THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
THE PEDIGREE
REGISTER
[ The official organ of The Society of Genealogists of London.]
EDITED BY
GEORGE SHERWOOD
VOL. II
LONDON:
1910—1913
PUBLISHED BY THE EDITOR
227 STRAND (by Temple Bar)
M.2
PREFACE
Six years to our credit. Well, that is more than was
allotted us by some of our critics. Our continued existence
has encouraged at least two other adventures to be announced.
We shall see if there is room for five periodicals devoted to
genealogy and family history in place of the two which held
the field when our own course begun.
If we can dispel the common idea, that genealogy is a study
ministering to vainglory, pretence and social exclusiveness, a
great step in advance will be gained. If genealogy teaches
anything it teaches the absurdity of claims for consideration
based on long descent: the proof that evidence exists to-day
to show the descent and illustrate the career of almost every
English-born person for the last four or five hundred years,
and only awaits indexing, is one of the purposes we set
before us.
The Pedigree Register welcomed and supported The Inter-
national Genealogical Directory; together with that useful work
it became an instrument in the formation of The Society of
Genealogists of London, incorporated in May 1911, whose
official organ it has become. That Society, essentially a
collecting and indexing Society, with over two hundred
members, has every prospect of a long and prosperous career.
The principal functions of The Pedigree Register will
continue to be the preservation in print of material not easily
accessible elsewhere and the making clear what records there
are of this kind, where they are, and what they contain. All
that remains is to express our deep sense of the obligation
under which we rest to the contributors and subscribers who
help us to carry it on.
G. S.
CONTENTS
PAGE
The Study of Ancestry: Some Reflexions. By F. S. SNELL,
M.A i
Descents from Mother to Daughter :
MlDDLETON-YoUNG . . . . . . . 21
SMYTHSBYE -MARTIN . . . . . . 101
SCRIMGEOUR-TAIT .' . . . . . 138
FORBES-HEANE . . . . . . . 184
iBBETSON-SlCHEL ....... 240
DAWSON-SIMPSON ....... 338
BARNS-WHITEHOUSE ....... 340
Pedigrees of BODDINGTON, 5; TIPPETTS, 10; HAVILAND, 18;
HACKETT, 37; PEMBERTON, 46; HARRIS, 50; BOLONIA,
WYDECOMBE, WHITCOMBE, 52; FOTHERGILL, 71; DRURY,
77; DALE, 83; DODWELL, 102; PARK, no; WILD, 112;
SHERWOOD (Mrs, the Authoress), 120; MASON, 132;
SHAKESPEARE, 135; PERRY, 143; TILGHMAN, 169; LOADER,
1 80; BAILEY, 181; HARVEY, ELLSTON, 182; EDYE, 200;
CARTER, 204; SHACKLOCK, 249; GOLDWYER, 261 ; MURRAY,
272; WHITCOMBE, 292; SHALLETT, 304; PEMBROKE, ROCH-
FORD, WlNTHROP, CtC., 322; WHITCOMBE, 328; THOMP-
SON (Francis, the Poet), 353; STOCKER, 358; HORNE, 363;
PITT, 374.
The Law's Lumber Room — Chancery Masters' Reports and
Certificates ..... 22, 89, 124, 242, 307
Pedigrees from Chancery Pleadings .... 277
Notes, Queries and Replies 26, 60, 92, 125, 154, 190, 224,
255, 287, 320, 349, 382
Proposals for a Society of Genealogists. By G. S. . . . 33
Pedigrees from Deeds in the Rushen Collection . . 36, 177
Pedigrees from the Public Records .... 58,86,174
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER Record of Births, Marriages, Deaths,
Appointments, Preferments, etc. ... 59, 286
On Title-page Autographs, and a Diary. By F. S. SNELL, M.A. 65
Genealogical Letters :MuNRo; ROBERTSON. By R.T.BERTHON. 79, 150
The Charters of Lynn Regis, Norfolk ..... 97
Quainton Parish, Buckinghamshire. Entries in the note-book
of John BUNTING, Churchwarden. By William BRAD-
BROOK, M.R.C.S 118
Family Characteristics : CLACK, of Wallingf ord, Berkshire . 1 29
CONTENTS
Leaves from Family Bibles :
LEWIS ; THURLBOURN ; HAYLES ; BOND .... 140
KENDALL ........ 250
HARRISON; GARRARD; SMITH; LOCKINGTON; FISHER;
FYNMORE . . . . . . . . 311
CASH; SUPPLE; PARK; HUTTON ..... 342
A Distinctive Christian Name:
" Joyce " in the families of BUCK, SPILLETT, SHERWOOD,
WALLER, TAYLOR, LEGGATT, BROWNJOHN, FRY, GOOD-
MAN, BUCKINGHAM, CLEVERSLEY, ARNOLD . . . 152
Pedigrees Received . . . . . . . . 160
Parish Register Deficiencies. By William BRADBROOK,M.R.C.S. 161
LOUGHTON Family Notes ....... 175
The Society of Genealogists of London. Quarterly Reports
186, 220, 251, 280, 316, 345, 378
Some Wills of the late Fourteenth Century and Beyond. By
F. S. SNELL, M.A. ....... 193
Pedigrees from Lyndhurst Manor Rolls :
GAINE; NEWBOLT; STOTE; BANNISTER; BARROW; BARRY;
THORNE; BROWNE; OLDING; BUCKLE; BRIGHT; CLEVERLY;
GASTIN; GASKIN; GASCOIGNE; PHILLIPS; PURKIS; PURCAS;
PURCHASE; ROGERS; GOLD; WYLD . . . 212,225
Inscriptions in St Luke's old Burial Ground, Chelsea. By
Lieut-Col. G. S. PARRY . . . 216, 232, 274, 298
The Family of John DAY, the Printer, of the Reformation.
By Joseph J. GREEN ....... 257
Bromley College Register, 1679-1800. By Richard HOL-
^ WORTHY ._ 284,300,333,352
A Scottish Family in Ireland. The ACHESONS. By W. Roberts
CROW ^ 289, 321
Inscriptions in the Churchyard of St Mary's, Paddington
Green, Middlesex. By Lieut-Col. G. S. PARRY . . 324
Francis THOMPSON, the Poet. By Perceval LUCAS . . . 353
Errata ......... 384
Index ......... 385
The Pedigree Register
JUNE 1910] [VoL. II, No. 13.
of
Genealogy is coming to its own. The Philistine has been abroad,
but no longer gibes ; at least, not so much as of yore. Quite a number
of people, of all descriptions, here and abroad, are taking a serious
interest in their pedigrees, and find true details of their forbears as
worthy of attention, and more interesting than, a 2Oth. century
romance. Genuine devotees may be complaisant, for their interest
in dry bones is not now suspect ; nor need they be accused of a
hankering after royal descents, titled ancestors, or even of the
emotions aroused by crested notepaper or a coachman's button. That
is passing, and one can afford to look around and review the situation,
take stock of prospects, and, in the light of progress, make a fresh
valuation of the science and art of pedigree-hunting and collecting.
The claims of pedigree research as a hobby, and in some degree,
though a small one, as a contribution to modern thought, may well
be worthy of discussion. Looked at from any point of view there
are the " high, " but certainly not " dry, " scientific theories and
deductions to be drawn from a study of the humblest pedigree ; and
the students of heredity and eugenics go, for some of their facts at
least, to the dry and apparently small details of a family tree. These
details are the unconsidered trifles which go to explain the theories
of descent and ultimately establish the connections of heredity as a
science with the other facts drawn from a study of education and
environment. The three, heredity, education and environment, form
the basis of our examination of the individual man. Anthropology
and the study of race may cast their nets wider, but are surely
incomplete without the facts supplied by these.
It is only within the last twenty or thirty years however, that the
importance of heredity as a factor in human nature has received
serious attention. SULLY'S Psychology , about the best practical work
on the faculties of the mind and educational training, was written well
within the recent period of scientific interest in heredity, and some
2 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
interesting pages of this work discuss, but all too briefly, the place of
heredity as it concerns the individual child. Mr. SULLY makes us
feel how much there is to be known of the true principles, pre-natal,
and drawing their roots from the past, that go to the development
and after bringing-up of a human being. Shortly, that is the educa-
tional value of the study or biological facts.
Much is being done under the name of eugenics to stimulate
research in family history, and the medical science of the day awaits
the results of these systematic investigations, not to mention their
implied value to sociology and the reform of our criminal system.
On the aesthetic side the revived interest in art of the last generation
has brought heraldry out of the limbo of things of no account, and
the sneers of Lord CHESTERFIELD as to the business of a Herald would
receive scant attention in this age of stamp-collecting, coin-collecting,
and curio-hunting, all of which have their devotees, their books, their
societies, and their not undistinguished patrons. We mention these
last hobbies, by way of comparison, the taste for them not being
necessarily bound up with the liking for coat-armour, or the technique
of quarterings.
Is it not true that at all times the balance of sympathy inclines
to the human and literary ? And, pace our thorough-going
scientific man, it is this and not the purely scientific side of human
nature that draws and interests. It is quite possible to take an
interest in heredity pure and simple — as a science, in shorr. It is
perhaps more usual, with most of us, tp dwell on its literary and
personal aspects, and there is little doubt that GALTON'S Hereditary
Genius and Inquiries into the Human Faculty and Development^ have in-
duced many to follow the subject, from its human and biographical
attractions, as much as from its scientific uses. Be it remembered,
that Sir Francis GALTON'S was the first voice raised in defence of
research into family history as a means of throwing light on the facts
of human nature. In the region of romance Mr. Thomas HARDY had
grappled with the orthodox theory of free-will. Whether we agreed
with him or not, Tess of the Durberuilles roused a hornet's nest at the
time, and the religious reviews were a chosen tilting-ground for the
defenders of the old view against this doughty heretic, who retorted
in a preface to the second edition. That is ancient history, but
mention of Mr. HARDY is not to discount the incidental, and, in many
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 3
cases, intentional, part that hereditary data have borne in the produc-
tion of more than one modern novel. Perhaps BjOrnstjerne BJ^RNSON,
who has just passed away from us, is the best example of these, and
we might add, in the conventional phrase, that The Heritage of the
Kurts is a work that " no library should be without. " How far the
same interests may be responsible for the less reputable class of fiction
is not for us to consider here. It is enough to reflect that literature,
along with ethics, is prone to vagaries, and that heresy may be the
motif of a romance ; though we would fain rescue Doctor Pascal from
the odium usually attached to the run of ZOLA'S works, for it is the
key to the rest, a wonderful work, however rotten may be the foun-
dations on which the other novels of the Rougon-Macquart series stand
in their doubtful deductions and anti-mystical tone. IBSEN'S Ghosts is
a symbol of other morbidities, and I suppose the Determinist school
is generally reminiscent of ZOLA — that is ZOLA the materialist. To
turn from such as these, who has not read Beyond the Dreams of Avarice
by Walter BESANT ? That romance would surely rouse the imagina-
tion of the Philistine, who is always with us !
There is the utilitarian side to the question, namely, for science ;
and there is the philosophical one, which has found its way, as we have
seen, into general literature and fiction. Nevertheless, many of us are
swayed as much by the antiquarian and maybe dilettante view of the
subject, though that view is not necessarily disconnected with its more
practical bearings reviewed above. Perhaps the antiquary and gene-
alogist are closely related to the explorer and scientific man. The
same elements belong to both characters ; the explorer's love of
adventure and the physicist's passion for research ; reproduced inpetto,
if you like, in the genealogist's quest for the unknown and sometimes
romantic, together with his unappeasable curiosity for small details.
Here then is your explorer and scientist working in narrower grooves,
writ small, and, we might add, " unhonoured and unsung ; "
though we must not forget that the late Professor FREEMAN attributed
functions of a similar kind to the study of topography in its relation
to a nation's history.
It is only, I think, very matter-of-fact people who refuse their
sympathy to small hobbies and their possibilities. The curious thing
is, that researches of a similar kind to genealogy hold their ground,
or at least, escape criticism. For years and years aband of enthusiastic
4 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
scholars has been engaged on the mystery of SHAKESPEARE. One
does not allude here to textual emendation and philology, but to the
human problems connected with the man, ranging from the philosophy,
religion and outlook on life of the great poet, to the smallest details
of his life and origin. From whom was he descended ? What sort
of a man was he ? His business transactions — the people he knew —
the people who knew him, and what they thought of him as man and
writer — side references, rare signatures, supposed portraits ; personal
details, traditional gossip, places and persons of his plays — all eagerly
looked for and drawn into the net of the SHAKESPEARE enthusiast.
And here, one might ask, what would now be the " Shakespeare
question " without the labours of HALLIWELL-PHILLIPS and FRENCH,
and especially in more recent years the valuable researches of
Mrs. STOPES and Professor WALLACE ? That might be our stand-
point as regards family history. It is quite possible for the average
pedigree student to imitate the zeal shown in Shakespearean or other
like research, at least in regard to questions concerned with his own
descent. True, in these times, his is to be the digging and delving,
but many a pleasant hour has been filled up to his own use and interest,
and maybe for those who come after him, who are desirous of
" enquiring of the former age and preparing to the search of
their fathers. "
F. S. SNELL.
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
The surname of BODDINGTON is most probably derived from the
name of a place. As there are two (and may have been more) places
of that name in England it by no means follows that all BODDINGTONS
are related to each other.
In Domesday Book we find a place called Boddington (" Boting-
tune "), near Cheltenham in Gloucestershire — and Upper and Lower
Bodington, alias Boddington (one joint parish), in Chipping Warden
hundred, Northamptonshire, (" Botendone ").
Domesday mentions also three places called " Bodetone " in York-
shire, in the wapentakes of Morley, Skyrack and " Anestig " respect-
ively. RUDDER'S Gloucestershire, 1779, (p-3Oo), says that Bodington is
from the British word * bod ', a mansion, and signified a capital house
or mansion in the town upon the water. BAKER'S Northamptonshire,
(1.477), conjectures that the Domesday * Botendone' is from ' boten',
a contraction of the Saxon plural of * botl ', a habitation, and c dune '
or * done ', a down ; which exactly corresponds with the situation of
the upper village, overlooking the rich pastures of Stoneton and
Wormleighton, just over the border in Warwickshire. Upper and
Lower Bodington lie just 20 miles north, within a three hours' horse-
back-ride of Steeple Barton.
The main portion of the pedigree now printed, shewing the imme-
diate descendants of Timothy BODDINGTON of Steeple Barton, who
died in 1736, is recast with slight additions from the Pedigree of the
Family of Boddington, (POLLARD & Sons, Exeter, 1889, oblong folio,
8pp). The result of a further attempt to discover the antecedents of
the above Timothy is now printed, in the hope that further details
may be forthcoming to make the chain complete.
It is interesting to note that these Steeple Barton BODDINGTONS
were, right back to Timothy, who died in 1736 (at least there is much
fact and a strong presumption), a race of corn-millers. When
Mr. Henry BODDINGTON of Manchester (1813-1886), visited Steeple
Barton about 1860, there was a tradition of an old time BODDINGTON,
a miller, a wonderful weight (sack) carrier, with a remarkably resonant
voice (a family characteristic), which was heard distinctly across the
valley, a mile distant. John BODDINGTON, son of Timothy, migrated
to Cuddington in Buckinghamshire ; was there in business as a miller,
before 1713, and died there in 1746. He it was, presumably, who
took Cuddington wind-mill, which has been in possession of the
family for nearly 200 years. His great-grandson, John BODDINGTON
(1777-1839), branched off to Thame (water) corn-mill; and Timothy
(1817-1885) John's youngest son, following up old tradition and sym-
pathy, became a corn-miller in Manchester.
I ask for any data, as to any BODDINGTON, anywhere, but more
particularly as to anyone of the name in Oxfordshire, Northampton-
shire, or Warwickshire, with a view to making a complete record of
this old yeoman family.
HENRY BODDINGTON.
POWNALL HALL,
WILMSLOW, CHESHIRE.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
William BODINGTON appears in 1529-30, as a " hanaster", qy for
" Hanseter, " a merchant of the Hanse. And as a member of
the Common Council of the City of Oxford in 1534 and 1548.
(Turner's Records of the City of Oxford, 1880.)
Thomas BODINGTON of Oxford.^
Died circa 1579. (Bonds in
Archd. Oxon as to his sons.)
I
I
John BODINGTON, apprenticed to
Wm. WYLKS of Oxford, turner,
1579, and (?) again in the same
year (this John or another of that
name) to Richard HOPPKINS of
Oxford, brewer.
John BODENTON of Middle Barton, co. Oxford=.
Administration 18 April 1604 to
his relict. (Oxford Wills, &c.)
I
John BODINGTON.
I
Timothy BODINGTON. Executor to his mother, i64o.=Ursula
A.D. 1655. William ARIS of Oxford, barber, and a John BODDINGTON
of Steeple Barton, yeoman, sell to Thomas PHILLIPPS of Ickford, Bucks.,
gentleman, land, a water mill, a barn, fishing, and common rights of
pasture in Westcott Barton and Middle Barton for £132. (Close Roll.)
A.D. 1660. A John BODDINGTON and William JUGGINS acquire of
William ARIS and Anne his wife and George HERNE, premises in
Westcott Barton, Middle Barton, and Cuddesdon, Oxon. (Feet of
Fines.) [Cuddesdon Registers searched by Vicar 1630-1700, who
says no BODDINGTON entry appears therein, 1909.]
Timothy BODDINGTON. Born circa 1646. Of Middle Barton'
in the Parish of Steeple Barton. Will dated 29 Jan. 1735-6,
dau. Sarah STEPTOE exix. Buried there 3 Feb. 1736, aged
about 90. Monumental inscription there, upright stone.
[The Parish Registers said to begin about 1660, but no
BODDINGTON entry said to appear until 1705.]
: Dorothy, danghter of
Died 29 Dec. 1727, aged 63.
Buried at Steeple Barton.
Upright tombstone next to
that of her husband.
[JUNE 1910 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
I
Walter BODINGTON,
apprenticed to
Edward NORTH, of
Oxford, joyner, 1579.
'I
.BODINGTON ^-Margaret (of Middle Barton), widow. Will dated
22 May 1635 ; proved 13 April 1640, by her son
Timothy. (Consist. Oxon.)
I I I
Anne= CONSTABLE. Bridget= COTES. Mary= SMYTH.
Timothy BODINGTON of Middle Barton, Oxon., yeoman.^:
Will dated 25 July 1668, proved 14 Oct. 1669 by his
daughter Jane DORNE. (Cons. Oxon.)
I
r ~
John BODINGTON, 1683.== Jane. Executrix of her == John DORNE of Middle Barton. Will
father's will, 1669. | proved in 1683, in which he mentions
his bro.-in-law John BODDINGTON.
I
Timothy DORNE, youngest son, 1683.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
a a
Timothy BODDINGTON (c. 1646- 1736), = Dorothy (1664-1727.)
of Steeple Barton.
Sarah. i
Marr. 27 Oct. 1712
at Steeple Barton.
Buried there
7 June 1742.
: Walter STEPTOE.
Died 31 August ;
buried 3 Sept. 1731
at Steeple Barton
aged 57. Mon.
Inscr.
I
John BODDINGTON of Cuddington, === Ann, dau. of.
Bucks, miller. Bur. there 12 May
1746. Admon. 21 June to his son
Thomas; Ann, the widow, having
renounced. (Archdeaconry of
Bucks.)
I
Sarah
Bapt. 9 June 1712
at Cuddington.
I
Mary dau. of =Thomas BoDDiNGTON.=Elizabeth, dau. of
Buried 9 April 1764,
at Cuddington.
ist wife.
Bapt. 30 Nov. 1713, at
Cuddington. Died 25th
buried there 27th Dec.
1795. Will dated
21 Aug. 1795; proved
26 Feb. 1796.
Died 1 5th and buried
1 8th April 1784, at
Cuddington. Monu-
mental Inscription.
2nd wife.
BODDINGTON of Cuddington and Thame, Oxon ;
Chearsley, Bucks; West Hoboken, New Jersey, U.S.A.;
Manchester, Silverdale, Eccles and Salford, Lancashire;
Pownall Hall, Wilmslow, Cheshire, etc.
b b
William BODDINGTON of Steeple Barton (1698-1779.)== Elizabeth, daughter of.
I
1
1
1
1
Thomas
Sarah.
Wm. BODDINGTON.
John BODDINGTON.
Edward BODDINGTON.
BODDINGTON.
Bapt. 29 Dec. 1723,
Bapt. 13 Feb. 1725,
Bapt. 29 Feb. 1728
Bapt. 22 March 1729,
Bapt. 29 Oct.
at Steeple Barton.
at Steeple Barton.
at Steeple Barton.
at Steeple Barton.
1721, at
Marr. there 8 Feb.
Died 3rd and buried
Steeple
1756, to Thomas
there 6th Feb. 1783.
Barton.
WHITEN.
Mon. Inscr. Will dated
1 8 Dec. 1782; proved
at Oxford 1 8 Feb. 1783;
mentions bro.-in-law
Wm. SIMSON.
JUNE 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
1
Timothy BOD-=
DINGTON. Bur.
1 8 April 1759,
at Steeple Bar-
ton.
:Mary, dau. of
. ... Buried
II
Dorothy.
1
William BODDINGTON.=
Bapt. 12 March 1698 at
Steeple Barton. Died
loth and buried there
i3th Dec. 1779. M.I.
Will dated 17 May 1777;
proved at Oxford 14
Dec. 1779, by his son
Edward. 6
s
= Elizabeth, dau.
of.. . . Died
"1
Thomas BOD-
DINGTON. Bapt.
16 Mch. 1700 at
Steeple Barton.
22 Dec. 1742,
at Steeple
Barton.
Mary.
Bapt.
ii April
1697, at
Steeple
Barton.
31 Jan. 1781.
Buried at
Steeple Barton.
M.I. there.
b
\
I
I
William BOD- Richard BOD- = Frances
DINGTON. DINGTON. Bapt. dau. of
Bapt. 26th 12 April 1724, at
Oct. 1721, at Steeple Barton.
Steeple Barton.
I
William BODDINGTON.
Bapt. 23 July 1751,
at Steeple Barton.
I
Hannah
Bapt. 3 Sept. 1727,
at Steeple Barton.
Elizabeth
Bapt. 19 July 1730,
at Steeple Barton.
I
Mary
Bapt. 9 Aug. 1 730,
at Steeple Barton.
I
Elizabeth.
Bapt. 15 Nov.i73o
at Steeple Barton.
I
Hannah.
Bapt. 16 Sept. 1739,
at Steeple Barton.
Married William
TIMERSON (?SIMSON)
Elizabeth. Bapt. 30 Nov. 1743,
at Steeple Barton. [Edward
FAULKNER named as son-in-
law, by William B. 1777, and
as executor in will Edward B.
1782.]
I
Richard BODDINGTON.
Named in his father's
will.
r
Samson BODDINGTON.
Named in his father's
will.
Mary, named in her father's will.
Married 28 April 1758, at
Steeple Barton, John BOWLEV.
io THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
of
The family of TIPPETTS of Gloucestershire probably originated in
one of the settlements of Flemish Weavers which took place towards
the close of the Middle Ages, the name being a corruption of
Theobald in its Flemish or French form of Thibault, and the family
continued to be associated with the cloth-weaving trade down to the
end of the i8th century.
There are Wills in the Probate Office at Gloucester of TIPPETTS, in
its numerous varying forms of spelling, of Berkeley and the neigh-
bourhood, as early as 1551, but the earliest direct ancestor to whom
I have so far been able to trace without a break is the Richard
TIPPETTS whose name stands at the head of the accompanying chart.
He was a clothworker, or clothier, as the cloth-weavers of that period
were called, and his will is dated ist April 1662, and was proved at
Gloucester 5th March 1663. He would have been an old man at the
time of making this will, as according to his bequests he had a grand-
daughter already married at the time.
Of his sons who survived him, John afterwards became successively a
constructor and a commissioner in the Royal Navy under Charles II.
and James II., and he is mentioned in both PEPYS' and EVELYN'S
Diaries. He received a grant of arms in 1669 and was subsequently
knighted. He left three daughters only, one of whom, Elizabeth,
was married to Christopher COLES Esq., of Pulborough, Sussex, where
her monument may still be seen on the north wall of the chancel of
the Parish Church, with the arms of the two families impaled.
William, the elder surviving son of Richard, followed in his father's
footsteps as a clothworker, and from BIGLAND'S Gloucestershire it
appears he was bailiff, or mayor, of Dursley two or three times.
His will was dated yth September 1687, and proved at Gloucester
2nd September 1691. His widow Rebecca survived him and was
buried at Dursley in December 1707, leaving her son Richard sole
executor and residuary legatee.
Richard, son of the last named William and Rebecca TIPPETTS, was
also a clothworker at Dursley, and was twice married. There is a
monument to his son William in the church at Dursley.
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER n
Richard, son of the preceding Richard TIPPETTS, was married to
Dorothy BERRIMAN at Nympsfield yth April 1702, and he is described
in the Register as " Cloathworker. " His wife was the daughter of
the Revd. James BERRIMAN, who in 1717 was rector of Nympsfield,
and she was living at Frampton-on-Severn in 1747.
James, the eldest son of the preceding, was baptised at Nympsfield
1 6th July 1703, and married at the same place to Elizabeth SHOWELL
in 1727. After this I have no information of him except his will,
which was proved at Gloucester I3thjuly 1741-2. In this he is
described as an Apothecary of Painswick, but no records of the
baptisms of any children of his are to be found there or at Dursley or
at Nympsfield, and in his will he only mentions " my children except-
ing my eldest son. " However, assistance was obtained here from the
will of his maternal uncle John BERRIMAN, apothecary, of Dursley,
which was dated 3<Dth October 1747, and proved the I5th July
following, at Gloucester. In this he leaves certain property to " my
cousin James Berriman TIPPETTS, son of James TIPPETTS, of Pains-
wick, apothecary, my nephew deceased. "
James Berriman TIPPETTS, just mentioned, was married by licence
at Painswick, I2th June 1758. He also was an apothecary, like his
father, and was afterwards in practice in Long Street, Dursley, where
he died 28th June 1782. His children are all mentioned in his will
dated 6th June 1782, and proved at Gloucester, in the order named.
The particulars of the descendants of his children are either from
personal knowledge, or family papers, and from information furnished
by descendants themselves.
R. A. VAUGHAN PRYCE.
104, BETHUNE ROAD,
STAMFORD HILL, LONDON, N.
12
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
Richard TIPPETTS of Dursley, Co. Gloucester,^
clothworker. Will dated i April 1662
proved at Gloucester 5 March 1663.
i
r
(? Richard) TIPPETTS =p Margery
Dead in 1662. I
i i nn
Richard William Elizabeth.
TIPPETTS TIPPETTS Hannah.
Mary.
I
William TIPPETTS of === Rebecca, dau. of
Dursley, clothworker.
Will dated 7 Sept.
1687; proved at Glou-
cester 2nd September
1691.
Will dated 31 May 1706;
proved at Gloucester
9 Dec. 1707.
r
Josiah TIPPETTS.
Died at Dursley
1687/8.
