The Halfway House
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by Jennifer Bixby, 1977'''
After months of research on the Halfway House, I am satisfied that local resources have been exhausted. Someday a concrete piece of evidence will undoubtedly surface by accident, much like the day of January 5, 1977, my birthday, when I determinedly set out for the attic to find the date on the purlin plate. Though I had searched unsuccessfully several times, I suddenly came to the realization on that day that the person who saw the date in 1915, Catherine Lukens, was only a child. {{Image|file=The_Halfway_House-3.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption=1807 date on the backside of a beam. }}Reminding myself that a child would be able to go where an adult would not, it took less than five minutes to find the date, 1807, in faded, but still legible paint, on the back of the supporting beam. I know that someday evidence such as this will turn up and it will seem so obvious when it does. Until then, there are two main obstacles to the research. Halfway House was supposedly built by Stillman Foote of Canton, to facilitate delivery of the mail between Ogdensburg and Canton. Unfortunately, the Canton Post Office burned and so destroyed all records to the extent that history books differ by four years on the dates Stillman Foote was postmaster. The second obstacle is the absence of any detailed maps of St. Lawrence County dating before 1858. The earliest map [Jennifer Bixby] was able to find was located in the Rare Book Room of the St. Lawrence University Library. It was dated 1829, but only designated towns and rivers, not a single road.
The St. Regis Indians originally owned the property on which Halfway House stands. Subsequently, a treaty was made with the Native Americans, and the State of New York acquired the property. In 1792 the State of New York decided to sell its “wastelands”, and [[macomb-10|Alexander Macomb]] purchased most of Northern New York for $.08 an acre. However, within two years, Macomb was bankrupt, in debtor’s prison, and the land was listed for resale. William Lyttle then bought most of the Town of Lisbon, and on January 8, 1804, sold 3000 acres to Stephen Van Rensselaer of Albany NY.
Stephen Van Rensselaer was the son of Kilean Van Rensselaer, a pearl and diamond merchant of Amsterdam, Holland, who owned Albany County, most of Rensselaer County and part of Columbia County in New York State. Kilean never saw his land, but sent his son here to make his claim. To establish his claim, Stephen had to arrive with 50 persons, 15 years of age or older, together with food supplies, livestock, and farming implements sufficient to start and maintain a colony. On November 1, 1785, Stephen Van Rensselaer set sail for the United States and became Patroon of his father’s property in New York State. As Patroon, Stephen Van Rensselaer literally owned life, land, and limb of his tenants. After a period of several years, a settler on Van Rensselaer’s land was given a paper beginning, but the leases were all perpetual. Terms were 22 1⁄2 bushels annually of wheat per 160 acres; 4 fat hens, and service of men with horse and wagon one day per year. The annual rent amounted to $29.16. “Sale” of these properties was an incomplete transfer which left certain claims in the hands of Stephen Van Rensselaer. The tenant got title only to rough land. If he created a farm for himself, and if he sold it, one third or one quarter of the sum received had to be turned over to Van Rensselaer. If the tenant defaulted in his rent, the landlord could sell the property. Van Rensselaer reserved all water and mineral rights. And these leases were to run forever! The Constitutional Convention of 1846 abolished feudal tenure, likewise perpetual leases, thereafter restricting agricultural leases to a duration of not over twelve years. Despite Stephen’s reputation as a man to be feared, he made many beneficial contributions to the State of New York. He was a native of New York City, and during his lifetime (1764-1839) he was a representative in Congress, Major General of volunteers of the War of 1812, president of the Erie Canal Commission, member of the State Constitutional Convention in 1821, a founder of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy NY, and a regent of the University of the State of New York. During his lifetime he gave more than $30,000 toward public education. And he was proprietor of most of the Town of Canton and the westerly half of St. Lawrence County. (A medical laboratory technology program pamphlet of the State University of New York Agricultural and Technical College at Canton NY quotes Stephen Van Rensselaer in 1824: “Vocational education is the diffusion of a very useful kind of knowledge with its application to the business of living.”) One tradition of Stephen Van Rensselaer was carried on by his son, Henry, and that was the keeping of mineral rights when property is otherwise transferred.
It was from Stephen Van Rensselaer that [[stocking-286|Billius Stocking]] of Sandisfield MassachusettsBillius moved to Hebron, Washington county, New York and was married to Patience Gray before 1800 bought 360 acres of land for $300.00; the deed was dated July 7, 1806. Billius Stocking (1779-1851) was the son of a Revolutionary War Veteran. We think Billius emigrated to the area as early as 1802. Lisbon Town Records show he first held a town office in 1805. He married [[Gray-7340|Patience Gray]] (1776-1850), the daughter of [[Gray-9543|Isaac Gray]] and [[McLain-511|Mary (McLain, Maklem, McKlem...)]], whose fathers were captains in the Revolutionary Army. Billius Stocking ran a saw mill on the road known as the Stocking Mill Road (now just Mill Road). In addition, Billius Stocking was a farmer and elder of the Presbyterian Church. To Billius and Patience were born ten children: [[Stocking-633|Timothy]], [[stocking-634|Isaac G]], [[stocking-635|Mary]], [[stocking-636|Billius]], Jr, [[stocking-288|Daniel]], [[stocking-637|Martha]], [[stocking-638|Harriet]], [[stocking-639|James T]], [[stocking-640|Melissa]], and [[stocking-641|Duncan]]. Several of the children lived all or most of their lives in Lisbon and are buried in Lisbon cemeteries.
Exactly who built this house will probably always be a mystery, but legend has it that [[Foote-1246|Stillman Foote]] of Canton built it on Stocking’s land. Lisbon Town Records show that Stillman Foote held public offices in Lisbon (which then included Canton) in 1802 and 1803. There is also mention in the records of Stillman Foote’s yard being used as a pound. In D. W. Church’s diary, Church mentions Foote and his party traveling to Lisbon several times. Stillman Foote arrived in Canton in 1800 from Middlebury Vermont, which his father founded. He brought a party of twelve, many of whom did not survive the first winter, including Foote’s father. The 1800 census in Canton lists five families, and gives this information about Stillman Foote: Stillman and his wife are between the ages of 26-45 and have one daughter, aged 10-16. Ten others are included in the household, “all free persons, not subject to tax”.Ancestry.com($), Federal Census, Year: 1800; Census Place: Canton, Oneida, New York. St Lawrence county was not created until 1802 [[foote-1427|George Foote]], Stillman’s brother, and a former member of the Green Mountain Boys, is included in the same census. According to Lisbon Town Records, George Foote and a man named [[marshall-18770|Stephen Marshall]] were appointed Pound Keepers in the Town of Lisbon in 1803.
Depicted on the mural in the present Canton Post Office are Daniel Harrington (the lone settler here when Foote arrived) and Stillman Foote bartering his horse, saddle and bridle for Harrington’s wheat crop. The two also arranged for the transfer of title from Harrington to Foote of one square mile of land (on present Fairlane Drive), where Foote and his party built a shanty. Daniel Harrington immediately left the area with his new horse, saddle, and bridle! In 1804 Foote built a tavern in Canton, and he and his family lived in that house. The building still stands on West Main Street, though greatly modified since it passed out of the Foote family a generation after Stillman died in 1835. In 1806 Foote was the first supervisor of Canton; in 1807 he was the first postmaster of Canton. In 1812 Foote built a bloom forge, in 1815 a distillery, and in 1827 a marble factory. He is also credited with having built a stone house in Canton, which still stands on Riverside Drive, dates unknown, and a mill, dates unknown.
Halfway House was probably built in 1807 (as the date in the attic indicates), when Foote obtained the franchise to carry mail between Canton and Ogdensburg, a distance of twenty miles. Where Foote obtained the franchise to carry mail is uncertain, but it may have been from Jonathon Thompson of Malone, who first carried the mail between Plattsburg and Ogdensburg on foot! The route took two weeks, one way. When Thompson sold his business in 1846, he owned one hundred horses along the way. By 1830 Craig’s Hotel in present-day Flackville was also the post office. But prior to 1830 Halfway House was the reputed mail stop.
In 1810 the population of Lisbon was 820; in 1820 the population was 930. In 1810 St. Lawrence County had five slaves out of a total 14,638 slaves in New York State. In 1810 St. Lawrence County had 247 looms making 19,047 yards of woolen, 36,000 yards of linen, and 1,926 yards of mixed cloth; 5 fulling mills, dressing 14,000 yards; 2 carding machines, using 10,500 pounds wool; 12 tanneries, using 1,767 hides; 2 distilleries, making 25,000 gallons of spirits, worth $.80 per gallon; and one trip hammer. According to the census of 1850, about 3,500 deer, worth $3.00 each, were killed a year in St. Lawrence County.
{{Image|file=The_Halfway_House-1.jpg |align=r |size=l |caption=New York Folklore Sign. }}Billius Stocking’s living descendant, Hobart Stocking of Stillwater Oklahoma, finds it hard to believe that Billius, a pillar of the church, would operate a tavern. However, the earliest tavern in Heuvelton, 1806, was run by Jairus Remington, a former minister. It is probable that Billius Stocking did not live at Halfway House and it is highly possible that the person named Legge (assumed from the alternate name of Halfway House, Foote-Legge-Stocking Tavern) was actually the proprietor. For one thing Billius Stocking had his own home and his family of twelve was too large to fit in the basement, where the innkeeper and family reportedly lived. The great fireplace in the basement was used for cooking; the bread pusher for the oven, with four-foot handle, is hanging in the kitchen. The wainscoting and old doors in the basement still have the original red paint on them. It is also interesting to note the pegging of the cellar and attic beams.
Upstairs in the main part of the tavern one enters the dining room with seven doors, original wide back door, fireplace, and wainscot of wide boards up to the chair rail. Chair rails are in all downstairs rooms. Another smaller fireplace with cupboards is in the adjoining small room, known as the library, where the proper ladies sat. From the front door, framed with narrow glass, one enters the hall, with wide open stairway. To the right of the hall is a wood-paneled room, known as the Welcome Room, because the bar was originally located in this room. This room has a large fireplace with cupboards above and at the side. To the left of the hall is the parlor, with 16" floor boards and mitred door and window casings. This room opened to the dining room and first-floor bedroom (now the present kitchen).
On the second floor was an “L”-shaped dance hall and one bedroom for the ladies. There is evidence of a fireplace in one part of the dance hall. The upstairs is now divided into three bedrooms, a laundry room and two full baths. The original wide pine boards make up the entire upstairs floor. The men supposedly slept over the coach house.
{{Image|file=The_Halfway_House-2.jpg |align=l |size=l |caption=Cooking fireplace in the Halfway House. }} Other taverns in this area at the time included the Stillman Foote Tavern in Canton, Northrup’s Tavern (Quarterway House, torn down, at Northrup’s Corners), Hopkins’ Tavern (Quarterway House at Woodbridge Corners, still standing), Halfway House on Potsdam-Canton Road (still standing), and another tavern on the Potsdam-Canton Road (now the home of Cecil and Gemma Moore). All were stage coach stops. The first tavern in Rensselaer Falls was kept by John Shull, Jr., an agent of Henry Van Rensselaer. Also operating at the time was the 1806 tavern of Jairus Remington in Heuvelton, and this tavern, known as Foote-LeggeStocking Tavern.
In 1813 the Parishville Turnpike Company, Inc., headed by David Parish, was empowered to build a road from Ogdensburg to Parishville with a capital of $50,000. In March 1827 this road was given up to the towns through which it passed, and in April 1831, the part between Ogdensburg and Canton was directed to be improved by a tax upon the three towns of Canton, Lisbon, and Ogdensburg of $500.00 for two years. Tolls were collected along the way for support of the road. In 1850 the road was planked, and a sum not exceeding $10,000 over six years was borrowed on the credit of the tolls.
The year 1816 was the coldest ever known in this country. It is remembered as the year without a summer. There were snow and ice every month, including a snow storm on June 17, and an ice storm on the Fourth of July. Scarcely anything grew and there was consequent suffering during the ensuing winter. Histories of St.Lawrence County record that most people were forced to live on little else but wild game and fish caught in local rivers. In the entire Northeast grain and fruit crops were total failures.
On May 5, 1819, Stephen Van Rensselaer sold more land to Billius Stocking. Billius Stocking sold the Halfway House to Henry Van Rensselaer of New York City, and his wife, Elizabeth, deed dated July 10, 1839. The sale included 100 acres; the purchase price was $161.52. It is doubtful that Henry and Elizabeth ever lived in Halfway House. At the time, they owned a mansion west of Ogdensburg, called Woodford, which was destroyed by fire while they owned it. Henry kept this property until 1858. It is my guess that he bought it as a tavern and someone else operated it for him. An 1858 map of St. Lawrence County designates this house as the Stocking-McFadden house. According to Stocking family genealogy, Harriet N. Stocking, daughter of Billius, married [[mcFadden-1945|George McFadden]]. Martha Stocking, daughter of Billius, also married a McFadden, [[mcFadden-1940|Henry]], brother of George. Lisbon Town records list the children of Martha and Henry as nine in number; there is no listing of children for Harriet and George in the Stocking family genealogy or by Lisbon Town records. The 1850 census shows George and Henry McFadden and wives living on what today is McFadden Road in Lisbon. They are also depicted there on an 1858 map of Lisbon and again in the 1860 census, so where the designation Stocking-McFadden house came from is a very big mystery, yet to be resolved. There is also no record of a Legge ever having married a Stocking, as Catherine Lukens suggests. Henry Chambers, born 1845, told Catherine Lukens he remembered as a small child visiting the tavern here and seeing the Foote-Legge-Stocking Tavern sign located at the cellar door. Catherine also told me one of her mother’s sisters from Potsdam NY remembered coming to a dance here with a date, but I do not know which sister that was, the eldest of whom was born in 1850. (See letter dated April 14, 1978.)
If a Legge was ever associated with the tavern, there is no documentation as to who it might have been. Censuses taken in the years 1800, 1810, 1820, 1830, and 1840 show no Legges in the towns of Canton, Oswegatchie, or Lisbon, except the following (all from Oswegatchie): John Legge, Sr., and his two sons, John, Jr., and Jeremiah. John Legge, Sr. had three sons. In his probate record the only son mentioned is David, who is also executor of the estate. I can find no census that records David Legge as a separate household until 1850, even though John Legge, Sr. states they are all living in the area. Could it have been David who was involved with the tavern here? (See additional Legge notes.)
Henry Van Rensselaer, who owned the house during the Stocking-McFadden occupancy, was the son of Stephen Van Rensselaer, who sold this property to Billius Stocking. Henry (1810-1864) was graduated from West Point in 1831, and commissioned Brevet Second Lieutenant in the Fifth Infantry Regiment on July 1 of that year. He resigned January 27, 1832, and engaged in agricultural pursuits near the old village of Ogdensburg. In 1834 Henry took charge of his father’s estates and lands in this county, becoming proprietor in 1836. He had just married a daughter of New York’s governor, John A. King. A Whig, Van Rensselaer was elected representative to the 27th Congress (1841-1843), one month during the brief presidency of William Henry Harrison and the remainder after the Vice-President John Tyler became President. Silas Wright, Jr., of Canton, was then a United States Senator. (He as later Governor of New York.) Henry Van Rensselaer re-entered military service during the Civil War. Rensselaeer Falls, originally called Tateville, then Canton Falls, was settled in 1839, the same date that Henry Van Rensselaer built a mill there. The village is now named after him. Unlike his father, Henry was liberal to the settlers on his lands. He had the reputation of being “the rich man’s companion and the poor man’s friend”.
Henry Van Rensselaer had many mining interests in the county, and when he sold Halfway House to Adam Cunningham, May 14, 1858, for $187.60, Henry kept the mineral rights. It must have been during the ownership of Adam Cunningham that Halfway House was part of the Underground Railroad. Legend has it that the lectern which was kept in the attic, and is still in the house, was used to hold services for slaves passing through to Canada. There are two other possibilities for the use of the lectern. One is that the house was used to hold church services in the Flackville vicinity before the present church buildings were erected. (One religious segment claims to have been holding services as early as 1805.) The other possibility is that services were actually held in the tavern following the law enacted in New England that the word of God was to be preached at least once a week in all taverns until the settlers had their established “meeting houses”, or churches. The top of the lectern is made from a sign that is barely legible, but says “Proceed At Your Own Peril”.
It seems appropriate to insert here that the Town of Lisbon paid a bounty for several years to men who would enlist in the Union Army during the Civil War. One year the bounty was as high as $500.00. As a consequence, Lisbon had the most enlisted men in the county, but also the most casualties.
I discovered a real curiosity while doing research in the County Court House. There are two deeds dated the same day and year, May 12, 1874. One pertains to the sale of Halfway House by Adam Cunningham to Anson Wallace; the other pertains to the sale of Halfway House by Anson Wallace to Adam Cunningham! What the deal was is pure conjecture. I do know that , according to a map dated 1864, Anson Wallace lived in this house. Regardless of what happened, Adam Cunningham had title in 1875, and on March 28, 1875, sold Halfway House to Margaret Hanna. When Margaret Hanna died, she bequeathed the property to James C. Hanna and Sarah, his wife. The Hannas sold Halfway House April 12, 1887, to Albert Carmichael. Albert Carmichael sold the property to Samuel Livingston, July 21, 1904.
Samuel Livingston had a reputation in Lisbon of being a man of questionable character. It is believed that during Livingston’s ownership the house was unoccupied (by people) some of the time, and used to store oats. This attracted rats, and cats were shut in the house to kill the rats. Catherine Lukens tells how she was entertained as a child by stains on the floors left by the cats, which suggested maps of Africa and South America in her imagination. I heard another story, which may or may not be true: the local legend is that when Livingston sold the farm he was to leave the corn field standing, which he did do, except he sent his children out the night before the transfer to strip the corn stalks off the cobs!
On March 1, 1912, Livingston sold Halfway House to Amos Lewis Lukens and his wife, Edith. The Lukens moved to this house from Virginia, with their children, Catherine, aged seven, and Laurence, aged twelve. The Lukens’ former home was next door to Woodlawn, the estate of Nellie Custis. (See Additional Historical Notes.) Amos and Edith Lukens brought with them the Mt. Vernon-Woodlawn influence evidenced in the railings and the large brass lock they added to the house. Catherine and Laurence Lukens inherited Halfway House from their father when he died, May 19, 1956. I know that by 1967 Catherine had moved to Liverpool NY, and Laurence was living here by himself. Laurence, too, had a strange reputation and it is said that many people were afraid of him.
The auction held here when Catherine Lukens sold Halfway House was a major event in recent local history. Years later people are still marveling at the antiques sold here. It was John and Carol Hameline who bought the house July 3, 1974, from Catherine and Laurence Lukens, for $30,000, a far cry from Macomb’s $.08 an acre! The Hamelines began the restoration of Halfway House. They were also the first owners of the house in its 170 years who were not farmers. (Both Hamelines were teachers.) Two years later the Hamelines sold Halfway House, and the sixteen acres it is now on, to Joel and Jennifer Bixby, October 18, 1976, for $37,500. The Bixby children, Abigail, aged seven, and Samantha, aged three, are the first children to live in the house in over sixty years. Joel Bixby is employed as a counselor by the State University of New York Agricultural and Technical College at Canton NY, thus making the Bixbys the second owner engaged in education. {{Image|file=The_Halfway_House.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=A contemporary view of the home. For Google Street View: [https://www.google.com/maps/@44.659274,-75.329624,3a,75y,205.72h,80.14t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sbIzzE7IRk7BoTaOVMgHXtQ!2e0!7i13312!8i6656 Halfway House Street View] }} :::'''2020 Billius Stocking Encore''' While in the grip of the 2020 Covid 19 pandemic, and having time on our hands as everybody did, [[Seale-23|Bob Seale]] and I revisited some issues with my 1977 paper on The History of Halfway House, and another article on [[Stocking-286|Billius Stocking]] in 1981. We found several discrepancies with his research and mine that didn’t hold up under closer scrutiny. This changes some of the details but not thebigger picture. This is intended to be a working document with amendments made as newdiscoveries come to light.
What we know as fact is that Halfway House was a tavern, and it was probably built in 1807 as the date on the purlin plate indicates, and as the Federalist style indicates. What we don’t know is exactly when Billius Stocking became involved with this tavern. It is unfortunate that most of what I wrote had no sources cited because at the time I only intended it for my private use (and nobody anticipated the internet!).
We also know that Billius was here as early as 1804 when he appears on a tax list in Lisbon NY, and that his second child was born here in 1804. In 1805 he held his first town office in Lisbon. In a 1971 article for the SLCHA magazine The Quarterly Catherine Lukens said Billius bought his first land here in 1806, 360 acres for $300, but on a recent trip to the court house there was no evidence of that deed. Bob Seale says the first deed for Billius was recorded January 2, 1808 when Billius bought land from Stephen Van Rensselaer, 95 8/10 acres for $300. I found this deed in Book 2, p. 68, and it is in Range 2, Lot 6 of Lisbon. The southern boundaries are on “widow Lytle’s farm”. Bob places the location of this property near 5 Mile Line Road and above the RR tracks, and I agree. At any rate the bigger question for me is WHERE DID BILLIUS LIVE BEFORE THAT?! 1808 is a full four years after he came to this inhospitable climate with his family. He could not have survived our harsh winters without a substantial structure.
The next bit of confusion appears with 2 transactions in 1819. On May 5, 1819 Billius SOLD BACK. to Stephen Van Rensselaer the 95 8/10 acres he bought in 1808 for $300 in Range 2, Lot 6. This deed is in Book #5, p. 415. Then on May 25, 1819 Stephen Van Rensselaer SOLD to Billius 100 acres for $300 in Range 7, Lot 8, which would make that location on both sides of this road and include the Halfway House and the site of his mill on Mill Road (formerly Stocking Mill Road), probably also his home there. This deed is in Book 5, p. 368. A “stake in Isaac Gray’s southerly line” was mentioned as a boundary. It is almost certain this tavern existed at that time and was a working tavern. One would have to deduce that STEPHEN VAN RENSSELAER WAS OPERATING THE TAVERN at that time (through his agents). When and why did the Halfway House become known as Foote-Legge-Stocking Tavern, as local legend has it, and as the Chambers brothers saw on the sign next to the cellar door? And further, why was it designated Stocking-McFadden house on an 1858 map?
A subsequent transaction occurred on July 10, 1839 when HENRY Van Rensselaer SOLD to Billius 20 acres for $161.52. This deed appears in Book #30, p. 431. The location of this property was the “SE corner of Billius’ 100-acre lot”. Bob Seale asked when Henry bought this property because there is no record of this transaction. Henry was the son of Stephen Van Rensselaer, who died January 26, 1839, so it is possible Henry was heir to the property or executor of the estate. In a 1971 article by Elizabeth Baxter in the SLCHA magazine The Quarterly Elizabeth says that Henry took charge of his father’s estates in 1834, again no source given. St. Lawrence County was not settled until 1800 so compared to other areas of the country this county was in its infancy. The County Clerk even admits the early records were sketchy, either because nobody cared or they didn’t have a repository in place. The few land records before 1807 are not even indexed to this day, but anybody is welcome to scroll through them, which we did. Without adequate records we are left with a lot of unsolved mysteries. Even with the luxury of the internet if I google Billius Stocking all that comes up is my work and Bob’s work. (as of 23 August 2020) ==Sources==
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Frost, Josephine C. ''The Haviland Genealogy: Ancestors and Descendants of William Haviland of Newport, Rhode Island, and Flushing, Long Island, 1653-1688: With Special Records of the Allied Families of Field, Hull, Torrey, Willett-Willis''. New York, NY: Lyons Genealogical Company, 1914.:'''WikiTree Bibliographic Syntax''' :Under the "== Sources ==" section of the profile, you can paste the below syntax.
:The "* {{Blue|Secondary: }}Frost, Josephine C. [[Space:The_Haviland_Genealogy|''The Haviland Genealogy'']] '': Ancestors and Descendants of William Haviland of Newport, Rhode Island, and Flushing, Long Island, 1653-1688 : with special records of the allied families of Field, Hull, Torrey, Willett-Willis.'' New York, NY: The Lyons Genealogical Co., 1914.
:(Where "#" represents a page number.) == Where to Find == === Digital & Xerographed Copies === * [https://archive.org/details/havilandgenealog00fros Archive.org] has a great, searchable digital version, which can be searched online and downloaded as PDF or text. * [http://www.higginsonbooks.com/ Higginson Books] has bound reprints. * [https://www.abebooks.com/ Abe Books] has bound xerographed reprints and occasionally re-sells a rare original copy. === Original Print Copies === :Only 200 copies of ''The Haviland Genealogy'' were bound and numbered in cloth, and an additional 25 in half-morocco (spine and corners covered by sheep-skin leather). The cloth-bound editions do not all look alike. :Not all of them have survived, and many of them are now in the hands of public libraries. The New York Public Library has one, and the Boston Library has another. [[Haviland-425|Christopher Sirmons Haviland]] owns three original copies (see below).Frost, ''Haviland'', p. #
Josephine C Frost, as far as I have had a chance to judge, was a careful researcher: while compiling several genealogies (among several: Frost 1912a: [[Space:The_Frost_Genealogy|''The Frost Genealogy'']] ; 1914: this book), she visited the locales of her subjects, copied cemetery inscriptions, talked with local residents ([[Space:Frost 1912b|Frost 1912b]]). Frost (see her introduction to this book) expresses her care in checking the accuracy of data, but much of the data is the result of research by others. How much of the data is based on family records and on recollections is not known; such sources can be unreliable as Frost shows in several instances where there are conflicts in the data. Sources that are cited should be checked and where possible data confirmed by multiple, independent sources.Per [[Haviland-425 | Christopher Sirmons Haviland]], [http://www.havilands.org The Haviland - de Havilland Heritage Society], 2017:
I have studied this book for decades. It is an extraordinary piece of work, and has been the "bible" for Haviland researchers in America for a century. Over the years, various errors have been identified, which Frost herself expected would happen, as some of the book is based more on conjecture than strict evidence. And so, as students of her work and of the family, we are expected to fix it. WikiTree is where that is happening. Someday we hope to publish a new, definitive Haviland / de Havilland genealogy, correcting and supplementing both Frost's ''The Haviland Genealogy'' as well as the older [[Space:The_Chronicle_de_Havilland|''Chronicle de Havilland'']] (1895) by John V.S. de Havilland, on which the Guernsey and English genealogy is founded). It is worth noting also that F. Eleanor Chapin published the ''Canadian Haviland Family Genealogy'' in 1991, which specializes in the Havilands the emigrated into Canada (particularly the loyalists).== Current Owners == This section documents current owners, chains of custody and other interesting information about specific copies of the original book in private collections and libraries. If you have, or know who has, an original copy, please document it here. === Number ? === {{Image|file=Frost_1914.jpg |caption=''The Haviland Genealogy'' by Josephine C. Frost
# ? from the New York Public Library, New York, NY
Cloth Binding (Blue) with Gold Embossed Spine }} This blue cloth-bound edition can be found in the Genealogy / Humanities room at the New York Public Library on 42nd Street, New York, NY. The pages of that copy are yellow and starting to disintegrate, as if the pages have a higher acid composition than the other copies, which seem to have a better quality paper and are in much better condition. Its copy number is not known. # Current Owner: The New York Public Library # Previous Owner: ? === Number 41 === {{Image|file=Frost_1914-1.jpg |caption=''The Haviland Genealogy'' by Josephine C. Frost
# 41 from [[Haviland-425|Christopher Sirmons Haviland]]'s collection
Cloth Binding (Red) with Gold Embossed Spine }} {{Image|file=The_Haviland_Genealogy.jpg }} # Current Owner: [[Haviland-425|Christopher Sirmons Haviland]]. # Previous Owner: Dr. [[Chesebrough-544|Henry E. Chesebrough]] of Greenwich, NY. === Number 58 === {{Image|file=Frost_1914-2.jpg |caption=''The Haviland Genealogy'' by Josephine C. Frost
# 58 from [[Haviland-425|Christopher Sirmons Haviland]]'s collection
Cloth Binding (Red) }} {{Image|file=The_Haviland_Genealogy-1.jpg }} {{Image|file=The_Haviland_Genealogy-2.jpg |caption=''The Haviland Genealogy'' #58 - Smoke Damage }} :Number 58 has black marks on some pages consistent with smoke damage. It may have survived a house fire. # Current Owner: [[Haviland-425|Christopher Sirmons Haviland]]. # Previous Owner: [[Haviland-437|Robert Alan Haviland]]. # Previous Owner: The Haviland China company. === Number 68 === # Current Owner: ? Irving B. Stanton, Jr. (great grandson of [[Haviland-511|Frederick Haviland]]). # Previous Owner: ? === Number 142 === {{Image|file=Frost_1914-3.jpg |caption=''The Haviland Genealogy'' by Josephine C. Frost
# 142 from [[Haviland-425|Christopher Sirmons Haviland]]'s collection
Autographed by Josephine C. Frost
Cloth Binding (Green) with Gold Embossed Spine }} {{Image|file=The_Haviland_Genealogy-3.jpg }} {{Image|file=The_Haviland_Genealogy-4.jpg |caption=#142 Josephine C. Frost autograph to "Elizabeth S. Haviland" ''(unidentified)'' }} {{Image|file=The_Haviland_Genealogy-5.jpg |caption=#142 inscription from "Richard" to "Aunt Anna" ''(unidentified)'' }} # Current Owner: [[Haviland-425|Christopher Sirmons Haviland]]. # Previous Owner: An independent antiquated bookseller. # Previous Owners: Elizabeth S. Haviland (not yet identified). Book is autographed to her by Josephine C. Frost. On the next page is another inscription that reads, "With Love to Aunt Anna from Richard, April 23, 1927." These individuals are not identified. In theory, Frost autographed the book to a woman named Elizabeth Haviland (it is not known whether this is a married name) ca 1914-1916, and then at some point it came to be owned by a Richard __?__ who inscribed it to his Aunt "Anna." We presume Richard and Anna are both descendants. === Number 149 === # Current Owner: The Boston Public Library # Previous Owner: ?
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'''USSR by the Einsatzgruppen: '''Raul Hilberg puts the Jewish death toll in the area of the mobile killing groups at 1.4 million. |- | |
'''Aggravated deaths in Ghettos of Nazi-occupied Europe:''' Raul Hilberg puts the Jewish death toll in the Ghettos at 700,000. |} '''Statistics of Non Jewish Dead''' {| | |Historians estimate 5 million additional deaths of gay people, priests, Romani people, people with mental or physical disabilities, communists, trade unionists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, anarchists, Poles and other Slavic peoples, and resistance fighters. These classes are included in this Wikipedia table. It shows Soviet civilians and Soviet POWs; they are not typicallyGoldberg, Adar’s. Canadian Encyclopedia. "Canada and the Holocaust" https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/holocaust Definition: "The Holocaust is defined as the systematic persecution and murder of 6 million Jews and 5 million non-Jews, including Roma and Sinti, Poles, political opponents, LGBTQ people and Soviet prisoners of war (POWs), by Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945. Jews were the only group targeted for complete destruction." included in the broad definition of the Holocaust (6 million Jews + 5 million non-POW, non-Jews); the total reaches ~14-15 million if they are included. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocaust_victims
|} {{Image |file = Holocaust_pictures-1.png |align = r |size = 200 |label = Major camps, ghettos, and deportation routes connecting them |caption = (''click [http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9e/Holocaust_pictures-1.png here] to see full size'') |wrap = y }} This map identifies locations of major camps and ghettos where millions of Jews and thousands of non-Jews who aided or protected them, plus an assortment of people deemed "political enemies" were imprisoned. The captives lived in deplorable conditions, performed heavy labor with no respite, and served as test subjects for medical experiments. Some were whipped, beaten, or shot by guards, mauled by guard dogs, or executed in mass gas chambers built for that purpose. Many died of malnutrition, illness, suicide, or failed attempts to escape. {{Clear}} {{Image |file = HolocaustSourceDocuments-1.gif |align = c |size = 120 |label = _ |caption = [[Project:Holocaust|'''HOLOCAUST PROJECT''']] |wrap = y }} == Overview of Definitions == Many organizations who do not limit their definition to Jews present their Holocaust definition by first mentioning Jews, then other victims of Nazi persecution, or divide the killings with the terms "Holocaust"(limited to Jews) and "Nazi Persecution" (for non-Jews). (In my review of a number of websites, it seems to me that some Holocaust organizations do not provide a clear definition of the word.-[[Weatherall-96|Weatherall-96]] 07:25, 30 December 2023 (UTC)) A sampling of definitions: === United Nations === *From the UN resolution 60/7 establishing January 27 as Holocaust Remembrance Day: https://www.un.org/en/holocaustremembrance/observance [https://documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N05/487/96/PDF/N0548796.pdf?OpenElement Text if resolution 60/7] " …. Reaffirming that the Holocaust, which resulted in the murder of one third of the Jewish people, along with countless members of other minorities, will forever be a warning to all people of the dangers of hatred, bigotry, racism and prejudice, 1. Resolves that the United Nations will designate 27 January as an annual International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust; 2. Urges Member States to develop educational programmes that will inculcate future generations with the lessons of the Holocaust in order to help to prevent future acts of genocide…." *US Holocaust Museum Memorial(USHMM): "Documenting Numbers of Victims of the Holocaust and Nazi Persecution" https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/documenting-numbers-of-victims-of-the-holocaust-and-nazi-persecution "The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million Jewish men, women and children by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. The Nazis, who came to power in Germany in January 1933, believed that Germans were "racially superior" and they wanted to create a “racially pure” state. Jews, deemed "inferior," were considered an alien threat to the so-called German racial community. During the era of the Holocaust, German authorities also targeted and killed other groups, including at times their children, because of their perceived racial and biological inferiority: Roma (Gypsies), Germans with disabilities, and some of the Slavic peoples (especially Poles and Russians). Other groups were persecuted for political or ideological reasons, or on the basis of what the Nazi regime considered to be criminal behavior. Among these groups were Communists, Socialists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and gay men." === International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance === *"The IHRA established the Committee on the Holocaust, Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity to develop and share good practices on how to sensitively reflect and discuss the Holocaust and other cases of genocides without diminishing their respective differences in an educational and research environment. The Committee has produced pedagogical guidance for educators; a publication comprising an overview of programs provided by 120 organizations worldwide that deal with the Holocaust in comparison to other mass atrocities; and its most recent report, History Never Repeats itself, but Sometimes it Rhymes: comparing the Holocaust to different Atrocities, which explores what we mean by “compare” when we relate the Holocaust to another genocide." International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. "Holocaust, Genocide and Crimes against Humanity" https://www.holocaustremembrance.com/holocaust-genocide-and-crimes-against-humanity accessed 31 Dec 2023. *From the article "What is Holocaust distortion and why is it a problem?"International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. "What is Holocaust distortion and why is it a problem?" 24.01.2022. https://www.holocaustremembrance.com/news-archive/what-holocaust-distortion-and-why-it-problem **"The eventual goal of Holocaust denial is to recast history to erase the legacy and reality of the genocide of the Jews and related atrocities by the Nazis and their collaborators." **Part of the 10-item list: "Use of the term “Holocaust” to refer to events or concepts that are not related to the genocide of European and North African Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators." === Encyclopedia Brittanica: Scotland/USA === *Encyclopedia Brittanica: Holocaust, the systematic state-sponsored killing of six million Jewish men, women, and children and millions of others by Nazi Germany and its collaborators during World War II." === England === *Wiener Holocaust Library's "Holocaust Explained" Educational program for children 13-18:https://www.theholocaustexplained.org/what-was-the-holocaust/ "The Holocaust (Shoah) is the term for the murder of around six million Jews by the Nazi regime and their collaborators during the Second World War...... The term ‘Holocaust’ can also refer to the orchestrated murder of Roma . Other groups were also targeted by the Nazi regime: disabled people, Soviet Prisoners of War and civilians, Polish civilians, homosexuals, socialists, communists and trades unionists, Freemasons and Jehovah’s Witnesses." * Centre for Holocaust Education (UK) "While the Centre uses the term ‘the Holocaust’ to refer specifically to the genocide of 6 million European Jews, we know that the Nazis and their collaborators also committed mass violence against many other groups..." Non-Jewish victims of Nazi persecution and murder: Using national research to inform your classroom practice. https://holocausteducation.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/1.-Non-JewishVictimsOfNaziPersecutionMurder-Digital.pdf *English Wikipedia https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Holocaust note at top: "This article is about the state-sponsored genocide of European Jews during World War II. For all peoples persecuted during this era, see Holocaust victims." And intro/definition: "The Holocaust was the genocide of European Jews during World War II. Between 1941 and 1945, Nazi Germany and its collaborators systematically murdered some six million Jews across German-occupied Europe, around two-thirds of Europe's Jewish population." *Imperial War Museum(UK) https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/what-was-the-holocaust "The Holocaust was the systematic murder of Europe's Jews by the Nazis and their collaborators during the Second World War." === France === *In France, '''Shoah''' is generally preferred over Holocaust, and both refer to Jews: Dictionary "Le Petit Larousse (2004) précise-t-il à l’entrée « Holocauste » : « génocide des Juifs d'Europe perpétré par les nazis et leurs auxiliaires de 1939 à 1945 […]. On dit plus couramment Shoah"https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoah En France et dans le monde francophone, pour nommer l'événement, l'usage a tendance à consacrer le terme « Shoah », préféré à « Holocauste ». Ainsi Le Petit Larousse (2004) précise-t-il à l’entrée « Holocauste » : « génocide des Juifs d'Europe perpétré par les nazis et leurs auxiliaires de 1939 à 1945 […]. On dit plus couramment Shoah. » *https://www.memorialdelashoah.org/le-sens-des-mots.html discussion on the terms concentration camps and crimes against humanity *From the Council of Europe Factsheet on Roma Genocide:https://www.coe.int/en/web/roma-genocide/france **In 1954, France established the last Sunday of April as a day to commemorate the victims of National Socialism. The official ceremony, which begins at the Shoah Memorial (Mémorial de la Shoah), commemorates all deportations during World War II, including those of Roma and homosexuals.France officially commemorates the Jewish victims of the Holocaust on the Sunday closest to 16 July. The memorial day is called the National Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Racist and Anti-Semitic Crimes of the So-Called “Government of the French State”, and in Homage to the Righteous among the Nations from France (Journée nationale à la mémoire des victimes des crimes racistes et antisémites de l’État français et d’hommage aux Justes de France). The day commemorates the rounding up of Jews in the Vélodrome d’Hiver, a former cycle track in Paris, on 16 and 17 July 1942 – the biggest round-up of Jews that took place on French territory during World War II. The day was officially introduced by President François Mitterrand on 3 February 1993. In addition to these official events, the Holocaust is commemorated on numerous other occasions related to historical events, such as the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising commemorated during Yom HaShoah. Remembrance activities also take place around 27 January, the International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust. **In October 2010, a law proposal, Proposition de loi n°273, was presented in front of the National Assembly stating the official recognition of the Roma Genocide and setting the official commemoration of this genocide on 5 April. **In 2013, French President François Hollande acknowledged the State responsibility in the internment of Roma from 1940 to 1946 during a tribute ceremony in Montreuil-Bellay, one of the 31 camps managed by Vichy regime. === Germany === *Wikipedia article is titled: "Holocaust" with subtitle "staatlich organisierter Völkermord an den europäischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistische Deutschland während des Zweiten Weltkriegs" (Deepl Translate: State-organized genocide of European Jews by National Socialist Germany during the Second World War) *Published 1953: [https://archive.org/details/finalsolution00reit The final solution : the attempt to exterminate the Jews of Europe 1939-45 by Reitlinger, Gerald] === Netherlands === *[https://nl.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocaust Dutch Wikipedia] Discussion on counting non-Jewish victims Citing scholars for each position *[https://www.holocaustnamenmonument.nl/posts/welke-namen-komen-op-het-monument-292/ Names Monument in Amsterdam] - Jews & Roma/Sinti === Poland === * Wikipedia article is titled:Zagłada Żydów (zagłada europejskich Żydów w czasie II wojny światowej) [Google Translate: Extermination of Jews (the extermination of European Jews during World War II)] There’s a section on the term and primary meaning, and a section in wider meanings. === Spain === *[https://es.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocausto Spanish Wikipedia]: The overview at the top names exclusively Jews ("es el genocidio realizado por el régimen de la Alemania nazi contra los judíos de Europa durante el transcurso de la Segunda Guerra Mundial") citing [https://dle.rae.es/holocausto this dictionary] but the dictionary gives this WWII definition: Exterminio sistemático de judíos y de otros grupos humanos llevado a cabo por el régimen de la Alemania nazi. From Spanish Wikipedia table:"Cifra de víctimas Aproximadamente 11 000 000 de asesinados entre judíos, gitanos y otros grupos étnicos, sociales e ideológicos" === United States === *" In 1980, the United States Congress unanimously voted to form the United States Holocaust Memorial Council. Its mandate was the creation of a living memorial to the 6 million Jews and millions of other victims who perished during the Holocaust."" History of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum" accessed 15 Mar 2024. [https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/history-of-the-united-states-holocaust-memorial-museum Live Link] and [https://web.archive.org/web/20231208085247/https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/history-of-the-united-states-holocaust-memorial-museum Archived Link] * Holocaust Encyclopedia online hosted by United States Holocaust Memorial and Museum: "Holocaust: The Holocaust was the state-sponsored systematic persecution and annihilation of European Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1933 and 1945. Jews were the primary victims. Six million were murdered."https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/glossary accessed 1 Jan 2024 **And: "Who Were the Victims? The Nazi regime persecuted different groups on ideological grounds. Jews were the primary targets for systematic persecution and mass murder by the Nazis and their collaborators. Nazi policies also led to the brutalization and persecution of millions of others. Nazi policies towards all the victim groups were brutal, but not identical." United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC. Accessed from front page of website, 11 Mar 2024. Page Last Edited: Mar 4, 2020 https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/mosaic-of-victims-an-overview?utm_source=website&utm_medium=homepage&utm_campaign=HP0324 *Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center: "The Holocaust was the world’s worst genocide with over 6 million Jews and millions of others murdered by the Nazi regime through the 30s and 40s."https://www.ilholocaustmuseum.org/learn/ accessed 31 Dec 2023 and "It is best when referencing the total number of victims of the Holocaust to say 6 million Jews and millions of others. All Holocaust organizations are making a united move to adhere to this message, and we must maintain a consistent record as a center of Holocaust education."https://www.ilholocaustmuseum.org/holocaust-misconceptions/ accessed 31 Dec 2023 and [https://web.archive.org/web/20231231121227/https://www.ilholocaustmuseum.org/holocaust-misconceptions/ archived link] *National WWII Museum (at New Orleans, Louisiana) "The Holocaust was Nazi Germany’s deliberate, organized, state-sponsored persecution and machinelike murder of approximately six million European Jews and at least five million prisoners of war, Romany, Jehovah’s Witnesses, homosexuals, and other victims." https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/holocaust ** note: inclusion of POWs. See below estimates compiled in Wikipedia - 17 million dead includes POWs, not 11 million [[Weatherall-96|Weatherall-96]] 07:20, 13 December 2023 (UTC) *[https://www.aju.edu/miller-intro-judaism-program Miller Intro to Judaism Program] (USA Conservative stream) calls the Holocaust.... paraphrasing from memory.... the genocide of 6 million Jews and the murder of 5 million others. I'm looking for my online copy, can access hard copy in January. [[Weatherall-96|Weatherall-96]] 03:56, 26 December 2023 (UTC) * Article by Deborah LipstadtLipstadt, Deborah. "The Trump Administration's Softcore Holocaust Denial." The Atlantic, 2017. [https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/01/the-trump-administrations-softcore-holocaust-denial/514974/ Link] and [https://web.archive.org/web/20170130223140/https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/01/the-trump-administrations-softcore-holocaust-denial/514974/ archived link] , current (2023) United States Special Envoy for Monitoring and Combating Antisemitism; discusses Nazi persecution against several groups and states the word Holocaust is to be used for the extermination of the Jews. === Other === *[https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/18qjzhj/does_the_holocaust_only_refer_to_the_6_million/ AskHistorians question on Reddit] answered by amateur and professional historians. Books and articles cited (by user [https://www.reddit.com/user/Georgy_K_Zhukov/ Georgy_K_Zhukov]): **Grondelski, John M. “What Is the Holocaust?” New Blackfriars 72, no. 854 (1991): 482–88. **Michman, Dan "'The Holocaust’ – Do We Agree What We Are Talking About?", Holocaust Studies, 20:1-2 (2014), 117-128. [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17504902.2014.11439098 online link, registration required] **Niewyk, Donald, and Francis Nicosia. The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust, Columbia University Press, 2003. ==== Romani Genocide or Porajmos ==== The Wikipedia list of languages shows a mixture of Romani Genocide, Romani Holocaust, and Porajmos. (all referring to the Nazi persecution of Roma/Sinti people) https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romani_Holocaust#/languages The term Porajmos is becoming used more often, but there are some problems with the term, as discussed at Wikipedia https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romani_Holocaust citing János Bársony and Ágnes Daróczi. *Here is a bit from the USHMM's Holocaust Encyclopedia: "In December 1942, Himmler ordered the deportation of all Roma from the so-called Greater German Reich. There were exceptions for certain categories, including people of “pure Gypsy blood,” those of Gypsy descent who were considered integrated into German society and therefore did not “behave like Gypsies,” serving soldiers and decorated veterans, people engaged in necessary war work, and individuals married to non-Roma. Local authorities, however, often ignored these distinctions during roundups. Police authorities even seized and deported Roma soldiers serving in the German armed forces (Wehrmacht), while they were home on leave."Genocide of European Roma (Gypsies), 1939–1945" https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/genocide-of-european-roma-gypsies-1939-1945 ==== Soviet POWs ==== *"Existing sources suggest that some 5.7 million Soviet army personnel fell into German hands during World War II. As of January 1945, the German army reported that only about 930,000 Soviet POWs remained in German custody. The German army released about one million Soviet POWs as auxiliaries of the German army and the SS. About half a million Soviet POWs had escaped German custody or had been liberated by the Soviet army as it advanced westward through eastern Europe into Germany. The remaining 3.3 million, or about 57 percent of those taken prisoner, were dead by the end of the war. Second only to the Jews, Soviet prisoners of war were the largest group of victims of Nazi racial policy.""Nazi Persecution of Soviet Prisoners of War". Accessed 10 Apr 2024. https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/nazi-persecution-of-soviet-prisoners-of-war *"Of the 1.3 million people sent to Auschwitz, 1.1 million were murdered. The number of victims includes 960,000 Jews (865,000 of whom were gassed on arrival), 74,000 non-Jewish Poles, 21,000 Romani, 15,000 Soviet prisoners of war, and up to 15,000 others."Wikipedia citing:
*Piper, Franciszek (2000b). Długoborski, Wacław; Piper, Franciszek (eds.). Auschwitz, 1940–1945. Central Issues in the History of the Camp. Vol. III: Mass Murder. Oświęcim: Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. ISBN 978-8385047872. OCLC 929235229 pages 230-231 and
* Piper, Franciszek (1998b) [1994]. "The Number of Victims". In Gutman, Yisrael; Berenbaum, Michael (eds.). Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-32684-2. pp71-72 *More info on Soviet POWS at Auschwitz [https://auschwitzacademicguide.arts.ubc.ca/files/2021/09/Suyesha_Soviet-POWs.pdf link] == Categorization and stickers for WT's Holocaust Project == Several thousand German Communists/anti-Nazis were killed at various concentration camps. Classify them in the camp they died in, but don't add a Holocaust sticker. Same with Soviet POWs. (still up for discussion.... - [[Weatherall-96|Weatherall-96]] 18:37, 20 December 2023 (UTC) ) == Notes == Wikipedia English has a current discussion on the name/scope of the Holocaust Victim article: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Holocaust_victims#Requested_move_15_December_2023 Formatting not done [[Weatherall-96|Weatherall-96]] 07:20, 13 December 2023 (UTC) From the Holocaust Encyclopedia by the United States Holocaust Memorial and Museum:https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/documenting-numbers-of-victims-of-the-holocaust-and-nazi-persecutionNumber of non-Jewish people murdered by Nazi Germany and its allies and collaborators (by group) Non-Jewish groups persecuted by the Nazi German regime and its allies and collaborators / Number of non-Jewish victims *Soviet prisoners of war: around 3.3 million *Non-Jewish (ethnic) Poles: around 1.8 million *Romani men, women, and children and other people derogatorily labeled as "Gypsies": at least 250,000, but possibly as high as 500,000 *Serb civilians murdered by Ustaša authorities of the Independent State of Croatia: more than 310,000 *People with disabilities living in institutions and care facilities: 250,000–300,000, including at least 10,000 children *German political opponents and dissenters: tens of thousands *Germans imprisoned in concentration camps as "professional criminals" and "asocials": about 35,000 *Jehovah's Witnesses killed in concentration camps or executed for refusing to serve in the German military: about 1,700 *Gay men, bisexual men, and other men accused of homosexuality: Hundreds, possibly thousands *Black people in Germany: Unknown, perhaps hundreds From English Wikipedia
Victims Murdered Source
Jews 6 million [1]
Gentiles (non-Jews)
*Soviet civilians 4.5 million [2] *Soviet POWs 3.3 million [3][1] *Poles 1.8 million [4][5][1] *Serbs More than 310,000 [6][7] *Disabled people 270,000 [8] *Romani 250,000–500,000 [1][9] *Freemasons 80,000 [10][11] *Slovenes 20,000–25,000 [12] *Homosexuals 5,000–15,000 [13] *Spanish Republicans 3,500 [14] *Jehovah's Witnesses 1,700 [1][15] *Total 17 million From Wikipedia talk page for https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocaust_victims *From recently retired user Levivich 23:44, 26 October 2023 (UTC)
What this article could be is a historiography article that explains the ongoing scholarly debate regarding Who are the victims of the Holocaust? This debate breaks down into three basic groups:
Most scholars hold the traditionalist view, that the Holocaust was limited to Jews, e.g. Waitman Wade Beorn, Paul R. Bartrop, Donald Bloxham, David Cesarani, John Connelly, Abraham and Hershel Edelheit, Jack Fischel, Günter Grau, Peter Hayes, Timothy P. Jackson, Alex J. Kay, Peter Longerich, Stephen D. Smith, and Dan Stone, among others.
Some scholars who argue for expansion of "Holocaust victims" to include certain non-Jews, though they do not all agree on which non-Jews should be included. For example:
Ian Hancock - Roma/Sinti
Samuel Totten - Roma/Sinti, disabled, LGBT
Charles King - Roma/Sinti, disabled, Slavs
Paul E. Wilson - Roma/Sinti, LGBT, Jehovah's Witnesses
Jonathan C. Friedman - Roma/Sinti, disabled, LGBT, Soviet POWs
Doris Bergen - Roma/Sinti, disabled, LGBT, Soviet POWs, Polish elites
John J. Michalczyk - Roma/Sinti, LGBT, Jehova's Witnesses, "and others"
Estelle Tarica - Roma/Sinti "and others"
Some scholars argue that the terms "Holocaust" and "Shoah" should be retired altogether, and we shouldn't differentiate between victim groups, for example Christian Gerlach and to some extent David Cesarani
There are some scholars who have mixed views or take a "both sides" approach, for example David M. Crowe, David Engel (historian), and A. Dirk Moses. Misc: https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catégorie:Répression_politique_et_extermination_sous_le_Troisième_Reich == Sources ==
The Holocaust 5 Star Profile List
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The House of Lee
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The Humphrey Jennings Fraud
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Henry VIII, King of England, appointed his friend, Robert Jennens, game warden of Shottle, near Duffield in Derbyshire, England. Robert married Ellen Beard and when he died he was buried in the Derbyshire Churchyard. Robert and Ellen had William. William, of Mobourne Hill, moved to Birmingham and married Joanna Elliot. He died 6 December 1602, and she died 10 Dec 1621. They are buried in St. Martin's Church in Birmingham. They had John Jennens.
John Jennens of Warwickshire (1579-1653) became a "distinguished" Birmingham iron master. Evidently a very wealthy one also. He owned [http://www.bmag.org.uk/aston-hall Aston Hall]. John had Humphrey.
Humphrey Jennes was born in Warwickshire, 23 August 1629. He was and iron master in Birmingham, like his father. He owned Erdington Hall. In 1659, he married Mary Milward (1637-1708). They had 10 children including Robert (1671-1725), Hester, Ann and William.
Robert Jennens (1671-1725) married in 1700, Ann Guidotte, daughter and heir of Carew Guidotte (-1761). They had one son, William Jennens (1701-1798).
William Jennens (1701-1798), of Acton Place, Suffolk, and godson of King William, was a miser, who had acquired a large estate. He died unmarried and without a will, leaving his estate to be settled by the British court. ["They declared that the inheritor of the real property was George Augustus William Curzon, a descendant of Robert Jennens’s eldest sister Hester. George’s mother, Sophia Charlotte Howe, took possession of the estate for him. After his early death she continued to hold the property for her second son, Richard William Penn Curzon (1796-1870). They later alleged, however, that the second son was the illegitimate son of a single woman named Ann Oake
The court divided the personal property of William Jennens between the living next of kin. They were Mary, Lady Andover, a granddaughter of Humphrey Jennens’s daughter Ann and William Lygon (1747-1816), the Earl of Beauchamp, a grandson of Hester Jennens, and a descendant of Thomas Lygon [14080].']
Nevertheless, controversy arose. William Jennens, born 15 November 1676, the youngest son of Humphrey Jennens and Mary Milford, was a British officer who had came to America to fight in the Indian wars. If it were he who was the William Jennings who wed Mary Jane Pulliam, then many Americans were coheirs. Litigation on behalf of the American descendants commenced around 1850. Every descendant of anybody who had an ancestor named ?Jenningsâ? was solicited. The accumulation of funds for litigation was initiated in England. Virginia descendants helped collect large sums of money. Many individuals named â??Jennings,â? even ones with no relation to William Jennings, sent money in hopes thatthey might share in the inheritance.
Yet the claim was a fraud perpetrated on the Jennings of America. We believe the American descendants who helped in the solicitation were misled, as well. A mail fraud of similar nature deceived individuals who believed they werethe descendants of the brother of Sir Francis Drake. The great Drake mail fraud was tried in New York and resulted in conviction
The controversy continued in 1931 when some Jennings heirs produced the following marriage certificate that purported to prove William Jennings was the son of Humphrey Jennens, and thus an heir to the Jennens fortune:
Sussex County Circuit Court
Below is a copy of record from Sussex County, Virginia, relative to the marriage of William Jennings (1676-1775) and Mary Jane Pulliam:
United States of America
State of Virginia
County of Sussex
To-wit:
I, Jesse Hargrave, Clerk of the Circuit Court of Sussex County, in the State of Virginia, aforesaid, do certify that said Court is a Court of Record, do hereby certify that the following is a true and correct copy of the marriagerecord of William Jennings and Mary J. Pulliam as of record in my said office.
Married January 24, 1724, William Jennings and Mary J. Pulliam, wife’s parents Joseph and Mary Pulliam, husbandâ??s parents Humphrey and Mary Milwood Jennens. Copy from Albemarle Parish Record.
In testimony whereof I have hereto set my hand and affixed the Seal of said Court, this Fourteenth day of January, A.D. 1931, in the 155 year of the Commonwealth.
Jesse Hargrave, Clerk
State of Virginia
County of Sussex
To-wit:
I, M.R. Peterson, sole Judge of the Circuit Court of the County of Sussex, in the State of Virginia, do certify that Jesse Hargrave, who hath given the proceeding certificate is now and was at the time of giving the same, Clerk ofthe said Court, duly elected and qualified; that his signature to said certificate is genuine, and his attestation in due form. Given under my hand, this 14th day of January, 1931.
M.R. Peterson, Judge of the Court aforesaid.
A lawsuit was filed in London on 5 November 1931 based on the above marriage certificate. This claim had been presented often before in the British courts and each time it failed for the same reason: William Jennens, the son of Humphrey Jennens, died in London in 1744 leaving a will in which he mentioned no wife or children. Further, the marriage certificate above has several problems.
:1) The marriage could not have occurred in Sussex County in 1724 for that county was formed from Surry County in 1748.
:2) It purports to be the record of a man of forty-eight years of age who had ten children in thirteen years and then lived to be ninety-nine, an extreme age for those days.
:3) No record of such a marriage is in the Albemarle Parish Register.
:4) It gives the names of the grooms deceased parents. This probably makes it the only marriage certificate of its kind in Virginia.
:5) It is probably inadmissable as court evidence as it was not recorded at the time of the wedding.
Someone probably inserted the record in the Sussex record book without the knowledge of the court’s officers Hargrave and Peterson.
Perpetrators of the fraud even went as far as to erect a gravestone at the ancient site of (Sunnyside), the one-time home of the family.
MARY JANE PULLIAM
1704 - 1774
Of Hanover County
Virginia
COLONEL WILLIAM HENRY
JENNINGS
1676 - 1775
Born in England
Retired British Officer
The Chancery Court of England in 1933 threw out the Jennings inheritance claim again. As reported in the New York Times on 5 February 1933 the Court characterized the claim as (frivolous, vexatious, and an abuse of the court.)
Ironically, several Jennings family genealogists still describe Mary Jane Pulliam’s husband as William Jennings, the son of Humphrey Jennens of Warwickshire. The grave stone even deceived A.B. Cummins, the author of Nottoway County, Virginia. He rediscovered it and reported in his book as a legitimate part of Nottoway County history.
Source:
http://www.gencircles.com/users/bselletti/13/data/12381 ==Sources==
:http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:2778192&id=I536995380
:http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~tmark/JenningsFraud.html
A Genealogical History of the Jennings Families
William Jennings, Mary Jane Pullman in England and Americahttps://tinyurl.com/ydc4ye2d
Name: William Jennings
Birth: 10 NOV 1676 Recorded: Leipfield Cathedral, Yorkshire, England
Death: 1775 Nottoway County, Virginia
WHAT IF ITS NOT A FRAUD There is a record of Humphrey Jennens as father of a William Jennens in Yorkshire. See photo attached
The hundredth anniversary of the arrival in Detroit of the first organized immigration from Germany.
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The husband of the wives of John Smith
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2 [[Smith-87226|John Smith-87226]] b 1619 Providence, Providence, RI d 1684 + [[Gildersleeve-120|Elizabeth Gildersleeve-120]] b 160 England d 1706 Providence, Providence, RI
and 1 [[Smith-14989|John Smith-14989]] (yDNA group NE39) (c1619 ENG -1684 Milford CT) m [[Hawley-293|Grace Hawley-293]]
-2 John Smith (1646 CT - 1732 CT) m Phebe Canfield and 1[[Smith-125056|John ‘Prudence Island’ Smith-125056]] (yDNA group NE64) (c1619-1677 Prudence Island RI) m. [[Unknown-218113|Margaret Unknown-218113]]
-2 John ‘Boston Neck’ Smith (___RI - 1730 RI) m. Phyllis Gerardy
--3 John ‘feather’ Smith (____RI - 1771 RI) m. Mercy Wescott
---4 John ‘ferryman’ Smith (1712 RI - 1782 RI) m. Hannah _____
''''' Discussion of the wives of John Smith-14989 I've noticed the three wives, Margaret Smith
Elizabeth Gildersleive
and Grace Hawley I could make no sense of this until I listed the children sequentially, by Mother and Place of birth Nicholas 1640- Margaret - Milford, New Haven
Ephraim 1644 - Margaret- Milford, New Haven
John 1647 -Margaret- Providence
Leonard 1647- Elizabeth- Providence
Ebenezer 1650- Margaret- Milford New Haven
Benjamin 1651- Elizabeth-
Eleanor 1651 - Elizabeth- Providence
Jeremiah 1652- Margaret- Kingston, RI
Mercy 1652- Margaret- Milford New Haven
Mary 1653- Elizabeth- Providence
Mahitable 1655- Grace - Milford, New Haven
Hannah 1658 - Elizabeth- Portsmouth RI
Hannah 1658- Grace - Portsmouth RI
Then I sorted the children by Mother and put in a speculative marriage date. John Smith married Margaret 1639 New Haven Ct. Margaret aged 20. [[Smith-30129|Smith-30129]] Nicholas 1640- Margaret - Milford, New Haven, Margaret b 1619
Ephraim 1644 - Margaret- Milford, New Haven
Ebenezer 1650- Margaret- Milford New Haven
Jeremiah 1652 -Margaret- Kingston, RI
Mercy 1652- Margaret- Milford New Haven
Daniel 1660- Margaret- Kingston, RI.
John Smith married Elizabeth 1646, Providence RI. Elizabeth aged 16,
[[Gildersleive-1|Gildersleive-1]] Leonard 1647- Elizabeth- Providence Eliz b 1630
Benjamin 1651- Elizabeth
Eleanor 1651 - Elizabeth- Providence
Mary 1653- Elizabeth- Providence
Hannah 1658 - Elizabeth- Portsmouth RI
Joseph 1658- Elizabeth- Providence
John Smith married Grace 1654 New Haven CT/Prov, RI. Grace aged 31,
[[Hawley-293|Hawley-293]] Mahitable 1655- Grace- Milford, New Haven, Grace b 1623
Hannah 1658 -Grace - Portsmouth RI
My limited resources (Ancestry.com) show John marrying all three of them, I searched for marriages of the three women and could find no other sets of husbands for them, so I must assume their marriages were victoms of overenthusiastic genealogists on Ancestry. Clearly the children overlap in sequence. I've found none of the three wives in The Puritan Great Migration. I'm convinced there were three different husbands here, but can find no information to support this. I would welcome any discussion on this, either here or through email, tbredehoft@alink.com. Tom (Bredehoft-6)
The Hutchins Line
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The Importance of Being Earnest 1939
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112 Caunce St, Blackpool, Lancashire, England {|border="1" |First Name||Last Name|| Gender||M/S||Date of Birth||Occupation |- |Edwin||Pick|| Male||M||20 May 1901||Window cleaner heavy work |- |Bertha||Pick|| Female||M||26 Mar 1898||Unpaid Domestic Duties |- |Flora||Williams|| Female||M||18 Mar 1918||Bleach dyer |- |one||person|| redacted||-||-||- |- |Marjorie||Thomson (Payne)|| Female||S||5 Jun 1928||School |- |Lucy A||Griffiths|| Female||S||24? Apr 1909||Actress |- |Margaret||Rutherford|| Female||S||11 May 1892||Actress |} Gielgud, Ashcroft, Hawkins and Howe were lodged together in Park Rd. '''1939 England and Wales Register'''
Park Rd, Blackpool, Lancashire, England {|border="1" |First Name||Last Name|| Gender||M/S||Date of Birth||Occupation |- |Olive||McKenzie|| Female||S||29 Jan 1890||? |- |Jane||McKenzie|| Female||M||26 Nov 1851||? |- |May||Hiles|| Female||M||29 Mar 1893||Unpaid domestic duties |- |Arthur J||Gielgud||Male||S||-||? manager |- |Peggy||Ashcroft (Edith M Hutchinson)|| Female||D||-||Actress |- |John E||Hawkins|| Male||S||-||Actor |- |George W||Howe|| Male||S||19 Apr 1900||Actor |- |Roger||Howard|| Male||S||8 Jan 1883||? |} Evans and Ffrangcon-Davies were staying at Buchannan St. '''1939 England and Wales Register'''
45 Buchanan St, Blackpool, Lancashire, England {|border="1" |First Name||Last Name|| Gender||M/S||Date of Birth||Occupation |- |William||Rafferty|| Male||M||9 Sep 1886||Light general labourer |- |Ellen||Rafferty|| Female||M||6 May 1890||Unpaid domestic duties |- |Mary||Rafferty (Moss)|| Female||S||7 May 1921||Shop assistant |- |Gwen||Ffrangcon-Davies||Female||S||25 Jan 1991||Actress |- |Edith M||Booth|| Female||W||8 Feb 1888||Actress |} John Gielgud volunteered, but was told they were not, at that time, taking men over 35. Later the government decided that most actors were better employed entertaining the troops and workers than fighting. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gielgud Wikipedia: John Gielgud] Jack Hawkins joined the Royal Welsh Fusiliers in 1941 as a lieutenant and served with ENSA in India and the Far East. [https://ww2gravestone.com/people/hawkins-john-edward-jack/ WWII Gravestones.com: Jack Hawkins] George Howe also joined ENSA. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Howe_(actor) Wikipedia: George Howe (actor)] Her talent having finally been recognised by the critics for Miss Prism Margaret Rutherford created the part for which she is best remembered, that of Madame Arcati in [[Coward-591|Noel Coward]]'s "Blythe Spirit", in 1941. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Rutherford Wikipedia: Margaret Rutherford] Edith Evans joined ENSA serving in Gibraltar and India and touring in Britain and Europe. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edith_Evans Wikipedia: Edith Evans] Peggy Ashcroft got married and spent much of the war raising her daughter. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peggy_Ashcroft Wikipedia: Peggy Ashcroft] Gwen Ffrangcon-Davies continued to work on the stage and spent most of 1942 playing Lady Macbeth opposite John Gielgud as Macbeth. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwen_Ffrangcon-Davies Wikipedia: Gwen Ffrangcon-Davies] ==Sources==
The interlinked Andrews, Barbour and Pirrie dynasties of Northern Ireland
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The Windsor Star (Windsor, Ontario, Canada) Tue, May 31, 1910, page 1
{{Newspapers.com|40659568}} (accessed 4 April 2024) === 1884, The Murderer O'Callaghan === * "The Murderer O'Callaghan", ''Detroit Free Press'', Detroit, Michigan, (1884) 14 December 1884, Page 11, {{Newspapers.com|144737515}} === 1886, The Poisoning of Dr. McKay's Cattle === :Dr. McKay, Binbrook :Robert Morrow, the tenant farmer and convicted poisoner * '''1886 Newspaper''': "Newspapers.com"
The Hamilton Spectator (Hamilton, Ontario, Canada) Thu, Dec 23, 1886, page 1
{{Newspapers.com|144707471}} (accessed 3 April 2024) * '''1887 Newspaper''': "Newspapers.com"
The Clinton New Era (Clinton, Ontario, Canada) Fri, Apr 29, 1887, page 3
{{Newspapers.com|144716739}} (accessed 3 April 2024) === 1897, Olive Sternaman === * "Olive Sternaman Will Come", ''The Standard'', St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, (1897) 26 July 1897, Page 1, {{Newspapers.com|144738013}} * "Olive Sternaman Will Come", ''The Standard'', St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, (1897) 26 July 1897, Page 1, {{Newspapers.com|144738013}} === The Disappearance of Maud Gillespie === * "Maud Gillespie Never Found Mother Tells The Story", ''The Toronto Star'', Toronto, Ontario, Canada, (1905) 12 December 1905, Page 4, {{Newspapers.com|144735903}} === Death of the Great Detective === * "Canada's Best Known Detective Is Dead", ''The Windsor Star'', Windsor, Ontario, Canada, (1906) 13 June 1906, Page 1, {{Newspapers.com|144716873}} * "Sleuthed His Last Criminal", ''The Hamilton Spectator'', Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, (1906) 13 June 1906, Page 7, {{Newspapers.com|144735743}} * "John Wilson Murray's will", ''The Ottawa Journal'', Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, (1906) 25 June 1906, Page 5, {{Newspapers.com|54997712}} * '''Wikipedia entry''': Wikipedia contributors, "John Wilson Murray"
[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John_Wilson_Murray&oldid=1189273123 ''Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia''] (accessed 3 April 2024) * [http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/murray_john_wilson_13E.html John Wilson Murray, Biographi.ca]
The Irish immigration into Pasmaquoddy, Maine
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The Island Project
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The Jalakeli Project
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The James Cash Genealogy (1834-1977) by Anna Courtney Hunt
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The James' in Humphreys County, Tennessee
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The Jan Van Hoesen House
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The Jefferson Image in the American Mind
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The Jeffersons of Westward. Part I
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The Jeffersons of Westward. Part II
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The Jelbert Society (1993 - 2006)
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'' ''Per pale argent and sable, a fess nebulee''
''between three garbs all counterchanged'' }} The Society no longer exists. Brian's brother Roger created and maintained the original [http://www.rogerj.co.uk/jelbsoc.htm website] in Brian's memory. To help bring it to a wider audience, and to allow for the original website to be taken down,we have created this free-space-page on Wikitree. It starts out as a faithful copy of the original. == Background == The Jelbert Society was a worldwide family history society founded by Brian Jelbert, [[Jelbart-157|Ralph Jelbart]] and [[Wilson-79903|Rob Wilson]] to co-ordinate genealogical research and provide a social network for members of the Jelbert/Jilbert/Jelbart families with roots in south west Cornwall, England. The Society was founded in 1993 and by 1995 Brian had created his website at www.boswarva.demon.co.uk which included the dedicated Jelbert Society pages. Soon contact had been made with other enthusiastic J*lb*rts and by and by 1998 there were around 85 members in the UK, Australia, New Zealand, the USA and Canada. The majority are recorded in the computerised database which has more than 4,500 entries. Brian died in June 2005 and it seems that by this time people were drifting away. Karol, Brian's wife, tells me that even Brian had felt the Society had done everything it could and it had run its course. Probably the Society's activities were at their peak in the mid to late 1990s. In April 1995 a successful Society gathering was staged in Marazion, Cornwall. It was attended by over 100 people including members from New Zealand and the USA. Such was its success that another gathering was held on Easter Sunday 1998. == The Society Gatherings == {{Image|file=The_Jelbert_Society_1993_-_2006-1.jpg |caption=(left to right) Roger Jelbart, Brian Jelbert and Ralph Jelbart at the 1998 'gathering' at Marazion, Cornwall. }} Ralph Jelbart remained the Society Hon. Sec. and editor until it closed in 2005. Listen to Radio Cornwall's report of the 1998 gathering. TODO - store the file at archive.org/Consider change to mp3 == Parish & Other Records == In general the parish records naming the J*lb*rt families date from the late 16th century but as they are incomplete, it is not possible to trace ancestries back beyond about 1600. The J*lb*rt name variations occur because literacy was not what it is today and travelling registrars, not conversant with local families, just wrote down what they thought they heard. No doubt a strong Cornish accent may also have been a factor. {{Image|file=Jelbert_Society_photos.jpg |align=r |size=m |caption= }} The earliest J*lb*rt tree begins in the parish of Gulval, near Penzance, with the baptism of [[Jelbart-152|John (Jelbart) Gelbert (1605-1665)]] on 15 November 1605. The burial of his father ([[Jelbard-13|Jacobi (Jelbard) Jelbart (abt.1575-1616)]]) is also recorded in the same parish records on 26 February 1615/16. Other trees begin in the parishes of Morvah, St Just, Zennor and Illogan but most of our members are descended from the Gulval/Madron/St Hilary and Morvah/St Buryan trees. It is probable that the Morvah, Zennor and St Just trees originated in Gulval but it has not yet been possible to prove this conclusively. Brian also held a number of other records including extracts from the parish records and memorial inscriptions for the parishes in south west Cornwall, census return extracts for the years 1841-1891 and various wills, many of which have been transcribed. == Boswarva Carn == {{Image|file=Jelbert_Society_photos-1.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption= }} Boswarva Carn is about one mile north of the village of Madron in Cornwall and gave its name to the farm that was the home of William Jelbart (1677-1738). William was the ancestor of many of the Gulval, Madron and St Hiliary families. == In Conclusion == Brian was the last spark in the embers of the Jelbert Society and it appeared that the Society has now run its course . Brian's death and the subsequent closing of Brian's popular web site in May 2006, finalised matters. His family and I do not want to his work of thirty years to be forgotten and I have therefore created this page (which largely incorporates material from the original site) in his memory. There were many others who gave their time and effort and enthusiastically helped Brian with the Societies work. Allison Jilbert, Richard Jilbert, Ralph Jelbart and Ron Jelbart to name but four. No doubt the occasional Jelbert, Jilbert or Jelbart will come across this site and find the information below of immense value to them. == Family Histories == The five main J*lb*rt Families can be viewed through the following links. Each link shows family members up to about 1900 to avoid publishing details of individuals who may still be living. It may still be possible to answer some queries about the Society's past work; in the first instance email me *[https://archive.org/details/jus-4241 The Descendants of Jacobi Jelbarte - The Gulval/Madron/St Hilary Families] *[https://archive.org/details/mor-341 The Descendants of Thomas Gilbart - The Morvah/St Buryan Family] *[https://archive.org/details/zen-2304 The Descendants of Samuell Gilbert - The Zennor Family] *[https://archive.org/details/ill-2596 The Descendants of John Gilbart - The Illogan Family] *[https://archive.org/details/jus-4241 The Descendants of John Gilbert - The St Just Family] Files are in .rtf format and may be downloaded and saved for viewing later. [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Transportation_and_Travelling_Conditions_for_Immigration_to_Australia_in_the_1800s Transportation and Travelling Conditions for Immigration to Australia in the 1800s]
The Jermys and Larners of Oxfordshire
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THE JOHN DAVID FAMILY
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The John Endres Chapel
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The John Frost Family
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The John Frost Family -1
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The John Housels of Milton, Chillisquaque, Lewisburg, West Buffalo, etc. of Pennsylvania
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The John Margerrisons of Brampton Derbyshire 1668-1729
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The John of England, 1638, immigration
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The John Wesley Boys
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The Johns
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The Johnson Family Record
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The Jones' of Harlan County, Kentucky
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The Jungbluth Family Book
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The Jungle North Trenance Farm Bulawayo
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The Jury Lists of South Carolina, 1778-1779
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The Kennedys
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The Kentucky Land Grants 1782-1924
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The Kentucky Migration from St. Mary's County Maryland 1785-1818
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The Kings Champion
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The Kinney Family of Louisa County, Virginia
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His will was probated in 1806, so Betty and her offspring would have been free blacks in Louisa County after that date. This page is an attempt to sort them out, try to identify family units, and determine what happened to the Kinney family. His brother, Charles, whose will is dated 12 Aug 1810, contains a provision for William Kinney. "I give to William Kinney two hundred dollars on account of his fidelity to and friendship for, me." What follows is a table to display the data that has been discovered about the various Kinneys that show up in the records of Louisa County. '''Some notes about the table.''' * All documents were obtained from the [http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:8881/R/7NU34N2PUPA34JMP9FKQR8HYTC4AJ2YFYLNH2NTDFHIUMHEMBQ-00679?func=search-simple Library of Virginia Digital Collection] * Each reference is a link to the primary source document (or a transcript of the primary document) from which these data have been extracted. * If a year appears in a column, the year was calculated by subtracting the age of the person as listed in the document from the year the document was created. You will notice a remarkable consistency in the birth years with a few minor exceptions. * Cells with an asterisk in them mean that the person was listed in the document with no other information than their name. * Spinster means they worked in the weaving industry. A huge thank you to [[Parks-2399|Kathie Forbes]] who provided this information in [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1492853/all-women-regardless-of-age-are-spinsters?show=1492890#a1492890 answer to a question] I posted in G2G. * If your browser doesn't render the table correctly, click on the screenshot on the right to view it in it's intended form. {| border="1" class="wikitable" ! 1851It is my will and desire that the following slaves be emancipated. Betty Kinney her son Billy Kinney, her daughter Sally Kinney with the children of said Sally Kinney, to wit, Louisa, John, David, Amelia & Sam and every other child or children which she may hereafter have and hereby do emancipate and set free the said Betty Kinney, Billy Kinney, Sally Kinney and the said children of Sally Kinney Louisa, John, David, Amelia & Sam.
It is my will that any executors hereafter named should lay off and allot to the said Betty Kinney, Billy Kinney, Sally Kinney and the said children of Sally Kinney fifty acres of land off the tract I now live on at such place as my excrs may think proper whereon they may reside during the life time of Sally Kinney, and at her death I give the said fifty acres of land to her two daughters Louisa & Amelia and their heirs forever.
It is my will and desire that the sons of Sally Kinney that is to say John, David & Sam, after being educated? in the common manner that children are educated in this part of the County at the expense of my estate be bound to some trade such as my executor may think best, wishing my said executors to take into consideration their future welfare more than their present ease and convenience.
I give to Lousia Kinney and Amelia Kinney the sum of twenty five pounds each when they come of age respectively.
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140229&custom_att_2=direct Free Negro Lists for Louisa County, 1851] !! Birth Year !! Occupation !! 1852
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1132544&custom_att_2=direct List of Free Negroes above 12 years of age within the district of the undersigned Com. Rev. in the year 1852] !! 1853
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1132547&custom_att_2=direct Report of Free Negroes over 12 years of age for 1853] !! 1854
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1132550&custom_att_2=direct List of Free Negroes for 1854] !! 1855
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140232&custom_att_2=direct List of Free Negroes North Side 1855] !! 1856
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140226&custom_att_2=direct Free Negroes South Side 1856] !! 1857
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140223&custom_att_2=direct Free Negroes North Side 1857] !! 1858
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140220&custom_att_2=direct List of Free Negroes 1858] !! 1859
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140217&custom_att_2=direct A List of Free Negroes within the District of John R. Quarles, Commisioner of the Revenue in the County of Louisa in the year 1859] !! 1860
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140214&custom_att_2=direct List of Free Negroes 1860] !! 1861
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140211&custom_att_2=direct Free Negroes 1861] !! 1862
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140208&custom_att_2=direct Free Negroes 1862] !! 1863
[http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1140205&custom_att_2=direct Free Negroes 1863] |- | [[Kinney-4311|Betty Kinney]] || 1745? || || || || || || || || || || || || || |- | [[Kinney-4317|Martha Ann Kinney]] || 1774 || Spinster || || || || || || || || || || || || |- | [[Kinney-4312|William Kinney]] || 1776 || Farmer || 1776 || || || || || || || || || || || |- | Fanny Kinney || 1781 || Spinster || 1781 || 1781 || 1781 || 1781 || 1781 || 1781 || 1781 || 1781 || || || || |- | John Kinney || 1781 || Vagabond || 1781 || 1781 || || || || || || || || || || |- | Jona Kinney || 1791 || Spinster || 1781 || || || || || || || || || || || |- | [[Kinney-4318|Jane Kinney]] || 1791 || Spinster || || 1791 || || || || || || || || || || |- | Sam Kinney || || || 1791 || 1791 || 1791 || || || || || || || || || |- | Louisa Kinney || 1794 || Spinster || 1794 || 1794 || || 1793 || || || || || || || || |- | James Kinney || 1795 || Blacksmith || 1795 || 1795 || || || || || || || || || || |- | Marcia Smith Overton || 1794 || || || || || || || || || || || || || |- | John Willis || 1798 || || || || || || || || || || || || || |- | Fleming Kinney || 1806 || Ditcher || || || || || || || || || || || || |- | Polly Kinney || 1806 || Spinster || 1807 || 1806 || || || || || || || || || || |- | Jane Kinney || || || || || || || 1808 || || || || || || || |- | Erasmus Ben Kinney || 1811 || Farmer || 1811 || 1811 || 1811 || 1811 || 1812 || 1811 || 1811 || || 1811 || 1811 || * || * |- | John W. Kinney || 1815 || Blacksmith || 1815 || 1815 || 1815 || 1815 || 1814 || 1817 || 1817 || 1817 || 1814 || 1814 || 1814 || |- | Harriet Kinney || 1816 || Spinster || 1816 || 1816 || 1816 || 1816 || 1816 || 1816 || 1816 || 1819 || 1816 || 1816 || 1816 || 1816 |- | Harrison Kinney || 1821 || Blacksmith || 1822 || 1822 || 1822 || || 1818 || 1818 || 1818 || 1818 || || 1818 || || * |- | Robert Kinney || 1821 || Labourer || 1821 || 1821 || 1821 || 1821 || 1821 || 1821 || 1821 || 1821 || 1821 || 1821 || 1821 || * |- | Charles Kinney || 1821 || Farmer || 1821 || 1821 || || 1821 || 1821 || || || || || || || * |- | Martha Kinney || 1823 || Spinster || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 || 1823 |- | Andrew Kinney || 1826 || Blacksmith || 1826 || 1826 || 1826 || 1826 || || || || || || 1824 || * || * |- | Charles A. Kinney || 1826 || Labourer || 1826 || 1826 || 1826 || 1826 || || 1826 || 1826 || 1826 || 1826 || 1826 || 1826 || 1826 |- | Martha A. Kinney || 1829 || Spinster || 1832 || 1829 || 1829 || 1830 || 1830 || 1830 || 1830 || 1830 || 1830 || 1829 || 1830 || 1830 |- | Frances Kinney || 1830 || Spinster || 1820 || 1820 || 1820 || 1820 || 1820 || || || || || || || |- | Eliza A. Kinney || 1830 || Spinster || 1830 || 1830 || || 1830 || || || || || || || || |- | Susan J. Kinney || 1832 || Spinster || 1832 || 1832 || 1832 || || || || || || 1836 || 1836 || || |- | Permelia Kinney || 1833 || Spinster || 1833 || 1833 || || || || || || || || || || |- | Mary F. Kinney || 1835 || Spinster || 1835 || 1835 || 1835 || 1835 || 1835 || || || || || || || |- | Lucy Kinney || || || || || || 1834 || 1835 || 1835 || 1835 || 1835 || 1837 || 1837 || 1837 || |- | Luther Kinney || 1836 || Farmer || 1836 || 1836 || || || || || || || || || || |- | Charles H. Kinney || 1839 || || 1839 || 1839 || 1839 || 1839 || 1839 || || || || || || || |- | Joseph Kinney || 1839 || || 1839 || 1839 || 1839 || 1838 || 1839 || 1839 || 1839 || 1839 || || || || |- | John William Kinney || || Blacksmith || || || || 1839 || 1840 || 1840 || 1840 || 1840 || || || || |- | Alfred Kinney || || Blacksmith || || || || || || 1840 || 1840 || 1840 || || || || |- | Quarles Jane Kinney || || Labourer || || || || || || || || 1846 || 1846 || 1846 || 1846 || |- | Sarah Jane Kinney || || || || || || || || || || || || 1848 || 1848 || |} Another source of information was free negro registrations for Louisa CountyThanks goes to volunteer Cheryl Holtzbach for transcribing the entirety of these records and indexing them., “Louisa County Free Black Register Master Index and Complete Text,” Piedmont Virginia Digital History: The Land Between the Rivers , accessed December 13, 2022, http://www.piedmontvahistory.org/archives14/items/show/636. That yielded a few matches with the first set of records as well as confirmation of some familial relationships. The page numbers correspond with the records that can be seen when viewing the pdf file linked in the referenced webpage. {| border="1" class="wikitable" ! Name !! Page # !! Reg. Date !! Age !! Birth Year !! Parent !! Page # !! Reg. Date !! Age !! Birth Year !! Page # !! Reg. Date !! Age !! Birth Year |- | Isaac Kinney || 13 || 25 Jun 1817 || 33 || 1784 || || || || || || || || || |- | David Kinney || 17 || 30 Dec 1817 || 23 || 1794 || || 49 || 28 Jul 1824 || 29 || 1795 || 295 || || 50 || |- | Fontaine M. Kinney || 32 || 8 Jun 1820 || 22 || 1798 || || 187 || 12 Oct 1835 || 38 || 1797 || 391 || 14 Oct 1850 || 53 || 1797 |- | William Kinney || 62 || 29 May 1826 || 21 || 1805 || Phillis Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | John Kinney || 67 || 13 Aug 1827 || 25 || 1802 || Amy Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Isaac Kinney || 75 || 13 Sep 1829 || 24 || 1805 || Amey Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | James Kinney || 82 || 9 Jul 1830 || 27 || 1803 || Amy Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | David Kinney || 88 || 10 Jan 1831 || || || Amey Kinney || 204 || 6 Jan 1837 || || || || || || |- | William Kinney || 154 || 12 Oct 1833 || 21 || 1812 || Sally Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Wesley Thornton Kinney || 156 || 12 Nov 1833 || 23 || 1810 || || || || || || || || || |- | Jane Kinney || 226 || 8 Feb 1839 || 50 || 1789 || Betsey Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Alexander Kinney || 320 || 9 Jan 1847 || 22 || 1825 || Jinney Kinney || 396 || 11 Oct 1850 || 25 || 1825 || || || || |- | Lucy Kinney || 322 || 5 May 1847 || 35 || 1812 || || || || || || || || || |- | Willie Myra Kinney || 323 || 5 May 1847 || 9 || 1838 || Lucy Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Mary Ellen Kinney || 324 || 5 May 1847 || 1 || 1846 || Lucy Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Martha Kinney || 329 || 8 May 1847 || 11 || 1836 || Ann Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Charles Kinney || 330 || 8 May 1847 || 26 || 1821 || Louisa Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Washington Kinney || 331 || 10 May 1847 || 18 || 1829 || Polly Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Fleming Kinney || 338 || 11 Dec 1847 || 43 || 1805 || Betsey Kinney || 372 || 13 May 1850 || 42 || 1808 || || || || |- | Joney Kinney || 354 || 9 Jul 1849 || 70 || 1779 || || || || || || || || || |- | Harriet Kinney || 355 || 9 Jul 1849 || 29 || 1820 || Joney Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Sally Kinney || 357 || 10 Sep 1849 || 24 || 1825 || Beckey Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Nancy Kinney || 358 || 10 Sep 1849 || 23 || 1826 || Beckey Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Ella Kinney || 359 || 10 Sep 1849 || 11 || 1838 || Beckey Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Polly Kinney || 381 || 9 Sep 1850 || 38 || 1812 || || || || || || || || || |- | Elliza Kinney || 382 || 9 Sep 1850 || 20 || 1830 || || || || || || || || || |- | Margaret Willie Kinney || 383 || 9 Sep 1850 || 18 || 1832 || || || || || || || || || |- | Pamelia Ann Kinney || 384 || 9 Sep 1850 || 17 || 1833 || || || || || || || || || |- | Louisa Kinney || 385 || 9 Sep 1850 || 56 || 1794 || || || || || || || || || |- | John W. Kinney || 390 || 11 Oct 1850 || 36 || 1814 || || 625 || 13 Apr 1863 || 49 || 1814 || || || || |- | Harrison Kinney || 395 || 11 Oct 1850 || 30 || 1820 || || || || || || || || || |- | David Kinney || 406 || 10 Feb 1851 || 50 || 1801 || || || || || || || || || |- | Luther Kinney || 530 || 10 Oct 1853 || 13 || 1840 || || || || || || || || || |- | Frances Kinney || 553 || 9 Oct 1854 || 36 || 1818 || || || || || || || || || |- | James Kinney || 554 || 9 Oct 1854 || 8 || 1846 || || || || || || || || || |- | Jane Kinney || 555 || 9 Oct 1854 || 10 || 1844 || || || || || || || || || |- | John Kinney || 556 || 9 Oct 1854 || 5 || 1849 || || || || || || || || || |- | Mary Kinney || 557 || 9 Oct 1854 || 13 || 1841 || || || || || || || || || |- | Charles Henry Kinney || 560 || 13 Nov 1855 || 15 || 1840 || || || || || || || || || |- | John William Kenney || 595 || 14 Feb 1859 || 19 || 1840 || John Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Quarles Kinney || 599 || 12 Sep 1859 || 14 || 1845 || John Kinney || || || || || || || || |- | Sarah Jane Kinney || 600 || 12 Sep 1859 || 12 || 1847 || John Kinney || || || || || || || || |} Some thoughts on slavery in Louisa County, Virginia in the early years of the United States. * 1723 - "The Virginia colony enacted laws to limit the increase of free negroes to those who were born into that class or manumitted by special acts of the legislature. Free negroes were denied the right to vote and forbidden to carry weapons of any sort".[https://www.shsu.edu/~jll004/vabeachcourse_spring09/bacons_rebellion/slavelawincolonialvirginiatimeline.pdf Slave Law in Colonial Virginia: A Timeline] * 1779 - Free negroes, slaves, and servants were not required by law to acknowledge the existence of a diety[[#laws|The statutes at large: being a collection of all the laws of Virginia]], p. 2260 * 1779 - Mulattos were defined in law as at least one-quarter black[[#laws|The statutes at large: being a collection of all the laws of Virginia]], p. 3465 * 1785 - Sheriffs were required, once a month, to "vist all negro quarters" to check for passes[[#laws|The statutes at large: being a collection of all the laws of Virginia]], p. 317 * 1788 - Free blacks, mulattos, and slaves cannot be called as witnesses at trial except in the trial of another black[[#laws|The statutes at large: being a collection of all the laws of Virginia]], p. 10,155 * 1790s - Free Blacks and the Registration Process in Nineteenth Century Virginia[http://www2.vcdh.virginia.edu/fbr/About.shtml Free Black Registers, Albemarle County :: Following the moral doctrines of human rights and freedom embraced in the American Revolution, in 1782 the Commonwealth of Virginia passed an act authorizing and permitting the manumission of slaves. As a result, in the ensuing decade the free black population of Virginia grew rapidly. Reacting to white concern about the increasing numbers of free blacks, in the 1790s the Virginia Legislature began to impose far reaching legal controls on its free black citizens. In 1793, the Virginia General Assembly passed a law prohibiting the immigration of free blacks into the Commonwealth. During the same year, the Legislature also passed a law requiring all free blacks to register with the local court every three years. Once a free black citizen registered with the court, a legal record was created documenting their status. A formal list, or register, of free blacks for each year was kept by the court, the registration was subsequently copied into the court records (Minutes Books), and a copy of the registration was given to the individual. The copy of the registration, commonly referred to as ‘free papers,’ allowed blacks to prove their freedom and were required to be produced upon demand. Failure to register could result in fines or imprisonment. :: The registration system established by the Commonwealth in 1793 was the legal foundation for controlling the free black population of Virginia. Throughout the pre-war nineteenth century, free black citizens in Virginia faced a concerted governmental effort, at both the state and local level, to restrict their liberties. * An act passed in 1801 by the Virginia legislature required commissioners of the revenue annually to return a complete list of all free African Americans within their districts, with their names, sex, place of abode, and trades, and a copy of the list to be fixed at the courthouse door[[#laws|The statutes at large: being a collection of all the laws of Virginia]], * 1821 Virginia Attorney General's written opinion[https://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/a4_2_1s16.html William Wirt, Rights of Free Negroes in Virginia, 7 Nov. 18211 Ops. Atty. Gen. 506] # They can vote at no election, although they may be freeholders. #They are incapable of any office of trust or profit, civil or military. # They are not competent witnesses against a white man in any case, civil or criminal. # They are not enrolled in the militia, are incapable of bearing arms, and are forbidden even to have in their possession military weapons, under the penalties of forfeiture and whipping. # They are subject to severe corporal punishment for raising their hand against a white man, except in defence against a wanton assault. # They are incapable of contracting marriage with a white woman, and the attempt is severely punished. * 1862 Free negroes were impressed into service building fortifications for the Confederacy. This included four of the Kinney men [http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1150927&custom_att_2=direct Enrollment of Free Negroes for Public Services, 1862 Octr 14th Filed] == Sources ==
The Kirk Family - In America
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The Knewstubbs of Port Chalmers, by Judy Knox
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The 'Lady Milton'
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The Lairds of Burnside
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The Lairds of Hunterston Castle
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The Lands of Princeton Indiana
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The Lands of William Phillips with Carhart Genealogical Deductions
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The Langsdorf Family History : From Germany to America
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'''The Langsdorf Family History : From Germany to America.''' Madison, Wisconsin, USA. All rights reserved; family use of excerpts is permitted. * [https://a.co/d/5YJNIfk Link to purchase on Amazon] * Note: book is priced at the minimum allowable rate and without royalties to the authors, to encourage family members to enjoy the book. Dear Family Members, We are thrilled to share with you our family history book, a collaborative effort that celebrates our shared heritage and memories. As co-authors of this book, we grant you permission to use small portions of the text and photos contained within for personal, non-commercial purposes. You are welcome to share excerpts of the text and photos with other family members, use them in family newsletters, create digital or physical scrapbooks, or incorporate them into family presentations or projects. However, please note that this permission is limited to personal use within our family circle; and in profiles on wikitree.com. We kindly ask that you respect the copyright of the material and attribute it appropriately to our family history book. (We have provided a sample of text for attribution at the top of the page.) If you have any questions about the use of specific content or need assistance, please don't hesitate to reach out to us. Thank you for your understanding and cooperation. Let's continue to cherish and preserve our family heritage together. Warm regards,
Patricia Applequist Shauer
[[Langsdorf-34|Deborah Langsdorf Gunther]] (link to her profile)
Patricia Langsdorf Jones
Leo Harold Frank == Pohl Göns == The Langsdorf family originated in this small farming community, due north of Frankfurt, Germany. Today it's accessible by taking the train from Frankfurt, getting off in Butzbach, and finding private transportation (or taking a long walk.) The town wasn't destroyed in either of the World Wars, so it still has many charming timbered houses, along with the original church. The family's surnames are present on plaques in the church, listing the dead from both World Wars and another, less famous war. They're also present in the cemetery, where the graves of the war dead are preserved. Per tradition, the graves of other people are eventually dug up and repurposed, so there are no other historical grave markers. {{Image|file=The_Langsdorf_Family_History_From_Germany_to_America.jpg |caption=Pohl Göns Evangelical Church }}
The Last Will & Testament of Alexander C. Garrigus
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The Last Will & Testament of Francis Garrigues
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The Last Will & Testament of Hannah S. Garrigues-1
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The Last Will & Testament of Henry Robinson
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The Last Will & Testament of Nancy Ann (née Mercer) Byers
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The Last Will &Testament of David Garrigus
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The Last Will and Testament of Beulah Garrigues
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The Last Will and Testament of Eliza Garrigues
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The Last Will and Testament of Hannah Garrigues
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The Last Will and Testament of Hannah S Garrigues
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The Last Will and Testament of Job Allyn
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The Last Will and Testament of Lydia H. Garrigues
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The Last Will and Testament of Rebecca S Hart
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The Last Will and Testament of Robert Parry Young 1797
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The Last Will and Testament of Sarah Garrigues
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The Last Will and Testament of the Right Honorable Charles Fitzroy
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(Not all persons mentioned received bequests; some are included to clarify relationships & business associates.) # [[FitzRoy-113|Charles Augustus Fitzroy]], eldest son: £12,400, a Mortgage of £5,000 ("transferred as his Mothers fortune in 1795") on the the late Sir Thomas Broughton's estates, a share of the residue of FitzRoy's funded property, and half of any balance left after settling the affairs of the 48th regiment. # [[Mundy-470|E. M. Mundy [Esquire]]] (Edward Miller Mundy, father of his late wife Frances Mundy) # [[Delves-Broughton-11|Sir Thomas Broughton]] (The Reverend Sir Thomas Broughton), mortgagee # [[Delves-Broughton-10|Lieutenant General Sir John-Delves Broughton [Baronet]]], mortagee # [[FitzRoy-220|Frances (FitzRoy) Rice-Trevor]], eldest daughter: £1,000, having "already received five thousand pounds at her Marriage." # [[Fitzroy-280|Emily]], youngest daughter (deceased) # [[FitzRoy-253|George Fitzroy]], second son: £6,562, the balance of FitzRoy's accounts in the Bank of England, two each of saddles, bridles, and horse cloths, and half of any balance left after settling the affairs of the 48th regiment. # [[FitzRoy-145|Robert Fitzroy]], third son: £6,562 and a £13,200 share in the Earl of Tankerville's mortgage 1 1/2 years after FitzRoy's death. # The Earl of Tankerville ([[Bennet-975|Charles Augustus Bennet]], 5th Earl of Tankerville), mortgagee # Georgiana Brown, maid to Lady Frances: £200 # Hugh Hoare ([[Hoare-1661|Henry Hugh Hoare]], 3rd Baronet, partner in Hoare's Bank) # Hugh Richard Hoare (4th Baronet, partner in Hoare's Bank) # William Everett, a manservant at Ampton: £100 and all FitzRoy's clothes # Daniel Johnson, a servant at Ampton: £25 and all the saddles, bridles and horse cloths (except two of each for George's use) # The Duke of Grafton, [[Fitzroy-91|George Henry Fitzroy]], eldest brother: Father's picture by [John] Hoppner # [[Smyth-1870|George Wilson]], nephew: Millers Gardeners Dictionary # [[Rice-12187|the Honorable George Rice-Trevor]], son-in-law: all the Claret & Champagne in the cellar, two Globes in the Library, and Chauchard's Map of Germany # Mrs. Short, housekeeper: £40 and his old watch # Thomas Elston: £10 # Sam Ellis: £10 # Samuel Shakshaft: the balance of the money he was already given # Thomas Rogers: 2% share from the sale of the farm, a stock cow, hay, wagons, carts and all other farming instruments # Colonel Wood # Jane Allen: £20 in addition to the amount already given # John Parkinson, signatory # Alexander Rainy, signatory # John Trouhard Pinkard, Doctor of Law ==Charles FitzRoy's Last Will and Testament== [''right margin, in formal calligraphy'':
The Right [Honorable]
'''CHARLES'''
'''FITZROY'''
commonly called
'''LORD'''
'''CHARLES'''
'''FITZROY'''
a General in His Majesty's Forces,
17]
'''I CHARLES FITZROY''' of Wicken in Northamptonshire
commonly called Lord Charles Fitzroy declare this to be my last will written
by my own hand on the twelfth of October and partly on following day in
the year of our blessed Lord and Savior one thousand eight hundred &
twenty nine. My oldest son '''Charles Augustus Fitzroy''' is entitled under
my Marriage Settlement of 1795 to a balance of Twelve thousand four
hundred pounds out of seventeen thousand five hundred pounds settled
upon the children or child of that Marriage he having already received
five thousand one hundred pounds ''from''^''it'' I also leave to my son Charles
Augustus a Mortgage of five thousand pounds which was transfered
to me as his Mothers fortune by her father '''E. M. Mundy [Esquire]''' in 1795 on
the estates of the late '''Sir Thomas Broughton''' but now belonging to
his successor '''Lieutenant General Sir John Delves Broughton [Baronet]''' I
also leave to the above named Charles Augustus a share of the residue
of my funded property as will be presently mentioned after all legacies
debts and other necessary expenses shall have been paid.
''the erasure of the above was made by me Charles Fitzroy 1879''
the children of my second Marriage in 1799 '''My daughter Frances'''
received five thousand pounds at her Marriage instead of her share which
would have been four thousand three hundred and seventy five pounds
since that time. '''My blessed Daughter Emily''' has died so that there
remains thirteen thousand one hundred and twenty five pounds to be
divided between her two Brothers George & Robert in addition to this
I leave to '''my son George Fitzroy''' whatever sum in Bank of England
that I may be possessed of at my death. I leave to '''my son Robert Fitzroy'''
the Mortgage or share of Mortgage which I have upon the '''Earl of '''
'''Tankerville's''' estates amounting to about thirteen thousand two hundred
pounds this however is not to become his property till the expiration of
one year and a half from my death . The interest during that time
to be added to the residue of the funded property. I also leave Robert
my gold watch. My Daughter Frances being comparatively better off
than her Brother I leave her one thousand pounds as a small
testimony of my affection, trusting that her husband will let her
have the interest of it in addition to her pin money till he becomes
Lord Dynevor or till he falls into full possession of the Broughton
Estate in either of which cases or upon her previous death I am sure
he will have no objection to transfer the principal to my son Charles
[PAGE 2]
or his heirs. I leave two hundred pounds to '''Georgiana Brown''' out of which
I have considered already her own having been given to her at ^''her'' Mistress's
death in 1810 and for which at her own desire I have paid the
interest only. I also leave in trust to '''Hugh Hoare [Esquire]''' of Fleet Street and his
son '''Hugh Richard Hoare''' one thousand pounds for the use of the
above named Georgiana Brown for her life the interest to be paid
half yearly three Months after it is due at her death the principal to
become the property of my oldest son Charles or his heirs To the two
other servants who were in my family at Ampton I leave (first) to
'''William Everett''' in return for his great attention to me during my
illness one hundred pounds and all my clothes of every description. To
'''Daniel Johnson''' I leave twenty five pounds he has a family to provide
for. And also (when the stable is cleared) all the saddles, bridles and horse
cloths with the exception of such two of each as my son George may keep
for his own use the Carriage Harness to remain with the phaeton I
beg '''my Brother the Duke of Grafton''' to accept our Father's picture by Hoppner
I wish I had a Horse worth his acceptance '''my Nephew George Wilson'''
will perhaps accept my Millers Gardeners Dictionary as a small token
of my affectionate remembrance from an old friend and Uncle To my
son in law '''the Honorable George Rice Trevor''' I leave all the Claret
& Champagne in my cellar the two Globes in the Library and
Chauchard's Map of Germany. '''Mrs. Short''' has higher wages than the
rest with full means of saving half of them To '''Thomas Elston''' & '''John'''
'''Webb''' ten pounds each and the same to '''Sam Ellis''' To '''Samuel Shakshaft'''
the balance which he has in hand according to the present value of the
funds I think there will remain a small balance of my funded property
to which the year and a half's interest kept back from Lord Tankerville's
Mortgage is also to be added whatever this may be after the above named
legacies debts (of which I have none beyond common annual bills) funeral
expenses ^'''+''' of keeping Wicken house & Garden to the earliest period at which
[''Margin note'':
'''+'''
and the necessary
Expenses
(Interlined in the
original will)]
it can be given up are paid it may accumulate till the expiration of
the second year from the day of my death my Executor (there is no Man
more honorable) will then make an equal division of this residue
between his brother Charles Augustus and himself. I name & appoint my
son George Fitzroy my sole Executor and residuary Legatee consequently
whatever is in the house (with the exception of the few articles left as
legacies from the Cellar or Library) in the Stable and Garden & on the Farm
are his subject to rent tithe & rates being paid out of it and a gift to '''Thomas'''
'''Rogers''' of two percent out of the clear produce of the sale of Farming two
stock cow hay (not in stable rick paid) Waggons Carts and all other
Farming Implements the Farm of Course to be given up as soon as
possible there may also remain a balance in the hands of [Messieurs] Greenwood
Cox & Co after all the regimental concerns of the 48th are wound up If any
doubt should arise as to the exact meaning of any thing I have written
above I wish it to be referred to my Brother the Duke of Grafton and '''Colonel'''
'''Wood''' if one only is alive or in England and their or his decision
within four days to be final the above Will written entirely with my own
hand is hereby signed by me this seventeenth day of October in the
year of our blessed Lord & Saviour Jesus Christ one thousand eight hundred
and twenty nine _{{signed} ''Charles Fitzroy'' }_
the Testator and
Will and Testament this eighth day of December one thousand eight hundred
and twenty nine in the presence of us who in his presence at his request
and in the presence of each other do hereunto subscribe our names as Witnesses
the several erasures and interlineations opposite to which the Testator has put
his initials been first made_ {{signed} ''Jno Parkinson'' } // {{signed} ''Alexander Rainy'' }
[PAGE 3]
a Codicil to the above Will '''I GIVE''' to my Housekeeper Mrs Short forty pounds and my old watch for her
attentive service to me and I give to '''Jane Allen''' the sum of twenty pounds in
addition to what I have already given her and it is my will the the
one thousand pounds given by my Will for my Daughter should be paid
to her absolutely on her own receipt and not be subject to the contingency
or Trust mentioned in my Will but be paid as an absolute legacy as
witness my hand this eight day of December one thousand eight hundred
and twenty nine. {{signed} ''Charles Fitzroy'' }_ Signed and published by Lord Charles
Fitzroy the Testator in the presence of us who in his presence at his request
and in the presence of each other do hereunto subscribe our names as
Witnesses_ {{signed} ''Jno Parkinson'' } // {{signed} ''Alexander Rainy'' } '''PROVED''' at London with a Codicil 29th December 1829 before the
Worshipful John Trouhard Pinkard Doctor of Law and Surrogate by the
oath of George Fitzroy Esquire the son and sole Executor to whom
administration was granted having been first sworn duly to administer. ==Notes of Interest== * '''Gold repeater watch''' (struck through, possibly the same watch later bequeathed to Mrs Short)''':''' A repeater watch can chime the hour, quarter-hour, or minutes at the press of a button or lever, allowing the wearer to determine the time in the dark. They were expensive status symbols due to the difficulty of fitting the extra mechanical complication into the pocket watch. A few repeater wristwatches are still made today.'''Notes: repeater watch:''' Wikipedia contributors, "Repeater (horology)," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Repeater_(horology)&oldid=1126112930 (accessed July 28, 2023). * '''Chauchard's Map of Germany''' (to George Rice-Trevor)''':''' '''Notes: map bequest:''' Chauchard, Jean Baptiste Hippolyte. ''A General Map of the Empire of Germany, Holland, the Netherlands, Switzerland, the Grisons, Italy, Sicily, Corsica, and Sardinia.'' London: T. Gillet for John Stockdale, 1800. [https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-4917933 Christie's] (accessed 26 Jul 2023). * '''Portrait of Augustus Henry FitzRoy, 3rd Duke of Grafton''' (to 4th Duke of Grafton)''':''' Painted by John Hoppner in 1805, it is a bust of the Duke in a crimson fur coat bearing the star of the King's Guard.'''Notes: painting of 3rd Duke of Grafton:''' McKay, William Darling and Roberts, W. ''John Hoppner, R.A.'' (P & D Colnaghi & Co. : London) [https://archive.org/details/johnhoppnerra00mcka/page/102/mode/2up?q=fitzroy Internet Archive] pp.102–103. Images of the original full-color painting are sparse, but reproductions of the mezzotint by C. Turner engraved the same year are quite popular. Hoppner also painted George Henry, Charles' eldest brother and the 4th Duke of Grafton, his wife Charlotte Maria, the Countess of Euston, Charles' wife Lady Frances Mundy'''Notes: Portrait of Lady Mundy:''' Hoppner, John. ''Portrait of Lady Frances Fitzroy, nee Mundy,'' (c. 1795) Painting. [http://newportalri.org/items/show/13328 Newportal] Identifier: 1999.940. Newport Restoration Foundation, Newport, Rhode Island, United States., and his sister Lady Elizabeth FitzRoy after her marriage to the son of the 1st Baron Southampton. Charles, it appears, never sat for a portrait (there are, however, a number of 'Unknown' portraits of British officers, any of whom could be him). The Duke's portrait was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1806 (Item 122), British Institution, 1843 (Item 175) and South Kensington, 1867 (Item 469). * '''Ampton Hall:''' '''Notes: Ampton Hall:''' Wikipedia contributors, "Ampton Hall," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ampton_Hall&oldid=1115439521 (accessed July 26, 2023). ==Sources==
The last Will and Testament of Thomas Heberden
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the Residentiary of the cathedral church of Saint Peter in Exeter'''
I give to '''my Son in law the Reverend William Karslake '''the sum of one
hundred pounds and to '''my grandsons William Heberden Karslake'''
'''and John Wollaston Karslake''' the sum of three hundred pounds
each the share in the English Tontine of the year one thousand
seven hundred and eighty nine on the life of '''my daughter Althea'''
'''Karslake''' I declare to be her property
I give to the said '''William'''
'''Karslake William Heberden Karslake and John Wollaston Karslake'''
all my sevcurities on the Torrington and Barnstaple Turnpikes in
trust to pay the interest and annual produce to '''my daughter'''
'''Althea Karslake''' for her life and if the said '''William Karslake'''
shall survive her to the said '''William Karslake''' for his life And
after the death of the survivor to transfer the said stock to the said
'''William Karslake William Heberden Karslake and John Wollaston Karslake''' equally
between them for their ownj use and benefit
And I give to the said '''William Karslake William Heberden Karslake and John'''
'''Wollaston''' the sum of five thousand pounds capital stock
three per cent consolidated Bank Annuities in trust to pay the
dividends to''' my said daughter Althea Karslake''' during the joint lives
of herself and her said husband into her own hands for her
separate use and her receipts to be good discharges and after the
death of such one of them the said '''Althea Karslake and her said'''
''''husband '''who shall first die if the said '''Althea Karslake '''shall
survive in trust for''' my said daughter Althea Karslake '''absolutely
But if the said '''William Karslake '''shall die in the lifetime of my
said''' daughter Althea Karslake '''then upon such trusts and for such
purposes as my said daughter Althea Karslake shall by her will
appoint And in default of such appointment the same trustfund
shall be in trust for the said '''William Heberden Karslake and John'''
'''Wollaston Karslake''' equally between them
I give to
'''my daughter Elizabeth Althea Heberden''' the sum of eight thousand
eight hundred pounds Capital stork three per cent Consolidated Bank
Annuities and two thousand and forty pounds sterling also six
hundred and thirty one pounds ten shillings advanced to the Thames
and Medway Canal Company with all interest thereon and if the
same be not worth six hundred pounds then to be made equal to
that sum and the further sum of one thousand five hundred
pounds capital three per stock Consolidated Bank Annuities the share in the
English Tontine] of the year one thousand seven hundred and
eighty nine on the life of the said '''Elizabeth Althea Heberden''' I
declare to be her property and pursuant to the power given to me by
my marriage settlement with her Mother I give and appoint
unto the said '''Elizabeth Althea Heberden''' three thousand five
hundred pounds stock three per cent Reduced Bank Annuities being
the remaining moiety of the trust fund by that settlement provided
for the portion of her and''' her sister Althea '''to whom on her
marriage I have appointed the other moiety I also give to '''my'''
'''daughter the said Elizabeth Althea Heberden''' the further sum of
six hundred pounds in acknowledgement of her very pleasing
attention to me during my illness
I give and devise all my manors
messuages farms lands tenements tithes and hereditaments
freehold leasehold and copyhold in the Counties of Gloucester and
wilts unto '''my son Thomas Heberden''' his heirs executors admin
istrators and assignes for all my estate and interest therein And I
[page 2] give to the said '''Thomas Heberden''' the land tax of my estates in the
Counties of Glourester and wilts received by my father and all my
shares in the ????? Turnpikes and all my shares in the West India Dock Company and shares in the Gas Light Company also the
reverence? land tax of Whimple Rectory and the sum of six
thousand punds capital stock three per ??? Consolidated Bank
Annuities and the further sum of nine hundred and twenty nine
pounds fourteen shillings and sixpence being the consideration
money which I have reserved for a portion of my estate at Lorrioge
sold to the Gloucester and Exeter Railway Company and my gold
watch by Recoroon with the sham and seals with arms nest and
motto I give and devise all my manors messuages farms lands
tenements and hereditaments freehold and leasehold in the counties
of Devon and Cornwall unto '''my son William Heberden,''' his heirs
executors administrators and assignes for all my estate and interest
therein
And I give to the said '''William Heberden''' all my securities
on the Exeter Paving Trust and my Exeter Water Company shares
and my gold watch by Lindsey and a red cornelian seal with my
arms
I bequeath all money which shall be due to me on the
current?? amount at my decease and all money afterwards accruing
due on that amount called the Annus to '''my two sons Thomas'''
'''Heberden and William Heberden '''equally between them
And I give to each of my two sons all arrears of rent due for the lands
and a? hereditaments devised to them respectively
I declare that the
provision hereby made for my sons shall be exclusive of the
portions provided for them by marriage settlement with regard
to my books I desire my wife to select all with English French and
Italian books as she may choose for herself and the remainder
of my books I give to my two sons equally between them and trust
they will divide the same with as much harmony as my Brother
and myself made a similar division of my fathers books
I give to '''my Brother William Heberden '''two hundred pounds free of legacy
duty and my ring with the head of Socrates which I trust he
will value from its being connected
with the rememberance of '''my father of my Brother Charles''' and me
I give to my Servant
'''William Harding '''if he shall be living with me at the time of
my decease an annuity of twenty pounds per ammun payable
half yearly the first payment to be made at the expiration of six
months from my deceaseAnd I hereby charge and make liable
my residuary personal estate to the payment of such annuity
unless my executors shall at any time determine to invest a
sufficient sum in the purchase of a Government Annuity of the
same amount in which case my personal estate shall released
from all charge and liability for the same
I give to '''my servants Sarah pook and Samuel Morrish '''if living with me at my decease
the sum of twenty five pounds each
To '''my servants Sarah Rowe'''
'''Ann Broom and John Prescott''' if living with me at the time of my decease the
sum of ten pounds each and to each of my other servants
then living with me the sum of five pounds
I give to the '''Reverend'''
'''James Smith Townsend if he shall be my Curate''' at the time of
my decease the sum of one hundred pounds
I give unto''' my friend'''
'''and Relation the Reverend Chancellor Marlin '''the sum of one
hundred pounds
I give unto '''my dear wife''' all my plate linen pictures
wine and household furniture both at my residence at Whimple
and at Exeter also my horses carriages live and dead farming
stock for her own absolute use and benefit
And I declare that the
provision made for my wife by marriage settlement and by my will
[page 3] shall be in satisfaction of dower
I give to '''my Nephew and Godson'''
'''Charles Heberden '''one hundred pounds also unto '''Mrs Joseph Marlin'''
'''and Mrs Charles Marlin Senior '''the sum of five Guineas each for a
ring in token of my rememberance of them
All the Rest and Residue
of my monies and securities for money goods chattells personal and
testamentary estate and efforts whatsoever I give and bequeath to
'''my said wife Mary Heberden and my two Sons Thomas Heberden'''
'''and William Heberden '''upon Trust to convert and dispose of the
same and invest the produce thereof in the public Funds or upon
Government or real securities at interest so that the whole maybe
invested upon such securities in their names and to pay the
dividends interest and annual produce of the same trust funds to my
said wife for her life And after her decease as to the sum of six
housand pounds sterling the same shall be in trust for such
ersons intents and purposes as''' my said wife Mary Heberden '''shall
by any deed or deeds instrument or instruments in writing to be by
her sealed and delivered in the presence of and attestedery two or
more witnesses or by her will direct or appoint And in default of and
subject to such appointment as to the said sum of six thousand
pounds and also as to all the said stocks Funds and securities subject
to the raising of the said sum of six thousand pounds from and after
the decease of my said wife I direct that thereout the sum of one
thousand pounds stock Three per cent Consolidated Bank Annuities
to be transfered to '''my Daughter Althea Karslake''' and the life sum of
the same stock to '''my daughter Elizabeth Althea Heberden'''
And as to all the residue of the said stocks funds and securities I give and
bequeath the same to '''my said two Sons Thomas Heberden and'''
'''William Heberden '''equally to be divided between them share and
share alike
And I appoint '''my said wife Mary Heberden and my'''
'''said two Sons Thomas Heberden and William Heberden Executors'''
of this my will In witness thereof I have to this my will
contained in four sheets of paper set my hand this twenty sixth
day of December in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred
and forty two - '''Thomas Heberden''', - , Signed by the said testator as his
last Will and Testament in the presence of us present at the same
time who at his request in his presence and in the presence of
each other have subscribed our names as witnesses,''' Ralph Sanders'''
'''Sol.r Exeter,-, Sam, H. Sanders Clerk to Ralph Sanders Sol.r Exeter'''
I Thomas Heberden declare this to be a codicil to
my will finding on an examination of my will that I have
quite inadvertantly and contrary to my intention left''' my Daugh-'''
'''ter Althea Karslake '''a much less sum than I haveleft to '''my daughter'''
'''Elizabeth Althea Heberden '''and finding also after paying all
legacies there will be a larger residue than I had anticipated I here
by give and bequeath to my '''Daughter Althea Karslake''' the
further sum of eighteen thousand pounds three per cent Consoli
dated Bank Annuities and to''' my Daughter Elizabeth Althea'''
'''Heberden''' the further sum of twelve thousand pounds three per
cent Consolidated Bank Annuities for their own absolute use and
benefit In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand this
twenty eighth day of January one thousand eight hundred and
forty three,-,''' Thomas Heberden,'''-, signed by the said Thomas Heberden
as and for a Codicil to this last Will and Testament in the precence
of us present at the same time who at his request in his presence
and in the presence of each other have subscribed our names as
witnesses,-,''' Ralph Sanders Sol.r Exeter,-, Sam H. Sanders Clerk to Ralph'''
'''Sanders Sol.r Exeter'''.
[page 4] Proved at London with a codicil 20th November 1843 before the judge
by the Oaths of '''Mary Heberden Widow the Relict and Thomas'''
'''Heberden Doctor in Medicine and the Reverend William Heberden'''
'''Clerk the Sons the Executors''' to whom Admon was granted having
been first sworn by Commission only to administer.
The Latest Illustrated Polyglot Family Bible
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The Latta Family Chronicles
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The Laytons and Religion and DNA
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The Lee County (AL) Four War Memorial
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'''Geelong, Australia'''
This is the account of the passage, as it occurred, as you see by my dates, I have only noted things most remarkable.
My dear Sister,
I wrote you from Plymouth, I hope you received my letter.
We left Plymouth on the '''8th of April''', we were played off with a band of music; and the owners offered them their passage out, but they declined the offer. I had a good look over Plymouth, and like it very much. I went through the Citadel, '''[1]''' and on to the Hoe, a sort of square overlooking the sea, the resort of all the fashionables of Plymouth. There are some fine streets in Plymouth quite equal to any in London, then is a Mechanics Institute, a very fine Hotel, viz the Royal Hotel and theatre, there are Hansom cabs & other cabs quite equal to London. Plymouth is about 250 miles from London, Railway fare third class 7/11 but I suppose you will not think of going there.
We had as near as I could count some 75 passengers on board at Plymouth, they did seem such uncouth people to Londoners, but they are the right sort for the colony, they are Methodists in religion, we cannot stand their talk at all. We left Plymouth very much gratified.
'''12th & 13th of April:''' We had a severe toppling in the Bay of Biscay. You would have laughed to see the females in the gale, as soon as they sat down on their carpet stools, they had brought with them, the ship would give a lurch and over they would go. There are no seats for the second class passengers provided. I should advise all who can afford it to pay 1st class fare - then they have not trouble in preparing your food. If you were to see the scrambling there is on board out emigrant ship, you would be surprised.
On the Daylesford our Cook house is too small for the number of passengers, it would do for 200, but we have 300 passengers.
'''14th April:''' We had a birth on board the wife of a preacher of the Methodist persuasion. The child was christened William Cary Daylesford Gillard, not very Christian like to bring his wife on board so near her confinement, but I hear it was a nine months child and 8 months married on the '''16th.''' The father preached, very much to the annoyance of some of the passengers, we had a great stir about it, but it was amicably settled.
'''May 4th:''' Death of child, and a fight against the cook house that was amicably settled and a receipt given in the form of a black eye.
'''5th:''' Becalmed
'''6th 7th 8th 9th 10th & 11th:''' Ditto with squalls in the evening.
Caught a shark on the '''11th''', he was caught and cooked & eaten in 4 hours, showing the demand for fresh fish, at the time it weighted between 60lb or 70lbs. I had some of it and very much liked it, it tasted something like mushrooms. In the evening a fair wind sprung up, and Neptune came on board.
'''13th:''' Crossed the line great amusement in shaving a general custom on crossing the line, the razors are not of an iron hoop about the size of a reaping hook and a sail is spread on the deck, and filled with water about 3 feet deep. Neptune sits on one of the Gun Carriages & orders the barber what razor to use in shaving the victim; there are razors Nos. 1, 2 & 3. No 1 being gapped like a hand saw, No 2 smoother, No 3 quite smooth. The lather is composed of flour and water& when they are lathering the victim, they try to get him to speak & if he does the lather brush is shoved into his mouth, after the shaving he is thrown backwards into the water, and a sever ducking awaits him there, however this is not compulsory, it is at the discretion of the passengers. The minster was shaved. In the evening we had a Masquerade Ball, great fun.
'''15th:''' Saw a homeward bound ship.
'''16th:''' Passed two outward bound ships.
'''June 1st:''' Death of a child.
'''5th:''' Death of a child & shot a Cape Hen, it was quite calm and fell with 50 yards of our ship, when one of the 1st cabin passengers jumper overboard and swam after it, but owing to the current running at the time, it soon drifted some distance off, he had great difficulty in getting to it, he had all his clothes on & after he reached the bird, he could not regain the ship, they lowered the lifeboat & just reached him in time to save him from drowning, he was the husband of that young girl I spoke of in my letter from Plymouth. The bird was of a brown colour, it measured from wing to wing 6ft 6ins, it only weighted 4lbs, it was most feathers. It was shot by my cabin mate, Mrs. Jas. Thornton.
'''6th:''' Becalmed: Lowered the boat, 18 persons got into it. Mr J Thornton & 2 others with their guns, the rowed some distance from the ship. They shop about 3 dozen pigeons, 3 albatross, the pigeons very much like our English, the albatross a very pretty bit, about the size of a goose, and near the same colour, & 2 others of a darker colour, measuring from wing to wing 7ft 7ins, it caused much amusement on board, all day a vessel in sight & saw a whale.
'''7th:''' Ship still in sight, bore down upon her, she came within a stone's throw upon us. Out captain lowered the lifeboat took his wife, Minister & wife, 2 chief cabin passengers& their wives on board of her, one of my cabin mates & 2 or 3 others. They found her to be an American ship bound for Calcutta, they said she was a fine vessel, and better fitted than ours, she was larger viz 800 tons register our 685 tons, they had 11 seaman, 4 of them Chinamen, we have over 20, all British, she left the downs same day as we did, same evening, 2 other vessels in sight, in the evening parted company with the American ship, fair wind having spring up.
'''10th:''' Blew a gale & we had for dinner some of the pigeons shot on the 6th. I assure you they were first rate such a treat is not often experienced at sea.
'''12th:''' Death of a child.
'''13th:''' We spoke a small vessel about 70 tons we laid to, it came within 200 yards of us, she was bound to Melbourne, she had been out 80 days from the Isle of Man, she had no chronometer on board & she was 23 degrees out of her reckoning, there were on board of her 11 men, it was quite a novelty to see so small a vessel so far out at sea.
'''16th:''' Sighted a barge, she came close to us & kept us company 2 days, but owing to it blowing a gale, we could not speak to her.
'''18th:''' 11th Sunday from Plymouth, caught an albatross with a fish hook, in the evening it blew a gale & a fine treat we had tossing about, it lasted 3 days, it was very laughable to hear the tines playing about though far from pleasant. Had for dinner the albatross that we caught on Sunday, it was very nice.
'''July 1st:''' Blew a gale.
'''2nd:''' Worse with rain & hail, first time I saw the sea run so high before. To look back you would think you were going to be swallowed up by the waves. I assure you my dear sister, it looked awfully grand.
'''July 3rd:''' Gale abated, a fine day, quite a treat after what we had suffered. Fight in Uncle Tom's cabin viz the open berths for single men.
'''9th:''' Fourteenth Sunday from Plymouth. Calm with rain & very cold.
'''11th:''' Fine & fair wind going 12 knots an hour, price of cheese in Longitude 100, cost 2/-@lb. My cabin mate Mr. Jas Thornton having one left sold it at that price, weight 6.5lbs. it was afterwards resold @2/2 & 2/6 lb, original cost 11d per lb. If you know anyone coming out, instead of loading themselves with cloths, let them bring, bacon, Cheese, spices, sweetmeats & Caps. I will undertake they will pay well, on the voyage there are a great number of caps get blown overboard.
At 10 o'clock there was a fight in Uncle Tom's cabin, between a Lambeth man of Dough & a Somersetshire cheesemongers assistant, it was in the dark & was settled by the receipt of a black eye being given.
'''12th:''' Spanking breeze & a ship in sight within signalling distance. In 24 hours we ran 285 miles, the greatest run we have ever had, but alas towards evening, wind increased to a gale, we had I think such a rocking, never before experienced, but it now became quite fun, for instead of being mute as we were wont to be, we used to laugh at the fun.
'''13th:''' Gale abated & fair wind.
'''14th:''' Very rough, great toping & fair wind, a barque in sight.
'''15th:''' My birthday, fair wind, fine day.
'''16th:''' Fair breeze, clear weather, a ship in sight.
'''17th:''' Fair breeze, saw a sail.
'''18th:''' Fine Breeze.
'''19th:''' Head wind.
'''20th:''' Head Wind, looking out for land, we saw a great change in the colour of the water. At 2.00pm saw a great many dolphin & two different kinds of birds, one sort like a goose flying, the other like a hawk. 3.30pm the land was descried, though a mere speck upon the water & many would not believe it was land, but at 6.00pm, all doubt on the subject was laid aside, for a light appeared in sight, known to be the revolving light of Cape Willoughby Encounter Bay, 100 miles from Adelaide, everyone then was full of spirits, but how soon they were damped, for at 11.00am it blew a most furious gale, which drove us out to sea again. The poor sailors said they had never had such work before, in taking in the sail, as they had on this occasion.
'''21st:''' Weather moderated bore up again for Kangaroo Island, at 5.00pm again saw the land. In the morning saw the mainland & thought we were making Backstairs passage, '''[2]''' but found it to be the entrance to River Murray. We got within a stone's throw of the land, it was bout ship again directly, to look for the lighthouse before named, but having a head wind we could not get away. We had a raffle today for a gun, 25 members @1/- a member, I happened to be the fortunate winner.
'''23rd:''' Head wind but no land in sight, we had got away from the land in view yesterday. At 10.00am we again saw land on our weather bow, at a great distance. At 2.00pm saw the Backstairs passage entrance to St Vincent Gulf, where we wanted to go, but could not make it, owing to adverse wind. At 4.00pm saw land ahead & made it. At 5.15pm & about 1 mile from the land was a rock & the sea washing over it looked very grand, it was the south west point of Kangaroo Island. We bout ship again & stood once more for Backstairs passage St Vincent Gulf. We saw plenty of birds & porpoises, this day one porpoise was harpooned, but got away again.
'''24th:''' After tacking all night, were pretty handy Backstairs passage, when it came on to blow a gale of wind, & tore our mainsail up the middle, also the jib. After beating about to no effect until 12.15 am, when we came to anchor within a mile of the mainland, & near the entrance of Backstairs passage, with the lighthouse before named in the distance, so that we had a fine view of the land, though not very comfortable to our feelings, for we having been at this time 5 weeks upon 2 quarts instead of 3 and no butter or treacle for the same time, & at the date I wrote this being the 116th day from London, & this day the allowance of pork is shortened to half the quality, 7 the raisins are all gone & the biscuits mouldy, so all we have to live upon is biscuits, flour & salt beef, until our arrival in Adelaide. At this time we are about 70 miles from it.
'''25th:''' At 5.00am began to weight anchor, at 7.20am got under weight with a foul wind & after tacking about 1 should think 30 times, we entered the passage at 3.15pm, once in the passage, we had a fair wind & came to anchor off the lightship.
'''At 12pm 26th:''' The pilot came on board, & at turn of tide, we sailed up within 2½ miles of Port Adelaide. I went on shore the same evening, it was 9 o'clock, when I got to the port, I went into a Free Concert Room, quite equal to London.
'''27th:''' I went up to the City of Adelaide, was there by 6.am, when I got there I could see nothing but dogs, however the shops opened at 7am, then I had a good look around, I like the town very much. I found Mr. Jno Springett & gave him the letter from Mrs. Read his sister, he looks very much older, he had been down from the diggins 6 weeks, I stayed to dinner with him, at 2.00pm, I left him and had another look round, & stayed at the Port for the night, early next morning, the 28th I returned to the ship.
'''29th:''' Stayed on board all day.
'''30th:''' Went ashore & explored the country inland.
'''31st:''' Done the same thing.
'''August 1st:''' Stayed on board all day.
'''2nd:''' The Victoria was towed out of Adelaide at 9.30am, she belongs to Messrs Griffiths & Newcombe, she left the East India Docks 14 days after us, & arrived here the day after us. Thought we never should have got away from Adelaide, for our ship got into debt there & the Captain having no money, he could not free her, he advertised for a loan, 5 successive days, but could not get it. When after laying there, 14 days the passengers raised £400 among them, & paid the debt, fortunately for me I had no money not a sixpence. Well during our stay there I went up to the City of Adelaide on the last day, & there I met an old man, rather, groggy, I asked him for work. Well he says they tell me I am drunk. Well I says I am not. Will you treat me to a nobler, which he was most happy to do. He went to a Public House, & called for a port of English Ale, for which he paid 2/-. He had his son with him & horse & cart. The son was quite sober. Well I spoke to the son about work. He asked me what wages, I wanted. I told him £1 week board & lodging which he said he should be willing to give me, but he says to me you had better come home, with me tonight. I will give you supper, bed & breakfast & then you can see how you like the place. Well I accepted this offer for I had but 6d in my pocket at the time. Well I went up with him to Pine forest, 4 miles from Adelaide, and he fulfilled his promise & gave me a 1/0 to start with, next morning well I came down to Adelaide, I got to the town about 10am. Well the town is 8 miles from the port. Thinks I to myself, I will be off to the ship. Just out of town is the market, so I went & had a look at that & there I saw Mr. J. Springett again, well I told him how our ship was situated, he behaved to me like a gentlemen, he asked me, If I want any money. Well says I, — I have only got 1/2, well he never said a word, but put a sovereign into my hand & told me if I could not get to Geelong by the ship he would let me have the money, to pay my passage. However that I did not require. Well I did not get to the ship, until 11 o'clock at night. Never so knocked up in my life, I must have walked 25 miles that day, no joke after 3 months voyage, well on Sunday the 6th, I went on shore again, with the view of going to work for the old settler, fencing, bullock driving etc etc. I took my carpet bag, with my two shirts & a few other things. Well I was to go up the country, about 50 miles with the son for a month or 6 weeks, to a new section they had bought. Well the old man said he would go & fetch my boxes from the ship, so off we went, and behold to my great astonishment, on our arrival at the Port, my boxes were on shore & the Steamer just leaving, to tow our ship from the shores of Adelaide. Well there was 5 of us left on shore, we gave 10/- each, to be rowed to the lightship, a distance of 15 miles out to sea, we weighted anchor on Monday night, and reached Melbourne on Wednesday. My master was quite willing for me to go. But I lost my carpet bag, through the job & the contents, but that I cared nothing about, so long as I reach Geelong. Well when we got to Melbourne, I went on shore & and enquired for Henry, but he was at the diggins, there was a letter there him, from your own dear self, which I forwarded to him. Well while I was there, previous to going to 118 Little Collins Street, I pledged my watch for 20/-, but next morning I saw two of his mates, & they gave him such an excellent character, that it done my heart good & offered to lend me, £5, £10 or £20 out of respect to Henry. £2 of which I accepted & got my watch out of limbo & took team to Geelong fare 6/- there are to steamers running every day to Geelong. I do not like Melbourne, half so well as Geelong. The markets here are very much overstocked with merchandise, at the present time I have seen three pairs of Wellington boors, sold for 9/- the three pairs. Shirts 10d each. Watches out of number.
Well on the '''16th day of August 1854''' after being 138 days from East India Dock, I was landed safe & sound at Geelong. Well I took up my quarters, at the Ballarat boarding house, at 35/- per week, to be paid in advance. I delivered the parcels I had for Mr. Strutt, & saw him, he said he would do what he could for me. I left the testimonial I had from my late master with him. Well next day I went to see Mr. Bankin, on the '''19th of August''', I delivered to him the letter from Mr. Hance, and one to John from G. Geley Rosa's I left, for Miss Bankin was not at home. They behaved very kind to me, & enquired after all & said the6y should like to see you out here. I could not see much alteration in Mr. Bankin or John, but James & Ellis are great grown fellows, also Emma is very tall & a very quiet girl. I have seen Mr & Miss Bankin in town, once since they were on horseback, and Miss B is the finest figure, I have seen in Geelong at present. I stayed up at their house all night, and next morning had a fine ride after the horses, they have 24 horses & 406 acres of land. They asked me to stay until Monday, it being Friday when I was there. Their place is a most delightful situation. I shall go & see them again shortly. Well I came back on the '''Saturday''', & on the '''Monday''' following I got a job at Chaff cutting, at 45/- per ton, me & another man was cutting 2½ days & we earned 35/- each, or 14/- per day, that was all they wanted but just then. However on the '''Friday''' after, I saw an advertisement wanted a Porter at a drapers. There was about 17 applications, but I was the successful one & I think the place will suit me well.
There is plenty to eat & drink, we are not as common here as at home, instead of having beer for supper we have a glass or two of sherry, & people live here something like they do at home.
My wages are 30/- a week & lodgings. I think that will pay me for coming. I have never once repented coming & as to the voyage it is nothing, I would think nothing of going home, & coming back again. I was not sea sick, it is a great pity Robert is not out here, he could do well. One of my shipmates got work the day he landed, on Saturday night £8 was put into his hand, for his weeks work, that seems rather funny after 30/- a week, that young man I speak of in the first part of my letter that was near drowned, he is boots at the Victoria Hotel, at the opposite corner of the market square from where I live.
I live with Bright & Co, Corner of Market Square, Moorabel Street, Geelong. '''[3]'''
There are some very fine houses building about Geelong, the finest houses are Hotels. I have seen one or two three storey high. There is a railway making from Geelong to Melbourne. Geelong is a musical town; there are plenty of German bands over here. Geelong is a beautiful place; there are some splendid hills, by the seaside. A dealer in Marine stores might come here & get a good cargo of ware, in the shape of bones from dead horses, goats etc for they lay about pretty think. There are a great many goats in Australia. Where I lodged one night, I had occasion to go out on the night, I fell over one in the bedroom, there was 14 men sleeping in the room & the goat made 15. I have seen but one of my old particulars the Donkey, but I am told by old chums they have seen two. But I think I shall engage him for a Sunday, out of respect to his race in the Mother country.
I got my money alright at Geelong. I will now bid adieu, with kind love, To Father, Mother, Martha, Emma, Robert, Edwin, Sarah, Ann, & Kate,
Believe me to be your Affectionate Brother,
Chas Thos Lee.
N.B. When you write address Post Office Geelong. I shall be most happy to see you any Sunday to Tea that will suit you. I have a letter from Henry, he is still at the Bendigo, and is not coming down until Christmas.
Give my kind regards to Mr. Hook, Cop (??) Squires & tell Squires, horseflesh is dear here, a £5 Horse at Romford, would fetch £40 here, also Mr. Geley, and all the Aristocrats of the village.
P.S. I must say a word or two about the natives here. At Adelaide there was a great number, but no so many here, the men are thick set fellows about 5ft 4in height, the women are shorter & their legs like broom sticks, they can talk English smoke & drink. I have seen them quite drunk & I have seen a nearly white featured girl with them. They have a great number of dogs with them & they all grub together, some of their legs are burned, sitting so close to the fire. I shall select one for a wife, because they want no clothes.
:'''Information about [1] [2] [3]''' '''[1]''' Royal Citadel, Plymouth was built in the late 1660’s, the Royal Citadel is located at the eastern end of Plymouth Hoe and overlooks the Plymouth Sound. Encompassing the site of the fort built by Sir Francis Drake, the citadel was built during the Dutch Wars of 1664-67 by King Charles II. The fort emphasized on the importance of Plymouth as channel port in the war and the unique structure ensured that the guns could be fired across the port as well as the town. The structure is built in local limestone with a huge English Baroque style entrance. The 70 feet high walls and equipments like 113 guns made it impossible to conquer. The Citadel served as the most important defence centre of British for over 100 years and is still occupied by the British Army. '''[2]''' The Backstairs Passage is a strait in South Australia lying between Fleurieu Peninsula on the Australian mainland and Dudley Peninsula on the eastern end of Kangaroo Island. The western edge of the passage is a line from Cape Jervis on Fleurieu Peninsula to Kangaroo Head (west of Penneshaw) on Kangaroo Island. The Pages, a group of islets, lie in the eastern entrance to the strait. About 14 km wide at its narrowest, it was formed by the rising sea around 13,000 years ago, at the end of the Pleistocene era, when it submerged the land connecting what is now Kangaroo Island with the Fleurieu Peninsula. Backstairs Passage was named by Matthew Flinders whilst he and his crew on HMS Investigator were exploring and mapping the coastline of South Australia in 1802. The coastal processes occurring in Gulf St Vincent and along the southern coastline of Fleurieu Peninsula are complex. Due to the relatively shallow Gulf St Vincent joining the Southern Ocean through the deeper Backstairs Passage, this narrow and dangerous channel is subjected to strong currents, heavy tidal swells and steep breaking seas. In the early years following European colonisation many of the nearly fifty vessels wrecked in the hazardous waters around Kangaroo Island were lost while crossing Backstairs Passage to and from the mainland. This led to South Australia's first lighthouse, the Sturt Light, being built in 1851 at Cape Willoughby on the eastern tip of Kangaroo Island. In addition to vessels navigating the treacherous crossing to and from the mainland, sailing ships (commonly wooden barques) making use of the Roaring Forties trade winds on voyaging to South Australia could be propelled by the prevailing winds into Backstairs Passage, or as far Bass Strait. '''[3]''' Today Market Square is located on the corner of Moorabool St & Malop St. Bright and Hitchcocks (also known as Brights) was a department store in Geelong, Victoria, Australia, operating on the same site from 1855 to 1979. The building remains today on the south-east corner of Moorabool and Little Malop Streets in central Geelong.
The Letter of Johannes Hain (1752)
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Ein Vatter und Ernährer, und alles guts Bescherer.
O Vatter Vatter gübe, das Deine große Liebe,
Wir inniglich betrachten, und so jering nicht achten.
O Vatter uns beschöre, zu Deinem Lob, und Ehre,
Das wir Dir recht vertrauen, und gäntzlich auf Dich bauen.
Wann wir nur dieses haben, so werten uns die Gaben,
Die wir zu dißem Leben, bedörfen wohl gegeben.
Eh Himmel und die Erde, zu nichte müßen werden,
Als solten sein verlasen, die Fleisches Sorge haßen.
So wertet ihr hertz liebe Freunte noch wohl wißen, wann unsere Reise ist angegangen, ich meine den 21. May 1751 nach Millheim zu, allda wir bey 4 Wochen sein aufgehalten worten. Von dannen seint wir in 5 Tagen nach Rotterdamm, da haben wir witer 14 Tag gehalten. Von dannen seind wir nach Helfersschlos, da wir wider 3 Tag gehalten. Von dannen über den tollen Sund, bis in alt England nach Dill, da wir 3 Tag gehalten. Von dannen nach Kaus, und haben als 3 Wochen von Rotterdam bis nach Kaus in alt England zugebracht. Da haben wir witer 14 Dag gehalten. Da ist unßer Schiff gebrobiantiert worten. Van dannen seind wir nun auf die ofenbare See gefahren, 8 Schiff zu gleich und seind unter Gottes gnätigem Beystand glücklich in 7 Woche 2 Tag ohne einigen Sturm bis in die Refier gefahren. Da haben wir doch noch erfahren misen was Sturm ist. Ein gantzen Tag und Nacht iber. Wir haben die Ancker schon geworfen gehabt wie er angangen, das es uns nicht gehintert. Von dannen seind wir in 2 Tag an die Stad Vilatelvia gefahren, und haben nicht mehr verlohren als 13 Persohnen, 2 Alte und 11 Kinter, davon ist eins dem Johannes Heintz und eins der Barben Ann. Dagegen haben wir aber witer 7 junge Künter auf der See bekommen, unßer Schiff war nicht so gar gros, nur CC und 40 Frachten. Von dißen Kintern, die auf der See gebohren sein, ist eins meines Bruders Frau, das hat meine Frau jus der Tauf gehaben, dann wir hatten auch einen reformierten Pfarrer bey uns aus dem Hanauischen. Eß lebet noch und wir alle so lang als Gott will. Auch alle unsere Landes Leut. Wir sein aber nicht mehr beyeinander. Der Johann Jörg Henrich und sein Bruder seind mit dem Daniel Bäcker von Ebersbach ins Neu Jörgische, den Johannes Hennrich den hat sein Bruder verdingt. Was er aber vor ein Hantirung treibt, kan ich nicht wißen. Ich habe gehört, er hat sich verheirat, den Brief wirt er angebracht haben an die Freunde im Neu Jörgischen.
Wir haben in einer Bettstad gelegen auf der See, ich und die zwei Gebrider. Meine Frau hat sie auch verpleget, wie mich selbst und meine Kinder, mit waschen und flicken, mit Essen und Trinken. Ihr beite gute Freunte als Vormünter habt mir geschrieben ich solte doch vor den Kleinen sorgen, nun aber kan ich nicht wißen, wie es mit ihm gehet. Der grose hat Wahr gekauft vor das Gelt bis auf ein Fracht, die er vor sich bezahlet, der Kleine mus sein Frach verdienen. Dißes aber kan ihm nicht schaden, wann er ihm sein Theil wieter gibt. Ich aber will thun nach eurem Verlangen, wann er mich darin ersuchen. Ich und mein Bruter sein beyeinander in Fintzelfani, in Almengel genand. Wir haben Land aufgeraumt über dem Blauen Berg. Ich habe auch schon 2 Morgen Land eingesät. Wir ziehen aber nicht darauf bis auf das zukommende Jahr 1753. Nun euch weiter von dißem Land zu berichten, so ist unser rechtmäßiger Herr, dem wir geschworen haben, Willhelm der 2te, König in England. Sonsten ist unßer gegenwärtiger Jubernier vom König eingesetzt, Recht und Gerechtigkeit zu befördern und das Böße zu strafen. Es ist aber nicht wie bey euch, das die Herrschaft die Untertanen plaget bis auf das Höchste mit Gelt geben und Frähntinste, dann wir sitzen fein ruhig unter unserer Herschaft. Sie regieren auch nicht lenger als ein Jahr, dann werten sie oder andere wieter erwählet von den Untertanen.
Ich kann euch vor dismahl nicht alles berichten, was ich gern wolte, sonsten würte mein Babier zu klein sein. Was ich euch aber schreibe mit einem halben Wort, das mus gantz wahr sein. Es ist alles frey, alle Hantierung und Profeßion. Es ist auch Gott gedanckt ein fruchtbahres Land mit allerley Gewächs, Frucht genuch, auch allerlei Frucht, ils keinen Hirschen habe ich noch gesehen. Wir haben die Zeit, wir hier sein im Land, lauter Weitzenbrod gebacken. Sie ist auch nicht so gar teuer. Mann kauft Beuschel um 4 Schelling, das ist bey euch 2 Kornmeste. Ein Schelling ist soviel an eurem Gelt als 9 alb und 20 Schelling ist ein Pfunt. Ich habe aber schon manchen Tag 3 bis 4 auch 5 Schelling vertind. Ein Wagen gilt allhier 3 Pfunt auch 4 Pfunt. Dabey braucht mann kein Holtz zu kaufen. Ich bin hier selber Förster. Ich und mein Bruder haben ein Stunte lang Walt, das schönste Holtz. Es gibt hier allerley Holtz 4erley Eichenholtz, Danne, beit Wallnis, Zettern, Kastanien, Hicher, Bappeln, allerley, das ich mein Lebtag in Teutschland nicht gesehen hab. Auch gesunt Waßer, gesunte Luft, auch Fieh genug. Es giebt hier Leut, die 10 bis 15 Geul haben, und haben nichts mit ins Land gebracht. Wer fleisig arbeitet, der kan sich hier wohl nehren, man gibt ja der Herschaft gar wehnig. Ein Mann, der 2 oder 3 oder 4 Hundert Ackerland hat, der gibt des Jahrs 2 oder 3 Schelling, das sein 9 alb, wie ich schon gemelt, auch manchmal garnichts.
Es gibt auch solche Bletz feil, wer Gelt mit ins Land bringt. Die Leute gehen als weiter fort. Es weis noch kein Mensch, wie gros das Land ist. Europa ist dagegen als Dillenburg gegen Franckfurt in der Landkarte. Das beste Land ligt noch wüst, sie wissen noch bis 7 Hundert Meillen und fünden kein Ende. Wann ein wohlstehenter Mann bey euch seine Sache zu Gelt hätte, und hätte Lust hieher zu ziehen, der kan hir in Ruhe sitzen, bäßer wie bey euch ein Edelmann. Die Armen auch, aber sie müßen klein anfangen, dann das Land bringet Frucht, wann mann das Holtz davon reiniget ohne Bäßerung. Aber das ist das Beste: wann sie nur ihre Fracht bezahlen können, so können sie sich darnach wohl nehren. Ein gemeiner Taglöhner hat 2 Schülling und 6 Bens. 12 Bens ist 1 Schelling, das ist bey euch ein halber Thaler. Soweit ist mein warhaftiger Bericht von dißem Land, von Frucht, Holtz, Wasser, des schönen Obst nicht zu vergeßen. Mehr Obst und Pörsing hat hier ein Mann, als bey euch ein gantzes Torf. Gottes Wort und Pretiger haben wir auch zur Genüge, wer es gerne höret. Es wirt euch wohl bewust sein, das Prätiger aus dem Dillenburgischen zu uns gekomen sein. Der Wisel ist bey uns Prätiger allhier. Der Otterbein ist in der Stad Längester. Es sein auch schon in dißem Jahr witer 14 Schif mit Leut ankommen. Da ist mein Bericht soweit vor dismahl. Kan hat nun iemand Lust von Euch zu kommen, doch aber auf sein Belieben, und nicht auf mein Geheis, dann die Reise ist beschwerlich. Die Kinder Ißrael nusten erst durch die Wüsten Sur und Helim, auch durch das rothe Meer reisen, ehe sie in das gelobte Land kamen. Doch war der Herr ihr Geleitsmann, der da spricht: Wann du durchs Feuer gehest, so will ich bey dir sein, das dich die Flamme nicht anzünten, und auf dem Wasser, das dich die Ströme nicht ersaufen. Ich heise niemand kommen, aber wann mein Schwager Johannes Ekhart, und meine Schwägern Magtalena kommen, wann sie noch nicht geheyrat sein, und es der Mutter nicht zu witer, wann sie noch beim Leben ist, oder wann sie sich selbsten unterstehen wolte, auf diße Reise zu begeben; es solte uns hertzlich lieb sein. Auch hete ich gern, das sie es meinen Geschwüstern und der Mutter sagen täten. Die möchten vieleicht zu uns kommen. Mein Bruter will auch schreiben, aber mann weis nicht, ob es euch möcht ankomen. Wann etwann jemand von euch komen will, der bringe mir doch das Buch vom wahren Himmelsweg mit, auch ein par Büchse gezogene, auch ein halb tutzet Trumsege, auch ein breit Beil, wie es die Zimmerleit bey euch brauchen, auch ein gute Zimmeraxt. Will aber einer vor sich Wahr mitbringen, der bring Sense, Futermeser, Bohren, wollen Tuch, Leintuch. Aber ich rathe einem jeglichen, das er sein Frachtgelt und was er auf der Reise braucht vor sich bezahlt. Nun segne euch Gott der Herr, ihr Vieljeliebte mein. Trauert nit allzusehr über den Abschied mein, beständig bleibt im Glauben, wir werden in kurtzer Zeit einander witer schauen in jener Ewigkeit. Dißes Mahl nichts mehr als der Früle Gottes, welcher höher ist als aller Engeln und Menschen Vernunft. Der bewahre dann unser und euer aller Hertzen und Sinnen in Christo Jesu bis zu dem ewigen und seligen Leben, Amen. Verbleibe euer dinstwilliger Schwager und Schwester bis in den Tod. Johannes Hein in Fintzelfania in Allenmengel bey Ludwig Hantz. Da mist ihr auch anschreiben. Wann ich nicht mehr bey ihm bin, so wirt er den Brief an mich liefern. - Heut Tado den 5. October 1752. Ihr werdet so gut sein und den Brief bezahlen mit 20 alb. Wann ihr nun witer einen Brief schreibet, so törft ihr auch nichts zahlen. Mann läst einen jeten bey seiner Religion in dißem Land. Bringet mir doch eine gute Mahlinger Dobackspfeife mit. Eß gibt hier kein auf solche Art. === Translation === The grace of the heavenly Father, the love of Jesus Christ, and the enlightenment of the Holy Spirit, be with you all, with heartfelt greetings, Amen. Especially to the hearts of all my dearest mother, siblings and brothers-in-law, and all good friends and acquaintances; while God still grants me life and health to tell you whether we have arrived happily in the country, I and we all can boast of nothing other than God's gracious visitation, for He has carried us into the country at the right hour, full-fledged and healthy, on His angel's chariot. :He gives us for our knowing, His Word, on Him bestowing
The name of kind supplier, and gracious rectifier.
---------------------- ''still has to be translated'' ---------------------
Grant for Thy glory, Father, this boon o’er every other:
That we may trust Thee solely and build upon Thee wholly.
If but this pray’r be heeded, the gifts which here are needed
While we this life are living, He surely will be giving.
Far sooner earth and heaven to ruin would be given,
Than they should be forsaken, who Thee by faith have taken. So, you dear friends will still remember when our journey started, I mean May 21, 1751 towarts Millheim (Mülheim),'''Mülheim''' is a town on the right banks of the river Rhine, opposite to the city of Cologne. In former times it was a port for transporting agricultural goods on the Rhine downstream to the Netherlands. It was also used as starting point for emigrants, as one of the easierst ways to get to go to port of Rotterdam, where most of the ships left from Europe to America. where we were delayed for 4 weeks. From there we traveled in 5 days to Rotterdamm (Rotterdam), where we stopped for another 14 days. From there we went to Helfersschlos (Hellevoetsluis), where we stayed for another 3 days. From there across the "tollen Sund" (Strait of Dover) to Dill (Deal) in old England, where we stopped for 3 days. From there to Kaus (Cowes), and so it took us 3 weeks from Rotterdam to Kaus (Cowes) in old England.According to the law in force at the time, all ships wishing to sail to the English colonies were obliged to dock in an English port beforehand. Cowes was the most suitable option for ships from Rotterdam. The stop was also used to load provisions for the crossing one last time. There we stopped for another 14 days. Then our ship was loaded with provisions. From there we finally sailed on the open sea, 8 ships at the same time, and under God's gracious assistance we sailed happily in 7 weeks and 2 days without any storms to the Refier (River, = Delaware). That's when we had to finally learn what a storm is. A whole day and night. We had already thrown the anchors as it started, so that it didn't blow us back. From there we sailed to the town of Vilatelvia (Philadelphia) in 2 days.
In total we lost no more than 13 people, 2 old ones and 11 children, one of whom belonged to [[Johannes Heintz]] and one to "[[Barben Ann]]". On the other hand, we gained another 7 young children born at sea. Our ship was not so big, only 240 freights.The cargo capacity in old sailing ships was divided into "freights". Larger ships had up to 500 freights, normally the capacity was 300. as the transport of emigrants became more and more commercialized in the 1700s, the term freights gradually came to be used by the trading companies for passengers, who were also regarded as nothing more than "goods". An adult passenger had to pay one "freight" for a crossing. This also included the calculated space required for food and other everyday items, such as straw for the bedstead and the luggage brought along. Children between the ages of 4 and 14 had to pay half a freight, while toddlers under the age of 4 could often travel free of charge. Of these children born at sea, one was given birth by my [[Schneider-14658|brother's wife]], and then baptized and sponsored by [[Eckhardt-676|my wife]], for we had a [[Reformed priest]] with us from the "region of Hanau".The "'''Hanauerland'''" (French: Pays de Hanau) refers to a former dominion north of Strasbourg on the French side and around Kehl in central Baden on the German side on both sides of the border formed by the Rhine. After the death of the last Count of Hanau, Johann Reinhard III, in 1736, the County of Hanau-Lichtenberg fell to Hesse-Darmstadt. The child is still alive and all of us as well, as long as God is willing. Also all our fellow countrymen. But we are no longer together. [[Henrich-435|Johann Jörg Henrich]] and his brother went with [[Daniel Bäcker from Ebersbach]] to Neu Jörg (New York), where [[Henrich-437|Johannes Henrich]] was hired out by his brother. But I do not know what craft he is doing or what he is up to. I have heard that he has married, he will have brought the letter to our friends in Neu Jörg (New York).
We were lying in one berth at sea, me and the two brothers. My wife cared for them, as well as for myself and my children, with washing and mending, with food and drink. You two good friends as guardians wrote to me that I should take care of the little one, but now I can't know how he's doing. The big one has bought goods for the money, except for one freight, which he has paid for himself; the little one has to earn his passage. But this cannot harm him as long as he gives him his share later. But I will do as you wish if he asks me for help in this matter. My brother and I are together in Fintzelfani (Pennsylvania), in Almengel (Allemaengel) as it is called.'''Allemaengel''' refers to a historical region in Pennsylvania. It is situated in the southeastern part of the state, primarily within Berks County, but it also extends into neighboring counties such as Lehigh and Schuylkill. The exact boundaries of Allemaengel may not be precisely defined, as it is more of a cultural and historical designation rather than an administrative division. The history of Allemaengel is deeply intertwined with the broader narrative of German immigration to Pennsylvania. Allemaengel's history begins in the early to mid-1700s when German-speaking settlers, often referred to as the Pennsylvania Dutch, began arriving in the region.
Probably the best overview of the topic gives John Levan '''Kistler''' in his Book "[https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/136744 '''''The history of Jerusalem "Allemaengel" Church'''; Albany Township, Berks Co., Pa.'']"; published 1947. We have cleared land beyond the Blue Mountain. I have already sown 2 acres of land. But we won't move on it until the coming year 1753. Now to tell you further of this land, our lawful lord, to whom we have sworn, is William the 2nd, King in England.The reigning King of England at that time was not William but George II. This obvious confusion of names can perhaps be explained by the fact that for decades only princes with the name William reigned in the Nassau territories, and Johannes Hain never knew a prince with any other name. Otherwise, our present governor is appointed by the king to promote law and justice and to punish evil. It is not, however, as with you, that the rulers plague their subjects to the utmost with giving money and services, for we dwell quietly under our leadership. They also do not rule for more than a year, then they or others are re-elected by the subjects.
I cannot tell you everything I would like to for now, otherwise my paper would be too small. But what I write to you in half a word must be entirely true. Everything is free, all craftsmanship and profession. It is also, thank God, a fertile land with all kinds of crops, fruit enough, all kinds of fruit, but I have not yet seen any millet. In the time we have been here in this country, we have only baked wheat bread. It's not that expensive either. You can buy bunches for 4 shillings, that's 2 "Kornmeste" for you.It has not yet been possible to clarify what the term "Kornmeste" represents for an entity. It is certainly a local hollow measure for determining the quantity of grain, as it was used in the Nassau territories. One shilling is as much as 9 Albus in your money,The Albus was a currency used in parts of the Holy Roman Empire, especially in the Rhineland, from the late Middle Ages onwards. The name "albus" is Latin and means "white". Due to the higher silver content, this lighter-colored coin differed in color from the other inferior coins. and 20 shillings is a pound. But I have earned 3 to 4 or even 5 shillings many a day. A cart here is worth 3 or 4 pounds. And you don't need to buy any wood. I am a forester here myself. Me and my brother have an hour of forest, In some parts of the Holy Roman Empire, time units were used to describe the size of areas or to represent distances. The most widely used unit was the "hour". This meant the distance that could be comfortably covered on foot in one hour. As you can see, however, this is a very subjective measure. From possible comparisons, it is known today that an average of 4 km or 2.5 miles was considered "comfortably manageable". For land, the relative indication by time units then corresponded to the area that took 1 hour to walk around. It is understandable that the size depends heavily on the shape of the land. In the end, this specification never caught on and today can only be understood as not more than a metaphorically imprecise indication for a "quite large plot of land". the most beautiful wood. There is all kinds of wood here, 4 kinds of oak, fir, both walnuts, cedar, chestnuts, hickory, poplar, all kinds that I have never seen in the German lands in my life. Also healthy water, healthy air, and plenty of livestock. There are people here who have 10 to 15 horses and have brought nothing with them into the country. If you work hard, you can make a living here, because you give very little to the authorities. A man who has 2 or 3 or 4 hundred acres of land gives 2 or 3 shillings a year, which is only 9 Albus, as I have already mentioned, and sometimes nothing at all.
There are also plots of land for sale if you bring money into the country. Because people are moving further into the country. People still don't know how big the country is. Europe is like Dillenburg compared to Frankfurt on the map. The best land is still unclaimed, they have already explored up to 700 miles and still can't find an end. When a well-off man of yours would turn his things into money and would like to move here, he can live here in peace, better than a nobleman amongst you. So can the poor, but they must start small; but the land bears fruit, when the wood is cleared of it, without further improvement. And that is the best thing: even if someone can only pay their passage, they can be well self-sufficient afterwards. A common day laborer earns 2 shillings and 6 pence. 12 pence is 1 shilling, which is half a Thaler for you. So much for my true account of this land, of crops, wood, water, and not forgetting the beautiful fruit. One man here has more fruit and peaches than an entire village in your territories. We also have plenty of God's word and preachers for those who like to hear it. You will be well aware that preachers have come to us from Dillenburg. [[Wisel]] is our preacher here. [[Otterbein-13|Otterbein]] is in the city of Längester (Lancaster). This year again 14 ships with people have already arrived. That's my report so far for this time. Now if any of you wish to come, but at your own will and not at my command, for the journey is arduous. The children of Israel first had to travel through the deserts of Sur (Shur) and Helim (Elim), and also through the Red Sea, before they reached the Promised Land. But the Lord was their guide, saying, "When you pass through the fire, I will be with you, so that the flames will not scorch you, and on the water, so that the rivers will not drown you." (Isaiah 43:2) I do not urge anyone to come, but when my brother-in-law [[Johannes Eckhart]] and my sister-in-law [[Magdalena]] come, if they have not yet been married, and if it is not against their [[mother's]] wishes, if she is still alive, or if she would like to go on this journey herself; it would be most welcome and pleasing to us. I would also like you to tell my siblings and mother. They might like to come to us. My brother also wants to write, but nobody knows whether it will reach you. If any of you want to come, bring me the [https://opendata.uni-halle.de/explore?bitstream_id=7b868f57-69d9-457d-b8ee-f9383e95178c&handle=1981185920/66947&provider=iiif-image Book of the True Way to Heaven], a couple of rifles, half a dozen two-man saws, a broad axe like the ones the carpenters use in your region, and a good carpenter's axe. But if someone wants to bring his own goods, he should bring scythes, forage sickles, drills, cloth and sheets. But I advise everyone to pay their own passage and whatever they need for the journey themselves. Now may The Lord, our God, bless you, my beloved ones. Do not grieve too much over my parting, remain steadfast in faith, in a short time we will see each other again in that eternity. This time nothing more than the will of God, which is higher than the understanding of all angels and men. May He then preserve our and all your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus until this eternal and blessed life, Amen. Remaining faithful, your brother-in-law and sister until death. Johannes Hein in Fintzelfania (Pennsylvania) in Allenmengel (Allemaengel) with [[Ludwig Hantz]]. You must also write to that place. When I am no longer with him, he will deliver the letter to me. - Given today, October 5, 1752. PS: You will be so good as to pay 20 Albus for the letter. If you now write a letter back, you will not have to pay anything. Everyone is left to his religion in this country. Please bring me a good "Mahlinger" tobacco pipe. There are none like that here. == Sources and Footnotes ==
The Letters of Rev. T.O. Ellis, M.D.
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The Life & Adventures of Lauritz & Fredrikke (Mjoen) Stenerson Family
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''This is information written down by Christine at the request of her son and one of his cousins, who were interested in family history and genealogy. The text has been edited for clarity and privacy - the names of the grandchildren have been omitted.'''' ---- Dad [[Stenerson-35|(Lauritz Stenerson)]] was born in Christiana, Norway (now called Oslo) on September 15, 1859 of parents [[Stenerson-37|Christian Stenerson]] (1823-1897) and [[Larsdotter-5631|Bodil Larsdatter]] (1826-1917). Lauritz immigrated to this country when he was in his twenties and brought his parents with him. Dad and parents and 2 boarders came to America in 1887. They landed in Aurora, Illinois and he worked for the CB&Q railroad. His brother [[Stenerson-39|Stener Stenerson]] had come over before. Stener had married in Norway and had two sons born over there, Charlie and Alex. Three girls (Bertha, Dora, and Luella) were born in Chicago where they lived, and Uncle Stener was in the painting and decorating business. Dad sometimes helped him and learned the trade too, and many of the people in the Clay Banks area had him do their papering and painting. Dad also had 2 brothers who died when very young of diphtheria. Dad's father worked as a cabinet maked a Gaustad (a mental institution near Oslo) and his mother was a tailoress. There was compulsory army service in Norway, so Dad served his time there and played the cornet in the army band. Mother [[Mjoen-16|Fredrikke Mjøen]] was born in Trolla [near Trondheim] in 1864. Her parents were [[Mjøen-20|Rasmus Mjøen]] and [[Petterson-430|Sara Johanna Petterson]] . Rasmus was born in 1830 (died in 1910) and Sara in 1833 (died in 1876). She had one brother, Even, who died when 18 years old, and sisters Jorgine [came to U.S. also, but died young], Anna [Pederson], Ingeborg, and Ida. Her two youngest sisters (Ingeborg and Ida) died when very young, and her mother died when she was 11 years old. Grandpa Mjøen [Rasmus] worked in a lumber yard as a foreman and later as a bookkeeper in a foundry in Trolla. Mother [Fredrikke] kept house for the family after the housekeeper left, and she also went to teachers training school and taught a few years before she came over here. Mother and Dad joined St. Olaf's Church (in Aurora, Illinois) shortly after it was organized and they met there. Dad organized and directed the choir and mother sang in the choir. The pastor was Rev. C. Reinertson. Mother did housework for a couple families in Aurora, and also worked at the garment factory for awhile. Rev. Reinertson served a couple country churches too and he had Mother teach the parochial school a few weeks in the summer time. When he left Aurora, he came to Door County [Wisconsin] and was pastor at Bay View and the Tanum-Forest congregations, and then he sent for Mother to come and teach parochial school up here. Shortly after that, Dad and his parents came up here too, and they were married by Rev. Reinertson at the Tanum parsonage. Mrs. Reinertson and Walter Gilbert were their attendants. Their wedding date was November 16, 1894. Dad and Mother belonged to the Tanum congregation in Clay Banks where all of us children were baptized and confirmed. Dad organized and directed the choir there for about 25 years and also served as a Klokker for as many. He and Mother also taught parochial school out there. Dad was very musical and had a real good tenor voice. He also organized and directed a small band, and was very active in Tanum church and very well-liked. He also served on the Salona school board and was Clay Banks town clerk a couple of terms. [Note: A “klokker” is a layperson who assists the minister in preparing for, and during the service.] ---- ''In the next section (omitted) Christine describes the family's moves from farm to farm in the Clay Banks area, and Christine's jobs - she worked as a cook or maid for a number of very wealthy families in the Lake Forest, Illinois area. Lauritz died in 1916, and eventually Fredrikke and some of her daughters moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin.'' ---- In 1925, Mother and the younger of us moved to Milwaukee and the twins [[Stenerson-41|Martha/"Mac"]] and [[Stenerson-40|Marie/"Mikky"]] finished high school there in 1927 at West Division. [[Stenerson-43|Anne]] was nursing in Milwaukee for the city until she married in August 1927. [[Stenerson-42|Laura]] was teaching in Dodge Co. and [[Stenerson-36|Ester]] did one year too. Then Laura and Mac and Mikky got jobs at Phoenix Hosiery and Ester worked a short time at Evinrude Motors and then did housework until she came up here to Sturgeon Bay and was bookkeeper at Woolworths until she retired. '''Now the history about the Stenerson girls'''
[[Stenerson-32|Sara]] finished high school and went out to North Dakota to teach in a one room country school. She met and married [[White-62510|Loren White]] out there and their first 3 children were born in North Dakota. They moved to Milwaukee in 1928 and had 3 more children. [[White-69308|Larry]] was killed in Germany in World War II. Sara passed away on March 24th, 1959. [[Stenerson-43|Anne]] finished high school and went into nurses training in Milwaukee and worked at private duty for awhile and then worked as a city nurse. She met and married [[Patterson-24639|Marvin Patterson]], a farmer who farmed in the Caldwell community near Mukwonago in 1927. They had 2 daughters. I [[Stenerson-38|Christine]] met and married [[Johnson-134100|Carl Johnson]] of Cannon Falls, Minn. in 1931 and we had one son. Carl passed away in 1944. [[Stenerson-42|Laura]] went to Sturgeon Bay High School 2 years and then attended Algoma teachers training school. Following this she taught 2 years in Dodge County. She met and married [[Mertig-2|Dick Mertig Sr]] from Glidden in 1941 and they had one son. They moved to Hayward and Laura passed away in 1981. [[Stenerson-40|Marie]] (Mikky) married Lester Olson on August 28, 1943. He was from the town of Clay Banks, a Vignes schoolmate and a farmer. They adopted 2 children. [[Stenerson-41|Martha]] (Mac) served as a dental assistant during World War II in the Navy and was stationed in Jacksonville, Florida and discharged just before Christmas in 1945. On Sept. 28, 1946 she married Bill Nelson - a confirmation-mate - a farmer in Forestville Township and they had 3 sons. The first one didn't live. That takes care of Lauritz and Fredrikke's children.
The Life and History of Corrine Louise Pearson Purves
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The Life and Times of Whity Black
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The Life History of John and Elizabeth Betsy Everts
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The Life of Sarah (Jackson) Johnston Underwood
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The Limberlost Apartment
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The Lineberry Family by W. S. Lineberry
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''The Lineberry Family'' was written by Winfield Scott Lineberry and completed in January of 1918. The cover was drawn and booklet printed by Robert E. Lineberry. The booklet provided the most complete accounting of the descendants of Jacob and Mary Youngblood Lineberry from the mid-18th to early-20th century. No attempts were made to correct errors or add information. As such, the booklet should be used only as a general reference guide and not as an authoritative reference source. This book has been photocopied and is available [http://digital.ncdcr.gov/cdm/ref/collection/p15012coll1/id/68038 online] through the North Carolina Digital Collections of the State Archives of North Carolina and the State Library of North Carolina.
== THE LINEBERRY FAMILY == === by W. S. Lineberry === === Cover Drawn and Booklet Printed by Robert E. Lineberry === The Lineberry Family, or a great many of them, seem to know but little of their ancestors or their relation one toward another, and I have been enjoined by several of the family to write a sketch of the family. I hope the reader will not expect too much of me, but I shall endeavor to give a true history of the family as handed down to me by my grandmother and other relatives, so the present generation and those who follow may know something of the family.
In the first place, I will say there is but one family of Lineberrys in America. This seems a little strange and I have sometimes thought that back in Germany the Leinbergers and the Leinbachs and others of like name might possibly all be the same, and got to spelling the name differently, like the Pughs. I know of three ways their names are spelled. Pugh and Pew (Welsh), Pou (French), yet they all pronounce it Pugh; but this is only a conjecture of my own. (Note: Lineberry is not the German form of the name-the "Line" was undoubtedly "Lein," and the "berry" was certainly different - berry is not a German form. In the voucher for pay to Jacob Lineberry for militia service from the North Carolina Revolutionary Acconts, Volume IX, page 106, folio 1, the name is given "Jacob Linebuger" - obviously meant for "Lineburger;" and in the deed from Jacob Lineberry and wife Catherine to George Lineberry - their son? - recorded in Book 1 page 271, of the Guilford County Public Registry, one of the signatures as transcribed on the record and so indexed is "Lienbarger." From this it would seem that the name in German was Leinberger pronounced Lineberger.)