Sarah ARUNDALE.= Richard TIPPETTS of=Sarah HARDING
Married at Dursley Dursley, clothworker. of Cam. Marr.
in 1669/70. Buried Bapt. there 1648. at Stinchcomb
there 1685. Buried there 1706/7. in 1686. Buried
ist wife. Will da. 27 Dec, 1706; at Dursley 1713.
proved 13 Feb. 1707. 2nd wife.
1
Elizabeth.
Bapt. at Dursley
1657. Married
Benjamin
SYMONDS.
Two sons.
Died young.
1
William TIPPETTS, of =
Dursley, clothworker.
Bapt. there 1674.
Buried there 1725.
= Hannah WENTT.
Married at Cam
1718. Buried at
Dursley 1757.
I
Hannah.
Bapt. at Dursley
1720. Bur. there
1777. Marr. Chas.
CORNWALL.
I
Thomas TIPPETTS= Sarah NEAL.
Bapt. at Dursley Married at
1723. Buried there Dursley
1789. 1749.
James TIPPETTS of = Elizabeth
Painswick, apothecary. SHOWELL.
Bapt. at Nympsfield Married at
1703. Will proved at Nympsfield
Gloucester 1741/2. 1727.
b b
JUNE 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
I
Sir John TIPPETTS of Portsmouth, aft. = Margaret,
of London, Knight. Commissary of the
Royal Navy under Charles II. and
James II. Will dated 13 July 1689;
proved 28 July 1692. (P.C.C.)
/
daughters only.
(a dau.)=John SHEARE of
I Wellington.
r
Elnor, married
John SHERLE
before 1662.
n
other children
referred to in
grandfather's will.
I
William TIPPETTS.
Bapt. at Dursley
1653-
I
Samuel TIPPETTS.
Bapt. at Dursley
1655. Dead in 1687.
John TIPPETTS of ' Dursley, = Mary Buried at
clothworker. Buried
there 1706/7.
T
Rebecca. Living
1706 unmarried.
Dursley 1727, aged
67. Will proved at
Gloucester 1728.
1
Richard TIPPETTS of=
Dursley, clothworker.
Bapt. there 1680. Bur.
there 1723.
= Dorothy, dau. of James
BERRIMAN. rector of
Nympsfield. Living at
Frampton-on-Severn in
1747.
1
John TIPPETTS.
Mentioned in
his father's
will.
"1
Nathaniel TIPPETTS.
Bapt. at Dursley 1682.
Living in Sept. 1706.
1
Robert TIPPETTS. Bapt.
at Nympsfield 1705.
Dead in 1747.
Johanna.
Living 1747.
1
Richard TIPPETTS of=
Dursley, clothworker.
Bapt. there 1709.
Buried there 1751.
1
= Hester Josiah TIPPETTS of
PAU L. Frampton -on - Severn
Apothecary. Bapt. at
Dursley 1713. Qy.
Died unmarried.
\
Joseph TIPPETTS,
clothworker.
Bapt. at Dursley
1718.
%
Richard Paul TIPPETTS of Tetbury.
He, or his descendants, assumed the
surname PAUL, instead of TIPPETTS.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
r
Mary. Bapt. at Dursley
1682. Buried there 1683.
1
Mary. Bapt. at Dursley 1687.
Buried there 1714. Married
William HOLBROW of Uley.
1 1
Sarah. Bapt. at Dursley Rebecca. Bapt. at
1689/90. Living in 1725, Dursley 1692.
unmarried. Living in 1725,
unmarried.
1 1
John TIPPETTS. Mary. Bapt. at
Bapt. at Dursley 1730. Dursley 1732.
Buried there 1736.
616
James Berriman TIPPETTS, apothecary. Born about 1730. = Elizabeth SADLER. Married at Painswick,
Buried at Dursley 1782. Will dated 6 June 1782, proved | 1758. Buried at Dursley 1820.
at Gloucester.
T
r
1
1
1
James Berriman
Hannah.
Elizabeth Mary PENN.
= Obediah
TIPPETTS
of = Mary
MARTIN.
TIPPETTS apoth-
Married
Married 1789.
London,
weaver
and
Married 1795.
ecary. Bapt. at
Robert
Died 1793.
warehouseman.
Born
2nd
wife.
Painswick, 1760.
BAM-
Buried at
1766.
Died at Hackney
FORD.
St. Matthew
1839/40. s.p.
Friday Street,
London.
ist wife.
John TIP- Obediah TIPPETTS. Bapt.=
PETTS. J792> at St. Peter's West-
Marr. Cath- cheap, London. Diedi872.
erine KENT. Buried at Finchley.
: Rebecca NORFOLK. James Berriman =
Born 1794. Marr. 1815 TIPPETTS of Lon-
at New Windsor, don, solicitor. Born
Berks. Died 1860. 1796. Died 1871.
= Lucy RICHARD-
SON. Married
1 82 1 at St. Pan-
eras, London.
1 Illl
Spencer Cook TIPPETTS. Three sc
Bapt. 1831 at Cloudesley
SquareChurch, Islington. Two daugl
1
ns James Berriman =
TIPPETTS of Lon-
iters. don,solicitor. Born
1825. Died 1898.
/•
= Mary Ann
1
Edward Watson
TIPPETTS. Born
1830. Died 1891,
s.p.
Died 1 894.
N
I
JUNE 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
I
John TIPPETTS of New Mills, == Ann, dau. of
Dursley, clothier. Bapt. at
Dursley 1696/7. Buried there
1736.
Buried at Dursley
1758, aged 57.
I
Ann. Living
in 1725, un-
married.
I
James TIPPETTS.
Bapt. at Dursley.
1736.
I
Elizabeth. Married
Maurice SMYTH.
Living in 1725.
Daughter Mary
SMYTH.
Other children mentioned in their
father's will, but no names specified.
1
Josiah TlPPETTTS of == Ann. dan. nf Tohn A DRY.
1
Mary. Bapt. at
Dursley 1772.
Died there
1821, unmarr.
~1
Richard TIPPETTS=
of Dartford, Kent,
surgeon.
Gloucester, plumber
and glazier. Died 1838.
c
/
pinmaker. Marr. at
St. Michael's, Gloucester,
1793. Died 1843.
c
1
Richard TIPPETTS of
Dartford, surgeon.
Died 1873.
Edward TIPPETTS of
Chelsea, surgeon. Died
about 1863, leaving a
daughter.
1
Mary Ann. Married
Edward HALL of
Chelsea Hospital.
1 1
Samuel TIPPETTS.
Sarah.
Died unmarried.
1
Richard TIPPETTS of Gloucester,
and afterwards of Manchester.
Twice married and left issue.
T
Alfred Malpas TIPPETTS,
Surgeon-General. Born
1832. Died 1904. Twice
married and left issue.
I
Theodore George TIPPETTS.
Born 1834. Died 1891.
Married and left issue.
Lucy Berriman. Born 1835.
Married Mason JACKSON, and
left issue.
i6
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
r
John TIPPETTS of Gravesend,=
Kent, Congregational minister.
Born 1795 at Gloucester. Died
1856 at Bradford.
= Elizabeth CHECKER
of Lynn. Born 1806.
Married 1828. Died
at Worcester 1872.
1
Mary Ann.
Married
John
WILSON.
r i i r \ \
John C. TIPPETTS. Elizabeth Ann. Born Ellen. Bapt. at Gravesend Sarah. Josiah TIPPETTS.
Born at Gravesend at Gravesend 1832. 1835. Died in London Ann Born 1831.
1830. Died in Lon- Died in London 1887. 1906. Married (as his Married Died 1900. s.p.
don 1866. s.p. Married R. Vaughan second wife) R. Vaughan
PRYCE. PRYCC. TAYLOR. Frances Octavia.
y Born 1833.
4, Died 1883.
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 17
I
James Berriman TIPPETTS== Sarah A. C. BINNING.
of Gloucester, plumber and I Died 1844. ist wife,
glazier. Born 1801. Died 1864. I Mary JONES. Died 1893.
I 2nd wife.
1 i I I f
mes Berriman Julia. John TIPPETTS. Thomas J. TIPPETTS. Emily.
PPETTS, Major Died Born 1841. Died 1889, s.p.
)rn 1836. 1867.
arried
•:RGUSON.
i8
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
John HAVELLAND of the manor of Wilkeswood,=
Isle of Purbeck, Dorset. Four times mayor
of Poole. Died 1540.
John HAVELLAND. Born 1526.
Died 1607. =|= Mary, dau. of Thomas CAREW
I of Higherham. Born 1536.
I Died 1632.
1 1
II
II
Thomas HAVELLAND= Elizabeth Anthony HAVELLAND of
James HAVELLAND
Frances.
Born
1561. Died
DACCOMBE. Will da.
Died in Malaga,
Married
1624.
Son and heir.
28 Sept. 1631, pr. 26 July
Spain.
John DOB-
1632 (P. C. C.) mentions " my
—
BINS.
cozen John HAVELLAND,
Richard HAVEL-
—
printer; his sister Anna FLET-
LAND. Born 1556
Margaret.
X
x CHER ; my cozen Christopher
(Poole Register.)
Married
HAVELLAND, whoserveth Mr.
Henry
EVELIN one of the Six Clar-
DACCOMBE
kes. "
1
1
1
1
Elenor. Bapt.
Susanna. Bapt.
Anthony HAVILAND= Hannah
John HAVILAND,
1 8 April 1585
at Winstone 3
Bapt. at Winstone
FOWLER.
citizen and stationer
at Winstone.
Sept. 1586.
ist Sept. 1587.
Married at
of London. Bapt. at
Marr. there
Winstone 6
Winstone 6 July 1589.
2 Dec. 1612
June 1621.
Buried there 24 Nov.
Richard DAF-
1638.
FEY senior.
s
s
r ~r ~r
Joane, Bapt. 30 Thomas HAVILAND= Elizabeth. Anne. Bapt. 12 Sept.
Sept. 1591 at Bapt. 10 March
Winstone. Marr. 1593 at Winstone.
Francis WEBB,
M. A.
T
William HAVi- = Katherine
dau. of 1596, at Winstone.
Marr. 4 Feb. 1621
Miles FLECKER, ci-
tizen and stationer
of London.
LAND. Bapt. 7
April 1605, at
Winstone.
dau, of
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
I
? Thomas HAVELLAND. Died
1614. Buried at Langton
Matravers, Dorset.
John HAVILAND. Born;
ca. 1552. Rector of
Winstone, Glouc.,
until his death.
Buried there 26 Jan.
1618.
Alice
Married
circa 1580.
HAVILAND=.
r
Mary. Living
1648. Marr.
Warde
CHAMBER-
LAINE.
r
John HAVILAND. Living
1648. In 1603 a John
HAVYLAND was party to
a deed concerning the
manor of Mudford (No-
tes and Queries for So-
merset and Dorset, XI.
in.)
Christopher HAVILAND of Mudford,
Somerset. Administration 25 April
1648, to John, the brother, and
Mary the sister, wife of Warde
CHAMBERLAINE. (P. C. C.)
20 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
John V. S. de HAVILLAND in The Chronicle of the De Hamllands^
(published about 1853), makes the statement (page 10) that
John HAVELLAND who heads the accompanying chart, son of James
de HAVELLAND and Helena de BEAUVOIR, " purchased the Manor of
Wilkeswood, in the Isle of Purbeck, about 1 530, and left an only
son, John HAVELLAND, married to Mary, daughter of Thomas CAREW,
of Higherham Manor. " I think he is mistaken, and that the accom-
panying chart is more nearly accurate. It is put together from the
Parish Registers of Winstone in Gloucestershire,Anthony HAVELLAND'S
will, and the administration of Christopher HAVELLAND. He is mis-
taken also in saying that James H AVI LAND, mayor of Salisbury, 1602-
1603, and son of Christopher, mayor of Poole 1569, died s.p. The
Parish Registers of St. Thomas, Salisbury, shew this to be incorrect.
Anthony's will, the administration of Christopher, and entries in
the Parish Registers of Winstone, which I have from the present
rector, the Rev. A. O. TROTTER, shew that Anthony had two sets of
cousins ; one the sons and daughters of the Rev. John HAVILAND
(who must have been his, Anthony's, first cousin) and the others,
Christopher, John and Mary, parents unknown. Both sets of cousins
must have been " cousins once removed," for the Rev. John HAVILAND
could not be the brother of John HAVILAND of Wilkeswood, nor could
John, mentioned in the administration of Christopher, be his brother.
I have been searching for years for the ancestry of William HA-
VILAND, who emigrated to America, and was living in Newport, Rhode
Island, as early as 1646, being first churchwarden of Newport in that
year. He was made a Freeman May iyth 1653 (right to vote) ; on
May 2ist 1656, he was Commissioner to the General Court, and in
1667 a Representative. He married at Newport, Hannah, daughter
of John HICKS. John HICKS was born in London about 1606, and
emigrated with his wife in 1635. The father of John HICKS was
Robert HICKS, born about 1575, of a Gloucestershire family. He,
Robert, went to America on the ship Fortune, which followed the
Mayflower with a second body of Puritans, and arrived at Weymouth,
Massachusetts, n Nov. 1621.
It is possible that William HAVILAND may have been the son of
John HAVILAND, living in 1648, since his, William's, eldest son was
named John ; or of some other member of this branch, whose parents
are unknown and whose grandfather may have been Thomas HAVEL-
LAND, " Gent. ", who died in 1614. I should like also to ascertain
the ancestry of Robert HICKS, born about 1575.
Eduardo Haviland HILLMAN.
3227, CAMPO SAN SAMUELE,
VENICE, ITALY.
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 21
©escenfe*
Janet MIDDLETON, dau. of ...... MIDDLE- = James BYERS of Tonley, merchant
TON of Stenhouse. Born c. 1637.
Married 16.7.1667, in Aberdeen. Died
29.11.1695.
of Aberdeen, son of John BYERS
of Coates, Treasurer of Edinburgh.
r
Isabel BYERS, 2nd dau. Bapt. i2.5.==Robert GORDON of Hallhead and
1670. I Esselmont, 2nd son of Patrick GOR-
I DON of Hallhead. Died 1728. (Had
I three sons and four daughters.)
r
Janet GORDON = John BLACK of Belfast and Bordeaux, wine-merchant, son
of George BLACK of Belfast. Living 1681.
Catherine BLACK (i3th child). Born == Francis TURNLY. Born 1735. Died
10.8.1736. Married 17.6.1760 at the I 10.3.1801. Son of St. John TURNLY
parish church, Belfast. Died 1795. I of Newtownards, Co. Down.
I
Catherine TURNLY. Born 1769. Died==Ezekiel Davis BOYD, son of Ezekiel
17.6.1850. I Davis BOYD of Bally castle, Co.
I Antrim.
I
Catherine BOYD. Married 12. 8.1812. = Robert GAGE, son of Revd. Robert
Died 22.10.1852. I GAGE of Rathlin Island, Co. Antrim.
| Born 20.10.1790. Died 30.9.1862.
r
RosettaGAGE. Born 28.5.1821. Married ^=Lt. Col. Gardiner HARVEY, Madras
1835. Died 15.2.1870. I Lt. Infantry, 4th son of Robert
I HARVEY of Malin, Co. Donegal.
I Born 9.10.1811. Died 28.1.1892.
r
Catherine HARVEY. Born 24. 1.1844.=!= Revd. Charles PELLY, eldest son of
Married 12.9.1867. Died 17.1.1907. I Charles PELLY. Born 7.7.1844.
r
Ethel PELLY, 3rd daughter. Married===John Ffolliott YOUNG, 4th son of
1899 at Culdaff. I Robert YOUNG of Culdaff, Co. Done-
gal. Born 13.3.1870.
1
Kathleen YOUNG.
Nothing further is known of MIDDLETON of Stenhouse, except in connection
with the BYERS of Tonley (BURKE'S Landed Gentry). Janet BLACK'S brother,
Joseph BLACK, M. D., appears in the Diet. Nat. %iog. It will be seen that
there are several dates missing in the earlier part, and these I should be glad
to fill in.
G. H. HARVEY.
22 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
£um6er ftccm
CHANCERY MASTERS' REPORTS AND CERTIFICATES
A. D. 1790-91.
If one wishes for genealogical ract and biographical detail combined in a manner
which leaves nothing to be desired, these documents offer a fine field for in-
vestigation. The following stray notes shew how very slightly the bare titles
of lawsuits, which are all one can get from the present Indexes or Calendars,
indicate who the persons were who were chiefly concerned, or what lies hidden
in the filed papers. They run from the year 1554 down to 1885, in an
unbroken series, and were bound up, some years since, in 4108 volumes.
Vol. 760.
ALTHAM v. HERON.
1790, Jan. 27. James Hanway ALTHAM, Susanna ALTHAM and Edward
ALTHAM, infants, by their next friend, and Thomas William ALTHAM and
Mary ALTHAM late infants v. Sir Richard HERON, Bart., William PAINTER
(since deceased) and William HANWAY. Certificate as to costs. Mr. Charles
ARNOLD receiver of the real estates of the plaintiffs.
ALSTON v. MALES.
1790, March 2. Samuel ALSTON v. John MALES and Ann his wife and
others.
Joseph FITCH and Sybill his wire, John DAIN and Sarah his wife, Elizabeth
MESSING, widow and executrix of Baptist MESSING, Henry MESSING, James
BOTTOMLEY and Mary his wife, James KIRK and Ann his wife, John MESSING
the younger, William MESSING, Samuel Brereton MESSING, Stephen MESSING,
Samuel LOTT and Elizabeth his wife and others. Testator Stephen WHITE,
clerk, will 18 Feb. 1773, wife Ann; book published by my brother John
WHITE ; to Samuel ALSTON of Nayland (Suffolk), gent., lands in Stratford and
Higham ; Thomas MOOR a bankrupt and Mary his widow ; my niece Sarah
GARROOD ; the children of my nieces Sybill ABBOTT and Sarah MESSING, of my
nephew Henry BAINES, and daughter of my niece Anne ROCHEBOIS ; Hatton
Garden ; Holton in Suffolk. Testator died 12 April 1773 ; his widow 31 Dec.
1781. As to legacy for purchase of Hymn Books.
ANDREWS v. NOEL.
1790, March 18. Edward ANDREWS Esq., an infant (now 21) v. Margaret,
wife of John Perrott NOEL Esq., late Margaret ANDREWS, widow, and others.
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 23
Robert, John, Margaret, and Thomas, infants, children of testator Edward
ANDREWS, deceased, who died 14 Sept. 1786. The nearest relations of the
infant defendant Robert ANDREWS, viz.
The Revd. Mr. HILTON and his sister Miss HILTON, brother and sister of
the said defendant Robert ANDREWS' late mother. Edmund ANDREWS brother
of defendant's late father Edward ANDREWS.
The said Robert ANDREWS is aged 1 9 and upwards.
The defendant Margaret, wife of John Perrott NOEL Esq., late Margaret
ANDREWS, widow, the mother, John AMPHLETT the uncle (mother's brother),
and Elizabeth, wife of Edmund ANDREWS Esq., Christian, wife of Mr. WIL-
KINSON, and. . . . the wife of Mr. CAMERON, the aunts of the said infant
defendants, John, Margaret and Thomas ANDREWS, are the sole next of kin of
the said three defendants, John aged 5, Margaret aged 4, and Thomas aged 3
and upwards 14 Nov. 1789. Said Robert ANDREWS at Trinity College,
Cambridge, from Nov. 1 788. Edmund BRODERIP guardian of Robert ANDREWS.
Deed of 15 and 16 June 1776 for raising portions for the younger children.
[1786, Sept. 12. Will of Edward ANDREWS of Brook Hill House, parish of
Broad Clist, co. Devon, Esq. Wife Margaret ANDREWS, John AMPHLETT of
Clent, Esq., and Edmund BRODERIP of Wells, gentleman, trustees and executors.
Freehold lands in co. Suffolk. (No children named). Wits., Thomas WAL-
DRON, William WILKINSON, Christian WILKINSON. Proved at London 30 Oct.
1786, by Margaret ANDREWS, the relict, and Edmund BRODERIP. Power
reserved for John AMPHLETT. (P. C. C. "NORFOLK", 501.)]
ANDREE v. KAYE.
1790, March 18. Frederick ANDREE and Ann his wife, Mary Ann
ANDREE, infant (by her said father), Abel JENKINS and Francis SQUIRE, gent.,
v. Joseph KAYE, gent.
Death of Mary KAYE, late wife of defendant Joseph KAYE, 20 Jan. 1786.
Account of money spent on the estate by Joseph KAYE. Enfield Chase,
Middlesex. Labourers' names.
ARCHER v. ARCHER.
1790, March 26. Hon. Sarah ARCHER (now wife of Other, Earl of
PLYMOUTH), the Hon. Ann Elizabeth ARCHER, the Hon. Maria ARCHER, deceased
(late wife of Henry HOWARD Esq.) late infants, and the Hon Harriott ARCHER
an infant, by Sarah WEST her grandmother v. Rt. Hon. Sarah, Baroness
ARCHER. Said Earl of PLYMOUTH receiver of rents of plaintiffs' estates in
cos. Warwick and Essex.
24 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
ATTORNEY-GENERAL v. POMFRET.
1790, March 1 1. Poor of the parish of Wandon, Bucks. Dixie GREGORY,
aged 6, the son of Dixie GREGORY, of Bedford, Esq., one of the trustees.
Whether an infant trustee. Act 7 Anne, to enable infants to make convey-
ances. That Sir Rowland ALSTON of Odell, co. Bedford, bart., is the heir at
law of Thomas James SELBY the surviving trustee on the part of his mother ;
that Ellen WELLS of Wandon, spinster, and Dixie GREGORY the only child of
Dixie GREGORY one of the present trustees by Henrietta (FRANKLYN) his late
wife deceased, are the coheirs at law of the said Thomas James SELBY on the
part of his father's mother the said Ellen WELLS. The infant's mother and
Elizabeth FRANKLYN her sister, since deceased. There being no descendant
of the said Mr. SELBY or of his father, nor no heir found on the part of his
paternal grandfather. Said Thomas James SELBY a trustee in 1748. William
SELBY a trustee in 1715.
ATTORNEY-GENERAL v. HARTLEY.
1790, March 20. Letitia Isabella HAYNE, niece and heir at law of Samuel
HOLDITCH Esq.
AUBERY v. AUBERY.
1790. April 13. Plaintiff Edward AUBERY an infant v. Mary AUBERY
widow and administratrix of Edward AUBERY, clerk, deceased, plaintiff's father.
Estate in the manor of Pinner alias Sudbury, Middlesex. Plaintiff is the
intestate's only child. Schedules of account 1786-9. West Camel, Somerset.
Names of people paid. Sherborne, Dorset. The deceased owned the Golden
Cross Inn and other premises at Charing Cross.
Ex PARTE ELIZABETH AUSTIN, AN INFANT.
1790, March 18. Petitioners John Luttrell OLMIUS and Elizabeth his
wife. Lease and fine dated 1772. Rt. Hon. Drigue Bellers OLMIUS, Lord
WALTHAM, and Frances his wife sold to James MILBOURN of Little Easton,
Essex, gent., for ^1000 the farm, &c., called Lesheton alias Albins alias
Pearsons, situate in Sandon, Springfield, Danbury and Great Baddow, Essex.
Said James MILBOURN died 13 July 1787 (will dated I July) without issue, and
John STOCK of Margaret Roothing, Essex, farmer, is nephew and coheir at law,
as being the only surviving son of Elizabeth STOCK one of the sisters of the said
James MILBOURN. Said Elizabeth STOCK died 3ist March 1781. Samuel
PORTER of Sheephall Bury, Stevenage, Herts., farmer, is another nephew and
coheir at law of the said James MILBOURN, as being son of Sarah PORTER,
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 25
deceased, another sister of the said James. Said Sarah PORTER died I2th Nov.
1786. James WEBB late of St. Marylebone, Middlesex, coachpainter, who died
1 4th August 1787, was another nephew and coheir of the said James MILBOURN,
as only surviving son of Ann WEBB, deceased, another sister of the said James
MILBOURN. Said Ann WEBB died roth Oct. 1758. Said James WEBB the
son, by will 19 July 1787, devised the residue of his estate to said Elizabeth
AUSTIN the infant and died 14 August 1787. Elizabeth, wife of John AUSTIN,
of Crown Lane, Upper Thames Street, London, cornfactor, is mother of the
said infant Elizabeth AUSTIN, who is 1 8 years of age.
ASKEW v. ASKEW.
1790, May 10. The Revd Adam ASKEW, clerk, Richard ASKEW, Thomas
ASKEW and Elizabeth ASKEW (three infant younger children of Doctor Anthony
ASKEW, deceased) v. Henry ASKEW Esq., executor of Doctor Adam ASKEW,
deceased, and the said Doctor Anthony ASKEW. The plaintiff Thomas his
passage to Jamaica. The defendant Henry is uncle and guardian of the plaintiff
Thomas in the igth year of his age, whose voyages to the West Indies are
intended to qualify him for a higher station in the East India Company's
service. Schedule of account. Money expended on the infant Thomas ASKEW.
Voyage to Jamaica on board the "Three Sisters", Nov. 1789. Bills paid at
Newcastle-on-Tyne, Gateshead and Redheugh. Mr. Thomas ASKEW'S journey
from Newcastle to London.
ASKEW v. ASKEW.
1790, May 10. The same parties. Sums paid to William Albert GUEX in
respect of the plaintiff Richard ASKEW'S apprenticeship and tour in Switzerland,
Germany, Holland, &c. His apprenticeship 4 March 1788 to Messrs. Samuel
STAPLES and William Albert GUEX, both then of London, merchants, who had
a house also at Havre de Grace in France, for five years. Premium a hundred
guineas a year. Said Richard now in the 2Oth year of his age.
ASPINALL v. ASPINALL.
1790, April 27. John ASPINALL the younger and Nicholas ASPINALL infants,
by Henry GREENWOOD, gentleman v. John ASPINALL father of the said infants,
Robert KENYON since deceased, Martin RICHARDSON, Henry ASPINALL and Mary
his wife, William ASPINALL, Nicholas ASPINALL, James ASPINALL, Alexander
ASPINALL, Thomas ASPINALL since deceased, Thomas DRINKWATER and Jane
his wife, Henry ASPINALL [and others]. Estates in Lancashire, York, and
Middlesex. Estate at Burnley and chambers in Lincoln's Inn. Mary ASPIN-
WALL « widow of the testator. " (To bg continued^
26 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
Qtolt*, Queries anb
RECORDS IN SCOTLAND.— To the student of genealogical research
the Scottish records provide a wide and productive area to work upon. The
late Sir William FRASER, K. C. B., who was Deputy Keeper of the Records in
the General Register House, Edinburgh, and a writer of numerous works relative
to the histories of noble and other families in Scotland, relied to a considerable
extent for pedigree matter upon the Register of Tailzies or Entails. This
Register contains valuable information regarding pedigrees of families who were
interested in heritable estate. Entails were first formally legalised by the
Statute of 1685 and concern the mode under which estates or heritable subjects
were conveyed from one heir to another. They are complete from 1685 to
the present day. As is well known, all land originally belonged to the Crown.
Charters were granted and gifts or grants were made to favorites and others for
services rendered to their Sovereigns, all of which grants in Scotland are recorded
in the Registers of the Great Seal and the Privy Seal. It must be borne in
mind, however, that the above applies more particularly to the nobility and
landed gentry.