Well, to begin, my great-great-grandfather Jacob Lineberry and his wife, Elizabeth, came to this country in 1752 from the Hartz mountains of Germany in what is now known as Brunswick. They had two boys, William and Jacob. Jacob was a baby at the time they came to America. They, like a great many others in that day and time, were persecuted on account of their religious opinions, and came to America where they could worship God according to the dictates of their own consciences.
They settled somewhere near the Randolph and Chatham line. Jacob, junior, married Mary Youngblood and settled on Brush Creek in Randolph County, and William married and settled in Chatham County; hence they were always called the Randolph Lineberrys and the Chatham Lineberrys.
As to the Chatham Lineberrys I shall say but little, as I know but little. I do know that there was a William, better known as Uncle Billy, who was a great Baptist preacher in his day, and was loved and revered by everyone who knew him; and that Professor E. G. Lineberry of Raleigh was a descendant of Uncle Billy. There is a considerable family in Chatham who are descendants of William Lineberry.
There is a little incident connected with my greatgrandfather, Jacob Lineberry II, that I feel bound to relate. In the time of the Revolutionary War he was a Whig. (God bless the name I love it yet.) He came home one time to see his family and get something to eat. Old Grandmother got the big oven by the fire and was cooking him a big corn pone which we older ones loved, but the present generation knows but little of, and I must say that they have missed a great treat if they never tasted pone bread. Those who have read the history of the Revolution know how David Fanning, a Tory officer who commanded a company of men, mostly Tories, ravaged the country from Fayetteville up to the mouth of Deep River, and how they committed murder, rape and arson, and how they left ruin and destitution wherever they went, committing all kinds of depredation. Grandfather was sitting by the fire waiting for his bread, when some of the family looked out and said, "Dave Fanning is coming!" Grandfather seized his gun and poked it through a crack in the wall and took aim at Fanning and no doubt would have brought him down, as he was said to be a good marksman, but Grandmother seized his arm and with tears in her eyes begged him not to kill him, for if he did his men would murder the whole family. I can see him now, brave man that he was, standing there meditating what to do. Finally for the sake of his family he withdrew his gun, jumped out at the back door and ran. The Tories fired several shots at him but their shots went wild, and he made his escape. Some of the family took the bread, ran upstairs and hid it in the big chest, but Fanning's men smelled it and never left the house until they found it and carried it with them.
I will now try to give the names of this brave man's children and their descendants. There were born to Jacob and Mary ten children, seven boys and three girls. The boys were Jacob, Francis, James, Thomas, Solomon, Samuel and George; the girls were Mary, Katie and, I think, Amy.
Jacob III, married and moved to Carroll County, Va., where there is a large number of his descendants.
Francis married Mary Scotton and settled on Brush Creek, one mile south of Locust Grove. They raised seven children, five boys and two girls. The boys were Lemuel, Alfred, Edwin, Oran and Albert; the girls were Elizabeth and Mary.
Lemuel married Sally Hanner, the only child of Abner Hanner, of Guilford County. They had eight children, four boys and four girls. The boys were William Hanner, Alfred Dennison, Lemuel Christy and Winfield Scott; the girls were Martha Caroline, who died at the age of three and was the first one buried at Gray's Chapel, Mary Jane, Loucina Marticia and Sarah Anne.
William H. married Sarah Duskin and moved to Carroll County, Mo., where he died a few years ago at the age of 76. His wife preceded him to the grave several years. They had three boys and five girls. The boys were Alford Balfour, Lemuel, and Wesley; the girls were Eoline, Bettie, Louetta, Martha and Dee.
Balfour married and settled near Hale, Mo., where he died last August. He left a large family, was a prosperous farmer and big stock dealer, and was very popular.
Lemuel has been married twice and lives in St. Louis, Mo.
Wesley lives in Colorado. I don't know whether he is married or not.
Eoline married Bruce Duskin and lives in Arkansas. They have several children whose names I do not know.
Bettie married a Mr. Griswold and died several years ago.
Louetta married Alex Cameron, and I think lives in Carroll County.
Martha, I think, married an Osborn and died several years ago.
Dee was never married and died about the time she was grown.
Alfred Dennison Lineberry married Nan Swift and died October 24, 1874, without issue.
Lemuel Christy Lineberry married Bettie Burns of Chatham County. They had five children. Jonnie Clay died in infancy and is buried in Chatham. Johnnie Christy died and was buried in New York City when he was about two years old. Ed married in Virginia, had one child, and his wife died. The last I knew of him was in Texas. Carrie married a Mr. Cross, who died. She then married a Mr. Harper and lives in Fayetteville. Lillie married a Mr. Oliver and lives in Reidsville. L. C. died November 2, 1915, aged 80 years 8 months and 9 days.
Winfield Scott Lineberry was born April 2, 1847, at Locust Grove, Randolph County, on the farm where he now lives. On September 28, 1870, he married Hulda Louisa Vickory, daughter of William Vickory of New Salem. To them were born nine children, five boys and four girls. They were William Lemuel, John Henry, Charles Francis, James Alpheus, Joseph Scott, Augusta, Virginia, Sallie Louise and Mary Mabel.
William Lemuel Lineberry married Mary Winters, in Colorado. He now lives near Mebane, N. C. They have seven children. Rosalie, Katie who died in infancy, James, Joseph, John Scott, Julia and Nora.
John Henry Lineberry married Gertie Hall of Kentucky and now lives in Roanoke, Va. They have three children, Mary, Tom Scott and Pauline.
Charles Francis Lineberry married Zilphey Holden and runs a foundry and machine ship in North Wilkesboro, N. C. They have two girls, Bertell and Frances.
James Alpheus Lineberry married Almira Johnson, of Raleigh, where he now lives. He has one son, James Alpheus, Jr.
Joseph Scott Lineberry is single and lives on the farm at Locust Grove with his father and mother.
Augusta Lineberry married John Milton Aldridge and lives in Millboro. The had seven children, Golden, Joe Roy and Bob Glenn, all of whom died in infancy, Dee, Mabel, John Milton, Jr., and Hall Scott.
Virginia Lineberry married R. Marvin Spencer and lives at Waycross, Ga. They have no children.
Sallie Louisa Lineberry married Frank E. Minor, of Profit, Va. and lives in Alberene, Va. They had three children, Sallie Lou, Frank Scott, and Virginia Elizabeth, who died at the age of six months.
Mary Mable Lineberry married Willis Booth who is Guilford County Auditor and lives in Greensboro. They have one girl, Hulda Frances.
If I have said more concerning my own family than anyone else, it must be understood that I am writing this more for the benefit of my grandchildren than anyone else.
Mary Jane Lineberry married in 1860 A. W. Ingold who was an editor. They lived in Yorkville, S. C., where they both died. They had two daughters, Zorada, who married a Mr. Ingram, and Sallie, who married Charlie Randleman.
Loucina Marticia Lineberry married Capt. H. R. McKinnie. He was a gallant Confederate officer. They had but one daughter, Virginia Lee, who married A. J. McKinnon. They had two boys and two girls, Henry, who is an officer in the American army, and Arthur, who is at home, Sallie Lou, who is a missionary in China, and Katie Lee. They all live in Maxton, N. C.
Sarah Anne Lineberry married John M. Curtis. They lived in Maxton. They had two boys and four girls. Ida, the oldest, married W. W. Jones. They lived in Asheboro. They had four boys and three girls. The boys are Henry, Wade, Robert Lee, and Wiley; the girls are Lolley, Lura and Sarah.
Walter Scott Curtis lives somewhere in South Carolina, and is not married.
John Christy Curtis married Lota Frostic of Maxton. They have, I think, two children living and two dead. I can't recall their names.
Lillie Curtis married Allen J. Steed of Maxton where they live. They have one boy, Boyd.
Florence Curtis married E. E. Holleman of Apex. They have two children living, Grady and Pauline.
Virginia Curtis married Otis Bass and livs in South Carolina. They have several children whose names I do not know.
Alfred Lineberry, son of Francis, moved to Indiana, married, and had one boy, Francis, and one girl, Mary.
Edwin Lineberry, son of Francis, married Annie Osborn and moved to Indiana some thirty-five years ago. He had three boys, William, Wesley and Addison, all living in Indiana; three girls, Almira, Eliza and Emma.
Oran Lineberry, son of Francis, first married Alva Reece. They had four boys, Lewis, who was killed in the War between the States at the battle of Chancellorsville, Va., ad Culver, who was killed in the last fight at Kinston and was a lieutenant of his company. William lives in Missouri, and Luther, I think, lives in Tennessee. Oran had three girls by his first wife. Armisey married the Rev. Elwood Smith of Iredell County. They have several children. Mary married a Mr. Reece in Yadkin County, where her father lived. She had several children. Laura, the youngest, married a Mr. Carson in Indiana. They had two children, a girl who is married and lives in Greensboro, and a son who lives in Norfolk, Va. Oran married the second time Mrs. Mary Hurt who was formerly a Miss Foot. They had one son, Thomas, who lives in Yadkin County, and two daughters. Emma married John Cook, of Jonesboro; they had several children. Loucina married William Davis and, I think, lives in Winston-Salem.
Albert Lineberry, youngest son of Francis, married Mrs. Mary Smith, formerly Mary McGee. They had one son, Logan, who married Alice Brown; they had one daughter, Edna, who married and lives in Greensboro with her mother. Albert had one daughter, Roella, who married Thad Crowson and lives in Trinity Township. They have a large family of children whose names I do not know.
Elizabeth Lineberry, daughter of Francis, never married. She died in New Salem several years ago.
Mary Lineberry, the youngest daughter of Francis Lineberry, married Gilbert Jones and lived on Sandy Creek, Randolph County. They had two sons and five daughters. Alford Jones, the oldest, married Vandelia Reece. They had two boys, Percy who is a prosperous farmer, and John who lives in Charleston, S. C.
Francis Jones married Mary Freeman. They had two boys and one girl who died early in life. Alford, the oldest, lives in Robeson County and is in the lumber and mercantile business, and John lives in the same county.
Jane Jones married Quinton Nixon. They had six boys and two girls. The boys were Alfred, Francis, Thomas, David, Lindsey, Tyson and Zeb, all living in Randolph County, and are farmers, except Francis, who lives in Virginia. The girls are Vandelia, who married a Millikan and lives in Randleman, and Bittie, who is single.
Caroline Jones, daughter of Gilbert and Mary, married Madison Jones and lives near Gray's Chapel. They have one boy, Wesley, and two daughters, Maggie and Martha. Maggie married Brower York. They had one boy, Brower York, Jr. Martha married John Curtis, of Liberty. They had several children.
Mary Anne Jones, daughter of Gilbert, married Lindsey York. They had no children. Necey Jones, daughter of Gilbert, married John Wilkerson. They had one daughter, Mary Jane. Lida Jones, the youngest daughter, died before she was grown.
I don't know who James Lineberry, son of Jacob II, married. He settled in Chatham County, had two girls who never married.
Thomas Lineberry, son of Jacob II, married Lizzie Gay. They had two boys and two girls. William, the oldest, never married. Jonas married Cindy Hix and died without issue. Sallie never married. Peggy married a Thornton, had several children who live in Guilford County.
Solomon Lineberry, son of Jacob II, married Polly Gay. They had three boys and one girl. Jacob, the oldest, married Elizabeth Smith and lived in New Salem. They had one boy and one girl. Alson, the boy, married a Parson and died without issue. Mary married George Wall. She left several children. Ambrose, son of Solomon, married a Brown and died without issue. Andy died while a young man. Rebecca, the only daughter, married William Pugh, son of Enoch and Pethiah Deviney Pugh, and had one son, Fillmore Pugh, who married Alethea Jane Allred and has several children, among them George Denny Pugh who married Irene Smith, daughter of Archibald Murphey Smith and wife Emily Foust.
The reader will see that James, Thomas and Solomon have left no descendants to keep up the Lineberry name.
Enoch Pugh was a son of Thomas Pugh, Jr., of Randolph County, North Carolina, and wife Barbara Amick, daughter of Nicholas Amick or Emig, the German immigrant who came to Pennsylvania with his father. Thomas Pugh, Jr., was a son of Thomas Pugh of Randolph County, and wife Elizabeth Pugh (first cousins), and Thomas Pugh was a son of James Pugh, the immigrant to Pennsylvania from Wales, and his wife Joan Price. Pethiah Deviney Pugh was a daughter of Samuel Deviney of Randolph County, the Regulator leader who was at the Battle of Alamance, and his second wife Anne Lau or Low. Sam Deviney lived to be more than 100 years old.
Alethea Jane Allred was a daughter of Henry Branson Allred of Randolph County, North Carolina, and wife Eunice Leonard. Henry Branson Allred was a son of Elisha Allred of Randolph County and wife Barbara Spoon. Elisha Allred was a son of John Allred of Randolph County, Revolutionary soldier, and his wife Sarah Spencer. John Allred was a son of William Allred of Randolp County, Revolutionary soldier, and his wife Elizabeth Diffee. William Allred was a son of John Allred of Northumberland County, Virginia, and wife Anne Hamilton. John Allred was a son of William Allred of Northumberland County and his first wife Alice Fallin. William Allred was a son of Clement Allred, Jr., born at Worstead, Norfolk, England, the immigrant to Northumberland County, Virginia, and his wife Elizabeth Tilles. Clement Allred, Jr., was a son of Clement Allred and wife Susan Boswell. Clement Allred was a son of John Allred and wife Agnes Rolfe. John Allred was a son of the Reverend Henry Allred, Vicar of Worstead, Norfolk, England, in the year 1553, and his wife Elizabeth.
We next come to Samuel Lineberry, son of Jacob II, who married Jane Bond, a good Christian woman, whom everyone loved. They had ten children, six boys and four girls. The boys were Jacob, the Rev. Arlando Wood, D.D., the Rev. Zachary, Elwood, the Rev. Samuel and William. The girls were Edith, Mary, Kiziah and Ardella.
Jacob married Edith Willhoight. To them were born seven children, four boys and three girls. Rankin Columbus, the oldest, married Daney King, of Montgomery County. They had four boys and two girls. Rachey, son of Rankin, married Ada Hackett. They have three boys and two girls. Jacob Peter, Rankin's second boy, married Ida Hackett. They have five boys and two girls. Rue, the third boy, married Lunda Hackett. They have one boy and one girl. William, the fourth boy, married Maude Foust. They have three boys. Minty Anne, the oldest girl of Rankin, married Robert Hackett and has five boys and five girls. Cina married John Allred and has two boys. Gaston, Jacob's second boy, married Rozana Aumon and had several children. Marion Luther, the third boy, married Jennie Lineberry and had three children; Shelton, the son, married Lou Julian. They live near Gray's Chapel and have several children. Oren, the oldest daughter, married Marion Trogdon. They have a large family. Two of the oldest boys volunteered for World War I and are now in camp. Belle, the youngest daughter, married Tom Jones and lives in Greensboro.
Scott, Jacob's youngest son, died the 7th of January 1918. He married Adaline McMasters and had three boys, Melvin, Lute, who married Emma Nelson and live in Worthville, and has several children, and Gaston. He also has several girls, whose names I do not know. Minty, Jacob's oldest daughter, married Harris Foust and died without children. Julia married the Rev. Joseph Smith. They had three boys and two girls. The boys are Friel, John and Coke; the girls are Ada, who married Roscoe Hackett, and Lucy, who married Charlie Sheren. Jane, Jacob's youngest daughter, married Samuel Smith and died very soon thereafter.
Now we come to the Rev. Arlando Wood Lineberry, D.D., and his family. He was one of the most popular ministers in the Methodist Protestant Church in North Carolina, was elected President of the North Carolina Conference time and again. He settled in Guilford County, five miles east of Greensboro, where he lived up to his death a few years ago. He married Miss Celia Gillespie, of Surry County. They had five boys and one girl, namely: Martin Alexander, Jesse William, Charles Clark, James Brantley, John and Captain Samuel L. Lineberry, who married Julia Frances Owen, of Yadkin College, on November 6, 1973, and died at the home of his only son, Albert A. Lineberry, at Lexington, about two years ago, aged 64 years. He had one daughter, who died at the age of two. The reason I say more of him that the rest of the family is because I know but little of the rest of the family. Dr. Lineberry's only daughter is Mrs. H. B. Owen of Gibsonville, N. C.
Zachary Lineberry was a devout Methodist Protestant minister and married Cinda Wood and lived at Randleman. When not preaching he made buggies. They had two boys, Cicero and Robert, and three daughters, Caroline, Louisa and Martha, all of whom are dead.
Cicero married Martha Farlow. They had three sons. Arlando married Maggie Swaim. They had several children. Charlie was a prominent merchant at Randleman. Logan lives in Randleman and is one of the largest grocery merchants in that town. Cicero had one daughter who lives in Randleman.
Robert Lineberry married Ida Workman and lived in Randleman up to his death. He was a good Christian man and was a leader in the church at Mt. Lebanon for years. They have some children, but I do not know their names.
Caroline, Zachary's oldest daughter, married Gus Kennett, who died in the army during the Was between the States. They had some children, but I think they are all dead. She married second Anderson Jarrell, and I think had some children.
Louisa, the second daughter, who was one of the most beautiful women I ever saw, married Web Stratford. They had three boys and three girls, whose names I do not know.
Martha, the youngest daughter of Zachary, married a McCollum.
Elwood Lineberry, son of Samuel, married Marticia Mills and moved to Indiana several years ago. They had two sons, Addison and Lindsey.
Samuel Lineberry, son of Samuel, married Martha Parker and moved to Indiana several years ago. He was a Methodist Protestant minister. I know but little of his family, except that Watt, his oldest boy, is a prominent Methodist Protestant minister and has been President of the Indiana Conference for years.
William A. Lineberry married Fannie Peeler. He lived and died in Randleman. They had two sons, Odell and Robert; he had eight daughters. I will only call the names of those I recollect. They are Jennie, Molcie, Fannie and Nettie.
Edith Lineberry, daughter of Samuel Lineberry and wife Jane Bond, married Reuben Smith. They had five sons and three daughters. Their oldest son, Alfred Smith, married Adeline Allred and had one son, Lazell, who is a preacher. Madison Smith went west and married. Pemberton Smith died at the age of twenty. Archibald Murphey Smith, known as Murphey, married Emily Foust. They had one boy and one girl, Luther E. and Irene who married George D. Pugh, son of Fillmore.
Jane Bond Lineberry was a daughter of John Bond and wife Jane Beeson of the Center Friends Meeting community in southern Guilford. John Bond was a son of Joseph Bond of Devizes and Bidiston, Wiltshire, England, and Chester, Pennsylvania, and wife Martha Rogers. Joseph Bond was a son of Benjamin Bond of Devizes and Bidiston, Wiltshire, and wife Anne Paradise of Slaughterford, Wiltshire. Benjamin Bond was a son of Edward Bond of Bewley, Wiltshire.
Jane Beeson Bond was a daughter of Benjamin Beeson and wife Elizabeth (Hunter?). Benjamin Beeson was a son of Richard Deeson and wife Charity Grubb. Richard Beeson was a son of Edward Beeson, the immigrant to Chester County, Pennsylvania, from Lancaster, England, where he was born in 1652. Charity Grubb Beeson was a daughter of John Grubb, the immigrant to Grubb's Landing, Delaware.
Emily Foust Smith was a daughter of David Foust and wife Laura Anne Wood. David Foust was a son of John Foust and wife Susannah Swinne. John Foust was a son of Jacob Foust, Revolutionary soldier, and wife Charity. Jacob Foust was a son of John Foust or Faust and wife Barbara Albright. John Foust was a son of John Peter Faust, the immigrant, and his wife Anna Elizabeth. Barbara Albright Foust was a daughter of John Albright (Albrecht), the immigrant, and wife Anna Barbara. The Fousts (Faust) and Albrights (Albrecht) were German Calvinist (German Reformed) immigrants to Pennsylvania and then to North Carolina.
Samuel, Reuben's youngest son, first married Jane Lineberry, then Sophie Anne Routh and then Belle Wood, who is still living. He has several children. He lives at Randleman and is the efficient miller at Naomi Mills.
Reuben Smith had three girls, Eliza, Frendles Malinda, and Mary. Eliza maried Eli Hayes. They had three boys and one girl, Gilmore, Fatey, Walter and Mary. Gilmore married Mollie Lamb. They live near New Salem and have no children. Fatey married Nannie Vickory. They have several children. Walter married a Miss Harden. I think they have no children. He runs a grocery store at Naomi. Mary, the only daughter, married Edgar Woollen. They had two boys, Baxter and Junius.
Frendles Malinda Smith married Newton Foust. They had three boys and two girls. The boys are Samuel, Reuben and Jasper; the girls, Caroline, who married Rufus Neese, a prosperous farmer near Providence, and Mary Jane, who married Jesse Pugh. Neese has a large, intelligent family. I don't know their names.
Mary, Reuben's youngest daughter, married Wesley Hayes and had several children.
Mary Lineberry, daughter of Samuel Lineberry, married Dr. Brantley York. Dr. York was a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and notwithstanding his blindness, was one of the greatest educators North Carolina ever produced. If I am not mistaken he was one of the founders of Old Trinty School; if not, he was one of the first teachers. For many years he ran the school at Yadkin College, where the Lineberry boys, his brothers-in-law, and J. W. Pugh got their education. He taught school at various places all over the state, and at one time ran a school at New Salem for several years, at which place my oldest son and daughter went to school to him. Dr. York and wife had five boys and, I think, one girl. The boys were: Watt, the oldest, who was a prominent lawyer and had a very bright prospect before him, but died in early manhood. I think he married and perhaps had some children. Dr. Durant York, Brantley's son, lives in Mebane and is very popular physician and citizen. He is a Confederate veteran. William, another son, lives a few miles from Mebane, and I learn is a very prosperous farmer. He also is a Confederate veteran. Bascom, another son, is a minister and teacher. He helped his father in his schools. He was a very efficient teacher. Victor, the youngest son, is also a minister and teacher. He married Zula Hayes at New Salem. I think he and his brother Bascom live somewhere in the western part of the state. Dr. York had another son, Clegg. I don't know where he lives.
I regret I can't give any more information about the family. I wrote one of Dr. York's sons to write and give me information as to whom they married, etc., but did not hear from him. Dr. York had one daughter, who married Professor Riem.
Kiziah Lineberry, daughter of Samuel, married Jess Pugh. To them were born four boys, James Wesley, Samuel Franklin, Thomas Kelly and Alfred, and two girls, Jane and Ardella. James Wesley married Lovina Wolfe. They had two boys. Riem Wolfe is a merchant and postmaster at Millboro. He married Louella Allred. George Wesley is a farmer and trader, lives near Gray's Chapel, and married Bessie Prevost of Worthville. James Wesley also has two girls, Estelle, who married Will Blair and lives in Greensboro, and Carrie, who married Cicero Redding. They all have a number of children.
James Wesley Pugh was a very prominent man. He was a farmer, merchant, and was for years before his death a magistrate. His counsel and advice were sought by all far and near. He was conservative and never gave a judgement that was not sustained when appeal was made to a higher court.
Samuel Franklin Pugh married Martha Smith of Forsyth County. He is a successful farmer; has four boys, Arlando, who married a Miss Williams; Theodore, who married a Miss Neese; Samuel, who married a Miss Hayes, and Clark, who married a Miss Routh. He also had three girls, Lou, who married Robert Lineberry; Tenie, who married Mike Ward, and Jane, who married Roda Underwood. S. F. Pugh was a Confederate veteran, and belonged to the cavalry.
Thomas K. Pugh married Martha Julian and is a successful farmer. He has three boys, Bascom, who married a Miss Turner; Charlie, who married a Miss Hayes, and Alfred, who married a Miss York, and five daughters, Lena who married a Mr. Wilson; Inez, who married a Mr. Kirkman; Lola, who is single; Elsie, who married a Mr. Barker, and Sallie, who married a Mr. Brown.
Alfred Pugh is a successful farmer and merchant of Grant Township. He was married twice. His first wife was Sarah Crowder, and his second one Sarah Kemp. He has several children by each wife.
Jane Pugh, daughter of Jesse, married Alson Routh. They had one daughter, Zula, who married Seward Nelson; has one boy, Guy, who lives with his grandmother and goes by the name of Guy Routh. Zula divorced Nelson and married Millard Pugh.
Ardella, Jesse Pugh's youngest daughter, married Wesley Cox, who lived in Staley. They had two boys, Dolph and June. Cox, before his death, was County Commissioner for several terms and was very popular.
Ardella Lineberry, youngest daughter of Samuel Lineberry, married James Caudle of New Salem, a veteran merchant. They had four boys. Melford, the oldest, is a successful merchant of Randleman. He married three times; his first wife was Sue Vickory; I do not know the names of his second and third wives. They were from outside this state. He has several children.
Barto, the second son, is a mail contractor and lives at Randleman. He married Jennie Vickory, daughter of William B. Vickory. They have three boys, Aubrey, Robert and Paul, and five girls, May, Jessie, Willie, Sallie and Bart.
Verney, the third boy, married a Miss Frayser.
Eli, the fourth, married a Miss Kirkman. He is a successful drummer (traveling salesman) and very popular man. He lives in Randleman.
James Caudle has one daughter, Carney, who has never married.
We will now go back to George Lineberry, son of grandfather Jacob Lineberry, Jr. George was a very successful farmer, always kept fat horses and lots of cattle and meat. He married Dorcas Hayes. They tell that old man Hayes had a very fine colt, and one Sunday George was there and wanted old man Hayes' consent to marry Dorcas. He asked the old man to go to the barn to look at his fine colt. Hayes opened the door so George could see. He looked in and said, "That's a fine colt." Hayes said, "Yes." George says, "Can I have Dorcas?" Hayes said, "Yes." "How old is the colt?" Well, George got Dorcas all right and they had two boys, Emerson and Horace, and four girls, Patsy, Polly, Louisa and Jemiana.
Emerson married Vaney York. They had three boys, George who married a Pugh, Nathan Scott who married a Ward, and Robert who married Lou Pugh. Emerson also had three girls, Marticia, Nancy and Amanda. Marticia married John Patterson, then Tom Heart. She had one boy by Patterson. Nancy married Tom Hackett. They had three boys and three girls. Robert married Minty Anne Lineberry; Roscoe married Ada Smith; John married Emma Dunn; Ada married Rachey Lineberry; Ida married Jacob Lineberry; and Louda married Rue Lineberry - three sisters married three brothers. Amanda, Emerson's youngest daughter, married George Allred. They have six living children. Dora, the oldest, married Bert Elder, who has a large hardware store and lumber business at Sanford; John, who married Cina Lineberry and lives at High Point; Charlie, who married Ollie Redding and lives at the old homeplace at Lineberry Station and runs a store; Della, who lives in High Point; and Henry and Jesse who have an interest in the Elder Hardware Store at Sanford.
Horace Lineberry, like his brother Emerson, was an oldtime farmer. They always had fine, fat horses and plenty of bread and meat. In fact you might say they "lived at home". Horace married Sally Allred. They had one son, George, who married Mary Hackett. They have a large family of children, the names of whom I do not know, and live in Greensboro.
Horace's oldest daughter, Isabel, married Nathaniel Allred. They have three boys, Tommy, Arlando and Arthur, and several girls, but I do not recall all their names. Sarah Anne, the youngest daughter of Horace, married Joe Hackett. They have several children. I do not know their names.
Patsy Lineberry, George's daughter, married John Jones, they had five boys, Madison, James, Frank, Quint, and Tom. Louisa Lineberry married Milton Beeson. They had three boys, John, Richard and Emerson. Polly Lineberry, daughter of George, never married. Minna Lineberry, daughter of George, married John Hinshaw. They had one son, Thomas, and a daughter named Louisa.
Amy Lineberry, daughter of Grandfather Jacob, married Jason McDaniel. They had two boys, Jacob and Lineberry McDaniel, and four girls, Amy, Ruth, Sophia and Sarah.
Jacob had two boys, Doris and Horace, and four girls, Sibyl, Sophia, Jane and Lovey. Sibyl married John Harden; they had one son, Ben, and two girls; one married Joe Patterson and the other Enoch Pugh. Sophia married Calvin Gray; they had four boys, Monroe, John who married a Miss Julian, Alex and Ben who married a Miss Slack, and one daughter Mary. Jane McDaniel, daughter of Jacob, never married. Lovey married Arlando Walker. They have several children.
Lineberry McDaniel went to South Carolina and married.
Amy McDaniel, Jason McDaniel's daughter, married Dimett Beeson. They had two boys, Milton and Curtis, and two girls, Ibby and Betsy. Neither of the girls ever married. As I have already said, Milton married Louisa Lineberry and after her death he married Sophia Smith. He had no children by his last wife. Curtis Beeson married Lizzie Bolden. They had ten children.
Ruth McDaniel, daughter of Jason McDaniel, married Jersey Hix. They had seven boys and one girl - Riley, William, Milton, John, Andrew, Emsley, Dickey Fields and Martha. They are all dead and I don't think any of them have any children living except Fields, who has several living in Randolph, and perhaps Martha has some living. Sophia and Sarah, daughters of Jason, never married.
Mary Lineberry, daughter of Great-grandfather Jacob, married Samuel Nelson, of Chatham. They have a large family that I know nothing of.
Katie Lineberry, daughter of Great-grandfather Jacob, married William Nelson, a veteran of the War of 1812. They had five boys and two girls, Larkin, Emsley, Hiram, Sam and Enoch, and Mary and Rebecca.
Larkin married Mary Goins. They had two children. Mary and Jim, who is a merchant and farmer. Mary died without marrying. James married Sallie Coble. They have three boys and two girls. The boys are Luther, Irwin and Joseph, and the two girls Johnsie and Annie. They are all single.
Emsley Nelson, son of William, married a McGee. They have two boys, Rufus and Lincoln, and I think they had some girls. They live in Trinity Township.
Hiram Nelson married Mary Allred. They had one son and one daughter, William Seward and Ada. William Seward Nelson lives in Norfolk, Va. He married Zula Routh. They had one son Guy, as I have already said, then were divorced. Guy was always known as Guy Routh. He lived in Greensboro. Ada, Hiram's only daughter, married Jerry Evans. They have two sons who are married, Walter and Oscar. They have four girls Esther, Lota, Alice and Katie.
Samuel Nelson, son of William, married Rebecca Hinshaw. They had one little girl who died in infancy.
Enoch Pugh Nelson, youngest son of William, married Elizabeth Julian. They had four sons, David Christy, William Vernon, Isaac Garfield and Samuel, and six girls, Lola, Louella, Hattie, Mattie, Pearl, and Winnie.
David C. married Halabut Allred. They had several children, but I do not know their names. David is a successful farmer and lumberman. William Vernon married a Miss Deaton of Richmond County. They have several children and live at Mt. Gilead, where he is in the mill and lumber business. Isaac Garfield married Missouri Bean of Montgomery County. He is a miller and farmer and has several children. Samuel married Ella Presnell and lives near Millboro. They have children. Lola Nelson died in her infancy. Louella married Ed Siler and lives in Worthville. She is a successful school teacher and has three living children, Edith, Ed, and Jewel. Hattie married John Howell and lives in Randleman; no children. Pearl married Archie Briles and lives at Cedar Falls. They have children. Winnie married Joseph Morgan and lives in Danville, Va. They have one child.
Mary Nelson, William's oldest daughter, married John Trogdon and left no children. Rebecca, William Nelson's younger daughter, married William C. Routh. They had three boys and three girls. The boys were Clark, who was killed at a party in the coal mine district of West Virginia. Vansickel, who is somewhere out west, and James, who married the widow of Eli Ellis, has one child and lives near Gray's Chapel.
Eldora and Katie, William Routh's daughters, died unmarried. Jennie Bell, the youngest, married Elijah Elliott. They have one girl, Freda, who married a Curtis, and one boy, Carl.
If I have left out any names or made any mistakes, I hope you will forgive me, as this has been no small job.
In conclusion, I will give a brief account of my own life for the benefit of my grandchildren. I was born at Locust Grove, Randolph County, on the farm I now live on and which was first settled by my father, Lemuel Lineberry, on April 2, 1847. What little education I have I got in a free school at York's Old School House before I was 14, and I will say our chances were not then what yours are today. When I was a little past 14 the War between the States broke out. When I saw the men volunteering and drilling, oh, how I did want to go, too, but my father and mother told me I was too young. However, I had an ambition to be a military man, so I studied the army tactics and became a drillmaster. After I was 15 I was pretty good drillmaster and was elected first lieutenant of the state militia, but this did not put me in the regular army where I could shoot Yankees, and this was the height of my ambition. When the first draft came on, which I believe was in 1862, I was elected first lieutenant of the drafted men. Now I thought I was going to get to don a uniform and go and fight Yankees, but that night when I came home my hope was cut in the bud, for my parents told me I was too young and could not go, but in April 1864, all between 17 and 18 were called to the colors, so we met in Asheboro and organized and I was again elected first lieutenant and Will Foust was elected captain. We were ordered out the 25th of May and when we got to Raleigh we had to reorganize and I was elected captain. My company was put in the first regular junior reserves as Company F. We later went into the 70th Regular N. C. Troops. We drilled in Raleigh some time. I had in my company 110 men, as fine a looking set of boys as ever shouldered a musket, and I must say I was proud of them.
I soon had them well drilled, as I had had some experience in drilling, and we were soon transferred to Weldon. There was a lot connected with this young life of mine that I would like to tell you, but it would consume too much space, so I must hasten on.
The first time we had the pleasure of meeting the bluecoats was at a place called Poplar Point, on the Roanoke River. We sank three gunboats (one got away) and put the Yankees to flight. I think that was one of the happiest nights I ever spent. I had tested my boys and saw they had the grit and would fight and I was prouder of them than I was before.
Our next fight was at Bellfield, Va. We fought the Yankees all day and lay in line of battle all night. That night there came a big sleet which froze our blankets to our clothes. Next morning when light came, to our surprise the Yankees were gone. They left ground covered with dead, which proved we had not shot wild. We pursued them several miles, but could not overtake them, so we came back to North Carolina.
Our next fight was at Kinston the last of March. Here we held an army four times our number three days, and many a Yankee we made to turn up his toes, but on the third night the Yankees found they could not break our lines. They commenced moving so as to cut us off from Raleigh so we had to fall back to Smithfield. I was slightly wounded in this fight, but never left the battlefield. Our next fight was at Bentonville, near Smithfield. Here Gen. Joe Johnston, our commander, had to fight not only the army we fought at Kinston but all of Sherman's grand army. They had at least six men to our one, but notwithstanding this our grand army, which was half-naked and half-starved, held all this powerful army in check for three days and nights and many were the dead bluecoats we left on the field. When they found they could not break our lines they again tried to cut us off from Raleigh, so we had to fall back again. When we got to Raleigh we heard the news of Lee's surrender, so Johnston marched us to Greensboro and surrendered to Sherman, and this ended the War. We surrendered April 27, 1865.
On April 28, 1865, I put foot in my old home once more with nothing in this world except the old clothes on my back and they were ragged - not a dollar in the world. I was sick on our retreat and put my knapsack in a baggage wagon with my uniform which was nearly new, and all my belongings except my Bible, and I never saw the knapsack any more. I found everything at home impoverished and I felt that I had rather be dead than alive. I went to work on the farm with but little to work with. I stayed on the farm and made two crops, then I went to Asheboro and clerked in a store for James March & Co. for one year, but did not like this, so I came back and farmed and in the winter would go to South Carolina with a few horses, if I could get them, to sell and perhaps a load of tobacco or flour, fruit or anything to make a few dollars. This was about the only way the farmer had to get any money, as we had no markets here for the surplus we made on the farms.
On September 28, 1870, I married Hulda Louise Vickory. I farmed, cut cordwood, worked some time at the carpenter's trade or anything I could do in order to raise my family. In 1889 I engaged in the sawmill business, and worked some three years or more in this business, but at the time the lumber business did not pay much unless a man had a large amount of capital, which I did not have.
Under Cleveland's first administration I was appointed United States Deputy Marshal under David Settle, but this did not suit me. I could not have the heart to drag a man away from his wife and crying children and put him in jail even if he had violated the law, so I said, "Scott, you had better resign and let someone else do the dirty work." And I did resign, though it paid big money and I needed it. (I mean the money.)
Under Cleveland's second administration I was appointed storekeeper and gauger and worked under Colonel (now Senator) Simmons, who was collector and I tell you I grew two inches one day when I was in his office and heard him tell a man that Capt. Lineberry made the best reports of any storekeeper in his service. From 1903 to 1909 I was either assistant doorkeeper or held some other good position in the legislature for every term between those dates.
On July 10, 1910, I went to Raleigh and assumed the position of Superintendent of the Soldier's Home, which position I filled for over six years, but my health failed and I was compelled to resign and come home on October 1, 1916, and I expect to remain here until the Lord calls me, which cannot be long. Then I wish to be laid to rest with my kindred at Gray's Chapel.
I have worked hard, raised nine children, five boys and four girls, and I am happy that they are all doing well.
January 24, 1918
The Linhay
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The link
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The Livingstons Genealogical Chart
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The Livingstons of Livingston Manor: Being the History of that Branch of the ... By Edwin Brockholst Livingston
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The Livingstons of Livingston Manor: Being the History of that Branch of the ... By Edwin Brockholst Livingston-1
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The Lociks or Locis Surname
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The London Burdekin's
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The Lone Punctuator
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You will know this from either: *a Public Comment saying "The Lone Punctuator was here", OR: *a Public Comment offering to correct the punctuation of your Profile that includes a sample, corrected, paragraph. '''Note''': a visit from The Lone Punctuator is a '''COMPLIMENT!''' The Lone Punctuator only corrects the '''VERY BEST''' profiles, those whose outstanding qualities can only be improved with better punctuation! The Lone Punctuator does not: *correct grammar *correct spelling *discuss or give advice on punctuation, grammar or spelling. Google it! That is all.
The Lone Star Baseball Club of Catskill
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The Longhunters
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The Long-Lived Hiram Bingham Newspaper Clipping
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The Lora Fleming Memorial Bridge
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The Loss of the Welcome
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The Lost Colony
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The Lost State of Franklin
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The Lost Train, Bergen-Belsen, Tröbitz, Theresienstadt
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The Lost Tribes of Israel ‘Found’
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THE LOUNSBURYS OF NEW YORK
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The Lowrie War
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The Luke Gardiner Study
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The Lynch Family of Abbeyville
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Lynch-3907.jpg
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Lynch-3907-1.jpg
The Machells of Hollow Oak
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The Machells of Kendal
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The Machells of Surrey
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The Mackie Family’s Childhood Memories
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The Madras Palayakat Co Pvt Ltd
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The Mahaffey project
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The Major Looks Things Over
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The Male Inhabitants of Warren, Rhode Island, 1747
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The Manchester Boys
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The Manor House, Kempston
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The Maori Wars
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The Maples
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The Marshall Street Apartment
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Rogers-31-1.jpg
Ted_Joe_Jeremy_Phil_Summer1982.jpg
Christmas_1983-4.jpg
Howes-1-14.jpg
Ted_Ross-GotTheMunchies_Sept1982_1.jpg
PhaseBackyard_Early1983.jpg
ProudOfHerGarden.b.jpg
Howes-1-28.jpg
Phase_TedsBackyard_2_Early1983.jpg
Ted_Kim_Chris_Tamra_MarshallSt.Early1988.jpg
Whitten-11-12.jpg
Howes-24-13.jpg
The_Marshall_Street_Apartment-2.jpg
Howes-1-38.jpg
Howes-1-35.jpg
TedAndJohnnyGrigg_1985.jpg
Ted_Roger-SurpriseBdayParty_Feb84orFeb85.jpg
Christmas_1983-6.jpg
JennRogersAndT.D..jpg
Whitten-1-39.jpg
Christmas_1986-3.jpg
MomsMarshallStPlants.jpg
The_Marshall_Street_Apartment-1.jpg
Ted_Ross-GotTheMunchies_Sept1982_2.jpg
TedsRoomAndGuitarEquip_1985.jpg
Ted_Acoustic_MessyRoom_85.jpg
Whitten-1-48.jpg
Phase_TedsBackyard_Early83.jpg
Christmas_1983-5.jpg
Whitten-1-50.jpg
TedWithRogerShepard-1987.jpg
Ted-Roger-Car.jpg
Whitten-11-19.jpg
Mom_Maureen-FrontOfHouse.jpg
Whitten-1-32.jpg
Christmas_1986-2.jpg
Ted_InHisRoom_84.jpg
The Mayflower Ancestries of Philena Gee Benjamin Benjamin Hall Maxwell
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Generation | Name |
7 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Allerton-6 Mary Allerton] |
6 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-9 Thomas Cushman, Jr.] |
5 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-509 Thomas Cushman] |
4 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-236 Ruth Cushman] |
3 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hunt-7118 Lore Hunt] |
2 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Jones-29277 Lura Jones] |
1 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gee-1079 Samuel Gee] |
0 | Philena Gee Benjamin Benjamin Hall Maxwell |
Generation | Name |
7 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Howland-21 John Howland] |
6 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Howland-70 Ruth Howland] |
5 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-509 Thomas Cushman] |
4 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-236 Ruth Cushman] |
3 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hunt-7118 Lore Hunt] |
2 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Jones-29277 Lura Jones] |
1 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gee-1079 Samuel Gee] |
0 | Philena Gee Benjamin Benjamin Hall Maxwell |
Generation | Name |
7 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Tilley-73 Elizabeth Tilley] |
6 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Howland-70 Ruth Howland] |
5 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-509 Thomas Cushman] |
4 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-236 Ruth Cushman] |
3 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hunt-7118 Lore Hunt] |
2 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Jones-29277 Lura Jones] |
1 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gee-1079 Samuel Gee] |
0 | Philena Gee Benjamin Benjamin Hall Maxwell |
Generation | Name |
8 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Allerton-3 Isaac Allerton] |
7 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Allerton-6 Mary Allerton] |
6 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-9 Thomas Cushman, Jr.] |
5 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-509 Thomas Cushman] |
4 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-236 Ruth Cushman] |
3 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hunt-7118 Lore Hunt] |
2 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Jones-29277 Lura Jones] |
1 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gee-1079 Samuel Gee] |
0 | Philena Gee Benjamin Benjamin Hall Maxwell |
Generation | Name |
8 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Norris-75 Mary (Norris) Allerton] |
7 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Allerton-6 Mary Allerton] |
6 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-9 Thomas Cushman, Jr.] |
5 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-509 Thomas Cushman] |
4 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-236 Ruth Cushman] |
3 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hunt-7118 Lore Hunt] |
2 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Jones-29277 Lura Jones] |
1 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gee-1079 Samuel Gee] |
0 | Philena Gee Benjamin Benjamin Hall Maxwell |
Generation | Name |
8 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Tilley-84 John Tilley] |
7 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Tilley-73 Elizabeth Tilley] |
6 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Howland-70 Ruth Howland] |
5 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-509 Thomas Cushman] |
4 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-236 Ruth Cushman] |
3 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hunt-7118 Lore Hunt] |
2 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Jones-29277 Lura Jones] |
1 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gee-1079 Samuel Gee] |
0 | Philena Gee Benjamin Benjamin Hall Maxwell |
Generation | Name |
8 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hurst-26 Joan (Hurst) Tilley] |
7 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Tilley-73 Elizabeth Tilley] |
6 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Howland-70 Ruth Howland] |
5 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-509 Thomas Cushman] |
4 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cushman-236 Ruth Cushman] |
3 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hunt-7118 Lore Hunt] |
2 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Jones-29277 Lura Jones] |
1 | [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gee-1079 Samuel Gee] |
0 | Philena Gee Benjamin Benjamin Hall Maxwell |
The McBeath Barn
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The McBride family of Rutherford County, Tennessee
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The McConnell's of Macon County, NC
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The McCracken Project
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The McDonald Family Tree
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The McElgunn Project
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The McIlwaine House
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The McIntyre/Haber Tree
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The Memoirs of Dagmar Grymer
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The 'Menzie' family of Tasmania, Australia
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The MENZIES CHIEFTAINS
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THE MILK - MILKS FAMILY in NORTH AMERICA
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The Millard Family in Pennsylvania
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The Miller family of the North Kent Coast.
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Issue
John Miller
Portswood Hampshire
Occupation, Mariner.
Married Elizabeth Neal, 2/1/1827,
St Marys Church, Corner of St Marys Road and Fratton Road, Portsea.
Issue:
John Edward, Christened 24/10/1824
Henry William Miller
Occupation Mariner/Coast Guard
Residing Chatham 1859
Seasalter Main Street in 1861-4
Reculvers in 1866
Epple Bay Cottage Birchington in 1871
4 York Terrace Birchington in 1881
6 St Mildred’s Terrace Westgate in 1901
Occupation General Labourer by 1881
Coast Guard Pensioner by 1901
Married Amelia Broad, 4/Q 1859, B C1835 of Wadebridge, Cornwall, D 10/1908.
Daughter of Richard Broad, & Mary Beer.
Died: 3/1920
Henry William Miller in 1861, whilst in the Coastguard Service.
Seasalter Marsh Street, Coast Guard in 1861 until '64. There were two Seasalter Coastguard Stations To the east was Seasalter Cliff station on the seaward side of the railway opposite Seasalter Road (now Joy Road) on what is now Admiralty walk. The other was to the west of Seasalter village at Graveny marshes. The dwellings in Seasalter in the 19th C were very thinly distributed, however a review of the census transcript indicates that when the enumerator visited Henry William occupied the second to last of the last two dwellings on the end of coastguard station. This was the Seasalter station to the west of Seasalter. The enumerator continued walking east to the Blue Anchor public house (now the Oyster Pearl) on what is now Faversham Road and then continued along Faversham Road to the south. It is possible that one of the Coastguard station cottages still exists at 414 Faversham road, close by the Seasalter Sailing Club the other has been rebuilt as a bungalow at 416, they have given their name to the Coastguard Caravan Park.
Issue:
Walter Edward Miller Ref. 7 to 11
Occupation Plumbers Apprentice 1881
Fisherman 1901
8 Essex Road, Westgate in 1901
Residence Princess Terrace, Westgate 1911 Married Emily Eliza Hall, 4/Q 1890,
Bapt 17/05/1869, 8 Seymour St, Deptford London
Died: 12/1959
Issue:
William Walter, 28/01/1893, Mutrix Garlinge
===Mutrixs and Raucorn=== Mutrix Garlinge was a small hamlet attached to a farm to the north of the railway line north of the village of Garlinge. Both are about midway between Westgate and Margate, Thanet, Kent.
They appear on the OS 6inch survey of 1896 – 1899. https://maps.nls.uk/view/101428782 The hamlet is so small that there are only two groups of buildings, the farm complex, and one other warren of eight buildings around a yard off Westbrook Road at about current houses 137 to 139.
Raucorn Road is on the western extremity of Westbrook. It would appear to have taken its name from a farm on the corner of Raucorn Road facing east.
==Family notes, cont== William Walter Miller
Able Seaman, H M Trawler Magnolia II, 1917
8 Essex Road, Westgate
Occupation Fisherman
Married Jennie Rose Robbins, at Willesden 25/12/1917, B 3/1/1894 Marylebone. D 1949
Died: 10/1987
===Organisation of the fishing=== The five boats were laid up on the Promenade at St Mildreds Bay, and were worked from the beach in the bay and from Margate harbour, Derek Coombe, writing in Fishermen from the Kentish Shore, Published by Meresborough Books, 17 Station Road, Rainham, Kent 1989. ISBN 0948193409, published several pages on the Margate-Westgate fishing with a description of the families herring punt Edith Mary with a photo, a photo of the family’s skiff Joken on her pole truck, discussion of the different uses that the boats were put to, and other relevant photos. In addition to Joken and Edith Mary the Jessamine was a big heavily built pitch pine clinker punt.
The fishing gear was stored in beach huts on the promenade at St Mildred’s Bay, in a row of huts towards the back of the prom. Jack Edward remembered the family, probably Walter Edward, keeping a billy goat to pull a small cart for deliveries around Wesgate. The billy did not like splashing through puddles, so would jump over them, cart and all. Jack also remembers William Walter taking the family of one of the big hoteliers on trips to France in Edith Mary. They were not averse to smuggling tobacco hidden behind the punts cieling on these trips.
The Westgate fishing community used to meet in the Tap Room of the Walmer Castle Hotel to divvy up the weeks profits, each family business taking their turn to transact their business.
==Family notes, cont== Issue:
Jack Edward Miller
Cpl, RAFUR, 5/5/44 – 1/10/47 France & Germany
54 Weston Rd, Cliftonville, Kent
Occupation Pattern Cutter
26 Caldicote Rd, Eynesbury Hunts
Occupation Factory management
Married Audrey Dorothea Sparkes, nee Collins, at St Johns the Baptist, Margate 23/10/1948,
B 24/03/1922, D 4/6/2004.
Died 19/3/2005
Issue:
Nicholas Paul, B 30/05/1950, Margate
4 Lowther Cres, Barrow in Furness
Occupation Naval Architect
Married Shona Doreen Bankhead, B 11/11/1951'
Issue:
Duncan Ewan, B 05/04/1979
Gordon Edward, B 21/06/1982, D 21/12/1988
Kirsty Fiona, B 13/08/1990
The Minnie and Will Story
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The Missing Roland Thornburgh
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The Mission Party of 1838
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The Moberger Families, 1676-1976
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The_Moberger_Families_1676-1976.png
:
The Moberger Families, 1676-1976 - Transcription
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The_Moberger_Families_1676-1976.jpg
The_Moberger_Families_1676-1976.png
'''1676-1976''' === Introduction === The surname MOBERGER has been derived from MOBERG which was a name common among soldiers in 17th century Sweden. The year 1676 has been chosen as the time-point of origin of the oldest family Moberger because of the birth in this year of [[Moberg-349|ESKIL]], 285, the first known to have borne the name. Eskil was a master tailor at VIMMERBY in Småland. It would seem most likely that Eskil was the son of a soldier, DIEDRICH MOBERG, who had a son christened ESCHEL (59). According to tradition, a soldier in the 30-years war between protestant Sweden and catholic Germany 1618 - 1648, named MOBERG, is said to have been called "der Moberger", which in German is the definite form of Moberg. Diedrich was, as the spelling of his forename seems to indicate, of German origin. In Sweden during the latter part of the 17th Century King KARL the XIth introduced an organization for recruiting soldiers to the armies, called "indelningsverket". This forced the farmers, by law, to pay for the equipping of soldiers, generally 2 - 3 farmers per soldier. In peace-time the soldier was guaranteed a small farm, sufficient seed for sowing as well as part of his salary, all payed for by the farmers. This organization, which meant a social security system for soldiers, was one of the main reasons why the small country of Sweden could afford to provide a sufficient number of trained soldiers for the almost constant wars during the 17th and 18th Centuries. To some extent it also released the farmers from having their own sons drafted. A great number of German soldiers were recruited to the Swedish regiments in Germany. Both between and on the conclusion of the wars many of these Germans followed the Swedes to their home --------- [country] where they also could benefit from the economic security [provided] by the Swedish system. DIEDRICH MOBERG may be assumed to be one of these German [soldiers] who settled down in the surroundings of Vimmerby around [??]. It's likely that he had exchanged his German last name for [??] when he served in the Swedish army in Germany. We do [not know] whether Diedrich himself used the surname MOBERGER. [[Moberg-349|ESKIL]], however, must have adopted the name, at the latest [1715] when his fourth child was born and registered (5) as [??] Eskils son NILS MOBERGER, 268. The relationship between the other families MOBERGER and the [descendants] of [[Moberg-349|ESKIL]] remains obscure. There is thus no conclusive [evidence?] that the father of CARL, b. 1732, 279, JOHAN MOBERG, [from] Södermanland, 287, was related to the Mobergers from [Småland]. According to tradition CARL, who was an organist to the [??] HÖLÖ, close to the royal castle TULLGARN in Södermanland, [performed?] piano concerts to KING GUSTAF III at the castle (9, 31). [??] by the King, CARL is said to have added the ending -ER [to his] surname MOBERG in order to distinguish him from those with [the?] more common name (31). This must have occurred prior to 1759 [when CARL] married, on which occasion he was officially registered [as CARL] MOBERGER (9). It has, however, not been possible to find [the] place and date of birth of his father JOHAN. The only [clue?] which has been found in the archives (6) is that JOHAN [arrived?] into the BOGSTA community in Södermanland from Småland. [This suggests], that JOHAN may also have been a descendant of DIEDRICH in Småland, which might have influenced CARL in adopting [the surname]. --------- The judge referee to the Court of Appeal in JÖNKÖPING, Johan PETER (PER), b. 1779, 217, according to information obtained from the archives (12), had moved to JÖNKÖPING from southern Småland. Even if it has not been possible, so far, to prove conclusively that he belonged to the same family MOBERGER, his name Johan PETER strongly suggests that he was a descendant of the merchant PETER, b. 1712, KALMAR, 265. The latter PETER was the third child of ESKIL and Johan PETER could well have been PETER's grand-son, and an older brother of Peter OTTO, b. 1787, 219, who later became a vicar of KLINTE, Gotland. The vicar OLOF (OLAUS), b. 1763, SEGERSTA, Hälsingland, 282, had obviously no connection with the other Mobergers in the country. He was registered with the name MOBERGER when he entered the school at GÄVLE at the age of 16 in 1779 (7). He was the son of ERIC Ersson MOBERG, b. 1718 in HISINGE, Närke, 289. There is no reason to believe that ERIC had any family ties with the Mobergers from Småland or Södermanland. Besides, OLOF had no children and, hence, no descendants. It is obvious that further studies are required to establish whether the different families with the last name MOBERGER are mutually related. Unfortunately many of the archives from the 17th Century have been destroyed by fire, which makes further investigation difficult and rather time-consuming. Even if such studies would be interesting and possibly something of a challenge, it has not been my primary intention to investigate a biological relationship between different Moberger families. The purpose has merely been to try to register all living or dead who bear or have borne the surname, independent of whether they are true relatives or not. It --------- [has also been] my intention to collect as much documentation as [possible about] the members of the families. I am fully aware that [such documentation] must always be incomplete. It is also natural [that collected] information will be more detailed concerning those [closest?] to my own branch of the family, the descendants of the [Mobergers from] SÖDRA VI close to VIMMERBY, [[Moberger-6|Johan ARVID]], b. 1801, 214. [A genalogic] chart of this kind is only to be regarded as a skeleton [??] of different generations. The large amount of information [about] the numerous individuals hidden behind the dry facts of [their birth] and death dates, occupations etc. has been a fascinating [??] to study. From the documents many members of the [family] belonging to different generations, appear almost alive, [and concerned] with the problems of their time. [We know] little about the circumstances of [[Moberg-349|ESKIL]] and his family. [He must], however, have had a certain influence in the small town of [VIMMERBY] (about 400 inhabitants at his time) since he was called a [master] tailor (5, 24). [[[Moberg-349|ESKIL]]'S] oldest son [[Moberg-352|OLAUS (Olof)]] , b. 1711, 263, was obviously [quite? well] off. He was a member of the municipal court before 1736 [and was] appointed postmaster of the town at the age of 26 in 1737 [?? He] was mentioned as a person of rank, had a house of his [own, three] servants (24) and was one of four donors of a new [??] to the town hall which had been partly destroyed by fire [??]. [[Moberg-352|OLAUS]] was married to [[Kastman-9|CATHARINA KASTMAN]], b. 1713, 264, a [sister?] of Jonas Kastman, a senior member of the municipal court. [OLAUS] and [[Kastman-9|CATHARINA]] had 8 children, only two of whom reached [adulthood]. One was their son OLOF, b. 1752, 245, who, after --------- receiving a Ph.D. at the University of Uppsala, was appointed headmaster of the elementary school at VÄSTERVIK. OLOF was married to CHRISTINA KASTMAN, b. 1769, 246, who was a niece of his mother. They lived in the building of the ' headmasters yard', which was preserved until the early nineteen thirthies. OLOF contributed considerably to the modernization of the school system (115) and was a respected citizen of the town of Västervik. He and CHRISTINA had two sons, both of whom became vicars and rural deans of country parishes, PER-OLOF, b. 1799, 211, and [[Moberger-6|Johan ARVID]], b. 1801, 214. [[Moberger-6|Johan ARVID]] was the most distinguished and colourful personality among the members of the family MOBERGER from Småland. He was a powerful, legendary dean of his parish, for more than 40 years. Still, 100 years after his death, in 1882, his memory was still alive among elderly people in Småland. He had received the degrees of a Ph.D. and D.D. (doctor of philosophy and theology) in 1827 (14) at the age of 26 at the University of Uppsala. He applied for and was appointed vicar before the age of 30 (in 1831) by the special permission of King KARL XIV JOHAN, the first Bernadotte on the Swedish throne. A letter (14) written in 1865 by ARVID to his son [[Moberger-23|VICTOR]], 178, when ARVID as a member attended the Swedish Parliament in Stockholm, is a most human document in which the vicar at the age of 64 describes the events of his life, his hopes and intentions as young and also his reasons for staying in a small country community for such a long time (he had then been vicar in the same parish for 34 years). ARVID explains in his letter that the only possibility for a young man, belonging to the common classes, to obtain a higher --------- [education] at his time was through the church. He never, however, [could] fulfill his academic ambitions because of the economic limitations created by a growing family and the overwhelming problems [he encountered?] in fighting drunkenness, ignorance and stinginess [amongst] the farmers of his parish. He is nevertheless satisfied with [??] and concludes in his letter that common sense, modesty and [??] economy are the fundamendals for happyness. Despite this wisdom, economic problems played a decisive influence [upon] the course of the lives of many members of the families in [this document?], especially during the latter part of the 19th century when [they had] to live under rather poor circumstances. This is probably [best documented] in a letter (16) written in 1858 by the vicar [PER-OLOF], b. 1799, 211, to his younger brother [[Moberger-6|ARVID]], 214, and [the] correspondence (20) between Arvids son [[Moberger-23|VICTOR]], b. 1836, 178, [and] his second son JOHN, b. 1872, 150. Poverty also [contributed] to the decision by two of the sons of [[Moberger-23|VICTOR]], [[Moberger-22|ARVID [Per]]], 148, and [[Moberger-36|OSCAR Hjalmar]], 157, to emigrate to USA in 1888 and 1898 respectively (27, 29). [[Moberger-6|[Johan] ARVID]] had a great talent for writing and speaking and it [was said] about his speeches in the Swedish Parliament that "his [words] flew like poisoned arrows among the benches" (14, 116). [As representative] of the clergymen in Sweden he exercised [much?] influence, and played a leading role in the decision of the [parliament?] in 1865 to found a new and still active democratic [parliament?]. When the decision was made ARVID expressed his [joy?] by dancing around a table with some other parliament [members]. This episode is described by CARL GRIMBERG, the most --------- well known author of the history of Sweden in his "Svenska Folkets Underbara Öden; Bd 9, 172, 1924 (78). All the three sons of ARVID, FABIAN, 174, ARVID, 175, and VICTOR, 178, inherited his talents and were highly appreciated preachers in different free-religious sects in Småland at their time. ARVID, b. 1835, 175, was also a well known physician at HÖGSBY in Småland. Throughout his life he fought a most exciting battle with representatives of the state church which he has described himself in a book (104). After his death a street in HÖGSBY, Doctor Mobergers road, was named after him (19). Among the members of the family MOBERGER from Södermanland an outstanding musical talent can be followed through the generations. Two were members of the Royal Musical Academy of Sweden (83), the Musical Director CARL JOHAN, b. 1763, GÄVLE, 251, and his nephew, the vicar DAVID, b. 1800, 224. One of David's daughters, ANNA, b. 1857, 198, was a well known pianist who for more than 20 years travelled with and accompanied the famous Swedish singer KRISTINA NILSSON (31). The third son of the progenitor of the family MOBERGER from Södermanland, CARL, 279, Eric JACOB, b. 1754, 254, became the successful managing director of the factory at LOVISEBERG, N. RÅDA, in Värmland. He and his wife CHRISTINA, 255, have been mentioned by the well known Swedish author SELMA LAGERLÖF in her novel "Charlotte Löwensköld" (93) as typical representatives of the rich and powerful upper class of their time. All now living members of the family MOBERGER from Södermanland are descendants of JACOB and CHRISTINA. --------- [The] discovery of the hitherto unknown life story of JONAS Peter, b. 1771, 256, a younger brother of Eric JACOB, 254, is [worth] mentioning as an example of the pleasure which can be experienced [when] searching for missing information. By chance I went through [a register] of names in a book: W. Olsson: Swedish Passenger [Arrivals] in New York 1820-1850, published in 1907 (110). A MARIA [MOBERGER] is reported to have landed in New York from Gävle in [?? and] a foot-note reference is made to "Årsunda släktregister" [in?] which her father, the parish clerk and church organist JONAS Peter, 256, her mother HEDVIG Elisabet DAHL, 257, as well [as] six brothers and sisters were listed with birth dates, families [?? Not] only was JONAS and his family found but also another [example] of how the musical talent in the family had influenced the [choice] of occupation of yet another descendant of the musically [gifted?] CARL. [These] are but a few examples from the well documentated members [of the] MOBERGER families of different generations. In order to make [available] the complete material, listed below are the references to [any original] sources available, for those who may be interested to [examine them] further. All references will be deposited together in the [??] microfilms in the archives of Genealogical Society in Stockholm. [My] intention is to complete these studies, at a later date, with [a biography?] of the members of the Moberger families. [The] collection of the material has been fairly time-consuming and [unfortunately] it has not been possible to finish it as planned in [1976]. As a consequence additional informations regarding births, [marriages] and deaths have, as far as possible, been up-dated to [??] of January 1982. In the list of names it has, however, not --------- been possible to include new members of the families whether by birth or marriage, after 1978 e.g. the wifes of JOHN Carl (46) and John PETER Gustaf (61) since the chart was already drawn and numbered before 1979. The reason why I have chosen the English language for the chart and the text is that nowadays a fairly great number of individuals carrying the name MOBERGER are U.S. citizens (35 out of a total of 91, now carrrying the name either by birth or marriage). Most of the Americans would have difficulties in understanding a Swedish text whereas those in Sweden will have no or small difficulties with the English language. I thus found it natural to present the results of my survey in English. It has been of invaluable help for me that so many members of the families have shown a great interest and willingness to provide complementary documentation. To all those, relatives or not, and especially to my sister ANNA-LISA, 99, who has devoted much time to studies in different archives and to my cousins in U.S.A., [[Moberger-21|CARL]] 91, [[Moberger-29|ARVID]] 93, [[Moberger-30|OLGA]] 95, and [[Moberger-32|WILLIAM]] 97, I want to extend my deepest gratitude. Without the help from them and many others this investigation would not have been possible. : Stockholm in August 1982
: [[Moberger-105|Gunnar Moberger]] === Person Key - FUTURE WORK === ''Not transcribed yet'' === Appendix A: Documents (sources 1-50) === 1. [?]rcker-Mattonska saml, 'Moberger', Handskriftsavdeln, Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm. 2. [?]G. Lychou, Släktarkivet, 'Moberger', Genealogiska fören, Stockholm. 3. [?]degrenska saml, 'Släkten Moberger', Genealogiska fören, Stockholm. 4. [G] Elgenstierna, 'Släkten Moberger', Handskriftsavdeln, Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm. 5. Doc. conc. the Master tailor [[Moberg-349|ESKIL]], b. 1676, Vimmerby, 285, and his family. : Landsarkivet in Vadstena: Reports on ESKIL and the origin of his family, children, birth and death register, 23/9 and 14/12 1971. : ELIAS, 142: 'The earliest ancestors ESKIL and OLOF and the family MOBERGER from Vimmerby'. Prepared for the family meeting 1933, 27/2 - 2/3 1928. 6. Doc. conc. the foreman and sheriff JOHAN, Ökna castle, Bogsta, Södermanland, 287. : Landsarkivet in Uppsala: Report on JOHAN 30/1 1975. 7. Doc. conc. the vicar [[Moberg-352|OLOF]], b. 1763, Segersta, Hälsingland, 282 and his family. : Landsarkivet in Härnösand: Report on OLOF and his family 21/4 1975. : Estate inventory after Olof's first wife ANNA Elisabeth, b. 1774, 283, 9/9 1834, Söderhamns Rådstuvurätt, Hanebo F:11:13, n:o 16. : Estate inventory after OLOF, 10/9 1843, Söderhamns Rådstuvurätt, Hanebo F:11:16, n:o 11. : Estate inventory after Olofs second wife, CATHARINA Christina, b. 1782, 284, 27/10 1849, Söderhamns Rådstuvurätt, Hanebo F:11:17, n:o 184. 8. Doc. conc. the merchant [[Moberger-139|PETER]], b. 1712, Kalmar, 265, and his family. : 'Brudskrift /Bride-poem/ öfver PETER MOBERGER vid giftermålet med [[Montelia-6|MARGARETA MONTELIA]], 17/11 1758'. From 'Verser mm till och öfver Enskilda', Kungl Biblioteket Fo:72, 1758, Stockholm. : 'Tankar /Thoughts/ mm med anledning av handelsmannens PETER MOBERGERS död 16/4 1779. From 'Verser mm till och öfver Enskilda', Kungl Biblioteket B4:79, 1779, Stockholm. : CALMAR Stiftstidning, 29/11 1800: Newspaper announcement regarding donations made by the widow MARGARETA MOBERGER. : KALMAR-Posten 21/6 1806: Notice of the death of MARGARETA MOBERGER, b. Montelius. : Newspaper item regarding the oldest merchant house in Kalmar, 'Mobergers Enka', established 1745. 9. Doc. conc. the family MOBERGER from Södermanland. : Julius Hjelm: 'Mobergerska släkten 1700 - 1932', Stockholm 1932, Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm. : Letter from Julius Hjelm to ANNA-LISA 99, 18/6 1941. 10. Doc. conc. the Musical Director CARL JOHAN, b. 1763, GÄVLE, 251, and his family. : Landsarkivet in Härnösand: Report on CARL JOHAN, his wife and their two children 20/2 1979. 11. Doc. conc. "änkeassessorskan" ANNA Elisabeth, b. 1763, 250, m. 1782 with the surgeon and "assessorn" SCHWARTZER, 1793 ÅBRANDT. : Calmar-bladet 29/4 1837: Notice of the death of ANNA ÅBRANDT, b. MOBERGER. 12. Doc. conc. the judge referee to the Court of Appeal,- Johan PETER, b. 1779, Jönköping, 217. : Landsarkivet in Vadstena: Report on Johan PETER (PER) and his family 17/2 1975. : Estate inventory after Peters wife Anna CHARLOTTA, b. 1788, 218, Jönköpings Tingsrätt Fl:30 s 931, 1849. : Jönköpingsbladet 11/7 1857: Notice of the death of PETER 8/7 1857. : Estate inventory after PETER. Jönköpings Tingsrätt Fl:26 s 981 and Fl:27 d 821, 30/9 1857. 13. Doc. conc. the vicar and rural dean Per OTTO, b. 1787, Klinte, Gotland, 219. : Letter from the present vicar of Klinte, E. Klint, regarding a tombstone on the grave of Otto at the churchyard, Klinte, 18/5 1979. : The tombstone on the grave of his son, the vicar Carl WILHELM, b. 1830, d. 1870, 195, at the churchyard, Alskog, Gotland, Photo 1978. 14. Doc. conc the vicar and rural dean [[Moberger-6|Johan ARVID]], PhD DD, b. 1801, Södra Vi (Vimmerby), Småland, 214. : PhD - Diploma, June 16, 1827. : Extract from J. Ståhl: Linköpings Stifts Herdaminne. Vol 2, Norrköping 1846 (125). : Leonard Carlsson, Södra Vi: Report on the dean Moberger of Södra Vi, 1950. : Newspaper notice regarding ARVID: "Herr Doktorn". : Letters from ARVID to his son [[Moberger-23|VICTOR]], 178, Dec. 17, 1865 and Oct 14, 1869 and to his son-in-law, the architect [[Sjöberg-395|GUSTAF SJÖBERG]] m. to [[Moberger-42|SELMA]], 183, Dec. 7, 1876. : The vicarage Sund, Södra Vi. Photo with Maria, 146, Hanna, 147 and the farm hand Johan, April 7, 1881. : List of publications by ARVID. : Newspaper notice of the death of ARVID, April 23, 1882. : The funeral of ARVID, Södra Vi church May 1, 1882. Photo from the church. : Westerwiks Dagblad May 7, 1932: 'För 50 år sedan'. Life story of ARVID. : The tombstone on Arvid's grave, the church yard at Södra Vi, photo 1978. : The church and the vicarage Sund of Södra Vi. Postcards 1978. 15. Doc. conc. [[Lundwall-12|FREDRIKA, b. Lundvall]], b. 1810, 215. : Letters from FREDRIKA to her daughter [[Moberger-42|SELMA]], 183, m. Sjöberg, Oct. 26, 1872 and to her son [[Moberger-23|VICTOR]], 178, March 29, 1866. 16. Doc. conc. the vicar and dean [[Moberger-5|PER-OLOF]], b. 1799, 211. : Letter from PER-OLOF to his brother [[Moberger-6|ARVID]], 214, May 8, 1858. 17. Doc. conc. the city sheriff ENOCH Gottfried, b. 1825, Jönköping, 187. : Jönköpingsbladet 1857: Newspaper announcements made by ENOCH, Febr. 17, April 15 and July 11, 1857. 18. Doc. conc. the free church preacher [[Moberger-38|FABIAN]], b. 1834, Södra Vi, 174. : Letter from FABIAN to his brother [[Moberger-23|VICTOR]], 178, May 5, 1889. : Memorandum on Fabian based upon narratives of ARVID, 148, OLGA, 95 and KARIN 86 (regarding Fabians daughter Emma Svensson). 19. Doc. conc. the doctor and preacher [[Moberger-39|ARVID Fredrik Teodor]], M D, b. 1835, Högsby, 175. : Report by ARVID to G. Elgenstierna, 'släkten MOBERGER', Handskriftssaml, Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm, 1918. : List of publications by ARVID. : Photos e.g. ARVID and ADÉLE, 176, at their engagement 1861; FABIAN, 174, ARVID, SELMA, 183 and her husband GUSTAF SJÖBERG, 1865. : Abstract from newspaper notice of the death of ARVID, Febr. 1, 1924. : Newspaper notice of the death of ARVIDS second wife ELIN, 177, 1958. : "Dr MOBERGERS VÄG" (Dr Mobergers road) in Högsby. Photo 1978. 20. Doc. conc. the preacher and farmer [[Moberger-23|Gustaf VICTOR Adrian]], b. 1836, Södra Vi, 178. : Invitation to the wedding ceremony between VICTOR and [[Westermark-43|OLGA WESTERMARK]], b. 1842, 179, Oct. 9, 1866. : Letters from VICTOR: To his brothers and sister after the death of OLGA, April 1, 1881; to his son [[Moberger-47|JOHN]], 150, 1900 - 1907. : List of children of VICTOR and OLGA made by VICTOR in 1885. : Invitation to the wedding ceremony between VICTOR and HULDA WENNERSTRÖM; b. 1839, 180, June 12, 1889. : Protocols of the sentences by the court of Albo Härad June 4, Sept. 3 and Nov. 24, 1895 and by Göta Court of Appeal, March 27, 1896 regarding a lawsuit between VICTOR and his wife HULDA. : Photos of VICTOR and his family. : Newspaper announcement and notice after the death of Victor, March 1, 1909. : Doc. regarding the sale of the property Hyltan, Virestad, March 4, 1909. : The tombstone on the grave of VICTOR and OLGA at the churchyard, Södra Vi, photo 1956. 21. Doc. conc. [[Westermark-43|OLGA WESTERMARK]], b. 1842, 179. : Letter from OLGA to her sister in law [[Moberger-50|SELMA SJÖBERG]], 183, Nov, 29, 1872. : Invitation by VICTOR to the funeral ceremonies after the death of OLGA, April 7, 1881. : Poems written by H. Tidman at the funeral of OLGA, April 7, 1881. 22. Doc. conc. the managing director [[Moberger-56|ARVID Gustaf]], b. 1871, Stockholm, 134. : Report by ARVID to G. Elgenstierna, 'Släkten MOBERGER', Handskriftsaml, Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm, June 1918. : Newspaper announcement and notice after ARVID'S death, July 19, 1944. : Newspaper announcement and notices after the death of ARVID'S wife HELNY, July 6, 1978. 23. Doc. conc. [[Moberger-60|Hulda Emilia (MIR)]] m. Ohlsson, b. 1878, 141. : Newspaper announcement after the death of MIR, Sept 21, 1952. 24. Doc. conc. the inspector of the elementary schools [[Moberger-61|ELIAS]], M Sc, b. 1880, Västervik, 142. : Report by ELIAS to G. Elgenstierna, 'Släkten MOBERGER', Handskriftsaml, Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm, July 2, 1918. : Doc. regarding the family MOBERGER, in particular the dean ARVID MOBERGER of Södra Vi, collected by Elias to the family meeting in 1933. : Photos: ELIAS and [[Jahnsson-Blohm-1|KARIN]], 143, 1916 (engagement), their family in 1940. 25. Doc. conc. Augusta Fredrika Maria (MIA), b. 1867, 146. : Report by MIA to G. Elgenstierna, 'Släkten MOBERGER', Handskriftsaml, Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm, 1918. : Letter from MIA to her brother JOHN, 150, Nov. 23, 1924. : Newspaper announcements after the death of MIA's husband, the postmaster Emanuel Anderson, Febr. 20, 1950 and after the death of MIA, Jan. 14, 1951. 26. Doc. conc. [[Moberger-46|HANNA Cecilia Wictorine]], b. 1869, 147. : Report on the inheritance after the death of her father [[Moberger-23|VICTOR]], 178, 1909 (completed 1940). : Photo on the 70-years birthday of HANNA, Eskilstuna in 1939. : Newspaper announcement after HANNA'S death, May 25, 1951. 27. Doc conc. the baker [[Moberger-22|ARVID Per]], b. 1870, Everett, Mass., USA, 148. : Life story of ARVID told by himself in an interview on tape, recorded in 1959 by his son [[Moberger-32|WILLIAM]], 97. : Letter from ARVID to his sister [[Moberger-46|HANNA]], 147, Dec. 30, 1919. : Photos of ARVID and his family e.g.: Wedding picture, 1901, [[Moberger-21|CARL]], 91, [[Moberger-29|ARVID]], 93 and [[Moberger-30|OLGA]], 95, 1905, 190 : The children [[Moberger-21|CARL]], [[Moberger-29|ARVID]], [[Moberger-30|OLGA]], [[Moberger-31|ALICE]], 96 and [[Moberger-32|WILLIAM]], 97, 1911. : ARVID, [[Lack-463|MIMMI]], 149 and their children, 1936. : ARVID and [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, 1950. : ARVID and his son [[Moberger-32|WILLIAM]] making tape recording, 1959. 28. Doc. conc. the pharmacist [[Moberger-47|JOHN Wiktor]], b. 1872, Göteborg, 150. : Life story of JOHN summarized by his son [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, in 1980. : Letters from JOHN to his father [[Moberger-23|VICTOR]], 178, his sister [[Moberger-46|HANNA]], 147 and his wife [[Af_Trolle-4|SIGNE]], 152, during 1907 - 1947. : List of publications and lectures by JOHN e.g. 'Future organisation of pharmacy in Sweden', Nov. 14, 1934 and Febr. 4, 1935. : Photos of JOHN and his family 1887 - 1948. : Newspaper announcements and notices after the death of JOHN, Febr. 26, 1948. : Newspaper announcements and notices after the death of his wife [[Af_Trolle-4|SIGNE]], 152, Dec. 3, 1955. 29. Doc. conc. the carpenter [[Moberger-36|OSCAR Hjalmar]], b. 1881, Cheyenne, Wyo., USA, 157. : Life story of OSCAR as told by himself in an interview on tape, recorded in 1960 by his nephew [[Moberger-32|WILLIAM]], 97. : Photos of OSCAR and his family 1899 - 1957, e.g. OSCAR, 1899, Wedding with [[Moody-10363|MARY KAHL]], 158, 1911, OSCAR, MARY and their children [[Moberger-133|OLGA]], 113, [[Moberger-134|CARMEN]], 114, [[Moberger-135|KERMIT]], 115, [[Moberger-136|ELMER]], 116 and [[Moberger-137|WALTER]], 118 in 1924, [[Moberger-135|KERMIT]], 115, and his family 1950, OSCAR, MARY and GUNNAR , 105, 1957. : Newspaper notice after the death of OSCAR, 1972. 30. Doc. conc. the captain and managing director CARL-GUSTAF Vilhelm Laurentius, b. 1879, Stockholm, 123. : Report by CARL-GUSTAF to G. Elgenstierna, 'Släkten MOBERGER', Handskriftsaml, Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm, June 21, 1918. : Newspaper announcement and notice after the death of CARL-GUSTAF's son-in-law, the managing director Eric Brodén married to BRITTE, 67, in Aug. 29, 1973. 31. Doc. conc. the diocese forester Karl ERIK Gustaf, b. 1898, Linköping, 126, and his family. : Letter from ERIK to [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, regarding the family MOBERGER from Södermanland, Dec. 12, 1975. : Newspaper announcements of the weddings of his children BIRGITTA, 68, Oct. 15, 1955, KARIN, 69, April 30, 1960, BERTIL, 72, July 19, 1971 and GUSTAV, 70, Aug. 7, 1974. : Letter from Nils GUSTAV Erik, 70, to [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, regarding his family, Jan. 15, 1975. 32. Doc. conc. the certified gymnastics instructor Elisabet (LISE), b. 1900, Skara, 128. : Letter from LISE to GUNNAR, 105, regarding the family MOBERGER from Södermanland, Febr. 7, 1975. : Newspaper announcement and notices after the death of LISE, Jan. 24, 1976. 33. Doc. conc. the managing director HARRY Arvid, b. 1907, Stockholm, 76 and his family. : Life story of HARRY made by [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, 1980. : List of publications by HARRY, e.g. Songs and speeches, a selection from the years 1925 - 1931, Stockholm 1931, Sv Saml, Vitt SV (Br), 'Med Cleve glas 75 år' Stockholm, 1945, Kungl. Biblioteket, Stockholm. : Newspaper notice at the 50-years birthday of HARRY, July 29, 1957. : Newspaper announcement after the death of HARRY, Nov. 23, 1964. : Newspaper announcement of the wedding of his daughter HELEN, 26, 1970. : Newspaper announcement after the death of HARRYS wife AINO, b. Kekonius, Nov. 24, 1981. 34. Doc. conc. the music teacher NINA Ester Helny, b. 1901, Göteborg, 78. : Letter from NINA to ANNA-LISA, 99, Oct. 1, 1971. 35. Doc. conc. the attorney OLOF Arvid Gustaf, b. 1918, Karlskoga, 83, and his family. : Newspaper notice of the wedding of KRISTINA, 27, 1961. : Newspaper announcement after the death of OLOF, July 13, 1966. : Letter from OLOF's first wife, GUDRUN, 84, to [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, regarding their family, January 16, 1975. : Letter from OLOF's second wife, ULLA Louise Birgitta, 85, to GUNNAR, 105, regarding their family, Febr. 24, 1975. : Letter from Lars HENRIK, 31, to [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, regarding his family, Jan. 22, 1975. : Newspaper announcements of the weddings of ULLAS daughter KERSTIN, 33, 1981 and OLOF's and ULLA's daughter KARIN, 29, 1981. 36. Doc. conc. the lektor (senior mistress) Anna KARIN Elisabet, M Sc, b. 1920, Linköping, 86. : Letter from KARIN to GUNNAR with information regarding FABIAN, 174, and his daughter Emma Svensson, b. 1867, Jan. 29, 1979. 37. Doc. regarding the chief physician MARIA Helny, M D, b. 1930, Gällivare, 87. : Newspaper notice of the 50-years birthday of MARIA, Jan. 29, 1980. 38. Doc. conc. HANS Arvid Gustav, b. 1908, Kalmar, 88. : Letter from HANS' wife ELIN, b. 1915, Kalmar, 89, to [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, regarding her family, Jan. 2, 1975. 39. Doc. conc. MARGIT, b. 1910, Kalmar, 90. : Letter from MARGIT to [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, regarding her family, Febr. 1975. : Letter from MARGIT's son Ulf HÅKAN Roland, b. 1943, 35, regarding his family, Febr. 21, 1975. 40. Doc. conc. the insurance inspector CARL Gustaf, b. 1902, Hyannis, Mass., USA, 91, and his family. : Family report given by CARL in 1971. : Photos of CARL, his wife FLORENCE, 92, and their children 1950 - 1978. : Newspaper notice of the wedding of CAROLE Joyce, 41, in 1957. : Letters from CARL to GUNNAR, 105, 1975 - 1979. : Family report given by GEORGE Carl, 37, to OLGA, 95, in 1971. : Newspaper article about DEBBIE Lynn, 9, The Boston Globe, May 23, 1978. : Family report given by WILLIAM Harold, 39, to OLGA in 1971. : Photos from the wedding of WILLIAM and BARBARA, 90, in 1953 and of WILLIAM and his family 1975. 41. Doc. conc. the managing director ARVID Frederick, b. 1905, Ipswich, Mass., and Lake Havasu City, Ariz., USA, 93, and his family. : Family report given by ARVID to [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, in 1971. : Letters from ARVID and MARION, 94, to [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, 1950 - 1980. : Photos of ARVID and MARION at their wedding 1934 and of the family 1950 - 1980. : Prospectus of different music and art tours, arranged by MARION and ARVID to Europe 1970, Ireland and Britain 1976 and Canada 1978. : Newspaper article about ARVID and MARION, Lake Havasu City Herald , Febr. 1977. : Newspaper articles and notices etc. regarding the Director of Institutional Ministries, Ref., Arvid DONALD, 42, and his family. : Photos and information regarding JANET Marion DEWIRE, 44, the artist INGRID Marion SANDBORN, 45 and JOHN Carl, 46. 42. Doc. conc. OLGA Carolina, b. 1907, 95 and ALICE Wilhelmina, b. 1909, 96, Everett, Mass., USA. : Letters from OLGA to ANNA-LISA, 99 and [[Moberger-105|GUNNAR]], 105, 1951 - 1981. : Reports from OLGA to GUNNAR regarding the MOBERGER families in USA in 1971. : Certificate, issued by the Board of Alderman when OLGA retired, Aug. 2, 1972. 43. Doc. conc. the engineer WILLIAM Chester, b. 1911, Reading, Mass., USA, 97, and his family. : Family report given by WILLIAM in 1971. : Letters, photos and notes regarding WILLIAM, ELLA, 98, and their daughters CHRISTINE Eda BALDWIN, 47, and Olga ANN, 48, 1950 - 1981. : Newspaper notice after the death of ELLA, May 26, 1981. 44. Doc. conc. ANNA-LISA, b. 1901, Stockholm, 99. : Photos, notes etc. regarding ANNA-LISA 1905 - 1981. : Group-photos of the family at the 75-years birthday of ANNA-LISA, Gyllene Uttern, Aug, 9, 1976. 45. Doc. conc. the chief surgeon John TORE, M D, b. 1904, Göteborg, 100, and his family. : Letters, photos, notes etc. regarding TORE and his family 1920 - 1980. 46. Doc. conc. the archaeologist OLGA Viktoria WALLGREN, M.A., b. 1906, Stockholm, 102. : Photos etc. of OLGA 1925 - 1956. : Newspaper announcements and notices after the death of OLGA, Jan. 10, 1957. 47. Doc. conc. the sales manager TAGE Viktor, b. 1915, Stockholm, 103, and his family. : Photos, notes etc. regarding TAGE and his family 1920 - 1980. : Announcement and photos at the wedding of EVA Märta KJELLIN, 50, 1957. 48. Doc. conc. the professor [[Moberger-105|John GUNNAR Viktor]], M D, b. 1918, Stockholm, 105, and his family. : Newspaper announcements notices, articles and photos etc. regarding GUNNAR and his family 1918-1981. : M.D. (Ph. D.) diploma, May 28, 1955. : List of publications by GUNNAR 1945 - 1981. : Newspaper notices, photos etc. regarding the children Ulla ELISABETH WESTBY/DYMLING, 42, and John ULF Gunnar, 53, and their children 1944 - 1981. : Photos etc. of the children PERNILLA Beatrice, 55, and John VICTOR, 56, 1967 - 1981. 49. Doc. conc. the architect GÖRAN Arvid, b. 1919, Göteborg, 108, and his family. : Letters, photos, notes etc. regarding GÖRAN and his family 1919 - 1981. 50. Doc. conc. the gynecologist Gustaf INGEMAR, M D, b. 1924, Halmstad, 111, and his family. : Newspaper notices regarding INGEMAR after the swedish schools shooting contest in Stockholm, 1940, 1941. : Letters, notes and photos regarding INGEMAR and his family 1924 - 1981. === Appendix B: Publications (sources 51-150) === 51. [??]fzelius G: Sveriges Apotekarhistoria Bd VI, Suppl II, Stockholm, 1949, [p.] 262. 52. [??]ehrendtz F: Kalmar Domkyrkas Grafvar: Epidafier i meddelanden från [K]almar läns Fornminnesförening II, 1900, p. 49, 58. 53. [B]erg G, Broomé B and Furtenbach B: Svenska Släktkalendern, 1976, [p.] 144, 279-286, 433. 54. [B]erg G, Kempff C and Furtenbach B: Svenska Släktkalendern, 1967, [p.] 124. 55. [B]ergforss N A: Svensk Postmatrikel, Vetlanda, 1928, p. 643. 56. [B]ergstrand H: Svenska Läkaresällkapet 150 år, Lund, 1958, p. 494-500, [50]3-504. 57. [B]ergström O: Svenskt Porträttgalleri, VII Armén, Stockholm, 1897, [p.] 25. 58. [??]exell B: Den hundraåriga skolan. Ett bidrag till Högsby Sockens [Hi]storia 1842-1942, Kalmar, 1942, p. 30. 59. [??]örkman G: Vimmerby stads Dombok och Protokoll 1614-1725, [Pe]rsonregister, Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm, 1957. 60. [??]remer S O and Thimon G: Uppsala Universitet Matrikel. Register [17]95-1817, Uppsala, 1971, p. 373. 61. [??]ruzelius A J: Sveriges Läkarhistoria Följd 3, Stockholm, 1901, p. 1379. 62. [??]arlsson C A: Anteckningar om Kristdala Socken i Tunaläns Härad och [Ka]lmar län, Stockholm, 1900, p. 167-168. 63. [??]vallin S: Lunds Stifts Herdaminne, del V, Lund, 1858, p. 72-73, 78. 64. [D]ahl T: Svenska Män och Kvinnor, del 5, 1949, p. 309. 65. Elgenstierna G: Svenska Adelns Ättartavlor, Bd II, Stockholm, 1926, [p.] 382. 66. Elgenstierna G: Svenska Adelns Ättartavlor, Bd III, Stockholm, 1927, [p.] 762-763. 67. Elgenstierna G: Svenska Adelns Ättartavlor, Bd IV, Stockholm, 1928, [p.] 304, 724. 68. Elgenstierna G: Svenska Adelns Ättartavlor, Bd V, Stockholm, 1930, [p.] 610. 69. Elgenstierna G: Svenska Adelns Ättartavlor, Bd VI, Stockholm, 1931, [p.] 449. 70. Elgenstierna G: Svenska Adelns Ättartavlor, Bd VIII, Stockholm, 1934, p. 383. 71. Elgenstierna G: Svenska Släktkalendern, 7:e årg, Stockholm, 1919, p. 625-627. 72. Elgenstierna G: Svenska Släktkalendern, 8:e årg, Stockholm, 1921, p. 210. 73. Elgenstierna G: Svenska Släktkalendern, 10:e årg, Stockholm, 1930, p. 214-215. 74. Eriksson H and Franzén O: Högsbyboken, del II, 1936, p. 213-556. 75. Erlandson E: Skara Högre Allm Läroverks Lärjungar, åren 1870-1910, Skövde, 1922, p. 351. 76. Fant JE and Låstbom A F: Uppsala Ärkestifts Herdaminne, 2:a del, Uppsala, 1843, p. 441. 77. Grape E: Postkontor och Postmästare, Stockholm, 1951, p. 648. 78. Grimberg C: Svenska folkets underbara öden, Bd 9, 1924, p. 172. 79. Gullberg Hj: Svenskt Porträttgalleri, XXII, Idkare af Handel, Stockholm, 1906, p. 105. 80. Göteborgs Högre Realläroverk 1900-1940, Malmö, 1953, p. 337, 363. 81. Göteborgs Nation i Uppsala, 1936-1942, Uppsala, 1943, p. 92. 82. Hildebrand A: Svenskt Porträttgalleri, XIII, Läkarekåren, 1911, p. 308. 83. Hilleström G: Kungl Musikaliska Akademin, Matrikel 1771-1971, Stockholm, 1972, p. 59, 69. 84. Hulthander C: Biografiska anteckningar från Carlberg 1792-1892, Norrköping, 1892, p. 240. 85. Humble N: Två Hälsingesocknar, Bollnäs, 1934, p. 193, 226, 264. 86. Hylander I: Östgötars Minne, Ny följd. Hedersledamöter av Östgöta Nation, Uppsala, 1926, p. 12. 87. Ihre J: Diss de Wimmerbya, Upsaliae 1747, p. 16. 88. Kalmar Läns Porträttgalleri, Göteborg, 1926, p. 61. 89. Kalmar Nation i Uppsala, 1900-1913, Uppsala, 1913, p. 37. 90. Kleberg J: Svenska Ämbetsverk, del V, Statskontoret 1680-1946, Uppsala, 1948, p. 70. 91. Kugelberg O: Postmästare i Sverige och Finland, Stockholm, 1895, p. 205. 92. [La]gerholm J: Södermanlands Närkes Nation i Uppsala 1595-1900, Uppsala [??]33, p. 306. 93. [La]gerlöf Selma: Charlotte Löwensköld, Bonniers, Stockholm, 1949, p. 78. 94. [L]emke O N: Visby Stifts Herdaminne, Örebro, 1868, p. 282, 445. 95. [L]ewenhaupt C: Sveriges Ridderskaps och Adelskalendar 1935, p. 519, [??]9, 929, 1177. 96. [L]evertin A: Schimmelpfennig C F V and Ahlberg K: Sveriges [??]otekarhistoria, Bd V, Göteborgs och Bohuslän, Suppl, Stockholm, [??]36, p.355, 421. 97. [Li?]ljestrand G: Karolinska Mediko-Kirurgiska Instituets Historia [??]10-1960, Del I:2 and III, Uppsala, 1960. 98. [Li?]ndorm O: Svenska Män och Kvinnor, del 5, Stockholm 1949, p. [??]9-310. 99. [L]ungquist J: "Smålänning Gu hjälp", Stockholm 1941, p. 348-349. 100. [L]undmark F: "Vadstena en gammal sjukhusstad", Svensk Läkartidning [??], 1952, p. 1166-1170. 101. [M]atrikel öfver Civile Embets- och Tjenstemän i Riket år 1856, [??]vildepartementet, Stockholm, 1857, p. 198. 102. [M]eurling Ch: Olof Meurlings Stamträd, Lund, 1902, p. 86-87. 103. [M]oberg A: Kungl Göta Lifgardes Officerskår 1741-1939, Sundbyberg, [19]41, p. 167. 104. [M]oberger A: Högsby friförsamlings historia 1863-1913, Kalmar 1913. 105. [N]ilsson J: Årsunda Släktregister, Gävle, 1942, p. 380. 106. [N]ordisk Familjebok, del XVIII, 1913, p. 767. 107. [N]orén F E: Från forna tiders Vimmerby och Sevede, Vimmerby, 1936, p. 61. 108. [N]yström L: Uppsala Ärkestifts Herdaminne, Uppsala, 1893, p. 623-624. 109. [O]dén K G: Östgötars minne, Stockholm, 1902, p. 267, 387, 397, 541. 110. [O]lsson N W: Swedish passenger Arrivals in New York, 1820-1850, Stockholm, 1907, p. 190. 111. [P]almgren H: Matrikel över Gästrike Hälsinglands Nation i Uppsala, [18]11-1912, Stockholm, 1913, p. 5, 21. 112. [P]aradis S: Statens Folkskoleinspektörer 1861-1956, Stockholm 1956, p. 62. 113. Persson G: Strövtåg i Emådalen, Vetlanda, 1969, p. 50. 114. Porträttgalleri från Skaraborgs län, Malmö, 1933, p. 500. 115. Reinhard M: Västerviks Folkskola 1763-1939, Västervik, 1940, p. 46. 116. Riksdagsprotokoll, Högre Presteståndets protokoll vid Lagt Riksd i Stockholm åren 1865-1866, Bd 1-5, Stockholm, 1865. 117. Roosval C, Matrikel öfver Embets- och Tjenstemän i Calmar Län och Öland från år 1799 "Stadens Herrar Handlande", 1898, p. 49. 118. Rudelius F: Kalmar Regementes Personhistoria 1623-1927, Norrköping, 1955, p. 461. 119. Sacklén J F: Sveriges Läkarhistoria, Bd II:1, Nyköping, 1823, p. 333, 353-356. 120. Sacklén J F: Sveriges Läkarhistoria, Bd II:2, Nyköping, 1824, p.358. 121. Sacklén J F: Sveriges Läkarhistoria, 1:a avd, Suppl, Nyköing, 1835, p. 241. 122. Sjöström C: Alnarps matrikel, 1862-1912, Lund, 1912, p. 225. 123. Sjöström C: Kalmar Nation i Lund 1670-1914, Lund, 1915, p. 84. 124. Stig E: Södra Vi Krönikan, Hembygdstidning, utgåva av Södra Vi Hembygdsföorening "Skolhistoria från Södra Vi", Kungl Biblioteket, Stockholm. 125. Ståhl J: Linköpings Stifts Herdaminnen, del II, Norrköping, 1846, p. 214, del III, Norrköping, 1847, p. 255. 126. Svensén E: Ur vårt fosterlands historia efter 1809, Stockholm, 1909, p. 445, 456. 127. Svensk Läkarmatrikel, 2:a del, Stockholm, 1895, p. 576. 128. Svensk Läkarmatrikel 1970, Bokförlaget Vem är Vem, Stockholm, 1971, p. 574-575. 129. Svensk Läkartidning, vol 72, 1975, p. 5174, 5179. 130. Svenska Läkare, Stockholm, 1959, p. 532-533. 131. Svenska Läkarsällskapets Handlingar, Bd 3-4, 6-8, 1816-1822. 132. Svenskt Porträttgalleri, VIII, Kungl Kustartilleriet, Stockholm 1902, p. 126. 133. Sveriges Jägmästare och Postmästare, 1973, p. 123. 134. von Sydow N and Björkman S: Svenska Gods och Gårdar, del 32, Västergötland (Skaraborgs läns Norra), Uddevalla, 1942, p. 948. 135. [??]m är det, Sv Bibliogr Handbok, Stockholm, 1953, p. 734. 136. [??]m är det, Sv Bibliogr Handbok, Stockholm, 1979, p. 721, 1165. 137. [??]m är vem, Stor-Stockholm, 1963, p. 921. 138. [??]m är vem, Skåne, Halland, Blekinge, 1966, p. 558. 139. [??]sterlund J A and Setterdahl J A: Linköpings Stifts Herdaminne, 2:a [??], Linköping, 1916, p. 159. 140. [??]sterlund J A, Setterdahl J A and Meurling E: Linköpings Stifts Herdaminne, Del 4, 2:a, häftet, Linköping, 1925, p. 25-27. 141. [??]degren J Th: Linköpings Stifts Ecklesiastiks och läroverksmatrikel år [187]4, Linköping, 1874, p. 184. 142. [??]dstrand A: Svensk Läkarhistoria (4:e följden), del III, Stockholm, [??]3, p. 462-463. 143. [??]destam G: Växjö Stifts Herdaminne, 6:e delen, Växjö, 1962, p. [??]-125. 144. [??]strand G: Smålands Nation i Uppsala 1637-1844, Uppsala, 1894, p. 586. 145. [??]terholm T: Predikare-Lena, 1962, p. 217-218. 146. [??]nberg L D C: Svenska Ättartal, årg 3, 1887, p. 63. 147. [??]nberg L D C: Svenska Ättartal, årg 4, 1888, p. 326. 148. [??]nberg L D C: Svenska Ättartal, årg 5, 1889, p. 228, 231. 149. [??]nberg L D C: Svenska Ättartal, årg 6, 1890, p. 184, 479. 150. [??]nberg L D C: Svenska Ättartal, årg 7, 1891, p. 246.
The Monroe Memoirs
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:On June 23, 1943, President Roosevelt approved the formation of the "American Commission for the Protection and Salvage of Artistic and Historic Monuments in War Areas" widely known as the "Roberts Commission," after its chairman, Supreme Court Justice Owen J. Roberts. The work of the "Harvard Group" and the "American Council of Learned Societies" contributed to its establishment. :Thus was born the Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives (“MFAA") section under the auspices of the Civil Affairs and Military Government Sections of the Allied Armies. Together the Monuments Men worked to protect monuments and other cultural treasures from the destruction of World War II. About two dozen Monuments Men braved the front lines to track, locate, and recover looted objects. Their work was dangerous: two Monuments Men were killed in combat while protecting works of art. In the last year of the war, they tracked, located, and in the years that followed, returned more than five million artistic and cultural items to the countries from which they had been taken. Their role in preserving cultural treasures was without precedent.
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The Nativity of the Holy Virgin Orthodox Church
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The Nemesis of Samuel Garrigues Sr.
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The Nestor - Haglund Letters
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The_Nestor_-_Haglund_Letters.jpg
The_Nestor_-_Haglund_Letters-2.jpg
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The New England Historical & Genealogical Register, Volume 173, Spring 2019
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** [[Woodgate-428|Ursula (Woodgate) Quarles (bef. 1603 - bef. 1652)]] ** [[Quarles-479|Francis Quarles (bef. 1592 - bef. 1644)]] ** [[Quarles-480|Frances (Quarles) Marbury]] ** [[Quarles-481|Elizabeth Quarles]] ** [[Quarles-482|Francis Quarles]] ** [[Quarles-483|John Quarles]] ** [[Quarles-484|Anne Quarles]] ** [[Quarles-485|Mary Quarles]] ** [[Quarles-127|Joanna (Quarles]] ** [[Marbury-280|Euseby Marbury]] ** [[Smith-541|Richard Smith]] ** [[Sutton-26|John Sutton KG]] ** [[Sutton-942|John (Sutton) Dudley]] '''Magdalen (Hall) Camp Was Not the Grandmother of William Curtis and Mary (Curtis) Ruggles of Roxbury, Massachusetts''' * Author: Robert Batle * Citation: Robert Batle, "Magdalen (Hall) Camp Was Not the Grandmother of William Curtis and Mary (Curtis) Ruggles of Roxbury, Massachusetts," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Spring 2019, 119-121 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Hall-1889|Magdalen (Hall) Campe]] ** [[Curtis-8|Thomas Curtis]] ** [[Camp-89|Mary (Camp) Curtis]] * Notes: The article shows that [[Camp-89|Mary (Camp) Curtis]] parents are not correct '''James Lane of North Yarmouth, Maine, and His Daughter Ann (Lane) (Bray) Shed of Billerica, Massachusetts''' * Author: Nathaniel Lane Taylor * Citation: Nathaniel Lane Taylor, "James Lane of North Yarmouth, Maine, and His Daughter Ann (Lane) (Bray) Shed of Billerica, Massachusetts," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Spring 2019, 122-131 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Shedd-326|Zachariah Shedd]] ** [[Bray-3328|Ann (Bray) Shed]] ** [[Shedd-323|Hanna Shedd]] ** [[Shedd-324|James Shedd]]] ** [[Shedd-325|Ebenezer Shedd]] ** [[Shedd-326|Zachariah Shedd]] ** [[Shedd-327|Nathan Shedd]] ** [[Shed-129|Agnes Shed]] '''David Holmes of Milton, Massachueetts''' * Author: Helen Schatvet Ullmann * Citation: Helen Schatvet Ullmann, "David Holmes of Milton, Massachueetts," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Spring 2019, 133-135 '''Captain Wiliam Terrett of Stonington, Connecticut, and Some of His Descendants''' * Author: Eugene Cole Zubrinsky * Citation: Eugene Cole Zubrinsky, "Captain Wiliam Terrett of Stonington, Connecticut, and Some of His Descendants," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Spring 2019, 136-147 '''Letters to Ezekiel and Edna (Halstead) (Bailey) Northend of Rowley, Massachusetts, in 1650 and 1652''' * Author: Scott Andrew Bartley * Citation: Scott Andrew Bartley, "Letters to Ezekiel and Edna (Halstead) (Bailey) Northend of Rowley, Massachusetts, in 1650 and 1652," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Spring 2019, 147-154 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Northend-3|Ezekiel Northend]] ** [[Halsted-10|Edna (Halsted) Northend]] ** [[Halstead-37|Henry Halstead]] ** [[Halsted-11|Nathan Halsted]] ** [[Denton-25|Isabel (Denton) Halsted]] ** [[Halstead-74|William Halstead]] '''Phillips Bible Records, 1775-1971''' * Author: Gregory Connell Lawrance * Citation: Gregory Connell Lawrance, "Phillips Bible Records, 1775-1971," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Spring 2019, 155-164 * Notes: 200 years of Bible records of descendents of Zachariah Connell and Margaret Wallace '''Rebecca's Siblings: The Overlooked Children of Secretary Edward and Rachel (Perne) Rawson''' * Author: Alwin E. Schmidt, Jr. * Continued from: ''[[Space:The New England Historical & Genealogical Register, Volume 173, Winter 2019]], 36'' * Citation: Alwin E. Schmidt, Jr., "Rebecca's Siblings: The Overlooked Children of Secretary Edward and Rachel (Perne) Rawson," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Spring 2019, 163-174 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Rawson-32|Edward Rawson|Edward Rawson (1638 - aft. 1655)]] ** [[Perne-1|Rachel (Perne) Rawson]]] ** [[Rawson-64|Rachel Rawson]] ** [[Rawson-1398|Perne (Rawson) Broughton]]] '''New London Beckwiths in the Records of the East (or Second) Congregational Society of Lyme, Connecticut: 'The John Beckwith Family Revisited'''' * Author: R. Bruce DIebold * Continued from: ''[[Space:The New England Historical & Genealogical Register, Volume 173, Winter 2019]], 51'' * Citation: R. Bruce DIebold, "New London Beckwiths in the Records of the East (or Second) Congregational Society of Lyme, Connecticut: 'The John Beckwith Family Revisited'," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Spring 2019, 175-186 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Beckwith-1890|Oliver Beckwith]] ** [[Moore-48421|Mary (Moore) Beckwith]] ** [[Beckwith-1957|William Beckwith]] ** [[Beckwith-1958|Jesse Beckwith]] ** [[Chappell-2601|Lucy (Chappell) Beckwith]] ** [[Beckwith-1959|Martha (Beckwith) Watrous]] ** [[Watrous-377|Gideon Watrous]] ** [[Beckwith-1960|Mary (Beckwith) Weeks]] ** [[Beckwith-1961|Lurana Beckwith]] ** [[Beckwith-1962|Lucretia (Beckwith) Minor]]] ** [[Beckwith-1467|Love (Beckwith) Beebe]] ** [[Beckwith-1963|Ichabod Beckwith]] ** [[Beckwith-1964|Dorridee Beckwith]] ** [[Beckwith-1965|Oliver Beckwith]] ** [[Beckwith-1966|Absalom Beckwith]] ** [[Beckwith-834|John Beckwith Jr.]] ** [[Brooks-7754|Hannah (Brooks) Beckwith]] * Notes: Additional generations of this family included in the article. '''Updates from English Records for Some Great Migration Immigrants Who Came by 1635''' * Author: (null) * Concluded from: ''[[Space:The New England Historical & Genealogical Register, Volume 173, Fall 2018]], 359'' * Citation: (null), "Updates from English Records for Some Great Migration Immigrants Who Came by 1635," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Spring 2019, 187-190 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Richardson-21163|George Richardson]] ** [[Saier-40|Mary (Saier) Richardson]] ** [[Cranfild-1|Mary (Cranfild) Richardson]] ** [[Rockwell-1789|John Rockwell]] ** [[Rockwell-88|William Rockwell]]] ** [[Seeley-67|Robert Seeley]]] ** [[Shaflin-2|Michael Shaflin]] ** [[Shaflin-1|Katherine (Shaflin) King]] ** [[Clarke-3072|Joane (Clarke) Stone]] ** [[Swain-779|Richard Swain]] ** [[Saunders-3789|Basselle (Saunders) Swain]]] ** [[White-1739|Edward White]] ** [[King-9397|Martha (King) White]]
The New England Historical & Genealogical Register, Volume 173, Winter 2019
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** [[Barker-462|Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow (abt. 1597 - 1621)]] ** [[Winslow-83|Edward Winslow Jr. (1595 - 1655)]] ** [[Barker-10854|George Barker (abt. 1531 - bef. 1608)]] ** [[Barker-10856|Robert Barker (abt. 1541)]] ** [[Barker-10852|Samuel Barker (abt. 1551 - bef. 1601)]] ** [[Barker-10853|Peter Barker (abt. 1505 - bef. 1559)]] ** [[Barker-10857|Myles Barker (1543)]] ** [[Barker-10858|Elizabeth (Barker) Ward (1545 - bef. 1591)]] ** [[Barker-10859|John Barker (abt. 1547)]] ** [[Barker-10860|James Barker (1549 - bef. 1601)]] ** [[Barker-10861|Mary Barker (abt. 1597 - aft. 1615)]] * Notes: Many additional names and relationships. '''The Will of ''Mayflower'' Passenger Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow''' * Author: Jeremy Dupertuis Bangs * Citation: Jeremy Dupertuis Bangs, "The Will of ''Mayflower'' Passenger Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Winter 2019, 18-25 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Barker-462|Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow (abt. 1597 - 1621)]] ** [[Winslow-83|Edward Winslow Jr. (1595 - 1655)]] ** [[Brewster-4|William Brewster (abt. 1566 - 1644)]] ** [[Allerton-3|Isaac Allerton Sr. (abt. 1586 - bef. 1659)]] '''Rebecca's Siblings: The Overlooked Children of Secretery Edward and Rachel (Perne) Rawson''' * Author: Alwin E. Schmidt, Jr * Citation: Alwin E. Schmidt, Jr, "Rebecca's Siblings: The Overlooked Children of Secretery Edward and Rachel (Perne) Rawson," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Winter 2019, 26-36 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Perne-1|Rachel (Perne) Rawson (1619 - 1677)]] ** [[Rawson-32|Edward Rawson (1615 - 1693)]] '''"Jedidah" Skidmore''' * Author: Barry E. Hinman * Citation: Barry E. Hinman, ""Jedidah" Skidmore," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Winter 2019, 37-38 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Skidmore-114|Jedidah (Skidmore) Higby (1624 - abt. 1660)]] ** [[Higby-73|Edward Higby (1616 - 1699)]] '''The New London Beckwiths in the Records of the East (or Second) Congretational Society of Lyme, Connecticut: The John Beckwith Family Revisited''' * Author: R. Bruce Diebold * Citation: R. Bruce Diebold, "The New London Beckwiths in the Records of the East (or Second) Congretational Society of Lyme, Connecticut: The John Beckwith Family Revisited," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Winter 2019, 39-51 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Beckwith-135|John Beckwith (abt. 1668 - aft. 1757)]] ** [[Mainwaring-425|Prudence (Mainwaring) Beckwith (abt. 1668 - 1740)]] ** [[Beckwith-78|Mathew Beckwith (abt. 1612 - 1681)]] ** [[Beckwith-1890|Oliver Beckwith (abt. 1691 - aft. 1758)]] ** [[Beckwith-834|John Beckwith Jr. (1700 - bef. 1753)]] ** [[Beckwith-943|Richard Beckwith (abt. 1702 - abt. 1769)]] ** [[Beckwith-1889|Jonathan Beckwith (1689)]] ** [[Beckwith-358|Hannah (Beckwith) Chappell (1700 - bef. 1738)]] ** [[Chappell-1672|George Chappell (bef. 1699 - aft. 1748)]] ** [[Beckwith-359|Bathsheba (Beckwith) Daniels (abt. 1698 - aft. 1743)]] ** [[Beckwith-370|Prudence (Beckwith) Dart (abt. 1699 - aft. 1754)]] ** [[Daniels-952|Nathaniel Daniels (1697)]] * Notes: Genealogy goes to grandchildren and some great grandchildren of John Beckwith. '''Edward Bishop (ca. 1618-1797) of Salem and Beverly, Massachusetts''' * Author: Nancy R. Stevens * Citation: Nancy R. Stevens, "Edward Bishop (ca. 1618-1797) of Salem and Beverly, Massachusetts," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Winter 2019, 52-65 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Bishop-984|Edward Bishop Sr. (abt. 1618 - 1695)]] ** [[Unknown-167149|Hannah (Unknown) Bishop (abt. 1625 - aft. 1692)]] ** [[Bishop-1489|Hannah (Bishop) Rayment (bef. 1646 - aft. 1677)]] ** [[Raymond-545|William Raymond (1637 - 1709)]] ** [[Hull-5204|Ruth (Hull) Rayment (1655 - 1738)]] * Notes: Includes genealogy to grandchildren. '''English Origin of Leslie Bradfield of Wethersfield and Branford, Connecticut''' * Author: Patricia Law Hatcher * Citation: Patricia Law Hatcher, "English Origin of Leslie Bradfield of Wethersfield and Branford, Connecticut," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Winter 2019, 66-81 * WikiTree Profiles:
** [[Bradfield-45|Leslie Bradfield (bef. 1598 - 1655)]] ** [[Bratfield-8|William Bratfield (abt. 1572 - bef. 1618)]] ** [[Bratfield-8|John Bratfield (bef. 1600)]] ** [[Bratfield-10|Robert Bratfield (bef. 1602 - 1658)]] ** [[Bratfield-13|Johan Bratfield (bef. 1607)]] ** [[Bratfield-14|Thomas Bratfield (bef. 1609)]] ** [[Bratfield-15|Joyce Bratfield (bef. 1613)]] ** [[Bratfield-16|William Bratfield (bef. 1618 - bef. 1670)]] ** [[X-5961|Mary (X) Bradfield (abt. 1615)]] ** [[Bradfield-44|Martha (Bradfield) Whitehead (abt. 1640 - aft. 1711)]] ** [[Bradfield-476|Samuel Bradfield (abt. 1652 - 1694)]] ** [[Bradfield-481|Mary Bradfield (abt. 1654 - 1655)]] * Notes: Includes an additional generation '''The Search for "Mr." Overton: The Ancestry of Rev. Valentine Overton and His Connections to New England Immigrants Rev. Peter Bulkeley, Elizabeth (St. John) Whiting, Martha (Bulkeley)(Whittingham) Hough, WIlliam Quarles, and Joanna (Quarles) Smith''' * Author: Clifford L Stott (concluded from 172:331) * Citation: Clifford L Stott (concluded from 172:331), "The Search for "Mr." Overton: The Ancestry of Rev. Valentine Overton and His Connections to New England Immigrants Rev. Peter Bulkeley, Elizabeth (St. John) Whiting, Martha (Bulkeley)(Whittingham) Hough, WIlliam Quarles, and Joanna (Quarles) Smith," ''The New England Historical & Genealogical Register'' (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 2019), Volume 173, Winter 2019, 82-91
The New Hampshire Grants or Benning Wentworth Grants
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The New Haven Genealogical Magazine
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The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Volume 150, Issue 2 (April 2019)
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''(includes much more information)'' '''Reuniting the Family of William and Eliza (Blunt) Hooker of Nineteenth Century New York City''' * Author: Sharon L. Hoyt, MLIS, CG * Citation: Sharon L. Hoyt, MLIS, CG, "Reuniting the. Family of William and Eliza (Blunt) Hooker of Nineteenth Century New York City," ''The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record'', Vol 150, issue 2, 133-146. * WikiTree Profiles: '''The Ogden Family of Oxenhope: The Probably Yorkshire Origin of John and Richard Ogden, Early Settlers of Stamford, Connecticut, and Proprietors of Hempstead, New York''' * Author: Louis G Ogden and Brent M. Owen * Citation: Louis G Ogden and Brent M. Owen, "The Ogden Family of Oxenhope: The Probably Yorkshire Origin of John and Richard Ogden, Early Settlers of Stamford, Connecticut, and Proprietors of Hempstead, New York," ''The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record'', Vol 150, issue 2, 147-154. * WikiTree Profiles: ** [[Ogden-3237|Richard Ogden (1621 - bef. 1687)]]''
(lists children and other information)''
The Night the Stars Fell - 1833, USA
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The_Night_the_Stars_Fell_-_1833_USA.jpg
The Nolan-Dolan-Glynn family mystery
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The North Parish of Sutton
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The Nuckolls Report
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The Nuwer Family Tree
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People in the Nuwer Family Tree
Generations[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1bQ3rJHcMZ0NZsgUMjWz7yCai4fQm_SrV/ The Grandchildren of John Nuwer and Catherine Kieffer]Individual essays
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/17xrx0wvuZ0QyZVpmP6kCpsKCYuHL0a_7/ The Grandchildren of Frank Nuwer and Catherine Bach]
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1J0ZCTLWhrGzkZWCmpbABC1aYnBSOGeIX/ The Grandchildren of Celestine Nuwer and John Kieffer]
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1eK9x1RVso2VsxgbTzOVCyteTx6FS2Q4v/ The Grandchildren of Andrew Nichter and Agatha Bohnwitz]
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1bNlqWki6dt4hhbU1bPikSEF4XOF9EUQI/ Two Lancaster Priests: Edward Ott and Roman Nuwer] (April 2021)The Nuwer Family at War
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1KEaToUh_B6dPnNeKG7j7qLVrAUjuWyT7/ Rev. Clarence F Ott] (October 2021)
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1guf-YyF3aeG5La6eT0XIXQcnYb_Ab6iK/ Two Geyer Priests]
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zSaZrMh8w3EuYncmHQ0cB5o_tD7HsE3q/ Christine Nuwer Pautler] (August 2021)
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WWnwuNFmBIAcxvzcxCBEvlRo_nPg6Qpi Francis X Nuwer II]
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/14zwTgeJu9sx1lkpbWaGsSR26GSD4AGuJ/ Michael Foran Nuwer] (September 2021)
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/15rqZTp6P0lJ2g9IBmjv6xV0rrdQmOXEe/ J. George Nuwer, A case of industrial work] (October 2021)
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1RvYgCppfdX7N1Upjbyh9EwY2CAzVB_8h/ Lawrence E. Nuwer, A case of industrial work] (September 2021)
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kwGzw7vPIq9d46yQiPpmBVCuIseZ5bQf/ Veterans of World War One] (November 2021)---- [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Nuwer-140 Back to homepage]
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1RIC92SVU7_xAGdip8GN7MVPOso68DXFr/ A war letter by Henry Stephan]
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1TJemRJvq7WwM4Yo_wcGigW4j-EDDL4up/ Two Marines in the Second World War] (November 2020)
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Alb_uLrLe9KS51A5-mXW9ac6YeA6qExn/ Roman Pautler in the Second World War] (May 2021)
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Xb4TZxLTui7XpGsjoGhQQ_ewEzU_nx0E/ Norbert Watkins in WW2] (October 2021)
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FyeEZtQY7L5gP-PclnPRnwsmnXkgi7Sp/ Veterans of the Second World War]
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/1wzXVo9eZwnK1e4HW39o4j1kYLIRQfHg1/ More World War Two Veterans]
The Odd widowry of Wm. & Libby
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The Official Roster of Ohio Soldiers, Sailors and Marines in the World War, 1917-18
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in the World War, 1917-18
23 Volumes
:Vols. I-XIX include Roster of Soldiers, vol. XX-XXI, Sailors, vol. XXII Marines vol. XXIII Corrections, List of Dead, Statisics. :Compiled under the direction of the governor, the secretary of state, and the adjutant general of the State of Ohio. * Author: Compilation, State of Ohio ** Vic Donahey, Governor ** Thad H. Brown, Secretary of State ** Frank D. Henderson, Adjutant General * Publisher: Columbus, Ohio - The F. J. Heer Printing Co., 1926-29 * Notes: Vols. I-XIX include roster of soldiers, vol. XX-XXI, sailors, and vol. XXII, marines. Compiled under the direction of the governor, the secretary of state, and the adjutant general, vol. I-XXI (also the military registrar, vol. XXII-XXIII) The preparation of the roster was under the direction and supervision of the adjutant general. *For a complete list all volumes available online see [https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000403239 Halthi Trust: The Official Roster of Ohio Soldiers, Sailors and Marines in the World War, 1917-18] :A shortened list with notes on alphabetical name range included for each volume. To use the Search function available for each volume, names must be entered Surname, Given Name, ex: Smith, John not John Smith: ::'''''Soldiers''''' * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89066171125&view=1up&seq=3 Volume _1] - Aab, Casper to Beight, Lloyd * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112056066415&view=1up&seq=5 Volume _2] - Beight, Paul F. to Bruce, Perley K. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112056066423&view=1up&seq=5 Volume _3] - Bruce, Ralph D. to Coleman, Sam * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112056066456&view=1up&seq=5 Volume _4] - Coleman, Sherman to Dickson, Edward A. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112056066464&view=1up&seq=7 Volume _5] - Dickson, Frank E. to Finch, Gerald * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112056066480&view=1up&seq=7 Volume _6] - Finch, Harley W. to Gonda, Steve W. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112056066498&view=1up&seq=7 Volume _7] - Gondek, Frank to Heidecker, Walter J. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112056066506&view=1up&seq=5 Volume _8] - Heidle, Frank J. to Jacobs, William G. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112056066514&view=1up&seq=5 Volume _9] - Jacobs, William H. to Koehler, Charles * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112055091398&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 10] - Koehler, Christopher L. to Lucas, William H. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89058460981&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 11] - Lucas, William J. to Meese, Roy * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112055091414&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 12] - Meese, Walter H. to Nester, Michael B. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112055091422&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 13] - Nestick, Joseph to Pokol, Arthur T. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112055091430&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 14] - Pokol, Charles J. to Rose, Ernest G. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89066171166&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 15] - Rose, Fariss W. to Shay, Charles * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112055091455&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 16] - Shay, Daniel to Stephens, Frank S. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89058461021&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 17] - Stephens, Frank S. to Tyson, Alfred * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89058461039&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 18] - Tyson, Benjamin H. to Wilkinson, Frank E. * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112055091489&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 19] - Wilkinson, Gale H. to Zywiczynski, John ::'''''Sailors''''' * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89058461054&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 20] - Aab, Frederick David to Laughlin, Frank Marion * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89058461062&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 21] - Laughlin, Russell David to Zweisler, Joseph Fred ::'''''Marines''''' * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89058461070&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 22] - Abair, Laurence Aloysius to Zupcic, Michael ::'''''Corrections, List of Dead, Statistics''''' * [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89058461088&view=1up&seq=5 Volume 23] - Names Not included in preceding volumes. List of those who Died. Statistics by State and County. :'''''Source Example:'''''
: State of Ohio, Comp. [<''URL of Page> The Official Roster of Ohio Soldiers, Sailors and Marines in the World War, 1917-18] 23 Volumes - Publisher: Columbus, Ohio - The F. J. Heer Printing Co., 1926-29 Vol. ## Page ###
The Ohio Riordan Research Team
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The Oklahoma Hearn's
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THE OLD SOLDIERS. REUNION OF THE I30TH N. Y. VOLS., OR FIRST N. Y. DRAGOONS.
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— — — [page 56] CHAPTER XVIII STEP-GRANDMOTHER Margaret Leitner was the daughter of Colonel George Leitner. He had moved to Florida after Indian troubles were over, coming with his wife and younger children from South Carolina. One or more children remained there. Colonel Leitner bought a large tract of land near Micanopy. He built his home near “George’s Pond” (named for him). It overlooked beautiful Lake Wauberg, now a University of Florida Recreation area. The acres he owned are still known as the Leitner tract. One of the writers owns a small part of it. He established a large plantation and raised much cotton. He, some of his family and slaves belonged to the old Micanopy Baptist Church. Records still in existence which date from 1832 bear their names. After the Civil War he was completely ruined. He had mortgaged his land to develop it and could not pay it off, so he lost everything and his home burned. stones from it are still there. They had spend many summers in Orange Springs, where they met Grandfather while he was there on business. Margaret Leitner McGahagin was a good mother to her large brood. She was a good seamstress and kept busy sewing clothes for them. She never saw her parents again after they moved to Brazil; they died there. Several of their younger children developed tuberculosis there and died. One of the brothers, Howard Leitner, came to Grandfather’s home shortly before he was killed and died there of that disease. He probably thought he might recover if he returned to Florida from Brazil. [page 57] Margaret Leitner McGahagin is buried by Grandfather. After Grandfather’s death, his widow and four younger children stayed on at the home for a few years. ... — — — [page 69] PART 2 DESCENDANTS OF JOSHUA LUCAS McGAHAGIN [[McGahagin-11|William Emmitt McGahagin]] was the first child born to Joshua L. and Sara Adeline McGahagin. He was born June18, 1847 at their plantation home at Long Swamp, Florida, near what is now Belleview. He grew very rapidly. He was 5feet 10 inches high when grown. His hair was very black, eyes blue, ruddy clear complexion, broad shoulders, was very erect all of his like. At the age of 16, when he entered the Confederate Army, he seemed a grown man. He received his early education in his home by a governess. When ten years of age his mother died, his father sent him to Orange Springsto school, about forty miles North of their home. Here he boarded for two years until his father married again. The Methodist Church was the school house, which is still standing. Here he played with children, the Pearson boys, which afterward were comrades in the battles fought in that area. Later he attended East Florida Seminary in Ocala, the first State College of Florida, which was established eight years previous to the War for Southern Independence, and when this crisis came in 1861, he was too young to go into service then, but enlisted when sixteen and saw action in the Confederate Army with his father at Horse Landing on the St. John’s River, Olistee and Gainesville. After his bout with measles, a Negro boy, named Lewis, helped him into a box car as the train pulled out of Waldo. He his there until the train stopped in [page 70] Ocala, from there he made his way home. With rest and care he regained fairly good health and lived until he was nearly 90. He died November, 1936 and is buried in the Lake Weir Cemetery. Aged 21, he married [[Gartrell-230|Emma Gartrell]] December 15, 1868, Atlanta Georgia, a Methodist Minister’s daughter. She and her mother came to Ocala as teachers, She was small and delicate and died of tuberculosis which was possibly contracted from a cousin, Willie McGahagin, who had died in their home of the disease. When Billy married, his father gave him a horse, a plow, a cook stove and a bed to start his new home, which was in Ocklawaha on the North side of Lake Weir. He homesteader the property. The house was built with the front facing the lake. There were three bedrooms, a living room and a large room connected by a covered breezeway to the house. This served as a kitchen and dining room. His sisters, Lizzie and Addie, often stayed with them to help with the babies. Emma bore several children. Three, Eddie, Ernest and Tallulah, survived her. Eddie died at age 16, Lula, aged 17. Earnest lived to be 77. After the death of Emma, March 16, 1880, he married Sarah Barbara Redding Morrison, March 26, 1881, a widow with two sons. Five children were born to this union. Sarah, Elizabeth, Nannie, Emily and Thomas Jefferson. The.y moved to Lecanto in 1894 because of his health and were there during the freeze of 1894-95. A few years later they moved back to Oklawaha where Barbara died July 1, 1918. Billy sold the home and moved to Ocala, where he lived the rest of his life. 1. William Ernest McGahagin, born November 24, 1872. Married Mary Burnett in 1899 at Ocala, where he was engaged in the mercantile business. Later they [page 71] moved to Tampa where he was in the wholesale grocery business. He died there, April 5, 1949. He attended business college in Atlanta, Georgia. One child was born to them, Alma. She married John H. Moore of Knoxville, Tennessee. ... ... . 2. Sarah (Sallie) McGahagin, born August 9, 1882 — attended school her first year at Hoods Academy at North Lake Weir. Her other schooling was elementary school at Lecanto. Normal training at Crystal River. She taught one year old school. She married Joel Moon of Dunnellon April, 1901. She died June 21, 1949. She was the mother of five children. [page 72] ... 3. Elizabeth (Lizzie), the second child of William and Barbara McGahagin, was born May 15, 1884. She married Robert Blair at Ocklawaha ... [page 73] ... 4. Nannie McGahagin was born September 25, 1886. She attended Normal Schools in Crystal River, Umatilla and Madison, Stetson University a short time. Graduate of University of Florida. Taught the public schools of Florida forty years. Now retired. She married Jared Reade Wimberly of Orange Springs, who died from a rattlesnake bite at age 31 when their only son, William Reade (Billy) was 2 1/2 years old. Billy was born December 31, 1915. After seven years, Nannie married Walter Austin Perry, then at Leesburg. Upon his retirement, they moved to Orange Springs, where he died a few years later. She is one of the writers of this Volume ... [page 74] ... 5. Emily was born December 8, 1888 at Lake Weir. She attended Normal School at Umarilla, Florida, also Stetson University in Deland. Taught school in elementary grades, also kindergarten, for several years. Was post master at Oklawaha for many years. She married Van Perry of Summerfield. ... 6. [[McGahagin-19|Thomas Jefferson McGahagin]] was born November 4, 1890 at Lake Weir, Florida. He served one year and five months in World War I. He married [[Nichols-17636|Claudia Nichols]] of Leesburg, Florida, June 21, 1921. He retired as telegraph operator, an employee of the Atlantic Coast Line Railway in 191, in Ocala, Florida. They have Three children. [page 75] ... [[McGahagin-23|Warren Ernest McGahagin]], born December 31, 1924, Chandler, Florida. A graduate of the university of Florida with a B.S. degree in mathematics and chemical engineering. Served in the U. S. Army Signal Corps for four years in World War II and rose to the rank of 1st Lieutenant. He is now senior electronics engineer in the employ of Martin Marietta Company of Orlando. He married [[Mayfield-2875|Barbara Mayfield]] of Knoxville, Tennessee, a school teacher. There are no children. [[McGahagin-24|Murray Gorden McGahagin]] born December 28, 1926. Educated in St.Petersburg schools. He served with the U.S. Army in Germany. After his separation from the Army, he is doing Civil Service work for the U.S. in France. [[McGahagin-10|Elizabeth]] [was] the oldest daughter of Joshua and Sarah Adeline McGahagin, ... She taught school for a while and at 24, she eloped with [[White-56684|Burton White]] of South Carolina. The moved [page 76] to Mellonville, now Sanford, where Burton Had a sawmill and cleared land for a home. Three children were born to them. One boy died while small, a girl [[White-56708|Talullah]], and a boy, [[White-56693|Alfred]], survived. Burton White’s health soon failed, so they moved back to South Carolina, where he died. She brought the two children back to Florida. Before long, She died of malaria fever at he home of her Brother, Billy. He kept the two children for some time, then their father’s brother from South Carolina came for them and took them to his home. The girl, Lula, grew up and married there. We seem to have heard her husband’s name was [[Cannon-5084|Cannon]] and that there were children. She died at an early age. Elizabeth’s son, Alfred, came back to Florida when he grew up and became a Coast Line Railway Engineer. He married [[Sanders-15004|Evvie Sanders]] of Micanopy. They moved to St. Petersburg. For many years he was passenger engineer on the Jacksonville-St. Petersburg run. There were several children. Alfred died a few years ago. (Unable to find any trace of the children) Two boys, Stephen Eubank and Jesse Eubank born in 1850, died in infancy. [[McGahagin-25|Alelia Talulah McGahagin]], the fifth child of Joshua and Sarah Adeline McGahagin, December 25, 1852. Lula, as she was called, was of a very intelligent disposition. Scholarly, timid. A blond, with light brown hair and blue eyes. Her sister, Elizabeth, six years her senior, was her constant companion and looked after her welfare. She was educated in the home by tutors. [page 77] When her Father left for Brazil, July 16, 1868, he took her with him. After a stop in Rio de Janerio, they went by boat to Rio Padro where the landed August 26, 1868.From there they went overland to the hills to villa Americana which was a colony of people from the Southern States of America. There Lula strayed with her father's father-in-law, George Leitner, and family while her father was in search of land for a new home. He purchased cacoa and coffee plantations. Lula soon began teaching the children of the colony. On June 9, 1873, she married [[White-70150|Lucius Alphonso White]] of Texas, who had moved to the province, Bahia Empire of Brazil. He was employed by a diamond mine com[pany. They lived there fourteen years. Four sons were born to them. James Kirby White died when two days old. Thomas Bannister White lived for two years. William Alphonso White born August 15, 1876. Lucius Alphonso, March 1881. Sometime, about the year 1883, they embarked on. boat trip back to New York and from there to Florida where she visited with her sisters, Addie and Lizzie and brother, Billy, at his home at Lake Weir, which was a very familiar spot to her, near her old home. Then visited other members of the family. It we at the first and last reunion of the four older McGahagin. Her husband's father had died and was buried in South America. When they left Florida, they went to his old home place In Texas. First to the Plains, then to La Porte, finally settled near Houston. Four more children were born to them. Ernest Alphonso, May 8, 1884. Emmit Alphonso, October 22, 1887. Robert and Elizabeth, twins, October 16, 1890. [page 78] Lula died May 5, 1892, leaving six children. 1. [[White-70158|William Alphonso]], a school teacher, and later postmaster at Cleveland, Texas, married [[Smith-263994|Kate Smith]]. He died August 20, 1949. They had eight children, William A., Jr., Lucius Jefferson, Robert Ernest, Douglas Emmitt, Walton, Katherine, Elizabeth and Neal Ellis. 2. [[White-70189|Lucius A. White, Jr.]] married [[Mackey-2702|Laura Mackey]]. Do not know date of his death. There were five children, Beatrice Alelia, born July 23, 1908, died August 8, 1921, Zubie Elizabeth, January 30, 1913, died January 27, 1914, Thomas Lucius, February 5, 1915, became a major in the Air Force. Was killed March 22, 194. Ernest Edward, May 3, 1910, a printer for the Chronicle in San Fransisco. Samuel David, July 13, 1918, a teacher at Lory Filed, Denver, Colorado. 3. Ernest Alphonso White married Hollis Crew ... 4. [[White-70153|Emmitt Alphonso White]], married Deanie Maddox. They live in Port Arthur, Texas. Three children were north to them, Emmitt Alphonso, Morris, and Dean. 5. Robert Alphonso White married Katie. ... 6.Elixabeth (Lizzie) White married Claude Otto. They live in Hungerford, Texas. ... [page 79] — — — [page 86] ... James E (Jim) McGahagin, the sixth child of Joshua L. and Margaret McGahagin was born at the family home on December 12, 1871. After his father’s return from Brazil, he attended public schools. He was a tall, black-haired, dark-eyed, energetic boy. He left home rather young. He was a mechanical engineer. On August 20, 1893, he married Emma Phillips in Burton, Alabama. She was born there on October 12, 1872. James E died February 12, 1951, she on April 19, 1951. They reared seven Children. I William Emmett, born 13 July 1894, in Mobile, Alabama.He served in the Army in World War I and received a citation for bravery. He attended Baptist Bible Institute, New Orleans, Louisiana, Southwestern Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas and Central Baptist Seminary, Kansas City, Kansas. He married Beulah Myrtle Jackson in Little Rock,Arkansas, April 16, 1921. She was born April11, 1898 at Newport, Arkansas. William Emmit was six feet two inches tall, black-haired, weighed around 200 pounds and was handsome. He was eloquent, versatile and had traveled in every state. He was a Baptist minister and evangelist. For a while he lived in Pensacola and held revival meetings in several Florida cities. He moved to Texas and continued his work there for a time. They had one son, William Emmit, Jr., who only lived three weeks. He wrote many sermons and tracts. He died in Cuero, Texas on October 9, 1962 and was buried with a military funeral in The National Cemetery in Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas. [page 87] Ii Joshua Leitner, Sr., was born at Stanton, Alabama December 1, 1899. ... III Flossie Margaret, her married name is Wilson. They live in Gonzalez, near Pensacola. IV H. W. (Guy) died in January 1962 of lung cancer. He was marked and lived in Pritchard, Alabama, A suburb of Mobile. V Barney Kermet was born June 2, 1909 at Pelatralcie, Mississippi. ... [page 88] ... VI O Stanley McGahagin, born June 22, 1912 in Laurel, Mississippi married Mary Carl, born August 24, 1924 in Coffeeville, Alabama. Married in Mobile Alabama, May 22, 1942. Live in Saraland, a suburb of Mobile. He is a contractor. Mary works in the office of a hospital in Mobile, Alabama. They have three children, Charles, born March 26, 1943 in Mobile, Alabama. He is a graduate of a submarine school in New London, Connecticut in 1962. Now serving on the nuclear powered submarine U.S.N. Scorpion. ... ... VII Emma Nell Born June 14, 1916 in Townsend, Mississippi. She married Jesse Reed Harden in Pascagoula, Mississippi. Their Children are Frederick Phillip Harden, SP/4 U. S. Army was born August 25, 1936 in Uniform, Alabama. He has served in the Army for nine years, of that time he spent sixteen months ln Korea and three years in Germany. ... [page 89] ... The ninth and last child of the Joshua McGahagin was named Howard. He only lived for two weeks. [END]
The O'Loughlin Family
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The Omaha Daily News Front Page Sept 28 1907
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The Oosterwal, Obbes, and Velkers Mystery
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lives at Bagijnestraat K.35. |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 22 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1885-02-28''' ||align="left"| Velkers is arrested for "Geweldigheid tegen een bediende beambte in functie." |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 22 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1885-03-07''' ||align="left"| Velkers is sentenced to 183 days "celstraf." |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#8bd"| 23 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1885-09-06''' ||align="left"| Velkers leaves Leeuwarden for jail in Groningen. |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 23 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1885-12-09''' ||align="left"| Velkers returns to Leeuwarden from jail in Groningen. |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 23 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1886-06-05''' ||align="left"| Velkers is arrested for "Geweldigheid tegen een bediende." |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 23 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1886-06-12''' ||align="left"| Velkers is sentenced to 3 months jail + [something illegible]. |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 24 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1886-11-13''' ||align="left"| Velkers is arrested for "Wederspannigheid." |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 24 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1886-11-20''' ||align="left"| Velkers is sentenced to 6 months jail. |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 25 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1887-09-24''' ||align="left"| Velkers is arrested for "Wederspannigheid." |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 25 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1887-10-01''' ||align="left"| Velkers is sentenced to 3 months jail. |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| 24 ||bgcolor="#adf"| 25 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1888-05-19''' ||align="left"| Hiltje marries Obbes.Huwelijksregister 1888, archiefnummer 9, Gemeentebestuur van Leeuwarden 1811-1941, inventarisnummer 3613, aktenummer 78 |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 25 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1888-06-02''' ||align="left"| Velkers is arrested for "Mishandeling." |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 25 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1888-06-10''' ||align="left"| Velkers is sentenced to 1 month jail. |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| 24 ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1888-11-10''' ||align="left"| Hiltje gives birth to [[Obbes-10|Remke Obbes]].Geboorteregister 1888, archiefnummer 9, Gemeentebestuur van Leeuwarden 1811-1941, inventarisnummer 3437, aktenummer 692 |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || ''' ''' || |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| 25 ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1890-02-09''' ||align="left"| Hiltje gives birth to [[Obbes-14|Jacoba Obbes]].Geboorteregister 1890, archiefnummer 9, Gemeentebestuur van Leeuwarden 1811-1941, inventarisnummer 3439, aktenummer 105 |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| 18 || '''1890-03-01''' ||align="left"| Liefke gives birth to [[Velkers-1|Janke Velkers]]. The father is unknown.Geboorteregister 1890, archiefnummer 9, Gemeentebestuur van Leeuwarden 1811-1941, inventarisnummer 3439, aktenummer 143 |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 27 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1890-09-03''' ||align="left"| Obbes is arrested for "Wederspannigheid." |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 27 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1890-09-13''' ||align="left"| Obbes is sentenced to 1 month jail. |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#8bd"| 28 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1890-09-23''' ||align="left"| Velkers leaves Leeuwarden to serve time in Hoorn.Bevolkingsregister 1876 - 1904, archiefnummer 80, Bevolkingsregister 1876 - 1904, inventarisnummer 4767, pagina 238 - Gemeente: Leeuwarden - Periode: 1876-1904 |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#8bd"| 27 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#8bd"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1890-10-06''' ||align="left"| Obbes leaves Leeuwarden to serve time in Hoorn.Bevolkingsregister 1876 - 1904, archiefnummer 60, Bevolkingsregister 1876 - 1904, inventarisnummer 4747, pagina 2 |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#8bd"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 28 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1890-12-22''' ||align="left"| Velkers returns to Leeuwarden from Hoorn.Bevolkingsregister 1876 - 1904, archiefnummer 80, Bevolkingsregister 1876 - 1904, inventarisnummer 4767, pagina 238 - Gemeente: Leeuwarden - Periode: 1876-1904 |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| 28 ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1891-01-04''' ||align="left"| Obbes returns to Leeuwarden from Hoorn.Bevolkingsregister 1876 - 1904, archiefnummer 60, Bevolkingsregister 1876 - 1904, inventarisnummer 4747, pagina 2 |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| 23 ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || '''1891-04-08''' ||align="left"| Hendrikje gives birth to [[Oosterwal-16|Rosette Velkers]].Geboorteregister 1891, archiefnummer 9, Gemeentebestuur van Leeuwarden 1811-1941, inventarisnummer 3440, aktenummer 266 Although Hendrikje is not married and Velkers later recognizes Rosette as his own, it is presumed that Obbes is the biological father. |- align="center" |bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| ||bgcolor="#adf"| ||bgcolor="#fdd"| || ''' ''' || |} == Sources ==
The Origin and Meaning of the Surname Barnum
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The origins of Clan Campbell
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The Origins of Deborah Gilbert Watson Hall
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The Origins of John George (Abt. 1700-1764) of Northamptonshire
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The origins of the Horsburgh's of that Ilk
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The Origins of William Hacker
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We only know that he left one son born about 1640 and whom I shall have to designate by the name of Captain HACKER not having been able to learn what his name really was. From the best information I have been able to obtain when but a youth entered the navy as a cadet under the famous Admiral BLAKE and was with that gallant officer in his celebrated victory over the Spanish Navy near Santa Cruy in South America in 1656 which so effectually destroyed the power of the Spanish Navy and established the supremacy of that of England.There is insufficient time and space here to correct the gross inaccuracies of this history. Interested persons may consult the WikiTree profiles of [[Hacker-64|Colonel Hacker]] and his son [[Hacker-63|Francis Hacker III]]. I will note that if Colonel Hacker's son had indeed sailed with Blake in the 1650s, it would have been under his own name, which would have been recorded. No such record seems to exist. But what was probably William Hacker's greatest failing as a historian was to completely misunderstand the nature of attainder. Colonel Francis Hacker was attainted for the crime of treason, which meant that his estate and titles were forfeit to the crown and would not pass to any of his heirs. It did not mean that his heirs were considered to inherit his guilt and liability to punishment for their father's crime. There were no agents of the Restoration government pursuing the children of the regicides across the world, as Uncle William seemed to imagine. Colonel Francis Hacker had one son, another Francis, baptized 26 May 1633 at the Colonel's seat of Stathern in Leicestershire."England, Leicestershire Parish Registers, 1533-1991," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QP43-FSC1 : 6 June 2018), Francis Hacker, 26 May 1633; records extracted by findmypast, images digitized by FamilySearch; citing Baptism, Stathern, Leicestershire, England, United Kingdom, page , Citing the Record Office of Leicestershire, Leicester, and Rutland, Wigston, UK. This Francis III led an unremarkable life; he attended Cambridge but did not take a degreehttps://archive.org/details/alumnicantabrigipt1vol2univiala/page/278 and was given a cornet's commission in his father's regiment in 1659, just before the Restoration of the monarchy disbanded it.British History Online [https://www.british-history.ac.uk/commons-jrnl/vol7/pp674-676#h3-0015] Following the Restoration, he appears to have lived quietly and without persecution in the parish of Stathern, where in 1676 he baptized his son Francis IV.England, Leicestershire Parish Registers, 1533-1991. Baptism, Stathern, Leicestershire, England, United Kingdom, page 3; citing the Record Office of Leicestershire, Leicester, and Rutland, Wigston, UK. [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QP43-PQQJ] Francis IV died without issue at Whitefriars in LondonWill of Francis Hacker, PROB 1716. London Metropolitan Archives. MS 9172/110. Will #103. in 1716, the last direct male descendant of Colonel Hacker. Nothing could be further from the tale told in the Hacker Record and still repeated, in whole or part, on many internet genealogy sites. The heirs and relatives of Colonel Francis Hacker had no price put on their heads. They never changed their name, which remained a respectable one; and indeed, when a male line of the Hacker family died out, the descendants of their daughters might petition to assume the Hacker name and arms.Burke's Gealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, vol 1. "Hacker of East Bridgford." p. 560. United Kingdom: H Colburn, 1875.[https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/ZNEKAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA560&dq=burke+heathcote-hacker] === "William of Andover" === As more information concerning the Hacker family became more widely available, the legend of William Hacker's origins began to drop some of the more fantastic elements and attempt to identify him with a documented individual. Unfortunately, many of these pedigrees continued the attempt to establish a descent from Francis Hacker. The parish records of Andover, Hampshire, show a William Hacker baptized 1 January 1691 - father John Hacker and mother Anne."England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NDM9-YXH : 19 March 2020), William Hacker, 1691. FindMyPast: England Births and Baptisms 1538-1975. [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_863751129] It appears that he was chosen as the designated Hacker ancestor solely because of his birth date. According to parish records, the father of this William Hacker was not Francis, but a John Hacker, born 1665."England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NYWN-K5D : 20 March 2020), John Hacker in entry for John Hacker, 1665. FindMyPast: England Births and Baptisms 1538-1975 [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_863735828] This John Hacker's father, likewise, was not Francis but another John Hacker (unidentified). Genealogists wedded to the Francis Hacker ancestry of William have engaged in logical contortions to show that these Johns were really Francis (changes of name, etc) but the records show rather that this was not the case. If William Hacker of Andover was the immigrant to Virginia who married there in 1738, he was not descended from Colonel Hacker, and that theory must be abandoned. Unfortunately, it persists. Andover had a fairly large population of Hackers, and thus there were several possible John Hackers as candidates for father of William. The best choice would seem to be the John Hacker who married Anne Bunny on 10 April 1683.FindMyPast, England Marriages 1538-1973 [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_854544221] "England Marriages, 1538–1973 ", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NVJS-3FQ : 13 March 2020), John Hacker, 1683.] He was apparently a master cordwainer (if the same John Hacker).FindMyPast, Britain, Country Apprentices 1710-1808. [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBOR%2FAPPRENTICES%2F194253%2F2] However, the sequence of birth records in Andover suggests that there were more than one John Hacker with wives named Anne or Ann at the same period. This makes it difficult to determine which parents produced which children. Fortunately, it appears that only one of the couples had a son William, which cuts down greatly on the need for disambiguation. The great problem with the theory that this William was the Hacker immigrant ancestor in Virginia is the fact that he was already married to Elizabeth Dean, on 1 October 1715."England Marriages, 1538–1973", database, FamilySearch [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NVJ3-34T : 12 March 2020), William Hacker, 1715.] FindMyPast, England Marriages 1538-1973.[https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_854546491] Moreover, he was married with children. The parish records show that William (b. 1718), Elizabeth (b. 1719), and John (b. 1723) appear to have survived infancy. Thus if we assume that William Hacker of Andover emigrated to Virginia where he married Anne Dillon in 1738, we have to believe that he abandoned Elizabeth, that he married bigamously, or that Elizabeth died before his second marriage. The parish records, however, do not show the burial of an Elizabeth Hacker in Andover between 1723 and 1750.FindMyPast, Hampshire Burials. [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FD%2F805257009%2F1] There is also the fact that he would have been nearing his 50s at the time of his marriage in Virginia, after which he would have had five more children in rapid succession. That would seem to be the work of a younger man. Finally, the evidence of the parish records presents a strong suggestion that William Hacker was buried in Andover, not having emigrated at all. After 1717, when William Hacker's son William died in infancy, there were no more burials of a William Hacker until 1761"England, Hampshire Parish Registers, 1538-1980," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QGQL-XN6D : 21 May 2020), William Hacker, 10 Dec 1761; citing Burial, , possibly other reference information Lancashire Record Office and Hampshire Record Office, England; FHL microfilm 1,041,197., 1764"England, Hampshire Parish Registers, 1538-1980," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QGQL-XNVL : 21 May 2020), Willm Hacker, 29 Jul 1764; citing Burial, , possibly other reference information Lancashire Record Office and Hampshire Record Office, England; FHL microfilm 1,041,197., and 1774"England, Hampshire Parish Registers, 1538-1980," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QGQL-Q6G6 : 21 May 2020), William Hacker, 16 Jun 1774; citing Burial, , possibly other reference information Lancashire Record Office and Hampshire Record Office, England; FHL microfilm 1,041,197. Unfortunately, the transcriptions of these records provide no identifying information besides the name and date. But William was not as common as name in Andover as John. The birth records of the same period only list four: the William Hacker b. 1691, his first son William who died in 1717,FindMyPast, Hampshire Burials.[https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FD%2F805677858%2F1] his second son William, b. 6 September 1718"England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3LF-BX8 : 19 March 2020), William Hacker, 1718., and William Hacker son of Andrew Hacker, (See Below) b. 22 October 1733."England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NDM9-Y6P : 19 March 2020), William Hacker, 1733. There seem to be too few candidates to fill these graves if we exclude William b. 1691 for reason of being in America. While his emigration is conceivable, the weight of evidence appears to be against it. His son William b. 1718 might be a better candidate, as neither his marriage or burial after 1738 seem to be securely documented. Then there might be the William Hacker son of Tobias, b. 1719 "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JSPS-5Z9 : 20 March 2020), William Hacker, 1719. And this without leaving Hampshire. There were far more Hackers in Cornwall, Devonshire and Somersetshire. One of the William Hackers there might have decided to seek out a bride in Virginia. === Andrew Hacker - A Connection? === On 8 December 1763, a land grant was registered to Andrew Hacker of (then) Frederick County, Virginia: "430 A. on Crooked Run adjacent Lawrance Snapp and Matthew Kelley in said County."Virginia Northern Neck Land Grants, 1742-1775, Vol. II, Book M (#M-217) [http://image.lva.virginia.gov/LONN/NN-1/218/0565_0567.pdf] Ancestry Sharing Image: [https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/21119765?h=d60b7f&utm] He was subsequently shown on the Rent Rolls in 1764 for that property.https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/21119775?h=77cfdf&utm] Hacker genealogists do not seem to have made much of this fact or have assigned it to coincidence, as it has long been known that William Hacker was not the first or only of his name in Virginia. But unlike John or even William, Andrew is not at all a common Hacker name. One place, however, where it is known is Andover, Hampshire. In Andover, on 4 October 1677, a John Hacker baptized a son Andrew."England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NYWN-K5C : 20 March 2020), Andrew Hacker, 1677. On 26 November 1694, a John Hacker (probably not the same one) and his wife Ann baptized a son Andrew."England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NDM9-YX8 : 19 March 2020), Andrew Hacker, 1694. That Andrew may have died young, as on 11 January 1702, John Hacker and his wife Ann baptized another son Andrew."England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NRXB-4XP : 19 March 2020), Andrew Hacker, 1702. On 26 December 1724, that Andrew Hacker may have been the one to marry Elizabeth Waters.England Marriages, 1538-1975 [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_854546683] On 26 October 1725, Andrew Hacker and his wife Elizabeth baptized a son Andrew."England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NBNB-DP1 : 19 March 2020), Andrew Hacker, 1725. On 22 October 1733, Andrew Hacker and his wife Elizabeth baptized a son William."England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NDM9-Y6P : 19 March 2020), William Hacker, 1733. Now that William Hacker is much too young to have married in Virginia in 1738, however the name suggests a relationship. An Andrew Hacker was buried in Andover on 30 April 1732.Hampshire Burials [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FD%2F805170850%2F1] This could have been the son of Andrew and Elizabeth born 1725 (unlike most parish records, those of Andover at this date did not seem to record the names of the parents of dead children. It is not at all clear who was the Andrew Hacker buried 28 September 1717Hampshire Burials: [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FD%2F805170847%2F1]). An Andrew Hacker was buried in Andover on 10 May 1772."England, Hampshire Parish Registers, 1538-1980," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QGQL-B48P : 21 May 2020), Andrew Hacker, 10 May 1772; citing Burial, , possibly other reference information Lancashire Record Office and Hampshire Record Office, England; FHL microfilm 1,041,197. This may have been the Andrew Hacker born 1702, but, if so, he was probably not the Andrew Hacker in Virginia. (The land office still had that property registered to Andrew Hacker as of 22 September 1777.Virginia Northern Neck Land Grants 1775-1800, vol III, Book Q (Q-194)[https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/21120047?h=49fe95&utm]) Thus we can not clearly identify the Andrew Hacker who settled in Frederick County Virginia in 1763 with the family of William Hacker of Andover. It is only speculation to suppose that the same John Hacker who fathered John Hacker in 1665 might be the John Hacker who fathered Andrew in 1677. But the data seem sufficient to suggest the possibility that further research may yield some conclusions, one way or the other. === "Chicken Bill" === This theory originates from the discovery of records that show a William Hacker "of Hampton Court" sentenced to October 1730 to transportation. From his trial at the Old Bailey, 8 April 1730: William Hacker , of Hampton-Court , was indicted, for that he, together with William Field , did on the 5th of this Instant April , feloniously steal 4 Cocks, 17 Hens, 5 Drakes, and 5 Ducks , the Property of Christopher Tilson , Esq; John Nicholson depos'd, That himself, the Prisoner, and William Field being drinking at Teddington , they went about 11 o'Clock at Night, and stole the Fowls, and carried them to Brentford, and put them into a Stable, and they got one Guy Moore to sell them. The Prisoner pleaded, that this Evidence got him to go with him to fetch the Fowls, telling him he had bought them; the Jury found him Guilty to the Value of 10 d. He was sentenced to transportation for seven years.Old Bailey Proceedings Online[https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/search.jsp?form=_divs&kwparse=and&_divs_fulltext=William+Hacker&ref=&_divs_div0Type_div1Type=sessionsPaper_trialAccount&submit.x=47&submit.y=-19] Old Bailey Proceedings Online[https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?div=s17300408-1] Ancestry Sharing Image.[https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/21100402?h=f3d784&utm] He was transported 30 October 1730 in the ship Forward and the landing certificate was issued January 1731 at "the Potomack".Coldham, Peter Wilson. The Complete Book of Emigrants in Bondage. p. 344. Genealogical Publishing Company: 1988. Ancestry Sharing Image [https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/21100094?h=e382c2&utm] The theory has the merit of good timing. If William Hacker reached "the Potomack" in 1731 and served the seven-year term of indenture, he would have been free to marry in 1738. Unfortunately, there are no records for him in the period between the order for his transportation and his marriage in Virginia. We don't know who purchased his indenture or where he did his service, or how and where he met his future wife. Thus there is no certain link between the transportee William Hacker and the immigrant ancestor William Hacker. The real problem lies with the genealogists who persist in the attempt to tie William Hacker the immigrant ancestor to Colonel Francis Hacker and thus to William of Andover. This strains credulity too far. We are to believe that William Hacker, engendered mysteriously by a nameless fugitive descended from a regicide and then living respectably in Andover with his wife and family, decided at the age of 39 to abandon them there and go to London to drink in low dram shops with low companions, with whom he committed a petty crime of property. After which, he contracted a bigamous marriage that probably made all his American children bastards - which would not make Uncle William of Shelbyville happy to know. It is quite possible that some of the myths of his origin originated with the ancestral William Hacker, telling stories to his family and neighbors to conceal the fact that both he and his wife were transported convicts. It is important to note that the William Hacker charged at The Old Bailey did not call himself "of Andover" but rather "of Hampton Court." He was a Londoner. The theft was a London crime, he was sentenced in a London court. Furthermore, it was a poor man's crime and probably a young, unmarried man's crime. This, of course, is conjecture, but if genealogists wish to go searching for the origin of "Chicken Bill" they had better look in the slums of London, a city where Hackers were plentiful. This does not mean they will find him there. And it does not mean that, if they do, they will have their immigrant ancestor. It is more than likely that William Hacker's origins will remain undiscovered. But undiscovered is better than making up fantastic tall tales. == Sources ==
After the restoration of the British Monarchy the dastardly scenes then perpetrated upon the body of his dead Admiral as well as upon the life of his father convinced the Captain that he had no favors to hope for at the hands of those then in power. He therefore fled to Holland under an assumed name entered the naval service of that country . . . History however furnishes us no evidence of that fact nor can we expect any from that source. For it must be remembered that when he fled from England- by an act of Parliament his father had been attained for treason which was made to extend to him and to his posterity forever.Hacker Record. pp. 47-48.
The Orphan Trail Handbook
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The Orrs/Quicks
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The Osmotherleys of Cumberland
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The outer rim of the global tree
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The Pacific Street Apartment
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The Packet Inn, Pennington, Lancashire
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The Paddock Genealogy: Descendants of Robert Paddock
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The Painter Family Tree
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The Papinaw Maracles
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2. '''Daniel H. Maracle''' who was born about 1825
Kitty who was born in 1827 baptized 1827 [Church Record]
3. '''Henry H. Maracle Jr'''. who was born about 1829 [?]
Margaret who was born in 1832 baptized 1832 [Church Record]
Mary Ann who was born in 1834 baptized 1834 [Church Record]
4. '''Cornelius H. Maracle''' who was born 1839 baptized 1839 [Church Record]
5. '''[[Maracle-36|Abram H. Maracle]]''' who was born about 1841
Mary who was born in 1843 and died in 1844
6. '''Susannah Maracle''' who was born in 1845 baptized 1845 [Church Record]
7. '''Seth H. Maracle''' who was born in 1847 baptized 1847 [Church Record]
1. '''John H. Maracle''' first married Ellen Claus on the 8th March 1841 [Church Record]. Ellen was born about 1825. She died before 1889. John died about 1892. They had several children:
Margaret born about 1841[?]
Therese born 1842 bap. 1842 [aka Agnes] who married John Smart
Elizabeth born about 1844 [?]
Sarah born 1845 bap.1846
Thomas C. born 1847 bap. 1848
John H. born 1850 bap. 1850 married Elizabeth Barnhart;
Mary Eliza Brant
Nelles born 1852 bap. 1852
Emma born 1853 bap. 1853 married John Gilbert Culbertson
William H. born 1855 bap. 1856 married Sarah Brant
Catherine born about 1861 married Robert James Barnhart
Elizabeth born about 1863 married Milo Brant
Louisa born about 1865 married Samuel Fuller
Debby born about 1867 married John J. Smart
When Agnes and her husband John Smart were killed by a train in March 1871, their children were then cared for by Ellen and John. There was a daughter Lydia who married Joseph J. W. Maracle. There was also a child David, who may have been from Agnes but took the last name Maracle. David married Charlotte Maracle. In 1889 John married Catherine Lousk but they were not together when he died. 2. '''Daniel H. Maracle''' married Charlotte Leween on the 1st November 1846 [Church Record]. Charlotte was born about 1830 and died in 1852. Daniel died in May 1891. Daniel and Charlotte had two daughters: Juliann and Eliza but both died young. Daniel then married Charlotte Purdy [aka Bardy] about 1856. Charlotte was the daughter of Peter and Sarah Purdy/Bardy. She was born in 1830 and died in 1912. Daniel and Charlotte had 5 children:
Catherine born 1857 bap. 1858 died young
Margret born about 1862 married Peter Purdy Jr.
Daniel H. born about 1864 married Ann Brant
Susan born about 1869
Nelson Seymour born about 1870 married Susan Walker; relationship with Eliza Jane Maracle 3. '''Henry H. Maracle Jr''' married Margaret Leween on the 18th June 1848 [Church Record]. She was from the Lake of Two Mountains. The 1851 census shows her name as “Mary Ann”. She died in 1899. Henry died in June 1896. Henry & Margaret/Mary Ann had 5 children:
Susan born about 1849 married William Loft [?]
Hannah born about 1851
Mary born about 1852 married Thomas Brant
Jacob born about 1859 married Mary Smart
Henry born about 1871 did not marry
There is another child associated with this family: Alex Maracle. He was born about 1875 and was described as an illegitimate son of Mary Ann Maracle. Alex married Effie L. Barnhart. 4. '''Cornelius H. Maracle''' married Magdalin Purdy/Bardy who was the daughter of Peter & Sarah Purdy/Bardy. Magdalin was born in 1839 and she died in 1913. Cornelius died in 1884. They had 5 children:
Charlotte born about 1860 married Peter John
Mary born about 1864 married Joseph S. Brant
Hannah born about 1865 married John J. D. Hill
Cynthia born about 1873 married George Bey
Alvina born about 1875 died 1892 [?] 5. '''[[Maracle-36|Abram H. Maracle]]''' married Sarah who was possibly “Sarah Smart”. Sarah was born about 1841 and died in 1891. Abram H. died in 1893. They had three children:
[[Maracle-35|George H.]] born about 1862 married [[Blanchard-3406|Lydia Blanchard]]
Elizabeth Ann born about 1864 married Wm. Henry Brant
Lydia born about 1866 married Lacise Leween Abram H. and Sarah also cared for the children of their daughter Elizabeth Ann & Wm. Henry Brant: Wallace and Martha Anne. Descendents of George H. Maracle seem to be the start of the “Pencil” Maracles. 6. '''Susannah Maracle''' married Charles Barnhart on the 22nd February 1864 [Picton Parish Church Record]. Charles was the son of David & Hannah (Hill) Barnhart. He was born in 1843 and died in 1910. Susannah died in 1923 from “cardiac failure; cerebral cypolexy and gall stones” [AO]. Susannah and Charles had several children:
Nicholas James born 1865 married Susan McCullough
Robert John born about 1867 married Annie Moses
Mary Anne born 1869 married John P. Moses;
J.A. MacDonald
David Henry born 1870 married Lydia Blanchard
Sarah Catherine born about 1872 married William Barnhart
Charles born about 1873
Joseph born about 1876 married Margaret Morgan
Jacob born about 1878 married Louise Bowler;
Lillian Doherty
Agnes born about 1880
William born 1882 married Margaret Maracle;
Esther C. Cayuga
Margaret born 1885 married Charles W. Bailey
Cornelius born about 1888 d. 1918 in England
There is another child associated with this family but we do not know much about her. Sarah was born about 1903. 7. '''Seth H. Maracle''' married Christeen Brant on the 17th October 1867 [Church Record]. Christeen was the daughter of Seth S. & Lena (Loft) Brant. She was born in 1852 and died in 1921 due to “TB of lungs and bowels” [AO]. Seth died in 1908. Seth & Christeen had several children:
Mary born about 1872 went to the U.S.
Seth Jr. born about 1874 married Catherine Jane Leween;
Leethia Bardy
Sarah born about 1876 went to the U.S.
Eliza Jane born 1878 never married but had children; relationship with Nelson Seymour Maracle
Elizabeth born 1880 married John L. Maracle
Thomas R. born 1882 married Laura Hill
Edward Joe/Seth born about 1884 married Elizabeth Ann John
Alice born about 1888 married Eli Maracle
James H. born about 1890 married Gertrude Maracle
Abram born 1894 d. 1912 === ‘Pappinaw’ Maracles – Where did they live? === According to land records from 1872: [LAC RG10 Vol. 1882 File 1135 C-11106]
Henry H. Maracle Sr held property in Lot 20 Concession 1
Daniel H. Maracle held property in Lot 19 Concession 1
Abram H. Maracle held property in E ½ Lot 21 Concession 1
John H. Maracle held property in W ½ Lot 24 Concession 2
Cornelius H. Maracle held property in E ½ Lot 18 Concession 1
According to land records from 1895:
David H. Maracle and William H. Maracle (sons of John H. Maracle) held land in W ½ Lot 24 Concession 2.
William H. Maracle also held land in W ½ Lot 21 Concession 1
The Heirs of Daniel H. Maracle held land in Lot 19 Concession 1
The Heirs of Abram H. Maracle held land in E ½ Lot 25 Concession 1
The Widow of Cornelius H. Maracle held land in E ½ Lot 18 Concession 1
Henry H. Maracle Jr held land in W ½ Lot 21 Concession 1
Seth H. Maracle held land in Lot 20 Concession 1
Charles Barnhart who was married to Susannah Maracle held property in E ½ Lot 21 Concession 1
The Parentage of Col. Greenberry Lee of GA
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The Parish House
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The Parish Records of Yarcombe, Devon, England
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The Passenger-Owned Sir William Molesworth
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The Patterson Place
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The Pattisson Family of Southchurch and Foulness
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The Peanut Man
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The Pennsylvania Lawrences
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The Pension of Benjamin L. Young
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The people & places of South Bragor
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The Pepplers of Rodheim
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The Perry Family Mysteries
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The Pethoud Family Record
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The Pettibone Registry
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The Phelps Family of America and Their English Ancestors
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The PHILIPPS Line AD 0010 to AD 2020
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The Pianoforte
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The Piano or Pianoforte was first created by [[Wikipedia:Bartolomeo_Cristofori|Bartolomeo Cristofori]], an Italian maker of Musical Instruments, who is credited with it's invention. *[[Wikipedia:Piano|Piano]] The piano was an intergral part of everyday life before Radio and Television.
The Pickens Clan
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The Pickett's of Charlotte, Chautauqua, New York
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The Piltdown Hoax
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The Plantagenet roll of the blood royal
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The Plantatoin World of Wilkinson County, Mississippi, 1792-2012
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The Plante Family: France to Canada to the United States of America
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The Pollack Place House
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The Potty Chair
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The Poulter Family Bible
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The Pownall Land Sales of Edward Hicks
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The Price of Homegrown Terror
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Wednesday Apr. 19, 1995 9:02 Am
5, 000 pound bomb
killed 168, (19 children)
more than 680 others injured
Dozens of cars were incinerated, and more than 300 nearby buildings were damaged or destroyed. Section 2: The Place (Building, history) Section 3: The Price Children:
19 America's Kids Child Development Center- 15 Baylee Isabel Almon 1, Oklahoma City.
Baby in photo with fireman, day after 1st birthday, single mom age 23, picture won 1996 Pulitzer Prize. Field of Empty Chairs.
Danielle Nicole Bell, 15 months, Oklahoma City.
Zachary Taylor Chavez, 3, Oklahoma City.
Anthony Christopher Cooper II, 2, Moore.
Antonio Ansara Cooper, Jr., 6 months, Midwest City.
Aaron M. Coverdale, 5 1/2, Oklahoma City.
Elijah S. Coverdale, 2 1/2, Oklahoma City.
Jaci Rae Coyne, 14 months, Moore.
Taylor Santoi Eaves, 8 months, Midwest City.
Tevin D'Aundrae Garrett, 16 months, Midwest City.
Kevin "Lee" Gottshall II, 6 months, Norman.
Blake Ryan Kennedy, 1 1/2, Amber.
Dominique Ravae (Johnson)-London, 2, Oklahoma City.
Chase Dalton Smith, 3, Oklahoma City.
Colton Wade Smith, 2, Oklahoma City.
4th Floor Dep. Transportation- 1 Kayla Marie Titsworth 3.5 !st Floor: Social Security Administration : Ashley Megan Eckles 4 Peachlyn Bradley 3, sister of Gabreon and grandmother Cheryl E. Hammons were killed Gabreon Deshawn Lee Bruce 3 mon old. Mother Dana Bradley, grandmother killed, mother and aunt injured (SS office) Adults:
Day care Dana LeAnne Cooper, 24, Moore. Scott D. Williams, 24, Tuttle.
Wanda Lee Howell, 34, Spencer.
Brenda Faye Daniels, 42, Oklahoma City.