A Register more suitable to the aims of The Pedigree Register is that of the
Services of Heirs, which is complete from 1545 to the present day. This is
most valuable in the tracing of family histories. The records are kept in the
Chancery Office in the Register House. Records of a much earlier date than
1545 were known to exist, but unfortunately they perished in the burning of
Holyrood in May 1544.
Another important office is that of the Lyon King of Arms. In this depart-
ment, also attached to the Register House, there is a Register of Genealogical
and Birth Brieves from 1727 to the present time ; also Registers of Birth
Brieves, Funeral Entries and Escutcheons from 1672, and a large number of
unofficial MSS., such as family histories, pedigrees, inventories of private charter
chests, &c.
With regard to the social life of the community in the early days, Scotland
was not unlike England in that respect, for it is known that barons, chiefs, and
large landowners held their Domestic Courts and were known as Baron Baillies.
They had considerable power over their dependents or vassals and could administer
punishment even to the extent of execution when occasion demanded. So far
as known, however, no records of such Domestic Courts are in existence ; a
circumstance which is much to be regretted.
As regards the Parish Registers, they are not what could be desired. In
many parishes there are long blank periods, and numerous volumes have been
either burned or lost.
Another source from which much detail can be gathered is to be found in
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 27
the Judicial Records. These begin with the system adopted in the reign of
David I. (1124-53) wnen the law was more effectually enforced upon the
inhabitants of the country generally. This was accomplished by the appoint-
ment of Sheriffs, who had definite judicial authority in the districts or shires
assigned to them, and by the grants of Regality and Barony conferred on the
great vassals of the Crown in their respective fiefs. These appear in a series of
volumes entitled "Acta Dominorum Councili ", and run from 1478 to 1532,
after which they are classified and arranged under the court of Session Records.
Attached to the Register House is the Historical Department, where
searches of a literary character can be made. This department supervises the
issue of those publications of Scottish records which have done so much towards
bringing early history to light. The earlier Scottish records were written in
Latin by the Papal Notaries. The reign of Alexander III. (1249-86) being
one of continued prosperity, the accumulation of documents in his time must
have been considerable. This is shewn by the Calendar or Inventory of
documents in the King's Treasury at Edinburgh Castle, made in the year 1282,
which is now preserved in London, and is the oldest official public record of
Scottish writs now extant. o/^n/rT-T^rTr T T-
James SOMERVILLE.
52 Marchmont Crescent, Edinburgh.
BRUCE AND MONRO OF AUCHENBOWIE BY BANNOCK-
BURN. — Major W. Bruce ARMSTRONG in his Bruces of Alrth (pp. 56-59)
deals with the above family. He says there is no evidence for the marriage of
Edward BRUCE and Agnes de ERTH, or that he was son of Robert BRUCE of
Clackmannan, or even that he ever existed at all. Moreover, it would appear
that the first of the family of Airth, of whom we have any authentic account,
is Alexander BRUCE of Stanehouse. He apparently was not a knight ; and his
wife * Jonete ' was not necessarily a LIVINGSTON. The Alexander BRUS or
BRUCE of the Stanehouse and of Airth who died before 1487 married Margaret,
daughter of Sir Malcolm FORRESTER of Torwoodhead and had six sons. They
were (i) John who died young ; (2) Sir Alexander of Brigham and Earlshall ;
(3) Edward of Kinnaird ; (4) Lucas of Cultmalundie ; (5) Robert of Auchen-
bowie and Bynning ; and (6) David.
The fifth son, Robert BRUCE, held the properties of Auchenbowie, Carnouck,
and Bynning. In December 1500, Andrew, Abbot of Newbattle, gives to
Robert BRUCE of Bynning and his wife the monastery lands of West Binning
in Linlithgowshire, they paying four shillings yearly. Auchenbowie was
murdered by Robert LIVINGSTON of Breedlaw and his adherents. He had
married in 1490 (i) Mary, or Margaret, PRESTOUN ; and (2), on 28 July 1506,
Margaret, daughter of Sir James SANDILANDS of Calder. By the latter he had
three sons — Robert the second of Auchenbowie, John executor of his father's
28 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
will in 1517, and Andrew of Powfoullis, also executor. There was probably
also a daughter Marjorie : for " Alexander DRUMMOND, fourth of Carnouck,
married Marjorie BRUCE, sister to Robert BRUCE, laird of Auchenbowie ".
From them descended William DRUMMOND of Hawthornden, the poet.
Robert BRUCE II. of Auchenbowie, was depute of Lord ERSKINE in 1551 ;
and compounded for the slaughter of his father in 1573. He had a son John
and from this date for over a century the pedigree is in a fragmentary condition.
Robert BRUCE of Greensyde is called third son of Robert of Auchenbowie ;
he was probably a son of Robert II.
Marjorie BRUCE is served heir-portioner of her father, Robert BRUCE of
Greensyde, 17 Oct. 1599.
Marjory BRUCE is served heir-portioner of her father's brother's son, Robert
BRUCE, portioner of the HALLS of Airth, in lands in Greensyde 17 July 1619;
and again 22 Jan. 1620. About 1619 she marries William LIVINGSTON of
Easter Grenezairdis. They have a charter 25 Aug. 1619, in which she is
mentioned as eldest lawful daughter of the late Robert BRUCE of Greensyde,
and possessor of parts of HALLS of Airth.
Susan BRUCE is served heir-portioner of Robert BRUCE portioner of HALLS of
Airth, son of her uncle, 22 Jan. 1620.
Susan BRUCE is served heir-portioner of Alexander BRUCE her uncle in part
of HALLS of Airth, 10 March 1629.
Susan BRUCE is served heir-portioner of Robert BRUCE of Greensyde, her
father, 10 March 1629.
Robert BRUCE of Auchenbowie married early in the seventeenth century Mar-
garet, third daughter of John BOYLE of Kelburn, who adhered to Queen Mary.
Robert BRUCE of Auchenbowie is on an inquest of 19 Feb. 1631.
Alexander BRUCE of Auchenbowie is served heir of his father, John BRUCE of
Auchenbowie, on 2 April 1631.
Robert BRUCE of Auchenbowie is served heir of Susan BRUCE (legitimate
daughter of Robert BRUCE of Greensyde, third son of Robert BRUCE of Auchen-
bowie) daughter of the brother of his great-grandfather, 25 April 1646.
Robert BRUCE, younger, of Auchenbowie, and Margaret CRAWFORD, his
future spouse, and Robert BRUCE elder of Auchenbowie, are all mentioned 9
July 1662.
Robert BRUCE of Auchenbowie and Margaret CRAUFORD his spouse, are
mentioned 21 June 1666.
Robert BRUCE younger of Auchenbowie and William BRUCE his brother-
german, are mentioned 17 September 1666. This Robert had succeeded
before 1678 when called < now of Auchenbowie '.
Robert BRUCE elder of Auchenbowie, assigns a bond to William BRUCE
second son of said Robert, 29 January 1667.
\
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 29
Robert BRUCE of Auchenbowie is infefted in the lands of Greensyde of HALLS
of Airth, 28 January 1670.
William BRUCE, brother-german to Robert BRUCE of Auchenbowie, marries
Jonet daughter of James ALEXANDER, portioner of Redheuch, 10 Feb. 1676.
Griselda BRUCE is served heir to her father William BRUCE, brother-german
of Robert BRUCE of Auchenbowie, 3 Sept. 1680.
John BRUCE of Auchenbowie died 1694, when his eldest daughter Janet,
wife of William, eldest son of William BRUCE of Newtoune, is served heir
to him.
William BRUCE was outlawed for murdering Charles ELPHINSTONE of Airth
on 29 April 1699 ; and his wife Janet, who died childless before 29 Dec. 1708,
made over Auchenbowie to her second sister Margaret BRUCE and her husband
Major George MONRO.
There are divers inaccuracies in the pedigrees or MONRO of Bearcrofts and
MONRO or Auchenbowie contained in the late Mr. Alexander MACKENZIE'S
History of the Munros of Fowlis (1898, pp. 311-321), for the correction of
some of which I am indebted to Mr. John A. INGLIS of 2 Rothesay Place,
Edinburgh, a descendant of Professor Alexander MONRO (primus).
Sir Alexander MONRO of Bearcrofts, M. P. for the County of Stirling 1690-
1702, by his wife Lillias EASTON (omitted by MACKENZIE), had two sons.
The elder, Major George MONRO, sold the estate of Bearcrofts immediately on
inheriting (about 1705), to Patrick HALDANE of Gleneagles, and married
Margaret BRUCE of Auchenbowie as stated above. Their eldest son Alexander
MONRO II., of Auchenbowie, Lieutenant in MONTGOMERY'S Regiment, married
Ann, daughter of Sir Robert STEWART of Tilliecoultry, a Lord of Session, and
uncle of the first Earl of BUTE. MACKENZIE slays Alexander in his father's
lifetime ; transforming his wife, Ann STEWART, into his step-mother. The
son of Alexander and Ann MONRO, George MONRO III. of Auchenbowie, for
many years H. M's Physician at Minorca, sold Auchenbowie to his father's
first-cousin Professor Alexander MONRO (primus) the famous Anatomist.
Dr. George MONRO'S second son, Lieutenant-General William Hector MONRO,
sometime Governor of Trinidad, became by his marriage in 1796 with
Philadelphia BOWER, I. of Edmondsham, Dorset.
John, younger son of Sir Alexander MONRO of Bearcrofts, was surgeon in
WILLIAM III.'s army in Flanders and father of Professor Alexander MONRO
(primus), who purchased Auchenbowie. This estate is still held by his family ;
the late owner having been David Binning MONRO, Provost of Oriel College,
Oxford, the Homeric scholar.
I shall be much obliged for any further details concerning the BRUGES of
Auchenbowie.
A. R. BAYLEY.
St. Margaret's, Malvern.
30 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1910
HENRY DE DALE. (A forgotten pluralist).— Among the Patent Rolls in
1328 we find a Commission of Oyer and Terminer to settle a complaint that
Henry del DALE and others had broken into the house of Henry de LATHUM at
Hale in Lancashire.
In 1335 among the Papal Registers there is a grant to him of the Canonry
and Prebend of Lincoln, notwithstanding he has the church of Walstanton in
the Diocese of Lincoln, value 40 marks.
From the Close Rolls in November 1337 we find Henry, Earl of LANCASTER,
has leave to grant to Isabella, his daughter, and to Henry de la DALE, the manor
of Estgarston, in Berkshire.
In February 1338 there is a ratification to him of the Prebend of Downham,
in the church of St Mary, Lincoln, and he is then described as the " King's
Clerk " ; whilst in May of the same year he obtains the Prebend of Shares-
hull, in the King's free chapel of Penkridge.
In July 1339, Matilda, Countess of ULSTER, (sister in law of Edward III.),
supplicates the King to grant her and Master Henry de la DALE, clerk, the
custody of the land in the realm belonging to the alien Abbey of Caen in
Normandy, to the value of ^200 per annum, in part payment of ^300 granted
her for the murder of her husband in Ireland, as she does not dare to go to
Ireland to see after her estates there. The following year there is a similar
application for the land of Fontrevalt, both of which are duly accorded her, and
we also find permission for Henry de DALE to cut their wood to the value of
£40 ; whilst in July 1339 John de MOWBRAY has license to enfeoffhim of the
Manors of Thirsk, Hovyngham, Burton in Lonsdale, Kirkby Malzard, with
the chace of Nidderdale, and the Manor of Epworth, with all knights' fees,
advowsons, chaces, warrens and appurtenances for him to regrant in tail to him
or Joan his wife and their right heirs.
In 1344 he has an indulgence to choose a confessor. Once again we find him
in the Papal Registers, in February 1345, where he is described as an M. A., B.
C. L., and M. B., and is provided with a Canonry in Wells, and a promise of
any dignity short of the episcopal, notwithstanding that he has the like in Lin-
coln, Salisbury (Prebend of Farindon), Wolverhampton, Penkridge, the warden-
ship of St Mary Magdalen Chapel in Preston, and the church of Heigham in
the Diocese of Lincoln ; and by 1347 he is also holding the church of Wigan in
the Diocese of Lichfield.
In May 1347 John de THORPE of Repingale acknowledges a debt to him of
joo marks, and in October 1348 he himself acknowledges owing Simon SYMEON
marks, and, in 1349, £300 to Henry de WALTON, parson of Preston.
1349 he is dead, as we find various people applying for his man-
ifold
H. B. D.
JuNEi9io] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 31
HUXLEY (I. 118,205). — The parentage of George, Thomas, and James
HUXLEY, brothers, is proved by Mr. J. G. BRADFORD'S note at the latter
reference as to the ancestry of George who married Catherine ROBINSON, and
George's Funeral Certificate mentions his brothers Thomas and James.
Mrs. Anne GALLARD was not their sister, but the daughter of Thomas HUXLEY,
of St. Vedast, Foster Lane, as stated at page 118. The reference to the
Visitation of Cheshire (Pedigree Register, I. 365) completely supports Mr.
BRADFORD'S most acceptable correction at page 205. Doubtless James HUXLEY
(page 1 1 8), baptised at Edmonton, 6 November 1614, is the James HUXLEY of
Dornford, Oxfordshire (page 122). He married, I believe, Elizabeth, daughter
of Sir William BARKHAM, and had Jane, who married Sir Nicholas PELHAM,
M. A., M. P., son of Sir Thomas PELHAM, Bart., by his third wife Margaret,
daughter of Sir Henry VANE of Fairlawn, Kent, and Elizabeth, who married
Robert CRESSETT, of Upton Cressett and Cound, Shropshire.
The Will of Thomas HUXLEY of Skimpans (page 1 1 8), dated 1 2 October
1685, was proved 10 March, 1695-6, (P.C.C.) Skimpans is given as in
North Mimms, Hertfordshire. The Will of Katherine, widow of John DENT
(page 1 1 8), of Windsor, Berkshire, was proved in 1637, (P.C.C.) The arms of
HUXLEY of Brindley, in the parish of Acton, Cheshire, are stated in the Visitation
of that county, 1613 (Harleian Society's Publication), as Ermine, on a bend coined
gules 3 crescents or, a crescent for difference. I very greatly regret my blunder at
page 1 1 8, with respect to the parents of George, Thomas, and James HUXLEY.
Funeral Certificate. George HUXLEY, 1627. He was buried at Edmonton
10 May 1627. "Son John HUXLEY (sonne and heire) about 28 years,
Thomas 2nd. son about 18, James 3 sonne about 12, Anne eldest daughter
about 22,2 Jane about i6,3 Katherine about 14. Son John HUXLEY chief
mourner & deceased brothers Mr. Thomas HUXLEY and Mr. James HUXLEY.
Pennons were borne by Mr. John ROBINSON and Mr. Thomas SMITH brothers
in law of defunct " — (Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica, Second Series,
Volume I., page 188.)
Reginald Stewart BODDINGTON.
GENEALOGICAL PROBLEM, No. i.— In the early 'twenties of last
century, a bright, promising, boy of six or seven ; father unknown but child
known to be illegitimate ; considerable competition amongst several well-to-do
families to adopt him ; secured by one of them on payment of a premium of
£4000 ; did well afterwards in life ; strong likeness to George IV. ; names of
mother and adopting parents known. How to prove his parentage ?
NEMO.
[Probably not possible to prove parentage, but NEMO might try Privy Purse
office for possible record of payments-out to adopting parents. Might be pos-
32 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER []UNE 1910
sible to get at banking account of supposed father ; bankers are prohibited by
law from destroying old ledgers. If the young man married after 1837 Somer-
set House Register might be tried to see what is said as to bridegroom's father.
—Ed.]
SMITHETT. — (I. 150). — The pedigree should be amended to read as
follows :
Bartylmew SMYTHEOT of=Joane
Buckland, Newington,
&c. Will 1522.
I \ il
Thomas SMYTHEOT. Willi=Joane John SMYTHEOT=Chrystiane Agnes.
1563. Bequeathed lands I of Newington. Will Jonanne.
at Buckland, &c. Will 1556. 1559.
.
Richard SMYT- Thomas SMYTHEOT.=Cyslie. = Parnell. Andrew SMYTHEOT=Amy.
HEOT. Buried at Buried at Buckland I of Buckland, Ry-
Buckland 1611. 1620. ver, &c. Will 1610.
..
I
*T» «T»
J. L. SMITHETT.
MOSSE. (I. 53, 70, 1 06). — In the Pedigree Register, No. 3, a pedigree of
the MOSSE family was given, but in later numbers it was shown that this pedigree
was incorrect, part of the entries relating to MOSSE of Postwick and part to
the Moss family of Cork. If the Pedigree Register is to be of any real service to
present as well as to future generations, it seems to me that it would be advisable
to publish correct pedigrees (as far as at present known) of these two families.
Perhaps the two gentlemen responsible for the information already contributed
would kindly take these matters in hand; as the publication of an incorrect
pedigree in your journal may cause endless trouble to the unwary and
inexperienced genealogist.
In the pedigree on p. 53, Charles MOSSE, a physician of Hull, is mentioned.
I have seen the Registers of St. Mary's, Lowgate, Hull, and found an entry : —
" 1730, Charles Moss, gent., buried Jan. 20." (/. e. 1731, new style). I
think this Charles Moss must have had some connection with Beverley,
because there was formerly a Monument in St. Mary's Church, Beverley, to Dr.
Charles Moss, who died in 1731 aged 46 years. This Monument is referred
to in POULSON'S Bever/ac, vol. II., p. 758, published in 1829. ^ went over to
Beverley some time ago to try to find it, but was told that it had probably been
destroyed or covered up in some of the restorations and alterations since that
date. To which family does that Charles Moss belong ?
I am interested in another family of Moss, some members of which were
settled in Hull and Yorkshire, and this family has been traced back to about
1710 at Thorner and Preston (Yorkshire). Any information about this family
would be of interest to me. Some of their descendants in recent times bear
names well known in connection with our public schools. (Shrewsbury, Harrow,
Charterhouse.)
Frank CHATTERTON.
Leicester House, Hull.
The Pedigree Register
SEPT 1910] [VoL. II, No. 14.
Jx>r Ql ^Society of d5eneafo<ji0fe,
" The day that thou seest this letter of mine, take with thee
...such people that thou knowest, and seek out all the tablets
which are in their houses... And if there be any... good for
my palace, search for it and find it and send it to me. "
Thus wrote a king in the Babylonian language more than two
thousand years ago, on a piece of clay one could put into one's waist-
coat pocket. To-day these hoards of precious manuscripts, on baked
clay, are being zealously sought for amongst the ruins of the buried
cities of Arabia. Who shall say that we of this present era will not
revert to the use of clay tablets, and impress upon them records,
perhaps in a kind of shorthand character, when in our turn we realize
the transitory nature of paper and parchment, stone and brass ?
In England we possess our caches of unknown manuscripts amongst
which research is often rewarded with trouvailles of the highest
importance. Professor WALLACE'S recent Shakespearean discoveries
form a case in point. These records await only an excavator with a
few hundreds at his command each year to yield up their treasures.
In the belief that systematic working is better than the casual
tunnelling and mining of amateur fossickers it is proposed to form a
SOCIETY OF GENEALOGISTS, whose principal function will be the collect-
ing, exploration, and indexing of English records rather than the
printing of them. A Maecenas might imitate the writer of the ancient
Babylonian letter already quoted, but a practical scheme for everyday
purposes is one which, by means of collective effort, will bring to the
ordinary inquirer, with the least expenditure of time and energy, a
body of evidence, and direct reference to documentary evidence, con-
cerning any place or any family in the kingdom.
A REFERENCE LIBRARY.
It is proposed to form, in a central position in London, a Genea-
logical and Topographical, Historical and Biographical, Reference
Library for the use of the Fellows, Members and Associates of the
proposed SOCIETY OF GENEALOGISTS. The contents of the library
will naturally fall into five divisions :
I. Printed volumes.
II. Volumes of MSS.
34 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
III. " Documents " including original MSS., lists of documents, engraved
and other portraits, copies and abstracts of deeds, wills, pedigrees, tombstone
inscriptions, pamphlets, extracts from periodicals, newspaper extracts, and
the like, arranged under
(a) SURNAMES,
(b) PLACE NAMES.
IV. A great Consolidated Index in one alphabet, on slips, on the Card
Index system.
V. A Subject Index on cards, with the object of bringing Richard SIMS'S
well-known Manual for the Genealogist^ Topographer and Legal Antiquary
up to date.
The work of the Library, it is proposed, shall be undertaken by a
paid Librarian (part or whole of his time), and two (or more) paid
Assistants.
Committees of Members (unpaid), will be formed for the execution
of certain desirable specific objects.
There might be, for example :
A Committee on the Library (printed volumes).
A Committee on the Library (manuscript volumes).
A Committee on " Documents ." This committee would make it its
business to advise the Executive of original documents and records offered
for sale, and recommend their purchase. It would draw up a circular to
be directed to Solicitors and others asking them to send in their obsolete
deeds and writings to the Society, rather than to the wastepaper merchant,
and so save much valuable material from the destruction which goes on
every day. It would see that the library was provided with all the printed
and manuscript lists of documents obtainable.
A Committee on Copies and abstracts of Deeds, Wills, records of lawsuits,
State Papers, private letters, etc. This committee would collect and trans-
cribe, in uniform style, and in duplicate, or triplicate, when necessary,
copies and abstracts of such documents, arrange them under the principal
surnames and places concerned, and pass them to the Librarian to be sorted
in with the "Document" collection.
A Committee on Copies of Tombstone Inscriptions. The business of this
committee would be to prepare full copies of all such inscriptions available,
transcribe them in duplicate or triplicate when necessary, sort them under
Surnames in order of date, and under places when a place is referred to
which is not in the parish where the monument happens to be erected.
These also would be sorted into the " Document " collection by the
Librarian.
A Committee on Marriage Registers and Marriage Licences. Its business
would be to gather systematically a record of every entry or licence of
Marriage prior to the beginning of General Registration in 1837, and to
pass them to the Librarian to be sorted into the Consolidated Index (on
slips.)
A Committee on School, College, Apprenticeship and Admission Registers
to Companies and Guilds, with functions similar to the last, and to urge
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 35
existing bodies to print their records and throw them open to inspection
and transcription.
A Committee on Engraved and other Portraits, Views of places, old houses,
etc., to collect such items for the " Document " collection.
A Committee on Heraldry. Its business would be to bring PAPWORTH'S
Ordinary and BURKE'S Armory up to date, providing, in the latter case,
the date of grant or other authoritative record of the ascription of every
known coat-of-arms.
A Committee for Recording Pedigrees. This would be an examining body
for pedigrees submitted to it, attesting its opinion as to authenticity after
a scrutiny of the evidence. It would also receive, on behalf of the Society,
such pedigrees for safe-keeping as the depositors might not wish thrown
open for general reference until a specified number of years had passed.
Other Committees for various special purposes would doubtless be formed.
There is no doubt that the result of a vast amount of original
research practically runs to waste. Our own suggestion is this. In
the course of a year many thousands of full abstracts, giving all the
gist of ancient documents, wills, etc., must be prepared for the use
of genealogists and local historians all over the kingdom. If it were
made a practice to send a duplicate copy in every case to The Society
of Genealogists ; if these copies were filed by the Librarian, not under
the principal families to which they relate, but under the parish, in
order of date ; there would accrue, in a very short time, a fund of
material for reference whose ready accessibility and value alone would
justify the existence of a Society such as the one it is now proposed
to form.
Fellows and members would have access to the Library, would be
advised periodically of notes and documents accruing likely to be of
special interest to themselves personally, and would be at liberty to
borrow printed books.
Associates would have access to the Library and the privilege of
contributing to its collections.
The proposed Subscription for Fellows is two guineas per annum.
For Members and Associates, one guinea. For Corresponding Asso-
ciates, half-a-guinea. Life Fellows, a composition of ten guineas.
Ladies would be eligible for election as Fellows, Members, or Associates.
Inquiries and promises of support should be addressed to the Hono-
rary Secretary, pro tern. Room 22, 227 Strand, London.
G. S.
36 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
from ©eebs in t$t (£u00en Coffetfion*
QWBerg*
Thomas ALBERY ==
r r i n
Thomas ALBERY. = Elizabeth... Henry ALBERY. Richard ALBERY. John ALBERY.
Died before 1632. Living 1632. of Wokingham, Living 1632. Living 1632.
Berks. Living
1632.
William MERRYETT=...
of Stepney, Mid-
dlesex. Died before
1587-
John THOMAS, vi car = Anne. = Edward STUBBES
of Stepney. Died Living of Gooseworth, co.
before 1587. 1587. Chester.
Ist husband.
(Htarlen :
Richard MARTEN of Hemingford=Alice...=Reginald NURSE
Abbotts, co. Huntingdon, 1559.
Died before 1573.
Ist husband.
Living Living 1573.
1573- 2nd husband.
Robert MARTEN of Duckworth, co. Huntingdon.
Living 1573.
John THOROWGOOD of Witcham,=...
Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire, 1559.
Died before 1573.
I
Thomas THOROWGOOD of Buckworth,
co. Huntingdon. 1573.
7. Warwick Mansions, Warwick Court,
High Holborn, London.
* Continued from Vol. I., p. 288.
P. C. RUSHEN.
3
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
37
Arms : (Confirmed by Vicars, Ulster, 1907) Quarterly, ist and 4th. Az. three hakes
haurient fesswise arg. (for HACKETT 1508) ; 2nd and 3rd, Gu. three backets
arg. (for HACKETT, 1639).
Crest : On a wreath of the colours an eagle displayed with two heads per pale, az. and
gu., between the heads a trefoil slipped vert.
Motto : Mon esperance est en Dieu.
(A.) William de HAKET. Accompanied King John to Ireland, =
and acquired large property in Co. Tipperary.
I
i. Sir Philip de HAKET
of Ballyboghill.
I
2. Sir Andrew de HAKET. Had large possessions near==
Cashel, and in Counties Dublin and Kildare.
I I
i. Sir William de HAKET.^= Joanna, daughter of (B.) 2. Andrew de HAKET. Of ^
Living in 1285. I William BEKERGAST. Co. Dublin and Co. Carlow. I
r
Sir John HAKET of Rathma-=
earthy, Co.Tipperary. A minor
in 1296. Said to have been
summoned to Parliament as a
Baron, 1302.
= Margaret, dau.
of Philip STA-
PLETON.
II
i. Henry de
HAKET,
2. Philip de
HAKET,I324.
T
i
3. Peter de===
HAKET
1308. Died
before
1328.
John Fitz
Peter de
HAKET.
Living in
1335-
HACKETT c
and Co. D
Elinor le
PETIT.
Living in
1335-
>f Carlow
ublin.
1
(C.)i HAKET of
Rathmacarthy.
1
2. John HAKET of Fethard
Co. Tipperary.
r
Mychel HAKET
i
r
Edward HAKET ==
Olyver HAKET.=
(D.) Master Redmond HAKET. ^
I
(E.) Edmond HAKET. Died^Anna ROKEL.
27 July, 1508.
I
Olyver HAKET. ^
r
James HACKETT. One of the first freemen ^=
and burgesses of Fethard.
i*
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
(F.) i. Richard HACKETT. == Joan, dau. of James WHITE of the
Will 1582. I King's Meadows, Waterford.
2. Patrick
HACKETT.
\
3. Anne.
I
i. Edmund HACKETT.