Military Victims: Sgt. Benjamin LaRanzo Davis, USMC 29 Cap. Randolph A. Guzman USMSC 28 SFC Lola Bolden USA 40 Section 4: The Memorial remains of the Murrah Federal Building were demolished on May 23, 1995
[[Unknown-471724|Elizabeth Johnson]]
(example for how to do underlined names)
The Price's General Store
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The Prichard Street Apartment
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The Primrose Family
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The Prince Family
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''' '''Item''' [[Prince-5049|John Prince]], the earliest identified member of the family as at 2020, was born about 1791 based on the details in the 1841 Census. At the time of the 1841 Census on the 6th June 1841 John an engineer, was living at Haigh Foundry, Aspull, Wigan, Lancashire with his wife Sarah and their children [[Prince-5041|George]], [[Prince-5050|Rebecca]] and [[Prince-5051|Joseph]].1841 Census [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/imageviewer/collections/8978/images/LANHO107_521_522-0275?treeid=&personid=&rc=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=YIe2&_phstart=successSource&pId=5159015 Ancestry] Haigh Foundry was established in the Douglas Valley in Haigh around 1790 by Alexander Lindsay, 6th Earl of Balcarres and his brother Robert, as an ironworks and foundry. The ironworks was not a success but the foundry was, particularly after Robert Daglish became chief engineer in 1804, and the works acquired a reputation for manufacturing winding engines and pumping equipment for the coal mining industry.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haigh_Foundry '''Item''' Infant mortalities. There have been five instances of infant mortality in the family. * [[Prince-5044|Elizabeth Lee Prince]] (1846 - abt 1847), the daughter of [[Prince-5041|George Lee Prince]] (6.2.1820 - 1856) and [[Craven-2355|Margaret Craven]] (1822 - 1890) :Three siblings from a family of twelve children. The parents were [[Prince-5048|Frederick Lee Prince]] (1854 - 1934) and [[Hesketh-427|Louisa Hesketh]] (15.4.1855 - 1921): * [[Prince-5076|Margaret Lee Prince]] (1876 - abt 1885) * [[Prince-5077|George Lee Prince]] (1878 - abt 1885) * [[Prince-5081|Benjamin Lee Prince]] abt (1887 - 1893) * [[Prince-5056|Margaret Nightingale Lee Prince]] (1882 - 1883), also from a family of twelve children. The parents were [[Prince-5047|Thomas Lee Prince]] (1852 - 1913) and [[Crook-2450|Margaret Crook]] (6.1.1854 - 1947). '''Item''' Canada. * [[Prince-5047|Thomas Lee Prince]] (1852 - 1913) had 12 children and died in Wentworth, Ontario, Canada. * On the 7th February 1913 [[Prince-5055|Joseph Nightingale Lee Prince]] (born abt 1880) a butcher, together with his wife [[Pearson-11953|Mary]] a weaver, and their son [[Prince-5071|George]] sailed from Liverpool aboard the 'Empress of Britain' for St John, New Brunswick, Canada.Emigration to Canada, [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/imageviewer/collections/2997/images/41039_b001965-00686?pId=138626211 Ancestry] * [[Prince-1396|William Lee Prince]] died on the 29th May 1914 with his wife [[Wilson-24792|Mary]] and their son [[Prince-1397|Gilbert]], perished in the wreck of the 'Empress of Ireland' when it sank off Fleuve Saint-Laurent, Québec, Canada near the mouth of the St Lawrence River.Sinking of the 'Empress of Ireland' [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RMS_Empress_of_Ireland Wikipedia] '''Item''' Catholic priests. * [[Prince-5040|Rev. Joseph Prince]] (28.1.1901 - 3.1.1992). On the 9th October 1948 Joseph sailed from Liverpool aboard the Pacific Steam Navigation ship 'Salaverry' en route to Guayaquil, Ecuador, South America. He had been living at 27 East View, Preston, Lancashire.Rev Joseph Prince en route to Ecuador, [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/imageviewer/collections/2997/images/41039_b001619-01365?pId=145094404 Ancestry] Joseph died aged 90 on the 3rd January 1992 and he was buried in the Holy Cross Cemetery, San Diego, San Diego County, California, U.S.A.Joseph Prince's birth and burial, [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=60525&h=39690338&ssrc=pt&tid=64206238&pid=46557310492&geo_a=r&geo_s=us&geo_t=us&geo_v=2.0.0&o_xid=62916&o_lid=62916&o_sch=Partners Ancestry] *[[Wareing-113|Rev. Joseph Wareing]] (1931 - 7.2.2017) served in England. '''Item''' Variation of the surname. The Lee-Prince variation started with [[Prince-5085|John Lee Prince]]'s daughters, [[Lee-Prince-1|Mary Ann Lee-Prince]] (1915 - ) and [[Lee-Prince-2|Elsie Lee-Prince]] (1919 - ). ==Sources==
The Probate of Johannes S. Bieber
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The problem of being lazy
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The Progress Agricultural Club
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The Pull House
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The puzzling connections between the Foleys and Galweys of Waterford
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Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Esq (1859-1930) - famous author of Sherlock Holmes - was a maternal cousin who had spent several summers visiting relatives in Waterford during Edmund’s lifetime.The phrase "maternal cousin" should probably read "paternal cousin" (Foley was probably a maternal cousin of Doyle and Doyle probably a paternal cousin of Foley). This suggests that [[Doyle-75|Doyle]]'s greatgrandfather Thomas Foley ([[Foley-1039]], d. 1857), whose reputed year of death has already been questioned, was closely related to, if not the same person as, [[Foley-5465]], whose precise date of death is more plausible for a man supposedly fathering children in 1771. == Andrew Lycett == Some of the puzzles are solved by the family tree on page xii and the following text from pages 10-12 of ''[https://books.google.ie/books?id=hN9aK1yW1OkC&source=gbs_navlinks_s The Man Who Created Sherlock Holmes: The Life and Times of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle]'' by Andrew Lycett (Simon and Schuster, 18 Nov 2008):
Shortly after the Devonshires' arrival in 1748 ... Thomas Foley was appointed agent of their estate ... the pride the family took in the distorted legend of old "Black Tom" Foley and his son Patrick killing a member of the Whiteboys ...As Thomas Foley died in 1828, 80 years after the Devonshires' arrival in 1748, his appointment as agent must have been a number of years after 1748. However, [https://www.irelandsown.ie/to-the-waterford-coast-and-along-it-an-essay-by-arthur-conan-doyle/ ''Ireland's Own''] misquotes Lycett's reference to give 1748 as the precise year of his appointment. == Glenbeg House == The [http://www.glenbeghouse.com/history history of Glenbeg House] further muddies the waters by claiming that Nelson Trafalgar Foley's sister, Mary, married in Scotland and gave birth under difficult circumstances to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. If Mrs. Doyle's parents married in 1835, then she was a generation younger than a man apparently born in 1805. == [[Blackall-42|Sir Hal Blackall]] == ''[http://www.galwey.com/genedocs/galweys_of_munster%202.htm The Galweys of Munster]'' by [[Blackall-42|SIR HENRY BLACKALL]] adds further to the confusion by, ''inter alia'', merging two generations:
Patrick Foley was the eldest of Thomas's nine children from three wives ... His half-brother, also called Thomas, was required, as the son of his father's second wife, to look further afield. So he became a lawyer, a calling that gave him the wherewithal to live comfortably at his nearby seat, Tourtane.
William, the first child of old Thomas Foley's third wife, Hannah Lowe from Cardiff, also sought advancement through the professions ... his father was originally a Catholic, adopting Protestantism as a convenience when he married his first wife Margaret Fitzgerald ... Patrick, the first of two children from the marriage, continued in his mother's religion, and ... married Elizabeth Cliffe ... by the time his father married for the third time, his commitment to his first wife's religion seems to have slipped and he reverted to Catholicism, the faith in which his son William (some thirty-five years younger than his half-brother Patrick) was brought up.
... William ... 1835 ... married Catherine Pack ...
... in August 1841, William Foley died suddenly in Clonmel wihle still in his early thirties ...
... In April 1847, aged only thirty-eight, she was forced to put her Kilkenny property up for sale and, shortly afterward, she moved with her two young daughters, Mary and Catherine, to Edinburgh.
Alicia [Galwey], b. 1806 m. Thomas Nelson Trafalgar Foley who we may conjecture was b. 21 Oct. 1805) J.P. of Ballygalley, Co. Waterford, by whom she had, with other issue, John Matthew Galwey Foley, County Inspector, R.I.C., and Edmond Foley of Owbeg.== Landed Estates == There is no genealogical detail in the [https://landedestates.ie/estate/3226 Foley (Lismore)] entry in the Landed Estates database. == ''Limerick Chronicle'' == The [https://www.limerickcity.ie/media/03%2030%20mcnally.pdf ''Limerick Chronicle'' of 30 March 1911] reported on the retirement of
[[Foley-5349|County Inspector Galway-Foley]], R.I.C., North Riding of County Tipperary. Mr. Galway-Foley is a member of an old and much-respected Co. Waterford family. He [sic] father, Mr. Edmund Foley, of Owbeg, Lismore, was for many years Sub-Sheriff of Co. Waterford. Mr. Galway-Foley is a grandson of the late [[Galwey-104|Mr. J. M. Galway]], M.P. of Abbeyside, Dungarvan, and [a greatnephew] of [[Galwey-212|Mr James Galway]], for many years Inspector-General of Prisons in Ireland.The omission of the crucial words "a greatnephew" leave the impression that Mr. Galway-Foley's grandfathers were both Galway.
The Quaker - Salem Public HighSchool - 1929
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[https://www.salempubliclibrary.org/salem-yearbooks Archived by Salem Public Library] The Quaker - Published by the Students of Salem High School - Salem, Ohio 1929 {| cellpadding=12 style="border-spacing: 3px;" border="0" |- ! Dedicated to Miss Ethel Beardmore !! In Memoriam of [[Bentley-8250|Ruth Ledora Bentley]] !! Superintendent J, S, Alen !! Principle W. J. Springer |- |{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-1.png |size=m}} || {{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-2.png |size=m}} || {{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-3.png |size=m}} || {{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-4.png |size=m}} |- |} ==Admin== {| cellpadding=12 style="border-spacing: 3px;" border="0" |- |{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-5.png|size=m|caption=English - Raymond Parshall}} || {{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-6.png|size=m|caption=English, Dean of Girls - Haude Heart}} || {{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-7.png|size=m|caption= English, Girls' Athletics - Anna Oelshlager}} |- |{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-8.png|size=m|caption=Civics, History - J. C. Oratory}} || {{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-9.png|size=m|caption=History, Occupations, Community Civics - Robert Ulrich}} || {{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-10.png|size=m|caption=English - Eleanor Workman}} |- |{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-11.png|size=m |caption=Biology, History - Paul Stratton}} ||{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-12.png|size=m |caption=Biology - Ella Thea Smith}} || {{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-13.png|size=m |caption=English, Latin - Mildred Horwell}} |- |{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-14.png|size=m |caption=Boys' Athletics - Floyd Stone}} ||{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-15.png|size=m |caption=Latin - Hilda Rose Stahl}} ||{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-16.png|size=m |caption=Chemistry, Physics - W. E. Bonsel}} |- |{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-17.png|size=m |caption=French - Esther Kelly}} ||Mathematics - Martha McCready|| Industrial Arts - Edward Englehart |- |Geography - Ruth Workman||Geography - Harold M. WIlliams|| Science - H.V. Henning |- |Spanish - Mary M. Hollett||Mathematics - Hazel Douglass||{{Image|file=The_Quaker_-_Salem_Public_HighSchool_-_1929-1.png|size=m|caption=History, German - Ethel Beardmore}} |- |Commerce - R.W. Hilgendorf||Home Economics - Isabelle Englehart|| English - Carolyn Wells |- |Sec. to Superintendence - Nellie Springer| Librarian - Cecile Shriver|| Music - Grace Orr |} ==Seniors== {| cellpadding=12 style="border-spacing: 3px;" border="0" |- |James Patten - "Jim" :Class President, 4 :Debate 1-4; Capt. 4 :Salemasquers, 4 :Quaker Staff, 4 :Commencement Speaker ||Helen Williams :Sec.-Treas. Class 2,3,4 :Brooks Contest, 3 :Insurance Essay Contest, 3 :Quaker Staff, 4 :French Club, 4 :Hi-Tri, 4 :Commencement Speaker, 4 ||James Wingard - "Jim" :Class Pres. 2; Vice Pres. 3,4 :Basketball 3,4 :Hi-Y 2,3,4 :Salemasquers 3, 4 :"Pals First," 4 :Tennis, 4 :Honor Student. :Brooks Contest, 4 |- |Almira Baker - "Bake" :Brooks Contest 3, 4 :Hi Tri, 4 :Committees, 3, 4 ||Melba Barnes - "Bones" :Basketball 2,3,4; Capt 4 :Cheerleader, 4 :Science Club, 3 :French Club, 4 :"Pals First," 4 ||Donald Blythe - "Nick" :Baseball, 4 |- |Myron Bolta - "Bolts" :French Club 3, 4 :Science Club 3, 4; Pres.4 :Salemasquers 3, 4 :"Pals First," 4 :Football 4 :Hi-Y 4 ||Martha Beardmore - "Mart" :Commerce Club 3,4 :Hi-Y 4 ||Alfred Brantingham - "Al" :Science Club 3, 4 :Track 2, 3, 4 :Salemasquers 3 :"Charm" 3 :Hi-Y 4 |- |Naomi Bricker - "Shorty" :Commerce Club 4 :Science Club 3, 4 :Hi - Tri 4 :Hockey 1 :Inter Class Basketball 2, 3, 4 ||Glenn Broomall - "Broom" :Quaker 4 :Salemasquers 3, 4 :"Charm" 3 :"Pals First" 4 :Committee Work 2, 3, 4 :Brooks Contest 4 ||Maude Buck - "Carl" :Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 :Volley Ball 2, 3, 4 :Hockey 2 :Baseball 3, 4 |- |Albert Brumenshenkel - "Al" :Science Club 2, 4 :Baseball 4 :Class Basketball 3, 4 ||Virginia Callahan :Debate 2, 3, 4; Capt 4 :Quaker 3, 4 Mgr. 4 :Band 4 :Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Pres 3 :Hi-Tri 4 :Science Club 4 :Commencement Speaker :Inter Class Basketball 1, 4 :Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 ||Margaret Carns - "Carns" :Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 :Valley Ball 1, 2, 3, 4 :Baseball 3, 4 :Hockey 1, 2, 4 :Soccer 4 :Hi-Tri 4 |- |Wilbur Coburn ||Robert Cope - "Bob" :Basketball 4 :Hi-Y 4 :Baseball 4 ||Ruth Chppell :Class Basketball 2 :Quaker 4 :Attendant to May Queen |- |Robert Coy - "Bob" :Track 3, 4 :Hi-Y 4 :Science Club 4 :Committees ||Lois Clay :Hi Tri-Y 4 :Committees :Class Baskeball 1, 2 ||Frances Cooper - "Reedie" :Inter-class Basketball 1, 2 :Hocket 1 :Inter-class Volley Ball 2, 3 :Honor Student :Hi-Tri 4 :French Club 3, 4 |- |Frederick Filler - "Fritz" :Hi-Y 2, 3, 4 :Salemasquers 3, 4 :Football Mgr. 3, 4 :Quaker 4 ||Raymond Fineran - "Ray" :Chearleader 3 :Volley Ball 1, 2, 3 :Class Basketball 1, 2 ||Marion Cope :Hockey 1 :French Club 3, 4; Pres :Attendant to May Queen |- |B. Bayerd Flick - "Bus" ||Clara Cromwell - "Katie" :Entered from Alliance High 2 :Hockey 3, 4 :Salemasquers 3, 4 :Hi-Tri 4 ||John Floyd - "Johnnie" :Science Club 3, 4 :Dramatic Club 4 :Tumblers Club 4 :Hi-Y 4 :Track 3, 4 Mgr. 4 |- |Alice Cyrus - "Casey" :Hockey 1 :Basketball 2 ||Fred Guilford - "Doc" :Football 1, 2, 3, 4 :Basketball 2, 3, 4 :Hi0Y Club 4 :Salemasquers Club 3, 4; Treas. 4 ||Florance Davis - "Ricky" :Second Honor Graduate :Commencement Speaker :Commerce Club 3 :Salemasquers 3, 4 :French Club 4 :Science Club 4 :Hi- Tri 4 :Basketball Mgr 4;As't 3 ---page 24--- |}
The Quest
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The Quin Family of Southern England
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Bookkeeper, Capmaker, Charwoman, Dress-making stock-keeper, Kitchenmaid, Ladies' hat designer, Laundry woman, Medical attendant, Nurse, Traveller (sales representative). Men's jobs were:
Bootmaker, Carman, Carpenter, Chauffeur, Clerk, Coachman, Domestic valet, Engineer, Errand boy, Fishmonger's assistant, Foreman, Gardener, Grocer, House decorator, Masseur, Milkman, Pantry boy, Printer, Printer compositor, Printer machine assistant, Printer's assistant, Printer's layer-on, Rubber stamp mechanic, Sign and glass writer, Soldier, Tailor, Zinc plate grainer. ===Military service=== Our records have shown two of our Quins with military service. One enlisted in 1894 for 21 years and finished as an Acting Regimental Sergeant Major. The other was in the Royal Air Force in 1918. ===Residential addresses=== Our Quins seem to have rented accommodation, as evidenced by census returns often showing the same family living at different addresses in the same road, not likely if they owned the property. ===Life-spans=== The average life-span of the twenty-five Quins for whom we have found birth and death records is 64 years. Of these: 2 died in infancy
3 died in the 39-49 range
4 died in the 50-59 range
4 died in the 60-69 range
5 died in the 70-79 range
5 died in the 80-89 range, and
2 died in the 90-93 range. ===Today's Quins=== Of our Quins born in the last 100 years, our records have shown five who might still be alive. Two were living in Middlesex, two in Sussex, and one in Berkshire. ===Summary=== Nothing exceptional has been found in the records of this family's births, marriages, deaths, occupations, life-spans and census records. However, one member of the family was resident in a workhouse on more than one occasions. Overall they seem to have lived modestly, sometimes choosing to move from densely populated areas to places like Beckenham in Kent and to the Sussex Coast. We know nothing about their health but most did live beyond the age of sixty. Clearly more research is necessary to get a more complete picture of the Quin family of Southern England. ===Who were the family members?=== Here's a list in chronological birth date order:
[[Quin-356|Bernard Quin (abt 1769 - )]] [[Quin-704|Mary Isabella Quin (1792 - )]] [[Quin-422|Thomas William Quin (1802 - )]] [[Quin-421|Georgiana Jane Quin (1805 - 1808)]] [[Quin-355|Bernard Quin (abt 1814 - 1865)]] [[Quin-418|George Frederick Quin (1845 - 1886)]] [[Quin-354|Alfred Edward Quin (1847 - bef 1905)]] [[Quin-419|Eliza Jane Quin (1850 - 1890)]] [[Quin-420|Charles Henry Quin (1855 - )]] [[Quin-428|Caroline Sarah (Quin) Melhuish (1872 - 1855)]] [[Quin-360|Alfred Bernard Quin (1873 - abt 1924)]] [[Quin-429|Thomas William Quin (1874 - 1938)]] [[Quin-424|Frederick Quin (1875 - 1942)]] [[Quin-361|George Frederick Quin (1875 - 1943)]] [[Quin-362|John Charles Quin (1876 - 1964)]] [[Quin-425|William Herbert Quin (1878 - )]] [[Quin-426|Henry James Quin (1880 - )]] [[Quin-363|Clara Rebecca (Quin) Fitzjohn (1880 - 1939)]] [[Quin-427|George Sydney Quin (1882 - )]] [[Quin-365|Ethel Laetitia Quin (1882 - )]] [[Quin-423|Bernard Alfred Quin (1884 - )]] [[Quin-631|Laura Quin (abt 1885 - 1890)]] [[Quin-364|Ada May (Quin) Fisher (1887 - 1967)]] [[Quin-346|Nelly (Quin) Pickup (1889 - 1970)]] [[Quin-430|Jessie Quin (1895 - )]] [[Quin-450|Ernest Edwin Quin (1899 - )]] [[Quin-366|Letty Catherine Constance (Quin) Booker (1900 - abt 1993)]] [[Quin-402|Sidney Robert Quin (1903 - 1980)]] [[Quin-433|Elsie Minnie Quin (1904 - )]] [[Quin-403|George William Quin (1904 - 1969)]] [[Quin-431|Violet Ellen Quin (1905 - )]] [[Quin-404|John Campbell Quin (1906 - 1955)]] [[Quin-432|Gladys Gwendolen (Quin) Smith (1907 - abt 1987)]] [[Quin-405|Ernest Alfred Quin (1908 - abt 1997)]] [[Quin-406|Elsie May (Quin) Kember (1910 - 1983)]] [[Quin-452|Freda Marjorie Quin (1911 - abt 1997)]] [[Quin-465|Frank Quin (1913 - 2001)]] [[Quin-453|Gordon Frederick Quin (1915 - 1985)]] [[Quin-454|John Francis Ernest Quin (1935 - 2015)]] [[Quin-463|Diana (Quin) Moreland (abt 1943 - )]] [[Quin-464|Barry Quin (abt 1949 - )]] [[Quin-460|Lance Quin (1960 - )]] [[Quin-461|Mark Quin (1964)]] ==Sources==
The Quinn - Quina conundrum
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The Rainford Ancestry Source
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The Rancks are really German
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The Rathdrum Project
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The real William and Nancy Giffin
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Duration: Informant: Evelyn Giffin, 507 Jones St === Death certificate for Hattie/Harriet, Nancy Hickey's daughter"Tennessee, Death Records, 1914-1955," Database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NSW9-7Z4 : accessed 29 June 2015), Nancy Hickey in entry for Hattie Lowe, 10 Jun 1946; citing Cemetery, Oak Ridge, Anderson, Tennessee, cn 11384, State Library and Archives, Nashville; FHL microfilm 2,137,371. === {|border="1" |Name:|| Hattie Lowe |- |Event Type:|| Death |- |Event Date: ||10 Jun 1946 |- |Event Place:|| Oak Ridge, Anderson, Tennessee |- |Gender:|| Female |- |Marital Status: ||Widowed |- |Race: ||White |- |Age: ||75 |- |Birth Date: ||03 Jan 1871 |- |Birthplace: ||Knox Co., Tenn. |- |Spouse's Name: ||James F. Lowe, Sr. |- |Father's Name: ||William Giffin |- |Father's Birthplace: ||Tenn. |- |Mother's Name:|| Nancy Hickey |- |Mother's Birthplace: ||Tenn. |- |Occupation: ||Housewife |- |Address:|| 104 Ithica lane |- |Residence Place: ||Oak Ridge, Anderson, Tenn. |- |Burial Place: ||Knoxville, Tenn. |- |Burial Date: ||10 Jun 1946 |- |Additional Relatives:|| X |} Additional information: Attended by physician: June 3 -10
Cause of death: Cachexia, Arteriosclerosis, generalized coronary arteriosclerosis
Other conditions: Senile atrophy of brain
Pyelitis and cystitis There was an autopsy for these findings Informant: Hospital Record Undertaker: Rose Funeral Home == Goolsby households for later == Nancy SGG: *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MDDZ-3DS|Here she is in the 1870 census with her kids and unmarried]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VKJ2-5H3|NSGG's pension record]] Other Goolsby families/people Censuses: *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MD82-YTL|Here is another Goolsby family that may be of interest that I want to save]]. *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGF7-3GL|John C Goolsby born around 1852, 1910 census, Sarah's brother?]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MSCT-HT2|Same family, 1900 this time though]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MDWK-YN5|John P from 1880, same as other censuses?]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MC6Q-FT7|Another Goolsby Family in Tennessee in 1850]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K44C-2ZH|Annie Goolsby born around 1865, have seen her before and want to investigate]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K44X-X54|Allen, born around 1876, 1940 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CP-ZQ5|Robert L, born 1880, 1940 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4ZJ-VJS|Thurman, 1891, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4ZV-R8F|Jim, 1909, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4ZV-R8L|Virgil, 1907, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SPQR-H38|J, 1906, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SPWQ-BHP|RL., 1865 (!!!), 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SPWH-PR6|James, 1875, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SP4L-3GK|SW, 1892, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MNP3-Y5S|Thurmon again in 20 census, living with mother Cordelia!]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MN5R-26Q|Robert from 1865 again, 20 census, living with sister JC Boone!]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGFK-ZHJ|Robert, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MSZK-CF9|Robert L, 1855 (!!!!), mother Arimento, 1890 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8TL-KP2|Wm, 1802, 1860 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCDK-X8R|John K, 1813, 1850 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8TP-X63|Thomas, 1835, 60 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CP-NQS|Millard, 1895, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CR-T3W|Sam W, 1892, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MS8H-16K|Aggie Goosbey, 1836, 1900 census, looks particularly interesting]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MD88-63Y|A N, 29-30, 70 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SP7B-MPH|Mathew, 1880, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SP4G-LBH|George, 1860, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGXC-CY3|Mounce, 1889, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGXC-C1L|John T, 85, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K44X-HL4|Wade, 1900, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MN52-RQR|Lawrence, 1857, 20 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MSDQ-Y35|Lawrence, 54 (!!!), 1900 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGFS-KXT|Lawrence C, 56, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCD2-VZH|Original Lawrence 1850 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MD85-KRZ|Martin 1817, 70 census, kid named Tennessee]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MDDH-ZJG|Wm, 50 (!!!), 79 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CF-VP2|Cordell L, 07, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CP-ZL1|Fannie, 04, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CP-NQP|Tom, 1881, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4C1-ZRT|Bomount, 16, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4C1-XZH|Floyd Goolsby]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4ZV-3QC|Dewey, 01, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SPQG-T83|John A, 84, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SPWH-5P2|Wade, 08, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SP4J-TK3|Ellison, 82, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SP4V-M7X|Virgil, 08, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MNPQ-93Z|Covington, 94, 20 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MNPQ-PB1|Francis L, 79, 20 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MG6T-2FX|George, 71, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGFQ-N2P|Frank L, 79, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGFQ-J5C|Byrd S, 58, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGFQ-VN9|George W, 62, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGFQ-BP4|Clay 78, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGNQ-W4M|LP, 41, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGNG-XVM|George, 60, 10 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MDWK-Z4V|Robert L, 56, 80 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8TH-LZ4|Martin, 1818, 1860 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CS-XTQ|Sylvester, 95, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CP-6QK|Wint D, 07, 40]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CP-6WZ|David L, 20, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K4CP-L4C|Ira E, 82, 40 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SPQ5-2XF|John Jenngain, Goolsly grandchildren, 66, 30 census]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SPQR-SNC|Clay, 74, 30 c]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SPWL-W4S|Johnny L, 90, 30 cen]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SP4L-L6B|Sylvester, 95, 30]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MNGH-HHJ|Clay, 76, 20]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MNGH-HCZ|Amos, 92, 20]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MNP7-3S3|George, 62, 20]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGX9-3BG|William W, 67, 10]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGFM-8PD|Columbus W, 78, 10]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGF7-M71|James H, 71, 10]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MD7V-9DK|Wm, 53, 80]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8TL-KDK|20, 60 Death Certificates: *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NS7B-MQM|Robert L's Wife]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NSX9-P44|James F's Daughter (1929-40)]] *[[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKMS-H9L9|Lawrence, JM's son, 1889-60) == Sources ==
The Record of Births, Marriages and Deaths and Intentions of Marriage, in the Town of Dedham
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The records of Joseph B. Kerlin's family joining the Society of Friends
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The records of the First Church in Salem, Massachusetts, 1629-1736
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes ''The Records of The First Church in Salem Massachusetts 1629-1736'', Publ. Essex Institute, Salem, Mass., 1974 *Source Example: ::
*[[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:The_records_of_the_First_Church_in_Salem%2C_Massachusetts%2C_1629-1736|WikiTree Profiles that use this source]] ===Available at these locations:=== *[https://archive.org/details/recordsoffirstch00firs_0 at Archive.org]
The Regency Townhouse
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The Register of Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury 1414-1443
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The Registers of Edlingham, Northumberland
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The Registers of Windlesham, Surrey, from 1677 to 1783
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The Relation of John the Founder
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The Relation Street House
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The Republic for Which It Stands
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The Rev John West
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The Reverend John Hull Company
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THE REYNOLDS GANG
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The Rich Family of Easton
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The Richardson Farm at Sunny Hill
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The right wife or Great,great grand Mothers' Great grand mother & fathers' both male and female grand parents.
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The Ritchie Boys - German Jews who fled Nazi Germany to become American GIs
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That was the plan. They were a secret weapon. Unlike some American GIs who had been drafted and didn't really want to go to war, the Ritchie Boys really wanted to.'''They were Jews born in Germany.'''
They had fled Nazi terrorism. Many were the oldest sons in their families, sent to safety when it became clear that Hitler intended to solve his "Jewish problem" . Many of these young men left large families behind. Most of these young men would be the only survivors in those large families. Some of these young men were in American Army units that liberated the Nazi death camps. Some of these young men liberated the death camp where their family had been murdered.'''They were called the Ritchie Boys because they had their Army training at Camp Ritchie in Maryland.'''
They were a secret weapon because they were Germans. They knew the German language, the terrain the Allied Armies would be moving in. They knew the German psyche.'''They were trained in intelligence gathering and in interrogation methods.'''
They knew how to exploit the weaknesses and fears of the captured German soldiers. They knew how to obtain vital information that would aid the Allied advances. But they weren't desk soldiers. They were combat soldiers. They fought in hard battles. The move out of Normandy, the Battle of Hurtgenwald, the Battle of the Bulge. Some died. Some won Silver Stars and Purple Hearts. Some were taken prisoner by the Germans. Those captured weren't treated as prisoners of war according to the Geneva Convention. They were Germans, they were Jews. They were executed, often after days of interrogation and torture. But they knew this was a possibility when they embarked for Europe on the troop ships. More than the American born GIs , the Ritchie Boys took the war personally. Call it vengeance or just retribution.'''They needed, with every cell in their body, to destroy the Nazi Regime, to end the Third Reich.'''
[[Angress-4|Werner Angress]]
[[Arnhold-120|Henry Arnhold]]
[[Baruch-33|Hans Baruch]]
[[Bauer-4597|John Peter Bauer]]
[[Baum-1184|Gerhard Baum]]
[[Cole-2720|Walter Cole]]
[[Van_Dam-782|Barry van Dam]]
[[Falkenstein-551|Ralph Falkenstein]]
[[Friede-13|Dittmar Friede]]
| | [[Haarburger-3|Freddie Haarburger]]
[[Herzberg-87|Hank Herzberg]]
[[Jacobs-10436|Kurt Jacobs]]
[[Kahn-576|Hugo Kahn ]]
[[Kirchheimer-6|Erich Kirchheimer]]
[[Lewin-487|Si Lewin]]
[[Lilienstein-43|Ernst Lilienstein]]
[[Lilienstein-52|Fritz Lilienstein]]
[[Mayer-3318|Frederick Mayer]]
[[Mayer-3369|Rudi Mayer]]
[[Michaelis-310|Rudy Michaelis]]
[[Mainzer-33|Edward Morgan]]
| | [[Rabinek-13|Paul Rabinek]]
[[Rosenberg-1035|Albert Rosenberg]]
[[Selling-21|Martin Selling ]]
[[Silberman-76|Max Silberman]]
[[Speir-212|Hans Speir]]
[[Steinfeld-282|Manny Steinfeld]]
[[Zappler-1|Murray Zappler]]
|}
The River and Victoria
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The River Road Apartment
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The Robertson House
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THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
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The Rodillian Academy
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The roots of Spollu
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The Rowing Match at Henley - Newspaper Article - 13 June 1829
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The Royal Dublin Fusiliers
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The Royal Leicestershire Regiment
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The Royal Stewart's of the Ohio Valley
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The Royal Stuarts
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The Rucker - Feilding - Poultney - Confusion
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[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=GBPRS%2FMIDDLESEXMIS%2FHAREFIELD%2FPLAN&parentid=PRS%2FMIDD%2FHAREFIELD%2FMONUINSC%2F001137 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=PRS%2FMIDD%2FHAREFIELD%2FMONUINSC%2F001137&firstname=john&firstname_variants=true&lastname=aleyn&sourcecountry=great+britain&yearofbirth=1664&yearofbirth_offset=5&eventyear=1664&eventyear_offset=5&keywordsplace=middlesex%2C+england&keywordsplace_proximity=5&sid=999 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 2 May 2024)
Johannis Aleyn burial (died in 1719 at age 55) in Harefield, Middlesex, England. ==ISSUE3: Wife of Edward Feilding not Poultney== '''Edward Fielding married Elizabeth Onslow the daughter of Edward Onslow of Onslow in Shropshire not Elizabeth Poultney.''' [[Fielding-17|Edward Fielding (abt.1632-bef.1693)]] of Bristol married [[Onslow-316|Elizabeth (Onslow) Fielding (abt.1640-bef.1690)]] See the [[Fielding-17|Edward Fielding]] profile for more information: #Edward Feilding himself was the reporter to the ''Visitations of Somerset and the City of Bristol 1672'' where it was reported that he maried Elizabeth the daughter and Coheire of Edward Onslow of Onslow in Com Salop. Visitations: G.D. Squibb,"The Visitations of Somerset and the City of Bristol 1672", The Harlean Society, 1992, ISBN 0 9 513335 3 4, page 186-187, Fielding of Bristol, accessed 28 Apr 2024 #The marriage is recorded on 20 Dec 1661 in Great Hanwood, Shropshire, England. Onslow (where the visitations report Elizabeth’s father’s origin) is a village only five miles from Great Hanwood "England Marriages, 1538–1973"
citing Digital film/folder number: 007907633; FHL microfilm: 992152
{{FamilySearch Record|N2Z5-9XD}} (accessed 28 April 2024)
Edward Falldinge marriage to Elisebeth Onslow on 20 Dec 1661 in Great Hanwood, Shropshire, England. #The will of Elizabeth’s father Edward Onslow rector of Horton in Gloucestershire written in 1667, records that he had a “daughter ffielden” #The memorial at Harefield to Edward and Elizabeth’s son in law John Aleyn the husband of their daughter Elizabeth, records Elizabeth’s parentage both on the paternal (Feilding of Bristol) and maternal side (Onslow of Onslow Shropshire) side. It also notes that Edward was an armiger "Middlesex Monumental Inscriptions"
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=GBPRS%2FMIDDLESEXMIS%2FHAREFIELD%2FPLAN&parentid=PRS%2FMIDD%2FHAREFIELD%2FMONUINSC%2F001137 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=PRS%2FMIDD%2FHAREFIELD%2FMONUINSC%2F001137&firstname=john&firstname_variants=true&lastname=aleyn&sourcecountry=great+britain&yearofbirth=1664&yearofbirth_offset=5&eventyear=1664&eventyear_offset=5&keywordsplace=middlesex%2C+england&keywordsplace_proximity=5&sid=999 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 2 May 2024)
Johannis Aleyn burial (died in 1719 at age 55) in Harefield, Middlesex, England. #Edward Onslow’s will also records he had a “daughter Basse(rr)tt” and Elizabeth In her own will records that she had a sister “Jane Bass(rr)ett” #Although Elizabeth and Edwards Marriage took place in Shropshire, this reflected Elizabeth’s father’s connection to Onslow. In fact, the parents of Edward and Elizabeth, were both members of the Ckergy, and their parishes of Horton and Uley were only about ten miles apart and they likely knew each other very well. An effort to explain why Elizabeth Poultney is often assumed to be the wife of Edward Feilden is explained below. ==ISSUE4: Elizabeth (Poultney) Feilding From Earlier Generation== '''Elizabeth Poultney (sometimes named as Elizabeth Maria Poultney/Poltney) believed by some as the mother of Elizabeth Fielden (born about 1652) actually died in 1537''' A woman named Elizabeth Poultney/Poltney (sometimes Elizabeth Maria Poultney) is often attributed to be the wife of [[Fielding-17|Edward Fielding (abt.1632-bef.1693)]] of Bristol, England. Its not entirely clear why this myth is commonplace as no reviewed family trees explain how this conclusion has been reached and the name does not seem to appear in any published books. Not only is the marriage unsupported by any reliable sources, but as discussed above, Edward Feilden married Elizabeth Onslow. It seems very likely that the origin of this confusion might possibly be an impressive memorial in St Edith Churchyard, Monks Kirby, Rugby: [[Poulteney-3|Lady Elizabeth Feilding (abt.1480-1539)]] was described as the wife of [[Feilding-44|Sir William Feilding (abt.1475-1547)]](and daughter of Thomas Poultney) on a memorial in St. Edith Churchyard, Monks Kirby, Rugby Borough, Warwickshire, England with a death date of 8 September 1539. Find a Grave (has image)
{{FindAGrave|148870342}} (accessed 1 May 2024)
Memorial page for Lady Elizabeth ''Poultney'' Feilding (unknown-8 Sep 1539), citing St. Edith Churchyard, Monks Kirby, Rugby Borough, Warwickshire, England; Maintained by Lucas (contributor 50499237). A second twist to this confusion is to identify Elizabeth Poultney who married Edward Feilden, with Elizabeth the daughter of Thomas Poultney, baptised1653. Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Poultney, was baptised on 10 April 1653 in Warwick, St Nicholas, Warwickshire, England. "Warwickshire Baptisms"
Archive: Warwickshire County Record Office; Reference: DR0181/4
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=S2%2FGBPRS%2FWARWICKSHIRE%2FPR-NONEXC%2FWARWICKSTNICHOLAS%2FDR0181-04-00004&parentid=GBPRS%2FWARWICKSHIRE%2FBAP%2F002172728 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FWARWICKSHIRE%2FBAP%2F002172728&sourcecategory=life+events+%28bmds%29&collection=parish+baptisms&firstname=elizabeth&firstname_variants=true&lastname=poultney&yearofbirth=1653&yearofbirth_offset=2&sourcecountry=great+britain&sid=999 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 1 May 2024)
Elizabeth Poultney baptism on 10 Apr 1653, daughter of Thomas Poultney, in Warwick, St Nicholas, Warwickshire, England. ==ISSUE5: Rose Lucy Confused from Earlier Generation== ==ISSUE6: Father of Edward Feilding of Bristol== '''The father of Edward Feilding of Bristol was Roger Feilding of Horton in Gloucestershire not Roger Feilding of Newnham Paddox in Warwickshire''' ==Action List== #[[Lucy-563|Rosa Lucy (1620-)]] (See ISSUE5) Needs to be disconnected from daughter, new dob new parents [[Lucy-389|William Lucy KB - Lucy-389]] and [[Brecknock-32|Margaret (Brecknock) Lucy - Brecknock-32 ]] #Unlink [[Fielding-1362|Edward Fielding (abt.1646-abt.1693)]] as not father of Peter Ruckers wife Elizabeth Unknown #Unlink [[Neale-3|Elizabeth Neale (1602-)]] as mother == Sources ==
The Ryes
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The Salazars - Welcome Page
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The Sale of Homestead Place
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The Salem News
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Salem Public Library is proud to present The Salem News
microfilm collection spanning the years 1905-2008 available online.
A special thanks to Youngstown State University and Dr. Pete Apicella for their help and resources to make this project possible. {{Image|file=The_Salem_News-64.png |align=c |size=800 |caption=Salem Ohio Area}}
The Sample Family of Saluda, South Carolina
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Item 1 whereas in _____ last I have given unto my daughter Polly Pulliam one Negro girl named Nell, one bed, and furniture which I value with some other articles of household furniture at $400, which is all that I intend for her until all my other children are made equal with her.
Item 2 whereas I have let my son John Sample have $173 in cash and do by these presents give to my said son John one Negro boy named Jack, one feather bed, and furniture which said property I value at $280 making with the cash of force said $453 which is all that I intend for him except he should wish to settle himself until all my other children are made equal with him and in that case he shall have the use of the tract of land I purchased of William Grubs to live in until it shall be in the power of my executor to make a final division of my estate, unless that should not happen until after 10 years after the date hereof.
Item 3 it is my will and desire that my beloved wife Barbary Sample should have the use and benefit of all the remainder of my estate for the purpose of support of herself and raising and educating my children in common English areas giving until my sons Darrell Sample, William Sample and my daughters Permelia Sample, Catherine Sample, and Jemima Sample as much of my estate as they come of age or marry as will make them all equal with my daughter Polly or in case my wife can spare as much to make her and the youngest children share equal to my son John’s. It is to be understood that in case my wife should not be able to spare as much of my estate as will make all my children shares equal, as above directed, that the deduction must be made proportionately on them under the direction of my executors here after named.
Item 4 it is my wish and desire that after the death of my wife that all the remainder of my estate both real and personal be equally divided amongst all my children in such manner as to make all their shares alike equal, the division to be conducted by my executors as may be best for the interest of the legatees.
Last of all I do here by constitute and appoint my dearly beloved wife Barbary Sample, my beloved brother Alex Sample, and my son John sample executrix and executors of this, my last will and testament. In witness where of I have hereunto to set my hand and affixed my seal this sixth day of October 1813 the presence of Joel Lipscomb, Benj Cains, Geo Heard”
''The Samuel H Woods Family'' by Myra Maxine Woods Loudin
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The Samuel Willis Account
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"John Willis my Fathers Brother the next in order of time was (by the best account (I have) Born in London ye 6th of 1st Mo. [March] 1668 and came over with the Family and after he came to the state of a Man he went into Pennsylvania In Chester County and married the daughter of one Brinton her name was Ester my Grandfather was helpful in Purchaseing some Land there I think the place is called Thornbury not far from Brumidgum [old pronunciation and spelling of “Birmingham”] where he settled he had several Children I think his sons were William John Henry Edward & Benjamin he also had several Daughters Viz: Mary, Ann, Sarah, & Ester if I am rightly informed they most of them Married (Except William who died young) and had Children & by account are chiefly dead several of them moved towards Corestoge [Conestoga]: my Uncle John and his Wife lived to be old as I suppose to Eighty years of age."
== Sources ==
The Saunders House at 231 N Summit St
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The Sausaman-Sassaman Family in America
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The Scanlon/Nash Family Laundries
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The Schimpf Book
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The Scots magazine
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THE SCOTS-IRISH CLANS
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The Scottish Nation: Montgomery
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The Scrace One Name Study
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The Scuttling of the Nestor
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The Search for Penelope Ashley-Cooper
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The Second Charter of Virginia; May 23, 1609
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The See Family Chronicles
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IRENESEE.JPG
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NANCYSEE.JPG
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The Seigniory of Longueuil
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THE SERB ROOTS PROJECT
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The Settlement of St Louis
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The Seven Daughters of Eve
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The Shaw Family Reunion
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The Sheaffer House
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The Shearer-Akers family, combined with The Bryan line through the seventh generation;
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The Sherwood Family in The Connecticut 1790 Census
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The Shield
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The ship "CONCORD" aka the "GERMAN MAYFLOWER"
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The ship "CONCORD" aka the "GERMAN MAYFLOWER"-1
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The ship "CONCORD" aka the "GERMAN MAYFLOWER"-2
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The ship "CONCORD" aka the "GERMAN MAYFLOWER"-3
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The ship "CONCORD" aka the "GERMAN MAYFLOWER"-4
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The Ship Angel Gabriel
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The Ship Hopewell - Belfast to Charleston, Sep 1770 to Dec 1770
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The_Ship_Hopewell_-_Belfast_to_Charleston_Sep_1770_to_Dec_1770-2.jpg
The_Ship_Hopewell_-_Belfast_to_Charleston_Sep_1770_to_Dec_1770.jpg
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The_Ship_Hopewell_-_Belfast_to_Charleston_Sep_1770_to_Dec_1770-2.png
*Joseph Kaine 150 +
*James Russell 300 +
*Robt Phillips Junr 100 +
*John Phillips 450 +
*James Cunningham 150 +
[https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/The_Ship_Hopewell_-_Belfast_to_Charleston_Sep_1770_to_Dec_1770-2 (Page 15)] - Click to View
*Joseph Cunningham 250 +
*Samuel Maxwell 100 + {Samuel MacOwell}
*William Hamilton 250 +
*Elizabeth Gray 100 +
*Margaret Gray 100 +
*John Rodgers 200 +
*Adam Blair 150 +
*Robert Hull 350 +
*John MacBride 400 +
*Mary MacBride 100
*Jane MacBride 100 +
*John MacCardy Junr 250 +
*Thomas Morton 200 +
*Andrew Mort 200 + {Andrew Morton}
*Samuel Sloan 100 +
*Andrew Miller 200 +
*William Hood 450 +
*David Ferris 200 +
*Robert Martin 250 +
*John Richman 100
*James Wilson 200 +
*Thomas Gladney 100 +
*John MacCurdy 200 +
[https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/The_Ship_Hopewell_-_Belfast_to_Charleston_Sep_1770_to_Dec_1770-3 (Page 16)] - Click to View
*Mary MacCurdy 100 +
*Jannet MacCurdy 100 +
*James MacCurdy 100 +
*William MacKee 350 +
*William MacCaa 450 +
*Jean MacCaa 100 +
*John MacCaa 100
*James Harbison 150 +
*Samuel Penny 200 +
*John Gray 300 +
*John Gray Junior 100 +
*John MacCrory 250 +
*William Anderson 300 +
*John Arnet 150 +
*John Arnet Junior 100 +
*Alexander Arnet 100 +
*Margaret Arnet 100 +
*Ann Arnet 100 +
*Mary Arnet 100 +
*Robert Phillips 250 +
*William Hamilton 200 {Only 1 "William Hamilton" is recorded in Dobbs' book. But two are recorded in the Council Notes}
*Charles Hamilton 100 +
[https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/The_Ship_Hopewell_-_Belfast_to_Charleston_Sep_1770_to_Dec_1770-4 (Page 17)] - Click to View
*Henry Henderson 100 +
*Richard MacCrory 100 +
*Margaret MacCrory 100 +
*Ann MacCrory 100 +
*George Rodgers 100 +
*Alexander Rodgers 100 +
*Thomas Rodgers 100 +
*Agnes Martin 100 +
*Joan MacCalaster 100 + {Jean MacCalawter}
*[[Ross-5829|Robert Ross]] 100 +
*William Graham 250 +
*James Rodgers 250 +
*Richard Gladney 100 +
:''Ordered that the Secretary do prepare Warrants of Survey, as prayed for by the petitioners.'' ----- Notes:
#numbers next to the name represent the amount of petitioned acres
#the plus "+" sign indicates the individual is mentioned in Dobson's ''Irish Emigrants in North America, Part Seven.''David Dobson, ''Irish Emigrants in North America, Part Seven'', (Baltimore, Maryland: Clearfield Company by Genealogical Publishing Co., 2008) If the individual's name is spelled different in Dobson's book, then the Dobson spelling is included after the plus sign within brackets. i.e. "{ Dobson's Spelling }" ##Dobbs' entry for each of these individuals was exactly the same, which read: " ''[name], from Ireland, probably on board the Hopewell from Belfast, petitioned for a land grant in South Carolina in January 1771.'' " #If a WikiTree profile corresponds to one of these passengers, feel free to add a link to their profile by adding their ID to their name. i.e. "Robert Ross" becomes "Ross-5829|Robert Ross" inside double square brackets "[[ ]]". ==Sources==
==Bibliography== *Crouch, Charles. ''The South-Carolina Gazette ; and Country Journal,'' 1765-1775. *Dickson, R. J. ''Ulster Emigration to Colonial America 1718-1775.'' London. Routledge and Kegan Paul. 1966. Image copy. ''Internet Archive.'' https://archive.org : 2024. *Dobson, David. ''Irish Emigrants in North America, Part Seven.'' Baltimore, Maryland: Clearfield Company by Genealogical Publishing Co., 2008. *Greene, John C., Compiler. "The Belfast Newsletter Index, 1737-1800." Database. ''The University of Louisiana, Lafayette, Louisiana.'' https://www.ucs.louisiana.edu/bnl/ : 2024. *South Carolina Council Journals and Upper House Journals, 1706-1775. Illinois History and Lincoln Collections. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Champaign, Illinois.
THE SHIP SUNDA
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The Shoenmaker Family in the Netherlands
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The Shtetl Lelyun
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The Silver Creek Simmons Family
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The_Silver_Creek_Simmons_Family.pdf
The Sinking of the HM Yacht Verona
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The sinking of the John Pratt (1957)
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The Sinking of the Skonerten Alexander in Læsø
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The Sippel Family In Australia
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The Sizzler
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The Skelton's Kingston Apple Orchard
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The Slaves of John Reed of Bourbon, Kentucky and Clinton, Missouri
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The Slaves of Lucy Fry, Madison county, Virginia
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The National Archive in Washington DC; Washington, DC; NARA Microform Publication: M432; Title: Seventh Census Of The United States, 1850; Record Group: Records of the Bureau of the Census; Record Group Number: 29
{{Ancestry Sharing|27057286|479c58}} - {{Ancestry Record|8055|92858883}} (accessed 14 January 2022)
Lucy Fry in Madison, Virginia, USA. {| border="1" class="sortable" !Owner!!Age!!YOB!!Gender!!Race!!Fugitive |- |Lucy Fry||80||1770||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||75||1775||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||50||1800||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||45||1805||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||40||1810||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||35||1815||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||35||1815||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||27||1823||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||27||1823||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||25||1825||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||20||1830||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||19||1831||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||13||1837||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||12||1838||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||11||1839||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||10||1840||Female||Black||X|| |- |Lucy Fry||7||1843||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||7||1843||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||7||1843||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||6||1844||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||7||1843||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||5||1845||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||5||1845||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||5||1845||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||5||1845||Male||Black||X|| |- |Lucy Fry||3||1847||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||2||1848||Female||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||2||1848||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||2||1848||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||6/12||1850||Male||Black|||| |- |Lucy Fry||2/12||1850||Male||Black||X |} ===1860 Slave Schedule=== Lucy Fry is recorded as owning 25 slaves. '''1860 Census''': "1860 U.S. Federal Census - Slave Schedules"
The National Archives in Washington DC; Washington DC, USA; Eighth Census of the United States 1860; Series Number: M653; Record Group: Records of the Bureau of the Census; Record Group Number: 29
{{Ancestry Sharing|27057315|677246}} - {{Ancestry Record|7668|92471361}} (accessed 14 January 2022)
Lucy Fry in Madison, Virginia, USA. {| border="1" class="sortable" !Owner!!Age!!YOB!!Gender!!Race |- |Lucy Fry||80||1780||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||68||1792||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||37||1823||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||30||1830||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||29||1831||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||27||1833||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||26||1834||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||20||1840||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||16||1844||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||16||1844||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||15||1845||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||13||1847||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||12||1848||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||11||1849||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||10||1850||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||9||1851||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||11||1849||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||7||1853||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||6||1854||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||5||1855||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||4||1856||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||3||1857||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||4||1856||Male||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||2||1858||Female||Black|| |- |Lucy Fry||2/12||1860||Female||Black|| |} ===Slave Payroll 1, Madison county, VA=== "This payroll acknowledges that J. B. Stanard, 1st Lieutenant, Corps of Engineers, paid certain Madison County, Virginia, slave owners for work performed by their slaves near Richmond, Virginia, from December 1862 to March 1863." Owner: [[Clark-66401|Lucy Fry]]. Enslaved: [[Fry-7723|Strother]]https://catalog.archives.gov/id/24485959 ===Freedman's Bureau=== :Charles Brock - 10 Jan 1866 - agreement of labor with pay :Conway Brock - 10 Jan 1866 - agreement of labor with pay == Sources ==
The Sloat Family - Typescript Genealogy of John Drake Sloat
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The Society of Friends, aka: Quakers
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The Society of the Friendly Sons of Saint Patrick for the Relief of Emigrants from Ireland
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The Sourcing Loophole
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The_Sourcing_Loophole-6.jpg
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: “'''A source is required''' but you can select one of the following: ::Unsourced family tree handed down to [the user, or] ::Source will be added by [the user] by [the next calendar day].”
The first option reads somewhat differently if the profile represents a person born less than 100 years ago. If the user selects the second option (but not either version of the first option), the system automatically adds the
The Southern Claims Commission
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The Spear Family Sampler
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The Spirit Lake (Inkpaduta) Massacre
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The Splendid Spruces Team
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Click on the 'Cousins' link within 'My Wikitree' or
use the tree app 'CC7 Views' to find other members who have profiles which come within your CC7. https://www.wikitree.com/apps/&view=cc7
=={{Blue|Scores and progress}}== You can check your progress once the challenge becomes live.
See this link:
https://plus.wikitree.com/Challenges/ConnectAThon/default.htm Please note: this page will show scores when the event becomes live.
Once live there is a delay of about 10-15 minutes in updating the scores. =={{Blue|Help : Connect-a-Thon}}== Want to know exactly what a connect-a-thon is then go to this [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Help:Connect-a-Thon page] =={{Blue|Team Member - Research Area}}== {| border="2" cellpadding="10" |+ |- bgcolor=#e4a0b6 style="text-align:center" | Team member || Research area |- style="text-align:center" | [[Entwistle-620|{{Green|Allan Entwistle|}}]] || England 1700-1930 |- style="text-align:center" | [[Scheeler-65|{{Green|Amy (Scheeler) Sparks|}}]] || Mid-Atlantic states |- style="text-align:center" | [[Dwyer-101|{{Green|Lisa Dwyer|}}]] || |- style="text-align:center" | [[Hutton-2752|{{Green|Loralee Hutton|}}]] || |- style="text-align:center" | [[Kreutzer-114|{{Green|Pam Kreutzer|}}]] || Civil War Soldiers |- style="text-align:center" | [[VanHaelst-1|{{Green|Mark VanHaelst|}}]] || |- style="text-align:center" | [[Ryan-6077|{{Green|Catherine Ryan|}}]] || California, West coast of the USA, and Slovenia. |- style="text-align:center" | [[Koler-25|{{Green|Mary Koler|}}]] || USA and England New England, the mid-Atlantic states, and Virginia |- style="text-align:center" | [[Archambo-9|{{Green|Alyssa Nelson|}}]] || Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas,
Yorkshire, England, and Quebec, Canada. |- style="text-align:center" | [[Ballingall-80|{{Green|Carla Knight|}}]] || |- style="text-align:center" | [[Reed-33353|{{Green|Robb Reed|}}]] || Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, and North Carolina |- style="text-align:center" | [[Gressley-41|{{Green|C Ruppel|}}]] || Colonial America, Virginia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Texas, Denmark, Central Europe (Czechia, Slovakia, Hungary, and Germany), and American railroads |- style="text-align:center" |}
=={{Blue|G2G link}}== {{Image |file=DBE_nnn-2.gif |align=l |size=130 |label='''G2G link''' |link=https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1729029/splendid-spruces-team-chat-april-2024-connect-a-thon |caption={{Red|Click on the G2G image to access the public chat page for the Splendid Spruces team.|}} }} {{Clear}}
=={{Blue|Previous Events}}== The Splendid Spruce Team entered the last 'Connect-a-Thon' event in January 2024 and came 6th with a total of 4,209 connections. The Splendid Spruce Team entered the last 'Source-a-Thon' event in 2023 and came 1st in the 'normalized' score with a figure of 253 which was really good considering that we only started as a team a few months before. Information regarding our participation in the 2023 'Source-a-Thon' can be found [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:The_Splendid_Spruces_Team_SAT here] for team members.
The SS Valbanera Mystery
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The Stauffer families of Switzerland, Germany and America : including Stouffer and Stover
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The stem Duchy of Bavaria
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The Stewart (Stuart) Chin
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The Stinsons of North Berry Jerry
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The Stirlings of Cadder
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The Original Family of that Name
and of
The Family of the STIRLINGS of DRUMPELLIER
With which the Representation
Of the Ancient House of CADDER now lies
BY
THOMAS WILLING STIRLING 1933
ST ANDREWS
W. C. HENDERSON & SON, LTD., UNIVERSITY PRESS
The Stoddard Family
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The stone clan
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The Story of Captain Thomas Callender
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(from [https://books.google.com/books?id=3kc2AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1565&lpg=PA1565&dq=%22Thomas+Callender%22+privateer&source=bl&ots=68W2H2ovsS&sig=ACfU3U0SiIj_XRRFL94VCrJ5t4WlbmAvuw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjn7IDfyNHlAhWPY98KHbq9A2QQ6AEwAnoECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=%22Thomas%20Callender%22%20privateer&f=false Colonial Families of Philadelphia, Vol II])
Capt. Thomas Callender, father of Ann (Callender) Price, and grandfather of the above-named children [our ancestor Richard Price being one], was born in Scotland, and at sixteen ran away from home. He engaged with the captain of a ship sailing for America, and came to Philadelphia. He later followed the sea as captain of a merchant ship, and during the Revolutionary War, obtained Letters of Marque from Congress and fitted out his vessel as a privateer. Meeting with a British man-of-war and refusing to strike his colors, his vessel was fired upon, and he lost his life in the engagement which followed. Captain Callender had married in Philadelphia, Margaret Rourke, prior to going to sea as Captain of the privateer. He removed his family, a colored slave, and his furniture, to Quakertown, Bucks county, intending to bring them back to Philadelphia on his return. When the British took possession of Philadelphia, all the remaining property of Captain Callender was destroyed. After the evacuation of the city by the British Army, Mrs. Callender returned to Philadelphia, and resided for many years in the family of Joseph Price, whose son her daughter later married, and where she died. She was remembered by her grandchildren as a very handsome woman, with beautiful hands and feet, who, at seventy years of age, embroidered beautifully without the use of glasses. '''Verifying the Story of Thomas Callender'''
Research is needed to verify some details in the above Colonial Families account of Thomas Callender. For instance, genealogy researchers have been unable to find documentation of the British capturing the Alfred. There is, however, documentation of the capture of Thomas Callender's ship the Alfred by an American privateer. Numerous reports in papers during the times provide the following details:
* The Alfred was listed under Master Thomas Callender as captured by patriot privateer Retaliation under Capt. Giles on October 10, 1776 in the Atlantic somewhere midway between the coast of Maine and London. * The Alfred was said by some reports to be among many ships in a convoy en route from Jamaica to London. * The cargo of sugar, rum, fostick, and mahogany was auctioned off in Boston when the ship arrived to be "cleared" for sale. [Some reports give dates that suggest some ships reported were not in a convoy.] * When the ship Alfred was offered up for sale it was reported that William Bradford had held off buying due to a concern it had not been cleared by owners in Philadelphia. It's not known if the ship was returned to surviving part-owners in Philadelphia (possibly because it was renamed). * Alfred disambiguation: Callender's Alfred can be confused with the Man of War Alfred. This different ship was outfitted in Philadelphia in November 1775 by American patriots for use as one of a limited number of ships in the newly created navy. The Man of War Alfred was active in the Battle of Block Island, considered to be the first naval engagement in the American Revolution. The inconsistencies between the only documented family lore and all other discovered documentation can be explained in a number of ways. Until more evidence is found, it is impossible to know which of these possibilities is the reality. A) Callender was Carrying on Neutral Trade and Killed by American Privateers During Capture. B) Callender was a Letter of Marque Holder, Killed by British, with his Ship Captured Prior to October 1776, and then Recaptured October 10, 1776. Callender had been engaging in cross-Atlantic trade since as early as 1754. During a period between 1763 and 1775 he served as master for at least six different ships with Caribbean Passes issued by the crown. It's important to note that Caribbean Passes are protective documents issued by the King to protect against harassment from West Indies buccaneers and French privateers. These are not "Letters of Marque" issued during a Revolution, designed to contract for some percentage of the spoils when taking prizes. Numerous reports can be found in old newspapers showing that Callender (a) was involved in constant trade between Jamaica, Philadelphia, and Liverpool, with arrivals and departures reported regularly between 1754 and 1772, and (b) was frequently the victim of privateer attacks prior to the American Revolution. In 1757, his ship Lark was taken by the French and he was peacefully released, returning home via Dunkirk to St. Christophers, to start up with a new ship the Rebecca. On his return he reports of numerous English ships taken with losing all crew on board. In 1758, the Rebecca, en route to Jamaica, was boarded by French attackers and his crew succeeded at fighting them off. Despite evidence that he was no stranger to seafaring violence, there is no record of him being involved in the taking of any "prizes." While it is true that there were thousands of takings by both sides and only a small number of accounts were ever fully reported in the press, there is a pattern that suggest Callender was more involved in continued trade than active privateering. His last known ship was the Alfred, which received a Caribbean Pass on March 3, 1775. Local Philadelphians may have heard a ship named The Alfred out of Philadelphia had been assigned for naval duty, misunderstanding that it was not Callender's Alfred; this one had previously been named the Black Prince. Documentation that the Callender family was moved out of Philadelphia with the home being destroyed does not prove which side they were on. Thomas was known to have a son Thomas at age one in 1776 who has been found in the census for Harford, MD with a Robert Callender, who may have been the grandfather. This adds to confusion because Ann is not named in the census and Harford, MD and Quakertown, PA are each about 60 miles in opposite directions from Philadelphia. Coming to a full conclusion on the true circumstances of Thomas Callender are made most unfulfilled by the absence of ANY consistent record of his death. His death has been reported in only one source (the Colonial Families). Despite the presence of considerable Philadelphia assets and the reliable record-keeping in the City, no will has been found and there has been no record of former property changing hands.
THE STORY OF CHARLES AND MARGARET RICH (GIBSON)
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The Story of Erastus Gilbert Crocker
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The Story of Gabriel and Marie Maupin
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'''[[Maupin-696|Dorothy Maupin Shaffett]]''' - Copyright 1994
1819 N. 82nd Street
Kansas City, KS 66112-2005 === Publisher === Gateway Press, Inc.
1001 N. Calvert Street
Baltimore, MD 21202 Library of Congress Control Number 93-79302 === Description === A history of the immigration of Gabriel and Marie Maupin to America with a focus on their Huguenot heritage, including a detailed history of the Maupin family up through the early 20th century. The research done by [[Maupin-696|Dorothy Maupin Shaffett]] corrects many of the myths that had been handed down by Maupin family descendants. For example (spoiler alert!) Gabriel was not a general and his wife, Marie, was not a Spencer. And they were not from Navarre. == Known Errors or Issues == First, The digital copy found on-line is missing pages 214-215.
Those pages have been attached as images here. * Page 90, [[Carter-31368|Amelia Carter]] was not the widow of [[Carter-6729|Elihu Carter]], she was his daughter. Jenkins was not her maiden name. * Page 130, birth year for John M. Wood should be 1836, not 1856. (He was married in 1856.) * Page 156 birth date for Bernard Maupin is 1 Jun 1782. Page 157 says 1 Jun 1783. Which is it? * Page 182, Fleming Cobbs Maupin died in Fort Collins, Colorado, not Fort Collins, IA. * Page 184, George F., son of [[Maupin-719|Charles Morris Maupin]] was born in 1858, not 1838. * Page 212, Susannah's LNAB should be Cooper, not Copper, and her marriage date is 6 Oct 1831. The date given 7 Nov 1831 was the date of recording in the Marriage Register. * Page 251, [[Maupin-828|Talitha (Maupin) Gates]] is shown as a daughter of [[Maupin-298|Daniel Maupin III]], but he is actually her grandfather. She is the daugher of [[Maupin-840|Garland D. Maupin Sr.]], proven in Garland's will. * Page 253, [[Maupin-1303|Archibald Maupin's]] wife [[Adams-53605|Rebecca]] died on 21 Jan 1884, not in 1808. * Page 256, [[Maupin-841|Malinda]] married [[Crews-1928|Daniel Crews]] not David. But he was the son of David Crews. * Page 270, [[Maupin-1230|Malinda]] married [[Burnett-6803|James Peter Burnett (1795-1873)]], not Bennett. * Page 292, George... "Some records give his wife as Polly, daughter of John". But, [[Maupin-809|Lysander Maupin]]'s death certificate shows his mother (George's wife) was ___ Jarman. * Page 307, William Addison Maupin's death date is 3 Apr 1877, not 23 Oct 1853, which is his brother Peter's death date. * Page 339 3. [[Maupin-593|Luraney]] married [[King-30986|Stephen King]], on 16 Dec 1785, not 1786. * Page 342 A. 1. c. [[Snelson-533|Virginia]] did not die single in 1880, but in 1926, married to [[Greenstreet-218|Alonzo K Greenstreet]]. * Page 344, 3. said "... married [[Maupin-630|Mary Maupin]], daughter of [[Maupin-50|Thomas L. Maupin]]." Should say "[https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1_name=Maupin-630&person2_name=Maupin-50 granddaughter]." Page 369, sect C., 2. shows it correctly. * Page 344, 3a. Addie Ida Maupin is a conflation of two individuals: [[Maupin-679|Addie Eudora]] & [[Maupin-732|Ida Laura]]. * Page 345, sect c. 2. [[Holt-8268|Maude]] was born 31 Dec 1896 (not 1897) - it is corrected on p. 370 sect. c2. * Page 345, sect c. 5. Wilber should be [[Holt-8273|Wilmer]].[[Holt-8548|Marshall, Maudie Marie (Holt)]], 1908-. [[Space:The_Descendants_Of_Michael_Holt|The Descendants of Michael Holt]]. Houston, Texas, 1967, page 517 It is corrected on p. 370 sect. c5. * Page 364, sect G. [[Maupin-687|William Taylor Maupin's]] birth date should be 30 Aug 1832, which is on his gravestone. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/40960560 * Page 367, Sect A, [[Maupin-49|George Maupin]] was born in 1819 according to FindAGrave and FamilySearch. * Page 369, sect C. says [[Maupin-61|Jacob]] married Rhonda Holt, should be [[Holt-8183|Rhoda]].[[Holt-8548|Marshall, Maudie Marie (Holt)]], 1908-. [[Space:The_Descendants_Of_Michael_Holt|The Descendants of Michael Holt]]. Houston, Texas, 1967, page 539. * Page 371, C.12, [[Maupin-789|Benjamin F. Maupin]] did not marry "[[Estes-3734|Estes]]," (She married [[Maupin-681|Benjamin L. Maupin]].) This Benjamin's wife was [[Sims-8168|Flora Elnora Sims]] (Please add to this section as you discover errors that you can verify!) == Available online at these locations: == * https://issuu.com/stanmaupin/docs/the_story_of_marie_and_gabriel_maupin * {{FamilySearch Book|285031}} == Citing This Source == Here's what a full citation of this book might look like, with the link referring back to this page: :[[Maupin-675|Maupin, Socrates]], [[Maupin-702|Eugene Maupin]], and [[Maupin-696|Dorothy Maupin Shaffett]]. [[Space:The_Story_of_Gabriel_and_Marie_Maupin|The Story of Gabriel and Marie Maupin]]: Huguenot Refugees to Virginia In 1700. Baltimore: Gateway Press, 1994, page xx. You can use this citation in two ways: * Source Citation: This text can be cut-and-pasted to the bottom of any profile: :::
THE STORY OF MY YOUTH AND EARLY MARRIED LIFE AS TOLD TO LOIS ELKINTON
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The Story of the Four D's
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'The story of the Julius Cohen Family of Seattle, Washington' prepared by Joseph Cohen
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The Story of the USS Kadashan Bay
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The Strebeck Family Record
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The Sudbury Fight
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The SURNAME
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The surname Bree in the 1841 UK Census
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{| border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#e1f0b4 !County of Residence!!# |- |Bedfordshire||4 |- |Cambridgeshire||7 |- |Cornwall||16 |- |Cumberland||1 |- |Derbyshire||1 |- |Hertfordshire||3 |- |Jersey||81 |- |Kent||5 |- |Lancashire||1 |- |Leicestershire||2 |- |Lincolnshire||2 |- |Middlesex||2 |- |Norfolk||1 |- |Northamptonshire||33 |- |Rutland||7 |- |Somerset||5 |- |Suffolk||4 |- |Sussex||2 |- |Warwickshire||7 |- |Worcestershire||3 |- |Yorkshire||4 |- |Total||191 |- |Counties||21 |}
===Individual Records=== {| border="1" cellpadding="4" class="sortable" |- bgcolor=#e1f0b4 !Name!!Sex!!DoB!!Born County!!Resides Town!!Resides County |- |Hannah Bree||female||1838||Bedfordshire||Toddington||Bedfordshire |- |Mark Bree||male||1787-1791||Bedfordshire||Toddington||Bedfordshire |- |Martha Bree||female||1792-1796||Bedfordshire||Toddington||Bedfordshire |- |Sarah Bree||female||1821-1825||Bedfordshire||Toddington||Bedfordshire |- |Eliza Bree||female||1831||Cambridgeshire||Wisbech St Peter and St Paul||Cambridgeshire |- |John Bree||male||1802-1806||Cambridgeshire||Wisbech St Peter and St Paul||Cambridgeshire |- |Joseph Bree||male||1829||Cambridgeshire||Wisbech St Peter and St Paul||Cambridgeshire |- |Louisa Bree||female||1822-1826||Cambridgeshire||Wisbech St Peter and St Paul||Cambridgeshire |- |Mary Bree||female||1802-1806||Cambridgeshire||Wisbech St Peter and St Paul||Cambridgeshire |- |Sarah Bree||female||1822-1826||Cambridgeshire||Wisbech St Peter and St Paul||Cambridgeshire |- |William Bree||male||1822-1826||Cambridgeshire||Wisbech St Peter and St Paul||Cambridgeshire |- |Agnes Bree||female||1841||Cornwall||Tintagel||Cornwall |- |Ann Bree||female||1762-1766||Cornwall||Crowan||Cornwall |- |Elizabeth Bree||female||1812-1816||Cornwall||Crowan||Cornwall |- |Elizabeth Bree||female||1837||Cornwall||Crowan||Cornwall |- |Emma Bree||female||1822-1826||||Tintagel||Cornwall |- |Jane Bree||female||1807-1811||Cornwall||Crowan||Cornwall |- |Jane Bree||female||1839||Cornwall||Crowan||Cornwall |- |Jessie Bree||female||1831||||Tintagel||Cornwall |- |Laura Bree||female||1836||Cornwall||Tintagel||Cornwall |- |Lucy Bree||female||1834||||Tintagel||Cornwall |- |Phillippa Bree||female||1807-1811||||Tintagel||Cornwall |- |Robert S Bree||male||1797-1801||||Tintagel||Cornwall |- |Robt Bree||male||||||Tintagel||Cornwall |- |Thomas Bree||male||1821-1825||Cornwall||St Erth||Cornwall |- |William Bree||male||1802-1806||Cornwall||Crowan||Cornwall |- |Windsor Bree||male||1840||Cornwall||Tintagel||Cornwall |- |Hannah Bree||female||1812-1816||Cumberland||St Bees||Cumberland |- |Marth Bree||female||1777-1781||Derbyshire||Bakewell||Derbyshire |- |Charles Bree||male||1782-1786||Hertfordshire||Kimpton||Hertfordshire |- |Rebecca Bree||female||1782-1786||Hertfordshire||Kimpton||Hertfordshire |- |Thos Bree||male||1817-1821||Hertfordshire||Chipping Barnet||Hertfordshire |- |Adelle Bree||female||1835||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Ann Bree||female||1822-1826||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Ann Bree||female||1812-1816||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Ann Bree||female||1819-1823||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Betsy Bree||female||1828||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Edward Bree||male||1838||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Elias Bree||male||1830||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Elias Bree||male||1838||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Elias Bree||male||1802-1806||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Elias Bree||male||1839||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Elias Bree||male||1787-1791||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Elias Bree||male||1822-1826||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Elie Bree||male||1800-1804||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Eliza Bree||female||1822-1826||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Elizabeth Bree||female||1807-1811||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Elizabeth Bree||female||1831||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Elizabeth Bree||female||1830||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Elizabeth Bree||female||1840||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Elizabeth Bree||female||1833||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Elizabth Bree||female||1757-1761||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Elizth Bree||female||1813-1817||Isle Of Jersey||St Clement||Jersey |- |Esther Bree||female||1801-1805||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Esther Bree||female||1828||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Esther Bree||female||1817-1821||Isle Of Jersey||St Clement||Jersey |- |Esther Bree||female||1835||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Esther Bree||female||1822-1826||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Esther Bree||female||1797-1801||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |George Bree||male||1799-1803||Isle Of Jersey||St Saviour||Jersey |- |George Bree||male||1802-1806||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |George Bree||male||1802-1806||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |George Bree||male||1836||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |George Bree||male||1841||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |George Bree||male||1828||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |George Bree||male||1832||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Harriet Bree||female||1834||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Isabelle Bree||female||1841||Isle Of Jersey||St Clement||Jersey |- |Jane Bree||female||1795-1799||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Jane Bree||female||1830||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Jane Bree||female||1834||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Jane Bree||female||1834||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Jean Bree||male||1810-1814||Isle Of Jersey||St Clement||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1822-1826||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1807-1811||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1807-1811||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1774-1778||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1837||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1831||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1777-1781||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1833||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1822-1826||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1832||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1839||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |John Bree||male||1782-1786||Isle Of Jersey||St Clement||Jersey |- |Marguierite Bree||female||1807-1811||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Marie Bree||female||1787-1791||Foreign||St Clement||Jersey |- 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Bree||male||1792-1796||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Philip Bree||male||1832||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Sarah Bree||female||1773-1777||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Sarah Bree||female||1772-1776||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Sophia Bree||female||1828||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Suky* Bree||female||1777-1781||Isle Of Jersey||St Clement||Jersey |- |Susanna Bree||female||1792-1796||Isle Of Jersey||||Jersey |- |Susanna Bree||female||1812-1816||Isle Of Jersey||Saint Helier||Jersey |- |Suson Bree||female||1828||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Suson Bree||female||1837||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Suson Bree||female||1807-1811||Isle Of Jersey||St. Martin||Jersey |- |Edward Bree||male||1807-1811||Kent||Minster||Kent |- |Harriott Bree||female||1817-1821||Kent||Deal||Kent |- |James O Bree||male||1829||Kent||Greenwich||Kent |- |Mary Bree||female||1812-1816||||Minster||Kent |- |William O Bree||male||1830||Kent||Greenwich||Kent |- 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The Swedish Torp and Torpares
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The_Swedish_Torp_and_Torpares.jpg
The_Swedish_Torp_and_Torpares.png
Example of a Soldiers Torp {{Image|file=Nystrom-385.png |align=r |size=m |caption=Example of a Soldiers Torp }} Excerpted: The secondary meaning of the word torp has to do with its use when, in the 19th century the Swedish population grew explosively. This was due in part to the introduction of the cowpox vaccine, which drastically reduced infant mortality, and – where a family had experienced that only one or two children survived infancy – now with the introduction of the vaccine, the parents could view their families of seven, eight, nine, and even ten children growing up to adulthood. As the families grew, the farms, which had been in the same family, perhaps for centuries, suddenly were no longer able to feed the many additional mouths. Add to this the fact that the nation’s laws precluded that, at the death of the farm owner, the farm could be carved up for the heirs. {{Image|file=Nystrom-385-5.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption=Swedish soldier, Carl Nystrom Sr. }} Usually the farm was therefore inherited by the eldest son. The remaining children had to make their own way, either by hiring out as farm hands and maid servants to a neighboring farmer, joining the army (see Swedish soldier photo), or taking up a village trade such as that of a cobbler, a tailor, or a carpenter. For those who wished to remain on the land and at the same time to stay at least semi-independent, there was one other choice, that of establishing one’s own existence on land which belonged to a farm owner. This land, a croft, usually the most unproductive, was quite often located on the outskirts of the village near the edge of the forest. This was of course encumbered land, and the settler who worked it was obligated to provide the owner with a certain number of free work days during the year. A torpare was a so-called crofter (tenant farmer) to whom a landowner leased land and a smaller cottage with compensation in the form of day labor. The torpare worked his plot of ground, seldom larger than a couple of acres, where he could plant potatoes, grow vegetables and a bit of hay for the lone cow, a couple of pigs, and a few chickens. Occasionally the land area was large enough also to support a horse. But there were problems, inasmuch as the farm owner wanted his torpare to work during the busiest seasons, the time of planting, harvesting, slaughtering, fence mending, and the repairing of roads. The crofter had to adjust his own schedule to the demands of the owner, thereby finding himself scrambling at odd hours accomplishing his own tasks. The social conditions under which the torpare worked varied greatly from farm to farm, from village to village.Where the farm owner and his crofter worked together harmoniously, life was tolerable at least. Where the owner and his farm laborer could not agree, or where the farm owner made unreasonable demands which the crofter could scarcely meet, life could be frustrating, humiliating and miserable. This state of affairs has been amply illustrated in Vilhelm Moberg’s The Emigrants. These conditions were of course one of the prime motivating factors for Swedes to immigrate to America. The farm owner and his crofter usually signed a contract which stipulated what each was to furnish the other. If the crofter became ill or incapacitated and thus could not fulfill his number of working days, he had to provide a substitute whom he was obligated to reimburse. If this were not possible, the crofter’s wife had to step in and carry on her husband’s duties, though she had a houseful of children which had to be raised, fed, and clothed. As a last resort it might become necessary for a half-grown son to shoulder his father’s responsibilities. {{Image|file=The_Swedish_Torp_and_Torpares.png |align=l |size=m |caption=A basic Swedish Torp }}The torp itself often left much to be desired. Consisting of one or two rooms, having most of the time nothing but a dirt floor, it was an unhealthy environment in which to raise a family. The crofter could, if asked by the farm owner, work extra days for a stipulated amount in cash, usually less than the going labor rates. But by doing so, he sacrificed his own time, which was necessary to keep his cottage in repair, to plant, to reap and to busy himself with countless other chores. '''How many Torps were there?''' The proliferation in Sweden of torp and torpare during the 19th century was no less than astounding. It is estimated that by the year 1860 there were no less than 100,000 Swedish torpare who with their families accounted for 457,000 persons. By the year 1900 that number had dropped to 70,000 torpare embracing 357,000 persons. The gradual lessening of the torparproletariat and its eventual demise can to a large extent be credited to the ongoing industrialization of Sweden. In the latter part of the 19th century, the number of torpares were greatly reduced by emigration. There was a transfer to cash leases. In 1943, day labor was banned, and thus the torparproletariat ceased. {{Image|file=Enebacken_Torp.jpg |align=r |size=m |caption=Swedish Torp at Enebacken }} '''The Torp Today '''| In today’s Sweden the torp has regained some of its romantic aspect. Modern Swedes want to go back to their roots, and thousands of city dwellers have returned to their parishes of origin, there to purchase the old family torp, if it still was in existence. If this was not possible, any other torp would do, so long as it was a torp Sources: Nystrom and Strandberg family history and The Swedish American Genealogist Vol. 30, No. 2, Issue, June , 2010, first published in the Swedish American Genealogist 1991, Issue 3. Online access: http://collections.carli.illinois.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/aug_sag/id/8704 NOTE: Much of the material for the S-AG article has been taken from the entry torp in the Swedish encyclopedia, Nordisk Familjebok, second edition IXXXVIII (Stockholm 1904-1936), YXIX, cols. 418-422.
The Sweet Connection
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The Swiss Origins of the HALEY Family
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The Symmers
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The Syriani Urfali Community
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The TASSIN Family Project
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The Teed Tree
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In the masthead of each issue an address and phone number appears for contacting Sally. She no longer resides in Arizona and the address and phone number are no longer valid. On the final page of the final issue, she leaves an email address. This is also no longer active and cannot be used to contact her.
'''Sally still welcomes all inquiries concerning Teed genealogy. For contact information, send a private message to [[Rutherford-448|Dave Rutherford]] and your correspondence will be forwarded.''' {{Image|file=Teed PDF-1.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 1''' }} '''Issue Number 1
'''Published Spring 1994
'''Includes:
''Migration of George Peter Teed (1813-1867) and family; pg. 1.
''Children and grandchildren of Susnna Teed (1592-678) pg. 5.
''Teed men in Revolutionary War Militia units; pg. 8
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-3.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 2''' }} '''Issue Number 2'''
'''Published Summer 1994
'''Includes:
''John W. Teed's Missing Manuscript; pg. 9.
''Teedville, New York; pg. 12
''Early Teed Families in Oregon; pg. 15.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-4.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 3''' }} '''Issue Number 3'''
'''Published Fall 1994
'''Includes:
''Sorting the John Teed's; pg. 17.
''Teed-Rosback Relationship; pg. 21.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-5.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 4''' }} '''Issue Number 4'''
'''Published Winter 1994
'''Includes:
''Dr, R. Wallace Teed; pg. 25.
''Joseph Teed of Delhi, Delaware, New York; pg. 27.
''Andrew Tees, Postmaster, Teedtown, N.J. 1852; pg. 28.
''Capt. Orlo Teed, Iowa Volunteers; pg. 30.
''Teed brothers to Nova Scotia after Revolutionary War; pg. 30.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-10.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 5 - Part 1''' }} {{Image|file=Teed PDF-11.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 5 - Part 2''' }} ::'''Issue Number 5'''
::'''Published Spring 1995
'''Includes:
''Joshua Teed (1607-1678); pg. 33.
''1994 Names Index for Issues 1-4; pg. 40-48.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-12.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 6 - Part 1''' }} {{Image|file=Teed PDF-13.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 6 - Part 2''' }} ::'''Issue Number 6'''
::'''Published Summer 1995
'''Includes:
''The Research of Mary Elizabeth Teed; pg. 49.
''Migration of Nathaniel Teed (1788-1840); pg. 53,
''John Teed of Huntington; pg. 57.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-14.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 7 - Part 1''' }} {{Image|file=Teed PDF-15.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 7 - Part 2''' }} ::'''Issue Number 7'''
::'''Published Fall 1995
'''Includes:
''John Tidd of Woburn; pg. 65.
''John Teed (1753-1833) Revolutionary War Veteran; pg. 69.
''Teed Frontier Settlers and Indian Uprisings; pages 72-76.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-6.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 8''' }} '''Issue Number 8'''
'''Published Winter 1995
'''Includes:
''Charles Teed (1919-1985) Draftee on Life Magazine Cover; pg. 81.
''Pell Teed of Kansas (1868-1942); pg. 84.
''Card Game Leads to Three Teed Murder Victims; pg. 86.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-9.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 9''' }} '''Issue Number 9'''
'''Published Spring 1996
'''Includes:
''Fremont Teed of Kuna Idaho and Family; pg. 89.
''Zepheniah Teed III (1828-1916); pg. 98.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-16.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 10 - Part 1''' }} {{Image|file=Teed PDF-17.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 10 - Part 2''' }} ::'''Issue Number 10'''
::'''Published Summer 1996
'''Includes:
''Dr. Cyrus R Teed, Founder of Koreshan Unity; pg. 101-115.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-7.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 11''' }} '''Issue Number 11'''
'''Published Fall 1996
'''Includes:
''President Gerald Ford, Descendant of Joshua Teed (1607-1687); pg. 117-122.
''Guy Teed (1888-1983) of Allegan County, Michigan; pg. 123.
''Ohio Shoemaker Moses Teed (1822-1893); pg. 126.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-8.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 12''' }} '''Issue Number 12'''
'''Published Winter 1996
'''Includes:
''Court Battle Over Koreshan Florida Land; pg. 129.
''Teed (and Tidd) Loyalists; pg. 132.
''Origin of the Tidd and Teed Names; pg. 135.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-18.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 13''' }} '''Issue Number 13'''
'''Published Spring 1997
'''Includes:
''Allen Teed Westlake (1854-1931); pg. 137.
''Teed Family Murders, West Sussex; pg. 140.
''Timeline for John Teed (1641-1687); pg. 144.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-19.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 14''' }} '''Issue Number 14'''
'''Published Summer 1997
'''Includes:
''Koreshan Land Dispute; pg. 145.
''Freeman Golding Teed (1851-1916); pg. 148.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-20.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 15''' }} '''Issue Number 15'''
'''Published Fall 1997
'''Includes:
''Marshall H Teed (1860-1936); pg. 153.
''Ralph Ernest Teed (1894-1927); pg. 155.
''James Teed and the Jennings Murder; pg. 156.
''Plus more! {{Image|file=Teed PDF-21.pdf |align=l |size=m |caption='''Issue Number 16''' }} '''Issue Number 16'''
'''Published Winter 1997
'''Includes:
''Charles Plummer Tidd; pg. 161.
''Family of Zepheniah Teed (1763-1838); pg. 164.
''Plus more!
The Testimony Of Thomas Bromfield
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The Thayer Family of Thornbury: A Study Trying its Reconstruction
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The Thomas Carroll Simmon Place
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THE THOMAS DAVIS (Davies) FAMILY of Sussex County
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THE THOMAS DAVIS FAMILY
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THE THOMAS DAVIS FAMILY 2
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The Thomlinson Family
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THE LATE SIR WILLIAM THOMLINSON
AN impressive tribute to the memory of the late Sir William Thomlinson, D.L., J.P., was paid at a memorial service in Christ Church, West Hartlepool, to-day.
The congregation, which filled the church, was representative of all phases of public life in the Hartlepools, and included also Mr. Francis Thomlinson (son), Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Wainwright. J.P., (son-in-law and daughter), and Mrs. Hesster (granddaughter).
The simple service was conducted by Canon J. Booth, Vicar of Holy Trinity. Seaton Carew, assisted by Canon R. H. J. Poole (Vicar of Christ Church), who gave the address, Canon F. T. Salter (Rector of Hartlepool), Rev. P. J. H. Kirner (Rural Dean), and the Rev. F. W. Nicholls, (St. George's Congregational Church). The Rev. J Mackie Evans and the Rev. B. P Davies were also present.
A letter explaining his own and the Bishop of Durham's inability to attend, was received by the relatives from the Bishop of Jarrow, who wrote, "I am anxious for you to know, by the only channel that is now open to me, the great debt which the diocese, as well the County of Durham, owes to him. It was not only his very ready and active service which he gave with such ability, but also his personal kindliness and generosity to many people, of which I have been increasingly aware during my time in this diocese.
Apart, therefore, from the official side, I was particularly anxious to be able to pay my personal tribute, to his memory, and can only once more say how sorry I that this is denied to me. I can only assure you that you and your family will be in my mind and prayer."
The choir was in attendance, and the service, which opened with the National Anthem and concluded with the "Dead March" in Saul, included also the singing of Psalm 23 and the hymns "Jesus Lives" and "Abide With Me."
CANON POOLE’S ADDRESS
In the course of his address, Canon Poole said this was a moment when they all felt the loss of a useful and very-well-beloved citizen. "There is no need," said the Canon, "to dwell on his public work --industrial, political, religious, philanthropic, and military. There is no need to dwell on his work as magistrate, which he pursued very carefully right up to the end of his life. He was well known as a careful, just and merciful wielder of the law.
"Nor is there any need to dwell on his work in connexion with the fine arts of the town, on his love of beauty, on his home, which was a perfect museum of beautiful and gracious things. We think also of his foreign travels, which certainly broadened his mind and his sympathies.
"One could go on enumerating the various accomplishments and graces which marked a great Christian gentleman. But this is no place for eulogies, and an enumeration of his many good qualities would be offensive to him--if he were here to hear it--as it would be unsuitable for this, occasion.
"We are assembled, Christian people--possibly some others--Christian believers in a Christian church during the Easter festival. We are here in this service to cleanse and re-charge ourselves by meditation on the Easter message. It is not sufficient for us to dwell with respectful longing and affection on the man we have lost.
THE REAL THOUGHT
"We must not come to this church, during Easter especially. to dwell on thoughts of life cut short--though his life was prolonged beyond the average--on hopes extinguished or usefulness arrested, on high power given only to be taken away. These are reflections which may easily come to us as we think of him who is gone.
"But language, feeling, thought may exceed their strength in dwelling on the darkness and doubts of human existence and fortunes. I think the real thought to carry away with us as we meet in the face of death is to remember man was not made in vain, man for whom Christ died. He was not made to perish, with all his thoughts and affections--perish in the dust of God, for whom Christ died and rose again, and for whom Christ now lives--now.”
THE FUNERAL
The funeral took place privately yesterday, with a service in Holy Trinity Church, Seaton Carew, prior to cremation at Darlington. The service, which was choral, was conducted by Canon Booth and the Rev. R. A. Beddoes, Vicar of Greatham.
The principal mourners were: Mr. Francis Thomlinson (son), Major Beresford-Peirse (son-in-law), Mr. C. L. Wainwright, J.P. (son-in-law), Mr. John Peirse (grandson), Mr. A. K. Steel (nephew), Mr. Peter Kirk, Darlington (brother-in-law). Among intimate friends who also attended were Dr. A. Ainsley, Messrs. F. W. J. Webb, Henry Chapman, A. Glendenning, R. Johnson, J. Ashley Barton, J.P., E. Judson, W. Wilson Clark, and the staff of The Green.
The only floral tributes were from members of the family.
Canon Booth officiated at the cremation.
The arrangements were carried out by H. Mason, Ltd., West Hartlepool.
(''Hartlepool Northern Daily Mail''; Wednesday 19 May 1943)
The three James Forsyths of Horton Township, Kings, NS
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The Tichenor Family in America
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The Tilney family connection between the Royal family of TUDOR, the premier ducal family of FITZALAN HOWARD Dukes of Norfolk and the COACHMAN family
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The Timeline for Edward Hicks Senior, The Spy
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The Timmons family of Ohio and Indiana
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Citing Page: 54; Affiliate Publication Number: M653; Affiliate Film Number: 268; FHL microfilm: 803268; Record number: 18398;
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M4NB-FN6 FamilySearch] (accessed 21 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYBB-366G FamilySearch Image] Image number 00484
John Timmons (70) in Jordan Township, Jasper, Indiana, United States. Born in Delaware. As the census does not indicate the relationship of this man to the head of household, we cannot be certain of his relationship. However, his age would likely exclude him as a child of John (only 15 years older) and indicate that perhaps he is a brother or a cousin. The name Abijah is also less common so may be a family name and easier to track in the records. ALso fo note is that Aibjah is born in Maryland, indicating that there is a likely a connection between the Maryland and Delaware Timmons families. There is another [[Timmons-1223|Abijah Timmons (1773-1827)]] on WikiTree, who is the brother of [[Timmons-1239|Abraham Timmons (abt.1765-abt.1812)]], who I think might be the father of John. Abraham was from Maryland and moved to Deerfield, Ross, Ohio and whose sons [[Timmons-1430|Wingate]] and [[Timmons-1429|Joshua]] both married women with the surname Rowan - [[Rowan-1457|Nancy]] and [[Rowan-1462|Sarah]] respectively. Our John married Margaret Rowen. Some online trees have suggested that Nancy and Sarah's father [[Rowan-600|Alexander Rowan]] is Margaret's father. It would be normal for a man to name a son after his brother, so it's possible that Abijah and John are also Abraham Timmons' sons, but more digging is needed. To try to uncover their relationship, I looked for other records of Abijah. We find him 10 years earlier living in the household of [[Timmons-2333|Wilson L. Timmons (abt.1811-1878)]] '''1850 Census''': "United States Census, 1850"
Citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.).
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MXQY-XLH FamilySearch] (accessed 21 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-67C9-MGJ FamilySearch Image] Image number 00203
Abajah Timmons (46) in Monroe Township, Pickaway, Ohio, United States. . {| border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 | Name || Sex || Age || Occupation || Birth Place |- | Wilson Timmons || M || 40 || || Ohio |- | Emaline Timmons || F || 35 || || Delaware |- | Esther Timmons || F || 12 || || Ohio |- | Nancy E Timmons || F || 10 || || Ohio |- | William H Timmons || M || 7 || || Ohio |- | '''Abajah Timmons''' || '''M''' || '''46''' || ||'''Maryland''' |- | Sarah A Timmons || F || 21 || || Ohio |- | Eliza Timmons || F || 18 || || Ohio |} Again, we are not told how these people are related, but from the way the names are arranged with Sarah and Eliza coming after Abijah, it suggests that he is their father and not Wilson. Given the closeness of their ages, it is posssible that Abijah adn Wilson are brothers. In the 1840 census Abijah is again found in Monroe Township, '''1840 Census''': "United States Census, 1840"
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRR-B9Q FamilySearch] (accessed 21 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YB7-W54 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00543
Abijah Timmons in Monroe Township, Pickaway, Ohio, United States. In the household are 1 male 30-40, 1 female under 5, 1 female 5-10, one female 10-15 and 1 female 30-40. , so it would appear Abijah had a family and that Sarah and Eliza who were found with him in 1850 were 2 of his 3 daughters. ( the ages fit) It is possible that his wife and younger daughter died between 1840 and 1850. We can find Wilson Timmons on the same census page and it does not show children of the right age to be these two girls Also on the same census page are: ::Margaret Timmins, aged betwen 50 and 60 with a girl betwen the ages of 10 and 15. ::William Timmins, in a household with two men, one between 20 and 30 and the other between 60 and 70. ==Tracking the Timmons Family== In the early 1800s, many Timmons along with other families made the trip from Maryland and Delaware to Ohio, settling mainly in Ross and Pickaway Counties and later some moved to Indiana, settling in Tippecanoe and Jasper. Many of these lines appear to link back to one common ancestor: [[Timmons-1189|John William Timmons (abt.1620-abt.1680)]] whose son WIlliam settled in Maryland. I've begun to list here what Timmons I could find in extant census records in a effort to determine family groups and ultimately prove John's parentage. Input from others is welcomed. '''Feel free to edit and improve this page.''' ==Timmons Heads of Household in Delaware 1810== :'''Smith Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 328, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-T6K FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-QG7 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00177
Smith Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Jno Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 327, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-RG7 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-QD9 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00176
Jno Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Levi Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 327, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-RGY FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-QD9 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00176
Levi Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Jno Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 337, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-RV2 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYBM-Q7K FamilySearch Image] Image number 00181
Jno Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Caty Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 339, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-RKT FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYBM-Q64 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00182
Caty Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Hester Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 329, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-TX3 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-QG7 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00177
Hester Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Noble Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 328, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-T62 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-QG7 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00177
Noble Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. : '''Steph Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 335, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-RJ3 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-Q8K FamilySearch Image] Image number 00180
Steph Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Geo Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 339, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-TM6 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYBM-Q64 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00182
Geo Timmonds in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Jno Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 338, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-RKD FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYBM-Q64 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00182
Jno Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Wm Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 328, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-TXD FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-QG7 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00177
Wm Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Ezekl Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 327, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-RGR FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-QD9 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00176
Ezekl Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Aaron Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 327, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-RGW FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-QD9 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00176
Aaron Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Wm Timmons''' was in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 334, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-RNP FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-Q8K FamilySearch Image] Image number 00180
Wm Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Sela Timmons''' was in Baltimore, Dagsboro, Indian River, Lewis, Rehoboth, and Broadkill, Sussex, Delaware, United States. '''1810 Census''': "United States Census, 1810"
Citing p. 439, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 224,381.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH24-BG4 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBM-QSK FamilySearch Image] Image number 00233
Sela Timmons in Baltimore, Dagsboro, Indian River, Lewis, Rehoboth, and Broadkill, Sussex, Delaware, United States. ==Timmons Heads of Household in Delaware 1800== :'''John Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-F5M FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
John Timmons Jr in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Lehiel Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-N6W FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
Lehiel Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Eli Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-N6S FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
Eli Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Jas Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-FPP FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
Jas Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''John Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-FPY FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
John Timmons Sr in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Noble Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-FP5 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
Noble Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Joshue Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-N6H FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
Joshua Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Wm Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-F5H FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
Wm Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Mathew Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-F5S FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
Mathew Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Gillip Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-N64 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
Gillip Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''Smith Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-FPD FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
Smith Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. :'''John Timmons''' in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, p. 389 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 389, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 4; FHL microfilm 6,413.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRH-N63 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9R8F-S37 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00207
John Timmons in Broad Creek Hundred, Sussex, Delaware, United States. ==Timmons Heads of Household in Maryland 1800== :'''Thomas Timmons Jr.''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211 '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LN9 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
Thomas Timmons Jr in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Abraham Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 234 '''1800 Census''':"United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 234, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-L9F FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RZK-YH FamilySearch Image] Image number 00240
Abraham Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Charls Timmons'''in Emmitsburg, Frederick, p. 172. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 172, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 10; FHL microfilm 193,663.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH55-KP1 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GR8Q-J6M FamilySearch Image] Image number 00179
Charls Timmons in Emmitsburg, Frederick, Maryland, United States. :'''Samuel Timmons''' in Nanticoke, Somerset. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 41, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-6GC FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RZK-9J FamilySearch Image] Image number 00047
Samuel Timmons in Nanticoke, Somerset, Maryland, United States. :'''Geo Timmona''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 234. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 234, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LS3 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RZK-YH FamilySearch Image] Image number 00240
Geo Timmons Sr in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Benjamin Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 210. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 210, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LX7 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RZK-9QG FamilySearch Image] Image number 00216
Benjamin Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Ephriam Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LF2 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
Ephriam Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Aaron Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcesterp. 234. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 234, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LS8 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RZK-YH FamilySearch Image] Image number 00240
Aaron Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''George Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 199. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 199, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-5LQ FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RZK-BC FamilySearch Image] Image number 00205
George Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Elisha Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LFJ FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
Elisha Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :''' Nancy Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LFX FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
Nancy Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :''' Whittington TImmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LF6 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
Whittington Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Geo Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 234. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 234, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-L9J FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RZK-YH FamilySearch Image] Image number 00240
Geo Timmons Jr in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :''' George Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 198. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 198, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-52Q FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9MG FamilySearch Image] Image number 00204
George Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Thomas Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LF8 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
Thomas Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Esau Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 208. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 208, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-28P FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-LF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00214
Esau Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :''' Isaac Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 205. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 205, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-27Z FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RZK-TG FamilySearch Image] Image number 00211
Isaac Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Edward Timmons''' in Anne Arundel, p. 102. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 102, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 9; FHL microfilm 193,662.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH5R-VMT FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GR8N-JV7 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00060
Edward Timmons in Anne Arundel, Maryland, United States. :'''David Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LFK FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
David Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Leonard Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LNM FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
Leonard Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :''' Elizah Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester. p. 210. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 210, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LXY FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RZK-9QG FamilySearch Image] Image number 00216
Elizah Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''George Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LFD FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
George Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''George Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LFD FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
George Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :''' Josse Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 211. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 211, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-LFL FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-9JF FamilySearch Image] Image number 00217
Josse Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Isaac Timmons''' in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, p. 202. '''1800 Census''': "United States Census, 1800"
Citing p. 202, NARA microfilm publication M32, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 12; FHL microfilm 193,665.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHRC-BL8 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZK-XM FamilySearch Image] Image number 00208
Isaac Timmons in Boquetenorton Hundred, Worcester, Maryland, United States. ==Timmons Heads of Household in Maryland1790== In the 1790 census Thomas was in Worcester, Maryland, United States. '''1790 Census''': "United States Census, 1790"
Citing p. 151, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-ZWK FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY8-3STJ FamilySearch Image] Image number 00458
Thomas Timmonds in Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Stephen Timmonds''' in Worcester, p. 151 "United States Census, 1790"Citing p. 151, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-Z7C FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY8-3STJ FamilySearch Image] Image number 00458 :'''Thos Timmon''' in Harford, p. 303. "United States Census, 1790" Citing p. 303, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-NM7 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YY8-SNGG FamilySearch Image] Image number 00538 :'''Edward Timmins''' in Anne Arundel, p 413. "United States Census, 1790" Citing p. 413, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKT-TT3 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YY8-SVSD FamilySearch Image] Image number 00232 :'''Whittington Timmonds''' in Worcester, p. 145 "United States Census, 1790" Citing p. 145, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-CKJ FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YY8-SV6P FamilySearch Image] Image number 00455 :'''James Timmonds''' Worcester, p. 151. "United States Census, 1790"
Citing p. 151, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-ZQD FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY8-3STJ FamilySearch Image] Image number 00458. :''' Joseph Timmonds''' in Worcester, p. 151. "United States Census, 1790"
Citing p. 151, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-ZQ6 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY8-3STJ FamilySearch Image] Image number 00458
Joseph Timmonds in Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Edwd Timmons''' in Harford, p. 303. "United States Census, 1790" Citing p. 303, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-NMB FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YY8-SNGG FamilySearch Image] Image number 00538 :'''Joseph Timmonds''' in Worcester, p. 147. "United States Census, 1790"Citing p. 147, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-CTB FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY8-3S88 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00456 :'''Elijah Timmonds''' in Worcester, p. 151. "United States Census, 1790"
Citing p. 151, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-ZWV FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY8-3STJ FamilySearch Image] Image number 00458
in Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Benjamin Timmonds''' in Worcester, p. 149 "United States Census, 1790"Citing p. 149, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-CPN FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY8-3SZ1 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00457 :'''Wm Timmonds''' in Worcester, p. 147. '''1790 Census''': "United States Census, 1790"
Citing p. 147, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-CT1 FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY8-3S88 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00456
Wm Timmonds in Worcester, Maryland, United States. :'''Nehemiah Timmonds''' in Worcester, p. 147. "United States Census, 1790"Citing p. 147, NARA microfilm publication M637, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 3; FHL microfilm 568,143.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHKY-C1T FamilySearch] (accessed 23 November 2021)
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY8-3S88 FamilySearch Image] Image number 00456
==Sources==
The tips of Evas tree
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The Tobacco Industry In Detroit
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The town of AYR
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The Town of Porthmadog, Wales - Registration District
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Christmas_2000.jpg
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The Trammel Families of Lincoln County, Georgia
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The_Trammel_Families_of_Lincoln_County_Georgia.pdf
The Trek of the Huscrofts in 1891
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The Trial of James Fentress Sr. for Murder
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Or a copy of the file can be requested from [[Fentress-129|David Fentress]].
There follows immediately below a transcription of that document which has maintained the original page structure.
Page 1
TENNESSEE - Pleas before the Circuit Court for Smith County at the court house in Carthage, in the county aforesaid on the second monday in October eighteen hundred and thirtyfive, present the honorable Samual Anderson judge.
The State of Tennessee ysett(?) |
vs | Indictment for Murder
James Fentress defendant |
To wit. "Be it remembered, that at a Circuit Court of Law and Equity, began and held for the county of Smith in the third judicial circuit of this State of Tennessee, at the court house in the town of Carthage in the county aforesaid, on the second monday being the twelfth day of October anno domine eighteen hundred and thirtyfive, and of the independance of the United States the sixtieth, present the honorable Samuel Anderson judge of the eleventh judicial circuit, and here presiding by virtue of an interchange of ridings with the honorable Abraham Caruthers: Proclamation being made, court was duly opened and thereupon, Samuel P. Howard Sheriff of said county, returned the Venire facias, and certified unto court, that he had duly summoned the following gentlemen good and lawful men of Smith County, to serve as jurors at the present term of this court, and who had been nominated & appointed for that purpose by the worshipful court of Pleas & quarter Sessios of Smith County, at the May Sessions last past; Said Venire facias containing the list of said jurors, having been handed to said Sheriff by Jonathan Pickett clerk of said court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions towit Peter Harod, George T. Wright, James McNurray, Samuel T. Coker, Thomas Bridges, James Kitchen, Moses Eastes, John Payne, Don C. Finley, John Trousdale junior, Milton Apple, James Gwalburg, Wesley Harvey, William Floyd, John Donsho, Thomas Allen, Thomas Allison, David Tysee, Richardson Cartwright, Beneon P. Lipscomb, Edmond S. Bradley, Brice F. Marten, Elijah Haynie, Exusn(?) Whitley, Joseph Winston and Henry B. McDonald all of whom this day appeared in open court (except Thomas Allison) and from whom the following gentlemen,
Page 2
good and lawful men of Smith county were duly elected empanneled and sworn as a grand jury of inquest for the body of the county of Smith during this term, towit, Henry B. McDonald (who was by the court appointed foreman), Edmind S. Bradley, Benson P. Lipscomb, Joseph Winston, John Trousdale junior, John Donoho, John Payne, Milton Apple, Don C, Finley, David Tyree, Exum Whitley, Elijah Haynie and Peter Harod : And the grand jurors aforesaid having been charged by the court touching(?) their present Service retired to their room attended by Thomas W. Page a duly chosen and sworn Constable. Said Sheriff also certified that George Rison who was also named in the list of jurors, had departed this life since his appointment and that George Baker also named as a juror on said list, had not been found in his county, Said Sheriff further certified, that he had summoned Benjamin Blades and Thomas W. Page, constables, as in said Venire also commanded, the latter of whom was duly sworn to attend the grand jury ----
===========| The grand jury came into court and presented a bill of
14th October | indictment against James Fentress for Murder, endorsed by
===========| their foreman "a true bill." (which is as follows) towit State of Tennessee, Smith County Circuit Court for said county, October term, in the year of our lord on thousand and eight hundred and thirtyfive. The Grand Jurors, for the state of Tennessee elected, empannelled, sworn and charged to inquire for the body of the county of Smith aforesaid, upon their oath present, that James Fentress, late of said county, yeoman, on the third day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand& eighthundred and thirtyfive , (not having the fear of God before his eyes, but being moved and seduced by the instigation of the devil) with force and arms, in the county aforesaid, in and upon one William Walker in the peace of God and our said state then and there being feloniously wilfully deliberately, unlawfullypremeditatedly and of hie malice aforethought did make an asaualt : and that the said James Fentress a certain Rifle Gun of the value of fifteen dollars, then and there loaded and charged with gunpowder and one leaden bullet, which Rifle Gun, he the siad James Fentress in his right hand then and there had and held to, at, against and upon the said William Walker, then and there feloniously, willfully, delierately, unlawfully, premeditatedly and of
Page 3
malice aforethought did Shoot and discharge, and that the seid James Fentress with the leaden bullet aforesaid, out of the Rifle Gun aforesiad, then and there by force of the gunpowder, shot and sent forth as aforesaid, the said William Walker, in and upon the left breast of him the said William Walker a little above the left pap of him the said William Walker, then and there feloniously, willfully, delierately, unlawfully, premeditatedly and of his malice aforethought, did strike, penetrate and wound, geraig(?) to the said William Walker, then and there, with the leaden bulletaforesaid, so as aforesiad shot, discharged and sent forth out of the Rifle Gun aforesaid by the said James Fentress, in and upon the left breast of him the said William Walker a little above the left pap on him the said William Salker, one mortal wound of the depth of ten inches and of the breadth of half an inch of which said mortal wound the said William Walker, then and there, at towit, in the county aforesaid instantly died : And so, the jurors aforesaid, upon their oath aforesaid, do say, that the said James Fentress, the said William Walker, in manner and form, and by the means aforesaid feloniously, willfully, delierately, unlawfully, premeditatedly and of his malice aforethought, did Kill and Murder in the first degree contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the state. AND the Jurors aforesaid, upon their oath aforesaid do further present that the said James Fentress late of the county of Smith aforesaid, yeoman, on the day and year aforesaid, in the county aforesaid, with force and arms (not having the fear of God before his eyes but being moved and seduced by the instigation of the devil) in and upon one William Walker, in the peace of God and our said state, then and there being, feloniously did make an assault ; and that the said James Fentress with a certain Rifle Gun of the value of fifteen dollars, then and there loaded and charged with gunpowder and on leaden bullet (which Rifle Gun the said James Fentress, in both his hands then and there had and held) to, at, against and upon the said William Walker, then and there feloniously did shoot and discharge, and that the siad Jaimes Fentress with the leaden bullet aforesaid, out of the RifleGun aforesaid, then and there by force of the gunpowder sent forth and shot as aforesaid, the said William Walker, in and upon the left breast of him the said William
Page 4
Walker, a little above the left pap of him the said William Walker then and there feloniously did strike, penetrate and wound, giving to the said William Walker then and there, with the leaden bullet aforesaid, & as aforesaid shot, discharged and sent forth out of the Rifle Gun aforesaid, by the said fames Fentress, in and upon the left breast, above the left pap of him the said William Walker one mortal wound of the depth of ten inches and of the breadth of half an inch ; of which said mortal wound, the said William Walker then and there instantly died : And so, the jurors aforesaid, upon their oath aforesaid, do say that the said James Fentress, the said William Walker in manner and form aforesaid, in the county aforesaid, feloniously did kill and slay ; contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignaty of the State.
--- Samuel Yeager, attorney general for the State of Tennessee, in the sixth solicitorial district (endorsed) Elisha Walker, prosecuter - Wilson Y. Walker, Elisha Walker, Samuel M. Murray, Hugh Bradley, Richard Brown, George W. Walker, Hiram H. Johnson, Frederick Uhls, William Kyle, Thomas Phelps and Lovett Dias, witnesses for the state and sworn in open court and sent before the grand jury.
13 October 1835 - test. Har C. clk.(?)
"A true bill", Henry B. McDonald, foreman of the Grand Jury.
============| Came the attorney general for the State and the said defendant
15th October | James Fentress in proper person when said defendant was
============| arraigned and charged on a bill of enditement for the murder of one William Walker, and thereupon said defendant for plea says he is not guilty in manner and form as charged in said bill of indictment, and of this he puts himself upon the County; and the attorney general for the state doth the like. Then came a jury of good and lawful men, towit, Leonard H. Cardwell, Alfred Bains, Andrew Jourancease(?), Taylor Whitley, Johnson Samson, Simon P. Hughes, Joshua Killibrew, Thomas T. Young, William A. Lack, Mastin Freeman, Warner Rucks and Nathan Bardone ; who were duly elected, tried and sworn, the truth to speak upon the issue of traverse(?) joined(?), and true deliverence to make between the State of Tennessee and the said defendant, James Fentress ; And afer hearing a part of the testimony, because
Page 5
the trial cannot be ended on this evening, the jurors aforesaid, are placed under the care and charge of Benjamin Blades, duly chosen and sworn for the purpose of keeping them together and apart from other persons, until tomorrow morning, half after seven Oclk. And the defendant was remanded to prison.
============| Came again the attorney general for the state, and the said
16th October | defendant James Fentress, was again led to the bar, and then
============| came also the same jury elected, tried, empanneled and sworn in this case on yesterday and who had been placed under the charge and care of Benjamin Blades, constable as aforesaid; when after the day spent in hearing testimony, because there is not time for the trial to be ended on this evening, the jurors aforesaid, are again placed under the charge and care of saaid Benjamine Blades, to be by him kept together and apart from other persons, until tomorrow morning half after 7 Oclk : And the defendant was remanded to prison.
============| Came again the attorney general for the state, and the said
17th October | defendant James Fentress, was again led to the bar, and then
============| came also the same jury elected, tried, and sworn in this case, and who had been placed under the care and charge of Benjamin Blades, constable on yessterday evening ; and after hearing the testimony and a part of the arguements of council, because there is not time for the trial to be ended, the jurors aforesaid are again placed under the care and charge of said Benjamin Blades, constable, to be by him kept together and apart from other persons until monday morning eight Oclk.
============| Came again the attorney general for the state, and the said
19th October | defendant James Fentress, was again led to the bar, and then
============| came also the same jury elected, tried, and sworn in this case, and who had been kept under the care of said Benjamin Blades, constable ; and after hearing the arguments of council, and the charge of the court, because there is no fime for the trial to be ended on this evening, the jury aforesaid are again placed under the care and charge of said Benjamin Blade and Robert Allen, constables, to be by them kept together and apart from other persons, until tomorrow morning. And defendant was remanded to prison.
============| Came again the attorney general for the state, and the said
20th October | defendant James Fentress, was again led to the bar, and then
============| came again the same jury elected, tried, and sworn in this case,
Page 6
and who had been kept under the care and charge of said Benjamin Blades and Robert Allen, constables as aforesaid, since yesterday evening ; And the jurors aforesaid, upon their oaths aforesaid do say that the defendant is NOT GUILTY of murder in the first degree, in manner and form as charged in the first count of the indictment ; but, the jurors aforesaid, upon their oath aforesaid, do further say, that the defendant is GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER in the manner and form as charged in the second count in the indictment, and they also say, that said defendant shall be confined in the Jail and Penetentiary house of the State of Tennessee for the period and term of three years and six months.
--- The defendant James Fentress here in open court acknowledged himself indebted to the State of Tennessee in the sum of twentyfive hundred dollars, to be levied of his goods and chattels, lands and tenements for the use of said state ; to be to be void nevertheless, upon condition that he makes his personal appearance from day to day before this court, during the present term, to abide & perform the judgement of said court in the case of the State of Tennessee against him for homicide in killing said William Walker and not depart without leave of said court.
--- Came here in open court John Y Roper and John Williamson and acknowledged themselves jointly and severally indebted to the State of Tennessee in the sum of twentyfive hundred dollars , to be levied of their goods and chattels lands and tenements, for the use of said State ; to be void nevertheless upon condition that James Fentress shall make his personal appearance before the court now in session from day to day during the present term, to abide and perform the judgement of said court, in the case of the State of Tennessee against him for homicide in killing said William Walker, and not depart without leave of said court.
============| Came again the attorney general for the state, and the said
24th October | defendant James Fentress in proper person, when said defendant
============| prayed the court for a new trial ; and after arguments had on the motion, by the attorney general, and the attornies for the defendant, the motion was overruled, and the court refused to grant a new trial. When, on motion of the attorney general, for judgement on the verdict of the jury, it is considered
Page 7
by the court, that said defendant, James Fentress, be confined in the jail and penetentiary house of the State of Tennessee, for the term of three years and six months, commencing on the second day of November next, and that the State of Tennessee recover against said defendant the cost of scist(?). And it is ordered by the court that the Sheriff of Smith County, have said defendant at said jail and penetentiary house on sisd second day of November. The defendant by his atourney, tendered his bill of exception to the opinion of the court, in refusing to grant a new trial, which was signed and sealed by the court and ordered to be made a part of the record. The defendant by his attorney prayed an appeal in the nature of a writ(?) of error, to the Supreme Court of Errors and Appeals held at Sparta in in said state, and to him it is granted.
--- The defendant James Fentress here in open court acknowledges himself indebted to the State of Tennessee in the sum of twentyfive hundred dollars, to be levied of his goods and chattels, lands and tenements for the use of said state ; to be void, nevertheless, upon condition that he makes his personal appearance before the judges of the Supreme Court of Errors and Appeals for the State of Tennessee at the next ensuing(?) term of said Supreme Court held at the court house in the town of Sparta, on the first monday of August next ; or at such other time and place as may be appointed for the next term of said Supreme Court for the middle section or division of said state, and then and there to present an appeal in the nature of a writ of error, this day granted him to said Supreme Court, on a judgement rendered against him in the Circuit Court for Smith Sounty, on an indictment for homicide, in feloniously slaying one William Walker. And then and there to abide the order and judgement of said Supreme Court in the premises ; and not depart without leave.
--- John Y Roper and John N. Williamson here in open court, acknowledged themselves jointly and severally indebted to the State of Tennessee in the sum of twentyfive hundred dollars, to be levied of their goods and chattels lands and tenements, for the use of said State ; to be void, nevertheless, upon condition that James Fentress shall make his personal appearance before the judges of the Supreme Court of Errors and Appeals for the
Page 8
State of Tennessee at the next ensuing term of said Supreme Court held at the court house in Sparta on the first Monday in August next, or at such time and place as may be appointed for the next term of said Supreme Court for the middle section or division of said State, then and there, to present an appeal in the nature of a writ of Error, this day granted to him in the Circuit Court for Smith County to said Supreme Court, on a judgement rendered against him on an indictment for homicide, in feloniously slaying one William Walker ; and then and there abide the order and judgement of said Supreme Court in the premises and not depart without leave.
============| The account of Henry B. McDonald for entertaining jurors and
27th October | constables confined on the trial (of James Fentress) was
============| presented and sworn to ; and being examined & approved by the attorney general, is allowed and ordered to be taxed in the bill of Cest(?) court(?). 184 diets @ 25¢ = $46. & 66 lodgings @ 12½¢ = $8.25 = $54.25 in all : fiftyfour dollars and twenty five cents.
============| The account of James Alexander jailor, for keeping the
28th October | defendant (James Fentress) was presented and sworn to ; and
============| having been allowed by the court it is ordered that the same be certified to the Treasurer of the state for payment to wit Keeping the defendant 17 days @ 37¼¢ = $6.37½ (and) 11 Turn Keys @ 50¢ = $5.50, $11.87½ in all, Eleven dollars and Eightyeight cents.
--- --- --- ---- Bill of Exceptions --- --- --- --- --- ---
Be it remembered that this cause (State vs James Fentress) came on to be tried this __ day of October 1835, before the honorable Samuel Anderson judge & when the following testimony was submitted to the jury on the part of the state towit
============| son of the deceased said, defendant and deceased had been
Elisha Walker | quarrelling and abusing each other for about three years -
============| that the dispute arose about the dower of old Mrs. Walker, the mother of deceased and also of defendant's wife - that defendant and the widow had swap'd about three years ago - that there had been no good blood between these parties since - that defendant had given deceased a cursing about once a week and sometimes oftener for about three years - that the defendant always began the quarrel, and that deceased never abused defendant or said anything in reply to his abuse for about eighteen months past - That deceased had not spoken to defendant since last christmas was(?) a year until on the day before he was killed as witness know of - That on friday, the day
Page 9
before he was killed defendant was a work in his tobacco patch about sixty yards from the house of deceased about 12 oclk near the lot fence and began to abuse decease, called him many hard names, such as whore master, old baptist etc. and said "that one Miller had whip'd him with a cow hide and cut all the skin off of his back etc. Witness said that defendant rubbed his back etc. saying that deceased had done do when Miller was shipping and that he cried "O.Lordy! O.Lordy!" Witness was at this time about two hundred and fifty yards distant from the parties in the tobacco ground - that deceased was nearer to witness than defendant - deceased usually spoke in a low tone of voice and defendant usually talked very loud - witness could not hear what deceased said, but could distinctly hear what defendant said to him. Defendant first began to throw rocks at deceased - he saw deceased afterwards stoop down in the creek to ger up a rock, and while in the act of getting it, defendant threw a rock at him ah=nd he dodged behind the corner of the fence. Defendant called for his gun , and one of his daughters brought it to him. Defendant then started in a brisk walk towards his own house and deceased followed him in a very fast walk. Defendant went on to the house and deceased stop'd at the road - Witness then went to where his father was and they both went up to defendants yard fence - his father dared defendant who was then in his house to come out and fight it out with him - saying he would fight(?) him with his gun - Witness also asked defendant to come out and fight him, but defendant would not come. Witness and his father then went back home. Defendant and his father lived about two hundred yards from each other. Witness afterwards on the same evening saw defendant at work in his tobacco ground, and his father went from his own housedown to the road near to where defendant was, and witness as too far off to hear what was said at this time - he saw his father in defendant's tobacco ground - Next morning (Saturday) little after sunrise aaid his father went down to the lot near the road where defendant was, and defendant began to curse and abuse him again, but his father did not say anything to him - Defendant talked loud and you might hear him half a mile - About 12 oclk the same day defendant was down at his lot, and his
Page 10
father went down to the road near to where he was, and defendant began to abuse him again, and they both quarrelled and abused each other very much, Defendant again called for his gun, which was brought to him ; defendant, howeverhad started to the house before he got the gun, his father followed on after him. Defendant said if he ever came on his premises he would make a window hole through him. His father stop'd at the road and went back home, and defendant went on to his house and put away his gun. In about an hour, and immediately after dinner, witness saw defendant down at his tobacco ground at work, he heard his father say "Yonder is the old rascal now without his gun and I will go and give him a whipping - saying that he had often tried to catch him and whip him, but never could catch him. That he always got his gun and run home. Witness was now at the house preparing to go to a camp meeting in the neighborhood. His father went down to where defendant - as his father went he saw him stoop down in the road, whether he picked up anything or not, witness does not know - his father got over into defendant's tobacco ground and went towards defendant - Witness heard defendant call for his gun, his father still advanced upon him - defendant started towards his house, they went pretty fast - defendant got into a run, thinks his father went in a fast walk, was some twenty or thirty yards behind defendant. One of defendant's daughters brought him his gun, for he kept hollering for it - the gun was handed to him at the fence where he got out of the tobacco ground into the road - defendant still retreated after he got the gun, he crossed the road, and got over the yard fence and went into his house - His father still followed without stopping until he got to the yard fence, when he got upon the yard fence he made a stop for a short time, then got down and walked within about ten or fifteen feet of the door and stopped and set the stick out one end before him on the ground and holding the top end with both his hands, apparently leaning on the stick. Witness was at this time sitting on the door sell at home washing his hands -
page 11
he got up and stepped into the house, and was standing wiping his hands at the towel when he heard the gunfire he stepped out at the door, and saw his father falling and his face had nearly reached the ground, his father fell nearer to, and more in front of the door than where he was when he last saw him standing leaning upon the stick. Witness ran over as soon as he could and when he got there he turned him over he was dead and had bled very much - Defendant had shut the door - Witness had kept his eyes on his father during the while time from the time he left the house until he came to where he stood leaning on the stick, and witness went into the house to wipe his hands - Witness being interrogated says he has often seen his father go after defendant to whip him, but defendant would always call for his gun and run home and get into the house - his father would follow him sometimes to the road and sometimes to defendants yard fence, but never could catch him - That his father said when he started and said he would go and whip the old rascal now that he has not got his gun, that he had often tried to catch him and whip him, but he always would run and get his gun, and keep out of his way. Said defendant always began the quarrel and his father would not say anything in reply to his abuse - That defendant had been in the habit of cursing and abusing his father about once a wee upon average and sometimes two or three times a week for the last eighteen months - that his father had not spoken to defendant for that time. Witness further said upon sross examination that while his father was at breakfast that morning before was killed, he heard him say that he would whip defendant, that he had borne his abuse as long as he could. Witness replied to him in a jocular manner, that he did not think they would fight, because both were to great cowards. Witness further stated that his father had been drinking for about a week - he drank by spells - he had been sober for some time before that week - whenever he drank it was by spells -
Page 12
Witness said defendant never came to his fathers' fields to quarrel with him, nor did defendant ever attempt to drive his father from his work - Said he had seen his father very often go to where defendant was at work and defendant would retire to his house - could not say how often this had happened - it had not happened for eighteen months before the killing - Witness stated when he took his eyes off his father in defendant's yard his eyes were not off of him more than a minute or about a minute. He further stated that his father got the tobacco stick in defendant's tobacco ground. He further stated that defendant often came near to his father and abused him very grossly, accused him of going to negro quarters, and caught the venerial disease He did this in the hearing of the family of the deceased towit, his wife and daughters, and he did it at one time when ther was company at the house. This witness was from appearance between twenty and twentyfive years old - no proof was given of his age - weight would be about one hundred and fortyfive pound. When he and his father were proposing to fight at the defendant's house on friday before the killing, defendant observed he would not fight him (deceased), for he was rotten with venerial, and he (defendant) would not fight a corpse - Defendant told witness at the same time, that his father was a dissgrace to him, and that he witness ought to kill him. Witness said Fentress was rather larger than his father.
==================| Says he was at camp meeting and was sent for to go to
Samuel D. M. Murray | defendants - Went and set as one of the justices that
==================| composed the examining court - Said defendant admitted he killed the man but that he did it in self-defence. Deceased was shot about half way between the nipple of the left breast and the collar bone, the bullet came out near the lower left edge of the right shoulder blade, broke the shoulder and the ball lodged and stopped at the skin - witness cut it out, was very muched brused. Upon the trial before the magistrates, the smallest rock and the stick which are now shown was produced as being the weapons used by Walker in the
Page 13
fight - is certain they are the same, because he (witness) took possession of them after the trial was over ; and kept them eversince, and brought them with him to court. The place in the yard where deceased was lying was about eightiin inches lower than the level of defendants floor. Witness said a ususl load of power in the ordinary atmosphere would all burn up within four or six feet from the muzzel of the gun. Witness being called back said it was a very windy day, and that the wind blew very strong from the South - Witness examined the deceased clothes for weapons and found mothing but a twist of tobacco - He also examined in the house for blood and also the platform before the door and found none. He also said that Mary Fentress on the trial before the justices did not speak of but one stone being thrown by defendant at Walker, and said that it rolled under the cupboard when it was thrown.
==============| (Son of deceased) Said the parties some years back had
Wilson Y. Walker | quarrelled about the land, after they fell out defendant
==============| abused his father about once a week and sometimes two or three times a week up to time of deceased's death that his father never made any replies to defendant's abuse - his father always spoke low and defendant very loud - had often seen his father go after defendant into his fields to whip him, when he would be cursing him, but defendant would always get his gun and run home into the house, and threatened, if his father came upon his premises he would kill him or shoot him, but his father never would catch him - had heard his father tell defendant if ever he caught him out in company he would thrash him for his abuse to him - heard defendant abusing his father on friday - heard him repeat over the story about Miller's whipping him, in substance the same as was stated by Elisha Walker - Was about three of four hundred yards off - The parties had another quarrel Saturday morning before breakfast, and another about twelve oclk, but witness was too far off to hear what was said. Soon after saw his father going down to where defendant was in his tobacco ground - Was at this time about four hundred yards off at work in the tobacco - heard defendant abusing his father - saw his father cross the road - go to the fence, and get over the fence - Defendant called to his daughter to bring him his gun - he started to the house - met his daughter with the
Page 14
gun - he set off in about half run towards his own house talking very loud and abusing his father, and his father followed in after the defendant in a very fast walk, with a tobacco stick in his hand, at the distance of about about twentyfive or thirty yards behind - defendant kept constantly looking back at his father as he was going along - Defendant went on, crossed the yard fence which was about twentyfive or thirty yards from the house, and went on with his gun in his hand, almost in a run into the house - When his father came to yard fence he stopp'd and set on the fence a short time, how long he could not say, but it was a very short little while - he got down off the fence and advanced with the tobacco stick in his hand until he came within about twelve or fifteen feet of the door where he stop'd - set one end of his stick upon the ground, holding the other end in both of his hands, and where he last saw him fefore he heard the gun apparantly leaning upon his stick with his face to the door and directly in front of it. His father stood there about five minutes = WWitness had heard the horn blow for dinner and told the hands, that they must finish the work before they would go to dinner, and witness commenced picking up tobacco plants which had been cut, and had picked up five or six plants, when he heard the gun fire - looked and saw his father falling in the yard, his face had nearly reached the ground - Witness then started and run as fast as he could to his father, but before he got there, his brother Elisha had got there and turned him over - His father fell directly before the door, and across the door, and his head up the hill, and it was at the south door. His father fell at the same place where he was standing leaning upon his stick before the gun fired. Witness'e eyes was not off of his father more than about one minute before he heard the gun fire. Witness saw his father and brother Elisha at the yard fence of defendant the day before - Elisha came home, but this father had been drinking for about a week before he was killed, and at the time he was killed, the jug was nearly empty.
=============| (Brother of deceased) Says he lives about three or four
George Walker | hundred yards from defendant and deceased - had frequently
=============| heard defendant cursing and abusing deceased, as far as to his house. Could not hear deceased say
Page 15
anything - had frequently seen defendant standing at his own house and deceased at his, and defendant was cursing and abusing deceased, and he making no reply. Had heard defendant accuse deceased of going at night after negro women. Said the deceased and defendant had been on very bad terms ever since defendant moved to that place. - Witness in order tp keep peace offered defendant two hundred dollars for the land - defendant refused to take it - On the day before the killing witness told Hiram Johnson to offer defendant three hundred dollars.
=============| , a little boy, said that in February or March last he had
Orthiel Johnson | heard defendant say that if Walker ever pressed(?) upon him
=============| he would kill him - that when defendant first came there to live, Walker had been very troublesome to him, and that he could hardly drive him with double lines, but he had then got him so that he could drive him with single lines.
=============| stated He arrived at Fentress' some time after Walker was
Thomas Phelps | dead and found the body lying a little to the right of the
=============| door as you enter - the head was farther to the right and farther from the house than the feet, it was also on higher ground than the feet. It was about three feet from the end of the platform. He saw Squire M. Murray cut out the bullet from under the skin, about the lower part of the right shoulder blade. The ball seems to have entered about midway between the left pap and collar bone, making a descent in passing through the body of about four or five inches - Saw no signs of any powder burn of powder stain. Walker had on a very dirty shirt, such an one as a man must have after having worked during the week in a tobacco field - He was in his shirt sleeves - The blood had covered the bosom of the shirt all around the wound, and indeed pretty much the whole upper part of his body was covered with a gore of blood, and it had even run into his shoes - He also searched the house for blood, but found none except he saw some blood upon the steps, which from the sand that was mixed with it when he saw it, appeared like it might have been brought there by a foot that had been trod in the blood on the ground and then steped on the puncheon(?). On cross examination he said that powder would stain eight of ten feet from the muzzle of the gun which might be seen by an experiment on snow which he had frequently made.
Page 16
==============| said that he heard a conversation to this effect about six
James Flanagan | months before Walker was killed, Fentress told one Hughes,
==============| that Walker had come at him in his own enclosure to beat him - that he (Fentress) had a sword and struck at Walker twice with it, but missed him - but if Walker ever came at him again in the same manner and inside of his enclosure that he would kill him.
============| , said - That some time about June or July was a year ago.
Rowland Clark | he was at Fentress' house - that he heard defendant appaently
============| in a passion say, that Walker had killed some of his hogs, and if Walker ever came into his yard fence abusing him and his family again, he would put a ball as near his heart as he could if his gun would go off. He also said that he had heard Walker call Fentress a rogue and a rascal. That he had seen Walker frequently following Fentress towards his house when they were quarrelling, but that he had not seen Walker go inside of Fentress' yard.
==================| Said - That at one time he saw Fentress throw stones at
Richard Brown Junr. | Walker when they were fifty yards distant from each
==================| other - That at another, he heard Fentress say that he lived where he did to aggrivate Walker. That at another time, about eight months ago, he heard Fentress call Walker a damned rogue, that he would be hung and that he defendant would be there to put the rope round his neck. This last was said to Walker in Fentress' tobacco field as witness rode by - witness had hon heard what was said before, he did not stop and did not hear Walker answer, for he was about three hundred yards from them.
=================| Said - He heard Fentress say he would not sell his land,
Richard Brown Senr. | that he would not be drove from it, but that he would
=================| stay there to fret Walker. That his son in law George Walker, the brother of deceased, had frequently proposed to buy it, but that Fentress would not sell it for less than four hundred dollars, which he considered more than its value. He examined for blood but found none in the house at any place. He said that powder will stain from six to ten feet from the muzzle of the gun. He believed that the patch would in ordinary cases be shot from eight to ten feet. He and others looked for a patch and found none.
Page 17
============| - said. That some time last summer he was at Walkers - that
Albert Burton | Walker's mule jumped into the lot of Fentress. That Walker
============| saw the mule going into defendants pasture lot and used no efforts to get it out - Fentress drove the mule out and said to Walker, your niggardly rascal if you do not keep your mule out I will kill it - and said that Walker was - damned old rascal and was not fit to keep company with anybody but negroes.
============| said - That when he arrived at Fentress' there were many
David Burford | persons around the dead body - He asked for Fentress and was
============| told that he had locked himself up in his house, but if he would go around to the back door he might be admitted. Witness accordingly went around to the back door and applied for admission which was refused. Mrs. Fentress enquired when he knocked who he was, he did not tell his name, but insisted on admittance, she still asked who it was, he refused to tell her, She enquired the third time who he was, he still did not tell her his name but broke the door open - He thought the whole a stratagem to cover the retreat of Fentress who he supposed had left the house. Under this impression he forced the door which opened without any great resistance and seems to have been fastened by a latch - the bed he believes had also been pulled so as to prevent its opening. The door being opened he entered and saw nobody but Mrs Fentress who was weeping and complaining of the manner in which her door had been broken open - Witness saw no other person in the room besides Mrs. Fentress - Witness asked for Mr. Fentress - he was answered from above stairs by a question either in the voice of Fentress of Mr. Dias, asking whether that was Major Burford. He answered in the affirmative and requested Fentress to comedown, who answered that he was willing to be taken into custody of a proper officer. Fentress as he said this, came forward and came down stairs, he met Fentress on the steps and gave him his hand - Witness went up stairs and found a loaded gun and a sword on the bed. Fentress did not deny having killed Walker but said he did it in self defence. Witness asked defendant why he refused to permit any one to enter the house and why he had closed his doors. Defendant answered that the young Walkers (Elisha and Wilson) had repeatedly threatened to beat him, and that he found that they would come in and kill him, he therefore shut his door
Page 18
and determined to defend himself against them upstairs until an officer should come. That he was perfectly willing to give himself up to the Sheriff and had sent a messenger after him. Witness says that defendant appeared perfectly willing nay even anxious to give himself up to the state authorities to stand his trial and abide by the laws of his country - Witness further stated that he was told by defendant at same time, that Walker threw two stones at him, while in the house, that one struck near the fire place which was in the right end of the house as Walker and Fentress entered. And a rock was produced, and on the trial laid on the table, which was said to be the one thrown - He looked on the wall but found no bruise upon it - He searched the house for blood and found a blot upon the tablecloth, which appears as if it might have been two drops near each other which had spread until they met and made one blot. He also heard Mary Fentress (defendant's daughter) tell the circumstances, she told the same story as her father except that the stone which the old man said struck near the chimney went out of doors into an open passage which was between the main part of the house and the back part or kitchen, where she said she had found the stone, and where she saw it fall. All this examination occurred about three or four oclk in the evening - the killing he understood took place about 15 minutes after dinner. Witness said that rock here produced and shown to him is not the rock produced and laid upon the table on the trial before the committing magistrates, that rock was larger than this this, of different shape and colour. The table cloth was also produced and shown to him - he said he did not believe it was the same, the spot of blood was different - He said he enquired into the circumstances of the murder and a stick was produced to him as the stick that Walker brought with him into the house - it was a tobacco stick - the stick was produced to him in the house, he thinks it was picked up in the floor by one of the girls - she picked it up in his presence while he was enquiring into the
Page 19
circumstances of the murder - Witness looked for blood in the house at the same time that he was so enquiring of Fentress, could find none on the floor, someone mentioned the table cloth which was still on the table, and suggested the idea of examining that - he does not know who suggested it - the cloth was on the table either turned up or folded he cannot remember - they looked at it, and found two spots of blood, they appear to have fallen near each other and appeared to have spread so as to have connected themselves together, the blood looked like it was fresh, though he did not examine it particularly - Maj. Burford being interrogated, said Fentress was a taller man than Walker - Walker was a stouter man in appearance and heavier than Fentress - He was also a younger man than Fentress and had a more healthy appearance and that his appearing more healthy might proceed from his drinking more Whisky than Fentress.
==============| - said, he was in the house of defendant at the time of the
George T. Wright | conversation between him and Maj. Burford, defendant
==============| appeared very willing to surender himself up - and appeared very willing to answer any question that was asked him - he said W. Walker had thrown a rock at him in the house which nearly brushed his hair - said he had shot him in the house as Walker advanced upon him with a stick drawn - that when he shot he was not certain whether he had hit him or not and ran out at the front door - An examination was made for blood none was found on the floor - Someone looked on the table cloth and found a splotch - the table cloth was produced to him - he recognized it as the same. The stick was also picked up in the house and shown as the stick that Walker brought in with him - all this took place before the front door was opened. After the door was he heard someone say that blood had been discovered on the platform - he took particular notice of it - it had the appearance of having been put there by the shoe of some one who had trod in blood and trod on the steps - it also had sand mixed with it. He also said he did not see any body in the house when he entered but Mrs Fentress. He went into the house immediately after Burford went in. This witness on crossexamination was asked who first suggested the probability that there was blood on the table cloth - he answered that he thought it was some one of the gentlemen present.
Page 20
=============| said - that Walker and Fentress had several neighborhood Law
Hiram Johnson | suits within the three years past - that the original dispute
=============| was about the tract of land on which Fentress lived. That Walker was dissatisfied with the manner in which Fentress got possession of said land which origionally belonged to Walkers mother, who was also Fentress' mother in law. Fentress and the old lady had swaped homes. About the 16th September last witness was riding with defendant who complained of the treatment he had received at Walker's hands ever since he had lived hear him (about three years) and said that when he, defendant, first came there he could scarcely work Walker with double lines, but he had got him so he could work him with a single line and damn him, he would get him so after a while that he would work him without any. Witness searched for the patching for the bullet and also examined whether there was any powder burn - he found neither - but the bosom of the shirt was covered i blood. He believes that the step of the door of Fentress' house is eighteen or twenty inches higher than the plane where Walker lay. In the morning of the day deceased was killed George Walker brother of the deceased requested witness to offer defendant three hundred dollars for his land - He did not see defendant before deceased was killed, and so did not make the offer. Witness says he examined deceased particularly and unbuttoned his pantaloons, and the blood had not run down below the waist band of his pantaloons inside of his clothes, but he was bloody from his knees down even into his shoes, the blood having run out and run down against his knees as they lay upon the ground.
============| , one of the committing magistrates says - that some time
Frederick Uhls | before the transaction he heard Fentress say that if Walker
============| did not cease abusing him on his own premisises would blow a ball through him. On being interogated as to the confessions of the defendant before the committing court, he said that, Fentress asserted that he shot Walker in his defendants own house and that he had done it in self defense - That defendant stated before that court, that Walker came to his tobacco scaffold where defendant was hanging tobacco - that defendant
Page 21
called to his daughter for his gun - that it was brought to him by Cynthia his second unmarried daughter - that he started towards the house before the gun came and met it at the fence of his tobacco patch, after recovering the gun he kept on to the house - that walker followed him - Defendant crossed the two fences - Walker crossed them after him carrying two rocks and a white oak tobacco stick - that defendant went into his house door - Walker followed him into his (defendants) yard - that he stopped about a minute fifteen feet from the door - some abusive words passed between them - That Walker then advanced upon him - that he, Fentress, gave back and went round the table which stood in the middle of the floor so as to leave the table on his right hand as Walker entered the house he threw a stone as he stepped in the door which he Fentress dodged - Walker then went round the table leaving it on his left side - that in passing around the table he threw another stone which also missed - that he then raised the tobacco stick - that he, defendant, then shot at him and thought he had missed him - under this impression he he ran out the door through which he had entered and ran around the end of the house and came in at the back door - that when he turned Walker followed him and struck at him twice - that Walker followed him to the door where he fell - He saw Elisha Walker coming through the tobacco field and on that account fastened his doors - he also stated that he sent for Mr. Dias a near neighbor to stay with and protect him against the Walkers until an officer could be found - that he had sent for an officer to surrender himself up. The trial of Fentress took place directly after the killing in Fentress' yard and in the presence of the dead body - Fentress was committed and sent off that evening to jail.
==========| , constable - says that a messenger came to the point, a place
William Kyle | near Dixon's Spring and told him that Mr. Fentress had killed
==========| Walker, and that Fentress wished an officer to come to his house as soon as possible that he might give himself into his custody - That when he arrived he heard defendant say, that the first rock struck about the chimney. He examined for blood but found none
Page 22
in the house or on the steps or platform in front of the door - He heard the defendant say that Walker was striking at him with the stick he when he shot at him - That Walker struck twice after he was shot as he pursued him (Fentress) around the table - that Walker struck his foot against a rock and fell - Defendant also said that Walker was on the door when he threw the first rock he rushed into the house striking at him (Fentress) & he shot him. He said he looked at the bullet hole in Walker, and also at the place where it was cut out - he said the bullet went in below the nipple, it made a very large hole, he said he noticed it particularly and was confident it went in below the nipple. After this witness had given his evidence and retired, he came back and asked leave to explain, and said, he was mistaken in saying the bullet entered below the nipple, that it was above, being asked how he found out his mistake, he said he found it out by noticing his own nipple, and it was lower down than he thought it was, he had never noticed it before, he also stated that he had talked to _____ who told him the bullet entered above the nipple. He saw nobody in the house when he entered but Mrs. Fentress - he said he entered immediately after Burford entered the house and said he did not consider the stick a very dangerous weapon that he had beat many a nigger over the head with as large a stick as that was.
==============| - says - That he examined for blood but found none anywhere
Thomas W. Page | in the house - the blood was all around the wound, and the
==============| bosom of the shirt was very bloody, the blood extended above and below the bullet hole in the shirt - it was so bloody that it some time before he could find the bullet hole in the shirt - The shirt was dirty, such as is usual with farmers on saturday evening - Saw no powder stains on the shirt.
=================| says , That he heard defendant say that Walker treated
William M. Clanahan | him badly, but never heard Fentress make any threats.
=================|
============| says - that he Miller never whipped Walker in his life - there
Martin Miller | never was a word of difference betwnn them in their lives.
============|
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=========| says - That he believes the ball would not strike the heart if
Doctr King | it went in the direction and struck in that part of the body
=========| described - that it might and probably would strike the great artery leading from the heart, if so, there could be no healthy respiration afterwords though the man might run a few steps after the shot - but that the blood would very soon gush out of his mouth and nostrils. He said a shot produced a sort of deadening sensation, but not much pain - he mentioned instances of men being shot in fight and not sensible of it until the fight was over - said such a shot as this bruised the parts in such a manner that the wound would not bleed freely immediately - thinks the first bleeding from this shot would be at the mouth, that is, if he was breathing through his mouth - or at his nostrils, if breathing through his nose. Said a man might walk fro ten to twenty steps after receiving this shot before he would fall. Ordinarily if a man was standing and received such a shot as this, he would give way in his knees, and sink in his tracts, but if in motion, would most usually continue in the motion, in the same direction he was going until he fell. Supposed it likely if a man was going backwards, he would continue to go backwards until he fell. He mentioned an instance in which he had shot a dog through the heart and he ran some distance about twenty steps. Upon crossexamination he said Walker might have spoken and uttered a whole sentence after receiving the ball - that some portion of blood would probably rise to his mouth at the first respiration, but might not fly out if he was breathing through his nostrils - At the second respiration a greater quantity of blood would probably rise, he cannot state anything with certainty as to the quantity that might be thrown out. He would necessarily fall dead from this shot when he fell, and then bleed very freely at the mouth. ---
The following evidence was then introduced in behalf of James Fentress the defendant viz. ---
Page 24
==============| gave in evidence that her father, the defendant and Walker
Mary L. Fentress | had disliked each other for some time past, ever since her
==============| father had moved to the place where he now lives which was about three years since - that they had repeatedly quarreled and that they mutually abused each other - that the quarrels were usually begun where her father was at work on his farm, and that she believes that Walker commenced them. On friday the day before the defendant shot Walker, he (defendant) was driving hogs out of his lot which was near Walker's house, when Walker began to abuse defendant - that defendant cursed Walker also but drove his hogs on - that Walker came out of his house, and set on the blocks of the yard fence, that they abused each other defendant still driving his hogs - Walker left the blocks and came to Fentress' fence near where it crossed a branch - When Walker got to the fence, both parties threw rocks at each other and Fentress called for his gun, which was carried to him. After Fentress got the gun he came on to the house. Walker followed him up to the yard fence, both parties abusing and cursing each other. While they were quarrelling in the lot she heard Walker accuse her father of stealing he said her father got his living our of his (Walker's) corn crib and smoke house - her father told Walker that Mr. Miller had whipped him with a cow hide - She saw her father rub his back in immitation of Walker while Miller was whiping him. While Mr. Walker was at the yard fence quarrelling with her father Elisha Walker came up. Fentress stood in the door of his house - Walker and his son repeatedly dared Fentress to come out and fight - Walker said he could whip him with his gun - Elisha said, if it were not for your family, I would come in your own house and beat you to death. Fentress abused and cursed them in return but would not go out. After quarrelling for some time Elisha Walker proposed to go home. Walker told him to go and look in his desk and bring him that best knife for he intended to kill the old rascal. Elisha started off - Walker said he would kill the damned old rascal if he went a hen scratch from his house, and gathering some rocks around him he lay down in the corner of Fentress' fence about fifty yards from his house and on the path to his tobacco field. He lay there until Debow's cart came along then left there, and the quarrel ended for that time. Same evening she saw and heard her father and Walker quarrelling in defendants tobacco field - She does not know which
Page 25
commenced the quarrel further than that Walker came into defendants tobacco field where defendant was at his labor. This time her father did not send for the gun - The quarrel the next morning before breakfast did not hear. About 12 oclock on saturday defendant was in his lot and Walker came near to where Fentress was in the lot and they began to quaarrel and abuse each other - Walker got over into the lot and came towards her father, who started to the house and called for his gun - the gun was carried to him by one of the children - he did not stop when he got the gun, but still kept on to the house, Walker still following him. Defendant went to his house and Walker came as far as the yard fence and dared Fentress to come out and fight. Fentress told him if he rushed on him on his own premises he would kill him, but would not go out to fight. Walker turned off and went home as witness believes. After dinner Fentress went to his tobacco field to hang tobacco - Witness saw Walker going from his house towards where defendant was hanging tobacco and knowing the quarrel between them, she kept her eyes on them and saw Walker come near to where her father was hanging tobacco, that her father started home and called for his gun, it was carried to the bars by Susan where it was taken by Cynthia who was on her way to the spring and carried to her father, defendant met Cynthia with the gun and took it - they were coming to the house very fast, her father got into a run before he got to Cynthia and got the gun - Mr. Walker was in a very fast walk or a kind of a run behind him. They made no stop when her father got the gun, but continued on the same way across the road and across the yard fence to the house - Walker was not far behind her father - he followed very fast and appeared to be very mad, he made no stop until he had crossed the road and got to the yard fence - He sat on the fence a short time and whittled upon the tobacco stick - He had got the stick from the scaffold where her father was hanging tobacco - He had two rocks, which she supposed he must have brought with him. When Walker got on the yard fence, Fentress was in his house door - Walker sat on the fence a moment and began to whittle the tobacco stick - He then jumped off the fence and came within about fifteen feet of the house door, when he again stopped , holding in his hands the stones and the before mentioned tobacco stick - All this time the quarrel kept up on both sides. Fentress threatening that if Walker rushed on his house he would shoot him - Walker stood a minute or two then started in a very fast walk towards the door - Fentress told him again that if he came in his house he would shoot him, at the same time giving way from the door - Walker
Page 26
put one foot upon the door sill, and threw a stone at Fentress which passed through the house and stopped in the passage, between the back door and the kitchen - Fentress had gone round the table which stood in the middle of the room so as to leave it on his right between him and the fire place - Walker entered and went the other way leaving the table on his left and between the fire place - When Walker had entered the house he threw another stone at defendant which defendant also dodged - it rolled under the bed - As soon as he had thrown his last rock Walker raised the stick - Walker was by this time at the corner of the table next to the fireplace - her father was near the back door - Walker had his stick raised and made a kind of a halt as the gun fired - As soon as the gun fired her father ran out of the same door he came in at. Walker followed him as he went out when he got near the door his (Walker) arms fell by his side and the stick fell from his hands as he stepped out of the house he staggered first one way then the other and with the appearance of a spring fell on his face in the yard - Her father came around the house and came in again at the back door. She said she stood in the passage between the house and kitchen and saw all as it happened - Her mother was standing not far from where she was - her mother appeared very much alarmed. They was the two Mr. Walkers both young men grown coming running to the house her father appeared to be afraid they would kill him and went up stairs, her mother fastened the doors and staid below to keep them out of the house - the front door was fastened and a bed was drawn across the back door to make it more secure to keep them out. Her father sent Susan for Mr. Dias - Witness says she was in the house when Maj. Burford came in - She said when he demanded admittance, her mother kept asking who he was - he did not tell but forced the door open her mother was against the door and came very near being pushed down - she further stated that when Major Burford was enquiring of her father about the fight and the tobacco stick was mentioned she picked it up off of the floor from the place where Mr. Walker had dropped it - She also saw the blood on the table cloth it was fresh - the stick, the stone and table cloth here produced are the same which were produced upon the ground and shown before the magistrates on the trial. She said her sister Cynthia was not in the house at the time. When she handed the gun to her father she went towards the spring - There was only one rock produced at the trial. She saw Mr. Walker throw two rocks at her father, the other rock which is here produced was not found until the next morn-
Page 27
ing, the trundle bed which had been drawn before the back door, had not been put back to its place until the next morning, when they pushed it back, they found the other rock had rolled under - This last Rock would weigh about two pounds, that produced on the trial would weigh about half a pound - She stated she had never seen or heard of any quarrelling between her father and Mr. Walker except upon her father's own land - She said it had very often happened. She could not tell how often, that Mr. Walker would come to where her father was at work, and drive him to the house - Her father would very often call for his gun as he came to the house, but never attempted to use it or to defend himself - Mr. Walker had always stopt at the yard fence before this time - He had not been in her father's yard before, since they moved to that place. After Walker had passed the corner of the table next to the door, and had thrown the second rock, he raised the stick to strike and made a stop at or near the second corner of the table to which he came as he passed around it, and while in that position the gun fired - As deceased passed towards the front door some blood flew out at his mouth and fell on the table cloth - She also said that she and one of her sisters was near the foot of the stairs when Maj. Burford first entered the house - This witness, being further examined as to the distance between the house of defendant and that of deceased said she supposed it was fifty yards - This witness was a girl about fifteen years old.
================| , a daughter of defendant says - That her father and Mr.
Cynthia L. Fentress | Walker have been in the habit of quarrelling with each
================| other for some years past - She believes that the quarrels were generally commenced by Mr. Walker, but that her father almost always quarrelled back - (Council for the state - Give an example in which Mr. Walker began the quarrel ? witness - remembered that some time before Walker was killed my father and myself were loading a waggon with wood to be hauled to the house, when Walker came near to where we were and began to abuse us and threw stones at us, so that we had to run to the house. Walker followed us until father called for his gun, and then Walker stopt.) This quarrelling had been kept up for several years in that way, that Walker when ever he was in a drinking spree, would come to where defendant was at work and a quarrel would certainly ensue - They seldom quarrelled except when Walker was drinking - for they did not speak to each other at any other times - Witness believed,
Page 28
that Walker did not absolutely become drunk, but he would occasionally keep himself in a constant state of excitement for several days in succession and in such cases was generally a quarrel. Witness believes that Mr. Walker had been in such a state for several days before his death. On friday, the day before Walker's death defendant was driving his hogs from his lot, when a quarrel arose between Walker and defendant - Witness heard the whole not being more than a hundred yards off, and heard Walker curse defendant distinctly - defendant returned the abuse - Walker in his yard - defendant in his lot - Walker came towards where defendant was - They both threw stones at each other - Witness believes that Walker threw the first stone - Defendant came on towards the house - Walker following him and both cursing each other. Fentress at length called for his gun which was carried to him, both men still came on, towards the house. Defendant came into the house - Walker followed to the road both still quarrelling. At the road Walker was joined by his son Elisha. They both stood at defendants yard fence and abused abused defendant who was in his own door both dared defendant to lay down his gun and come out and fight - defendant would not - but returned the abuse - they said if he would come out they would whip him. Elisha then went off - as he started Walker told him to look in his desk and bring him his knife - Elisha went off and did not return - Walker said he would beat the damned old rascal to death if he could catch him a hen scratch from home. After he had lain there some time he went off. The quarrel in the morning of the same day she related substantially as Mary had done. The quarrel early in the morning she told as was told by the young Walker, except she believed that Walker commenced the quarrel for she saw him going to where defendant was - heard him speak, but could not distinquish what he said - the quarrel arose immediately. About fifteen minutes after dinner was over witness was going to the spring. She saw Walker coming through the tobacco field in a very fast walk. She looked to the tobacco scaffold where she knew her father was at work and which was not far from her at the time and saw her father hanging tobacco. When Walker got near her father he started to the house and called for his gun. Susan brought it to the fence
Page 29
and witness carried it from there until she met defendant at the fence of the tobacco field - When defendant received the gun he passed her and went on towards the house, Walker followed him and also passed her. Walker had in his hands two stones and a tobacco stick - She went on towards the spring. Fentress was part of the time in a run - Walker walked very fast, they both came faster as they came near to where she met her father with the gun - Walker followed defendant across the bars and to his yard fence before he stopped. By the time that Walker had got on the yard fence Fentress was in his house door - Walker sat a moment on the fence - then jumped down into the yard and advanced within fifteen feet of the house door, where he again halted for a time. All this time the quarrel was constantly kept up in a loud voice. Fentress repeatedly told Walker that if he rushed upon him in ins own premises he would shoot him - Walker said damn him he would kill him at the risk of his life. Walker started again to wards the house - Witness was between the house and spring - the spring is apposite the end of the house - from where she stood she could see the front door. She saw Walker go to the steps place his right foot upon it and and throw a stone in the house - he then entered almost immediately afterwards the gun fired. Then defendant came running out of the house - Walker followed him - just as Walker stepped out of the house he stopped and with a kind of a spring fell on his face - Defendant ran around the house to the end opposite to where she was, but she saw him enter the back door - She ran towards the house - Mr. & Mrs. Williamson came up she let down the fence for them to ride around through the orchard - She jumped over the barr and went the nearest way to the house - When she jumped over fence Wilson Walker was just behind her - Elisha Walker was already at the dead body - she went on before Wilson Walker and arrived at the house first - She was admitted at the back door - Her father expressed great fear of the young Walkers - When Maj. Burford came she was setting by the side of the stair case below-stairs - The bed had been pulled before the door to prevent its opening.
Page 30
Maj. Burford pushed it open and entered - Her father came down and surrendered himself up - She also said that just before the gun fired she had seen her father at the back door. That after the gun fired she went to the house and got there a little before Wilson Walker did.
========-======| says - That she and her husband were going to her fathers,
Sarah Williamson | to go from there to the campmeeting. That when she came
=======-=======| to the fence of defendant she saw Cynthia Fentress who told her what had happened. Cynthia threw down the fence and she rode through the orchard to the back door of the house - When she left the road she saw Wilson Walker and observed to him that she had expected this to happen he replied yes one way of the other. She and her husband rode on - She does not know whether Cynthia came on behind her, or went the nearest way to the house. When she and Mr. Williamson came to the back door her father sent Mr. Williamson for the sheriff - So that Mr. Williamson did not enter the house at all at that time. She however went in and went up stairs where she stayed until Maj. Burford came - She says defendant had prepared above stairs to defend himself against the young Walkers. The next morning after the death and before the committing magistrates she was sweeping the house and found under the bed the second stone - it was a large one - She also saw the tobacco stick lying on the floor when she first got in - She was married in August last. Her father and uncle Wm Walker had been at enmity ever since her father moved to that place. She had seen her father driven from his work and followed up to the house by Walker a great many times - She cannot tell how often from the time they first moved there until about eighteen months ago, it happened almost every week, sometimes two or three times in a week, then again not so often - Her father would almost always call for his gun as he was coming to the house, but when he got it he would not stop nor attempt to defend himself - Walker never followed him into the yard. She had never seen Mr. Walker in her fathers yard from the time they moved there, until she saw him lying there dead. She never heard of er father going to Mr.
Page 31
Walkers to quarrel or to drive him from his work. For about eighteen months past they had been more peaceable - She had heard of the quarrel on friday, before she left home on saturday - Her husband had sent a couple of negroes to assist her father, they came home and told her of it - that was the reason why she said to Wilson Wilson Walker she expected something the kind to happen. She said when the quarrels would begin between her father and uncle, she could not tell which was most abusive - She has often heard her uncle accuse her father of stealing, and her father would reply back to him in the same way. She said the said the small rock weighing about half a pound, the table cloth and tobacco stick here produced, are the same that were produced on the trial before the magistrates. The large rock weighing about two pounds, here shown her, is the same which she found on the trunnel bed the next morning - When Maj. Burford broke into the house, she was upstairs with her father, and came down with him - heard Maj. Burford enquiring how the killing took place - her father answered all his questions - the stick was spoken of - it was lying on the floor towards the front door, and picked up by her sister - Search was made for blood - none was found on the floor - the table cloth was examined and a splotch of blood found on it - it was fresh - She said her father had loaned out his gun for some time prior to the killing, but that it had been at home for about three or four weeks before the killing.
================| says that he arrived at Fentress' a short time after the
John N. Williamson | death - Saw Cynthia in the road - she pulled down the
================| fence - he and his wife went to the back door - his wife entered - Fentress met him at the door and told him to go to the camp meeting and bring the sheriff - if he was not here, to Carthage - that he must bring him as soon as possible - Witness went to the camp meeting, but before he got to the camp ground he met Rich Tompkins, who told him that any constable or Justice of the Peace was sufficient - They then went to the camp ground and found 'Squire McMurray, but before they returned to Fentress' house Maj. Burford had already arrived together with Mr. Kyle a constable.
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===========| said, that a short time after dinner Susan Fentress a daughter
Thomas Dias | of defendant about twelve years old came to his house and
===========| requested him to go over to her father - telling him that defendant had killed Walker and that her father wished to see him - he went and found Fentress up stairs - defendant told him that he had killed Walker in self defence in his own house - Dias staid up stairs until Maj. Burford thrust open the door and entered - he then heard his voice and asked whether that was Maj. Burford - Burford said it was. He told Fentress to come down and surrender himself to Burford - defendant did so. When they came down stairs Maj. Burford enquired about the circumstances - Fentress answered all his questions - his statement of it amounted to about this - that Walker had pursued him from his tobacco ground to the house with rocks and a stick, had followed him into the house and had the stick drawn to strike him at the time he shot - Maj. Burford enquired where the rock struck which he said had been thrown at him in the house, he said somewhere about the fire place. When the stick was enquired for it was lying on the floor and picked up by one of the children - search was made for blood, but none was found on the floor - Some one said let us examine the table cloth - Fentress had said Walker was near the table - they went to the table - the corners of the cloth had been turned up over some things that were on the table - when they turned down the corners they saw a splotch of blood, it had fallen upon that part of the cloth which was near the corner of the table - the cloth here produced is the same - The front door was afterwards opened and a spot of blood was discovered on the platform before the door - Witness examined it particularly, it had the appearance of blood that had fallen there the sun had dried it and it glistened like the blood which had been dried by the sun in the yard, it appeared to be fresh, there was sand on the platform, and some sand in the blood, but it did not have the appearance of having been brought there uppn and persons foot - he said the platform before the door is about eight feet wide, that is, it extends eight feet from the house before the door - the blood was neared to the door than to the outer edge of the platform - he thinks it was between two and three feet of the door sill - someone mentioned at the time that
Page 33
it might have been brought there upon the foot of some person, and careful examination for another track either going out or coming in - but none could be found - there was no appearance that any one had trodden in the blood out of doors. The stone here produced is the same that was produced before the magistrates - the stick is also the same.
=============| - said - that the saturday before that on which the occurance
Nathan Brewer | took place - He and William Walker were riding from Dixon's
=============| Spring - that Walker told him that he had tried to settle the matter some way with Fentress - and that he would settle at the risk of his life. And if witness staid in this country he would hear that it was settled or else he would hear of the death of one of them. Witness remonstrated and tried to dissuade him - he said no - that he would make defendant settle the matter before christmas or that he would kill him, for he was tired of living in that way - Walker had been drinking something at Dixon's Spring that day.
=============| said - that he passed Walker and one Carter Guthrie on their
James Hastings | return from Dixon's Spring some time before Walker's death -
=============| He heard Walker tell Guthrie, that if Fentress did not behave himself he would kill him.
=============| - said - that Walker was rather a silent man than otherwise,
John A. Debow | but that he was quarrelsome with his neighbors - and was not
=============| considered a pleasant neighbor - That Fentress was more noisy when excited talked more but he had never known him to have a fight. He could by no means be called a quarrelsome of contentious man. Said he had been acquainted with Fentress and lived a neighbor to him for about thirty years - He was a very peaceable orderly man in society, of very industrious habits and good character - never heard in his life of his being disguised in the sleightest degree with spirits. Fentress has a large family of children, eight or ten - principally daughters. The fresh last spring washed away the fence of Mr. Fentress the rails were carried down upon Mr. Walker's land - Walker's rails were also washed down - Witness sent his cart to help Fentress to get his rails back - Understood he did not get them - Knows Fentress had to break a crop fence. Walker's fence was made up much better than before.
Page 34
==========| - said - that he had known these two men to quarrel several
Bird Debow | times. About eighteen months or two years before the death
==========| of Walker he (W) had told witness an anecdote to this effect that he (W) had gone on a bluff near Fentress' cornfield - Fentress was ploughing and the rows ended near where Walker sat - When Fentress would drive to that end of the row, he would cry wo! to the horse - the horse being young he would stop, and Fentress could not start him no more until son Edward who was hoeing in the same field would come and lead the horse so as to start him, he would then go until he came again to the same end where Walker was who again cried wo! and the same result would follow. At length Edward became impatient and told Walker if he did not quit, he would throw a stone at him, and when the repetition of the same thing he did throw at Walker - who picked up his hand full of rocks and made him leave the field. Witness said he had heard Walker commence two quarrels with Fentress - and he had heard Fentress commence one quarrel with Walker - which is all the the quarrels he ever witnessed between them. Said he had known the general character of Fentress for thirty years, and lived a neighbor to him all that time - Fentress has always maintained a good character - Witness never heard his integrity or honesty impeached in any way - he is a man of very peaceable orderly industrious habits with a large family upon his hands - At one time witness and defendant was together in conversation - Walker came along not far from them, when defendant said to Walker - you cannot come along here God damn you, but you can go to Brook's negro kitchen.
===============| son of defendant says - That he has not been living with his
Edward Fentress | father for a year or two - that when he lived there, Walker
===============| and defendant frequently quarreled - That he believes Walker generally commenced it because he was mad with defendant about the land on which defendant lived - He says that just before he left his father Walker came to the field and stopped his fathers horse repeatedly by telling him to Wo! - That he witness threw a stone at Walker, and Walker threw back and drove him out of the field into the tobacco ground. This was all the Evidence. ---
--- In the progress of this trial defendant produced his daughter Susan and proposed to
Page 35
examine her as a witness - She is within a few months of twelve years old - she was interogated by the court and asked who made you ? to which she made no answer and seemed to be at a loss for an answer - She was then asked if she knew anything of the consequences of telling a lie ? to which she made no answer - she was then asked if she knew she would be punished when she died if she told lies - she said she did. She had been examined before the magistrates, but the court thought her inadmissible as a witness - The court charged the jury as follows :
======| - If they were satisfied from the proof that defendant and the
Charge | deceased commenced a quarrel in the defendant's tobacco patch and
======| that he retreated from there to his house with the view and design of inducing the deceased to follow him into his own yard or house that he might have a pretext to kill Walker under circumstances which would have the appearance of killing in his own defence and if he had previously deliberated and meditated upon decoying Walker to his house for that purpose and resolved to resort to that stratagem, and his retreat on that occasion was not dictated by fear or cowardice, but to effect a design thus deliberately formed, the killing of Walker under such circumstances would be murder in the first degree - Altho Walker might have pursued Fentress into his own house and there assaulted him with rocks or a stick before he was shot. They might look to former quarrels previous threats and menaces and previous malice if any existed as circumstances from which they might or might not infer such a previous deliberate premeditated purpose. But altho there might have been such previous threats and Menaces made by defendant and altho there might have been previous quarrels and long standing enmity between Walker and defendant there was no rule of law that made it imperious upon them to refer the killing to such previous threats and malice unless all the circumstances in the case warranted them in drawing such an inference. If they thought it most likely that Fentress would have shot Walker for the provocation given him on that occasion provided that had been the first quarrel between them it would be safe for them to
Page 36
refer the killing to the provocation then given rather than to previous malice and threats. In the event you should not believe the killing was upon previous malice and in pursuance to a purpose formed upon deliberation and premeditation your next enquiry will be whether the killing under the circumstances amounted to murder in the second degree manslaughter or excusable homicide. To constitute murder in the second degree the killing must be upon malice aforethought also - but malice aforethought as applied to murder does not necessarily imply the slayer cooly determined to kill. It does not require prior or previous threats but the law frequently implies the killing was with malice aforethought from the act of killing itself. If a man killed his fellow by using a deadly weapon which he must know would endanger life without any provocation such killing would be murder in the first degree the act of killing in such case would be evidence of a wicked, depraved and murderous heart and no provocation having been given would be evidence that slayer had cooly designed to kill upon deliberation. But if the killing took place immediately upon a great provocation given such as should excite a man with great passion the killing would not be murder in the first degree but it would be murder in the second degree or manslaughter depending upon the mature and extent of the provocation and the instrument used. If the provocation consisted of abusive epithets irritating and provoking language the slayer accted under the influence of passion thus excited before passion had time to cool it would be murder in the second degree altho he killed with a deadly weapon which he knew would endanger life. But if the slayer should be first rudely assaulted under such aggravating circumstances that would likely excite such such a tempest of passion as would dethr(?) one his reason and while in this fury and storm of passion he killed the assailant altho with a deadly weapon it would be manslaughter. With this view of murder in the second degree and
Page 37
manslaughter you will apply the facts in the case and see whether the killing amounts to either of these offences and which of them. Should you believe that Walker commenced quarrelling with Fentress on Fentress' own premices and Fentress retreated to his house and Walker pursued him to Fentress' own house and threatened to whip Fentress in presence of his family and at his own house and should you further believe that Walker halted within ten or twelve feet of Fentress's door and was there shot down by Fentress before he had assaulted him in that case as the provocation was merely irritating and provoking language threats and gestures and upon this provocation there given Fentress shot him under the impulse of passion then excited it would be murder in the second degree - but should you believe Walker had thrown a rock or a stick at Fentress when at his house within throwing distance this would be an assault and being at his own house in presence of his family it was immaterial whether Fentress was hit or not. If he then shot Walker for that Assault immediately while under the influence of passion ; and when he shot, Walker was not following up the assault and was not at the time aiming another blow, which might endanger life or great bodily harm the killing would be manslaughter. But should you believe that when Walker came up within ten or twelve feet of the door of Fentress' house he then threw a rock or struck upon Fentress and was aiming a blow within throwing distance and Fentress hot him to protect himself or any of his family in the house from bodily harm this would be excusable or justifiable homicide provided Fentress could not have protected himself or family in any other way. If he could have protected himself and family in some other way he done wrong in shooting Walker with his gun which he knew would destroy Walker's life and it would in that view be manslaughter because a man who kills another must show he was under a necessity to kill or incurr the hazzard of being killed himself or receiving some great bodily harm or of having his wife or children or some of them killed or a great bodily harm inflicted upon them. You will then consider in this case whether Fentress could have protected himself and family from the blow that was aimed by shutting his door. If the assault was so sudden he had not time to
Page 38
shut his door and there was no other way to afford the protection he would be justifiable in killing. If the range of the ball thro the body of Walker satisfies you his left side was presented to Fentress and he was standing fronting Fentress the moment before he was shot then it might be important to why he changed the position of his body - would presenting the gun against him cause him to shift his position or did he place himself on that position to throw a rock or stick at Walker (sic) and if the latter did he aim the blow after the gun was presented with a view to protect himself or did he first aim the blow and Fentress then presented the gun and shot to protect himself or family. If Fentress first presented the gun and Walker drew a rock to stick to protect himself and had not before assaulted Fentress by throwing a rock or stick the killing would be murder in the second degree - otherwise it would be justifiable or excusable homicide - If there be and proof in the case to enable you to determine how that fact was you will decide accordingly but if you are unable from the proof to ascertain how that fact was then it is proper I should state to you this rule of law when a man is killed and you have the slayer before you the law presumes the killing was unlawful and malicious which presumption stands until the slayer removes the presumption by proving facts or circumstances to show he was excusable or justifiable. The foregoing view is predicated upon the supposition only that you should believe Walker was shot in front of the door and before he entered the house of Fentress. But if you should believe from the proof that Walker entered Fentress' house and threw a rock or stick at Fentress in his own house and was pursuing up the assault and was aiming another blow with a stick in the house when Fentress shot, in that view he would be excusable also altho no rock had been thrown if Walker entered the house with a stick in his hand and assaulted Fentress by drawing the stick to strike within striking distance : Hence it is all important for you to examine the facts coolly and dispassionately to see how the truth is whether he was shot in the house or in front of the door. The testimony of the witnesses should be reconciled providing you can do so by a reasonable construction of their evidence if you cannot reconcile them or if facts sworn to by different
Page 39
witnesses clash so they cannot all be true you will then consider the degree of credit which ought to be given to the witnesses. If from the manner of their giving testimony you discover any of them possessed great feeling and anxiety in favor of one side or that they had prepared their story before hand or that they swore differently before you from the way they swore before the committing court or that the account they gave is unreasonable or improbable or inconsistent with other facts which you are satisfied did exist these circumstances would detract from their credit. And if you are satisfied any one or more of the witnesses did willfully and knowingly state a falsehood even on a collateral mater that ought to destroy evidence with you altogether. The court further charges the jury if they were not fully convinced the killing was murder in the first degree but it was murder in the second degree - Or if they were not fully convinced that it was murder in the second degree but it was manslaughter - Or if they were not fully convinced it was manslaughter such doubt if reasonable and not sought after should incline them on the side of mercy - And it would be their duty to find it murder in the second degree in the second degree in the first doubt, manslaughter in the second doubt and justifiable homicide in the third doubt. Should you find it murder in the first degree you will say so in your verdict and no more - it you should find the killing justifiable you will render a verdict of not guilty. But should you find it murder in the second degree your will say so and in that case you must fix the period the defendant must be confined in the penetentiary which must not be less than ten years and not more than twentyone years but any intermediate span between these periods. And should you find the killing manslaughter say so and you must then fix the period he must be confined in the penetentiary which must not be less than two years and not more than ten years but you can fix it at any intermediate space between these periods. -----------
The Jury after deliberating some time upon their verdict, returned into court and requested a repetition of that part of the charge in relation to shutting the door - The court repeated to them the same in substance as is stated in the charge.
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Defendants council moved the court for a new trial, which motion was overruled by the court and this bill of exception signed and sealed by the court and made part of the record. (signed) S. Anderson
----- Bill of Cost
---
(A detailed - nearly one page - list of court costs is laid out, but being of little relevance has not been transcribed.) Total was $192.16½
Page 41
===========
TENNESSEE
===========
(I) William Hart clerk of the Circuit Court for Smith County do hereby certify ; to whom it may concern, that the forgoing transcript is a true copy of the record and proceedings in a certain suit lately determined in said court between the State of Tennessee plaintiff and James Fentress defendant, on an indictment for Murder. And I further certify that the taxation of cost amended thereto is also a copy from the Records of said office.
In determining whereof I have here unto set my hand, and affixed the seal of said court, at office 14th December 1835. (signed) William Hart
---- Index
---
Grand jurors p 2
Indictment p 2
Plea & issue & jury p 4
Verdict p 6
Motion for new trial p 6
Judgement & Appeal p 7
Recognizances on appeal p 7
Orders on taxation of cost p 8
Bill of Exceptions & begins p 8
Charge of the Court begins p 35
depositions
Elisha Walker p 8
Wilson Y. Walker p 13
George Walker p 14
Samuel D. M. Murray p 15
Orthiel Johnson p 15
Thomas Phelps p 15
James Flanagan p 16
Rowland Clark p 16
Richard Brown Junr. p 16
Richard Brown Senr. p 16
Albert Burton p 17
David Burford p 17
George T. Wright p 19
Hiram Johnson p 20
Frederick Uhls p 20
William Kyle p 21
Thomas M. Page p 22
William M. Clannahan p 22
Martin Miller p 22
Dr. A. H. King p 23
Mary L Fentress p 24
Cynthia L Fentress p 27
Sarah Williamson p 30
John N. Williamson p 31
Thomas Dias p 32
Nathan Brewer p 33
James hastings p 33
John A. Debow p 33
Bird Debow p 34
Edward L. Fentress p 34
Page 42
(cover)
The State
vs Homicide
Ja. Fentress
=================
from Smith Circuit Court
=================
Carthage 18.Jan.1836 State
(next part of cover hard to read)
James Fentress
(?)
Seld(?) Jany 25 1836 The circuit court minutes for the first trial of James Fentress can be found in the FamilySearch Catalog under United States, Tennessee, Smith - Court records. Volume A-B, D-E 1811-1836, Film 319187, image group number 8657502. The film includes the Circuit Court minutes for 1829-1836. The minutes for the October 1835 term of the Smith County Circuit Court [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-D3CH-D9CV-F?i=770&cat=202070 can be found on-line here] starting on image 771 (page 416) starting with the appointment of the grand jury for the term. The text relating to the grand jury findings and the first trial are on images 776, 778, 779, 785 and possibly more. This has not been detailed here as the content is repeated with far more detail in the primary source above. The circuit court minutes for the second trial of James Fentress can be found in the FamilySeaarch Catalog under United States, Tennessee, Smith - Court records. Volume F-G 1836-1842, Film 319188, image group number 8657503. The film has court minutes 1836-1838 starting at the beginning of the roll. The text relating to the second trial [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-63CH-6QTW?i=12&cat=202070 can be found on-line here] in the record for the April 1836 and August 1836 sessions of the circuit court. Relevant images are image 13 (Apr 1836 session of the circuit court, page 16 - bail ($3,000) posted to ensure that James Fentress would reappear re-appear for a second trial with a new jury in August - co-bondsmen were John Y. Roper and John N. Williamson - bonds were also signed by a number of witnesses that they would appear to give evidence at the trial in August), image 34 (August session of the circuit court, page 59 - impanel the jury and start the trial on 18 Apr 1836), image 35 (trial again lasts several days), image 38 (not guilty verdict on 23 Apr 1836), image 49 (expense claim for entertaining jurors), image 50 court costs) and image 76 (expense claim for Constable Kyle). This has not been further detailed here as it is not very easy to read the handwriting. Like the first trial the testimony of the witnesses is not recorded in the circuit court minutes so while we have some of the names of people who testified at the second trial there nothing about what they said.
The Trial of Joseph Husband
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The following gentlemen were sworn on the GRAND JURY.
Hon. Wm. John Monson, foreman.
Sir Robt. Sheffield, Bart.
Anthony Wilson, Esq.
Sir M.Cholmeley, Bart., M.P.
Jos. Llvesey, Esq.
Sir Thos. Beckett, Bart
Wm. Elmhirst, Esq.
Geo. Hussey Packe, Esq.
John Fardell, Esq.
Wm. Hutton, Esq.
Wm. Parker, Esq.
Hy. Bacon Hickman, Esq.
Geo. Nevile, Esq.
Ayscoghe Boucherett, Esq.
W. H. Smith, Esq.
Chas. Chaplin, Esq.
Hy. Smythe, Esq.
Chas. Allix, Esq.
Geo. M. Monckton, Esq.
G. T. W. Sibthorp, Esq.
Edw. Wright Esq.
Weston Cracroft, Esq.
C. H. J. Mundy, Esq.
His Lordship delivered brief charge. He remarked that he should not under the necessity of detaining them beyond a very short time, as he did not find in the cases to come before them anything requiring particular comment or explanation. The cases were not very numerous, and with few exceptions he found nothing of a very serious description in the charges. The smallness of the number, and the lightness of the offences, indicated, he hoped, besides activity in the prevention of offences, that the predisposing causes to crime did not exist to any great extent. He did not find any one case likely to present difficulty to gentlemen so conversant with the duties of the Grand Inquest as those whom it was his privilege to address; and accordingly they could at once commence their labours. '''Tuesday July 22'''
'''Obtaining Goods under False Pretences.'''
''[[Husband-195|Jos. Husband]], was indicted for having, on the 18th of January, at Scothern, uttered a forged order for the delivery of some goods, with the intent to defraud Wm. Dawkins. ''Mr. Flowers'' prosecuted: the prisoner was undefended. Husband presented at the shop of the prosecutor an order for a quantity of grocery goods, calico, stockings, etc.; it purported to have been written by [[Clayworth-49|Mr. Wm. Clayworth]], farmer, of Nettleham, father-in-law to the prisoner.Clayworth was what today we would call Joseph's stepfather.—The prisoner's mother was called, who said that she had given her son no orders to obtain any goods from the prosecutor; and in answer to questions by the accused, Mrs.Clayworth stated that her husband occupied between 300 and 400 acres of land, and he always allowed her son to be at home when he was out of situation.—Mr. W. Clayworth was shown the order for the goods question, and said he had neither written it nor given anybody instructions to write such order.—On being called upon for his defence the prisoner produced a long and well-indicted defence, which he read to the Jury: the substance of it was, that when he procured the goods he had no intention whatever to defraud Mr. Dawkins, and that he expected his mother would pay for them, which she promised to do. He said he had been brought up to the business of chemist, and had lived in several situations --one for 8 years, another for 4 years, and a third for 3 years, in each of which he had conducted himself in a manner to the satisfaction of his employers. About 18 months ago his last master had died; and it being a disadvantage to a chemist's assistant to be married with reference to obtaining situations, he was not successful in getting another, and went home to his father-in-law's at Nettleham, his wife and family going home to her friends. After a lapse of some time his wife, thinking she was a burden upon her friends, endeavored to prevail upon his relatives to advance something towards their maintenance, particularly as he (the prisoner) received nothing but his board although be himself worked on the farm as a labourer. When his mother married Mr. Clayworth her pecuniary circumstances were equally good as her husband's: nothing whatever had been given from their common stock for his benefit, and even the money which had been given for his apprenticeship premium was advanced by his grandfather. His mother had repeatedly allowed him to procure shop goods, which she had paid for, and she would no doubt have paid Mr. Dawkins had she not been ill when the money for the articles (which amounted to about 17s.Online calculations place this as approximately $130 US in 2017 funds.) was applied for.—The Jury found him guilty, but recommended him to mercy.— Three months' imprisonment.The Lincoln, Rutland and Stamford Mercury, Friday, July 25, 1851, pg. 1. England and Wales Criminal Registers confirm that the trial was held at ''The Castle of Lincoln'' and that Joseph was sentenced to three months imprisonment for "''forging a request for delivery of goods.''"Home Office: Criminal Registers, Middlesex and Home Office: Criminal Registers, England and Wales; Records created or inherited by the Home Office, Ministry of Home Security, and related bodies, Series HO 26 and HO 27; The National Archives of the UK (TNA), Kew, Surrey, England, Class: HO 27; Piece: 96; Page: 325, Lincolnshire, 1851. ==Sources==
The Trials and Tribulations of William J Webber
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The Trip to Texas
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The Trustees’ Garden and the Gardener’s Savannah, Province of Georgia
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The Turner Patent
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The Turners at Ashampton
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The Two Jesse Thames's in Bladen/Cumberland NC
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No. 241
John Thimbs to Joseph Stevens
Error above
/s/ John Stevens /s/ Sarah Stevens
Signed Sealed & Delivered in the presence of us - John Bear, Joseph Thimbs, Joseph White
North Carolina, Bladen County} '''Novr Court 1772''' Then was the execution of this Deed acknowledge in open Court by the within Mentioned John Stevens in Due form of law Ordered to be Registered - Malwin Colville CC
The Two Patrick Crawford's
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The Unhappy Family of Christopher Vernon
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The Unholy Seven
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The United States and Russia: The Beginning of Relations, 1765-1815
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The Uplands
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The Vaden Family Research Center
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The Vanshaick group
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The Vantage Point
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The Varnado Family originally Limoge, France
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The Vault
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The Vaz Dias family tree Project
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The Velvet Underground
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The Via Del Santo House
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The Vindicator
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The Virginia Culps
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The Wagner Family Early History
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The Waldren Studio Challenge
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[[Fraser-13849|Elsie Howard (Fraser) Goss (1896-1982)]] ==1915== [[Adamson-4054|Ella Rebecca (Adamson) McKenzie (1891-1992)]] ==1902== [[Bernasconi-98|Henry Perley Bernasconi (1885-1969)]] ==1896== [[Bernasconi-95|Olga Clare (Bernasconi) Watson (1875-1967)]]
[[Bernasconi-96|Amelia Bernasconi (1877-)]]
[[Bernasconi-97|Jennie Bernasconi (1878-)]] ==1895== [[Fraser-14262|Ada Belle Fraser (1875-1923)]] ==1893== [[Pullman-529|Max Pullman (abt.1865-1918)]]
The Walker & Hatch Lumber Company
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The Walker Farm
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The Walker Letters
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March 25th 1863 Dear Caroline - I take the present opportunity of informing you that I am well at present and hope this may fin you n good health I received a letter from you which was dated December 18th and was very glad to hear from you I would be very glad to be at him with you but I cannot tell when I shall enjoy that privelege I want you to write to me The first opportunity and let me know how you are getting along let me know if you have got the horse yet ore not and let me know about everything else the first opportunity let me know if you [writing obscured] living where I left o[writing obscured] We are now camped [writing obscured] east of Murfreesbo[writing obscured] Manchester Pike Th[writing obscured] large army camped about here now. Tomorrow morning we are to be reviewed by General Rosecranz last week our Pickets had some small skirmishes with the Rebel Pickets but we made them get away on double quick time and have heard nothing from them for several days Our men had a fight not a great distance from here last week with Morgans Men in which we took about four hundred prisoners and killed and wounded a goodly number Tell Jimmy I have got his knife yet and to be a good boy and mind his mother Lucy Ann you must be a good girl and obey your Mother bless their little souls I want to see them very bad Nothing more at present I ever remain your Affectionate Husband R E Walker To Caroline Walker [new letter on same page] Dear Mother I take this opportunity to state to you that I am well and hope these few lines will find ou in good heath I would like very much to see you and the children Give my respects to Rashe tell him I am well and hearty and would be glad to see him R E Walker [another letter to Caroline] Caroline tell your father and mother I am well and would be very glad to see them Give your sisters and brothers my best respects and to all our relations ad friends the same Nothing More R E Walker (?) (?) this (?) I sent to you for you to remember me your Fathe Richar E Walker == D-5 == Buffalo Creek Grainger County
Tennessee January the 12th 1864 Dear wife I take the opportunity to write you a few lines to inform you that I am well and I hope this letter will find you in the [?] condition the Boys in our company are all well at the present time thare is some few cases of Small pox in our Rigiment but it is not in our company I have no new from the front only wee go [crossed out?] to the Rebells a forageing wee had one man wounded yesterday wee have plenty to eat but to much to wear (?) but I think wee will soon git some clothing I would like to see you all but I do not know when I will come home I will come as quick as I can and you must do the best you can until I come home I want you to write to me evary chance you git and I will do the same I have not much to write at present no news of importance So nothing more at present only I remain your ["wife" crossed out] Husband until [writing obscured] Richard E Walker Caroline Walker == D-6 == Mossey Creek, Tenn, March the 27th 1864 [Note: first page is missing a few letters on the left side of the page and the second page is missing some letters on the right side. I will keep the lines the way they were written to type a more accurate and readable transcription] r wife I take the opportu
to write you a few
s to inform you that
m well and I hope
letter will find you
same condition
e wrote four letters
u and sent them by
le and I have not got
aster from you for
at look in the post
ice for letters, I received
tter from your sister polly
e and she stated in her
that thee was all well
t you to take ceer of
things I sent him win
napsack thare is
er and envelops in it
can use tell mother
ely for me [Page 2] I send my best respe
to her and all my fre
I will come home as
soon as I can but I
not tell when that will
write to me as soon
you can direct yo
letter to the 6th E
Ten and mark it for
letter R. E. Wal
to Caroline
Walker == D-7 == Camp Near Mosey Creek
March the 20th 1864 dear Wife I tak my pen in han to inform yo that I am Well at pressent hopin these fue lins Will find yo in joys the Same like blessin I ho [?] Nothin of im portent to rite to yo I havent receved no leter from yo sence I left Knoxvill I Wod be glad to git aletr from yo Sary [?] rit in her leter that yo Was Well is al that I hav heard from yo I Want yo to keep my knapsack tell I Com home I had a port [?] foles [?] in it and paper and some posted stamps yo use them We git plenty to eight tims is very god her now I got a letr from poly bell [Polly Bell?] tha rit that thy all Ws Well and tims Ware god thair thing Were Chepe tell Mother that We are Well and Wod be glad to seetem al Make yor leters at knox vill I Will send by male So No More at present bit remans yor husban un till death Richard e Walker
to Chairline Walker == D-8 == Camp near Moosey Creek
April 15 (?) 11864 dear wife I A rale mi self of writen you A few lines to let you now that I am well at this present time hoping that these few lines May find you in the same state of health Carline I Can (?) from you that I recive your Kind letter the 29 dated the 27 witch was great satis faction for me to uher that you an the childern was well that was the first time I have heard from you since we left Knoxill I want you to take good cheer of your self an an the Childern an I will Come Hom as soon as I Can tell Mother an the Childern howdy for me an tell them All to writ to me you Must write ever chance yous have I have wrot severall times an never have got aney answer you wanted to now If we thoughtt we wood Com back to Knoxvill A gain I Cant tell at this time I want you to look in the office at Knoxvill for I will writ by Male from this ( . . . ?) tell I get Home R E Walker
to Carline Walker you wanted to now the name of that County and post office Carlinvill Co
Macufin Ill == D-9 == Near Marietta Georgia
June 26th 1864 Dear wife I seat my self to answer you letter of the 12 which come to hand this morning I was truly glad to hear from you that you was well but was sorry to hear that Losty (?) was sick I am well at this time and hope that this may find you and the children injoying the same blessing George and Thomas is both well Billy Colman was well the last time I heard from him. We will have some fighting to do we had a hard little skirmish yesterday and the man on my right hand was wounded in the thigh but no other one evar hurt in our company we have seen a very hard time every since we have been Georgia but I hope the time will soon come when we will see better times but we may have a good deel of fighting to do yet before this rebelion (?) is put down we are now lying in gun shot of the rebels brest works I would like to see you and the children very well but as I can't you must write often and let me know how all is getting along. Tell mother o folks howdy for me and give them my best respects are your folks the same also give respects to Mr. Jones folks you must take good care of your self and if I never see you again in this world I hope to met you in a better world to come & I will close for the present write as soon as you get this your truly Husband untell death R. E. Walker == D-10 == July the 7th 164
Camp Ruffs Station Ga Dear wife I agane seat my self to drop you a few lines to inform you that I am well & do hope when this reaches you it ma find you enjoying the same like blessing I have not read a letter from you since the 12th of june & this is the 3rd or 4th letter that I have writen since that I have pritty good nuse to write we have whiped the rebs agane & have bin taking prisners by hundreds for the last 3 or four days I have bin n all the engagements & have come out unhurt so fare & I hope will remain to be as lucky in the future as I have bin in past time we have taken a large number of prisners in three or four days past but I am told that they have made another stand on this of Chattahoocha river but some think they have all crased the river I cant tell how that is we are camped five miles below Marietta & fiften miles above Atlanta on the rail rode about five miles in the rear but I cant tell how long we will stay hear I hope that we will gard the rail rode a while you stated in your last letter that lucy ann was sick which was not agreeable to me but I hope the next nus I git she will be well I want you to write more frequent than you have hear to fore & I will write evry chance I have == D-11 == August the 7th 164 Dear husband it is with plesure I seat my self to Drop you afew lines to lit you know that we are all Well hoping this Will Come to hand an find you geting a long very Well I recived your kind letter dated july the 2th and Was Sorrow to hear you Was Wounded but I hope you will be able to get home in afew days Went to knoxville last friday to see if I Could got to Com an see you or see if I Could get to bring you up hear for I want to see you I Want you to get a ferlought to Come hom Where I Can take Care of you I have Went to town every day to see if I Could hear from you I have rote 5 or 6 letter to you an only got one frome you I Could not hear from you untels I receved your letter yesterday I Want you to take Car of your self the best you Can for I Cant tell how bad (?) that News hurt me when I heard about you giting Wounded but I hope you Will be able to sit up and read This letter for your Self the Children is Well and ants to See you they talk about you every day I Wish you Could get to Come home wher I Could tell you My feelings for I Can not rite them to you I Want you to rite if you are able to rite an if not git some body to rite I will rite to you every day or too untell you Can get to Come up hear if you have eny ide (?) of geting to Come rite to me if you Can an let me know so I Will Close hoping to see Shortly I remain your loving Wife until death Careoline
Walker to
Richard E Walker [Another letter on the same paper] Dear Son I will rite you a few lines to let you know that we are al Well I do hope this Will Come to you and hand an fin you in tolarble good health I Cant tell how bad that News hurt me when I heard about you but I hope you will be able to get home again I am glad to hear you Was no Wors than you Was an that is bad anuf your Sister Sends you her love an wants to see you georges Wife sends her love and respects and all the rest wishes you Will I Will Close Anna Walker and family to richard Walker == D-12 == [Note: EXTREMELY difficult to read] August the 25th (..)64
Camp Neir Atlanta Dear Brother I now seat mi self to Drop you a fue lines to let you know that I am Well hopen these due lines Mai (?) find you on the mend from yor Wonds I have Much Nuse to right We are at this time on the (...?) thew hant bin Much fiten for Several Days We (...?) had but 2 hard fites sense you left us. Won of them Was rite in front of Whire you (...?) Wonded the other Was on the When We Moved A rand the rebels had a batry (?) on our left A lot one Mile of in a larg field We Was ordered to sling our Knapsacks an Take This rebel batry Ner a lot al the Way was open ground. We formed our lines rased the yel (?) and shirted (?) When We got in a lot 2 hundred yards We Was git on so bad that We had to stop rite in the open field and rest While We rested tha Kild Severl of us then We rased an shirted A gin When thee sen that We Determaed (?) to Come that hulds out (...?) times is as pes(...?) heir(...?) (?) an has bin far(...?) Pay/Day (?) as tha har bin sens We bin do(...?) heir tha is No fiten going on only Canon hit is very neryat times ef this reches you I Want you after reden hit to send hit to Sarah K Walker if you (...?) also I Want you to anser hit and rite to Me (...?) times and thee helth of of William Colman is Well. georg has somthing like the rumets (?) he left (...?) last Nite for to go to the hose with (...........?) Giv Mi respects to al Wel I Will Close for this time I remain yous (...?) Brother tip Death
Thomas Walker
To Richard E Walker We Drawed (?) our Money if you Want What I ow you and air Well(......?) ask (?) hit Comes in a letter rite and I Will send hit. == D-13 == [Note: also very difficult to read] '''Section 1''' September the 12 1864
Camp DedCator Georgia
Decal County Dear brother hit is once More With plasure that I take Mi pen in hand to in form you that yose truly kind letr of the 20th of August fond Me Well and I truly hope these fue lines Mai rech you Ad find your fameley Well and you on the Mend. Sister C. (?) Wi (?) (...?) are air very William [might be "Well" and something else?] to al that I (...?) ad I Wod bin truly glad of I cod To [there are about 10 words I can't make out] as get to go & see him that Nite afte he was Wondid and I Wantid to an (...?) bad but I Codent '''Section 2''' A (...?) A (?) him to yoo (...?) he's very glad to (......?) got home (...?) you Cod Wait (...?) him Well brother I Can in form you that We took Atlanta the 2 (?) of this Month We Taken serson (?) (...?) guns a (?) large A Mont of amnation some 3 or 4 (...?) prisners We air now Camped in site of dedcator We flanked at a rond atlanta We (...?) the rebels 25 Miles then lel bak to Dedcator and hav Went in Camps I don't knew how long for We hav bin her 5 Days I have rit Severl lettrs to you and this is the first I have got I Was very glad to git hit Nothing is More plasure to Me than to git a letr but you no few that is '''Section 3''' I Can in form you that I hav Money (...?) out I Can rite and (...?) as ball (?) as Much as I plese hit semes strang to sett in A tent but A grate Dell Stranger to Not (hav?) (cannon?) and (...?) whislen A rond mihead I hav heir d them So Much that hit is lonsom (very?) (thing?) semes qiet Well Der brother I shal Close Mi letr I hav bin rite most all day I Mis you very Much after Mesin With you and Slepin With you over 2 yers I Wa very lonsom for severl Days hit semed that When I Wod git time Chanse of layen Don of a nite I Wod then Mis you but thank god that hit hant no werse '''Section 4''' Well as I unely trust Wat We Mai liv to Meat giv Mi helth to Sarah R Walker Tell Mother that I Wod like for them to rite often Dear brother I hope the time (han?) long (often?) We can Meat I tokles Volendy What you said he said that he had sent you yor Descripted (role?) to the (hes?) pitch So I Will close tak good cair of yor self Dood the best you can rite often excuse Mi bad hand rite So fareWell Dear brother Thomas Walker
To Richard E Walker Wel al Mi folk that I am well == D-16 == State of Tennessee Feb the 15 1865 Der brother I seat my self to drop you a few lines in anser to your kind letter that that come to me to day dated Feb the 11 an Was glad to her From you an to her that you Was at home With your famly the letter stated that Caroline had bin sick I hope When thes few lines Com to hand they Will find in good helth this leaves me in good helth Dear brother I hant no nuse to rite to you only the regment sa I under stand is gon to Virginia an I hant herd onething from Thomas since he left her I rote to him a bout too Weaks a go an hant got no anser yet I hope that I will git a letter soon So no more ondly I Will Tell you that I am haven a good time her to Whot I have I have a good bunk to sleep on an plenty to eat that is When I Call as good time in times like this So no more at this time hopen to her from you soon so Far Well George W Walker To Richard E Walker an Family
The Ward Family Record
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The Ward Family Record II
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The Warners of Hartfor an Farmington Connecticut
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The Warren Oriole Newspaper
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The Watermelon Riot or Panama Massacre
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The Way International
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The Way It Was
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The Weagleys
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The Weddle genealogical work of Elizabeth Weddle Mueting
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The Welfare Committee
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'''With the Eventual Establishment of the Welfare Committee'''
The White Columns
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The Whitman Party
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The WikiTree Challenge 12 Media Workspace
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The Wild Scotsman
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BRISBANE papers to the 4th instant are to hand.
'''STICKING-UP OF THE MAIL''' The Daily Guardian of the 3rd states that some further particulars of this event have come to hand. It appears that the mail was stopped about six miles from Roma on the Condamine side, on Tuesday last, by " the Wild Scotsman." It happened that he had a pretty good haul as the mail contained a package of notes consigned to the Bank of Queensland, and also some specie, sovereigns, and silver, also for the same bank. It is not certain what the exact amount was, some say £75 others £175. It is not likely, however, that his career will he a long one, as £50 reward has been offered for his apprehension, and two constables and about twenty volunteers from Roma are out after him.[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/13121336 The Sydney Morning Herald, Thu 9 Nov 1865. p. 3. QUEENSLAND.] '''1865 Appraisal of Macpherson's exploits'''
WE have Brisbane papers to the 23rd instant.
The Daily Guardian of that date states that the " Wild Scotsman " is still at large, and growing bolder, by experience of the inefficiency of police protection in the districts he is infesting. He is fast getting mailmen down to that dangerous state of passive acquiescence which rendered the bushrangers of New South Wales so successful. What is worse still, the gossiping prattle of newspaper correspondents who reside in the districts, is fast helping to puff the poor wretch into that notoriety which is fame with a large majority of the utterly ignorant and the half-educated portion of the community, who are always ready to admire impudence and unscrupulousness, and who, having nothing to lose, no great reverence for law and order, consider every man a hero was a bold enough to set law and order at defiance. The last news we had of him was by a telegram from Gayndah on Thursday last, to the effect that he was supped rose been thrown from his horse at a place about fifteen miles from that town, and having lost his horse, was skulking away on foot, with police inspector Murray as his heels. Should the news be true, and Murray is fortunate enough to come up with the invincible here, we have no doubt he will be able to give a good account of himself, and of the robber also. In the meantime it is the duty of every honest well disposed resident in the district to assist the police to the utmost of their ability in either capturing or ridding the colony of the presence of such a desperado. "The Felons Apprehension Act" of New South Wales was effectual in breaking up the organised band of robbers who so long held away on the main roads of that colony. The merits of the Act are that under it, any one is at liberty to shoot down a known bushranger wherever he is found. Before we can hope to effectually grapple with the evil in this colony, we must have a similar enactment, and it is a pity that such a provision was not inserted in the Criminal Statutes last session, when they were consolidated. Prevention is better than cure and if such a law were once established here, it would go far to prevent lazy and dishonest men, like Macpherson, from turning highwaymen in order to live an easy and dissolute life.[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/13123881 The Sydney Morning Herald, Wed 27 Dec 1865. p. 5. QUEENSLAND.] '''£250 Reward.'''
THE Government has been pleased to grant the above Reward for the Apprehension, or for Information that will lead to the capture of JAMES MACPHERSON, alias 'The Wild Scotchman,' who is charged with Robbery under Arms of various of her Majesty's Mails in Queensland.
Description : About 23 years of age, 5 feet 10 1/2 inches high, square shouldered, stout build, long arms, light hair, no whiskers, small downy tuft of hair on chin, Roman nose, blue eyes, face much sunburnt, gunshot wound inside left forearm from wrist to elbow, speaks -German fluently.
Caution.— Any parties found harboring the said robber, or giving false information relative to his whereabouts, will be prosecuted under the Felons' Apprehension Act.
Information must be given to the undersigned or to any Justice of the Peace, or Police Officer;
D. T. SEYMOUR, ? Commissioner of Police;
January 1st, 1866.[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/147937634 Maryborough Chronicle, Wide Bay and Burnett Advertiser, Sat 13 Jan 1866. p. 3. Advertising.] We have, however, at the present time, in the very heart of the colony, an individual whose name is James Macpherson, but who is better known by the soubriquet of the "Wild Scotsman," committing depredations on travellers on the highway, and plundering Her Majesty's mails. Several bodies of police are in hot pursuit of him, but they cannot effect his capture; he continues to crop up at intervals and in different places, and frequently robs the mail within one hundred and fifty miles of Brisbane. In course of time there can be no doubt but that he will be hunted down by those who are on his track.[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/1260856 The Brisbane Courier, Wed 17 Jan 1866. p. 2. SOCIAL.] In Queensland, a similar movement is on foot in favour for the liberation of the bushranger McPherson, better known as the " Wild Scotsman." The petitioners appear to have adopted the ludicrous, although seemingly successful, course pursued by their neighbours in New South Wales, and they accordingly memorialise for the outlaw's liberation on the score that his mother is infirm and without means of support! Judging from this depraved notion of justice and mercy, it would appear that the future of these two colonies will be of an exceedingly lively nature.- If Messrs. Sullivan, Gardiner, and McPherson can effect a "junction of their forces," the must promising results may be anticipated, and the present monotony of the bush districts will be enlivened by a few more highway robberies and murders ; while the young recruits under these three experienced leaders will be afforded an opportunity of out rivalling the atrocities of such human fiends as Hall, Morgan, and Co.[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/8930197 The Mercury, Thu 28 May 1874. p. 2. THE MERCURY.] It is the fashion now to be very merciful to criminals, and, therefore, the news in another column that the 'Wild Scotsman' has been set at liberty will not surprise many. Indeed, if we approved of the principle— which we assuredly do not — of giving prisoners long sentences and then letting them off with short terms of punishment, we should say that in the case of MACPHERSON the lenity of the law could not be better employed. He was a very young, hot headed, and romantic, but not a radically bad fellow at the time when GARDINER, BEN HALL, MORGAN and other bushrangers in the Southern Colonies were having things pretty much their own way down there, and when their exploits were the wonder and admiration of a considerable number of honest and foolish working men, artizans, and others in this colony. MACPHERSON, ' The- Wild Scotsman,' was one of these people who were led away, only he was, by the impulsiveness of his nature, and a little more force of character led much farther away than any of his fellow workmen. He was fired with the ambition of emulating the deeds of GARDINER, BEN HALL, MORGAN, CAPTAIN THUNDERBOLT, and the other popular highwaymen then upon the roads in the southern colonies — and he adopted their profession at once and tried to emulate their example. He did not commit, as many murders as his prototypes in the southern colonies, and he was not so cruel nor bloodthirsty in his robberies nor so senseless in the destruction of cheques and other valuable property, of which he could make no use, when he found. them in the mail bags of the postmen he 'stuck up' while he was on the road. But he had a long career of crime and cost the country a large sum of money from first to last. Under the circumstances the cheapest and most satisfactory mode of dealing with the culprit would have been to have hung him. As this. was not done at the time, and the man has been long enough in prison to have become convicted of the folly of following highway robbery as a profession in this colony, there seems no particular danger in letting him at liberty again now. He is not a heartless villain. his poor old father and mother are honest respectable folks—and he can, and probably will, make up his mind to buckle to hard honest work for the remainder of his days, and try to make the last days of his parents as comfortable as he can. If he gets tired of the monotony of this sort of life, and tries the .'bushranging' again — why there will be less trouble to catch or shoot him down than there was before, because the country is more thickly populated, and bushranging is not so popular and romantic a system of robbery, as it was in 1864 and 1865. The risks are great in releasing such a criminal; but the people who took the most active part in securing his release reside in or close to Brisbane, and therefore are not likely to suffer from any depredations which he may commit in the future. If he does take it into his head to 'stick them up,' tie them to trees in the lonely bush, or otherwise maltreat ; them— why they will take it all in good part under, the hope and belief that he will serve the people in the outside districts , very much worse than that, because, the latter took no active parf in securing his release.[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/169516390 The Telegraph, Wed 23 Dec 1874. p. 2. No title.] In order not to be out of the Colonial fashion our Government1 has released a notorious scoundrel called James Macpherson, better known as 'the Wild Scotsman.' It is to be hoped that the long imprisonment which this man has suffered has been the means of instilling more settled ideas in his mind.[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/169514703 The Telegraph, Fri 25 Dec 1874. p. 2. THE WEEK.] Further signs of the awful season we have been passing through, are not far to find. Carriers come in daily, with a weak team, who had a strong one last year, with one team who had two last year, and some we hear of, have lost their all-poor Black Jack (the first white man that ever crossed the Burdekin), and James Macpherson (the noted "Wild Scotsman" of former days) being among the great sufferers among the carriers, so far as I have yet learned.[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/52443268 Morning Bulletin, Sat 8 Apr 1893. p. 7. WINTON.] [FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT]
Bourketown
July 23
While returning from a funeral an old resident here, James M'Pherson known many years ago as the 'Wild Scotsman,' was thrown from his horse, and so injured that he only lived, unconscious, for 48 hours. He leaves a widow and a large family unprovided for.[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/146908643 Maryborough Chronicle, Wide Bay and Burnett Advertiser, Wed 24 Jul 1895. p. 2. COLONIAL TELEGRAMS.] == Historical Reflections == The Wild Scotsman By OXLEY BATMAN [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/139910115 World's News (Sydney, NSW : 1901 - 1955), Saturday 24 February 1951, page 6. THE BAD OLD DAYS.] IN November, 1865, the Nanango bush telegraph in the South Burnett region of Queensland was humming with the news that "The Wild Scotsman," Alpin Macpherson, was in the district. Born of respectable, hard-working parents who took part in the McConnel's historic squattage of Cressbrook Station, Macpherson's exploits reverberated from the Weddin Ranges of NSW to the Houghton River district of Moreton Bay. Macpherson had established himself as a sort of Robin Hood-cum Don Quixote in South Burnett. With the squatters he was not popular. Among the shepherds, hut-keepers, station hands and draymen, of whom a sizable percentage were convicts, he had many sympathisers; was a source of pride in the frontier district of Nanango. Typical of his acts was when he called at an outstation of Tarong, the district's pioneer pastoral holding, and found the shepherd's hut occupied only by the shepherd's wife and a trio of emaciated looking children. The appearance of the group changed Macpherson's visit from plunder to philanthrophy. From his saddlebags he drew a big swag of silver which he endeavored to press upon the terrified woman. Guessing it was the proceeds of some holdup, she declined the silver. Incensed at the rebuffing of his "charity," the Wild Scotsman rode off after lecturing the woman on the evils of ingratitude among the lower orders. The goodwill toward the Wild Scotsman, fostered by such incidents, was not shared by Patrick McCallum, first guardian of the mails on the lonely Nanango-Gayndah run. McCallum delivered the mails by pack saddle; it was before coach tracks were laid down in this region, inhabited by some of the most war-like aboriginal tribes in the colony. In mid-November, 1865, McCallum, as he set out on his run, had uneasy thoughts about being ac-costed at a lonely stage of the trip about 50 miles from Nanango. But as he let down the sliprails on the common, exactly a mile from the town of Nanango, he was stopped by the demand: "Bail up!" The mailman turned and faced the Wild Scotsman, who commanded him to move his horses into the scrub. Macpherson ransacked the bags, taking only cash. Then he apologised for the stress of circumstances which compelled him to "borrow" the mailman's horse and rode off on it. Left with only a packhorse, McCallum trudged the dusty mile back to Nanango township where he found a large detachment of NSW troopers in the the middle of a spree and in no state to chase the Wild Scotsman. They greeted with alcoholic derision his impassioned statement that, within the past hour, their quarry had been at the very gate of Nanango. Meanwhile, on the mailman's horse, Macpherson covered 40 miles before nightfall, reaching Mondure Station (afterwards owned by the late Arnold Wienholt, African big-game hunter and champion of Emperor Haille Selassie). At Mondure, Macpherson helped himself to the best of a bunch of horses and then headed north. He was careful to free the mailman's horse at a spot where it would be easily found. A note attached to the animal's halter thanked the mailman for the loan. Some months later near the Seven Mile Flat adjacent to the present-day South Burnett town of Goomeri, the Nanango-Gayndah mailman heard from the rear the command: "Bail up!" Turning, McCallum looked into the barrel of the Wild Scots-man's pistol. This time Macpherson was mounted on a well-known racehorse Black Eagle, stolen from the Hon. H. B. Moreton, of Wetheron Station. Black Eagle had been a star performer at the Burnett Derby at Gayndah, the first organised race meeting in Queensland. The bushranger again ransacked the mails. This time the mailman was left his horse but was relieved of his saddle. McCallum was assured that this saddle would be returned at the first opportunity. Before he took leave of his victim, the Wild Scotsman requested McCallum to deliver an important packet to Mr. J. O'Connel Bligh, Police Magistrate of Gayndah. This packet was found to consist mostly of warrants for Macpherson's arrest. A few weeks later, the borrowed saddle, bearing a note reading: "This is Pat McCallum's saddle. See he gets it back," was found in the stable of a shanty near the town of Taroom, 100 miles away. A few weeks later, Macpherson attempted to attend a race meeting at Tarong station, doubtlessly with the idea of acquiring a blue-blooded stable mate for Black Eagle. On the outskirts of the meeting he was recognised by the station's head stockman, Alex McCallum, a brother of the mailman. Abandoning his intention, Macpherson fled to the scrubs of Tenneringering Creek. Here he took shelter in a hut during a storm but on emerging, he found Black Eagle had bolted at the height of the downpour. The Wild Scotsman then set out on foot for Nanango. Near Maidenwell he narrowly escaped being ridden over by a galloping police posse as he lay hidden in long grass. Subsequently the missing Black Eagle was found by a blackboy from Tarong station and returned to his owner. Black Eagle lived to win another classic event at the famous Gayndah race meeting. Meanwhile, Macpherson slipped through the police cordon and reached the vicinity now occupied by the Nanango District Hospital. The Wild Scotsman was so confident that on several occasions he entered the bar of the old Star Hotel, close to the headquarters of the NSW police detachment. His confidence in the loyalty of his Nanango sympathisers was vindicated by a warning of a belated raid on his hideout on Hospital Hill. Macpherson was miles away when the net closed, although he was travelling on foot. The Wild Scotsman, however, knew where to find a horse. Near Meeandu Creek, on the Jondaryan-Nanango run, the mailman, Pat McCallum, heard the now familiar demand: "Bail up!" At the subsequent airy announcement: "Pat, I want your horse," the maddened mailman danced with rage as he declared: ''This is too much! People will think I'm working in with you." Macpherson was insistent and departed with the horse, comforting McCallum with: "Don't worry, Pat. I'll return it to you on Saturday." On Saturday, Macpherson, having used McCallum's horse to catch another mount, left the mailman's animal by a path where he was certain to find it. To honor his promise the Wild Scotsman had run the gauntlet of a much reinforced police body. Despite his widespread band of sympathisers, the South Burnett was getting too hot for the Wild Scots-man. He lay low till March, 1866, when he successfully stuck up the Maryborough - Port Curtis mail coach. Then he made into the ranges, and thumbed his nose at the police parties which rode unobservingly within a hundred yards of his hide-outs. Macpherson made his fourth holdup of HM mails near Gin Gin Station in April, 1866. This time the mailman was acting as a decoy in a plan devised by a party of squatters who had become impatient at the futility of the police. When the mailman halted at the bushranger's demand: "Bail up," the concealed squatters converged. Macpherson fled, scorning the fusillade which followed him, but after a long chase his mount foundered. The Wild Scotsman surrendered quietly and said: "Good work, boys! The police could never have done it!" Macpherson escaped twice during the month he was awaiting trial, robbing the Peak Downs-Rockhampton mail coach during one period of liberty, but he was eventually recaptured. On September 13, 1866, he was sentenced by Judge Lutwyche in Brisbane to 25 years imprisonment. The fact that in all his escapades the Wild Scotsman had never discharged a shot at a man paid dividends. A representative body of citizens, among whom were the Rev. B. G. Wilson, an influential Brisbane clergyman, and Mr. J. H. McConnel, owner of Cressbrook Station, on which Macpherson had been born, approached the authorities. As a result, Macpherson was released on December 22, 1874. His subsequent career vindicated the granting of his parole. Till his death after a fall from a horse near Burketown, on the Gulf of Carpentaria, in 1895, the Wild Scotsman's record remained clean. '''The WILD SCOTSMAN ROAMS the RANGES When Queensland Bushrangers Rode— No. 4.''' By CLEM LACK [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/98232398 Sunday Mail (Brisbane, Qld. : 1926 - 1954), Sunday 14 May 1939, page 13.] QUEENSLAND'S most picturesque bush-ranger in the sixties was Alpin MacPherson, known as the Wild Scots-man, who attempted to emulate the deeds of Ben Hall, Gilbert, and other highwaymen of the Southern States. He was not of the desperado type, and seems to have taken to his lawless profession in the spirit of adventure rather than that of an outlaw indulging criminal instincts in a wild career of robbery, violence, and sudden death. His activities were sufficiently astonishing, and the pattern of his wild life so colourful as to place him among the select company of Australian bushrangers, although his exploits were not on the same scale as those of Gardiner, Thunderbolt, and other more notorious characters of the road. Twice he was captured, twice he escaped in dramatic circumstances; and after serving a term in prison he was released before his sentence was completed. Thereafter he lived a peaceful, orderly life, and died prosaically of a broken neck when a horse which he was riding to a funeral threw him to the ground. MacPHERSON was born in Scotland, and came to Queensland with his parents as a child. His father was employed on McConnel's station at Cressbrook. Young MacPherson went to school in Brisbane, and on leaving was apprenticed to John Petrie, the stone mason whose workshops were situated on the corner of Queen and Wharf streets. He was popular with his employers and workmates, and bore a good reputation as an intelligent and industrious work-man. He was a diligent reader and took a keen interest in the debating classes held at the Brisbane Mechanics School of Arts. One morning he failed to appear at work, and the people of Brisbane town were astonished and shocked to learn later that the amiable, well-mannered lad, who had gone to the rescue of a leading citizen when toughs attacked him one night at the Valley, had taken to the roads, with two other wild young spirits from the shearing sheds who were fired with the ambition to become bushrangers. The first exploit of MacPherson and his companions was to "stick up" the public house and store of a man named Willis at Houghton River, North Queensland. During the scuffle, Willis attacked MacPherson with a tomahawk, and was slightly wounded by a shot fired by the Wild Scotsman or one of his companions. For some time after this occurrence, there is very little definite record of his movements, and the material available to the historian is somewhat vague and contradictory. It appears, however, that thereafter, the Wild Scotsman preferred to work alone. He is sup-nosed to have boasted his intention of going to New South Wales to fight a duel with Sir Frederick Pottinger, head of the police force in that colony. There appears to be fairly conclusive evidence that he actually was in New South Wales for some time, that he en-countered Sir Frederick Pottinger and some troopers and exchanged shots with them, and was slightly wounded during the affray. He has also been credited with having joined the Hall gang of bushrangers, and he frequently claimed afterward that he staged robberies and hold-ups in company with Gilbert and Hall. SOME time in the early sixties the Wild Scotsman returned to Queensland, and speedily became a notorious character, robbing the overland mails, sticking up travellers, stealing racehorses and other-wise endeavouring to establish him-self as the standard ideal of the Australian bushranger. The records in the Oxley Library are vague and contradictory, and it is difficult to outline his career in chronological sequence, but it appears that he had not been opera-ting for many months when he was captured by the police. A warrant had been issued for his arrest for his attack on Sir Frederick Pottinger, and he was extradited to stand trial in Sydney on a charge of shooting with intent to do grevious bodily harm. Before the trial opened Sir Frederick Pottinger was killed in an accident, and the charge against MacPherson was not preceded with. He was returned to Queensland in charge of the police to stand trial for the Haughton River hold up and other charges. At Brisbane he was remanded to Rockhampton, and was placed aboard the steamer Diamantina. To ensure the safe custody of his prisoner, Constable Mailer chained him with leg irons, handcuffs being a useless precaution. MacPherson, a big, well-built man, had remark-ably small hands and could easily slip them through the ordinary handcuffs. He boasted freely that the handcuffs that could hold him had never been made. Nevertheless, in spite of the leg irons. MacPherson managed to escape. During the voyage up the coast he had been so quiet and sub-missive that the constable allowed him to stay on deck during the day, and MacPherson would sit near the cook's galley reading a book for hours at a time. While the ship was at Gladstone he took advantage of the hustle and confusion at the wharf and the relaxed vigilance of his gaoler to make a desperate bid for liberty. Probably, his hands being free, he had managed to secrete a file, and loose himself of his leg irons. In the dusk of the evening he slipped quietly overboard, swimming through shark-infested waters to the shore. His escape was not noticed till about half an hour afterwards. The Wild Scotsman was never again captured by police, and he roamed at large for three years more be-fore he was caught by a party of bushmen. ONE day at dusk, seven or eight miles past Barambah, he stuck up the mailman, carrying her Majesty's mails between Nanango and Gayndah. McCallum, the mailman, was astonished to hear a loud, penetrating voice roaring from the shelter of some trees: "Pull up! Pull up!" Immediately afterward a power-fully built man, about 24 years old and 6ft. in height, emerged, leading a handsome jet black horse. This was identified later as the racehorse Black Eagle, stolen from the Hon. B. B. Moreton, of Wetheron. Pointing a six-chambered revolver at McCallum's head, the stranger exclaimed peevishly: "You've kept me waiting! I've been on the look-out for you for a long time!" "Are you the Wild Scotsman?" asked McCallum. "They call me that?" replied the huge, bearded rider, who made no attempt to conceal his identity. He forced the mailman to turn off the load into the bush and dismount, but McCallum courageously refused to take the mail bags off his horse. MacPherson, picturesque, with a red girdle round his waist, tied his mount to a near-by tea-tree, and taking a long knife from his girdle, ripped the mail bags open, swiftly abstracting everything of cash value. He also took the mailman's saddle and helped himself to some cigars the mailman had in his pocket, adding insult to injury by offering him one. He then handed the mailman a packet and asked him to deliver it to J. OConnel Bligh, police magistrate at Gayndah. The package contained a number of valuable papers which MacPherson had taken in previous robberies, and which he said were of no use to him. VAULTING into the saddle, MacPherson then made off at a gallop. The mail man reported the hold up to the police at Boonara. Next night he arrived at Gayndah, and thirty police and trackers were sent in search of the Wild Scots-man, a price being put upon his head. MacPherson narrowly escaped capture many times. One day he was lurking around Tarong Station. A race meeting was to be held on the following day, and MacPherson was trying to "lift" a race-horse or two from one of the pad-docks. But he was discovered and had to dash off with a hallooing posse of well-mounted young squatters at his heels. He managed to give his pursuers the slip, and travelled toward Cooyar, camping on Tenningering Creek. A thunder-storm broke, and he sought shelter in an old shack, leaving his horse nearby. When he returned, his horse had gone, and he was forced to travel on foot through country that was stirred up against him like a dis-turbed hornet's nest. He was nearly caught by a search party in the Maidenwell district. He was actually lying down, with some blade grass as his only cover, when several mounted police rode past him only a few feet distant. AS a sequal to the robbery near Boonara, an escort of mounted police accompanied the mailman from Gayndah to Boonara, but no escort was provided for the journey from Nanango. Neglect of such an obvious precaution met with its due reward shortly afterwards. McCallum was again held up and robbed by the Scotsman, this time just out-side Nanango in broad daylight, on the Old Barambah Road. Seemingly, all this time, the bush-ranger had been wandering about on foot. Walking quietly from behind a tree, he pointed his revolver at McCallum and demanded his horse and saddle as well as other valuables. After slitting the mail bags, and making a leisurely selection, he rode off on the stolen horse. He apologised to the mailman for taking it, and promised to return the animal as soon as he could. He reached Mondure in the dusk of the evening, and choosing one of the best horses he could find, made for the Wide Bay ranges, leaving be-hind him the "borrowed" mailman's horse, which was subsequently retrieved by its owner. MacPherson worked his way further and further north, occasionally varying the robbery of mailmen and road travellers with a raid on a lonely settler. In March, 1866, the mailman who carried the overland mail between Maryborough and Port Curtis was "stuck up" and robbed by MacPherson about seven miles from Waroo Station at Baffle Creek. He was not heard of or seen again for a month. On March 31 the mailman, on reaching Gin Gin station, was warned that a strange man riding a horse and leading another had been seen riding through the paddocks, and that later he had made inquiries of station employees as to the date and time of the mailman's arrival. Suspecting that the stranger was the Wild Scotsman, plans were made to trap him. Two of the men rode swiftly to Munduran Station, eight miles away, to put the manager, W. Nott, on his guard, and ask him to organise a pursuit party. The nearest police station was at Maryborough, 100 miles away. It was arranged that the mailman should go ahead of the party and act as a decoy. Near the Kolan River, the two men from Gin Gin saw in the distance on the far side of the river a man riding on horse-back and leading another, evidently making for a bush shanty some dis-tance along the road. They recog-nised him as the suspicious stranger, and warily the party followed their quarry. THE mailman, as arranged, can-tered leisurely ahead of the party, who were all well armed, and rapidly overhauled the traveller. Continued on next page. " After slitting the mail bags, and making a leisurely selection he rode off on the stolen horse . . . WHEN THE WILD SCOTSMAN ROAMED THE RANGES (Continued from previous page.) MacPherson, as he proved to be, was walking his horse slowly along the road, when he heard the mailman galloping along behind him. Some sixth sense must have warned him that all was not well, and just at the moment his pursuers broke from cover, he dug his spurs into his mount, dropped the halter of the animal he was leading, and wheeling his horse round, galloped recklessly down the steep side of the gorge below the road. He probably would have escaped them had not his horse foundered. His pursuers, mounted on strong, fresh horses, speedily caught up with him ere he had reached level ground at the bottom of the declivity. Hurriedly the Wild Scots-man began to unstrap the double-barrelled gun he carried across the pommel of his saddle, but he was too late. He found himself staring down the barrels of four rifles, and Nott exclaimed: "Put up your hands, or I'll fire!" The Wild Scotsman shrugged his broad shoulders, and slowly reached up his arms. "All right,'' he growled, "I give up." After he had been searched and relieved of a collection of pistols, his legs were strapped to his stirrups, and his hands tied behind his back. "I knew you weren't policemen,'' he said, addressing Nott, "by the way you galloped down that ridge, but you would not have got me if my horse hadn't been done up." In the pack of the horse he had abandoned was found a well-equipped case of surgical instruments, with a supply of lint, and other necessaries for treating wounds. The party and their prisoner returned to the station. The police at Maryborough were advised, and two constables took the outlaw into custody. MacPherson was committed for trial at the Supreme Court, Brisbane, on the first charge of robbing and shooting Willis at Haughton River. Evidently he had plenty of sympathisers on the jury, for he was acquitted on the ground of doubtful identity. He was defended by barrister Pring, afterward Mr. Justice Pring. The Crown Prosecutor told the Chief Justice (Sir James Cockle) that there were many other charges pending against the prisoner. At his request the venue was changed to Maryborough. At the Maryborough trial, on two charges of mail robbery, the Wild Scotsman was found guilty and sentenced to 25 years' penal servitude. THE Wild Scotsman disappeared from public view behind the wall of St. Helena prison in More-ton Bay. He had served nine years of his sentence when he determined to escape. The prison authorities carefully guarded the boats on the beach, but MacPherson had made other plans. Sugar cane was then cultivated on St Helena, and prison labour was employed in the growing and manufacture of sugar. One dark night MacPherson broke out of his cell, taking a "sugar cooler," a shallow wooden box about 8ft. square and a foot deep, he dragged it to the water's edge. In this frail craft, with a pair of crude paddles, he faced the peril of choppy seas and the menace of sharks, and succeeded in reaching the mainland. But he was soon recaptured. Two years later he was more fortunate. The Rev. B. G. Wilson, of Brisbane, interested himself in the Wild Scotsman, and through his influence the authorities suspended the remainder of the sentence. MacPherson, on gaining his freedom, justified the clemency extended him by leading a quiet and exemplary life. He met his death some years later at Barcaldine, falling from the horse he was riding and breaking his neck. == Other Sources == # The "Wild Scotchman" : Queensland bushranger James MacPherson Pt.1. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, Online blog. 25 May 2016. Accessed on 28 Mar 2022 at https://www.slq.qld.gov.au/blog/wild-scotchman-queensland-bushranger-james-macpherson-pt1. # The "Wild Scotchman" : Queensland bushranger James MacPherson Pt.2. John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, Online blog. 25 May 2016. Accessed on 28 Mar 2022 at https://www.slq.qld.gov.au/blog/wild-scotchman-queensland-bushranger-james-macpherson-pt2. # Wikipedia contributors, "James Alpin McPherson," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=James_Alpin_McPherson&oldid=1040064566 (accessed March 28, 2022). # Basil Shaw, 'McPherson, James Alpin (1842–1895)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/mcpherson-james-alpin-4134/text6619, published first in hardcopy 1974, accessed online 28 March 2022. # [http://www.sabatech.net/Scotchman/ Blog: James McPherson - The Wild Scotchman. Queensland's only Bushranger.] # Moreton Bay and More Blog ## [https://moretonbayandmore.home.blog/2019/10/07/a-brief-history-of-bushranging-in-queensland-part-1/ A Brief History of Bushranging in Queensland. Part 1.] ## [https://moretonbayandmore.home.blog/2019/10/20/a-brief-history-of-bushranging-in-queensland-part-2/ A Brief History of Bushranging in Queensland. Part 2.] ## [https://moretonbayandmore.home.blog/2019/11/13/a-brief-history-of-bushranging-in-queensland-part-3/ A Brief History of bushranging in Queensland. Part 3.] ## [https://moretonbayandmore.home.blog/2019/12/02/a-brief-history-of-queensland-bushranging-the-wild-scotchman/ A brief history of Queensland bushranging: the Wild Scotchman] ## [https://moretonbayandmore.home.blog/2019/12/07/the-wild-scotchman-life-on-the-run-1865-1866/ The Wild Scotchman – Life on the Run – 1865-1866] ## [https://moretonbayandmore.home.blog/2019/11/03/the-indictment-of-the-bushranger-the-wild-scotchman/ The indictment of the bushranger “The Wild Scotchman”] ## [https://moretonbayandmore.home.blog/2019/09/13/the-wild-scotchman-gets-sent-down-13-september-1866/ The ‘Wild Scotchman’ gets sent down – 13 September 1866.] ## [https://moretonbayandmore.home.blog/2019/12/08/the-wild-scotchmans-life-after-crime/ The Wild Scotchman’s Life after Crime] # Murphy, J. E.; Eston, E. W. Wilderness to Wealth: Being a History of the Shires of Nanango, Kingaroy, Wondai, Murgon, Kilkivan and the Upper Yarraman Portion of the Rosalie Shire 1850-1950. W. R. Smith & Paterson Pty. Ltd., 1950. 1974. pp. 51-54. # Grimes, Judith A. Pioneering into the Future: A History of the Nanango Shire. Wise Owl Research Publishers, 1998. pp. 401-404. == Sources ==
The Wild West
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The Wilder
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The Wiley Thornton Images
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The Wilhelm Project
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The Will & Death Duties of Thomas Jacka who died 1796, St Erth Cornwall, England
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The following is an analysis of the records pertaining to the settling of Thomas's estate. After a person died and their will was processed by the court a copy was sent to the “Inland Revenue where death duty was calculated. The Inland Revenue created registers to record all this incoming information from the courts.”The National Archives. (2018). Death duties 1796-1903 - The National Archives. [online] Available at: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/death-duties-1796-1903/ [Accessed 3 Mar. 2018]. [vi] Search.findmypast.com. (2018). The Death Duty Registers it were created to enable the authorities to collect money from the estate once a person had died. Note that “Inheritance tax was first introduced in 1796 was applied to any estate with a value of over £20. {| class="wikitable" ! Child’s Name at baptism !! Baptised !! Date of Marriage of Children - Before father died/After father died !! Thomas Jacka’s Will (child mentioned) AP/J/2020 Will of Thomas Jacka of St Erth 1796 !! Father’s Death Duty Register Entry (child mentioned) IR 26/339, EXETER: Cornwall Archdeaconry, Repository The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 4DU [Note this is not the original will, but instead a copy made by the clerk (source:- Cornish Probate Records http://webs.lanset.com/azazella/probate_guide.html) presumably at the time the probate was processed] |- | '''[[Jacka-15|Thomas Jacka]]''' || 26 December 1760, St Buryan Parish Registers, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1718-1812.Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 11 Jun 2018), Baptism of Thomas Jacka, baptised 29 December 1760, St Buryan Parish Register; St Buryan Parish Registers, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1718-1812, ornwall Records Office, Truro. page 34 unnumbered entry [last entry] for A.D. 1760; https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-6QKS-Z99?cc=1769414&wc=3CB4-K6D%3A138123201%2C141035101%2C1582882809 (image 21 of 88) || Married Anna Moyses, by licence on 29 May 1790 in Wendron, Cornwall.Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 25 Nov 2012), Marriage entry for Thomas Jacka(Sithney) & Anna Moyses, married by licence on 29 May 1790, Wendon Parish Register; citing Wendon Parish Registers, Marriage banns, Marriages, 1754-1812, Year 1790, page 165, entry 609; https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-XC79-KV4?cc=1769414&wc=3CBH-GPX%3A138123201%2C142405601%2C1582884005 (image 83 of 144;) || No || No |- | '''[[Jacka-17|William Jacka]]''' || 2 January 1763, Sithney Parish Registers, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812.Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 11 Jun 2018), Baptism of William Jacka, baptised 2 January 1763, Sithney Parish Register; Sithney Parish Register, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro. 1763, page 30, unnumbered entry (first entry on the page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-65X9-XHK?cc=1769414&wc=3CBH-6T1%3A138123201%2C140750301%2C1582884019 (image 20 of 108) || Married Margaret Wood 12 May 1790, after bans were read on February 28, & March 7 & 21st in Germoe. Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 11 Jun 2018), Marriage of William Jacka & Margaret Wood both of Germoe, married 12 May 1790,Germoe Parish Register; citing Germoe Parish Registers, Germoe Marriage banns, Marriages, 1754-1812. 1790, Cornwall Records Office, Truro. Page 35, entry 141; https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-6QZ7-T12?cc=1769414&wc=3CB4-FMD%3A138123201%2C138780501%2C1582884005 (image 21 of 34) || No || No |- | '''[[Jacka-18|John Jackka]]''' || 2 January 1764, Sithney Parish Registers.Register, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812. Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England. "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 11 Jun 2018), Baptism of John Jackka, baptised 2 January 1764 Sithney Parish Register; citing Sithney Parish Register, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro. Year 1764, page 32, unnumbered entry (3rd line on page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-65X9-8LM?cc=1769414&wc=3CBH-6T1%3A138123201%2C140750301%2C1582884019 (image 21 of 108) ||'' May have married by licence to the widow Mary Limbrick on 17 June 1800 in Helston.''Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 4 May 2018), Marriage Licence of John Jacka & Mary Lambrick (widow) married 17 Jun 1800 Helston Parish Register; citing Helston Parish Records Marriages, 1754-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro.Year 1800, page 206, entry 818; https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6QVQ-QKP?cc=1769414&wc=3CBZ-DP8%3A138123201%2C138937101%2C138815001 (105 of 133)
''[see note 4 below]'' || “my son John Jacka” & “my three sons '''John Jacka''', Joseph Jacka & James Jacka” || As Executor or Administrator |- |''' [[Jacka-19|Elizabeth Jackka]]''' || 30 November 1766, Sithney Parish Registers, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812. Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 20 May 2018), Baptism of Elizabeth Jackka, baptised 30 November 1766, Sithney Parish Register; citing Sithney Parish Register, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro. Year 1766, p.35, unnumbered entry (third from bottom of page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-65X9-7SJ?cc=1769414&wc=3CBH-6T1%3A138123201%2C140750301%2C1582884019 (image 22 of 108) || Married William Jelbart 12 Mary 1800 in St Erth, Cornwall. Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 25 Nov 2012), Marriage of Elizabeth Jacka(St Erth) & William Jelbart(St Levan), married 12 May 1800, St Erth Parish Register; citing St Erth Marriages, 1782-1812; Cornwall Records Office, Truro. Year 1800, page 38, unnumber entry (4th on page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DTLW-MW6?cc=1769414&wc=3CBC-2J3%3A138123201%2C141323201%2C141336701 (image 21 of 35) || “my daughter Eliseth Jacka” || Auxiliary Legatee |- | '''[[Jacka-20|Abraham Jackka]]''' || 4 May 1769, Sithney Parish Registers, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812. Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 20 May 2018), Baptism of Abraham Jackka, baptised 4 May 1769, Sithney Parish Register; citing Sithney Parish Register, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro. Year 1769, p.38, unnumbered entry (middle of page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-65X9-6RT?cc=1769414&wc=3CBH-6T1%3A138123201%2C140750301%2C1582884019 (image 24 of 108) || Married Ann Milldrum on 20 November 1796, in St Hilary, Cornwall after Banns were read.Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 25 Nov 2012), Marriage entry for Abraham JACKA(St Erth) & Ann MILLDRUM(St Hilary), married 20 November 1796, St Hilary Parish Register; St Hilary Parish Registers, Marriages, 1754-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro. Year 1796, page 167, unnumber entry (second on page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-XK5Q-LQN?cc=1769414&wc=3CBH-BZW%3A138123201%2C141471801%2C138815001 (89 of 123) || “my son Abrahm Jacka” || Auxiliary Legatee |- | '''[[Jacka-21|Joseph Jackka]]''' || 29 September 1771, Sithney Parish Registers, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812.Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 20 May 2018), Baptism of Joseph Jackka, baptised 29 September 1771, Sithney Parish Register; citing Sithney Parish Register, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro. Year 1771, p.41, unnumbered entry (8th from bottom of page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-65X9-C98?cc=1769414&wc=3CBH-6T1%3A138123201%2C140750301%2C1582884019 (image 25 of 108)|| Married Charity Berryman 7 October 1798, St Erth, after banns were read.Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 25 Nov 2012), Marriage of Joseph Jacka (St Erth) & Charity BERRYMAN (St Erth), married 7 October 1798, St Erth Parish Register; citing St Erth Parish Register, St Erth Marriages, 1782-1812 Year 1798, page 34, unnumbered entry (third on page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DTGW-2V?cc=1769414&wc=3CBC-2J3%3A138123201%2C141323201%2C141336701 (image 19 of 35) || “my three sons John Jacka, '''Joseph Jacka''' & James Jacka” || As Executor or Administrator |- | '''[[Jaccka-1|James Jaccka]]''' || 12 October 1774, Sithney Parish Registers, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812.Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 20 May 2018), Baptism of James Jackka, baptised 12 October 1774, Sithney Parish Register; citing Sithney Parish Register, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro. Year 1771, p.45, unnumbered entry (6th from bottom of page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-65X9-XRS?cc=1769414&wc=3CBH-6T1%3A138123201%2C140750301%2C1582884019 (image 27 of 108) || Married Eleanor Hammill on 16 November 1800, St Erth.Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 25 Nov 2012), Marriage entry for James Jacka(St Erth) and Eleanor Hammel(St Erth), married 16 November 1800, St Erth Parish Register; citing St Erth Parish Registers, Marriages, 1782-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro.Year 1800, Page 39, unnumbered entry at top of page; https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DTLW-MW6?cc=1769414&wc=3CBC-2J3%3A138123201%2C141323201%2C141336701 ( image 21 of 35) || “my three sons John Jacka, Joseph Jacka & '''James Jacka'''” || As Executor or Administrator |- | '''[[Jacka-22|Ann Jackka]]''' || 26 October 1777, Sithney Parish Registers, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812.Cornwall Record Office, Truro, Cornwall, England., "England, Cornwall Parish Registers, 1538-2010," images database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org : accessed 20 May 2018), Baptism of Ann Jackka, baptised 26 October 1777, Sithney Parish Register; citing Sithney Parish Register, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1737-1812, Cornwall Records Office, Truro. Year 1771, p.49, unnumbered entry (8th from bottom of page); https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-65X9-WPD?cc=1769414&wc=3CBH-6T1%3A138123201%2C140750301%2C1582884019 (image 29 of 108) || No marriage has yet been identified for Ann. || “my daughter Ann Jacka” || Auxiliary Legatee |} ==Research Notes== '''Note 1''' - All the children of Thomas Jacka (see list below) except the two eldest sons, Thomas and William, are included in the Will. Both sons had already married so perhaps their father had already given them their inheritance while he was still alive.
'''Note 2''' - It is interesting to note that of those sons mentioned in the will it is only Abrahm who is listed as an Auxillary Legatee the other sons were listed As Executors or Administrators, perhpas there was a limit to the number of Executors or Administrators.
'''Note 3''' - The only grandchild mentioned are those child of John Jacka the reason for this is not known, was he not well? or had his wife received a significant inheritance so it was expected that he would live off this. Or perhaps the father didn't approve of his son marrying the widow Mary Limbrick?
'''Note 4''' - It is possible that John predeceased his father who mentions his grandsons (children of John) as residuary legatees in his will rather than his son [his son has either died (most likely) or has been disinherited (but then John's sons would have most likely been disinherited as well)].
==Sources==
The will and inventory of Steward Southgate
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Case 55019
Southgate Steward
Residence Leicester
Will 1765 '''Worcester ? Leicester may 2nd 1765'''
The within named Noah Jones, Thomas
Denny & John Fletcher, personally appearing
were sworn that in the apprizing of the
within estate, they would act impartally
Before me
Thos Steel? Justice of the Peace
Series A, Case 55019
Warrant for prize
Steward Southgate Estate
Dated Jan 7 1765 '''Series A Case 55019'''
Steward Southgate
Inventory
14 May 1765
due 7 ?d
recorded Vol. 8 page 537 {| class="wikitable" border="1" |- | Bad notes £16 : 18s : 3 | Bought over | |- ||| || 16: 18 : 3 |- | A note from Stephen Hutchinson for 20 sheep & lambs the sheep suposed to be worth || || 5 : 00 : 0 |- | ||Sum total||£1146 : 10 : 11 3/4 |} Wearing apparel Desposed off by himself (viz) 2 cotton shirts
2 cotton + linen Do one pair of yarn Stockings 2 pair of
Leather Breeches one pair of shoes a bever hat a cloth coat
+ jacket 23 yards of fulled cloth which was said to be
disposed of to his son Stewart Southgate afore his decease
Noah Jones
Thomas Denny
John Fletcher
appd.
--
A draught chain |
1 piece of a long chain | not apprized
a Ha?an |
1 pair Horse Races |
Worcester : May 14 1765 John Southgate one of the? of
Last Will + Testament of Steward Southgate Did bring off
?ut called ?akers apprend + solemnly affirmed that I are going
in a just + time Inventory of said Decd Estate so far as la?
come to his knowledge + if any thing more shall hereafter
appear he would confer same to be added
John Chandler Judge Probate
Worcester Fs Recorded with the Records of Wills
for sd County Libo 8 Page 537 &c
Timo Paine Reg
5/40
Inventory of the Estate of Stewart Southgate Late of
Leicester deceased (viz) his wearing apparel -
his Camblet Coat 18/ for the Jacket 18/ Linen Do 4/ | 2 - 0 - 6 |
2 waistcoats 4/6 a Druget Jacket 2/6, old hat 1/, 3 pair of stockings 6/ | 1 - 4 - 0 |
2 pair of linen Do 9/ a pair of outside Do 1/3 a pair Gloves 3/ | 0 - 13 - 3 |
cotton handkerchief 1/6, Boots 10/ 3 shirts 9/, 1Do 5/3, Glasss 2/6 | 1 - 8 - 3 |
Long waistcoat 5/ Linen Jacket 1/ Silver button 1/4 | 0 - 7 - 4 |
16 yards of wool cloth £4 - 4s - 3d his purse £2 - 8s - 0d | 6 - 12 - 3 |
His real Estate (viz) his homestead about 90 acreswith his mansion house &c | 320 - 0 - 0 |
about 16 acres + half of land with a barn thereon &c | 86 - 0 - 0 |
about one acre + quarter of orchard land on the south sideof the road above John Southgate own? land | 6 - 0 - 0 |
about an acre and half below the Road opposite Land Orchard | 6 - 13 - 4 |
about 17 acres on the top of the hill adjoining ? Le?g?ts Land | 33 - 6 - 8 |
a farm lying partly in Spencer and partly in Leicestercontaining about 96 acres | 133 - 6 - 8 |
West of Nath'el Greens on Spencer Lane 20 acres | 10 - 13 - 4 |
at Cedar Meadow about 5 1/2 acres | 3 - 0 - 0 |
Cedar Lott? in said meadow | 1 - 4 - 0 |
Below Capt Newhalls 1 acre + 3/4 | 0 - 12 - 0 |
at Burncoat meadow about 45 acres | 49 - 4 - 0 |
Southwest from Capt Whitmores Mill about 6 acres + 3/4 | 3 - 12 - 0 |
at Town meadow and upland about 27 acres | 40 - 00 - 0 |
South of Bradishes? about 7 acres | 4 - 0 - 0 |
by North Cedar swamp 11 acres | 3 - 6 - 8 |
4 Cedar Lotts in said swamp | 0 - 10 - 4 |
South of William Gilkeys 19 acres | 7 - 12 - 0 |
on Worcester Line adjoyning Lamper Hill about 150 acres | 90 - 00 - 0 |
South east of Johnson Watsons 11 acres | 5 - 01 - 4 |
11 acres adjoyning to Nath'll Scotts Land North of ye Road to Lambs | 9 - 00 - 0 |
3 acres South of said Road adjoining Samuel Watsons Land | 1 - 12 - 0 |
15 acres North of Joseph + Nathan Seargents near Lambs Mill | 4 - 10 - 0 |
Land in common and undivided about 100 acres | 20 - 00 - 0 |
about 14 acres of Land Lying on the South side of the Roadnear the North Cedar swamp | 7 - 00 - 0 |
one Cedar Lott in South Swamp | 0 - 18 - 0 |
hay at Burncoat meadow £1 : 0s : 0d hay at home £1 - 0s - 0d | 2 - 0 - 0 |
parsnips & carrots 3/4 | 0 - 3 - 4 |
three Rights of Land in Townships near Lake Champlainviz one in Charlotte £4 : 0 : 0 2 Do in Shelbourn £6 : 15 : 0 | 10 - 15 - 0 |
carried over | £872 - 5 - 9 |
6/40
brought over | £872 - 5 - 9 |
His oxen £15 - 0 - 0 : 8 cows 31 - 13 - 4 | 46 - 13 - 4 |
2 farrow Do £5 - 17 - 4 1 heifer 2 - 8 - 0 a bull 1 - 16 - 0 | 9 - 13 - 4 |
2 yearlings £2 - 0 - 0 a fat Hog 2 - 4 - 6, 8 Running Do 4 - 4 - 0 | 8 - 8 - 6 |
Best Bed £8 13 4 with the furniture | 8 - 13 - 4 |
one Do & Do £5 - 13 - 10 | 5 - 13 10 |
one Do with the furniture 5 - 14 - 0 Couch framed bed 1 - 6 - 9 | 7 - 00 - 8 |
one Bed in East Room £6 - 10s - 8d, 6 puter poringers 4/8 | 6 - 15 - 4 |
5 puter plates 6/? 6 Do 5/4, 5 Do 4/9 5 Spoons 1/ 6 Do 9 1/2 d | 0 - 17 - 10 1/2 |
A silver Do 11/, 6 small tea spoons 8d 4 puter Dishes 15/7 | 1 - 7 - 3 |
2 basons 2/8 Teapot 3/ 2 canteens, coffeepot, funel saucepan 2/6 | 8 - 2 |
peper Box + Lamp Grator & case 2d 1/2 3 candlesticks 1/6 | 1 - 8 1/2 |
Case of knives & forks 3/8, 4 knives & six forks 1/2 | 4 - 10 |
Tankard & puter pot 3/, 7lb & 1/4 old puter 5/7 3 Looking glases 7/6 | 16 - 1 |
Bayleys Dictionary zuol? £1 - 0s - 0d Great bible 8/ | 1 - 8 - 0 |
39 Small Pamphlets 14/7 1/2 | 14 - 7 1/2 |
Warming pan 6/ button mould 2 iron pots + lid 9/7 | 15 - 7 |
Do 2/6, Do 2/8 Iron Kettle 2/ Small Do 2/ Tea Do 6/ | 0 - 15 - 2 |
Brass kittle 14/8 34 lb of old Brass £1 - 7s - 2d Gridiron 1/- | 1 - 12 - 0 |
A Toster 3/ Chaffing Dish 3/ Tongs 4/8 Crane Tranuls? & hooks 2/4 | 0 - 13 - 0 |
Crane 4/8 Box iron & leters? 1/6 Iron Goose? 3/4 Iron Square 1/- | 10 - 6 |
Large Millyard? 5/ Small Do 2/ one pair of hand irons 12/ | 0 - 19 - 0 |
Do 11/ Do 10/ actone? 11/ Do 6/ Bellows 4/8 | 2 : 2 : 8 |
Wool Combs 18/ 23 Scains of Linen yarn and 12 Do of Tow 16 | 1 - 14 - 0 |
Cloth & wool for two bed quilts 16/ woolen yarn & cotton 4/ | 1 - 00 - 0 |
Basket + Rags 1/ 2 sheep skins 4/4 under bed + cord 6/ | 11 - 4 |
Warping barrs spools & sealm? 10/ Quil wheel and spindles 3/ | 13 - 0 |
Skreen 3/ window Glass 1/6 an old Chest 1/ old Jacket 1/, 2 beehives & glas? box 8d | 7 - 2 |
Chest of Draws 1/10 old Do 1/ meal chest 6/ wheel 3/ | 11 - 10 |
Linen wheel 10/ woolen Do 2/ Blades 1/ Chest 8d Cups + saucers & (pot ? 8d | 14 - 4 |
Cards 1/4, 3 glass bottles 10d a bottle of Batemans Drops 1/10 | 0 - 4 - 0 |
a bottle of Brittish oyl 1/10, 18 viols with Druggs 4/ a box of wafers 8d | 6 - 6 |
scales & weights 6/ 2 rasors hone & glass 4/ fisher hooks 2d | 10 - 2 |
an oz of Pikery 8d Inkhorn stand Penknife & sand box 1/ | 0 - 1 - 8 |
Salt cellar & porringer 4d Sheers 8d a mortar 8d Earthen ware 3/4 | 5 - 0 |
Surveying instruments £1 - 0s - 0d 2 swilltubs 1/ 2 butter tubs 2/6 | 1 - 3 - 6 |
Kneeding trough 2/ washing tub 2/ meat Do 3/ | 0 - 7 - 0 |
Cheese basket & tongs 8d Dye tub 1/ Coffee Box hoops + Tray 8d | 0 - 2 - 4 |
Lanthorn 4d 3 beehives 6d a Loom 13/4 a Chest 3/ | 0 - 17 - 2 |
a Grain chest 3/ Do 1/6 6 Dry Casks 4/ 11 bucket of ashes 6/ | 0 - 14 - 6 |
3 old Chests 2 beehives 1/ a Corn fan 6/8 yarn & strainer &c 8d | 0 - 8 - 4 |
carried over | £989 - 13 - 4 1/2 |
7/40
4 boxes 2/ Churn 12/ Salt box 1/6 7 wooden bowls 4/6 | 1 - 0 - 0 |
4 trays 6/ 3 hoops & followers 2/ 4 milking pails 8/ | 16 - 0 |
Cheese tub 6/ Round table 13/4 Do 6/ Bookcases & Desk 2: 13/4 | 3 - 18 - 8 |
Clock & Case £6 - 13 - 4, 6 white chairs & one seat? Do 10/ | 7 - 3 - 4 |
6 Black Do & one ? Do 13/ 7 barrels of syder £2 - 0 - 0 | 2 - 13 - 0 |
4 barrels of vinegar 1:4:0 ten barrels 13/4 2D /2 Do 2/ | 1 - 19 - 4 |
a 3 quarter barrel 3/ chees press 6/ meat tub 1/4 | 0 - 10 -4 |
4 Hogshead 4/6 a half hogshead Tub 6d a Desk chest 3/ jarr & oyl 1/ | 0 - 9 - 0 |
an old Pail 3d an old ax 2/ Do 1/8 | 0 - 3 - 11 |
Sole leather 10/6 calf skin & mills 7/ butter 17/6 | 1 - 15 - 0 |
a saddle 16/ good cheese £16:6s:8 other cheese 2:5:4 | 19 - 8 - 0 |
Saddle bags 1/6 square table 6/8 10 yards of cloth £2:13:4 | 3 - 1 - 16 |
Meal bags 5/ Sled 4/ a yoke staple & Ring 3/ Chain 8/ Iron bar 9/ | 1 - 9 - 0 |
Broad ax 10/ Short iron Barr 7/ Cops & pin 2/ 2 old axes 2/8 | 1 - 1 - 8 |
Post ax 2/ hatchet 1/ wedges 1/4 3 old bells 8d 3 augers 3/ 2Do 10d | 0 - 8 - 10 |
4 Chizels 2/8 2 Goages & old chizel 1/2 4 old files 1d one Do 1/4 | 0 - 6 - 0 |
2 Shaves 10d 2 plane irons 6d 3 Gimblets & Tapbour? 5d | 0 - 1 - 11 |
4 old sythes 2/8 3 syckles 1/7 1 Do 4d an old spade 1/ 2 hows 6/8 | 12 - 3 |
one sythe & tackling 2/ Do 1/ Small fork 8d Dung fork 1/ | 0 - 4 - 8 |
2 pair of Beetle Rings 2/8 a Rake 4d Loom Tackling 5/4 | 0 - 8 - 4 |
2 sieves 1/4 an old pition? 8d an old frying pan 1/4 | 0 - 3 - 4 |
yarn 7d cheese cloth 6d old knife 2d Dried apples 8d 103lb old iron 16/3 | 0 - 18 - 2 |
old hough? 8d a pair of sheers 1/4 Cyder mill £2:13:4 | 2 - 15 - 4 |
Cart £2:13:4 horse Do 1:0:0 a peck of salt 1/2 | 3 - 14 - 6 |
10 bushel of Damaged potatoes 6/ a bushel of Good Do 7/6 | 0 - 13 - 6 |
a peck & 1.2 of malt 1/6 2 bushel & 3 pecks of peas 14/8 | 0 - 16 - 2 |
11 bushel of oats 22/ 3 bushel of Indian Corn 9/4 | 1 - 11 - 4 |
29 bush of wheat 7 - 14 - 8 Rye 34 bush 7:18:8 | 15 - 13 - 4 |
3/4 lb of Chocolate 1/2 Cow hide 9/2 Calf skin 1/10 | 12 - 2 |
Sawmil hors? with 2 Saws £6:0s:0d 1/8 part of forge land house & appurtenances in partnership | 6 - 0 - 06 - 13 - 4 |
Grindstone 14/ Shingles 10/8 1100 of white pine boards £1:10:0 | 2 - 14 - 8 |
336 foot of chesnut board 7/ 1800 of pine board £2:2:0 | 2 - 9 - 0 |
Poplar boards 500, 12/ Stock of poor Do 2/ Some Refuge Boards 5/4 | 0 - 19 - 4 |
Boards at Richard Southgates mill £2:8:0 3 pair of sled hides 4/9 | 2 - 12 - 9 |
Grain by New barn on the Ground 1:0:0 Do below the old mill 6/ | 1 - 6 - 0 |
Notes on interest with the interest included to the to the 7th of Jan^ry 1765 | 32 - 3 - 4 1/4 |
Plow share 11/6 old Do 3/ 2 ears for plow 1/4 | 15 - 6 |
narrow teeth £7:2s:0d yoak staple & Ring 2/ | 1 - 4 - 0 |
4 Towels 3/6 6 napkins 8/2 4 Diaper Table Cloths 1:5:10 | 1 - 17 - 6 |
4 window curtains 9/4 a Chest of Draws 1:9:4 | 1 - 18 - 8 |
carried over | £1124 - 12 - 8 3/4 |
8/40
SERIES A, Case 55019
Steward Southgate
Decree Allowance of Will
Dated Jan 7 1865
Recorded vol. 8 page 482
9/40 (typed)
To all people to whom these presentsshall come, John Chandler Esq;Judge of the Probate of Wills, &c. in the County ofWorcester within the Province of the Massachussetts-Bayin New England, sendeth Greeting.
Know ye, That on the Seventh Day of January
Anno Domini One Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty Five
The instrument hereunto annexed (purporting the last Will and Testament
of Steward Southgate late of Leicester in said County yeoman
deceased) was presented for Probate by Elizabeth Southgate John Southgate
and Robert Southgate the Executors therein named; then present
John Potter & Nathaniel Potter of being of ye People called Quakers. Two
Witnesses thereto subscribed, who made Solemn affirmation that they saw the said
Testator sign, seal, and heard him declare the said Instrument to be
his last Will and Testament, and that they will William
Scott the other witness subscribed their Names
together as Witnesses to the Execution thereof in said Testator Presence ;
and that he was then (to the best of their Judgment) of sound and disposing
Mind:
I do Prove, Approve, and Allow of the said Instrument as the last Will and
Testament of the before-named deceased, and do commit the Adminstration
thereof in all Matters, the same concerning, and of his Estate whereof he
died siez'd and possess'd in said County, unto the sd Elizabeth John +
Robert the before named Executors well and faithfully
to execute the said Will, and to administer the Estate of the said deceased
according thereto; who accepted of their said Trust, and is ordered to
Return an Inventory of sd Decd Estate in three months
and they shall render and Account (upon Oath) of their Proceedings,
when thereunto lawfully required.
In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my Hand and Seal of Office,
the Day and Year above-written.
by order of the Honble Judge
Timo Paine Reg
John Chandler
Worcester fs. Recorded with Records of Wills
for said County Libo S Page A79
Timo Paine Reg
10/40
SERIES A, Case 55019
Steward Southgate
Adn Account
1778
12/
Copied Recorded
Compd
Decree Allowance of Acct
Dated Aug 3 1778
11/40
Series A, Case 55019
An account of the lands of the Estate sold by us as Executors
1765
Octob^r 30th | Sold to John Hart 2 lots in ye South Cedar Swamp at | 1 - 16 - ~ |
Same Day | to John Potter 14 acres near ye North Cedar Swamp at | 7 - 3 - ~ |
Same Day | to Ebenz^r Warren 7 acres South of Braddithes at | 4 - 4 - ~ |
1766
11 Feb^y | to Thos Denny 100 acres at Lamper hill at | 65 - 17 - 4 |
Sept^r 3d | to John Chandler Esqr 50 acres on Worcestr Line at | 32 -~ - ~ |
Same Day | to Revd Benj^a Conklin 16 acres north of Town Meadow | 25 - 10 - ~ |
Same Day | to John Pike Land in & about the North Cedar Swamp | 10 - 13 - ~ |
Octob^r 10th | to Sam^ll Walton 3 acres by his own Land | 2 - 4 - ~ |
Nov^r 29th | to Knight Sprague the Farm in Spencer 96 acres at | 140 - ~ - ~ |
1767
March 24th | to Nathan Lamb Burncoat Meadow + Land about it 45 acres | 59 - 6 - 8 |
1768
March 23 | to John Southgate several parcles of Land as by his deed described at .... | 205 - 18- 0 |
1769
March 15th | to Cap^t James Hone comon land in Palmer at | 3 - 15 - ~ |
1770
Feb^y 13th | to Alex^a Parkman Right in the forge spot at | 6 - 13 - 4 |
1771
March 6th | to Ditto the Home Place at | 266 - 13 - 4 |
18th | to Elizabeth Southgate a Right in Shelburn at | 4 - ~ - ~ |
Same Day | to Steward Southagate a Right in Charlotty at | 5 - 16 - 6 |
861 - 10 - 2 |
12/40
1766 | Brought over | 25 - 8 - 10 3/4 |
January | to Proprocton Taxes 58/ | 2 - 18 - 0 |
30th | to Nathan White 16/2 1/2 | 16 - 2 1/2 |
Feb^y 25th | to Nath^ll Goodspeed 2/9 | 2 - 9 |
March 3d | to Robert Earll for 2/8 | 2 - 8 |
April 8 | to Abigail Webster 27/4 1/2 | 1 - 7 - 4 1/2 |
10th | to John Potter £5 - 4 - 3 3/4 | 5 - 4 - 3 3/4 |
10th | to Nath^ll Potter for £5 - 19/3 | 5 - 19 - 3 |
11th | to Thos Denny 17/7 1/4 | 17 - 7 1/4 |
July 20th | to Wm Henshaw 10/10 1/2 | 10 - 10 1/2 |
Decr 10th | to Samll Walton for 11/1 | 11 - 1 1/2 |
1767
8th April | to William Earll 25/3 | 1 - 5 - 3 |
1770
14th July | to Capt John Brown 3/ | 3 - 0 |
Account of Notes Paid with their Interest made up toto the 7th January 1766
Paid
to Ebenezr Mackintire £12 - 13/1 | 12 - 13 - 1 |
to Elizabeth Southgate 35/8 | 1 - 15 - 8 |
to John Bond Jr £9 - 2/8 | 9 - 2 - 8 |
to Thos Newhall £6 - 10 /6 | 6 - 10 - 6 |
13/40
1765
An account of Debts due from the Estate of Steward
Southgate Paid by John Southgate Executor
Jan 16th | Paid to Asa Conant 37/5 | 1 - 17 - 5 |
Feb 15th | to Daniel Newhall Jr 22/2 | 1 - 2 - 2 |
28 | to George Earll 85/8 | 4 - 5 - 8 |
March 4th | to Jonas Liverman | 0 - 6 - 0 |
16 | to James Putnam E? 21/6 | 1 - 1 - 6 |
31st | to John Fletcher 3/9 | 0 - 3 - 9 |
April 8th | to Mathew Walton 29/7 1/2 | 1 - 9 - 7 1/2 |
10th | to John Worster 7/2 1/2 | 0 - 7 - 2 1/2 |
11th | to Thos Newhall Jr 5/ | 0 - 5 - 0 |
14th | to Richard Southgate 11/6 | 0 - 11 - 6 |
19th | to James Thompson 37/5 | 1 - 17 - 5 |
May 28th | to Richard Gleeson Jr 8/1 | 0 - 8 - 1 3/4 |
Aug 23d | to Abijah Tucker 5/ | 0 - 5 - 0 |
Nov 7 | to Doctor Prentice 38/2 | 1 - 18 - 2 |
18th | to Ebenzr Warren 64/ | 3 - 4 - 0 |
27th | to Nathan Sargeant 2/8 | 0 - 2 - 8 |
28th | to Doctr Flint 79/4 | 3 - 19 -4 |
Decr 2d | to Doctr Bardain 25/ | 1 - 5 - 0 |
1766
1st Jan | to Jonathan Lowder 9/ | 0 - 9 - 0 |
11 | to Nathll Harwood 5/4 | 0 - 5 - 4 |
15th | to Seth Washburn 4/11 1/4 | 0 - 4 - 11 1/4 |
17th | to Noah Jones 13d 1/2 | 0 - 1 - 1 1/2 |
carried over | 25 - 9 - 11 3/4 |
14/40 (duplicate of p. 13)
15/40 (page has been cut vertically and is misaligned)
An account of Money Received Due to the Estate
1765 | on account£ S D | |
April 11th | Recevd of Jonathan Sargeant 2/ | 0 - 2 - 0 |
May 16th | of Robert Henry 13/4 | 0 - 13 - 4 |
18th | of Benjamin Tucker 14/8 | 0 - 14 - 8 |
of Benja Tucker Jr 10/ | 0 - 10 - 0 | |
Novr 25th | of Joseph Sprague 11/ | 0 - 11 - 0 |
Decr 4th | of David Earll 11/4 | 0 - 11 - 4 |
6th | of Benjamin Bond 29/11 | 1 - 9 - 11 |
1766 25? Feby | of Benjamin Richardson 9/6 | 0 - 9 - 6 |
May 19th | of David Baldwin 2/7 | 0 - 2 - 7 |
July 10th | of Daniel Hubbard 3/4 | 0 - 3 -4 |
1767 June | of Amos Newton 9/ | 0 - 9 - 0 |
1768 26th March | of John Brown Jr 12/ | 0 - 12 - 0 |
June 14th | of the Widow Lawton 17/ | 0 - 17 - 0 |
1770 21st Decr | of Joseph Sargeant 7/6 | 0 - 7 - 6 |
1771 | of Jonathan Hoddar 1/4 | 0 - 1 - 4 |
of John Woodard 1/4 | 0 - 1 - 4 | |
of Capt John Brown two Note one for 19/8one for 26/8 worth of Iron for the forge Romans? | 2 - 4 - 8 | |
of Timo Pane Esq If on account | 0 - 9 - 0 | |
for a Hog head of lime not prised | 1 - 6 - 8 | |
the contents of several notes of hand amountingto £32 = 3/4 1/4 with their Interest included to 7th ofJanuay 1764 see the Invetary | 32 - 3 - 4 1/4 |
16/40(page has been cut vertically and is misaligned)
Amount charged to the Estate
1764
Decr 21st | Funeral Expences 18/4 | 0 - 18 - 4 |
1765 Jan 4th | to Travel to Worcester to Lodge the Will 1/8 | 0 - 1 -8 |
to threshing cleaning & stowing 20 Bushels oats | 0 - 5 - 0 | |
to Do of Wheat 19 bushels @ 9d per Bushel | 0 - 14 - 3 | |
to 3/ Pd for swearing the apprisers | 0 - 3 - 0 | |
to five & a half Days attendance on ye apprizers @ 3/ | 0 - 16 - 6 | |
to 24/4 pd cash of the apprisers | 3 - 13 - 0 | |
May 1st | to two Days work mending fences 2/6 | 0 - 5 - 0 |
to Bargaining & leting 3 parcles of Pasture | 0 - 1 - 6 | |
to inserting 2 advertisments in the Publickprint for settlement of account & sale of land 9/ | 0 - 9 - 0 | |
15th | to keeping to hay from ye pd of Febr to thirtineone, two year old heiffer and three yearling 28/ | 1 - 8 - 0 |
16th | to 8/6 pd Esqr Putnam for advice Relating to the Estate | 0 - 8 - 6 |
to two journeys to Worcester to Review advice | 0 - 3 - 4 | |
to Travel to Richard Southgates mill & shiking 17 out? Board | 0 - 2 - 8 | |
to a Day Carrying the Chain measuring Land sold | 0 - 2 - 8 | |
to a Day of Mr Denny 4/ Yon & Return 2/ | 0 - 6 - 0 | |
to showing Land to Judge Chandler 1/ | 0 - 1 - 0 | |
Septr | to travel to Cedar Swamp & showing Land to Hart | 0 - 2 - 0 |
Octr 30th | to Bargaining & selling to John Hart 1/ | 0 - 1 - 0 |
Novr 28 | to travel to Doctr Flints to settle accounts | 0 - 3 - 4 |
Decr 2 | to travel to Spencer to show Land to AnthonySprague & settling accounts with Doctr Bardain | 0 - 4 - 0 |
carried up | 10 - 9 - 9 |
17/40
1765 | Brought up | 10 - 9 - 9 |
Decr | to Bargaining & writing with Anthony Sprague | 0 - 2 - 0 |
1766. 17th april | to showing land to Mr Conklin 1/8 | 0 - 1 - 8 |
to trave to Charlton to take up MalkinlivesNote | 0 - 3 - 4 | |
June 14th | to showing Land to John Pike 2/4 | 0 - 2 - 4 |
Septr 3d | to showing more Land to Pike Bargn + writing | 0 - 6 - 0 |
Bargaining + writing with Mr Conklin 1/8 | 0 - 1 - 8 | |
to Ditto with Judge Chandler 3/ | 0 - 3 - 0 | |
Novr 29th | to Ditto with Knight Sprague 4/ showing land 2/ | 0 - 6 - 0 |
1767 24 March | to Deed to Nathan Lamb and pra? Bond | 0 - 1 - 6 |
1768 18th March | to 5 day, selling the forge Reckoningat 3/ pr Day Expences of arbitrators 7/6 | 1 - 2 - 6 |
1770 | ||
June 9th | To Travel & attendance at ye General Court fiveDays @ 8/ Drawing up an answer to Capt BrownsPetition 3/ half a Day at Capt Browns search? yeforge Book 1/6 | 2 - 4 - 6 |
Octobr | 3 Days Travel & attendance at ye Gen Courtagain on the affair with Capt Brown @ 8/ pr Day | 0 - 1 - 4 |
1771 | ||
March 6th | Bargaining & writing with Parkman 3/8 | 0 - 3 - 8 |
Recording Parkmans Mortgage Deed 2/ | 0 - 2 - 0 | |
16 - 13 - 11 | ||
25 :3 :10 3/4 | 3 - 13 - 0 | |
53 :19 :4 1/2 | £19 - 0 - 11 | |
79 :3 : 3 1/4 |
18/40
by John Southgate
An account of Stewards cloathing charges to the Estates
out of ye inventy> Camblet Coat 18/ Linnen Jacket 4/ Drugget Do 2/6 | £1 - 4 - 6 |
1765 Jan 28th to the Taylors for cutting & making Cloathes | £0 - 11 - 4 |
to Lining & Triming | 14/6 3/4 |
19/40
1766 Account of Rents Recd by us Executors for the Estate (land
April 17th for the year past
for the
Home place | 10 - 13 - 4 |
Wash Piece 10/8 | 0 - 10 - 8 |
Uper Barn & Land about it | 4 - 0 - 0 |
Little Orchard & Pasture near it | 1 - 12 - 8 |
Burncoat Meadow | 0 - 12 - 0 |
Spencer Orchard & Pastures | 3 - 9 - 4 |
= 20:18:~
1767 April 17th for the year pastfor the
Home place | 13 - 6 - 8 |
Barn & Land about it | 3 - 6 - 8 |
Little Orchard & Pasture | 1 - 12 - 8 |
Wash piece 10/8 | 0 - 10 - 8 |
= 18:16:8
1768 17th April for the year Pastfor the
Home Place | 10 - 13 - 4 |
Barn & Land about it | 3 - 6 - 8 |
Little Orchard & pasture | 1 - 12 - 8 |
Wash piece 8/ | ~ - 8 - ~ |
= 16:~:8
1769 17th April for the year pastfor the Home Place 9:16:8 - 9:16:8
1770 17th April for Ditto 10:13:4 - 10:13:4
1771 6th March for Ditto 8:13:4 - 8:13:4
20/40
SERIES A, Case, 55019
LHS
John
Robert
Sarah Dickenson
Steward
Amos
Moses
Ruth
RHS
Steward Southgate
18
14:5
10:9 3/4
7: 2 1/2
3:7 1/4
--
2:14:0 3/4
21/40
summation of totals in inventory
22/40LHS
SERIES A, Case 55019
Steward Southgate
Ad?
April 8 1771
24/ pd
Decree Allowance of
account [not signed]
Dated Apr 8, 1771
RHS (written sideways)
We pray allowance for a Bed & rug inventoryed
23/40Worcestah April 8: 1771 the within named Elizabeth
Southgate John Southgate & Robert Southgate
Executors of the Last Will & Testament of Richard Steward
Southgate Late of Leicester Dcd Presented ye
asaying? account for my allowance and having
affirmed & made oath by trust thereof Produced voucher for
the Payments therein contained I allow thereof whereby
it appears a Ballance Remains in their Hands
of £1220:11/10 3/4 & wheras ye Decd in his Last Will Gave
to his wife Elizabeth one Eighth part of his Estate after
his Debt ? one Eighth being £152:10:2 3/4 ye Ballance
then Remaining being 1067:11/8 & wheras ye Decd in
his lifetime advanced to his son john Eighty Six pound
six shillings & nine pence lawful mony to his Daughter Sarah Dickenson
thirty five pound sixteen shillings & three farthings
which makes ? whole 1189:14/5 3/4 which I
order to be paid to ye Decd Heirs agreeable to his
Will viz: ye said John ye sum of £46:19/11 which
with £86:6/9 makes £133:6/8 to ye said Robert the
sum of £133:6/8 To ye said Sarah Dickenson the
sum of £30:11/ 3/4 which with ye aforesaid sum advanced
makes 66:13/4 To his son Steward or his legal
representative, ye sum of £100:0:0 To his son Amos
his guardian or legal representative ye sum of £100:0:0
To his son Moses his guardian or legal representative
ye sum of £100:0:0 To his Daughter Ruth her guardian
or legal representative ye sum of £66:13:4
24/40SERIES A, Case 55019
Steward Southgate
Adn Amount?
A copy
1778
Reced?
Compd
Dated Aug 3, 1778
Recorded vol. 74 page 387/402
25/40Worcester August 3 1778 The further account of
Elizabeth Southgate and John Southgate two of the
executors of the last will and testament of Steward
Southgate late of Leicester deceased - The said account-
ants charge themselves with the sum of £122,,2,,9,,3
more than what they charged themselves with in
their last settlement, which I order to be distri-
buted to and among the heirs of the deceased ac-
cording to the last will and testament of the said
deceased - And whereas Moses Southgate and Ruth
Southgate son and daughter of the deceased, have
deceased themselves under the age of twenty one
years, I do hereby allow the interest, improvements
or projects of their respective shares from the death
of the testator, to their respective deaths to the
said Elizabeth for their respective supports and
maintenance untill they respectively died: and
do further order that the principle which belonged
to the said Moses and Ruth as their shares in said estate
be paid to their surviving Brother and Sisters equa-
ble to the Directions of the said testators last will &
testament
Livi Lincoln JProb
A copy examined Mr Joseph Wheeler Reqr?
26/40
Recd of Household furniture and Money before the Decease of our
father Steward Southgate which by this will we are to Acessent?
for Thirty five pounds sixteen shillings 3/4 lawfull money
Recd by us
Azariah DickinsonSarah Dickinson
27/40
SERIES A, Case 55019
Steward Southgate
Receipt of Advancement
Recorded vol. 207 page 40
COMPARED
28/40
John Southgate to His father Steward Southgate Dr
To money payd to Gilke & cash payd for your Rates whichought to have been brought into ye last Reconing | £1 : 6 : 10 | |
To 1 Narrow ax 6/8 & 1 Sythe 6/ | 12 : 8 | |
To a butter tub pork & butter etc?? | 7 : 10 | |
To 10d more than I charged you on Popes order | 0 : 10 | |
To cash payd to Bowker & other money | 19 : 4 | |
Feb 7 1763 | To cash payd Bond for pumps | 6 : 8 |
May 16 | To 1 Note of Richary Gleasons £35:2:6 and for 2and Capt Bowkers Note 23:11:0 and for all 3? ---> | :17:3 1/4 |
To cash I gave you more than you bought thingsfor me at Baston? | 14:2 | |
Total | 12: 5: 7 1/4 | |
To 60 acres & 66 Rods of Land I have him a Deed of | 131 16 8 | |
Total | 144:2:3 1/4 | |
Contra Credet for Sundry articles of chargeon his Book against me | -63:15:6 1/4 | |
Due to me | 80:6:9 |
December 12 1764 The above ballance of
£80:6:9 lawfull money Due to me I freely
Give to my son John Southgate and to be accounted as part of his Portion to my
Estate when my said Estate Comes to be Divided
among Heirs there to after my Deseas
for me
Steward Southgate
Tests
Wm Seatt
Robert Southgate
Receivd and accepted the above sum of £80:6-9 on conditions
as above writen pr me -- John Southgate
I acknowledge I Rcd Six pound more
John Southgate
29/40
SERIES A, Case 55019
Steward Southgate
Statement
30/40Whereas on a settlement of accounts before my fathers
Death ? in Decer 1764 there was? found to be in my hands
upwards of Eight Pounds lawful money which sum
was a part of the Aprizement of a part of the olf Place
set out to me at the sum of one hundred and thirteen
pounds six shillings and eight pence which Land Usd?
to Rent for four pouns per Anum which I Rent I promise
to be ccountable for in Proportion to the sum ?
to Robert or Elizabeth Southgate Executors with me to
the Last Will of my late father Steward Southgate
Which Rent is to Begin at my fathers decese and
to be Paid in out Usual manner of Receiving Rents
that is to Draw Intrest? from the time the yearly Rents
Become Due and to continue till a father
Settlement of the Estate provided that no Interest is
Due? on said sum Witness my hand March 28h 1768
John Southgate
31/40
SERIES A, Case 55019
Steward Southgate
Last Will and Testament
7h January 1765
Probate 0 6 0
Copy & Records? 12
Warrant etc? 2 6
--
£1.0.6
Allowed Jan 7, 1765
Recorded Vol. 8 Page 479
Decree " " 8 " 482
32/40
In the Peace of our Soverain Lord the King George the Third of
Great Britain ? And in the fifth year of the Reign this Fourteenth
day of December and in the year of our Lord Christ one thousand seven
hundred and sixty four I Steward Southgate of Leicester in the
County of Worcester and Province of the Massachusetts Bay In
New England yeoman. Being weak in body but of sound mind
and memory; And calling to mind the unsertainty of this Transitory
life and the certainty of Death to which all Aleph? are liable to: when so
-ever it shall please the Almighty Being to call the Soul + Spirit to
Himself that Gave it ; And my Mortal Part to the Earth to Buried in
Decent Cristian Burial at the Discretion of my Executors. And as
Touching? my worldly goods or Estate I give + bequeath in the following
manner. viz
Imprimus.
I give and bequeath to Elizabeth my dearly beloved wife one
eighth part of my Estate which Remainds after my just debts
funeral charges + settlement of my Estate are paid to be by her
freely posesed + enjoyed + to her own use + despose? for ever
allowing her liberty of takeing ? Eighth part or there of my
Estate partly in personal? + partly in Real Estate if she shall
think it is most for her advantage
Item
I give and bequeath to my eldest son John Southgate one
hundred and thirty three pounds, six shillings + eight pence
to be Levyed and collected out of my estate to be by him freely
posesed and injoyed for ever accounting what I have already
given him as part of said sum : and it is also my will + pleasure
that my said son John have leberty to make up his said proportion in
and part of my land, adjoining to his own land, if he shall chuse to do it
as there apprized value
Item
I give and bequeath to my son Robart Southgate one hundred and
thirty three pounds six shillings and eight pence to be leveyed and
collected out of my Estate to be by him freely possessed + injoyed for
ever. And it is also my will + pleasure that my son Robart have
liberty to take his said proportion or any part of it (if he pleaseth)
in lands at their apprized value
Item
I give and bequeath to my daughter Sarah now the wife of
Azariah Dickinson sixty six pounds thirteen shillings and four
pence to be levied and collected out of my Estate to be by her freely
possessed and injoyed for ever accounting what household goods +
furnature I have already given her as part of said sum.
Item
I give and bequeath to my son Steward Southgate one hundred
pounds to be leveyed and collected out of my Estate to be by him freely
possessed and injoyed for ever or to the value of that sum layd of to him in
lands at their apprized value as my Executors or either two of them
agreeing shall think it most for his benifit. There being given my
said son Steward by his late Grandfather Scott three pounds six shillings
and eight pence money which came into my hands. It is there for my will
+ pleasure that said sum be leveyed + collected out of my estate and that he
receave the same sum with the Interest there of from the first day of july
last past and that the pincipell of interest there of be paid him at his arriveing to
33/40
the age of twenty one years : Both principell + interest at his
arriveing at the age a fore said He is to receave over and above what I
have given him of my Estate and to be Reaconed as no part of my Estate
Item
I give and bequeath to my son Amos Southgate one hundred pounds
to be leveyed + collected out of my Estate to be by him freely possessed
and injoyed for ever.
Item
I give and bequeath to Son Moses Southgate one hundred pounds
to be leveyed and collected out of my Estate to be by him freely possessed
and injoyed to ever
Item
I give and bequeath to my daughter Ruth Southgate sixty six pounds
thirteen shillings and four pence to be leveyed and collected out of my
Estate to be by her freely possessed and injoyed for ever.
It is my will and pleasure that my two youngest sons + my youngest
Daughters be the care + charge of my wife Elizabeth in their minority
and that she have the care of them and see that they are well educated
in the English language in reading : Writing + Cyphering and the
Cost there of to be paid out of the Incomes of their shair or proportion
of my Estate.
It is also my will pleasure that my said three youngest
children have their shairs of my estate in lang + other Estate at their
apprized value : but if my Executors shall think it most for the said childrens
prospect + advantage to sell their shairs they have liberty to do it
or any part there of and the produce in money ariseing from such
sale shall be put on interest and paid them yearly as they shall stand in
need for their support till they arrive to suitable age to be put out at
trades and it is my desire my two youngest sons have such trade given
them as my wife Elizabeth (their mother) shall judge most for there
advantage as soon as they arrive to suitable age there for
And that the whole of the shares of my said sons Amos + Moses be paid
them with all the profits ariseing there from at
there ariveing at twenty one years of age saveing only what is
necessarily expended in bringing them up in there minority and my
daughter Ruth like wise receave the full of her share of my said estate
with all the profits arising there from (not being other wise expended as a
fore said) at her arriveing at twenty one years of age or on her entering
on a settled state of life by marrage.
It is my further will and pleasure that in case either of my before
named children whether sons or daughters die before they arrive at
twenty one years of age to receave into there own hand there part
or portion of my Estate : then the share or part of the Deseased child or children shall
be passed? ? those my children that do survive in the same proportion as I
have set for the dividing my estate.
It is my further will and pleasure that my executors or either
two of them agreeing may + shall sell all or any part of my real estate
houses + lands ? that cant conveniently or profitably be divided
amongst my said wife and children or part there of as they or either
two of them in there sound judgment shall think best + the money ariseing
by such sale to be put on intrest for the benefit of my said wife + children
My further will and pleasure is that after my just debts are paid and
34/40
all charges ariseing from the settling of my estate : then the
remainder of my said estate shall be divided in the same
manner an form amongst + between my wife + children as before
mentioned and to abate and multiply to each of them by the same
rule + proportion as I have set to each of them before mentioned
as my estate shall hold out whether more or less
And I do appoint Elizabeth my dearly beloved
wife and my two eldest sons John Southgate and Robart
Southgate Executors to this my last will and testament
And I do utterly disanull + revoke all former
wills and testaments by me any way before made and all
other Executors by me at any time before named : ratifying
and conferming this and no others to be my last will
and testament
Signed Sealed pronounced and declared
this and no others to be my last will
and testament in presents of us
John Potter
Nathaniel Potter Jnr
Wm Scott
Steward Southgate
35/40
SERIES A, Case 55019
Steward Southgate
Ad?t
April 29 1771
24/ pd
Allowed Apr 29, 1771
Recorded Vol 11 Page 388
36/40Worcester the account of Elizabeth Southgate
John Southgate and RObert Southgate Executors of the
Last Will & Testament of Steward Southgate Late of
Leicester In?nts Decd.
the said accountants charge themselves with of ?
Estate of said Decd as Contained in an inventory thereof
Exhibited? into ye Probate office ? County
May 14: 1765 | Item of £282:0:3 3/4 | |
Als with ye following sums Rcd | ||
Jonathan Sargent 2/ | Robert Henry 13/4 | 15:4 |
Benjn Tooker? 14/8 | Benjn Tooker Jr 10/ | 1:4:8 |
Joseph Sprague 11/ | David Earl 11/4 | 1:2:4 |
Benja Bond 29/11 | Benja Richardson 9/6 | 1:19:5 |
David Baldwin 9/7 | Daniel Hubbard 3/4 | 5:11 |
Amos Newton 9/ | John Brown 12/ | 1:1:0 |
Widdow Lawton 27/ | Joseph Sargent 7/6 | 1:4:6 |
Jonas Hoddard 1/4 | John Woodward 1/4 | 2:8 |
John Brown two notes one for 19/ & one for 26/8Worth of sum? ye ? Remains | 2:5:8 | |
Timo Paine 9/ 1 Hogshead of Lime & of app?sed? 26/8 | 1:15:8 | |
for Rent Received | for ye year 1765 | 20:18:0 |
for Ditto | for ye year 1766 | 18:16:8 |
for Ditto | for ye year 1767 | 16:0:8 |
for Do | for ye year 1768 | 9:16:8 |
for Ditto | for ye year 1769 | 10:13:4 |
for Ditto | for ye year 1770 | 8:13:4 |
In lands sold viz | ||
To John Hart | 2 lotts in ye South Cedar Swamp | 1:16:0 |
To John Potter | 14 acres near ye North Cedar Swamp | 7:3:0 |
To Ebenezer Warrin | 7 acres South of Bradishes | 4:4:0 |
To Thos Denney | 100 acres at Lamper Hill | 65:17:4 |
To John Chandler | 50 acres on Worcester Line | 32:0:0 |
To Benja Concklin | 16 acres north of Gunn meadow | 25:10:0 |
233:6:2 | ||
515:6:5 3/4 |
37/40
Debt brought over | £515:06:5 3/4 | |
To John Pike | Land in & about ye North Cedar Swamp | 10:13:0 |
To Samuel Watson | 3 acres by his own land | 2:4:0 |
To Knight Sprague | ye Farm in Spencer 9 acres | 140:0:0 |
To Nathan Lamb | Burncoat Meadow landabout 45 acres | 59:6:8 |
To John Southgate | Several Parcles of Land as by Deed Discribed | 205:18:0 |
To James Stone | Comon Land in Palmer | 3:15:0 |
To Allexander Parkman | Right in ye Conse?otet | 6:13:4 |
To Ditto | ye Home Place ... at ... | 266:13:4 |
To Elizabeth Southgate | a Right in Shelburn | 4 |
To Steward Southgate | a Right in Charlotty | 5:16:6 |
Debts Recd of Robert Tho Earl | 2:5:0 | |
Ephraim Moore | 14:10 3/4 | |
Joshua Tooker 8d David Wait 4/ | 4:8 | |
To the Interest on ye several ? of Land sold for | 134:8:9 1/2 | |
To interest on ye He?ts Deed | 15:4:4 | |
To the Interest on ye Purford Estate in ye hands of John | 6:9:9 1/2 | |
To ye interest on ue Perford Estate in ye Hands of ye Widdow | 26:12:0 | |
To sundrys come to land firce ? ye Inventory | ||
a Di?ll Claim 5/4 a piece of a logchain 4/ | 9:4 | |
A Hamer 8d 1 pair House T? 5/4 | 6:0 | 15:4 |
3 old laths a latch & one hinge & a small Ring | 4:0 | |
1 Lem? Right in Palmer sold to J Southgate for | 1-- | |
1407:4:6 1/2 | ||
ye said John further Chargs himself with ye Rentof ye Recd Estate Given him by Decd | 18:5:6 | |
Interest on said sum | 2:14:0 3/4 | |
1428:4:2 1/4 | ||
A Right in Shelburn sold to Benja Ham? for | 1432:4:2 1/4 |
38/40
Debt Brought forward | 1432:4:2 1/4 | ||
and prays allowance as follows viz | |||
Robert | pd Robert Southgate a Debt due to him | 43:4:2 1/2 | |
| | pd Josiah Brown | 12:8 | |
| | pd for G?ing Grain & Tending at the ? Ro? | 1:19:5 1/4 | |
John [written sideways in margin in this section until ...] | pd asa conant? 37/5 | pd David Newhall Jr 22/2 | 2:19:7 |
pd George Earl 4:5/8 | pd Jonas Livermore 6/ | 4:11:8 | |
pd James Putnam Esq? 21/6 | pd John Fletcher 3/9 | 1:5:3 | |
pd Mathew Walton? 29/7 1/2 | pd John Werit? 7/2 1/2 | 1:16:10 | |
pd Thos Newhall 5/ | pd Richard Southgate 11/6 | 16:6 | |
pd James Thornton? 37/5 | ps Richard Gleason 8/1 3/4 | 2:5:6 3/4 | |
pd Elijah Tooker 5/ | pd Doctor Prentice 38/2 | 2:3:2 | |
pd Ebenezer Warrin 64/ | pd Walter Sargent 2/8 | 3:6:8 | |
pd Doctor Flynt 3:19/4 | pd Doctor Bradain 25/ | 5:4:4 | |
pd Jonas Lowder 9/ | pd Nathll Harwood 5/4 | 14:4 | |
pd Seth Waltham 4/11 1/4 | pd Noah Jones 1/1 1/2 | 6:0 3/4 | |
pd Proprietor Eames? | 2:18:0 | ||
pd Nathan Wait 16/2 1/2 | ps Nat Goodspeed 2/9 | 18:11 1/2 | |
pd Robert Earl Jr 2/8 | pd Abigail Webster 27/4 1/4 | 1:10:0 1/4 | |
pd John Potter 5:4/3 3/4 | pd Nathll Potter 5:19/3 | 11:3:6 3/4 | |
pd Thos Denny 17/7 1/4 | pd Wm Henshaw 10/10 1/2 | 1:16:4 1/2 | |
pd Samll Walton Jr 11/ 1/2 | pd Wm Earl 25/3 | 1:16:4 1/2 | |
pd John Brown 3/ | pd Ebenezer McIntire 12:13/1 | 12:16:1 | |
pd Elizabeth Southgate 35/8 | pd John Bond Jr 9:2/8 | 10:18:4 | |
pd Thos Newhall | 6:10:6 | ||
pd ye appriser | 3:13:0 | ||
... | ... | 79:3:3 1/4 | |
ye Widdow | pd Abigail Webster | 27:0:2 | |
pd Rebecca Potter 5/0 3/4 | pd Ebe Hart? 4/6 | 9:6 3/4 | |
pd Deborah Earl 2/9 1/2 | pd Thos Green 3/4 | 6:1 1/2 | |
pd Samll Walton | 5:5 3/4 | ||
... | ... | 28:1:4 | |
John | pd Rebecca Tucker 2/5 | pd Josiah Brewer 1/8 | 4:2 |
pd Gideon Smith 8d 3/4 | pd Nathll Livermore 3/ | 3:8 3/4 | |
ps Nathll Richardson | 1:1 | ||
... | ... | 8:10 3/4 |
We pray allowance for 10 yd cloath apprisednot Belonging to Estate2:13:4
Desperate? Debt apprised 21:18:3
24:4:7...1781:03? [obscured by folded corner of page]
39/40
Debt Brought over | 1432:4:2 1/2 |
Disbursement Brought over | £1781:1:0 3/4 |
? ye Late? ? Cyder mill | 1:6:8 |
Tor? John Time & Trouble sellingLands Reaching? Paying DebtsThashing & Cleaning Grain & ?ping Cattle | 13:0:11 |
To supporting of apprisers ? ye accountant Elizabeth 5 days & attending on them | 1:0:0 |
To ye Widdow for mourning | 6:6:0 |
To Drawing allowing? & re?ing thisexec? for? | 1:4:0 |
...200:18:7 3/4...£1231:5:6 3/4 | |
a Debt ordered to be paid to ye Decdson Steward | 3:6:8 |
Interest from ye first day of July 1764 | 1:7:0 |
...4:13:8...1226:11:10 3/4 | |
a Debt Due to Benja Therres? we take upon us to pay | 6:10 |
...1220:1:10 3/4 | |
Pa? Wrengcast? In ye interest on ? ye select land | 4:18:8 |
Pla? pd James Putname Esq for advice | 6:0 |
...5:04:8...£1214:17:2 1/2 | |
We add two Phisical Books & an old Jam? | 7:4 |
We may allowance for a bed wrong inventoryed | 1315:4:6 1/2 |
?? | 1:8 |
Elizabeth SouthgateJohn SouthgateRobt Southgate | 1213:2:10 1/2 |
Worcester April 2 1771 Elizabeth Southgate one of ye Executors
of ye last will & testament of Steward Southgate Decd being of ye
? Called Quakers affirmed that ye esaying out was a just
& true amount according to her best judgment
Coram? John Chandler Judge Probate
Worcester April 2 1771 John Southgate & Robert Southgate ?
to ye Decd Will appeared & made oath to ye truth of ye above
account
Corma John Chandler Judge Probate
40/40
Worcester April 29 1771 if above names Elizabeth
Southgate John Southgate & Robert Southgate
Presented ye a?ing accounts for my allowance and
Produced vouchers for ye payments therein contained I allow
thereof whereby it appears a Ballance Remains in their
hands of twelve hundred thirteen pound two shillings
& ten pence half penny to be Disposed of agreeable to said
Decd Will and that they further account for ye Desperate
Debts of twenty one pound Eighteen shillings & three
pence when they Receive of Same
John Chandler Judge Probate
Worcester Recorded with ye Records of Will for
Said County [signature of Judge Chandler]
The Will Family In America
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The Will of Accepted Frewen
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Pro[v?]idence Arch Bishop of Yorke, knowing well, that as nothing more certaine then Death, Soe then the
[h...] there of, nothing more uncertaine, to the end I may be the readdier to obey ny nakers summons, when ere
he shall call me hence, being at this present (blessed be God for it) in p[er]fect health of Body and of a
Sound Memory, doe against that tyme, by this my last Will and Testam[en]t ( revoking all other Wills by me made )
dispose of my Selfe, and that Portion of Substance w[hi]ch it hath pleased him in the riches of his mercy to bestow upon
me in this World in manner Following, First, and above all things my Soule I humbly commend & bequeath unto
my Blessed Saviour upon the merritts of whose Death and Passion, I wholly and stedfastly rely for the eternall
bliss and Salvation thereof, My Body I leave in a Christian manner to be decently interred in the p[ar]ish Church
of Northam in Sussex. if my Executor hereafter named finde, that with any conveniency it can be done, there
to rest togather with theirs from whome I received it in a sure and certaine expectation of a joyfull resurrection
att the last Day. Ouy of my temporall estate I bequeath unto Magdalen Colledge in Oxford ( my Mother that gave me
my breeding ) five hundred pounds, to be imployed as my Guift, to the honnor of the Colledge in some Publiq[ue] way
approved of by my worthy Frinde''' Gilbert''' at this present '''L[or]d B[i]s[ho]p of London'''; As also I forgive unto it 500 Pounds
lent it by me ( Pecuniis numeratis ) in a tyme of necessity, as it will doubt not appeare by the Regester there.
To my deare and onely '''Sister Mary Bigge Widdow''' I guive the Sum[me] of fower hundred Pounds of Lawfull Money
of England to be paid her w[i]thin fower Monthes after my decease And likewise an Annuity of Fifty Pounds
dureing her naturall life to be accompted for from the day of my decease: [&?] each of her two Sons '''John''' & '''William'''
'''Bigge''' five hundred Pounds, To my '''Cousen Thomas Frewen of Northam''' Fower hundred Pounds Moreover a
written Pay Booke in folio haveing his name written by my Selfe att the beginninge thereof, together w[i]th the smale
remainder of my printed Bookes in what language soev[er] ( the greeke testam[en]t in folio and any two other Bookes
in English that my '''Brother Stephen Frewen''' shall make choyce of onely excepted ) desiring him not to parte
them by selling away any; though I well know, they are now but few, and that those in the Spanish tongue will
( for the present ) be of little use to him; And lastly the [blank] of the Rectory of Northam in Sussex as
[it?] will more fully appeare by a writinge left for him by me in a small Boxe haveing his name in it; To his two
'''Brothers William and Samuell''' two hundred pounds sev[er]ally and to '''Mrs Sharpe of Tenterden''' ( theire
Sister ) Forty Poundes: To my '''Nephew Thomas Frewen''' ( Sonn to my brother Stephen ) Fifty poundes and to
his Wife ten in gold, therewith to buy her a Ringe, if she please soe to imploy it: To ev[er]y Bishop of this
Kingdome a Ringe ( with : none to be under the value of 30:8d ) haveing this inscription Neq[ue] melior sum quam
patres mei | Re:19 A F: To my much honour[e]d frinde and Brother Gilbert L[or]d Bishop of London, I guive a Greeke
Testam[ent] in folio haveing his name at the beginninge of it; And to the '''Right Rev[er]end John P: P of Rochester''' a
Ringe once [B.P?] of J[e]wells; To my two Chaplins in howse '''Mr James Mosely'''; my Secretary, Steward of my house and
Controll[er] (if destitute p[e]rferm[?]t ) '''John Bebine''' the two that waite in my Chamber ten pounds apeece or sev[er]ally
therewith to Buy them mourning To ev[er]y of my other Domestiq[ue] Servants a full yeares Wage beside what due to
(them) [Page 2]
Them ( my two upper Cookes excepted to whom I give but one quarters Pay ) at my Death; as alsoe to ev[er]y
one amongst them that [illegible] with me or was sent by me from London hither five Pounds to carry him back
againe; To the Poore of Northam ten Pounds to be distributed the morrow after my funerall if buryed there
And to the Poore of the p[ar]ish where I dye, twenty Nobles, For the paym[en]t of ev[er]y of these Su[m]mes, that is above forty
Pounds I allow fower Monthes after my decease but for discharge of the rest onely eight weekes. Of this my
last Will and Testam[en]t ( written with my owne hand ) I make my Brother Stephen Frewen of London sole
Executor giveing unto him (my Debts Legacies and Funerall expences being first payed and discharged) all
the rest of my Goods, chattells, and p[er]sonall Estate whatsoev[er]. Wishing him here in the close to be mindfull of
that of the Apostle: If it be but a manns Testam[en]t yet if it be confirmed, noe man disanulleth or addeth
there to; In Wittness of all w[hi]ch I have to this my last Will and Testam[en]t sett my Hand and Seale, the
twenty second day of May in the yeare of o[ur] Lord God according to the Accompt now used in England One
Thousand Sixe hundred Sixty three Sealed signed published and declared in the p[re]sence of '''Edward Diggle S.T.P'''
'''George Parish S.T.P John Sharpe.'''
Probate in Latin, proved 23 Jul 1664 Latin phrases:
Pecuniis numeratis - Counted money?
Neq[ue] melior sum quam patres mei - I am no better than my fathers == Sources ==
The Will of Agnes (Smith) Machell
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to Anthonie Sym my servant one Harden Shert ;
to '''Hew Smyth my brother''', one Ewe ;
to Sibbie Smith, one other Ewe ;
to Rychard Hill, one Lyning Shert &c. ;
to '''Frances Machell my daughter''' the residue, and 1 appoint her Executrix.
'''Robert Smith my brother''', and Roland Swinbank, my approved frend
I appoint Guardians of my daughter Frances
alwais pvided that if Xpher Bell by anye authoritie to him given by
'''Barnabie Machell my laite husband''' doo obteyne the tuiton of my said daughter
Then my will is that he shall have wth her that portion by here Father given being xxi lb.
and the rest to be and remane in the hande of the said Robert Smyth and Roland Swinbank,
to the only use of my said daughter during her minoritie.
Witnesses : Thomas Hill, Hen. Shepd, Hen. Fournesse, Richard Hill.
Admon with will granted to Robert Smith and Roland Swinbank, for the use of executrix during her minority. This transcription was taken from "The Machells of Crackenthorpe". E. Ballasis. The Machells of Crackenthorpe. Reprinted for the Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society. Kendal: T. Wilson 28 Highgate. 1886. Pg. 459. 10. Will of Agnes Machell.
The Will of Alexander Colvill DD
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The will of Ann Pitt, spinster of Kensington 1781.
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The Will of Anniver Joliffe of Shaston, Dorset written 1691 probate 1700
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The will of Antony Wooddis (Woodhouse) 1701
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Of the Sovereigne Lord William the Third by the grace of god of England Scotland France & Ireland being defender
Of the Faith Annoq[ue] Domi[ni] 1701 I Anthony Woodis of Milltowne in the parish of Ashoverin the County of
Derby yeoman being weake in Body but of Sound and perfect memory Thanks bee to god for the same and calling to minde
The uncertainty of this estate on Earth and that all Flesh must yield unto death when It shall please god to Call and Being desirouse
To settle things in order Doe make this my last will and Testament in manner and forme Following Revoking and annulling by these
p[re]sente all and every will and wills Testam[en]t and Testam[en]ts by me formerly made either by word of mouth or in writing and this to bee
Taken for my last will & Testam[en]t and none other First I will and Bequeath my soule unto Almighty God my maker and to Jesus Christ my
Redeemer and the Holy Ghost my Sanctifyer and my Body to the Earth From whence It came to bee Buryed in such Christian like
manner as to my as to my Ex[ecu]to[r] and Ex[ecu]trix hereafter named shall seeme convenient and now for the setling of such Temporall estate as god
in mercy hath lent me of order & dispose of the same in the manner and forme Following
It[em] I give and Bequeath unto Rebecca my wife all household goods & implem[en]ts of household I am poss[ess]ed off To have & to hold unto her &
her assigns for Ever more.
It[em] I give and bequeath unto my s[ai]d loving wife Rebecca The messuage house wherein I now live with all manner of housing
outhouses edifices Foulds & gardens Orchards & yards thereunto belonging or appertaineing scituate in Milltowne afores[ai]d with the one
moyety or halfe part of all Farmes Lands grounds and Tenem[en]ts with theire appurtenances that I have at or within Milltowne afores[ai]d at
Lea within the parish of Ashover at Washington - or els where with the County of Derby For and During the Terme of her naturall
Life in full recompence of her Dower with the [Coape one?] to the s[ai]d moyety belonging my meaninge is the one moyety of all [Coape?]
[???] is shall brought [?] paid in my whole Lands
It[em] I give and Bequeath unto my Sonne Edward Wooddis and to his heires and assigns for ever more the other moyety of all my Farmes
Lands grounds & Tenem[en]ts with theire appurtenances whatsoever that I have or am possessed of within Milltowne Lea Washington
or els where within the County of Derby with the other moyety of all my [Coape ?] And after my wifes decease I order & bequeath
the messuage house - with all out houseing Foulds yards gardens & Orchards with the moyety or half part of all my Farms Lands
Grounds and p[re]misses before given my wife for her life unto my Sonne Edward Wooddis his heires & assigns for ever
Now ? provided nevertheless and my minde & will is and I order that my Sonne Edward Wooddis shall pay or cause
To bee payd unto my Two Youngest Daughters Mary Wooddis and Martha Wooddis threescore pounds apeece of
Lawfull money of England as the[y?] accomplish theire respective ages of Twenty one yeares and if either of them dye [die]
before she accomplish that age her part Soe dyeing to bee equally devided & paid to the other Surviveing & Ann theire Sister
now wife of Robert Millward when the surviveing Sister Mary or Martha attaines one & twenty yeares of age or any time
after upon lawfull demand made thereof And if Both Mary & Martha dye before either of them Come to Twenty one yeares
of age then the one moyety of theire s[ai]d Legacyes to be paid to my daughter Ann now wife of Robert Millward within one
yeares time next after the Death of ye [the] survivor of them the said Mary & Martha yet it is my minde that if either Mary or Martha
my daughters have issue of theire Body lawfully begotten though dye before one & twenty yeares of age that then her part so dyeing shall goe to
her issue of her body lawfully begotten any thing above pertaining to the ? notwithstanding and it is my mind my wife shall maintain
them with all manner of ? sums of money as above contained to the Contrary notwithstanding And it is my minde my wife shall maintaine
my daughters Mary & Martha till the[y] Come to one & twenty yeares of age if she so longe live And if she dye before that my Sonne Edward shall maintaine
them with all manner of necessaryes from [?] next her decease untill the[y] come to theire ages of one & twenty yeares And if my Sonne Edward neglect or refuse
to pay the above menc[i]oned sumes of mony as above menc[i]oned ordered & directed Then the Maintenance of my s[ai]d children if theire mother dye [die]
before they attaine one and twenty yeares as abovesaid then It shall & may bee lawfull for Joseph Hodgkinson my wives [wife’s] brother to enter upon all my
Lands at Lea aforesaid & the same [?] till Mary and Martha bee fully p[ai]d Maintained & Satisfyed as above s[ai]d And ? lands to bee[be] delivered unto
My two daughters Mary and Martha ? one of them within six months after if it is made in payment of maintenance as above the s[ai]d Lands to bee delivered unto
my Two daughters Mary & Martha or [?] one of them within Six months after [?] is made in paym[en]t or maintenance as above s[ai]d & the s[ai]d Lands
to bee to them the s[ai]d Mary & Martha & theire heires & assigns for Ever
It[em]My mind & will is & I order my Sonne Edward Wooddis is at his owne charge to pay threescore Pounds that I have made [a bond to?] Rob[er]t Millward For
It[em] I give unto my daughter Mary the greate Chest standing in greate Chamber in the dwelling wherein I now live for ever
It[em] I give and bequeath all the Resydue of my estate and Substance whatsoever & not before bequeathed equally betwixt my loveing wife & my Sonne
Edward Wooddis they paying off all my debts which is not above and ordered equally betwixt them & make & appoynt my s[ai]d wife Rebecca & my Sonne
Edward Wooddis Full and absolute Ex[ecu]trix and ex[ecu]tor of this my last will & testam[en]t In witness whereof I Anthony Wooddis have hereunto set my hand
ans Seale the day & yeare first above written
Anthony Wooddis
X
His mark [LS]
'''Inventory of goods associated with Antony's will undertaken on 23 October 1707'''
The value of goods identified in the inventory was 29 Pounds, eleven shillings and six pence. The inventory was signed by Antony's brother-in-laws; [[Hodgkinson-182|Joseph Hodgkinson (1659-)]] and [[Hodgkinson-180|Edmond Hodgkinson (1667-abt.1748)]].Staffordshire, Dioceses of Lichfield and Coventry wills and probate 1521-1860 Image, Find My Past (https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record/browse?id=GBPRS/STAFF/007622803/00533) Accessed 13 Sep 2022). == Sources ==
The will of Augustine Pettus 1661
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The
---- '''twentieth day of June''' in the yeare of our Lord God According to the computation now
used in England '''One Thousand & six hundred Fifty and Nyne'''
I '''Augustine Pettus''' now y
Lodginge in Lo[n]don beinge to Travell into France and well knoweinge the uncertaine condition
of this present life Soe the better settlinge of that my worldlie estate which God of his
greate goodness & mercy hath lent mee Doe ordaine and make this my last will and testam[en]t
in manner and Forme Followinge First and before all things I commit and commend
my soule and bodie into the mercifull hands of God my maker and to Jesus Christ my
only Saviour & Redeemer assuredly trustinge that by and through his onely meritts
bitter death & passion to bee saved and to have a joyfull resurrection & to remain ??
amongst his most glorious company in heaven Item I give and bequeath to? my youngest brother '''John'''
'''Pettus''' [[Pettus-550|John Pettus Bt (abt.1640-1698)]] and to the heyres of his bodie lawfully begotten All those my freehold Landes Tenements and
hereditaments with the Appertenances thereunto belonginge lyeinge & beinge in the Manno[r] of
'''Rushall''' alias '''Rushell''' in the Countie of Norffolke now in the occupation of '''Thomas Fisher my''' Tenant there, and like wise I give and bequeath to the said '''John Pettus''' my youngest brother
All those my freehold Landes Tenements and hereditaments with the Appurtenances thereunto
belonginge lyeinge or beinge in the Mannor of '''Boylands''' in the Towne of '''Chedeston''' alias '''Chislten'''
in the Countie of '''Suffolke''' now in the occupation of '''William Loanie''' my Tenant there &
to the heyres of his bodie lawfully begotten And likewise I give and bequeath to the S[ai]d
'''John Pettus''' my youngest brother All those other Freehold Landes and Tenements and
hereditaments with the Appurtenances thereunto belonginge in the Towne of '''Cheddestons'''
aforesaid now in the occupation of '''Richard Potmson [Robinson?]''' and '''Thomas Payne''' my Tenents and to
the heyres of his bodie lawfully begotten Also I give and bequeath to the said '''John Pettus''' my youngest
brother and to the heyres of his bodie lawfully begotten All those my freeholds Landes Tenements
and hereditaments with the appurtenances thereunto belonginge lyeinge and beinge in the Mannor of
'''Huntingfield''' in the Countie of '''Suffolke''' aforesaid now in the occupation of '''William Buents(?)'''
my tenant there And I give and bequeath to the said '''John Pettus''' my youngest brother and to ye
heytes of his bodie lawfully begotten all those my freehold landes tenements and hereditaments
with the appurtanences thereunto belonginge lyeinge or beinge in '''St Jameses''' in the Countie
of '''Suffolk''' in one of the Noyie? Swathes? now in the use and occupation of '''Richard Tubby''' there my
tenant And in case the said '''John Pettus''' my youngest brother dye without issue of his bodie
lawfully begotten I will and bequeath the aforesaid Freehold Landes Tenements and hereditaments
with the appurtanances thereunto belonginge lyeinge or beinge in aforesaid to my eldest Brother
'''Sr Thomas Pettus''' [[Pettus-212|Thomas Pettus Bt (-1671)]] of '''Rackheath''' in the County of Norfolk Barronett And to the heyres of his
body lawfully begotten And in case the said '''Sr Thomas Pettus Barronett my eldest brother'''
dyes without issue of his bodie lawfully begotten I will and bequeath all of the aforesaid Freehold
Landes Tenements and hereditaments with the appurtenances thereunto belonginge lyeinge or beinge
in the Places and Counties aforesaid to '''my loveing Uncle Sir John Pettus Knight''' [[Pettus-433|John Pettus MP FRS (1613-1685)]] and the
heyres of his bodie lawfully begotten Item I give and bequeath the 3000 ye Legacuy which my
Loveinge Father gave me which nist/next bee sayeth/payable unto mee after the death of '''Dame Anne Pettus''' [[Everard-441|Anne (Everard) Warner (-1663)]]
The Relict of my '''deare Father Sr Thomas Pettus Barronett''' [[Pettus-434|Thomas Pettus Bt (abt.1606-1654)]] in manner of forme as the followeth
but(?) to my '''eldest brother Sr Thomas Pettus Baronett''' aforesaid 1000 pounds and to my youngest
brother '''John Pettus''' aforesaid eighteen hundred Poundes and to my '''Cousin Richard Pettus''' [[Pettus-569|Richard Pettus (-1662)]] Son
to Sir RichardRichard here is an error it should be John Pettus my Uncle aforesaid two hundred poundes And to '''Elizabeth Sandes''' [[Pettus-570|Elizabeth (Pettus) Sandys (abt.1640-1714)]] the daughter
of my said '''Uncle Pettus''' Twod(?) hundred poundes Item I give and bequeath as an heyre Loome to the
family of the Pettuses my large shininge guilt cupp with chrystall bowle This same gilt cup with the crystal bowl is given to Augustine in his father's will. to '''Sr Thomas Pettus'''
my eldest brother Barronett to have itt first, and from him to descend to the next Barronett of
his family of the Pettuses and so by ??? for Ever Item I give and bequeath all those
my Trusts and what ever them(?) conteyned in them with all others of myne ( my Evidence & guilts
excepted ) now beinge in the custodie of '''Mr Nicholas Browne''' of Norwich unto my loveinge Cousin
'''Charles Ramsey''' and his wife to doo with them as they thinke good, My ? Will is brother John
that yow will affoce(?) my loveing '''Couson Charles and his wife''' 5 ? payes ~[per] Annum a peece so
longe as they two shall live, and to bestow Twentie Poindes on Rouges(?) att Twentie shillings
a longi
---- adfringe to my Nearest Relations and friends Item I give and bequeath unto '''Mr John Jenny'''
the Gray Mare It might say "Dray Mare". Hard to decipher. which I had of him beinge now att messrs(?) '''William Barkero''' att '''Hardwicke''' Item my will is that my youngest brother '''John Pettus''' shall pay Fiftie pounds unto the said '''John'''
'''Jenny''' beinge now Clerke att Stow Hall And my will is also that what money I have left
over and above my Revenues may bee paidd unto my '''Cousins Charles and his wife'''. And my will is also that in every towne where my estates lyee Five pounds a peece shall be
given to the church wardens to distribute itt to the poore of the parrish. And I doe
ordaine constitute and make '''John Pettus''' my youngest brother the sole executor of this my
last will and testament In witness whoseof I have hereunto putt my hand and my seale the
twentieth day of June Anno Domini One Thousand six hundred Fiftie Nyne '''Augustine Pettus''' Signed Sealed and subscribed ad published and declared by the said '''Augustine Pettus''' to
bee his last will and testament the twentieth day of June 1659 in the pr[ecenc]e of '''John Earke'''
'''Robert Billington Tho: Goodwin St(?) David''' == Codicil == 18 May 1661 Whereas I '''Augustine Pettus''' have heretofore made my last will and testament in writing
subscribed with my hand and sealed with my seale And whereas I have therein amongs
other things given and bequeathed the summe of One thousand poundes To my
brother '''Sr Thomas Pettus''' of Rache?? in the Countie of Norffolk. Now my Will is and I doe
hereby declare the s[ai]d bequeath of One Thousand Pounds to my said Brother '''Sr Thomas'''
'''Pettus''' to be utterly voyd and of None Effect, And I doe hereby give and bequeath the
said One Thousand pounds in manner and forme following First I give unto my
'''deare brother Mr John Pettus''' Seaven Hundred Pounds which together with the
Sume of Eighteen hundred pounds given unto in my said last will and testament
is in all the summe or Two Thousand and Five hundred pounds. And I doe here-
by give and bequeath unto my '''cousin Richard Pettus''' Sonne of my Uncle Sr John
Pettus The Summe of Two hundred pounds as an Addition to what I have given him
in my said last will and Testament Item whereas I have in my said last will and
testament Forgett my Fouer '''Cousens Thomas, Augustine and John Pettus''' and their
'''lame Sister''' whose name I doe not now remember Sonnes and daughter of my Cosen
'''Henry Pettus of Norwich''' my will is as I doe hereby give unto my said three Cozens
'''Thomas, Augustine and John Pettus''' The summe of One hundred pounds To bee
Equally devided betweene them and to bee paied them out of the first Rents To bee
raised out of my estate after my decease. And I doe give unto my '''Cousen theire'''
'''Lame Sister''' One Annuetie or yearely Rent of Tenne Poundes to bee paidd her out of
my estate duringe her life And I doe hereby declare that this Peece of Paper And all
the bequeaths therein to bee my owne Reall intention and as a Coddicill to be Anne[?]t
to my said last will and testament In witness whence I have hereunto sett my hand
the day and yeare above written. Aug. Pettus Witnesse '''Ana Bythell, Lucy Bythell''' == Probate == In Latin. Probatum ...
...
...
... Primio die Marsio
July Anno Donnm Millofiino sexagesimo --- John
Pettus ...
...
...
... Jurat. ==Sources==
The Will of Barnabye Machell of Crackenthorpe and Battlebrough
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my mr. and Land Lord Mr.George Machell, a wether sheep
Leaving my whoiie hoipe and trust in him that he will be good
mr. to my wiffe and child; to '''Maudlen Machell my brother's'''
'''daughter''' a yowe and a lamb; to '''my wife Agnes''' the years
I have in her tenement &c, and the bringing up of my said
brother's daughter ; to my Mother a black cow &c.,
to '''my daughter Francise''' the residue, and I appoint her executrix.
Letters of admon, with will, gr.
to '''Agnes the widow''' for the use of the daughter during her minotity.
Mr. George Machell, Gent. Michaell Robinson, Robt. Smith,
and Xxofer Bell his brothers in law are appointed supervisors in law,
and if there arise any questions touching this will either by his mother,
sisters or any other, the decision of the supervisors to be final
without any further suit of law or trouble.
Witnesses: George Machell, gent. Xpfer Bell. " This transcription is taken from The Machells of Crackenthorpe. E. Ballasis. The Machells of Crackenthorpe. Reprinted for the Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society. Kendal: T. Wilson 28 Highgate. 1886. Pg. 458. 6.
The Will of Capt. Benjamin Clement, father of a Susannah (Evans)
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Vis Item to give to my grand daughter Susana Clement daughter to Benj.a Clement one of my best Beds and furniture and five pounds in Cash to be delivered to her by my Executors when she comes of proper age to receive it
Vis Item I do give to the heir at Law of my Daughter Jeriah Gilbert deceast one shilling
Vis Item do give to the heir at Law of my daughter Rachel Abston deceast one shilling
Vis Item do give to the heir at Law of my daughter Elizabeth Butterworth deceast one shilling
I give and bequeth to my son John Clement the tract of Land he now lives fifty Acres more or less which Land I purchased of John Goad lying on the frying pan Creek
Item do lend to my said wife Susana the use of the tract of Land I now live on with all my inclusive Survays joyning of it with the third part of the prophas of the Mill during the time of her widowhood and my will is that my said Wife Susana shall not Lease, Sell nor lett the sd. Land nor Mill nor any part thereoff to any person or persons whatever and at her deseas or marrage the Land and Mill may be sold or any time after to the best advantage And all my Legaseas excepted movable to be sold to the best advantage Neagroes and all that can be collected before or after the Sale of the Land and that the whole amount of my Estate after charges taken oute may be divided into ten equal parts one part to be divided between James Gilbert and Rachal Gilbert Children of Jeriah Gilbert deceas'd one part to be divided between John Abston Frances Abston Susana Abston and Rachal Abston Children of Rachal Abston deceas'd one part to be divided between Isaac Butterworth, Stephen Butterworth, Jane Butterworth and Susanna hill Butterworth Children of Elizabeth Butterworth deceased the above mentioned Children of the deceased is to be paid these parts of the Estate by the Executors when they come of Lawful age to receive it, the other seven parts to be equally divided amongest my Children
one part to Stephen Clement his heirs or assigns for ever,
one part to Isaac Clement his heirs or assigns for ever,
one part to Benj.a Clement his heirs or assigns for ever,
one part to Adam Clement his heirs or assigns for ever,
one part to John Clement his heirs or assigns for ever
one part to Susanna Evans her heirs or assigns for ever.
One part to be divided to Martha Clement Widow of James Clement deceased and her Children according as the Law provides
Lastly I do appoint my Son Isaac Clement and my Son Adam Clement whole and Sole Executors of this my last Will and Testament in Witness whereoff I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my Seal this the thirtyeth day of March one thousand seven hundred and eighty W Test his Benja Clement .LS. John Bobbitt William M Cash his Mark Benjamin X Foster her Mark his Ruth R Cash Thomas T Roberson mark Mark
At a Court held for Pittsylvania County the 18th day of April 1780 This last Will and Testament of Benjamin Clement deceased was exhibited into Court by Isaac Clement one of the Executors herein appointed and the same was proved by the Oaths of the witnesses hereto and ordered to be recorded and the said Executor having taken the Oath by Law prescribed and with John Wilson and William Todd his securities entered into bond and acknowledged the same Certificate is granted him for obtaining a probate of the said Will in due form And afterwards, to wit, At a Court held for the said County the 20th day of June in the year aforesaid came here into Court Adam Clement the other Executor in the said Will named and prayed leave to be joined in the probate thereof which is granted him having first taken the Oath of Exor and together with John Wilson and Abraham Shelton Gent. His Securities entered into bond and acknowledged the same.Teste Will Tunstall CC.
COMMENT: Estate valued at 27,664 pounds, 4 shillings and 8 pence.
The Will of Dame Anne Fleetwod
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I Dame Anne Fleetwood of Drayton in the parish of
Barton Stacey in the County of Southton Widow and
[Page 2] Executrix of Sir Gerrard Fleetwood of Crawley in the sayd County of Southton
Knt. --- being in Competent --- and of sound minde pray --- --- God
--- --- the uncertainty of this Life doe make and ordaine this my last will
and testament in --- following First I bequeath my soule unto the hands of
Almight God my maker and creator (?) And my Body --- to the Earth from whence (?) it was taken to be --ly buryed att the dis-- of my daughter
Sonne in Law and Executor hereafter named --ing att the Last day for
Joyful Resurrection onto Everlasting Life through the --- of Jesus
Christ my blessed Saviour and Redeemer And as to --ing such temporall
Estate wherewith it hath pleased God to Entrust me with all I give devise
And bequeath the same as followeth that is to say --- my Will and minde
Is that all such Debts and Sumes of money as I shall justly and truly owe
att the the time of my decease to any person or --- whatsoever shall be
Truly payd according to Equity and good Cons-- out of my Estate first after
devised And my Debts being payd and Funerall Expenses sattisfied or
--- I give and bequeath the --- and --- of my Estate Goods and
Chattells as followeth (---) Imprimis I give and bequeath unto the
Church wardens for the --- being of the parish of Barton Stacey aforeSayd
Forty Shillings to be distributed unto and amongst the poor
Inhabitants --- to be payd unto them within Six months after my
decease Item I give to the --- of Cassington in OxfordShire Forty
Shillings to be payd within Six months --- after my decease
Item I give unto my good friends Doctor John Nicholas Warden of
Winchester Colledge Doctor David Thomas of Salisbury and Mr Thomas --man of Winchester Colledge whom I have by make and constitute
The Executors of this my last Will and Testament --- pounds (?) --- to
buy each of them a Ring to wear in mourning --- of me or --- to
Dispose as they shall think fitt Item I give to --- Anne Stansby
Daughter of Captaine Richard Stansby and my niece Frances Stirridge
The Sume of Five pounds --- to be payd within Twelve months
next after my decease Item I five unto my Sonne in Law John Ryves of
Drayton aforeSayd --- my Diamond Ring Item I give unto my
waiting mayd that shall be liveing with me att the time of my decease
Twenty Shillings And whereas by --- --- bearing date
The Fourteenth day of December in the Two and Twentieth years of the
Reigne of our late Sovereign Lord King Charles the --- --- sume of Six
Hundred and Fifty pounds was --ed to be payd unto my Sayd late
Husband Sir Gerrard Fleetwood onto such person as he should appoint
By any writting under his hand after the decease of Anne Stanhope
wife of Arthur Stanhope Esq. One of the sones of the Right ---
Peter C-- of Chesterfield out of certaine messuages Lands Tenements
And hereditaments --- in a certain place --- --- ---
--- Walle (?) within the Forest of B--wood in the County of
Buckingham And whereas the Sayd Sir Gerrard Fleetwood by his last
Will and Testament in writting dated the Six and Twentyeth day of
November One Thousand Six Hundred Fifty Seven Did give and
Bequeath unto me the sayd Dame Anne Fleetwood the sayd sume of
Six Hundred and Fifty Pounds to be disposed of as I should thinke fitt
And whereas I have severall Lands or --- Goods Chattells and
Other Estate in Cassington and Elsewhere to be disposed of now as
--- the Six Hundred and Fifty Pounds and the sayd Lands
--- Goods and Chattells --- --- I give and bequeath in manner
[Page 3] Following That is to say, All my ---hold Lands and Tenements I
give devise and bequeath unto the sayd Doctor John Nicholas Doctor David Thomas and Thomas --man and their --- forever And
The sayd Six Hundred and Fifty pounds to be --- after the death of
the sayd Anne Stanhope and my --- --- of Drayton Farme And all
My personall Estate Goods and Chattells whatsoever I give devise and
Unto the sayd Dr John Nicholas Dr David Thomas and Thomas --man their Executors and Administrators --- the ---
And --- --- --- in them the sayd Dr John Nicholas
Dr David Thomas and Thomas --man And to this --- and
--- that they the sayd Dr John Nicholas Dr David Thomas and
Thomas --man their --- Executors and Administrators
Respectively shall and with pay and deliver over to the hands of my daughter Anne Ryves wife of my sayd Sonne in Law John Ryves during
Her naturall Life or to such person or --- as she shall appoint
And att such --- and --- and in such mannor and proportion as
She shall from time --- --- and appoint by any writing
Under there hand or otherwise to permitt and suffer her and them to
Have --- and --- all the yearely Rents --- and proffitts of my
Freehold Lands and Tenements and Chattle --- and personall Estate
And It is my will and --- and I doe hereby --- that the sayd
yearely Rents --- and proffitts shall be for --- and separate
Maintenance and provision for my sayd daughter Ryves and to be
att her disposall only as if she were Sole and Unmarryed And that
Her sayd husband John Ryves shall not --- himselfe now
--- --- with the sayd yearely Rents --- and proffitts or any
--- thereof And that neither the sayd Dr John Nicholas Dr David Thomas and Thomas --man my sayd Trustees nor any overseer
of them shall pay or deliver the sayd Rents --- and parts thereof or appointment onto his life And in case my sayd
Daughter Anne Ryves shall happen to outlive and survive her sayd
Husband Thenffro (?) sayd Dr John Nicholas Dr David Thomas and
Thomas --man and the Survivor of them and the Executors or
Administrators of the survivor of them shall pay and deliver over to the hands of my sayd Daughter Anne Ryves onto sayd person or
persons as she shall authorize and appoint to --- the same
The sayd Sum of Six Hundred and Fifty pounds and every parte
Thereof --- to be --- after the death of the sayd Anne Stanhope
And alsoe all and every offer my stocke of Cattle Corne S--hold
Stuffe and the proffitts and --- --- plate and --- my goods
and personal Estate whatsoever not before disposed of that shall then
be in her hands or possession of my sayd Executors or any ---
of them --- Survivour of them and the Executors or ---
Of the Survivor of them And in case that my sayd Daughter Anne
Ryves shall dye in the Lifetime of her sayd Husband T Rathon (?)
My sayd Estate --- and personall --- in the Lifetime as att
The time of the Death of my sayd Daughter shall bee disposed to such
person and persons and --- --- intent and purpose as my sayd
Daughter Anne shall by any writeing signed by her and sealed in
The presence of Two or more witnesses --- and Appoint and
[Page 4] For default of such appointment That from all my sayd Reall Estate shall be
In Trust for the Issues of my sayd Daughter Anne And the sayd Personall Estate
For the Executors and Administrators of my sayd Daughter Anne provided
Always and it is my will and meaneing and I doe hereby --- that for
sayd Dr John Nicholas Dr David Thomas and Thomas --man my Executors constituted and appointed of this my last will and Testament shall
Not be any of them charged or --- --- for the Acts and Deeds of
Another but every one for his own Acts and Deeds alone nor for any Sum
or Sumes of money Goods Chattells or other thing whatsoever other than
What they and every of them shall actually receive or orally --- to their
And every and either of their respective hands or possession or be actually
Or really disposed of by them or any --- of them respectively by virtue
Of this my last will And that my sayd Executors and their Issues Executors
And Administrators respectively acting in --- of this my will
And Thrists aforeSayd shall be allowed and shall --- unto them ---
Respectively out of my Estate hereby devised to them all such just and
wayes in relation to this my will and Trusts aforesayd And Lastly I doe
Revoke Annual and hereby make voyd all former Will and Wills by me
Made and doe Establish this presents (?) to be and remaine for and as my
last will and Testament In witnesse whereof the sayd Dame Anne
Fleetwood the Executrix have --- sett my hand and seale the Sixth
Day of January in the Second yeare of the Reigne of our Sovereign Lord
and Lady King William and Queene Mary over England And in the
yeare of our Lord God One Thousand Six Hundred and Ninety - Anne Fleetwood - Signed sealed published and declared to be the Last Will and Testament of the within named Dame Anne Fleetwood in the presence of Walter Batt-- Mary Ba-- Frances --- Margaret --- her ma--.
The Will of Dorothy Crane
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The Will of Dr. Granville Craddock
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The Will of Edward Batten 1638
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The Will of Elizabeth Owfeild, dated 1624
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The Will of Elizabeth Perham
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The Will of Ephraim Hedges
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The Will of Frances Thwaites 1718
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The National Archives; Kew, Surrey, England; Records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Series PROB 11; Class: PROB 11; Piece: 566
{{Ancestry Sharing|980195|a3ec5f1c904d825bdd16985707cc1ce9db5ad4319c9fc9a014ccb4f6ec03e31e}} - {{Ancestry Record|5111|685747|uk}} (accessed 3 January 2023)
Will of Francisca Thwaits, granted probate on 8 Nov 1718. Died about 1718. Spelling, punctuation and line breaks are as per the register copy. Capital F is rendered as F rather than ff. Abbreviations are expanded and additions noted in [square brackets]. Paragraph breaks (where added) and bold text for names are my own for ease of reading. People mentioned in the Will *Jeremiah Thwait (late husband) *Thomas Thwait (kinsman, sailmaker of Rotherhithe) *Mrs Mary Salmon (sister of above Thomas Thwait) *Mrs Ann Thresher (servant) *Katherine Withins (Cousin, spinster) *Mrs Dorothy Ashburnham *Anne Battersly (servant) *Mr Phillips of Islington *Mrs Letitia Price *Mrs Sarah Browne *Madam Howard Madam Wilkins Mrs Teton Mrs Elford ---- In the Name of God Amen
I Frances Thwait Widow and Executrix of the last Will and
Testament of '''Jeremiah Thwait''' late of the Parish of St James's
Clerkenwell in the County of Middx Gent. being weak in body but of
sound and perfect mind and memory praised be given to God
for the same and being mindful of the frail and uncertain
condic[i]on of this transitory life do make and ordain this my
last Will and Testament in manner and form following (that is to
say) First and principally I recom[m]end my Soul into the hands of
Almighty God my Creator and of Jesus Christ my only Saviour
and Redeemer by whose mercy and merits I do believe and
assuredly hope to obtain free pardon and remission of all my Sins
and Offences and to inherit among the Elect the joys and fruition of
Eternal life My body I commit to the Earth from whence it was
extracted to be decently buried according to the discretion of
my Executor And as hereinafter is named in sure and certain
expectac[i]on of a Resurrection at the last day And in respect of
my worldly Estate which God of his exceeding bounty hath endowed
me withall I order and dispose of the same in manner and form
following (that is to say) Imprimis I give and bequeath unto my
Executor hereinafter named the sum[m]e of one hundred pounds
to be by him paid unto my Kinsman '''Thomas Thwait''' of
Rotherhith in the County of Surry Sailmaker within one year
after my decease Item I give and bequeath unto my Kinswoman
'''Mrs Mary Salmon''' Sister of the said Mr Thomas Thwait the
sum[m]e of one hundred pounds to be paid her by my Executor
within one year after my decease for her sole seperate and
peculiar use and disposal (notwithstanding her Coverture) and
that the Receipt of the said Mary Salmon (notwithstanding her
Coverture) shall be a good discharge to my Executor for the same
Item I give and bequeath unto '''Mrs Ann Thresher''' Spinster who
lately lived with me as my Servant Maid Five pounds to be paid
her out of the Legacy of ten pounds that was given me by the
last Will and Testament of my Cosin '''Katherine Withins''' Spinster
who died about two years since and which said Legacy ought to
have been paid me long since but is not as yet paid but the
said Five pounds is to be paid unto the said Anne Thresher as
soon as ever my Executor can recover the same Item the other
Five pounds the remainder of the said tenn pounds legacy soe
given to me as aforesaid I do hereby give and bequeath unto [in margin]^the same
'''Mrs Dorothy Ashburnham''' in the parish of St Sepulchres for her [Page 2]
sole seperate and peculiar use and disposal (notwithstanding her
Coverture) and that the Receipt of the said Mrs Dorothy Ashburnham
(notwithstanding her Coverture) shall be a good discharge to my
Executor for the same and the said Five pounds is to be paid her
as soon as ever my Executor recovers the same Item I do hereby
give and bequeath unto '''Anne Battersly''' my Servant that now lives
with me In case she lives with me at the time of my death and not
otherwise my Stuff Cloaths that are made up and now are in
wear Item I do hereby give and bequeath the sum[m]e of Five
pounds for the benefit of the Children belonging to the Charity
School in the Parish of St James's Clerkenwell and to be paid
by my Executor as soon as he can get in the same Item I doe
hereby give and bequeath unto '''Mr Phillips of Islington''' a gold
Ring of a Guinea price Item I do hereby order direct and
appoint that my Executor do bury me decently in the Vault
where my late husband Mr Jeremiah Thwait was buried in at
Chelmsford in Essex and that there be a Hearse and two mourning
Coaches to go to Chelmsford and my Will and desire is that Mr
Phillips and Mr Thomas Thwait Mrs Mary Salmon my Executor and
his Wife and Mr Phillips Wife '''Mrs Letitia Price''' and '''Mrs Sarah'''
'''Browne''' Shall go into the said two Coaches and see me interred
and the Men that go therein shall have Hatbands and Gloves
and the women only Gloves And my Will and desire farther is
that my Executor will invite '''Madam Howard Madam Wilkins Mrs'''
'''Teton Mrs Elford''' and the Lodgers that lodge in my house to
my Funeral and to give them a pair of Gloves each and for the
Funeral to be decently performed so as aforesaid I do hereby
order direct and appoint and allow for the defraying of the
charges of my Funeral Expenses and the Executors care
therein only the sum[m]e of Sixty pounds of lawful money of Great
Britain Item I farther hereby give and bequeath unto Benjamin
Collett of the Parish of St James's Clerkenwell aforesaid Gent the
sum[m]e of Five pounds of good and lawful money of Great Britain
and a gold Ring of the value of a Guinea And do hereby desire
my Executor to take care and see that the Monument that my
late husband bespoke in his lifetime be finished and placed over
the Vault where my said late husband desired the same and
that my Executor do pay for the same over and above my
Funeral Expences All the rest and residue of my Estate after
Devts Funerals Legacies Probate of my Will and all other
charges are first paid and discharged I give and bequeath the
same unto the said Thomas Thwait and Mary Salmon his Sister
to be equally divided between them share and share alike And
of this my last Will and Testament (containing three Sheets of
Paper and sign'd and sealed at the bottom of each Sheet of Paper)
I do hereby nominate and appoint the said Benjamin Collett my
full and sole Executoe hereby revoking all former Wills by me
at any time made In Witness whereof I have hereunto set my
hand and Seal unto each Sheet of Paper this twenty Seventh
day of January in the year of our Lord one thousand Seven
hundred and Seventeen .|. [Signed] Frances Thwaits .|. Signed Sealed
published and declared by the said Frances Thwait the Testatrix [Page 3]
and for and as her last Will and Testament in the presence of
us .|. Letitia Price Sarah Browne .|. Proved on 8 November 1718. == Sources ==
The Will of Francis Starrs of Segully
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The will of George Beilby of Nafferton 1865
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The Will of George Dives of Lingfield, Surrey
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The will of George Haselwood
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The will of Guy Machell of Crackenthorpe
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I Guy Machell of Crackenthorpe, sick of my body, whole and perfect of my remembrance, in this
manner and form following make my last will and testament.
First, I give and bequeath my soul to almighty God, to our blessed lady clean virgin, to all the
company of heaven; and my body to be buried within the church of St. Michael of Appleby.
Also I give and bequeath for the portion of my mortuary 3s 4d.
Also I give and bequeath for my forgotten tithes, my soul to be discharged of the church 20d.
Also, if the said gift and legacy for the portion of my mortuary be not sufficient to the vicar, then I
will, on inventory of all my goods to be made by four sworn men prized and valued, that which
the law requireth to be fully and truly paid.
Also I give and bequeath to my son Thomas Machell my best jack.
Also I give and bequeath to my son Henry Machell my best steel coat, with my best sword.
Also I give and bequeath to my son Edward Machell my other steel coat, with one other sword.
Also I give and bequeath to my Ion Leonard Machell one bastard.
Item, I give and bequeath to my son Guy Macbell one little Sword.
The residue of all my goods, moveable and unmoveable, not given and bequeathed before, my
funeral expenses and debts paid, I give and bequeath to my '''wife Margaret Machell''', and to my '''sons'''
'''Henry Machell, Edward Machell, Leonard Machell, Guy Machell, Wylfryde Machell, Gryllys'''
'''Machell, Myghtfell Machell, Robert Machell''', and to my '''daughter Anne Machell'''; whom I
order and make my true executors, to disperse for my soul’s health, as they think best to please God and comfort to my soul.
Also I will that all my goods move" able and immoveable remain whole together, under the
government and rule of my '''wife Margaret''', without any division, parts, or portions, till the youngest
of my forenamed sons come and be of perfect age and discretion; and then by the
fight of friends the goods left and unspended to be divided by even portions to my wife,
sons and daughter aforenamed.
Also I make and order supervisors of this my will the right honourable the lord Henry, earl of
Cumberland, his honourable son lord Henry Clifford, and my right worshipful friend Sir Thomas
Ch—— knight ; deferring of them all to see that my wife and sons afornamed
executors be not hurt nor harmed with wrongs ; but that they help and aid them in right, for the
love of God, as my great trust is therein. Records of this my last will and testament, Thomas
Hyll, John Shepperth, Henry Nelson with others more.
Guy died soon after the making of this will. And within a year afterwards the aforesaid (Henry)
Machell died at Donnington : And Hugh Machell his brother claimed his effects as next of kin. '''This transcription is taken from:''' *E. Ballasis. The Machells of Crackenthorpe. Reprinted for the Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society. Pg. 457-458. Kendal: T. Wilson 28 Highgate. 1886.
The will of Henry Bray 1742 - 1812
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The will of Henry Hening of Poxewell, 10 June 1700
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The Will of Henrye Thwaite 1601 East Witton
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West Yorkshire Wills and Probate. Peculiar of Knaresborough (Honour Court), Wills, Administrations and Inventories. WYL1012. West Yorkshire Archive Service, Morley, Leeds, England; Reference Number: RD/AP1/92/131
{{Ancestry Sharing|947922|fb3c04dabf6a84a67494716aa2b6913432bdea0890c450da242fddc1be112afe}} - {{Ancestry Record|5246|26116}} (accessed 1 January 2023)
Henry Thwaite probate in 1601. Occupation: Husbandman. Spelling, punctuation and line breaks are as per the register copy. Capital F is rendered as F rather than ff. Abbreviations are expanded and additions noted in [square brackets]. Paragraph breaks (where added) and bold text for names are my own for ease of reading. People mentioned in the Will *Bartholemewe Thwaite (nephew) *Henrie Thwaite (son of nephew Richard) *Thomas Thwaite (son of nephew Richard) *Richard Thwaite (nephew) *Thomas Thwaite (brother) *Margaret Thwaite (witness) ---- In The Name of God Amen The last daie of November in the yeare of our Lord god 1601 I henrie
Thwaite of Eastwitton in the Countie of Yorke husbandman sicke in bodie but of good and p[er]fecte Remembrance (I praise
god) doe maike and ordaine this my last will and testament in mann[er] and forme Following: That is to saie: First
I comende my soule into the hande of Almightie god ^my maker hopinge assuredlye throughe thonelie meritte of Jesus
Christ my Saviour to be made p[ar]taker of lief everlastinge. [?] I Comende my Bodye to the earth whereof it
is maide and the same to be buried in the Churchyard of Eastwitton afforesaid and as concerninge the disposic[i]on
of all my temporall and worldlie goodes whatsoev[er], I dispose and bequeathe the same in man[ner] and forme followinge
That is to saie First I give and bequeath unto '''Bartholemewe Thwaite''' my Nephewe twentie Shillinges and
unto '''Henrie''' and '''Thomas Thwaite''' two of the sonnes of '''Richard Thwaite''' my Nephewe equallie betwixt
them an [oxe calf?] and also I give unto '''Thomas Thwaite''' of F[l?]asbro my brother all my arpell and lastlie
I give and bequeath unto the said Richard Thwaite my Nephewe my Ferme or tenem[en]t in Eastwitton afforesaid
and all my title an ten[an]tright thereunto, And also (my debts and legeci[es] paid and Funerall expences distributed) I give unto the said Richard Thwaite the rest of all my goodes moveable and imoveable whatsoev[er]
And of this my last will and testament I ordaine and make the said Richard
Wytnesses hereof Thomas [?] Fermerie '''Margaret Thwaite'''.
The Will of Hiram Rogers (Rogers-23243)
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The Will Of Hugh Jacka written 1734 probated 1848
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The Will of Jane (Frank) Beilby of Albion St Kingston Upon Hull 1855
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The Will of Jeremiah Thwaites 1716
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The National Archives; Kew, Surrey, England; Records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Series PROB 11; Class: PROB 11; Piece: 555
{{Ancestry Sharing|977777|a62f5440e354f2c09939fd720e56ab4ff7cdd532909247e625d14693906076ee}} - {{Ancestry Record|5111|825276|uk}} (accessed 3 January 2023)
Will of Jeremia Thwaites, granted probate on 3 Dec 1716. Died about 1716 in St James Clerkenwell, Middlesex, England. Spelling, punctuation and line breaks are as per the register copy. Capital F is rendered as F rather than ff. Abbreviations are expanded and additions noted in [square brackets]. Paragraph breaks (where added) and bold text for names are my own for ease of reading. People mentioned in the Will *Edward Sadler (friend) *Frances Thwaites (wife) *Thomas Thwates (cousin) *Mary Salmon (cousin) ---- In the Name of God Amen
I Jeremy Thwaites of the parish of St James Clerkenwell in
the County of Middlesex Yeoman being of sound and perfect
mind and memory (praise be Almighty God for the same) Doe
make and declare this my last Will and Testament in manner
following (that is to say) First and principally I commend
my Soul into the hands of Almighty God my Maker and Redeemer
hoping and assuredly believing that by and through the alone
Merits Death and Passion of my Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ I
shall obtain full and free pardon and remission of all my sins
here committed and Life Everlasting in the Kingdom of Heaven
And my Body I committ to the Earth to be decently buried in the
parish Church of Chelmesfford in the County of Essex as near to
my late Father and Mother as conveniently may be And as
touching the disposall of such Temporall Estate as it hath
pleased Almighty God to bestow on me I give and dispose of
the same as followeth (vizt) Imprimis I give and bequeath
unto my friend Mr '''Edward Sadler''' All that my messuage or
Tenement with the appurtenances wherein I now dwell Scituate
and being in Clerkenwell close in the parish of St James
Clerkenwell in the County of Middlesex In Trust nevertheless that [Page 2]
the said Edward Sadler his Executors and Administrators shall permitt
and suffer my loving Wife '''Frances Thwaites''' to receive and take
the Rents Issues and profitts thereof for and during the Terme of
her Naturall Life In case the Terme of years therein to come shall
soe long continue And from and after her decease shall in like
manner permit and Suffer my Cousins '''Thomas Thwates''' and
'''Mary Salmon''' to receive and take the Rents Issues and profitts
thereof equally between them part and share alike for and during
the remainder of the terme of years which shall be therein to
come and unexpired at the time of the decease of my Wife
Frances Thwaites Item I doe hereby acquit release and discharge
unto my cousin Thomas Thwaites One Bond or Obligation from
him to be made for payment of the sum[m]e of Fifty pounds
Principall money and alsoe one note under his hand for payment
of Four pounds And I doe hereby Order my Executrix hereafter named
to deliver up to the said Thomas Thwaites the said Bond and note
to be cancelled and made void Item I give and bequeath unto
my cousin Mary Salmon the sum[m]e of Fifty pounds of lawfull
money to be paid within the space of Twleve months next after
my decease Item all the rest and residue of my Goods Chattels debts
and Estate whatsoever I give and bequeath unto my loving Wife
Frances Thwaites whom I doe hereby make ordain and appoint
Executrix of this my last Will and Testament Lastly I doe hereby
revoke and make void all former Wills by me at any time
heretofore made and this only doe I establish and confirme for
and as my last Will and Testament In Witness whereof I have
hereunto sett my hand and Seale the three and twentieth day of
June Anno Domini 1711 And in the Tenth year of the Reigne of
our Soveraigne Lady Anne (by the Grace of God) Queen of Great
Britain etc. [Signed] Jeremy Thwaites his marke Signed Sealed published and
declared by the said Testator for and as his last Will and Testament
in the presence of Susanna Forster Littleton Westley Ser. == Sources ==
The Will of Joane Grey widow of Semley, Wiltshire 1668
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The Will of Joel Adams, Sr.