Qy. died s.p.
\
2. James HACKETT.== Catherine WALL, of Cool-
Will 1617. I namuck, Co. Waterford.
I
I
3. Joane. 4. Ellen.
I
(H.) i. John HACKETT = Margaret, dau. of Matthew
Died 15 April 1639. I BROWNE, of London.
\
2. Ellen.
I I II
i. James HACKETT. == Joan POWER 2. John HACKETT. =Catherine, dau. 3. Frank.
Will 1670. Died 1679. Will. | of James LEE. 4. Catherine.
I
(J.) i. Patrick HACKETT. = Elizabeth
Will 1684.
BOWERS.
Will 1684.
2. Nicholas.
Died s.p.
3. Katherine.
4. ... (a dau)
m. Wm. TOBIN.
i. Elizabeth. (L.) 2. James HACKETT,
3. John.
i. James HACKETT.
Will 1708. Died s.p.
\ \
2. Thomas HACKETT==:. . . dau. of John COOKE 3. Elinor.
I of Kiltinane, Co. Tip-
I perary.
I
4. Austin.
I
Thomas HACKETT=Mary, dau. of John SHEPPARD of Castle
Will 1788.
John, Co. Tipperary. Married 1743.
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
39
\
4. Ellen
(G.) 5. Pierce HACKETT= —
James HACKETT=Alson, dau. of Jasper
HAROLD of Limerick.
\
2. Thomas HACKETT= Christian, dau. of C...
of Limerick. I CREAGH, of Limerick.
r
I
James HACKETT=Alson, dau. of Jasper WHITE.
r
. George HACKETT=
1
= Katherine (K.) 2. Sir Thomas =
DRULL, a HACKETT, Lord
Dutch lady. Mayor of Dublin.
Died 1706.
=Mary, dau. of
ARTHUR.
1 1 1
John 3. Phaire. Married
John, son of Sir
Dominick ROCHE.
4. Phyllis Carrick.
Married
5. Margaret. Married
Thomas ROCHE.
1 1 1 1 1
i. John HACKETT. Died 6
Nov. 1760.
2. Thomas James HACKETT.
3. Alice, Married John
READING.
4. Ellen. Married Dominick
BERMINGHAM.
5. Dymphna.
1 1 1
. James. 2. John. 3. Thomas HACKETT=
fery young in 1684. Born before 1684.
In the service of the
House of Orange.
1 1
=... 4. George.
5. Katherine.
Thomas HACKETT. ==...
Lived in Holland.
\
. Charles Edward HACKETT. = Maria Elizabeth
n the service of the House | VAN SENDEN.
»f Orange.
f
I
2. Thomas.
\
Edmund Walter Rudolph
Henry HACKETT.
Richard
I
3. Richard.
I
4. Henry.
I I II I
Five daughters.
4°
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
b I b
(M.) i. Thomas HACKETT= Elizabeth, dau. of
ofTrin. Coll. Dublin
1763; B.A. 1768. Died
before 1797 s.p.
John LATHAM of
Meldrum, Co. Tip-
perary. Married
1790.
(N.) 2. Major James
HACKETT, of Spring-
field, Co. Tipperary.
...HAYDEN=I. Thomas =^= Anne
ist wife. I HACKETT.
James HACKETT.
Died s.p.
SHEP-
PARD of
John's Hill,
Waterford.
Marr. 1820.
2nd wife.
I
2. James HACKETT.
Died 1824 s.p.
Will unproved.
:Anne, sister and coheir
of Robert LOWE of
Knockelly. Co. Tippe-
rary.
I I
Thomas Sheppard HACKETT. M.D. Hannah = William
Born 1821. Died in Australia. Dawson. CONSTABLE.
1865. s.p.
3. John 4. Edmond=
HACKETT. HACKETT.
= ... dau. of
Rev
Died in
KETTLEWELL
Australia
headmaster
s.p.
of Clonmell
school.
r \
Jane. Died Elizabeth ST.. . PINCHIN
unmarried. I of Tramore.
INI
1 1
i. Frances Mitchell.
5. Thomas = Mary 6. Revd. John Winthrop HACK-=pJane, dau. of Henry
Died unmarried.
HACKETT.
Anne ETT. Incumbent of St. James's
Joseph Monck MA-
2. Mary. Died unmd.
FOGARTY. Church, Crinken, Bray. Born
SON, LL.D., of Dargle
3. Sarah Winthrop.
1804. Died 1888.
Cottage, Bray, Co.
Born 1791. Died
Wicklow. Born
1892, unmd.
1819. Died 1895.
4. Jane. Died unmd.
c
c
x- s
i. John HACKETT.
Died s.p.
I
2. Valentine
HACKETT.
Died s.p.
I
3. Mary Anne.
Marr. (i) Rev.
... JELLY. (2)
.. LUTZ.
I
4. Sarah Louisa.
Marr. Rev. John
CRAWFORD.
5. Helen. Marr.
James JOYCE.
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
\
3. Captain John HACKETT,:
8th Light Dragoons. Of
Anne Street, Clonmell.
Made a freeman of Water-
ford 1781. Died July 1822.
Sarah Mitchell, dau.
of Richard POPE of
Cork, by Sarah, his
wife, dau. of William
WINTHROP. Married
1788.
I I
4. Lydia. Marr. 1791.
Thos. ALCOCK of
Killeagh House, Dun-
more East.
5. Anne. Marr. Peter
James FRANQUEFORT
of Waterford, and
died s.p. 1820.
I I I I I
6. Elizabeth. Marr. Rev.
Peter Augustus FRANQUE-
FORT, of Waterford.
7 (a dau.) Marr. ...
MORRIS of Waterford.
8. Susanna. Died unmd.
9. Hannah. Married John
ADAMS of New Ross.
10. Mary. Married
WILKINS.
I
I
I I
5. William HACKETT. 6. Robert HACKETT. 7. Henry HACKETT, 8. Mary. Married John PERRY
Said to have lived Said to have served of Fethard. Said to of Woodroffe, Co. Tipperary.
have served in
Peninsular War.
Twice married. Died
1837, s.p. Will.
near Portlaw, Co.
Waterford, and died
s.p.
in Peninsular War.
Married Miss...
KINLOCH. Died s.p.
Died s.p.
9. Catherine. Married Captain
ROBERTS, R.N., of Waterford.
Uncle of Field-Marshal Earl
Roberts. P.C., K.G., V.C. etc.
\
7. Richard Pope = Emily
HACKETT. Died MILLIKIN
s.p. of London.
Died 1908.
8. Francis
HACKETT.
I I I I
9. Eleanor Mandeville.
I I
Married Edward
GILLMAN of Rock House.
10. Alice. Died unmarried.
11. Nathaniel Anne. Born 1805. Died
unmarried 1877.
12. Mitchell. \
13. Anne. > Died in infancy.
14. Ellen. j
1
6. Louisa. Marr.
John NICKSON.
1
7. Melinda. Marr.
William ORR.
1
8. Emily. Marr.
Dr. Lancaster
JOYCE.
"1
9. Thomasina. Marr.
Captain Henry
SARRATT, R.N.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
I
i. Annie Frances =Rt. Rev. William
Born 1844. Marr.
1879.
PAKENHAM-
WALSH.D.D., Lord
Bishop of Ossory
1878-97. Died
1902.
I
2. Sarah Mary=Capt. Robert
Born 1846. Telford LE-
FROY 96th
Regt. Born
1834. Died
1907. s.p.
\
3. Hon. John Winthrop
HACKETT, LL. D., Born
1848. Member of Legis-
lative Council, Western
Australia ^= Deborah Ver-
non, dau. of
Fredk. Slade
Drake BROCK-
MAN of Perth,
W. A. Married
1905.
i. Verna,
\
2. Patricia.
I
3. Joan.
i. Revd. George Kennedy
HACKETT. Born 1881.
2. Harold Monck Mason
HACKETT. Lieut. 6th
Gurkhas. Born 1883.
T
T
3. Eva Annie. 4. Nora Winthrop.
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
43
1
4. Jane Georgina.
Born 1848. Died
1862, unmarried.
1
5. Very Rev. Henry Monck=
Mason HACKETT, LL. D.,
D.C.L. Dean of Waterford.
Born 1849.
1
Anna Jane, 6. Rev. Thos. Ed-
dau.ofjohn mund HACKETT.
Gordon Born 1850.
KENNEDY.
Marr. 1879.
~l
7. Alice Isabella.
Born 1 85 1. Marr.
1877, Rt. Rev.
John Baptist
CROZIER, D. D.,
Lord Bishop of
Ossory 1897-
1907. Lord Bis-
hop of Down
1907, & has is-
sue.
8. Georgiana Jo-
sephine. Born
1856. Died 1909,
unmarried.
1
5. John Winthrop
HACKETT. Born
1888.
1 1
6. Gerald Olf 7. Henry Robert
Basil HACKETT. HACKETT. Born
Born 1890. 1896.
1
8. Sheila Ruby.
44 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
of
This pedigree has been fully proved and registered in the office of
the Ulster King of Arms. As far as No. 9, the main line pedigree,
including the whole of the early portion, was already recorded there ;
while from the first John HAKET of Fethard to James Fitz Richard
HACKETT (son of No. 6) it is confirmed by an old family pedigree
now extant, dated 1586, and continued down to his own time in 1721
by Thomas HACKETT, No. 12. The other children have been put
in from information contained in Wills, &c.
The ancient arms of the family, the three hakes, are carved on a
curious stone on a pillar in Fethard church which records that Nos. 4
and 5, (Redmond and Edmund) were " fabricatores " of the church ;
while they also occur with the ROKEL (or ROCKLEY) arms — Lozengy
argent and gules — on the tomb (1508) of the said Edmund and his
wife in the same church.
The other quartering, with the crest as given, and motto, Spes mea
DeuSy is recorded in the Funeral entry of No. 8, (1639), in the
Ulster's Office, impaling, for BROWNE, Ermine on a fess embattled
counter-embattled sable three escallops argent. Probably these hackets, or
plumbers' hammers, are merely a garbled form of the original fish.
No. i. Presumably it was when the King, then Prince John, went
to Ireland as Viceroy that William de HAKET accompanied him.
Probably there were other members of the family with him, as the
Irish State Papers record several persons of the name who cannot be
found in the pedigree.
No. 2. Andrew de HAKET is stated erroneously in the Ulster's
pedigree to have owned Coolemine, Co. Dublin. It was his son Peter
who acquired it in 1303 from Peter de BERMINGHAM ; and in 1328
and 1335 his widow, Elenor le PETIT (called Emma in the Ulster's
Pedigree), and son, John FITZ PETER, had certain transactions relating
to the manor with the Archbishop of Dublin.
No. 3. I have a few stray notes of the Rathmacarthy branch, but
not sufficient to give a connected pedigree.
No. 5. The townlands held by Edmund HACKETT'S descendants
were Killedmond (i.e., church of Edmund), Notetown or Nodestown,
Gambonstown and Sladoghbeg, Barony of Middlethird, Co. Tipperary.
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 45
No. 6. The Ulster's pedigree erroneously gives his wife as Joan,
daughter of Oliver MORRIS of Knockagh ; but her parentage is clear
from the husband's will. The Ulster's mistake is probably due to
references to the MORRISES as relations. The connection is through
the WALLS of Coolnamuck.
No. 7, is not mentioned in his brother's will. He is, however,
given in the Ulster's pedigree, from which the pedigree of his descend-
ants is taken.
No. 8. John HACKETT of the funeral entry. In addition to the
children there given he mentions " three young boys, " and " three or
four daughters" (sic) in his will. One of his daughters married Major
John BUTLER of Ballyclohy, and another George EVERARD. The
family lands were confirmed to him in 1629 by Royal Letters Patent,
but were sequestrated from his son by CROMWELL ; Fethard being in
the territories of the ORMONDES. The lands were restored to his
great-grandson James, then a minor, by Letters Patent of Charles II.
in 1684.
No. 10. Sir Thomas HACKETT was Lord Mayor 1685, Deputy
Lieutenant for Co. Dublin, and, in 1689, M.P. for Portarlington.
He was banker to many of the Irish nobility and lost heavily in the
Revolution, being a staunch Jacobite. It is curious to note that his
nephew was serving the House of Orange long before the Revolution.
No. n. I have strong reasons for supposing that this James is the
ancestor of HACKETT of Orchardstown, Co. Tipperary, and through
them of the HACKETTS of Moor Park, Elm Grove, Birr, and Douras,
and the HACKETT-MANDEVILLES of Ballydine. Further information
on this point will be gratefully received.
No. 12. Thomas HACKETT was a friend of GRATTAN, and is said
to have played cards with Marie Antoinette. He dissipated the
family property in gambling.
No. 13. Major James HACKETT'S issue is believed to be extinct in
the male line.
I am anxious to trace the pedigrees of other branches of this family.
W. P. PAKEN HAM-WALSH,
Lieut. R.E.
Crinken House,
Shankill, Co. Dublin.
46
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
Sir Adam de PEMBERTON=...
of Pemberton, Lancashire. |
Living in 1154.
I
Alan de PEMBERTON, (senior) =pEdusa
of Pemberton and Windle.
Living 1189. Called " de
WINDLE ", from the manor
which he inherited through
an heiress. Died in 1200.
I
William de PEMBERTON.
Living in 1246.
I
TON called " de WIN-
DLE " and inherited
the manor.
and heir of
Adam de PEMBERTON, lord of=... Sir Alan de PEMBER-= Amice, dau.
Pemberton. Living 1292. Evi-
dently inherited the manor of
Pemberton.
of Rainhill.
r
Hugh de
TON, 1204. " Hugh,
son of Adam. "
I
r
i
John William^ Mary...
of Pem-
berton.
armiger.
Living
1292.
\
Their great grand-dau. & heir mar-
ried GERARD of Kingsley, Ches-
hire from whom descends the pre-
sent Lord GERARD of Brynn.
I
' ' Dominus Adamde=Alice Thomas . Adam = .
PEMBERTON " lord
of Pemberton and
of Pemberton man-
or 1348.
del
HAC-
KING.
r
John de PEMBERTON.
1348.
I
I
I
n
Matilda (or Maude.)
Married Thomas MOLINEUX
of Sefton.
John. Hugh, William de PEM-==T Eleanor, or
BERTON. I Alienora, 1368.
1
1
1
1
1
1
Thurstan de
Emma.
A dau.
A dau.
Alice.
Mauc
PEMBERTON.
Marr. Robert
Marr. Rafe
Marr...
Marr...
Marr
Held Pem-
HINDLEY of
WORSLEY
SANKEY
PARR
Mo LI
berton manor
Hindley.
of Worsley.
of Sankey.
of Parr.
of Ra
1368.
and I
This branch is said to have ended in heiresses.
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
47
[Who was the father of
this Richard de P. ?
Possibly John, son of
Adam de P., Living 1348]
Richard de PEMBERTON of = Alice...
Tunsted and of Prescot,
Lanes, (Halsnead is in Pres-
cot,) 1385. Died 1415.
I
Thomas de PEMBERTON, gent.==...
Died before his father.
I
I
Hugh de PEMBERTON. Sue- = Margaret, dau. and heir
ceeded his grandfather Rich- of Thomas le NORRES of
ard. In 1404 Halsnead Burtenhead, descended
manor was granted to Hugh from the lords of Sutton
by Richard de MOLYNEUX and Formby, 1219.
de Wigan Woodhous, who
quartered the arms of PEM-
BERTON.
I
Thurstan de=Emma...
PEMBERTON. (see DE
1422-1469. TRAFFORD
Deeds,
No. 107.)
I
William de PEMBERTON of
Halsnead. Died s. p. Was
succeeded by his brother
John.
\
John de PEMBERTON ==...
of Burtenhead, 1490
and 1501.
Richard de
PEMBERTON.
I
James PEMBERTON,
gent. Died i$o8,s.p.
Was succeeded by
his brother George.
1
George PEMBERTON =
of Halsnead, Tuns-
ted, and Pemberton.
Died 1558.
= Isabel, dau.
of John
DYCHEFIELD
of Ditton.
1 1 1
Thomas Richard =
PEM-
Margaret. BERTON.
1577-
=Elizth.
1 1
George William =5:
r
James
1
James PEMBERTON =
(the elder) of Hals-
1 1 1 1 1 I
= Alice Beatrix. John. Eliz. Ellen. dau. dau.
1593. Marr. Rev. Marr. Marr. Marr. Marr.
nead Manor and
Whiston. Died
John
CROSSE,
1512.
1520. 1514
Roger
FAZA- MOLY- DAV-
KERLEY
of F.
NEUX
of Mel-
lyng.
ENPORT.
48
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
r
James PEMBERTON (younger). Born i57i. = Katherine.
Died 1655. His estates were confiscated
by the Commonwealth, but he and his
son George compounded for some por-
tions and bought them back.
I
Richard PEMBERTON ==...
r i
James. George.
r
George PEMBERTON =
Born 1608. Died
1688.
1
=Emma... James * suc- =
ceeded his
bro. George.
1
= ... Richd.=
"1
=Jane. John ==Eliz.
B. 1609. 1 GAR-
D. 1687. 1 NEXT.
Ill II II
Anna. Born Emma. Anna. Born James. Richard. Thomas. James.
1672. Died Died 1685. Died Born Born Born Born
1690. 1675. 1690. 1642. 1647. 1651. 1653.
* In i6gi he conveyed parts of Halsnead to his kinsman, John PEMBERTON, evidently
on the death of his daughter Anna. How, exactly, was his kinsman John related to him ?
Catherine.. .= John PEMBERTON, owned land in;
ist wife. Whiston, Billinge, Up Holland,
Orrell, Ashton, Haigh and Scar-
isbrook. Inherited from his
" kinsman " James a part of
Halsnead. Died 1730.
:Anne, dau. of... SEPHTON,
and widow of Thomas
BISPHAM of Bispham Hall.
I
Robert PEMBERTON. Captain in the Indian
Army. Born 1714. Died 1740. Killed at the
battle of Pondicherry, India. Spendthrift, and
sold the property and all his goods and
chattels.
I
Edward PEMBERTON, = Ellen, dau. of
M.D., 2nd son. Of
Warrington. Born
1715. Died 1781.
J. LYON of
Appleton.
1
Robert PEMBERTON of =
the Inner Temple. A
Commissioner of Bank-
ruptcy. Born 1760.
Died 1 804.
b
= Margaret, dau. and h. of
Edward LEIGH, descend-
ed from the LEIGHS of
Adlington.
b
MM
Thomas.
Matthew.
John.
James.
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
b I b
49
I
Thomas (Pemberton LEIGH)
Baron KINGSDOWN of Torry
Hill, Kent. Eldest son. As-
sumed the name of LEIGH as
cousin and heir to Sir Robert
Holt LEIGH, a descendant of
theLEiGHSof Adlington. Born
1793. Died 1867. s.p.
\ M
Edward LElGH-PEMBERTON=Charlotte, dau. Ann.
of Torry Hill, 2nd son, and of S. Compton Love-
heir to his brother. Born Cox, Esq., a day.
1795. Died 1877. Master in
Chancery.
r
1 1
1
1
III
Sir Edward =: Matilda
Rev. Charles. Robert
. Loftus.
Major-Gen.
Henry.
Emily.
LEIGH-PEM-
C.M.,
Marr. Eliz., Born
4th
Sir
Wyke-
Born
Margt.
BERTON, K.
dau. of
dau. of J. 1826.
son. A
ham LEIGH-
1835-
Char-
C.B., of Tor-
Rev.the
WOODCOCK. Died
Chan-
PEMBER-
Marr.
lotte.
ry Hill, etc.
Hon.
s.p.
cery
TON,
K.C.B.
Mary
Born 1823.
Francis
Regis-
Born 1833.
dau. of
Assist. Legal
James
trar.
Marr. Jessie
the Rt.
Secretary to
NOEL.
Born
dau.
of John
Honble
the Home
Died
1832.
GRAHAM
Sir
Office. D. L.,
1906.
Died
son of Wil-
Rich-
Sf J.P.Kent,
1907.
Ham
GRA-
ard
etc., etc.
s.p.
HAM
of
GARTH.
Born 1823.
Tamrawer,
P.C.
Died 1910.
Stirl
ingshire.
I
1 III
1
Ill
1
II
1
Mil
Robert = Edith Wilfrid. Percy =p Eleanor,
Arnold
Darell
Evelyn
Cyril
Nor-
LEIGH-
dau. May.
LEIGH
dau. of
Franc-
LEIGH-
Hazel.
LEIGH-
man
PEM-
of Maud
. PEM-
Corn-
es
PEM-
PEM-
Hen-
BERTON,
Ro-
BER-
wallis
Margt.
BERTON.
BER-
ry.
of Tor-
bert
TON.
WYKE-
Alice.
Born
TON.
Guy.
ry Hill,
Hay
HAM-
1885.
Born
Do-
etc., J.
MUR-
MARTIN.
1873-
rot-
P., etc.
RAY
Marr.
hy.
Born
Mary
1851.
Evelyn, .
dau. of
George
MEGAW.
1 1
1 III
1 1
Douglas LEIGH- 2 daurs. Three sons. 2 daurs.
PEMBERTON.
In this pedigree the links required are the parentage of Richard
de PEMBERTON, who died in 1415, and of John PEMBERTON, who
inherited from his "kinsman" James, and died in 1730. The
authorities are the PEMBERTON family deeds and papers at Halsnead
Hall, and such usual sources of information as the records of the
Palatinate and Duchy of Lancaster, the Public Records, local
histories, church registers, etc.
I should be much indebted for any light on the above points.
JESSIE G. (LADY) LEIGH-PEMBERTON.
Abbot's Leigh,
Hayward's Heath.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
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SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 51
This is an example of how little may be known about the ancestry
of a man who has achieved some degree of public notice. The chief fig-
ure in the accompanying pedigree died but recently ; his biography has
been published and contains only very scanty family particulars ; and
though several contemporary relatives survive, the annexed particulars
are all that an enquiry can elicit.
Thomas Lake HARRIS, widely known as a religious mystic and
writer of poetry which seems enigmatic to the " Philistine, " was born
in the parish of Bletchley, the only child of a farmer and miller. As
he went to America when five years old his career is identified with
American rather than English interests. He visited the land of his
birth several times, and in 1866 annexed the personality of Laurence
OLIPHANT. It is this event which constitutes HARRIS'S claim on our
interest, as the spiritual and mental subjugation of the " Admirable
CRICHTON " of his day is one of the romances of real life.
HARRIS in 1844 was minister to a " Universalist " church ; then he
joined the Spiritualists, then the Swedenborgians, and then founded a
religion of his own — " The Brotherhood of the New Life. " In 1891
he dedicated his Lyra Triumphalis to SWINBURNE : and announced that
he had put on immortality and perennial youth !
One critic notes — " Dr. DOWIE was a very simple character in com-
parison with HARRIS. "
It is stated that HARRIS came of " an old Puritan stock. " That
his people were dissenters is evident ; no entry of LAKE or HARRIS is
found in either Bletchley or Fenny Stratford Registers, and the records
of the Baptists in Fenny Stratford are unfortunately scanty and im-
perfect. He also claimed that his " family was descended from the
Earl of MALMESBURY ", but no proof is offered of this assertion ; a
similar claim, equally unsupported, is not uncommonly made by
people of the name of HARRIS.
American correspondents may be able to provide details of the
father Thomas HARRIS'S second wife, the dates and places of death and
burial ; also of Thomas Lake HARRIS'S third wife (it seems he was
married thrice), and the names of his sons, etc.
W. BRADBROOK.
Bletchley.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
($ofonia;
Thomas de Bolonia, benefactor to the monks of Muchelney, co. Somerset= ..
I
Sir Pharamus de BOLONIA, lord of Wydecombe, Tintenhull, and .
in Martock, co. Somerset, 1238, 1242, 1243. Benefactor to the monks I
of Muchelney.
I
Richard de BOLONIA, lord of=...
Wydecombe, Tintenhull and
Ashe. 1254, 1256.
I
Walter. Held
land in Wyde-
combe in 1249-50.
I
John. Held land
in Wydecombe in
1249-50.
r
Sir Pharamus de BOLONIA
de WYDECOMBE, lord of Wyde-
combe,Tintenhull and Ashe 1262-
1285. [Harl. MS. 1451.]
I
Robert de WYDECOMBE.
Held land in Wydecombe
1263. occ. 1284.
I
Sir Robert de BOLONIA alias=?...
de WYDECOMBE of Wyde-
combe and Ashe 1280-1293.
[Harl. 1451.]
I
Pharamus de WYDECOMBE.
Held lands in Wydecombe
in 1293.
I
William de WYDECOMBE:^...
of Wydecombe [Harl.
I
Peter de BOLONIA
of Ashe 1306, 1311.
John de WYDECOMBE of Wydecombe 1303, 1314, 1322 [Harl. 1451]= ...
I
Walter de WYDECOMBE, lord of Wydecombe ^=Ellena...
1325-1340 ; constable of Corfe Castle, Dorset, I Widow
[Harl- MS1-] I in *347-
I
Walter de WYDECOMBE, =p...
lord of Wydecombe
1347-1363. [Harl. 1451.]
1
John de CRUKERNE,
" sonne of Walter de
WIDCOMBE. " [Harl.
I
Thomas de CRUKERNE,
•' sonne of Walter de
WIDCOMBE. " [Harl.
John de WYDECOMBE, lord of Wydecombe. = ...
? benefactor of the church of Frome 1377. [
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
53
John de WYDECOMBE =
lord of Wydecombe.
I
I
Robert WYDECOMBE, WiDCOMBE, = Benedicta.
or WHITCOMBE, of Shrewsbury, | occ. 1428.
1420-1445.
John WYDECOMBE, = ..
lord of Wydecom-
be. Held lands in
Chinnock and
Hardington, Som-
erset, 1431-2
'T1
J
Robert WHITCOMBE
of Shrewsbury,
junior, merchant.
\
Jone, only dau.
Wife of Thomas
LLOYD of Shrews-
bury 1479.
I
T
Thomas WYDE- = Edith, dau. &
COMBE or WHIT-
COMBE, of Mal-
veysin Berwick,
co. Salop.
heir of Adam
MALVEYSIN of
Malveysin
Berwick.
a quibus
WHITCOMBE of
Shropshire.
I
John WYDECOMBE, the younger, "late of=...
Mertok, co. Somerset, yoman, 1461."
I
John WITDECOMBE of Witdecombe==sjoane.
r
John WITDECOMBE of Witdecombe =• Alice. ..
and other lands in Martock and 1527.
elsewhere in Somerset. Will proved
in 1527. (P.C.C. Register "Porch."
fo. 23.)
I
William WITDECOMBE, = Eliza-
1527. beth..
I527-
54 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
According to the Domesday Survey, the township of Martock in
the county of Somerset was held in chief of the Conqueror by Eustace,
Count of BOULOGNE, whose daughter and heir conveyed it through
marriage to Stephen, Count of BLOIS, afterwards King of England, and
their younger son, William, Count of BOULOGNE, conceded it to his
kinsman Pharamus de BOLONIA.