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Catalog: [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/443450 General index to wills, 1787-1950; wills, 1787-1941] Wills, Vol. E 1806-1816 Wills, Vols. G-H 1814-1834
Image path: South Carolina Probate Records, Bound Volumes, 1671-1977 > Richland > Wills, 1823-1834, Vol. H > image 564 of 649; Citing Department of Archives and History, Columbia.
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939L-J89F-5W?i=563&cc=1919417&cat=443450 FamilySearch Image] (accessed 19 February 2022)
The will of John Brickell, Yeoman of Motcombe, Dorset 1685
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The will of John de Stourton 1438
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The Will of John G. Wilhite
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The Will of John Hedges
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The Will of John Owfeild, dated 1620, proved 1621
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Ireland kinge defendor of the faith And of Scotland the Liiij th 1620. '''I John Owfield''' of Ashburne in the Countie of Derby butcher, being troubled wth
sicknesse, but of sound & p[er]fect remembrance (Laud & praise be unto almighty god for it) do ordaine & make this my p[rese]nte testam[en]t contayning herin my
last will, in maner & fourme followinge. ffirst I Commend my soule to Almighty god my maker & redeemer, & my body to bee buried in the parish
church of Ashburne aforesaid neere unto my Anncestors. '''It[e]m''' I give & bequeath unto '''Elizabeth Owfield my loving wiffe''' my dwelling home in Ashburne
aforesaid w[i]th the yards backsides buildings & appurten[a]nc[e]s therto belonging for the terme of her n[atu]rall life. and after the deceasse of the said Elizabeth
my will and true intent and meaning is that '''Roger Owfield my sonne''' shall have the same during his n[atur]rall life, & after the deceasse of the said Roger
the heirs males of the body of the said Roger Lawfully begotten, & to bee begotten, & for default of such issue, I give & bequeath the same to '''John'''
'''Owfield my loving sonne''' & the heires males of his body Lawfully begotten, & to bee begotten, and for default of such issue, I give the same
unto '''my sonne WIll[ia]m Owfield''' & his heirs for ever. And if it shall happen my sonne Roger to dy with out issue male, my now will & true
intent & meaning is, that '''Margaret, his now wiffe''', shall have the same, for terme of her n[atu]rall life, so as shee shall keepe it in goods repaire '''It[e]m'''
I give & bequeath all my goodds & Chattelles, aswell moveable & nonmoveable unto '''Elizabeth my wiffe''' ffor her maintenance, during her life upponn
Condic[i]on that she devide & bestowe the residue therof amongst my children w[hi]ch shall be livinge, at the tyme of her deceasse, saving that
'''Elizabeth my daughter''' shall have to her use by virtue herof my best bedd & two kyne at the deceasse of the said Elizabeth her mother. And I
do ordain and make '''Elizabeth my Wiffe''' my sole executrixe of this my last will & testam[en]t: And I revoke & adnull all former Executors, wills, legacies
and bequests by mee at any tyme hertofore named, willed or bequeathed. In witnesse wherof I have herunto putt my hand and seale the
day and yeare above written. Sealed and deliv[er]ed in the pr[e]sence of. Nicholas Bous
Philippe Etonn
WIll[ia]m Taylor
Richard Yall / Ysall ffiat probac[i]o testament. suprascript or administrato
bonourd D[i]ct Defunct[us] Executorii in eod[un] testato no[mi]niat &c
Commissio Minist[]so De Asbourne Ro: Master. ==Sources==
The Will of John Wagstaff, Sr.
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USBH_Heritage_Exchange,_Needs_Slave_Profiles
Will Records, 1765-1922 ; General Index to Wills and List of Heirs, Decedents, 1765-1948; Author: Virginia. Superior Court of Law (Mecklenburg County); Probate Place: Mecklenburg, Virginia
{{Ancestry Sharing|30862544|3c6a80}} - {{Ancestry Record|62347|2014045}} (accessed 18 October 2022)
John Wagstaff will date 31 Aug 1829.
The will of John White, alias Wampers, 1679
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The Will of Joseph John Alston I
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The Will of Lady Jean Skipwith
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The Will of Lancelot Machell (1624 - 1681)
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Pr. 15 Dec. 1656, in Consistory Court by Elizabeth Machell, one of the executrices. My body to be buried as my executors shall think fit. To my eldest
son Hugh Machell and to Hugh's son Lancelot and to the heirs of my family 2
pictures, one of Anne Countess of Pembroke given me by the Countess, and the
other of the most noble and victorious Lord George, Earl of Cumberland, her
father, given me by Richard, Earl of Thanet, also a silver medal being the picture
of the said Countess as a token of her love, also another large medal being the
picture of Charles 11. also given to me by the Countess to remain in the evidence
chest as monuments of her favour for ever ; all the furniture &c, in the house
called Crackenthorpe Hall, I give to the said Hugh and Lancelot ; to my said son
Hugh, my best horse and arms with all furniture thereunto belonging ; to the
said Lancelot Machell one silver tankard and one plate bearing the family arms,
and a fine Turkey leather guilded Bible, bearing the King's Arms to be kept as
heirlooms; to my second son Thomas Machell, rector of Kirkbythore, £20 for the
use of his son Lancelot Machell, and to his wife Elizabeth 20s. to buy a ring with;
to my younger son Lancelot Machell of Skipton Castle, warden there for the
Right Honble Richard, Earl of Thanet certain moneys due from Mr. Conniston
and Mr. Willm Dargue of Appleby, £5 due from my brother Thwaytes of Appleby,
55s. or 4 marks due from Henry Sanderson of Appleby, 20s. due from William
Robinson of Kirkbythore, miller, £3 due from Lancelot Nicholson of Crackenthorp
and £6 due unto me by John Potter of Lazenby, Cumberland, my bailiff; to Mar-
garet Fawcett my mother, 50s. to buy a gown; to Elizabeth Dent my neice, a
whye &c, and to her sister Margaret Atkinson a whye; to my servant Lancelot
Machell the same ; to Reiginald Hill for kindness to me during my illness 40s: ; to
my servant Anne Bousfield for her diligence and care during my sickness one
whye; to my old servant William Brunskill 40s.;to Thomas Fawcett my black
suit and coat; to my wife Elizabeth Machell, my son Thomas Machell, and
my daughter Susan Machell the rest of my goods and I appoint them executors,
Thomas' son, Lancelot to act for his father in case he die before me, Thomas
Fletcher of Little Strickland, Esqr., John Thwaites of Appleby, John Pattinson
of Penrith, and William Atkinson of Morland, gentleman, are supervisors, to
whom I give 20s. each for mourning rings. Witnesses : Hugh Machell, Thomas
Machell, Thomas Fawcett, John Nelson, John Allan, Heugh Shepperd, and
William Atkinson.
The Will of Olive Bullock
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The Will of Peyton Randolph
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The Will of Ralph Rigby
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The Will of Richard Huske of Saint Ives
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and Testament of me Richard Huske of Saint Ives in the
County of Huntingdon Gent as follows viz. In the first place my
Will is that I be buried at Exning near Newmarket in the County
of Suffolk as near to my Father’s Grave as convenienty will
permit it being at the West End of the parish Church there but It
would not have an Extravagant Funeral made for me. Imprimis I ratify and confirm my Wife’s Jointure made by me
to her for her Life and I order my Executrix hereafter named
to pay my said Wife one hundred pounds within three Months
after my decease pursuant to such Marriage Settlement and
also I order my said Executrix to pay her 10 pounds for
Mourning. Item I give and devise unto my Grandson
'''Bromsall Huske''' All that my Crowne Inn in St Ives
aforesaid together with all the Shops and other Appurtenances
incident and belonging thereto and now in the several Tenures
or Occupations of Gideon Maud Mr Knighton and Mr
Barnes Glover their undertenants or Assigns And also
my Pound Close and my Meadow Ground as 'tis now lett
to the said Gideon Maud with the Crown Inn to hold to
him and his Heirs for ever also I give and bequeath
unto my said Grandson and his Heirs for ever All those
my four Acres of freehold meadow Ground in Saint Ives
aforesaid with the Appurtenances purchased by me of
John Foreman many years since and also all that my
Freehold Cottage or Tenement with three Acres of Arable
Land situate standing lying and being in the parish of
papworth Everard in the County of Cambridge with all
Commons and right of Common and other Appurtenance
thereunto belonging and appertaining and now in the tenure
or occupation of Thomas Haines and I nominate and
appoint my said Executrix herein after named Guardian
to my said Grandson during his Minority and for her to
take the Rents and Profits of my said Estates so
devised as aforesaid to my Grandson for his
Maintenance and Education and finding and providing
him with Cloaths and all other Apparel and necessaries of
what kind soever and I further order and direct my
said Executrix to pay all Fines and Fees on my
Grandson’s Admission to the Premisses above devised to
him as aforesaid out of my personal Estate And as to
all the rest residue and remainder of my Real Estate in
Admission or otherwise I give and devise unto my said
Executrix and her Heirs and Assigns for ever subject
nevertheless to the several Trust Conditions and Payments
[ ] matter expressed and directed (that is to say) that my
said Executrix shall permit my said Wife to live and Dwell ^ and suffer
in my Bridge Street where I formerly lived (Rent free) or
Otherwise to permit her to lett or demise the same to any
person or persons whatsoever for the term of her Life in
pursuance of her Marriage Jointure and in case she shall
think fit to live in the same then my will and meaning is and
I do hereby order and direct my said Executrix shall and
[pay] the Land tax and Quit rent for the said premisses yearly
as often as they shall respectively become and payable and
from and after my said Wifes decease my Will and meaning is
[ ] my said Real Estate of what kind or nature soever
[ ] and direct that my said Executrix shall and do
dispose of the same or convey and surrender all or any
part or parcel thereof to and amongst all or any of my
said Grandchildren when she shall think fit and proper
so to do or otherwise to devise the same or any part or
parcel thereof to all or any of my said Grandchildren in
and by her last will and Testament in Writing as she shall
think fit and proper so to do so as the said Real Estate so
devised be disposed on by my said Executrix to and amongst
my said Grandchildren in her Lifetime or my her Will in such
manner as she shall think proper so to do But in case my
said Executrix shall intermarry again then my devise so to
her made as above relating to her and my said Grandchildren
shall be null and void to all intents and purposes from the
day of such Marriage and from and after her intermarriage
that then such my said Real Estate so devised to my said
Executrix in Trust as above (Except my Real and personal
Estate situate lying and being in Milton or near adjoining in
The said County of Bedford which will go to my grandson
'''John Robert Throckmorton Huske''' as my heir at Law) I
give and devise unto my said Grandson '''Bromsall Huske'''
and his heirs of ever (any thing hereinbefore contained to
The contrary notwithstanding) Item I give and bequeath unto
my Clerk or Servant '''Mr Robert Letham''' twenty Guineas to
be paid him within twelve Months after my decease over
and above his wages that shall be due and owing him at my
death (being twenty pounds per Annum and no more) provided
that he shall make up all my Court Rolls and the Tenants
Copys of their several admissions to their respective Copyholds
Estates respectively taken up by them at the several Courts
whereof I am now Steward and deliver over such Court Rolls
and Copys when so made up by him unto my said Executrix
for her to deliver over the same to the several and respective
Lords to whom such Court Rolls belong or appertain and also
To the several Tenants such their respective Copys that have
taken up their serval Copyhold Estates to which they have
respectively been admitted and I order and direct my said
Executrix to find and provide my said Clerk with Meat Drink
Washing and Lodging for twelve Months after my decease. Item I give and bequeath unto my friend '''Thomas Want'''
twenty pounds and appoint him supervisor of my said Will
and desire and order him that would assist my said
Executrix in performing and carrying my said Will into Execution
and also performing the several trusts reposed by me in her in
my said Will and in case my Daughter shall Intermarry
Then and from henceforth I appoint my said friend Want to be
sole Guardian and Trustee to my said Grandson Bromsall
during his Minority. Item all my personal Estate of what Kind
or nature soever I give and bequeath unto my daughter in law
'''Susanna Huske''' Widow and hereby I appoint her full and solo
Executrix of this my last Will and Testament in Trust of her in
the first place to pay all my Fines and Fees for taking up my
said several Copyhold Estates and also my debts Legacy and
Funeral Charges and probate of this my will and afterwards at
her death or sooner (if she shall think fit) by her will or
otherwise to divide the Remainder of my said personal Estate
between''' my two Granddaughters''' share and share alike (Except
what money is due and owing to me on the Bedfordshire Estate for
Principal and Interest which I advanced when such estate was
purchased which Cash so due at my death I give and bequeath
unto my grandson '''John Robt Throckmorton Huske''' his Executors
and Administrators he giving my said Executrix a full and
General Release and Discharge of all Demands or pretensions
that he [[Melloy-32|Melloy-32]] shall or may pretend to or claim by virtue and
under a Note or Memorandum that I gave to settle five
hundred pounds on my said Executrix and her Heirs that she
had or should have by his said deceased Father together with
five hundred pounds more advanced and lent by way of Mortgage
on my said son’s Estate in Hemingford which he afterwards
purchased of Robert Porter and which said five hundred pounds
Note or Memorandum so given by me has been lost or mislaid
by him or his wife and my further mind and meaning is that
my said Executrix shall not be accountable to any of my said
Grandchildren for the rents and profits of my real Estate or
for the Interest of my personal Estate (in case she don’t Marry)
but otherwise if she does In witness whereof I have hereunto
set my hand and seal this ninth day of February 1757 ''R Huske''
Signed sealed published and declared by me as and for my
last Will and Testament containing three sheets of paper of my
own hand Writing in the presence of three witnesses whose
names are hereunto set and attested by then at my request
And in my presence ''R. Astell.'' ''Robt Snablin'' a Gentleman
in the Temple to be heard of a Handoes Coffeehouse by Temple
Bar ''Thos Moore'' at Quindon by and beyond Oudle Inn in
[ ] London Road '''CODIRILL''' to be annex to my last
Will and Testament.
All that my Legacy of Twenty_given by Will to my late Clerk
or Servant '''Letham''' I hereby revoke and make null and void to
all intents and purposes whatsoever Witness may hand 29th day
of January 1760 ''R Huske''
'''CODIRILL''' to be added to the last Will
and Testament of me Richard Huske of St Ives
in the County of Huntingdon Gent made this third
day of July in the year of our Lord one Thousand
seven hundred and sixty and which I desire may be
deemed and taken as part of my will
I give and bequeath unto my dearly beloved wife''' Susan'''
'''Huske''' (over and above what I have given her by my said will)
[ ] use and occupation of the House I now dwell in there to
reside until the next Quarter day after my decease without any
[ ] or molestation whatsoever And my will is that my said
last Will named shall be chargeable with and shall pay all
Rent Quit rent parish dues Taxes and other Assessments laid
on the said dwellinghouse to that time and I also give and
bequeath unto my said Wife the use and Enjoyment of all my
household goods furniture plate and linen remaining in the
said house at the time of my decease for the Term of her life
And my Will intent and meaning is that my said Wife shall
Not be answerable or accountable for any wear or tear in the
use of the same And I do hereby Declare that my said last
Will in writing and this Codiril and any Codiril by me made
since the Execution of my last will do contain my last Will
And Testament in Writing In Witness whereof I have hereunto
set my hand and seal the day and year as was above written
''R. Huske.'' Signed sealed published and declared by the said
Richard Huske as and for a Codiril to be added to and be
Part of his last will and testament in the presence of us
who in his presence have subscribed our names as Witnesses
''Robt Tench. John Jennings. John Beicherro'' '''This will''' was proved at London with two
Codirills the twenty sixth July in the Year of our Lord one
thousand seven hundred and sixty before the Right Worshipfull
Edward Simpson Jortor of Laws Master Keeper or Commissary
of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury lawfully constituted by
the Oath of Susanna Huske Widow the solo Executrix
named in the said will to who Administration was granted
of all and singular the Goods Chattels and Credits of the deseased
having been first sworn by Commission duly administer. A note added in the column on page 4 reads:
On the 13th day of April [1811]
[Admendom] to the Will and the Codrill annexed of
the Goods Chattels and the Cuorts of
Richard Huske late of St Ives in
the county of Huntingdon decd left
Named by Susannah Huske Widow
decd whilst living the Relict and to be
Ext Named in the said Will was
Married to Thomas Arch P the Younger
of Ely in the Isle of Ely and County
of Cambridge--- as a Pason For
that purpose named by and [ ]
part and behalf of Susannah
Waddington of Ely in the Isle of Ely
and county of Cambridge Widow the
Richd Thomas Waddington [date] in
D[ ] Rector of Northwood in the
County of Norfolk Mary Wyche
Leheup of Bury Saint Edmunds in
the County of Suffolk Widow Agnes
Waddington of Ely alousd Sp. and
John Horsey Waddington of Little Park
in the County of Southhampton Esquire
[Minster] far as concerns all the Right
Litle and Intent of him the Richard
Huske decd in and to certain Land
Tenements and Meas with the Apperts
situate in the Parish of Doddington in
the Isle of Ely aforesd and the resdue
and remainder of a certain Term of
500 Yrs therein granted and afrigreed
to him the said Richd Huske decd
by a certain Judue of A Parts leaving
Date the 19th day of July 1734 and
Noco to come and unexpired and all
benefit and advantage to be had
and taken there upon but no further
or otherwise or in any other chawier
whatsoever having first sworn by
Comon duly to admit thesaid
Executrix dying Intestate.
The Will of Richard Hutchcroft 1874
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Probate Packets, 1835-1930; Probate Index, 1835-1989; Author: Iowa. District Court (Des Moines County); Probate Place: Des Moines, Iowa
{{Ancestry Sharing|29999784|30be81}} - {{Ancestry Record|9064|1038531|uk}} (accessed 19 August 2022) Images 591 - 727 (Will 711- 715)
Richard Hutchcroft probate on 24 Dec 1879. Spelling, punctuation and line breaks are as per the register copy. Abbreviations are expanded and additions noted in [square brackets]. Paragraph breaks (where added) and bold text for names are my own for ease of reading. People in the will: *Elizabeth Hutchcroft (wife) *Peter Hutchcroft (youngest son) *'Thomas S. Hutchcroft (son) *Mary Ann Pilling (daughter) *Hannah Eland (daughter) *Sarah E. Eland (daughter) *Eliza Ulrich (daughter) * John R. Hutchcroft (son) *Matilda C. E. Downer (daughter) *Edward J. Hutchcroft (son) *Job A. G. Hutchcroft (son) ---- I Richard Hutchcroft of
the Town of Kossuch in the County of
Des Moines, State of Iowa, recollecting
that life is uncertain and death the
[?] of all, being of sound and
disposing mind and memory, and being
desirous of settling my worldly affairs
while I have strength and capacity so
to do, do make and publish this my
last will and Testament, that is to say:
First
I direct that as soon after my
death as practicable my Executors
pay all funeral expenses, and all my
just debts, out of the first moneys
that shall come into their hands
from any portion of my Estate.
Second
I will and direct that my
beloved wife '''Elizabeth Hutchcroft'''
have, hold, use and enjoy all my
Personal and Real Estate of which I
may die seised, for and during her
natural life term: Subject, however,
to such directions as I shall herein-
after give
Third
My youngest son, '''Peter Hutchcroft''',
being, as yet, a minor, and not settled
in business, I direct, that, in case I die
before settling him in business, my Executors
[Page 2]
furnish him funds out of my Estate,
on the same terms, and making him
equal with my other children, not
charging him more than five per cent
interest on any funds loaned him
from my Estate.
Fourth
I direct, that, should my wife,
Elizabeth Hutchcroft, at any time
before her death, prefer making a division
among my children, of any portion of
my Estate left in her hands, she do so
under the direction of my Executors,
Such divisions to be equal, that is, share
and share alike, among my following
named children, Taking into consider-
ation the amount heretofore received
by each one respectively, to wit:
'''Thomas S. Hutchcroft, Mary Ann Pilling,'''
'''Hannah Eland, Sarah E. Eland, Eliza'''
'''Ulrich, John R. Hutchcroft, Matilda C. E.'''
'''Downer, Edward J. Hutchcroft, Job A. G.'''
'''Hutchcroft''' and Peter Hutchcroft.
Fifth
I direct that the share, or shares, from
any portion of my Estate, personal or real,
going to my daughters Mary Ann Pilling, and
Eliza Ulrich, shall be held in trust by
Trustees I may hereinafter name, to be
paid over to them, or their heirs, in such
installments, and at such times, as said
Trustees in their judgment may think will
be best for the interest of said Mary Ann
Pilling and Eliza Ulrich, or their children, and
in case any one or more of my children
[Page 3]
named in item Four should die without
issue, then the share that would have
gone to them shall go to my remaining children
Sixth
I direct that as soon after the death of
my wife, should she survive me, as
practicable, my Executors sell at private
or public sale, as they may deem best
for the interest of the Estate, all personal
& real Estate then on hand, and divide
the proceeds among all my children as
directed in Fourth Item. But should
my wife marry again, I direct that
my Executors proceed at once to close
up the Estate
and after paying over to her what would
be going to her by law, to divide the remain-
-der among all my children as directed
in Item Four.
Seventh
I hereby appoint my Son Thomas S.
Hutchcroft, and [Hnry?] Carper, Executors of
this my last will and Testament, I also
appoint them Trustees to take charge of the
funds as provided in Item Five, hereby
exempting them from the necessity of
giving bonds as such Executors and trustees,
and I request, R.S.Hedges, F Wycoff & Wm [Hearper?]
to sign as witnesses of my signature to
this instrument.
Witness my hand this 28th day of December
A.D.1874 [signed] Richard Hutchcroft his mark
Attest R.S. Hedges
F Wycoff
Wm [Hearper?]
Proved December 17th 1879
== Sources ==
The Will of Richard Machell of Calebecke
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11th Dec. 1565
Pr. July 1577.
'''Transcription''' My body to be humated and buried wyt -- unto the place wher my wyffe is buried in
the church; to '''my son George Machell''' the good will of my farmhold in hudskills
in Caldbeck ; to '''my son William Machell''' xxb.insilver ; '''to Yllen Machel Madlen
daughter''' ?? s. towards her marradge ; to Sibbell Prestman, Jane Doughter ?? to
her marradge ; to '''my daughter Jane Prestman''' one silver spoon ; to illiner tiffine
the same ; to '''my son George's daughter Isabell Machell''', a silver massour ; to
Janet plough 6s. 8. ; to Thomas Robinson of Howbeck, 5s. ; to William May,
Parish clerk, 1s. ; to the poor man's box to be divided to the poor 5s. ; '''to Jane'''
'''Machell and Anne Machell, my son George's daughters''', the rest of my goods, and I
appoint them executrices. Witnesses : Cuthbert Bewley, John Smythe of Hesket,
William Ray, Christopher Relph, Thomas Atkinson, with others. Supervisors :
Thomas Bewlye, Nicholas Machell, Sir William Robinson my curat, Cuthbert
Bewlye, Thomas Bewlye to have one Angell of gould for his paynes, Nicholas
Machell 6s. 8d. ; SirWilliam Robinson the same, and Cuthbert Bewlye the same
for their paynes.
The Will of Richard Seager of Fordington 1626
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The Will of Robert Yeatman, Gentleman of Donhead Saint Andrew, Wiltshire 1741
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The Will of Ryland Randolph
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The Will of Samuel S. Boyd
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The Will of Samuelis Angier
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The_Will_of_Samuelis_Angier.jpg
Minister of the Gospel being in a good State of bodily --
health and of sound memory and understanding (blessed be-
God for it/ soo make authorduin this my last will and --
Testament in manner and form following first I give myself
Soul and body to God my Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifyer
trusting to be saved through the merits of Christ and sanctification
of the Spirit according to the clarfing love of the ffather which
I admire and adore My body I will that it be deposited in
hope of a joyful Resurrection in the Yard of the New.
Chappel in Durkinfeild aforesaid over against the South Door
of the said Chappell in the MIddle between the said door and
the Wall As for my Estate and worldly Goods which God hath
graciously given me by Gods leave I bequeath as followeth
first I give to my eldest Son Bezaliell Angier and his heires
foreover All my RealEstate Lands and Tenements with the
appurtenances thereof lying and being in Winmerly[9] and
Nether Wiersdale[8] in the Parish of Garstang[14][15] and County of
Lancaster. Also I give unto my said Son Bezalliell Angier and
his heires for ever That Estate Land and Tenement lying -
and being in Hurst[10] in the Parish of Ashton under Lyne in -
the County of Lancaster aforesaid with the appurtenances -
which I purchased of James Loorh and also the Land and
Tenement I purchased of Ralph Hall with th appurtenances lying
and being in Mofsdolee- in the said Parish of Ashton UnderLin-
===Page 107 Left Hand Side=== and Country of Lancaster. Nevertheless my will is that if James
Loorh or his heires shall pay to my said son Bezaliell Angier the
sinno of one hundred pounds of lawfull money of great Britain
and the Arrears of Rent owing to me for the said Estate or shall
be owing at the time of my death then that my said son Bezaliell
Angier shall surrender all the estate right and title which he shall,
have of in and unto the said Lands and Tenement purchased from
the said James Loorh with the appurtenances by virtue of this my-
last will and Testament or otherwise unto the said James Loorh
and his heires Also that if John Hall Son of Ralph Hall aforesaid
or Sarah Gall Widow or either of them shall shall pay to me --
during my life time or to my said son Bezaliell Angier the sum
of Ninety pound after my decease together with the yearly-
Rent or arrears thereof then the authorising for the said Lands
and Tenements purchased of the said Ralph has all lying and
being in Mofsdolee aforesaid that then my said Son Bezalliell,
Angier shall surrender unto the said John Hall and his heires
all his right and title of in and unto the said Land and Tenement
with th' appurtenances for ever And further as concerning
my personal Estate after the payment of my funeral charges
and debts I bequeth the same as follosweth First I give to my
Son John Angier of Bristoll the sume of one hundred and fifty
pounds Item I will that my Executors hereafter named & doe fulfill
the Covenants made with my Son in Law Mr Ralph Lathropp
according to Articles agreed upon between him and me when
he married my daughter Margret if they are not all fulfilled
in my life time And further in order to the making provision
for my daughter Anne and her Children I give and bequeath
unto my Executors hereafter named the summe of four hundred
pounds of lawfull money of great Britain in Trust to and
for the use and uses of my said daughter Anne and her
children which she now hath or hereafter shall have by her
present husband to be improved paid and disposed of by my
said Executors to her and her children as have after followeth
hoping that her said present husband will give and dispose
unto her the said Anne and his Children by her all his Estate
real and personal of the time of his decease/ That is to say/
my Will is that my said Executors shall pay unto my said
Anne interest for the said summe of four hundred pounds
yearly by two equall payments after the rate of Five pounds.
The hundrend during all the time of her natural life after her
decease my Will is that the said summe of four hundred pounds
shall be improved by my said Executors to and for the use and
uses of all the children of the said Anne equally to be__
divided amongst them and to be paid to them as they shall
severally attain the age of one and twenty years. And if all
the chidldren of my said daughter or shall happen to dye before
her the said Anne then my Will is that the said sume of four
hundred pounds after this death of the said Anne shall be
equally distributed amongst all my Grandchildren. Item my
Silver Plate I give as followeth. To my Son Bezaliell Angier I
give my Silver Tankard and my largest Tumbler To my daughter
===Page 107 Right Hand Side=== Lathropp I give my Silver Salver and a Silver Potenger To my Son.
John Angier I give a large Silver Possit Cup and Two Silver Spoons.
as as much Silver Plate more as will make up the sum of five
pounds Item I give to the feofees of the New Chappell in --
Dunkinfeild aforesaid a Silver Cup weighing Eleven Ounces or-
thereabouts for the use of the Lords Table Item I give to my
Servant Margret Marshall one old Silver Spoon Item I give to.-
my Man Joseph Burgaes one old Silver Spoon Item all the rest,
of my Silver Plate to give to my daughter Anne as for my books
I bequeath as follows That is to say I give them all to my Son
Bezaliell Angier Item I give to the said Margrett Marshall
Six pounds. To the aforesaid Joseph Burgaes I give the sume of
four pounds fifteen shillings Provided they stay with me up till
my death Also I give to the said Margret Marshall and Joseph
Burgaes to each of them Ten shillings a piece for every year
they or either of them shall live with me after the date of
these Presents upon the same condition they live with me till
my death. Item I give my small Tenement in Dedham to my
son Bezaliell desiring him to give ten shillings apiece to such
children to whom I am Uncle to with the children of my
Brethren and Sisters who have not herefore received soe
much by my order. Item I give to my brother Nathaniel
a Guinea Item I give to my two Sisters Hannah and Sarah
to each of them a Guinea Item I give to my Brother in law
Edmund Sherman a Guinea Item I give to the Poor of my-
congregation that meets in Durkinfeild the sum of five pounds
to be distributed amongst them according to the discretion of-
the feofees of the said Chappel Item I give to my Poor of Dedham
five pounds to be distributed by my two Sisters Hannah and
Sarah as they see fitt Item as to my Household Godos I give to-
my daughter Lathropp my bestised and bedding and half of my
Linens except the sinper and also five dozen of pewter plates
of the best sort All the rest of my household goods I give to
my daughter Anne whatsoever else remains of my personal
- Estate not before disposed of I give equally amongst al my -
four children And lastly I too nominate and appoint my two
sons/ to witt Bezaliell Angier and John Angier aforesaid to be
joint Exorutors of this my last Will and Testament hoping they
will faithfully discharge the same And I also authorise and appoint
my two Servants to witt / Joseph Bourgaes and Margrett Marshall
to keep possession of my house and Goods and take the care and
charge thereof and also to oversee the affairs of my funeral
by and with the order and direction of Mr Thomas Bufferworth
of Manchester the elder and his wife and to keep in possession-
as aforesaid until my Executors aforesaid or one of them shall
discharge them from that Trust in witness whereof I the said
Samuel Angier have hereunto my hand and seal the fourth
day of July Anno Dom 1712. I. Samuel Angier/ Sealed Signed
published and declared to be the last Will and Testament of
the said Samuel Angier in the presennc of us. /. John Abright
Elizabeth Lowe Joseph Lowe/.
End of Transcript.
==Will Abstract== From Family Search [https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/24635382?p=9051882&returnLabel=The%20Reverend%20Samuell%20Angeir%20(GVNP-TSP)&returnUrl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.familysearch.org%2Ftree%2Fperson%2Fmemories%2FGVNP-TSP / ANGIER, Samuel - will proved 24 December 1713 ] ( accesssed 23 Feb 2023) ''"Samuel Angier of Duckinfield, co of Chester, Minister of the Gospel, 4 July 1712, proved 24 December 1713. To be buried in the yard of the new Chapel in Duckingfield, over against the South door, in the middle between the said door and the wall. Eldest son Bezaliell. son John Angier of Bristol. Son in law Mr Ralph Lathropp. My daughter Margaret, his wife. My daughter Anne and her children. son John Angier I give my small tenement in Dedham to my son Bezaliell desiring him to give two shillings apiece to such children to whom I am an uncle i.e. the children of my brethren and sisters etc. My brother Nathaniel. My two sisters Hannah and Sarah. My brother in law, Edmund sherman. To the poor of Dedham five pounds to be distributed by my two sisters, Hannah and Sarah. All my four children. Leeds, 267 [Genealogical Gleanings in England by Henry F Water, A. M. NEGHR L:28]" '''Towns mentioned in the Will''' : #'''Nether Wiresdale(Neither Wryesdale), Garstang, Lancaster '''[https://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/LAN/NetherWyresdale / Nether Wryesdale] ( accessed 27 Feb 2023) #'''Winmerly, (Winmarleigh)Garstang, Lancaster'''[https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lancs/vol7/pp291-300 / British History OnLine -The Town of Winmarleigh, Garstang History ] ( accessed 27 Feb 2023) #'''Hurst, Ashton under Lyne, County Lancaster'''[https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lancs/vol4/pp338-347#h3-0003 / British History OnLine - Town of Hurst-Footnote 4 Line 4] ( accessed 27 Feb 2022) #'''Mofs dolee, Ashton Under Lyne, Lancaster''' #'''New Chapel, Durkinfield (Dukinfield)''' [https://www.nationalchurchestrust.org/church/old-chapel-dukinfield / Old Chapel ] ( accessed 27 Feb 2023) #'''Dedham''' [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedham,_Essex Dedham, Essex ]( accessed 3 Mar 2023) #'''Garstag''' [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garstang / Ancient Parish of Garstang] ( accessed 26 Feb 2023) [https://archive.org/stream/historyofparisho2105manc/historyofparisho2105manc_djvu.txt / The History of the Township of Garstang ] ( accessed 27 Feb 2023) ==Sources==
The Will of Sir Gerrard Fleetwood
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The National Archives; Kew, Surrey, England; Records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Series PROB 11; Class: PROB 11; Piece: 284
{{Ancestry Sharing|30352997|6052b3}} - {{Ancestry Record|5111|765334}} (accessed 11 September 2022)
Will of Gerrard Fleetwood, granted probate on 26 Feb 1658. Died about 1657 in Crawley, Southampton, England. * Written: 27 November 1657 * Revised: 6 December 1657 * Proved: 26 February 1658 === Summary === '''Beneficiaries of the Will'''
: Dame Anne Fleetwood (4th and current wife & Relict of Gerrard) :Children: * daughter Elizabeth Kekewich. Elizabeth Fleetwood was married to George Kekewich, after her first husband Thomas Dowse died * daughter (?) Gifford :[Note: His son Dutton Fleetwood was not mentioned probably because he had already died.] : Nephews * Lord Lieutenant General George Fleetwood. Son of Gerrard's brother, [[Fleetwood-44 | Sir Miles Fleetwood]] (–1641) and Anne Luke. * Sir William Fleetwood. Son of Gerrard's brother, Miles Fleetwood : Daughter-in-law * --- --- : Grandchildren: * Thomas Dowse, son of his daughter Elizabeth and first husband Thomas Dowse * Richard Gifford * Gerrard Dutton Fleetwood, son of his son Dutton Fleetwood and wife Anne Salisbury : Sons of late Sir William Fleetwood * [Sir] Miles Fleetwood [MP] * Charles Fleetwood : Offspring of Sir William Fleetwood * Gerrard Dutton Fleetwood :Other * George --- Esquire * Captain Thomas Byrd * Priest of Crawley :Executors
* Sir William Fleetwood, his nephew (son of his brother Sir Miles Fleetwood) * Dame Anne Fleetwood, his wife and Relict of Gerrard --- --- :Witnesses
* Margaret --- --- * Gerrard Whitton * Francis Whitta-- === The Will of Sir Gerrard Fleetwood === * Spelling, punctuation, and line breaks are as per the original. * Paragraph breaks (where added, like at the start of a new bequest) and bold text for names are my own for ease of reading. * ligatures and abbreviations are expanded and additions noted in [square brackets] * ff is rendered as F '''Transcription'''
November the 26th, [16]57
In the name of God Amen, '''I Gerrard '''
'''Fleetwood''' of Crawley in the Countie of Southampton '''knight''', being weake in bodie but of
perfect memorie doe make my last will and testament the day and yeare before written
Imprimis [Firstly] I bequeath my soule to God that gave it And my Bodie to the earth
from which it came in first and — hope of a glorious resurrection to eternal
life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Item I give to the priest of Crawley foure shillings.
Item I give unto my Nephew the '''Lord George Fleetwood''' an hundred pounds a year out of
the lands in — which is now in —- to my daughter in law, And the — —
that — unto my Nephew '''Sir William Fleetwood''', to be disposed of as followeth. — to
'''Sir William Fleetwood''' during his life, And after his decease to his Eldest Sonnes '''Miles '''
'''Fleetwood''' and '''Charles Fleetwood''' Sonnes of the late '''Sir William Fleetwood''' And each of them
and thereunto for forever a hundred pounds a yeare, And the remainder to be left to '''Sir William '''
'''Fleetwood'''’s offspring if '''Gerrard Dutton Fleetwood''' shall depart this life without issued males. Item
I give unto my wife five hundred pounds to be paid by '''Sir William Fleetwood''' out of
this estate within the first two (?) yeares after the six hundred and fiftie pounds Go (?) —
and paid unto '''my wife''' which I give unto her for the which there is a Debt — the
'''Lord Lieutenant generall Fleetwood''' and '''George — Esquire''' and my Trustee for the
— of the same. Item I give unto '''my wife''' my — Crawley during her life, if
the said '''Gerrard Dutton Fleetwood''' shall depart this life without issued males if — —
so long continued which are granted unto me in my Lease. Item I give unto my first
grandchildren '''Thomas Douse''' and '''Richard Gifford''' all that my estate in Southam after
the mortgage is paid to be equally divided between them, if the said '''Gerrard Dutton '''
'''Fleetwood''' shall depart this life without issued males. Item I give to my daughter
’'''Elizabeth Kekewich''' twentie shillings. Item I give to my daughter '''Gifford'''
twentie shillings. Item my will is that '''Captaine Thomas Byrd''' nor —
Talmidge shall have any thing to doe with my grandchild '''Gerrard Dutton Fleetwood'''
on his personal estate during his minoritie. Item my will is that my wife shall have
half in all my estate with my —. All these things performed my debts and —
[Page 2] being first paid and discharged. I give to '''Sir William Fleetwood''' and '''my wife’'''all
my personal estate, whome I make my Executors of this my last will and testament
Ger. Fleetwood. Sealed and — in the presence of Margaret — —,
Gerrard Whitton, Francis Whitta—-.
This Will was proved at London the six and twentieth day of
February in the year of our Lord God according to the computation of the
Church of England one thousand six hundred fifty seven, before the Judge for
probate of wills and granting adminstration faithfully authorized by the oath
of '''Sir William Fleetwood''' and '''Dame Anne Fleetwood''' the Relict of the
said Deceased — —- therein named. To whom administration
of all and singular the said — goods, chattels and debts now granted
and committed, They bring first in out of law — with and truly to
administer. Revised: this sixth (?) day of December 1658 y—: original
will of y—: said '''Sir Gerrard Fleetwood''' — —
to and for y—: — of my — '''Sir William '''
'''Fleetwood''' and '''Jane Ann Fleetwood''' —
therein named y—: same having first — provided
by within — and confirmed by — —-
of this —.
Witness — Browne: — — —
Examined and compared
with — original
By — —: Browne:
John Whyte
== Sources ==
The will of Sir Ivo FitzWarin
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The will of Sir John Pettus, Baronnet (proved 1698)
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Bambeigg Jean
Robert Fawsett Clerl
John Goodwin === Codicill (14 October 1697) ===
'''A codicill''' to be added to the last will & testament of me Sr John Pettus of Rackheath in the County of Norfolk Baronett & to be taken as part of my last will.Whereas I the said Sr John Pettus in & by my last will & testam bearing date on or about the twenty sixth day of March on the year of our Lord One thousand six hundred ninety & five have given or otherwise appointed to be paid to '''my two daughters Frances & Mary''' to each of them a equal share of the moneys as I have hereby ordered & appointed to be raised by sale of the several farms in '''Cayster''' near Norwich in my said last will particularly mentioned now for as much as the said '''Frances my daughter''' without my consent & against my likening hath intermarried with '''Robert Fawsett Clerke''' I do therefore hereby declare my will & Mind to be that my said daughter Frances shall have only five hundred pounds of the moneys which shall raised by sale of the said farms & no more thereof and that '''Robert my son''' besides the five hundred pounds I have given or which or wise appointed to be paid to him in & by my said will shall have two hundred pounds more out of the moneys to be raised by the sale of the said farms to be added to the said five hundred pounds and that '''Mary my daughter''' shall have all the raised by the sale of the said farms provided & upon condition that she the said Mary does not marry without my consent or the consent of her mother my wife if any said wife shall happen to survive me. But if my said '''daughter Mary''' shall marry without my consent or the consent of my said wife if she shall survive me then & in that case my will and mind is that the said '''Mary my daughter''' shall have only five hundred pounds out of the moneys which shall be raised by sale of the said farms & no more and that the remainder of the moneys raised by such sale after my said '''daughters Frances & Mary''' shall have received out thereof five hundred pounds a pair shall be paid to my said '''son Robert Pettus''' anything in my said last will contained to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding them my mind & will is that within Convenient time after my decease the sum of three pounds shall be distributed & paid to & amongst the '''poor people''' of each of the parishes of '''Rackheath & Cayster''' aforesaid at the discretion of my Executrix Item I give & bequeath to '''John Goodwyer my servant''' ten pounds & to '''my kinsman John Pettus''' twenty pounds to be paid to respectively within one year next after my decease by my said Executrix and this I declare as a further part of my will & desire that the same may be added thereto & be taken as part thereof in witness whereof I the said Sir John Pettus have hereunto put my hand & seal this '''fourteenth day of October''' in the year or our Lord Christ One thousand six hundred ninety & seven - '''1697'''. ( signed J Pettus ) signed sealed published & declared by the said Sir John Pettus as part of his last will in the presence of us whose names are hereto set as witnesses who severally subscribed our names as witnesses hereto in the presence of the said testator
Erasmus Jarvis,
William Pigg,
Susanna Lewis === Probate (8 February 1698/9) === ''NOTE: this is in Latin'' Probatum ... ... ... ... et '''Octavo die February''' Anno Domni '''1698''' ... ... John Pettus Baronetti ... ... ... Extri ... ... Jurat ( ... )
The Will of Sir John Rodes 1639
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Spelling, punctuation and line breaks are as per the register copy. Capital F is rendered as F rather than ff. Abbreviations are expanded and additions noted in [square brackets]. Paragraph breaks (where added) and bold text for names are my own for ease of reading. Beneficiaries of the Will : *Francis Rodes (son) *Darcye Rodes (son) *Mallorie Rodes (son) *Ursula Rodes (daughter) *Gartrude Rodes (daughter) *Priscilla Rodes (daughter) *Henry (son, deceased) *John Rodes (son) ---- In the name of god Amen The
our lord god One thousand sixe hundred thirtie and nine I Sr John Rode[s of]
Barlebrough in the County of Derbie Knight weak in bodie but stronge in
minde And of A good and p[er]fect memorie and understandinge praised be my
Creator, give againe and restore unto my Almightie and mercifull god
my spirit which he of his infinite goodnesse and mercie gave unto me
when he first formed me in my mothers wombe assuringe my selfe
that for his infinite and sweete mercies declared in the precious
of his onely begotten Sonne Jesus Christ my onely saviour and redeemer he
will receave my soule into glorie And give me an inheritance immortall
and undefiled that fadeth not away but endureth in heaven for ever And I also
com[m]end my bodie to the earth whereof it came desiringe the same may be
buried in the p[ar]ish Church of Barlebrough in the Chancell there as I have
given directions And doe beleave that at the greate day of the gen[er]all resurection
I shall receave the same againeas incorruptable stronge And p[er]fect bodie
And as touching my worldly goods [w]hich it hath please god to bestowe
upon me
Impri[mis] I give Fortie shillinges to the poore of the p[ar]ish of Barlebrough to be distributed
at the discretion of my [deleted] sonne '''Francis Rodes'''.
Item I give and bequeath to my sonne '''Darcye Rodes''' two hundred
in full satisfact[i]on of his [deleted] Childes p[ar]te and porc[i]on to be paid thim one yeare
before he come forth of his Apprentiship over and besides the thirtie poundes
which is to be paid him yearely by his brother Francis Rodes in Case he [...]
live his brother '''Mallorie Rodes''' and besides the money hee is to receave for [...]
the Neather Creswell water milne and other lands to be sould for the be[''nefit'']
of him and some others of my Children And if in Case he die ^one yeare before [he come]
forth of his Apprentiship, then my will is that the said two hundred and [''fifty'']
pounds be devided equally and paid to his sister '''Ursula Rodes''' and his b[''rother'']
Mallorye Rodes except he the said Darcye Rodes shall marry before that time [...]
thereof otherwise
Item I give and bequeath to my daughter '''Gartrude Rodes''' the some of Five hu[''ndred'']
pounds to be paid her within six monethes after my decease and my [''bay'']
which I did usually ride upon./
Item I give and bequeath to my daughter '''Priscilla Rodes''' two hundred pounds to be
paid her within sixe moneths after my
Item I give and bequeath to my daughter Ursula Rodes the some of Five hundred
pounds to be paid her within sixe Monethes after my decease.
Item I give and bequeath to my servant William Bright Five pounds over and
above his wages./.
Item I give and bequeath to my servant Raphe Hathersedge Five pounds over and
above his wages.
Item I give to Elizabeth Moodie my servant the bed she lyeth
that Foure pounds shalbe paid to the said Elizabeth by Edward Boulsover for
lands he occupieth of mine lyeinge and beinge in Whitnell in the County
of Derbie yearely duringe her life at the Feast Dayes of the Annunciac[i]on
of our blessed Virgin Marie And at St Michael the Archangell by even [''and'']
equall porc[i]ons. And in Case the sayde Edward Boulsover do not paye then [...]
[... .... & ... the lands ... her life]
Item I give and bequeath to Robert
shillings
Item I give and bequeath to my kinswoman Anne Basset the some of
twentye pounds
[Page 2]
Item I give to ev[er]ye other of my men servantes which are above the age of Twentie one
yeares except John Smedley Raph Hathersedge William Bright and Robert
the some of tenn shillinges over and above their wages And to ev[er]y of my menservantes
under the age of xxj[...] yeares the some of Five shillinges over and above their
wages. / Item I give to ev[er]y of my maid servantes over and above their wages the some of tenn
shillinges exceptinge the said Elizabeth Moodie to whom I have given A
better legacie. / Item I give and bequeath to my loveinge and Deare Daughter in awe the wife of my
Sonne Francis Rodes Fortie Shillinges to buy her a Ringe And to ev[er]y one of the
Sonnes and Daughters of my Said Sonne Francis Rodes, beinge my grandchildren
ev[er]y one of them tenn shillinges to buy for ev[er]y one of them A Ringe. / Item my will and minde is that my Said loveinge Sonne Francis Rodes shall have
any hawke which my Right hon[ora]ble friend Thomas Viscount Wentworth Lord
Deputye of Ireland did bestowe upon me And I give my Said Sonne Francis
Rodes my graye stoned horse and my Seale. / Item I give to my friend James Webster A gould Ringe with a Deathes head which
I will my executor to buye and give him. Item I give and bequeath to my Sonne Mallorye Rodes twentie Shillinges to buy him A
Ringe in full satisfacc[i]on of his Childes p[ar]te besides the thirty pounds in the year
which my Sonne Francis Rodes is to paye him Duringe his life. And my
will is that my executor of thes my last will and testament paye forth [...]
my goods and Chatteles not given by this my last will or other wise disposed
of all the said legacyes by sale thereof or other wise as he pleaseth provided
always And it is my meaninge that in Case my goods shall not extend and
reache to be of that value and worth as to satisfie and paye my [page damaged]
and the iust Debts of my Sonne '''Henry'''. And the legacies of this my [page damaged]
will bequeathed then my will is that they shalbe Defalked and [page damaged]
forth of ev[er]y of the legacies or porcons ^[...] this my last will and testam[''ent'']
given to my Children Darcye Rodes Gartrude Rodes Priscilla Rodes and
Ursula Rodes, A p[ro]portionable p[ar]te, out of ev[er]y of them, according to the
legacies or porcons hereby given and bequeathed unto ev[er]y of them by the
Discretion of my good friends George Jessop and James Webster Item my will is that the residue of my goods my iust Debts and the iust Debt[s]
of my Sonne Henry Deceased (which shalbe paid forth of my
goodes And my legacies hereby given and bequeathed and fun[er]all
expences beinge Discharged shall equally be p[...]d and de[...]
amongst my Children Gartrude Priscilla and Ursula, And for
the good confidense and trust
in my
and love towards his brethren and Sisters I doe
make and ordayne him my sole and onely executor
of this my last will and testamente [Page 3]
making me Doubt but he will truly and faithfully
p[er]forme this my last will and testament And of this will
I make my good friend Sr George Lascelles over seer./
And whereas heretofore by an Indenture under my hand and seale
bearing date the eleventh daye of this p[re]sent September I have given
granted enfeoffed and confirmed to my good Friends George Jessopp
and James Webster and their heires upon speciall trust & confidence in
them all those Closes of meadowe lands and pasture Commonly called milne
Close Pighill Close And the Pingle Close or Damsteade And one water
milne called Creswell neather milne And two Cottage howses w[i]th the
app[ur[ten[a]nces and land[es] thereunto belonginge or w[i]th eyther of them let
or occupied lyeing and beinge in Creswell in the County of Derbie
And one Close called Birkinheade in the p[ar]ish of harthill in the County
of Yorke And a little Close called under hill Pingle in Barlbrough
and two acres and one Roode of arrable land in Barlebrough Com[m]on
feildes my will and minde is And I Doe hereby grant and devise
the same landes And p[re]misses to the said George Jessop and James
Webster and their heires and assignes for ever for the benefitt of my
foure younger Children Gartrude Rodes Pr[i]scila Rodes Darcye Rodes and
Mallorye Rodes accordinge to the true intent and meaninge [''set'']
Downe in the said Indenture In witness whereof I have hereto put my
hand and seale this xijth day of September 1639
John Rodes Reade Signed
and published in the p[re]sence of
James Webster
Jho: Harrison[...]
Barnefeild Booth
John Smedley
The marke of
Raph Hathersedge [Codicil]
Be it knowne unto all men by these p[re]sentes
That whereas I have made my last will and
testament bearing the date the twelveth Day of
this p[re]sent September Anno D[omi]ni 1639 I do by
this p[re]sent Coudcicill ratifie and confirme the
same And my will is And I doe give and
bequeath to my sonne '''John Rodes''' five poundes
in full satisfacion of his Childs p[ar]te and I
Doe Desire this Codicill to be annexed to my
said last will In witness whereof I have
hereto put my hand this sixteenth Day of
September Anno D[omi]ni 1639
[Signed, illegible] In the p[re]sence of
The marke of James Webster
Barbara Webster
Cyprian Banbery
Barnefeild Booth Probate in Latin == Sources ==
The will of Sir Thomas Pettus, 1st Baronet of Rackheath
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'''fifthe day of November''' in the yeare of our Lord God according to
the computation now used in England '''one thousand six hundred ffifty'''
'''& foure''' I '''Thomas Pettus of Rackheath''' in the
county of Norff[olk] '''Baronet''' being of perfect memory though not in
p[er]fect health & well knowing the uncertain condition of this pr[e]sent life
for the better setling of that my worldly state which God of his great
goodness & mercy hath lent me, doe ordaine & make this my last will
& testament in manner and forme following ffirst and before all things
I commit and commend my soule into the mercifull hands of God my maker
and to Jesus Christ my only Saviour & Redeemer assuredly trustinge
that by & through his onely meritts bitter death & passion to be
saved and to have a joyfull resurrection & to remain amongst his
most glorious company in heaven And my body I will to be buried
in Christian buriall in the Chancell of the '''p[ar]ish Church of Rackheath'''
aforesaid neare '''my lately deceased & dearly beloved wife Elizabeth'''
in such manner as shall seeme best to my executrix hereafter named And I doe give to be bestowed upon repaire of the said Church for
the breaking up of the ground where my body shall be laid twenty
shillings. Item I give and bequeath unto the poor of the said towne
of '''Rackheath''' forty shillings Fourty shillings was two old pounds (20 shillings to the pound) to be paid into the hands of the Church
wardens and overseers there then being at my decease & to be &
remain for a stocke forever And that they with the consent of
the minister of the same p[ar]ish shall imploy variant of employ put out & use the
same for the best benefit that may be made for the good of the
said poor people. And soe yearlely & from time to time the same
to be employed used & put forth by the successive church wardens
overseers and minister and the whole profitt & benefit thereof
arising & made yearly to be bestowed by them amongst such the
poor people of the said towne where most need shall be Item I
give and bequeath the poore of the towne of '''Castor St Edmund'''
by Norwich fforty shilling in like manner to be paid and employed
as my pr[e]cedent guift to Rackheath Item I give to the poor of
the towne of '''little Ellingham''' forty shillings And to the poore of the
town of '''Salhouse''' fforty shillings And to the poor of the town of '''Wroxham''' twenty shillings. Item I give and bequeath unto '''Thomas '''
'''Pettus my sonne''' all my Tapestry Hangings in my Dyning chamber
at '''Rackheath''' aforesaid, together with all the household stuffe & furniture
belonging to the same chamber And alsoe the bed & furniture of the
chamber next unto the Dyning chamber called the Black Chamber
with the furniture of the inner chamber belonging thereof
as they are now furnished And also the bed & furniture of the corner
chamber over the hall there with all the furniture off the inner chamber ---- belonging thereto as now they are furnished Also I give &
bequeath unto the said '''Thomas Pettus my sonne''' the bed and furniture
of the corner chamber at the top of the staires where my said sonne
Thomas useth to lodge. And also one bedd of greene figured sattin
as now it stands in my studdy chamber Item I give & bequeath to
the said '''Thomas Pettus my sonne''' All my armour in the armoury
chamber and in the hall All my vessels & implements of brewing
belonging to the brewhouse two long tables & a lininry cupboard
standing in the hall All those long planks lying in the drying
rooms in the bleeching yard Probably an area used for spreading cloth to be bleached by the sun. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bleachfield Also all the pictures hanging in the
parlour & the musicke room. Also my biggest organ in the
musicke room, two base vyalls one inlayd the other that which I bought
of one Mr Bolt, three loose treble Vyalls not belonging to the
chest A vyall or viol was a stringed instrument that was played upright. https://www.pepysdiary.com/encyclopedia/461/ They were often kept as a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chest_of_viols Chest of Viols]. , one tenor vyall not belonging to the chest, together
with the musique table standing in the said musique roome Item I give & bequeath unto '''Augustine Pettus my sonne''' my large
standing guilt cupp w[i]th a christall bowle Item I give & bequeath unto '''John Pettus my sonne''' one silver bason & ewer A ewer is a jug for water for washing. A matching Ewer and Basin set were common. See a 17th century silver example [https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/204939 here].
given by '''Sr Nathaniel Bacon''' to '''my late wife Elizabeth''' marked
with the Armes of Bacon Also I give unto '''Thomas Pettus my'''
'''sonne''' all my library of bookes in my studdy savinge that I give
unto my loving and auncient ancient - as in long standing friend '''Mr Henry Nerford clerke''' Henry Nerford was Rector at Atleburgh in the hundred of Shropham https://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-hist-norfolk/vol1/pp501-541 any one
Author out of them which the said '''Henry Nerford''' shall be pleased
to make choice of. Item I will & devise unto my executrix untill
'''John Pettus my youngest sonne''' shall attaine to his age of one
& twenty years, all that my Tenement w[i]th all my lands & their
appurtenances in '''Shropham''' in the county of Norffs w[hi]ch I lately
purchased of '''Thomas Amys''' Amys = Amis. the end letter is an S with the the tail going up - so the word Pettus for the same & All that my messuages & all my
free and coppyhold lands in '''Thurgarton''' in the county of Norffs
or in any other towne there near adioyning w[i]th the appurtenances
And all that my messuages & all my freehold & coppyhold lands
tenements & hereditaments whatsoever in '''Felmingham''' be consistent with your capital Fs. Either ff or F. in the County
of Norffs or in any of the other towne there neare adioyning with
appurtenances And also all my messuages houses tenements
and lands whatsoever wherein I have any estate of inheritance
in Fee simple https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fee_simple & lyinge in the Citty or county of the citty of
Norwich or in '''Higham by Norwich''' [https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Heigham,_Norfolk_Genealogy HEIGHAM, or Higham, a parish Norwich district, Norfolk; in the W side of Norwich city.] with their & every of their
appurtenances And if that my said sonne John Shall happen
to live until he shall attaine to his age of one & twenty years then
I will and devise that all & every of the aforesaid messuages, houses
lands tenements & hereditaments whatsoever being Freehold or
Coppyhold & lying in '''Shropham, Thurgarton, Felmingham''' or in any
towns there neare adioyning in Norwich Higham aforesaid or
in any of them with their & every of their appurtenances shall wholy
remaine & goe to my said '''sonne John Pettus''' & his heirs forever But if it shall soe happen that the said '''John Pettus''' shalle dye before
he shall attaine to the age afforesaid & without heire of his body begotten
then I will and my meaninge is that the interest last before limited ---- to my said executrix shall cease & be void And then I doe
will and devise all & every of the said messuages houses lands
tenements & hereditaments in '''Shropham & Thurgarton Felmingham'''
or in any town there near adjoining, in '''Norwich Higham'''
aforesaid or in any of them which the appurtenances to '''Augustine'''
'''Pettus my second son''' & his heirs forever. And whereas I
am possessed or some others stand possessed in trust for me
& in my use of & in certanie lands laying in '''Thurgarton''' aforesaid
for terme of divers(?) yeares therein to run & unexpired & of
& in two meadows lying in or near Norwich whereof one lyeth
within the precinct of the late '''Cathederal Church of Norwich'''
is now divided into three parts letten to severall y soub & the other
of the said meadows lyeth in or near the '''streete called Consforth (?)'''
streete over against the conion stath (?) on the further side of the
river for terme of divers(?) yeares therein to rune & unexpired
my will & minde is that my executrix or trustees in whom the
estates(?) for yeares of & in the said lands & meadows shall after
my death rest, shall assigne & sel over all such lands meadows
& things holden by any lease for terme of yeares & lyinge in
'''Thurgarton''' or in or neare Norwich as aforesaid with the appurtenances
unto my said sonne John upon he shall attaine to his age of
one & twenty yeares for & duringe the residue of the termes &
estates therein then to rune & unexpired respectively But if
the said John happen to dye before that age then I will & my
minde is that like assignment be made unto my said sonne
Augustine if then he be living as by intent of this my will ought
to have beene made to the said John if he had attained his age
aforesaid. Item my will and mind is that my said sonne Augustine
shall have & enjoy & accordingly I give to hom & his heirs for
ever all my Coppyhold lands & tenements lying or being
in '''Thinlingfeild''' or in any other towne there near adjoinging
in '''Cheston Linstead''' or '''St James in the County of Suffolk'''
with the appurtenances And if any defect shall happen to this
my will for want of Surrender to the use of my will of any
of my Coppyhold lands or tenements before willed or indended(?)
to either of my said sonnes Augustine and John or by reason
of any other mixfection [imperfection?] my will & minds is & I do strictly
charge my '''sonne Thomas Pettus''' & whosoever hereafter
shall happen to be my next heire to make surrender & due
any act that shall be requisite in law to supply any such defect(?)
or mixpection [imperfection?] & to assure a good & gofect (?) estate unto my said
two younger sonnes & their heires according to the intent of this
my will of all such coppyhold lands & tenements as be here
before willed or intended to my said sonne '''Augustine & John'''
& their heirs severally & respectively And my will & mind
is that my deare wife for the better stay of her selfe & of such
servants as shall continue with her for some time convenient
after my death & for the ordering of things belonging to the ---- executrix of this my will shall have the free use of my
house where I now dwell & all the houses yards gardens
& orchards to the same by me used with free use of all the
pasture grounds now in my use & occupation in '''Rackheath'''
aforesaid for the pasturage and in manifeymige (?) of her horses
cowes sheepe & other cattell for & during the spane
of six months next after my decease And I doe earnestly
desire my sonne Thomas Pettus and my next heire whatsoever
to agree hereunto & pfonine(?) my will therein accordingly And also to convey & assure unto her my said wife for her
life my mannors houses & lands tenements & other hereditaments
in '''Castor St Edmund''' & other the townes adjoininge in liew (?) of
the mannors lands tenements & hereditaments in '''Rackheath Salhouse'''
& other places assigned or limited for her joyuturie [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jointure jointure] - the widow's portion according to
the true intent & meaning of certaine prisoes (?) in the deeds
thereof conteyned And I will & devise unto my executrix &
her heires all my lands tenements & hereditaments in '''Rackheath'''
which I purchased of '''George Lockwood''' or of '''Robert Matcher'''
& all my meadow in '''Thorpe by Norwich''' which I purchased of
'''my brother Nathaniel Knyvet''' esq & the reversion of
the said lands tenements & meadow the same being lately by me
setled upon my now wife for p[ar]te of her joyuturie upon trust
& confidence nevertheless that if my said sonne Thomas Pettus
or such p[ers]on as shall be my next heire & shall attain to the age
of one & twenty yeares shall within three months next after such
age by way of grant of rent charge or otherwise as my said
executrix or her heires shall judge to be meete & sufficient secure
the yearely paymt of three severall annuall rents vizt one
of ten pounds to my '''cozen Christian the wife of Charles'''
'''Ramsey''' Another of ffoure pounds to my servant '''Nicholas'''
'''Spencer''' duringe their severall lives respectively That then
my said executrix & her heirs shall convey & set over the
said lands tenements meadows & hereditaments lately devised with
the appurtenances & all their interest therein to the said '''Thomas'''
'''Pettus''' or such p[er]son as shall be my next heire & his heirs And if the said '''Thomas Pettus''' or such my heirs shall not when three
months after his age of one and twenty years & request by my
executrix to this purpose give & make such securities for the
said three annual rents then my will is that the said
lands tenements meadow & hereditaments & the estate of my
executrix therein shall be conveyed over to '''Augustine Pettus'''
my sonne & his heirs charged with or tyed for the payment of
the said three annuall rents last mentioned And my will &
my mind is that my said sonne '''Thomas Pettus''' & my next heire
that shall be shall pay at the Guildhall porch in Norwich
unto my beloved friend '''Henry Nerford clerke''' within six
months after my decease the sum of one hundred pounds ---- & to my said '''sonne John''' when he shall have attained his age
of one & twenty years the sum of one thousand pounds And I doe will & devise unto my executrix hereafter named
& her heirs upon trust hereafter declared all that my Marsh
called or knowne by the name of '''Bungd Marsh''' with the grounds
& appurtenances by me purchased of '''Robert Houghton esquire'''
& lying in '''Burlingham in Norfolk''' Also also all that my
Marsh called or known by the name of '''Thurlow Marsh'''
with all the grounds and other appurtenances which I purchased of
'''Richard Fenkenson esq''' lyinge in '''Thernigby''' in the said county. And further I doe will & devise unto my said executrix & her
assignes upon like trust all that Marsh called or knowne
by the name of '''Berts or Bretts Marsh''' with all the grounds &
other appurtenances which I hold by lease made by the President
& Schollers of '''Mary Magdalen Colledge in Oxford''' And all my estate terms of years & interest in the same All which
prunipped (?) willed or devised to executrix as aforesaid I
have willed & devised to her to this intent & purpose & upon
this speciall (?) trust & confidence in her & her heirs exe[cuto]rs adm[inistrators]
& ass[ign]s by me reposed that if my said sonne Thomas Pettus
or such p[ers]on as shall be my next heir shall have attained to
his age of one & twenty years & shall be for further
assurance of such coppyhold lands & tenements as be to my
said sonnes '''Augustine & John''' respectively devised according
to the intent of my will And shall within three months after
such age secure to the content of my said sonne John to be
paid to him the sum of one thousand pounds as aforesaid that
then my executrix her heirs & assignes shall convey over all
the said three marshes & pr[e]miss[e]s & all their severall estates
oft & in the same to my said sonne '''Thomas Pettus''' or next heire And out of the rents & profits of the said marshes in the
meantime (?) arisinge my executrix or her assignes shall pay
to the said '''Henry Nerford''' the said sum of one hundred
pounds And if the said '''Thomas Pettus''' or such next heire
as aforesaid shall not p[er]mitt (?) & suffer but disturbe (?) my said
wife & her servants & family quietly & peaceably to have the free
use of the said houses & other things for six months according
to my will before aforesaid then I devise the residue of
the rents & profits of the said three marshes unto my said wife
until my said sonne Thomas or his next heire as aforesaid
shall have attained the age of one & twenty years
otherwise my will is that my said sonne Thomas or next
heire aforesaid shall have & enjoy all the said residue of
the rents & profits of the said three Marshes and if my
said sonne Thomas or such my next heire as aforesaid shall
not within three months next after such request as aforesaid
doe such which shall be requisite for further assurance of all the (?) ---- coppyhold lands & tenements as aforesaid according to the intent
of my will before declared or shall not within three months
sufficiently secure by good security to my said sonne John the
payment of the said sum or one thousand pounds unto him at his
age of one & twenty years then my will is that my executrix
shall sell all the said three marshes & all their estates therein
& with the moneys thereof arising pay the same sum of one
thousand pounds unto my said sonne John to be paid as aforesaid
and shall with the confidence of those moneys soe farr as they
will extend recompense to my '''said sonnes Augustine &'''
'''John''' such losses damage & as they & their heires & respectively
& pportionably shall or shall be in the judg[e]m[en]t of my
executrix taking upon her the executorship likely to suple quo (?)
for default of surrender or other defect of assurance of any
of the said coppyhold lands or tenements by my heir as shall
be needfull or requisite as aforesil [aforesaid?] Item I give & bequest unto my sonne '''John Pettus''' & his heirs all my coppyhold
lands which I hold of the Mannor of '''Shunpling''' or of the '''Rectory of'''
'''?ickleborow''' in the county of Norfolk. Now for the more sure
p[er]formance of such covenants as upon consideration of marriage
with my new wife I have made with her friends '''William'''
'''Hemeningham''' '''John Hobart esq''' & '''Charles Everard her brother'''
for the disbursing of the summ of five thousand pounds upon
purchase of lands & of taking the same & securing the paym[en]t
of three hundred pounds yearely for my wife as by indenture
thereoft more fully appeareth I doe hereby will and devise to my
executrix '''the mannor of Thorpehall''' & all & every of the
messuages lands & tenements & hereditaments in '''North Pritake''' or (?)
elsewhere which were lately in any wise conveyed or mortgaged
or intended to be conveyed or mortgaged unto me or my use (?)
by '''Willm Arminger esq''' or any other with him to have & to hold
such & soe many of them as be conveyed to me & my heirs with
the appurtenances to my executrix & her heires & such & fore many of
them as be conveyed to me but for any terme of yeares or
otherwise with the appurtenances to my executrix during the severall
termes of yeares or any other estate therein. And my will is that my executrix shall have all my estates in these mannor
messuages lands tenements & hereditaments to the intent that she shall
have & receive all such summes of money as are or shall be payable
for redemption of these estates or otherwise by or upon the securities
to me given thereby And shall have all the indentures deeds
& other evidences to me belonging & touching the mannor or any
of the other premisses mortgaged or conveyed to me as aforesaid And my will & minde is that if I dye having issue by my wife
onely one daughter that then such purchase being made as is by
my said covenants required the lands & tenements soe purchased
shall after the death of my wife & her covenants as to touching (?)
her annuall rent or yearely maintenance of three hundred
pounds & formed be conveyed to my sonne Augustine & his heires
charged & tyed as shall be meete for the payment of such p[or]tion in ---- money & annuall maintenance to such daughter as shall
be payable or to be paid to her by the intent & true meaning
of the said indenture of covenant. But if such purchase shall
be made & I happen to have noe issue by my now wife or noe
such issue by her that shall live untill such purchase & the death
of my wife then my will & my mind is that the purchased lands
& tenements shall be soe ordered estated & setled upon my
said sonne '''Augustine''' & his heirs as that my said wife may
be well secured to have the revenues thereof during her life
& to have the sume of one thousand pounds within six months
after her death to be paid to her exec[u]t[o]rs adm[inistrator]s or ass[ign]s; & soe
that my said sonne '''John''' shall be secured likewise to have one
other summ of one thousand pounds to be paid to him his exec[uto]rs
adm[inistrato]rs or ass[ign]s within six months after the death of my said
wife. And if it happens that I dye & have noe issue by my now
wife, or my issue on her begotten shall dye before such purchase
be made as by my covenants is appointed then my will is if
my wife & her said friends will hereunto agree that noe such
intended purchase shall be made with the said five thousand
pounds but that money shall be soe ordered & disposed that
she my said wife shall have the summ or one thousand pounds
p[ar]te thereoft paid to her or her assignes & be secured to have
the sume or two hundred & forty pounds yearely during her
life paid as the annuall summ of three hundred pounds by
the covenant or purchase to be paid And after her death
one thousand pounds other p[ar]te of the said five thousand
pounds shall be paid to my said sonne John and his assigns
& three thousand pounds residue of the said five thousand
pounds shall be paid to my said sonne Augustine or his
assigns Item whereas '''Sr John Pettus my brother''' hath by
a certaine writing (?) under his hand & seale covenants with me to
pay to me or my exec[uto]rs at severall times severall summes of
money & by abund under his hand & seale stands bound [borrowed?] to me
in eight hundred pounds for p[er]formance of the said covenents
which covenants have not beene in any p[ar]te p[e]rformed my will &
minde is that my executrix shall upon and after the paym[en]t of the
said eight hundred pounds by my said brother to her or her
assignes pay as a guift & legacy from me unto my beloved
'''nephew Richard Pettus''' sonne of the said '''Sr John Pettus''' one
hundred pounds Item I give and bequeath unto my dearly beloved
'''wife Dame Anne Pettus''' & her heires forever all that my
Cottage in '''Beeston''' which I lately purchased of ... Cooke (?)
with the yard garden thereto belonging with the appurtenances as
also all the furniture household stuffe & mixlents of household
now in or belonging to the same. Item I give & bequeath to my
beloved '''brother in law Charles Everard''' twenty pounds to be
paid out in a peece of plate for a remembrance of me Item I
give and bequeath unto my loving brother in law '''Nathaniel''' ---- '''Knyvet esq''' as alsoe to '''Elizabeth Knyvet his daughter'''
my loving neece to each of them five pounds for a peece
of plate Item I give and bequeath unto my honoured '''mother'''
'''in law the lady [[Heveningham-24|Abigael Pettus]]''' Abigail was Thomas' father's second wife. So in modern terms his stepmother. But in the 17th century she would be called his mother-in-law. to '''[[Pettus-433|Sr John Pettus]] my'''
'''beloved brother''' to '''my brother in law [[Knyvett-19|Thomas Knyvet esq]]'''
to '''Mr [[Knyvett-28|John Knyvet]] his sonne''' to my '''nephew [[Le_Gros-246|Thomas Le Gros esq]]'''
to '''my Cosen John Sedley esq''' to '''Captain'''
'''Thomas Cornwallys''' '''Mr Philip Cornwaleys''', '''Mrs Ffrancis'''
'''Paston''' to my loving '''father in law Arthur Everard esq'''
to my '''brother John Everard''' & '''Mr Robert Cottrine (?)''' to
every one of them twenty shillings to buy them a ring for a
remembrance Item I give & bequeath to my very loving
friends '''Mr John Watson''' '''Mr George Lockwood''' & mr (?)
'''Jorny [or Formy] clerke''' to every one of them five pounds Item I give to my servant '''Edward Shepley''' & to my servant '''John'''
'''King''' to each of them five pounds To my servants '''Robert'''
'''Peckhaver (?)''' five (?) pounds & to '''Henry Hendry''' fforty shillings
To my servants Phillip Hill Phillip Below FFrancis Smith
John Horkes, Henry Allen, William .... & Thomas
Ely (?) to every one of them twenty shillings all with said legacyes
before im this my last will given & bequited I [ erased: give & bequeath them ]
will & appoint them to be paid by my exequtrix according
to the tenour & true intent & meaning of the same my last
will And I doe ordain & make '''Dame Anne Pettus my'''
'''welbeloved wife''' the sole executrix of this my last will &
testament Revoking & annhilating & disannulling all & every
other former will or wills by me made or ordained And
for & concerning all other my goods catteles Chattells
jewells plate ready money bills bonds leases trusts stuffe
solerfills (?) of houshold whatsoever undisposed & ?? by this
my last will given and bequeathed my debts & legacyes
first being paid and satisfied I give & bequeath them soly &
wholy to the said Anne my loving wife the exequtrix of this
my testament and last will. And in wittnes that this is my last will
contayning seaven sheets of paper I have to every sheete sett
my hand & to this last sheet put to my hand & seale & published
the same in the presence of those whose names be hereunto subscribed Thos Pettus Sealed & published in the presence of '''Robert Cokewyn (?)'''
'''Robert Peckhaver Jeremy Brame Edw: Shepley''' This will was proved at Westminster Before the Judges on
the '''twelfth day of December''' in the yeare or our Lord
'''1654''' by the oath of Dame Anne Pettus widdow relict
of the said deceased & sole executrix therein named To
whose administration it was comitted being in our (?) forme
of Law sworne well & truly to administer it ==Sources==
The will of Sir Thomas Pettus, 2nd Baronet of Rackheath
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The Nyne and Twentieth day of July in the year of the Raigne of our most illustrious [glorious]
Soveraigne Lord Charles the Second by the Grace of God of England Scotland France and
Ireland King Defender of the Faith since? fourteenth Anno qui Domini One Thousand Six
hundred sixtie two
'''Sir Thomas Pettus of Rackheath''' in the county of Norff: Baronett
although sicke and weake of bodie yet being sound and perfect mind and memorie God be
praised considering the uncertaintie of this ??? life and the reasonableness of a setled
disposition to be made of what I possesse in such ??? as becomes mee doe hereby ?? ?? ???
every? former will and testament by me formerly made and doe now make and ordaine this my
last will and testament in manner and forme following First with all humilitie & contrition
of ??? and with my l:in repentance of my manifold Sinnes(?) and offenses I commend my
Soule and selfe(?) into the … my Gracious Redeemer and
Saviour from and through whome only I expect and hope for eternal life ??? and ??? Kingdom of Heaven Next I desire my bodie may be buried decentlie in the
Parish Church of '''Rackheath''' aforesaid as neare my late deare Father Sr Thomas Pettus
as may be And coucking(?) my worldly Estate I dispose thereof as followeth I that is to say First
I doe give and devise for a Stock for the poor people of the Parish of '''Rackheath''' the Summe
of five pounds of lawful money of England to be paid by my Executrix hereafter named Item I give for a Stock for the poor people of '''Salehouse''' five pounds of like money Item
Then I give to the poore people of '''Caster''' five pounds of like money And also to the
poore people of '''little Ellingham''' five pounds to be paid by my Executrix Item I give and devise all my Freeholds and copyholds Messuages houses lands Tenements and
hereditaments scituate lying and being in '''Hardwick''' '''alleddseton''' '''South Lynne''' the Norwich (?)
'''North Roughton''' and '''Tathey''' in the County of Norff; with theire appurtenances now
in the use and annexation of '''William Barker''' or his assigned or undertennants and alsoe
all those my messuages houses lands tenements marshes and hereditaments as well
Freehold as copyhold scituate lying and being in Hardwick aforesaid '''South Lynne'''
'''Middleton''' and '''North Roughton''' in the said county of Norff: with their appurtenances
now in the tenure use and occupation of '''Robert Rudd''' or his assignes or undertenants
on in anie other towne or townes there next adjoyning And alsoe all those my
Messuages houses lands marches feedings and pastures scituate lying and being in
'''Tillney''' ---- '''All Saints''' in the said County of Norff: or any other Towne or Townes there neare
adjoining now in the tenure use and occupation of Richard Farthing or his assignes or
undertenants all which said promised I give and devise unto my '''daughter Elizabeth'''
'''Pettus''' and her heires of her bodie forever when she shall attain to her age of one and
twentie years And also all that my '''Marsh at Statocr Gate''' And all that my Marsh
calle or known by the name '''Bunars Marsh''' with the Grounds and appertanences
purchased by my '''late Father Sir Thomas Pettus''' of '''Robert Mongiston (?) Esquire'''
and lying in the '''Burlingham''' in Norff: And also all that my Marsh called or known
by the name of '''Thurlow Marsh''' with all the Grounds and other appurtenances
which my late father Sir Thomas Pettus purchased of '''Richard Jenkinson (?) Esquire'''
lying in '''Heringby''' in the said county of Norff: And after all that ?? ??
called or known by the name of '''Beres or Buells Marsh''' with all the Grounds
and appurtenances which I hold by lease made by the President ad scholars of
'''Mary Magdalen Colledge''' in Oxford provided that if '''the child that Dame Elizabeth'''
'''my wife now goeth with''' all when it shall be borne shall be a son then I give
and devise all the said Messuages Lands & Marshes and premisses to my said son
and his heires when he shall attain to the age of one and twenty years or
if the child which my said wife now goeth with all when it shall be borne shall
happen to be a daughter Then I will and my mind is that all my said messuages
Lands, Tenements Marshes and Premissses aforesaid whatsoever devised in ???
will shall be unto the said '''Elizabeth my daughter'''and the said daughter that
shall be borne and theirs heires equallie to be decided between the m when they
shall attaine to the ages of one and twentie years and in the meantime I will
and devise that my and well beloved '''wife Dame Elizabeth Pettus''' shall have
the use and occupation of all and singular ?? ?? premisses and profit ???
my said children shall attaine to their said severall and respective ages of one and
twenty yeares and shall have native (?) and take … profits
thereof coming for and towards the payment and satisfaction of my debts and
lecterns (?) But if it shall happen that my said children shall depart this
life before they shall attaine to their said ages of one and twentie yeares as afore
said without issue of theire bodies begotten then I give and devise all and sing???
my said freeholds and cophold lands aforesaid with theire appurtenances unto
my said dear beloved '''wife Dame Elizabeth Pettus''' and her heires for ever ?? I
will that my said dear wife shall have all the manners Lands Tenements ??
Freehold or Copyhold laying and being in the County of Suffolk or else where
late were the Mannors Land and Tenements of '''my brother Augustine Pettus ??'''
to her and her heires to dispose give or sell as she shall think fits And whereas I
did mortgage to '''John Pettus Esquire my brother''' '''Ellingham Hall''' in the County
of Norff: with certain Lands thereunto belonging for Five hundred years (?) for them
payment of the Summe of One thousand pounds to my said brother when he should
attaine to the age of one and twentie yeares of which said summe of One Thousand
pounds there was paid unto him the said '''John Pettus''' the Third Day of April in the
year of our Lord One Thousand Six hundred sixty and one the summe of two hundred
pounds at the payment of which said Summe of Two hundred pounds it was then
agreed in writing between me and the said '''John Pettus''' that upon the payment of
the summe of Hundred pounds upon the Four and twentieth day of June then next
following and a mortgage or certaine Lands in '''Cafney (?) All Saints''' to the said '''John Pettus'''
that the said '''John Pettus''' should assigne and sell ?? all his Estate right Title and lease (?)
of yeares and interest in '''Ellingham''' to mee on such reason (?) or ?? ?? whome I should
appoynt which said last mentioned Two hundred pounds with a mortgage Sealed of a
tendered (?) to the said '''John Pettus''' for in security of Six hundred pounds being the remainder
of the said One Thousand pounds according to the said agreement which he would not
accept ---- accept of now I do (?) hereby will and devise that I doe nominate and appoint my
Executrix hereafter named shall take the said assignment of the said '''John Pettus'''
and all the Estate and Interest and Termes of Yeares as he should have assigned to mee to her
yie(?) and behoose(?) Item I give unto '''John Pettus Esquire''' my loveing Brother Twentie
pounds to buy him mourning Item I give to my servants '''Richard Lewes''' and '''Francis'''
'''Biymall (?)''' fortie pounds Item I give to my '''cousin Charles Ramsey''' and his wife twenty
pounds that is to say to each and everie of them Tenn pounds Item I give to the maid
servants (vizt) the House maide the Chamber maide and the wash maide to each and every
of them fourty shillings a peece Item I give to '''Thomas Rafles Clerke''' the summe of Tenn
pounds of lawfull money of England Item I give to him that shall preach my funerall
Sermon five pounds Item I give to my '''loveing Niece Mrs Mary Goodyear(?)''' the summe
of one hundred pounds of lawfull money of England Item I give to '''Mother Stratford?'''
twenty pounds to buy her mourning Item I give to my '''brother Goodyeare''' and his wife
Tenn pounds a peece to buy mourning Item I give to my '''Sister Mistress Anne'''
'''Overbury'' and my '''Sister Mullene''' Tenn pounds a peece to buy them mourning Item I give to '''my Cousin and his wife''' Tenn pounds a peece to buy them mourning Item I give to my '''Cousin Thomas Cornwallis''' and his wife Tenn pounds a peece Item I give to my '''Cousin'''
'''Harman?''' and my cousin '''Mrs Frances Le Grose''' and my '''cousin Hamon''' to each and every
of them tenn pounds a peece to buy them mourning Item I give to '''Mr Mapleshon?''' Five
pounds Item I give to '''Charles Shillinge my God sonne Parson Shillinge's Sonne''' twenty pounds Item I give to my '''Cousin Thomas Cornwallis''' and '''sonne Thomas Cornwallis'''
?? which he owe mee being Fifty pounds Item I give to '''Francis Styles''' tenn
pounds Item I give to my true and faythfull servant '''Richard Lewes''' the Bedd in the
in the Corner Chamber and all the furniture of the same to be delivered by my Execut[rix] All the rest of my Goods and Chattels Debts plate Jewells household stuffe Implements(?)
and ??? of household I wholy give and bequeath to my dearely beloved '''wife'''
'''Dame Elizabeth Pettus''' whome I ordaine and make sole Executrix of this my last
will and testament and doe will and appoynt her to bestowe one hundred pounds of
lawfull money of England at my Fi?icen? In wihielse whereof I the said '''Sir'''
'''Thomas Pettus''' name to this my last will and testament being in writing containing
??? fower? sheetes of paper ?? my name to everie page and to the last
sheet affixed my seale the day and yeare above written Tho: Pettus ?? published and declared by the above named Testator as his last will and testament
in the presence of '''Rich Lewes Anna Overburie Fran Style Symon Mojse Charles'''
'''Ramsey ?? Anrelby Lionell Gizling''' Probatum (latin) ?? Testamentum ...
...
... constituto Inoderimo Die Mensio Novembrio Anno Domini Millesimo
sixiense? survo Sextuage Sind? Textio Juramento Dominus Elizabetha Pettus Relicta dirti de funrti
...
...
...
...
...
... Revoratafuit ... Testum
29 January : 1675: Et Administratio ..... Marty: 1676: juxla : == Sources ==
The Will of Sir Thomas Udevale 1367
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The Will of the Rev. Thomas Machell (1648-1698)
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The Will of Theophilus Mayo
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The Will of Thomas Aldersey of Tattenhall
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'''[[Thomas Wright]]'''
'''[[Peter Wright]]''' Nov. 10th 1797 - Thomas Done Aldersey one of the Executors in this WIll named (power &c to '''[[Elleanor Done]]''' the Executrix) in common form before me '''[[Joseph Eaton, Jur.]]''' Under Boot
Prob issued 18th Nov 1797. (Source)'''Probate''': "Cheshire Wills And Probate"
[https://search.findmypast.com/record?id=GBPRS%2FCHS%2F4012119%2F00438&parentid=GBPRS%2FCHS%2F748056634 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.com/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FCHS%2F748056634 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 4 September 2023)
Thomas Aldersey probate in 1797 in Cheshire, England. Residence Tattenhall, Cheshire, England. Occupation: Farmer. ==Sources==
The will of Thomas Bickley, Bishop of Chichester
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The will of Thomas Graye, Yeoman of Semley, Wiltshire 1653
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The Will of Thomas Knyvet 1569
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[https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/5111/images/40611_311317-00066 Ancestry Browsable Image]
Free Ancestry Sharing Images: [https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/22332934?h=d602c9 Page1], [https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/22332947?h=0f493c Page2], [https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/22332960?h=135dbf Page3], [https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/22332973?h=946019 Page4], [https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/22332980?h=d40a01 Pages5]
{{Ancestry Record|5111|913488}} (accessed 4 December 2020) {| border = "1" | Name: || Thome Knevet [Thomas Knevet] |- | Residence: || Buckenham Austell, Norfolk, England |- | Probate Date: || 11 Feb 1569 [1570 Feb 11] |- | Death Year: || Abt 1569 |- | Source Citation || The National Archives; Kew, Surrey, England;
Records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Series PROB 11; Class: PROB 11; Piece: 52 |- | Original data: || Prerogative Court of Canterbury: Wills of Selected Famous Persons. Digitized images.
Records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Series PROB 1. The National Archives, Kew, England. |} Spelling is mostly as in the probate copy. Abbreviated words are expanded in [square brackets]. Names of people and places are in '''bold''' introduced for ease of reading. Line breaks are added in the text so that the lines match the probate copy. Extra paragraph breaks are added between sections for readability. Page breaks are indicated by dividing lines and in edit mode by HTML comments with page numbers. == Abstract / Summary == Wills body to be buried in the same tomb as Lady Catherine his last wife in the Church of New Buckenham. Gives 40 shillings each to his Yeoman Warders. Gives 20 shillings each to his other servants and asks that they be given food and drink in Buckenham Castle for six months so that they have time to find other service. Gives 40s to the church of New Buckenham for repairs and also for his burial. Assigns two manors to descend his heir apparent, these being Mendlesham, Suffolk and Hillborough, Norfolk. The intent being that these represent a one third part of all his properties. The remaining 2 thirds can apparently be used for the advancement of his children and payment of debts (according to a statue made in the reign of Henry VIII). They include: * the Castle of Buckenham * the manor of Old Buckenham * the burgage of New Buckenham * The manor of Buckenham Lanthes * the manor of Tatteshalles in Weleton * the manor of Tibbenham in Tibbenham * 2 pieces of pasture in Buckenham Park * the little park in Wymondham called Cromwell Park with Colman Grounds * the woods called Rowe Carre and Peasant Hange * 3 closes called Haywood close, Persons Lawns and Lodge Lawn * a close called Hawsell * Buckenham Close manor * the Rectory and Parsonage od Old Buckenham * the old Monastery or Priory (Buckenham Abbey?) The remaining properties are to be under the control of the executors during the minority of his son and heir (Thomas). The profits of them during that time should be used to purchase a manor or manors to be given to his second son Henry. The executors should hold a wood sale yearly to sell wood from his woods to the poor people of New Buckenham, Old Buckenham and Carleton. Gives £20 to be paid yearly to son Henry until he reaches the age of 18 and commits him to the care of the President, Masters and Fellows of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. They are to bring him up, from the age of 8, and educate him until he is 18. Prior to the age of 8 the executors will provide for him. Once son Henry reaches the age of 18 the executors shall pay him £40 yearly until they have purchased the manor, lands etc that they are instructed to purchase for him. His servants William Chase and Margaret Eldred who are now married purchased some land from Sir Thomas. If this sale is overturned the executors are to repay that money to them. Gives servant Johanne Yeomans £40 to be paid £20 on his day of marriage and the other £20 within 6 years after that Gives servant Oliver Malling £10. Sir Thomas' house in Foster Lane, London (and the contents) is to be sold and the proceeds to provide for Elizabeth Williams until she marries and on that day the remainder given to her. Gives to brother Henry the repayment of a debt which Edward Bray owes to Sir Thomas Gives to Robert Edwards, Henry Underwood and Richard Long 26s 8d each to be paid every year for the remainder of their lives. Arthur the son of Elizabeth Williams is given 20 marks yearly until he is 16. He is to be brought up and educated as the discretion of the executors. When he reaches 16 he is to be given £18 towards his education in law until he is 21. When he is 21 he is to be paid £300. If this £300 is not paid for some reason then Arthur will be able to enter any and all of the manors being managed by the executors. This implies he will reach 21 at least one year before son Thomas will reach the age of 16 (the end of his minority). The executors must present their accounts to the supervisors every 2 years during the minority of the heir. If the executors neglect their duties then son Henry and brother Henry will become the executors. The executor are to make payments on the properties that Sir Thomas has mortgaged. Gives the lease of Hilborowe Parsonage to his brothers Henry and Anthony Gives £50 each to his brothers Henry and Anthony. Also gives to brother Henry the lease of Hingham Warren. Repays some fines levied on Stamard and Folker of Mendlesham. Wills that his tenant Edward Dorante of Hilborowe can continue paying the same rent. Gives £20 to Damshed of Horsted States that Thomas Wilson owes him money for failing fulfill agreements regarding Earl's Mill. Gives John Rame his servant 50 store lambs from the ewe course at Hillborowe plus £20 plus the gray ambling nagg which was bought at Wolpitt Fair. Gives household stuff to Lawrance Romsey his servant Gives to Oliver Malling his servant the next advowson of the vicarage of Mendlesham, Suffolk (if this occurs during the minority of son Thomas). Directs that John Sanderson his servant and park keeper should keep that position and keep all the profits along with other benefits. Gives Thomas Nelling and William Lamshed the rye and barley that they would have owed to him. Gives £18 annually to his brother Edmund during the minority of the heir. Gives Robert Corie a 25 year lease on his farm in Tibbenham called Tibenham Hall. Declares his executors to be: * Roger Woodhouse of Kimberly Esq * Frances Thursbie of Rougham Esq * Francis Cawdie of Wallington Esq * Robert Rogers of Conlton Gent Ordains that his supervisors will be: * The high and mighty [[Howard-1215|Prince Thomas Duke of Norfolk (1538 - 1572)]] * The right honourable [[Stanley-294|Edward Duke of Derby (1509 - 1572)]] * The right honourable [[Radcliffe-845|Thomas Earl of Sussex (1525 - 1583)]] * The right honourable [[Parker-18468|Henry Lord Morley (1532 - 1577)]] == Transcription == In the name of God Amen the viij th daye of September Anno domini 1569 and in the eleventhe yeare of
the reihne of our soveraigne Lady quene Elizabeth by the grace of God of england France and Ireland defender of the faith I Sir Thomas
Knyvet knighte of buckenham castell in the countie of norfolk knight and within the dioces of norwiche beinge of good and perfect rememberance
thankes be god considering that the state of man is subjecte to many perills and never continewethe in one estate, soe that as we be sure eche one borne
into this worlde shall dye As forthe due reward of the manyfolde wickednes and sinnes of man and not with stondinge noe thinge is more-
uncertaine then the howre , and the tyme wee shall departe oute of this worlde And I knowinge my owne infirmitie and sicknes, therefore to
th[e ]intente I maye bee the more readie to dep[ar]te this worlde in peace and blessinge of god with a quiet and cleare consceyence whensoever it shall
please almightie god to call me I by theis p[rese]nte renouncinge all former wills Doe nowe ordaine make and declare this my last will and
testament in manner and forme following, First I commend my soule to the almightie god the father the sonne and the hollie ghoaste
moste faithefullie beleaveing that throughe the merrites passion and death of our Saviour Jesus christe to have remyssione of my synnes and
to enjoye the lyfe everlasting Item I will my bodie to be buried within the '''churche of newe buckenham''' in the said countie of norff[olk]
in the same tombe wherein the bodie of the '''ladie Catherine my laste wyfe''' Does "laste wyfe" suggest that he may have had a former wife? dothe lye, there to remain until the daye of the gen[er]all resurrection
if god will at which I believe it shall ryse againe unto lyfe everlastinge and for all other things such anye my buriall I doe referre the
same to be ordered by the good advice and discretion of my executors Item I will that my executors doe give and dispose the somme of Tenne Pounds of
lawfull money of englande to the releavenige of the poore people and prisonners within the said countie of Norff[olk] as unto their wysedommes
shall seame most charitable to be done Item I will and bequeathe to every one of '''my yomen waiters''' This probably is meant to say "yeoman warders". That is how the MP biography interprets it. This could mean a personal guard as in the Royal Yeoman Warders or it could mean his servants who were Yeomen (being "a servant in a royal or noble household, ranking between a sergeant and a groom or a squire and a page."). the somme of xls xl shillings = 40 shillings of lawfull money of
englande over and besides theire waige which I require my executors to paye unto them within one halfe yeare next after my decease Item I will
and bequeath to all other '''my Servanntes''' xxs20 shillings a peece of lawful monney of englande the same to be paid within one halfe yeare as is aforesaid And I will my said executors ymmediatlie after my decease provide sufficiente meate and drink for my servanntes within my house of
'''Buckenham castell''' aforesaide by the space of sixe monnths nexte ensewinge my decease, to the intente that they in that meane tyme maye further
provide for the bestoweinge of themselves in sarvice or otherwise as they shall thynke good Item I will and bequeathe to the '''churche wardens'''
of '''newe buckenham''' aforesaide towardes the repaira[tion] of the churche or to suche other good uses as it shall please the inhabitants of the
'''towne of newe buckenham''' aforesaid to ymploye or bestowe the same xls of lawfull monney of englande which shall be inconsideration of the
breakeage up of the earthe in the churche aforesaid for my buriall And as to[ ]mheinge(?) all my mannors lordeshippes landes tenements and
hereditaments whatsoever wheresoever the same be within this realme of englande my verey will is as enseweth, that is to saye, first I doe
assigne ordaine appointe and leave all that '''my mannor of mendlesham''' with th[e] app[ur]tenn[an]ces '''in the countie of Suff[olk]''', and all that '''my mannor
'''of hillboroughe''' with th[e] appurtenn[an]ces in the countie of Norff[olk] to discende to '''my next heire apparente''' which is for the hoale and full thirde
part of all those my other mannors landes tenements and hereditaments to the intente that the Rentes Ma[...]tnt maye thereof be satisfied of
suche wardeshipp primer seazon lyverie "wardship, primer seisin, and livery". This terminology is part of the Statue of Wills. It is mentioned in this legal analysis document: https://ecollections.law.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1121&context=faculty_publications
"The Statute of Wills adds further language when the land is held in knight-service in chief and similar tenures. Here, each person may give, dispose, will or assign two parts of the same manors, lands, tenements, or hereditaments in three parts divided ... to and for the advancement of his wife, preferment of his children, and payment of his debts, or otherwise at his will and pleasure; any law, statute, custom, or other thing to the contrary notwithstanding." The third part not transferred under this provision was subject to wardship, primer seisin, and livery. " and other proffits as to her Majestie apperteyneth by the lawes and statue of this realme and if
it shall happen that this ij mannors shall not be the whoale and thirde parte of all those my mannors tenements and hereditaments
Then I will that the residue of that thirde parte, that is to saye, somuche as shall suffice supplie and make upp the said full thirde parte
shall be yssuinge and goinge oute of a parte of the Demeanes [https://www.collinsdictionary.com/us/dictionary/english/demeanes Demeanes definition]: # land, esp surrounding a house or manor, retained by the owner for his or her own use # ''property law'' the possession and use of one's own property or land # the territory ruled by a state or a sovereign; realm; domain # a region or district; domain of my '''mannor of buckenham''' in the countie of Norf[olk], that is to say
oute of a yearelie farme of xxxv£ refyned by a lease of the Demeanes of that '''mannor called the heyewoodd close''' p[ar]cell of the
Demeanes of the '''castell and mannor of Buckenham castell''' . I doe moste humblie beseche that it maye please the right honorable
'''Sr William Cecill''' knighte one of o[ur] said soveraigne ladye the quene her Maiesties most honourable privey cowncell, and M[aster]e of her
highenes courte of wardes and lyveries The "Court of Wards and Liveries" was formally created in the 32nd year of Henry 8th. See [https://ecollections.law.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1121&context=faculty_publications this academic paper] for more analysis. and all other her Maiesties officiers of the same courte for the tyme beinge to accepte and take
the residue of the same third parte oute and of the said Demeanes of the mannor of Buckenham and other the premisses aforesaid And if it shall happen that those my mannors shall amounte to more than whoale and full thyrde parte of all those my mannors landes tene[men]ts
and hereditaments, then likewise I most humblie beseche that it may please the right honorable Sr William Cecill that the
surplusage of the yearlie value of the said ij mannors over and besides the said full and whoale thirde parte may be taken by my
executors and ymployed by them to the performance of this my last will and Testament and that the said ij mannors and parte ---- Of the said Demeanes maye be dispeaened(?) ''(or disp[urs]eavered)'' and devided from from the other twoe partes residue by suche order as by thiere wysedomes shall seame best to
stande w[ith] equtie and w[ith] order of the lawes and statutes of this realme And whereas I the said Sr Thomas Knivet doe stande seazed https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seisin amonge other
landes and tenementes of and in the '''castle of buckenham''', '''the mannor of olde buckenham''' '''the burgaige of newe buckenham''', '''the manno[rs] of'''
'''buckenham Lanthes''', and of and in the '''manno[rs] of tattershalles in weleton''' and the '''mannor of Tibbinham in tibbinham''' ij peeces of
pasture in '''buckenham parke''', '''the littell parke in wymondham called Cromwelle parke''' There is a farm called "Cromwell or Little Park Farm" in [https://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/maps/series?xCenter=3415938.70686&yCenter=2885713.97574&scale=63360&viewScale=181417.4208&mapLayer=nineteenth&subLayer=first_edition&title=Ordnance%20Survey%20and%20Ordnance%20Survey%20of%20Scotland%20First%20Series&download=true this 1838 OS map]. w[ith] those groundes called '''Colmane groundes'''
w[ith] '''the wooddes called rowe carre and peaseant hanghe''' , three closes called '''haywood closes personns lawndes and lodge lawnde'''
late in the farme and occupation of '''John Futter and Richard Futter''', and one other '''close called hawsell''' nowe in the farme and
occupation of '''William Cocket esquire''' / '''the manno[r] called buckenham close mannor''' and the '''rectorie and parsonage of olde buckenham''' als[o]
of all that monasterie or priori with the landes tenementes meadows pastures and feadinges nowe in the tennure of
Stephen Tailor, and where by the statute made in the xxxij th yeare of the raigne of o[ur] late soveraigne lorde of famous memorye
king henrye the eighte There were many statues passed in the 32nd year of Henry 8. The [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statute_of_Wills Statute of Wills] definitely affected this will.
There were also at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Acts_of_the_Parliament_of_England,_1485%E2%80%931601 least 2 taxation acts and act establishing the Court of Wards]. I maye give and assigne ij partes of all my mannors landes tenementes and heredittamentes for the ad//
vancement of my chyldrenn Related to the Statute of Wills. 'Of the three specific purposes expressed in the statute, the meaning of "advancement of children" was apparently put before the courts most often.'. See [https://ecollections.law.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1121&context=faculty_publications analysis here]. and payment of my debtes or otherwyse as in the same statute at lardge is exp[re]ssed I the said Sir
Thomas meaninge and entendinge that the said manors landes tenementes and heredittamentes next above specified shall be by that
my laste will and testament set forthe and expressed to be those ij parte of all and singuler my manno[rs] landes tenementes and
heredittamentes within this realme of englande in three partes to be devided with ij partes shall be appointed and ymployed to th[e] use and
performance of this my last will and testament I doe will give and assigne to my said executors and to the xecuto[rs] and executoe of them
or the survivoe of my executors '''duringe the minoritie of my Sonne and heire''' "during the minority" would mean until he was 16 all that '''my castell and mannor of buckenham''' and
'''buckenham laathes, the mannor of buckenham close mannor atte buckenham and Cromwelle, the mannor of buckenham priorie''' with
the appurtenances with all the landes meadowes pastures and feadinges now in the tenure and occupation of '''Stevyn Tailor''' all those landes
late '''Siomse Tropes gentleman''' late in the teannure and occupation of '''Edward Luke[?]''', alsoe ij closes p[ar]cell of the said possessione
of the said '''Denise Toppes''' called '''greate wakes''' and '''littell Denchemer''' nowe in the teanure and occupation of '''william kendall''' &
'''Rob?te Risinge''' and all those closes called '''wattes grove''' and closes called '''wattes closes''' sometyme in the tennure and occupation of '''John'''>br/> '''W?den''' and nowe in the teannure of '''William Chase, Frances Fitten''', and all those landes latelie puchased of '''John Rowse gente'''
la[te?] in the teannure and occupation of '''Stephen Robertes clerke''' , and all that '''greate lake of water called the sea marre in olde buckenham'''
with the fishe howse belongeinge to the same, all that the '''rectorie or p[ar]sonnige of buckenham all S[ain]tes and buckenham St Andrews'''
sometyme belongeinge to the late priorie of buckenham, the '''mannor of tettenshales in Carleton''', the '''mannor of tibbinham''' in
tibbinham with the appurtenances, the '''mannor of wymondham grishouoghe''' There is a manor of Crysshaugh in Wymondham mentioned in this [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C7470653 1515 document] with all and singuler their appurtanences , '''the lesser parke in
wymondham called Cromwelles park''', '''the greate parke in wymondham''' with the stocke of 6.6. milcke weale appon eche of them with
all their cattell utensilles householde stuffe with other necessarries belongeinge to those ij deyries with all and singuler the said mannors
Messuages landes temementes fouldecorsesappears to relate to the privilege of hunting birds in an area rentes reversions sutes lyveries courtes leeses veiwes of francke pledge "... And the assise of the king, anno. 18. Ed. 3. stat. 1. called the sta∣tute for view of Francke pledge. And these be called assises, be∣cause they set downe and ap∣point a certaine measure, rate, or order in the things which they concerne. ..." [https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A19476.0001.001/1:6.2?rgn=div2;view=fulltext The interpreter] p[rere]quisites of courtes faires
mar[ke?]t priveledge customes realties and other hereditamentes with all and singler their app[urt]anaces Doinge noe waiste of tymber nor
wai[ste] or distructione of howses or breakeinge upp anye groundes belongeinge to anye parte of p[ar]cell of the premisses appointed or here//
tofore [u]sed for pasture or meadowse sufficiente tymber alwaies to be takenn uppon the premisses for the supportacion, and mayneteyance
of a[...]nd singuler the howses edificeis and mylles in and uppon the premises or anye of the same situated or builded, and sufficient
fire ??te ploughe bote carte bote stile bote gate bote bridge bote and pale bote [https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/bote#English Wiktionary]: "A privilege or allowance of necessaries, especially in feudal times. A right to take wood from property not one's own." uppon the premisses to be takenn by my said
executors of the survivors of them as often as necessarie shall require allwaies forprized and excepted and I will that ymmediatlie after
that my executors shall have levyed receyved and takenn of the farmes rentes proffittes and revenues of the said mannors lordeshippes
sign[...]es landes tenementes and heredittamentes with their appurtaneces suche sommes of lawfull monney of england as may suffice for
the paymentes of my debtes, that then they my said executors shall levey receave and take of the Farmes rentes issues and revenues
of the said mannors lordeshippes signiories landes tenementes and heredittamentes with the appurtanences the somme of mm£ of lawfull
monney of england which said somme of mm£ I will that my said executors shall by the good advice and consente of my sup[er]visors or some of
them ymplye and bestowe in p[ur]chaizinge of some mannor or mannors landes or tenementes to be conveyed and assigned unto my
'''second sonne Henry Knevet''' and to the[ h]eires of his bodie lawfullie begotten absolutelie with oute any condition or Defeasannte in deede to
be e[...]ssed or made uppon anye of the said conveyannce or assurannce with the remainder to the righte heires of me the said Sir Thomas
knevet with oute anye suche condition or defeasemite as is aforesaid. Item I will that my executors shall yearelie amonge my woodes in
olde buckenham and tibbenham make a wood sale of xv: acres of underwood which hathe bene accustomed to be felled once within xx years nexte
befo??y[...] ?? wood sale , and the same to sell at reasonable prices to my poore ten[an]tes and inhabitantes of '''newe buckenham olde buckenham'''
'''Carleton and tibbenham''', and the monney thereof conveyinge to be ymplyed to the performance of this my last will and testament
and the said wood sale to be yearlie made, '''during the mynorotie of my heire''' Item I give and bequeath to the said '''Henrye Knevet''' my
??[sonne?] twentie pounds of lawfull monney of englande, to be yearelie paide untill he accomplisshes the age of xviii yeares paide to
??or his use by my executors or executors or executors or my executors or the survivors or my executors for his education and bringeinge
up whome I do commyt to the [goneritties &] bringeinge up of the M[asters] and P[res]edente of the house or colledge called corpus [ch]pi (christi?) The [https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1558-1603/member/knyvet-sir-thomas-1528-69 MP biography] says Corpus Christi colledge otherwise
called bennett colledge in the '''universitie of Cambridge''' with the consente of the whoale Fellowshippe of the said howse at suche
?n as my said sonne Henrye shall comme to the age of viii years and that the said masters, president and fellowes shall have and receive?
[annua?]lie of my said executors the said somme of xx pounds which before I have gyven to and for th[e] education of the said Henrye yearelie to
paide unto them in the hall of the colledge aforesaide on the featste daye of all S[ain]ts yearlie until he the said Henrye shall
accomplishe the age of xviii yeares Item I will and bequeathe to the said masters president and fellows of the said howse twentie
poundes of lawfull monney of englande, to be paid unto them by my said executors at such tyme as my said sonne
---- Henrye shalbe arrived in the said house or colledge there to contynewe and to be broughte upp in learneinge, and I doe moste hartilie
require the said m[asters] president and fellows to shewe theire love and favour towarde my said sonne Henrye that he maye there amonge them frome
the tyme of this entry into the said house untill suche tyme as he come to the age of xviij years by their diligente and mercifull[?] aforsighte[?]
be provided of all thinges necessarie for hym aswell meate drinke and apparrell as alsoe that he maye beapployed in the studies
of all mannor of good learninge and vertuous execenesthis could mean "virtuous exertions" aswell in the greeke as in the lattine , and if the said twentie poundes yearlie
to be paide as is aforesaide for my said sonne Henrye for to be well and decentlie kepte clothed fedd lodged and used in ev[er]ye respect as shall
be requisite and shall seeme convenient to the said M[asters] President and fellowes, then I will that my said executors shall yearlie yealde
unto the said M[saters] President and p[re]sident at the said feaste daye of all Saintes so muche more of lawfull monney of englande over &
besides the said yearlie somme of twentie poundes as shall supplie the wante and lacke of my said sonne Henrye for his education
as is aforesaid Item I will that after my said sonne Henry shall accomplish th[e] age of xviij yeares, that my said executors or
the survivors of them or the executor or executors of the survivors of them shall yearlie paie unto my said sonne Henrye Fouretie pounds of
lawfull monney of englande, until suche tyme as my said executors shall have p[ur]chazed conveyed and assigned suche mannor or mannors
landes & tenementes as they shall p[ur]chaize with the foresaid somme of twoe thousande poundes unto my said sonne Henrye and to t[he ]heires of>br/> his bodie lawfully begotten with the remainder over to the righte heires of me the said Sir Thomas as is before p[ro]mized And I will
and require my said executors sufficientlie to provide for the education of my said sonne Henrye untill he come to the age of viii yeares
accordinge as unto his tender yeares apperteigne Item I will devise and require, that whereas for and in consideration of the somme of
lxxxxiij£ vis viijd£93 6s 8d of lawfull money of england to me paide by '''my s[er]vannte william Chasse''' I solde unto the said william
and unto '''Margaret Elrred widdowe''' noew the wyfe of the said William Chasse xxx acres and a halfe of lande and pasture lienge and
beinge in '''olde buckenham''' aforesaide as by conveyannce thereof frome me to them made maye appeare I will that if the said lande pasture
shallbe at any tyme hereafter lawfullie recovered frome the said william and margaret or frome either of them or frome the heires of them
or either of theire or them, that they I will my said executors shall repaie unto the said william and Margaret or to thone of them
the executors or administrators of them or the one of them, the said somme of lxxxxiij£ vis viijd of lawfull monney of englande Item I give and bequeathe to '''Johanne yeomans my sarvannte''' the somme of Fouretie poundes of lawfull monney of england, to be paid in
mannor and forme followinge, that is to saye, at the daye of the marriage of the said Johanne Yeomans twentie Pounds, and within
vj yeares nexte after the other twentie pounds of lawfull money of englande Item I give and bequeathe to '''Ollyver Malling''' my
sarvannte tenne pounds of good and lawfull monney of englande Item I will that my executors or ij of them shall sell all that m[y?]
lease and tearme of yeares of and in my '''house in foster lane in london''' with all the household stuffe and the monney thereof conveye[?] [or recived?]
to be by my executors ymployed uppon '''Elizabeth Williams''' in mannor and forme following, that is to saye, that they shall [...?]
provide for her good and virtuous education and all necessaries for her untill the daye of her marriage, and at the daye of her marriage
that my said executors shall give unto her suche somme and sommes of lawfull monney of england as the same leaze and tearme o[..]
yeares and householde stuffe were solde for Item I give and bequeathe to '''my brother Henrye Knevet''' tharrtrage of a Debt which Edwarde[?]
Braye bought doe owe and stande bounde to paye unto me, and upon the payment of the same I doe require my said executors not to
moleste hym for not payinge of the said debte at suche tyme as ye summe was due and paiable unto me, and if he shall refuse to paie th??me
within one yeare nexte after my decease, then I will my said executors doe putt in sute those bondes which he standeth bounde unto me , and ??
Awnswere unto my brother Henrye as muche as the arrerayeis doe nowe amounte unto Item I give unto '''Robert Edwardes''', '''Henrye'''
'''Underwood''' and '''Richard Longe''' and to either of them xxvis viijd of good and lawfull monney of englande, to be paide either of
them or to the rest[?] of either of them yearlie and ev[er]ye yeare by the said executors duringe the lyves of them and ev[er]ye of them Item I ???
bequeathe to '''Arthure the sonne of Elizabeth Williams''' This Arthur Williams could be related to the Arthur Williams mentioned in [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/170587bc-16f9-4318-a938-1512f96c853d this document]. There is also a [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FM%2F753681976%2F2 possible marriage] for him. xx marrkes A [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_(currency) mark] was "160 pence (13 shillings and 4 pence), two-thirds of a pound" So 20 marks was £13 6s 8d. yearlie to hym to be paide by my executors or th[e] executo[rs] of my
executors untill he come and be of th[e] age of xvj yeares to be broughte upp in learninge at the discretion of my executors, and after th??he
home accomplisshed and is of th[e] age of xvj yeares, then I will give and bequeathe to the said Aethure xviij£ of lawfull monney
of englandm towards the mayneteynannce, and bringeinge of hym in the studie of the lawes of this realme, with kinde of pr[??]sione
and studie I doe require my said executors to cause hym to follow yearlie to be paide unto hym by my said executors or the executors or my
Executors until he come and be th[e] age of xxj yeares, and when he is and hathe accomplisshed the age of xxj , then I will and
bequeathe unto the said Aethure three hundred pounds of lawfull monney of Englande to be paide by my said executors of the
executors of my executors when he come to the said age of xxj th yeares, and I will assigne and bequeathe that if it shall happen
the said somme of three hundred Pounds or any parte or parcell thereof to the said Arthure before gyvenn and bequeathed
be not satisfied or unpaide in forme aforesaid , That then it shall be lawfull unto the said Aethure at his said aige of xxj
yeares to enter into all and singuler said mannors landes tenementes and heredittamentes by this my p[rese]nte testament and last
will assigned willed and bequeathed unto my said executors for p[er]formance of this my said laste will and testament the??ie
to holde possess and enjoye to hym and his assignes for one yeare then next followinge his entrie for full payment and
satisfaction of the said iij hundred poundes and after that one yeare determined my said executors to reenter reposses the said
mannors and other the premisses before them devised and assigned , And they to have the same to these[?] and p[er]formance of this
my last will and testament as is aforesaide provided alwaies that if the said Aethure shall fortune to Dye or Depart??
this p[re]sente worlde before he shall accomplisshe the age of xxi yeares or before the ende of the tearme and space of the said year??
after his entrie in formme aforesaide to be had and made for none payment of the said three hundred pounds to him geyven
and bequeathed , That then and ymmediatlie after suche his decease I will that the said mannors landes Tenementes and other
heredittamentes before assigned gyven and bequeathed to my said executors shall stande & be to my executors for and fowar??
the performance of this my p[rese]nte testament and laste will as is before remembred and the legaceis before gyven to the said
Arthure to be voide and of none effect Item I will and ordaine assigne and require, that within ij yeares nexte after my
---- Decease for and '''duringe the minoritie of my said heire''' my executors for the survyvors of them or the executor or executors of the S[ur]vivo[rs] of my executors
doe make in writinge to the sup[ur]visors of my p[rese]nte last will and testament or to twoe of them or to the S[ur]vivo[rs] of them, A trewe and perfecte
accompte, aswell of all suche sommes of monney as shall be leveyed and takenn by them or anye of them either of my goodes debtes chattelles
aswell reall as p[er]sonall as of the revenues issued and proffittes of my said mannors landes tenementes and heredittamentes afore
assigned to these of this my p[rese]nte last will and testament accordinge to a trewe value of the same mannors landes tenementes and
hereditamentes and the same to be delivered to my supervisors, and soe ev[ery] twoe yeares during the said minoritie of my said heire doe accompte
in formme aforesaid, uppon[...] ev[er]y which accompte the said executors to be allowed theire reasonable chardge frome tyme to tyme to be
Disbursed in and aboute th[e] extention & performance of this my last will and testament and I will that the somme and sommes of
monney beinge in th[e h]andes of my said executors and the s[ur]vivo[rs] of them, and in the handes of the executor[rs] or executor or executors of the s[ur]vivo[rs] of
them to be ymployed on mannor and formme followinge viz that first my debtes that be and shall growe dwe[owe? due?] with theise nexte twoe
yeares to be paide, and alsoe somanye of my legaceies as shall be hable to be annfnocred on that tyme and after the same be done as
is aforesaid I will that all other sommes of money aswell which be the legacies of my sonnes as of the said Aethure and others before
mentioned, and all other sommes of monnet which shall be levied uppon the premisses appointed for the performance of this my laste
will and testament, and remaiyninge in the handes of my said executors as shall appeare uppon theire said accompte I will
shallbe ymployed put forthe used and bestowed to the best proffitt and benefite either of p[ur]chaizinge of landes or otherwise that to
the said executors and survivors wisdomes and disections or the most profit of them shallbe thoughte meete for and to the use of my
said cheldren , the proffite of which I will have equallie accompted for with the rest, to eche of my said children Thomas and
Henrye , accordinge to the trewe intente and meaninge of this my last will and testament as maye be reasonablie collected &
gathered uppon the same, which if any said executors or the survivors of them or the executors or executor of the same survivors of my executo[rs]
shall refuse or neclecte to doe for and by the space of vi monnethes nexte vt supra of ev[er]ye of the said twoe yeares Then I will that theire
said executorshipp shall cease and be utterlie voide / And that then and from there forthe I constitute ordaine and make the said
'''Henrye Knevet my sonne''' and '''Henrye Knevet my brother''' to be my executors, soe that theye theire executors or the executors of them with
in ev[er]ye twoe yeares then next followinge, doe make a like trewe accompt in writing before my said Supervisors or twoe of them
or to the survivors of them, and doinge all other thinges as is aforesaid lymited and appointed to the said other executors And
whereas I have morgaged to '''Edward Warde gentleman''' certeine landes tenementes and heredittamentes in '''wymondham''' for twoe
hundred poundes to be paide to hym at the feaste of the purification of our ladie 1572 and have morgarged to '''George Baron[et?]'''
'''of hedgeset gentleman''' the said '''rectorie and parsonaige of olde buckenham''' for which there is owinge to hym at this daye sixe hundred
markes A [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_(currency) mark] was "160 pence (13 shillings and 4 pence), two-thirds of a pound" So 600 marks = 400 pounds. to be paide yearlie the xijth daie of october, twoe hundred markes till the said sixe hundrethe markes be paide and also I
have morgarged to '''George Mone [or Ylvne?]''' gent certeine woodes and growndes called tibbenham parke and shippmtr[?] hawte [Sheepcote house?] in tibbenham
for the some of twoe hundred poundes of lawfull monney of england to be paide in and uppon the laste daye of Februarie Anno Domi[...]
1570 at the dwellinge howse of the said '''George Nane''' [Nave?] in tastocke I doe require beseche and moste stracghthe chardge my executors
to provide and will to forsee that the said sommes of monney for the said morgaiges be paide at the severall daies afore
remembered Soe as the said landes tenementes and certorie maye be saved and preserned towards the execution of this my last
will and testament, and after to disrende to my said sonne Thomas his heires Item I give and bequeathe the lease of hillborowe p[ar]sonage
which I had of the grannte of '''Sir Richard Coggell parsonn''' there XX to my twoe brethren viz unto '''Henrye Knevet''' and '''Anthonye Knevet'''
Esquires with twoe nexte advowsions or gifte of the same benefrie with all proffittes and commodities to the same belongeinge or in
anye wyse apperteyninge Item I give and bequeathe to my foursaide '''brethren Henrye and Anthonye''' and to either of them theire
heires executors and assignes L£ of lawfull englisshe monney to be paide to eche of them by my executors as the same shall ryse[?]
uppon suche landes assigned to the use and performance of this my laste will and testament / And if it shall fortune anye of my said
brethren to dye before they have receyved my bequeaste , then I will that the survivors of them to have the whoale ??? Item I give alsoe to '''my brother Henrye Knevet''' his executors and assignes the lease of '''hingham warren''' which I late had of the '''lorde Morleye''' for the
tearme of xxi yeares To have and to holde to hym and to his assignes duringe the tearme then to come at the daye of my decease
Item wheareas there was paide unto me by one Stamarde and Folker of mendlesham my tenantes there twoe fynes of foure
poundes a pece and for soe muche as I was abused by the courte rolles as firce that tyme it hathe more evidenthe appeared unto
my conscyence therefore I will and my mynde is that my said executors doe make repayment and restitution to them and ev[er]ye of
them of the said severall sommes before specified within one yeare nexte after my decease or as the same will be levied uppon the
landes and goodes assigned to the use of my will Item I will and bequeathe that one '''Edwarde Dorante of Hilborowe''' my
Tennannte his heires executors and assignes and ev[er]ye of them shall hold all suche landes and Tenementes late in controversie
betwene hym and me by coppie of court roll quietlie as his p[re]decessors did before hym paymige the olde rente as it hathe
beene accustomed to be paide to the lorde of the said maoor and noe more , doinge the sute and service of the right dewe
and accustomed, And that all suche articles as were made betwene us of a newe agreament and ende of the same controversie
shallbe cacelled by my executors and the same to be frustrate voide and of none effecte Item I give and bequeate to one
'''Damshed of horstede''' in the countie of norff[olk] his heires and assignes the some of xx £ of lawfull monney of englande
to be paide unto hym or them by my executors as the same shall aryse uppon[...] the proffitt of my landes assigned to
the p[er]formance of my will Item I will that whereas one '''Thomas wilson''' late fermor of my myll called Earles
myll stode bonnden unto me with iij suerties in divers sommes of monney for the p[er]formance of certenie covenntes
comprised in a paire of Indentures made betwene us, And for sommhe as the said bonde is by them forfeited for none
obfnaration & p[er]formannce of the said Covenanntes on his p[ar]te to be p[er]formed fulfilled and kepte, therefore if
the said Thomas willson with his suerties or anye of them shall at anye tyme after my Decease within ij yeares enter
into accompte gefore my executors and there take suche order for the payment of the Dewe debt which shallbe insthe ---- Chardged uppon hym by myne executors for the tyme that the said '''Thomas wilson''' hathe occupied the same myll, that then I will
that suche obligtion as they and ev[er]ye of them have forfeited to me to be cancelled made voide and frustrate and noe advaintaige to
be takenn by the same Item I give and bequeathe to '''John Rame my Sarvannte''' his executors and assignes one halfe hundred of
store lambes to be takenn oute of my ewe corse at hillborowe, and also xx pounds of lawfull monney of englande dewe to hym for his
waige and other Debtes, and my graie amblinge nagge which was boughte at wolpitt faire
Item I give and bequeath to>br/> '''Lawrannce Romsey my sarvannte''' all suche househilde stuffe as I have lent unto '''Peter Asmote''' of nor, and his wyfe and that
the same to be delivered p[ro]ntelie after my decease to hym of his assignes Item I give and bequeathe to '''Olyver Mallinge''' my
servannte the nexte advowson of the vicaridge of mendlesham in the countie of Suff[olk] when it shall happen to fall to
bestowe at his will and pleasure, if the same doe fall in the tyme of the minoritie of my sonne '''Thomas''' or if he Dye of my
sonne '''Henrye''' Item I doe give and bequeathe unto '''John Sanndersonn my sarvannte & keper of my parke''' the said office with
all proffittes thereunto belongeinge with one yarde called the wollhouse yarde nowe in the teannure of '''Mystris wattes'''
Duringe his naturall lyfe and good behavio[r], To have and to holde to the said '''John Sannderson''' Duringe his naturall
lyfe, soe as he execute well and faithefillie his said office with suche ordinairie allowance of Cattell in the said parke as he
hathe heretofore bene accustomed with oute anye thinge payinge for the same Item I doe give to '''Thomas Snellinge'''
'''William Lamshede of hilborowe''' all suche rye and barley as they dow owe unto me the said Sir Thomas at the daye of
the makeinge of this my laste will and testamente Item I give and bequeathe unto '''my brother Edmund Knevite''' esquire
one yearelie annuitie of xiij pounds xis xiijd to be takenn oute of those landes assigned to the p[er]formance of my will Duringe
the minoritie of my foresaide sonne Thomas Item I will that '''Roberte Corie''' shall have holde and quietlie enioye to hym his
executors and assignes one lease and tearme of xxj yeares of and in all that my farme in tibbenham called tibbenham
hall with all the howses buildinges meadowes feadinges and Pastures to the same belongeinge and apperteyninge and nowe
beinge in the farme and occupation of the said Roberte accordinge to the tearme of A paire of Indentures thereof made
Betwene me the said Sir Thomas of the one partie, and the said Roberte of the other partie beareinge Date the
Daye of in the yeare of the raigne of our soveraigne ladye quene Elizabeth Item whereas I stande
Indebted to Divers and sonndrey p[er]sonnes in sunndrey debte whereof they have noe specialties I require and beseche
my said executors to satisfie and paye suche and soemanye of the same as they shall fynde sufficientlie to be proved good
and p[er]fecte debte in dischardge of my conscience whereof I will they shall have allowannce uppon the said accomptes All
the residewe of my goodes and chattelles not mencioned gynen or bequeathed in this my p[rese]nte pnte is a [https://folgerpedia.folger.edu/mediawiki/media/images_pedia_folgerpedia_mw/2/21/Alphabet_Abbreviations.pdf secretary hand abbreviation] for presente. last will and and Testament I will
assign and bequeathe them to the disposition of my executors whome I ordaine constiture and make '''Roger woodhowse of'''
'''kymberlie esquire, Frannces Thursbie of rougham esquire, Franncis Cawdie of wallington esquire, and Robert Rogers'''
'''of conlton gent''' my executors of this my laste will and testament, And I further ordaine constiture and make the highe and
myghtie Prince '''Thomas Duke of Norff[olk]''', The right honourable '''Edwarde earle of Darbie''', the righte honourable '''Thomas'''
'''Erle of Sussex''', and the righte honourable '''henrie lorde Morley''' sup[er]visors of this my laste will and testament, besecheing
theire honors aswell for the dischardge of my conscience as for the sake of my Childrenn theire kinsmen to take the paine to have
Due consideration of th[e] execution of this my p[rese]nte laste will and testament, as theye be those parsonns in whome above all
other I doe repose my truste and confidennce Theis beinge witnessed '''henrye knevet esquire Robert Buxton gent, Gregorie'''
'''Buxton John Rame William Chase and William Johnsone''' with others //// Probatum ....
.... London underimo die Februrarii Anno domini Millnno quingen sexagesimmo nono / Juramento ...
.. notary ... Rogeri Woodhowse, executor ...
... == Sources ==
The Will of Thomas Missing 1733
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The will of Thomas Snagge 1591
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and proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury 17 May 1593.Will of Thomas Snagge, Her Majesty's Sergeant at Law. Reference: PROB 11/81/408. Description: Will of Thomas Snagge, Her Majesty's Sergeant at Law. Date: 17 May 1593. Held by: The National Archives, Kew.(https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D928998) Accessed 31 July 2022 Spelling, punctuation and line breaks are as per the register copy. ff is rendered as F.
Abbreviations are expanded and additions noted in [square brackets]. Paragraph
breaks (where added) and bold text for names are my own for ease of reading. People in the will: :[[Dickons-49|Elizabeth Snagge]] (wife of the writer [[Snagge-17|Thomas Snagge]]) :[[Snagge-18|Thomas Snagge]] (son) :[[Snagge-25|Robert Snagge]] (AKA Roberte)(son) :Agnes Snagge (wife of Thomas the son) :[[Snagge-26|Lewys Snagge]] (son) :Thomas Hunt (witness) :George Croswell (witness) Thome Snagge. In the name of god: amen The Seventh daye
of Aprill in the yeare of our Lorde Christ A thousand Five hundreth ninety one and in the three
and thirtey[?] yeare of the Rayne of my most gracious Soveraiyne Ladye and [M?s] Elizabeth the
Quene's Ma[jes]tie, I Thomas Snagge, one of her Ma[jes]ties Serjeants at Law being
of wholle minde and perfecte memorye yealding therefore most humble thanks to Almighty god
Doe make and ordayne this my Last will and testament in forme following First I bequeathe to
'''Elizabeth''' my Loving wyfe my house called the Lodge in Marston parke together with the neather
Lodge in the Said parke called Hayward's Lodge and together wit the Litle parke otherwise called
the [?]Brache together. also with all the thicke within the pale of the Said Litle parke as it is nowe
called and together with the Saide other parke wherein the Said twoe Lodges Doe stand the woods and
Deere in them bothe and the soyle and grounde in them and of them bothe To have and to holde to my Saide
wyfe from the Daye of my Deathe unto the full end terme of threescore yeares then next ensuring
yf she Liveth so Longe I bequeathe also to my saide wyfe During the Saide terme yf She Liveth So longe
my conduitt and hoppe yarde in Cranfielde in the County of Beds and my Lande called Venyson Lane in
Cranfield aforesaide To have and to holde to her for the saide terme to the intent aforesaide Also,
give to my saide wyfe one yearly Annuity of twoe hundred markes by the yeare to be taken and Levyed
by heroute and of all my Lands temements Leased and hereditaments whatsoever payable to her during
the Saide Terme of threescore yeares yf she liveth so longe. And my will and minde also is that if she [?]
cannot have the same with quietnes That she shall or maye [?]Distreyne for the same in all my Saide Lande.
whatsoever other than the Saide parkes at all time and times During the Saide terme. Item I also give and
bequeathe to '''Elizabeth''' my said wyfe the rest of all my plate and hangings for terme of her lyfe. Item I
will for that '''Thomas''' my eldest sonne hath hadd a lazy badd and Loose lyfe And in the time of his Saide
Loosenes hath entred into greate bonds to Divers [?]rostening and wicked persons for litle or nothing received
to passe awaye to them after my Decease the wholle or greatest parte of that whiche shoulde Distend or
come unto him from me that he the Saide '''Thomas''' shall yearely have paide unto him after my Deathe twoe
hundred pounds by yeare by my Said wyfe so Longe as he shall live in good and virtuous lyfe and so longe
as he be quieted against the saide wicked persons and every of them yf either of whiche happen to be
broken then the same payment of the saide twoe hundred pounds from that time forthe utterly cease
And Further my minde is that if god give him the grace to alter his Saide Loose lyfe uppon good triall
thereof had as hereafter is appointed to be adiudged and allowed, and that he be cleared of the saide bonds
without Selling morgaging or charging any parte of my possessions therewith. That then my Saide wyfe shall
or maye make his and his childrens portons what shall lyke her and in what sorte shall lyke her havnig
regarde to the provision for her other children And the payment of my debts and that my saide sonne
'''Thomas''' maye from time to time During his lyfe Destrayne for the Same in all my saide Landes and Leases excepte
the Saide parkes During the lyfe of my Saide wyfe under the Conditon aforesaide. And I will to my Saide
Sonne '''Thomas''' my Mannor House at Marsonne or my Mannor House at Kempstone as shall best lyke
his wyfe to Dwell in. and what house of them bothe she refuseth, the Same refused house I will shall goe
to '''Robert''' my Sonne together with forty pounds by yeare of annuity for terme of his lyfe to be [?]yssuing
oute of all my Saide Landes and Leases the parkes [?]accepted during the lyfe of my Saide wyfe And that he
shall of maye Distreyne for the Same at all times During his lyfe in all my Landes and Leases the Said
parkes excepted During his Said mother's lyfe. Item I will that if my Sonne '''Thomas''' Doe Dye leaving
'''Agnes''' his nowe wyfe. That then the said '''Agnes''' shall have During her lyfe my manor House of Kempstone
with all the edifices belonging to the same and withe the orchard and gardens thereof and one hundred
pounds by yeare oute of all my Lande and Leases and that she shall and may Defreyne for the same in
all the Saide Lands and Leases During the Saide terme. Item I give to '''Lewys''' my Sonne Twenty pounds
by yeare of Annuity for the terme of his lyfe to be yssuing oute of all my Landes and Leases the Saide parkes
excepted during the lyfe of my Said wyfe and that he shall or may Distreyne for the Same at all times
During his lyfe in all my Said Landes and Leases the Saide parkes excepted During his Said mothers lyfe.
Item I ordayne and make '''Elizabeth''' my wyfe my Saide Sonnes '''Thomas''' and '''Robert''' my Executors of
this my Said will. Provided allwayes and my will and minde is that if my wyfe marryeth not againt
That neither the Saide '''Thomas''' nor '''Robert''' nor any of them shall in any sorte meddle as Executors or
Executor of this my Said will During the lyfe of there Saide mother other than as [?Sozinte] to her or by [?usez]
of theire names in [?athons] or Suted yf neede be yf they or any of them Doe take uppon him or them to meddle
therein during her lyfe the kepnig[keeping] her Selfe Sole as aforesaide contrary to this proviso. Then I will that
he or they that so meddleth form thenceforthe shal be no Longer Executor or Executors hereof. But,
the authoritye hereby given to them or him forthwithe thenceforthe to cease and Determyne as
thoughe they or any of them had never have thereunto authorized by this my will provided also that
after the Deathe of my Saide wyfe yf my Saide Sonne '''Thomas''' be not at the time of her Saide Deathe
and form the time of the making this my will till that time of godly and honest conversacon and a
stayed man And so be indeted and allowed as by my honorable and Deare god Lord of the Lorde Mordante
and the Lorde Sainte John of Bletsoe or the survivors of them That then my Saide Sonne '''Thomas''' shall
not in any wise meddle with thexecuton of this my Saide will During the Lyfe of my Saide Sonne '''Roberte'''.
Thomas Snagge. Thomas Hunt. George Croswell. ==Sources==
The Will of Thomas Stretton a Mariner of Bristol Probate 1690
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The Will of William Ashurst , proved 18 February 1719/20
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The Will of William Clopton of Kentwell, Suffolk - 1589
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Bold text where bold or large text used
''Superscripts used as appropriate''
''lligatures and abbreviations have been expanded in [square brackets].''
ff replaced by capital F
''Words unable to transcribe signified by ——''
Words transcribed but uncertain by ? [[Sansum-45|Sansum-45]] 09:45, 3 August 2023 (UTC) ===Transcript of the Willl=== The xieth daye of December 1588 Anno xxxi Elizabethe Regine [etc.]
'''I William Clopton''' of kentwell esquire do revoke
and hereby utterly reverse and disalowe all former wills by me heretofore made and doe
by this? presente make and declare my last will and testament First I com[m]end my
sowle to god [etc.] Item I ordeyne and appoynte my brother Thomas Clopton my Lovinge kinsman
William Clopton of Groton gent and my fayethefull and trustie servannte John Bowswell
gent to be my exetutors to see my debte and legacie fuly payde Item I give to the pore
people of [deleted word possibly melford] Melford Stansted and Glemsford five poundes The handes of the
witnesses Thomas Banwell Rgger Matto Signum Edwardi Lovell
==Probate Norwich 31 December 1588== The will was initially proved at Norwich on the 31st December 1588 (just 13 days after his burial). A transcript (see below) provided in the 1866 edition of the Visitations '''Visitations:''' “ WILL OF WILLIAM CLOPTON , ESQUIRE . - 1588”, Joseph Jackson Howard (ed.) ''The Visitations of Suffolke, William Harvey, with additions from Family Documents Original Wills”, publisher Samual Tymms, London, 1866 , Vol. I, p. 64, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ExI2AQAAMAAJ&dq Google Books], (accessed 6th August) is presumably of the will held at Norwich (it does not specify its source but the Norwich will could be inspected).Will: “Clopton, William, esquire, of Long Melford [Kentwell], Suffolk”,Norfolk Records Office, 1588, [https://nrocatalogue.norfolk.gov.uk/index.php/clopton-william-esquire-of-long-melford-kentwell-suffolk NCC will register Homes 337], (accessed 8th August) '''Will:''' "Probate records for the Episcopal Consistory Court, Archdeaconry of Norwich"
Catalog: [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/278818 Probate records for the Episcopal Consistory Court, Archdeaconry of Norwich] Regd. copy wills vol. 86 1587-1588
Film number: 008219667 > image 391 of 490
{{FamilySearch Image|3Q9M-CSGJ-DSZQ}} (accessed 10 August 2023) Administration was granted to the named executors in the person of Mr. Thomas Peade of Bury St. Edmunds in the county of Suffolk. ===Latin Transcript=== ''Probatum fuit hujusmodi testamentum apud Norwicum coram venerabili viro magistro Willielmo Maister legum doctore vicario in spiritualibus generali et officiali principali reverendi episcopi patris et domini domini Edmundi , providentia divina Norwicensis episcopi legitime deputato ultimo die mensis Decembris anno Domini millesimo quin gentesimo octogesimo octavo . Et commissa fuit administratio bonorum etc. executoribus in dicto testamento nominatis de bene etc. in persona magistri Thomæ Peade de Burye Sancti Edmundi in comitatu Suff ' , notarii publici procuratoris in hac parte legitime constituti jurat ' etc.'' ===English Translation=== Translated through google translate [[Sansum-45|Sansum-45]] 11:12, 7 August 2023 (UTC) This testament was proved at Norwich in the presence of the venerable man Master William Maister, doctor of laws, vicar general in spiritual matters and principal official of the reverend bishop father and lord Sir Edmund, the divine providence lawfully appointed bishop of Norwich on the last day of December in the year of the Lord one thousand five hundred and eighty eight. And he was entrusted with the administration of goods, etc. to the executors named in the said will concerning the property etc. in the of Mr. Thomas Peade of Bury St. Edmunds in the county of Suff, the notary public procurator duly appointed in this part swears, etc. ===The Sentence === The sentence (which is dated 19 June 1589) probably relates to William’s widow Anne Clopton contesting the will but the latin script has not been transcribed or translated. '''Sentence:''' "Sentence of William Clopton of Kentwell, Suffolk",The National Archives Kew,[https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D925197 ref: PROB 11/74/86], 19 June 1589, (accessed 31 Jul 2023) ==Probate Catebury 19 July 1599== Administration was granted to Thomas Clopton (the heir and one of the named executors), subject to the sentence (see above) on the 19th July 1589. a latin transcript being available in the 1866 edition of the Visitations of Suffolk (and translated below). which has been translated using google translate. ===Latin Transcript=== ''Probatum ac per sententiam approbatum et insumatum fuit testamentum suprascriptum apud London ' coram venerabili viro magistro Willielmo Drury legum doctore Curiæ Prerogativa Cantuariensis magistro custode sive commissario etc. decimo nono die mensis Junii anno Domini millesimo quingentesimo octogesimo nono , juramento Johannis Burrough notarii publici , procuratoris Thomæ Clopton unins executorum in hujusmodi testamento nominato ; cui commissa fuit administratio bonorum , jurium , et creditorum ejusdem defuncti de bene et fideliter administrando etc. ad Sancta Dei Evangelia jurati ; reservata potestate similem commissionem faciendam Willielmo Clopton et Johanni Bowswell cæteris executoribus in eodem testamento nominatis , cum venerint eandem petituri in debita juris forma admissuris .'' ===English Translation=== Translated through google translate [[Sansum-45|Sansum-45]] 11:12, 7 August 2023 (UTC) Proved and by sentence approved and accepted was the above-written will at London 'before the venerable man William Drury, doctor of the laws of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, master custodian or commissioner, etc. on the nineteenth day of June in the year of the Lord one thousand five hundred and eighty-ninth, by the oath of John Burrough, notary public, Thomas Clopton's attorney, one of the executors named in this testament; to whom was entrusted the administration of the goods, rights, and credits of the same deceased for the good and faithful administration, etc. sworn to the Holy Gospels of God; reserved power to make a similar commission to William Clopton and John Bowswell, the other executors named in the same will, when they come to claim the same in due legal form. " ==Marginal Note== The following note is also inserted in the margin of the PCC copy of the will. In 1619 (on 15th April), as the will was not fully administered (and the executors deceased), Walter Clopton next of kin to William Clopton, was granted administration. A transcript (see below) is provided in the 1866 edition of the Visitations which has been translated using google translate. === Latin Transcript=== ''Deco quinto die Aprilis anno Domini 1619 emanavit commissio Waltero Clopton proximo consanguineo Willielmi Clopton de Kentwell armigeri defuncti habentis etc. ad administrand ' bona , jura , et credita hujus modi juxta tenorem et effectum testamenti ejusdem defuncti per Thomam Clopton unum executorum jam etiam defunctum non plene administrata de bene etc. jurato , Willielmo Clopton et Johanne Bowswell executoribus in eodem testamento nominatis demortuis'' ===English Translation=== On the fifteenth day of April in the year 1619, a commission was issued to Walter Clopton, the next of kin of William Clopton of Kentwell, esquire, deceased, etc. to administer the goods, rights, and credits of this kind according to the tenor and effect of the will of the same deceased by Thomas Clopton, one of the executors of the already deceased, not fully administered of the property, etc. to the jury, William Clopton and John Bowswell, deceased, named as executors in the same will == Sources ==
The will of William Fairclough b.1665 d.1729
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Being penitent and sorry for all my sins most humbly desiring forgiveness for the same, I commend my soul to God that gave it having good hope through faith to Inherit Eternal life and my Body I Commit to the Earth to be Decently Buried at the discretion of my Executors hereafter named and as to the settling of my temporal estate of such Goods and Chattels as it hath pleased God to bestow upon me, I do order give and dispose thereof as followeth:
I will and ordain that my Lawful Debts, Funeral Expenses and probate of this my will be all first paid and Discharged out of my personal Estate of goods. Then, I Give Devise and bequeath to my son '''Hugh''' ten pounds towards the putting his life in the Lease, as likewise the malt mill and the Cubbord as stands in the wall at the further End of the House if he thinks convenient to give for the lieu of the said Cubbord the sum of Thirty Shillings or else suffer the same to be peasably taken away.
Item: I give devise and bequeath to my Son '''Robert''' the sum of fifty pounds. Item: I give devise and bequeath to my Son '''George''' the sum of twenty pounds. Item: I give devise and bequeath to my Son '''William ''' provided he comes again freely discharged and settles to Business otherways I give him the sum of Ten pounds. Item: I give devise and bequeath to my Son '''Henry''' the sum of fifty pounds. Item: I give devise and bequeath to my Daughter '''Ann''' two shillings and sixpence. Item: I give devise and bequeath to my '''Daughter Margaret''' the sum of Twenty pounds. Item: I give devise and bequeath to my Daughter '''Alice''' the sum of Thirty One pounds. Item: I give devise and bequeath to my Daughter '''Margery''' the sum of Thirty five pounds. Item: I give devise and bequeath to my Loving wife '''Margery''' (provided she remain unmarried) all the Remaining part of my goods, money and credits.
Item I give devise and bequeath to my son Hugh my Tenement with all the Appurtenances thereunto belonging with all my Tithe and Tenantright thereunto belonging, to enter there on the second day of February next after my Decease, upon the condition nevertheless that he pay or cause to be paid to my wife '''Margery''' his mother the annual or yearly sum of three pounds a year and allow her Liberty of Housroom and fire while she keeps herself unmarried; but if in case she happen to marry then he shall pay her but forty shillings and she shall make a just count for all the rest and deliver the same value up to the Executors to be at their just Disposing; and I do appoint my loving wife '''Margery''' and my two sons '''Hugh''' and '''Robert''' executors of this my last Will and Testament, Revoake and making void all others by me made or declared. In Witness hereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this Thirty first day of October Anno Domini 1729.
Sealed signed published and William Ffairclough. Declared by the Testator as His marke. his last Will and Testament. the words 'provided she keep. unmarried' being first. interlined in presence of us. whose names are hereunder. subscribed William Ascroft. William Ascroft. John Wignall. Oct 1739. Tarleton, Lancashire, England.
The Will of William Haselwood
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[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=GBPRS%2FSTAFF%2F007623148%2F00138&parentid=GBPRS%2FSTAFF%2FWILLS%2F420454 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS/STAFF/WILLS/420454 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 3 September 2022)
William Haselwood probate in 1747 in Walsall, Staffordshire, England. Spelling, punctuation and line breaks are as per the register copy. ff is rendered as F. Abbreviations are expanded and additions noted in [square brackets]. Paragraph breaks (where added) and bold text for names are my own for ease of reading. Beneficiaries of the Will: *George Haselwood (father) *Thomas Dickon Freeman (brother in law) *Mary Haselwood (daughter) *Ann Haselwood (daughter) *Mary Haselwood (wife) *George Haselwood (eldest son) *Thomas Haselwood (son) *Joseph Haselwood (son) ---- In the Name of God Amen I '''William Haselwood''' of Walsall in the
County of Stafford Malster being of Sound and Disposing Mind (praised be Almighty
God) do make and ordain this My Last Will and Testament in Manner following
(That is to Say) Whereas I am intitled to the Fee Simple and Inheritance of three
Messuages Dwelling houses or Tenements with their appurtenances Situate and being
in Walsall aforesaid in a Certain Street or place there called Digbath which were
formerley in the Occupat[i]on of Joseph Gryffis Mary Bamford and Edward Spink
and are now in the possession of John Clarkson Thomas Chapman and Joseph Mays
in Reversion Expectant immediately upon the death of my '''Father George'''
'''Haselwood''' who is intitled thereto dureing his Natural Life only Now I do hereby
Give and Devise All the said three Messuages Dwelling houses or Tenements
with their and every of their Appurtenances Unto my Brother in Law '''Thomas'''
'''Dickon Freeman''' his Ex[ecut]ors Adm[inistrat]ors and Assignes for and dureing and unto the
full End and Term of Five hundred years Upontrust by Lease Sale or Mortgage
of the said ^promes for the said Term or any part thereof to Levy raise and pay the Sum of Fourteen
pounds of Good Money of Great Britain unto and for the use of my two Daughters
'''Mary Haselwood''' and '''Ann Haselwood''' as soon as conveniently may be after
the decease of my Loveing '''Wife Mary''' and my said Father George Haselwood
and after the decease of the Survivor of them And Charged and Chargeable as
aforesaid I give and Devise All the said Messuages Dwelling houses or Tenements
with their and every of their Appurtenances unto my Eldest Son '''George'''
'''Haselwood''' and his heirs for ever Also I give and bequeath unto my two Sons
'''Thomas Haselwood''' and '''Joseph Haselwood''' and to each of them the sum of ten
pounds and no more in regard they are otherwise provided For And I direct the said
two last mentioned Legacy's to be paid to my said two Sons Thomas and Joseph
when they shall Attain their respective Ages of One and Twenty Years And I
Give and bequeath All the rest residue and remainder of my Goods Chattels and
personal Estate whatsoever and wheresoever (over and above what will pay my
Debts Legacy's and Funeral Expences) unto my said Daughters Mary Haselwood
and Ann Haselwood to be equally divided betwixt them And I make and
Appoint my said Loveing ^Wife Mary Haselwood and my said Daughter Mary
Haselwood to be Joint Executrixes of this my Will I Witness whereof
I the said William Haselwood have hereunto Sett my hand and Seal this
Seventh day of November One Thousand Seven hundred and Forty Six
[signed] Wm Haselwood
Signed Sealed Published and
Declared In presence of -
R[?] Nevill
The mark of
Thomas Bird
Roger Holmes [Page 2]
Lichfield 24th April 1747
Let a Probat of the within Written Will be granted
to Thomas Halsord and Jos: Halsord joint Executors
named therein
J[?] Fletcher
The said executors was then
duly Sworn before me
Jon White Snr == Sources ==
The Will of William Nicholson of Cranagill, 1714/5
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The_Will_of_William_Nicholson_of_Cranagill_1714_5.jpg
The_Will_of_William_Nicholson_of_Cranagill_1714_5-11.jpg
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The_Will_of_William_Nicholson_of_Cranagill_1714_5-4.jpg
The_Will_of_William_Nicholson_of_Cranagill_1714_5-1.jpg
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The_Will_of_William_Nicholson_of_Cranagill_1714_5-5.jpg
The Will of William Underhill Esq
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The Will of William Walker and the Court Case Arising Therefrom
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United States, Virginia, Cumberland
Probate records
Will books, with inventories and accounts, 1749-1887; general indexes to wills, 1749-1975
Author: Virginia. County Court (Cumberland County); Virginia. Circuit Superior Court of Law and Chancery (Cumberland County); Virginia. Circuit Court (Cumberland County)
Will book, Vol. 9-11 1832-1852
pages 230 and 231 (and does NOT continue on page 232) which are in image 335
URL : https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9PC-ML7?i=334&cat=367904 == The Will (Transcription) == Wm. Walker's Will
In the name of GodAmen, I William Walker being of sound mind and memory do make and ordain this my last Will and testament in manner following. When my spirit is turned out of this earthly tabernacle, wherein it has abided for upwards of Eighty years, I have a firm hope that it will go to my Redeemer. My body I wish to be decently intered by the side of my wife in a plain coffin made by my own domestics, hoping that Edward Blanton will render some assistance.
In the first place, I give and bequeath to '''John or Jack Miller''' who married my daughters '''Sarah''' & '''Judith''' and went off with a strumpet and left his wife in distress, which was the cause of her death, a head board with this inscription "Here lies The Body of Jack Miller, who was the cause of the death of his wife".
Secondly, I give and bequeath to my grandson '''William T. Miller''' who treated(?) his grandfather and the ashes of his mother with so much contempt as to go off to his father and to refuse to return, saying that he would work up to his chin in mud first. To him I give ten feet square to be picked out of the muddyest part of my farm.
Thirdly, I give to '''Allen S. Miller''' the following four negros Aliez(?) Franhey(?), Milley, Martha and Mat together with my dark bay mare Uieginia(?), commonly called Fly.
Fourthly, My will and desire are that Sam Lehbber and his wife Patty shal have the privilege of choosing their master from among my children for whom the child chosen as their master is to pay the valuation to be put upon them by Allen Telilson and Dr. Wm. L. Morton or any other two good neighbors.
Fifthly, I give and bequeath unto my son William B. B. Walker Kith(?), upon condition that he maintains old aunt Aggy during her life.
Sixthly, I give and bequeath unto my grand daughter '''Mary Ann Wilson''' the following slaves, to wit Loury, Hannah and Independence together with the ones new in their possession named Emmeline.
Seventhly, I give to my grand daughter Mary Ann Blanton, Penny and her five children, to wit Betsey, Sam, John, Judy and Chisled(?). And if Penny shall have any other childor children,during my life, I wish them to go likewise to my said grand daughter.
Eightly, To '''Harlow Cadwell''' for his disrespect to his wife's relations both by words and deeds, I give twenty five cents. Intending at the same time to give his wife's children, my daughter '''Rebecca B. Cadwell''', one equal childs part.
Ninthly, I will my lands to be sold and the proceeds thereof, together with all the rest of my property to be equally divided among my children. That is to say '''Kennen Happuch Ligon''', '''Mary A. L. G. M. Hines''', '''Nancy T. Blanton''', '''Virginia McGehee''', '''William B. B. Walker''', and the children of my son '''John''' viz '''Susan L. Blanton''' and '''William A. B. Walker''' which two each mentioned grand children are to take such part only as their father would have taken in sharing equally with the rest of my children. And to my daughter '''Rebecca B. Cadwell's''' children I also give the like equal parts with the children of my son John.
Lastly, I appoint my son '''William B. B. Walker''' my sole executor of this my last will & testament. As witnes my hand seal this 20th February 1838.
(signed) Wm. Walker
Witnesses : Danl. A. Wilson, Wm. L. Morton, Joseph Lehen, Abadiah Harris --- Codicil to my last Will and testament now in the hands of Dr. William L. Morton which will was written by Daniel A. Wilson some time past in which I bequeath to my grandson '''Wm. L. Miller''' a small lot of land therein named. I now revoke that bequest, and will and direct that he shall at my death have the following property, to wit Sarah and her two sons Coleman and Henry, and the increase of the woman if any forever and direct that this codecil shall be appended to and made a part of my last will and testament now in the hands of Dr. Wm. L. Morton. In testimony of which I have set my hand and affixed my seal this 27th day of June 1839. The interlineation(?) before assigned was made.
(signed) Wm. Walker
Witnesses : A. Wilson, Abadiah Harris
---
At a court held for Cumberland County the 24th day of August 1840, the following last will and testament of Wm. Walker deemed(?) with a codecil thereto annexed was presented in Court and the will proved by (ends). == The Will (Analysis) == Names of family members in order of first appearance in the will with contextual notes on how the person relates to William Walker: William Walker, testator John or Jack Miller, former son-in-law married both to daughter Sarah and later to daughter Judith William T. Miller, son of Jack and grandson of William Walker - which mother unknown Allen S. Miller, son of Jack and grandson of William Walker - which mother unknown William B. B. Walker, son of William Walker and executor of William Walker's estate Mary Ann Wilson, granddaughter of William Walker - parentage unknown - possibly the married name of daughter Rebecca Cadwell's Mary Ann Harlow Cadwell, son-in-law of William Walker and second husband of Rebecca B. Cadwell Rebecca B. Cadwell, second married name of daughter of William Walker Kennen Happuch Ligon, married name of daughter of William Walker Mary A. L. G. M. Hines, married name of daughter of William Walker Nancy T. Blanton, married name of daughter of William Walker Virginia McGehee, married name of daughter of William Walker John Walker, deceased, son of William Walker Susan L. Blanton, married name of daughter of John Walker and granddaughter of William Walker William A. B. Walker, son of John Walker and granddaughter of William Walker == The Court Case (Source) == The subsequent court case (which concluded on 22 Dec 1845) can be found at :
Library of Virginia Chancery Proceedings HEIR(S) OF William Walker vs EXR OF William Walker. Index Number: 1845-007. Names: Blanton, Cadwell, French, Hines, Ligon, McGhee, Miller, Walker, Walthall
URL : http://www.lva.virginia.gov/chancery/case_detail.asp?CFN=049-1845-007 == The Court Case (Transcription) == The proceedings of the court case :
(some punctuation has been added to this transcription for readability) === PAGE 1 === (Index Number:) 1845-007
Cumberland County (Virginia)
Chancery Cases : Heirs of William Walker vs Exr. of William Walker etc.
(Names:) Blanton, Cadwell, French, Hines, Ligon, McGhee, Miller, Walker, Walthall === PAGE 2 === I W. W. Co: Ch:Walker etc. vs Walker's Exr. etc. Chancery Papers === PAGE 3 === To this worshipfull(?) the county court of Cumberland in chancery sitting recently(?) (?...)plaining showeth(?) unto your worships your orator '''James Blanton''' and Nancy his wife, formerly '''Nancy Walker''', '''James Walthall''' and '''Elizabeth''' his wife, one of the daughters of '''Rebecca Blanton''', formerly '''Rebecca Walker''', '''Henry Hines''' and '''Mary A. S. M.''' his wife, formerly Walker, [the following is written but crossed out - Elijah McGehee and Virginia his wife, formerly Walker,] '''James Blanton''' and Kewhim(?) Blanton in right of '''Elijah McGehee''' and '''Virginia''' his wife, formerly Walker, that '''Wm. Walker''' of this county departed this life some time in year 1840 after just having made and published his last will and testament which is of record in the clerk's of the county court of Cumberland, an office copy of which is herewith said and prayed to be taken as a part of this bill, in which said will; after making several arbises(?) He makes the following dispositions of his land, to wit that his lands be sold and the procedes thereof together with all the rest of his property to be eaqually divided among his children, that is to say '''Karen Happuch Ligon''', '''Mary A. S. M. Hines''', '''Nancy T. Blanton''', '''Virginia McGehee''', '''William B. B. Walker''' and the children of his son '''John''' (viz.) '''Susan L. Blanton''' and '''William A. B. Walker''', the two last mentioned grandchildren are to take such part (an by?) as their father would have taken in sharing equally with the rest of his children {note that Rebecca Walker is missing from this listing of William's children}. Your orators and oratresses present that the said William Walker the father and grandfather of (taurora?) (Ins coralnas?) left a (case cousianata?) estate (lorthe hut ?) and personal that his son William B. B. Walker qualified as executor under the last will testament of the said William and took upn himself the execution of the said will. === PAGE 4 === Your orators and (oratresss?) are of the opinion that said Executor has long since paid off all the costs that were due (as our?) his testators Estate and has since sold the (land muhorn a?) in the testator's will and that the money has all been collected for the same or might have been collected by the said Exr. and that they know of no reason to prevent the distribution(?) of the money & of the proceeds of the sale of the said land from being distributed(?) as mentioned in the testator's will (auong?). Those entitled(?) as these (in?) mentioned your orators & oratresses alledge that the following are the children(?) and (aestbkytees?) in the will of the said William Walker deceased to wit: '''Wm. Ligon''' who intermarried with '''Karen Happuch''', '''Henry Hines''' who intermarried with '''Mary A. S. M. Walker''', '''James Blanton''' who intermarried with '''Nancy T.''', '''Elijah McGehee''' who intermaried with '''Virginia''', the daughter of the said '''William Walker''' deceased, '''William B. B. Walker''', '''Susan L. Blanton''' who intermaried with '''Joseph Blanton''', '''William A. B. Walker''', the last two are the only children of '''John S. Walker''' deceased, one of the sons of the said '''William Walker'''. The said '''Susan''' & '''William''' as aforesaid are entitled to their Father's portion as if he were living. Your orator '''James Walthall''' intermarried with '''Elizabeth Blanton''', one of the daughters of '''Rebecca''', now '''Rebecca Cadwell''', formerly '''Rebecca Walker''', one of the daughters of the said '''Wm. Walker''', who intermarried with '''Lindsay Blanton''', who long (?) departed this life without any interest in this suit, just the said Rebecca Cadewell by her first marriage, to wit with her husband '''Lindsay Blanton''', had the following children, to wit Elizabeth Blanton who intermarried with '''James Walthall''', '''Judith F. Blanton''' who intermarried with '''John French''', '''Allen Blanton''' & '''Adolphus Blandon''', the last two of whom, to wit Allen & Adolphus, are infants whom, it is prayed, may be represented by a guardian ad litem appointed by the court to === PAGE 5 === take care & protect their interests and rights in this suit. And the said Rebecca after her intermarriage with '''Haslan Cadwell''' had the following children, to wit '''Uriah F. Cadwell''', '''John W. Cadwell''' & '''Mary Ann Cadwell''', all of whom are infants underthe age of twenty one years whom, it is prayed, may be represented by their guardian ad litem appointed by the court specially to (?) care of their interests in this suit and your orator & oratress not knowing the exact time of the birth of the children of the said Rebecca by her present husband '''Harlow Cadwell''', begs leave to propose the following suit how to be (aicisnd?) by the court in order that the rights of the said '''Uriah F. Cadwell''', '''John W. Cadwell''' & '''Mary Ann Cadwell''', infant children of the said '''Rebecca Cadwell''' since her marriage with the said Caldwell on (candled?) to participate (man?) the will of the said '''Wm. Walker'''. That is whether the children of the said Rebecca that have been born since the (creation?) of the said will to wit, since the 20th of Feb , on all (?) and whether the children that have been born since the death of the testator '''Wm. Walker''' which occur(nad?) just previous to the 24th day of August 1840, that is to say on the _____ day of ______ 1840 are entitled atall(?) which (suisbous yum?) or a less (Losulney?) pray may be settled and adjudged by this court so as to determine the rights of the said children to participate (in an?) the said will in the (Cuonscow?) of the money belonging to the Est. of the said '''William Walker''' deceased, also '''Edward Blanton''' who intermarried with Mary A., formerly '''Mary A. Miller''', '''Wm. T. Miller''' and '''Allen S. Miller''', the last three, === PAGE 6 === to wit '''Edward Blanton''' & '''Mary A.''', his wife, '''Wm. T. & Allen S. Miller''', your orators and oraratresses alledge have no interest whatever with the subject matter of the (aivestone askr los?) your orators & oratresses. To the End these low(?), that justice(?) may be done, your orators & oratresses pray that the said '''Wm. B. B. Walker''', Exr. of the said '''William Walker''' deceased and in his own right may be made Deft(defendant?) to this bill and answer the several allegations here in containd. And that '''William Legon''' & '''Kerun Happuck''', his wife, '''Joseph Blanton''' and '''Susan''', his wife, and '''William A. B. Walker''', the last two, to wit Susan & William, are the only children of '''John S. Walker''' deceased, '''Edward Blanton''' and Mary, his wife - formarly '''Mary A. Miller''', '''Wm T. Miller''' and '''Allen S. Miller''', the last three of whom are grandchildren of the said '''William Walker''' deceased. And '''John French''' and '''Judith''', his wife - one of the children of '''Rebecca Cadwell''' by her marriage with '''Lindsay Blanton''', her first husband, and '''Allen Blanton''' & '''Adolphus Blanton''', the last two to [wit], Allen & Adolphus, are in fact children of the said '''Rebecca''' by her marriage with '''Lindsay Blanton''', whom it is prayed may be represented by a guardian ad litem And '''Uriah F. Cadwell''', '''John W. Cadwell''' & '''Mary A. Cadwell''', infant children of the said Rebecca Cadwell by her present marriage whom it is prayed may be represented by a guardian ad litem be (moan or mean?) (Defts or defendants?) to this will and that they answer the the several allegations herein(?) contained and that your worships will order and (cursee?) a settlement of the Executoral accounts of the said '''Wm. B. B. Walker''' with the Est. of the said '''Wm. Walker''' deceased. And that this worshipfull court will also oversee(?) a === PAGE 7a === distribution(?) of the money or what other Estate may be subject to (cutr?ion?) answering(?) those that one rightfully entitled under the will of the said '''Wm. Walker''' or by purchase(?) from those that were entitled as therein described and grant to your orators & oratresses such other and (justhr?) relief in the (pressecses?) as their case may (require?) one or more (spa??) in (chcing?) and in (an by or only?) (taun?) a your orators & Oratresses will (?) pray. {signed} JC === PAGE 7b === {some sort of signature page}
J WtVikar(?)
atty. for Pttfs. {presumably 'attorney for the plaintiffs'} === PAGE 8 === {some sort of title page}
Walker Heirs vs. (S bill?) Walker Estate === PAGE 9 === The joint answers of '''Allen Blanton''' and '''Adolphus Blanton''', infant children of '''Rebecca Cadwell''' by her first marriage to wit to '''Lindsay Blanton''', '''Uriah Cadwell''', '''John W. Cadwell''', '''Mary A. Cadwell''', infant children of the said '''Rebecca Cadwell''' by her present marriage to '''Haslaw W. Cadwell''' by this guardian ad litem '''Blake B. Woodson''' appointed by the court specially to take care of the interest of the said '''Allen Blanton''' & '''Adolphus Blanton''', '''Uriah Cadwell''', '''John W. Cadwell''', '''Mary A. Cadwell''' in (absent?) in (chaing?) now depending(?) in the county court of Cumberland in which '''James Blanton''' & '''Nancy''', his wife, and others are complainants and '''Wm. B. B. Walker''' & in his own right and others are defendants, your responders for answers by them. Said guardians ad litem say that they know of no reason why a decision should not be had as prayed for by the complainants. Your respondant, knowing of no reason why the prayer of the county court to(?) should not be granted and just(?) be more (cornnetd?) the interest of the said infants to the case(?) of the court and if the interests of the ssid infants are to be effected they(?)can & will suggest the same to your respondent. Your respondent having answered, prays to be dismissed. JC
Allen Blanton, Adolphus Blanton, Uriah Cadwell, Jno. W. Cadwell, Mary A. Cadwell by B. B. Woodson, Gdn. ad litem === PAGE 10 === The joint answer of '''Edward A. Blanton''' & '''Mary A.''', his wife, '''William T. Miller''' and '''Allen S. Miller''' to a bill of complaint Examined(?) in the county court of Cumberland by '''James Blanton''' & '''Nancy''', his wife, & others against your respon(dants?) clients and others. Your respondants joint answer (?) to say that they have no interist whatever under the clauses in their Grandfather Wm. Walker will concerning the sale of the land & the division of the proceeds of said sale and that they have long since recd. the specific legacy to which they were entitled (?) their Grandfather '''Wm. Walker''''s will. Having answered, pray to be dismissed with their costs. JB
Wm. T. Miller, Allen S, Miller, Edward A. Blanton, Mary A. Miller. === PAGE 11 === The joint answer of '''Wm. Legon''' & '''Kerun Happuck''', his wife, '''Josheph Blanton''' and '''Susan''', his wife, '''William A. B. Walker''', '''John French''' and '''Judith''', his wife, '''Allen Blanton''' & '''Adolphus Blandon''', the two last are infants under the age of twenty and over the age of fourteen, to a bill of complint (extubeud or exhbeud?) against '''William B. B. Walker''' Exr. of '''Wm. Walker''' and in his own right & your respondants and others by '''Jas. Blandon''' & '''Nancy''', his wife, & others in the county court of Cumberland. Your respondants have answered thus to say that they admit the (one word which seems to be crossed out or is anyway unreadable?) of the complainants bill and are willing that a division shall be made as prayed for in the complainants bill. Your respondants prays to be dismissed with their reasonable costs.
'''Wm. B. B. Walker''' Ex. of '''W. Walker''' dec., '''James D. Walthall''', '''Joseph Blanton''', '''Wm. B. Legon''', '''Harlon B. Cadwell''', '''Richard A. Blanton''', '''Allen S. Blanton''', '''Jno. French''' by (somebody - not readable) === PAGE 12 === The answer of '''Wm. B. B. Walker''' Executor of '''Wm. Walker''' deceased and in his own right & others to a bill of complaint in (tubeud?) against him by '''James Blanton''' & '''Nancy''', his wife, & others in the county court of Cumberland, your respondant for(?) answers thus(?) to admits that he is the Exr. of the said '''Wm. Walker''' & that he is also one of the distributors(?) under the will of the said '''Wm. Walker''' and that he has sold the land mentioned(?) in the will of the said '''Wm.''' & (lke?) provided(?) these of are(?) now in a (dy?) for(?) (conversion or distribution or division?). Your respondant also admits the (lrreth?) of the complainants bill as far as the facts (these in?) stood (romy?) within his own knowledge and he knows of no just reason why the division should not be had as prayed for by the compts (presumably complanants). Your respondant having answered prays to be dismissed with his reasonable costs.
'''Wm. B. B. Walker''', '''Wm. B. B. Walker''' ex. of '''W Walker''' === PAGE 13 === Walker Heirs vs. Walker exr. & others
In chancery
This day this cause(?) came out to be heard by consent of parties upon the bill and our(?) was (Jikd?) and on motion '''Blake B. Woodson''' was appointed by the court guardian ad litem for '''Allen Blanton''', '''Adolphus Blanton''', '''Uriah Cadwell''', '''John W. Cadwell''' & '''Mary A. Cadwell''', infant children of '''Rebecca Cadwell''', who filed(?) their answer in this cause consideration where of and after (treating?) the argument of council. The court doth first(?) (adjudge?) and (decide?) that only those children borne of '''Mrs. Rebecca Cadwell''', the daughter of '''Wm. Walker''' at the period or up to the date of the death of the said '''Wm. Walker''' & taken under his will and those that have been born of '''Mrs. Rebecca Cadwell''' (Ein..?) the death of the said William Walker have no interest whatever in the est. of the said Willam Walker and it appearing to the satisfaction of the court that the following are the children of the said Rebecca Cadwell that are entitled under that(?) will of the said '''William Walker''', to wit '''Elizabeth''', who intermarried with '''Jas. Walthall''', '''William''' & '''Blanton Judith''', who intermarried with '''John French''', '''Allen & Adolphus Blanton''', '''Uriah F. Cadwell''', '''John W. Cadwell''', '''Mary A. Cadwell'''. The court doth adjudge (?) orders and causes that Allen Witgrove, Wm. S. Morton, Thos. W. Grouder, Edward Hughes & John W. Wilson be appointed commissioners the whole or any three of whom may act and that they settle the Executoral account of '''Wm. B. B. Walker''' with the Est. of '''William Walker''' deceased (?) and that the same commissioners do distribute the Estate of '''Wm. Walker''' (?) (?) the (?) of his Executor into seven eaqual === PAGE 14 === parts and (assign?) one sevenths to '''Wm. B. Legon''' & '''Kernin Happuch''', his wife, one seventh to '''Henry (Hezus or Hines?)''' and '''Mary A. S. M. Hines''', one seventh to '''James Blanton''' and '''Nancy T.''', his wife, and, it appearing to the satisfaction of the court that ''''Jas. Blanton''' & (Beubus?) Blanton are entitled to the interest(?) of '''Elijah McGehee''' and '''Virginia''', his wife, by (purchases?) the court adjudges (?) and devises. But the said (?) (?) (?) as (assignee?) to '''Jas. Blanton''' & (Beubus?) Blanton in right of '''Elijah McGehee''' & '''Virginia''', his wife, one seventh part of the said Estate And (Neuf?) the said commissioners as assignee to '''Wm. B. B. Walker''', one seventh part of the Est. and that (?) as also (assigned?) '''Joseph Blanton''' and '''Susan''', his wife, & '''William A. B. Walker''', one seventh part of the Est. to be eaqually (distributed or divided?) between them, and that they do also assigned to '''Rebecca B. Cadwell's''' children, to wit '''Jas. Walthall''' & '''Elizabeth''', his wife, '''William L. B. Blanton''', '''John French''' & '''Judith''', his wife, '''Allen Blanton''', '''Adolphus Blanton''', '''Uriah F. Cadwell''', '''John W. Cadwell''' and '''Mary A. Cadwell''', one seventh part of the Estate to be eaqually (distributed?) among them, that is to say the one eighth of the said seventh to each of the said children of '''Rebecca Cadwell''' and that the said (distribution?) do (?) into (?) and (?) to the said Exr. to (?) (?) proper proportions of all just (?) that may (?) after (?) against the Est. of the said '''Wm. Walker''' before they shall be (?) to the benefit of this (?) if the (?) shall (?) the same & that the said (?) part (?) proceedings to court.