This Pharamus was son of William and grandson of Geoffrey de
BOLONIA, a younger brother of Count Eustace ; their eldest brother
was the illustrious Godfrey de BOLONIA, or BOULOGNE, Duke of
Lorraine, the famous Crusader who was elected first Christian King of
Jerusalem. Pharamus seems to have settled the lordships of Wyde-
combe and Ashe within his manor of Martock upon one of his
brothers, (of whom there were two, Eustace and Simon) whose son
(or grandson) and successor was
Thomas de BOLONIA, lord of Wydecombe and Ashe in the parish
of Martock, whose name appears at the head of the preceding
pedigree. He was a benefactor to the monks of Muchelney, and his
charter was confirmed in 1240 by his son and successor Pharamus.
Sir Pharamus de BOLONIA was lord of Wydecombe, Tintenhull and
Ashe in Martock 1238, 1242, 1243. ^n addition to confirming his
father's charter to the monks of Muchelney, he was himself their
benefactor in 1240. He appears as a knight in 1242-43.
Sir Pharamus de BOLONIA alias de WYDECOMBE, son of Richard, and
grandson of Pharamus, appears first as Pharamus de BOLONIA at
Tintenhull in 1262, and in the same year as a knight he is witness to
a charter of Robert de SANCTO CLARO to Montacute Abbey. As
Pharamus de WYDECOMBE he occurs at Tintenhull in 1263, and in
the following year he is in dispute with Robert son of Walter con-
cerning land in Wydecombe. As Sir Pharamus de WYDECOMBE he
was one of the knights elected on a jury to enquire concerning the
Liberty of the Island of Muchelney in 1280, in which year he is on
the Assize Roll as Pharamus de BOLONIA. He occurs again in 1283,
1284 and 1285 as Pharamus de WYDECOMBE. Robert de WYDECOMBE,
who held land in Wydecombe in 1263-4, was doubtless a brother of
his. In 1284 his name follows immediately after that of Pharamus as
a witness to an inquest taken at Martock.
[In Harleian MS. 1451, fo. 172, Pharamus de WYDECOMBE, in the
parish of Martock, stands first of six generations, viz : Pharamus,
Richard, William, John, Walter, Walter.]
Sir Richard de BOLONIA alias de WYDECOMBE, son of Sir Pharamus,
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 55
as Richard de BOLONIA held "Aysse and Wytecumbe " of William
de FIENNES, his kinsman (great-grandson of Ingelram de FIENNES and
Sybil his wife, daughter and heir of Pharamus de BOLONIA, the original
grantee of Martock, temp. Henry II) in 1286. In 1293-4 he is in
dispute with his brother Pharamus, son of Pharamus de WYDECOMBE,
over land in Wydecombe and Asshe-juxta-Mertok.
John de WYDECOMBE, son of William and grandson of Sir Richard,
was perhaps the latter's successor. He appears on the Subsidy Roll
for the Hundred of Martock as early as 1303, and in 1314 is witness
to a grant of John de MOREBATHE juxta Brideport of lands at " la
Feune-juxta-Mertoke. " In 1322 John de WYDKCOM BE was enfeoffed
of the manor of Hardington in Somerset.
Walter de WYDECOMBE (WIDCOMBE, WHITECOMBE, etc.) son of
John, was lord of Wydecombe in 1325, in which year John SAY of
Martock is appointed to arrest him. Four years later he receives
protection with the same John SAY for going beyond the sea on the
King's service, for which in the same year he receives exemption for
life from being put on assizes, juries, or recognisances, and from
appointments as mayor, sheriff, coroner or other minister of the Crown
against his will. In 1330 we again find him associated with John SAY
of Martock and also with William de MONTE ACUTO, Earl of Salis-
bury, under whom in 1338 he is appointed constable of Corfe Castle,
Dorset, an office which he still holds in 1340. He was dead by 1347
and had left Elena his widow guardian to his son and heir Walter,
then under age.
Walter's appearance in Dorset is interesting and is followed in 1342
by a complaint of trespass against John de WYDECOMBE, Stephen de
WYDECOMBE and others in Fordington. In 1244 Philip de WYDI-
COMBE occurs on a Dorset Roll. In 1332 William de WIDCOMBE was
chaplain of Colbere, co. Dorset, and in 1408 Edward de WHITECOMBE
appears as a juror in an inquest taken at Erode Wyndesore ; but
beyond these exceptions no trace of the name is seen in Dorset until
the latter part of the 1 5th century, when a well-defined branch of the
family, bearing the WHITCOMBE arms, appropriately differenced,
appears in Sherborne and afterwards in Lillington in that county,
thriving until the middle of the i8th century. From them the
WHITCOMBS of America (descendants of John WHETCOMBE of Dor-
chester, Scituate and Lancaster, Massachusetts, 1588-1662) are
derived ; but the origin and ultimate end of this family in England I
have been unable to determine, though I suspect it to be derived from
the original Somerset stock.
Walter de WYPECOMBE, son and heir of Walter, was under age in
1347. In 1353, however, he is witness to a deed of William de
MOUNTAGUE, Earl of Salisbury, for the manor of Corry Ryvel in
56 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
Somerset ; and in 1360 and 1363 we meet him associated with John
de MONTE ACUTO.
Until recent times the family has had representatives in the county of
Somerset, none of whom however seem to have been of much account.
Walter was succeeded by a son John, who may have been that John
de WYDECOMBE who was in 1377 benefactor to the church of Frome.
But the last clearly settled in Martock was John WITDECOMBE, who
by will 1527 (P.C.C. 23 " PORCH ", 3 Sept., 19 Hen. VIII.) bequeaths
his lands in Witdecombe, Bowrehenton, Cote, Lymborough in the
parish of Martock, Kingsbury, Drayton, Fivehead, Crewkerne,
Greinton, Edington, Langporteston, Langton Weston, Southwick and
Fromselwood, to his wife Alice for life, with remainder to his brother
William and his heirs. He was son of John and Joane WITDECOMBE.
In 1461 "John WYDECOMBE the younger, late of Mertok, co.
Somerset, yoman " appears in the Patent Rolls. He was probably
grandfather of John of Martock last considered (i.e. the testator of
1527) and father of the latter's father John. His description as John
the younger forces the conclusion that his father was also John, and
was probably identical with that John who in 1431-2 was a deforciant
in a suit concerning lands in Chinnock (four miles S.E. of Martock),
Hewenbeare and Hardington in Somerset, and was undoubtedly heir
in the second or third generation to Walter de WYDECOMBE the
younger, just discussed.
In 1331 Philip de WHITECOUMBE occurs in a suit against John de
COSTON, parson of Bandrip, and in 1354 William de WYDECOMBE is
witness to a charter of Henry de LACY concerning lands in Donneheved,
co. Somerset. The names of Simon WYDECOMBE and Isabella his
wife appear in 1388-9 in connection with the manor of Sandford-
Oreskoys, Somerset. In 1412 Richard WYDECOMBE of Bath was
elected on a jury to decide the position of the city pillory ; he was
Member of Parliament for Bath in 1389, 1414, 1420, 1424 and 1428.
Thomas WYDECOMBE was juror to an inquest in Martock in 1431, and
in the Patent Rolls of Edward IV. we read of " Wydecombe, co.
Somerset, with other lands lately held by Thomas WYDECOMBE and
Elena his wife and Thomas his son, 1463. "
The Arms borne by the family of WYDECOMBE of Wydecombe in
Martock since the days of Henry III. have been : Paly of six, or and
sable, three eagles displayed counterchanged.
Robert WYDECOMBE (WIDCOMBE, WHITCOMBE, etc.) of Shrewsbury
was a Somerset man, and his son Thomas, who married Edith heiress
of MALVEYSIN of Malveysin Berwick, co. Salop, is constantly described
as of Wydecombe, co. Somerset. He and his descendants have
always borne and still bear the undifferenced arms of the early WYDE-
COMBES of Wydecombe in Martock ; they were proved at the Visitation
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 57
of Salop in 1623 and again by Richard WHITCOMBE, barrister-at-law,
in 1 8 1 8. Robert was a man of some account in Shrewsbury. He was
freeman of the town and five times its bailiff between 1420 and 1441 ;
while he was its representative in Parliament in 1420, 1421, and 1433.
By his wife, Benedicta, he left issue two sons : Robert of Shrewsbury,
who left an only daughter Jone, wife of Thomas LLOYD of Shrewsbury,
and Thomas aforesaid, ancestor of the Shropshire WHITCOMBES, from
whom descended the WHITCOMBES of Worcestershire (i8th century),
London (ijth century), and perhaps of Kent (iyth century).
The ancestry of Robert is a matter of some doubt, and strictly it is
not possible with the evidence as yet at hand to place him. Joseph
MORRIS, the Shropshire genealogist, made him son of John de
WYDECOMBE of Wydecombe (in Martock), and there is much in support
of his assertion.
In the 1 6th century there was a well-established branch in Devon,
bearing the usual arms, slightly differenced, whence sprung the
WHITCOMBES (WHETCOMBE, etc.) of Essex, who flourished in that
county at least till 1845. ^n tne middle of the 1 8th century a family
of WHITCOMBE appeared in the county of Gloucester, representatives
of which still survive.
I should much appreciate any information or evidence leading to
the connection of the above names and facts, the extension of the
Somerset pedigree, establishment of the origin of the Devon, Dorset,
Kent, Gloucester or American branches, or any particulars and data of
the family in all its branches. Especially I am anxious to obtain
evidence as to the ancestry and connections of Robert WYDECOMBE
(WHITCOMBE) of Shrewsbury (1420-1445), and his son Thomas, of
Malveysin-Berwick, co. Salop.
Harold A. WHITCOMBE.
5, Hagley Road,
Edgbaston, Birmingham.
H
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
ftrom
William WICKHAM of
ington, Somt. yeoman.
J
I I
ucnara iMizaDeiu-
A/ICKHAM. Marr. in
Died in 1684 (ist
717. s.p. wife).
ington or Nether Stowey, wife). Married Cannington,
Somt. yeoman. Will dated before 1727. Somt., living
7 Sep. 1727. Living 1731. I73I-
s.p.
r
A
on
b.
nf.
1 II
William Grace.
EVANS. in 1731
Died in
ijios.p. Malah,
I73i-
1 1
Died Ann = Thomas Elizabeth. Marr. =
• S'P- I73I- Perry about 1710.
*73i-
: Robt. WOOLCOTT,
Clerk. 1731.
living ["" ~~|
Elizabeth. A minor Anne.
in 1730. I73°-
TTT
Mary. Died=John GILL Sarah,
before 1731. Mary.
s.p. Joane.
All dead in 1727.
Deduced from Chancery Proceedings, A,D. 1730 TEALE v. PERRY (306).
'73 1 „ „ „ (438).
1757, TURNER v. PERRY (638).
Edward NOON, Parish Clerk of St. Paul, Covent=s= Elizabeth
Garden. Will dated 19 Sep. 1709, and pr. P.C.C. 1709.
J
I
Elizabeth. Died ^= Rev. Mervin PERRY, Rector of Dyrham,
March 1752. I Glouc. Died 17 December 1752.
1 1
Edward PERRY. Elizabeth. ==Wm. ENGLAND of
Died before Died I Westerleigh,
1752, s. p. I739- 1 Glouc., yeoman.
1 1 1
Margaret. Died Mervin PERRY.
before 1752. Died s.p. before
Mary. Died be- 1752.
fore 1752.
r
Margaret eldest=John TURNER, of |
child 1757. Westerleigh, felt- Ann.
maker 1757. Died
before
I752-
1 1
William PERRY. Born John PERRY.
after Sep. 1709. Of Born after
Reading, cabinet-ma- Sep. 1709.
ker in 1757. Living 1757.
* Continued from vol. I, p. 352.
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
59
1734, HOUGHTON v. PERRY (1038).
... HOUGHTON. Died = Elizabeth [sister to
before 1720. I John PERRY?] 1720.
I
John HOUGHTON of London, gent. Married = Elizabeth, d. of ...
about 1720. Had property in Appleton, | JOHNSTONE 1734.
Berks ; Cassington, Oxon, etc.
I
James >
HOUGHTON
1728.
r 71
James HOUGHTON William HOUGHTON
of London, Ma- of London, vintner,
riner. 1734. 1734.
I \
Elizabeth Mary=John STRINGFELLOW
of London, 1734. of London. Died
1734. before 1734.
G. S. PARRY, LT.-COL.
(pebtgree QRegiefer" (gtecorb of Q&irf00,
©eaffle, (&ppotnftnenf0t (preferment, etc.
WILSON. — On 3rd. July, at Bridge of Earn, Perthshire, Agnes Marion
WILSON, widow of the late Major Stuart WILSON, and daughter of the
late David James SMEATON of Letham and Abbey Park, N.B. *
* Some genealogical, biographical, and biological facts have been filed with the Editor.
60 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
Qtofc* an* (gtaritw*.
ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS at SOMERSET HOUSE.— Rather
more than fifty years ago, in 1858, as the result, probably, of the appearance of
David Copperfield, business connected with the proving and keeping of wills was
transferred from Doctors' Commons to Somerset House. Great accumulations
of ancient records and papers were transferred from the old, semi-ecclesiastical,
proctors, who made so good a thing of it, to the modern permanent Civil service,
some of the records dating back as early as 1258 ; and a separate department
was created (at the public expense) to arrange, catalogue, index, and produce
them when needed. There have been some excellent officials in that depart-
ment and some excellent work has been done, but some of the old slackness,
inherited no doubt from Doctors' Commons, has survived until the present day.
The following are some of the conditions there as regards ancient records more
than a hundred years old ; and these, being public records, as no one will dispute,
should be undoubtedly as freely accessible as ancient records can be made for
the purposes of modern historical research.
The Literary Enquiry Department is closed for six weeks, (one eighth part
of the year) every Summer, at a season when it is particularly convenient for
many residents in the country to come up to town to do a little research work;
and for a further six weeks the Department is open only from 1 1 a.m. to 3 p.m.
There are prohibitive fees to be paid for the privilege of seeing original
documents.
Non-testamentary records, dating from 1258, are not allowed to be seen
under any circumstances ; which raises the question, For what purpose (at the
public expense) are they preserved at all ?
The accommodation is so limited during the short hours the Department is
open that it is a common thing for applicants to be refused a seat.
The record-keepers are so little acquainted with the elements of the business
of record-keeping that no Schedules or Class Lists of what Bundles, books, ^c.,
exist are to be seen there on the shelves ; and, although certain Indexes have
been printed, copies are not available.
Priceless documents and papers remain entirely unsorted, bundled up, or
indexed in any way ; can never be consulted, and are in imminent danger of
destruction — are, in fact, being destroyed, by dirt and neglect.
What is the remedy ?
A new President of the Probate Division has lately been appointed, and to
him a humble Petition, signed by sixty readers and others of some eminence in
the literary world, has been presented. The promoters of this Petition are
resolved, with the aid of those who are interested at all in ancient records (kept
at the public expense), to take every constitutional means to have them made
freely accessible all the year round, during ordinary office hours, to those who
can make use of them — to have them brought, in short, under precisely similar
regulations as obtain in regard to ancient records now at the Public Record
Office.
If Socialism means finding " soft " places for some of the community, with
hours ii to 3, and an interval for luncheon, (when the office is open), and full
\
SEPT. 19 10] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 61
pay when it is not, at the expense of the rest, I have no hesitation in saying
that the Department of Ancient Records in the Principal Probate Registry at
Somerset House forms the strongest object-lesson against Socialism with which
I have yet met. I do not think this state of things would have continued had
these records remained in the hands of the Church. The Court Rolls of the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners, for example, have been thrown open freely, as they
should be, to anyone who can make use of them. G. S.
A CASE OF ENTAIL.— One of Sir Thomas PHILLIPPS'S MSS., No.
25685, contained the following draft letter and pedigree, now in my possession
by the courtesy of the Revd. H.R. HUBAND. The paper is in a rather
dilapidated condition and the writing somewhat hard to decipher, so that it will
be as well to preserve in print the information it contains. The table is slightly
re-arranged in conformity with the generally-accepted arrangement of pedigree
matter. Additions and doubtful readings are in brackets :
"T.P. 14 Octor. 1808. — Dear OAKLEY. [In reference to] the 6 difP
Papers delivd by you to me some few days ago relative to a supposed Right in
Mrs B. OAKLEY'S Famy to several freehd Estes in Petticoat Lane, St. Leonard
[Shoreditch] &? Enfield the follg Observ'ons & Questns occur to me for attentn.
Under what Instrum* did Mr John JAMES, who appears to be Mrs BUT-
CHER'S Gl GrandP &f who is Conjectured to have cut off the Entail become
so entitled to this Property ? Or what reason is there to imagine that he was
only Tenant in tail ; for he states himself in his will to have a disposable interest
wch wod not be the case if he had not the Fee. And how was it known to be
an Entail ? N.B. If there was an Entail it must have been either barred by a
Fine or a Recovy ; &f which of those Acts was the most proper the Writ8 creatg
the Est[at]e tail will be necessy to shew. A search made unsuccessf7 for a Fine
in the years 1725, 1726, 1727 &f 1728 was not suff*. ; for he not dying until
1736 there were sev1. other years in which a search might have been effected
with great Propriety, both for a Fine & a Recov7. Did Mrs Mary HIGGINS the
Mor of Mr J. JAMES, execute any appo* under his will in favour of Creditors
or o'rwise or was his pers[onal] Est[at]e adequate to the disch[arg]e of his
Debts? When did Mrs HIGGINS die? N.B. She was dead in Decr 1739.
What is become of Mr. Sam1 JAMES, his Bro'r, and did he do any Act to bar
his Entail ? The like question arises as to Mr J. FOULDS, the Uncle ? How
has Mr. ROSSETER, whom you mentd to me, come into the Famy or acquired
an Int* ? Does not the Est[at]e tail in quest11 arise under Mr John JAMES'
will ? If so, all enquiry previous to that Instrum1 will be useless.
Has any profess1 gentn been hitherto concerned in instituting enquiries, and,
if so, who was he, and where is his Bill ? This circumstance is very material.
N.B. There is a pencil observn in the margin of fo. 4 of the Office copy of
Mrs J. JAMES will intimatg that she did not avail herself of [appointing?] the
Est[at]e : but on what Foundation & by whom was that observn made?
Unless Mesdmes KINMAN, W. JONES & F. CROWDER are dead with1 leavg any
descend*8 a moiety only of these freehdEst[at]es can be vested in Mrs BUTCHER.
And the most essential Points apparently to be established are that Mre HIGGINS
did not exec6 any appo*., that Mr Samuel JAMES had not any Issue ; or, if he
had, that it is extinct & that no Act was done to destroy that Entail, and that
62
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
the Famy of John FOULDS is also determined in like manner. I shall be happy
in congratulating you that there is a Prospect of something & with due infor-
mation will endeavour to establish it. — Yours very truly, R.G.T. Benjn
OAKLEY Esqre., 9, Castle Alley, Royal Exche. "
Samuel JAMES= Mary FOULDS, sister=Wm. HIGGINS who survived
I to John FOULDS. her 2nd husbd.
N.B. There were 2 Dau'rs also,
it appears by Mr.B. OAKLEY'S
Ansr. to my L're.-R.G.T.
I
John JAMES. ^= Margaret.
Will dated 3
Oct. 1736.
I
Samuel JAMES.
I
Chas. WALTON =p Frances JAMES. N.B. She
I is not noticed in her Par's
will.
I
Mat. COATS= Hannah JAMES. N.B. She
I is not mentd. in her
I Father's will.
I
I
Chas. == Elizabeth Robert —Margaret Richard PAGE. == Hannah COATS.
[WALTON].
Chas.
TRAPP. [WALTON].
DAVIES.
Died 1772 or
1773-
Married 7 July
1738. Died Jan.
1792.
[WALTON].
GERMAINE.
surgeon. 1745 but marr. as " Maria".
24 Nov. 1763. Died Dec.
1808.
1 1
Eliza Winifred
[married] [married]
KINMAN. JONES.
1
Frances
[married ist]
CROWDER
now [2nd]
SCRIVEN.
1
John BUTCHER. Benjamin:
Born 10 Oct. OAKLEY.
1769.
1
= Hannah Marcy
Ann, but christen-
ed " Hannah Mar-
ia". Born 4 Mar,
1773-
1 1 INI III
Adriana Hannah Page
SIR THOMAS PHILLIPPS' MSS.— (I. 174). In June, Messrs. SOTHEBY
sold a further portion of this remarkable library, making the fourteenth portion
which has been so dispersed. This time there were upwards of two hundred
volumes on vellum, besides extensive collections of State Papers, original corres-
pondence, heraldic and genealogical works. Nearly every county in England
was represented by collections of original deeds, court rolls, &fc. The lots
numbered over nine hundred and the most interesting Catalogue ran to 151
pages.
"THE PEDIGREE REGISTER" COLLECTION OF MSS.— To Mr.
C. Davies SHERBORN we are indebted for the MS. slips of the Catalogue of the
WINCKLEY Papers, now deposited in the Town Clerk's Office, Preston, Lan-
cashire. These comprise about 1220 items, ranging from A.D. 1348 to 1867,
and relate principally to Preston and the neighbourhood. The papers passed
SEPT. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 63
from the WINCKLEY family to Sir John SHELLEY and Count MUENSTER ; and
from him to Mr. SHERBORN, by whom they were handed on to the custody of
the County Borough of Preston, on the understanding that the documents
should be always freely accessible to literary enquirers. Typewritten copies
of the Catalogue are in the possession of the Town Clerk of Preston, and
ourselves. It comprises short lists of documents relating to the following places.
Balderstone, 1679-1820. Kirkland, 1544-1698.
Brockholes, 1348-1857. Mitton, 1653-1676.
Catterall, temp. Edward 11-1855. Osbaldeston, 1677-1697.
Guerdon, area 1559-1759- Ribbleton, 1682-1861.
Fullwood, 1609-1728. Walton-le-Dale, 1586-1791.
Garstang, 1422-1697.
PARISH REGISTERS.— The Parish Register, by William BRADBROOK,
M.R.C.S., The Genealogist's Pocket Library, vol. VII. (Walton-on-Thames,
C.A. BERNAU 1910, i6mo. 2s. 6d.)
It is probable that a juster and more accurate view of English life and
character could be obtained from a study of this little book than from six-months
diligent perusal of the contemporary daily press. Beginning with Sir Thomas
CROMWELL'S injunction of 1535, that registers of baptisms, marriages and burials
should be systematically kept, the author gives a table of the principal enactments
affecting registers of this kind down to the time of general Civil registration in
1837. The one purpose which the legislature never once contemplated, and
does not realize to this day, is that Parish Registers and other records of birth,
marriage and death are valuable as records, altogether apart from pecuniary
claims. It might easily be urged that the withholding from inspection of any
public record, except upon payment of fees, amounts to a denial of justice.
We are charmed with the numerous, hitherto unpublished, examples given of
many entries — with the author's observations, drawn from the experience of
many years. " Quis homo hie est ? Quo patre natus ? " is the quotation at the
head of one of the chapters. "... why this is flat knavery to take upon him
another man's name. " Few of the half-world, one imagines, know that to
assume a " professional " name is a survival of the old Roman law, which
compelled women of loose character to take a name not their own, so that
infamy might not be brought upon an honourable one. The statistics and
historical illustrations are not the least valuable part of the book. This is the
direct writing of experience, and throughout the book one gets that sustained
impression.
Stony Stratford is in the author's own particular country. An entry in the
Register there records, very appropriately,
" 1665. Old Knockstone, the pavier, bur., Aug. I2th. "
It was in the hotel-book there that the traveller wrote, " They may well call
this place Stony Stratford, for I have been most terribly bitten by fleas. "
References to English Surnames, 1601, by F.K. and S. HITCHING. (Walton
on Thames, Chas. A. BERNAU, 1910. Small quarto, los. 6d.) This work is
part of a scheme designed to provide an Index for certain years to all the sur-
names in the Parish Registers of England. It takes the year 1601, and those
Registers which happen to be printed, and shews in what Register for that
64 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1910
particular year certain surnames occur. There are nearly twenty-thousand
references. This is excellent spade-work and we hope the compilers will be
encouraged to further effort. We do not, however, quite approve of the old
capital " F " being treated as if it were double " f, " nor of the old " U "
being treated as " V " when it happened to be written in that form. To
enter a name like " UNWIN " under " V, " when a separate place is set apart
for " U " surnames, is absurd.
A series of such indexes would go far towards fixing the local habitation of
families during the period covered by them. To determine this is, of course,
the first step towards the discovery of family history.
To think of the town of Olney is to think of COWPER, of the bridge men-
tioned in " The Task, " and of the tame hares. Since COWPER'S time the thing
of most permanent importance which has happened in connection with the
town is the printing of the Parish Registers of Olney, 1665-1812. The fourth
and fifth parts, with the Index, are now issued by the Bucks Parish Register
Society. Pure chance saved the Registers from destruction by fire in 1786 ;
their contents will in future be both safe and easily accessible ; but probably of
Olneyites themselves not one in fifty knows how much he owes to the producers
of this excellent work. This Society (Hon. Sec., W. BRADBROOK, M.R.C.S.,
Bletchley,) has now to its credit thirteen admirable volumes.
The Legitimist Kalendar for 1910. (Forget-me-not Royalist Club, 32, Elgin
Crescent, Bayswater, London, W. 8V0. IDS.) There is much matter of histor-
ical and biographical value in this book, in addition to the genealogical tables
of royal personages, and there is a fairly full, but not exhaustive, Index. We
dare not venture on any criticism of the ostensible object of the Kalendar, for
fear of being misunderstood, beyond saying that if Legitimist claims seem logical,
the weakness of logicians lies in this, that being but human, they are apt to
overlook some important element or other which to the argument is vital.
Comprehensive Pedigree, No. 3. The PISTON Family of the Midland
Counties . . . 1600-1910, by Edward Mil ward Seede PARKER. (Weston-super-
Mare, 1910, Folio, ypp.) The earlier parts of this scheme were noticed in
The Pedigree Register, I, 237, 366. In this part descents of MILWARD and
PARKER of Keynsham, Somerset, are given in careful and most accurate detail.
It is interesting to note that the Revd. Benjamin MILWARD (1732-1785), a
fully-ordained clergyman, was appointed in 1773, by the lord of the manor of
West Cranmore, Somerset, as his gamekeeper ; holding at the same time the
office of Surrogate for granting marriage-licences.
Catalogue of Booh and Tracts on Genealogy and Heraldry in the Central Tublic
Libraries [at Newcastle-upon-Tyne]. (Newcastle-upon-Tyne. 1910, small
quarto, pp. 68.) While welcoming any catalogue of genealogical works we
cannot extend our congratulations in this case to printing, paper, or binding.
Nor can we recommend the Index. If, for example, we wish to discover at
once whether anything is in the Library of genealogical fact concerning inhab-
itants of Warkworth, or of merry Carlisle, or of fifty other places named in the
body of the work, the Index is useless. The Catalogue is a classified catalogue
and the Index is a classified index. There is a good list of printed Rolls of
Arms, and we note with satisfaction that a collection of deeds relating to North-
umberland and Durham will be dealt with in a separate Calendar.
The Pedigree Register
DEC. 1910] [VOL. II, No. 15.
, anb a
" John Bennett one
This Bock God
Giue him
Grace Thaeron
to Luck Anno
Dom : 1679 ".(flourish)
That finished, we may presume that John BENNETT'S whole duty
of man was laid down for practice. Could the writer have seen ahead
in the far future — for clairvoyance was fashionable in those days too(!)
— that antiquary and bookhunter of the nineteenth century prowling
about old Holywell Street, (still in being though threatened daily with
the housebreaker), said bibliophile rescuing Bishop HALL'S Contentation
with these pious lines from the " sixpenny box " of varia, and herein
displaying for all to see, he might have marvelled that time and posterity
had taken their revenge by way of The Pedigree Register, on this effort
that for so long had blushed in the dark unseen. Allowing for seven-
teenth-century pronunciation, BENNETT'S prosody is not far out, and
it is plain that John had a dialect of his own ; an accent too, say
from north of the Thames. We leave the puzzle to the " E.D.D. "
and its learned Grammar. But, one may ask, why, with such a
common English surname, did he not give us a little genealogy, as
" a gift from my aunt Priscilla ", or other amiable pedigree lore ?
What possibilities might that have opened up — well, at all events,
outside of BENNETT and.... SMITH? For such we should have been
grateful. As it is, J.B.'s lines as evidence are not even a small mercy.
All the same, at this distance of 200 years and odd, we are beholden
to him for the quaint scrawl. Nay, before leaving John BENNETT and
Contentation^ we must own to speaking in our opening lines the true
word that is spoken in jest — partly at all events — for Joseph, Bishop
of Norwich, was surely a tolerably good specimen of tireless patience
and virile Christianity.*
There is to me something intimate, personal, and interesting in
these book superscriptions, though but simple autographs, and their
material for pedigrees of the slightest. But the paradox may be
* See Lord LYTTON'S apt use of the Bishop's characteristics in The Caxtons. LYTTON'S
references are to HALL'S Meditations.
66 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
risked, that even such may be of greater value than more direct tes-
timony. They are circumstantial evidence, and perhaps not much of
that; but there is the stimulus of the slight clue and what it is going
to open up. In a genealogical search this is sometimes worth all.
Keen students will appreciate the goad of the motive and the
problem. It may be one of those little things, unimportant at first
sight, and unnoticed except by individual collectors here and there, but
for genealogical purposes an unworked mine. Of course data such
as these are only one of other sources of information, more or less
neglected, I think, and it depends on the character of the particular
search how far such minor evidence may come into use.
Diaries, though their much fuller detail will not bear comparison with
the meagreness of autographs, have of course a definite interest of
their own, which they share with memoirs, letters, and other evidence
that lies beyond the strait confines of formal biography. In the
"all at sixpence" box again in old Booksellers' Row there turned up
from under a heap of musty trifles POTTER'S Grecian Antiquities — ye
booklovers know it, with its leather backs, large print and elaborate
copper-plates. Mine was one of the usual eighteenth century editions,
about 1747, I think, and not much to look at; but on closer inspection
POTTER was seen to be a blind, serving here as custodian of untold
and secret things. In days gone by he must have kept his discreet
outside wedged in among the other books: heavy, no doubt, with
consequential reserve; for here, in faded ink, written between the
printed lines and running on to the margins, was revealed the diary
of a well-known literary man of his day. The book belonged to
Capell LOFFT the younger, and the journal dealt with the first three
years of his married life. You will find all about Capell LOFFT, father
and son, in the " D.N.B. "; short and adequate accounts and fairly
prosaic — not so my original writing, for here was life and gossip and
intimacy. To profane eyes were spread open the thoughts and doings
of those three years of work and recreation, anxiety and peace, self-
questioning and hopeful schemes. Reticence is naturally not to be
looked for in documents of this kind; but, apart from some personal
self-revelation and conscious analysis, which are the characteristic, and
indeed, the purpose most often of such daily memoranda, events
play round the early years of Victoria's reign. To judge from the
few remarks, grimly humorous in tone, the diarist permits himself to
make on public events, LOFFT would now be reckoned a Socialist, if
it is just to use so fluid a term to describe his contempt for Coronations
and suchlike symbols of mediaeval tyranny, and his enthusiasm for
those " agin the Government ". Labour was, in those days, begin-
ning to stir to its grievances, and it is interesting to read these mental
details of a barrister iand literary man, whose chief work, frequently
DEC. 1 910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 67
referred to in the diary, is perhaps the long Chartist poem of Ernest.
As we noted above, there is much self-questioning in the diary,
and self-improvement and the formation or character are topics that
are often discussed. The ethical outlook of the time came on the
heels of more than one " revival"; a reaction from the deadness — in
a religious sense — of the eighteenth century; the religious impetus
of the greatest of these revivals bifurcating in Wesleyanism on the one
hand, and somewhat later in the High Church movement at Oxford.
And the literature of that time reflects, as it should, this rather self-
conscious stirring to improvement — quite good and healthy-minded
in its way — and its dissatisfaction with the grosser material age that had
passed. For Sunday, BLAIR'S Sermons ; Hannah MORE was not long
dead; for strict Evangelicals there were the Tales of MRS SHERWOOD;
Sandford and Merton was still solemnly coming out at intervals (for
people had not yet tumbled to the fun of its didactic platitudes) and
Mr. PUNCH'S version of DAY'S masterpiece was not yet due.
Minor books of the period these, but still significant of middle-class
thought and taste. One could dwell longer on this interesting early
Victorian period, and my readers of a bookish turn will doubtless
recognise much of the moralising spirit in these and other literary
signs of the times. The Oxford Movement was getting out of its
swaddling-clothes, and the great new middle-class that rose to pros-
perity after the repeal of the Corn Laws was keen for Evangelicism
and missionary enterprise, philanthropy and the abolition of slavery,
on the one hand, and on the other — a domestic one — was imposing on
the age its ideal, a new conception of Puritanism, a code of formality,
propriety and Sabbatarian restriction, now in 1910 fast melting away,
but still a drear reality to most of us who can look back beyond a
generation. Nor was it without its honest, sane, good points, subjec-
tive in a sense, as carrying on a good and older Puritan tradition, but
with a more recent memory of a world-loving aristocracy that was
thought of as redolent of the gaming, the late hours and the general
naughtiness and depravity of the eighteenth century ; for had not
" our fathers told us " ? (and the relentless genius of HOGARTH has per-
petuated for us of a later day the life of those times for high and
low alike) — a tradition of Puritan grandfathers engaged in honest
trade, serving the wants of bewigged and bepatched lords and ladies
in Sedan chairs making their way to the front-seats of the wicked
playhouses, where WYCHERLEY and CONGREVE still held the boards,
and the worldly wave of the later Stuart days had not yet spent its
force. But the graceful outside, the dress, the manners and sen-
timent of eighteenth-century life were equally shared in their degree
by lord and lady with Puritan grandfather, and no ROUSSEAU had
yet arrived to break the spell of their pre-revolution unconsciousness.
68 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
That is, such traces of this as had survived the coming of the fig-leaf
— here and on the Continent — after the breakdown of Holy Church
under the Tudors. *
Ethically speaking, we may suppose that LOFFT was only partially
a man of his day. The diary opens up a pleasing side of the radical
barrister and literary man. Though he betrays attachment to no
particular church, the sway of his sympathies is towards practical
philanthropy. He glories in Art and more than once bemoans his
negligence of Law for the fascination of the sale-room. This, with
his politics, and literary tastes, strikes a different note from the drab
formality of the pre-forties. The names of well-known people whom
he met are mentioned in his story, though unfortunately but few
details are given of them. There has been some digression here,
and I feel that the excursion into i8th. century times is rather beyond
the scope of this gossip, though as a background to the diary it may
be accepted, and my readers may pardon this retrospect and that of
LOFFT and his days, more especially as reserve is claimed as to the
rest of LOFFT'S writing ; for the diary must remain a memory, though
its times are on record in print and otherwise. A shelf among the
unpublished treasures of the British Museum Library seemed to be
the proper place for this manuscript ; but after reading those intimate
and personal lines not once, but several times, I changed my intention
as to the gift. Page by page the sacred record of those three years
was given to the flames ; his affections, frailties, criticisms, daily doings
and meditations on all, scattered in thin air. He would have had it
so, I think. **
To return to our fly-leaves and autographs. Of some literary
interest is the inscription in a book belonging to a friend of mine.
La Beatrice di Dante — Ragionamenti Critici di Gabriele Rossetti, Londra,
1 842, is a small book in paper-covers. Outside is written " G. P.
BOYCE." On the fly leaf: " Al suo chiararrisimo suocero Gaetano Polidori
nelle dottrine dantesche estesamente e profondamente versato in segno di
sincero respetto fautore : il 2 di ottobre. " The Italian seems easy
* I would here guard against the accusation of partisanship ; my allusion is to the morbid
side of Puritanism, parent of that legion brood of affectations which was the sport of
Hudibras. The point is a psychological one, and as such a problem for the philosopher
and historian, who would, no doubt, weigh with nicety the effect of the clash of the new
Protestant ethos with the traditional view of things and its instinctive repugnance as a
reforming influence to the paganism of the Renaissance. Well-informed Roman Catholics,
however, confess to Puritan influence in their church ; so that, whatever the origin, the
strict Puritan attitude has affected the older church, as well as the Protestant sects. I speak
under correction, but ' mauvaise honte ' is, I think, a phrase of comparatively modern invention.
* Since writing these lines, I have come across the sentiments of an earlier diarist much
to the point. The will (dated 1677), of William WHITE of Pusey, Berks., clerk, (P. C. C.
80 Reeve), asks his executors " to burne and abolish all my Diaries from the year 1628 " —
" If nowe any of these things have escaped the fire I desire them forthwith to turne their Eies
from them, and forthwith to burne them. "
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 69
enough to translate, even by one unacquainted with the language,
as I am. An obliging former owner (the bookseller, perhaps), has
written on a slip of paper : " Presentation Copy — Inscrn from
Author to his Father-in-law Polidori. The name G. P. BOYCE (Lands-
cape-painter) is B's handwriting, [and it] might at some time have
been given to B. by Dante R — , or perhaps bought by B. secondhand."
Here then is art and literature as well as genealogy.
A trifling record in my scrap-book was cut from the front-leaf of a
copy ofCEuvres spirituelles de M. L'AbbeB** (LAme Interieure) 1779,
and as we look on the formal writing of " Thomas WELD his book
May 26th. 1781 ", there is a hint of Douay, perhaps, and the Seminary
life of the Catholics of those days. (I was going to say, of French
Emigre priests, but they came later) and a memory of the small body
of English Catholics, then in the deeps of their humiliation before
the Emancipation Acts. For is not this the father of the Cardinal ?
Perhaps some reader on this slight evidence will to my certain
gratitude clinch the matter. Or, we shall be told there is much ado
here over a bare name. Maybe, but as remarked before, it is here
that the interest comes in — conjecture is proper and may lead on to more.
Here at any rate the atmosphere created is a true one. The clues
therefrom are not so evident, but none the less, taken with other
facts, may establish a link, or fill in a vital blank.
We have questioned the silent handwriting of the past, and naught
but wraiths may have come to satisfy our want for definiteness, colour,
or links in the chain. Well, the hunt, and the find — a casual one
perhaps, and the putting of two and two together, with our degree of
knowledge of those bygone years, were worth much in themselves, and
have not family details been rescued from such faint intimations of
personality ? Faithfully followed-up there is at least the chance, and
one would like extremely to hear of some instance in point. Though
no direct ancestral information emerges from the quest, there is biogra-
phy even in the passage of a book from owner to owner. Many years
ago there came into my possession a leather-backed volume — a heavy
consequential tome, aimed, if I remember, at the Roman Catholics.
That, however, need not detain us ; but the names on the first fly-leaf
were worth attention. No genealogy. No details to speak of.
Still we submit there is interest in the signatures of the successive
owners of Defensio Ecclesi<e Anglicans . . . . D. Rich. Crakanthorp,
S. T. D Editum, Lond. 1625. " H. WT. WORMINGTON "
appears to be the earlier name, though the double initials would
suggest otherwise. The other signature is of one " Joh. BURYS ",
who adds " Jehova portio mea. " There is not much to go upon
here, but more ado has been made over a scrap of SHAKESPEARE'S.
How, too, if some great-great grandson of either of the writers should
70 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
recognise here, or by other evidence, that an ancestor's autograph is
here visible ; that he was a churchman and keen in his Anglicanism,
and that WORMINGTON at least had the daintiest of handwritings ?
Though the detail comes before the signatures, we have " Bought at
an Auction at the Anne and Grecian Coffee House ffeb. 29, 1727-8,
Price Sixpence ". Here now is a mine of information for the intel-
ligent reader with a taste for topography and comparative economics
to explore for himself ! To what base uses had Defensio been coming
in these 100 years. At all events second-hand theology in those days
seems to have been as lightly held as now : though CRAKANTHORP'S
controversial Latin was presumably a trial. And lastly, is John BURYS
the John BURY of the " D.N.B. ", who died in 1667 ?
PORNY'S Heraldry [? 1717] with " John CLARK'S Book 1814 " is
delightfully commonplace. Still there is hope for a descendant,
though " CLARK " is not very instructive, and in the circumstances,
his list of washing, or at all events, account of his wardrobe, written
at the end of the volume is shameless levity. Speaking of this
name reminds me of one " Fredk Arnaud CLARK, Leghorn, 2oth.
Augt. 1814", whom I am anxious to know something about. He
appears on the fly-leaf of loose covers to an old French prayer-book
(Anglican liturgy), front page gone, and the cover itself is stamped
Ciceronis Orationum I. The book is an heir-loom of mine, and any
information on F. A. CLARK would be much appreciated.
A fitting wind-up to this gossip should be mention of some signa-
tures in an old Book of Common Prayer and Bible (bound together), and
dated 1708-9, which I was permitted by the courtesy of the owner
to copy some years ago. The autographs are in different hands and
" should this meet the eye ", &c.. of any one interested, he may be
able to piece the details together, one need scarcely add, to the great
satisfaction of the writer of these notes. The earliest names are
" Jos. TILLY and Mary TILLY " written one above the other, and
presumably husband and wife. Date uncertain, but possibly early
1 8th. century. Then a jump into about the middle of the I9th. cen-
tury, when " W. WARD, M. D. " (about 1850 ?) records his owner-
ship. The signature of " R. MATTHEWS " follows — uncertain date,
but quite modern, and lastly in a very neat and small handwriting,
" George Shingleton MATTHEWS ; Campden, Decr 22. 1850". The
book belonged to a gentleman of the name of NOEL who had it from
his grandfather. It is probably only a coincidence that NOEL is also
the family name of the Earl of Gainsborough, and that the last-named
signature is dated from Campden, which is of course the seat of the
Marquess of Camden's (NOEL) family.
F. S. SNELL.
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
Richard FOTHERGILL. Thought to have been:
third son of John F., and Isabel his wife (nee
FOTHERGILL) of Brounber in Ravenstonedale
(Westmoreland.) Bapt. 25 Dec. 1639. Or he
may have been third son of Thomas F. of
Tarn House in R'dale. Bapt. 3 July 1631.
Buried there 26 April 1695; described as of
Dubbs, but formerly of Greenside in Raven-
stonedale.
:Elles, dau. of Michael PROCTER and
Ellen (BOUPSPHELL) his wife. Bapt. 21
Aug. 1631 at R'dale. Marr. 28 June 1666
at Ravenstonedale. Buried 7 Dec. 1702
at R'dale. Testamentary bond dated 12
Dec. 1702. Her sister Ellen married
John KNOOSTOP (KNEWSTUBB.)
r
Thomas FOTHERGILL.:
Bapt. ii Oct. 1668 at
R'dale, as son of Rich.
Bur. there 21 April
1706 as " of Dubbs."
Will. da. 1 8 April 1706.
(Pec. of R'dale.)
= Ellen, dau. of Richard
MURTHWAITE of Wath.
Married 5 May 1692 at
R'dale. Will proved 29
March 1749. (Pec- °f
R'dale.)
1
Elizabeth. Bapt.
28 July 1667 at
R'dale as dau. of
Richard F. of
Greenside.
1
Ellen. Bapt. 7 Aug.
1670, at R'dale.
Bur. there 19 May
1735. Will proved
!735- (pec. of
R'dale.)
r
\
Richard FOTHERGILL.^ Mary, dau. of
George FOTHERGILL. Born= Isabel BACK-
Born 1696, but not
Henry FOTHER-
, but not registered.
HOUSE. Marr.
registered. Mentioned
GILL of Wauda-
Mentioned in his father's
30 Jan. 1736.
as son in wills of his
le, afterwards of
will. Settled first at Sunbi-
at Orton.
father and mother.
Wath in Raven-
gin and then, in 1740, at
Paid fine for Dubbs at
stonedale. Marr.
Barugh in Orton (Feet of
Court Baron 17 May
there 1 1 May
•Fines, Trin., 13 Geo II.)
1716. Bur. at Seber-
1725. Bur. there
Will da. 10 Oct. 1743,
gham 1 8 Aug. 1775.
19 March 1753.
proved 1743 (Consist, of
Will, as of Dubbs, da.
Carlisle.)
15 Aug. 1775. (Pec.
R'dale.) a
a
b
b
X s
^
\
Alice. Bapt. 3 June 1693, at=Joseph UDALL.
Ravenstonedale. Married
there 9 June 1724.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
r
Thomas FOTHERGILL. Born = Mary, dau. of Richard
15 Feb. 1726-7 at R'dale.
Buried there 17 May 1790.
Will da. 23 April 1790. (Pec.
of R'dale) described as " of
Dubbs." Found 19 Oct. 1775
son and heir of Richard.
DIXON of Causeway
End in Ravenstone-
dale. Marr. there 19
May 1767.
I
Henry FOTHERGILL:
Born 29 Oct. 1736.
Mentioned in his
father's will. Bur. 10
Sept. 1800 as " of
Artlegarth/'aged 60.
: Elizabeth DENT of
Kirkby Stephen.
Marr. there 25 Apr.
1763. Bur. 15 June
1809, as " of Artie-
garth," aged 60.
I
Richard FOTHERGILL. Born
14 July 1769. Heir to his
father 23 Dec. 1790. Will 28
Oct. 1791. (Pec. R'dale.)
I
William FOTHERGILL. Born 28 Feb. 1773. Succeeded to
Dubbs on death of his brother Richard. Buried 16 Jan.
1792, aged 18. Will pr. 1793 (Pec. R'dale). Devised
Dubbs to his uncle Richard DIXON of Causeway End.
r
Richard FOTHERGILL of Notting-=Jane GODFREY.
ham, merchant. Born 22 Sept.
1763. Died 13 Oct. 1822. Buried
at Old Radford, Notts.
Born 5 Nov.
1772. Died 26
Oct. 1846.
I
James == Margaret THOMPSON.
FOTHERGILL | Marr. 17 Jan. 1796, at
Ravenstonedale.
I
Thomas FOTHERGILL of Broadfold in=Susan BACKHOUSE of
Morland. Bapt. 2 Aug. 1733 at Orton. I Old Hall, Morland.
Will pr. 1811 (Consist. Carlisle.)
r
Thomas FOTHERGILL of Broadfold in Morland^ DENT.
T
i
i
Thomas FOTHERGILL. Married twice. George FOTHERGILL= Elizabeth YOUN.
I i
Thomas FOTHERGILL of Greengill. George FOTHERGILL=|= Sarah MILNER
Born 1800. Will proved 1876 (Carlisle.) a surgeon. | of Orton.
T
John Milner FOTHERGILL, M.D.
Born 1841. Died 1888.
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
73
I
Ann. Born i Aug. 1730.
Marr. 5 April 1755
Francis WHALEY of
Tarn House.
I
Ellen (Elianor). Born 15 Dec. 1732.
Marr. 19 May 1767, at Ravenstone-
dale, Thomas RELPH of Sebergham,
co. Cumberland.
I
Mary. Born 5 Sept.
1734. Marr. William
ROBSON.
1
Mary. Born i July 1768. Marr.
29 Sept. 1791, at Ravenstone-
dale, David HEWETSON of Kirk-
by Stephen.
1
Sarah. Born 13
Jan. 1771 (Note
in Pocket-book.)
\
Ann. Born 13 May
1777. Buried 13
Dec. 1777.
I
Elizabeth. Married
July 1804 by licen-
e, at R'dale, An-
tiony FAWCETT.
I
Mary. Bapt. 5 Sept. 1770 at Crosby
Garrett. Marr. 30 May 1797, at
R'dale, William SLEE of Long
Marion.
T
Isabella. Born 1791. Died at her house
in Arboretum street, Nottingham, and
buried 5 June 1869 in the Church Ce-
metery there. M.I.
I \ \
George FOTHERGILL. Bapt. 6 May Elenor Mary. Marr.
1741 at Orton. Died 1823. Bur. ...WILSON.
28 Dec. at Orton.
I
John FOTHERGILL of = Bridget ALLINSON.
Greengill. Born 1776. '
Will pr. 1858. (Con-
sist. Carlisle.)
I
George FOTHERGILL of Barugh in Orton.
Will proved 1859. (Consistory of Carlisle.)
Died s.p.
\ I
John FOTHERGILL, Archdeacon= Elizabeth Christopher FOTHERGILL=
of Berbice. Vicar of Bridekirk, AIREY. Went to Canada. SHEPHEARD.
Cumberland.
74 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
in
of
I have in my pedigree a statement for which no documentary evi-
dence can be shown. As one is apt to get prejudiced in favour of one's
own case I ask my brother-genealogists to sit in judgment on the doubt-
ful point and decide if I have proof enough to establish the weak link.
The point in dispute is this. Can I show that my great-grand-
father Richard FOTHERGILL of Nottingham was son of Henry FOTHER-
GILL of Ravenstonedale ?
Richard FOTHERGILL is said by his monumental inscription in Old
Radford Churchyard, Nottingham, to have been born 23rd September
1763, and to have died 13 October 1822. Search for his baptism has
been made in Ravenstonedale, but no trace of it can be found.
Henry FOTHERGILL married, at Kirkby Stephen, Elizabeth DENT
25 April 1763 ; the issue of the marriage being (as I assume) the
above Richard ; James, who married in 1796 Margaret THOMPSON ;
Elizabeth, who married by license Anthony FAWCETT 3rd July 1804
(witnesses, Richard HEWETSON and James FOTHERGILL) ; Mary, bapt.
at Crossby Garrett 5th September 1770, marr., 30 May 1797, William
SLEE of Long Martin, (witnesses, Dan. SIMPSON and Henry FOTHER-
GILL); Isabella, born 1791, and died at her house in Arboretum Street,
Nottingham; buried in the Church Cemetery 5 June 1869.
The parentage and marriage of Henry, and the names and marriages
of his children were told to me, before I had searched any registers,
by Miss Lydia FOTHERGILL of Arboretum Street, who was daughter
of James, a son of Richard, and who had lived with her great-aunt
Isabella and her own aunt Elizabeth FOTHERGILL.
My father, John Henry FOTHERGILL, who knew little about his
family, always told me that some of his ancestors had lived in Cum-
berland ; the same statement was made to me by Miss Lydia. This
lady wrote to her sister Mrs MOORE in America, who replied that her
great-grandfather Henry lived from time to time either at or near
Appleby, and returned to Ravenstonedale when the children were
young. The old aunt Isabella, when asked by Miss Lydia, always
said she was born in Cumberland, and that she was a daughter of
Henry FOTHERGILL of Ravenstonedale. A marriage visit of the
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 75
descendants of Anthony FAWCETT and Elizabeth FOTHERGILL was paid
to the old ladies at Arboretum Street.
The Revd. John FOTHERGILL, who was born in 1824, grandson of
James, the brother of Richard of Nottingham, sometime in the sixties
inserted a FOTHERGILL query in Notes and Queries. To this I replied
in the eighties. He wrote me several letters and we afterwards formed
a fast friendship. He visited my Father's house, who at once remem-
bered Him. This Revd. John FOTHERGILL, in one of his letters, says
his grandfather James was brother of my great-grandfather Richard,
who was son of Henry. He also spoke of Dr. John Milner FOTHER-
GILL as belonging to our branch. John Milner FOTHERGILL was
descended from an uncle of the Hen^y FOTHERGILL in question. The
Revd. John told me about a dispute over the estate of Dubbs in
Ravenstonedale, which was devised by will of William, the nephew of
Henry FOTHERGILL, (proved in the Peculiar Court of Ravenstonedale
in 1793), to his uncle Richard DIXON, and not to his uncle Henry
FOTHERGILL. Mr. HEWITSON of Ravenstonedale lent me some papers
with the remark that after this length of time we could let bygones
be bygones. One of the letters is as follows :
" Mr.William FOTHERGILL at George COLDHAM'S Esq., Attorney-
at-Law, Broad Street Buildings, London. Dubbs Oct. 13, 1791.
Dear Brother
I hope these few lines will find you well wich I am at present
and I was married to David HEWETSON on 29 Sept. [at] Raven-
stonedale Church and we went to Kirkby to dine, we was favoured
with the company of Uncle Richard DIXON, Brother Ben,
Hannery John, cousins Sarah HEWITSON and Molly BECK, uncle
Hannery came to Dubbs night before I married and they are all
well uncle Hannery and cousin Richard WHALEY dined with us
at Kirby faire and they are all well. Uncle Hannery has behaved
very rude to uncle Richard DIXON you must not mind what he
says about us he will say anything to get Dubbs if he comes to
Dubbs he will pay no rent you must not let him come whatever
you do when he writes to you about coming to Dubbs do not
write to him. Peggy SKARBROUGH is very poorley and not likely
to live long wich is all at present, From your loving sister Mary
HEWETSON. "
The uncle Richard DIXON in a letter to William FOTHERGILL, of
76 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
which I have a copy, advises him when he writes to his uncle Henry
to tell him that " your sister has let the estate, " before his letter
came to hand. The foregoing letter and extract show that some
reliance can be placed on the Rev. John's tradition, as he had never
seen these papers when he told me about the Dubbs estate.
Miss Lydia FOTHERGILL in a letter to me states that Isabella always
said that her brother Richard ought to have had Dubbs.
Mrs. HEWITSON of Brunt Hill in Ravenstonedale told me that
Richard of Nottingham was the eldest son of Henry FOTHERGILL.
Mr. HEWITSON had heard of the marriage trip to Nottingham.
To sum up, it was known to Isabella FOTHERGILL, who lived to
1869, and handed down from her to Lydia, who told the writer that
her father was Henry of Ravenstonedale, and that he had children as
before stated, who married as above mentioned. This has been partly
confirmed by the marriage registration of Elizabeth and Anthony
FAWCETT, with Richard HEWITSON and [brother] James FOTHERGILL
as witnesses, and by that of Mary and William SLEE, witnesses Dan
SIMPSON and [father] Henry FOTHERGILL.
The statements of the Rev. John FOTHERGILL, who had lived and
conversed with his old relations and other inhabitants of Ravenstone-
dale, that his grandfather James was a brother of Richard of Notting-
ham, and that Henry of Ravenstonedale was the father of both of
them, and his knowledge of the dispute over Dubbs, are also testimony.
Compare also the visit of the descendants of Anthony FAWCETT and
the baptismal entry of Mary, daughter of Henry and Elizabeth
FOTHERGILL.