December 22nd 1845. == The Court Case (Comments) == * The will of William Walker stipulated "that his lands be sold and the procedes thereof together with all the rest of his property to be equally divided among his children". At lease one or his children pre-deceased William and that child's offspring were among the heirs that receved a share of the value of the estate. It is probably safe to say that the seven children of William mentioned in the will are all his children except for children who might have pre-deceased William but had no offspring. * The wife or wives of Willaim Walker are NOT mentioned in the court case. * The court case states that William had three grandchilden with the surname Miller. These were the children of one of Williams daughters. See the will. * Richard A. Blanton is mentioned only once in the court case (page 11). It is unclear how this person fits into the family. There is a possibility that this is the same person as Adolphus Blanton and that the full name was Richard Adolphus Blanton. * There are other persons mentioned in the court case but they are court appointed officials and a business partner of James Blanton. These persons have not been highlighted nor included in the analysis. == The Court Case (Analysis) == (references are page number in the court proceedings transcript)
=== Names === James Blanton (titular complaintant) 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 11, 12, 14, 14
Nancy T. (Walker) Blanton 3, 3, 9, 10, 11, 11, 12, 14
James D. Walthall 3, 4, 11, 13, 13, 14
Elizabeth (Blanton) Walthall 3, 4, 13, 13
Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell 3, 3, 4, 6, 9, 9, 13, 13, 14, 14
Henry Hines 3, 4, 14
Mary A. S. M. (Walker) Hines 3, 3, 4, 14 Elijah McGehee 3, 4, 14
Virginia (Walker) McGehee 3, 3, 14
William Walker (testator) 3, 4, 4, 4, 5. 5, 6, 6, 6, 7a, 10, 11, 11, 12, 13, 13, 14
Karen Happuch (Walker) Legon 3, 4, 6, 11, 14
William B. B. Walker (executor of will & titular defendant) 3, 3, 4, 6, 6, 9, 11, 11, 12, 13, 14
Susan L. (Walker) Blanton 3, 4, 6, 11, 14
William A. B. Walker 3, 4, 6, 11, 14
John S. Walker 3, 4, 6
William B. Legon 4, 6, 11, 11, 14
Joseph Blanton 4, 6, 9, 11, 11, 14
Lindsay Blanton 4, 6, 9
John French 4, 6, 11, 11, 13, 13, 14
Allen S. Blanton 4, 6, 9, 9, 11, 11, 13, 13, 14
Adolphus Blanton 4, 6, 9, 9, 11, 13, 13, 14
Haslan Cadwell (first name is possibly Harlow, Haslaw, Harlon or Haslow) 5, 9, 11
Uriah F. Cadwell 5, 6, 9, 9, 13, 13, 14
John W. Cadwell 5, 6, 9, 9, 13, 13, 14
Mary Ann Cadwell 5, 6, 9, 9, 13, 13, 14
Edward Blanton 5, 6, 6, 10
Mary A. (Miller) Blanton 5, 6, 6, 10
Wm. T. Miller 5, 6, 6, 10
Allen S. Miller 5, 6, 6, 10
Judith F. (Blanton) French 4, 6, 11, 13, 14
Richard A. Blanton 11
William L. B. Blanton 13, 14, 14
=== Reltionships === James Blanton is husband of Nancy T. (Walker) Blanton 3, 4, 11, 12, 14
John French was the husband of Judith F. (Blanton) French 4, 6, 11, 13
Henry Hines was the husband of Mary A. S. M. (Walker) Hines 3, 4, 14
Elijah McGehee was the husband of Virginia (Walker) McGehee 3, 4, 14
William Walker was the father of Karen Happuch (Walker) Legon 3, 4
William Walker was the father of Mary A. S. M. (Walker) Hines 3, 4
William Walker was the father of Nancy T. (Walker) Blanton 3, 4
William Walker was the father of Virginia (Walker) McGehee 3, 4
William Walker was the father of William B. B. Walker 3, 4
William Walker was the father of Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell 4, 13
William Walker was the father of John S. Walker 3, 4
William Walker was the grandfather (via John) of Susan L. (Walker) Blanton 3, 4, 6
William Walker was the grandfather (via John) of William A. B. Walker 3, 4, 6
William Walker was the grandfather (via ???) of Mary A. (Miller) Blanton 6, 10
William Walker was the grandfather (via ???) of Wm. T. Miller 6, 10
William Walker was the grandfather (via ???) of Allen S. Miller 6, 10
William B. Legon was the husband of Karen Happuch (Walker) Legon 4, 6, 11, 14
Joseph Blanton was the husband of Susan L. (Walker) Blanton 4, 6, 11, 14
Lindsay Blanton was the first husband of Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell 4, 6, 9
Haslan Cadwell was the second husband of Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell 5
Lindsay Blanton was the father of Elizabeth (Blanton) Walthall 4
James Walthall was the husband of Elizabeth (Blanton) Walthall 3, 4, 13, 14, 14
Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell was the mother of Elizabeth (Blanton) Walthall 3, 4
Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell was the mother of Judith (Blanton) French 6, 14
Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell was the mother of Allen Blanton 4, 9, 13, 14
Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell was the mother of Adolphus Blanton 4, 9, 13, 14
Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell was the mother of Uriah F. Cadwell 5, 6, 9, 13, 14
Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell was the mother of John W. Cadwell 5, 6, 9, 13, 14
Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell was the mother of Mary Ann Cadwell 5, 6, 9, 13, 14
Rebecca (Walker) Blanton Cadwell was the mother of William L. B. Blanton 13, 14, 14
Edward Blanton was the husband of Mary A. (Miller) Blanton 5, 6, 6, 10
=== Dates and other information === William Walker - died in 1840 3
William Walker - died "just previous to the 24th day of August 1840" 5
John S. Walker - died pre 1840 3, 4
Lindsay Blanton - died "long before" 1840 4
Allen Blanton was a child in 1845 4
Allen Blanton was between 14 and 21 y. o. in 1845 11
Adolphus Blanton was a child in 1845 4
Adolphus Blanton was between 14 and 21 y. o. in 1845 11
Uriah F. Cadwell was under 21 years old in 1845 5
John W. Cadwell was under 21 years old in 1845 5
Mary Ann Cadwell was under 21 years old in 1845 5
The will of William Waker was written on 20 Feb 1838 5
The court case was concluded on 22 Dec 1845 14 == The Pension Application (Source) == The application for a Revolutionary War pension can be found at [https://www.fold3.com/image/19827098?terms=walker,war,us,revolutionary,william Revolutionary War pension file] at Fold3 (paid subscription required). Compiled ca. 1800 - ca. 1912, documenting the period ca. 1775 - ca. 1900. Publisher: NARA, Record Group: 15, Roll: 2477. == The Pension Application (Transcription) == Note that pages without genealogical or historical interest have been explained here but not transcribed. '''Page 1''' - title page '''Page 2''' - William's service record and pension decision
"William Walker of Cumb. Co. in the state of Virginia who was a Serg. & Prv. in the combat commanded by Captain Morton of the Regt. commanded by Co. Lawson in the Virginia was for 19 months & 18 days Priv. and 4 months 12 days Sergt."
"Included in the roll of Virginia at the rate of 86 Dollars 90 Cents per annum to commence on the 4th day of March, 1831."
There is other material on page 2 but it's relevance is hard to understand. '''Page 3''' - There is material on page 3 but it's relevance is hard to understand. '''Pages 4 & 5'''
1832 testimonials from Joseph Jenkins, Daniel A. Wilson and John Robinson saying that Wm. Walker was a soldier in the revolution and they believed him to be 76 years of age. '''Page 6''' - the actual application in the words of William Walker
14th July 1832, Airygreen, Cumberland Cty. & State of Virginia. The declaration of William Walker of the place, County and State above named in order to obtain a pension as a revolutionary soldier, answers the questions posed by the secretary of the board of war viz.:
When and where were you born? Agreeable to the register handed to me by my father, I was born in the county and state above written on the 26th day of February 1757 and from that time until now, when at home, have ever lived within a mile of the same place. I enlisted as a rifleman under Capt. John Morton of Prince Edward County the 19th day of February, 1776 and in a few days after marched to Portsmouth, Virginia and was organized in the 4th Virginia Regiment. The following are the names of the captains composing the regiment, viz. Morton, Lark, Brent, which were rifle companies, Lucus, Forkner, Riddly, Mason and Mathews, Lawson being Col. commander. We remained at this place until about the 10th of Sept. when we were called to go to the north to reinforce General Washington whom we met in his retreat to the farther part of the state of Jersey.
The first combat that I was in was at Brunswick covering a party that was taking down the bridges. The next was at Currell's Ferry Christmas morning 1776 on picket at that place a party of the enemy fired upon our Ferry boat, killing one man, when several fired(?) papers(?) from each side. The same day in the evening we escaped(?) the ferry moving on to Trenton, the 4th Virginia Regiment being the vanguard. The company to which I belonged being the oldest company, commanded by Capt. Wales, who formerly had been an officer in the British army, were in the front of the whole. After taking the Hessians we returned back to Currell's Ferry from which place I was sent as a guard with some wounded Hessians and sick Americans to a hospital which prevented one from being with my much beloved General and brothers in arms at the battle of Princetown. I rejoined my regiment about the 10th of January at a village called Chatham. From which time until some time in March I never was at any one 48 hours out of active(?) service. In this place I beg leave to bring in the names of a few officers whose conduct in this winter campaign claims a monumention the breast of every American. Col. Morgan, Richard Parker, Jos. Parker (continues next page) '''Page 7''' - application continues
and Charles Scot with each of whom I was in several combats. But passing over many interesting circumstances, from the above time to the latter part of August 1777, when on our march to meet the enemy in the State of Virginia as we supposed we were met immediately after Chester with an express(?) that the enemy was landing at the head of Elk(?). At this place 8 hundred men, chiefly volunteers, called the detached light infantry, I being among them. The following are the names of the field officers commanding this party, Rick Parker, Col. Heath with a glass eye, Col Crawford with his bathe(?) of hunting shirt, pantalons and Rifle, Col. Martin from North Carolina, General Maxwell, being the commander. We marched to a place called Iron Hill where we remained until the 2nd of Sept. the enemy being as yet stationary then a very bloody conflict ensued. As no historian has noticed this I refer you to Washington's official letters, for myself I can say that this detachment on that day deserved well of their Country. Between this and the 11th of Sept. second combat and on the 11th commenced the action of Brandywine in which we were engaged the greater part of the day with some few intervals. The next combat that I was in was at the white horse on the 16th of Sept. after which I rejoined my regiment and was at the battle of Germantown on the 4th Oct. omitting to notice many interesting circumstances. From this time until sometime in February 1778 at Valley's Forge I received my discharge from Brigadier General Charles Scot, which is either misplaced or lost.
After this I returned home but I did not remain idle. I rendered my country very essential service in exercising and training the militia of my County and met the enemy at every point where they ventured to come into Virginia. In February 1781 I volunteered myself in a Company of militia commanded by Capt. Dick Allen in the grade of 1st Sergeant for the term of 3 months in defense of the neighborhood of Portsmouth. When we got to headquarters in the vicinity of Suffolk we were Organized and placed under command of Col. Pray, a continental officer until he was called called to go (to?) the action at Guilford in North Carolina after which we were placed under Col. Lowenman. General Mulingbuy in his tower, I was in a very warm(?) combatman the long (continues next page) '''Page 8''' - application continues
Bridge when Fondice Fell the 9th of Dec. 1775. After serving 3 months I returned home for a short time. But when the enemy made their appearance at the Point of York, I volunteered myself and joined Stuban (Gen.). In this short tour, I was organized in no particular company, but served only as a reconnoitrer. After the enemy fell below Richmand I returned home a while. On or about the 11th Sept 1781, I marched from the County of Cumberland to the siege of Yourk under the Command of Capt. Dick Allen. I was 7 weeks on this tour having to march to the Barracks beyond Winchester. tour, I likewise served in the grade of 1st Sergeant under which grade I claim my pension. Soon after this I was appointed by the worshipful Court of Cumberland Capt. of their Militia. In the year 1787 I commenced a preach of the gospel and the next year resigned my military commission. I appoint the Rev. Luther Rice as my agent to receive payment of my pension as it shall become due. He hereby relinquishes every claim whatever to a pension of annuity except the present declairs(?) that his (?) is not on the pension Roll of the agency of any state.
(signed) Wm. Walker ------------------------------- Prince Edward County, State of Virginia
I do hereby certify that I was well acquainted with the above named Wm. Walker in the year 1776 at which time he was a soldier in the Revolutionary War in the 4th Regiment and continued so to be until 1778 at which time he was discharged. He discharged his duty to his country as a faithful soldier and has been a respectable citizen ever since to my knowledge. Given under my hand this 16th day of July AD 1832
(signed)John(?) Cresity(?) Lt.
Late of the Army of the Revolution '''Page 9'''
This is a typewritten letter from the pension department dated 14 Sep 1938 to a Mrs. F. W. Ziese of Decatur, Illinois replying to a query received from Mrs. Zeise (the query can be found on p. 23). The letter is readable though the quality of the scan leaves much to be desired. It repeats or summarizes what William Walker wrote in the application so this letter has not been transcribed here. '''Page 10'''
This is a list of all the people to whom William Walker's pension history had been sent. It would seem that his story was quite popular :
On 15 Dec 1902 to Mrs. Egbert R. Jones of Holly Springs, Mississippi
On 10 Mar 1921 to Miss Inlena Sheldon Benedict of New York City (see page 16)
On 11 Oct 1921 to Mr. M. L. Cash of Bristol, Virginia
On 21 Oct 1921 to Mrs. C. A. Turrell of New York City (see page 21)
On 24 Jun 1929 to Miss Mary C. Dame (U. C. J.?) of Richmond, Virginia (see p. 22 & pp. 28/29)
On 31 Oct 1930 to Hon. Clarence Cannon (rest of line unreadable)
On 11 Jan 1934 to Mrs. Avis Hillsman Totty of Petersburg, Virginia see pages 17-18)
On 14 Sep 1938 to Mrs. F. W. Ziese (M. C. S.?) of Decatur, Illinois (see pages 9 & 23)
Also on this page is a printed and hand completed card entitled "INVALID" - meaning or use unknown.
'''Page 11'''
This page is a preprinted and hand completed form which says that William Walker had been paid his pension for the period 4 Sep 1838 to 4 Mar 1839 at the rate of $86.90 p.a. via the Richmond, Virginia office of the US Treasury.
'''Page 12''' - An incomprehensible receipt for something that somebody had paid. '''Page 13'''
A letter dated 14 Jan 1835 to the pension office from Bains Taverh of Richmond on behalf of William Walker questioning whether the amount of the pension being paid to William is correct and noting that another pensioner with similar length of service and rank is receiving more. '''Pages 14 & 15'''
An answer from the pension office saying that the current pension amount is correct and explaining why - other pensioner had longer service. '''Page 16''' - a query (from Miss Benedict) looking for genealogical information '''Page 17 & 18'''
A query (from Mrs. Avis Hillsman Totty of Petersburg, Virginia) looking for genealogical information about William Walker. Letter dated 6 Jan 1934. This has the advantage that the letter contains information about the wife of William Walker.
(from) "1639 Westoner Ave., Petersburg, Virginia, Jan 6, 1934"
(to) "Department of the Interior, Pension Bureau, Washington , D.C."
"Dear sir: I would appreciate it very much if you would send me the pension record of Capt. (Col.) William Walker of Cumberland County, Virginia. He died 1840. He was married to Mary Anne Smith, Prince Edward County, on March 31, 1785. Any family data on your files would be very much appreciated, as he is my great, great, great grandfather and I wish to enter the D. A. R. Chapter in Petersburg on his record as a revolutionary soldier. In order for me to enter the chapter as a charter member, I must have my papers completed and in Washington by January 16, 1934. Thanking you for your earliest attention.
Truely yours, (Mrs.) Avis Hillsman Totti." '''Page 19 & 20'''
Handwritten letter
(from) 1008 Fairmount Avenue, Bristol, Virginia
(to) Commissioner of Pensions, Washington, D. C.
Dear Sir:
To complete D. A. R. papers for Mrs. J. H. Baker, Bristol, Tennessee will you kindly give me the war record of her maternal ancestor, Daniel Walker, "S. of W. 1833, Pen. 2.169"?
Also of William Walker "S. of W. 1833, Pen. 2.129"?
Thanking you I am yours respectfully Mr. W. L. Cash.
(receiving stamp of Record Division, Sep 22 1921)
'''Page 21''' - a query (from Mrs. C. W. Turell) looking for genealogical information '''Page 22''' - a query (from Miss Mary Dame) looking for genealogical information. Answer on pp. 28/29. '''Page 23''' - a typed query (answered on p. 9) (from Mrs. F. W. Zeise seeking genealogical information
(from) 463 South Crea Street, Decatur, Illinois
Dated August 8, 1938 - receiving stamp August 10, 1938
(to) Veterans Administration, Washington, D. C.
Dear Sir:
I would like to have the name of the birthplace or place of residence or any other information concerning William Walker who served in the War of Revolution as a private in Captain John Morton's Company, also designated (to?) Captain John Holcombe's Company, 4th Virginia Regiment, commanded successively by Col. Thomas Elliott, Col. Robert Lawson and Major Isaac Beall. He enlisted for two years, date not shown. His name is first borne on the company muster roll for May 1777, which bears the remark "Received pay to the 1 April. Present." He was reported on the company muster roll for January 1778, date Feby. 4 "Dischd 4 Feby." and on the company muster roll for February, 1778, dated March 6, "Dischd 14 Feb."
Thanking you, I am very sincerely, Mrs. F. W. Ziese
Address: Mrs F. W. Ziese, 468 S. Crea, Decatur, Illinois
'''Pages 24 & 25''' - a typed answer to the request of Mrs. Avis Hillsman Totty (pp. 17 & 18).
This supplied the information she requested - an answer very similar to page 9 so not transcribed here. But of interest is that there is a handwritten note with an arrow pointing to "the engagement at '''Coryell's Ferry''' on Christmas Morning, 1776". The note says "See Lossing's Field (Borley?) Rev. Volume 2, page 147 for correct spelling of this ferry." (William Walker, in his application for a pension, had spelled the place name as "Currell's Ferry".) Name of the Ferry Crossing on the Delaware River can be seen in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Trenton#/media/File:Battle_of_Trenton.Dean.USMA.edu.history.gif historical map which accompanies the WikiPedia account of the Battle of Trenton]. A further handwritten note says "Soldier's death not in Agency Book." '''Pages 26 & 27''' - parts of a typed answer to a request.
This is probably parts of (or possibly a draft of) an answer to the request of Clarence Cannon (mentioned on p. 10). It would appear to be dated 31 Oct 1930. Content similar to page 9. There is a handwritten note saying :
"This letter addressed to Hon. Clarence Cannon, U. S. House of Representatives, and beginning(?) but is in (drim?) of William Walker, S.14780." The name of the ferry crossing on the Deleware River has again (ref. p. 24) been hand corrected from "Currell's Ferry" to "Coryell's Ferry". '''Pages 28 & 29''' - Answer to request from Miss Mary C. Dame of Richmond, VA - similar to p. 9 '''Page 30''' - A printed answer form, partially hand completed
This gives information from the pension file of William Walker - content similar to p. 9. There is no date or any indication that this was ever sent to anyone. '''Pages 31''' - source information for the pension folder of William Walker
The Will of Willis Alston
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The William, Thomas & Marquis Easts
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The William Anderson Lee Bible
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The_William_Anderson_Lee_Bible.jpg
The_William_Anderson_Lee_Bible-2.jpg
The_William_Anderson_Lee_Bible-1.jpg
The William Colbert Family
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The William Dill Family and Relatives in America
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The_William_Dill_Family_and_Relatives_in_America.pdf
The William Green Farm House, Ewing, New Jersey
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''William Green, ancestor of the families of that name in this region, dissatisfied with some new relation in his father’s family, left his native land, England, at the early age of twenty, and landed at the port of Philadelphia. Soon after, desirous of returning, and finding no vessel about to sail from that port, he went to New York, but not meeting with an opportunity immediately, visited Long Island. He there became acquainted with the family of John Reeder , recently arrived from England, whose sister, or daughter, Joanna, in process of time, he married, and removed to Ewing township, about 1700. He purchased three hundred and forty-five acres of Col. Daniel Coxe , the deed bearing the date 1712, and on it erected the first brick house in the township, which is still standing, having on the west end the date, 1717, and is owned and occupied by his descendent of the fifth generation, Henry Green . His qualities were such as to give him distinction, for he was appointed one of the first judges of Hunterdon county, and from the frequent mention of his name in public affairs and important business transactions, he was evidently a prominent and useful citizen. He died, as is indicated by his antique tombstone in the Ewing church-yard, in 1722.'' Cooley, Eli, ''Early Settlers in Trenton and Ewing New Jersey,'' W.S.Sharp Publishing, Trenton, NJ, 1883; p. 78+.* [[Green-25162|Willilam Green Jr]] and [[Armitage-1067|Lydia (Armitage) Green]]. William, the son of William, was one of the corporators of Trenton First Church (now Ewing) from 1756 to 1764. He married Lydia, daughter of Enoch Armitage, by whom he had four children: Enoch; William, who took ownership of the house; Joanna, the wife of Christopher Howell; and Mary, the wife of Daniel Howell. William died in 1786 at the age of 84, Friends of the William Green Farmhouse, (http://www.williamgreenhouse.org/about-the-house/past-owners-of-the-wm-green-house/) Past Owners of the Farmhouse, ''Friends of the William Green Farmhouse'' website, accessed 3 June 2021. * [[Green-25162|William W Green III]] and [[Moore-44493|Phebe (Moore) Green]]. William, the son of William, married Phebe, daughter of [[Moore-44494|Samuel Moore]] and having had children: Enoch, a physician, went South, and died young, at Savannah, Ga.; Elijah, not married, died 1850, aged 68; Samuel; Lydia, married Israel Carle ; Rebecca, married John Welling ; Sarah, died May 28th ,1820, aged 44; and Mary, wife of John Jones . William III died October 30th, 1815, aged 72, * [[Green-41905|Samuel Moore]] and Mary (Perrine) Green. Samuel Green, the son of William, married Mary, daughter of Henry Perrine, of Monmouth, who died November 25th, 1847, aged 52. Their children were: Emily, wife of Henry Bilyeu; William A.; Phebe, wife of Francis Sneed; Henry; Lydia; Sarah, wife of David Jeffries; Hannah, wife of Henry Lanning; Lewis, went to Australia, and there married; and John, married Elizabeth, daughter of William Scudder; has children, Margaret and Sarah. Samuel died April 1st, 1859, at age 68. * Henry Perrine Green and Virginia (Reeder) Green. Henry P. Green, son of Samuel, married Virginia, daughter of Amos Reeder. Henry P. Green, son of Samuel and Mary (Perrine) Green, was the owner of a farm of one hundred and sixty acres, which he cultivated in a most efficient manner. Their children are: William, married Augustine, daughter of William Scudder; Frederic, married Mary Lee; Anna, died in youth; Florence, died in childhood; Henry; and Amos Reeder. * Lydia Moore * Jewell Blackwell * The Trenton State College/TCNJ ===Construction === TH home of [[Green-xxxx|William Green, Sr.]] was built near the Delaware River. A log cabin belonging to John Severns was built on the site prior to 1730, That cabin remained a part of the house until it was demolished down to the foundation during the third building stage. Its original foundation still remains and was encorporated into the third building stage. The house as it presently stands consists of three sections from three different building periods. The oldest section of the home adjoined the cabin previously on the site. Originally, it was a two-and-a-half story brick structure, one room deep, with a divided basement, a single room on the first floor, and two rooms above. Although this portion of the building has been dated back as far as 1717, it seems unlikely that it was constructed so quickly after William acquired the land. 1730 is a more likely date of construction. Friends of the William Green Farmhouse, (http://www.williamgreenhouse.org/about-the-house/phases-of-construction/) Phases of Construction, ''Friends of the William Green Farmhouse'' website, accessed 3 June 2021. The second section is located behind the 1730’s section, and it consists of two rooms and a stair hall on the first floor, with two rooms above. It is built of mud, horse hair and plaster and over lumber with hand-made nails, There is no record of when it was built, but the materials used and construction techniques indicate between 1750 and 1790. A date towards the latter part of this period is more likely, since the door panels made for this section indicate the post-Revolutionary era. Building the third addition almost doubled the size of the house. It is made of brick set in a common bond with seven rows between headers. There are circular saw marks on much of the interior lath which indicates it was built after 1830. It is possible the construction was done after [[Green-xxxxx|Samuel Green]] purchased the property in 1833 or [[Green-xxx|Henry P. Green]] in 1848. {{Image|file=http://www.williamgreenhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/GreenHouse1920s-1024x614.jpg|caption=The farmhouse as it appeared in the 1920s}} ===Preservation and Restoration=== The William Green Farm House has been listed on the New Jersey and national Registers of Historic Places since the 1970's, It is a significant example of colonial farmhouse architecture. This historic treasure, dating from c.1730, is located on the campus of '''The College of New Jersey''' (TCNJ) in Ewing Township, NJ. Not having the resources necessary to restore the structure, TCNJ funded a stabilization project in 2007 to ensure that no further deterioration occured while they attempted to raise the funds for restoration. For several years the [[#friends|''Friends of the William Green Farm House'']], in partnership with TCNJ, were raising funds for a full restoration so the house can be used as an alumni house with a museum. IN 2012, plans were made to restore the farmhouse and turn it into an alumni house, Many state universities have historic buildings integrated into their campus including but not limited to: Rider University, Monmouth University, and Princeton University. These buildings are renovated to preserve an important part of the college and the community history. The estimate was prepared as well as a work timeline, and the ''Friends of the William Green Farmhouse'' agreed to fundraise contingent upon a letter of support. Unfortunately, when Mr. Greg Caiola https://obits.nj.com/obituaries/trenton/obituary.aspx?n=gregory-caiola&pid=168875783&fhid=28321 passed away, his successor, John Donahue https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-p-donohue decided to renege on the plans. ''Friends of the William Green Farmhouse'', (https://www.facebook.com/WilliamGreenFarmHouseTCNJ/) a social group on Facebook.com; accessed 3 June 2021. Unfortunately, the college later announced they would not sanction use or help restore or maintain the house, despite the fact that they own the property. In 2015, the house was placed on New Jersey Preservation's list of 10 Most Endangered Historic Sites. Mulvaney, Nicole, website (https://www.nj.com/mercer/2015/05/njs_10_most_endangered_historic_sites_for_2015.html), citing ''N.J.'s 10 most endangered historic sites for 2015'', True New Jersey - NJ.com; accessed 3 June 2021. ===The Friends of the Farmhouse=== The ''Friends of the William Green Farmhouse'' is a non-profit group dedicated to the saving of the William Green Farmhouse on the campus of the College of New Jersey in Ewing, New Jersey. The goal of this group is to preserve a record of the farmhouse' past, raise awareness for the uncertain future of the stucture, to stabilize and secure the farmhouse from future damage, and pottentially raise enough funding to convince the College of New Jersey Campus to restore the building. ==Sources==
The William Kinder Carr Project
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The William Russell in Colonial Virginia Project
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The Wills of Walter Price 1650 and 1651
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Nineteenth December One thousand six hundred and fifty In the name of God Amen I Walter Price citizen in Northamt taylor of London being ——— in body but of good and perfect mind and memory (Thanks be given to Almighty God) And calling to mind the uncertainty of this life doe make and _ _ _ _ _ this my last will and testament in manner and form following Thats to say first and principally I commit and commend my soul unto the hands of Almighty God steadfastly believing through the merits? and death and passion of my Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to receive full pardon and remission of all my sins my body being of the _ _ _ _ and substance of the earth to the earth I commit[?] to be buried in the new churchyard in Morefield _ _ _ _ touching such on worldly goods [that] God hath blessed me withall I give and _ _ _ _ _ the _ _ _ _ as followeth ( viz) Inprimis I give and bequeath to my eldest son William Price one house or tenement commonly called by the name of the Talbot lying and being in High Bottoms wherein one Madden and now one Peirce lives in during the expiration of the lease and to my eldest sons first wife’s children I give and bequeath the sum of five pounds a piece ITEM I give to my second son John Price my scales on _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ and also a pair of brass andirons fire shovell and tongs I give and bequeath to my youngest son Samuel Price as being yet unprovided for in the world one house or tenement being in High Bottom adjoining and being on the backside of the Talbott wherein one Mr Grafton lives in and also my lease of some tenements in Bell Alley _ _ _ _ _ in Coleman Street London during the remainder of tyme remaining in the leases and also all the left and reminder of my household [stuff?] goods and furniture of household stuff except what above written is given to my son John which goods some of them also in my son in law Norris Woods hands and the rest in other _ _ _ _ which are all specified in a note also? my son Samuel has and write out ITEM I give to Ann Keele my kinswoman tenn pounds and to the window Wright and to the widow Thomas tenn shillings a piece I give to Mr _ _ church minister twenty shillings And to the poore of his parish where I formerly lived twenty shillings ITEM to Martha Applestone ? widdow twenty five shillings And to _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ five shillings ITEM I give to Mr John Porot draper and to _ _ Richard Young mercer tenn shillings a piece I give to the _ _ _ _ _ _ _ of the poor at work in the Old wardrobe and Minories London the _ _ _ of ? pounds Major General_ _ _ ?? _ _ _ fifteen pounds which I borrowed off him ITEM my will and mind is that after my will is performed And that all the legacies and summes of money before by me given shall be paid out of the rents ? and those profitts of my houses and tenements situated in the parish of St Andrews Holborn ? and by Bottom House wherein one on Talbott Estate? and two others liveth in ITEM I give to my youngest son Samuel _ _ _ _ fourteen pounds owing? to me by my son in law Norris Wood ITEM all the rest and residue of my estate with the three houses which Mt Talbott and the other two dwells in during the remainders of the lease my debts being paid and funerall charges discharged and all my legacies according to the true mean ing and intent of this my last will and testament performed I give and be queath the same to my daughter Elizabeth whom I doe make sole Executrix of this my last will and testament And I doe ? and appoint the said Mt John Porort and Mt Richard Young overseers of the same Witness my hand and date the day and year above written. Walter Price Witnesses Richard Young and Martha Applestone? '''Transcript of the second Will written by Walter Price 22 February 1651''' (transcibed by B. Brown Oct 2022
The Two and Twentieth Day of February one thousand six hundred fifty one of Walter Price a citizen and merchant taylor of London being weak in body but of perfect ?? memory ____ be ? doe make and ordain this my last will in form following FIRST I give and bequeath to the five children of my sonne William Price which he had by his first wife five pounds a piece of lawful English money ITEM I give to my son John Price one pair of brass andirons and ?? one pair of iron tongs and fire shovell with brass topps on them and the rest of my goods which are in Croydon in the custody of Mr Norris Wood for? the said John Price paying ? pounds to my executors And after the ——— ——— about my ——— to my said son John Price ITEM I give and bequeath unto Mr Christopher ———— ten shillings for himself and ten shillings more to be by him distributed to the poor of his church ITEM I give and bequeath to my niece Ann Keele the sum of twenty pounds of lawful English money to be paid her by five pounds a year over the space of four years ————after my decease by quarterly payments and to be paid out of rents of my house in Bottom —————the ———Bell Alley— And also i give to the said Ann Keele after the ———- four years ended the sum of four pounds of lawful money yearly out of the rents of the said houses during the leases of the said houses and to be paid her by quarterly payments ITEM I give to my overseerers after named twenty shillings a piece ITEM I give to my son in law Seth Wood clerk and Elizabeth his wife twenty pounds a year out of the rents of the said lease during the continuence thereof ITEM I give to my son in law Francis Church and his wife forty shillings ITEM I give to my son Samuel Price one ————chest one old ———chair a little warming pan my bed and bedstead and all the rest of the furniture of my bed except the two quilts and the curtains And also I give him my cloak fur coat and suit and hat And the said two quilts and OLD CURTAINS I give to the said Ann Keele together with the rest of my wearing apparel ITEM I give to my four sons William Price Samuel Price John Price and Francis Church to every of them————- penny ribband And to my grandchild Joseph Price a six penny ribband ITEM to my daughter Patience Price and my grandchild Mary Church and to Mary Thomas twelve pence a piece to buy them ———— ITEM I give and bequeath the said lease and all my debts household goods and personal estate whatsoever after my debts and funeral charges shall be first paid out of the whole to my said daughter Elizabeth Wood and her children to be equally divided amongst them And I hereby name the said Seth Wood and Elizabeth his wife my executors of this my will And my will and mind is that Mr Knott my tenant or he who shall dwell in his house or be tennant thereto under my executors shall pay the said legacies given to my niece Ann Keele ————- ——out of the rents of the said house ITEM I nominate Mr John Parock and Mr Richard Young overseers of this my will Be It remembered that Sir Cornelius Vertunden? oweth me two and twenty pounds and Norris Wood oweth me fourteen pounds and eleven shillings In Witness whereof I have to put my hand and seal the day and year ———above written sealed and published by the said Walter Price ————last will and testament in the presence of William Cinson? Francis Church.
The Wiltons of Cornwall
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The Wood Family
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The Woodbridge Record: Being an Account of the Descendants of the Rev. John Woodbridge of Newbury, Mass.
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The Work Men's Dwellings Improvement Company
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Capital, £60,000 in 15,000 Shares of £4 each..
(With power to increase.).
Payable £1 on application. £1 on allotment, and subsequent calls at intervals of not less than three months..
'''PATRONS'''.
The Right Hon. Lord Hotham..
Sir David Salomons, Bart., J. P..
Sir C.J. Palmer, Bart. J.P..
Rev. George T. Palmer M.A..
Colonel Chester, J.P., D.L, Chlcheley HalL.
Rev. Richard Parnell, B.A..
'''[[Fenwick-363|Pascoe Fenwick, Esq.]].'''
J. Conyers Merrell, Esq..
H. W. HulL Esq...
R J. S. Todd, Esq..
'''PRESIDENT.'''.
The Right Hon. the Earl of Rosebery..
'''DIRECTORS.'''.
E. J. Craigie,.
Robert M. Inman, Esq., L.R.C.P., F.R.G.S..
Donald Mangles Dewar, Esq..
Sir Howard Elphinstone, Bart..
William T. Raymond, Esq..
Sir Richard Gethin, Bart. &.
S.D. Waddy, Esq., Q.C.. M P..
'''BANKERS.'''— The Consolidated Bank (limited). 450, West Strand, W.C. Solicitors.— Messrs. Saunders, Hawksford, and Bennett, 27, King-street, Cheapside, E.C..
Secretary. — Richard M. Soutter, Esq.,.
Offices --121, Pall-mall, London, S.W..
The '''objects''' of this Company are :—.
1. To erect dwellings for the working classes upon improved plans.
2. To alter, repair, end adapt the existing residences of the Industrial classes, with a view to provide them with more healthy and comfortable homes.
3. To make advances to owners of dwellings requiring improvements, so as to enable them to make the same under the supervision of the Company.
4 To purchase Land and Houses suitable for such dwellings.
In the event of no allotment being made the deposits will be returned in full..
Prospectuses and Forms of Application for Shares can be had of the Bankers and Secretary.London Evening Standard, Saturday 14 August 1875, pg.1. ====Source====
The Workhouse in Stratton, Cornwall
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The Wrangler Network made its official release in 2014 for those who live
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The Wreck of the Dunbar
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The Writing of Daniel De Leon
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The Wykhof
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The Yeatons of New England
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The Yingling Genealogy Book by Claude J. Rahn (Reformatted)
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The_Yingling_Genealogy_Book_by_Claude_J_Rahn_Reformatted.pdf
The York Settlers in South Africa
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The Young (Jung) Families of the Mohawk Valley 1710-1946
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The Zero Date Loophole
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Theisen Family Reunion
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Thelma Irion Research
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Theobald
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Theodocius Wathen Will
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Second It is my will that after my death that my family be kept together under the care and direction of my beloved wife '''[[Buckman-549|Susan]]''' until such time as my children may arrive at full age and Marry
Third I will and desire that no administration be had or granted on my estate and that my property real personal & mixed remain entire and undisposed of for the use, comfort & support of my family and the raiseing and educating of my younger children and to be under the control and management of my executors hereafter named to be used and applied for that purpose
Fourth I will and desire to my beloved wife '''[[Buckman-549|Susan]]''' all of my estate real personal or mixed during her natural life or widowhood, But if she should hereafter marry it is my will and desire that she then shall have and hold one third part of my estate during her natural life but this devise is to be subject to the the conditions of restrictions hereafter named. Fifth I have given my two oldest sons '''[[Wathen-217| James]]''' & '''[[Wathen-195|Charles]]''' a good education, having had the advantage of a collegiate course, and at a final division of my estate amongst all of my children, is to stand Charged with two hundred dollars and '''[[Wathen-195|Charles]]''' is to stand charged with one hundred & fifty dollars for these advantages. Sixth my two youngest sons '''[[Wathen-211|Ignatius]]''' and '''Samuel''' is to be sent to school and advanced in education as far as my tow sons '''[[Wathen-247|Theadore]]''' & '''[[Wathen-197|Elisha]]''' has been educated and on failure of my executors to give them this education they are to receive the sum of fifteen hundred dollars each from my estate over and above my other children when they arrive at the age of twenty one
Seventh my two next youngest sons '''[[Wathen-189|Wingate]]''' and '''[[Wathen-259|William Thomas]]'''. I desire that my executors send them to school untill they be advanced in education as far as my said two sons '''[[Wathen-247|Theadore]]''' & '''[[Wathen-197|Elisha]]''' and in case they shall not receive this advantage they are to receive from my estate the sum of twelve hundred dollars each when they arrive at the age of twenty one which they are to have over what my other children is to receive at the final division of my estate
Eighth When my youngest child arrives at the age of twenty one years a final & equal division of my estate is then to be made & not before between al of my children Towit '''[[Wathen-351|Eveline]]''', '''[[Wathen-219|Ann Cambron]]''', '''[[Wathen-217| James]]''', '''[[Wathen-195|Charles]]''', '''[[Wathen-197|Elisha J]]''', '''[[Wathen-247|Theadore]]''','''[[Wathen-223| Julia]]''', '''[[Wathen-259|William T]]''', '''[[Wathen-189|Wingate]]''', '''[[Wathen-211|Ignatius]]''' and '''Samuel A''' under the restrictions Conditions & exceptions before named
Ninth My daughter '''[[Wathen-219|Ann]]''' has intermarried with Madison Cambron to whom I loaned a negro girl which they now have in possession this I now declare & make known to be a loan and not a gift and said girl is yet part and parcel of my estate but my wife has the right to take possession of her at such time as she pleases and reloan her or put another servant in her stead as she can conveniently spare one
Tenth I do hereby revoke and forever annul all former wills & codicils heretofore made by me. Eleventh I do hereby appoint my beloved wife '''[[Buckman-549|Susan Wathen]]''' Executrix and '''[[Wathen-217|James Wathen]]''' '''[[Wathen-195|Charles Wathen]]''' & '''Samuel A Wathen''' my sons executors to this my last will and testament and do not require them or either of them to give security at the probate of this will.
In Testimony of which I have here unto set my hand & seal this first day of May 1860
'''[[Wathen-249|Theodosius Wathen]]'''
Witness Hiram McElroy
William T. Buckman
A Codicil to the foregoing upon mature reflection I have concluded to make a change in the fifth clause in this will in which I have directed that on a final settlement of my estate that my son '''[[Wathen-217|James]]''' is to stand charged with two hundred and fifty dollars and my son '''[[Wathen-195|Charles]]''' is to stand charged with one hundred and fifty dollars, by reason of advantages they have received at my hands in the way of education as therein set forth. I have expended a large sum of money in educating them and to do justice to my other children I now desire & direct that my said two sons '''[[Wathen-217|James]]''' & '''[[Wathen-195|Charles]]''' be charged upon a final settlement of my estate the sum of five hundred dollars each for the said advantages they have received instead of the sums named in said fifth clause of the will I advanced to my daughter '''[[Wathen-219|Ann]]''' wife of Madison Cambron one yellow mare and upon settlement of my estate she is to stand charged with the sum of one hundred dollars for said mare and in case she retains the possession of the negro girl '''Levinia''' that I loaned her as named in the foregoing will after my death She is to pay my estate at the rate of forty dollars per year hire for said girls service, but said hire is not to commence until after my death I have appointed my sons '''[[Wathen-217|James]]''' & '''[[Wathen-195|Charles Wathen]]''' two of my executors to my will as they are both of age and perhaps may leave the family shortly and do hereby release them from the trouble of the execution of this will. And I do hereby discharge them from the appointment as executors as state in the eleventh clause of my will I testimony of which I have signed published & proclaimed this codicil to my last will and testament its provisions to be carried out this 10th day of April 1861.
'''[[Wathen-249|The Wathen]]'''
Witness James Onan
Hiram McElroy
At a county court held for Union county at the courthouse thereof on the 4th day of March 1862 This instrument of writing purporting to be the last will and testament & codicil thereto of Theodocius Wathen deceased was proven by the oath of Hiram McElroy a subscribing witness to said will & codicil and at a subsequent term of said court held at the same place on the 6th day of March 1862 said will was further & fully proven by the oath of William T. Buckman the other subscribing witness thereto & the codicil fully proven by the oath of James Onan the other subscribing witness whereupon the same was ordered to be recorded as the last will and testament of said decedant which has been accordingly done
Att Tho. S. Chapman Clk
Theodor Willmann Naturalisation
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Ho 1
119/4625
E 30 ---- To the Right Honorable Sir George Grey
Baronet Her Majesty’s Principal Secretary of State for the
Home Department
The humble Memorial of
Theodore Willmann of 116 Old Kent
Road in the County of Surrey Jeweller.
Sheweth
That your Memorialist was born at Saint Margen
Frieburg [sic] in the Grand Duchy of Baden in Germany of parents
subjects of the said Grand Duchy and that your Memorialist is
also a subject of the said Grand Duchy and is now of the age of
thirty-one years and upwards and is by trade a Master Jeweller
and carries on his business as such at 116 Old Kent Road aforesaid.
That your Memorialist came to the United Kingdom for the
purpose of business and residence eleven years ago - that he has resided
in Surrey during the said period namely at Gravel Lane Blackfriars
Road Surrey aforesaid for a period of six years and at 116 Old Kent
Road aforesaid for the residue of the said period of eleven years.
That your Memorialist is married but has no children and
has a fixed domicile here and intends to continue to reside within
the United Kingdom.
That your Memorialist being permanently settled in business
in this Country is desirous to hold freehold and leasehold property
here and being now under arrangement to advance money on
mortgage of leasehold property is desirous to obtain all the rights
and capacities of a natural born British subject which the statute
of 7 and 8 Queen Victoria chapter 66 will allow him to enjoy.
Your Memorialist therefore humbly
prays that you will issue a Certificate granting
to your Memorialist all the rights and
capacities of a British subject which the said
statute will allow him to enjoy
And your Memorialist will ever pray
Theodor Willmann ---- I Theodore Willmann of 116 Old Kent Road in the
County of Surrey Jeweller do solemnly and sincerely declare that
I was born at Saint Margen Freiburg in the Grand Duchy of
Baden in Germany of parents subjects of the said Grand Duchy and
that I am also a subject of the said Grand Duchy and am now of
the age of thirty one years and upwards and am by trade a Master
Jeweller and carry on business as such at 116 Old Kent Road
aforesaid. That I came to the United Kingdom for the purpose
of business and residence eleven years ago - that I have resided
in Surrey during the said period namely at Gravel Lane
Blackfriars Road Surrey aforesaid for a period of six years and
at 116 Old Kent Road aforesaid for the residue of the said period
of eleven years. That I am married but have no children and
that I have a fixed domicile here and intend to continue to
reside within the United Kingdom and that being permanently
settled in business in this Country and being desirous to hold
freehold and leasehold property here and being now under arrange-
ment to advance money on mortgage of leasehold property I am
desirous of obtaining all the rights and capacities of a natural
born British subject which the statute of 7 and 8 Victoria chapter
66 will allow me to enjoy and I make this solemn Declaration
conscientiously believing
virtue of the provisions of an act made and passed in the session
of Parliament of the fifth and sixth years of the reign of his late
Majesty King William the fourth intituted [sic] “An Act to repeal an act
of the present session of Parliament intituted [sic] an act for the more
effectual abolition of Oaths and Affirmations taken and made in
various Departments of the state and to substitute Declarations in
lieu thereof and for the more entire suppression of voluntary and
extra judicial Oaths and Affidavits and to make other provision for
the abolition of unnecessary Oaths.”
Declared at Southwark Police
Court
Surrey this twenty-fourth
day of January 1865
Theodor Willmann
Before me
T. B. Buchan
Metropolitan Magistrate ---- We Edward Thomas Goddard of 86 Blackman Street
Southwark in the County of Surrey Baker Joeph [sic] Whitaker
of 2 Ralph Terrace Brunswick Road Camberwell in the
County of Surrey Wood Turner Frederick John Roper of
114 Old Kent Road in the County of Surrey Hosier and
John Jacobs of 110 Old Kent Road aforesaid China and
Glass Dealer
and all being respectively householders do jointly and severally
solemnly and sincerely declare that we know and are well acquainted
with Theodore Willmann of 116 Old Kent Road in the County of
Surrey Jeweller and that the said Theodore Willmann is a perfectly
respectable and loyally disposed person and we further declare
that to the best of our knowledge information and belief the several
matters stated in the above written Memorial of the said Theodore
Willmann are perfectly true and correct and we make this solemn
Declaration conscientiously believing the same to be true and by
virtue of the provisions of an act made and passed in the Session
of Parliament of the fifth and sixth years of the reign of his
late Majesty King William the fourth intituted [sic] “An Act to repeal
an act of the present session of Parliament intituted [sic] an act for the
more effectual abolition of Oaths and Affirmations taken and made
in various Departments of the State and to substitute Declarations
in lieu thereof and for the more entire suppression of voluntary and
extrajudicial Oaths and Affidavits and to make other provisions for
the abolition of unnecessary Oaths”.
Declared at Southwark Police
Court in the County of Surrey
this twenty-fourth day of
January 1865 Before me
Edward Thomas Goddard
J Wittaker
Fred. Roper
John Jacobs
T. B. Buchan
Metropolitan Magistrate ---- [Wrapper]
London
25. Jan[uar]y. 1865:
R. R. Greig
[Stamp]
HOME OFFICE
30 JAN 1865
No. 840 a/31
T. Willmann’s Memor[ia]l.
Inquiries if a Statem[en]t
signed by the Householders
will be sufficient
[?]/14
Yes
30/1 ---- 5 Verulam Buildings, Gray’s Inn, W.C.
28 January 1865
Sir,
As to Theodore Willmann’s
memorial.
I have the honor of receiving your
letter stating “that it is requisite that the
four householders should state whether
they are British born subjects + also how
long they have personally known the
memorialist”.
As it will put the householders
to considerable inconvenience to attend
before the Magistrate again to make
a declaration I take the liberty of
enquiring whether the Home Secretary
Sir George Grey will be satisfied with
a statement of the facts required signed
by the 4 householders.
I may add they are all
British born subjects + have known
the Memorialist for a long period
I am Sir
Your most obedient Servant
Rob: R: Greig
[To] T.[?] G. Baring Esq.
Home Office
Whitehall ---- [Stamp]
HOME OFFICE
8 FEB 1865
5 Verulam Buildings, Gray’s Inn, W.C.
Tuesday 7 February 1865
As to Theodore Willmann’s mem[oria]l.
Sir,
I beg to send herewith
a Statement of the 4 householders
as to their being British born subjects
+ the length of time they have
respectively known the memorialist as
required by your letter of 31st ult.
I have the honour to be
Sir,
your obedient Servant
Rob:R:Greig
[To]T. G. Baring Esq.
Home Office
Whitehall ---- [Stamp]
HOME OFFICE
8 FEB 1865
As to Mr Theodore Willmann’s
Memorial for Certificate of Naturalization and
the Declaration of four householders in support thereof:
We
Frederick John Roper and Joseph Soda Whitaker
being the four declarants to a Declaration annexed to
the memorial of Theodore Willmann for certificate of
naturalization respectively state that we are respectively
British born subjects and have known and been
well acquainted with the said Theodore Willmann
for the following periods of time namely I the said
years and upwards - I the said John Jacobs
for a period of about 6 years years [sic] and upwards
I the said Frederick John Roper for a period of
4 years and upwards and I the said
Joseph Soda Whitaker for a period of 8
years and upwards.
As witness our hands respectively this
fourth day of February 1865
[signed] Edward Thomas Goddard
[signed] John Jacobs
[signed] Fred. J. Roper
[signed] Joseph Sade Whitaker ---- [Notes on wrapper as far as legible]
No-4625
granted 15 February 1865
T. Willmann.
a/26
A Proper Case
H.W.
Grant cert.
[?/?]
R. R. Greig
5 Verulam B[uildin]gs Gray’s Inn
[Stamp]
HOME OFFICE
25 JAN 1865
No. 714
[Stamp]
HOME OFFICE
8 FEB 1865
No. 1110
subject of the G[ran]d Duke
of Baden, aged 31,
married, a Jeweller,
has resided 11 years
and intends to do so
permanently -
?Inform that the declarants
must state whether they are
British born, + also how long
they have known the applicant
amended W/ 25/1 T. [?]. [[Willman-49|Access Theodor Willmann's profile here.]]
Theophilus Merriman. The False Pedigree and Information about Nathaniel Merriman
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Theophilus Shatswell's Will of 1663
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Theora Hamblett, Artist
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Theories About the Origins of Abraham Perkins
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Theories Supporting Existence of Bluesky as wife of Parker Adkins
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Theresa Anne Beck
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Theresa Bashford To-Do List
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Theresienstadt aka Terezín Ghetto
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Theta Sigma Phi
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They Came To This Place
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They Mystery of Ellen Spittle of Virginia
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Thibodeaux Family
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Thielke Name Study Info
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Thigpen
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Things From Linda Franks Pen Pal Susan Tan
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Things I can't put in biography
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Things I Learned on WikiTree
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Things I threw away
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1754
Suit titles taken from OBS 1/653
Henry Lousier v Letitia Mascall nee Brucer to be named as Heir at Law to Anthony Brucer
https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C9555826
This case [[Space:Bill_of_Complaint:_Letitia_Mascall_v._Thomas_Ryves_and_others%2C_1757|Bill of Complaint: Letitia Mascall v. Thomas Ryves and others, 1757]] Owen Hughes (brother of Ann Penny) admon PCC St George Bloomsbury. This should be on microfilm https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C3063691 This is '''Reference: PROB 6/142''' Description: Administration act book: Folios 1-94: Registrar's seat. Folios 95-138: Surrey seat; clerk: Toriano; covering Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Hampshire, Somerset, Surrey, Sussex and Wiltshire. Folios 139-168: Welsh seat; clerk: Stubbs; covering Berkshire, Derbyshire, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire, Rutland, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire, Worcestershire and Wales. '''Folios 169-214: Middlesex seat; clerk: Farrant; covering Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex, Hertfordshire, Huntingdonshire, Kent, Lincolnshire, Middlesex, Norfolk and Suffolk.''' Folios 216-end: London seat; clerk: Gostling; covering the City of London and some nearby parishes. Date: 1766
Things of interest
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Third Waldeck Regiment (Hessian) in Revolutionary War
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Thirteen Year Old Mom by Faye Collum Fairley
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Thirty Years War between Sweden and the Lithuanian-Polish Empire
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This Day In History 26 March
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Thistle
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Thom Family Burial Plot
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Thomas
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Thomas, John C & Araminta family Bible page
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Thomas & Nancy Carpenter family
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Thomas (Carlisle) de Carlisle
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Thomas -1
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Thomas aka John Thurston
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Thomas and John Kent of Cumberland
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Thomas and Sarah Grimwood
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Mary Maria 1821
Thomas William 1822/6
Marian 1826
Elizabeth/Betsey 1829/30
Ebenezer 1832
Thomas 1835
Christopher 1839
---- '''[[Grimwood-1012|Thomas Grimwood]] & [[Spall-191|Sarah READ (nee Spall)]]''' of Dallinghoo"England and Wales Census, 1841," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M73W-5TY : 25 May 2019), Thomas Grimwood, Dallinghoo, Suffolk, England, United Kingdom; 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. This couple were married in 1821 at Dallinghoo."England Marriages, 1538–1973 ", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NL9Q-9ZQ : 13 March 2020), Thomas Grimwood, 1821. Sarah's first husband, Walter Read, died in 1819. Her two children by Walter also appear with this couple in the 1841 census (Sarah Ann Read and Elizabeth Read). Sarah died in late 1841. Their children were:
Ann 1822
William 1825 (likely died as infant but may be earlier baptism)
William 1827
John 1832 (although mother's name given as Mary Read at baptism - this may be a mistranscription of Sarah, as he appears with the family on the 1841 and 1851 censuses)
Mary 1835
Rosina 1836 "The following prizes were awarded by the East Suffolk Agricultural Association, and presented at the meeting held at Saxmundham, on Thursday last:-
Class I.- Labourers in Husbandry, who have brought up to the age of 8 years the greatest number of children, without or with the least parochial relief: two sovereigns each...
Thomas Grimwood, Dallinghoo, 6 children; r. by Mr. Jas. Churchyard, Dallinghoo." [https://search.findmypast.co.uk/bna/viewarticle?id=bl%2f0001325%2f18480916%2f055&stringtohighlight=grimwood%20dallinghoo The Suffolk Chronicle; or Weekly General Advertiser & County Express, 16 September 1848, p3, c4] ---- '''[[Grimwood-1014|Thomas Grimwood]] and Sarah (unknown)''' of Ringshall"England and Wales Census, 1841," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M738-B3H : 25 May 2019), Thomas Grimwood, Ringshall, Suffolk, England, United Kingdom; 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. The following children of this couple were all baptised at the Baptist meeting house in Wattisham: Sarah 1824
Thomas 1827
John 1829
Daniel 1833
Eliza 1835
There is an 1805 baptism of a Thomas Grimwood at the same baptist meeting house (who may be the Thomas of this couple) - son of Thomas Grimwood & Mary"England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NRSG-NQV : 18 September 2020), Thomas Grimwood, 1805. (also possible siblings Mary 1807 and George 1809) == Sources ==
Thomas Angell, Last Will & Testament 1685 and Inventory
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Thomas B. McCune Family Line
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Thomas Barnum College of Arms research, 2014
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Thomas Barnum Family Records
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Thomas_Barnum_Family_Records.pdf
Thomas_Barnum_Family_Records-1.pdf
Thomas Barnum Probate
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Thomas Bassett's Land Grants
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George the Second by the Grace of God of Great Britain France and Ireland King Defender of the faith &c To all to whom these presents shall come Greeting Know ye that for divers good Causes and Consideration but more Especially for and in Consideration of the Sum of Eight Pounds Ten Shillings of good and lawful Money for our Use paid To our Receiver General of our Revenues in this our Colony and Dominion of Virginia We have Given Granted and confirmed and by these presents for us our Heirs and Successors do Give Grant and confirm unto '''Thomas Basset''' One certain Tract or parcel of Land containing '''One thousand seven hundred Acres''' lying and being in the County of Goochland on both sides of Willis River and bounded as followeth (to wit) Beginning at two white Oaks and running thence on James Cunningham North thirteen Degrees West fifty eight Poles to a white Oak North fifty Degrees East two hundred and seventy six Poles Crossing Willis River to two Pines Thence on John Cunninghams North thirty two Degrees East one hundred and forty Poles to Pointers. Thence on Merry Webb North sixty five Degrees West three hundred and then Poles to two red Oaks South fifty Degrees West forty four Poles to two white Oaks North Forty Degrees West One hundred and ten Poles to a Spanish Oak North fifty Degrees East one hundred and twenty eight Poles to a Spanish Oak Thence on Joseph Price North fifty five Degrees West two hundred and twenty eight Poles to a Pine Thence a new Line South thirty five Degrees West three hundred and Forty two Poles Crossing Randolph’s Creek to a maple in a pond Thence on Joseph Dable South forty five Degrees East three hundred and twenty Poles to a pine and red Oak North Forty five Degrees East seventy two Poles to a red Oak South forty five Degrees East two hundred Poles Crossing Willis River to Pointers South forty five Degrees West nineteen Poles to a white Oak the same Course continued for hundred and fifty Poles to two Pines Thence on Robert Barnard South Forty five Degrees East one hundred and sixty poles to a pine Thence North forty five Degrees East three hundred and sixty two poles to the First Station With all Woods Underwoods Swamps Marshes Low grounds Meadows Feedings and his due share of all Veins Mines and Quarries as well discovered as not discovered within the bounds aforesaid and being part of the said Quantity of One thousand seven hundred acres of Land and the Rivers Waters and Water Courses therein contained together with the Privileges of Hunting Hawking Fishing Fowling and all other profits commodities and Hereditaments whatsoever to the same or any part thereof belonging or in any wise appertaining To have hold possess and Enjoy the said Tract or Parcel of Land and all other the before Granted premises and every part thereof with their and every of their Appurtenances unto the said Thomas Basset and to his Heirs and assigns forever To the only use and Behoof of him the said Thomas Basset his Heirs and assigns forever To be held of us our Heirs and Successors as of our Manner of East Greenwich in the County of Kent in Free and common Soccage and not in Capite or by Knights Service Yielding and Paying unto us our Heirs and Successors for every fifty Acres of Land and so proportionably for a lesser or greater Quantity than fifty Acres the Fee Rent of one Shilling Yearly to be paid upon the Feast of Saint Michael the Arch Angel and also Cultivating and Improving three Acres part of every fifty of the tract abovementioned within three Years after the Date of these presents provided always that if three years of the said Fee Rent Shall at any time be in arrear and Unpaid or if the said Thomas Basset his Heirs or Assigns do not within the Space of three Years next coming after the Date of these presents Cultivate and Improve three Acres part of every fifty of the Tract abovementioned Then the Estate hereby granted shall Cease and be utterly Determined and thereafter it shall and may be lawful to and for us our Heirs and Successors to Grant the same Lands and premises with the Appurtenances unto such other person or persons as we our Heirs and Successors shall think fit In Witness whereof we have caused these our Letters patent to be made Witness our Trusty and Welbeloved James Blair Clark president of our Council and Commander in Chief of our said Colony and Dominion at Williamsburgh under the Seal of our said Colony the First Day of December One thousand seven hundred and forty In the Fourteenth year of our Reign. :James Blair '''20 Aug 1748'''
George the Second by the Grace of God of Great Britain France and Ireland King Defender of the faith &c To all to whom these Presents shall come Greeting Know ye that for divers good Causes and Considerations but more especially for and Consideration of the Sum of Fifty Shillings of good and lawful Money for our Use paid to our Receiver General of our Revenues in this our Colony and Dominion of Virginia We have Given Granted & confirmed and by these presents for us our Heirs and Successors do Give Grant and confirm unto '''Thomas Bassett''' One certain Tract or parcel of Land containing '''five hundred acres''' lying and being in the County of Goochland on Angolo Creek and bounded as followeth (to wit) Beginning at a Hiccory a corner to David Page 616 and John Francis ????ing Thence on David Bell Bell ^ north ten degrees west one hundred and seventy five poles to a pine Thence south fifty degrees west one hundred and ninety four poles to a Hiccory Thence west one hundred and sixty poles to a white oak Thence on Daniel Stoner south sixty three poles to a pine The same Course continued one hundred and ninety three poles to a white oak Thence south ten degrees west one hundred and sixteen poles to a Dogwood by the north side of Angolo Creek Thence on Stephen Stone north seventy eight degrees east one hundred and eighty nine poles crossing the creek several Times to a Hiccory and Elm by the South Side of the said creek Richard Wards corner Thence north six and a half degrees east nine poles crossing the creek to a Hiccory Thence on John Francis the same Course continued two hundred and eighty poles to a white oak on the east Side of a run Thence east one hundred and thirty eight Poles to the first Station With all Woods underwoods Swamps Marshes Low Grounds Meadows Feedings and his due share of all Veins Mines and Quarries as well discovered as not discovered within the Bounds aforesaid and being part of the said Quantity of five hundred acres of Land and the Rivers Waters and Water Courses therein contained together with the Privileges of Hunting Hawking Fishing Fowling and all other profits commodities and Hereditaments whatsoever to the same or any part thereof belonging or in any wise appertaining To have hold possess and Enjoy the said Tract or Parcel of Land and all other the before granted Premises and every part thereof with their and every of their Appurtenances to the said Thomas Basset and to his Heirs and assigns forever To the only use and Behoof of him the said Thomas Basset his Heirs and assigns for-ever To be held of us our Heirs and Successors as of our Manner of East Greenwich in the County of Kent in free & common Soccage and not in Capite or by Knights Service Yielding and Paying unto us our Heirs and Successors for every fifty acres of Land and so proportionably for a lesser or greater Quantity than fifty acres the Fee Rent of one Shilling yearly to be paid upon the Feast of Saint Michael the Arch Angel and also cultivating and improving three acres part of every fifty of the Tract abovementioned within three years after the date of these presents Provided always that if three years of the said Fee Rent shall at any time be in arrear and unpaid or if the said Thomas Basset his Heirs or Assigns do not within the Space of three years next coming after the date of these Page 617 Presents cultivate and improve three acres part of every fifty of the Tract abovementioned Then the Estate hereby granted shall Cease and be utterly Determined and thereafter it shall and may be lawful to and for us our Heirs and Successors to grant the same Lands and premises with the Appurtenances unto such other person or persons as we our Heirs and Successors shall think fit In Witness whereof we have caused these our Letters patent to be made Witness our Trusty and Welbeloved Sir William Gooch Baronet our Lieutn Governor and Commander in Chief of our said Colony and Dominion at Williamsburgh under the Seal of our said Colony the twentieth day of August one thousand seven hundred and forty eight In the twenty second year of our Reign. :William Gooch '''20 Aug 1748'''
George the Second by the Grace of God of Great Britain France and Ireland King Defender of the faith &c To all to whom these presents shall come Greeting Know ye that for divers good Causes and Considerations but more especially for and Consideration of the Sum of Five Pounds of good and lawful Money for our Use paid to our Receiver General of our Revenues in this our Colony and Dominion of Virginia We have Given Granted and confirmed and by these presents for us our Heirs and Successors do Give Grant and confirm unto '''Thomas Bassett''' One certain Tract or parcel of Land containing '''one thousand acres''' lying and being in the County of Goochland between Great Guinea and Angolo Creeks and bounded as followeth (to wit) Beginning at a black Oak in a Corner to Andrew Crew running thence on their and ???? south twenty eight degrees west one hundred and eighty four poles to Pointers Thence on the said Thomas Bassett north sixty two degrees west seventy six poles to a Pine Thence south seventy one degrees west seventy poles to a black oak Thence south fifty degrees west sixty four poles to a pine Thence south thirty seven degrees west one hundred and one poles to Pointers Thence south seventeen degrees west thirty two poles Thence on Joseph ?cholls south eighty degrees west two hundred and ten poles to Pointers Thence south ten degrees east fifty two poles to Pointers Page 646 Thence on David Bell south sixty five degrees west one hundred and eighty seven Poles to Pointers the same course continued two hundred and seventy poles to Pointers Thence on Daniel Stoner north twenty eight degrees east one hundred and seventy eight poles to a Pine on a Hill Thence north one hundred and twenty nine poles to a white Oak Thence north fifty five degrees east three hundred and seventy one Poles to Pointers near the East Side of a run Thence new Lines south twenty degrees East one hundred and thirty seven poles to Pointers Thence north seventy degrees east two hundred and two poles to a white oak Thence north twenty degrees west sixty five poles to a Pine Thence on Isaac Allen north seventy degrees east three hundred and nine poles to Pointers Thence a new Line south sixty two degrees east forty eight poles to the First Station With all Woods underwoods Swamps marshes Low grounds Meadows Feedings and his due share of all Veins Mines and Quarries as well discovered as not discovered within the bounds aforesaid and being part of the said Quantity of One thousand acres of Land and the Rivers Waters and Water Courses therein contained together with the Privileges of Hunting Hawking Fishing Fowling and all other profits commodities Hereditaments whatsoever to the same or any part thereof belonging or in any wise appertaining To have hold possess and Enjoy the said Tract or Parcel of Land and all other the before granted Premises and every part thereof with their and every of their Appurtenances unto the said Thomas Basset and to his Heirs and assigns forever To the only use and Behoof of him the said Thomas Basset his Heirs and assigns forever To be held of us our Heirs and Successors as of our Manner of East Greenwich in the County of Kent in free & common Soccage and not in Capite or by Knights Service Yielding and Paying unto us our Heirs and Successors for every fifty acres of Land and so proportionably for a lesser or greater Quantity than fifty Acres the Fee Rent of one Shilling yearly to be paid upon the Feast of Saint Michael the Arch Angel and also cultivating and improving three acres part of every fifty of the Tract abovementioned within three years after the Date Page 647 of these presents Provided always that if three years of the said Fee Rent shall at any time be in arrear and Unpaid or if the said Thomas Basset his Heirs or Assigns do not within the Space of three years next coming after the date of these Presents cultivate and improve three acres part of every fifty of the Tract abovementioned Then the Estate hereby granted shall Cease and be utterly Determined and thereafter it shall and may be lawful to and for us our Heirs and Successors to Grant the same Lands and premises with the Appurtenances unto such other person or persons as we our Heirs and Successors shall think fit In Witness whereof we have caused these our Letters patent to be made Witness our Trusty and Welbeloved Sir William Gooch Baronet our Lieutenant Governor and Commander in Chief of our said Colony and Dominion at Williamsburgh under the Seal of our said Colony the twentieth day of August One thousand seven hundred and forty eight In the twenty second year of our Reign. :William Gooch '''28 Aug 1748'''
George the Second by the Grace of God of Great Britain France & Ireland King Defender of the faith &c To all to whom these Presents shall come Greeting Know ye that for divers good Causes and Considerations but more especially for and Consideration of the Sum of Forty Shillings of good and lawful Money for our Use paid to our Receiver General of our Revenues in this our Colony and Dominion of Virginia We have Given Granted & confirmed and by these presents for us our Heirs and Successors do Give Grant and confirm unto '''Thomas Bassett '''One certain Tract or parcel of Land containing '''four hundred acres''' lying and being in the County of Goochland amoungst the South Branches of Willis River and bounded as followeth (to wit) Beginning at a Pine Paul Micheaurp’s Corner running thence on the said Micheaurp north one hundred and eighty six poles to Pointers Thence a new Line west two hundred and ninety two poles to an Ash on the west Side of a Run Thence on William Mays south thirty two degrees west one hundred and fifty five poles to a white Oak South seven degrees west sixty five poles to a pine east three hundred and seventy seven poles to the First Station With all Woods underwoods Swamps marshes Lowgrounds Meadows Feedings and his due share of all Veins Mines and Quarries as well discovered as not discovered within the bounds aforesaid and being part of the said Quantity of four hundred acres of Land and the Rivers Waters and Water Courses therein contained together with the Privileges of Hunting Hawking Fishing Fowling and all other profits commodities and Hereditaments whatsoever to the same or any part thereof belonging or in any wise appertaining To have hold possess and Enjoy the said Tract or Parcel of Land and all other the before granted Premises and every part thereof with their & every of their Appurtenances unto the said Thomas Basset and to his Heirs and assigns forever To the only use and Behoof of him the said Thomas Basset his Heirs and assigns for-ever To be held of us our Heirs and Successors as of our Manner of East Greenwich in the County of Kent in free & common Soccage and not in Capite or by Knights Service Yielding and Paying unto us our Heirs and Successors for every fifty acres of Land and so proportionably for a lesser or greater Quantity than fifty Acres the Fee Rent of one Shilling yearly to be paid upon the Feast of Saint Michael the Arch Angel and also cultivating and improving three acres part of every fifty of the Tract abovementioned within three years after the date of these presents Provided always that if three years of the said Fee Rent shall at any time be in arrear and Unpaid or if the said Thomas Basset his Heirs or Assigns do not within the Space of three years next coming after the date of these Presents cultivate and improve three acres part of every fifty of the Tract abovementioned Then the Estate hereby granted shall Cease and be utterly Determined and thereafter it shall and may be lawful to and for us our Heirs and Successors to Grant the same Lands and premises with the Appurtenances unto such other person or persons as we our Heirs and Successors shall think fit In Witness whereof we have caused these our Letters patent to be made Witness our Trusty and Welbeloved Sir Page 624 William Gooch Baronet our Lieutenant Governor and Commander in Chief of our said Colony and Dominion at Williamsburgh under the Seal of our said Colony the twentieth day of August One thousand seven hundred and forty eight In the twenty second year of our Reign. :William Gooch '''5 Sep 1749'''
George the Second by the Grace of God of Great Britain France and Ireland King Defender of the faith &c To all to whom these Presents shall come Greeting Know ye that for divers good Causes and Considerations but more especially for and Consideration of the Sum of Four Pounds of good and lawful Money for our Use paid to our Receiver General of our Revenues in this our Colony and Dominion of Virginia We have given granted and confirmed and by these Presents for us our Heirs and Successors do give grant and confirm unto '''Thomas Bassett''' One certain Tract or Parcel of Land containing '''seven hundred and ninety one Acres''' lying and being in the County of Lunenburgh on both Sides of Ward’s Fork and bounded as followeth (to wit) Beginning at a maple on the said Fork Thence north fifty six Degrees west ninety four poles to a white Oak Thence north thirty nine Degrees west one hundred and twenty six Poles to a Hiccory Thence South eighty eight Degrees west sixty four Poles to a white Oak Thence north five Degrees west one hundred and ninety eight Poles to a red Oak Thence north seventy eight Degrees East two hundred and seventy eight Poles to a white Oak Thence South seventy two Degrees East sixty two Poles to a Dogwood on Ward’s Fork Thence up the said Fork as it meanders to a Hiccory on the same Thence South sixty one Degrees Eat [sic] one hundred and fourteen Poles to a white Oak Thence South sixty one Degree East two hundred and two Poles to a red Oak Thence South fifty four Degrees West eighty Poles to a white Oak Thence North eighty Degrees west twenty eight Poles to a red Oak Thence South twenty one Degrees West sixty Poles to a red Oak Thence North seventy five Degrees west eighty two Poles to a Gum on the Fork Thence down the said Fork as it meanders to the Beginning With all Woods underwoods Swamps marshes Low grounds meadows Feedings and his due Share of all Veins Mines and Quarries as well discovered as not discovered within the Bounds aforesaid and being Part of the said Quantity of seven hundred and ninety one Acres of Land and the Rivers Waters and Water Courses therein contained together with the Privileges of Hunting Hawking Fishing Fowling and all other Profits Commodities and Hereditaments whatsoever to the same or any Part thereof belonging or in anywise appertaining To have hold possess and Enjoy the said Tract or Parcel of Land and all other the before granted Premises and every part thereof with their and every of their Appurtenances unto the said Thomas Bassett and to his Heirs and Assigns forever To the only use and Behoof of him the said Thomas Basset his Heirs and Assigns forever To be held of us our Heirs and Successors as of our Manner of East Greenwich in the County of Kent in free and common Soccage and not in Capite or by Knights Service Yielding and Paying unto us our Heirs and Successors for every fifty acres of Land and so proportionably for a Lesser or Greater Quantity than fifty Acres the Fee Rent of one shilling yearly to be paid upon the Feast of Saint Michael the Arch Angel and also cultivating and improving three Acres Part of every fifty of the Tract abovementioned within three years after the Date of these Presents Provided always that if three years of the said fee Rent shall at any Time be in Arrear and unpaid or if the said Thomas Bassett his Heirs or Assigns do not within the Space of three years next coming after the Date of these Presents cultivate and improve three acres Part of every fifty of the Tract abovementioned Then the Estate hereby granted shall cease and be utterly determined and thereafter it shall and may be lawful to and for us our Heirs and Successors to grant the same Lands and Premises with the Appurts [sic] unto such other Person or Persons as we our Heirs and Successors shall think fit In Witness whereof we have caused these our Letters Patent to be made Witness our Trusty and Welbeloved Thomas Lee Esq. President of our Council and Commander in Chief of our said Colony and Dominion at Williamsburgh under the Seal of our said Colony the fifth Day of September one thousand seven hundred and forty nine In the twenty third year of our Reign. :Thomas Lee P.
Thomas Batts-Soanes connection
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Thomas Booker will 1695
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Thomas Bourne of Ombersley/Droitwich/Kempsey Theory
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Thomas Bowring Descendants
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Thomas Brewer Research Notes
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Thomas Brewer Research Notes 2
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Thomas Bruce in Scots Peerage
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Thomas Bryan 1731-1798
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Thomas Burnap merge items 2022
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Thomas Burne of Derby and Thomas Bourne of Marshfield
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Thomas C. Blackwell Plantation Union County Kentucky
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==1850 Census== Slaves owned by [[Latham-4118|Lucy Latham Blackwell]]'''1850 U.S. Slave Census''', Union County, Kentucky, slave schedule, District 2, p. 345 (penned), slaves in the Lucy Blackwell household, digital image 11 of 28, ''FamilySearch.org'' ([https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-XXZC-NS?i=10&cc=1420440&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AHR7L-5B3Z]: accessed 10 March 2023); citing NARA microfilm publication M432, roll 228
*female born 1807 *male born 1825 (James) *female born 1823 *female born 1833 *female born 1835 *female born 1837 *female born 1840 *male born 1843 *female born 1846 *female born 1847 *female born 1849
==1855 Tax Schedule== Lucy Blackwell owned 4 slaves over age 16, 7 slaves under age 16 in the year she passed away.'''1855 Tax Assessment'''. Kentucky, Union County “Tax Books, 1853-1864”, Tax Assessor, p. 33, Lucy Blackwell, image 146 of 709, ''FamilySearch.org'', [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS3J-XS9W-K?i=145&cat=157393 FamilySearch link]: accessed 10 March 2023)
==1860 Census== Slaves owned by [[Blackwell-6526|Thomas C. Blackwell]]'''1860 U.S. Slave Census''', Union County, Kentucky, slave schedule, Uniontown, p. 36 (penned), slaves in the Thos. C. Blackwell household, digital image 1 of 4 ''FamilySearch.org'' ([https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GB9J-SNS2?cc=3161105&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AWKK1-BPMM]: accessed 10 March 2023); citing NARA microfilm publication M653, roll 406 *female born 1815 *female born 1830 *female born 1833 *male born 1837 *female born 1839 *female born 1844 *female born 1848 *female born 1849 *male born 1852 *female born 1854 *female born 1855 *male born 1856 (James) *male born 1857 *female born 1858 *female born 1859 *female born 1859 (Sallie, 9 months old) *female born 1859 (1 month old)
== Sources ==
Thomas C. Harris Bible
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Thomas C. Keator Family Bible Pages
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Thomas B. Keator
Married to
S. Maria Sturgess
January 14th, 1862 ''Page 2:''
Births
Eugene T. Keator
Born October 19 1863
Sarah L. Keator
Born August 16 1865 ''Page 3:'' ''
no transcription, image only'' ''Page 4:''
Births
Thomas B. Keator
Born October 28, 1826
S. Maria Sturgess
Born February 16, 1839
Jacob C. Keator, father of Thomas B.
was born November 23, 1797
Betsey his mother daughter of
David Smith was born February 16th, 1800
George Sturgess father of S.
Maria Sturgess was born Sept 17
1799
Sarah Olmstead mother of S. Maria
was born August 19, 1798 ''Page 5:''
Births:
Jacob C. Keator
was born November
the 23 - 1797
Elizabeth Smith
was Born February
the 16 - 1800
Cornelia Ann
Keator
was Born
Apr 30 - 1821
Elizabeth
Keator was Born
aug 31 - 1824
Thomas B Keator
was Born Oct 25 1826
Mary [?] Keator
was Born Oct 1 - 1832
Clarissa Keator
was Born Dec 18 - 1836
Ella C. Keator
was Born Dec 8 - 1843
Eliza Etanan Keator
was Born march 29 - 1840 ''Page 6:''
Marriages
January 20 1820
then Jacob C. Keator
and Elizabeth Smith
were married
Jane Elizabeth was Married
to Alexander H. Burhaus
July 1st 1845
Mary Jennett was Married
to Jonas M. Preston
November 17 - 1856
Thomas B. Keator was
married to S.
Maria Sturgess - January 14, 1862
Ella C. Keator was
married to Robert S. Smith
March 2, 1869 Page 7:
Cornelius Keator, Father of
Jacob C. Keator was Born [blank]
Married to Elizabeth Krom [blank]
Married to Jane Shout [blank]
Died [blank]
Elizabeth Krom Keator
was Born (mother Jacob C. Keator)
Died [blank]
David Smith, Father of
Elizabeth S. Keator was
Born [blank]
Died [blank]
Jane More Smith Mother
of Elizabeth S. Keator
was Born [blank]
Died [blank]
Made July 19, 1880
Grandchildren of Jacob C. and Elizabeth S. Keator
Children of Thomas B. + Maria S. Keator -
Eugene T. Keator Born
October 19, 1863
Sarah L. Keator Born
August 15, 1865
Children of Jane E. + Alexander H. Burhaus
Mary, was Born Nov 06
1846 - she was Married May
1st 1866 to Cornelius C. Smith
Elizabeth Burhaus was
Born July 14 1859
Jacob C. Keator Jr
was Born Dec 14, 1908
Ella M. Keator
Born Oct 22, 1912 Page 8:
Eliza E. Keator
Departed this Life
March 11 - 1842
Clarisa Keator
Departed this Life
Apr 12 - 1842
Cornelia Ann Keator
Departed this life
June 17th 1887
Jacob C. Keator
Departed this life
February 23th, 1888
Elizabeth Keator
Departed this life
October 8th, 1889
Mary J. Keator
Departed this life
March 3 1900
Alexander H. Burhaus
died September
2 1899 age 80 years
Thomas B. Keator
departed this life
May 18th 1906
Jane Elizabeth
Keator departed this
life [blank]
Eugene T. Keator
departed this life
May 7th 1913
Thomas Carter Study
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THOMAS CASEY NAMED IN CLAIM RECORDS
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Thomas Cleverley Indenture 1683
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Thomas Colman and Elizabeth Bumphrey's household
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Thomas Dane Alternative Child List
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Thomas Dane Memory
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Thomas Davenport Sr (abt. 1616 - 1685) Expanded Biography
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Thomas de Goswyk, Hostage of Robert the Bruce
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Thomas Delaware Mahon and the American Revolution
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Thomas Dewey Notes 2023
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Thomas Dewey Revisions: Draft and Discussion
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Thomas Dexter morse Sr
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Thomas English, Last Will and Testament 1889
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Thomas Evans (1710 - 1777) Stanhope Evans Benjamin Evans of Amherst County, Virginia
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Thomas Family Bible
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Ridley's sister, Mary's son, Charles Huddleston Jr. also kept a Bible Record - [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Bellah_Family_Bible_Record Bellah, Humphreys, Huddleston] in Oregon County, Missouri page 1
'''Marriages:'''
Ridley B. Thomas and Susanna Thomas was married December the 23rd AD 1827.
Polley Baker Thomas and Stephen Hampton was married March the 1st AD 1819
Rhoda Thomas and William Dethrerage was married March the 3rd AD 1853
Ridley B. Thomas, Isabella Jane Thomas was married March 22 AD. 1862
John B Fitte? and ... June Fite? was married March the 28th AD 1868
John C. Fite? .. 1846 Martha Thomas and William L. Guthrie was married Dec the 28th AD 1838 -- ''daughter of Ridley''
Mary Thomas and Sammy Carrel was married Dec 23rd 1858 -- ''daughter of Ridley''
M Guthrie was born ...
August the first day, 1880?
Leuby Jane Fite was born oct 30th ...
Laurie Graves was born May 26 ...
August 1875
Laurie Fite was born Nov 8, 1873
Bell Marie? Fite born July 3, 1877
Pete Fite was born March? 8, 1874 ----------------- Page 2
'''Births:'''
[[Thomas-50195|Ridley]] B Thomas, Aug 25, 1807 -- ''son of Ephriam Thomas & Caty Dielhl/Teal''
Susanna Thomas, born Jan 14, 1806 -- ''1st wife of Ridley''
Polly Baker Thomas born Apr 16, 1831 -- ''daug of Ridley''
Rhoda Thomas was born Sept 11?, 1832? -- ''daug of Ridley''
Martha Thomas was born April 17, 1836 -- ''daug of Ridley''
Katherine Thomas was born Feb 17, 1838 -- ''daug of Ridley''
Mary Thomas was born May 1, 1840 -- ''daug of Ridley''
Nelly Thomas was born ... 20th, 1843 -- ''daug of Ridley''
Susanna Thomas was born Jan 8, 1847 -- ''Rebecca Susanna, daug of Ridley'' Luther B Thomas was born Sept 27, 1828 -- ''son of Ridley''
Lafayett Thomas was born Sept 2, 1833 -- ''son of Ridley''
Ridley B Thomas was born Jan 8, 1847 -- ''son of Ridley''
Elizabeth Jane Thomas was born April 30, 1850 -- ''daug of Ridley''
Carrol Esters was born May 11, 1848 -- ''unsure who this is''
Leonard Esters was born July 11, 1840
Ridly B. Hampton was born Dec 4, 1849
William F? Campbell was born Sept 30, 1830 ----------- Page 3
'''Births:'''
(top line can't be read)
Peter Fite born ? 8, 1873
Bell Fite, Aug 8, 1875
July the 1877 ''These next 5 people are the parents of Mary Thomas and the parents of her 2nd husband, Charles Huddleston, and their son, Charles Huddleston Jr. This makes it seem like the Bible was kept by Mary Thomas, but many of the entries are from her brother Ridley's family, and Mary may have kept a different record.''
[[Thomas-11077|Ephriam Thomas]] was born April 1, 1771, deceased Dec 5, 1840
Catherine Thomas was born August 13, 1775 -- [[Diehl-413|Maria Catharina "Caty" Teal/Diehl Thomas]]
[[Huddleston-1335|Abraham Huddleston]] was born June 13, 1773 -
Polly Huddleston was born March 20, 1777 -- [[Allen-13106|Mary Allen]], wife of Abraham
[[Huddleston-3173|Charles Huddleston]] was born Jan 26, 1796 -- ''grandson of Abraham''
Mary Huddleston was born Dec 13, 1815 Margret An Carrell was born Nov 2, 1857? -- ''These 3 Carrells are probably grandchildren of Ridley Thomas, children of Mary Thomas Carrell''
John Carrell was born Jan 5, 1861
Sammy Brutten? Carell Edmund L. Deatherage was born Jeb ? 1844 --''These 3 Deatherages are probably grandchildren of Ridley Thomas, children of Rhoda Thomas Deatherage''
Mary Jane Detherage was born Oct 15, 1855
William L. Deatherage was born Jan 7, 1857 Lissey Beath Thomas departed this life Juy 17, 1859
William Thomas was ? Mar 5, 1864
Jackson Thomas was ? April 21? 1865
??? ----------- Page 4
'''Deaths''':
Martha Ann? Thomas was '''born''' in the year 1856, Jan 29 -- ''Not sure if this is the daug of Ridley. She married in 1858 & 1866. Ridley had a sister Martha b abt 1810, and a daug Martha b 1836''
Susnna Rebecka Thomas was born in the year 1858, Mar 6 -- ''Ridley had a daug name Rebecca Susanna, b 1847, m 1865. Not sure who this is.''
Sammy Brutten? Carrell deceased Feb 1863
R.B. Thomas departed this life July the 31st of 1865 -- [[Thomas-50195|Ridley B. Thomas]], son of Ephriam Thomas & Caty Diehl
Bela Buford departed ?? 15th 1866
Catharine Thomas deceast this life the 25 of September AD 1859 -- ''wife of Ephriam Thomas, mother of Ridley''
Rhoda Thomas deceast Feb 5 ??
Luther B. Thomas departed Sept 27, 1835
S. J. Fite departed Nov ? 1879
Ridley B. Hampton departed Oct 31, 1859 -- ''son of Ridey's daug Polly Baker (Thomas) Westbrook, Hampton''
Susanna Thomas deceast this life August the 10, 186? -- ''wife of Ridley B. Thomas''
Leonard Estes deceased ??
Thomas Family Bibliography
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Thomas Family History
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Thomas_Family_History.jpg
Thomas Family Mysteries
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Thomas Fenwick Will Transcription
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'''Thomas Fenwick'''
In prensence of
Philip Washbourn
John Able, Bernard Drewry
I appoint my son '''[[Fenwick-1595|Richard Fenwick]]''' and '''Bernard Thomas''' Executors of this my Last Will and Testament
'''Thomas Fenwick'''
I '''Thomas Fenwick''' being weak in body but of sound mind do alter the within Will in the following manner (To wit) the negro boy named '''[[Fenwick-1596|Jim]]''' willed to my Daughter '''Monica''' I now give and bequeath to my son '''[[Fenwick-1595|Richard Fenwick]]''' s’d '''[[Fenwick-1595|Richard]]''' to have possession s’d Negro after my death and to be Vested in him and his heirs forever Signed and Sealed this 24th day July 1816 by me
'''Thomas Fenwick'''
Attest Phil Washbourn
David Clark
Sam’l Abell
At a County Court began and held for Washington County on Monday the 9th day of September 1816 This Last Will and Testament of '''Thomas Fenwick''' deceased together with the Codicil thereto appointing the Executors therecoss was produced in Court and proven by the oaths of Philip Washbourn and John Abell two of the subscribing witnesses thereto and also the further Codicil annexed to said Will was proven by the oaths of Philip Washbourn and John Abell two of the subscribing witnesses thereto and thereupon the said Will together with the said Codicils was ordered to be Recorded
Atteste John Hughes J? C. W. C.
Thomas Fisher Research
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Thomas Flagg (c 1621-1698) Additional Materials
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Thomas Fletcher Will Transcription
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In the first place it is my will that all my just debts which are few & small be paid.
In the second upon my death it is my will and desire to and I do hereby in this my last will and testament emancipate and set free my slaves '''[[Fletcher-17660|Nancy]]''' aged about forty four '''[[Fletcher-17673|Stephen]]''' aged about thirty five '''[[Fletcher-17668|Leah]]''' aged about twenty five '''[[Fletcher-17674|Catharine]]''' aged about twenty two '''[[Fletcher-17677|Hariet]]''' aged about Sixteen '''[[Fletcher-17661|Richard]]''' about fourteen '''[[Fletcher-17662|Williams]]''' about thirteen '''[[Fletcher-17669|Sally]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17670|George]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17671|Eliza]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17665|Cassy]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17667|Mary]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17678|Nancy]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17664|Susan]]''' & '''[[Fletcher-17675|John]]''' together with every such child or children as all or either of the above named and emancipated Females may hereafter have the whole & each of the above named with such child or children hereafter born as aforesaid to enjoy as full freedom as if born free this devise is made in consideration of the diligent and faithful services of said Negroes and thare [sic] parents and in unison with my principles. Hoping that they and each of them may continue in honest industrious habits and persuits.
In the Third upon my death I will and devise all my land & estate and property of every description and denomination To the above named and emancipated '''[[Fletcher-17660|Nancy]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17673|Stephen]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17668|Leah]]''' & '''[[Fletcher-17674|Catharine]]''' or to such of them as shall be living at the time this devise can take effect to be equally divided between them or the survivors of them by my Executor by making this divise [sic] I have done and performed an act of Justice as they have been serviceable and instrumental to me in the acquisition and improvement of my estate.
In the fourth I do hereby constitute and appoint '''John Fletcher''' my nephew my soul [sic] Executor of this my last Willa and Testament and I do will that this sum of fifty Dollars be raised from my estate to be retained by my said Executor as a remuneration for the services to be performed in addition to such other legal compensation as the Court may think them entitled to.
In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand & affixed my seal this twenty fourth day of May in the year of our Lord one Thousand Eight Hundred and Thirty six. '''[[Fletcher-5986|Thomas''' (his X mark) '''Fletcher]]'''.
Signed Sealed Subscribed and acknowledged in presents [sic] of us and in the presents of each other, witness, '''John S. Chapman''', '''John A. McKenny''', '''Andrew Bell Chapman'''
Codicil to the above and foregoing will that it is my further will and desire that my four oldest slaves '''[[Fletcher-17660|Nancy]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17673|Stephen]]''' '''[[Fletcher-17668|Leah]]''' & '''[[Fletcher-17674|Catharine]]''' shall have all my property as named in my will equally between them and those named marked out in the boddy [sic] of the Will before signed May 24, 1836. '''[[Fletcher-5986|Thomas''' (his X mark) '''Fletcher]]'''
Witness '''John S. Chapman''', '''John A. McKenny''', '''Andrew Bell Chapman'''
At a County Court holden for Union County at the Courthouse in Morganfield on the 16th day of July 1838. This last Will & Testament with the Codicil attached thereto of '''[[Fletcher-5986|Thomas Fletcher]]''' deceased was produced into Court and proven to be the last Will & Testament of the said deceased by the oath of '''John S Chapman''' and '''Andrew Bell Chapman''' two of the subscribing Witnesses thereto and was by the Court ordered to be recorded And on motion of '''John Fletcher''' the Executor therein named who made oath as the law directs and with '''Francis Clements''' '''Martin M Berry''' '''Geo W Whitecotton''' '''Thomas W Gist''' '''Charles C P Gilchrist''' '''Allen Anderson''' '''James Eddings''' and '''Isaac Jones''' his securities executed and acknowledged bond in the penalty of One Thousand dollars condition as the law directs a Certificate is granted him to obtain a probate thereof in due form of law == Sources ==
Thomas Foster - Disputed Origins
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Thomas Fuller House, aka Tabby Manse, 1211 Bay Street, Beaufort, South Carolina 29902 USA
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Thomas Garde MD research
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[https://digitalcollections.tcd.ie/concern/works/70795b624 Trinity College Library] Accessed 15 August 2020. 1817 B.A. at Trinity College, Dublin.The medical directory for Ireland 1856, published by the Royal College of Physicians, page 47
[https://archive.org/details/b28035859_0002/page/46/mode/2up?q=Castlemartyr Internet Archive] Accessed 13 August 2022. 1821 M.D. at Edinburgh. 1832 At Knockane, county of Cork, the lady of Thomas Garde Esq, M,D,, of a daughter. Belfast Commercial Chronicle - Monday 16 July 1832. [https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001287/18320716/008/0003 Belfast Commercial Chronicle - Monday 16 July 1832.] Britishnewspaperarchive, British Library, Findmypast. (Accessed 13 August 2022)(something doesn't tie up with suspected first marriage date - it's possible 1st marriage could be earlier.) 1836 1st marriage? Thomas married Jane Gaggin at Kilmahon Glebe on Saturday 28 May 1836. Jane was the second daughter of John Gaggin, Esq., late of Ballybane, county Cork. Thomas, Esq., M.P., was of Knockane. ''N.B. I'm assuming that M.P. should be M.D., which is what the Limerick Chronicle of 8 June 1836 has.'''''Marriage'''
Published in the Southern Reported and Cork Commercial Courier, Page 2 of 4, Marriages section.
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/bna/viewarticle?id=bl%2f0000876%2f18360609%2f029&stringtohighlight=thomas%20garde FindMyPast Irish Newspapers] '''Marriage''': "Ireland, Casey Collection Indexes, 1545-1960"
Casey Collection, published 1952-71; Author:: Albert E. Casey: O'Kief, Coshe Mang, Slieve Lougher, and Upper Blackwater in Ireland
{{Ancestry Sharing|29908825|75fbad}} - {{Ancestry Record|62062|90352812|uk}} (accessed 13 August 2022)
Thomas Garde marriage to Jane Gaggin in 1838 in Ireland. 1840 On the 22d instant, the Lady of Dr. Thomas Garde, of Knockane, of a son. Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier - Saturday 27 June 1840.[https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000876/18400627/032/0002 Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier - Saturday 27 June 1840] Britishnewspaperarchive, British Library, Findmypast. (Accessed 13 August 2022)
{{Blue|Eldest son, Henry Thomas}} 1846 On the 19th inst., the lady of Dr. Thomas Garde, of Knockane, of a son. Cork Examiner - Friday 22 May 1846.[https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000425/18460522/060/0003 Cork Examiner - Friday 22 May 1846] Britishnewspaperarchive, British Library, Findmypast. (Accessed 13 August 2022) 1850 (Death) Jane, wife of Thomas Garde, Esq. M.D. Knockane. Limerick Chronicle - Wednesday 03 April 1850.[https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000899/18500403/015/0003 Limerick Chronicle - Wednesday 03 April 1850] Britishnewspaperarchive, British Library, Findmypast. (Accessed 13 August 2022) 1850 Thomas, a Physician of Castlemartyr, married Aphra Wakeham, of Youghal, on 5 September 1850 in St Mary's church, Youghal, Cork, Ire. Aphra was the daughter of the late Rev. Thomas Wakeham. Thomas was the son of Henry Garde, Physician. Witnesses were John Desmond, M.D., and Susan Skinner. '''Marriage''': "Ireland, Select Marriages, 1619-1898"
{{Ancestry Record|9904|717493|uk}} (accessed 13 August 2022)
Thomas Garde marriage to Aphra Wakeham on 5 Sep 1850 in Youghal, Cork, Ire. '''Marriage'''
Tiperary Free Press 14 September 1850, page 3 of 4, Marriages
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/bna/viewarticle?id=bl%2f0000790%2f18500914%2f028&stringtohighlight=aphra FindMyPast Irish Newspapers] Accessed 13 August 2022.'''Marriage'''
Middleton Registration District, Group Registration ID 3202720, Date of Event 5 September 1850.
[https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1850/09394/5402871.pdf Irish Genealogy] Accessed 13 August 2022. 1852 On the 28th ult., the wife of Dr. Thomas Garde, of Castlemartyr, of a son. Date of birth 28 May 1852. '''Birth''': "Ireland, Casey Collection Indexes, 1545-1960"
Casey Collection, published 1952-71; Author:: Albert E. Casey: O'Kief, Coshe Mang, Slieve Lougher, and Upper Blackwater in Ireland
{{Ancestry Sharing|29906706|86995c}} - {{Ancestry Record|62062|285454|uk}} (accessed 13 August 2022)
A Son Garde born in 28 May, son of Thomas, in Ireland. '''Birth'''
Cork Examiner, 2 June 1852, page 2 of 4, Births section
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/bna/viewarticle?id=bl%2f0000425%2f18520602%2f048&stringtohighlight=castlemartyr FindMyPast Irish Newspapers] Accessed 13 August 2022.
{{Blue|Third son, Theodore William Wakeham}} 1856 Med. Att. Castlemartyr and Ballymacoda Constab., formerly Med. Att. Dongourney Fever Hosp.; Mem. Roy. Med. Soc. of Edin. 1861 Thomas and family arrived on the ship Commodore Perry on 8 December 1861 in Melbourne, Australia having departed from Liverpool '''Passenger List''': "Victoria, Australia, Assisted and Unassisted Passenger Lists, 1839-1923"
Public Record Office Victoria; North Melbourne, Victoria; Inward Overseas Passenger Lists (British Ports) [Microfiche Copy of VPRS 947]; Series: VPRS 7666
{{Ancestry Sharing|29908753|914ab3}} - {{Ancestry Record|1635|2804792|uk}} (accessed 13 August 2022)
Name: Thomas Garde; Nationality: English; Arrival Age: 60; Birth Date: abt 1801; Departure Place: Liverpool; Arrival Date: 8 Dec 1861; Arrival Place: Melbourne, Australia; Ship: Commodore Perry. :Thomas Garde 60 :Aphia Garde 46 :Jane Garde 24 :Ann Garde 22 :Henry T Garde 21 :Elizabeth 20 :Theodore? 9 :Mary Finn 21 (single, servant?) 1863 Died, at his residence, Hobson Street, on the 8th inst., of disease of the heart, Thomas Garde, Esq., M.D. Edin., A.B., T.C.D., Mem. Roy. Med. Soc., Edin., late of Castle Martyr, Co. Cork, Ireland, aged 64 years. The funeral will leave Hobson-street at 11 a.m. og Friday (this day). Date of death is 8 July 1863.'''Death'''
New Zealander, 10 July 1863, Page 3, Death section.
[https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZ18630710.2.8?end_date=31-12-1863&items_per_page=10&phrase=2&query=Thomas+Garde&snippet=true&start_date=01-01-1862 Papers Past] Accessed 13 August 2022.'''Death Registration'''
New Zealand Death Registration 1863/7177 Garde, Thomas, aged 64 years. === Aphra Theophila (Wakeham) Garde === 1821 Estimated birth year from age at death. 1877 Death on 1st May, Aphra Theophila, relict of the late Thomas Garde, Esq., M.D., R.C.M., Edin., A.M.T.C.D., late of Castlemartyr, County Cork, Ireland, aged 56 years. The funeral will leave her residence, Great North Road, tomorrow (Thursday) at 3 p.m.'''Death'''
Auckland Star, 2 May 1877, Page 2, Deaths section
[https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18770502.2.8?end_date=31-12-1877&items_per_page=10&query=Garde&snippet=true&start_date=01-01-1877 Papers Past] Accessed 14 August 2022.'''Death Registration'''
New Zealand Deaths 1877/4704 Garde, Aphra Theophila, aged 56 years. === Jane Marian (Garde) Aickin === [[Garde-116|Jane Marion (Garde) Aickin (bef.1837-1938)]] 1837 Baptized at Killeagh on 24 April 1837. '''Baptism''': "Irish Parish Register Baptisms & Confirmations, Ffolliott Collection"
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=S2%2FIRE%2FWATERFORD%2FFFOLLIOTT-REGISTERS-15%2F00135&parentid=IRE%2FFFOLLIOTT%2FREG%2F041723 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=IRE/FFOLLIOTT/REG/041723 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 14 August 2022)
Jane Grade baptism on 24 Apr 1837, daughter of Thomas & Jane, in Killeagh, Cork, Ireland.
1837 Estimated year of birth from age at death. 1871 On August 5, at St Matthew's church, by the Rev. D. Jones, John, eldest son of Thimas Aickin, Esq., M.D., Riversdale, to Jane Marian, eldest daughter of the late Thomas Garde, Esq., M.D., Castle Martyr, County Cork, Ireland.'''Marriage'''
Auckland Star, 10 August 1871, Page 2, Marriage section
[https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18710810.2.8?end_date=31-12-1871&items_per_page=10&phrase=2&query=Thomas+Garde&snippet=true&start_date=01-01-1871 Papers Past] Accessed 13 August 2022. 1938 Death on 20 July 1938, at her daughter's residence, Torbau, Jane Marion, widow of the late John Aickin, and dearly loved mother of William, Selwyn, and Mrs. H. Cholmodeley-Smith, and granmother of Clifton Leys, Orakei. Funeral leaves her daughter's residence at 2 p.m. today (Thursday), for Avondale Cemetery.'''Death'''
New Zealand Herald, 21 July 1938, Page 1., Deaths section
[https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19380721.2.2.4?end_date=31-12-1938&items_per_page=10&query=Jane+Aickin&snippet=true&start_date=01-01-1938 Papers Past] Accessed 13 August 2022.'''Death Registration'''
New Zealand Death Registration 1938/19637 Aickin, Jane Marion, aged 101 years. === Henry Thomas Garde === 1839 Born 22 June at Knockane and baptized on 5 July at Killeagh. '''Baptism''': "Irish Parish Register Baptisms & Confirmations, Ffolliott Collection"
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=S2%2FIRE%2FWATERFORD%2FFFOLLIOTT-REGISTERS-15%2F00136&parentid=IRE%2FFFOLLIOTT%2FREG%2F041738 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=IRE/FFOLLIOTT/REG/041738 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 14 August 2022)
Henry Thomas Grade baptism on 5 Jul 1839 (born 22 Jun ?), son of John & Jane, in Killeagh, Cork, Ireland.
''Looking at the sequencing I think that should be 1840.'' 1840 Estimated birth year from age at death on FindAGrave memorial image.
1842 Estimated birth year from age at death in newspaper report. 1878 Marriage on March 6 at St Barnabas (Church of England), by the Rev. J. Barnier, Henry Thomas, eldest son of the late Thomas Garde, Esq,, M.D.R.C.M. Edin., M.A.T.C.D., of Castlemartyr, county Cork, Ireland, to Hessie Ada Elizabeth, second daughter of the late Thomas Russel, Esq., of Epsom, Auckland.'''Marriage'''
The Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser, Saturday 16 March 1878, page 345, Family Notices, Marriages section
[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/162691448?searchTerm=Garde%20Henry%20Thomas Trove] Accessed 14 August 2022. 1912 Bankruptcy: Henry Thomas Garde of 17 L'avenue, off Fitzroy-street, Newtown and 180 Phillip-street, Sydney, cordial manufacturer. 11 March 1912.[https://archive.org/details/newsouthwalesgov1912unse/page/1780/mode/2up?q=%22Thomas+Garde%22 New South Wales government gazette 1912] Sydney : Govt. Print, Internet Archive (Is this our Henry Thomas?) 1925 Death on October 23, 1925, at 11 Stanley Street, Waverley, Henry Thomas, beloved husband of Jessie A.E. Garde, aged 83 years.'''Death'''
The Daily Telegraph (Sydney), Saturday 24 October 1925, Page 10, Family Notices, Deaths
[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/245047937?searchTerm=Henry%20Thomas%20Garde Trove] Accessed 14 August 2022. '''Death''': "Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985"
Nsw Pioneer Index - Between the Wars Series 1919-1945; Registration Number: 16648
{{Ancestry Record|1779|3756652}} (accessed 14 August 2022)
Henry T Garde death 1925, child of Thomas & Gaggin, in Waverley, New South Wales. '''Memorial''': Find a Grave (has image)
{{FindAGrave|189969159}} (accessed 14 August 2022)
Memorial page for Henry Thomas Garde (unknown-23 Oct 1925), citing Rookwood General Cemetery, Rookwood, Cumberland Council, New South Wales, Australia (plot: Zone C Anglican Section 7 Grave 3502); Maintained by alisonc1109 ♣ (contributor 48349597). Jessie died 1 August 1927 at Waverley.1927 'Family Notices', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 2 August, p. 8. , viewed 14 Aug 2022, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article16394060 === Annie (Garde) Bond === 1838 Born 20 October 1838 at Knockane. Baptized at Killeagh on 29 October 1838. '''Baptism''': "Irish Parish Register Baptisms & Confirmations, Ffolliott Collection"
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=S2%2FIRE%2FWATERFORD%2FFFOLLIOTT-REGISTERS-15%2F00135&parentid=IRE%2FFFOLLIOTT%2FREG%2F041732 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=IRE%2FFFOLLIOTT%2FREG%2F041732 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 14 August 2022)
Anne Garde baptism on 29 Oct 1838 (born 20 Oct ?), daughter of Thomas & Jane, in Killeagh, Cork, Ireland. 1845 Estimated birth year from age at death. 1863 On the 4th July at St Mary's, Parnell, Auckland, by the Right Rev. the Lord Bishop of New Zealand, J, Francis Bond, Esq., Surgeon., late of Kingstown, county Dublin, Ireland, to Annie, second daughter of Thomas Garde Esq., M.D., late of Castlemartyr, county Cork, Ireland.'''Marriage'''
Cork Examiner, 24 September 1863, Page 3, Marriages section
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/bna/viewarticle?id=bl%2f0000425%2f18630924%2f049&stringtohighlight=garde FindMyPast Irish Newspapers] Accessed 13 August 2022.'''Marriage'''
New Zealander, 6 July 1863, Page 2, Married section
[https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZ18630706.2.9?items_per_page=10&query=Annie+Garde&snippet=true Papers Past] Accessed 13 August 2022. 1931 On April 28, at Mount Eden, Annie, dearly beloved wife of the late Dr. Francis Bond, of Penrith, New South Wales, and beloved sister of Mrs John Aickin, of Birkenhead. Private interment this (Thusday) morning.'''Death'''
New Zealand Herald, 30 April 1931, Page 1, Deaths section
[https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19310430.2.2.3?items_per_page=10&phrase=2&query=Francis+Bond&snippet=true Papers Past] Accessed 13 August 2022. Aged 85 according to death registration.'''Death Registration'''
New Zealand Death Registration 1931/2463, Annie Bond, aged 85Y. '''Death Registration''': "New Zealand Death Index"
Registration Number: 1931/2463
[https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=ANZ%2FNZBMD%2FD%2F0763056 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 13 August 2022)
Annie Bond death (age 85) in New Zealand. === Elizabeth Mitchell (Garde) Aickin === [[Garde-115|Elizabeth Mitchell (Garde) Aickin (abt.1842-1890)]] 1842 Birth at Knockane on 16 August and baptized at Killeagh on 4 September. '''Baptism''': "Irish Parish Register Baptisms & Confirmations, Ffolliott Collection"
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=S2%2FIRE%2FWATERFORD%2FFFOLLIOTT-REGISTERS-15%2F00136&parentid=IRE%2FFFOLLIOTT%2FREG%2F041747 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=IRE/FFOLLIOTT/REG/041747 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 14 August 2022)
Elizabeth Mitchell Grade baptism on 4 Sep 1842 (born 16 Aug ?), child of Thomas & Jane, in Killeagh, Cork, Ireland. 1848 Estimated birth year from age at death.' 1871 On April 17, at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, by the REv. B.T. Didley, Casement, third son of Thomas Aickin, Esq., M.D., Riversdale, to ELizabeth Mitchell, youngest daighter of the late Thomas Garde, Esq., M.D., of Castle Martyr, County Cork, Ireland.'''Marriage'''
Auckland Star, 19 April 1871, Page 2, Marriages section
[https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18710419.2.7?end_date=31-12-1871&items_per_page=10&phrase=2&query=Thomas+Garde&snippet=true&start_date=01-01-1871 Papers Past] Accessed 13 August 2022. 1890 Death on October 5, at Mount Eden, Elizabeth Mitchell, the beloved wife of Casement Aickin, and youngest daughter of the late Thomas Garde, M.D.'''Death'''
Auckland Star, 7 October 1890, Page 8, Deaths section
[https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18901007.2.27?end_date=31-12-1890&items_per_page=10&phrase=2&query=Elizabeth+Mitchell&snippet=true&start_date=01-01-1890 Papers Past] Accessed 13 August 2022.'''Death Registration'''
New Zealand Death registration 1890/4516 Aickin, Elizabeth Mitchell, aged 42 years. === Theodore William Wakeham Garde === 1852 Estimated birth year from marriage record 1882 At St Paul's church, Adelaide, South Australia, married Clara Cordeaux on 21 January 1882. Theodore, aged 30, was the third son of the late Thomas Garde, Esq., M.D., of Castlemartyr, County Cork, Ireland. Clara, aged 22, was the third daughter of Joseph Cordeaux, Esq., of Haxby Lodge and Chessvat House, Yorkshire. '''Marriage Registration''': "South Australia Marriages 1842-1937"
Registration Number: 130/288
[https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=ANZ%2FAU%2FSA%2FBMD%2FM%2F0000216789%2F1 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 13 August 2022)
Theodore William Wakeham Garde (30) marriage to Clara Cordeaux on 21 Jan 1882 in St Paul Church [Adelaide], South Australia, Australia.'''Marriage'''
Evening Joutnal, Adelaide, on Tuesday 24 January 1882, Page 2, Marriage section
[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/197765571?searchTerm=Thomas%20Garde Trove] Accessed 13 August 2022. 1901 Census records T.W.W. Garde living at Excelsior Parade, number of persons 1 male and 2 females. '''1901 Census''': "New South Wales 1901 Census"
Series: NRS 685
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=ANZ%2FNRS685%2F1189%2F005&parentid=AU%2F1901%2FCOLLECTORS%2F234516 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=AU/1901/COLLECTORS/234516 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 14 August 2022)
T W W Garde in Cumberland, New South Wales, Australia. 1903/4 Electoral Rolls record Thomas William Wakeham Garde, occupation accountant, resident at Excelsior Parade, Canterbury (Wardell Division). '''1903 Electoral Register''': "Australia Electoral Rolls"
Page: 14
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=S2%2FANZ%2FAUELECTORALROLL%2FNSW%2FAU22001903NSWELECTORALROLL1903CGPDF-000250&parentid=AU%2FELECTORALROLL%2F323%2F001010059 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=AU/ELECTORALROLL/323/001010059 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 14 August 2022)
First name(s): Thomas William Wakeham; Last name: Garde; Sex: Male; Year: 1903; Occupation: Accountant; Street: Excelsior Parade; Address: Excelsior Parade; District: Canterbury; Sub-district: Wardell; Number: 312-1; State: New South Wales; Country: Australia. 1905 GARDE.— The Friends of Mr. T. W. W . GARDE, of "Karamera." Excelsior-parade, Marrickville, are kindly invited to attend the Funeral of his dearly beloved wife, Clara; which will leave the Marrickville Cottage Hospital, Lillydale-st, Marrickville, THIS DAY, at 1.50, for Waverley Cemetary. J. J. Thomas, Undertaker.1905 'Family Notices', The Daily Telegraph (Sydney, NSW : 1883 - 1930), 18 March, p. 20. , viewed 14 Aug 2022, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article236910521 1905 Less than four weeks after his wife's death Theodore sold his residence and all his household furnishings, the sale taking place by auction on Wednesday April 12th.'''Sale'''
The Daily Telegraph (Sydney), Wednesday 12 April 1905, Page 3, Advertising
[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/239511899?searchTerm=T.%20W.%20W.%20Garde Trove] Accessed 14 August 2022. === Clara (Cordukes/Cordeaux) Garde === In the 1871 census Clara (age 12) was the boarder and a scholar in the household of Mary A Mercer, a School Mistress, in Minster Yard with Beddern, Yorkshire, England. '''1871 Census''': "1871 England Census"
The National Archives; Kew, London, England; 1871 England Census; Class: RG10; Piece: 4744; Folio: 126; Page: 4; GSU roll: 847255
{{Ancestry Sharing|29950337|689f74}} - {{Ancestry Record|7619|9450945|uk}} (accessed 16 August 2022)
Claro Cordukes (12) boarder in household of Mary A Mercer (57) in York registration district. Born in Sheriff Hutton, Yorkshire, England. Whether she was receiving private tuition or attending St Peter's School or one of the other schools in the Minster is not known."The Minster and its precincts," in A History of the County of York: the City of York, ed. P M Tillott (London: Victoria County History, 1961), 337-343. British History Online, accessed August 16, 2022, http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/yorks/city-of-york/pp337-343. Brother Harry:
1902 CORDEAUX - April 8, at Matlock Baths, Derbyshire, Harry, dearly loved brother of Mrs. T. W. W. Garde, Karamea, Marrickville. (By cable).1902 'Family Notices', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 5 April, p. 1. , viewed 14 Aug 2022, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article14459548 '''Death Registration''': "England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837-1915"
{{Ancestry Record|8914|7466567|uk}} (accessed 14 August 2022)
Henry Cordeaux death Jan-Feb-Mar 1902 in Bakewell (age 47) volume 7b page 473.
{{Blue|Confirms Clara Cordeaux as wife of T.W.W. Garde}} 1905 Death on March 16, at the Marricksville Cottage Hospital, Clara Garde, aged 44 years.'''Death'''
The Sydney and New South Wales Advertiser, Wednesday 22 March 1905, Page 766, Familu Notices, Deaths
[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/164034971?searchTerm=Clara%20Garde Trove] Accessed 14 August 2022. '''Death''': "Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985"
Nsw Pioneer Index - Federation Series 1889-1918; Registration Number: 1964
{{Ancestry Record|1779|3135186}} (accessed 14 August 2022)
Clara Garde death 1905, child of Joseph & Mary, in Marrickville, New South Wales. '''Memorial''': Find a Grave (has image)
{{FindAGrave|218673447}} (accessed 14 August 2022)
Memorial page for Clara Garde (1860-18 Mar 1905), citing Waverley Cemetery, Bronte, Waverley Council, New South Wales, Australia (plot: W-19-CE-OR-4547); Maintained by woowoo (contributor 49949980). === Thomas Parents & Siblings === Henry was the son of Thomas Garde of Dunsfort (Deansford) and Jane, daughter of William Walter, born about 1758, died in 1841. He had 2 brothers William (c1754-1823) and John (c1754-1804) and a sister Anne (c1757-1848) who married John Boles Esq.[https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_BSkAAAAAQAAJ/page/530/mode/2up A genealogical and heraldic dictionary of the landed gentry of Great Britain and Ireland] Burke, Bernard Sir, 1814-1892, Pub 1862, London Harrison (Accessed 14 August 2022). On Thursday, Sept 12 1782 the degree of Doctor of Medicine was conferred by the University of Edinburgh. From Ireland, Henry Garde (Thesis, De catarrho). The Scots Magazine - Sunday 01 September 1782.[https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000545/17820901/014/0056 The Scots Magazine - Sunday 01 September 1782] Britishnewspaperarchive, British Library, Findmypast. (Accessed 14 August 2022) He married Ann Smith in 1795, '''Marriage''': "Ireland, Casey Collection Indexes, 1545-1960"
Casey Collection, published 1952-71; Author:: Albert E. Casey: O'Kief, Coshe Mang, Slieve Lougher, and Upper Blackwater in Ireland
{{Ancestry Sharing|29919274|a858d3}} - {{Ancestry Record|62062|279193|uk}} (accessed 14 August 2022)
Henry Garde MD marriage to Ann Smith on 7 Mar 1795 in Ireland. At Castlemartyr, Henry Garde, Esq., M. D. to Miss Ann Smith. Saunders's News-Letter - Wednesday 18 March 1795 [https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001057/17950318/005/0002 Saunders's News-Letter - Wednesday 18 March 1795] Britishnewspaperarchive, British Library, Findmypast. (Accessed 14 August 2022) and left 3 children Thomas, John (Vicar of Ballinfach) and Ellen who married Rev Godfrey Smith. On Tuesday, the 30th ult. at the Cathedral Church of St. Finn Barr’s, by the Rev. John Garde, the Rev. Godfrey Clarke Smith, of Lianabrinny, in this County, to Ellen, only daughter of Henry Garde, of Lochcarrig, Esq. M.D.[https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001646/18271101/016/0003 Cork Constitution - Thursday 01 November 1827] Britishnewspaperarchive, British Library, Findmypast. (Accessed 14 August 2022). === Miscellaneous Sightings === 1827 Thomas Gard married Anne Coghlan at Kilmichael, Cork and Ross, om 28 January 1827. '''Marriage''': "Ireland Roman Catholic Parish Marriages"
[https://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=IRE%2FPRS%2FMICROFILM04797-05%2F0020&parentid=IRE%2FPRS%2FMAR%2F0238385%2F1 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=IRE%2FPRS%2FMAR%2F0238385%2F1 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 13 August 2022)
Thos Gard marriage to Anne Coghlan on 28 Jan 1827 in Kilmichael, Cork and Ross, Cork, Ireland. 1833 This is an interesting one - he's in a list of people offering a reward for information about breaking and entering of John Gaggin Jr's house Cork Constitution - Tuesday 15 January 1833 https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001646/18330115/027/0003 1836 Dublin. Thomas was a freemason on 21 November 1836 in Youghal. '''Freemason Membership''': "Ireland, Grand Lodge of Freemasons of Ireland Membership Registers, 1733-1923"
The Grand Lodge of Freemasons of Ireland; Dublin, Ireland; Collection: Freemasons of Ireland Membership Registers; Volume Number: Volume I
{{Ancestry Sharing|29909248|a215f9}} - {{Ancestry Record|60904|233396|uk}} (accessed 13 August 2022)
Name: Thomas Garde; Gender: Male; Event Date: 21 Nov 1836; Event Place: Youghal; Lodge Number: 68. 1875, Auckland. Thomas W W Garde was a freemason on 27 October 1875 in Auckland. '''Freemason Membership''': "Ireland, Grand Lodge of Freemasons of Ireland Membership Registers, 1733-1923"
The Grand Lodge of Freemasons of Ireland; Dublin, Ireland; Collection: Freemasons of Ireland Membership Registers; Volume Number: Volume V
{{Ancestry Sharing|29909036|ab2bec}} - {{Ancestry Record|60904|205947|uk}} (accessed 13 August 2022)
Name: Thomas W W Garde; Gender: Male; Event Date: 27 Oct 1875; Event Place: Auckland; Lodge: United Tervice; Lodge Number: 421. 1879 Death on June 14th, very suddenly, at Wellington, T.W.W. Garde, late of County Cork, Ireland.'''Death'''
West Coast Times, 30 June 1879, page 2, Deaths section
[https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WCT18790630.2.7?end_date=31-12-1879&items_per_page=10&query=Garde&snippet=true&start_date=01-01-1879 Papers Past] Accessessed 14 August 2022. ''N.B. Unable to find a death registration'' 1886 Thomas W W Garde, commercial traveller, 57 Waterloo Street. '''Directory''': "Sands Directories: Sydney and New South Wales, Australia, 1858-1933"
Sands Directories: Sydney and New South Wales, Australia, 1861-1933. Balgowlah, Australia: W. & F. Pascoe Pty, Ltd. Directories reproduced from microfiche copies courtesy of W. & F. Pascoe Pty, Ltd
{{Ancestry Sharing|29922387|62a86b}} - {{Ancestry Record|1164|361154|uk}} (accessed 14 August 2022)
Name/Business Name: Thomas W W Garde; Year: 1886; Page No: 530. == Sources ==
Thomas Garrett to Joseph Watson
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[[Unknown-581419|Elizabeth (Unknown) Greene (abt.1610-1658)]]
[[Smith-259315|Mary (Smith) Green (bef.1607-bef.1625)]]
[[Newman-974|Elizabeth (Newman) Green (abt.1610-1658)]]
[[Lynde-455|Elizabeth (Lynde) Green (1607-1658)]]
----- Merge related changes: [[Smith-259315|Mary (Smith) Green (bef.1607-bef.1625)]] detached as spouse
[[Newman-974|Elizabeth (Newman) Green (abt.1610-1658)]] detached as spouse
Merge rejected of [[Newman-974|Elizabeth (Newman) Green (abt.1610-1658)]] into [[Unknown-581419|Elizabeth (Unknown) Greene (abt.1610-1658)]]
30 November 2021 note -- Necessary links are believed to have been restored. ----- current post merge profile , sans boxes and category ----- == Biography == :Thomas Green was born 1606/07 in England, probably in Leicestershire; (marriage source states b. 3 AUG 1600 St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England). Thomas's father was [[Greene-1868|John Greene]] ...and Thomas's mother was [[Scargell-1|Ann Scargell]] ... He arrived on the ship "Planter" in 1635/6 :He married 26 JUN 1627 Hertfordshire, England as [[UNKNOWN-101051|Thomas UNKNOWN]] to Wife [[Lynde-40|Elizabeth Lynde]].{{citation_needed}} He died December 19, 1667 in Malden, Massachusetts (Middlesex) having had 5 sons and 5 daughters. ::The first record extant of him is dated 1653, when his youngest daughter, Dorcas, was born, but it is exceedingly probable that he was an early settler in the Massachusetts Colony; that he remained temporarily in one of the new settlements until about 1649-50, when he removed to the northern part of Malden, now Melrose, where he secured his farm of sixty-three acres;{{citation_needed}} that all his children lived with him or near him with the exception of daughter Hannah, who married and lived in Woburn. It is certain that he lived in Malden, Massachusetts, as early as October 28, 1651, when his wife Elizabeth and daughter of the same name, signed a petition to the general court concerning the Rev. Marmaduke Matthews. A portion of his farm in Malden was still in the possession of some of his descendants two hundred years later. He was selectman of Malden in 1658, served several times on the Middlesex county grand jury and was known as Thomas Green(e). He is called Thomas Greene, Sr., to distinguish him from his son, Thomas, Jr., and another Thomas Greene of the town, who had no suffix. His ten children who had been living near him commenced to separate about 1676. Four of his sons — Samuel, William, Nathaniel and Jabez — removed to Leicester, and their descendants are found today in every state in the Union. Another son, Henry, removed to Killingly, Connecticut, as did the children of his son Jacob. Another son, David, removed to Amherst, New Hampshire; two others, Jacob and Benjamin, to Hanover, New Jersey. Thomas Greene, Sr., in his will, dated November 12, 1667, does not mention any wife, but makes bequests to his "eldest son" Thomas, to sons John, William, Henry, Samuel and to daughters Elizabeth, Mary, Hannah, Martha and Dorcas. This shows that all his children were living at the date of his death. Some of them were born in England, but it is not on record how many. His first marriage was to Elizabeth ————, who died August 22, 1658, and is believed to have been the mother of all his children. He married (second) Frances, born in 1608, widow of Richard Cook, previously widow of Isaac Wheeler, who had had children by her first two husbands.Reynolds, Cuyler ''[[Space:Hudson-Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs|Hudson-Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs]]'' (Lewis historical publishing company in New York, 1911) Vol. 4, [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=loc.ark:/13960/t9b56ss63;view=2up;seq=492 Page 1795-1798]. Note: The Greene family of Amsterdam, New York, are descendants of Thomas Greene, of England, the final e of the name being dropped by the second generation in America. There were other families of the same name who settled in New England at an early date, and there were others by the name of Thomas. There was a Thomas who was on record in Roxbury in 1648; Thomas, who came in the "Speedwell" in 1636; and Thomas, of Middlesex. These must not be confounded with the Thomas Greene, of Malden, who founded the family under consideration in this sketch. [11245 but Malden is in Middlesex} Thomas was born in England in 1600. Thomas Green passed away in 1667 at Malden, Massachusetts Colony.Pope, Charles H. ''[[Space:The Pioneers of Massachusetts|The Pioneers of Massachusetts]]'' (Charles H. Pope, Boston, MA, 221 Columbus Ave., 1900) [https://archive.org/details/pioneersofmassac00pope/page/199/mode/1up Page 199]. === Notes === Biography (uncorrected) from Dick Lambert (merged) included the following sources *http://www.ourfamtree.org/browse.php/Thomas-Green/p309331 * "Windows Into Our Past A Genealogy of Lewis Green & Associated Families, Volume 6", compiled by Judy Parsons Smith © 2005 *http://www.ourfamtree.org/browse.php/John-Green/f210441 *http://www.nivek-systems.co.uk/genuki/ESS/ *http://users.ox.ac.uk/~malcolm/genuki/big/eng/KEN/ "Thomas Green Birth 3 AUG 1600 England, Hertfordshire, St Albans; Death 19 DEC 1667 FamilySearch County Page FamilySearch State Page Massachusetts Trails To The Past Thomas green was born in England, probably about 1606. There are some reasons for supposing that he came to Leicestershire, but no proof of the fact. The time of his arrival in this country is also uncertain. The first record in which his name appears, so as to identify him, is 1653, when his youngest daughter, Dorcas, was born. Yet he doubtless came many years before, probably 1635 or 1636. We are inclined to the opinion that he lived in Ipswich till 1649 or 1650, and then removed to Malden. He certainly lived in Malden as early as Oct. 28, 1651, when his wife Elizabeth, and dau. bearing the same name, signed a petition to the General Court. He had a farm of 63 acres in the north part of Malden, in that part which is now the town of Melrose. A part of his farm remains to this day in the possession of his descendants. He was selectman of Malden in 1658, and was several times on the grand jury of the County of Middlesex. As there were two other Thomas Greens in the town, he is known on the records as Thomas Green, se nior; his son being Junior, and the other Thomas left without any suffix. He married first Elizabeth ---, who was doubtless the mother of all his children, and who die d Aug. 22, 1658. Second, Frances Cook, Sept. 5,1659.''[[Space:Births, Marriages, and Deaths in the Town of Malden, Massachusetts, 1649-1850|Births, Marriages, and Deaths in the Town of Malden, Massachusetts, 1649-1850]]'' (University Press, Cambridge, 1914) [https://books.google.com/books?id=0kIOAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA237 Page 237]. ::* Green, Thomas, Sen., m. Frances Cooke[wid. of Richard]. ''Capt. Marshall.'' 5 (7), 1659. She was then the widow of Richard Cook, who died Oct. 14, 1658; and had previously been the widow of Isaac Wheeler. She was born in 1608, and had children by both her former husbands. He died Dec. 19, 1667. His will, dated Nov. 12, 1667; proved Jan. 15,1667-8; recorded Midd. P rob., 5:297, mentions no wife, but makes bequests to his "eldest son" Thomas, sons John, William, Henry, Samuel, and daughters Elizabeth, Mary, Hannah, Martha, and Dorcas. Sons William and Henry were appointed executors. John Waite, John Lynde, witnesses. Inventory, Jan. 10, 1667-8; amount, L. 285.18.2. Information in this biography is sourced from "The Ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton" unless otherwise specified.Dean Crawford Smith, Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed., ''The ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'' in 4 parts, (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-304; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/292/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)] ===Resolved Origins=== This Thomas Green and his family were extensively researched in a 1996 publication, ''The Ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton'' citing parish records, wills, court records and other reliable sources. Multiple Thomas Greens lived in the area and different pedigrees exist on the internet. Please always look for solid sourcing. ===Birth & Christening=== Thomas Green was christened 3 Feb 1599/1600 at Toppesfield, Essex, England to [[Greene-7793|William Greene]] and his second wife, [[Unknown-581436|Christian Unknown]].Essex : Toppesfield : St Margaret of Antioch : Register of unspecified type : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/581826e4e93790ec8bd1f837 : viewed 18 Nov 2021) baptism Thomas Greene 04 Feb 1599/00 More detail is on William's profile; Christian was the widow of Thomas Bateman and had at least two children by him, proved by parish registers and by her own will bequeathing to her son Samuel Batemen and her daughter Mary Batemen Grip's children as well as to her Green children. ===Three Marriages & Children from Two=== Thomas Green had a '''first wife Mary''' as shown by the christening of their daughter Mary at Toppesfield on 8 Sep 1625 where both parents' names were listed.Essex : Toppesfield : St Margaret of Antioch : Register of unspecified type : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/581826e8e93790ec8bd1fe9a : viewed 19 Nov 2021) baptism Mary Greene 08 Sep 1625 Dean Crawford Smith and Melinde Lutz Sanborn (1996) speculate that the marriage was that of Thomas Green and Mary Smith (daughter of John) at St. Nicholas Colchester on 28 Jun 1624"England Marriages, 1538–1973 ", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N26N-CJX : 12 March 2020), Thomas Greene, 1624. and that Mary was perhaps the child baptized at Toppesfield 17 Jan 1606/07.Essex : Toppesfield : St Margaret of Antioch : Parish Register : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/581826e5e93790ec8bd1f998 : viewed 19 Nov 2021) baptism Mary Smith 05 Jan 1606/7 While this is certainly possible, why a couple both of Toppesfield would get married 20 miles away at Colchester is uncertain. Still, no other Thomas Greens are found having children at Toppesfield at this time so it seems this girl Mary was his. Arguing against the Colchester marriage is a second christening found there on 17 Jan 1626 (double year not stated) of Thomas Greene, son of Thomas Greene and Mary.Colchester parish regiser 17 Jan 1626 christening of Thomas Greene [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FESSEX-BAP%2F0529929 findmypast.co.uk Reference D/P 203/1/1 $subscription] This is after the 8 Sep 1625 Toppesfield burial of Mary (below). But just to make it interesting, this christening was at St. Botolph which was apparently an Augustinian (Catholic) church and the marriage of 28 Jun 1624 was at St. Nicholas (Church of England). So maybe these were two separate couples. Sadly young Thomas was buried at St. Botolph on 23 Nov 1626 (findmypast.co.uk Reference D/P 203/1/1) so was not the later son of this Thomas Green. Further, a Thomas Greene and Eunice had a child James christened at St. Botolph on 6 Apr 1628 (findmypast reference D/P 203/1/1), maybe the same Thomas with a different marriage? In any case, Thomas Greenes were apparently thick on the ground at Colchester. Mary, wife of Thomas Greene was buried at Toppesfield on 8 Sep 1625Essex : Toppesfield : St Margaret of Antioch : Register of unspecified type : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/5817edd2e93790ec75902aab : viewed 19 Nov 2021) burial Mary Greene 08 Sep 1625 . The daughter Mary who was listed in Thomas' will of 22 Nov 1667 was his second daughter Mary so the first one likely died young. Since her mother apparently died in or near childbirth, it is very likely that young Mary died at that time too. Perhaps Thomas lived away from Toppesfield briefly as his second marriage and birth of eldest son Thomas is not found there but then the rest of his children appear in Toppesfield. His '''second marriage to [[Unknown-581419|Elizabeth Unknown]]''' was around 1630; a record has not been found and perhaps they married in her home parish or elsewhere. Children listed in his will were: (christenings of children of his brother William also appear in Toppesfield at this time) #Thomas (listed as eldest son) born c. 1630 likely near Toppesfield #John 6 Dec 1632Essex : Toppesfield : St Margaret of Antioch : : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/581826e9e93790ec8bd200f9 : viewed 19 Nov 2021) baptism John Greene 06 Dec 1632 (mother listed as Elizabeth) #Elizabeth 30 Nov 1634Essex : Toppesfield : St Margaret of Antioch : Parish Register : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/581826eae93790ec8bd201a6 : viewed 19 Nov 2021) baptism Elizabeth Greene 11 Dec 1634 (mother listed as Elizabeth) #William (executor) 15 Dec 1636Essex : Toppesfield : St Margaret of Antioch : Parish Register : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/581826eae93790ec8bd20270 : viewed 18 Nov 2021) baptism William Greene 15 Dec 1636 #Henry (executor) 13 Jan 1638/39Essex : Toppesfield : St Margaret of Antioch : Register of unspecified type : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/581826ebe93790ec8bd2032f : viewed 19 Nov 2021) baptism Henery Greene 13 Jan 1638/9 (mother listed as Elizabeth) #Samuell born c. April 1645 in Massachusetts; it was in this gap between Henry and Samuell that the family emigrated to New England. #Mary born c. 1647 #Hannah born c. 1649 #Martha born c. 1651 (these three are estimated based on order listed in the will) #Dorcas born 1 May 1653 Malden, MassVital Records of Malden, Massachusetts 1653 [https://ma-vitalrecords.org/MA/Middlesex/Malden/aBirthsG.shtml birth of Dorcas Green, daughter of Thomas] (note that daughters of Thomas Jr were listed as "Thomas Jr") Elizabeth died August 1658 as Elizabeth Green, wife of Thomas Sr.("6th month", some sites claim a specific day of the 22nd but Malden Vital records does not show a day).Vital Records of Malden, Massachusetts 1658 death of [https://ma-vitalrecords.org/MA/Middlesex/Malden/aDeathsG.shtml Elizabeth Green, wife of Thomas] Thomas' '''third marriage to Frances''' was 5 Sep 1659 at Malden, performed by Captain Marshall.Vital Records of Malden, Massachusetts [https://ma-vitalrecords.org/MA/Middlesex/Malden/aMarriagesG.shtml 1659 marriage of Thomas Green and Francis Cook, widow of Richard] His wife was Frances, who first married Isaac Wheeler in Cranfield, Bedfordshire England as "Frances Watson" although it's unknown whether this was her last name at birth. She then married Richard Cook who died in Malden 14 Oct 1658, next this Thomas Green and finally Joseph Wheeler. There were no children from this marriage. ===Immigration=== Thomas did not appear in his mother's 1642 will so there is speculation that he was already in New England by that date. His 1662 deposition stated that at about 16 or 18 years old his family lived on "Lady Moodey"s farm in Lynn, Massachusetts which would mean they were in Massachusetts as early as 1644. They were in Malden by 1649 per a deposition of Thomas' son John. As disscussed in the "Questionable Information" section, neither Thomas nor his son Thomas was the 15-year old listed on both the ''Hopewell'' and the ''Planter'' in 1635 (born c. 1620), nor were they the Thomas Green of the 1635 ''Speedwell'' who traveled alone as a 24-year old on a ship bound for Virginia, not New England.1635 Passenger list of the Speedwell for 24-year old [https://packrat-pro.com/ships/speedwell.htm Thomas Green] so was born about 1611, nicely in between Thomas Green Sr. and Jr. It is certain that he lived in Malden, Massachusetts, as early as October 28, 1651, when his wife Elizabeth and daughter of the same name, signed a petition to the general court concerning the Rev. Marmaduke Matthews. (citing MBCR:3:236, 250, 257, 294Records of the Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England Volume 3 [https://archives.lib.state.ma.us/bitstream/handle/2452/802285/ocm3522063_vol3.pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=y p. 236]). Various records about Thomas appear in "Kempton" and in narratives listed in the "See Below" section; he was on the county's grand jury and was frequently a Malden selectman. ===Death & Estate=== The will of Thomas Green, Senior written 22 Nov 1667 is completely transcribed in "Kempton" He died December 19, 1667 in Malden, Middlesex, Massachusetts.Vital Records of Malden, Massachusetts 1667 death of [https://ma-vitalrecords.org/MA/Middlesex/Malden/aDeathsG.shtml Thomas Green, Sr]Pope, Charles H. The Pioneers of Massachusetts (Charles H. Pope, Boston, MA, 221 Columbus Ave., 1900) [https://archive.org/details/pioneersofmassac00pope/page/199/mode/1up Page 199]. His will was proved 15 Jan 1667/68 and listed all of the children shown above and his un-named wife; it only listed first names of his daughters, not their married names (if any). ===Questionable Information=== *He was not born in 1606/07 in Leicestershire, Hertfordshire or anywhere else reported without source. *His parents are as stated on this profile borne out by Toppesfield parish registers. *His wife Elizabeth's name has not been found. Some oral traditions and unsourced pedigrees list her as "Lynde" or "Swindells" or "Newman" without documentation and possibly based on DNA matching. At least one source of Newman is here.Windows Into Our Past, Volume 6 Published on Jan 1, 2004 A Genealogy of Lewis Green & Associated Families [https://issuu.com/judyparsonssmith/docs/volume6/220 p.76] *This is NOT the Thomas Green who was on the ship's register for both the ''Planter'' and the ''Hopewell'' in 1635 apparently alone and as a 15 year old, placing his birth about 1620. His entry on the Hopewell listed him as "Son of George"1635 Hopewell passenger list for 15 year old Thomas Green at [https://www.packrat-pro.com/ships/hopewell1.htm packratpro.com] while his entry the Planter simply listed his name and age.1635 Planter passenger list for 15 year old Thomas Green at [https://packrat-pro.com/ships/planter.htm packratpro.com] Some web sites claim this teen was from St. Albans, Hertfordshire. In fact it is not clear if that young man ever traveled to New England and while records in Roxbury, Massachusetts and another [[Green-410|Thomas Green of Malden]] who married Margaret Call and seemingly Elizabeth Webb have been identified as possible candidates, it was definitely not THIS Thomas "jr" who was only about 5 years old in 1635. Anderson in "Great Migration" discusses this scenario as well and thinks that the 15-year old never appeared in New England.Great Migration 1634-1635, G-H. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2009.) Originally published as: The Great Migration, Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635, Volume III, G-H, by Robert Charles Anderson. Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2003. [https://www.americanancestors.org/databases/great-migration-immigrants-to-new-england-1634-1635-volume-iii-g-h/image/?volumeId=7118&pageName=150&rId=22097290 p. 151] $subscription *A mish-mash of Green information appears in the "Family Records of the Branches of the Hanaford...&c" book by Mary Elizsabeth Neal Hanaford. She states in three consecutive paragraphs that Thomas Jr came to America with his father and was a farmer in Malden, Mass (true); that Thomas Green was a passenger for Virginia on the 1635 ''Speedwell'' (true but a different man, born about 1611) and that Thomas Green was of Ipswich, Mass as of 19 Dec 1648 (possible but unsourced and could have been another Thomas Green who married Margaret Call). Her presentation could lead to some erroneous understandings of these various families and it must be understood that she has simply listed a string of "Green" facts about different people in different places and times, this is NOT a linear narration of the family of Malden, Massachusetts.Hanaford, Mary Elisabeth Neal. Family Records of Branches of the Hanaford, Thompson, Huckins, ... and Allied Families (Rockford, Ill., 1915) [https://books.google.com/books?id=q45PAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA266 Page 266]. *Another mash-up of Green information is found in Samuel S. Greene's "A Genealogical Sketch...&c"A Genealogical Sketch of the Descendants of Thomas Green of Malden, Mass. (Henry W. Dutton & Son, Boston, 1858) [https://archive.org/stream/genealogicalsket00gree#page/8/mode/2up Page 8] This work states (all unsourced) that Thomas of Malden was born about 1606 (ignoring his own deposition stating he was born 1600), that there was "probably reason to think" they came from Leicestershire (but matching the children with those born in Toppesfield, Essex), states a daughter Mary born about 1633 who married John Waite in 1655 (Thomas had a daughter Mary b. 1625 who seems to have died at birth and another who was likely born about 1647 and Torrey says that John Waite married Mary Hills, daughter of Joseph Hill, NOT Mary Green) and it goes on. He does agree with the later marriage to Frances Cook/Wheeler but this publication should be treated with care. ===Research Notes=== THe "Hudson-Mowhawk genealogical and family memoirs" publication asserts the following although without primary sources:Reynolds, Cuyler Hudson-Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs (Lewis historical publishing company in New York, 1911) Vol. 4, [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=loc.ark:/13960/t9b56ss63;view=2up;seq=492 Page 1795-1798] ''Note: The Greene family of Amsterdam, New York, are descendants of Thomas Greene, of England, the final e of the name being dropped by the second generation in America. There were other families of the same name who settled in New England at an early date, and there were others by the name of Thomas. There was a Thomas who was on record in Roxbury in 1648; Thomas, who came in the "Speedwell" in 1636; and Thomas, of Middlesex. These must not be confounded with the Thomas Greene, of Malden.'' The validity of the Roxbury records are uncertain and bear further research; some research has also indicated a "Widow Green" of Roxbury. == Sources ==
Thomas Greene Family Research
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Thomas Greene's Wives
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[[Smith-259315|Mary (Smith) Green (bef.1607-bef.1625)]]
[[Unknown-581419|Elizabeth (Unknown) Greene (abt.1610-1658)]]
[[Watson-21981|Frances (Watson) Wheeler (abt.1612-aft.1671)]]
Other-- :[[Newman-974|Elizabeth (Newman) Green (abt.1610-1658)]] :[[Lynde-455|Elizabeth (Lynde) Green (1607-1658)]] ----- The identity of Thomas Greene was documented by Dean Crawford Smith and Melinde Lutz Sanborn in 2000. He was baptized Toppesfield, Essex, England, 3 February 1599/1600, son of William,Dean Crawford Smith, Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed., ''The ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'' in 4 parts (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-304, at 300; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/300/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)].H. B. Barnes and Philip Morant, ''The register of baptisms, marriages and burials at St. Margaret's, Toppesfield Parish, Essex Co., England : 1559-1650 ...'' (Topsfield, Mass. : Merrill Press, 1905), 19; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/registerofbaptis00barn/page/n30/mode/1up ''InternetArchive''].Thomas Green 1599 baptism, "Baptisms, 1559-1692; burials, 1560-1689; marriages, 1598-1690" in "Parish registers for Toppesfield"; digital image, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DTFP-NH?i=538&cc=1465709 ''FamilySearch''], FHL film 857,071, Item 5, DGS 4,298,449, image 539 of 615 (recto). and is the same man deposed Middlesex County, Massachusetts Bay, 16 (2) 1662, then "aged about 62."Citing "Middlesex Court Files, folio 32," Dean Crawford Smith, Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed., ''The ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'' in 4 parts (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-304, at 300; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/300/mode/1up?view=theater ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)]. Thomas died at Malden, Middlesex County, 19 December 1667,Citing "Malden VR 346," Dean Crawford Smith and Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed, ''The Ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'', in 4 parts, (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-304, at 300; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/300/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)]. leaving a will dated 12 November 1667.Citing "Middlesex Probate 5:270-275, also original papers in #9840," Dean Crawford Smith and Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed, ''The Ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'', in 4 parts, (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-304, at 301-302; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/301/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)]. This origin and identity was followed by Robert Charles Anderson in 2003 who referenced the baptismal date and wrote, "Dean Crawford Smith and Melinde Lutz Sanborn identified the English origin of the eldest Thomas Greene of Malden ..."Robert Charles Anderson, ''Great Migration: Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635, Volume III, G-H'' (2003), 150; digital images by subscription, [https://www.americanancestors.org/DB116/i/7118/150/235151758 ''AmericanAncestors'']. Thomas Greene is presumed to have married three times. Information regarding each of the three wives follows. ==Mary (Smith) Green== Thomas was baptized 1599/1600 at Toppesfield, and in 1625, the first baptism to a child of Thomas appears in the parish records there, listing the wife's name as Mary, :1625, Mary, d. Thomas Greene & Mary, 8 Sept.Mary Greene (child) 1625 baptism, H. B. Barnes and Philip Morant, ''The register of baptisms, marriages and burials at St. Margaret's, Toppesfield Parish, Essex Co., England : 1559-1650 ...'' (Topsfield, Mass. : Merrill Press, 1905), 31; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/registerofbaptis00barn/page/n42/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'']. An entry of the same day appears there for the burial of Mary, wife of Thomas Greene.Mary Greene (wife) 1625 burial, H. B. Barnes and Philip Morant, ''The register of baptisms, marriages and burials at St. Margaret's, Toppesfield Parish, Essex Co., England : 1559-1650 ...'' (Topsfield, Mass. : Merrill Press, 1905), 60; [https://archive.org/details/registerofbaptis00barn/page/n42/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'']. '''Was she Mary Smith?''' She may have been the Marie Smith who married at St. Nicholas, Colchester, Essex, 28 June 1624, Thomas Greene,Greene-Smith 1624 marriage, "England Marriages, 1538–1973 "; database (only), [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N26N-CJX ''FamilySearch''], St Nicholas. Coldchester, Essex, England in IGI Batch M137953. possibly the Mary Smith baptized Toppesfield 17 January 1606/7, daughter John Smith.Mary Smith 1606 baptism, H. B. Barnes and Philip Morant, ''The register of baptisms, marriages and burials at St. Margaret's, Toppesfield Parish, Essex Co., England : 1559-1650 ...'' (Topsfield, Mass. : Merrill Press, 1905), 21; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/registerofbaptis00barn/page/n31/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'']. ==Elizabeth (_____) Greene== An additional four baptisms are recorded at Toppesfield between 1632 and 1638 for the children of "Thomas Greene & Elizabeth."John Greene 1632 baptism, Elizabeth Greene 1634 baptism, William Greene 1636 baptism and Henery Greene 1638 baptism, H. B. Barnes and Philip Morant, ''The register of baptisms, marriages and burials at St. Margaret's, Toppesfield Parish, Essex Co., England : 1559-1650 ...'' (Topsfield, Mass. : Merrill Press, 1905), 35-37, 39; digital image, [https://archive.org/details/registerofbaptis00barn/page/n46/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'']. All of these children migrated to New England--records of them are found there and each is named in Thomas' will.Citing "Middlesex Probate 5:270-275, also original papers in #9840," Dean Crawford Smith and Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed, ''The Ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'', in 4 parts, (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-304, at 301-302; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/301/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)]. One more child, son Thomas, was born at England about 1630. He is named in his father's will as the eldest son, but research has yet to produce a record of his baptism. The four English baptisms 1632-1638 are, :1632, "John, s. Thomas Greene & Elizabeth, 6 December." As "John Greene, Senr," he testified at Cambridge, Massachusetts Bay, 10 September 1695, then "age 63 years or thereabouts."Citing "Middlesex Court Files, folio 179," Dean Crawford Smith, Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed., ''The ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'' in 4 parts (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-310, at 301; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/301/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)]. :1634, "Elizabeth, d. Thomas Greene & Elizabeth, 30 Novem-." :1636, "William, s. Thomas Greene & Elizabeth, 15 December." He died Malden, 30 December 1705, aged 70 years.Citing "Malden VR 346," Dean Crawford Smith, Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed., ''The ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'' in 4 parts (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-310, at 304; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/304/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)]. :1638, "Henery, s. Thomas Greene & Elizabeth, 13 Janu. [1638/9]." He died at Malden, 19 September 1717, age 78 years, 8 months.Citing "Malden VR 346," Dean Crawford Smith, Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed., ''The ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'' in 4 parts (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-310, at 305; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/305/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)]. Yet other children were born or recorded to Thomas and Elizabeth at Massachusetts Bay. :Samuel Green, born about April 1645 (died at Malden, 31 October 1724, aged 79 years, 7 months and 19 days).Citing "Gravestone, Bell Rock Cemetery ..." and "Malden VR 346," Dean Crawford Smith, Melinde Lutz Sanborn, ed., ''The ancestry of Eva Belle Kempton, 1878-1908'' in 4 parts (Boston : New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1996-2000), (4) 293-310, at 305; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/305/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'' (borrow)]. :Mary Green, born about 1647; mentioned in her father's will, See [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Thomas_Greene%27s_Wives#Research_Notes Research Notes]. :Hannah Green, born say 1649; mentioned in her father's will. :Martha, born say 1651; mentioned in her father's will. :Dorcas, born Malden, 1 May 1653. Elizabeth was born, probably England, about 1610 (birth of first presumed child, about 1630); she died at Malden, Massachusetts Bay, August 1658."Births, Marriages and Deaths in Malden, Massachusetts" ''Vital Records from the New England Historical and Genealogical Register''. [https://archive.org/details/newenglandhistor1856wate/page/n341/mode/2up Vol. 10 p. 163]. '''Not Elizabeth Newman.''' Elizabeth Newman was mis-identified as the wife of the immigrant, Thomas Green, in a 2004 release of Judy Parsons Smith's ''Windows into Our Past''.Judy Parsons Smith, ''Windows Into Our Past, Volume 6 ...'' (1 January 2004), 76; digital images, [https://issuu.com/judyparsonssmith/docs/volume6/220 ''Issuu.com''] (download), citing "Information from Appalachian Ancestors, 2002 [by E-mail from darlene (email address removed/privacy)]. This work also mis-identified the origin and parentage of the immigrant, reporting Thomas Greene was born "St. Albans, Hartfort," England, about 1600, died "16 April 1674," the son of an Arthur Green. [[Newman-974|Elizabeth Newman]] is otherwise presumed the wife of [[Green-6978|James Greene]] of Charlestown. See Thomas Bellows Wyman, ''The genealogies and estates of Charlestown''.''[[Space:The Genealogies and Estates of Charlestown|The Genealogies and Estates of Charlestown ...]]'', 2 vols. (D. Clapp, Boston, 1879), 1:437 (James Green, 12); digital images, [https://archive.org/details/genealogiesestat01wyma/page/437/mode/1up ''IntenetArchive'']. and William H. Whitmore, "The Wing Family."William H. Whitmore, "The Wing Family," ''The New England Historical and Genealogical Register'', 38 (1874):376-378, at 377; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/newenglandhisto54unkngoog/page/n408/mode/2up ''InternetArchive'']. An entry for James Green-Elizabeth Newman appeared in Frederick A. Virkus, ''The Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy'' (1925)Frederick A. Virkus, ''The Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy'', multiple vols. (Chicago, A.N. Marquis & company, 1925), 1:978; digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015011819037?urlappend=%3Bseq=986%3Bownerid=13510798899577408-1050 ''Hathi Trust'']. just above the entry for Thomas Green-Elizabeth _____. It is possible this Elizabeth (Newman) Green became mistakenly associated with Thomas by someone transferring data. '''Not Elizabeth Swindells.''' Elizabeth Swindells, a spinster, married at Prestbury, Cheshire, England, 5 July 1627, John Greene, by license dated 26 June 1627.Greene-Swindells 1627 marriage, James Croston, ed., ''Record Society for the Publication of Original Documents relating to Lancashire and Cheshire'', 109 vols. ([S.l.] : The Society, 1879-1965), 5 (Prestbury 1560-1636):260; digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044032412322?urlappend=%3Bseq=292%3Bownerid=116823482-296 ''Hathi Trust''].Greene-Swindels 1627 marriage, "Parish registers for Prestbury, Baptisms, marriages, burials, 1560-1636, 1637-1685 ..." in "England, Cheshire Parish Registers, 1538-2000"; images, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6XSW-2JZ?i=199&cc=1614792&cat=691421 ''FamilySearch''], courtesy of Cheshire Record Office; FHL film 2093600 DGS 4018873, image 131 of 481. Green-Swindells 1627 marriage license, William Ferguson Irvine, ed., ''Marriage Licences in the Diocese of Chester 1624-1632'', 8 vols. ([Edinburgh & London] : Printed for the Society, 1907-1924), in ''The Record Society for the Publication of Original Documents related to Lancashire and Cheshire'' 3 (vol. 57):98; digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/njp.32101044299715?urlappend=%3Bseq=112%3Bownerid=27021597768599639-116 ''Hathi Trust''].Greene-Swindles 1627 marriage license, "Marriage licences, 1624-1631, 1639-1644, 1661-1673" in "England, Cheshire, Marriage Bonds and Allegations, 1606-1900"; database and images, [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FB1S-BMK ''FamilySearch''] (database, indexed as Johnem Greene and Elizabetham Swindles, 26 Jun 1627) and [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-68JQ-CCC?cc=1410775&wc=M896-DTG%3A27921201%2C27918402 ''FamilySearch''] (digital image, Latin), courtesy of Cheshire Record Office, Chester, FHL film 1,885,391, DGS 4,018,557, image 118 of 285 (sixth entry, verso). A Thomas Green was bondsman for the marriage license. Possibly someone mis-recorded the groom's name in the process of transferring data. John and Elizabeth (Swindells) Greene may be the couple who lived at Adlington, a village in the parish of Prestbury. Perhaps also the parents of Edward, baptised 27 January 1627/8, and buried 20 May 1636; and Ellen, baptised 10 June 1630. [See [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1333575/proposal-sever-elizabeth-lynde-swindells-marriage-thomas?show=1333871#a1333871 G2G].] '''Not Elizabeth Lynde.''' Information about her is generally conflicted; her name, more often than not, is given as Elizabeth Lynde Swindells, Family files usually report her birth at Presbury, Cheshire. She is at times said daughter of [[Lynde-16|Dea. Thomas Lynde]]. Her husband is described as Thomas Green, born/baptized St. Albans, Hertfordshire, 3 August 1600, son of [[Greene-1868|John Green]] and [[Scargell-1|Ann Almey Scargell]]. The Green-Lynde marriage is said at St. Albans, Hertfordshire, 26 June 1627 (same date as the Green-Swindells Cheshire license). No historical records were found at Prestbury or St. Albans to support these various claims. (One Thomas Greene was baptized Stevenage, Hertfordshire, 3 August 1600, son of Thomas.)Thomas Greene 1600 (Stevenage) baptism, "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975"; database only, [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J32C-CXX ''FamilySearch'']. [See [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1333575/proposal-sever-elizabeth-lynde-swindells-marriage-thomas G2G].] ==Frances (Watson) Wheeler== Frances Watson was born about 1612 (deposed Middlesex, Massachusetts, 5 October 1652, aged 44).Charles Henry Pope, ''The Pioneers of Massachusetts ...'' (1900), 116 (Richard Cook)l digital images, {https://archive.org/details/pioneersofmassac00pope/page/116 ''InternetArchive'']. As Frances Watson, she married (1) at Cranfield, Bedfordshire, England, 9 April 1635, Isaac Wheeler.Parish registers for Cranfield, 1600-1972 FHL film 952401 Item 1, [https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/004006322?cat=313448 ''FamilySearch'']. He died presumably before 16 : 4 : 1648 [16 May 1648], when Frances Wheeler signed a petition on behalf of the "Inhabitants of Mestick side & other In Charles towne" (landowners in the southern section of acreage), requesting the town devise a way to settle disputes regarding the placement of highways.Deloraine Pendre Corey, "The History of Malden, Massachusetts, 1633-1785" (Malden, 1899), 95-96; digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/njp.32101019677671?urlappend=%3Bseq=123%3Bownerid=27021597768319685-127 ''Hathi Trust'']. Frances married (2), perhaps Charlestown, between 16 May 1648 (she was Frances Wheeler in a petition to the court) and before about August 1648 (birth of child, 1649), Richard Cook, who was listed as "of Charlestown" by Savage; he died in Malden. 14 August 1658.Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001; [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QG1K-D3CC ''FamilySearch'']. Frances Cooke, "widow of Richard," married (3), at Malden, 5 September 1659, Thomas Green, Sen.Green-Cooke 1659 marriage, Deloraine P. Corey, ''Births, marriages and deaths in the town of Malden, Massachusetts, 1649-1850'' (Cambridge : Printed at the University Press for the city of Malden, 1903), 237 (Green); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89096691027?urlappend=%3Bseq=259%3Bownerid=13510798901255055-289 ''Hathi Trust'']. They were married by Capt. Marshall. After Thomas Greene's death, Francis married (4) [[Wheeler-1037|Lieutenant Joseph Wheeler]]. ==Research Notes== '''Daughter Mary.''' It is not clear how Smith and Sanborn came to claim that the Mary mentioned in her father' will was not the same Mary baptized Toppesfield, 1625. (Smith and Sanborn suggest the daughter mentioned in Thomas' will was "born say 1647.") This is a possible conflict, especially as the authors write, "It is possible that Elizabeth and Mary, whom we presume were the two daughters who already had their portions, as mentioned in Thomas' will, were married into Malden families soon after the Greens arrival." ([https://archive.org/details/ancestryofevabel04smit/page/301/mode/1up page 301]) == Sources ==
Thomas Guardianship Transcript of 1883
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Thomas H. Minard 1901 Will
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Thomas Hammond Biographical Extracts
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See also: [[Space:Thomas_Hammond_Research_Items|Thomas Hammond Research Items]] Note: If the contents of the extraction listed as "Hammond Family" can not be verified as public domain material, it should likely be removed. Link no longer functions, but could well have been a family file. ==Savage== James Savage, ''A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England'' (Boston, Little, Brown and company, 1860-62), 4 vols., 2:346; digital images [https://archive.org/stream/genealogicaldic02savarich#page/346/mode/2up ''InternetArchive'']. :THOMAS, Hingham 1636, younger br. of the first William, b. at Lavenham, Co. Suff k. where, it is said, he was bapt. 9 Jan. 1587, perhaps sev. yrs. bef. he was b. ; freem. 9 Mar. 1637, by w. Eliz. m. prob. in Eng. 12 Nov. 1623, wh. d. bef. him, brot. ch. Eliz. and Thomas, had Sarah, bapt. 13 Sept. 1640, and Nathaniel, 12 Mar. 1643; rem. to Watertown, thence across the riv. 1650, to Cambridge vill. purchas. large farm with Vincent Druce, and d. 30 Sept. 1675, aged 88 yrs. His Will names all these ch. Eliz. wh. m. 17 Aug. 1659, George Woodward, Thomas, and Nathaniel, all then m. and Sarah, prob. w. of Nathaniel Stedman, as dec. but her ch. Sarah and Eliz. to be heirs. He had very good est ==Binney== Charles J. F. Binney, ''The history and genealogy of the Prentice, or Prentiss family, in New England, etc., from 1631 to 1883'' (Charles James Fox, 1806-1888, pub. 1883. Appendix), p. 410-11 digital images, [https://archive.org/stream/historyandgenea00binngoog#page/n523/mode/2up ''InternetArchive'']. :Thomas Hammond, 2d, was of Hingham, Mass., in 1636, a freeman March 9, 1637. By wife Elizabeth, married probably in England, Nov. 12, 1623, and who d. before him and brought over children, Elizabeth and Thomas. Sarah, bapt. Sept. 13, 1640. Nathaniel, bapt. March 12, 1643. Removed to Watertown, Mass. and thence, in 1650, across the river to Cambridge Village (Newton). He purchased a large farm with Vincent Druce, and d. Sept. 3, 1685, ae. 88. ==Cutter== William Richard Cutter and William Frederick Adams, ''Genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of the state of Massachusetts'' {New York, Lewis historical Pub. Co., 1910), 4 vols., 2:1142-1146 (Hammond), in particular part, 1143; digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/nnc2.ark:/13960/t7mp53p85?urlappend=%3Bseq=641 ''Hathi Trust'']. :[Abstracted] He was one of the first settlers at Hingham, Massachusetts, and had land granted him there in 1636. He took the freeman's oath March 9, 1636-37. He was a member of the grand jury in 1637. With several others he removed to a site near the boundary line between what are now the towns of Newton and Brookline. He probably removed to Cambridge Village, now Newton, about 1650, but held lands in Hingham for some years after that date. His homestead in Newton was near the Brookline boundary near a sheet of water which has since been called Hammond's pond. This homestead remained in the family for many generations. Thomas Hammond was a large land owner and one of the wealthiest men of the town in his day. He died in 1675, leaving an unsigned will which was admitted to probate November 5, 1675. He married in Lavenham, England, November 12, 1623, ELIZABETH, born in Great Welnetham, daughter of ROBERT and PRUDENCE (HAMMOND) CASON, and granddaughter of ROBERT and ELIZABETH Hammond, of Great Welnetham. It is said that a silver coin is still in the possession of descendants which was stamped by her when on a visit to the mint in England when she was a young girl. Children: 1. Thomas, mentioned below. 2. ELIZABETH, born about 1633-34. 3. Sarah, baptized September 13, 1640. 4. Nathaniel, baptized March 12, 1643. ==Baldwin== Charles Candee Baldwin, ''The Baldwin genealogy from 1500 to 1881'' (Cleveland, O, [Leader printing company], 1881), p. 844; digital images, [https://archive.org/stream/baldwingenealogy00bald#page/844/mode/2up ''InternetArchive'']. :Nathaniel Hammond was b. March 2, 1643, s. of Thomas and his wife Elizabeth, of Hingham, Mass. Thomas Hammond was b. in Lavenham, Suffolk, England, Jan. 9, 1587, and s. of Thomas of that Parish, by his wife, Rose Trippe, m. May 14, 1573. ==Hingham== Following excerpt from "History of NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS, County of Middlesex, Massachusetts, From 1639 to 1800. With a Genealogical Register of its Inhabitants, Prior to 1800." By Francis Jackson, (of Boston,) A Native of Newton. Boston: Printed by Stacy and Richardson 1854. I. HAMMOND, THOMAS, was one of the first settlers of Hingham, and had land granted to him there in 1636 ; took the freeman's oath there, March 9, 1636-7. Two of his children were baptized in Hingham. Thomas Hammond, Vincent Druce, John Parker, Nicholas Hodgen, and John Winchester, all had land granted to them in Hingham in 1636, and were probably there in 1635; They all removed from Hingham about the same time. The three first settled in Cambridge Village and the two last within the bounds of Boston, (now Brookline,) but all five were in the same neighborhood. Hodgen first purchased sixty- seven acres of land on Cambridge Hill, in Cambridge Village, but he and wife Elizabeth, then of Boston, (Brookline,) conveyed the same to Thomas Hammond and Vincent Druce, (then both of Hingham,) on the 4. 12, 1650; also, thirteen acres more, which was granted by the town of Cambridge to Robert Bradish; and also sixteen acres more, in Muddy river, next to Cambridge hill, adjoining John Parker's land N. N. W., and N. E. Hammond and Druce bought, 1658, of Thomas Brattle and others, six hundred acres at Muddy river, (Brookline,) called the Royton farm, for L 100, N. partly on the Roxbury line, and s. partly on the Cambridge line, surveyed by John Oliver. Hammond sold his place in Hingham to William Sprague, in March, 1656, for L 60. Hammond and Druce's purchases were held in common until 1664, when a division was made; " the dividing line was one hundred rods long, running over the great hill," the pond being in Hammond's part. Hammond also bought of Esther Sparhawk, dr. of Nathaniel Sparhawk, three hundred and thirty acres, for L 40, in 1656, being the same land granted by the town of Cambridge to her father, " bounding s. and W. on land of Robert Bradish, and N. by land of Elder Frost, now in the possession of John Ward and Lieut. Prentice." It is not known whether his W. Elizabeth came to this country with him, or whether he was m. at Hingham. Hobart's s Diary states that his dr. Sarah was baptized Sept. 13, 1640, and s. Nathaniel, March 12, 1643. His will is on record, but is neither signed nor dated; was exhibited to the Court by his wid. Elizabeth, Sept. 30, 1675, and was in his own handwriting. It was set up, and Elder Wiswall and John Spring were appointed to appraise the estate; and their inventory, amounting to L 1,139, 16s. 2d., dated Oct. 25, 1675, states that lie d. Sept. 30,1675. His will names but two sons and two daughters, Thomas and Nathaniel, and Sarah Stedman and Elizabeth Woodward, w. of George Woodward, and divides his estate between these four, and his wid. Elizabeth, to -whom he gave his dwelling house and a portion of his land. To Thomas, the house he then lived in, and portions of land. To Nathaniel, the house he then occupied, with the land adjoining, and the cranberry meadow, from the corner of the pond to 11 Troublesome swamp." In his division of the farm, the orchards and the barn were put into his son Thomas' part, and so he added the following item, which is the last clause in his will: - I Furthermore, my will is that my son Nathaniel have one-third part of the fruit of the orchards with my son Thomas, year by year, till he have an orchard of his own, and use of the barn till his brother Thomas help him build one." Appoints his w. sole executrix, and his friends Jonathan Hyde and James Trowbridge, overseers. The maiden name of his w. Elizabeth was Cason, of Lavenham, Eng. There is a tradition in the family relative to this mother of the Newton Hammonds. It is said that when a young woman, in England, she took a walk with a party of young folks and went into the Mint, to see how money was coined. The master of the Mint was pleased with her appearance and chat, and gave her an invitation to try her hand in the operation. She had evidently made some impression upon him, and he was desirous to know if she could make as good an impression upon the coin; so he placed a piece of silver coin upon the die, about the size of half a crown, - she came forward and grasped the lever, and stamped a fair impression upon the coin, whereupon he presented her with the silver piece, which she bore off in triumph; and from her fair hand, it has passed through those of her descendants, to the seventh generation, and is now possessed by Stephen Hammond, of Roxbury, whose son William, of the eighth, is looking wishfully for it. ==Hammond Family== From [[Hammond-8447|Thomas Hammond (abt.1603-1675)]] Reference was to http:/www.bellcolib.org/crm/hammonshistory.html The origin of this family in England is said to have been traced to two kinsmen of William the Conqueror, who went into England with him in 1066. These young warriors were descended from a younger son of Rollo, the first Duke of Normandy, while William the Conqueror was descended from the eldest son. The eldest of the two early Hammonds in England, Sir Robert Fitzhamer, seventh Count or Earl of Coneile in Normandy, was a mighty man of valor, one of the most illustrious, of all the valiant knights that accompanied the Conqueror into England. Later he became Lord Cardiff in Wales, Lord of Tewkesbury, and Earl of Gloucester in England, and by King Rufus he was made a free Prince of Wales, styled by the King, Robert the Great, by the grace of God, Prince of Glamorgan, Earle of Coneile, etc. He was also commissioned general of the army against the French. The second, Haimon, called Dapifer, from his having received the office of Lord Steward for the King. He died without children. Robert left four daughters. Later members of this family became prominently identified with the Church, as Bishops, Abbots, etc. The oldest direct line in England, are the Hammonds of St. Albans Court, in Kent County, where this branch has been seated since the reign of Henry VIII, King of England, when John Hammond was tenant to the Abbot and Convent of St. Albans; his son Thomas purchased the manor in 1551; and married (first) Anne, daughter of Robert Haddle and (second) Alice, daughter of Edward Monnis of Waldershire, by whom he had ten children. Two of his grandsons, Francis and Robert became distinguished in the Army, each winning the title of Colonel; they accompanied Sir Walter Raleigh on his expedition to Guinea, and won the praise of that gallant soldier. Sir William Hammond, of St. Albans, who received the honor of Knighthood, 1608, married Elizabeth, daughter of Anthony Archer, Esq., of Bishopsborne and had issue: Sir Anthoney, his eldest son and heir, who married Ann daughter of Sir Dudley Digges, Knight of Chillam Castle, Master of Rolls to King Charles I, and member of the Council of the Virginia Co., 1609. Through this kinship, Ralph Hamor or Hammond, proved by foreign research to be one and the same, was one of the twelve gentlemen, to whom King James I, in 1624, granted a charter to proceed to Virginia to establish a colony, of which he appointed Sir Francis Wyatt, Governor; Sir George Yeardly, Knight, and the other ten gentlemen, Esq., to be his council. This Ralph Hamor the first of the name in America, was of the Hammonds of Aerin of Kent Co., England; he was a younger son of that house, whose lineage is the same as the Hammonds of St. Albans, but being the heir of a younger son, their arms are different. During the reign of Charles I and II, the Hammonds, were high in office in England, Dr John Hammond, was Court Physician to King James I., and his son, was Chaplain to Charles I, and another son came to Virginia, and was a member of the House of Burguess, from Isle of Wight Co., 1635-1652; he then went to Maryland, where he remained a few years, before returning to England, where he wrote "Leak and Rachel" describing the Colonies of Maryland and Virginia. Yet another son of Dr. John Hammond, was a Lieut. Gen. in Cromwells Army, and his grandson, a son of Thomas Hammond, was Col. Robert Hammond, Governor of the Isle of Wight, England, and it was to this Col. Robert Hammond, that King Charles I, fled for protection when driven from his throne, Col. Robert being loyal to his King, gave him shelter beneath his roof, which act of loyalty cost him his office. Sir William b.1579 d. 1650 grandson of Thomas Hammond was knighted by James I in 1607/8 and had a brother Thomas. To this Thomas the descendants of William of Watertown and Thomas of Newton have tried to trace their line of descent without avil. The present representative of the St. Albans family is William Oxenden Hammond, Nonington, County Kent, England. There is quite a general impression and a strong probability that William of London is descended from one of younger sons of the family of St Albans Court, possibly from one of the brothers of Sir William of whom there are several, through the connection has not been traced as the English genealogies preserve full records of the first sons only. Later sons and daughters being usually merely alluded to. There are also reasons to believe that William of London and Thomas of Lavenham may have been related, maybe cousins. There aren't any other noted families bearing the name in England, one of the later being that of Baron Edmond Hammond who was raised to the peerage in 1874. The Caplain and the keeper at the Isle of Wight and one of the judges of Charles I were Hammonds. There are several distinct branches or lines of Hammonds in the USA. The following are some of them. One, Philip Hammond the first ancestor of this line to come to the US, is said to have come from County Kent and landed in Ann Arundell County MD in 1607. His brothers Thomas and Rezin came soon after and settled in Jamestown BA in 1608, they were called Cavaliers because they favored Charles I. The puritans were called Roundheads because they favored Cromell. There is another line whose ancestor is said to have settled in Kittery, ME. The family is Thomas of William of Kittery. In 1632 William Hammond son of Thomas of Lavenham, referred to as William of Watertown, came to Boston and some years later settled in Watertown MA. Two years later his wife Elizabeth Payne Hammond, two sons Thomas and John, three daughters, Elizabeth, Anne, and Sarah rejoined him arriving in Boston in the ship Francis in April 1634. She was a sister of William Payne an extensive land owner in New England. This William did not have a son Benjamin. In 1634 Elizabeth Penn Hammond, widow of William of London with three daughters Elizabeth, Martha, Rachel son Benjamin came on the ship Griffin landing at Boston. Sep 18, 1634. From Benjamin who married Mary Vincent and settled in Sandwich MA. This is still another family line. The above two lines have caused genealogists much confusion. Both named William with wives named Elizabeth and both wives had brothers named William, and they both arrived in Boston in 1634. And one being William of London, who never came to the US, and William of Watertown being the other. Benjamin lived in Sandwich MA and had sons, Samuel, John, Benjamin and Nathan who settled in Rochester MA. In 1636 Thomas, son of Thomas of Lavenham, with his wife Elizabeth Carson, daughter Elizabeth, son Thomas came to Boston and settled in Hingham MA. In 1640 he moved to Newton where lived and died was known as Thomas of Newton. Had a daughter Sarah and son Nathaniel born in Newton. Thomas and Nathaniel started yet another line. ==Sources==
Thomas Hammond Research Items
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See also: [[Space:Thomas_Hammond_Biographical_Extracts|Thomas Hammond Biographical Extracts]] '''Directory''' Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Directory: Immigrants to New England, 1620–1640 (Boston, Massachusetts. New England Historic and Genealogical Society. 2015) p 149: Hammond, Thomas: Unknown; 1636; Hingham, Cambridge
[https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uma.ark:/13960/t0gt5x713?urlappend=%3Bseq=396 MBCR 1:372] -- see Nathaniel B. Shurtleff, ''Records of the governor and company of the Massachusetts bay ...'' (Boston, W. White, printer to the commonwealth, 1853-54), 5 vols. in 6, 1:372 (freemen); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uma.ark:/13960/t0gt5x713?urlappend=%3Bseq=396 ''Hathi Trust''].