From this evidence I think it can be deduced safely that Richard
of Nottingham was the son of Henry of Ravenstonedale ; because he
was stated to be so by his sister Isabella, confirmed by the Rev. John
FOFHERGILL, who was well-versed in the family history. Here is an
example of the knowledge of family connexions being within an ace of
becoming lost. What might be done to fix the point by record-
evidence ? I should be inclined to try in the order named, Census
Returns of 1861, Plea Rolls for address of Henry any time between
1763 and 1792, as a guide to the place of baptism of his children, and
records of apprenticeship at Hull for Richard's parentage, on the
chance that he might have been apprenticed in that town.
GERALD FOTHERGILL.
BRUSSELS ROAD, NEW WANDSWORTH,
LONDON, S.W.
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
77
An order signed by Oliver CROMWELL directs payment " unto
Captain George DRURY of my Regiment of foote upon account the
sume of four hundred and fifty pounds for the present supply of my
sd Regmt." dated 29 January 1649, to Mr. James STANDISH. Receipt
signed " George DRURY," dated 29th January 1649. No place
named, but as King CHARLES was executed on the 3Oth, I presume
all three named were in London on the 29th. Can anyone give
any further information of this George DRURY ?
In the Calendar of State Papers under date 1662, 1 5 Dec., are "Docu-
ments relating to Adventurers and Soldiers pretending to the estate of
the Marquess of ANTRIM, Alexander Mac DONNELL and Sir James
Mac DONNELL in Antrim and Coleraine." One runs as follows : — (i)
Petition to the Lord Lieutenant of the several adventurers and soldiers,
their assigns or tenants whose adventures and arrears were allotted
upon and satisfied but of the above Marquis* and others in Antrim
and within the liberties of Coleraine (then follow lists of officers and
soldiers belonging to various companies) " Abstract of the debentures
of Captain Wingfield CLAYPOOLE'S troop in Lord FLEETWOOD'S regi-
ment of horse, for service since 1649 — gives claims in money of:
(then follows a long list of names including) " Tieg and George
DRURY. "
I would be glad of any further information about this George DRURY
or even of the native place of Captain Wingfield CLAYPOOLE.
A large DRURY family in the United States of America begins thus : —
Lydia, dau. of Edmund and Tamazine=Hugh DRURY supposed son of =p Mary, widow
RICE of Barkhamstead, England and
Sudbury, Mass., U.S.A. Died 1675,
aged 47.
Obed DRURY of London, Eng.
and of Sudbury, and Boston,
Mass. Died 1689.
of Rev. Edw.
FLETCHER.
I
Lieut. John DRURY .== Mary, dau of... SHRIMP-
Born 1646. Died 1678. | TON of Boston.
Hugh DRURY. Born
1677. Died young.
T
I
Capt. Thomas DRURY. Born == Rachel, dau. of Mary. Born 10 July] Bjohn DRURY.
IO Aug. 1668. Died 1723. Of Hpnrv RIP.R nf 167-2. Marr. William* iRorn 26 Dec.
Framingham, Mass. Repre-
sentative to the General
Court.
Henry RICE of 1672. Marr. William* iBorn 26 Dec.
Sudbury, Mass. ALDEN, a mariner^ 11678. Died
of Boston. i Nov. 1702.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
r
1
1
Caleb DRURY, == Elizabeth, dau.
Capt. Thos. DRURY.== Sarah, dau. of Capt.
Mary
Born 5 Oct.
of John EAMES
Born 29 Aug. 1690.
Isaac CLARKE.
Marr.
1688. Died
of Framing-
Died 1783, cet. 93.
= Mary, widow of
David
1723. Of Fra-
ham.
Of Grafton, Mass.
Samuel HARRING-
BENT.
mingham.
\
X
s TON.
9 sons, i dau.
5 sons, 8 daus.
\ \ I
John DRURY. == Susannah, dau. of Hon. Ed. Rachel. Marr. George Lydia, Marr.
Died 1754. Of I GODDARD of Watertown FAIRBANKS, JR. of Hoi- Joseph PIKE
Framingham. I Boston and Framingham. liston, Mass. 2nd wife.
of Newbury,
Mass.
7 sons, 8 daus.
T
T
I
Elizabeth. Born
1701. Marr.
MicahDRURY. = Abigail, dau. of Uriah DRURY. Born = Martha, dau.
4UAVAU Ju/RU *» * • — — ii '-/i^CUl j l^itl H. \J1 \^J 1 ICII.1 J~/ X\ U JA. A • 1_J\JL JLJ. |i- IT-LCtl L I I i i, VI
Born 2 May I John EAMES of 17 Jan. 1707. Living I of Samuel
Isaac MORSE of 1704. Of Fra- J Framingham. 4jan. 1754. Of Fra- I EAMES of
Holliston, Mass, mingham. ^, mingham. /K Framingham.
5 sons, 4 daus. 5 sons, 5 daus.
We are anxious to find out who this Hugh DRURY was, or where he came from.
Another American family begins thus : —
Edward DRURY. Born at in i7o8.^Sarah, dau. of William MAUGRIDGE
Died 17 Oct. 1763 in Berks Co. Read-
ing, Pennsylvania. One of the founders
of Reading, Penn.
of Philadelphia. Marr. 19 Dec. 1742.
Died 28 Mar. 1785.
Elizabeth. Born 1743
in Philadelphia. Marr.
1766 to William PAYNE
Colonel, of Philadel-
phia. Died 8 Apr. 1832.
I
Ann. Born 4 March
1745. Died I7jan.i833.
Marr. (i) Capt. John
LITTLE (2) Dr. John
BOYD of Baltimore.
I
Mary Maugridge. Born
19 Sept. 1748. Died 3
June 1826. Marr. Hercu-
les COURTENAY, her
brother-in-law (2ndwif e).
I
William
DRURY. Born
2 July 1750.
Died young.
I
Sarah. Born i Sept. 1753. Died 24 Sept.
1785. Marr. Hercules COURTENAY.
(ist wife).
John DRURY. Born
3 Jan. 1756. Died
19 Jan. 1756.
r
Edward DRURY. Born 13
May 1758. Died 21 Nov.
1762.
We are anxious to know anything more of Edward DRURY, William MAUGRIDGE,
or Hercules COURTENAY, who is believed to have come from Ireland, and born about
1735. He died in Baltimore 1816.
H.C. DRURY
48, FITZWILLIAM SQUARE,
DUBLIN.
DEC. 1 910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 79
MUNRO: ROBERTSON
Miss Christine RAINY (sister of Principal RAINY) to Raymond
Tinne BERTHON.
" Edinburgh, 26 Dec. 1893.
Dear Mr. Berthon,
I rather think Sir John MUNRO'S soubriquet had some reference to
his rotundity of figure, though he was a staunch Presbyterian and
suffered both fines and imprisonment on account of his opinions.
The FOWLIS family were Protestants and Presbyterians from the
Reformation downwards. One of them was a member of the Parlia-
ment that adopted KNOX'S " Confession of Faith " in 1 560, and several
of them were like Sir John, very corpulent ; Sir Robert, who fell at
Falkirk in 1746, was so. I have heard that they hailed from Ireland
in the days of MALCOLM II, of Scotland, and came over to help him
against the Danes. If you could make a pilgrimage to Creich, Dr.
AIRD could tell you plenty of old stories. I am afraid most of them
will die with him. I don't know anything about " Big William of
the Beans, " but my father used to tell us about Mr. Gilbert ROBERT-
SON, Minister of Kincardine, who was his grandfather and your great-
great-great-grandfather. He was a very pious man and favoured the
Hanoverian Government, as he feared that Popery would come in
with the Pretender. He was supposed to be so obnoxious to the
Jacobites that his elders persuaded him to wear a pistol for self-defence,
and one or two of them used to go with him as a bodyguard
when he travelled from place to place. He used to preach with the
pistol in his belt, but he never made use of it except to light his
candle.
The church of Scotland was in rather a bad state in his time ; the
so called " Moderates " having got the ascendency, they used to force
unwelcome Ministers on reclaiming congregations, and for refusing to
take part in one of these forced settlements Mr. Gilbert had to
appear before the General Assembly and receive a rebuke. He rode
up to Edinburgh on horseback, and his wife was so ill of consumption
when he left home that he marked out a grave for her, in case he
might not get back in time to superintend her funeral. However,
they did meet again in life — but she died soon afterwards, and my
grandmother, who was only entering her teens, took entire charge of
the housekeeping thenceforward. She was a person of great energy
and cheerfulness. In his later years, her father came over to live at
Creich, an assistant and successor having been appointed to the parish
8o THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
of Kincardine. There was a room in the Manse of Creich where he
had had a remarkable dream many years before, and he said then,
that he would like to die in that room, where Heaven had seemed so
near. He had his wish. The only other circumstance that occurs
to me about him was that he had a favourite cat which followed him
about like a dog — and after his death it would not eat, but went and
lay on his grave till it died.
I always heard the Kiltearn family were remarkably handsome and
amiable. My father had a special affection for his uncle's wife, Mrs.
ROBERTSON of Kiltearn. Both she and her husband were people of
good taste and kept their house and garden in great order. Margaret
PARKER used to have letters written by " Aunt ROBERTSON " giving
curious details of life in a manse in Ross-shire in her father's time.
With best wishes of the season, Believe me
Your affecte cousin
(Signed) C. RAINY. "
Dr. AIRD, Free Church minister of Creich, to R.T. BERTHON.
(Extract.)
" 23 Nov. 1893.
The following is what is contained in the ALLAN Manuscript as I
copied it from the manuscript lent me by the late Mr. John MUNRO,
factor, Fowlis.
1. Sir John MUNRO, who succeeded his father Sir John "the
mortar-piece. "
2. Captain Andrew MUNRO of Westerton or Logic Wester, parish
of Ferrintosh, who married Ellen, daughter of Sir George
MUNRO, knight, of Newmore and Culrain. Captain Andrew
MUNRO died 1724.
3. Christian, daughter of Sir John, died at Fowlis, unmarried, 1730.
4. Ann, daughter of Sir John, married Cornet William ROBERTSON,
of Urchany, Nairnshire, son of Colin ROBERTSON of Kindeace.
5. Margaret, daughter of Sir John, married Captain Daniel McNiiL,
a Kintyre man, and died 19 March, 1729.
6. Jane, daughter of Sir John, married Peter BETHUNE of Culnashea
behind Fowlis. Issue :
i. Ann who married Revd. John BAYNE, minister of Dingwall from
1716 to 1736. He was of the BAYNES of Tulloch and had
3 daughters who were married as follows :
(i) , married to Mr. FORBES, who had a daughter, Miss
FORBES, who resided in Inverness.
(2) Jane, married to Captain William DOUGLAS, Fyrish, in 1766
who had a son Robert, who died in Jamaica about 1840.
(3) Christian, married Revd. Gilbert ROBERTSON, minister of Kin-
cardine from 1742 to 1774."
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 8x
Revd. Dr. AIRD to R.T. BERTHON.
(Extract.)
" Free Manse, Creich, by Ardguy.
22 Jan., 1894.
During the latter part of the spring of 1746 a number of rebels
encamped close to the Manse of Kincardine. Mr. ROBERTSON had to
leave it, and the congregation had to leave the church for several
Sabbaths. The land between Bonar Bridge and Ardguy, now turned
into fine corn-fields, was then under broom, six feet high. The con-
gregation met for five or six Sabbaths in the broom and Mr. ROBERTSON
preached to them dressed in the Highland dress, kilt and hose, and
looked remarkably well in it. But after the Battle of Culloden he
returned to the Manse and the congregation to the church. "
The same to the same.
(Extract.)
"3 January, 1894.
I return Miss RAINY'S letter which interested me much. One of
the traditions respecting her excellent great-grandfather Mr. Gilbert
ROBERTSON I heard nearly fifty years ago from one of my elders, a
little different but substantially the same. The Manses of Kincardine
and of Creich are about two miles apart, the Sutherland Kyle or Firth
intervening. In November 1758, when Mr. James SMITH Minister
of Creich, died, Mr. Gilbert ROBERTSON, Kincardine, slept the night
of Mr. SMITH'S funeral in the room in which Mr. SMITH died, in the
Manse of Creich, and had a very extraordinary dream. He heard
the most melodious music and his eyes were dazzled with the brightest
light he ever beheld. He awoke and found it to have been a dream,
but was much impressed, rose and prayed and asked if it were God's
will that that was the room in which he would wish to die.
In April 1771 Mr. RAINY was inducted minister of Creich ; in
November 1772 he married Mr. Gilbert ROBERTSON'S daughter.
Mr. ROBERTSON was a widower, and the Manse of Kincardine was
rebuilt in 1773. He suffered much from stone, and although the
manse was completed in November 1773, yet it was considered unwise
that he should enter it at that season of the year, and therefore he
resided with his daughter and son-in-law in the neighbouring manse
of Creich, where he died in March 1774, in the identical room where
he had the dream and prayed if it were the Lord's will that he should
die there. There was a very protracted and severe frost, so much so
that the water of the Kyle between Creich and Kincardine was frozen,
as there is a good deal of fresh water flows into it from five pretty
large salmon rivers : and his body was carried on men's shoulders on
82 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
the ice from the manse of Creich to that of Kincardine, and buried
next day in the MUNRO'S burying-ground in the churchyard of Kin-
cardine. It was surrounded by a wall two centuries ago, but is now
in a ruinous state. The MUNROS of Achany and Altas are buried
there, and they descended from the Fowlis MUNROS. Mrs. RAINY
was a very excellent amiable lady, possessed of much of the milk of
human kindness. The reason why Sir John MUNRO, Fowlis, was
called " the Mortar Piece " was because of his uncommon corpulence.
When abroad at the head of his regiment, whenever the command
was given to them to fire, they then lay flat on the soil so that the
shot from the enemy passed over them and did no harm. But Sir
John stood erect, as, if he lay flat, owing to his corpulence, it took
five or six men to help him up again. The present Mr. George
KENNEDY, Dornoch, who has resided in Edinburgh for the past thir-
teen years, told me that the house in which Mrs. ROBERTSON'S, Kilt-
earns, father and mother resided is alongside the railway now within
less than a mile from Golspie on the Farm of Kirkton or Kilmailie.
It is a slated cottage and I should think that they must be buried in
the churchyard of Golspie, or it may be in the burying-ground on the
farm of Kirkton, where the church and burying-ground originally
were, and where some of the Earls of SUTHERLAND are buried, but
which has not been used as a burying-ground for many years.
I always heard my mother say that Dr. ROBERTSON was an uncom-
monly handsome man and Mrs. ROBERTSON particularly good-looking,
and both had a fine taste. The manse was close to the Cromarty
Firth, the soil was beautifully laid out with shrubs and splendid
flowers, and the garden stocked with apple and pear trees. The soil
is particularly good and the walls of the manse were covered with
splendid pear trees, which never failed in yielding a rich supply of
savory fruit. "
The same to the same.
(Extract.)
" 9 January, 1895.
The Manse of Kiltearn is on the North side of the Cromarty Firth
in a beautiful situation. The minister claimed the right of salmon-
fishing there, which Sir Hugh MUNRO disputed. There was some
lawsuit about it, or, at any rate, it was threatened in Dr. ROBERTSON'S
time. I was told that Sir Hugh MUNRO said c it was too bad that
Dr. ROBERTSON and he could not agree about it, as they were relations'
but, said Sir Hugh, ' I am too proud and the Doctor is too positive.' "
R.T.B.
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 83
©afc.
A In a grant of Arms to Roger DALE of Tixover, in a MS. in the
British Museum, his grandfather is given as Robert DALE, and the
MS. states his descent was proved from Sir Theodoric DALE (temp.
Edward III), but the proofs are not given, nor is the place of resi-
dence of Robert DALE, sen.
B From certain cases in the Star Chamber it is obvious Robert DALE
of Winkele and Hawkersley died about 1587 and his wife was living
a widow in 1589. The Visitation of Cheshire, 1580 (Harl : Soc.)
gives a pedigree of the LEIGHS of Baguleigh, but Katherine's name
does not figure in it. The arms of this branch of LEIGH were
" azure 2 bars argent over all a bend argent (or gules)" Baguley
came into their possession by the marriage of Ellen, heir of Sir Wm.
BAGULEY, with Sir John LEIGH of Bouthes.
0 I have been unable to trace the date or place of death of Robert
DALE of Winkele and Northants. There is no Will or Adm6n of
him in Peterboro' Registry, Northants Wills, or in P.C.C., nor, as
far as I am aware at Chester. The arms of BRASSEY of Terton were
" Quarterly : Per f ess indented sable and argenty in the first quarter a
mallard argent billed gules"
D Robert DALE of Tixover and Newcastle-under-Lyme figures in many
Chancery Cases, but I can find no particulars of any issue of his
marriage. Neither have I succeeded in finding his Will.
H No Will of Wm. DALE or Adm6n is in P.C.C.
F At the Visitation of London (1613) and of Northants (1613) the
arms of DALE of Rutland (Gules a swan argent) were erroneously
confirmed to Wm. DALE, alderman and grocer of London, the crest
being furthermore placed on a cap of maintenance. In 1614 there
is an Adm6n of a Wm. DALE of Westminster to his widow Elizabeth.
Q- Richard DALE survived his father and mother, but evidently died
*./>., as we find his four sisters described as the coheirs of their
father. All these coheirs had issue and the said issue quartered the
(wrong) arms of DALE.
HYLTON B. DALE.
46, HARCOURT TERRACE,
REDCLIFFE SQUARE, S.W.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
ARMS : Paly of 6 gules & argent, on
a chief azure 3 garbs or.
Thomas DALE of Newcastle— Anne Aged
under- Lyme, Staffs., innholder. I 70 in 1629.
r
Thomas DALE of Newcastle=
under-Lyme, & of Bednoll,
co. Staffs., innkeeper. Died
circa 1615, intestate. Admon.
at Lichfield. Held land of
the Crown.
III!
=Ann, dau. of Michael DALE
Thomas COR- Gilbert DALE
BETTofHand- John DALE
furth, co. Staffs. Ellen
Married in All living in
1590. 1627.
°r
Robert DALE of=
Winkele, son &
heir in 1580. Of
Northampton,
victualler, in
1600.
= Elizabeth dau. of
John BRASSEY of
Terton, co. Chester
by his wife Maud,
dau. of Robert
BIRD of Howfield.
I
William DALE, only son. Under
age in 1613, being of Pendle, co.
Staffs. Aged 18 in 1627, being then
of Bednol.Later grocer of London.
1
Elizabeth = Robert DALE, son and heir,
only dau. of Tixover, co. Rutland, in
Marr. aft. 1613. Innkeeper of New-
1613. castle-under-Lyme in 1629,
being then aged 50. Living
in 1634.
E|
William DALE. Liv.
in 1622, being ap-
prentice to his cou-
sin James RUDYERD
of London, Grocer.
A Robert DALE of Northampton, victualler, occurs in Chancery Cases in 1691,
CHANCERY CASES
DALE v. CORBET
DALE v. SMYTHE
MACYE v. DALE
SMITH v. DALE
D.
D.
M.
THOROWGOOD v. DALE T.
DALE v. HARRISON D.
DALE v. HAND D.
DALE v. WARBROOKER
BAND v. DALE
8/22
6/24
12/31
291/58 Series II
12/12 „ „
52/51
20/3
41/43
344/21 Series II
332/42 „ „
July 1603
Jan. i 6 i 8
Nov. 1608
April 1 600
Jan. 1599
Feb. 1626
Jan. 1629
June 1627
April 1624
April 1623
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
Robert DALE. Claimed descent from^=
Sir Tedrik or Theodorik DALE, Esq.
to the Black Prince at the Battle of
Poictiers.
B
Robert DALE of Winkele and^=Katherine dau. of LEIGH
Hawkersley, co. Chester. Died I of Baguleigh, co. Chester.
circa 1587. I Living a widow in 1589.
|P
Roger DALE of the William DALE alderman and=
Inner Temple. Vide grocer of London. Warden
Pedigree Register, I. of the Grocers' Company in
322. 1608 & 1613. Also of Brig-
stock, Northants. Died in
1616.
= Elizabeth dau. of Thomas ELLIOTT of
Surrey, Esq. & of St. Magdalen,
Milk St. parish. Married at St. Peters,
Paul's Wharf in May 1583. Will dated
22 Nov. 162-; proved 8 Feb. 1632-3.
(P.C.C.)
r~
IG
1
1
1
1
Robert DALE.
Richard DALE.
Agnes marr.
Elizabeth marr. ist
Joan marr. to
Mary marr. to
Of Brigstock
Living 22 Mch
to Charles
to Abraham BUTLER
Rich. READE
James RUD-
in 1613. Died
1619-20, but
PARKER of
and 2nd to Charles
of London,
YEARD of Lon-
s.p.
dead apparent-
London,
ATYE son of Sir
grocer, 3rd
don, grocer in
ly s.p. by Nov.
draper.
Arthur ATYE of Kil-
son of Wm.
1619, 4th son
162-.
28 Nov. 1615,
burn, MX. by both of
READE of Fol-
of James RUD-
=
whom she had issue.
kestone, CO.
YERD of Rud-
*T>
Marr. BUTLER Mi-
Kent. Living
yerd, co.Staffs.
chaelmas 1619, who
1634. Died
He was war-
died 5 Nov. 1620,
circa 1657.
den of the Gro-
mercer of Cheap-
=
cers' Company
side. Marr. ATYE
"T-
in 1634. Died
Jan. 1626.
in 1651.
The following may relate to the family :
P.C.C. Adm6n. Jan. 1647-8. Robert DALE of Bowes, Staffs, to father
Wm. DALE.
„ „ April 1659. John DALE of Billing, Northants, to relict
Eliz. DALE.
86 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
from 10* (J)u6fic (Ifccorb***
CHAN. PRO. (1758-1800)
1753. Hodges v. Ravenhill (1146)
1758. Ravenhill v. Chest. (1568)
1760. „ v. Havard (1861)
1779. Cotes v. Ravenhill (2001)
I
EdwardRAWLiNsof
Willcroft, Lugwar-
dine, Heref., gent.
Will pr. 4 May 1775,
(Consistory Ct. of
Hereford) s.p.
I
1 2
William RAVEN- = Sarah = John SKYRME of
John RAWLINS=
of Little Thing HILL of Wool- Brockhampton,
Hall, Withing- hope Heref. Died Woolhope, yeo.
ton,Heref.,gent. before 1709. Marr. before
Died before J7°9-
I750- f~
Elizabeth = William RAVENHILL. Born before
Died I?og. Of the Custom House, Lon-
before don, tidewaiter, in 1750. Previous-
J753- ty °f Hall House, Woolhope,
Heref. Died 1750-3.
i
John =Mary
RAVEN- 1750.
HILL
only s.,
liv. 1779.
1750-
of Little
Warwick St.
Charing Cross,
tailor, 1750.
I750-
r
Frances
1779.
I
Susan=Simon
1779. EXTON
1779.
I
Charlotte
1779.
Digby Co- Pris-=Wm.HoL-
TES of Abi- cilia LINS of
Ann of
Sutton,
dore, He- 1750.
ref., Clerk.
Hereford,
baker,
Heref.
sp.
1750.
1750.
\
Robert
COTES
1779.
Sarah
1779.
7T I
Catherine of Peter- Thomas
church sp., a. 21 on COTES
23 June 1779. 1779.
1752. Martin v. Ravenhill (1818)
CHAN. PRO. (1758-1800).
Robert WEARE==
William
only son.
T
Jj
Elizabeth =p . . . BAKER.
only dau.
\
Isaac WEARE of Ottery^=
St. Mary, Dev. gent.
I
J
Hugh BAKER =
only child.
Mary==John
I FORBES.
I
I
Ann. Died==-James MAR-
before I TIN. Died
1752. I before 1752.
Elizab. Mary.
Died before
1752.
I
Hannah^John
Died
bef.1746
Samuel
FORBES
Died in-
testate
I
Martha, of
London,
sp. Will
dated 28
Dec. 1743.
Died 30
July 1746.
II
James MAR-
TiN.Died s.p.
Ann,of Hon-
iton, Dev.,
liv. 1752, sp.
I
HughMAR- =
TIN. Died
before: 752.
i
an only dau.
Elizabeth.
Willdat. 8
Aug. 1 750.
Died 21
Dec. 1750
RAVEN-
HILL. Died
before 1746.
Henrietta
Died 22
Jan. 1745.
\
John RA-
VENHILL
of Bristol
maltster
I752-
* Continued from p. 59.
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
87
i
John MARSH, of Over ^ Mary. Died
Penn, Staff., tailor. | in 1733.
Died Dec. 1734.
T
I
Peter BATCH, of Virginia,:
planter. Owned land in
Codsall. Staff.
Nathan MARSH of Over^
Penn, flaxdresser. Died
before 1740.
I
Phebe= Samuel BRADLEY,
of Dudley, Wore.,
collier. 1740.
Alexander BACH,
of Hanover, Vir-
ginia. 1744.
I I
Phebe_John SHARPLES Sarah. A=Benj. PEARSE-
minor in HOUSE 1740.
!734-
I
Mary= William PERRY, of Wol-
1744. verhampton, buckle-
maker. 1744.
Deduced from Chan. Pro. A.D. 1740. PERRY v. BRADLEY (1591)
1744. PERRY v. HOPKINS (1844)
Edward HOWELLS, of Middleton-Scriven, = Hannah
Salop, gent., in 1782. Of Broseley Farm, I
Broseley, Salop, in 1766.
Richard ROWLEY, of Walton, Salop, = Elizabeth^ Samuel RIDLEY, of Lower
gent., late of Aldenham. Marr. in I 1782 I Faintree, Chetton, Salop.
July 1766. Died May 1774. (isthusb.) I | Marr. Sep. 1775.
I
Richard ROWLEY only child. Of
Kidderminster in 1782.
Maria. Bapt. at Middleton
Scriven 16 July 1780.
Deduced from Chan. Pro. A.D. 1782. ROWLEY v. PERRY (1554)
== MELLOR OF Church Stern-
r i
William WILSON of St. George's, Jamai-=sr Mak j> -p A«I^I^R wr v^uuiwi oicm-
ca, planter. Will dated 12 Jan. 1711. 1719- I dale, Derby. Died before 1719.
I I I I
PaulSMiTH=Ann=JohnTHOMPSON, Wm. Ann=Thos, WIL- Hester=Thos.
of Stafford, 1719 of Uttoxeter, MEL- 1719 LOTTofWit- 1719 HOALME of
gent. 1719. Staff., and later of LOR tington,
2nd husb. Kington, Staff., 1719. Lanes.,
butcher, 2nd husb. yeoman.
Deduced from Chan. Pro. 1719. PERRY v. THOMPSON. (1780)
Church
Sterndale,
webster.
1719.
88
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
Joseph PERRY. Died=Ann 1728
27 Oct. 1727.
I I I
Joseph PERRY, Died = Elizabeth William PERRY ==Kinbarrow Elizabeth = John PIN-
intestate after 1741. Diedi75i. Died 1727-8. 1728. SON 1728.
I I
Joseph PERRY of Bilston, Staff .== Margaret Mary. A=[Wm. ELLIOTT?]
boxmaker. Died 25 Jan. 1778. 11741. minor 1737.
in 1728.
Richard PERRY, of Bilston,
Staff., gunlocksmith. 1786.
Deduced from Chan. Pro. A.D. 1779 PERRY v. MARSTON (1703)
1783 „ „ (2000)
1786 „ „ (1698)
I
Margaret un-
marr. in 1737.