[https://hdl.handle.net/2027/dul1.ark:/13960/t82k04v9p?urlappend=%3Bseq=213 Lechford 175] -- see Thomas Lechford and J. Hammond Trumbull, Edward Everett Hale, Jr., ed., ''Note-book kept by Thomas Lechford, esq. ...'' (Cambridge, John Wilson and son, 1885), 175; digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/dul1.ark:/13960/t82k04v9p?urlappend=%3Bseq=213 ''Hathi Trust''].
HiBOP 90;
[https://www.americanancestors.org/DB202/i/11666/13/0 NEHGR 121:13] -- see C. Edward Egan, Jr., "The Hobart Journal," ''New England Historical and Genealogical Register'', 121 (1967):[https://www.americanancestors.org/DB202/i/11666/3/0 3-25 (1635-1652)], 121 (1967):[https://www.americanancestors.org/DB202/i/11666/102/23553640 102-127 (1652-1671)], 121 (1967):[https://www.americanancestors.org/DB202/i/11666/191/23517406 191-216 (1671-1685)], 121 (1967):[https://www.americanancestors.org/DB202/i/11666/269/23491117 269-294 (1685-1700)]; digital images by subscription, ''AmericanAncestors''.
Bond [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=dul1.ark:/13960/t5p880t3c&view=1up&seq=324&skin=2021 272], [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/dul1.ark:/13960/t5p880t3c?urlappend=%3Bseq=324 779] -- see Henry Bond and Horatio Gates Jones, ''Genealogies of the families and descendants of the early settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts ...'' (Boston, The N. E. Historic-genealogical society, for the benefit of the "Bond fund," 1860) 2nd ed., 2 vols in 1, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/dul1.ark:/13960/t5p880t3c?urlappend=%3Bseq=324 272 (1 Thomas Hammond)] and [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/dul1.ark:/13960/t5p880t3c?urlappend=%3Bseq=831 779-786 [Hammond descendancy]]; digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/dul1.ark:/13960/t5p880t3c?urlappend=%3Bseq=324 ''Hathi Trust''].
[https://hdl.handle.net/2027/coo.31924081304325?urlappend=%3Bseq=300 Hingham Hist 2:286];
Frederick Stam Hammond, History and Genealogy of the Hammond Families in America, volume 2 (Oneida, New York, 1904) 1-5 (proposed English origin not proved)].
'''Other Sources''' CambridgeHist -- see Lucius R. Paige, ''History of Cambridge Massachusetts ...''(Boston H. O. Houghton Co., Riverside Press, Cambridge, MA, 1877); digital images, [https://archive.org/details/historyofcambrid00paigiala/page/n8/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'']. NewtonHist -- see Francis Jackson, ''A History of the Early Settlement of Newton ...'' (Boston:, Printed by Stacy and Richardson. 1854); digital images, [https://archive.org/details/cu31924025963376/page/n6/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'']. Jackson (1854) reports "The Newton Church" records ... were all burnt in 1770." (p. [https://archive.org/details/cu31924025963376/page/n122/mode/1up 117]) "The following persons, with their wives, were probably the first members of the church .... Thomas Hammond [from] Hingham [Church]." (p. [https://archive.org/details/cu31924025963376/page/n122/mode/1up 117-118]). Hosea Sprague, ''The Genealogy of the Sprague's in Hingham ...'' (Hingham, H.Sprague, 1828), 13 (1629); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044086451945?urlappend=%3Bseq=17 ''Hathi Trust'']. NEHGR, Vol. 107, NEHGS, Boston, MA, 1953 -- See Arthur Adams, "Memoirs of the Deceased Members of the New England Historic Genealogical Society," ''New England Historical and Genealogical Register'', 107 (1953):226; digital images by subscription, [https://www.americanancestors.org/DB202/i/11622/226/0 ''AmericanAncestors'']. Clarence Almon Torrey ''New England Marriages to 1700''; HAMMOND, Thomas (1603-1675) & Elizabeth CASON/CARSON?; Lavenham; Eng, 12 Nov 1623; Hingham/Cambridge ''New England Marriages Prior to 1700'' (2015), multiple vols., 2:692; digital images by subscription [https://www.americanancestors.org/DB1568/rd/21175/692/426888874 ''AmericanAncestors'']. She is Elizabeth Cason/Carson?; works consulted as "Gen. Adv. 4:128; Horatio Hammond Gen. 3; Reed (1956); Davis-Bancroft 30; Hammond 2:1; Prime 35; Winthrop-Babcock; Watertown 272, 779; Pope's Pioneers; Blackman Anc. 231." '''Published Hammond English Parish Extracts/Abstracts.''' -- See Frederick Stam Hammond, ''History and genealogies of the Hammond families in America ...'' ( Oneida, N.Y. : Ryan & Burkhart, Printers, 1902), 2 vols in 3 parts, 1:1:15-29; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n60/mode/1up ''InternetArchive'']. [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n60/mode/1up Lavenham Parish Records] : [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n60/mode/1up Baptisms, 15-17]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n66/mode/1up Marriages, 17-18]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n68/mode/1up Burials, 18-19].
[https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n70/mode/1up Melford Parish Registers] : [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n70/mode/1up Baptisms, 19-20]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n74/mode/1up Marriages, 21]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n74/mode/1up Burials, 21]
[https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n74/mode/1up Great Waldingfield Registers] : [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n74/mode/1up Baptisms, 21-22]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n76/mode/1up Marriages 22]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n76/mode/1up Burials, 22-23]
[https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n78/mode/1up Lawshal Registers] : [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n78/mode/1up Baptisms 23-26]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n84/mode/1up Marriages, 26]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n84/mode/1up Burials, 26-27]
[https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n86/mode/1up Hawkedon Registers] [*] : [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n86/mode/1up Baptisms, 27-28]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n88/mode/1up Marriages, 28]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n88/mode/1up Burials, 28]
[https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n88/mode/1up Boxtead Registers] : [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n88/mode/1up Baptisms, 28]' [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n90/mode/1up Marriages, 29]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n90/mode/1up Burials, 29]
[https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n90/mode/1up Hartest Register] : [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n90/mode/1up Baptisms, 29]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n90/mode/1up Marriages, 29]; [https://archive.org/details/historygenealogi11hamm/page/n90/mode/1up Burials, 29]
[*] Notes, "The earlier registers not searched." '''Vital Records.''' Hamond-Stedman 1662 marriage, ''Vital records of Cambridge, Massachusetts, to the year 1850'' (Boston, Mass. [Wright & Potter Print. Co.], 1914-15), 2 vols., 2:180 (Hamond); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044098880107?urlappend=%3Bseq=184 ''Hathi Trust'']; 17 December 1662; intention not recorded. Tho[mas] Hammond 1678 death entry, ''Vital records of Cambridge, Massachusetts, to the year 1850'' (Boston, Mass. [Wright & Potter Print. Co.], 1914-15), 2 vols., 2:586 (Hammond); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044098880107?urlappend=%3Bseq=590 ''Hathi Trust'']; Oct. 20, 167. Hammond-Stedman 1662 marriage entry, ''Vital records of Newton, Massachusetts, to the year 1850'' (Boston, NEHGS, at the charge of the Eddy town-record fund, 1905), 300 (Hammond); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015027053183?urlappend=%3Bseq=334 ''Hathi Trust'']; Thomas and Elizabeth Stedman, Dec. 17, 1662; intention not recorded, notes: "Town copy with additions." Nath[anie]ll Hamond Sr. 1691 death entry, ''Vital records of Newton, Massachusetts, to the year 1850'' (Boston, NEHGS, at the charge of the Eddy town-record fund, 1905), 457 (Hamond); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015027053183?urlappend=%3Bseq=507 ''Hathi Trust'']; "dup. Nathaniell Hammond" cites "G.R.I. [gravestone record, Centre Street Cemetery]" for "a. 49." Woodward-Hamond 1659 marriage entry, 'Watertown records : comprising the first and second books of town proceedings, with the lands, grants and possessions, also the proprietors' book, and the first book and supplement of births, deaths and marriages'' 9Watertown, Mass. : Press of F.G. Barker, 1894) 1 vol. in multiple parts, variously paginated, [vital records]:22 digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89067596734?urlappend=%3Bseq=434 ''Hathi Trust'']; "Marryed the 17 of Agusft [1659]." George Woodward 1676 death entry, ''Watertown records'' [vol. 1] : ''comprising the first and second books of town proceedings, with the lands, grants and possessions, also the proprietors' book, and the first book and supplement of births, deaths and marriages'' (Watertown, Mass. : Press of F.G. Barker, 1894) 1 vol. in multiple parts, variously paginated, [[BMD] First Book]:41; digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89067596734?urlappend=%3Bseq=453 ''Hathi Trust'']; "George Woodward Dyed the thirty firft of may [1676] Elizabeth Woodward 1700 death entry, ''Watertown records'' [vol. 2] ''comprising the third book of town proceedings and the second book of births, marriages and deaths to end of 1737 also plan and register of burials in Arlington street burying ground'' (Watertown, Mass. : Press of Fred G. Barker, 1900), 1 vol. in multiple parts, variously paginated, [[BMD] Second Book]:14; digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89077237725?urlappend=%3Bseq=434 ''Hathi Trust'']; "Elizabeth woodward Diceased August 24 : 1700 : Aged : 66." == Sources ==
Thomas Harriot
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Thomas Haydon: Household and Pre-1850 Census
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Thomas Higham Transcribed will: 1616
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From East Sussex Record Office, PBT 1/1/15/118 Thomas Hyam (Higham) of Westfield, yeoman; registered will with grant of probate; Probate records 1518-1858; PBT 1/1/15/118; [http://www.thekeep.info/collections/getrecord/GB179_PBT_1_1_15_118] Accessed 14 Jan 2019.
Transcribed by [[Roberts-9671|Dave Roberts]] In the name of God Amen the sixteenth day of February in the year of the reign of our Sovereigh Lord James by the grace of God of England France and Ireland king defender of the faith etc the thirteenth and of Scotland the nine and fortieth and in the year of our Lord God one thousand six hundred and fifteen I [[Higham-300|Thomas Hiam]] of the parish of Westfield in the county of Sussex yeoman, being sick in body but of sound and perfect remembrance (thanks be given unto God) do constitute make and ordain this my last will and testament in manner and form following first I bequeath my soul into the hands of Almighty God my creator who gave it me hoping assuredly to have free pardon and full remission of all my sins through the merits of Jesus Christ my faithful redeemer and my body I bequeath unto the earth from whence it came and to be interred at the discretion of my executrix Item I will and bequeath unto the poor of the parish of Westfield ten shillings of good and lawful money of England with said ten shillings my mind and will is that it shall be employed by the overseer of the poor towards the setting up of a house for poor to dwell in Item I will and bequeath unto Thomas Hyam my son ten pounds of good and lawful money of England and to be paid unto him within three years next after my decease by my executrix Item I will and bequeath unto my daughter [[Higham-299|Anne]] the now wife of [[Catt-83|Nicholas Catt]] of the parish of Westfield before specified twenty pounds of good and lawful money and to be paid unto her within four months and immediately ensuing my decease by my executrix Item I will and bequeath unto my son John five and twenty pounds of good and lawful money of England and to be paid unto him at the age of one and twenty years by my executrix Item I will and bequeath unto my son William five and twenty pounds of like lawful English money and to be paid unto him at the age of one and twenty years by my executrix Item I will and bequeath unto my daughter Alice fifteen pounds of good and lawful money of England and to be paid unto her at her age of one and twenty years by my executrix Item I will and bequeath unto my daughter Mary fifteen pounds of like lawful English money and to be paid unto her at the age of one and twenty years by my executrix Item I will and bequeath unto my daughter Elizabeth fifteen pounds of like lawful English money and to be paid unto her at her age of one and twenty years by my executrix and if it do chance that the said John William Alice Mary and Elizabeth Hyam my sons and daughters do one or more of them die before such time as they shall attain unto the age of one and twenty years then my will and mind is that the portion or portions of him or them so dying shall be equally divided between the survivors of him or them so dying or wholy to the survivor and to be paid unto him or them at the age of one and twenty years by my executrix Item I will and bequeath unto Anne the daughter of James Lullam five shillings and to be paid unto her within one month next after my decease Item I will and bequeath unto Stephen Bentlee five shillings and to be paid unto him within one month next after my decease Item All my debts and legacies being discharged all the rest of my goods and chattells I give and bequeath unto Anne my now wife whom I do make constitute and ordain sole executrix to this my last will and testament and do hereby make Thomas Nery the elder and Abraham Downer both of the said parish of Westfield overseers to the same This is the last will and testament of me Thomas Hyam touching the disposal of one house or tenement with certain lands and other the appertenances belonging unto the same situate and being in the parish of Bexhill in the county of Sussex commonly called or known by the name Stumblepitt all with said house and lands with all and singular the appertenances belonging unto the same I do give and bequeath unto Anne my now wife during her life and after her decease I do give and bequeath same unto Thomas Hyam my son and if the said Thomas do die without heirs by him lawfully begotten then I do give and bequeath the same unto my son John Hyam and if the said John do die likewise without heirs by him lawfully begotten then I do give and bequeath the same unto my son William Hyam and his heirs forever in witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal the day and year before written Thomas Hyam his mark in the presence of those whose names are underwritten Tho Maudisley Nicholas Catt his mark. == Research Notes == Dates
date of will: 16 Feb 1615/16
grant of probate: 18 April 1616 People mentioned in the will: # [[Higham-300|Thomas Hyam]] of Westfield, yeoman # Anne Hyam, his wife and sole executrix, received remainder plus property at Bexhill for her life # Thomas Hyam, his son, received ten pounds and to inherit property at Bexhill # [[Higham-299|Anne Catt]], his daughter and wife of [[Catt-83|Nicholas Catt]], received twenty pounds # John Hyam, his son, not yet 21, received twenty five pounds # William Hyam, his son, not yet 21, received twenty five pounds # Alice Hyam, his daughter, not yet 21, received fifteen pounds # Mary Hyam, his daughter, not yet 21, received fifteen pounds # Elizabeth Hyam, his daughter not yet 21, received fifteen pounds # Anne Lullam, daughter of James Lullam, received five shillings # Stephen Bentlee, unknown, received five shillings # Thomas Nery, overseer # Abraham Downer, overseer # Thomas Maudisley, witness # Nicholas Catt, witness. Presumably, his son in law. == Sources ==
Thomas Holcombe - Constitution of the Connecticut Colony - 1639
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Thomas Holcombe - Other Research Notes
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Thomas Holcombe Additional Sources
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Thomas Holcombe Oath of a Freeman ... 1634
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Thomas Hubbarde's Will
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Thomas Hunt Mercantile Records
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Thomas Innes
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Thomas Innes born lThomas Innes born
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Thomas J. Coleman Will Transcription
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Item 1st I will my soul to God who gave it and my body to its mother earth to be by executors herein after named buried in a Christian like manner.
Item 2nd I will and bequeath to my beloved wife '''[[Dillon-6200|Jane Coleman]]''' all of my house hold and kitchen furniture and all of my farming implements and utensils I also will and bequeath to her two horses to be chosen by her out of my stock of horses also three cows and calves twenty head of hogs & fifteen sheep to be selected by her out of my stock and also all of my fowles [sic] and poultry
I also have all of my farm on which I now live to my wife '''[[Dillon-6200|Jane Coleman]]''' during her widowhood to be by her cultivated for the mutual benefit of herself and our two children '''John Zebidec Coleman''' and '''Urian Coleman''' subject however to the control and management of my Executor.
3rd In the event of my wife '''[[Dillon-6200|Jane Coleman]]''' marrying again It is upon the happening of that event my will that my two children '''John Zebidec Coleman''' and '''Urian Coleman''' shall have two thirds of my farm and requested that their Guardian herein after named shall rent the said two thirds of my farm out and apply the proceeds thereof towards the support of my said two children and at the death of my said wife it is my will that the whole of my farm shall go to my two children '''John Zebidec''' and '''Urian''' to be equally divided between them and in case of the death of either of my said two youngest children '''John Zebeedic''' and '''Urian''' the whole of my said farm I will & bequeath to the survivor and in case of the death of both of them before they shall arrive at the age of twenty one years without issue then the property devised to them is to go to my ten children by my first wife and the children of such as should be dead at that time
4th It is my will and desire that my daughter '''Jane''' shall have a home with my wife & children and be support out of the products of my farm without any charge as she has done in my life time as long as she remains unmarried provided she will stay and make it her home.
5th It is also my will and desire that my Executors shall leave with my wife & family grain meat & groceries and other necessary articles such as I have generally provided sufficient to their opinion and discretion for their supp [sic] for one year from my death which articles are to be exempt from appraisement or sale.
6th I give to my daughter '''Jane Coleman''' her choice of a horse or mare after my wife has taken choice of two also one bed & furniture and one saddle & bridle which makes her equal to the donations heretofore given to my first wifes children.
7th It is my will and desire that all of my negroes and personal property of every description which is not above bequeathed be sold by my Executors on a credit of twelve months except a white colt which I will to my son '''John Zebidec Coleman''' and a sorrel colt with a blaze face which I will to my daughter '''Urian Coleman''' and that all debts due me by notes and accounts be collected that all of my just debts be first paid out of the proceeds thereof.
9” I will and devise all of the estate left to me and my wife by James Kelly dec’d to my beloved wife '''[[Dillon-6200|Jane Coleman]]''' for her benefit during her life and at her death to be equally devised between '''John Zebidec''' & '''Urian Coleman'''.
10” I do hereby constitute '''Thomas Dillan''' Guardian of my two children '''John Zebidec''' & '''Urian Coleman'''
11th I constitute and appoint my friends '''John S. Wilson''' and '''Jonathan J. Williams''' Executors to this my last will and testament and invest them with full power to carry this my last will and testament into effect and in case but one of them should qualify as my Executor or either of them should die before this will is fully carried into effect I hereby give the one who qualified or the survivor should both qualify and one of them die all the powers vested in both of them by this will to carry the same into effect
In Testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 6th day of October 1842.
'''[[Coleman-19863|Thomas his X mark Coleman]]'''
Signed sealed and delivered in the presence of J J Williams, Robert Hall, James Swope.
The codicil to my last will and testament made this 17 February 1844 my will is that all my Negroes and their increase be disposed of as above mentioned.
I also will to my wife my cart and yoke of oxen
In Testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 17 February 1844
'''[[Coleman-19863|Thomas his X mark Coleman]]'''
Signed [sic] and sealed delivered in the presence of J. J. Williams, Attest Jesse Adkins
Union County Kentucky, sct, April Count Court 1844 -
This last will and testament of '''[[Coleman-19863|Thomas J. Coleman]]''' Dec’d was this day produced in court and proven as such by the oaths of Robert Hall and James Swope two of the subscribing witnesses thereto and also the codicil thereto attached was proven to be the act and deed of said '''[[Coleman-19863|Thomas Coleman]]''' by the oaths of Jesse Adkins one of the subscribing witnesses thereto and ordered to be recorded – whereupon the same is recorded accordingly
Att James R. Hughes clk Union county Court.
Thomas J Davis by Runk pp 1083-1084
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Thomas Jacobs Family
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Thomas Jefferson Coon's Probate
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Thomas Jones Family Collection
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Thomas Kinnersley will 1592
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''' proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury on 3 December 1593 '''Will''': "England & Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384-1858"/
The National Archives; Kew, Surrey, England; Records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Series PROB 11; Class: PROB 11; Piece: 82/ {{Ancestry Sharing|29606526|5ff9ac}} - {{Ancestry Record|5111|928684|uk}} (accessed 24 July 2022)/ Will of Thome Kinnersley of Badger, Shropshire, England, granted probate on 3 Dec 1593. Died Abt 1593. '''In the name of god: Amen''' the fift/
day of Julye in the yere of oure Lorde god one thousande fyve hundred nynetie twoe/
and in the fower and thirtithe yere of the Raigne of our soueraigne Ladye Elizabethe/
by the grace of god of England ffrance and Ireland Quene Defender of the faith
I Thomas Kinnersley of Badger within the countie of Salop Esquire and of /
the Dioces of Hereford beyng weak in bodye but of good and perfect memorye /
I thank Almightie god for the same do make this my last will and testamente in manner/
and forme folowinge
ffirst of all I bequeathe my soule unto Almightie god my creator -/
faythfully trusting by the merittes of the passion of his deere son Jesus xristeChrist my Redemer /
to be made a member of his heavenlye kingdome My body to be buryed in the parishe churche/
or chauncell of Badger aforesaid in suche convenyent place as shall like best my Executors
Item where I have before this tyme by deede in wrytinge Indented betwixt me on the one xteparte/
and Thomas Woodcocke of Bridgend within the sayed countie gentleman my sonne in/
lawe and Edward Kinnersley my second sonne on the other parte bearing date the tenth/
Day of June in the fower and thirtithe yere of the raigne of her sayed Maiestie i.e. 10 Jun 1592, less than a month before the will as well/
for the intent of the performance and payment of certain Debtes and sommes of monye/
conteyned in a certeyne Schedule to the sayed wryting indented annexed as allso for many other/
reasonable considerations gyven graunted bargained solde and confirmed unto the sayed/
Thomas Woodcocke and Edward Kinnersley and to theire assignes for ever all and singular/
then my goodes chattels and cattells whatsoever yet nevertheless and forasmuche my/
Intent is that the matters in the said schedule conteyned shall after my decease be fullye/
performed And forasmuche allso as there be dyvers debtes and thinges in righte or acconsc. a reference to “chose in action”, legal French meaning a personal right over property which can only be claimed or enforced by action, and not by taking physical possession/
due unto me which I could not passe from me by the sayed wryting indented Therefore/
my will is and I give and bequeathe to my executors the said debtes and thinges in righte/
for the intente aforesaied and do leave them and all other thinges to the order and disposition/
of my executors; And of this my last will and testament I make constitute and/
appoynte the sayed Thomas Woodcocke and Edward Kinnersley my true and lawfull/
executors to do and performe this my last will
In wytnesse whereof I have subscribed/
my name theise beynge witnesses (corrected in margin : these beareinge witnesse) Thomas Warter, William ffitzherbert, Willm/
Walter, Richard Martyn, Thomas Kynnersley
(in margin T Thome Kinnersley) '''''(three words in margin … boardinge …) unclear where these were to be inserted ''''' Proved at the Prerogative Court of Canterbury at London on 3 December 1593 Probatum fuit h[uius]mo[du]s Testament/
apud London coram Mag[ist]ro Willmo. Lewin legum doctore curi[a]e prerogativ[a]e Cantuarien[sis] -/
a Mag[ist]ro custode sive Commissario tertio die mensis Decembris Anno Domini millesimo quingen[te]s[im]o/
nonagesimo tertio termino Juramento Thome Fles Notarii publici procurator Thome Woodcocke et/
Edwardi Kynnersley Executorum in h[uius]mo[d]i testamento nominat. Quibus commissa fuit/
Administrac(i)o bonorum iurium et creditorum di[cti] Def[uncti] de bene et fideliter Administrand(o) ea[dem]/
ad sancta dei Evangelia Jurat : '''Transcription conventions''' Original spelling and (lack of) punctuation. / = line ending. Paragraphs inserted for ease of reading == Sources==
Thomas Lawes Case in Court of Common Pleas Hilary Term 1500
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Thomas Lee, Thomas Greenberry Lee and Thomas Ludwell Lee
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Thomas Lemuel Whidby Family
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Thomas Lightfoot
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Thomas Lodge profile remake
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Thomas Lyons
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Thomas Mathews/Mathis will
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Thomas Mattingly Son Of Cezar
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Thomas McCune Family Line
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Thomas Meador Research Revisited
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Thomas Milton (1561 - 1627) FSP
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Thomas Milton (1595 - abt. 1670)
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Place: Virginia; Year: 1619; Page Number: 14
{{Ancestry Record|7486|4055202}} (accessed 30 April 2024)
Name: Thomas Molton; Arrival Year: 1619; Arrival Place: Virginia; Primary Immigrant: Molton, Thomas; Source Publication Code: 1219.4; Source Bibliography: COLDHAM, PETER WILSON. The Complete Book of Emigrants: A Comprehensive Listing Compiled from English Public Records of Those Who Took Ship to the Americas for Political, Religious, and Economic Reasons; of Those Who Were Deported for Vagrancy, Roguery, or Non-Conformity; and of Those Who Were Sold to Labour in the New Colonies. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co. 1607-1660. 1988. 600p.;
Household Members (Name):
Thomas Molton. Clement Melton [Milton-2190] arrived in 1622 in Virginia '''Passenger List''': "U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s"
Place: Virginia; Year: 1622; Page Number: 489
{{Ancestry Record|7486|4810177}} (accessed 30 April 2024)
Name: Clement Melton; Arrival Year: 1622; Arrival Place: Virginia; Primary Immigrant: Melton, Clement; Source Publication Code: 4916; Annotation: Date and port of arrival or date and place of mention. Place of origin, name of ship, name of spouse and children, occupation, living conditions, ownership of land, dates and circumstances of death, and other historical information may also be provided.; Source Bibliography: MCCARTNEY, MARTHA W. Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers 1607-1635: A Biographical Dictionary. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2007.;
Household Members (Name):
Clement Melton. Thomas Molton arrived in 1622 in Virginia '''Passenger List''': "U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s"
Place: Virginia; Year: 1622; Page Number: 28
{{Ancestry Record|7486|4055203}} (accessed 30 April 2024)
Name: Thomas Molton; Arrival Year: 1622; Arrival Place: Virginia; Primary Immigrant: Molton, Thomas; Source Publication Code: 1219.4; Source Bibliography: COLDHAM, PETER WILSON. The Complete Book of Emigrants: A Comprehensive Listing Compiled from English Public Records of Those Who Took Ship to the Americas for Political, Religious, and Economic Reasons; of Those Who Were Deported for Vagrancy, Roguery, or Non-Conformity; and of Those Who Were Sold to Labour in the New Colonies. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co. 1607-1660. 1988. 600p.;
Household Members (Name):
Thomas Molton. George Melton arrived in 1622 in Virginia [Milton-2860]. Est. date of birth, 1601. '''Passenger List''': "U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s"
Place: Virginia; Year: 1622; Page Number: 489
{{Ancestry Record|7486|4810178}} (accessed 30 April 2024)
Name: George Melton; Arrival Year: 1622; Arrival Place: Virginia; Primary Immigrant: Melton, George; Source Publication Code: 4916; Annotation: Date and port of arrival or date and place of mention. Place of origin, name of ship, name of spouse and children, occupation, living conditions, ownership of land, dates and circumstances of death, and other historical information may also be provided.; Source Bibliography: MCCARTNEY, MARTHA W. Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers 1607-1635: A Biographical Dictionary. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2007.;
Household Members (Name):
George Melton. '''Thomas Molton (age 25) arrived in 1624 in Virginia''' '''Passenger List''': "U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s"
Place: Virginia; Year: 1624; Page Number: 232
{{Ancestry Record|7486|4055958}} (accessed 30 April 2024)
Name: Thomas Molton; Age: 25; Birth Year: about 1599; Arrival Year: 1624; Arrival Place: Virginia; Primary Immigrant: Molton, Thomas; Source Publication Code: 3283; Annotation: Standard work. Includes lists of ships to Bermuda, Barbados, and continental North America. Indexes family names. Names of Jews are excerpted in Adler, no. 61. Care should be taken when using Hotten. There are two versions, one with accurate text and index; Source Bibliography: HOTTEN, JOHN CAMDEN, editor. The Original Lists of Persons of Quality; Emigrants; Religious Exiles; Political Rebels; Serving Men Sold for a Term of Years; Apprentices; Children Stolen; Maidens Pressed; and Others Who Went from Great Britain to the American Plantations, 1600-1700. With Their Ages, the Localities Where They Formerly Lived in the Mother Country, the Names of the Ships in Which They Embarked, and Other Interesting Particulars. From MSS. Preserved in the State;
Household Members (Name) Age:
Thomas Molton 25. Thomas arrived in 1625 in Virginia. Age 25. Birth in 1600 '''Passenger List''': "U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s"
Place: Virginia; Year: 1625; Page Number: 59
{{Ancestry Record|7486|4055959}} (accessed 10 April 2023)
Name: Thomas Molton; Age: 25; Birth Year: about 1600; Arrival Year: 1625; Arrival Place: Virginia; Primary Immigrant: Molton, Thomas; Source Publication Code: 1219.4; Source Bibliography: COLDHAM, PETER WILSON. The Complete Book of Emigrants: A Comprehensive Listing Compiled from English Public Records of Those Who Took Ship to the Americas for Political, Religious, and Economic Reasons; of Those Who Were Deported for Vagrancy, Roguery, or Non-Conformity; and of Those Who Were Sold to Labour in the New Colonies. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co. 1607-1660. 1988. 600p.;
Household Members (Name):
Thomas Molton. Thomas Melton arrived in Virginia in 1635. '''Virginia Immigrants, 1623-1666''': "Virginia Immigrants, 1623-1666"
Greer, George Cabel. Early Virginia Immigrants 1623-1666. Richmond, VA, USA: W. C. Hill Printing Co., 1912
{{Ancestry Record|2063|10331}} (accessed 10 April 2023)
Name: Thomas Melton; Arrived By: 1635; Sponsors: Capt. Adam Thoroughgood; Residence Place: Virginia; Reference: Early Virginia Immigrants; 1623–1666 M. Thomas arrived in 1637 in Virginia '''Passenger List''': "U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s"
Place: Virginia; Year: 1637; Page Number: 110
{{Ancestry Record|7486|4062157}} (accessed 30 April 2024)
Name: Thomas Moulton; Arrival Year: 1637; Arrival Place: Virginia; Primary Immigrant: Moulton, Thomas; Source Publication Code: 6219; Annotation: Date and place where land was patented and the record was created listing those transported/imported. Only the names of those to be transported were indexed. Abstracted from Land Office records located at the Virginia State Library. See also source numbers 62; Source Bibliography: NUGENT, NELL M. Cavaliers and Pioneers: A Calendar of Virginia Land Grants, 1623-1800. Vol. 1:1-6. Richmond, VA: Dietz Printing Co., [1929-1931. Although vol. 6 ends with the year 1695, no other volumes were published.];
Household Members (Name):
Thomas Moulton. Thomas arrived in 1638 in Virginia '''Passenger List''': "U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s"
Place: Virginia; Year: 1638; Page Number: 150
{{Ancestry Record|7486|4119876}} (accessed 10 April 2023)
Name: Thomas Melton; Arrival Year: 1638; Arrival Place: Virginia; Primary Immigrant: Melton, Thomas; Source Publication Code: 6219; Annotation: Date and place where land was patented and the record was created listing those transported/imported. Only the names of those to be transported were indexed. Abstracted from Land Office records located at the Virginia State Library. See also source numbers 62; Source Bibliography: NUGENT, NELL M. Cavaliers and Pioneers: A Calendar of Virginia Land Grants, 1623-1800. Vol. 1:1-6. Richmond, VA: Dietz Printing Co., [1929-1931. Although vol. 6 ends with the year 1695, no other volumes were published.];
Household Members (Name) Relationship:
Thomas Melton
Hannah Melton Wife. https://www.genealogy.com/ftm/l/e/i/Vera-M-Leisure/GENE2-0014.html More About THOMAS MELTON, SR.: Fact 1: 1635, Thomas Melton had land in Accomack District that was in Norfolk Fact 2: 1638, Thomas Melton and his wife Hannah had land in Lower Norfolk (see scrapbook) The issue of Thomas Melton and his wife Anna are not of record, but they surely included a son named Thomas Melton/Milton, Jr. who received land from Phillip Chefly on 21 January 1669,married Elizabeth Watkins, and died in present Surry County, VA. Another likely son was Anthony Melton of Lower Norfolk and York Counties, VA who married Rachel, widow of William Shortrike of York Olde Fields by 1669 and died there by October term of court, 1675. Issue of both Thomas Melton, Jr. and Anthony Melton went to northeastern NC. Children of THOMAS MELTON and HANNAH WALLINGSTON are: 27. i. WILLIAM13 MILTON, b. Abt. 1628, England; d. Westmorland Co., VA. 28. ii. GEORGE MILTON, b. Abt. 1632, England; d. Abt. 1678, Surry Co., VA. 29. iii. ANTHONY MELTON, b. Abt. 1638, England/Lower Norfolk Co., VA; d. Bef. October 25, 1675, York Co., VA. 30. iv. THOMAS MELTON, JR., b. Abt. 1640, Isle of Wight/Lower Norfolk Co., Virginia; d. Bef. March 08, 1737, Surry Co., VA. 8. The issue of Thomas Melton and his wife Anna are not of record, but they surely included a son named ''Thomas Melton/Milton, Jr.'' who received land from Phillip Chefly on 21 January 1669, married Elizabeth Watkins and died in present Surry County, VA''. Another likely son was ''Anthony Melton'' of Lower Norfolk and York Counties, VA who married Rachel, widow of ''William Shortrike of York'' olde Fields by 1669 and died there by October term of court, 1675. Issue of both Thomas Melton, Jr. and Anthony Melton went to northeastern NC. https://www.packrat-pro.com/ships/margaret1619.htm The Margaret of Bristol approved to leave Sept 15, 1619, and arrived in Jamestown with Master Capt. John Woodleefe and 36 settlers on Dec 4, 1619. ''Margaret sources: Coldham page 13 & 14 per Virginia Company Records http://www.jamestowne.org/Jamestowne_Society_Chronology.htm [link no longer active] If you choose to use this information or copy this page, please have the courtesy to include an acknowledgment that the work, research and compilation was done by Anne Stevens of packrat-pro.com. Alphabetical: *Blanchard, John gent *Bourton, Christopher, tailor *Clement, William, cook and gardener, alive 01 Aug 1622 *''Cley James, joiner, died'' *''Cole John, died'' *Cole, William *Coopy, Samuell *''Coopy, Thomas, carpenter, smith, fowler, and turner, died'' *''Coyfe, Charles, gunmaker and smith, died'' *''Davis, Thomas, cooper and shingler, died'' *''Denton/Deinton, Thomas, died'' *Felgate, Toby gent *''Godfry Richard, joiner, drowned'' *Hampton, Walter *Hurd, John *''Jones John, gardener and smith, died'' *'''Molton, Thomas, cook and gardener, alive 01 Aug 1622''' *''Nelme, Christopher, shoemaker, died'' *''Osborne, Humphrey, died'' *''Painter/Paynter, Rowland, died'' *Parker, William *Patche, William *''Paynter, Edward, slain'' *''Peerse/Peers, Henry gent, died'' *''Peirse, Thomas, for hops and oade, died'' *''Plant, Humphrey, sawyer and carpenter, died'' *''Sandford, Thomas, died'' *''Sherife, Richard the elder, carpenter, died'' *Sherife, Richard the younger, cooper, alive 01 Aug 1622 *Singer, John *Stone, William *''Taylor, John alias Stokeley, died'' *''Thorpe, Thomas, slain'' *''Torset, Stephen, died'' *Yate, Ferdinando gent, returned 20 Mar 1620 Notes about the men by John Smyth After landing, and as instructed by the ''London Company'', Woodlief prayed: “We ordaine that this day of our ships arrival, at the place assigned for plantacon, in the land of Virginia, shall be yearly and perpetually kept holy as a day of Thanksgiving to Almighty God”. The settlers celebrated Thanksgiving, two years and seventeen days before the ''Mayflower Pilgrims''. Note: There are 35 settlers on the list. Of the 35, 20 died. That is a 57% death rate.
Thomas Moulton
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Thomas Paine Rev War Pension and Land Grant Records
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Thomas_Paine_Rev_War_Pension_and_Land_Grant_Records-4.pdf
Thomas_Paine_Rev_War_Pension_and_Land_Grant_Records.pdf
FILE 1 :p7: Thomas Paine affidavit, 1832 ::Capt Sawyer, RI State Artillery (also p. 8) ::Col. Elliott ::General Sullivan ::Capt. Gladding :p. 8: Capt (Simeon) Newell in Col. Willet's[[Willett-458|Marinus Willett (1740-1830)]] Regmt., NY State Militia :p9: William Rounseville ::Abiatha G. Rounseville ::Edward E. Dodge, clergyman :p10: David Paine, his brother, who served with Thomas :p11: Gen'l Spencer, Gen'l Sullivan ::Col. Elliot ::Maj. Sawyer ::Col. Willet ::Dr. Joseph Speed ::John James Speed :p12: Ruth Brown, her affidavit (She is found in the 1840 census as a head of household) FILE 2 :p4: 11 May 1843, Huldah Paine affidavit, gives her marriage date 3 Aug 1781, and death date of Thomas Oct 1839 :p5: 11 May 1843 affidavit of Elisabeth Ennest, their daughter, age 56. She has an older brother, age 58; and lost one brother who would be over 60. (Here we see Elisabeth providing statements which support the fact that her parents had married, over 60 years ago. She is not being asked to list all of her siblings; she is only defining the eldest children.) :p6: 9 May 1843 affidavit of Isreal Paine age 66; has known them over 60 years; their eldest son couldn't have been more than 5 years younger than Isreal. (Sadly, Israel neither claims nor denies that he is related to Thomas, though we have wondered if they were related. It is certainly implied that he is not closely related. It's also implied that he was located near Thomas's residence around 1781, and therefore may be the son of a relative.) :p7: 11 May 1843 affidavit of Ruth Brown age 76, has known them 70 years; "saw the movements of the wedding at the time" in 1781 in Green River NY; knew the eldest son FILE 3 :p2: 13 Apr 1855; Mentions Capt. Gladdin + Newell; could this be Capt. Gladding and Capt. Newell, mentioned elsewhere? ::Huldah and Thomas married in River Holler on 3 Aug 1781 by priest Martin, a minister; her maiden name was Huldah Virgil ::witness Lillis Ennest (Daughter-in-law of Elizabeth, Huldah's daughter) ::witness Nancy B. Vandermark (Daughter of Elizabeth) p17 "there is no record of their marriage, we have tried to retrieve it" Aug 1843 FILE 4 :p3, list of persons Thomas served under (1st is the Captain, 2nd is the Colonel): ::George Brinkerhoff; Roswell Hopkins ::Abner Hawley; David Pratt ::Nathanl. Henry; Marinus Willett ::Simeon Newell; (Marinus Willett) FILE 5 :p2, 11 Dec 1843: witnessed by Benjamin Paine, John W. Quigg, and Phebe Paine (Benjamin was a descendant, and Phebe was his wife) :p3 John W. Quigg, and Ithiel Eldred :p7 and further pages: genealogy inquiry by Rev. Frank Grant Lewis (a genealogist, and a descendant of Thomas and Huldah)
Thomas Parker Notes
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Thomas Parlor Estate, Probate
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Thomas Patch Research
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*[[Patch-390|Edmund Patch Jr. (1601-1680)]] *[[Patch-950|Thomas Patch Sr (aft.1639-1711)]]
*[[Patch-46|Thomas Patch Sr. (abt.1638-1721)]] *[[Space:Patch_in_Essex_County_Records_and_Files|Patch in Essex County Records and Files]] *[[Space:John_and_Thomas_Patch_agreement_regarding_estate_of_Nicholas_Patch|John and Thomas Patch agreement regarding estate of Nicholas Patch]] *[[Space:Essex_County_contemporaries%2C_both_Thomas_Patch|Essex County contemporaries, both Thomas Patch]] *[[Space:Patch_of_Beverly_Other_Notes|Patch of Beverly Other Notes]] ==Records and Files, Thomas Patch== George Francis Dow, ''Records and Files of the Quarterly Courts of Essex County, Massachusetts'', 9 vols. (Salem, Mass. : Essex institute, 1911-1975) ... See [[Space:Patch_in_Essex_County_Records_and_Files|Patch in Essex County Records and Files]] '''Thomas Patch in 1 (1636-1656), select entries''' *476 (Index) [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064462322?urlappend=%3Bseq=488%3Bownerid=13510798899857678-508 ''HathTrust''] *No entries for Thomas Patch '''Thomas Patch in 2 (1656-1662)''' *485 (Index) [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150257?urlappend=%3Bseq=501%3Bownerid=13510798902219195-515 ''HathTrust''] *No entries for Thomas Patch '''Thomas Patch in 3 (1662-1667)''' *513 (Index) [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362167?urlappend=%3Bseq=521%3Bownerid=27021597765516051-525 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas 355, Court Held at Ipswich, Sep 25, 1666. Part of "A record of strays in the court book of Ipswich"--"John Abbie of Wenham entered, Feb 12 1666, a bay horse about seven years old appraised at four pounds by Daniell Killam and Thomas Patch." [Patch signature appears] [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362167?urlappend=%3Bseq=363%3Bownerid=27021597765517837-369 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas 384 - [Births in Wenham] [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362167?urlappend=%3Bseq=392%3Bownerid=27021597765516051-396 ''HathTrust''] '''Thomas Patch in 4 (1667-1671)''' *493 (Index) [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362217?urlappend=%3Bseq=501%3Bownerid=27021597765516106-505 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas 347, Certificate dated May 11 1670 that John Galley, John Blake, Henry Bayly, Thomas West, John Woodbery and '''Thomas Patch of Beverly''' were admitted freeman by the General Court, signed by Edw. Rawson,* secretary. [Court held at Ipswich, Mar. 28, 1671.] [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362217?urlappend=%3Bseq=355%3Bownerid=27021597765516106-359 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas 408, as an item written in 1668 in reference to the will of Jno Thorndike. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362217?urlappend=%3Bseq=416%3Bownerid=27021597765516106-420 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas, 410, Court held at Salem, 27 : 4 : 1671. "John Gally, John Black, Hen. Baily, John Woodberye, Thomas Patch and Tristrum Coffin took the oath of freemen." [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362217?urlappend=%3Bseq=418%3Bownerid=27021597765516106-422 ''HathTrust''] '''Thomas Patch in 5 (1672-1674)''' *482 (Index) [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064461266?urlappend=%3Bseq=488%3Bownerid=13510798899858004-508 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 245, Court held at Salem, 26 9 1673, Tho. Patch on Grand Jury. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064461266?urlappend=%3Bseq=253%3Bownerid=13510798899858004-261 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 255, Court held at Salem 26 : 9 : 1673 Administration of the estate of Nicholas Patch to John and Thomas Patch ... who died intestate ... with inventory and agreement [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064461266?urlappend=%3Bseq=263%3Bownerid=13510798899858004-271 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 259, Court held at Salem 26 : 9 : 1673, "Venire, dated 3 : 9 : 1673, for '''Wenham trial jury and grand jurymen''' ... signed by Hilliard Veren, cleric; and served by Richard Dodg, constable of Wenham, who returned the name of Thomas Patch to serve on the grand jury, and John Batchelder for the jury of trials." [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064461266?urlappend=%3Bseq=267%3Bownerid=13510798899858004-275 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 261, for '''Wenham births''' [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064461266?urlappend=%3Bseq=269%3Bownerid=13510798899858004-277 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 316, Court held at Salem, 30 : 4 : 1674, Grand Jury includes Tho. Patch. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064461266?urlappend=%3Bseq=324%3Bownerid=13510798899858004-332 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 359, references estate of Edmond Patch ... [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064461266?urlappend=%3Bseq=367%3Bownerid=13510798899858004-375 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 376, Court Held a Salem, July 21, 1674, "The town of Beverly, presented for a defect of a highway between the house of Mr. Roger Conant and the head of the rail fence Wenhamward, said Beverly was to make good the way before the next Salem court, and make their return, upon penalty of 5li., and to pay cost of witnesses, Robt. Hibbert and Thomas Patch. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064461266?urlappend=%3Bseq=383%3Bownerid=13510798899858004-391 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 378. Court Held at Salem, July 21, 1674, "The town of Salem, presented for defec in the country highway between Frost Fish brook and Horse bridge, Wenhamward, and in particular at the foot of the hill called Leach's hill, between that place and the house of Edward Bishop, were to repair it before the next Salem court." "Thos. Patch and Andrew Mansfield testified that the country highway was insufficient, etc. Sworn in court." [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000064461266?urlappend=%3Bseq=383%3Bownerid=13510798899858004-391 ''HathTrust''] '''Thomas Patch in 6 (1675-1678)''' *496 (Index) [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362191?urlappend=%3Bseq=500%3Bownerid=27021597765516189-504 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 119, Court held at Ipswich '''28 March 1676''' Thomas Woodberry v Thomas Patch. Debt due for Rent. Appealed, with Patch bound to Walter Fairefield and Richard Hutton, sureties. [This is Thomas Patch of Wenham; the sureties seem [[Fairfield-19|Walter Fairfield]] and [[Hutton-50|Richard Hutton]] of Wenham/Ipswich and related note reads, "Writ: Thomas Woodbery v '''Thomas Patch of Wenham''' ...attachment of ... tendered by defendant's wife."] [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362191?urlappend=%3Bseq=127%3Bownerid=27021597765516189-131 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 146, "Court Held at Salem, 27 : 4 : 1676," Patch v Woodbery; verdict for plaintiff ... Appealed and then appeal withdrawn. Writ was served by constable of Beverly. "Account of rent paid by Thomas Patch to Thomas Woodbery since July 15, 1674 ..." "William Dodge, aged about thirty years, deposed that there were apples brought to his cider mill in 1674 and 1675 by Thomas Patch or his order and he made them into cider, which Thomas Woodbery had. Sworn in Court." [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362191?urlappend=%3Bseq=150%3Bownerid=27021597765516189-154 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 187, 1676. Inventory of estate of Richard Kembell ... Thomas Patch autograph. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362191?urlappend=%3Bseq=191%3Bownerid=27021597765516189-195 ''HathiTrust''] :*Thomas - 188, Cont'd inventory of Richard Kembell, includes debt due "John Lovet, cooper" and Thomas Patch. [Seems [[Kimball-60|Richard Kimball]] dec'd Ipswich, m (1) Ursula Scott] [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362191?urlappend=%3Bseq=192%3Bownerid=27021597765516189-196 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 279, Court held at Salem 26 : 4 : 1677, Jury of trials includes Thomas Patch. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362191?urlappend=%3Bseq=283%3Bownerid=27021597765516189-287 ''HathiTrust''] :*Thomas - 289, Court held at Salem 26 : 4 : 1677; "James Moulton, sr., Richard Huten and Thomas Patch '''all of Wenham''', were confirmed as tithingmen." [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362191?urlappend=%3Bseq=293%3Bownerid=27021597765516189-297 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 349 Court held at Salem, 27 : 9 : 1677. Thomas Patch, aged about 39 years [so b. 1638], deposed in the matter of Tho. Woodbery v Richard Stackhouse. that Woodbury said that he had taken out about thirty yards from the sail for other purposes. Sworn in Court. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044011362191?urlappend=%3Bseq=353%3Bownerid=27021597765516189-357 ''HathTrust''] :::Others in the case are: ::*Richard Stackous ::*Thomas Woodbery ::*Hannah Travis, aged about eighteen years (heard her mother Stackhose ...) ::*John Stone, aged about fifty five years (about mackerel season and Roger Hoskin) ::*Susannah Stackhouse, aged about sixty years (about sail Hannah Travis brought) ::*Jonah Johnson, aged about twenty-eight (was at sea in ketch ''William and Mary'' with Humphrei Woodbury) ::*Nehemiah Grover, aged about thirty years ::*William Huper, aged about thirty years ::*John Hill, aged about forty-two yeas ::*Humfre Woodberry, Nicolus Grove and Benjamin Small (for appraisal) ::*John Sampson, aged fifty years ::*Roger Haskings, aged about thirty-four years (mentions Thomas Woodbury's point and John Hull) ::*Hannah Harris, aged about thirty years '''Thomas Patch in 7 (1678-1680)''' *468 (Index) [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=482%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-486 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 81, [did not find this item], may be mis-indexed for the page does mention "John Peach, Jr.," but this man was presumably of Marblehead, "...served by Wm Wood, constable of Marblehead, who returned the name of John Peach, Jr., for the jury of trials and James Dennis for the grand jury." [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=91%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-95 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 182, Court Held at Ipswich, Apr. 1, 1679 ... "Henry Balie, aged about seventy-eight years, deposed that he flead the cow, '''Thomas Patch of Wenham''' and John Herrick being present part of the time, and found ten wounds, etc. Sworn, Apr. 1, 1679, before Wm. Hathorne, assistant." [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=196%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-200 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 207, map and other information, comments separately suggest Wenham [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=220%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-224 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 218, John Poland v Thomas Patch [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=232%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-236 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 258, 1679 - Writ on Poland v Patch, trespass; Thomas Patch, aged about 41 years [thus b. 1638]. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=272%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-276 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 291-293, More Patch/Poland trespass. Writ served by Richard Hutton, constable of '''Wenham''' ... [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=305%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-309 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 384, Jury of trials, includes both Jon Lovett, jr., and Thomas Patch. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=398%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-402 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 419, presented town of Salem, for highway at Fish Frost brook being insuffieicent for want of a bridge, witnesses are John Abbey and Thomas Patch [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=433%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-437 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 420, Venire of 4 May 1680, for '''Wenham''' ... returning name of Thomas Patch for Jury of trials [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044012425872?urlappend=%3Bseq=434%3Bownerid=27021597765516286-438 ''HathTrust''] '''Thomas Patch in 8 (1680-1683)''' *482 (Index) [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=488%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-502 ''HathTrust''] *473 (Index--for "Inventories," Edmond Patch) [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=479%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-493 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 20 - Sept 1680 - Divisional line ... between Wenham and Beverly "so deponents ran it alone and it took in the families before mentioned. Later Beverly men ran it and found the same" Thomas Patch testified to the same. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=26%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-32 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 22 - Sept 1680 - Thomas Patch aged about forty two years deposed that he questioned Capt. Dixy, Beverly's commissioner, etc. Sworn July 20, 1680 [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=28%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-34 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 24 seems John Patch [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=30%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-36 ''HathTrust''] :*54+ ('''Edmund Patch Estate''') [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=60%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-66 ''HathTrust'']. Refers to a bond, dated 20 February 1673, given by Edmund Patch ... to Richard Dodge of Wenham and Samuel Dodge of Ipswich .... at 55, "Wenham, May 15, 1695, to Capt. Sewall, an addition to the inventory made by Thomas Patch, administrator of the '''estate of his uncle''', Edmond Patch, who lived in Ipswich and died there Nov. 10, 1680 ... and now dew to me for about 15 years administration ... 'paper is scarce.'" :*Thomas - 63 - Nov 1680 Thomas Patch aged about forty two years, deposed that the county highway at Frost-fish brook is not sufficient for want of a bridge. Sworn in court. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=69%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-75 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas -161 - Sept 1681 - more on running lines Thomas Patch is witness. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=167%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-173 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 301 - 1682 Estate of Richard Brabrooke ... mentions a land at Wenham and the debt contracted by Tho. Patch [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=307%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-313 ''HathTrust''] :*Thomas - 384 - 1682 - Thomas Patch as one of the '''selectmen of Wenham''' [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112104150190?urlappend=%3Bseq=390%3Bownerid=13510798902219479-396 ''HathTrust''] '''Thomas Patch in 9 (1683-1686)''' *Index https://salem.lib.virginia.edu/Essex/vol9/index/essvol9P.html :*Thomas, 41, Court held a Salem, June 26, 1683, Jury of trials includes Thomas Patch. https://salem.lib.virginia.edu/Essex/vol9/images/essex041.html :*Thomas - 84, Venire of 22 April 1683 for '''Wenham''' ... https://salem.lib.virginia.edu/Essex/vol9/images/essex084.html :*Thomas - 102, Thomas Scott estate matter https://salem.lib.virginia.edu/Essex/vol9/images/essex102.html :*Thomas - 223-232, this is the Thomas Scott estate matter. https://salem.lib.virginia.edu/Essex/vol9/images/essex223.html :*Thomas - 224, ditto :*Thomas - 226, ditto :*Thomas - 227, ditto ==Essex County Deeds== '''Index''' *Patch Grantee Index https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9ZZ-BDRY?i=469&wc=MCBL-N6D%3A361613201%2C361760701&cc=2106411
**Thomas Patch Grantee Index https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89ZZ-BXMQ?i=471&wc=MCBL-N6D%3A361613201%2C361760701&cc=2106411 *Patch Grantor Index https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99ZZ-B95J?i=85&wc=MCBL-YM9%3A361613201%2C361828601&cc=2106411
**Thomas Patch Grantor Index https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99ZZ-B9YK?i=88&wc=MCBL-YM9%3A361613201%2C361828601&cc=2106411 '''Patch of Salem/Beverly, select deeds''' *'''1673''' recorded 1673, 10 mo 26, Indenture, Thomas Patch, e ux, et. al. '''4:47'''/Salem? << Is brothers' agreement to devise their father's estate. *'''1702''' recorded 1736, June 17, Joanna Heathard to Thomas Patch, Jr., '''70:266'''/Beverly;Deeds, v. 68-70 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9ZZ-1H4L?i=872&cc=2106411&cat=209907 ''FamilySearch''], 866044 7463287 873-874 of 891 << Selling "My Dwelling house with about a quarter of an Acres of land to is ... and Likewise my _____ ____ of Land it Standeth on _____??? dated 12 November 1702. *'''1707''', recorded 1718, May 17, Thomas Patch Sr to James Patch, deed dated 28 March 1707, "Massachusetts Land Records, 1620-1986"; digital images, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9ZZ-18H1?i=91&cc=2106411&cat=209907 ''FamilySearch''] (image 92 of 605), otherwise Essex County Deeds '''38:84''', recorded 17 May 1718; James is "my Loving Son ..."; deed refers to "about one acre one which my Dwelling House now Standeth .... bounded ... Easterly by ye ten acres of Land given to my late wife Mary by her father Lovits Last Will and Testament." *'''1707''', recorded 1718, May 17, Thomas Patch Junr & William Patch to James Patch, deed dated 28 March 1707, "Massachusetts Land Records, 1620-1986"; digital images, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99ZZ-18V2?i=92&cc=2106411&cat=209907 ''FamilySearch''] (image 93 of 605), otherwise Essex County Deeds '''38:84''', recorded 17 May 1718; refers to "ten acres ... Land ... given to our Hon'd Mother Mary Patch of Beverly ... Deceast as by our sd Grandfathrs Last will & Testament." *'''1729'''<
Thomas Penfold and Descendants
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Thomas Perrott of Brook
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Under the terms of a deed of settlement of his estates issued by Sir John Perrot in 1584, Thomas's father had been named as a beneficiary in the event of the deaths of the issuer's sons, namely [[Perrot-1|Sir Thomas]] (d.1594), William (d.c.1587) and Sir James (d.1637). After Sir John's attainder for treason his estates were forfeit to the Crown and from 1594-1608 Sir James and Thomas (plaintiff's father) worked together to recover them."'' G.D. Squibb, Reports of Heraldic Cases in the Court of Chivalry 1623-1732.
Despite this early co-operation, the interests of the two parties were incompatible and Thomas Perrott, often in alliance with the Countess of Northumberland, later opposed Sir James' title to several substantial properties.
Thomas Perrott of Laugharne
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An account of early Perrot family ownership of lands in Laugharne is set out in the [https://archive.org/details/MayoPp518522 Mayo Genealogy] below {{Image|file=My_Perrott_Family_Data-6.png |align=c |size=650 |caption='''Perrott Family in''' [https://archive.org/details/MayoPp518522/page/n1 '''Mayo Genealogy''']}} The above refers to Barnwell's NOTES ON THE PERROT FAMILY in Arch. Camb. 3rd series No. XLI January 1865
"Who this John Perrot of Haverfordwest is is uncertain, unless it was his uncle John, the younger son of Sir Thomas Perrot. It may, however, have been a son of this John Perrot: at any rate he was probably a near kinsman. It has been stated that Sir William Perrot died at the battle of Hedgecot, or Banbury, in 1469,— a statement disproved by his being alive nearly forty years afterwards. His father-in-law, however, Sir Harry Wogan, and his kinsman, Jankyn Perrot of Scotsborough, were among the slain on that occasion. (See Warkworth Chronicle.) The following are the names of those who perished in this battle :—Sir Roger Vaughan, Knight; Harry Wogan, son and heir; Thomas ap Rosse- here (Roger) Vaughan, Esquire; Watkin Thomas, son of Roger Vaughan ; Yvan ap John of Merwyke ; Davy ap Jankyn of Limeric; Harry Done (Dwnn) of Picton ; John Done of Kidwelly; Rhys ap Morgan of Ulster; Jankyn Perot of Scotsborough; John Eneand (?Eynion) of Pembrokeshire; and John Contour of Hereford. An inquisition was taken at Tallacharn, in Carmarthenshire (2 Eliz.), before John Vaughan, gentleman, on the possessions of William Perrot, deceased. Who this William Perrot is doubtful. It could not have been Sir William Perrot, the father of Sir Owen; nor the brother of the Lord Deputy, whose name was William, as he died near Dublin in 1597. Sir John Perrot, the Lord Deputy, was the owner of Tallacharn at the time of his attainder; so that it appears to have continued in the family down to that period. It is probable that this William is the son of that John Perrot whom we have seen put in possession of the estate as the representative of Sir William Perrot." {{Image|file=My_Perrott_Family_Data-65.jpg |align=c |size=700 |caption=Alternative Conjectural Tree based on [https://archive.org/details/BartrumProjectPerrot2 P C Bartrum Perrot 2]}}
Thomas Perrott of Llanybri Principal of Carmarthe Academy
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Thomas_Perrott_of_Llanybri_Principal_of_Carmarthe_Academy.jpg
{{Image|file=Rees-1371-4.png |align=r |size=m |caption='''Llanybri Old Chapel in 1933 and as it is now''' }}At the centre of Llanybri stood Morbrichurch, now Hen Gapel, whose battlemented tower was visible for miles around. The ruins of this medieval chapel of ease, which shaped Thomas' early life, still survive. It was converted by Stephen Hughes, ‘The Apostle of Carmarthenshire’ ''"Perhaps this is oldest non-conformist house of worship in Wales. This building was taken over around 1675 by Stephen Hughes ‘The Apostle of Carmarthenshire’ and used for independent worship until his death in 1688. It is a long, narrow building, on the exact form of the old churches, with a belfry at the gable end. Stephen Hughes was given a licence to preach in a dwelling house in the parish of Llanstephan in 1672, when Charles II announced freedom for the non-conformists, which was most certainly intended to favour the Catholics. It is almost certain that the Old Chapel was not in non-conformist possession at that time, unless Hughes named it as the place which obtained the licence. It is apparent that Stephen Hughes was the minister here from the beginning of the cause until the death of that good man in the year 1688."''Hanes Eglwysi Annibynnol Cymru (1871) T. Rees & J. Thomas.
An ecclesiastical survey in 1715 notes: ''"This is a Chapel belonging to Llan 'Stephan. The present Impropriator is Mr Champion of the Inner Temple, since the Civil Warre 40s a year was paid by the Impropriator as I am inform'd to a Minister for reading Prayers here, upon his withdrawing the Salary Prayers were neglect'd to be read here, & the Chapel was suffer'd to decay. After it was decay'd William Evans [http://www.qmulreligionandliterature.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/bd.pdf#nameddest=Evans William Evans] who has the Care of the Seminary of Dissenters at Carmarthen is said to have taken a Lease of the Chapel of the Impropriator at the rent of 10s a year or under,upon which by contribution from the Presbyterians it was repair'd by them for the space of about 10 years has been kept in repair & made use of for a Conventicle."'' [http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/wal/Archives/NLWjournals/Visitation1710 Visitation of Carmarthen 1710]
"It was William Evans also, according to Tenison, who secured for Dissent the episcopal chapel at Llanybri, attached to the rectory of Llanstephan, one of the six Percy impropriations. It seems that the tenth Earl of Northumberland had alienated the profits of this living to one Henry Champion of the Inner Temple, who was brought up on the Percy estate at Petworth in Sussex, and was one of the Earl's most trusted agents ; upon the decay of the chapel and the discontinuance of the services there, Champion granted a lease of it to William Evans at a rent of 10s. a year (or under), who had it repaired, fitted up, and used as a meeting-house for the Nonconformists of the district. On what precise grounds this distant lawyer from the Inner Temple was persuaded to divert an episcopal chapel from Anglican use is not a little mysterious ; but the legal bonds were so soundly tightened up that neither Archdeacon Tenison, nor all the other powers of the Church, could unloosen them in the least. "We have no chapel in our parish, except that which is possessed by the Independent congregation," is the wailing cry of the churchwardens in 1790. Though the process entered into between Evans and Champion seems to savour somewhat of sharp practice, the upshot was a peculiarly fitting retribution to befall the shameless secularism associated with the Percy rectories. The Puritan powers had succeeded in diverting the revenues of five of these close corporations to the use of four Trier nominees and a Baptist lecturer, a revolutionary scheme that worked for a few years only ; it was left for William Evans and a Gallio-like impropriator to alienate the chapel at Llanybri, dedicated as it was to the Blessed Virgin Mary, from the Church in perpetuity. Thus William Evans stands before us as an active, resourceful, well-informed, eminently practical person, set free by the Toleration Act for the most varied and fruitful enterprises, whether reading with his group of students at the seminary, or preaching under a wide-spreading oak at Llanddarog, or making his way to Pencader with a bundle of his own translation of the Assembly's Catechism on his saddle. "God's gift to his people ... a public benefaction," are Jeremy Owen's words of him." 'A History of Carmarthenshire' Lloyd, Sir John E., (Ed.). 2 vols., Cardiff, London Carmarthenshire Society (1935, 1939). See also [https://journals.library.wales/view/1386666/1404686/32#?xywh=-1918%2C408%2C6249%2C3824 Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion Issue details 1928-1929, 1930] {{Image|file=Llan-y-Bri_Chapel.png |caption=Llan-y-Bri Chapel before fire}} {{Image|file=Llan-y-Bri_Chapel.jpg |align=r |size=m |caption=and after}}[http://www.welshleigh.org/genealogy/biographies/stephenhughes.htm Apostle of Carmarthenshire] and used as a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conventicle_Act_1664 Conventicle] by dissenters in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.
{{Image|file=Rees-1371-6.png |align=l |size=300 |caption=
'''The Memorial Hall, Albert Square, Manchester.
Erected in 1862 to mark the Bicentennial of The Great Ejection.'''}} [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Act_of_Uniformity_1662/ The Act of Uniformity] in 1662, together with the resulting [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Ejection Great Ejection] of Dissenters, was described [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._C._Ryle J.C.Ryle] as an ''"injury to the cause of true religion in England which will probably never be repaired."'' It resulted in the formation of Dissenting Academies [http://www.qmulreligionandliterature.co.uk/research/the-dissenting-academies-project/dissenting-academies/ Dissenting Academies Online] but by the 19th century their original purpose to provide a higher education was superseded by the founding of new universities which were open to non-conformists, and by the reform of Oxford and Cambridge. Thomas Perrot attended Abergavenny Academy [http://dissacad.english.qmul.ac.uk/sample1.php?parameter=academyretrieve&alpha=270 Abergavenny Academy] where he was the pupil of Roger Griffith,[http://www.qmulreligionandliterature.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/bd.pdf#nameddest=Griffith Roger Griffith] who succeeded Samuel Jones of Brynllywarch, [http://www.qmulreligionandliterature.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/bd.pdf#nameddest=Jones1697 Samuel Jones ] himself an eminent casualty of The Great Ejection. When Griffiths conformed, [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/commons-hist-proceedings/vol3/pp212-217 Act of Conformity] and resigned from Abergavenny in 1702, Perrot moved to Shrewsbury to study with James Owen,[http://www.qmulreligionandliterature.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/bd.pdf#nameddest=Owen1706 James Owen] a former assistant of Stephen Hughes who was tutored from c.1670 by Samuel Jones. He was ordained at Knutsford in Cheshire on 6 August 1706 and became schoolmaster at Newmarket in Flintshire (1706–14) from where he moved to Bromborough in anticipation of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schism_Act Schism Act.]
Following William Evans' death in 1719, Thomas[https://biography.wales/article/s-PERR-THO-1733 Thomas Perrot, Dictionary of Welsh Biography] became minister of Heol Awst Presbyterian Church (Lammas St), [https://imgur.com/a/rFYI9 Lammas St] + [https://britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/300009488-capel-heol-awst-carmarthen#.XLOAAehKjIV Capel Heol Awst largest chapel in Wales in 1826.] and Tutor of Carmarthen Academy [https://dissacad.english.qmul.ac.uk/sample1.php?detail=achist&histid=18&acadid=31 Carmarthen Academy] later the Presbyterian College, [https://archive.org/details/heol-awst-carmarthen l Heol Awst /Presybyterian College] teaching Classics, Greek, Hebrew, Metaphysics, Logic, Theology, Chronology and Natural Philosophy (Science).
Thomas inherited property from his father John who died in 1726 and he greatly benefited from his marriage with Eleanor Lloyd, [https://ia601500.us.archive.org/2/items/ThomasPerrottLloydPapersReferences/Thomas%20Perrott%20Lloyd%20Papers%20References.pdf Lloyd Papers: Llanstephan Mansion] daughter of Henry and Martha Lloyd of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plas_Llanstephan Plas Llanstephan]. When Thomas transferred some property to his brother-in-law in 1728, he was styled as 'gent'.
His will in 1734 names Eleanor as executrix and mentions brothers John and William and sisters Anne, Jennet and Elizabeth. It reveals Thomas as a well-to-do person with twelve rooms identified in his home. He owned a substantial library, worth £40, and a Celestial and Terrestrial Ball, valued at £3 10s. Thomas had a daughter Mary, his only surviving child in 1768. On his death in 1733, Jeremy Owen [http://yba.llgc.org.uk/en/s-OWEN-JER-1704.html Jeremy Owen DNB] praised his ''"excellent friend"'' as ''"free from bias, a man of impartiality and moderation."'' A late 18thcentury account of the dissenters’ academies described Perrot simply as ''"of great learning."'' Dr Williams Library, 24.59, fos. 91–2.
Thomas had a daughter, Mary, described as his only surviving child in 1768 and as a [https://archive.org/details/BRAGlynMillsOptimised17086/page/n51 'spinster of Carmarthen'] in the Lloyd Papers. (Mary Perrot daughter of Rev. Thomas Perrot deceased) See [https://archive.org/details/BRAGlynMillsBundle9No26 Thomas Perrot will 1734 + Carms Wills: Admons 2 August, Inventory 19 July 1726.] His widow was alive in 1744, when the Carmarthen student, [https://dissacad.english.qmul.ac.uk/sample1.php?parameter=personretrieve&alpha=251 Thomas Morgan,] bought six books from her. Thomas Perrot’s brother [https://ia601502.us.archive.org/24/items/MayoPp518522/Mayo%20pp%20518-522.pdf John] was a Presbyterian minister in Wotton-under-Edge Gloucestershire from 1720 and died there in 1749. John's son, [https://dissacad.english.qmul.ac.uk/sample1.php?parameter=personretrieve&alpha=253 Samuel], attended Carmarthen Academy from 1753-57 and subsequently became a Unitarian minister in Ireland. In 1732 Thomas seems to have taught another nephew, also a [https://dissacad.english.qmul.ac.uk/sample1.php?parameter=personretrieve&alpha=6960 Thomas] who later ministered at Blakeney and Kingswood.
In 1732 [http://www.qmulreligionandliterature.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/bd.pdf#nameddest=Perrot Perrot] delivered a glass vial to the Royal Society, ''"containing a partially formed chicken, whose belly seem’d to be the Egg cover’d with a soft skin"''. His paper on it was given by his friend, the celebrated scientist, dissenting tutor and Royal Society Fellow [http://www.qmulreligionandliterature.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/bd.pdf#nameddest=Eames John Eames.] ---- == SOURCES & RESEARCH NOTES== ===References===
Thomas Prence - Some Other Sources
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Thomas Rankin Bradshaw's Letter of Lineage
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Thomas Riley and Sarah Elizabeth (Betty) Chaney Sartin
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Thomas Roberts Family Research
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Thomas Roberts in Cabell County, Virginia
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Born, December 22, 1762, in Mecklenburg County, Virginia, the son of Thomas Roberts; died, March 13, 1848. Married, December 23, 1788, in Charlotte County, Virginia by the Rev. Thomas Roberts to Nancy May. Enlisted in Mecklenburg County, in 1780, as a substitute for Jacob Watson and Thomas Roberts. Served as a private under Captain William Lucas in the Virginia militia under Colonel Mumford and General Green. Took part in the battle of Guilford Courthouse, and was on marches to the Roanoke and Dan Rivers.:'''1848''' :: [[Roberts-15553 | Roberts-15553]]; Probate of Will written on 22 October 1846'"West Virginia Will Books, 1756-1971," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:9392-CS93-BL?cc=1909099&wc=Q8BW-MX9%3A179687401%2C179754001 : 21 June 2016), Cabell > Will book, v. 001 1820-1848 > image 190 of 434; citing Jackson County Clerk, West Virginia. Mention of wife, Nancy, and children Claburn, Thomas, Gabriel, Lucinda Mathews, and Rita Garrets. :'''1849''' :: [[Roberts-15553 | Roberts-15553]]; September 10, Thomas Roberts bill of sale; executors: Thomas Roberts and Gabriel Roberts"West Virginia Will Books, 1756-1971," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:9392-HYSY-R6?cc=1909099&wc=Q8BW-MXL%3A179687401%2C179791901 : 22 June 2016), Cabell; Will book, v. 002 1847-1850; image 18 of 43; citing Jackson County Clerk, West Virginia. :::Roberts who appeared at sale: ::::*Anderson ::::*Gabriel ::::*John ::::*Thomas Roberts, Jr :'''1852''' :: [[Roberts-15553 | Roberts-15553]] Appraisal of personal property of Thomas Roberts: :::"We the undersigned Appraisers of the personal property of thomas Roberts deceased have this day been called on by Thomas Roberts son of the deceased who is on of the Administrators in the will of the deceased to appraise a certain black woman of the name of Peggy and we appraise her to the sum of five hundred dollars this given under our hand this 15th day of May 1852. (signed) James. T Carrell, Philip Powell, Hames B Snodgrass, Thomas Roberts, Executor"West Virginia Will Books, 1756-1971," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:9392-HG3M-3Q?cc=1909099&wc=Q8BW-MS4%3A179687401%2C179813601 : 22 June 2016), Cabell; Will book, v. 002 1850-1885; image 43 of 185; citing Jackson County Clerk, West Virginia. (note: this is directly tied to the 1848 probate as Peggy is directly mentioned in that will) :'''1855''' :: [[Roberts-15553 | Roberts-15553]]; A Third Settlement of the Estate of Thomas Roberts Dec. on October 20, 1855"West Virginia Will Books, 1756-1971," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:9392-HGS1-WV?cc=1909099&wc=Q8BW-MS4%3A179687401%2C179813601 : 22 June 2016), Cabell; Will book, v. 002 1850-1885; image 90 of 185; citing Jackson County Clerk, West Virginia. :::Roberts on the settlement account: ::::*Thomas Roberts, executor ::::*Gabriel Roberts ::::*Claborn Roberts === [[Roberts-30764-Thomas Roberts]] married to Sarah Ann Herndon === :'''1806''' ::Will of Joseph Herndon was contested in Charlotte County, Virginia. Plaintiffs are Hezekiah McCargo and Thomas Roberts. Executor of the will is Joseph's son-in-law, Frances Roberts. The allotments were announced on January 18, 1806:Index No. 1806-021; Chancery Records; Charlotte County, Virginia, online at: https://www.lva.virginia.gov/chancery/full_case_detail.asp?CFN=037-1806-021#img; accessed on January 3, 2021 === Charlotte County === :'''1810 Census''' :Two Thomas Roberts in Charlotte County 1810 Census: ::*2 - - 1 - - - 1 - 1 - 15"United States Census, 1810," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YYY-CVD?cc=1803765&wc=QZZZ-9MQ%3A1588180005%2C1588180422%2C1588179902 : 1 December 2015), Virginia, Charlotte; Not Stated; image 47 of 67; citing NARA microfilm publication M252, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). :::On the same page is Bartholomew Roberts ::*1 1 2 - 1 1 - 1 - 1 1 - "United States Census, 1810," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYYY-ZFB?cc=1803765&wc=QZZZ-9MQ%3A1588180005%2C1588180422%2C1588179902 : 1 December 2015), Virginia; Charlotte; Not Stated; image 48 of 67; citing NARA microfilm publication M252, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). :::On the same page Francis Roberts, Henry Roberts Sen., Lewis Roberts, John Roberts : Thomas Portwood, Loyd Portwood (perhaps father of Nancy Portwood) on image 41"United States Census, 1810," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYYY-ZCS?cc=1803765&wc=QZZZ-9MQ%3A1588180005%2C1588180422%2C1588179902 : 1 December 2015), Virginia, Charlotte; Not Stated; image 44 of 67; citing NARA microfilm publication M252, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.) :No Mays in Charlotte County 1810 :'''1820 Census''' : Three Thomas Roberts ::#1Males: 2 2 2 2 - 1 ; Females: 1 1 - - 1 - ; Male Slaves: 5 4 3 1 ; Female Slaves 8 2 2 - "United States Census, 1820," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHLT-52B : accessed 4 January 2021), Thomas Roberts, Charlotte, Virginia, United States; citing p. 25, NARA microfilm publication M33, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 136; FHL microfilm 193,695. ::#2 Males: 1 - - - 1 - ; Females: - 1 - - 1 - ; No Slaves "United States Census, 1820," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHLT-5GD : accessed 4 January 2021), Thomas Roberts, Charlotte, Virginia, United States; citing p. 26, NARA microfilm publication M33, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 136; FHL microfilm 193,695. ::#3 Males: - - - - - 1; Females - - - 1 - 1; Male Slaves - 1 1 - ; Female Slaves: 1 - 1 - ; listed as Thomas Roberts, Sr."United States Census, 1820," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHLT-5GW : accessed 4 January 2021), Thomas Roberts, Charlotte, Virginia, United States; citing p. 26, NARA microfilm publication M33, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 136; FHL microfilm 193,695. ::Other Roberts include Francis Roberts, John Roberts (2), Gabriel Roberts, Wyllie Roberts :'''1830 Census''' :No Thomas Roberts in Charlotte County :'''1840 Census''' :No Thomas Roberts in Charlotte County === Cabell County === :'''1820s''' : Finding references to a Valentine Herndon serving in several juries in Cabell County. Since families often moved with relatives, I think this is worth mentioning as Thomas Roberts married a Herndon. Perhaps there is a connection.West Virginia Chancery Records, image 144 of 877, 1824; https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9VT-CC5L?i=143; also image 174 of 877; https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9VT-CCG1?i=173; accessed on January 17, 2021 Also finding the occasional Brizindine reference. :'''1830 Census''' :No Thomas Roberts in Cabell County :'''1840 Census''' :No Thomas Roberts in Cabell County ===Kanawha County=== :'''1840 Census ''' :Thomas Roberts in Kanawha County in 1840; One boy 10-15, one 15-20, man 50-60; girls two 5-10, one 10-15, one 15-20"United States Census, 1840," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYBS-BGX?cc=1786457&wc=31SK-L2D%3A1588670024%2C1588670921%2C1588665902 : 24 August 2015), Virginia; Kanawha; Not Stated; image 13 of 134; citing NARA microfilm publication M704, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). :'''1850 Census''' :Thomas Roberts (12 years old); Head of household is Sarah Roberts (51, F); others in household are Elcey L (33, F); James C (31, M, Farmer); John A (25, M, Laborer), Richard S (23, M, Laborer), Sarah F (20, F), Rosina (16, F), Adelia (13, F); Jo(abbreviation for Johnathan?)(11, M), Samuel K. Dame (29, M, Blacksmith)."United States Census, 1850," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8DH-2SG : 23 December 2020), Thomas A Roberts in household of Sarah H Roberts, Kanawha, Virginia, United States; citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). :Thomas Roberts, age 20, Engineer and Head of Household, born in VA; also in household Frances Roberts (16, M, Engineer), Gabriel Harris (35, M, Black, Laborer), George Booth (20, M, Mulato, Laborer)"United States Census, 1850," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8DH-M1G : 23 December 2020), Thomas Roberts, Kanawha, Virginia, United States; citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.) :Thomas A. Roberts, head of household, 30 years of age, laborer, born in VA; in household is Eliza Roberts (F, 25, Kentucky), Druselia J. (2, F), Marth A (1, F), Malinda Turner (25, F), Silas Roberts (18, M, Laborer) "United States Census, 1850," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8DH-81Y : 23 December 2020), Thomas A Roberts, Kanawha, Virginia, United States; citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). ===Putnam County=== :'''1850 Census''' :Thomas Roberts, age 56, Farmer, value of land 2,500; living in household Susan O (57, female), Dorothy S. (20, female), Adaliza (16, female), Albert Becket (25, male, Farmer)"United States Census, 1850," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8DL-43B : 23 December 2020), Thomas Roberts, Putnam, Virginia, United States; citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). :'''1869''' :Thomas Roberts in Putnam County, died in 1869 :[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:9392-H175-K?mode=g&i=197&wc=Q816-MNG%3A179687101%2C179700701%3Fcc%3D1909099&cc=1909099 Will, Roberts, Thomas, Book 1, p 336 (1869); accessed August 1, 2016)] == Notes == The four instances of the settlement of the estate of Thomas Roberts (1848, 1849, 1852,1855) refer to the same [[Roberts-15553 | Roberts-15553]]. == References ==
Thomas applied for a pension in Cabell County, Virginia, which was granted in 1833. His widow received his pension in 1849 and died, July 20, 1852. Among members of the family named, besides his father, are Isaac Roberts, a brother, and Oney Roberts, possibly a sister. Supporting data was filed by Thomas McCallister, Allen Rice, and James Brown.
Thomas Roger Vaden's Obituary
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Thomas Rundell's Voyage to America
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Thomas Serlys of Wye d1533
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Thomas Seymour Bill of Sale 1785
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I '''Thos. Seymour''' of Hartford in the County
of Hartford in the State of Connecticut in
New England Sign, For In Consideration
of the Sum of One Hundred pounds lawful
money of New England received to my full
Satisfaction & Content of '''Henry Seymour'''
of the City & State of New York, Merchant,
do bargain sell & dispose of into him the
said '''Henry Seymour''' & to his heirs and
assignees my Negro Man named, '''Jack'''
about Twenty four years old, a Servant
for Life - To have & to hold the said
Negro man now in the City of New
York, unto him the said '''Henry'''
'''Seymour''' his heirs & assignees forever
& I do bind myself my Executors Ad-
ministrators & assignees to warrant and
defend the said Negro Man named
'''Jack''' unto him the said said '''Henry'''
'''Seymour''' his Executors Admin[istrators] & assignees
against the lawful claim of any
Person or Persons forever, by these
presents; & that he is a Servant
for Life; & that I purchased him
as such, of '''Capt Seth Collins''' of said
Hartford. In witness whereof I have
hereunto set my hand & Seal the 22nd
Day of January in the year of our Lord
1785.
'''Thos Seymour'''
Signed Sealed & delivered
in presence of
'''Wm Seymour'''
'''John Ledyard'''
==Sources==
Thomas Sharp, Quaker, Newton, New Jersey, 1681
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Thomas Shirley of Belmount
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Thomas Shockley Civil War Pension and Perline (Wolf) Shockley Widow's Pension
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Thomas Sroufe family bible pages
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Thomas Starey Meredith Research
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Thomas Stone and Slavery
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Thomas Strother Chapman Biography
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p. 867-869 '''[[Chapman-22574|THOMAS STROTHER CHAPMAN]]''' (DECEASED) was the son of John Strother and Polly Casey (Waggener) Chapman. His father was born in Frederick County, Virginia, March 28, 1784, came to Union County among its earliest settlers; and died in his home in Union County October 12, 1851. Subject’s mother was born in Mercer County, Kentucky, July 24, 1788, and died in Union County September 12, 1848. His grandfather, Thomas Chapman, was a Virginia planter of the old school, a fine gentleman, and one of the largest land owners in the old Dominion; was born there in 1753, and died in 1795. This Thomas Chapman’s widow, Sarah (Bell) Chapman, survived him several years, and died in Henderson, 1809. The great grandfather of our subject was James Chapman, who was an Englishman that married a Welsh lady. Our subject’s maternal grandfather was John Waggener, who was born in Berkeley County, Virginia, and died in Shawneetown, Illinois, May 1, 1820. Our subject, '''[[Chapman-22574|Thomas S. Chapman]]''', was born near Spring Grove on what is known as the old Coonts tract, February 2, 1811. His schooling was undoubtedly good, and embraced every thing that would go to make up a thorough business man. On February 20, 1834, Mr. Chapman married Prudence Huston, in Davies County, Ky. She is the daughter of Benjamin and Hannah (Friley) Huston, whose ancestry and parentage are described in the sketch of her brother, Judge George Huston. Mrs. Chapman was born January 17, 1817, and now at her advanced age, is a lady of more than ordinary sprightliness, and magnificent memory.
Mr. Chapman was a Whig in politics until that party went to pieces, when he entered the Democratic party. He was called from private life to the office of county clerk, which he held for eight years, making a most efficient officer, and becoming so thoroughly acquainted with the office that he was always called upon thereafter when a stress of work compelled the incumbent to ask for aid. He was elected to the office of County Judge, and fulfilled its duties for four years. After he served out his term as Judge he retired to private business, and managed his farm the rest of his days. Mr. Chapman’s home is a beautiful brick standing near the north end of Main street, containing eight rooms. In this house our subject breathed his last on December 10, 1877.
Thomas Thorpe family photos
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Thomas Thorp's Book
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Thomas Throne 1656 Will 1737
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Thomas Thrower Marrow House
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Thomas Tilman
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Abstract of Fluvanna County, Virginia Will Book No. 1; Author: Daughters of the American Revolution. Point of Fork Chapter (Fork Union, Virginia); Probate Place: Fluvanna, Virginia
{{Ancestry Sharing|1786246|610d81a043e11d7d96b25cf82303c60d19152c0fe5d939b6855555c068786073}} - {{Ancestry Record|62347|786134}} (accessed 14 February 2023)
Zaceriah Tilman probate in Fluvanna, Virginia, USA. . His will named his father Thomas Tilman and siblings, Hugh Rice, John Boxom, Jacob, Winifred Hix, Zachariah, and Thomas Tilman. Daniel and Thomas Tilman '''SR''' to Samuel Dyer * December 1 1787 Daniel Tilman and Thomas Tilman SR of Fluvanna County to Samuel Dyer of Albemarle for 50 pds one mulatto woman named Poll about 25 years old. Signed Daniel Tilman and Thomas (his "T" mark) Tilman. Witnesses: William A Fryer, Andres Squair, Leonard Henly, John Petters (shows Leonard Henly and John Petters were witnesses for Thomas Tilman)Fluvanna County, VA Deed Book 2, page 255. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKH-HSSC-X?i=422&cat=402676. Thomas Tilman '''JR''' to Robert Moorman * May 17 1790 Thomas Tilman JR of Fluvanna to Robert Moorman of Albemarle for 45pds. Slaves: Derander, a woman, Sall, a girl, Lott, a child. Also a wagon, 2 horses, 3 beds, and furniture. Signed Thomas (his "X" mark) Tilman. Witnesses: [[Jean-1238 | William Jean]], Mich'l AttkissonFluvanna County, VA Deed Book 2 page 348. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKH-HSS4-N?i=469&cat=402676. Thomas Tilman to Thomas Baber * June 1 1791 Thomas Tilman of Fluvanna to Thomas Baber of Buckingham a slave man named Milford. Signed Thomas (his "T" mark) Tilman. Witnesses: Mich'l Attkisson, Ware OglesbyFluvanna County, VA Deed Book 2 page 433. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKH-HS9X-Q?i=511&cat=402676. Thomas Tilman SR to Edward Tilman * September 10 1795 Thomas Tilman SR of Fluvanna County to Edward Tilman of South Carolina for 60pds a negro boy, Squire. Thomas Tilman is indebted to Edward Tilman on a note from 1767 for 29 pds. If Thomas pays Edward by Jan 7 1796 the mortgage is void. Signed Thomas (his "T" mark) Tilman Senr. Witnesses: Michael Atkison, J Carter, Thomas (his "X"mark) Tilman JRFluvanna County, VA Deed Book 3 page 157. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKH-HSMJ-4?i=657&cat=402676. Thomas SR, Jacob, and Zachariah Tilman * June 1 1796 Thomas Tilman SR is indebted to Jacob Tilman for 150pds. Thomas SR sold to Zachariah Tilman the following slaves: Bob, Flora, Sam, Amy, Tera plus Cattle, sheep, hogs, beds, furniture and plantation tools. If Jacob Tilman wished, Zachariah should sell the property and give any surplus to Thomas Tilman SR - if Thomas Tilman does not pay the amount owed. Signed Thomas (his "T" mark) Tilman Senr. Witnesses: Jacob Morris, John Morris, Rhodam Angel, William ThompsonFluvanna County, VA Deed Book 3 page 227. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKH-HSMJ-5?i=692&cat=402676. Thomas Tilman SR to Jacob Tilman * April 22 1796 Thomas Tilman SR to son Jacob Tilman for "services rendered me" 100 acres on both sides of Hardware River adjoining George Damron, John Morris, John Coles. Signed Thomas (his "T" mark) Tilman. Witnesses: John Morris, William Thompson, Thomas (X) Mills, Rhodam AngelFluvanna County, VA Deed Book 3 272. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKH-HSMV-7?i=715&cat=402676. Thomas and Hannah Tilman to William Perry * September 13 1797 Thomas Tilman and Hannah, his wife, to William Perry all of Fluvanna for 135pds, 100 acres on both sides of Hardware River adjoining James Johnson. Signed Thomas (his "T" mark) Tilman, Hannah {her "h" mark) Tilman. Witnesses: Jacob Tilman, John Morris, Rice TilmanFluvanna County, VA Deed Book 3 page 356. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKH-HSM3-T?i=757&cat=402676. June 17, 1800 - Thomas Tilman SR to Hannah Tilman "my wife" * All my lands on Hardware River in Fluvanna, adjoining my son Jacob Tilman and Samuel C Tilman, being the land I now live on. To do with as she pleases. Signed Thomas (his T mark) Tilman. Witnesses: Jacob Tilman, Sally P Tilman, George Duncan, Rice TilmanFluvanna County, VA Deed Book 3 page 612. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKH-H9BL-H?cat=402676. July 9, 1802 - Land Grant survey for Thomas Miller, shows Thomas Tilman was dec'd. * 301 3/4 acres, Levy Swanson's line, Rhodam Angels line, James Johnsons line, line of Thomas Tilman, dec'd, Larkin Bransom's lineLibrary of Virginia; Virginia land patents (1623–1774) and land grants (1779–2000), including land grants and survey plats for the Northern Neck proprietary (1690–1874), Miller, Thomas. Land Grant 9 July 1802. N.p., 1802. Print. https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01LVA_INST/altrmk/alma990007962670205756. May 9, 1806 - Hannah Tilman to "my son" Samuel Cole Tilman * 50 acres on Hardware River "for love and affection & 1 dollar". Both sides of Hardware River, Thomas Millers' line, a new line, John A Stranges line. Signed Hannah (her "HT" mark) Tilman. Witnesses: Jacob Tilman, Sam'l A Murray, Peter H WareFluvanna County, VA Deed Book 4 page 580. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS35-4HTT?i=319&cat=402676. May 9, 1806 - Hannah Tilman "relict of Thomas Tilman, deceased" to James Johnson * For $100, 17 acres on the north side of Hardware River joining Sam A Murrey, James Johnson, and William Roberts. Signed Hannah Tilman. Witnesses: Jacob Tilman Sam'l A Murry, Peter H Ware, Samuel C TilmanFluvanna County, VA Deed Book 4 page 600. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS35-4HTB?i=329&cat=402676. ===Thomas Tilman Albemarle Deeds=== All of these appear to be the same Thomas Tilman whose land fell into Fluvanna and who was married to Hannah February 11, 1752 - George Dameril and Ann Thany, his wife, to Thomas Tilman * George Dameril and Ann Thaney, his wife, of Albemarle, to Thomas Tilman, of Goochland. For 100 pounds, 400 acres on both sides of Hardware River, Benjamin Woodsons line. Signed George Dameril, An Thaney Dameril. Witnesses: Matthew Jordan, Alex. McCaul, Thomas Thornill?Albemarle County, VA Deed Book 1 page 416. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89PH-Z9H7?i=262&cat=283051. October 26, 1765 - Thomas Tilman mortgage to Alexander McCaul * Thomas Tilman of Albemarle to Alexander McCaul of Richmond, county of Henrico, Merchant, for 5 shillings - 150 acres in Albemarle on the Fluvanna River between great Rockfish and little Rockfish, bounded by John Ware and John Henry, purchased by said Thomas Tilman from William Walton. 400 acres in Albemarle on Hardware River between John Moore and Hugh Morris purchased by the said Thomas Tilman from George Dameron. Also the following slaves: Korah, Lance, Bellow, Amey, Flora, Bob, Phebe, Sall, Jan, Ursilla, and Phillis. Also a bay mare unbranded, a black horse, a bay mare and colt, 11 black cattle marked with 2 underkeels, other cattle and hogs (markings given). Beds, furniture, pewter. Thomas Tilman will pay 264 pounds and 5 shillings by October 26, 1768. Signed Thomas (his "T" mark) Tilman. Acknowledged in court by Thomas TilmanAlbemarle County, VA Deed Book 4 page 197-199. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS4X-5SDC-T?i=571&cat=283051. Note - William Walton to Thomas Tilman August 7, 1761Albemarle County, VA Deed Book 3 page 90. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS4X-5S6J-T?i=254&cat=283051 and March 24, 1784 - Thomas Tilman and Hannah "his wife" of Fluvanna * To William Anderson England, for 135 pounds, 200 acres on Totier Creek adjoining, Hugh Morris, and John Lewis. Signed Thomas (his "T" mark) Tilman, Hannah Tilman. Witnesses: J?. S Bryan, Josiah (his "X" mark) Thomson, Joseph (his "O" mark) Grymer?. Hannah appeared in court and relinquished her dowerAlbemarle County, VA Deed Book 8 page 124. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS4X-G47V?i=371&cat=283051. == Sources ==
Thomas Todd of Rufford - Will 1672
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Thomas Toombs of Buckinghamshire Decendants
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Thomas Trammell of Fairfax County, Virginia
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Thomas_Trammell_of_Fairfax_County_Virginia-2.pdf
Thomas_Trammell_of_Fairfax_County_Virginia.pdf
Thomas Tyrrell of Heron, Essex
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Thomas V. McCune Family Line
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Thomas Wathen Will Transcription
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'''[[Wathen-250|Thomas Wathen]]'''
The erasures and interlining in the 1st & 2nd line in the 4th Item and in the 1st line of 6th Item were made before signing.
Richard Mudd
Wilm Mudd
Wm Graham
Josiah Williams
At a county court began and held for Union County at the courthouse in Morganfield on Monday the 16th day of August 1824 This last will and Testament of '''[[Wathen-250|Thomas Wathen]]''' deceased was produced in court and proven by the oaths of Wiliam Mudd and William Graham tow of the subscribing witnesses thereto and thereupon ordered to be recorded
Attest James R. Hughes CUCC
Thomas Whaley House
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Thomas White d.1601 Bristol Merchant
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Thomas White of Surry
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Thomas Wightman and Mary (Glendinning) Gillespie
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Thomas Williamson - Will
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Thomas Wills - Accused Bigamist
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{{FamilySearch Record|KC92-7D9}} (accessed 25 September 2022)
{{FamilySearch Image|939N-QW9V-BG}} Image number 00108
Thomas Wills marriage to Mary Ann Blackler in 1842 in Devon, England, United Kingdom. 1851: [[Wills-5830|Thomas Wills]] (30) head of household in Alverstoke registration district in Hampshire, England. Born in Veer, Devon, England. '''1851 Census''': "1851 England Census"
Class: HO107; Piece: 1660; Folio: 29; Page: 50; GSU roll: 193567; ED, institution, or vessel: 1a; Household Schedule Number: 230
{{Ancestry Sharing|30540918|da6ee9}} - {{Ancestry Record|uki1851|5810817}} (accessed 27 September 2022)
Thomas Wills (30) head of household in Alverstoke registration district in Hampshire, England. Born in Veer, Devon, England. 17 Dec 1859: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110324177/auction/ AUCTION] 15 Sep 1860: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110324311/the-royal-arms-license/ The Royal Arms - License.] 1861: [[Blackler-180|Mary Ann Wills]] (44, brewer's wife; "Royal Arms") head of household in Alverstoke registration district in Hampshire, England. Born in Harberton, Devon, England. '''1861 Census''': "1861 England Census"
Class: RG 9; Piece: 645; Folio: 37; Page: 3; GSU roll: 542677; ED, institution, or vessel: 2; Household schedule number: 12
{{Ancestry Sharing|30541189|fad3e5}} - {{Ancestry Record|8767|7881790}} (accessed 27 September 2022)
Mary Ann Wills (44) head of household in Alverstoke registration district in Hampshire, England. Born in Harberton, Devon, England. 01 Mar 1862: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110324660/public-auction/ PUBLIC AUCTION] 08 Mar 1862: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110268897/stoke-road-peel-terrace-and-anglesey/ STOKE ROAD, PEEL TERRACE, AND ANGLESEY, NEAR GOSPORT] 04 Jun 1870: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110267041/a-new-yorker-causes-the-arrest-of-his/ A New Yorker Causes the Arrest of His Father - Singular Case.] 07 Jun 1870: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110266625/trial-of-an-alleged-bigamist/ Trial of An Alleged Bigamist.] 07 Jun 1870: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110267699/the-bigamy-case-of-thomas-wills/ The Bigamy Case of Thomas Wills] 18 Nov 1870: [[Blackler-180|Marry A Wills]] (53) in Philadelphia Ward 26 Dist 86 (2nd Enum), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania '''1870 Census''': "1870 United States Federal Census"
Year: 1870; Census Place: Philadelphia Ward 26 Dist 86 (2nd Enum), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Roll: M593_1441; Page: 148A
{{Ancestry Sharing|30541236|739164}} - {{Ancestry Record|7163|6395378}} (accessed 27 September 2022)
Marry A Wills (53) in Philadelphia Ward 26 Dist 86 (2nd Enum), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 21 Oct 1873: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110323757/arrested-on-the-charge-of-bigamy/ Arrested on the Charge of Bigamy.] 22 Oct 1873: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110323636/arrested-on-charge-of-bigamy/ Arrested on Charge of Bigamy] 22 Oct 1873: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110267860/charge-of-bigamy/ CHARGE OF BIGAMY.] 14 May 1874: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110323979/local-miscellany/ Local Miscellany] 18 Jun 1874: [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/110324076/circuit-court/ Circuit Court] 1880: [[Blackler-180|Mary Ann Wills]] (63), married, Keeps House, head of household in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Born in England. '''1880 Census''': "1880 United States Federal Census"
Year: 1880; Census Place: Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Roll: 1189; Page: 186B; Enumeration District: 656
{{Ancestry Sharing|30541394|732cce}} - {{Ancestry Record|6742|648062}} (accessed 27 September 2022)
Mary Ann Wills (63), married, Keeps House, head of household in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Born in England. ==Sources==
Thomas Winston F35 1863 Taxable Property
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Thomas-1
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THOMPSON
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Thompson, James A. Miller Commission 9572
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“Swayne County” NC is Swain County, in Western NC, on the Tennessee Border. == Related Applications == :[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WX-39S2-Z?i=718&cat=209173 9570] - Application of James’ wife, [[Battle-374|Nancy Ann (Battle) Thompson]]
:[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89WX-66QF?i=880&cat=209173 22812] - Duplicate application for James A. Thompson (not identical)
:[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9WX-66CS?i=895&cat=209173 22813] - Duplicate application for [[Battle-374|Nancy Ann (Battle) Thompson]] (not identical)
:[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WX-QLPD?i=344&cat=209173 30094] - Application of James’ daughter, [[Thompson-27363|Mrs. Julia E Jackson]]
==Transcription Begins Here== ---- Rejected Neither applicant nor ancestors ever enrolled. Does not establish fact of descent from person who was a party to the treaty of 1835-6 and 1846. ---- (Received Jan 8, 1907) Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Washington, D. C.
SIR:
I hereby make application for such share as may be due me of the fund appropriated by the Act of Congress approved June 30, 1906, in accordance with the decrees of the Court of Claims of May 18, 1905, and May 28, 1906, in favor of the Eastern Cherokees. The evidence of identity is herewith subjoined. :English name: ''Jas. A. Thompson''
:Indian name: ''Cherokees call us (Tomsy)''
:Residence: ''Kansas Ind Ter''
:Town and post office: ''Kansas I. T.''
:County: ''Deleware''
:State: ''Ind. Ter. or Okla''
:Date and place of birth: ''Oct 4th 1826(?) Eighteen Hundre 29''[?]
:By what right do you claim to share? If you claim through more than one relative living in 1851, set forth each claim separately: ''Only one.[[Black-4726|'''Hister Black''']] a. 1/4 Cherokee one fourth Cherokee my Grandmother''
:Are you married? ''Yes''
:Name and age of wife or husband: wife ''Eighty years old #9570''
:Give names of your father and mother, and your mother's name before marriage.
::Father-English name: ''Thompson''
::Indian name: ''Tomsy''
::Mother-English name: ''Millsap''[Millsay?]
::Indian name: ''don’t know''
::Maiden name: ''Millsap''[?]
:Where were they born? ''now Swayne Co. N.C.''
::Father: ''Swayne Co. N.C.''
::Mother: ''Swayne Co. N.C.''
:Where did they reside in 1851, if living at that time? ''living in said Co''
::Father: ''Swayne Co N.C. it was Jackson Co. ~'' [?]
::Mother: ''the same''
:Date of death of your father and mother —
::Father: ''in the year 1872''
::Mother: ''in the year 1868''
:Were they ever enrolled for annuities, land or other benefits? if so, state when and where: ''don’t know''
:Name all your brothers and sisters, giving ages, and if not living, the date of death: ''none'' :State English and Indian names of your grandparents on both father's and mother's side, if possible: ::Father’s Side: ''Eng. Thompson, Ind. Name (Tomsy)''
::Mother’s Side: ''Millsap''
:Where were they born? ''in now Swayne Co N.C.''
:Where did they reside in 1851, if living at that time? ''Swayne Co North Carolina''
:Give names of all their children, and residence, if living; if not living, give dates of deaths: ::English name: ''don’t know''
:Have you ever been enrolled for annuities, land, or other benefits? If so, state when and where:
::''my father said he would have me enroled when I was small. See rolls of 35-6.'' :To expedite identification, claimants should give the full English and Indian names, if possible, of their paternal and maternal ancestors back to 1835: '' [[Black-4726|'''Hester Black''']] Ind. name (Ka Ne Kah)'' REMARKS. (Under this head the applicant may give any additional information that he believes will assist in proving his claims.) ''Our proofs on file at Muskogee I. T. [Indian Territory] give proofs I couldn’t now give several old Cherokees and white witnesses deceased since taken that knew them '' I solemnly swear that the foregoing statements made by me are true to the best of my knowledge and belief. ''Jas. A. Thompson''
''27 day of December 1906'' AFFIDAVIT. (The following affidavit must be sworn to by two or more witnesses who are well acquainted with the applicant.) Personally appeared before me ''Geo. W. Cockran'' and ''John W Thompson'', who being duly sworn, on oath depose and say that they are well acquainted with ''James A. Thompson'' who makes the foregoing applications and statements, and have known ''him'' for 30 years and 35 years, respectively, and know him to be the identical person ''he'' represents ''himself'' to be, and that the statements made by them are true, to the best of their knowledge and belief, and they have no interest whatever in ''this'' claim.
''G. W. Cochran''
''John W. Thompson''
---- Jan 15 1908
Tahlequah Okla-
Guion Miller Spec Com.
601 Oury Building Washington D.C.
Application No. 22812-
Its reported here that the time for hearing claims is just off two years would like to know the truth of it. How it is progressing. We are enrolled here on census rolls as Cherokees and I know I saw my name on an old roll. Davis Com [Dawes Commission] called in same rolls . I understood they claimed not authentic. Any information legitimate will be appreciated. Thanking you in advance I am yours truly,
Jas. A. Thompson ---- January 14, 1908.
James A. Thompson, Kansas, Okla.
Sir:
Relative to your application for participation in the fund arising from the judgment of the Court of Claims, in favor of the Eastern Cherokee, give your father's full name and state where he resided in 1835. Was he ever A member of the Eastern Cherokee tribe of Indians? Where were you born? Where have you lived since your birth? When did you move to Oklahoma? Have you ever been enrolled with the Eastern Cherokees? If not, explain why. Have you ever been enrolled with any other tribe of Indians. If so, state when and with what tribe. Were you or your parents slaves? If so, state whether slaves of Indians or white poople?
Very respectfully,
Guion Miller,
Special Commissioner
CHB/ALS ---- [This appears to be a fragment of a longer text, but it's not clear where the rest is.]
My grand mother '''Hester Odear''' They called her Odear. But thinks her proper name was '''Adair'''. we are Enroled now on the Census roll here now as Cherokees - This about all the Information I can give unless any proofs could be got from Muskogee.
Thanking you I am yours Truly
Jas. A. Thompson (COURT OF CLAIMS EASTERN CHEROKEES.Rec. JAN 23 1908) ---- Jan 18, 1908
Tahlequah, Okla
Hon Guion Miller Special Com
Washington D. C. Apl. 9572
Dear sir
Yours reed [sic] thanks. I was borned and remained in the old Nation N.C. til I came her in 86 but failed to get her in time to get on the roll of 86 you remember(?) Daws Com [Dawes Commission] rejected all that was not on that even full bloods. and the court also now I know my name was on a roll handed me by Ex chief [[Ross-6907|'''John Ross''' ]] of the Eastern Band N.C. My grandfather was a minister came west with the Cherokees after marrying a Cherokee. opposed his wife being enrold or taking anything from the Cherokees saying they deserved all the gov. give (due?) them. My father '''[[Thompson-21612|Nathan Thompson]]''' in my presence when a boy spok to two councilmen telling them he wanted me enrolled. They did at next council yet he like my grandfather was opposed taking anything from them (over)… We were not slaves - White & Cherokee. The Eastern band of Cherokees didn’t [illegible] money for many years from the fact they didn’t come here (Emigrate) Some hid in the Mts rather than come … My grandmother '''Hester Black''' was a fair sample of Cherokee. I thought when a boy the best woman in the world.
Truly,
Jas. A. Thompson
(Received Jan 23 1908)
---- Tahlequah Okla. 3-16-0/9
Dear Com. Miller, [Commissioner Guion Miller]
I see from the news …(?) you will soon finish the roll. Will you be so kind to inform me if you got our proofs from Muscogee Okla. If not I doubt the case. Since I came here I found a prominant old Cherokee who has been employed as interpreter years ago says he knew [[Walker-38026| Betsy Walker]] a Cherokee back in Tennesee as you may see in our proofs was the grand mother of my wife my wife and myself as near as I can figure it the same blood. My name was on a roll handed me by John Roors ['''[[Ross-6907|John Ross]]'''] an Ex chief of the Eastern Cherokees N. C. and I sent all together to Muscogee Okla when I thought they mite called for I wrote to know what it would cost they said (26 96) (??) my attys Winnans & Bixby said not they would be come at in time. [sic, meaning unclear]
Please inform me if it would be necessary to get this old Cherokees affidavit and proofs from Muscogee. I am glad to note the Gov. more favorable to the interest of the Cherokees for to my knowledge they have suffered long.
Truly yours
Jas. A. Thompson.
[Note:''' [[Ross-6907|John Ross ]]''' was a famous Chief of the Cherokee, see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Ross_(Cherokee_chief) ] ---- Tahlequah, Okla. Jan 4 1908 [?]
Mr. Nathan Brickford Esq.
My dear Sir
I just Rec’d a communication from commissioner Miller seems that all claimants will have to show on certain rolls to be recognized. My name was on a roll. Ex chief of the Eastern Cherokees handed me he was also a witness filed affidavit that I was of Cherokee decent and so recognized by the Eastern band. Also by the sacred [second?] chief of the Eastern Band.''' Chief Smith''' of the Eastern Band. After he came back from Washington when the Eastern Band sued this Nation for their prorata share in mony. Which they lost. But said all that would come here events be entitled land. as the treaty stipulated this domain should belong to the whole Cherokee people to share and share alike but the Daws Commission & their courts held different so me & many others was regected I fail to see if this (over) … Treaty was valid they could reject any that made valid proof of Blood yet they rejected full Bloods from the Eastern Band. Perhaps the refusal of the Eastern Band to come here still operated against them as it seems they was neglected all along they drew no money til their Agt got them citizenship in the old nation. This accounts for a great many not on the rolls. I know they were scattered in Ga Tenn, S.C, &C, yet they were Cherokees and under this treaty had a right in this domain. I think the E. Band have been badly treated because they didn’t come here. We are now enrolled on the census role here as Cherokees. You said you would cary it to the Supreme Court. Lawyers here say it’s not appealable. Well let me hear from you.
Truly,
Jas. A. Thompson. ---- Kansas Ind Ter
Feb 23 0/7
Hon Nathen Beckford
Washington DC
My Dear Sir
Would like to hear from you how claim is progressing what your prospects is, etc. Did you ever get application from my daughter '''[[Thompson-27363|Mrs. Julia Jackson]]''' lives at Tahlequeh, I. T.? A widow has four children first '''Amy''' about 14, 2nd a boy '''Jessee''' 12 yrs old 3rd a girl about 10 years old, '''Edney''', 4th a boy about 7 years old. I sent them application don’t know if they sent it. would like they be on file how about our proofs at Muscogee. Think they can become at with this. Think you would have a clear case an afidavit by Ex chief of… Eastern Band N. and by 2nd chief Eastern Band and '''Ned Christey''' and''' Jno. Taylor''' all old Cherokees who knew our ancestors. I believe most all dead now. Besides several whites proving that we was the descendants of Betsy (wife’s side) Walker & Hester Black on Thompson side. With all this proof to hand think you would have a clear case. Daws Com (Dawes commission) said it was clear as to blood I spent hundreds of Dol to get it but now to poor to raise the $26.00 Dol they ask to duplicate. Seems very unjust. Please let me hear how it’s progressing. Very Truly,
Jas. A. Thompson. [Note: Julia E. Jackson’s application is #30094]. ---- Special Commissioner of the Court of Claims,
Eastern Cherokee Enrollment
601 Ouray Building
Washington, D. C.
September 15,1908
Application No. 9572
James A. Thompson, Kansas, Okla.
Sir:
In the matter of your application for participation in the fund arising from the judgement of the Court of Claims in favor of the Eastern Cherokees, please take notice that F.D.Ryan one of my duly authorized assistants, will be at Locust Grove, Okl on Monday, September 28th, 1908, at 9 o’clock, A.M., for the purpose of taking testimony relative to your claim: You should appear promptly before him, and if you have any witnesses you wish to have testify in your behalf you should also have them present at that time. You can ascertain where the hearing will take place by making inquiry of J. B. Bryan.
: ☛ If you are enrolled on the final Rolls of Citizens of the Five Civilized Tribes, you should bring with you the number of your enrollment, and also the number of your Census Card.
: ☛ Bring this notice with you. Very respectfully,
GUION MILLER
Special Commissioner
---- Tahlequah, Okla. Sept 21 0/8
Hon. Guion Miller,
I am not able to go to Locust [Locust Grove] . I have not found my census card mislaid. Ex Chief John Rooss ['''John Ross'''] of the Eastern Cherokees gave me a roll that contained my name. I sent with my proofs to [? Locust grove?] Filed with my papers I wrote to get up my papers. They said it would cost me 26. my atty advised me to not pay it that the proofs would be come at. [?] But suppose they are yet at Muskogee with proofs. I feel sure we would be allowed. The Dawes Com. said proof as to Blood was sufficient. Rejected because we was not found on the roll of 86. My witness being well advanced in years Cherokees and whites have most all past away. Since there is one here an old prominent Cherokee who knew [[Leatherwood-176|'''Betsy Walker''']] my wife’s grandmother. Well I am broke down physically and financially. Can do no more only regret I spent a living trying for it. Let me hear please from you.
Respectfully,
Jas. A. Thompson
(Received Oct 7 1908)
[Note: Betsy Walker would have been Nancy (Battle) Thompson's great or 2nd great grandmother, depending on which Betsy Walker is meant, not her grandmother.] —
Thompson - Cavett Family Bible
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Thomsas Grendon of England & Va. (Documents)
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Thomson, Outfitters in Glasgow
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Thomson - McVetty Family History
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Thomson family reserch
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Thorburnska arkiven - Riksarkivet
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Thornhill vs Peters Court Case
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Thornton 1300-1917 by Mrs. Lola Jane Carr-Bates
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Thornton Family Reunion
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Thornton Name Study Info
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Thornville In Lapeer County, Michigan
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Thorp(e) Chart
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Thorp, Wisconsin
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Thorpe/Thorp Family English Roots
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Thoughts on DNA Conformations and Lazarus
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Thousand Oaks, California, Borderline Bar and Grill shooting
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Threads of Ancestors Document
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Threats to Limerick postal officials, June 1922
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The republicans [denied] involvement in, for example, the intimidation of 'postal officials' in Limerick in July 1922. 'R. G. Hetherington, P. and J. Waldron and T. J. Phelan' were visited by 'masked and armed men' in their homes and served with 'orders to leave Ireland'. These 'outrages' were attributed 'to personal spite on the part of unauthorised individuals' and Stephen O'Meara,''Recte'' O'Mara. Mayor of Limerick, agreed to an 'inquiry' ... Irish Government plans to cut postal workers' wages had been causing resentment in the summer of 1922 and a Post Office strike began on 10 September.== The Waldron Family Version == Many details not mentioned in the newspaper reports are given in accounts written later by [[McNamara-1209|Ciss Waldron]], wife of [[Waldron-816|Jack]], and by their son [[Waldron-202|Paddy]]. Masked men with revolvers had came to the doors of the four Limerick Post Office staff around midnight on 22 Jun 1922 and handed in notes ordering them to clear out of Ireland before 12 noon on 26 Jun 1922 or that they would be shot at sight if they failed to do so. Coincidentally, the two Waldrons and Phelan and his wife (who had also worked as a telegraph clerk before their marriage) all had fathers who had once been in the Royal Irish Constabulary. Based on where they eventually died, only Hetherington appears to have ever returned to live in Limerick. The Waldrons eventually settled in Dublin and Phelan appears to have remained in England. Ciss's account, written in September 1924, states that on 22 Jun 1922, she:
experienced the greatest trouble of my life. Masked men with revolvers came to our door at midnight and handed us a note ordering [[Waldron-816|Jack]] to clear out of Ireland before 12 noon on 26 Jun 1922 or he would be shot at sight if he failed to do so. The note said it was on account of his conduct during the Irish war that this punishment was, but we knew it was all Post Office jealousy & [[Waldron-2705|Paddy]], [[Phelan-1396|Mr. Phelan]] and [[Hetherington-1784|Mr. Hetherington]] got the same warning. They had an awful experience at Riverview[[Waldron-2705|Paddy Waldron]] and his family lived at [https://goo.gl/maps/EkbkBwtdYdVonPM66 Riverview] on the South Circular Road in the townland of Ballinacurra (Hart). because they saw the raiders through the window (it was not quite dark when they went there) & would not open the door so shots were fired & a window broken & three or four men tramped upstairs to the bedroom to them, it was awful, with [[McNamara-3846|Lil]] not wellLil was seven months pregnant with her fifth and last child. & the children laid up with measles & everything & Paddy was sure his last minute had come. D.G.''deo gratias''. we got no fright like that as we opened the door at onceJack and Ciss and their family were living at 4 Verona Esplanade, off O'Connell Avenue, which had until recently been known as Military Road. & a man just pointed the revolver at us & handed the note & spoke roughly & went off. It was bad enough when we read the contents of the note. Mr & Mrs Hetherington had the worst experience, they were afraid to open when they heard the loud knocking as there was trouble on between Catholics & Protestants in Belfast and there had been a few reprisals in the South so they thought perhaps those fellows were coming for Mr. H, he being a Protestant so he went out the back way and over the high wall into the Model School grounds before [[Arthur-3644|Mrs H]] opened the door, the raiders searched the houseThe Hetheringtons were neighbours of Jack Waldron at 7 Verona Esplanade. and back and were angry when they did not find him, but left the note & threats & went away. The worst part was that Mr H got a bad fall when jumping off the wall and was 4 hours lying in pain on the wet grass until about 4a.m. when poor Mrs H (who was half distracted when he was not coming back and afraid to go out until daylight on account of the Republicans in the barracksVerona Esplanade is overlooked by what is now Sarsfield Barracks, but was then referred to as the New Barracks. The barracks remained in the possession of the anti-Treaty Republicans until later in the summer. who might shoot anyone they saw stirring & not knowing whether the other crowd had gone or what had become of her husband) came to our door & told us he had gone over the wall at midnight & she was afraid they found him & that he was dead when he had not turned up. I'll never forget how dreadful she looked that morning. I felt ashamed for feeling so troubled myself over our warning when I had Jack safely with me anyway. The whole terrace was soon aroused & Mr Quaid & Jack got out into the Model grounds & found the poor man cold & suffering but quite conscious. His back was badly hurt & he could not move. We threw out pillows & rugs from the window & Mr Quaid went for the Dr & ambulance while Jack settled Mr H & covered him as well as he could. We aroused the MillersSamuel Millar was Head Master of the Model School; see [http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Limerick/Limerick_No__4_Urban/Military_Road__Pt__of_/631177/ 1911 census]. at the school who opened the gate & we all got in. How I pitied Mrs H! It was an awful time for her. Mr H recovered very slowly & he is not really the same yet & I don't suppose he ever really will be. His nerves are bad since besides his not being strong. Mrs H is not well at all since either. They live in London & they don't like it. They went back to Limerick about September 1923 & Mr H only stayed a few nights, he was too nervous. What trouble those ruffians brought on an innocent old couple. Jack, Paddy & Mr. Phelan cleared out that day. Things were so upset at the time that it would not have been safe for them to ignore the threat. They went on to Dublin & reported their case at HQ. They were offered positions in Dublin for the time being but they thought it safer to go to London. So they set out & only got positions in the PO that they did not like at all, routine work that they had not done at home for years. They stayed there til August & then got back to Dublin to the Sec's office. They were happy there only they were uncertain whether they would not be sent back to Limerick again. Then a PO strike came on in September 1922 I think it was & they WERE sent to Limerick. It was another awful time for them & for us, but they only stayed from Friday night til Sunday following at 2pm when they motored back to Dublin. They slept in the PO the 2 nights & they were anything but pleasant nights I am sure, even though there was a crowd of other men with them. It was known at once by the Limerick staff that they were there & they were wild & threatened all sorts of things. Luckily Jack & Paddy got off safely out of the place & I hope we'll never have such an unhappy time again. They were kept on in Dublin after that & we are all up here since 12 October 1922[?]. [[Keogh-899|Mr Keogh]]James P Keogh was married to [[Clancy-1624|Elizabeth Clancy]], aunt, godmother and guardian to the two Mrs. Waldrons, whose mother had died when they were infants. bought 21 Marlborough RoadThe advertisement for the auction of 21 Marlborough Road on 11 Sep 1922 appeared in ''The Irish Times'' of 2 Sep 1922; the Solicitor for Vendor was Alfred Norman - Jack Waldron's third cousin once removed! in Dublin for us & we are paying £ 72 a year rent to him for it. It is supposed to be cheap, but I think it very expensive for us as we have only £ 320 a year at present but it goes up £ 13 a year. A clerical officer is Jack's rank, but he expects promotion any day ... Jack is in the accountant's office in Talbot House, Marlborough St.Jack and Ciss's son, another [[Waldron-202|Paddy Waldron]], five years old at the time, wrote his memories of the incident to his son, a third [[Waldron-201|Paddy Waldron]], on 20 Apr 1988:
There was a 'quasi-judicial' enquiry held later, presided over by (I think) the Lord [sic] Mayor.Limerick has a Mayor, not a Lord Mayor, a technicality of which most of those unfamiliar with the life of [[Joynt-133|William Lane Joynt]] are probably unaware - Lane Joynt at different times was Mayor of Limerick and Lord Mayor of Dublin. (I have press-cuttings somewhere reporting the enquiry) IRA & PO officials etc denied responsibility & noone was ever found 'guilty'. Suggestions were that some PO officials (who resented the fact that [[Waldron-816|Dad]] & [[Waldron-2705|Paddy]] were made Overseers in preference to themselves) got the IRA to do the 'dirty work' for them. Evidence was given that Dad & Paddy had contributed to republican funds (& I think that they had baptized their sons PHP and Thos McDonagh!After the executed patriots [[Pearse-122|Patrick Henry Pearse]] and [[MacDonagh-1|Thomas MacDonagh]].) and that the IRA had nothing against them. The PO 'unpleasantness' arose (I think) out of an earlier PO 'Strike'. The postmen decided (again, I think) to down tools for a day as a protest against something (like the shooting of someone by the Brits) - but they insisted on signing on for the day first so that they wouldn't lose a day's pay. Dad and Paddy were too conscientious to follow suit (although equally sympathetic) - they would not take the day's pay unless they worked for it, which they did. Also, they were Overseers and thus not in the Postmen's Union (Paddy had been a leading figure in same until his promotion - see pictureThis refers to a framed group photograph of the Mansion House Conference of the Association of Irish Post Office Clerks, Dublin, July 1904, which is still in the possession of the Waldron family.). Paddy had been brought to Dublin to Head Office about 1914 and again with Dad about 1920, for interview by 'The Right Hon' James McMahon & 'Sir' _____ for promotion. They also were sent to Whitehall, London for further interviews. After the raids, they were transferred to Dublin & the families moved in October 1922. Needless to say, I don't remember anything of this & Dad never (I think) told me the full story. [[Waldron-2658|Kit]] remembers a lot - I only remember bringing our black cat in a basket on the train to Dublin!! I don't know if Dad's friendship with Fred Flynn (who was in the British Army) had anything to do with it (Dad and Paddy were the first two original 'Ecumenists' - although the word, and the practice, were unknown then. Fred ... was a Catholic - and a saint - & [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Flynn_(bishop_of_Lancaster) his brother] was a bishop - but Bill Hawker was a Prod and Mr Blanc in Portarlington either a Quaker or a Jehovah's Witness!The [http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Queen_s_Co_/Portarlington_South/Main_Street/790327/ 1911 census] lists Charles William Blanc, Post Office Clerk, and his wife and infant son as Members of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible_Student_movement International Bible Students Association] (mistranscribed at census.nationalarchives.ie), a precursor of what became known as Jehovah's witnesses in 1931. [[Waldron-816|Jack Waldron]] had spent the period from 27 Mar 1907 to 18 Oct 1907 working in the Post Office in Portarlington. His colleague Mr. Blanc came to the rescue with a short-term loan when there was a cash flow crisis in the Waldron family on the eve of the departure of Jack's brother Tot for New York on the maiden voyage of the Lusitania on 8-13 Sep 1907. They were all true 'gentlemen' in the best sense of the word). Dad received many letters of support and sympathy from some prominent Limerick and PO people - some of which I have. Merit was, I think, duly rewarded, especially in Paddy's case when he rose to be controller of the Dublin Postal District (the top job in the postal service).== The Hetherington Family Version == Richard Hetherington made several applications for compensation for the consequences of the 1922 attack.See Irish Distress Committee and Irish Grants Committee: Files and Minutes [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C9014435 CO 762/34/11]; Brian Hughes of Mary Immaculate College, Limerick, kindly provided a copy of this file to [[Waldron-201|Paddy Waldron]]. These applications reveal that he lived at several different addresses in the first five years after his move to London. He resided for a time with his daughter when he first came to the city. He was at 121 Blythe Road, West Kensington, W.14, when the Minister of Finance of the Irish Free State turned down his first compensation claim on 7 Apr 1924. He was living at 49 Northcroft Road in West Ealing, London, W.13 at the time of his application on 26 Oct 1926 to the Irish Grants Committee, having previously lived at 53, Linzee Road, Hornsey, N.8. The first of these may have been his daughter's address. His first application for compensation was on 22 Jun 1923 to the Compensation (Personal Injuries) Committee, which ruled that "no compensation was payable in this case", so that compensation was refused by the Minister of Finance of the Irish Free State. This decision was communicated by a letter on 7 Apr 1924 to his Limerick solicitor [[Myles-956|J. O. Myles]] from J. J. McElligott, then assistant secretary in the Department of Finance.https://www.dib.ie/biography/mcelligott-james-john-jimmy-a5654 He next submitted a detailed claim dated 31 Dec 1924 to the Irish Claims Compensation Association, London. This claim said that his house "was raided by a gang of 10 or 12 masked and armed men". It gives the exact wording of the threatening letter:
After careful and impartial consideration of your case, and owing to your conduct during Irish War you are hereby ordered to leave Ireland by Noon on Monday, June 26th 1922. Failing to obey this order you run the penalty of being shot at sight.It also includes the full text of the letter written on 28 Jun 1922 to Stephen O'Mara, Mayor of Limerick, by M. A. Hetherington, C. Waldron, Anne Phelan and L. Waldron, Wives of the Victimised men, seeking the Mayor's help and "that of both Sections of the I.R.A." Hetherington's 1924 claim also confirms, quoting the ''Limerick Chronicle'' of 3 Aug 1922, that the Solicitor representing to the Postal Union had stated to the Mayor's Court of Enquiry that
By order
On the 14th April 1920, there was a protest strike in the Post Office, in connection with the treatment of prisoners in Mountjoy. On that occasion, 80 men in the Post Office were punished for going on strike, '''and these four remained at work'''. That is the reason they were guilty of National Sins.Hetherington claimed that several other members of the Supervising force also remained at their posts during the Strike, but were left unmolested. He alleged that by the premature withdrawal of the Crown Forces from Ireland, he, in common with all other Southern Irish loyalists, was left without the protection to which he was justly entitled. Two applications were made by Richard George Hetherington from Co. Limerick to the Irish Grants Committee, on 26 Oct 1926 and 18 Dec 1926. The latter was for £ 2,000 for personal injuries, suffering, etc., and for £ 1,764.3.0 for loss of employment and other special financial losses, and for interest on these sums, on the grounds that his premature "retirement was caused by ill-health directly resulting from the criminal attack". It confirmed that his two Sons served in the British Army in France in the Great War - one in the South Irish Horse and one in the 1st Bat. Grenadier Guards - and the latter was killed in the battle of the Somme. Their father remained in hospital in Limerick until 7 Sep 1922, at which point he left for London, and never returned to duty. The case was scheduled for hearing on 21 Jan 1927. The file includes a letter dated 11 Jul 1927 from Hetherington's local M.P., [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_Nield Herbert Nield], to the Colonial Secretary, [[Amery-57|Leo Amery]], complaining that no decision had yet been issued six months after the hearing. Hetherington was eventually awarded just £ 500. == Endnotes ==
Three Brothers - The Ties That Bind by Faye Collum Fairley
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Three Generations of Texas Jester
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......... '''2''' Charles Wesley Jester b: Apr 3, 1841 in Macoupin Co., IL d: Apr 2, 1909 in at his residence, corner Ninth avenue and Fifteenth street, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX Burial: Apr 1909 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
............. +M. Eliza "Lisa" Rakestraw b: Oct 1, 1849 in AL d: Oct 2, 1922 in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oct 1922 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX m: Nov 25, 1868 in Navarro Co., TX
.................... '''3''' George E. Jester b: Oct 14, 1869 in TX d: Oct 22, 1935 in his home, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
........................ +Lena Frost b: Jun 29, 1875 d: May 4, 1965 in Dallas Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX m: Dec 18, 1895 in Navarro Co., TX
....................'''3''' Charles Lee Jester, Judge b: Sep 17, 1871 in TX d: Nov 25, 1942 in Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
........................ +Belle Fish b: May 22, 1879 d: Jun 30, 1953 in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
.................... '''3''' Homer Bates Jester, Dr. Sr. b: Dec 31, 1876 in TX d: Jan 26, 1943 in Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX Burial: 1943 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
.................... '''3''' Walter Beaton Jester b: Aug 20, 1877 in probably in Navarro Co., TX d: Feb 1, 1878 in probably in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Feb 1878 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
.................... '''3''' Ida Jester b: 1879 in TX d: 1961 in probley in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro County, TX
........................ +Joshua Lucius Halbert, Sr. Mayor b: 1869 in Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX d: Jul 1, 1929 in at home, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX Burial: Jul 1929 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro County, TX
.................... '''3''' Hugh Cain Jester b: Oct 19, 1881 in (assumed son of Charlie Jester by pob) d: Apr 5, 1935 in Dallas Co., TX
........................ +Kate Jordan b: Feb 25, 1885 in assumed wife of Hugh by pob d: Dec 8, 1963 in probley in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
....................'''3''' Mabel Jester b: Jul 16, 1883 in probley in Navarro Co., TX d: Sep 20, 1885 in probley in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cem., Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
.................... '''3''' Lila Jester b: Jul 25, 1885 d: May 16, 1958 in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
........................ +Lowry Martin b: Feb 2, 1883 d: Oct 31, 1959 in Navarro Co., TX
.................... '''3''' Jean [tentive placement] Jester b: Dec 18, 1897 d: Feb 13, 1962 in probley in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
........................ +William Quinn b: Mar 24, 1879 d: Jan 9, 1958 in probley in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
......... 2 Martha Louisa Jester b: 1841 in IL d: 1871
............. +Thomas Jefferson Kendall, Sr. b: 1835 d: 1890 m: Jan 27, 1864 in Navarro Co., TX
.................... '''3''' Edgar Jester Kendall b: 1865 d: 1944
........................ +Willie Dean b: 1872 d: 1936
....................'''3''' Charles Paul Kendall b: 1869 d: Dec 1940 in Ennis, Ellis Co., TX Burial: Myrtle Cemetery, Ellis Co., TX
........................ +Minnie Maud Allen b: 1871 d: 1944 m: Dec 20, 1889 in Ennis, Ellis Co., TX
......... 2 George Taylor Jester, TX Lt. Governor b: Aug 23, 1846 in Macoupin Co., IL d: Jul 19, 1922 in Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX (at home) Burial: Jul 1922 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
............. +Alice E. Bates b: 1854 d: 1875 Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX m: 1871 in (or 1872)
.................... '''3''' Claude W. Jester b: 1873 in Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX d: Feb 1952 in NY Burial: 1952 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
........................ +(Eliza Fishburn - assumed see nots)
.................... 3 Alice Bates Jester b: Abt. 1872 in TX
........................ +Clay Johnson, Dr. m: Feb 16, 1898 in Navarro Co., TX
......... *2nd Wife of George Taylor Jester, TX Lt. Governor:
............. +Frances Paine "Fannie" Gorden b: Apr 21, 1861 in Aberdeen, Monroe Co., MS d: Oct 3, 1953 in Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oct 1953 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX m: Dec 29, 1880 in Navarro Co., TX
.................... 3 Charles Gordon Jester b: Nov 26, 1882
........................ +Marion Duncan b: Abt. 1894 d: in Possible july 1, 1974 in Harris Co., TX
.................... 3 Ruby (tenative placement) Jester b: 1884 d: 1888 Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
.................... 3 Beauford Halbert Jester, TX Governor b: Jan 12, 1893 in Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX d: Jul 11, 1949 in Harris Co., TX; Died on a train in route to Houston, TX Burial: Oakwood Cem., Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
........................ +Mabel Buchanan b: Apr 10, 1901 in Texarkana, AR d: Aug 19, 1984 in Bowie Co., TX; lr. Texarkana, Bowie Co., TX m: Jun 15, 1921 in First Methodist Church, Texarkana, Miller Co., AR
.................... 3 George Taylor Jester, Jr. b: 1895 d: Oct 14, 1914 in Travis Co., TX
......... 2 Mary Diadema Jester b: Dec 11, 1844 in IL d: Nov 11, 1903 in probably in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
............. +James Daniel Hamilton b: Apr 21, 1844 d: Feb 15, 1929 in probably in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX m: Oct 18, 1865 in Navarro Co., TX
.................... 3 James Mackey Hamilton b: Jul 24, 1881 d: Nov 25, 1883 Burial: Hamilton-Beeman Cem., Navarro Co., TN
.................... 3 Mrs. Joe Garner b: Abt. 1869 d: Dec 19, 1923
........................ +Joe Garner
......... 2 Vina Cordelia Jester b: Aug 10, 1848 in Macoupin Co., Illinois d: Jun 9, 1916 in probably in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
............. +Robert Patrick Bates, Sr. b: 1832 d: Aug 21, 1916 in a hospital, Ft. Worth, Tarrant Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX m: Oct 29, 1874 in Navarro Co., TX
.................... 3 Robert Patrick Bates, Jr. b: Jan 28, 1884 d: Jan 19, 1951 in probley in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cem., Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
........................ +Nannie Elizabeth Trammell b: Aug 16, 1885 d: Sep 27, 1950 in probley in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cem., Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX m: Sep 7, 1907 in Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
......... 2 [[Jester-410|Levi Levin Jester]] b: Jan 6, 1851 in Waverly, Morgan co., IL d: Mar 11, 1938 in 3900 Lexington Ave., Dallas, Dallas Co.,TX Burial: Mar 1938 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
............. +Mary Eliza "Minnie" Cain b: Feb 5, 1861 in Wetumpka, AL d: Aug 22, 1946 in Dallas Co., TX Burial: Aug 1946 Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX m: Dec 15, 1881
.................... 3 Stanley Cain Jester b: Sep 21, 1882 d: Apr 2, 1888 in probably in Navarro Co., TX Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
.................... 3 Herbert Whitesell Jester, Sr. b: Feb 5, 1884 in Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX d: Mar 2, 1974 in Dallas, Dallas Co., TX
........................ +Elizabeth Ann Henry b: Sep 2, 1892 d: Oct 1976 in Dallas Co., TX m: Sep 12, 1911 in Smith Co., TX
.................... 3 John Cain Jester b: Dec 6, 1890 in TX d: Jul 10, 1971 in Dallas, Dallas Co., TX Burial: Restland Memorial Park (per obituary)
........................ +Elizabeth Ramey m: Sep 24, 1912 in Smith Co., TX .................... *2nd Wife of John Cain Jester:
........................ +Lorna Foree Mattison b: Aug 31, 1902 d: Aug 21, 1994 in Dallas, Dallas Co., TX m: 1940
.................... 3 Leven Jester b: Feb 11, 1892 in Tyler, Smith Co., TX d: Jul 1951 in his home; Long Beach, CA Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX
.................... 3 Ralph Kouns Jester b: Jul 10, 1901 d: Sep 25, 1991
........................ +Lois Wilson
http://txnavarr.genealogyvillage.com/biographies/j/jester_levi.htm
Three James Stokers in Kentucky
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Three Similar Thomas Profiles in North Carolina
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Thomas Bentley of Maryland and old Rowan (Davie)/Lincoln Counties, North Carolina, is NOT the Thomas Bentley with wife Hannah BEASLEY as reported by Allan Bentley ( see Allan's response and agreement below) in "Descendants of William Bentley" in the Family Home Pages of Family Tree Maker.:
Our Thomas Bentley of Maryland married his wife Hannah (maiden name unknown) IN MARYLAND about 1744/45 prior to moving to North Carolina before 1767.Their children were born in Maryland prior to the move. As stated Thomas and Hannah were married in MARYLAND, not in Wilkes County, NC. Thomas and Hannah Bentley were the parents of the following children (more children may be discovered as new genealogical material becomes available):#[[Bentley-1569|Benjamin Bentley]] b. 1746-46 Frederick Co., Maryland, died before 15 March 1839 Wilkes Co., NC, married ca 1765 Jane (Holman?) b. 1750 d. Wilkes Co., NC. ##Source: James article and Bentleys of Eastern Kentucky #[[Bentley-40|Mary (Bentley) Freeman]] b. ca. 1749-52 Frederick Co., Maryland d. 1830-33 Buncombe Co., NC, married 17 Dec. 1769 Rowan Co., NC to Aaron Freeman. ##source is marriage license with Thomas as father #[[Bentley-1474|Daniel Bentley]] b. 1752 Frederick Co., Maryland, died 15 Jan 1839 Letcher Co., KY, married 8 Feb 1782 Rowan Co., NC, to Nancy Lewis b. abt. 1759 d. 4 Oct 1845 Letcher Co., KY. ##See profile no one clear source #[[Bentley-602|Rachel Bentley]] b. 1752-56 Frederick Co., Maryland, d. Washington Co., VA, married about 1782 Richard Whiteaker b. 1752 Maryland, d. 18 Oct 1838 Washington Co., VA. #[[Bentley-1066|Lydia Bentley]] b. ca 1755 Frederick Co., Maryland d. 15 July 1837 Gilmer (now Fannin) Co., GA, married about 1774 Meshack Davis b. 1749 Maryland, d. 7 Oct 1853 Dial, Fannin Co., GA. (This Lydia profile is linked to yet another [[Bentley-1095|Thomas Bentley]]) #[[Bentley-1593|Patience Bentley]] b. abt 1760Frederick Co., Maryland, married Peter Lewis in Rowan Co., NC. #[[Bentley-572|Margaret Bentley]] b. 1765 Frederick Co., Maryland, d. ca 1829 Letcher Co., KY, married 25 Sept 1794 Lincoln Co., NC to William Yonts b. ca 1771, d 1836 Perry Co., KY. Allan Bentley (also an experienced Bentley genealogist) responded to Jame's post with:
Where is the proof of this marriage?Why isn't Hannah's maiden name revealed in this marriage record? The List for rent Due on Land in Frederick County, 1768-69, lists "Thomas Bentley, gone to Carolina." Recent research indicates there were up to 3 Thomas Bentley's in North Carolina during this time period:#Thomas Bentley of Roan County, NC #Thomas Bentley of Tyrrell County, NC #Thomas Bentley of Pasquotank County NC James W. Miller responded back with the following:
While there is no "official" record of Thomas and Hannah Bentley's marriage, such as a banns, bond or Bible record, one knows Thomas and Hannah were married and living In Frederick County, Maryland, before 1751 since she released her "dower rights" afforded to her when her husband, Thomas Bentley, sold land to Jacob Bamker in Frederick County, Maryland, in 1751 as can be found in Mary Kay Coker's abstract of the deed: :Jacob Banker [purchaser] recorded 21 June 1751. Made 29 May 1751 between Thomas Bentley of FC [Frederick County], for 39 pcm [pounds current money], tract called "Hill Spring," on south side of Great Pipe Creek, M&B [metes and bounds] given; for 50 acres. Signed Thos. Bentley, before Nath Wickham, Nathl Wickham 3d. Thomas Bently ack. deed, and at same time Hannah Bentley, wife of Thomas Bentley examined apart released dower [before Nath Wickham and Tho Beatty]. Receipt. AF [alienation fee] paid. :SOURCE: Frederick County Maryland Land Records, Liber B Abstracts, 1748-1752, by Patricia Abelard Andersen, p. 45 (and copy from courthouse) Yes, there were three Thomas Bentleys in North Carolina in the 1760s, two of which were in EASTERN North Carolina counties of Tyrrell and Pasquotank. These Thomas Bentleys in eastern NC have been confused with the Thomas Bentley of Frederick county, MD, who had wife Hannah and moved his family to Rowan Co., in CENTRAL NC, in the 1760s.Allan respond back agreeing with James:
Very good work James. I see now how the Thomas Bentley of MD and NC is NOT the husband of Hannah Beasley. I now believe she was married to one of the EASTERN NC Thomas Bentleys. I am removing Hannah Beasley from Thomas Bentley of MD and NC and making changes to my database. As soon as the changes are made I will update my record on Rootsweb WorldConnect.Conclusion/Question from the above discussion?? Four different Thomas profiles with two married to two differ Hannah #[[Bentley-895|Thomas]] from Rhode Island wife is NOT Hannah but (Elizabeth Bergen) not father of [[Bentley-1425|Mary]] who can be merged with [[Bentley-40|Mary]] (daughter of Thomas from MD and NC #[[Bentley-571|Thomas]] from MD and NC married to Hannah Unknown ##Father unknown, maybe servant Thomas from England ##Children currently attached are correct but all are included ## was married to a Hannah but not sure last name is Thomas as ones attached to profile currently #[[Bentley-1591|Thomas Sr]], married to [[Beasley-864|MARY BEASLEY]] (need more sources-not current linked as wife)(sources and other profiles seem to suggest that a different [[Bentley-1559|Mary Beasley]] was married to a [[Beasley-1012|Robert (Francis) Beasley]] SOME BEASLEY FAMILIES OF THE COLONIAL SOUTH by John D. Beatty, CG. page 112 [http://www.beasleygenealogy.net/documents/SomeBeasleyFamilies-ColonialSouth_JohnBeatty_Final_Oct2015.pdf available here] This Mary and Robert are the parents of the Hannah who married Thomas Jr. discussed below. #[[Bentley-1579|Thomas Jr]] ([sources don't support parents]) from eastern NC who married [[Beasley-1015|Hannah Beasley]] ## wife HANNAH4 BEASLEY . . . was born December 29, 1714 in North Carolina. She married THOMAS BENTLEY, JR. Abt. 1746 in Wilkes County, North Carolina, ##Did Thomas Jr and Hannah Beasley have children?? *Recommendation 2: **[[Bentley-1579|Thomas Jr.]] detach three children who will be attached to [[Bentley-571|Thomas from MD]] ** attach [[Beasley-1015|Hannah Beasley]] as wife **attach other Hannah ?? **possible record to be added to Thomas profile ***Thomas Bentley, Elizabeth Wells, and William Croply were witnesses to Samuel Beasley will (1735), SOME BEASLEY FAMILIES OF THE COLONIAL SOUTH by John D. Beatty, CG. page 111 [http://www.beasleygenealogy.net/documents/SomeBeasleyFamilies-ColonialSouth_JohnBeatty_Final_Oct2015.pdf available here] citing to Early Records of North Carolina, 5: 6; record no. 27 *Recommendation 3: **Make [[Bentley-571|Thomas #3]] the profile for the Thomas from Maryland and NC ** parents and birth place unknown **detach 3 current Hannahs wives and add [[Bentley-1427|Hannah]] (last name unknown) **attach three children wrongly attached to the [[Bentley-1579|Thomas Jr]] married to Hannah Beasley (not sure if they have children) **Move the information about the Thomas from MD and NC from [[Bentley-895|Thomas, from RI #1]] profile into the profile for [[Bentley-571|Thomas, from MD and NC]]. Add the following records which support a Thomas moving from Maryland to North Carolina, the record from 1767 in MD, specifically mentions a Thomas being in NC (these records are not in any profile yet): MOVED over -------------- This [http://www.ncgenweb.us/alexander/benjaminbentley.html page] also by James seems to have possible sources for Benjamin and Thomas [[https://www.gengophers.com/book.html#/book/82947?page=1&score=1 The Bentleys of Kentucky]] has sources for this line of the Bentley family.
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William Henry Tickell. Born of William and Ann Tickell the 4th December 1826 {{Image|file=Tickell_Family_Bible-1.jpg |caption=Tickell Family Bible Image 2 |size=1100 }} Elizabeth Jean Tickell. Born of William and Ann Tickell the 6th of May 1827
Eliz Jean Tickell. Born of William and Ann Tickell the 6th of July 1829 {{Image|file=Tickell_Family_Bible-2.jpg |caption=Tickell Family Bible Image 3 |size=1100 }} tweens
Elizebeth Drown. Born of John and Ann Dronn October 9th 1838 about half past 10 in the
Also Mary Ann Dronn born of John and Ann Drown October 9th 1838 about 20 minutes after.
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Tickell family immigration to Australia aboard 'Crusader' 1870
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Tiffany Long
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Tiffany Tigers - Sandlot Football in the 1920s
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Tikveš
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Tilcamp
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Tilcamp German roots
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Tilden P. Vaughan Bible
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Tile Backgrounds of Morris-18630
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Tilley Family Material
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Tim and Sharon's House
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Tim Cagle's Free Space Pictures
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Tim Wentz To-Do List
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Time Line - Colonel Sam Robertson
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Robertson-3810.jpg
Time Magazine's Person of the Year
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Time Rolls On
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Time_Rolls_On-3.jpg
Time_Rolls_On.jpg
Time_Rolls_On-5.jpg
Time_Rolls_On-4.jpg
Time_Rolls_On-1.jpg
Time_Rolls_On-2.jpg
Time Will Tell: Memoirs of a Kangaroo Point Kid.
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Time Zones
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Time_Zones.jpg
'''Examples:''' * GMT 0000 on Tuesday = EST 7:00 PM '''''Monday''''' * GMT 1100 on Tuesday = NZDT Midnight '''''Wednesday''''' '''Note:''' Daylight Savings Time currently in effect in the USA. {| border="2" class="wikitable" cellpadding="3" style="display:block;overflow-x:scroll;height:680px;width:480px;" ! align="center" style="background:#ccffcc;"|GMT ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|EDT ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|CDT ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|MDT ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|PDT ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|UK ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|AEDT ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|NZDT |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0000 || 8pm -1 || 7pm -1 || 6pm -1 || 5pm -1 || 12am|| 11am || 1pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0100 || 9pm -1 || 8pm -1 || 7pm -1 || 6pm -1 || 1am|| 12pm || 2pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0200 || 10pm -1 || 9pm -1 || 8pm -1 || 7pm -1 || 2am || 1pm || 3pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0300 || 11pm -1 || 10pm -1 || 9pm -1 || 8pm -1 || 3am || 2pm || 4pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0400 || 12am || 11pm -1 || 10pm -1 || 9pm -1 || 4am || 3pm || 5pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0500 || 1am || 12am || 11pm -1 || 10pm -1 || 5am || 4pm || 6pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0600 || 2am || 1am || 12am || 11pm -1 || 6am || 5pm || 7pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0700 || 3am || 2am || 11am || 12am || 7am || 6pm || 8pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0800 || 4am || 3am || 2am || 1am || 8am || 7pm || 9pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 0900 || 5am || 4am || 3am || 2am || 9am || 8pm || 10pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1000 || 6am || 5am || 4am || 3am || 10am || 9pm || 11pm || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1100 || 7am || 6am || 5am || 4am || 11am || 10pm || 12am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1200 || 8am || 7am || 6am || 5am || 12pm || 11pm || 1am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1300 || 9am || 8am || 7am || 6am || 1pm || 12am +1|| 2am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1400 || 10am || 9am || 8am || 7am || 2pm || 1am +1|| 3am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1500 || 11am || 10am || 9am || 8am || 3pm || 2am +1|| 4am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1600 || 12pm || 11am || 10am || 9am || 4pm || 3am +1|| 5am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1700 || 1pm || 12pm || 11am || 10am || 5pm || 4am +1 || 6am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1800 || 2pm || 1m || 12pm || 11am || 6pm || 5am +1|| 7am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 1900 || 3pm || 2pm || 1pm || 12pm || 7pm || 6am +1|| 8am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 2000 || 4pm || 3pm || 2pm || 1pm || 8pm || 7am +1|| 9am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 2100 || 5pm || 4pm || 3pm || 2pm || 9pm || 8am +1|| 10am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 2200 || 6pm || 5pm || 4pm || 3pm || 10pm || 9am +1|| 11am +1 || |- | ! style="background:#ccffcc;" | 2300 || 7pm || 6pm || 5pm || 4pm || 11pm || 10am +1|| 12pm +1 || |}
Timeline: Thomson Outfitters in Glasgow
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Timeline App
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Timeline for Joseph Henry Marshall
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Timeline for Texas Counties
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Tarrant_County_Texas-1.png
'''{{Brown|1836-1845 - Republic of Texas}}'''
'''{{Blue| Post 1845 Texas joined the Union.}}'''
::
Timeline of Historical Events
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Timeline of Keiffer's Brigade, Union Army, US Civil War
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Timeline of Martin Scranton Children
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Timeline of the Kimballs of VA, NC, SC
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Timeline Paul Edward Rainford
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Timeline Table Format
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|t = (The type of row display: H (header), R (row), F (footer) - default R)
|d = (The date/range of the event - default "Date" for t H, "" for t R or F)
|e = (The event description - default "Event" for t H, "" for t R or F)
===Sample Display===
TimelineStuff
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Timmins
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Timothy Dunnagan Orange County North Carolina Plantation
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Timothy Hudson, Sheila Sewell, Helen Lee
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Timothy Olmsted's Will
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James Gorham
N.T. Leonard (L.S.) Hampden. At a Probate Court holden at Springfield, within and fo the County of Hampden, on the first Tuesday of April A.D. 1860 by the Honorable John Wells, Esquire, Judge of Probate. The foregoing Will having been presented by Harriet L. Olmsted the Exectrix there in named for Probate, on the sixth day of March last (and notice then ordered to be given to all persons interested therein appear at this time, if they should see fit; and it being now made to appear that notice has been given as ordered.) and there being now present Norman T. Leonard, one of the witnesses thereto subscribed, who on the oath declares, that he saw the said decease sign and seal, and heard him declare the said instrument to be his last Will and Testament, and that he with Levi Bush & James Gorham subscribed their names as witnesses therof, in the presence of the said decease, and that he was then, to the best of his judgment, of sound and disposing mind, therefore, I do decree that the said instrument be and hereby is proved, approved and allowed as the last Will and Testament of the said deceased, and that as such it have full force and effect and that the Execution thereof in all matters concerning the same, and the Estate of the said deceased, whereof he died seized and possessed within this Commonwealth, to be administrated upon, by committee unto Harriet L. Olmsted the Exectrix of the said Will named, she first giving bond as the law in such cases directs. Given under my hand and seal of Office, at the Court aforesaid. :John Wells at time [of] Record attest, Judge of said Court, William S. Shureleff, Register
Timulty's
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Tina Kobus To-Do List
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[[Unknown-623593|Christina Unknown (abt.1725-)]]
[[Lerka-2|Godefrid Lerka (1764-1838)]]
[[Körlin-14|Carl Körlin (abt.1819-)]]
[[Hartuhn-1|Louise (Hartuhn) Körlin (abt.1819-)]]
[[Schiefelbein-73|Emilie Heinriette (Schiefelbein) Schöneck (1847-1900)]] Add parents and sibling
[[Klatt-313|Gottfried Klatt (1822-1908)]], create wife and children's profiles
[[Radde-18|Eleonore Radde (abt.1788-)]] add previous spouse, parents and children
[[Lehrke-75|Gottfried Lehrke (1800-)]] check for wife, children and death
[[Heek-15|Johann Heek (1768-)]] Finish Johann, then add wife and children and wife's family
[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Lehrke-78 Michael Benjamin]]Wife, kids, death
[[Lerka-5|Gottlieb Lerka (1771-1811)]] Add children's spouses and children.
[[Heek-43|Louise Heek (abt.1814-1880)]] add children's profiles '''Visit FHL and get the following records:''' *[[Kobus-100|Franziskus Kobus (1819-)]] last two children's birth records. *[[Grzywacz-14|Anna Grzywacz (1791-)]] death record Czersk,1865, W213, 0064, 28 *[[Schaldach-1|Michael Schaldach (1765-1790)]] get link information to his birth, and if he has any siblings and his parents information. '''Pull Civil Records for:''' *1876,1619/22,6_1619_0_22_0125,126,Anna Krajecka,52 l. '''Get Alt Grabau early records to transcribe'''
TinEye How To
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Tinsley
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TinyDancerLJB
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Tip of the Week from Betsy Ko
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P.C.: Shift-Alt + letter — e.g., Shift-Alt-G for G2G Recent Activity
Mac: Ctrl-Opt + letter — e.g., Ctrl-Opt-G for G2G Recent Activity 2.
—Navigational Keys (jump to...)
1: Nav Home Page
F: Find — WikiTree person search page
G: G2G Recent Activity
H: Help Search — WikiTree Help search page
R: Random Profile
W: Watchlist — jumps to your Watchlist 3.
—Information Management Keys
I: ID — copy WikiTree ID
L: Link — copy WikiTree Link
U: URL — copy URL
N: Notes open/close
V: Clipboard open/close 4.
—While Browsing a Person Profile
A: Ancestors — like pressing the Ancestors button
D: Descendants — like pressing the Descendants button
E: Edit profile — open Editing session
M: Magnifier on/off
T: Tree apps — opens Tree Apps
X: Extra Watchlist open/close
Z: Zoom–in–Place on/off 5.
—While Editing a Person Profile
A: AGC — run Auto Gedcom Cleanup (AGC)
B: Bio — run Auto Bio
C: Compare — compare draft with saved information
E: Enhanced Editor — toggles Enhanced Editor while in Editing session
P: Preview — like pressing the Preview button while in Editing session
K: Category — opens the Category helper box
Q: Quit — return to profile / delete draft
S: Save — saves your current Editing session
T: Template — Add any template ==Are you '''''sure''''' you don't have any duplicates on your watchlist?== Have you been using the "Find Matches" tab on your watchlist? It's a great way to deep dive and find potential duplicate profiles that need merging. [https://www.youtube.com/live/HNpC5jGp0CE?si=yVB9SJZdgDoN6SAZ&t=4379 Tip shared on December 2, 2023], link will take you directly to the tip segment. ==Use this WikiTree Browser Extension to find out more about your recent CC7 changes== [https://www.youtube.com/live/HX1X4KRdWMw?si=U_BlJTdlZLtn8uZ0&t=3965 Tip shared on January 13, 2024], link will take you directly to the tip segment. ==WikiTree's new search interface== {{YouTube |KiLPJEZAiZg |April 6th Tip of the Week |4506 |playlist=NewMemberQA }}
Tipos de movimiento
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Tippah County, Mississippi - Chisholm sources
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Home in 1840 (City, County, State): Tippah, Mississippi
Free White Persons – Males – Under 5: 2
Free White Persons – Males – 20 thru 29: 1
Free White Persons – Females – Under 5: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 20 thru 29: 1
Persons Employed in Agriculture: 1
Free White Persons – Under 20: 3
Free White Persons – 20 thru 49: 2
Total Free White Persons: 5
Total All Persons – Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: 5
Year: 1840; Census Place: Tippah, Mississippi; Roll: 219; Page: 186; Family History Library Film: 0014842
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1451962:8057?_phsrc=Zmn99&_phstart=successSource&gsln=Chisholm&ml_rpos=2&queryId=2d32d9733fa3d8b758e2a35b963fb434
1850 US Census – Name: John D Chisholm
Gender: Male. Age: 34. Birth Year: abt 1816
Birthplace: South Carolina
Home in 1850: Division 3, Tippah, Mississippi, USA
Occupation: Farmer. Industry: Agriculture
Real Estate: 350. Line Number: 13
Dwelling Number: 171. Family Number: 171
Household Members Age
John D Chisholm 34. b. SC. Farmer.
Sarah Chisholm 33. b. KY
Nancy A Chisholm 13. b. MS
Henry W Chisholm 12. b. MS
William T Chisholm 10. b. MS
James M Chisholm 8. b. MS
John B Chisholm 7. b. MS
Thomas J Chisholm 5. b. MS
Asa G Chisholm 3. b. MS
Year: 1850; Census Place: Division 3, Tippah, Mississippi; Roll: 381; Page: 503b
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/3561045:8054
1850 US Census – Name: Robert Chisolm
Gender: Male. Age: 37. Birth Year: abt 1813
Birthplace: South Carolina
Home in 1850: District 2, Tippah, Mississippi, USA
Occupation: Farmer. Industry: Agriculture
Real Estate: 250. Line Number: 24
Dwelling Number: 158. Family Number: 158
Household Members Age
Robert Chisolm 37. b. SC. Farmer
Louisa Chisolm 29. b. SC
Miram L Chisolm 9. b. MS
Mary Ann Chisolm 8. b. MS
Cintha J Chisolm 6. b. MS
Vanburen Chisolm 4. b. MS
John Chisolm 1. b. MS
Year: 1850; Census Place: District 2, Tippah, Mississippi; Roll: 381; Page: 404b
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/3552744:8054
1850 US Census – Name: George W Chisholm
Gender: Male. Age: 52. Birth Year: abt 1798
Birthplace: Kentucky
Home in 1850: Division 3, Tippah, Mississippi, USA
Occupation: Farmer. Industry: Agriculture
Real Estate: 400. Line Number: 5
Dwelling Number: 734. Family Number: 734
Household Members Age
George W Chisholm 52. b. KY. Farmer
Ellinor Chisholm 51. b. SC
John M Chisholm 26. b. KY
Elizabeth Chisholm 23. b. KY
Mary Chisholm 21. b. KY
Hiram Chisholm 19. b. KY
Margery Chisholm 17. b. KY
Rachel Chisholm 15. b. KY
Rebecca Chisholm 12. b. MS
Ellinor Chisholm 9. b. MS
Benjamin Chisholm 7. b. MS
Year: 1850; Census Place: Division 3, Tippah, Mississippi; Roll: 381; Page: 543a
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/3564355:8054
Tips for determining Irish Ancestry
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Tipton
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Tipton County Tennessee Deeds (Grantee)-Campbell
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'''Land Records (Grantees)'''
'''1830'''
'''Updated: 1 Apr 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !From !Book !Page !Comments !Doc_Image |- !1830 | |Campbell |William |John G. Blount |A |335 |150 acres in District 11; Range 5, Section 6 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CST8-CRGN?i=178&cat=405071 Doc Image] |}
Tipton County Tennessee Land Entries-Campbell
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'''Land Entries'''
'''1821-1830'''
'''Updated: 1 Apr 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !Volume !Page !Comments !Doc_Image |- !1821 | |Campbell |Arthur |A |152 |640 acres in the 11th District; Range 1, Section 6 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-F3CX-4H1L?i=114&cat=405079 Doc Image] |- !1825 | |Campbell |William |A |245 |310 acres in the 11th District; Range 1, Section 1 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-X3CX-4CXY?i=164&cat=405079 Doc Image] |- !1827 | |Campbell |David |A |410 |125 acres in the 11th District; Range 5, Section 8 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-F3CX-4CB7?i=253&cat=405079 Doc Image] |- !1829 | |Campbell |Adam D. |A |435 |160 acres in the 11th District; Range 6, Section 7 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-F3CX-4HCD?i=265&cat=405079 Doc Image] |- !1830 | |Campbell |Lewis |A |461 |125 acres in the 11th District; Range 2, Section 11 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-X3CX-4HS7?i=280&cat=405079 Doc Image] |}
Tipton County Tennessee Land Surveys-Campbell
Inbound links: 1
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'''Land Surveys'''
'''1827-1831'''
'''Updated: 1 Apr 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !Volume !Page !Comments !Doc_Image |- !1827 | |Campbell |Mary |A |282 |200 acres in Range 6, Section 7 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-F3CX-79MR-3?i=182&cat=405075 Doc Image] |- !1832 | |Campbell |James B. |A |282 |89 acres in Range 6, Section 7 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-F3CX-79MR-3?i=182&cat=405075 Doc Image] |- !1832 | |Campbell |James B. |A |317 |124 acres in Range 6, Section 7 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-F3CX-W9WG?i=199&cat=405075 Doc Image] |}
Tipton County Tennessee Probate-Campbell
Inbound links: 1
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'''Probate Records'''
'''1835-1861'''
'''Updated: 1 Apr 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !Instrument !Book !Page !Comment !Doc_Image |- !1835 | |Campbell |William |Will |A |28 |Children: Jane, John A., Francis M., Thomas C., and William Campbell; executor: Carlton Allen (brother in law). Has land in Christine Co., KY |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:SQWF-J971-9?i=107&cc=1619127&cat=233406 Doc Image] |- !1861 | |Campbell |Thomas C. |Will |A |246 |Wife: Elizabeth M. T. Campbell; Executor: M. H. Cullum |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:SQWF-JMTM-9?i=284&cc=1619127&cat=233406 Doc Image] |}
Tiras
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Project:
Tish Domin
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Saved: 18 Oct 2021
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TISHOMINGO
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TISHOMINGO-3.jpg
TISHOMINGO.jpg
TISHOMINGO-1.jpg
TISHOMINGO-2.jpg
TISHOMINGO STATE PARK, MS
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Titchfield Abbey
Inbound links: 2
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Tite Family Ancestors in Northamptonshire
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Touched: 5 Apr 2017
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Title Deed
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 28 views
Saved: 20 Mar 2021
Touched: 20 Mar 2021
Watch List: 1
Project:
Titterington
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 105 views
Saved: 7 Oct 2016
Touched: 7 Oct 2016
Watch List: 1
Project:
Tjurstorp
Inbound links: 4
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 71 views
Saved: 30 Jan 2024
Touched: 30 Jan 2024
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Tjurstorp-1.jpg
To America From Scotland
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Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 73 views
Saved: 25 Jul 2016
Touched: 25 Jul 2016
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Project:
To do
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 47 views
Saved: 20 Jun 2019
Touched: 20 Jun 2019
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To Do: Unknown-220794 Cecily (Unknown) Farrar
Inbound links: 2
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 81 views
Saved: 1 Sep 2023
Touched: 1 Sep 2023
Watch List: 1
Project:
To do for Russell Reed Deacon Napier
Inbound links: 0
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To England by HMS Troop Ships
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To Err Is Human To Correct It Takes A Genealogist-1
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To Plant a Tree, A Glass-Edgar-Shaver-Koons Genealogy
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Toberhead McCool Research Status
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Todd Family Reunion
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Todd's Crossing
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Todd's of Scotland
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Todero family, Pueblo, CO
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TODO
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Togarmah
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Toggle Switch Delaney
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Tolands
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Tolbert Vandeventer Interview
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"FATHER AND SON
What They Have Accomplished on a Caddo County Farm. A stranger personally to us, but a regular reader of the Tribune, Mr. Tolbert Vandeventer, living six miles southwest of the city, called on us Saturday forenoon to inquire concerning the operation of the restored 2-cent railroad passenger fare in this state taken in connection with a trip from here to Kansas and other 2-cent states. After answering him as best we could, telling him that, under the present ruling of the railroads, he would have to pay 3 cents a mile from the last station in the next state, unless he preferred buying a through ticket here at 3 cents a mile- (he didn't)- We had a talk with Mr. Vandeventer on how he was getting along at farming. He said that he and Mrs. Vandeventer intended to take the month of August for a visit with relatives and old friends in Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska; that they had been here since soon after the opening, and had not taken a vacation. He said that one of his cows died Friday night, and that the same night another cow got a shoulder broken. He though the latter would recover. She was with about fifty other cattle when the injury was sustained. Mr. Vandeventer and his son Floyd own these cattle and have good teams and the other things attaching to those who are making farming a success. We were interested in Mr. Vandeventer's narration of his life since coming to Caddo county. First, he located in this city, and went into the hauling business. He made from three to four dollars a day. Our people were kind in furnishing him work. After following this work for about two years, he quit it, and had $80 in money to show for it all, and he had so worn out a good wagon that it had to be replaced within a short time. It will have been nine years coming month since he and his family moved upon the farm which they still continue to occupy. They had a team and bought two cows with the $80. A baby cyclone came along, accompanied by a bolt of lightning which dazed both Mr. and Mrs. Vandeventer, who were in the house, but left the house standing. On looking out of doors, they saw their two cows lying down. Mrs. Vandeventer asked how it came that they were lying down so early in the day. Mr. Vandeventer's practiced eye told him they were dead. They had been standing about a dozen feet apart, facing in the same direction. The lightning had struck both of them in the hips. Mr. Vandeventer, in a spirit of despair, asked his wife how they would manage to keep from starving. She replied that they would get more cows as soon as they were able, As the saying is, they stayed on the job, and have comfort and prosperity to show for it, But as were going to tell about Floyd, the son. He, a few years after the cyclone incident, concluded that he wanted to get away from the farm, and he went to Chickasha and started to take a course at the business college. He had not finished it before he grew thin and pale, and decided that there wouldn't be much in that kind of an education, even if he could work indoors and keep his health. He returned to the farm. One day some months ago, he was sitting in the house, and remarked to his father that he believed he would like to sell his personal property and go somewhere else. He said this was what he would do if he could get $800 for what property he had. His father told him he would take it. Floyd though a moment and said he would take $1,000 for it. The father said "All right; come with me into town and we will fix it up." Floyd by this time, had raised the price to $1,200. The father replied that he would give him the $1,000 which had been agreed upon. Floyd, after thinking a moment, said, "If it is worth that to you it is worth as much to me; I'll keep it." The father stated that Floyd is about 24 years of age; that he is a man who always finds something to do; that he owns twenty head of cattle, a team of fine mules, a span of good horses, besides other property, and that he has accumulated this property within the last eighteen months. Where there is one young man who has done as well there are dozens who have not approached it. Mr. Vandeventer made us feel more than ever like pressing the point which we have been advocating in favor of our farmers raising live stock. It is easier than running entirely to field crops and is very much more profitable.[https://www.newspapers.com/clip/100102952/father-and-son/ Father and Son]. Caddo County Tribune (Anadarko, Oklahoma), 17 July 1913, page 2, columns 3-4.
Tollison-Blankenship Family Reunion
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Tolstrup folk
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Tom Byers
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Tom C. Simmons' Estate
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Tom Cargill's 'Old Gray' Saga
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Tom Cleland Family History
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Tom Gocze Family pets & backyard visitors
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Tombstone Inscription for Abijah Yeager
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ABIGAH YEAGER
Born in Culpeper Co., Va.
Jan.20, 1788
Died in Bibb Co., Ala.
Sept. 2, 1862
He was a man of honest industry
and stern integrity, and for many years
an acceptable member of the M.E. Church
This languishing head is at rest,
Its thinking and aching are o'er,
This quiet unmovable breast,
Is heaved by affliction no more." == Sources ==
Tomlin- Eagleville Tennessee
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Tomlins Gloucestershire
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Tommy the Cat
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Tommye Hills
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Tompkins Family Mysteries-1
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Tomski Family Bibliography
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Ton Family of Heerewaarden
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'''Note:''' Some relationships shown below may be uncertain and/or based on less reliable sources, dates may also be approximations - consult individual profiles for more information.
'''Notation Used:''' Spouses surnames are highlighted in bold; first partner/spouse is shown on the line with the descendant, subsequent relationships are shown on the line(s) following the descendant with multiple "+" signs indicating. (for example "++" indicates a second partner/spouse); "*" denotes research has found no children of the descendant; Descendant surnames are not shown except where they appear as a spouse of another descendant. Profiles exist for 1301 of 1953 descendants, and for 294 of 951 spouses (includes 25 intermarriages) :1640 - [[Gerrits-335|Jan]] + Jantjien '''Peters''' ::1669 - [[Jansen-1524|Anneken]] ::1671 - [[Jansen-1525|Gerrit]] + Anneke Fransen '''van der Linde''' :::1705 - [[Ton-351|Jan Gerritsen]] + Arientje '''van Schreven''' ::: ++ [[Van_Neerlangel-1|Henderske]] '''van Neerlangel''' ::::1726 - Jantje ::::1729 - Johan :::1707 - [[Ton-352|Anneke]] + [[Sepers-81|Jan]] '''Sepers''' ::::1740 - [[Sepers-1|Robbertus]] + [[Ton-434|Peterken]] '''Ton''' :::::1773 - [[Sepers-3|Anneke]] * :::::1775 - [[Sepers-4|Johannes]] + [[Van Manen-38|Judith]] '''van Maanen''' * :::::1776 - [[Sepers-5|Adrianus]] * :::::1778 - [[Sepers-6|Adriana]] + [[Bosz-1|Hendrik]] '''Bosz''' ::::::1803 - [[Bosz-2|Elizabeth]] + Pieter '''van den Berg''' :::::::1834 - Pieter Gerardus + Elizabeth Cornelia '''Lalleman''' :::::::1836 - Adriana Hendrika + Gijsbertus '''Valstar''' :::::::1840 - Jacobus + Theodora '''van den Ende''' :::::::1842 - [[Van den Berg-875|Hendrik]] + [[Ton-126|Johanna]] '''Ton''' ::::::::1865 - [[Van den Berg-870|Hendrik Adrianus]] + [[De Lange-357|Elisabeth Hendrina Clasina]] '''de Lange''' :::::::::1888 - [[Van den Berg-898|Anna]] + Willibrordus Jacobus '''Sluiters''' :::::::::1890 - [[Van den Berg-899|Elisabeth]] + Wilhelmus '''Wigmans''' :::::::::1891 - [[Van den Berg-900|Maria Louisa]] * :::::::::1893 - [[Van den Berg-901|Hendrik]] + Catharina '''Roerade''' :::::::::1895 - [[Van den Berg-902|Maria Louisa]] + Pieter Klaasse '''Bos''' ::::::::: ++ Joseph '''Coltof''' :::::::::1897 - [[Van den Berg-903|Gerardus Wilhelmus]] * :::::::::1898 - [[Van den Berg-904|Johannes Wilhelmus]] * :::::::::1900 - [[Van den Berg-905|Johannes Wilhelmus]] :::::::::1901 - [[Van den Berg-906|Pieter Gerardus]] + Adriana Catharina Maria '''Coomans''' :::::::::1903 - [[Van den Berg-910|Gerarda]] :::::::::1904 - [[Van den Berg-907|[Infant]]] * :::::::::1906 - [[Van den Berg-908|Clasina]] :::::::::1907 - [[Van den Berg-909|[Infant]]] * ::::::::1866 - [[Van den Berg-871|Pieternella]] + [[Caron-1098|Louis Willem]] '''Caron''' :::::::::1888 - [[Caron-1099|Jean Leonardus Louis]] * :::::::::1889 - [[Caron-1100|Johanna Magdalena]] + Cornelis Antonie '''van Nierop''' :::::::::1891 - [[Caron-1101|Louis Willem Pieter]] + Maria '''van der Vet''' ::::::::: ++ Wilhelmina Johanna '''van der Sluijs''' :::::::::1893 - [[Caron-1102|Petronella Louisa]] + Pieter Mathijs '''Janssen''' :::::::::1895 - [[Caron-1103|Adriana]] * :::::::::1896 - [[Caron-1104|Hendrika Johanna]] + Carolus Johannes '''Wiegerink''' ::::::::1868 - [[Van den Berg-873|Elizabeth]] * ::::::::1869 - [[Van den Berg-872|Gerritje]] ::::::::1871 - [[Van den Berg-874|Pieter]] * :::::::1845 - Dina * ::::::1806 - [[Bosz-3|Petrus Gerhardus]] + Wilhelmina '''Gerhards''' :::::::1833 - Pieternella + Jan '''van Kampen''' :::::::1836 - Adriana * :::::::1838 - Hendrik Marinus + Klaasje '''van Lien''' :::::::1842 - Lodewijk * ::::::1809 - [[Bosz-4|Berendina Hendrika]] + Hendrik Willem '''Westhof''' :::::::1833 - Hendrik + Dirkje '''Noordermeer''' :::::::1835 - Willem + Johanna '''van den Berg''' :::::::1842 - Adriana + Cornelis '''Lagraauw''' :::::::1849 - Elisabeth + Arie '''van der Pol''' ::::::1817 - [[Bosz-5|Pieternella]] + Leendert '''van den Berg''' :::::: ++ Johannes '''van den Berg''' :::::::1838 - Mondina * :::::::1840 - Adriana + Hermanus '''van der Lugt''' :::::::1842 - Jacob * :::::::1845 - Hendrika + Gerrit '''van den Ende''' :::::::1849 - Jacob + Maartje '''Schellevis''' ::::::: ++ Eva '''van Spronsen''' :::::::1863 - Johannes ::::::1821 - [[Bosz-6|Anna Maria]] + Pieter '''Laros''' :::::::1854 - Pieter + Neeltje '''de Jong''' :::::::1856 - Hendrik + Johanna '''Kroese''' :::::::1858 - Adriana + Andries '''de Visser''' :::::::1862 - Adrianus * :::::::1866 - Willem * :::::1779 - [[Sepers-7|Gerrit]] * :::::1781 - [[Sepers-8|Gerrit]] + [[Van Hoften-11|Gerdina]] '''van Hoften''' ::::::1816 - [[Sepers-16|Judik]] + [[Wolf-3026|Goossen]] '''Wolf''' :::::::1840 - [[Wolf-3027|Hermen]] + Eimke '''van Eck''' ::::::::1870 - Gosewina + Gerrit '''van Hoften''' ::::::::1871 - Metje * ::::::::1872 - [Infant] * ::::::::1873 - Metje + Cornelis Huibertus '''van Bruchem''' ::::::::1874 - Jenneke * ::::::::1875 - Jenneke * ::::::::1876 - Jenneke Gerritje + Aart '''van Zon''' ::::::::1878 - Gerretje * ::::::::1879 - Eimke * :::::::1843 - [[Wolf-3028|Gerrit]] + Cornelia '''Vissers''' * :::::::1846 - [[Wolf-3029|Jenneke]] * :::::::1849 - [[Wolf-3030|Jan]] + Elizabeth '''van Heusden''' ::::::::1880 - Wilhelmina + Gerrit '''Klop''' ::::::::1882 - Gosewina + Arie '''Klop''' ::::::::1884 - Cornelia Hendrika + Andries Marinus '''van Bruggen''' ::::::::1886 - Hendrika + Evert '''Verwoert''' ::::::::1888 - Judith + Jan '''Vink''' ::::::::1891 - Clasina + Johannes '''Geurtsen''' ::::::::1894 - Jan ::::::::1897 - [Infant] * ::::::::1898 - Albertus * ::::::::1901 - Gerrit * ::::::1818 - [[Sepers-17|Robbert]] * ::::::1820 - [[Sepers-18|Aaij]] * ::::::1822 - [[Sepers-19|Pittronella]] + [[Van Meurs-45|Albartus]] '''van Meurs''' :::::::1839 - [[Van Meurs-46|Johannes]] * :::::::1841 - [[Van Meurs-47|Gerrit]] + Johanna Cornelia '''Vermazen''' * :::::::1843 - [[Van Meurs-48|Judic]] * :::::::1845 - [[Van Meurs-49|Albartus]] + Maria Elizabeth '''Goijer''' * :::::::1850 - [[Van Meurs-50|Piet]] * :::::::1853 - [[Van Meurs-51|Jan]] * :::::::1856 - [[Van Meurs-52|Judik]] + Aalt '''Gardenbroek''' ::::::::1894 - Albertus Pieter Johannes ::::::::1896 - Maria Hendrika ::::::::1896 - Gerdina Judith * ::::::::1898 - Albertus Johannes Gerrit * ::::::::1899 - Albertus Pieter Johannes * ::::::::1900 - Albertus Pieter Johannes + Gerritje Aaltje '''van Dijk''' :::::::1862 - [[Van Meurs-53|Pieternella]] * ::::::1824 - [[Sepers-20|Jantje]] * ::::::1827 - [[Sepers-21|Adriana]] + [[Biesters-5|Jacobus]] '''Biesters''' :::::::1872 - [[Biesters-6|Bartus Johannes]] * :::::1782 - [[Sepers-9|Anneke]] + [[Van Wessem-1|Gradus]] '''van Wessem''' ::::: ++ [[Van Zon-41|Gijsbert]] '''van Son''' ::::::1812 - [[Van Wessem-2|Jacques]] + [[Huijgen-20|Jantje]] '''Huijgen''' :::::::1841 - [[Van Wessem-4|Johannes Gerardus]] + Hendrika '''de Weijer''' :::::::1843 - [[Van Wessem-5|Gerrit Adrianus]] * :::::::1846 - [[Van Wessem-6|Gerardus Gijsbartus]] + Margaretha Hendrika '''Feris''' :::::::1848 - [[Van Wessem-7|Dirk Jan]] * :::::::1850 - [[Van Wessem-8|Gijsbert Cornelis]] + Janna Hendrika '''van Loenen''' :::::::1852 - [[Van Wessem-9|Gerritje Adriana]] + Gerrit '''van Leeuwen''' :::::::1856 - [[Van Wessem-10|Jacobus]] :::::::1858 - [[Van Wessem-11|Anneke Cornelia]] + Cornelis '''Steennis''' :::::::1862 - [[Van Wessem-12|Adriana Lamberta]] * ::::::1813 - [[Van Wessem-3|Robert]] ::::::1816 - [[Van Zon-42|Gijsbertus Gerhardus]] * ::::::1818 - [[Van Son-35|Pieternella]] + [[Van Hoften-12|Joost]] '''van Hoften''' :::::::1840 - [[Van Hoften-13|Gerrit]] * :::::::1841 - [[Van Hoften-14|Dirk Johannes]] * :::::::1842 - [[Van Hoften-15|Willem]] + Aartje '''van Heusden''' ::::::::1876 - Peternella Gerdina + Gosewinus '''van Meurs''' ::::::::1877 - Cornelis Arie + Maria Johanna '''Pruijssers''' ::::::::1879 - Gerritdina Cornelia + Adrianus '''van Rossum''' ::::::::1881 - Arie + Gijsbertha Willemina '''Schreuders''' ::::::::1884 - Cornelia + Adrianus '''Schreuders''' :::::::1845 - [[Van Hoften-16|Gerardina]] * :::::::1846 - [[Van Hoften-17|Gysbert]] * :::::::1848 - [[Van Hoften-18|Anna]] + Cornelis '''de Koning''' ::::::::1881 - Christina Maria + George Pieter '''Hijlkema''' ::::::::1884 - Joost Willem + Magcheltje '''Veldhoen''' ::::::::1887 - [infant] * twin * ::::::::1887 - [infant] * twin * ::::::::1889 - Johannes Cornelis + Cornelia Elisabeth '''Elemans''' :::::::1850 - [[Van Hoften-19|Aaltje]] + Pieter Willem '''Ridderhof''' ::::::::1874 - Cornelis + Maria '''Koopman''' ::::::::1877 - Joost * ::::::::1879 - Johanna Cornelia + Corstiaan '''Kop''' :::::::1854 - [[Van Hoften-20|Dirk Johannes]] + Louise Hermine '''van der Kaaij''' * :::::::1857 - [[Van Hoften-21|Gerritje]] + Rutger '''van Hoeven''' ::::::::1879 - Antoon + Hendrika '''de Kruijff''' ::::::::1882 - Pieter + Janna '''Jansen''' ::::::::1886 - Arnoldus * ::::::::1887 - Pieternella + Antoon '''Reuvers''' ::::::::1890 - Hester * ::::::::1892 - Hester * ::::::::1896 - Joost * ::::::::1901 - [infant] * twin * ::::::::1901 - Hester *twin * :::::::1862 - [[Van Hoften-22|Johanna Willemina Catherina]] + Wijnand '''Kosters''' ::::::::1886 - [infant] * ::::::::1888 - Adrianus Gijsbertus ::::::::1889 - Gerdina + Wilhelmus '''Groeneveld''' ::::::::1891 - Joost Pieter ::::::::1894 - Adriana Johanna Wijnanda + Joannes Adrianus '''Aalbersberg''' ::::::::1895 - Johannis Berdinis * ::::::::1903 - Johanna Josephina Pietronella + Willem Johan '''Verkaik''' ::::::1820 - [[Van Son-36|Geertruida]] * ::::::1821 - [[Van Son-37|Johannes]] + Clasina Cornelia '''van Aalst''' :::::::1856 - Geertruida * :::::::1858 - [[Van Son-32|Adriana]] + [[Ton-171|Hendrikus Gijsbertus]] '''Ton''' ::::::::''[children listed under Hendrikus Gijsbertus Ton'' :::::::1862 - Gijsbert + Christina '''Biesters''' ::::::::???? - Jacoba + [[Sepers-60|Jan Adrianus]] '''Sepers''' :::::::::''[children listed under Jan Adrianus Sepers'' ::::::::???? - Herman Hendrik + [[Sepers-62|Gijsbertha Johanna]] '''Sepers''' :::::::::1938 - Gisbert Jacob ::::::1823 - [[Van Son-38|Gerrit]] * :::::1784 - [[Sepers-10|Hendrik]] + Nieske '''Vink''' ::::::1815 - [[Sepers-12|Robbert]] * ::::::1818 - [[Sepers-13|Cornelis]] + [[Dekkers-62|Klasina]] '''Dekkers''' :::::::1862 - [[Seepers-1|Hendrik]] + [[Van Duinen-17|Johanna]] '''van Duinen''' ::::::::1899 - [[Seepers-2|Clasina]] + Willem '''Rooijens''' :::::::::1921 - Willem :::::::::1922 - Johanna :::::::::1926 - Jacoba :::::::::1929 - Hendrik :::::::::1931 - Clasina ::::::::1900 - [[Seepers-3|Aart]] + Antonia '''van Eeuwijk''' :::::::::1929 - Klaas :::::::::1930 - Johanna Hendrika :::::::::1931 - Jan Hendrik :::::::::1933 - Hendrik ::::::::1902 - [[Seepers-4|Cornelis]] + Maria Petronella '''Schalken''' ::::::::1904 - [[Seepers-5|Hendrik]] + Artje Dirkje '''van Eeuwijk''' :::::::::1928 - Hendrik :::::::::1930 - Jantje :::::::::1932 - Johanna * :::::::::1933 - Klaas * :::::::::1934 - [infant] * :::::::::1935 - Klaas :::::::::1937 - Willem :::::::::1938 - Johanna :::::::::1940 - Wilhelmina ::::::::1906 - [[Seepers-6|Johan]] + Cornelia '''Vos''' :::::::1863 - [[Sepers-51|Lena]] * :::::::1865 - [[Sepers-52|Peter]] * :::::::1866 - [[Sepers-53|Peter]] + [[Van Meurs-44|Aaltje]] '''van Meurs''' ::::::::1893 - [[Sepers-70|Clasina Alberta]] * ::::::::1894 - [[Sepers-71|Jenneke Clasina]] + Anthonie '''Willemsen''' ::::::::1895 - [[Sepers-72|Cornelis Albertus]] + Willemina Johanna '''Werps''' :::::::::1923 - Aaltje :::::::::1926 - Arie Hendrikus ::::::::1897 - [[Sepers-73|Gradus Dirk]] + Geertje '''Smits''' :::::::::1920 - Antonia Petronella :::::::::1923 - Aaltje ::::::::1899 - [[Sepers-74|Peter Hendrik]] * ::::::::1901 - [[Sepers-75|Antonij]] * ::::::::1902 - [[Sepers-76|Clasina]] + Nicolaas Marinus '''Koenen''' ::::::::1905 - [[Sepers-77|Aaltje]] + Cornelis Lambertus '''Humble''' :::::::::1937 - Aaltje Lena ::::::::1907 - [[Sepers-78|Nico]] + Wilhelmina Francina '''van Niekerk''' :::::::::1934 - Pieternella Antonia :::::::::1937 - Hendrika Aaltje :::::::::1940 - Wilhelmina Francina ::::::::1910 - [[Sepers-79|Dirkje]] + Marinus Hendrik '''Rooijens''' :::::::::1939 - Aaltje Wilhelmina ::::::::1912 - [[Sepers-80|Antonij]] + Barbara '''Bouwman''' :::::::::1937 - Christiana Hendrika :::::::1868 - [[Sepers-54|Neeske]] + Bruisten '''Vos''' ::::::::1889 - Neeske Clasina * ::::::::1894 - Klasiena + Gosen '''Dijkers''' ::::::::1903 - Karl + Gertrud '''Fischer''' ::::::1822 - [[Sepers-14|Johannes]] + [[Biesters-3|Geertrui]] '''Biesters''' :::::::1850 - [[Sepers-22|Jacob]] + [[Udo-66|Mijntje]] '''Udo''' ::::::::1878 - [[Sepers-35|Dirkje]] + Peter '''van Zuilichem''' :::::::::1903 - Goossen Albartus + Gerdina Anneke '''Udo''' :::::::::1905 - Wilhelmina Elisabeth + Willem '''Eernst''' ::::::::1879 - [[Sepers-36|Gerrit]] + Dirkje '''van Meurs''' :::::::::1908 - Huibert Jacob + Jantje '''Brinkman''' ::::::::1880 - [[Sepers-37|Geertruida]] + Gerrit Johannes '''van der Helden''' :::::::::''[children listed under Gerrit Johannes van der Helden'' ::::::::1883 - [[Sepers-38|Johannes]] + Maaike Maria Gerdina '''van Tussenbroek''' :::::::::1912 - Jacob Willem :::::::::1913 - Mijntje + Cornelis '''van Sonsbeek''' :::::::::1913 - Gijsbert Marinus * ::::::::1885 - [[Sepers-39|Hendrika Geertruida]] + Willeminus Nelis '''de Jong''' :::::::::1912 - Willemina Adriana :::::::::1915 - Jan Jacob ::::::::1887 - [[Sepers-40|Hendrik Arie]] + Adriana '''Schreuders''' :::::::::1913 - Jacob Adrianus :::::::::1918 - Gerard Willem ::::::::1889 - [[Sepers-41|Robbert]] + Toonia Anna '''van Hoften''' :::::::::1919 - Jacob Cornelis :::::::::1922 - Jacob Cornelis ::::::::1892 - [[Sepers-42|Wilhelmina Jacoba]] + Cornelis Matthijs '''van Hoften''' ::::::::1894 - [[Sepers-43|Jacob]] + Jenneke '''van Hoften''' ::::::::1897 - [[Sepers-44|Adrianus Hendrik]] + Willemijntje Dirkje '''Udo''' :::::::::1928 - Wilhelmina Jacoba :::::::1853 - [[Sepers-23|Hendrik]] + [[Udo-65|Hendrika]] '''Udo''' ::::::::1879 - [[Sepers-24|Geertruida]] + [[Udo-78|Gerrit]] '''Udo''' :::::::::''[children listed under Gerrit Udo'' ::::::::1880 - [[Sepers-25|Metje]] * ::::::::1882 - [[Sepers-26|Johannes]] + Jenneke '''Schreuders''' :::::::::1907 - Gerdina :::::::::1912 - Hendrik :::::::::1917 - Johannes Adrianus ::::::::1884 - [[Sepers-27|Hendrika Geertruida]] * ::::::::1885 - [[Sepers-28|Gerrit]] + Gijsbertha Gerharda '''van Son''' :::::::::1912 - Hendrik Gijsbert ::::::::1886 - [[Sepers-29|Robbert]] + Elizabeth '''Zeische''' ::::::::1888 - [[Sepers-30|Wilhelmina]] + Antonie '''Schreuders''' :::::::::1917 - Gerdina Hendrika :::::::::1924 - Hendrika Adriana ::::::::1889 - [[Sepers-31|Adriana]] + Marinus '''van den Bergh''' ::::::::1891 - [[Sepers-32|Nieske]] + Hendrik '''van Oosterum''' :::::::::1918 - Hendrika Josijna ::::::::1894 - [[Sepers-33|Dirkje]] + Johan Willem '''van Oosterum''' ::::::::1896 - [[Sepers-34|Metje Hendrika]] + Dirk Adrianus '''Baggerman''' :::::::::''[children listed under Dirk Adrianus Baggerman'' :::::::::1923 - Anthonij Hendrik :::::::::1927 - Hendrika Adriana :::::::1858 - [[Sepers-2|Nieske]] + [[Udo-64|Goossen]] '''Udo''' ::::::::''[children listed under Goossen Udo'' ::::::1824 - [[Sepers-15|Jan]] + [[Biesters-4|Adriana]] '''Biesters''' :::::::1856 - [[Sepers-45|Arien]] + [[Udo-67|Adriana]] '''Udo''' ::::::::1888 - [[Sepers-65|Jan Adriaan]] * ::::::::1890 - [[Sepers-66|Gerrit]] ::::::::1892 - [[Sepers-67|Jan Hendrikus]] + Berendina '''Geels''' ::::::::1893 - [[Sepers-68|Hendrik Geertruidus]] * ::::::::1897 - [[Sepers-69|Adriana Dirkje]] :::::::1858 - [[Sepers-46|Nieske]] + [[Udo-54|Gerrit Teunis]] '''Udo''' ::::::::''[children listed under Gerrit Teunis Udo'' :::::::1860 - [[Sepers-47|[infant]]] * :::::::1861 - [[Sepers-48|Dirkje]] * :::::::1864 - [[Sepers-49|Hendrika]] + Gosewinus '''van der Helden''' ::::::::''[children listed under Gosewinus van der Helden'' :::::::1866 - [[Sepers-50|Jacob]] + [[Van_Heun-6|Bartje]] '''van Heun''' ::::::::1898 - [[Sepers-55|Adrianus Jan]] + Rijntje Hendrika '''Groenendaal''' :::::::::1928 - Jacob Willem ::::::::1899 - [[Sepers-56|Geertruida]] + Arie '''Schreuders''' ::::::::1900 - [[Sepers-57|Adriana]] + Arnoldus '''van Hoften''' :::::::::''[children listed under Arnoldus van Hoften'' ::::::::1901 - [[Sepers-58|Cartharina Jacoba]] + Jan Hendrik '''van Maanen''' :::::::::1937 - Jan Jacob ::::::::1902 - [[Sepers-59|Dirkje]] * ::::::::1903 - [[Sepers-60|Jan Adrianus]] + Jacoba '''van Son''' :::::::::1935 - Jacob Bart :::::::::1940 - Gijsberta Christiana ::::::::1906 - [[Sepers-61|Dirkje]] + Cornelis Johannes '''van Zetten''' :::::::::1939 - Cornelis Jacob ::::::::1908 - [[Sepers-62|Gijsbertha Johanna]] + Herman Hendrik '''van Son''' :::::::::''[children listed under Herman Hendrik van Son'' ::::::::1910 - [[Sepers-63|Jacob Bart]] + Bertha '''Schreuders''' :::::::::1940 - Jacob Adrianus ::::::::1913 - [[Sepers-64|Bartje Jacoba]] :::::1787 - [[Sepers-11|Emmetje]] + [[Van der Helden-18|Leendert]] '''van der Helden''' ::::::1809 - [[Van der Helden-19|Robbert]] + [[Udo-90|Gerdina]] '''Udo''' :::::::1837 - [[Van der Helden-20|Leentje]] * :::::::1838 - [[Van der Helden-21|Fier]] + Geertje '''van Toorn''' ::::::::1864 - Robbertus + Gijsbertje '''Biesters''' ::::::::1865 - Jan + Gerdina Maria '''van Alphen''' ::::::::1866 - Leendert * ::::::::1867 - Gosewinus + [[Sepers-49|Hendrika]] '''Sepers''' :::::::::1899 - Geertje Adriana :::::::::1900 - Adriana Fiertje :::::::::1903 - Fier Jan :::::::::1904 - Janna * :::::::::1908 - Jan Fier * ::::::::1870 - Gerdina + Leendert '''van Alphen''' ::::::::1872 - Fier + Jenneke '''Biesters''' ::::::::1876 - Gerard * ::::::::1878 - Gerrit Johannes + [[Sepers-37|Geertruida]] '''Sepers''' :::::::::1904 - Geertje Wilhelmina + Arnoldus Lambertus '''Buijs''' :::::::::1906 - Wilhelmina Jacoba + Teunis '''Udo''' :::::::::1910 - Hendrika Gerdina :::::::::1912 - Fierida + Hermanus Daniel '''Storm''' :::::::::1913 - Jacob Fier ::::::::1882 - Helena + Gerrit Johannes '''van Maanen''' ::::::::1883 - Hendrik Cornelis + Judig '''van Woerkom''' :::::::1841 - [[Van der Helden-22|Emke]] + Petrus Hendricus '''Seelt''' * ::::::: ++ Daniel Jan Hendik '''de Weerd''' :::::::1845 - [[Van der Helden-23|Jenneke]] + Peter '''van Suilekom''' ::::::::1868 - Elisabeth * ::::::::1869 - Elisabeth :::::::1849 - [[Van der Helden-24|Maria]] + Matthijs Hendrik Willem '''van den Bosch''' ::::::::1879 - Mina Anna Arnolda * ::::::::1881 - Robertus Gerdinus + Johanna Maria '''van Veen''' ::::::::1882 - Cornelis Petrus Johannes * ::::::::1883 - Cornelis Petrus Johannes ::::::::1884 - Gerdina Emma * ::::::::1886 - Matthijs Marius + Agnes Maria '''Wilton''' ::::::::1887 - Pieternella Johanna + Gerardus '''van Anrooij''' ::::::::1889 - Fier Leendert * ::::::::1891 - Emma Helena + Pieter Dirk '''van Maaren''' :::::::1858 - [[Van der Helden-25|Gerdiena Johanna]] + Arij Anthonij '''de Munck''' ::::::::1882 - Robberta Emma Gerdiena + Jan '''Pool''' ::::::::1884 - Anthonij + Albertina Catharina '''de Ridder''' ::::::::1887 - Arie Anthonij * ::::::::1888 - Leendert Fier + Maria '''van Rossum''' ::::::::1890 - Petrus + Barbara '''Best''' :::1709 - [[Ton-353|Frans]] * :::1712 - [[Ton-354|Frans]] :::1714 - [[Ton-355|Gerrit]] + [[Telder-5|Maria]] '''Telder''' ::: ++ [[Ton-368|Elisabeth]] '''Ton''' ::::1746 - [[Ton-377|Anneke]] * ::::1748 - [[Ton-378|Adriaantje]] + [[Cooyman-4|Johannes]] '''Cooyman''' :::::1769 - Artje :::::1770 - [[Kooyman-7|Gerardus]] :::::1773 - [[Kooijmans-4|Anna Maria]] :::::1776 - [[Kooymans-2|Arnoldus]] :::::1779 - [[Kooijman-56|Elisabeth]] :::::1782 - [[Kooijman-57|Maria]] + [[Reuvers-335|Jan]] '''Reuvers''' ::::::1804 - Johannis * ::::::1805 - Jan + Gijsbertje '''Frick''' ::::::1808 - Adriaantje + Thomas '''van Eck''' ::::::1810 - Johannes + Pieternella '''van Bockel''' ::::::1813 - Gerrit * ::::::1816 - Hermanus * :::::1785 - [[Kooijman-58|Johannes]] + [[Van Rossum-55|Pieternella]] '''van Rossum''' ::::: ++ [[Versfelt-3|Johanna Catharina]] '''Versfelt''' ::::::1805 - Geertje * ::::::1808 - Adriana + Willem '''Quivoij''' ::::::1815 - Gerritje + Jan '''Schimmel''' :::::: ++ Martinus '''van Aalst''' ::::::1816 - Johannes * ::::::1818 - Peter + Johanna '''de Bijl''' ::::::1821 - Anna "Anneke" * ::::::1823 - Maria + Arie '''Baggerman''' :::::: ++ Machiel '''van der Sluijs''' +++ Martinus '''Baggerman''' ::::::1830 - Pieternella Johanna * ::::::1834 - Petronella ::::::1836 - Maria ::::::1837 - Arnolda Johanna ::::::1839 - Janske ::::::1840 - Johannes ::::::1841 - Gerardus + Johanna '''Kouwenberg''' :::::1787 - [[Kooijmans-5|Anneke]] + [[Van Aalst-29|Peter]] '''van Aalst *''' ::::: ++ [[Lutteke-3|Adam]] '''Lutteke''' ::::::1824 - [infant] * ::::1753 - [[Ton-367|Dirkje]] * ::::1754 - [[Ton-366|Gerrit]] + [[De_Jongh-166|Niske]] '''de Jongh''' :::::1788 - [[Ton-369|Gerrit]] * :::::1790 - [[Ton-370|Gerrit]] + [[Van_Valkenburg-361|Jantje]] '''van Valkenburg''' ::::::1816 - [[Ton-387|Gerret]] * ::::::1820 - [[Ton-388|Margareta]] + [[Vermeulen-573|Jan]] '''Vermeulen''' :::::::1849 - [[Vermeulen-574|Jantje]] + Hendrik Jacobus '''Ligtelijn''' ::::::::1885 - Jan * :::::::1852 - [[Vermeulen-575|Jenneke]] + Gerrit Cornelis '''Crouwel''' ::::::::1876 - Margaretha Johanna + Antonij '''van Meurs''' ::::::::1878 - Elizabeth + Martinus '''Schilperoot''' ::::::::1881 - Janna Petronella + Anthonie '''Schouburg''' ::::::::1885 - Goossen Cornelis + Catrina '''van der Zalm''' ::::::::1888 - Jan + Daatje '''Verbeek''' :::::::1854 - [[Vermeulen-576|Nieske]] + Cornelis '''Gouw''' ::::::::1883 - Leendert Pieter ::::::::1885 - Elizabeth Sientje + Jan '''van der Have''' ::::::::1888 - Jan Cornelis * ::::::::1892 - Jan Cornelis + Jannetje Pieternella '''van der Pijl''' :::::::1857 - [[Vermeulen-577|Gerrit]] * :::::::1863 - [[Vermeulen-578|Jan]] * ::::::1823 - [[Ton-389|[infant]]] * ::::::1824 - [[Ton-390|Gerritje]] * ::::::1827 - [[Ton-391|[infant]]] * ::::::1828 - [[Ton-392|[infant]]] * ::::::1830 - [[Ton-393|[infant]]] * :::::1792 - [[Ton-371|Adriana]] + [[De_Wijs-18|Gradus]] '''de Wijs''' ::::::1820 - [[De_Wijs-11|Gerrit]] * ::::::1822 - [[De_Wijs-12|Willem]] + Christina Elisabeth '''Lenseling''' :::::: ++ [[Smit-2303|Tryntje]] '''Smit''' +++ [[Van de Pol-28|Allegonda]] '''van de Pol''' :::::::1853 - [[De_Wijs-20|Adriana Arnolda]] + Roelof '''Arends''' ::::::::1884 - Jan * ::::::::1885 - Willem * ::::::::1886 - Willem + Alida Geertruida '''Edelenbos''' ::::::::1887 - Wilhelmina Antonia + Jacobus Martinus '''de Bes''' ::::::::1889 - Roelof + Elizabeth '''Paludanus''' ::::::::1891 - Albertus Christiaan + Johanna Maria '''Schreuders''' ::::::::1893 - Jan + Maria '''van Dam''' ::::::::1895 - Adrianus Coenraad * :::::::1854 - [[De_Wijs-7|Antje Hendrika]] + [[Ton-156|Gijsbert Jan]] '''Ton''' :::::::: ''[children listed under Gijsbert Jan Ton'' :::::::1856 - [[De_Wijs-21|Grada]] + Adrianus Coenraad '''Biesgraaff''' ::::::::1885 - Neeltje Christina Elisabeth * ::::::::1886 - Elisabeth Christina * ::::::::1888 - Adriana (twin) * ::::::::1888 - Leendert (twin) * ::::::::1889 - Leendert Willem + Jacoba Cornelia '''Cornelisse''' ::::::::1891 - Willem Leendert * ::::::::1893 - Adrianus Coenraad * ::::::::1897 - Grada Adriana + Arie '''Snijders''' ::::::::1900 - Adrianus Coenraad * :::::::1857 - [[De_Wijs-22|Arnoldus]] + Jacoba '''Langeler''' ::::::::1890 - [infant] * ::::::::1891 - Henrica Christina Elisabeth + Cornelis '''van den Heuvel''' :::::::: ++ Cornelis Wilhelmus '''Snijder''' ::::::::1893 - [infant] * ::::::::1894 - Willem Hendrik + Adriana Metje '''Mastenbroek''' ::::::::1897 - [infant] * ::::::::1898 - [infant] * ::::::::1899 - Dirkje + Denis '''Rijsdijk''' ::::::::1901 - Arnoldus Jacobus + Hendrica Johanna Susanna '''Endenburg''' :::::::1858 - [[De_Wijs-23|Gradus]] + Anna '''de Vrij''' ::::::::1894 - Christina Elizabeth + Lucien Gerardus '''Tomassen''' ::::::::1895 - Cornelia + Johannes Gerardus '''van den Dorpel''' ::::::::1897 - Wilhelmina * ::::::::1898 - Willem ::::::::1901 - Johannes Cornelis * ::::::::1904 - Anna Hendrika + Willem '''van der Knaap''' ::::::::1906 - Cornelis Gijsbertus + Adriana '''Hordijk''' ::::::::1908 - Johanna Cornelia + Pieter Leendert '''de Vogel''' ::::::::1911 - Wilhelmina + Jacobus Henricus '''van Lienden''' :::::::1859 - [[De_Wijs-24|Jannigje Cecilia]] * :::::::1862 - [[De_Wijs-25|Carolina]] * :::::::1862 - [[De_Wijs-26|Gerritje]] * :::::::1862 - [[De_Wijs-27|Gerrit]] * :::::::1864 - [[De_Wijs-28|Gerritje]] * :::::::1866 - [[De_Wijs-29|Johanna Hendrika Elisabeth]] * ::::::1825 - [[De_Wijs-13|Theodorus]] + [[Van Knodzenburg-2|Johanna]] '''Plat''' * :::::: ++ [[Van IJzendoorn-6|Hermina]] '''van Ijsendoorn''' ::::::1827 - [[De_Wijs-14|Adrianus]] + [[Van Frankfort-1|Elizabeth]] '''van Frankfort''' :::::::1861 - [[De_Wijs-30|Adriana Cornelia]] + Jan '''van Ringelestein''' ::::::::1884 - Leendert + Maria Catharina '''Frickel''' ::::::::1888 - Adrianus * ::::::::1892 - Willem + Cornelia '''van den Berg''' ::::::::1894 - Elisabeth + Theodorus Roelof '''Cools''' ::::::::1898 - Adrianus + Aleida '''Puts''' :::::::: ++ Anna Catharina '''Hansen''' :::::::1863 - [[De_Wijs-31|Jantje]] + Peter '''de Waal''' ::::::::1884 - Petronella Hendrika ::::::::1887 - Adrianus + Aaltje '''Janssen''' ::::::::1890 - Elisabeth + Hendrikus Antonius '''Knijf''' ::::::::1893 - Hendrik + Wilhelmina '''Wittekamp''' ::::::::1896 - Gerrit * ::::::::1899 - Adriana Cornelia ::::::::1905 - Theodora :::::::1865 - [[De_Wijs-32|Gradus]] + Aaltje '''de Vries''' ::::::::1892 - Adrianus ::::::::1895 - Herman Marinus + Geertruida Elisabeth '''Peeters''' ::::::::1896 - Elisabeth * ::::::::1898 - Marie + Johannes '''Tax''' ::::::::1900 - Peter Wilhelm * ::::::::1901 - Gerardus :::::::1868 - [[De_Wijs-33|Petronella]] + Catharinus '''Kaldenberg''' ::::::::1892 - Huibert * ::::::::1896 - Huibert * ::::::::1899 - Matthijs Willem * ::::::::1900 - Adrianus ::::::::1904 - Huibert ::::::::1906 - Bertus Catharinus ::::::::1909 - Matthijs Willem :::::::1869 - [[De_Wijs-34|Gerrit]] + Aleida '''Kers''' ::::::::1899 - Adrianus ::::::::1900 - Johanna Hendrika * ::::::::1902 - Jan * ::::::::1905 - Jan Gerrit * ::::::::1906 - Bertus Martinus ::::::::1907 - Roelof Hendrikus * ::::::::1910 - Roelof Hendrikus ::::::::1914 - Aleida * :::::::1873 - [[De_Wijs-35|Nieske]] + Adrianus Jacobus '''van Berghem''' ::::::::1899 - Aart ::::::::1900 - Adrianus Gerardus + Elisabeth Adriana '''Voogd''' ::::::::1902 - Maarten ::::::::1904 - Bertus Johannes + Teuntje '''Kalkman''' :::::::1875 - [[De_Wijs-36|Cornelia Elisabeth]] + Peter '''Huigen''' ::::::::1901 - Gerardina Willemina + Jan '''van Vliet''' ::::::::1907 - Adrianus Cornelis :::::::1878 - [[De_Wijs-37|Maartje]] + [not recorded] ::::::: ++ Izaak '''Peter''' ::::::::1897 - Gerarda * ::::::::1899 - Sara Maria * ::::::::1900 - Elizabeth + Mathias Heinrich '''Lutters''' ::::::::1903 - Sara Maria :::::::1882 - [[De_Wijs-38|Theodora]] + Willem '''Voogd''' ::::::::1909 - Pieter ::::::::1912 - Elisabeth Adriana + Adrianus Gerardus '''van Berghem''' :::::::1885 - [[De_Wijs-39|Adrianus]] + Maria '''van der Weerden''' ::::::::1909 - Elisabeth ::::::::1911 - Adrianus ::::::1830 - [[De_Wijs-15|Gerhardus]] * ::::::1831 - [[De_Wijs-16|Gerhardus]] + [[Van Uden-7|Alida Cornelia]] '''van Uden''' * ::::::1835 - [[De_Wijs-17|Neeske]] + [[Van Santen-62|Hendrik]] '''van Santen''' :::::::1859 - [[Van Santen-63|Andries]] + Maria Petronella '''van de Leur''' * :::::::1862 - [[Van Santen-64|Gradus]] + Elizabeth Gerdina '''Baggerman''' ::::::::1886 - Hendrika ::::::::1890 - Maaike * ::::::::1892 - Jan ::::::::1897 - Elizabeth Gerdina + Jan van '''Riemsdijk''' :::::::1865 - [[Van Santen-65|Adriana]] + Wilhelmus Franciscus '''van Hesteren''' ::::::::1887 - Adriana Johanna * ::::::::1888 - Hendrik ::::::::1889 - Johanna Maria + Jacob '''Stam''' ::::::::1891 - Dionisius Franciscus ::::::::1892 - Gijsberdina Clasina + Johannes Simon '''Landsbergen''' ::::::::1894 - Andries * ::::::::1896 - Adriana ::::::::1897 - Wilhelmus Franciscus * ::::::::1898 - Willemina * :::::::1869 - [[Van Santen-66|Cornelis]] + Jannetje Hendrika '''Wethlij''''' ::::::: ++ Maria Adriana Wilhelmina '''van Dinther''' ::::::::1889 - [infant] * ::::::::1906 - Maria Elisabeth + Johannes Antonius '''van den Akker''' ::::::::1907 - [infant] (twin) * ::::::::1907 - [infant] (twin) * ::::::::1908 - Maria Adriana Wilhelmina + Antonius Cornelis '''Kerkhof''' ::::::::1909 - Adriana + Gerardus Franciscus '''Reinders''' ::::::::1911 - Hendrik Dionisia * ::::::::1912 - Dionisia + Johannes Gerardus '''van Grinsven''' ::::::::1913 - Hendricus Dionisius ::::::::1915 - Cornelis Rudolf ::::::::1916 - Adelina * :::::1795 - [[Ton-372|Elizabeth]] + [[Van_Meurs-43|Geurt]] '''van Meurs''' ::::::1826 - [[Van_Meurs-39|Anneke]] + [[Schimmel-80|Dirk]] '''Schimmel''' :::::::1857 - [[Schimmel-81|Johannes]] + Catharina '''van Doorn''' ::::::::1883 - Dirk + Elisabeth '''Ursinus''' ::::::::1884 - Johannes * ::::::::1885 - Geertruida + Hendrik '''van Vliet''' ::::::::1886 - Annabetta * ::::::::1887 - Anna Elisabeth + Jan Hendrik '''van Gessel''' ::::::::1889 - Johannes + Elizabeth '''Vos''' ::::::::1890 - Neeltje + Rokus '''Visser''' ::::::::1894 - Elizabeth * ::::::::1899 - Jan ::::::::1901 - Gerrit * :::::::1858 - [[Schimmel-82|Gerrit]] * :::::::1860 - [[Schimmel-83|Geertje]] + Dirk '''Peters''' ::::::::1884 - Cornelia * ::::::::1885 - Gerrit Jan ::::::::1888 - Cornelia * ::::::::1891 - Dirk ::::::::1893 - Gerard Johannes + Elizabeth Maria '''Keijzer''' ::::::::1896 - Dirkje Pieternella ::::::::1897 - Anna Elisabeth + Corenlis '''Houtman''' ::::::::1900 - [Infant] * ::::::::1901 - Pieter Arie ::::::::1904 - Jan Gerrit * :::::::1861 - [[Schimmel-84|Dirk]] + Elisabeth '''van Ommeren''' ::::::: ++ Aaltjen '''van Galen''' ::::::::1884 - Dirk + Antje '''Attasio''' ::::::::1886 - Geert Jan + Rosina Johanna '''Spoor''' ::::::::1888 - Johannes * ::::::::1900 - Hendrik Cornelis ::::::::1902 - Johannes * ::::::::1904 - Johanna Elisabeth :::::::1862 - [[Schimmel-85|Elisabeth]] * :::::::1863 - [[Schimmel-86|Jan]] * :::::::1864 - [[Schimmel-87|Jan]] + Willemina '''Onink''' ::::::::1891 - Dirk + Johanna '''Peters''' ::::::::1892 - Gerrit ::::::::1895 - Anna Elisabeth + Leonardus Hendrikus '''Schreuders''' ::::::::1896 - [Infant] * ::::::::1897 - Jan ::::::::1899 - Hesterus * ::::::::1901 - Hesterus * ::::::::1903 - Hestera Willemina * ::::::::1904 - [Infant] * :::::::1868 - [[Schimmel-88|Geurt]] * :::::::1871 - [[Schimmel-89|Piet]] + Dirkje '''Onink''' ::::::::1901 - [Infant] * ::::::::1902 - Anna Petronella + Gerrit '''van Doorn''' ::::::::1903 - Roelof ::::::::1905 - Dirkje ::::::::1907 - Dirk ::::::::1911 - Piet ::::::1830 - [[Van_Meurs-40|Martijntje]] * ::::::1832 - [[Van_Meurs-41|Gerritje]] + [[De With-29|Jacobus Marinus]] '''de With''' :::::::1856 - [[De With-30|Arnolda]] + Pieter Johannes '''Zwemstra''' ::::::::1878 - Pieternella Elisabeth + Gerrit '''van Tussenbroek''' ::::::::1881 - Jacobus Marinus * ::::::::1882 - Jacobus Marinus + Gerdina '''van Steenbrugge''' ::::::::1886 - Metje + Willem '''Ton''' ::::::::1888 - Gerrit Jan ::::::::1890 - Gradus Martinus ::::::::1894 - Gerrit ::::::::1897 - Arnolda ::::::::1901 - Geertruida ::::::::1904 - Pieter Johannes :::::::1858 - [[De With-31|Geurt]] * :::::::1859 - [[De With-32|Geertje]] + Leendert Arnoldus '''Verbruggen''' ::::::::1881 - Arie + Trijntje '''Postma''' ::::::::1883 - Jacobus Marinus + Johanna '''van Hoften''' ::::::::1885 - Petronella + Leendert '''van Offeren''' ::::::::1889 - Gerrit ::::::::1895 - Gerrigje ::::::::1896 - Gerrit + Cornelia Elisabeth '''Schellekens''' ::::::::1898 - Leendert Arnoldus + Geerdina '''Schellekens''' ::::::::1901 - Geertje + Johan Wilhelm '''Paulissen''' ::::::::1903 - Martinus Gerardus + Elisabeth '''Ketting''' :::::::1862 - [[De With-33|Geertruida]] * :::::::1865 - [[De With-34|Geertruida]] + Goossen '''Janssen''' ::::::::1888 - Metje * ::::::::1891 - Metje ::::::::1893 - Gerritje + Dirk '''Vastenouw''' ::::::::1896 - Grada ::::::::1897 - Jacobus Marinus ::::::::1900 - Jan ::::::::1904 - Geurt Gijsbertus :::::::1868 - [[De With-35|Geurt Jacobus Gerardus]] * :::::::1870 - [[De With-36|Geurt Jacobus]] * :::::::1871 - [[De With-37|Hendrika]] * :::::::1872 - [[De With-38|Elisabet]] + Jan '''Vermazen''' ::::::::1897 - Gijsje ::::::::1899 - Jacobus Marinus ::::::::1902 - Gerritje ::::::::1906 - Geurt Gijsbertus ::::::::1908 - Abraham Arnoldus + Gijsberdina Willemina '''van Kooten''' ::::::::1910 - Grada Martina :::::::1875 - [[De With-39|Gerrit Jacobus]] + Adriana '''Vermazen''' ::::::::1898 - Jacoba Maria * ::::::::1899 - Jacoba Maria ::::::::1900 - Gijsje + Machiel '''van den Berg''' ::::::::1901 - Gerritje * ::::::::1903 - Gerritje Martijntje ::::::::1904 - Janna * ::::::::1906 - Hendrika Arnolda * ::::::::1907 - Arnolda Elisabeth * ::::::::1909 - Arnolda Elisabeth ::::::::1911 - Areke ::::::::1916 - Geertruida * :::::::1878 - [[De With-40|Geurt Gijsbertus]] ::::::1836 - [[Van_Meurs-42|Gradus]] * :::::1799 - [[Ton-373|Anneke]] :::::1801 - [[Ton-374|Dirkje]] * :::::1803 - [[Ton-375|Geertrui]] + [[Brinkman-391|Cornelis Hendrik]] '''Brinkman''' ::::::1832 - [[Brinkman-385|Catharina Jacoba]] + [[Van Heun-5|Adrianus]] '''van Heun''' :::::::1869 - [[Van Heun-6|Bartje]] + [[Sepers-50|Jacob]] '''Sepers''' ::::::::''[children listed under Jacob Sepers]'' :::::::1871 - [[Van Heun-7|Jan]] * :::::::1874 - [[Van Heun-8|Cornelis Hendrik Jan]] + Maria '''Udo''' ::::::::1902 - Gerrit Henri + Roelanda Hendrika '''Overeem''' ::::::::1903 - Adrianus Gijsbert * ::::::::1907 - Janske Catharina Jacoba * ::::::::1909 - Fier Arnoldus ::::::::1915 - Gijs ::::::1835 - [[Brinkman-386|Neeske]] + [[Van Maanen-75|Jan Hendrik]] '''van Maanen''' :::::::1859 - [[Van Maanen-76|Cornelis Hendrik]] + Johanna Christina '''Biesters''' ::::::::1887 - Jan Hendrik + Drieka '''van Ooijen''' ::::::::1887 - Willem * ::::::::1890 - Gerrit + Artje '''Schreuders''' ::::::::1893 - Cornelis Hendrik + Dirkje Berendina '''Kranen''' ::::::::1895 - Jenneke ::::::::1896 - Johannes :::::::1861 - [[Van Maanen-77|Jan]] + Hendrika Catharina '''Kosters''' ::::::::1884 - Neeske Geertruida + Johannes '''Ton''' ::::::::1886 - Jan * ::::::::1887 - Jan * ::::::::1889 - Johanna Margaretha * ::::::::1890 - Jan Hendrik * ::::::::1891 - Johanna Margaretha + Wouter Adrianus '''de Jong''' ::::::::1892 - Jantje + Marinus '''de Jong''' ::::::::1893 - Jan Hendrik * ::::::::1896 - Dirkje Gijsje * ::::::::1899 - Dirkje Gijsje + Willem '''Koenen''' ::::::::1901 - Geertruida :::::::1864 - [[Van Maanen-78|Teuntje Tijsje]] + Jan Johannes '''van Herpen''' ::::::::1886 - Gosewijntje ::::::::1887 - Corstiaan ::::::::1888 - Neeske :::::::1865 - [[Van Maanen-79|Geertruida]] + Dirk Johannes '''Weijers''' ::::::::1890 - Anthonie ::::::::1892 - Nieske ::::::::1893 - Jan Hendrik * ::::::::1895 - Jan Hendrik * :::::::1870 - [[Van Maanen-80|Jantje]] + Albertus Johannes '''van Maanen''' ::::::::1894 - Robbertus + Geertruida '''van den Berg''' ::::::::1895 - Jan Hendrik * ::::::::1896 - Geertruida ::::::::1898 - Willemijntje ::::::::1900 - Neeske + Matthijs '''Gennissen''' ::::::::1907 - Jantje Hendrika :::::::1872 - [[Van Maanen-81|Gerrit Johannes]] * :::::::1874 - [[Van Maanen-82|Maria]] + Arnoldus '''de With''' ::::::::1900 - Antonetta ::::::::1902 - Jan Hendrik Gerard :::::::1877 - [[Van Maanen-83|Gerrit Johannes]] + Helena '''van der Helden''' ::::::::1903 - [Infant] * ::::::1838 - [[Brinkman-387|Jantje]] * ::::::1842 - [[Brinkman-388|Geertrui]] + [[Van Heun-2|Leonard]] '''van Heun''' :::::::1881 - [[Van Heun-3|Dirk Bart]] + Jantje Hendrika '''van Herpen''' :::::::1883 - [[Van Heun-4|Cornelis Hendrik Jan]] + Catharina '''van Herpen''' ::::::1845 - [[Brinkman-389|Jan]] * ::::::1847 - [[Brinkman-390|Gerrit]] + [[Janssen-693|Hendrika]] '''Janssen''' :::::::1876 - [[Brinkman-402|Cornelis Hendrik]] * :::::::1877 - [[Brinkman-403|Cornelis Hendrik]] + Geertje Wilhelmina '''Ton''' ::::::::1907 - Arida Cornelia Hendrika * ::::::::1910 - Gerritje Hendrika :::::::1879 - [[Brinkman-404|Willem]] + Maria '''van Alphen''' ::::::::1900 - Gerrit Jan ::::::::1903 - Leendert Hendrik :::::::1880 - [[Brinkman-405|Geertruida]] + Janus '''de Kiviet''' ::::::::1906 - Jan Gerrit + Cornelia Francina Helena '''van Graafeiland''' ::::::::1910 - Gerrit Hendrik :::::::1884 - [[Brinkman-406|Jenneke Jantje]] + Gerrit '''Floor''' ::::::::1909 - Jan Willem Marinus ::::::::1911 - Hendrika Gerritje + Rudolph Lambertus Daniel '''van Schaik''' ::::::::1912 - Marinus Gerrit ::::::::1914 - Gerrit Hendrik + Anna Clara Margrietha '''Vredeling''' ::::::::1915 - Cornelis Willem * ::::::::1926 - Johanna Hendrika * :::::::1888 - [[Brinkman-407|Jantje Catharina]] :::::1805 - [[Ton-376|Aart]] + [[Van Oort-93|Jantje]] '''van Oort''' ::::::1837 - [[Ton-394|Jan Jacob]] + [[Van de Sand-3|Johanna Francina]] '''van de Sand''' :::::::1866 - [[Ton-430|Jantje]] + Bartus Lourens '''Vissers''' ::::::::1902 - Francina Anneke ::::::::1905 - Gerritje Jacob :::::::1868 - [[Ton-431|Catharina Hendrika]] * :::::::1870 - [[Ton-432|Jan Bart]] * :::::::1874 - [[Ton-433|Catharina Jenneke]] * ::::::1840 - [[Ton-395|Gerrit]] + Pieternella '''van Manen''' :::::::1872 - [[Ton-420|Aart]] :::::::1874 - [[Ton-421|Willemijntje]] * :::::::1875 - [[Ton-422|Jansje]] :::::::1877 - [[Ton-423|Robbert]] + Hendrika '''Pluim''' ::::::::1903 - Pieternella * ::::::::1906 - Johanna Pieternella ::::::::1910 - Frederik Gerrit + Jacoba Johanna '''Brinkman''' :::::::1880 - [[Ton-424|Willem]] * :::::::1882 - [[Ton-425|Willem]] + Metje '''Zwemstra''' ::::::::1911 - Gerrit :::::::1884 - [[Ton-426|Pieternella]] + Dirk Antoon '''Breddels''' ::::::::1911 - Pieternella Lambertje :::::::1887 - [[Ton-427|Jan Jacob]] * :::::::1888 - [[Ton-428|Gerrit]] * :::::::1893 - [[Ton-429|Albertus Johannes]] ::::::1845 - [[Ton-396|Albert]] * ::::1758 - [[Ton-361|Dirk]] + [[Van_Doesburg-7|Dirkje]] '''van Doesburg''' :::::1788 - [[Ton-362|Gerrit]] + [[Wolff-888|Maaike]] '''Wolff''' ::::::1810 - [[Ton-383|Dirk]] + [[Snoek-55|Clasina]] '''Snoek''' :::::::1835 - [[Ton-417|Maaike]] * :::::::1838 - [[Ton-418|Gerrit]] * :::::::1839 - [[Ton-419|[infant]]] * ::::::1813 - [[Ton-384|Jenneke]] ::::::1815 - [[Ton-385|Hermen]] + [[Meijer-458|Johanna Cornelia]] '''Meijer''' :::::::1844 - [[Ton-409|Maaike]] + Abraham '''de Bruine''' :::::::1846 - [[Ton-410|Dirkje]] + Huibert '''Herks''' :::::::1849 - [[Ton-411|Johanna Cornelia]] * :::::::1852 - [[Ton-412|Elizabeth]] + Roelof '''Suiker''' :::::::1855 - [[Ton-413|Jetje]] * :::::::1857 - [[Ton-414|Gerrit]] + Everdina '''van Essen''' :::::::1859 - [[Ton-415|Johanna Carolina]] + Nicolaas Johannes '''van Muilwijk''' :::::::1862 - [[Ton-416|Huibert]] + Jannigje '''Visser''' ::::::1818 - [[Ton-386|Elizabeth]] + [[Weijgertze-2|Jan]] '''Weijgertz''' :::::::1858 - [[Weijgertze-3|Maria]] + Johannis '''Clements''' ::::::::1884 - Johannis Gerrit + Arnolda '''van Riet''' ::::::::1886 - Jacob Dirk + Willemina Everdina '''Willems''' ::::::::1887 - Huibertus Linus * ::::::::1888 - Frans Willem * ::::::::1891 - Marinus ::::::::1893 - Gijsbert * ::::::::1895 - Jan Gijsbert * ::::::::1898 - Maria Johanna ::::::::1901 - Areke Elizabeth + Jan '''de Rooij''' ::::::::1904 - Marinus :::::1792 - [[Ton-363|Metje]] + [[Udo-13|Hendrikus]] '''Udo''' ::::::1813 - [[Udo-8|Goossen van de Sand]] * ::::::1816 - [[Udo-9|Willemina]] + [[Van Sonsbeek-3|Johannis]] '''van Sonsbeek''' :::::::1842 - [[Van Sonsbeek-4|Cornelia Peternella]]] ::::::1819 - [[Udo-10|Gerrit]] + [[Vermazen-1|Geertrui]]] '''Vermazen''' :::::::1848 - [[Udo-62|Metje]] + Johannes '''Vink''' ::::::::1874 - Gerrit + Johanna Cornelia '''van Zuilichem''' :::::::1849 - [[Udo-63|Geertui]] + Willem Jan '''Zoet''' ::::::::1870 - Janna Cornelia * ::::::::1871 - Willem Jan * ::::::::1871 - Geertruida + Willem '''Ewoldt''' ::::::::1873 - Jenneke Maria + Jan Willem '''Vermeulen''' ::::::::1874 - Willem Jan + Margaretha Johanna '''van Ommeren''' ::::::::1875 - Gerdina Johanna + Hieronijmus '''Harte''' ::::::::1877 - Metje * ::::::::1878 - Lucasina Hermanus Johannes '''Bik''' ::::::::1879 - Jan + Sophia Josephia '''Dibbets''' ::::::::1881 - Gerrit + Cornelia '''Witzel''' ::::::::1882 - Johanna Elisabeth + Cornelis '''Bik''' ::::::::1883 - Metje + Nicolaas Willem '''de Leen''' ::::::::1885 - Adriana + Albert Arie '''Nijveldt''' ::::::::1886 - Janna Willemina ::::::::1888 - Hendrika + Albertus Willem '''van Hattum''' ::::::::1890 - Cornelis + Anna Carolina '''de Bie''' ::::::::1892 - Elisabeth + Dirk Jan '''Blom''' :::::::1852 - [[Udo-64|Goossen]] + [[Sepers-2|Nieske]] '''Sepers''' ::::::::1878 - [[Udo-76|Metje]] + Gerrit Wouter '''de Jong''' :::::::::1903 - Jan Goossen * :::::::::1905 - Nieske Neeltje + Gosewinus '''Udo''' ::::::::1879 - [[Udo-77|Adriana]] + Dirk '''Brinkman''' :::::::::1901 - Arie :::::::::1901 - Nieske * :::::::::1905 - Goossen * ::::::::1881 - [[Udo-78|Gerrit]] + [[Sepers-24|Geertruida]] '''Sepers''' :::::::::1910 - [[Udo-89|Johannes Hendrik]] ::::::::1883 - [[Udo-79|Geertruida]] + Adrianus '''Schreuders''' :::::::::1903 - Geerdina * :::::::::1907 - Geerdina Johanna Nieske ::::::::1884 - [[Udo-80|Johannes]] * ::::::::1886 - [[Udo-81|Hendrik]] + Cornelia '''Schreuders''' :::::::::1912 - Gerdina Nieske ::::::::1888 - [[Udo-82|Goossen]] ::::::::1890 - [[Udo-83|Nieske]] * ::::::::1892 - [[Udo-84|Areke]] + Willem '''van Son''' :::::::::1923 - Christina * ::::::::1893 - [[Udo-85|Hendrika]] + Maathijs Aart '''van Hoften''' :::::::::1921 - Janigje :::::::::1926 - Nieske ::::::::1896 - [[Udo-86|Dirkje]] + Willem Antonie '''van de Water''' :::::::::1931 - Nieske * ::::::::1898 - [[Udo-87|Geertruida]] + Jacob '''Visser''' ::::::::1901 - [[Udo-88|Robbert]] + Francina Anneke '''Vissers''' :::::::1853 - [[Udo-65|Hendrika]] + [[Sepers-23|Hendrik]] '''Sepers''' ::::::::''[children listed under Hendrik Sepers]'' :::::::1855 - [[Udo-66|Mijntje]] + [[Sepers-22|Jacob]] '''Sepers''' ::::::::''[children listed under Jacob Sepers]'' :::::::1857 - [[Udo-67|Adriana]] + [[Sepers-45|Arien]] '''Sepers''' ::::::::''[children listed under Arien Sepers]'' :::::::1859 - [[Udo-68|Aaltje]] * :::::::1861 - [[Udo-69|Hendrikus]] * :::::::1864 - [[Udo-70|Gerrit]] + Bardina Willemina '''Termeer''' ::::::::1898 - Gerrit ::::::::1899 - Jan ::::::::1901 - Metje ::::::::1902 - Gijsbert ::::::::1904 - Hendrik ::::::::1906 - Willem ::::::::1908 - Berdinus ::::::::1909 - Geertruida ::::::::1911 - Dirk * ::::::::1914 - Berdina * :::::::1866 - [[Udo-71|Willem]] + Johanna '''van Dijk''' ::::::::1907 - Wilhelmina ::::::::1911 - Frederika Geertruida * :::::::1868 - [[Udo-72|Hendrik]] + Anna Willemina '''Vermeulen''' ::::::1823 - [[Udo-11|Hendrika Gerdina]] + [[Van Hoften-6|Roelof]] '''van Hoften''' :::::::1853 - [[Van Hoften-7|Cornelis]] + Jenneke '''Vos''' ::::::::1879 - Hendrika Gerdina + Dirk Jan '''Spies''' ::::::::1881 - Egodina Catharina + Evert Jan '''Spies''' :::::::1857 - [[Van Hoften-8|Hendrikus]] + Jenneke '''Esmeijer''' ::::::::1893 - Hendrika Gerharda + Marinus '''Schimmel''' ::::::::1894 - Gradus + Adriana Hendrika '''van Ooijen''' ::::::::1896 - Gerharda Rebekka ::::::::1897 - Roelof ::::::::1900 - Hendrik ::::::::1903 - Willemijntje ::::::::1906 - Magretha ::::::::1909 - Jenneke Hendrika :::::::1860 - [[Van Hoften-9|Christiaan]] + [[Buijs-131|Neeske]] '''Buijs''' ::::::::1885 - Jantje + Dirk '''Biesters''' ::::::::1887 - Hendrika Gerdina + Berdinus '''Brinkman''' ::::::::1889 - Arnolda * ::::::::1893 - Roelof * ::::::::1898 - Arnoldus * ::::::::1901 - Arnoldus + [[Sepers-57|Adriana]] '''Sepers''' :::::::::1934 - Hendrika Gerdina :::::::1865 - [[Van Hoften-10|Goossen]] + Johanna '''Brugman''' ::::::::1894 - Roelof * ::::::::1895 - Roelof Jacob + [[Buijs-139|Bertha]] '''Buijs''' ::::::::1899 - Mijntje * ::::::::1903 - Jacob Roelof ::::::1826 - [[Udo-12|Dirk]] + [[Van Lith-35|Willemijntje]] '''Van Lith''' :::::: ++ [[Ton-400|Dirkje]] '''Ton''' :::::::1854 - [[Udo-53|Hendrikus]] + Willemina '''van Gameren''' ::::::::1878 - Willem ::::::::1879 - Huibertha Francina + Peter '''Hoogakker''' ::::::::1881 - Dirkje + Joseph Johannes Mattheus '''Vintges''' ::::::::1884 - Hendrika Willemina + Johannes Jacobus '''Lafeber''' ::::::::1886 - Metje ::::::::1889 - Maria + Cornelis '''Ribbers''' ::::::::1891 - Antoon + Anna '''van Valburg''' ::::::::1893 - Dirk Hendrik + Christina '''Smits''' :::::::1857 - [[Udo-54|Gerrit Teunis]] + [[Sepers-46|Nieske]] '''Sepers''' ::::::::1891 - Dirk Jan ::::::::1892 - Adrianus ::::::::1895 - Willemijntje Adriana + Gradus Hendrikus '''Groenendaal''' :::::::1861 - [[Udo-55|Gosewinus]] + Gijsberta Wilhelmina '''van Lith''' ::::::::1886 - Willemijntje Dirkje * ::::::::1891 - Ludolph Diederik ::::::::1893 - Dirkje ::::::::1895 - Jantje ::::::::1897 - Gosewinus + Nieske Neeltje '''de Jong''' ::::::::1901 - Grietje Jantje ::::::::1903 - Metje Hendrika :::::::1864 - [[Udo-56|Teunis]] + Jacoba '''Biesters''' ::::::::1893 - Dirk * ::::::::1894 - Dirk Willem ::::::::1896 - Willem ::::::::1899 - Willemijntje Dirkje ::::::::1901 - Teunis ::::::::1904 - Jacob ::::::::1906 - Jenneke :::::::''[more children listed under Dirkje Ton]'' :::::1796 - [[Ton-360|Dirk]] + [[Vink-161|Neeske]] '''Vink''' ::::::1824 - [[Ton-397|Dirk]] * ::::::1827 - [[Ton-398|Margarietha]] + [[Van Herpen-82|Aart]] '''van Herpen''' :::::::1857 - [[Van Herpen-83|Catharina]] + Hendrikus Hubertus '''Takken''' ::::::::1885 - Anna Margrietha + Arie Gijsbert '''van den Oever''' ::::::::1887 - Arnoldus * ::::::::1895 - Margarietha Catharina Huberta + Bastiaan '''Brinkman''' :::::::1866 - [[Van Herpen-84|[infant]]] * ::::::1831 - [[Ton-399|Jantje]] + [[Buijs-128|Arnoldus]] '''Buijs''' :::::::1861 - [[Buijs-131|Neeske]] + [[Van Hoften-9|Christiaan]] '''van Hoften''' ::::::::''[children listed under Christiaan van Hoften]'' :::::::1863 - [[Buijs-132|Hester Adriana]] + Johannes '''Hommersom''' ::::::: ++ Nelis Hendrikus '''van Stuijvenberg''' ::::::::1888 - Artje ::::::::1890 - Arnoldus Johannes * ::::::::1893 - Jan Arnoldus + Adriana Petronella '''van der Kraan''' ::::::::1896 - Jantje Jacoba ::::::::1897 - Jacoba Theodora :::::::1865 - [[Buijs-133|Arie Dirk]] + [[Van Leeuwen-415|Neeltje]] '''van Leeuwen''' ::::::::1895 - [[Buijs-136|Arnoldus Lambertus]] * ::::::::1896 - [[Buijs-137|Hendrika Arnolda]] + Gijsbert '''van Son''' ::::::::1897 - [[Buijs-138|Arnoldus Lambertus]] + Geertje Wilhelmina '''van der Helden''' ::::::::1899 - [[Buijs-139|Bertha]] + Roelof Jacob '''van Hoften''' :::::::::''[children listed under Roelof Jacob van Hoften]'' ::::::::1900 - [[Buijs-140|Jan]] * ::::::::1901 - [[Buijs-141|Jantje Dirkje]] * ::::::::1903 - [[Buijs-142|Artje Hendrika]] * ::::::::1907 - [[Buijs-143|Aart Hendrikus]] + Areke '''Schreuders''' :::::::1868 - [[Buijs-134|Dirkje Alida]] + Pieter '''Hartman''' :::::::1875 - [[Buijs-135|Dirk Arie]] + Willemina Theodora '''van Ballegooijen''' ::::::::1898 - Jantje + Karel '''Vennik''' ::::::::1899 - Sibilla Catharina ::::::::1902 - Arnolda * ::::::::1904 - Arnoldus + Anna Auguste Else '''Himmler''' ::::::::1907 - [Infant] * ::::::::1909 - Gijsbert + Catharina '''Postema''' ::::::::1912 - Wilhelmus Theodorus ::::::::1919 - Hendrik Wladimir Albrecht Ernst * ::::::1834 - [[Ton-400|Dirkje]] + [[Udo-12|Dirk]] '''Udo''' :::::::1869 - [[Udo-57|[infant]]] * :::::::1870 - [[Udo-58|Dirk]] * :::::::1873 - [[Udo-59|Marinus]] * :::::::1875 - [[Udo-60|[infant]]] * :::::::1876 - [[Udo-61|Metje]] * ::::::1837 - [[Ton-401|Geertje]] * ::::::1840 - [[Ton-402|Gerrit Jan]] + [[Schimmel-79|Elisabeth]] '''Schimmel''' :::::::1876 - [[Ton-404|Dirk Johannes]] + Adriana '''Vermeulen''' :::::::1878 - [[Ton-405|Johannes]] + Neeske Geertruida '''van Maanen''' ::::::::1910 - Gerrit Jan Dirk + Johanna '''van Soest''' ::::::::1912 - Hendrik Jan :::::::1879 - [[Ton-406|Nieske]] + Johannes Kornelis '''de Bijl''' ::::::::1907 - Gerrit Jan Dirk :::::::1881 - [[Ton-407|[infant]]] * :::::::1883 - [[Ton-408|Jenneke]] + Cornelis '''van Hoften''' ::::::::1911 - Cornelia Jenneke * ::::::1845 - [[Ton-403|Geertje]] * :::::1800 - [[Ton-364|Elizabeth]] + [[Van der Helden-1|Bartus Cornelis]] '''van der Helden''' ::::::1824 - [[Van der Helden-2|Cornelia]] + [[Papo-3|Frederik Jacob]] '''Papo''' :::::::1853 - [[Papo-4|Bartha Cornelia]] * :::::::1855 - [[Papo-5|Catharina Cornelia]] * :::::::1858 - [[Papo-6|[infant]]] * :::::::1859 - [[Papo-7|Elizabeth Frederica]] * :::::::1861 - [[Papo-8|Catharina Cornelia]] + Jan '''van der Tuin''' :::::::1864 - [[Papo-9|Maria Adriana]] ::::::1828 - [[Van der Helden-3|Dirk]] * ::::::1832 - [[Van der Helden-4|Leendert]] + [[De Koning-128|Johanna]] '''de Koning''' :::::: ++ [[Van Maren-12|Jantje]] '''van Maren''' :::::::1860 - [[Van der Helden-7|Bart Cornelis]] + Hendrieka '''de Wit''' ::::::::1894 - Geertruide Hedrika + Petrus Joannes '''Adrianes''' ::::::::1896 - Johannes Arnoldus + Wilhelmina '''de Rouw''' ::::::::1901 - Mattheus Johannes + Petronella Hendrica Everdina '''van den Thillart''' :::::::1862 - [[Van der Helden-8|Geertruida]] + Hendrikus '''van Overdam''' ::::::::1892 - Dirk Arie + Cornelia '''van Deursen''' ::::::::1893 - Adriana Hendrika ::::::::1895 - Lena + Johannes '''Brouwers''' ::::::::1898 - Hendrikus Lambertus + Jacoba Wilhelmina '''van Heun''' ::::::::1900 - Geertruida ::::::::1901 - Hermina ::::::::1903 - Jacoba + Johannes Jacobus '''Neve''' ::::::::1906 - Bertha :::::::1864 - [[Van der Helden-9|Dirk Arie]] * :::::::1865 - [[Van der Helden-10|Dirkje]] * :::::::1867 - [[Van der Helden-11|Adam]] * :::::::1868 - [[Van der Helden-14|Elisabeth]] * :::::::1870 - [[Van der Helden-15|Dirk Arie]] :::::::1871 - [[Van der Helden-16|Adam]] * :::::::1873 - [[Van der Helden-17|Fransina]] + Dirk Arie '''van Ijzendoorn''' ::::::::1892 - Jantje + Abraham '''Berkenpas''' ::::::::1894 - Dirkje + Dirk '''de Gier''' ::::::::1896 - Hermanus Leonardus ::::::::1898 - Fransina Hermina + Teede '''Tiekstra''' ::::::::1900 - Helena Gerdina + Gerrit '''Ribbink''' ::::::::1902 - Jan ::::::::1906 - Maartje Hendrika ::::::1836 - [[Van der Helden-5|Emmetje]] + [[Van_Maren-6|Glaudi Christiaan]] '''van Maren''' :::::::1867 - [[Van_Maren-7|Glaudi Christiaan]] * :::::::1869 - [[Van_Maren-8|Elisabeth Frederika]] + Zweer '''Ververs''' ::::::::1895 - Bart Kornelis ::::::::1901 - Christina Frederika * ::::::::1903 - Jantje ::::::::1906 - Marinus ::::::::1909 - [infant] :::::::1873 - [[Van_Maren-9|Bartha Cornelia]] * :::::::1875 - [[Van_Maren-10|Glaude Christiaan]] * :::::::1881 - [[Van_Maren-11|Cornelia Christina]] * ::::::1840 - [[Van der Helden-6|Dirkje]] + [[Vermeulen-564|Johannes]] '''Vermeulen''' :::::::1869 - [[Vermeulen-565|Anna Elisabeth]] * :::::::1871 - [[Vermeulen-566|Berta Cornelia Gerardina]] * :::::::1873 - [[Vermeulen-567|Gerrit Johannes Marinus]] + Adriana '''Ros''' :::::::1876 - [[Vermeulen-568|Johanna Maria Gijsberta]] :::::::1878 - [[Vermeulen-569|Cornelis Frederik]] + Adriana '''Ziere''' ::::::::1907 - Cornelis Jacobus ::::::::1908 - Johanna Dirkje :::::::1881 - [[Vermeulen-570|Emma Wellemina Dirkje Helena]] * :::::::1884 - [[Vermeulen-571|Dirkje Hendrika Johanna Frederika Maria]] :::::1805 - [[Ton-365|Adriana]] + [[Udo-14|Aart]] '''Udo''' ::::::1829 - [[Udo-15|Dirk]] + Willemijntje '''den Otter''' :::::::1857 - [[Udo-48|Adriana]] * :::::::1859 - [[Udo-49|Gijsbertus Arnoldus]] * :::::::1860 - [[Udo-50|Adriana]] + Anthonij '''Baggerman''' ::::::::1885 - [infant] ::::::::1886 - Willemina Cornelia + [[Udo-33|Aart Willem]] '''Udo''' :::::::::''[children listed under Aart Willem Udo]'' ::::::::1888 - Cornelis Anthonij + [[Udo-39|Wilehelmina Adriana]] '''Udo''' ::::::::1890 - Dirk Adrianus * ::::::::1891 - Dirk Adrianus + [[Sepers-34|Metje Hendrika]] '''Sepers''' :::::::::1923 - Anthonij Hendrik :::::::::1927 - Hendrika Adriana ::::::::1893 - Antonette ::::::::1895 - Adriaan Gijsbertus ::::::::1896 - Anton :::::::1862 - [[Udo-51|Arnoldus]] * :::::::1863 - [[Udo-52|Gijsbertus Arnoldus]] * ::::::1831 - [[Udo-16|Cornelia]] + [[Pluim-55|Frederik]] '''Pluim''' :::::::1863 - [[Pluim-56|Maria Adriana]] + Jan Hendrik '''Bongaards''' ::::::: ++ Eliza '''van Heemskerk''' ::::::::1891 - Jacoba Cornelia * ::::::::1894 - Adriana Cornelia ::::::::1896 - Cornelia :::::::1866 - [[Pluim-57|Arie]] + Wilhelmina Arnolda '''van Steenbrugge''' ::::::::1888 - Antonie Cornelis ::::::::1894 - Frederik :::::::1868 - [[Pluim-58|Adriana]] * ::::::1834 - [[Udo-17|Gerrit]] * ::::::1836 - [[Udo-18|Dirkje]] + [[Brinkman-393|Jan]] '''Brinkman''' :::::::1865 - [[Brinkman-394|Gerritje]] + Jan '''de Jong''' :::::::1866 - [[Brinkman-395|Berta Adriana]] + Hendrik Willem '''van Lienden''' :::::::1869 - [[Brinkman-396|Jasparus]] + Jenneje '''Kozijn''' :::::::1872 - [[Brinkman-397|Arnoldus]] * :::::::1875 - [[Brinkman-398|Arnoldus]] * ::::::1839 - [[Udo-19|Martinus]] + [[Brinkman-392|Berndina]] '''Brinkman''' :::::::1874 - [[Udo-43|Aart]] + Uke Christina '''Vissers''' :::::::1877 - [[Udo-44|Gerritje]] + Cornelis Marinus '''Kosters''' :::::::1879 - [[Udo-45|Adriana Dirkje]] * :::::::1882 - [[Udo-46|Adrianus Dirk]] + [[Kosters-22|Dirkje Hendrika]] '''Kosters''' ::::::::1910 - [[Udo-73|Martinus Goossen Cornelis]] ::::::::1914 - [[Udo-74|Hendrika Berndina]] ::::::::1916 - [[Udo-75|Berndina Dirkje]] :::::::1884 - [[Udo-47|Jasparus]] * ::::::1842 - [[Udo-20|Metje]] + [[Biesters-1|Johannes]] '''Biesters''' :::::::1878 - [[Biesters-2|Cornelia Dirkje]] + Gerrit '''Brinkman''' ::::::1845 - [[Udo-21|Jan]] + [[Weijgertze-1|Geertruida]] '''Weijgertze''' :::::: ++ [[Van Os-93|Artje]] '''van Os''' :::::::1876 - [[Udo-29|Aart]] * :::::::1877 - [[Udo-30|Hermina Helena]] * :::::::1878 - [[Udo-31|Aart Adrianus]] * :::::::1880 - [[Udo-32|Willem Aart]] * :::::::1882 - [[Udo-33|Aart Willem]] + Willemina Cornelia '''Baggerman''' ::::::::1908 - Adriana + Johan '''van Zuilichem''' ::::::::1910 - Jan Anton + Maria Alida '''van Deudekom''' :::::::::???? - Aart Arnoldus Jan + Winnifred '''Vosveld''' ::::::::::???? - Myra Winnifred :::::::::???? - Annie Willemina Maria + Hans '''van Meijgaard''' ::::::::::???? - Marc Arnoud ::::::::::???? - Michiel Jan :::::::::1948 - Willem Arnoldus "Wim" + Cornelia Maatje '''Smits''' ::::::::::1978 - Anne-Marie Willemijn + Dennis '''van Zuilen''' :::::::::::2013 - Hanne Cornelia ::::::::::1981 - Frank Jan + :::::::::???? - Arnoldus Hendrikus + Geertje Arida '''van Zon''' :::::::1883 - [[Udo-34|Hermina Helena]] * :::::::1884 - [[Udo-35|Hermina Adriana]] * :::::::1886 - [[Udo-36|Adriana Dirkje]] * :::::::1886 - [[Udo-37|Willem Adrianus]] * :::::::1887 - [[Udo-38|[infant]]] :::::::1889 - [[Udo-39|Wilhelmina Adriana]] + Cornelis Anthonij '''Baggerman''' ::::::::''[children listed under Cornelis Anthonij Baggerman]'' :::::::1892 - [[Udo-40|Adrianus Martinus]] * :::::::1893 - [[Udo-41|Jan Hendrik]] + Leeske Adriana '''Clements''' ::::::::1922 - Artha + Bart '''Peterse''' :::::::::1949 - Jan Hendrik + Nellie Paulina Elisabeth '''Spiering''' ::::::::::1973 - Bennie ::::::::1926 - Hendrikus Isaak Gerrit Lidus "Henk" + Aaltje "Alie" '''van Maren''' :::::::::1954 - Jan Hendrik + Maaike '''van Tussenbroek''' ::::::::::1979 - Rosaline ::::::::::1982 - Annemarie :::::::::1957 - Dirkje Janny "Dicky" + Henk '''van Rekum''' ::::::::::1986 - Sjors ::::::::::1988 - Thomas :::::::::1965 - Adriana "Jeanette" + Theo '''Lintsen''' ::::::::::1999 - Aaltje Everdina "Romy" ::::::::::2001 - Hendrika Antonia "Vera" :::::::1894 - [[Udo-42|Martinus Bardinus]] * ::::::1849 - [[Udo-22|Gerrit]] + [[De Lange-425|Aaltje]] '''de Lange''' :::::::1880 - [[Udo-23|Artje]] :::::::1882 - [[Udo-24|Wilhelmina]] + Arie '''den Hartog''' :::::::1885 - [[Udo-25|Aart]] + Maria Ludovica '''Hoekveld''' :::::::1888 - [[Udo-26|Martina]] * :::::::1892 - [[Udo-27|Adrianus Jan]] + Johanna Dina '''Beekes''' :::::::1898 - [[Udo-28|Martina Aaltje]] * :::1716 - [[Ton-356|Jantjen]] * :::1722 - [[Ton-357|Jantjen]] ::1675 - [[Jansen-1526|Dirck]] * ::1676 - [[Jansen-1520|Dirck]] + Hilleke Peters '''van Duynen''' :::???? - [[Ton-368|Elisabeth]] + [[Ton-355|Gerrit]] '''Ton''' ::::''[children listed under Gerrit Ton]'' :::???? - [[Ton-358|Hendrick]] + [[Van Oort-94|Ariaentje]] '''van Oort''' ::: ++ Aaltje '''Telders''' ::::1743 - [[Ton-434|Peternel]] ::::''[children listed under Robbertus Sepers]'' ::::1745 - Gerrit + Adriana '''Kloekart''' :::::1782 - Henderina :::::1783 - Jannetje * :::::1784 - Henderik :::::1786 - Adriana * :::::1788 - Adriana :::::1789 - L? ''(possibly Liena)'' :::::1791 - Lieven + Joppa '''van Westenbrugge''' :::::1792 - Adriaan + Jacomijntje '''Logmans''' ::::: ++ Neeltje '''Poot''' :::::1794 - Jannetje :::::1797 - M? ''(possibly Marinus)'' ::::1746 - Cilia ::::1747 - Dirk ::::1760 - Antonie ::::1764 - [[Ton-359|Antonie]] + Maria '''Stam''' ::::1765 - Ariaentjen + Jacob '''Biesters''' :::: ++ Arnoldus '''Velcke''' ::::1769 - Dirk ::::1772 - Wolfert ::::1775 - Arij ::::1776 - Arij :::1715 - [[Ton-179|Aert]] + [[Van_Neerlangel-1|Henderske]] '''van Neerlangel''' ::::1738 - [[Ton-180|Peterken]] ::::1740 - [[Ton-75|Dirck]] + [[Ganseman-1|Lijsbeth]] '''Ganseman''' :::::1771 - [[Ton-112|Adriaantje]] :::::1774 - [[Ton-79|Johanna]] + [[Van Cranenburgh-1|Jan Hendrik]] '''van Cranenburgh''' ::::::1808 - [[Van Cranenburgh-2|Willem Diderik]] + [[Post-997|Maria Magdalena]] '''Post''' :::::::1830 - [[Van Cranenburgh-4|Jan Hendrik]] + [[Mennes-16|Maria Alida]] '''Mennes''' :::::::1831 - [[Van Cranenburgh-28|Johanna Margaretha]] + Pieter Fredrik '''Wildering''' ::::::: ++ Hermann Diederich '''Vonfelde''' +++ Eduard Henri '''Verweege''' ++++ Johannes Gerardus '''Elsmann''' :::::::1832 - [[Van Cranenburgh-29|Wilhelmina Maria]] + Willem '''Blüm''' :::::::1834 - [[Van Cranenburgh-30|Jacoba Margaretha Franciska]] * :::::::1836 - [[Van Cranenburgh-31|Elize Henriette]] * :::::::1838 - [[Van Cranenburgh-32|Maria Magdalena]] + Hendrik '''van der Bruijn''' :::::::1841 - [[Van Cranenburgh-33|Willem Diderik]] * :::::::1843 - [[Cranenburgh-1|Gerarda Eva]] + [[Van der Bruijn-1|Johannes]] '''van der Bruijn''' ::::::1811 - [[Van Cranenburgh-12|Elisa]] + [[Van der Does-16|Henriette Jacqueline]] '''van der Does''' :::::::1845 - [[Van Cranenburgh-15|Esther Jeane]] + Willem Jacobus '''Brandt''' :::::::1845 - [[Van Cranenburgh-14|Jan Hendrik]] * ::::::1814 - [[Van Cranenburgh-8|Johannis]] * ::::::1816 - [[Van Cranenburgh-13|Johannis]] + [[Beekes-8|Antonia Johanna]] '''Beekes''' :::::: ++ [[Blum-420|Johanna Petronella]] '''Blum''' :::::::1843 - [[Van Cranenburgh-16|Jan Hendrik]] * :::::::1843 - [[Van Cranenburgh-17|[infant]]] * :::::::1844 - [[Van Cranenburgh-18|Johanna Catharina]] + [[Hofland-44|Gozewinus Adrianus]] '''Hofland''' :::::::1845 - [[Van Cranenburgh-19|Jan Hendrik]] * :::::::1846 - [[Van Cranenburgh-20|Willem]] * :::::::1848 - [[Van Cranenburgh-21|Wandrina Maria]] + Willem Frans '''Schultz''' :::::::1852 - [[Van Cranenburgh-22|Catharina Johanna]] + Anthoni Isaak Cornelis '''Plaat''' :::::::1852 - [[Van Cranenburgh-23|Jan Hendrik]] + [[Van den Dool-19|Maartje]] '''van den Dool *''' ::::::: ++ [[Van Reeven-1|Elizabeth]] '''van Reeven''' ::::::::1879 - [[Van Cranenburgh-34|Johan Hendrik]] * ::::::::1880 - [[Van Cranenburgh-35|Jannetje Anthoniaa]] + Herman Josephus Gerardus '''van der Laan''' ::::::::1882 - [[Van Cranenburgh-36|Antonia Martina Johannaa]] + Johannes '''van Rossum''' ::::::::1883 - [[Van Cranenburgh-37|Johan Hendrik]] + Trijntje Hendrina '''van den Burg''' ::::::::1884 - [[Van Cranenburgh-38|Johanna Petronella]] + Willem Arie '''Vletter''' ::::::::1886 - [[Van Cranenburgh-39|Willem Eliza]] * ::::::::1888 - [[Van Cranenburgh-40|Jan]] + Johanna '''van den Burg''' ::::::::1890 - [[Van Cranenburgh-41|Jeane Elise]] + Cornelis '''Verhagen''' ::::::::1893 - [[Van Cranenburgh-42|Pieter Gerard]] + Carolina '''Blanken''' ::::::::1895 - [[Van Cranenburgh-43|Anton Hendrik]] + Janna '''van Nieuwkerk''' :::::::1853 - [[Van Cranenburgh-24|Willem Machiel]] * :::::::1861 - [[Van Cranenburgh-25|Elise Johanna]] * :::::::1863 - [[Van Cranenburgh-26|Johannes Gerardus Franciscus]] * :::::::1864 - [[Van Cranenburgh-27|Jeane Elise]] * ::::::1818 - [[Van Cranenburgh-11|Elizabeth]] * ::::::1821 - [[Van Cranenburgh-3|Josina Hendrika]] * :::::1777 - [[Ton-80|Aart]] + [[Van Beusichem-14|Gijbertje]] '''van Beusichem''' ::::::1812 - [[Ton-81|Dirk]] + [[van Ballegoijen-3|Anneke]] '''van Ballegoijen''' :::::::1834 - [[Ton-154|Gijsbartje]] + [[Walraven-100|Hermanus Dirkze]] '''Walraven''' ::::::::1874 - [[Walraven-104|Dirk Jan]] + Anna Maria '''van Leeuwen''' ::::::::1875 - [[Walraven-105|Stevina Cornelia]] * :::::::1836 - [[Ton-155|Hendrika Willemina]] + [[Van Londen-6|Hendrik]] '''van Londen''' ::::::::1856 - [[Van Londen-7|Maria]] * ::::::::1858 - [[Van Londen-8|David]] + Geertje '''Pippel''' ::::::::1860 - [[Van Londen-9|Dirk]] + Maaike '''van der Mooren''' :::::::: ++ Kaatje '''de Groot''' ::::::::1864 - [[Van Londen-10|Hendrikus]] + Johanna Cornelia '''van den Boezem''' ::::::::1867 - [[Van Londen-11|Johannis]] * ::::::::1870 - [[Van Londen-12|Johannes Marinus]] * ::::::::1873 - [[Van Londen-13|Annebeth]] + Johannes Hendrikus '''Dekker''' ::::::::1877 - [[Van Londen-14|Maria]] + Johannes Dirk '''van der Graaff''' ::::::::1878 - [[Van Londen-15|Anna]] * ::::::::1882 - [[Van Londen-16|Johannis]] * ::::::::1884 - [[Van Londen-17|[infant]]] * :::::::1838 - [[Ton-158|Aart Gijsbert]] + [[Van den Dungen-2|Cornelia Johanna]] '''van den Dungen''' ::::::::1862 - [[Ton-319|Anna Cornelia]] + Gerrit Johannes '''Oostrom''' ::::::::1864 - [[Ton-320|Jan Machiel]] * ::::::::1866 - [[Ton-321|Dirk]] + Bartje '''de Ruiter''' ::::::::1869 - [[Ton-322|Johanna Adriana]] * ::::::::1870 - [[Ton-323|Johanna Adriana]] * ::::::::1873 - [[Ton-324|Johannes]] + Roelanda '''van Lopik''' ::::::::1877 - [[Ton-325|Aart Gijsbert]] * ::::::::1880 - [[Ton-326|Martinus]] * :::::::1840 - [[Ton-159|Willem Hendrik]] + [[Broekhuizen-30|Jantje]] '''Broekhuizen''' ::::::::1862 - [[Broekhuizen-31|Janna Hendrina]] + Adrianus '''Roelofs''' ::::::::1870 - [[Ton-312|Dirk]] * ::::::::1872 - [[Ton-313|Jantje Willemina]] + Cornelis '''Snijders''' ::::::::1874 - [[Ton-314|Wouter]] + Cornelia Wilmina '''Keijman''' ::::::::1877 - [[Ton-315|Anneke Elizabeth]] + Lubbartus Mol '''de Krieger''' ::::::::1878 - [[Ton-316|Gijsbertje]] + Otto '''Honders''' ::::::::1880 - [[Ton-317|Hendrik]] * ::::::::1882 - [[Ton-318|Jan Willem]] + Clazina '''Bauw''' :::::::1843 - [[Ton-161|Dirk Gijsbert]] * :::::::1845 - [[Ton-162|Dirk Gijsbert]] * :::::::1848 - [[Ton-156|Gijsbert Jan]] + [[De Wijs-7|Antje Hendrika]] '''de Wijs''' ::::::: ++ [[Demoed-1|Paula]] '''Demoed''' ::::::::1883 - [[Ton-271|Dirk Willem]] ::::::::1885 - [[Ton-267|Willem Gijsbert]] + Maria '''van der Spek''' ::::::::1886 - [[Ton-272|Christina Elizabeth]] * ::::::::1888 - [[Ton-288|Gijsbert Jan]] ::::::::1889 - [[Ton-289|Anneke Adriana]] ::::::::1890 - [[Ton-268|Cornelia]] + [[Kraaijestein-3|Stephanus]] '''Kraaijestein''' ::::::::1892 - [[Ton-290|Jan Hendrik]] ::::::::1895 - [[Ton-157|Anna Elisabeth]] ::::::::1895 - [[Ton-269|Paulina Hendrika]] + [[Mackenbach-3|Huibert]] '''Mackenbach''' ::::::::1899 - [[Ton-270|Hendrikus]] + [[Bakker-748|Arnolda]] '''Bakker''' ::::::::1903 - [[Ton-340|Gijsbartje]] :::::::1850 - [[Ton-163|Anneke Elizabeth]] * :::::::1852 - [[Ton-164|Jan Hendrik]] :::::::1856 - [[Ton-160|Johannis]] + [[Van Zuidam-1|Maria]] '''van Zuidam''' ::::::::1879 - [[Ton-300|Anneke]] * ::::::::1881 - [[Ton-301|Allegonda Geertruida]] * ::::::::1883 - [[Ton-302|Huiberta]] + Willem Adrianus '''van Veenendaal''' ::::::::1884 - [[Ton-303|Dirk]] * ::::::::1886 - [[Ton-304|Hendrika]] * ::::::::1888 - [[Ton-305|Hendrik]] * ::::::::1891 - [[Ton-306|Jacomintje]] * ::::::::1892 - [[Ton-307|Allegonda Geertruida]] * ::::::::1894 - [[Ton-308|Hendrik]] + Theresia '''Schnack''' ::::::::1897 - [[Ton-309|Jan Hendrik]] * ::::::::1898 - [[Ton-310|Allegonda Geertruida]] + Jan '''van Mourik''' ::::::::1900 - [[Ton-311|Arie]] * ::::::1818 - [[Ton-110|Gijsbert]] + [[De Bie-37|Geertje]] '''de Bie''' :::::::1850 - [[Ton-169|Aart Gijsbert]] + [[De Lange-361|Hendrika]] '''de Lange''' ::::::::1881 - [[Ton-291|Gijsbert]] * ::::::::1882 - [[Ton-292|Roelofke]] + Marius '''van Anrooij''' ::::::::1884 - [[Ton-293|Gijsbert]] * ::::::::1885 - [[Ton-294|Geertje Wilhelmina]] * ::::::::1886 - [[Ton-295|Gijsbert]] + Hester '''van Kranenburg''' ::::::::1888 - [[Ton-296|Geertje]] * ::::::::1890 - [[Ton-297|Geertje]] * ::::::::1891 - [[Ton-298|Geertje]] * ::::::::1893 - [[Ton-299|Geertje Arieka]] * :::::::1851 - [[Ton-170|Arie]] + [[Van Aalst-25|Hendrika Cornelia]] '''van Aalst''' ::::::::1881 - [[Ton-277|Geertje Wilhelmina]] + Cornelis Hendrik '''Brinkman''' ::::::::1882 - [[Ton-278|Teuntje]] + Willem Hermanus '''Weijgertze''' ::::::::1883 - [[Ton-279|Gijsbert]] * ::::::::1884 - [[Ton-280|Gijsbertus]] * ::::::::1886 - [[Ton-281|Gijsbertha Hendrika]] ::::::::1887 - [[Ton-282|Geurtje]] + Arie '''Zwitser''' ::::::::1888 - [[Ton-283|[infant]]] * ::::::::1889 - [[Ton-284|Arie]] + [[Van Aalsburg-9|Henderijntje]] '''van Aalsburg''' ::::::::1891 - [[Ton-285|Hendrika Cornelia]] * ::::::::1892 - [[Ton-286|Artha Johanna]] ::::::::1893 - [[Ton-287|Hendrik Cornelis]] * :::::::1853 - [[Ton-171|Hendrikus Gijsbertus]] + [[Van Son-32|Adriana]] '''van Son''' ::::::::1890 - [[Ton-273|Geertje Clasina]] + Arnoldus '''Bregt''' ::::::::1892 - [[Ton-274|[infant]]] * ::::::::1894 - [[Ton-275|Clasina Cornelia]] + [[Van Steenis-13|Martinus]] '''van Steenis''' ::::::::1896 - [[Ton-276|Gijse Alida]] + Marinus '''van Ommeren''' :::::::1855 - [[Ton-172|Hendrika Willemina]] + [[De Graaff-52|Pieter]] '''de Graaff''' :::::::1858 - [[Ton-173|Gijsbertje Elizabeth]] + [[Sterrenberg-9|Mattijs Maas]] '''Sterrenberg''' ::::::::1887 - [[Sterrenberg-10|Gerrit Pieter]] ::::::::1889 - [[Sterrenberg-11|Pieternella Johanna]] ::::::1822 - [[Ton-111|Elizabeth]] + [[Schmitt-1472|Gerardus Cornelis]] '''Schmitt''' :::::: ++ [[Blommestijn-1|Cornelis]] '''Blommestijn''' :::::::1850 - [[Schmitt-1473|Wilhelm Gerardus]] + [[Cousijnse-1|Johanna Geertruij]] '''Cousijnse''' ::::::::1881 - [[Schmitt-1497|Gerardus Wilhelm]] + Sophia '''Notmeijer''' :::::::: ++ Willempje '''Karssen''' +++ Aartje '''Karssen''' ::::::::1882 - [[Schmitt-1498|Willem Johannes]] * ::::::::1882 - [[Schmitt-1499|Adriana Elisabeth]] * :::::::1852 - [[Schmitt-1474|Arie Gijsbert]] + [[Nome-2|Cornelia Francisca]] '''Nome''' ::::::::1881 - [[Schmitt-1496|Nellij Louisa Susanna Francisca]] * :::::::1855 - [[Schmitt-1475|Gerardus Cornelis]] * :::::::1868 - [[Blommestijn-2|Cornelis Wilhelm]] * ::::::1828 - [[Ton-82|Jan]] + [[Van Berghem-3|Henderijntje]] '''van Berghem''' :::::: ++ [[Overheul-1|Artje]] '''Overheul''' :::::::1856 - [[Ton-165|Aart Gijsbert]] * :::::::1858 - [[Ton-166|Gijsje]] + [[Van Acquoij-30|Huibert]] '''van Acquoij''' ::::::::1882 - [[Van Acquoij-38|Jan Willem]] * ::::::::1883 - [[Van Acquoij-33|Jan Willem]] + [[Thoomes-1|Johanna Helena Wilhelmina]] '''Thoomes''' :::::::::1907 - [[Van Acquoij-34|[infant]]] :::::::::1908 - [[Van Acquoij-35|[infant]]] :::::::::1909 - [[Van Acquoij-36|[infant]]] :::::::::1911 - [[Van Acquoij-37|[infant]]] ::::::::1884 - [[Van Acquoij-31|Willem]] + [[Stam-273|Johanna Willemina]] '''Stam''' :::::::1859 - [[Ton-167|Adriana]] + [[Van Aalsburg-3|Jan]] '''van Aalsburg''' ::::::::1879 - [[Van Aalsburg-4|Antonie]] ::::::::1882 - [[Van Aalsburg-5|Hendrik Jan]] + Maria '''van Arendonk''' ::::::::1884 - [[Van Aalsburg-6|Johannes]] + Jenneke '''van Weelden''' ::::::::1887 - [[Van Aalsburg-7|Jan]] + Cornelia '''van Arendonk''' ::::::::1890 - [[Van Aalsburg-8|Cornelis]] ::::::::1893 - [[Van Aalsburg-9|Henderijntje]] + [[Ton-284|Arie]] '''Ton''' ::::::::1895 - [[Van Aalsburg-10|Gijsbert]] ::::::::1898 - [[Van Aalsburg-11|Gerrit]] * :::::::1862 - [[Ton-168|Aart Gijsbert]] * :::::::1865 - [[Ton-174|Aart Gijsbert]] * :::::::1866 - [[Ton-175|Aart Gijsbert]] * :::::::1867 - [[Ton-176|Dirk]] + [[Van Velzen-44|Anna]] '''van Velzen''' ::::::::1891 - [[Ton-183|Artje]] ::::::::1894 - [[Ton-184|Jan]] :::::::1870 - [[Ton-177|Aart Gijsbert]] :::::1780 - [[Ton-77|Henderica]] + [[Verweij-51|Gerrit]] '''Verweij''' ::::::1801 - [[Verweij-58|Maria]] + [[Van Bommel-37|Hendrik]] '''van Bommel''' :::::::1834 - [[Van Bommel-38|Hendrik]] * :::::::1839 - [[Van Bommel-39|Geertje]] + [[Van der Lee-33|Willem]] '''van der Lee''' ::::::::1870 - [[Van der Lee-34|Jan Hendrik]] + Hijltje '''van Berghem''' :::::::1844 - [[Van Bommel-40|Nikolaas]] + [[Den Otter-3|Cornelia Adriana]] '''den Otter''' ::::::::1873 - [[Van Bommel-42|Maria Hendrika]] + Aart '''Pellen''' ::::::::1874 - [[Van Bommel-43|Hendrik]] + Angenissa Barendina '''van Kuilenburg''' ::::::::1878 - [[Van Bommel-44|Adrianus]] * ::::::::1880 - [[Van Bommel-45|Janna]] + Johannes Pieter '''van Riel''' ::::::::1882 - [[Van Bommel-46|Anna Niske]] * ::::::::1885 - [[Van Bommel-47|Gijsberta Cornelia]] + Arie '''Goedhart''' ::::::::1888 - [[Van Bommel-48|Geertruida Willemina]] + Hendrikus '''Zondag''' ::::::1802 - [[Verweij-59|Elisabeth]] * ::::::1805 - [[Verweij-60|Jantje]] * ::::::1808 - [[Verweij-52|Aaltje]] + [[Van Deutekom-4|Huibert]] '''van Deutekom''' :::::::1836 - [[Van Deutekom-5|Hendrik]] + [[Rensing-4|Cornelia]] '''Rensing''' ::::::::1873 - [[Van Deutekom-23|Johanna]] + Frederikus '''Schumaker''' ::::::::1875 - [[Van Deutekom-24|Hendrika Jacoba]] + Frans Gerhardus '''Hoekstra''' ::::::::1878 - [[Van Deutekom-25|Huibert Jacobus Hendrik]] + Jacoba Steventje '''van de Kop''' ::::::::1880 - [[Van Deutekom-26|Jacobus Albertus]] * ::::::::1882 - [[Van Deutekom-27|Aaltje]] + Johannes Hendricus Christiaan '''Grandjean Perrenod Comtesse''' ::::::::1885 - [[Van Deutekom-28|Jacoba Alberta]] * ::::::::1887 - [[Van Deutekom-29|Jenneke]] + Philip '''Flipse''' :::::::1838 - [[Van Deutekom-6|Alida]] * :::::::1840 - [[Van Deutekom-7|Jenneke]] + [[Van As-70|Roelof]] '''van As''' ::::::::1873 - [[Van As-71|Hermanus]] * :::::::1841 - [[Van Deutekom-8|Jantje]] :::::::1844 - [[Van Deutekom-9|Gerrit]] * :::::::1845 - [[Van Deutekom-10|Jan]] * :::::::1849 - [[Van Deutekom-11|Hendrikus]] * ::::::1810 - [[Verweij-61|Gerrit]] + [[Vermeulen-424|Jansje Alida]] '''Vermeulen''' :::::::1838 - [[Verweij-83|Jantje]] * :::::::1840 - [[Verweij-84|Dirk]] + [[Zwamborn-6|Jantje]] '''Zwamborn''' ::::::::1889 - [[Verweij-139|Elizabeth]] ::::::::1891 - [[Verweij-140|Albertus Jan]] ::::::::1892 - [[Verweij-141|Goossen Jan Gerrit]] :::::::1842 - [[Verweij-85|Gerrit]] + [[Van Leeuwen-391|Belia Pieternella]] '''van Leeuwen''' ::::::::1886 - [[Verweij-136|Jantje Metje]] * ::::::::1887 - [[Verweij-137|Antonie Gerrit]] ::::::::1888 - [[Verweij-138|Gerrit]] :::::::1846 - [[Verweij-86|Jantje Alida]] + [[Van Deutekom-12|Arie]] '''van Deutekom''' ::::::::1868 - [[Van Deutekom-13|Gerrit Jan]] + Pieternella '''van Duinen''' ::::::::1871 - [[Van Deutekom-14|Johannis]] * ::::::::1873 - [[Van Deutekom-15|Jantje Alida]] + Hendrik '''van Leeuwen''' ::::::::1874 - [[Van Deutekom-16|Johannis]] * ::::::::1875 - [[Van Deutekom-17|Johannes]] + Francina Johanna '''van Beusekom''' ::::::::1879 - [[Van Deutekom-18|Gijsbertha]] + Dirk '''Weijgertze''' ::::::::1880 - [[Van Deutekom-19|Gerritje]] + Hendrik Jan '''van Arnhem''' :::::::: ++ Jonas '''Kleij''' +++ Jan '''Temminick''' ::::::::1882 - [[Van Deutekom-20|Dirk]] ::::::::1885 - [[Van Deutekom-21|Johanna Gozewina]] + Abraham '''van Splunter''' ::::::::1887 - [[Van Deutekom-22|Geertruida]] * :::::::1849 - [[Verweij-87|Gijsbert]] * :::::::1850 - [[Verweij-88|Gerritje]] + [[Vermeulen-428|Hendrikus]] '''Vermeulen''' ::::::::''[children listed under Hendrikus Vermeulen]'' ::::::1813 - [[Verweij-62|Dirk]] + [[Van Bommel-36|Maria]] '''van Bommel''' :::::::1834 - [[Verweij-75|Jan Hendrik]] * :::::::1836 - [[Verweij-76|Gerritje]] * :::::::1837 - [[Verweij-77|Klaas]] + [[Van der Heijden-73|Hermina]] '''van der Heijden''' ::::::: ++ [[De Bruin-293|Johanna]] '''de Bruin''' +++ [[De Bruijn-144|Willem]] '''de Bruijn''' ::::::::1873 - [[Verweij-128|Maria Christina Johanna]] + Martinus '''van den Hurk''' ::::::::1874 - [[Verweij-129|Josephus Antonius Nicolaas]] + Allegonda '''Vullings''' ::::::::1875 - [[Verweij-130|Dirk Marinus]] * ::::::::1877 - [[Verweij-131|Cornelis Johannes]] * ::::::::1878 - [[Verweij-132|Dirk Marinus]] * ::::::::1878 - [[Verweij-133|Nicolaas]] + Henrietta Josephina Maria '''Leenders''' ::::::::1880 - [[Verweij-134|Cornelia Maria]] * ::::::::1884 - [[Verweij-135|Cornelia Sophia]] * :::::::1839 - [[Verweij-78|Hendrika]] ::::::::1879 - [[De Bruijn-146|Jantje Maria]] + Leendert '''Weijgertse''' ::::::::1884 - [[De Bruijn-147|Gerrit]] * :::::::1841 - [[Verweij-79|Jan Hendrik]] + Sophia '''Blum''' :::::::1844 - [[Verweij-80|Martinus]] * :::::::1846 - [[Verweij-81|Dirkje]] * :::::::1849 - [[Verweij-82|Martinus]] + [[Hofmans-4|Dina]] '''Hofmans''' ::::::::1884 - [[Hofmans-5|Maria]] + Antonius '''Briaire''' ::::::::1887 - [[Verweij-121|Martina]] + Jan '''van Duinen''' ::::::::1891 - [[Verweij-122|Martinus]] + Hendrina Wilhelmina '''van Bers''' ::::::::1893 - [[Verweij-123|Arnoldus]] + Allegonda Johanna '''Schoemakers''' ::::::::1896 - [[Verweij-124|Henrica Wilhelmina]] * ::::::::1897 - [[Verweij-125|Dirk Gosuinus]] + Bertha Wilhelmina '''Stolzenbach''' ::::::1816 - [[Verweij-63|Cornelis]] * ::::::1819 - [[Verweij-64|Elizabeth]] + [[Vermeulen-423|Jan Jansen]] '''Vermeulen''' :::::::1840 - [[Vermeulen-425|Goossen Jan]] + Wilhelmina '''Kaper''' * :::::::1842 - [[Vermeulen-426|Gerrit]] * :::::::1845 - [[Vermeulen-427|Jantje Alida]] + Adrianus '''van Mierlo''' ::::::::1869 - [[Van Mierlo-64|Elisabeth Jacoba]] + Johannes Cornelis '''van Grevenbroek''' ::::::::1871 - [[Van Mierlo-65|Catharina Adriana]] * :::::::1850 - [[Vermeulen-428|Hendrikus]] + Gerritje '''Verweij''' ::::::::1877 - [[Vermeulen-440|Gerrit]] ::::::::1880 - [[Vermeulen-441|Jan Jansen]] ::::::::1882 - [[Vermeulen-442|Jantje Alida]] ::::::::1885 - [[Vermeulen-443|Elizabeth]] * ::::::::1887 - [[Vermeulen-444|Dirk Goossen Jan]] ::::::::1891 - [[Vermeulen-445|Gijsbertus]] :::::::1855 - [[Vermeulen-429|Gerrit]] + Wilhelmina Catharina '''Bakker''' :::::::1857 - [[Vermeulen-430|Barend]] * ::::::1822 - [[Verweij-65|Jan]] + [[Van Ballegoijen-10|Willemke]] '''van Ballegoijen''' :::::::1853 - [[Verweij-66|Hendrika]] * :::::::1855 - [[Verweij-67|Hendrika]] * :::::::1858 - [[Verweij-68|Henderijntje]] * :::::::1860 - [[Verweij-69|Henderijntje]] + Gradus '''van de Water''' ::::::::1884 - [[Van de Water-43|Henriette Wilhelmina]] ::::::::1886 - [[Van de Water-44|Jantje]] + Petrus Johannes '''Stembord''' ::::::::1888 - [[Van de Water-45|Helena]] + Adrianus Johannes '''Ule''' :::::::: ++ Lucian '''Bloch''' ::::::::1890 - [[Van de Water-46|Gerrit]] + Jantje '''Pot''' ::::::::1892 - [[Van de Water-47|Hendrik Willem]] + Alida '''van Dijk''' ::::::::1895 - [[Van de Water-48|Marinus]] + Ferdinanda Catharina Johanna '''Harkink''' ::::::::1897 - [[Van de Water-49|Johanna Margaretha]] + Cornelis '''Borstlap''' ::::::::1899 - [[Van de Water-50|Jan]] + Jannetje Geertje '''Hoepel''' ::::::::1902 - [[Van de Water-51|Adrianus]] + Antonia '''Weber''' :::::::1862 - [[Verweij-70|Gerrit]] * :::::::1865 - [[Verweij-71|Hendrik Willem]] * :::::::1868 - [[Verweij-72|Marinus]] + Teuntje Clazina '''van Papendrecht''' ::::::::1896 - [[Verweij-147|Jan]] + Neeltje Catharina '''van Golverdingen''' ::::::::1902 - [[Verweij-148|Adriana Jacoba]] :::::::1870 - [[Verweij-73|Anneke Elizabeth]] :::::::1874 - [[Verweij-74|Jan]] * :::::1784 - [[Ton-12|Roelof]] + [[Companje-2|Anna Hendrika]] '''Companje''' ::::::1804 - [[Ton-18|Geertruij]] + [[Beekes-1|Wander]] '''Beekes''' :::::::1828 - [[Beekes-2|Anna Hendrica]] + [[Moot-27|Johannes Cornelis]] '''Moot''' ::::::::1849 - [[Moot-28|Johannes Cornelis]] * ::::::::1850 - [[Moot-29|Henri]] ::::::::1852 - [[Moot-30|Anna Hendrica]] * ::::::::1854 - [[Moot-31|Geertruida]] + Willem '''van der Linden''' ::::::::1855 - [[Moot-32|Wouter Roelof]] * ::::::::1856 - [[Moot-33|Cornelis Arnoldus]] ::::::::1858 - [[Moot-34|Anton Wilhelm]] * ::::::::1860 - [[Moot-35|Hendrik Johannes]] * ::::::::1862 - [[Moot-36|Anna Elisabeth]] ::::::::1864 - [[Moot-37|Roelof]] * ::::::::1865 - [[Moot-38|Hendrica Justina]] * ::::::::1867 - [[Moot-39|Hendrika Johanna]] :::::::1830 - [[Beekes-3|Arnoldus]] * :::::::1832 - [[Beekes-4|Roelof]] :::::::1834 - [[Beekes-5|Arnoldus]] + [[Knieriem-2|Cornelia Hendrica]] '''Knieriem''' ::::::::1860 - [[Beekes-9|Johanna Maria]] + Lodewijk Ferdinand '''Miggels''' ::::::::1861 - [[Beekes-10|Geertruida Cornelia]] + Jan '''van der Veen''' ::::::::1863 - [[Beekes-11|Frederik Arnoldus]] * ::::::::1864 - [[Beekes-12|Arnoldus Cornelius]] * ::::::::1865 - [[Beekes-13|Cornelia Hendrica]] * ::::::::1866 - [[Beekes-14|Arnoldus]] * ::::::::1869 - [[Beekes-15|Arnoldus]] + Johanna Maria '''van Bommel''' ::::::::1871 - [[Beekes-16|Cornelis Hendricus]] * ::::::::1872 - [[Beekes-17|Anna Elisabeth]] + Hendrik '''Withaar''' ::::::::1874 - [[Beekes-18|Cornelius Hendricus]] + Johanna Elisabeth '''van Bommel''' ::::::::1875 - [[Beekes-19|Johan Martin]] + Johanna Margaretha Wilhelmina '''Koers''' :::::::1836 - [[Beekes-6|Wander]] * :::::::1837 - [[Beekes-7|[infant]]] * ::::::1807 - [[Ton-17|Elizabeth]] + [[Verduijn-16|Frans]] '''Verduijn''' :::::::1832 - [[Verduijn-33|Antonia Pieternella]] + [[Peeters-109|Jan Arend]] '''Peeters''' * ::::::1808 - [[Ton-16|Jakoba]] + [[Van Wingerden-24|Johannes]] '''van Wingerden''' :::::::1839 - [[Van Wingerden-30|Wilhelmina Maria Gerdina Jacoba]] * :::::::1841 - [[Van Wingerden-31|Johannes Wilhelmus Jacobus]] * :::::::1846 - [[Van Wingerden-24|Willem Johannes]] + [[De Schot-1|Elisabeth Jacoba]] '''de Schot''' ::::::: ++ [[Slijp-1|Johanna Elizabeth]] '''Slijp''' ::::::::1866 - [[Van Wingerden-33|Jacoba Geertruida Elisabeth]] * ::::::::1867 - [[Van Wingerden-34|Johannes Jacobus]] * ::::::::1869 - [[Van Wingerden-35|Adrianus Wilhelmus Jacobus]] * ::::::::1876 - [[Van Wingerden-36|Jacobus Adrianus]] * ::::::1810 - [[Ton-15|Dirkje]] + [[Beerens-9|Arnoldus]] '''Beerens''' :::::::1840 - [[Beerens-13|Arnoldus Johannes Franciscus]] + [[Van Toorn-7|Maria]] '''van Toorn''' ::::::::1878 - [[Beerens-15|Maria Johanna]] + [[Verhave-1|Thomas]] '''Verhave''' ::::::::1879 - [[Beerens-16|Arnoldus Johannes Franciscus]] + [[Van Steenbergen-40|Huibertje]] '''van Steenbergen''' ::::::::1881 - [[Beerens-17|Roelof]] + [[Van der Weerd-1|Gerritje]] '''van der Weerd''' ::::::::1883 - [[Beerens-18|Jansje]] * ::::::::1886 - [[Beerens-19|Dirkje]] + [[Van Rosendaal-4|Johannes Jacobus]] '''van Rosendaal''' :::::::1842 - [[Beerens-11|Anna Hendrika]] * :::::::1843 - [[Beerens-12|Roelof]] + [[Groothuis-11|Johanna]] '''Groothuis''' ::::::::1870 - [[Beerens-20|Dirkje]] + Jan '''van Elburg''' ::::::::1872 - [[Beerens-21|Arnoldus Johannes Franciscus]] + Cornelia '''van de Water''' ::::::::1875 - [[Beerens-22|Elisabeth Gerrida]] + Roelof '''van der Hoeve''' ::::::::1877 - [[Beerens-23|Gerrit Hendrik]] ::::::::1879 - [[Beerens-24|Johanna Hendrika]] + Dirk '''Dirksen''' :::::::1849 - [[Beerens-14|Johannes]] * ::::::1814 - [[Ton-11|Hendrikus Martinus]] + [[Van Noort-227|Anneke]] '''van Noort''' :::::::1839 - [[Ton-13|Roelof Johannes]] + [[Van Leersum-7|Rijkje]] '''van Leersum''' ::::::::1868 - [[Ton-19|Anna Hendrika]] + [[Van Herpen-5|Ferdinand]] '''van Herpen''' :::::::::1892 - Gijsbertus ::::::::1870 - [[Ton-20|Marretje]] + [[Van Hall-1|Jan]] '''van Hall''' :::::::::1897 - [[Van Hall-2|Teunis van Hall]] ::::::::1875 - [[Ton-21|Hendrikus Martinus]] + Dieuwertje '''Bol''' ::::::::1876 - [[Ton-22|Teunisje]] * ::::::::1881 - [[Ton-23|Teunis]] + [[Tigchelaar-2|Froukje]] '''Tigchelaar''' ::::::::1883 - [[Ton-24|Rijkje]] * :::::::1842 - [[Ton-178|Jan]] + [[Vis-57|Adriana]] '''Vis''' ::::::::1869 - [[Vis-58|Leendert]] + Kornelia '''van Weelden''' :::::::::1890 - Jan Leendert ::::::::1872 - [[Ton-256|Hendricus Martinus]] * ::::::::1874 - [[Ton-257|Lena]] + [[Zuidam-10|Cornelis]] '''Zuidam''' ::::::::1876 - [[Ton-258|Hendricus Martinus]] + Neeltje '''van Dam''' :::::::::1901 - Jan :::::::::1902 - Nico ::::::::1877 - [[Ton-259|Anna]] + ''[not recorded]'' :::::::::1902 - [[Ton-265|Johanna]] + Jan '''Hoogendijk''' ::::::::1880 - [[Ton-260|Adrianus]] * ::::::::1882 - [[Ton-261|Adriana]] * ::::::::1882 - [[Ton-262|Jan]] * ::::::::1883 - [[Ton-263|Adriana]] + Frederik Willem '''van der Bunk''' ::::::::1885 - [[Ton-264|Hendrina Hendrika]] :::::::1844 - [[Ton-34|Anna Hendrika]] + [[Van Florestein-10|Cornelis]] '''van Florestein''' ::::::::1873 - [[Van Florestein-9|Arend Hendrik]] ::::::::1874 - [[Van Florestein-8|Anneke Antonia Sophia]] * ::::::::1874 - [[Van Florestein-7|Anna Hendrika Martina]] * ::::::::1877 - [[Van Florestein-5|Antoon]] * ::::::::1877 - [[Van Florestein-6|Hendricus Martinus]] ::::::::1878 - [[Van Florestein-4|Dirkje Cornelia Louisa]] * :::::::1847 - [[Ton-33|Hendrina]] + [[Monhemius-1|Bart Cornelis]] '''Monhemius''' * :::::::1849 - [[Ton-14|Hendrik Maarten Jacob]] + [[Van Wijk-300|Maria]] '''van Wijk''' ::::::::1875 - [[Ton-25|Hendrikus Martinus]] + [[Verweij-47|Cornelia]] '''Verweij''' ::::::::1878 - [[Ton-26|Cornelis]] * ::::::::1881 - [[Ton-27|Anna]] + [[Van Tussenbroek-3|Gerrit Jan]] '''van Tussenbroek''' :::::::::1908 - [[Van Tussenbroek-4|Reinier]] ::::::::1884 - [[Ton-266|Dirkje]] ::::::::1887 - [[Ton-28|Cornelis]] + [[Burgers-104|Martina Hermina]] '''Burgers''' ::::::::1890 - [[Ton-29|Hendrina]] + [[Zwartebol-1|Leendert]] '''Zwartebol''' ::::::::1894 - [[Ton-30|Abel]] * :::::::1852 - [[Ton-32|Arie]] * :::::::1859 - [[Ton-31|Gerrit Jan]] * :::::1787 - [[Ton-78|Gerrit]] + [[De Groot-452|Pieternelletje]] '''de Groot''' ::::::1821 - [[Ton-114|Dirk]] * ::::::1822 - [[Ton-115|Maartje]] + ''[not recorded]'' :::::: ++ [[Bontje-6|Willem]] '''Bontje''' :::::::1849 - [[Ton-255|Jakobus Gerardus]] * ::::::1823 - [[Ton-116|Elisabeth]] * ::::::1825 - [[Ton-117|Adriana]] + [[Beglinger-19|Johannes Gerardus]] '''Beglinger''' :::::::1849 - [[Beglinger-20|Engelina Wilhelmina Pieternella]] + [[Petiet-1|Martinus]] '''Petiet''' ::::::::1871 - [[Petiet-2|Maarten]] * ::::::::1872 - [[Petiet-3|Martinus Johannes]] + Adriana '''Oostrum''' ::::::::1874 - [[Petiet-4|Louisa Adriana]] + Bendit Salomon '''Edersheim''' ::::::::1876 - [[Petiet-5|Adriana Petronella]] ::::::::1878 - [[Petiet-6|Johannes Gerardus]] * ::::::::1879 - [[Petiet-7|Johannes Gerardus]] + Wilmina Cornelia Catharina '''van Klaveren''' ::::::::1881 - [[Petiet-8|Maarten]] + Gerritje '''Taal''' :::::::1852 - [[Beglinger-21|Johannes Gerardus]] :::::::1853 - [[Beglinger-22|Elisabeth Catharina]] + Johan Gerrit '''Gunzel''' :::::::1855 - [[Beglinger-23|Pieternella Adriana]] + Hubertus Pieter '''de Borst''' :::::::1858 - [[Beglinger-24|Nicolaas Dirk Johannes]] + [[Harteloh-1|Johanna Alijda]] '''Harteloh''' ::::::::1883 - [[Beglinger-25|Johannes Gerardus Nicolaas]] + Wilhelmina Jacoba '''Heijdt''' :::::::::1909 - Nicolaas Dirk Johannes :::::::::1911 - Louise Josephine ::::::::1884 - [[Beglinger-26|Johanna Alijda]] * ::::::::1884 - [[Beglinger-27|Hendrika Maria]] + Hendrik Willem Pieter '''de Moet''' ::::::::1886 - [[Beglinger-28|Nicolaas Dirk Johannes]] * ::::::::1888 - [[Beglinger-29|Hendrikus Johannes]] * ::::::::1889 - [[Beglinger-30|Johanna Alijda]] + Willem '''van Meer''' ::::::1826 - [[Ton-118|Dirkje]] + [[Perrenet-1|Nicolaas Hendrik]] '''Perrenet''' * ::::::1827 - [[Ton-119|Johanna]] * ::::::1829 - [[Ton-121|Arie]] * ::::::1829 - [[Ton-120|Dirk]] + [[Van der Gaag-23|Willemina]] '''van der Gaag''' :::::: ++ [[Oversloot-1|Cornelia]] '''Oversloot''' :::::::1858 - [[Ton-143|Pieternella Johanna]] * :::::::1859 - [[Ton-144|Jannetje]] * :::::::1860 - [[Ton-145|[infant]]] * :::::::1861 - [[Ton-146|Jannetje]] * :::::::1863 - [[Ton-147|Pieternella]] * :::::::1864 - [[Ton-148|[infant]]] * :::::::1871 - [[Ton-149|Pieternella Hendrika]] + [[Stevens-8326|Hendrik]] '''Stevens''' ::::::: ++ [[Vrijman-2|Adrianus Martinus]] '''Vrijman''' ::::::::1895 - [[Stevens-8327|Hendrikus Johannes]] + Adriaantje '''van der Eijk''' ::::::::1897 - [[Stevens-8328|Cornelia]] * ::::::::1899 - [[Stevens-8329|Johanna]] * ::::::::1900 - [[Stevens-8330|Dirkje]] * ::::::::1903 - [[Vrijman-3|Gerardus]] + Elisabeth '''Orie''' ::::::::1904 - [[Vrijman-4|Cornelia]] + Johannes Marius '''van Horen''' ::::::::1906 - [[Vrijman-5|Adriana]] * :::::::1873 - [[Ton-150|Maria]] + [[Spruijt-32|Baltus]] '''Spruijt''' ::::::::1893 - [[Ton-254|Maria]] + Jacobus '''Krul''' :::::::: ++ Pieter Adrianus '''Oudijk''' +++ Antonie Frederik '''Van den Heuvel tot Beichlingen gezegd Bartolotti Rijnders''' ::::::::1898 - [[Spruijt-33|Cornelia]] + Cornelis '''Aandewiel''' ::::::::1900 - [[Spruijt-34|Geerlof]] + Suzanna '''Hendrikse''' ::::::::1902 - [[Spruijt-35|Dirk]] + Catharina Martina '''Lucas''' ::::::::1905 - [[Spruijt-36|Lucas]] * ::::::::1906 - [[Spruijt-37|Johannes]] ::::::::1912 - [[Spruijt-38|Albertus]] + Maria '''Zwart''' :::::::1876 - [[Ton-151|Gerritje]] * :::::::1881 - [[Ton-152|Gerardus]] + [[Zuurmond-2|Rijka]] '''Zuurmond''' ::::::::1905 - [[Ton-253|Dirk]] + Bastiaantje Maartje '''Visser''' ::::::1831 - [[Ton-122|Arie]] * ::::::1832 - [[Ton-123|[infant]]] * ::::::1834 - [[Ton-124|Elisabeth]] + [[Van Oosten-70|Hendrik]] '''van Oosten''' :::::::1858 - [[Van Oosten-71|Gerritje]] + [[De Braal-2|Jan Cornelis]] '''de Braal''' ::::::::1883 - [[De Braal-3|Willem]] * ::::::::1885 - [[De Braal-4|Elisabeth Maria]] * ::::::::1886 - [[De Braal-5|Willem]] * ::::::::1887 - [[De Braal-6|Hendrik]] * ::::::::1889 - [[De Braal-7|Maria]] * ::::::::1890 - [[De Braal-8|Hendrik]] + Cornelia Wilhelmina '''Vooijs''' :::::::: ++ Bertha Margaretha Eva '''Sacher''' ::::::::1893 - [[De Braal-9|Gerard]] + Pieternella '''van der Weiden''' ::::::::1896 - [[De Braal-10|Adriana Dirkje]] + Hendrik '''de Ruiter''' ::::::::1897 - [[De Braal-11|Catharinus Antonie]] + Elisabeth '''Huis''' ::::::::1899 - [[De Braal-12|Gerritje Maria]] + Hendrik '''de Ruiter''' ::::::::1901 - [[De Braal-13|Maria]] * ::::::::1903 - [[De Braal-14|Willem]] :::::::1860 - [[Van Oosten-72|Trijntje]] + [[Dekker-315|Arie]] '''Dekker''' ::::::::1881 - [[Dekker-316|Hendrik Eliza]] * :::::::1862 - [[Van Oosten-73|Dirk]] + [[Ten Holt-7|Maria]] '''ten Holt''' ::::::::1898 - [[Van Oosten-81|Hendrik Arie]] + Gerardina Barta '''Heijink''' ::::::::1899 - [[Van Oosten-82|Foppe Marinus]] * ::::::::1900 - [[Van Oosten-83|Dirk]] + Alida '''Vermeer''' ::::::::1901 - [[Van Oosten-84|Cornelis Adrianus]] + Marrigje '''Albers''' ::::::::1903 - [[Van Oosten-86|Arie]] + Elisabeth Maria Anna '''van Eijk''' ::::::::1903 - [[Van Oosten-85|[infant]]] * :::::::1865 - [[Van Oosten-74|Pietje]] + [[Tiggelooven-1|Wilhelmus]] '''Tiggelooven''' ::::::::1894 - [[Tiggelooven-2|Maria Adriana]] * :::::::1868 - [[Van Oosten-75|Hendrik]] + [[Valstar-7|Elisabeth]] '''Valstar''' ::::::::1893 - [[Van Oosten-78|Elisabeth]] + Leendert Popta '''Wassenaar''' ::::::::1895 - [[Van Oosten-79|Stijntje]] + Leendert '''Alleblas''' ::::::::1897 - [[Van Oosten-80|Hendrik]] + Wilhelmina '''de Bruin''' :::::::1871 - [[Van Oosten-76|Betje]] + [[Korteland-1|Cornelis]] '''Korteland''' ::::::::1890 - [[Korteland-2|Trijntje]] + Leendert Johannes Lambertus '''Boers''' ::::::::1893 - [[Korteland-3|Jannetje]] * ::::::::1894 - [[Korteland-4|Elizabeth]] * ::::::::1895 - [[Korteland-5|Leentje]] + Hendrik '''Wijnhorst''' ::::::::1896 - [[Korteland-6|Jan]] * ::::::::1897 - [[Korteland-7|Jan]] + Anthonia Margje '''Snieder''' ::::::::1900 - [[Korteland-8|Elisabeth]] * :::::::1875 - [[Van Oosten-77|Arie]] * ::::::1836 - [[Ton-125|Gerardus]] + [[Van der Hoeven-62|Neeltje]] '''van der Hoeven''' :::::::1859 - [[Ton-137|Gerardus Wilhelmus]] + [[Van der Meer-224|Alida]] '''van der Meer''' ::::::::1884 - [[Ton-245|Neeltje]] + Johannes '''Mooiman''' :::::::::1906 - Gijsbertus + Huibertje '''Pronk''' :::::::::1908 - Alida + Albertus '''van Droffelaar''' :::::::::1909 - Arie + Christina Wilhelmina '''de Rooij''' :::::::::1910 - Hendrina + Dirk K. '''Frank''' :::::::::1911 - Gerardus Wilhelmus + Maria Theresia Josephina '''Oosterwijk''' :::::::::1912 - Johanna Willemina * :::::::::1921 - Wilhelmus ::::::::1886 - [[Ton-246|Johanna]] + Pieter Cornelis '''Boode''' ::::::::1890 - [[Ton-247|Gerardus]] * ::::::::1892 - [[Ton-248|Antje]] + Simon '''Stam''' ::::::::1895 - [[Ton-249|Arie]] + Grietje '''Salverd''' ::::::::1897 - [[Ton-250|Wilhelmus]] + Johanna Adriana '''Veenman''' ::::::::1900 - [[Ton-251|Gerardus]] + Gerritje Margaretha Josina '''Gerritsen''' ::::::::1904 - [[Ton-252|Albertus]] + Johanna '''van Nielen''' :::::::1861 - [[Ton-138|Arie]] + [[Van den Bos-54|Antje]] '''van den Bos''' ::::::: ++ [[Louwer-2|Johanna Christina]] '''Louwer''' ::::::::1885 - [[Ton-231|[infant]]] * ::::::::1888 - [[Ton-232|Gerardus]] * ::::::::1888 - [[Ton-233|[infant]]] * ::::::::1889 - [[Ton-234|Heiltje]] + Jacobus Johannes '''Wiskie''' ::::::::1890 - [[Ton-235|Neeltje Geertruida]] + Gerrit '''de Koning''' ::::::::1892 - [[Ton-236|Francina]] + Arie Johannes '''van Alphen''' ::::::::1895 - [[Ton-237|Geertruida]] + Jacobus Johannes '''Jaspers''' ::::::::1895 - [[Ton-238|Hendrika]] + Hendrikus Johannes '''Arts''' ::::::::1896 - [[Ton-239|Adelheid Emma Wilhelmina Theresia]] * ::::::::1896 - [[Ton-240|Wilhelmina Helena Paulina Maria]] * ::::::::1898 - [[Ton-241|Gerardus]] + Johanna Alletta '''Siebkes''' ::::::::1899 - [[Ton-242|Anna Benedicta]] * ::::::::1900 - [[Ton-243|Arie]] ::::::::1902 - [[Ton-244|Frans]] + Lena '''van der Bom''' :::::::1864 - [[Ton-139|Pietje]] + [[Van der Marel-8|Johannes]] '''van der Marel''' ::::::::1887 - [[Van der Marel-9|Jannetje]] + Leendert '''van den Berg''' ::::::::1889 - [[Van der Marel-10|Gerardus]] + Martina Catharina '''Koene''' ::::::::1891 - [[Van der Marel-11|Arend]] + Teuna Klazina '''Nieuwenhuizen''' ::::::::1893 - [[Van der Marel-12|Cornelis]] * ::::::::1897 - [[Van der Marel-13|Adriana]] + Silvester '''van den Hoek''' ::::::::1899 - [[Van der Marel-14|Johannes]] + Arendje '''Zeeman''' ::::::::1902 - [[Van der Marel-15|Leendert]] + Alderina Martina '''Storm''' ::::::::1906 - [[Van der Marel-16|Jacoba]] + Arend '''Vermeer''' ::::::::1909 - [[Van der Marel-17|Cornelia]] + Leendert '''de Munnik''' :::::::1867 - [[Ton-140|Wilhelmus]] + [[Lamot-6|Clazina]] '''Lamot''' ::::::::1890 - [[Ton-221|Gerardus]] * ::::::::1891 - [[Ton-222|Neeltje Maria]] + Johannes '''Voois''' ::::::::1892 - [[Ton-223|Neeltje]] * ::::::::1893 - [[Ton-224|Clazina]] + Govert '''Boekestein''' ::::::::1894 - [[Ton-225|Gerardus]] * ::::::::1896 - [[Ton-226|Aafjse Cornelia]] + Gerrit '''Wijnands''' ::::::::1897 - [[Ton-227|Cornelis]] * ::::::::1899 - [[Ton-228|Maria Cornelia]] * ::::::::1901 - [[Ton-229|Pietje]] + Arie '''van Antwerpen''' ::::::::1905 - [[Ton-230|Wilhelmus]] + Johanna '''van Dijk''' :::::::1871 - [[Ton-141|Nicolaas]] + [[Hoogenraad-11|Anna]] '''Hoogenraad''' ::::::::1896 - [[Ton-220|Cornelia]] * :::::::1874 - [[Ton-142|Johannes]] * ::::::1838 - [[Ton-126|Johanna]] + [[Van den Berg-875|Hendrik]] '''van den Berg''' :::::::''[children listed under Hendrik van den Berg'' ::::::1840 - [[Ton-127|Pieter]] + [[Langenberg-25|Teuna]] '''Langenberg''' :::::::1868 - [[Ton-181|Petronella Adriana]] + [[Van der Wel-69|Jan]] '''van der Wel''' ::::::::1886 - [[Van der Wel-70|Gijsbert Hendrik]] + Johanna Margaretha '''Groos''' ::::::::1888 - [[Van der Wel-68|Pieter]] * ::::::::1890 - [[Van der Wel-71|Pieter]] + Daatje Margaretha '''Vellekoop''' ::::::::1892 - [[Van der Wel-72|Jan]] * ::::::::1894 - [[Van der Wel-73|Dirk Anton]] + Femmetje Cornelia '''Brandlight''' ::::::::1895 - [[Van der Wel-74|Petronella Adriana]] ::::::::1896 - [[Van der Wel-75|Teuna]] * ::::::::1898 - [[Van der Wel-76|Teuna]] * ::::::::1899 - [[Van der Wel-77|Teuna]] + Abraham '''van Eldik''' ::::::::1901 - [[Van der Wel-78|Engel]] + Cornelia '''van Driel''' ::::::::1904 - [[Van der Wel-79|Gerardus Hendrik]] ::::::::1907 - [[Van der Wel-80|Arnoldus]] * ::::::::1908 - [[Van der Wel-81|Arie]] :::::::1869 - [[Ton-182|Gerardus Hendrik]] + [[Van Staalduinen-60|Susanna]] '''van Staalduinen''' ::::::: ++ [[Besemer-24|Elizabeth Sara]] '''Besemer''' ::::::::1888 - [[Ton-208|Wouter Hendrik]] + Elisabeth '''de Bruin''' ::::::::1892 - [[Ton-209|Pieter]] * ::::::::1894 - [[Ton-210|Maria Francina]] * ::::::::1896 - [[Ton-211|Jan Leendert]] * ::::::::1898 - [[Ton-212|Pieter]] * ::::::::1900 - [[Ton-213|Pieter]] * ::::::::1901 - [[Ton-219|Maria Francina]] + Antonie '''Aldus''' ::::::::1903 - [[Ton-214|Leendert]] * ::::::::1904 - [[Ton-215|Teuna]] * ::::::::1907 - [[Ton-216|Susanna]] * ::::::::1909 - [[Ton-218|Jan Leendert Pieter]] + Jannetje '''Spruijt''' ::::::::1910 - [[Ton-217|Susanna]] * :::::::1870 - [[Ton-128|Adriana]] * :::::::1872 - [[Ton-129|Maartje]] * :::::::1874 - [[Ton-130|Hendrik]] + [[Pakvis-1|Catharina]] '''Pakvis''' :::::::1876 - [[Ton-131|Dirkje]] + [[Blijs-1|Petrus Phillipus]] '''Blijs''' ::::::::1902 - [[Blijs-2|[Infant]]] * ::::::::1903 - [[Blijs-3|Geertrui Jacoba]] * ::::::::1903 - [[Blijs-4|Teunna Pieternella]] * ::::::::1906 - [[Blijs-5|Geertruida Teuna]] + Jacobus Cornelis '''Nieuwenhuijsen''' ::::::::1907 - [[Blijs-6|Pieter]] + Gertrud '''Heuser''' :::::::1878 - [[Ton-132|Nicolaas]] * :::::::1880 - [[Ton-133|Arie]] :::::::1883 - [[Ton-134|Adriana]] * :::::1790 - [[Ton-113|Elizabeth]] * :::::1791 - [[Ton-57|Dirk]] + [[Verweij-48|Grietje]] '''Verweij''' ::::: ++ [[Van_Peuten-1|Adriana]] '''van Peuten''' ::::::1821 - [[Ton-56|Dirk]] + [[Van Kuilenburg-1|Willemijntje]] '''van Kuilenburg''' :::::::1854 - [[Ton-60|Margaretha Janna]] * :::::::1855 - [[Ton-41|Anthonie]] + [[Van Norden-15|Jannetje]] '''van Norden''' ::::::::1886 - [[Ton-42|Wilhelmina]] + Gerrit '''Pap''' :::::::::1911 - [[Pap-23|Jannetje]] :::::::::1913 - [[Pap-21|Anton]] :::::::::1916 - [[Pap-22|Gijsbert]] ::::::::1888 - [[Ton-37|Gijsbert]] + [[Van Bentum-5|Hendrika Willemina]] '''van Bentum''' :::::::::1910 - [[Ton-9|Anthonie]] + [[Van Triest-2|Gerrigje]] '''van Triest''' ::::::::::1936 - [[Ton-35|Anthonie]] ::::::::::1940 - [[Ton-36|John]] ::::::::::1941 - [[Ton-8|Johannes Lambertus]] :::::::::::1978 - [[Ton-7|Robert]] :::::::::1912 - [[Ton-40|Elisabeth]] :::::::::1914 - [[Ton-39|Gijsbert]] :::::::::1919 - [[Ton-38|Jannetje]] ::::::::1890 - [[Ton-43|Derk]] + Willempje '''van 't Slot''' :::::::::1917 - [[Ton-50|Anthonie]] :::::::::1918 - [[Ton-51|Kornelia]] :::::::::1919 - [[Ton-52|Jannetje]] :::::::::1923 - [[Ton-53|Berendje]] :::::::::1925 - [[Ton-49|Dirk]] :::::::::1928 - [[Ton-54|Willempje]] :::::::::1930 - [[Ton-55|Mina]] ::::::::1893 - [[Ton-44|Barend]] + Jannetje '''van 't Slot''' :::::::::1924 - [infant] * :::::::::1924 - Cornelis * ::::::::1894 - [[Ton-45|Dirk Jan]] * ::::::::1897 - [[Ton-48|Gerrigje]] ::::::::1899 - [[Ton-47|Neeltje]] + Koenraad '''Zwiep''' ::::::::1901 - [[Ton-46|Arie]] + Jannetje '''Verdouw''' ::::::::1904 - [[Ton-74|Aaltje]] :::::::1856 - [[Ton-67|Dirk]] + [[Verbeek-112|Cornelia Anna]] '''Verbeek''' ::::::::1890 - [[Ton-198|[Infant]]] * ::::::::1891 - [[Ton-199|Dirk]] * ::::::::1892 - [[Ton-200|Aart Teunis]] ::::::::1893 - [[Ton-201|Dirk]] ::::::::1894 - [[Ton-202|Jantje Wilhelmina]] + Piet '''Vermeulen''' ::::::::1895 - [[Ton-203|Cornelis Jan]] * ::::::::1896 - [[Ton-204|Cornelis Jan]] + Grietje Jansje '''van Lith''' ::::::::1897 - [[Ton-205|Willem]] ::::::::1899 - [[Ton-206|Adriana]] ::::::::1900 - [[Ton-207|Pieter]] * :::::::1858 - [[Ton-72|Gerrit Jan]] + [[Vermeulen-438|Warendtje]] '''Vermeulen''' ::::::::1901 - [[Ton-192|Jacobus Adrianus]] + Elisabeth Gerdina '''van de Pol''' :::::::: ++ Hendrika '''de Bie''' ::::::::1902 - [[Ton-193|Wilhelmina]] + Bernardus '''van Wamel''' ::::::::1905 - [[Ton-194|Gerrit]] ::::::::1907 - [[Ton-195|Dirkje]] + Albertus Adrianus '''van der Berg''' ::::::::1909 - [[Ton-196|Grietje Adriana]] + Martinus Hendrikus '''den Ambtman''' ::::::::1912 - [[Ton-197|Klasinus]] + Gijsberta Janske '''Ton''' :::::::1862 - [[Ton-66|Neeltje]] + [[Van Tussenbroek-19|Gerrit Willem]] '''van Tussenbroek''' ::::::::1889 - [[van Tussenbroek-20|[infant]]] * ::::::::1890 - [[van Tussenbroek-21|Barend]] * ::::::::1890 - [[van Tussenbroek-22|[infant]]] * ::::::::1892 - [[van Tussenbroek-23|Barendinus]] + Maartje '''Vermeulen''' ::::::::1893 - [[van Tussenbroek-24|Willemina]] + Aalbert '''de Jong''' ::::::::1895 - [[van Tussenbroek-25|Willemijnus]] * ::::::::1897 - [[van Tussenbroek-26|Dirkje Antonia]] + Hermanus '''Vermeulen''' ::::::::1899 - [[van Tussenbroek-27|Dientje Janna]] + Jacobus Jan Hendrikus '''Pluim''' ::::::::1901 - [[van Tussenbroek-28|Neeltje Gerritje]] + Hermanus '''van Tussenbroek''' ::::::::1905 - [[van Tussenbroek-29|Gerritje Adriana]] * ::::::::1907 - [[van Tussenbroek-30|Gerritje Adriana]] + Antonie Johannes '''van Beest''' :::::::1864 - [[Ton-58|Margrietha]] * :::::::1867 - [[Ton-68|Adrianus]] + [[Van Toorn-9|Pitronella Janna Adriana]] '''van Toorn''' * ::::::1822 - [[Ton-63|Jantje]] + [[Van Schaardijk-1|Johannes]] '''van Schaardijk''' :::::::1852 - [[Van Scheerdijk-1|Grietje Maria]] + [[Van Muiswinkel-1|Frans]] '''van Muiswinkel''' ::::::::1877 - [[Van Muiswinkel-2|Willemina Johanna]] + Gerrit Antonie '''van Arkel''' ::::::::1880 - [[Van Muiswinkel-3|Jantje Johanna]] + Arie Antonie '''van Mourik''' ::::::::1885 - [[Van Muiswinkel-4|Johannes Gijsbert]] ::::::::1889 - [[Van Muiswinkel-5|Francina Maaike Hendrika]] :::::::1854 - [[Van Scheerdijk-2|Gijsbert]] + [[Kompanje-1|Ariena Maria Willemina]] '''Kompanje''' ::::::::1892 - [[Van Scheerdijk-15|Jantje]] ::::::::1894 - [[Van Scheerdijk-9|Johannes]] * ::::::::1896 - [[Van Scheerdijk-10|Hendrika Gerdina]] + Hendrik Reinier '''Denekamp''' ::::::::1897 - [[Van Scheerdijk-12|Jacoba]] ::::::::1898 - [[Van Scheerdijk-8|Gijsbert]] * ::::::::1899 - [[Van Scheerdijk-13|Janna Hendrika]] ::::::::1901 - [[Van Scheerdijk-11|Gijsbert]] * ::::::::1901 - [[Van Scheerdijk-14|Johannes]] :::::::1856 - [[Van Scheerdijk-3|Maria]] * :::::::1858 - [[Van Scheerdijk-4|Dirk]] * :::::::1860 - [[Van Scheerdijk-5|Dirkje Gerdina]] * :::::::1862 - [[Van Scheerdijk-6|Johanna]] + [[Van Mameren-2|Pieter Marinus]] '''van Mameren''' ::::::::1885 - [[Van Mameren-7|Jantje]] + Peter '''van Zoelen''' ::::::::1886 - [[Van Mameren-8|Bertha]] + Matthijs '''van Arkel''' ::::::::1890 - [[Van Mameren-3|Johanna Gijsberta]] * ::::::::1892 - [[Van Mameren-9|Gijsberta Johanna]] + Anthonie '''van Est''' ::::::::1894 - [[Van Mameren-5|Piet]] * ::::::::1895 - [[Van Mameren-4|Margaretha Maria]] * ::::::::1897 - [[Van Mameren-10|Grietje Maria]] + Dirk Cornelis '''de Bie''' ::::::::1900 - [[Van Mameren-11|Pieter]] ::::::::1903 - [[Van Mameren-6|Johannes]] * :::::::1863 - [[Van Scheerdijk-7|Dirkje]] * ::::::1824 - [[Ton-61|Roelof]] + [[Van Arkel-75|Teuntje]] '''van Arkel''' :::::::1854 - [[Ton-83|Margaretha]] + [[Van Oort-75|Cornelis Jacobus]] '''van Oort''' ::::::::1881 - [[Van Oort-82|Johannes]] + Teuntje '''Berendse''' ::::::::1882 - [[Van Oort-83|Teuntje]] ::::::::1884 - [[Van Oort-84|Willemina Maria]] :::::::1856 - [[Ton-84|Dirkje]] + [[Krouwel-1|Cornelis]] '''Krouwel''' ::::::::1886 - [[Krouwel-2|Hermen]] * ::::::::1888 - [[Krouwel-3|Teuntje Margaretha]] + Karel '''van Doorn''' :::::::: ++ Cornelis '''Jansen''' ::::::::1889 - [[Krouwel-4|Catrinus]] + Jansje Geertruida '''Rensen''' ::::::::1891 - [[Krouwel-5|Roelof]] ::::::::1893 - [[Krouwel-6|Johan]] + Lena Hermina '''Rensen''' ::::::::1897 - [[Krouwel-7|Dirkje]] * :::::::1857 - [[Ton-85|[infant]]] * :::::::1858 - [[Ton-88|Janna]] + [[Van Steenis-9|Hendrikus]] '''van Steenis''' ::::::::1885 - [[Van Steenis-10|Roelof]] + Anneke '''van Aalst''' ::::::::1886 - [[Van Steenis-11|Geertje]] + Tabe '''Tietema''' ::::::::1888 - [[Van Steenis-12|Martinus]] * ::::::::1890 - [[Van Steenis-13|Martinus]] + [[Ton-275|Clasina Cornelia]] '''Ton''' :::::::1860 - [[Ton-86|Dirk]] * :::::::1861 - [[Ton-87|Dirk]] * :::::::1862 - [[Ton-89|Hendrika Hermina]] + [[Van Kuilenburg-2|Anthonie Gerrit Jan]] '''van Kuilenburg''' ::::::::1891 - [[Van Kuilenburg-3|Barendina]] ::::::::1893 - [[Van Kuilenburg-4|Roelof]] ::::::::1894 - [[Van Kuilenburg-5|Adrianus Anthonie]] ::::::::1895 - [[Van Kuilenburg-6|Teuntje]] + Willem '''de Weerd''' ::::::::1898 - [[Van Kuilenburg-7|Margaretha]] * ::::::::1902 - [[Van Kuilenburg-8|Gerard]] :::::::1863 - [[Ton-90|Adriana]] * :::::::1865 - [[Ton-91|Dirk Jan]] * :::::::1867 - [[Ton-92|Adriana]] + [[Van Oort-75|Cornelis Jacobus]] '''van Oort''' ::::::::1889 - [[Van Oort-81|Margaretha]] + [[Peters van Neijenhof-1|Gerrit Gijsbertus]] '''Peters van Neijenhof''' ::::::::1890 - [[Van Oort-76|Cornelia Jacoba]] * ::::::::1892 - [[Van Oort-77|Roelof]] * ::::::::1895 - [[Van Oort-78|Cornelis Jacobus]] ::::::::1898 - [[Van Oort-79|Roelof]] ::::::::1901 - [[Van Oort-80|Johan Adriaan]] :::::::1869 - [[Ton-93|Jan Leendert]] + [[Ton-97|Dirkje]] '''Ton''' ::::::::1902 - [[Ton-186|Roelof]] ::::::::1908 - [[Ton-187|Gerrit]] :::::::1872 - [[Ton-94|Dirk]] * ::::::1827 - [[Ton-153|Elizabeth]] + [[Van Tuil-3|Willem]] '''van Tuil''' :::::::1859 - [[Van Tuil-4|Gerrigje Margarertha]] * :::::::1860 - [[Van Tuil-5|Roelof]] * :::::::1861 - [[Van Tuil-6|Margaretha Elisabeth]] + [[Van de Pol-51|Hendrik]] '''van de Pol''' ::::::::1897 - [[Van de Pol-53|Willem Hendrik]] ::::::::1899 - [[Van de Pol-52|Aalt]] * ::::::::1901 - [[Van de Pol-54|Elizabeth]] * :::::::1863 - [[Van Tuil-7|Dirk]] + [[Wiegand Bruss-1|Johanna Maria]] '''Wiegand Bruss''' :::::::1864 - [[Van Tuil-8|Roelof]] + [[Berendsen-63|Tonia]] '''Berendsen''' ::::::: ++ [[Kunst-69|Alida Pieternella]] '''Kunst''' ::::::::1899 - [[Van Tuil-10|Willem]] * :::::::1872 - [[Van Tuil-9|Jan Cornelis]] + [[Kunst-68|Everdina]] '''Kunst''' ::::::1829 - [[Ton-59|Jan Cornelis]] * ::::::1831 - [[Ton-71|Johanna]] + [[Spaan-31|Peter]] '''Spaan''' :::::::1858 - [[Spaan-32|Johannes]] * :::::::1859 - [[Spaan-33|Dirk]] * :::::::1860 - [[Spaan-34|Jan]] * :::::::1862 - [[Spaan-35|Johanna]] + [[De Bie-41|Wouter Gerrit]] '''de Bie''' :::::::1863 - [[Spaan-36|Gerrit Jan]] * :::::::1863 - [[Spaan-37|Margrietha]] * :::::::1865 - [[Spaan-38|Janna]] * :::::::1866 - [[Spaan-39|[infant]]] * :::::::1867 - [[Spaan-40|Hendrik]] * :::::::1868 - [[Spaan-41|Janna Cornelia]] * :::::::1869 - [[Spaan-42|Hendrika Hermina]] * :::::::1872 - [[Spaan-43|[infant]]] * ::::::1833 - [[Ton-69|Gerrit]] + [[Brune-135|Adriana]] '''Brune''' :::::::1864 - [[Ton-95|Grietje]] + [[Van den Berg-888|Aart]] '''van den Berg''' ::::::::1896 - [[Van den Berg-889|Geertje Maria]] * :::::::1866 - [[Ton-96|Maria]] + [[Van Balkum-3|Peter Gijsbert]] '''van Balkum''' :::::::1867 - [[Ton-97|Dirkje]] + [[Ton-93|Jan Leendert]] '''Ton''' ::::::::''[Children listed under Jan Leendert Ton]'' :::::::1876 - [[Ton-98|Adriana Martina]] + [[Van Alphen-25|Arie]] '''van Alphen''' ::::::::1904 - [[Van Alphen-26|Cornelis]] ::::::::1905 - [[Van Alphen-27|Gerritje Adriana]] ::::::::1908 - [[Van Alphen-28|Gerrit]] ::::::::1910 - [[Van Alphen-29|Adriana]] ::::::::1911 - [[Van Alphen-30|Arie Gijsbertus]] * ::::::::1917 - [[Van Alphen-31|Gerritje Gijsberta]] * ::::::1835 - [[Ton-70|Adrianus]] * ::::::1839 - [[Ton-62|Aaltje]] + [[Van Tussenbroek-6|Johannis Catharinus]] '''van Tussenbroek''' :::::::1861 - [[Van Tussenbroek-7|Barendina Gijsberta]] + [[Jansen in de Wal-3|Antonius]] '''Jansen in de Wal''' ::::::::1892 - [[Jansen in de Wal-4|Johannes Gerardus]] + [[De Rouville-3|Cornelia]] '''de Rouville''' ::::::::1896 - [[Jansen in de Wal-5|Marius Albert Hermanus]] + [[Siliakus-2|Maria Albartha]] '''Siliakus''' ::::::::1898 - [[Jansen in de Wal-6|Antonius Bernardus Gijsbertus]] :::::::1862 - [[Van Tussenbroek-8|Adriana]] + [[Van Tussenbroek-31|Anthonie]] '''van Tussenbroek''' :::::::1864 - [[Van Tussenbroek-9|Gijsbert]] + [[Hoogerbeets-2|Catharina]] '''Hoogerbeets''' :::::::1866 - [[Van Tussenbroek-10|Dirk]] + [[Van Mil-7|Cornelia Hendrika]] '''van Mil''' ::::::::1906 - [[Van Tussenbroek-32|Johannes Catharinus]] ::::::::1907 - [[Van Tussenbroek-33|Gerrit]] :::::::1868 - [[Van Tussenbroek-11|Aaltje]] :::::::1871 - [[Van Tussenbroek-12|Johannes Catharinus]] * :::::::1873 - [[Van Tussenbroek-13|Johannes Catharinus]] + [[Verbeek-113|Aaltje]] '''Verbeek''' :::::::1875 - [[Van Tussenbroek-15|Adriana Hentje Gardina]] + Hendrik '''Withaar''' :::::::1877 - [[Van Tussenbroek-16|Janna Cornelia]] + [[Gijse-1|Peter]] '''Gijse''' ::::::::1905 - [[Gijse-2|Janna Petronella Cornelia]] ::::::::1907 - [[Gijse-3|Jan Peter Cornelis]] ::::::::1910 - [[Gijse-4|Huibartus]] ::::::::1912 - [[Gijse-5|Adriana Antonia]] :::::::1879 - [[Van Tussenbroek-14|Catharinus Johannes]] + [[Verbeek-114|Arta]] '''Verbeek''' ::::::::1907 - [[Van Tussenbroek-34|Johannes Catharinus]] ::::::::1909 - [[Van Tussenbroek-35|Antoon Gerrit Martinus]] ::::::::1911 - [[Van Tussenbroek-36|Hendrik Albertus Adrianus]] :::::::1882 - [[Van Tussenbroek-18|Geertje]] + [[Van Zijderveld-1|Teunis]] '''van Zijderveld''' :::::::1884 - [[Van Tussenbroek-17|Johanna Catharina]] ::::::1841 - [[Ton-65|Catharinus Johannes]] + [[Van Mil-6|Huiberta]] '''van Mil''' :::::: ++ [[Van Heun-1|Bartje]] '''van Heun''' :::::::1872 - [[Ton-99|Dirk Adrianus]] * :::::::1875 - [[Ton-100|Johanna Gerdina]] * :::::::1877 - [[Ton-101|Johanna Gerdina]] + [[Verweij-96|Jan Marinus]] '''Verweij''' ::::::::1904 - [[Verweij-112|Maria Huiberta]] * ::::::::1906 - [[Verweij-113|Maria Huiberta]] * ::::::::1907 - [[Verweij-114|Johannes Gijsbertus]] ::::::::1909 - [[Verweij-115|Gijsbertus Marinus]] * ::::::::1910 - [[Verweij-116|Huiberta Maria]] ::::::::1911 - [[Verweij-117|Maria Johanna]] ::::::::1915 - [[Verweij-119|Gijsberta]] + Laurens Pieter '''Hoogerdijk''' ::::::::1918 - [[Verweij-118|Dirkje Adriana]] * :::::::1879 - [[Ton-102|[infant]]] * ::::::1844 - [[Ton-64|Aart]] + [[Valkis-1|Gijsbertje Hendrika Huibertje]] '''Valkis''' :::::::1870 - [[Ton-103|Bart]] :::::::1871 - [[Ton-104|Dirk]] + [[Kleij-9|Jenneke Hendrika]] '''Kleij''' ::::::::1904 - [[Ton-342|Gijsbertus Hendrikus]] + Dirkje '''Kosters''' ::::::::1905 - [[Ton-343|[infant]]] * ::::::::1907 - [[Ton-344|Janna Petronella]] + Jan '''Appeldoorn''' ::::::::1909 - [[Ton-345|Artha Alida]] * ::::::::1919 - [[Ton-346|Dirkje Jenneke]] + Peter '''van Rossem''' :::::::1872 - [[Ton-105|Helena Cornelia]] + [[Van Eck-123|Geurt Jan]] '''van Eck''' ::::::::1905 - [[Van Eck-125|Helena Lotera]] + Frederik '''van Ommeren''' ::::::::1906 - [[Van Eck-126|Gijsbertus Hendrikus Huibert]] ::::::::1908 - [[Van Eck-127|Jan]] ::::::::1909 - [[Van Eck-128|Cornelis]] ::::::::1911 - [[Van Eck-129|Arie]] * ::::::::1912 - [[Van Eck-130|Aartje Johanna Jacoba]] * ::::::::1914 - [[Van Eck-131|Geurt Jan]] * ::::::::1917 - [[Van Eck-132|Adriana]] ::::::::1920 - [[Van Eck-133|Frederika Johanna]] :::::::1873 - [[Ton-106|Adriana]] + ''[not recorded]'' ::::::::1897 - [[Ton-341|Adriana]] :::::::1877 - [[Ton-107|Hendrik Cornelis]] + [[De Bie-40|Johanna]] '''de Bie''' ::::::::1916 - [[Ton-335|Aart]] ::::::::1918 - [[Ton-336|Willem]] * ::::::::1920 - [[Ton-337|Willem]] + Petronella '''van Hirtum''' ::::::::1922 - [[Ton-338|Hendrik Cornelis]] * ::::::::1931 - [[Ton-339|Johanna Hendrika]] * :::::::1881 - [[Ton-109|Cornelis]] + [[De Bie-39|Johanna Jacoba]] '''de Bie''' ::::::::1904 - [[Ton-327|Gijsbertje Hendrika Huibertje]] * ::::::::1905 - [[Ton-328|Teunis Johannes]] ::::::::1907 - [[Ton-329|Gijsbertje Hendrika Huibertje]] * ::::::::1908 - [[Ton-330|Gijsbertus Aart]] ::::::::1910 - [[Ton-331|Cornelis Bertus]] + Elizabeth '''Janssen''' ::::::::1914 - [[Ton-333|Gijsbertus]] ::::::::1919 - [[Ton-332|Adriana]] ::::::::1924 - [[Ton-334|[infant]]] * :::::::1881 - [[Ton-108|Jan]] ::::1743 - Jenneken ::::???? - Rutje * ::::1746 - Gerrit * :::1717 - [[Ton-347|Peter]] :::1719 - [[Ton-348|Gerrit]] :::1722 - [[Ton-349|[unknown]]] :::1724 - [[Ton-350|Jantje]]
Ton Jonker To-Do List
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Ton-7 Album
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Tonkin Name Study Info
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Ton's Dutch Terminology
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Ton's Genealogy Wishlist
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Tontine Street Methodist - baptism index
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Tony Freeman's Family Tree
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Toogoods and Pattersons from 1790 to 1860
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Tooke(s) of North Pickenham, and Houghton on the Hill
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Tooke(s) of Thompson
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Tooke and Related Families of Bruce County, Ontario, Canada
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Tooke and Related Families of Norfolk
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Tooke and Related Families of Norwich, Thompson, Purely & Serjeant's Inn
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Tooke View of the Russian Empire
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Tools for WikiTree Profiles
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Toombs Family History
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Toombs Family History Page PEI
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Toombs from Potterspury
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Topliss Name Study Info
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Toponomy Of DRUIM-DRUM
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Topsy’s DNA
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Torbay, Ship of Prisoners Revolutionary War
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Match to this list: [[Wilkie-1995|William Wilkie]]
One possible match to this list is [[Lockhart-1457|Samuel Lockhart]] Subject: BALFOUR, NISBET
Subject: BARNWELL, JOHN
Subject: CHARLESTON, S.C.
Subject: GREENE, JOB
Subject: NORTH CAROLINA - MILITIA
Subject: SOUTH CAROLINA - MILITIA
Subject: TORBAY, HMS
Date: 1781-05-18 Abstract: Moore, Stephen, and John Barnwell. On the prison ship TORBAY. To Gen. Green. I p. Copy. Roll Number: 175 Places · Charles Town Harbour Dates · 18th May 1781 Other · Prison Ship Torbay ---- Prison Ship Torbay, Charles Town Harbour the 18th May 1781 We have the honour of inclosing [sic] you a Copy of a letter from Colonel Balfour Commandant of Charles Town, which was handed us immediately on being put on board this Ship: The Letter speaking for itself needs no comment; Your Wisdom will best dictate the notice it merits - We just beg leave to observe that should it fall to the Lot of all, or any of us to be made victims, agreeable to the menace therein contained, we have only to regret that our blood cannot be disposed of more to the Advancement of the Glorious Cause to which we have adhered. A seperate [sic] Roll of our names attends this letter. With the greatest respect we are Sir Yr. most Obedient and most H'mble Servants Stephen Moore Lieut. Col. No. Carolina Militia John Barnwell Major So. Carolina Militia Major Genl. N. Greene For ourselves and one hundred & thirty other Prisoners '''Torbay Prison Ship, Charles Town Harbour 18th May 1781''' Axson William Junr. Exd. Ashe Samuel Arthur George Anthony John Atmore Ralph Barnwell John Major Baddily John Major Barnwell Edward Capt. Bonnetheau Peter Capt. Bembridge Henry Black John Lieut. Branford William Ball Joseph Barnwell Robert Bee Joseph Blemdell Nathl. Bricken James Bailey Francis Basqum William Clarke Jonathan Cockran Thomas Cooke Thomas Calhoone John (protection) Cray Joseph Capt. 16th Aug. 80 Conyers Norwood Cox James Cominins Richard Cohen Jacob Dorsius? John Dewar Robert Dessanscare? William Dunlap Joseph Edmunds Reverd. Eveliegh Thomas Edwards John Junr. Edwards John Warren Elliott Thomas Senr. Elliott Joseph Junr. Evans John Eberly John Egan John (protection) Elliott William Guerard Benjamin Gibbons John Grayson Thomas Guerard Peter Graves William Geir Christian Gadsden Phillip Graves John Glover Joseph Grott Francis George Mitchel Harvey William Lieut. Henry Jacobs [sic] Hamilton David Holmes John B. Holmes William Hughes Thomas Howard James Harris Thomas Hornby William Jones George Jacobs Daniel Kent Charles Kennon Henry Kain John '''Lockhart Samuel Capt. 16th Aug. 80''' Libby Nathaniel Liston Thomas Lee Stephens [sic] Lieut. Legare Thomas Lesserne John Leybert Henry Meyers Phillip Michl. John Minott John Senr. Moncrief John Magdalen Charles Minott John Junr. Miller Samuel Moore Stephen Colo. 16th Aug. 80 Murphy Williams [sic] Monks George Morgan Jonathan Moss George Doctr. Marriett Abraham Miller Solomon Lieut. Neufville John Junr. Neufvelle William Owen John Priolian Samuel Priolian Phillips [sic] Pinkney Charles Junr. Poyas James Palmer Job Robinson Joseph Revin Thomas Rhodes Daniel Righton Joseph Scott John Senr. Snelling William Stephenson John Junr. Stephens Daniel Snyder Paul Smith Samuel Seavers Abraham Singleton Rippely Scotton Samuel Sayle William (protd. 61 yrs. of age does not to be exchanged) [sic] Shrewsbury Stephen Tousiger James Tandus John Taylor Paul White Leml.? Lieut. Wigg William William James Warham Charles Adjt. Waring Thomas Senr. Waring Richard White Isaac Welch George Wheeler Benjamin Waties John Junr. Wilcocks William Warham David '''Wilkie William''' You Thomas Yeadon Richards [sic] Prison Ship Torbay Prisoners Papers of the Continental Congress M246-175 i155 v2 pg 218 National Archives & Records Administration Transcribed by Billy Markland http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~familyinformation/transcripts/torbay.html accessed 24 February 2015 == Sources ==
Torbjörn Gullbrandsson Bra personexempel.
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Torino Village - One Place Study Exploration
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Torke Family History
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All U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-Current results for Torke.
[http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?dbid=3693&rank=1&new=1&so=3&MSAV=0&msT=1&gss=ms_db&gsln=Torke]
Average Life Expectancy for [http://www.ancestry.com/name-origin?surname=torke# Torke]s
===Books=== Kane, Leona Torke. ''[[Space:The_Torke_Family_Genealogy%2C_1801-1985|The Torke Family Genealogy, 1801-1985]]'' ===Torke Trees on other websites=== Ancestry.com [http://search.ancestry.myfamily.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=pubmembertrees&rank=1&sbo=t&gsbco=Sweden&gsln=Torke Public] Member Tree for Torke.
===Notable Torkes=== [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Torke Michael Torke] - Composer * [[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:Torke_Family_History|WikiTree Profiles that use this source]]
Toronto Historical Families
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Torp Rosendal Haddarp Östergård Näshult
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Torpenhow Village School
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Torrey Coat of Arms
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Torrey Name Study Info
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Torrey Reference Library
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Torrey_Reference_Library-13.pdf
Torrey_Reference_Library-11.pdf
Torrey_Reference_Library-14.pdf
Torrey_Name_Study.jpg
Torrey_Reference_Library-15.pdf
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Torrey_Reference_Library-4.pdf
Torreys in Wool
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Torrey's New England Marriages Bride's Name
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Torrey_s_New_England_Marriages_Bride_s_Name.png
Tottons and Tottens in Ireland
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Touissant-Alsace
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Toulonseslaan Dordrecht
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Toulonseslaan_Dordrecht-1.png
Toulonseslaan_Dordrecht-2.png
Toulonseslaan_Dordrecht.png
Toulonseslaan_Dordrecht-1.jpg
De kinderen van [[Nederveen-4 | Andrina Nederveen]] en [[Van Wijnen-23|Paulus Adrianus van Wijnen]] zijn op de Toulonselaan 20HH geboren.
Derde huis links, met dakkapel. Het hoekpand heeft een gevelsteen met jaartal 1901. }} {{Image|file=Toulonseslaan_Dordrecht.png |align=c |size=800 |caption= Hoek Paul Krugerstraat - Toulonselaan in 2017.
Het hoekpand is nogal toegetakeld sinds de oplevering.
De buitenmuren van de begane grond zijn geverfd en het balkon is eraf. }} {{Image|file=Toulonseslaan_Dordrecht-1.png |caption= Tegenwoordig bestaat nummer 20 niet meer.
De woning is samengevoegd met nummer 18. Het huisnummer 20 is weggehaald. }} {{Image|file=Toulonseslaan_Dordrecht-2.png |caption= De deur van nummer 18 is nu de voordeur voor het gehele pand.
Dit is te zien aan de sporen op de stoep.
De deurklink is weg en het huisnummer 20 is weggehaald. }}
Toure Project
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Tours of Ancestry.com
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Tower Family Research
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Tower Genealogical Society
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Towery Family Tree
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Town and Canton of Sartilly
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Town_and_Canton_of_Sartilly.jpg
Town_and_Canton_of_Sartilly-1.jpg
TOWN HALL
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Town House
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Town_House-2.jpg
Town_House.jpg
Town_House-1.jpg
Town_House.pdf
Town of Castelfranci, Italy
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Town_of_Castelfranci_Italy.jpg
Town of Elgin, Ontario
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Town of Oswego, New York
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Town of Sempronius, 1880 United States Census
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Town of Sempronius Census Records 1800-1880
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Town of Vonda
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Townlands, People
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Townlands of Faughanvale Civil Parish in County Londonderry
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Townlands of Kilcronaghan Civil Parish in County Londonderry
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Townlands of Killardry Civil Parish in County Tipperary
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Townlands of Killelagh Civil Parish in County Londonderry
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Townlands of Kilteely Civil Parish in County Limerick
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Townlands of Kiltinan Civil Parish in County Tipperary
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Townlands of Learmount Civil Parish in County Londonderry
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Townlands of Longfield West Civil Parish in County Tyrone
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Townlands of Macosquin Civil Parish in County Londonderry
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Townlands of Rathlynin Civil Parish in County Tipperary
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Townlands of Shronell Civil Parish in County Tipperary
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Towns/Townes Sources
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Towns Annexed by Connecticut in 1749
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Towns Name Study Info
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Townsend - Sayer Line collected images
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Ilston-4.jpg
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Sayer-1617.jpg
Townsend_-_Sayer_Line_collected_images.png
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Townsend_-_Sayer_Line_collected_images-22.jpg
Townsend Family History
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TOWNSEND SOCIETY
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TOWNSEND_SOCIETY.jpg
TOWNSEND_SOCIETY.png
Townships of Burra, South Australia
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Townships_of_Burra_South_Australia.png
Toxteth St Agnes' - marriage index
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Toxteth St Bride's - marriage index
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Toxteth St James' - marriage index
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Toxteth St John the Baptist - marriage index
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Toxteth St Michael in the hamlet - marriage index
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Toxteth St Patrick's - baptism index
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Toxteth St Patrick's - marriage index
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Toy Cannon owned by Herbert Myron Lawrence
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Time taken: 0.13 s
Date of report: 2024-05-18 11:50:06 Date of Data: 12 May 2024