Chan. Pro. (1671?) GALE v. PERRY (60 Collins)
Edward WEBBER of=
Plymtree, Devon.
I
Abraham WEBBER of Plymtree, Devon, gent. == Abigail. Died
Will dated i Jan. 1665. Died Oct. 1669. I Dec. 1670.
Joane=Thos. MOULTON
1665. gent. 1665.
1
1
1
i «
Robert
Thomasin = FORD
Edith 2nd=Walter
Mary=Thos. CHANNON or
WEBBER
eldest
Died bef.
dau. Died
GALE
3rd
CHANCE, of Harpford,
Died s.p.
dau. 1671.
1665.
1665-71.
1665.
dau.
Dev. Clerk. Marr.
July 1670
S'P'
1671.
M^^HH
after i June 1665.
I I I I I
Abraham GALE Abigail Elizabeth Honor Johane Mary
only son. Died s.p. 1671. 1671. 1671. 1671. 1671.
a
=Wm.
Died
1671
EVELEIGH
before
a
Wm.
i
JAMES =
k 2
=Mellany=Ed. PRATT
4th dau. 1671.
1671. .
1
Margery =
5th dau.
1671.
=John PERRY
als. CAPE
1671.
1
Johane=
6th d.
1671.
1 III
Anthony JAMES Mary
aged 12 in Abigail
(1671?) Johane
INI
John PERRY aged 16 in 167(1)
Thomas PERRY aged 12
Peter PERRY, aged 8
James PERRY aged 5
m r
Abigal William
1671. EVELEIGH
Grace aged 5 in
1671. 167(1)
~n
Elizabeth
1671
Mary
1671
G. S. PARRY, LT.-COL.
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 89
€$t fiaw'0 £um6er (Room*
CHANCERY MASTERS' REPORTS AND CERTIFICATES
A. D. 1790-91.
[These papers at the Rolls Office have been used but little by the men who
make the history-books, or, indeed, by those who make the pedigrees. They
run from the year 1554 to 1885 and are bound up in 4108 volumes. In 1790
all eyes were turned to France; to DANTON, MARAT, ROBESPIERRE; BURKE and
PITT and Fox. The young NELSON and the young BONAPARTE had not then
been heard of; but very soon they were to weave round the beginning of a
new epoch the romance with which their names will always be associated. In
such an atmosphere as this were enacted the following minor realities.]
Vol. 760, continued.
ACLAND v. EARL of ILCHESTER.
1790, May 21. Elizabeth Kitty ACLAND an infant, by John ACLAND Esq.,
v. Henry, Earl of ILCHESTER, Hugh ACLAND Esq., Hon. Francis BULLER,
Rt. Hon. Christiana Henrietta Carolina ACLAND, Richard CRIDLAND and
Matthew NATION.
Whether it is proper to increase the allowance of jCjoo a year for the infant's
maintenance. She only surviving daughter and heir at law of her late father
John Dyke ACLAND, deceased. Estates in Somerset yearly value £3000. She
only surviving sister of Sir John ACLAND, knight, deceased, her brother, who
died an infant. The infant Elizabeth Kitty resides with the said Lady
Christiana, was 13 in January 1786, and is now in the i8th year of her age,
having lately been presented at Court. Bills for a Sedan chair, Chairmen's
liveries, necessary attendance at public places. A dropsy in the brain, a malady
incident to the family, of which the plaintiff's sister the late Lucy ACLAND, and
her late infant brother died. Mr. FARQUHAR of Marlborough Street, surgeon,
his expensive plan. Schedule of account. Sums paid to hoopmaker, milliner,
mercer ; for a cap and feathers, for sattin ; to a mantua-maker, and for extra-
ordinary apparel.
ABDY v. LAWFORD.
1790, June 23. Personal estate of testator George LAWFORD.
George LAWFORD, Henry ESAM and Sarah his wife, late Sarah LAWFORD,
Sophia and Frances LAWFORD, Edward LAWFORD, Robert LAWFORD, William
LYCETT and Sarah his wife, late Sarah YATES, and others. Testator died
23 Jan. 1783. Schedules of payments, funeral expenses, &c. " Mr. CREED'S
* Continued from p. 25.
9o THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
expences to and from Portsmouth ", " Jane SCOTT for maintenance of her two
children". Prize money (ships' names). James JACKSON, surgeon. Greenwich
Hospital. Sir William ABDY'S expenses. Testator's father George LAWFORD ;
his half sister Sarah LAWFORD and her children ; his wife Jane LAWFORD and
children Sophia and Frances ; his sister Sarah, wife of Henry ESAM ; his cous-
in Sarah YATES ; his natural son Edward LAWFORD ; his cousin Sarah, wife of
Henry BEVINS ; his cousin Robert LAWFORD.
AMIEL v. BENYON.
1790, July 27. Otho Hamilton AMIEL, gent., and Frances his wife
v. Richard BENYON, clerk, and others. A legacy of £5000 given to plaintiff
Frances by will of testator Francis John TYSSEN. His death 9 Sept. 1781.
Her marriage 2 Nov. 1787. Executors' account. Maintenance and education
of plaintiff Frances. Mrs. TYSSEN the plaintiff Frances' mother.
ARCHER v. ARCHER.
1790, June 25. Whether the marriage proposed to be had between Edward
Bolton CLIVE Esq., and the plaintiff Harriott ARCHER is a proper marriage.
The Earl and Countess of PLYMOUTH plaintiff's guardians. The petitioner is
the eldest son of the late George CLIVE of London, banker, and Member of
Parliament, is related to Lord CLIVE, and is a Lieutenant in the First Regiment
of Guards, entitled to a considerable paternal estate and to the reversion of the
late Mr. Justice CLIVE of the Court of Common Pleas his near relation ; is
upwards of 22 years of age. Plaintiff Harriott ARCHER is one of the daughters
of the late Lord ARCHER, who left no male issue ; is upwards of 20 years of
age. CLIVE'S estate in co. Louth worth £1690 a year and in co. Hereford
worth £800 a year.
Will of George CLIVE the father 2 April 1778, his wife Sidney CLIVE.
Mrs. Alice BOLTON, since deceased. Robert and Francis GOSLING, bankers,
trustees. Theophilus, George and Henry CLIVE sons of testator. Will of Sir
Edward CLIVE, knight, judge of the Common Pleas 30 Dec. 1768, his wife
Dame Judith. Plaintiff Harriott ARCHER'S fortune £6083.35^., in Three per
cent Consolid. Bank Annuities, daughter and coheir of Andrew, Lord ARCHER.
Estates in Warwick, Essex and Glouc. Proposed terms of marriage settlement.
ARMYTAGE v. FOUNTAYNE.
1790, July 21. John ARMYTAGE Esq., v. Rev. John FOUNTAYNE and others.
Will of Godfrey WENTWORTH, deceased. Schedule of farms, lands, &c., in
Saxton, Scarthingwell, Church Fenton, Barkston Ash, and Barkston, co. York
in mortgage to the testator from Sir Thos. GASCOIGNE, Bart.
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 91
ATTORNEY-GENERAL v. The Bishop of Oxford.
1790, July 2O. Estate of the testator Thomas SIMS. Bequests to church
at Wheatley, Oxon. William TOOVEY the younger and Joseph MOULDEN his
surviving executors. John SIMS deceased. Schedules of account. Funeral
expenses. Journeys to Oxford, Wallingford and Denton.
ATTORNEY-GENERAL v. HARTLEY.
1790, July 29. Estate of Samuel TRAVERS Esq., deceased. Bovells Hall
in Little Clacton, Essex, Alton Park Farmhouse in Great Clacton, Great
Holland, Essex, Cole Barns Hall, Woodrows Farm. Annexed : surveyor's
report of necessary repairs.
ATTORNEY-GENERAL v. GREENWOOD.
1790, Aug. 5. Bequest by Margaret PEAT to the Independent Society.
Her will 2 Nov. 1784. Defendant Joseph STONARD treasurer of the Institution
or Academy for the Tuition of young men for the Ministry at Homerton in
Middlesex. Testatrix attended a Meeting House at Stepney for 40 years and
a Meeting House in White Row, Spitalfields, where Nathaniel TROTMAN, who
was educated at the Academy at Homerton, performs divine service. Ann
LORIMER declares that the testatrix very frequently discoursed with her about
the said Academy and expressed great satisfaction in Mr. TROTMAN'S manner
of preaching. James RUTHERFORD was on a friendly and intimate footing
with testatrix for several years. William SHARMAN served his apprenticeship
and was shopman to the testatrix for 1 8 years before her death. Her lodgings
at Low Layton [Essex] about a month before her death. Part of the said
Academy called King's Head Society.
ABDY v. LAWFORD.
1790, Dec. 1 6. Appointment of guardians for the defendants Sophia and
Frances LAWFORD. Their mother Jane STANLEY. Testator George LAWFORD,
his will dated 14 Nov. 1782, gave £1000 for his natural daughters' mainte-
nance and education. His sister Sarah LAWFORD and wife Jane LAWFORD.
His widow, afterwards Jane HILL, was buried 14 Jan. 1787. The said Sophia
was born 25 Jan. 1776, and Frances 2 March 1782. Testator died 23 Jan.
1783. Said children weakly and delicate. Doctor BAYFIELD of Hill Street,
Berkeley Square, ordered their mother to take them from Kennington in Surrey,
where she resided, to Brighthelmstone, to bathe in the sea, ride on horseback,
and drink Port Wine. Boarding School at Lewes. Their mother's income
from letting apartments and pension of £40 a year as daughter to a Captain in
the Navy. Henry CREED a person of great respectability and property,
appointed a guardian. (To be continued).
92 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
t Q&pfie* anb (Retrien?**
THE SOCIETY OF GENEALOGISTS OF LONDON. — The
required number of fifty Founders and Fellows having rapidly joined, this
Society's Memorandum and Articles of Association are in active preparation,
for registration in due legal form. As soon as this is done a prospectus will be
issued, and would-be Fellows, Members, or Associates may put up for election,
the Annual Subscription being fixed at two guineas, one guinea, and half-a-
guinea respectively. Life Fellows ten guineas. A strong Executive Com-
mittee has been formed and the Marquess of TWEEDDALE has kindly consented
to act as President. The Hon. Secretary (George SHERWOOD, Room 22,227
Strand, (by Temple Bar,) London) will be pleased to answer inquiries.
I wish to comment on one feature which might help to make the proposed
Society self-supporting to a certain extent, to wit : the reproduction of
manuscripts in facsimile at a reasonable charge per page of a uniform size,
if possible, say about 8x 12 inches. To facilitate the matter, an announce-
ment could be issued containing a request that all contributors of manuscripts
prepare the same (preferably) with Indian-ink on architects' tracing-cloth,
so that ordinary blue-prints or black-prints could be made direct, without
the intervention of a camera. Still better results, however, can be attained
where the contributor is willing to have a typist prepare his manuscript. In
such event the typist should use a good (preferably new) black record-ribbon
on the typewriter, and should write upon fairly' strong or tough but thin,
translucent paper, under which should be placed a new sheet of reversed
black carbon paper. The latter will make a reversed writing upon the back,
thus causing two separate " images," one on the front and one on the back,
in perfect juxtaposition with each other. In this way the requisite degree of
opaqueness of the writing is achieved. Such sheets so written can be used
like architects' tracings, to produce excellent blue prints or black prints in
facsimile, at nominal cost.
As to the permanency of the so-called black prints (or Van Dyke prints
as they are often termed in America), I made an investigation of this point
some years ago, and was informed by the Canadian Patent Office, Ottawa,
that experiments and tests made with acids, etc., has established the fact that
such prints are as permanent as Indian-ink and are therefore used freely for
certain official records.
Manuscripts intended for photographic reproduction as suggested above
should have a margin of at least one inch at the left, so that the resultant
prints will have a similar space for the purpose of binding.
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 93
When contributors send ordinary manuscripts which are not susceptible of
reproduction except by the use of a camera, it is still possible to avoid the
expense of photographic plates, for an instrument using a lense has recently
been successfully demonstrated. This new device (the Rectigraph) is indeed
a camera but by it one can make good copies (paper negatives) of manuscripts
direct from the latter. There is a reason to believe that these paper negatives
can be used as negatives to produce paper positives at very small cost.
I realize that this note relates largely to mechanical matters, but the ulti-
mate purpose sought may perhaps justify its insertion.
Eugene F. MAC PIKE.
i, Park Row, Chicago, U.S.A.
MOSSE. — (I. 53,70,106; II. 32). In the latter reference Mr. CHATTER-
TON suggests that corrected pedigrees of the MOSSE family be published.
Unfortunately, being in India, I am unable to verify the matter which has
since arisen, nor have I the previous numbers of The Pedigree Register by me.
I have, however, a reprint of the MOSSE pedigree as originally printed, and
notes of the various corrections, and from these can give the following notes :
The whole of the Irish Family, i.e. the whole of the pedigree on the
second page of the original table, from a.a. is correct except as noted below.
This pedigree should spring from Rev. Thomas MOSSE, rector of Mary-
borough, Queen's County, and Prebendary of Fethard, Wexford, 1691-2 ;
rector of Timoge and Rathaspicke 1692 ; Matric. T.C.D. 1680, aet. 17.
Will proved Leighlin, 1732. He married Martha, daughter of Rev. Andrew
NISBET, Rector of Timoge. Mr. Ball WRIGHT says he was the son of
Michael MOSSE of Cork, by Mary, daughter of the Rev. Thomas BOYLE,
and that he had a brother Rev. Michael MOSSE, Minor Canon of St. Patrick's,
and afterwards Prebendary of Fintona, Diocese of Clogher, who matric.
T.C.D. 1677, aet. 18. He married in 1685, Frances DRURY.
We know that sisters of the Rev. Thomas MOSSE married respectively
(i) FORSTER, ancestor of Sir Nicholas FORSTER, (2) Ven. Charles WHIT-
TINGHAM, Archdeacon of Dublin, whence Bartholomew MOSSE'S wife was his
first cousin. (3) Philip WHITTINGHAM, brother of the Archdeacon.
The following addenda and corrigenda should be made in the pedigree :
(1) "Thomas MOSSE, a physician," add, "born at Maryborough; matric.
T.C.D. 1723, aet. 1 8 ; educated at Kilkenny ; married Anne (? Julian)
daughter of Henry SHEWELL of Listowel, Co. Kerry. From him descended
the MOSSES of Kilkenny and Mountmellick. "
(2) Add, " another brother of preceding,
Rev. William MOSSE, born 1713; B. A., T.C.D. 1733 ; rector of Philips-
town, King's Co.; died unmarried 1768. "
94 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
(3) For, "a daughter= William MOORCROFT," substitute " Mary=Rev. James
MOORCROFT. "
The Coat-of-arms given with the original pedigree is that used by the
Irish branch.
W. P. PAKENHAM WALSH, Lieut. R.E.
ROYAL COMMISSION ON PUBLIC RECORDS.— Prof. WALLACE'S
recent Shakespearean discoveries at the Record Office seem to have aroused
the authorities to some further inquiry as to the steps to be taken for the
better preservation, access to, and indexing of public records still uncatalogued
and unexamined. One might be excused for thinking that obviously the
very first step would be to prepare Inventories (in scientific parlance
" Class Lists ") of all the public records in the kingdom — defining clearly
what are public records in the widest possible manner. For example
manorial Court Rolls, Assize Rolls and Quarter Sessions Rolls, Wills
and Parish Registers, should be distinctly brought within that category.
These Inventories (Class Lists) should have a column showing the " means
of reference " (if any), whether Catalogue, Calendar or Index, in every
case, placed against each enumeration of Bundle, Volume, or Roll,
and they should be accumulated all in one building, the Public Record
Office for choice. The Inventories could afterwards be used periodi-
cally to check loss, transfer, and — peculation. And it should be enacted
that all ancient " public records ", without exception, of more than a hun-
dred years old, should be freely open, without fee, to any student, all the
year round during ordinary office hours. Failure of present custodians to
comply and evidence of attempts to extort fees for mere inspection and
permission to copy to be followed by immediate transference of such records
to the Public Record Office in London.
The Secretary of the Royal Commission is Mr. Hubert HALL, F.S.A.,
Public Record Office, Chancery Lane, London, to whom everyone who cares
twopence about ancient records should write expressing a definite opinion on
some definite, practicable, point. It would be of no use, for example, to
advocate indexing every name in every record, because that would at once
put the proposer out of court as a person of no practical experience. We may
be sure that if little interest is expressed in the work of the Committee, little
or nothing will be done.
WORCESTER EPISCOPAL DOCUMENTS.— The enormous mass of
episcopal documents in the Edgar Tower has been placed in order up to the
year 1700. The bulk of the work relates to the period before 1700.
Consistory Court papers date from 1615 and number 12,130. The gene-
DEC. 1910] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 95
alogical value of the papers is great, and as yet has probably never been used.
The papers trace the rise of Nonconformity, the attack on Recusants, and the
general tendency of each period. Presentments to benefices number 2,895.
There is a number of documents showing the sale of next turns, and the
presentations and bonds against simony and unlawful tithe. The section deal-
ing with the schools and hospitals includes appointments of masters, disputes as
to management, and the return made in 1663. Many miscellaneous docu-
ments have come to light, the chief treasure being a fragment of a very early
MS. of the " Romaunt de la Rose " written in the south of France. There
is in all a total of 26,581 separate papers. (The Times.}
COMMISSARY COURT OF LONDON WILLS.— The MS. Calen-
dar of these documents, now at Somerset House, has been completed from the
year 1347 down to 1489, in three volumes. There are, in the third volume,
1467-89, notices of several bequests of books, and in the whole, references are
given to about 1 2,240 wills of this interesting pre-reformation period.
MISCELLANEA OF THE EXCHEQUER.— In the Public Record
Office Modern Class-list of these documents, covering A.D. 1191 to 1820,
the following items of genealogical interest occur :
Deeds and evidences relating to the family of PLESSETS, 25 Hen. III.
to 22 Edw. I. [1290-1294]. 14 membranes. No. i/n.
Memorandum as to searches to be made in records for evidence relating
to the possessions of the family of BREONS, temp. Edward II. [A.D. 1307-27].
i membrane. No. 4/25.
Roll of recognizances made to the DESPENCERS and others, 4 Edward III.
[A.D. 1330-31]. 2 membranes. No. 4/29.
Documents relating to the ENGLEFIELD family and their possessions, Edward
III. to Elizabeth [A.D. 1327-1603]. I file. No. 5/23.
Notes as to the earldom of SURREY, temp. Richard II. [A.D. 1377-99].
3 membranes. No. 6/19.
Later copy of an award 15 Henry VII. [A.D. 1499-1500] as to a con-
troversy in the family of BUSSY, with pedigree. I membrane. No. 9/15.
Part of a pedigree of the duke of NORFOLK, temp. Henry VII. [A.D.
1485-1509] on paper. I page. No. 9/28.
Paper book of documents relating to the property and affairs of the UVEDALE
family. Henry VIII. to Elizabeth. [A.D. 1509-1603.] 428 pp. No. 12/10.
INQUISITIONS POST MORTEM.— With the Index of Inquisitions,
vol. IV., with Appendices. (Public Record Office — Lists and Indexes. No.
XXXIII. London. H.M. Stationery Office, 1 909) the work of making bare
96 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1910
lists of these records in dictionary order, comes to an end. The Appendices
consist of lists of the Inquisitions in the Palatinate of Chester, Palatinate of
Durham, and the Duchy of Lancaster, Henry VIII. to Charles II. There are
few of later date than the end of Charles I. These records, otherwise
known as Escheats, are perhaps the most frequently consulted of all personal
records, after wills. Full calendars, or abstracts of the information contained
in them, Henry III. to Richard III., as also of the reign of Henry VII., are
in progress, but the work is necessarily slow, and it is unlikely that the
later Inquisitions will be dealt with at all fully within a measurable space of
time. The bare lists, however, will be found extremely useful and should be
turned to in every case first, to ascertain whether the person in whom you are
interested held land directly of the Crown. If he did do so, he will probably
be found here, and the Escheat will shew what land he died possessed of, how
he acquired it, and the name and age of his heir.
SMITH. — It is proposed to deposit in the library of the Historical Society
of Pennsylvania, at Philadelphia, a collection of manuscript material, in four
volumes comprising 1182 pages, together with some 585 illustrations, entitled
" The Making of SMITH." This has been collected on behalf of Dr. T.
Guilford SMITH of Buffalo, New York, by Mr. C. A. HOPPIN, and while
chiefly illustrative of SMITH families in the United States, it comprises accounts
of certain English families, namely LLOYD of Bristol, BRINLEY, WASE, EAST-
WICK, HOWLAND, and HARTLEY of Lancashire. The English origin of
Walter NEWBERY, ancestor of the NEWBERYS of Newport, Rhode Island, an
account of whom is given in the collection, yet remains to be discovered.
A PEDIGREE OF THE CLAYTON FAMILY, by Gerald E. C.
CLAYTON, Penarwel, 1908. Single sheet, 5ft. 2^"xi8". This gives the
descendants of Edward CLAYTON (1699-1767) of Bamber Bridge, Leyland,
Lancashire, linen-printer, who according to ABRAM'S History of Blackburn
and BAINES'S History of Lancashire, introduced the art of linen-printing into
Lancashire. It is said that he was an elder brother of George CLAYTON,
ancestor of the Weigh-house preachers, for whose history see the history of the
family of AVELING. Edward CLAYTON married Frances NAILOR who survived
him and died in 1795. We should like to have seen in the printed sheet the
surname repeated in the case of most of the men CLAYTONS. To omit this
makes the table less clear than it might be to those unfamiliar with the family.
The arms are given as Urgent, a cross engrailed sable, between four torteaux.
The Crest — a dexter arm and hand with a dagger. We miss the date of grant
or other authority, and we think the places of birth or baptism, marriage,
death, and burial should have been given in every case. We hope Mr. CLAYTON
will be induced to reprint the chart with these details inserted, although we
appreciate his putting together what he has done and value his work highly.
The Pedigree Register
MARCH 1911] [VoL. II, No. 16.
tfatfae of £gnn Q^ie, Qtorfofft.
The following interesting letter describes the rescue of the Lynn
charters from CROMWELL in 1656, by the town clerk, Francis ROLFE,
who evidently considered that the actual physical possession of these
pieces of parchment was essential to their effectiveness. The original
draft of the letter is in the possession of Mr. Eustace NEVILLE-
ROLFE, C. V. O., H. M. Consul at Naples, the present head of the
ROLFE family.
The occasion was in the summer of 1656 when the borough of
Lynn sent its ancient Charters to CROMWELL, congratulating him upon
his accession to power, formally resigning all liberties and privileges,
and praying for a new Charter, which was granted.
The Town Clerk, possessed with a sense of the importance of pre-
serving the earlier documents, surreptitiously removed them from the
office of the clerk of the Council to whom they were entrusted for the
preparation of the new one, and gleefully carried them back to Lynn.
Within a month of the accession of Charles II., on 23 June 1660,
the Corporation of Lynn " agreed and ordered that Oliver's charter
confirming the privileges of the town be cancelled ".
Seventeen years later, and but a few months before his death,
ROLFE prayed the Corporation for " further kindness and favour " on
account of what he considered had been his services in the matter ;
either not knowing himself, or imagining the Corporation would be
ignorant, that such documents would be "of record" and enrolled on
the Patent Rolls or Charter Rolls in London. The whole affair is
very funny and characteristic.
Francis ROLFE died in 1678 and is buried in St. Nicholas, Lynn,
where there is a tombstone inscribed to his memory. We are much
indebted to Miss BLACK of Heacham for permission to print the letter
and explanatory notes.
Endorsed :
" My Grandfather's letter about keeping the Lynn old Charters
from Oliver CROMWELL. 4th. February 1677".
M
98 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
[The above is in William ROLFE'S handwriting.
Born Oct. i8th., 1669. Buried in Norwich Cathedral, 1754.]
" To the right worthy the Mayor, Alderman and Common
Council of the Borough of King's Lynn in Norfolk.
Gent,
Nothing is more grievous to the spirit of man than to know he
hath well deserved of his friend yet apprehended himself ill requi-
ted though happily there be no just cause of his supposition but
his friend being ignorant of his kindness cannot retaliate as other-
wise he would. This put me upon begging your Council freely to
demonstrate wherein I considered this Corporation stands obliged
to me upon a particular score for which I account myself to merit
their respects. And forasmuch as I believe the same may be alto-
gether unknown to most of you and forgotten by the rest I am
bold to give you this account thereof as briefly as I can. About
May or June in the year of Our Lord 1656 Mr. Thomas TOLL
then being Mayor These several Charters of this Corporation
namely that of King John the two Charters of Henry the VIII,
that of P. and Mary and that of K James were by order of the
house sent to London to Oliver Lord Protector with a petition
handed by the same house briefly congratulating his access to the
Government and a full resignation of all the liberties and privileges
of this town to him ; and how all members of the same house were
ordered to attend the same, who accordingly in solemn manner
upon their knees actually surrendered up all the said Charters and
all your liberties and privileges in them contained into the Lord
Protector's own hands who received the same from the hands of
Mr. Recorder GODDARD with abundant expressions of gratitude
and great love for this town. And after he had read what he plea-
sed in them and ready to dismiss the company I began to gather
up the Charters and would have carried them away but Oliver laid
his hand upon me saying c Nay, Nay young man these are mine
and belong to me and I will take care of them and keep them ' ; at
which I was very much troubled but durst not say a word ; And
after this there being occasion to make use of these Charters for
drawing up a new one by them ; we were enforced to petition him
by the means of Maior Generall DESBOROW and Col JOANES he was
pleased to deliver them to the care of one Mr. JESSOPP clerk of the
MAR. 19"] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 99
Council upon whom we were ordered to attend, upon all occasions
for our inspection of them, And he being wearied with our often
attendance was pleased upon my engagement and promise of redeli-
vering them to himself to deliver them into my hands he being
well acquainted with me long before And we having after severall
weeks time finished Oliver's new Charter I fearing the consequen-
ces of loosing the old Charters purposely forgot to deliver them
back to JESSOP according to my engagement but brought them away
to Lynn without taking any leave of him only leaving the boxes
behind for fear of discovery and after this I lived a long time in
terrible fear of being questioned for the same and of being sent for
by a pursuivant and was enforced during Oliver's time to be silent
lest I might meet with some enemies and this account hath rested
for long as it is almost totally forgotten : And now I hope you will
look upon this as so signal a kindness done to this Corporation and
every one of you (by preserving your Charters the grounds of your
ancient rights and privileges which cost your predecessors many
thousands of pounds in acquiring) And this done by me with the
apparent hazard of ruin and destruction of me and of my very
being, you will acknowledge I desire your continued favours in a
greater measure that any that have gone before me besides such a
reward as may encourage others that shall succeed me ; Especially
if you shall please to consider the sad consequences the loss of the
Charters would have been unto you. All the footsteps of your
rights and privileges being totally abrogated and nothing left but
the infamy and reproach of being unfaithful and disloyal subjects
and having nothing to rely upon but what you had inadvisedly
accepted from the hands of a wicked traitor and how could you
have looked upon his Sacred Majesty for gaining a new Charter
from him having thus renounced his Government and what would
have been expected but the seizure of your lands as well as privi-
leges there being persons about the King fit and willing to have
begged the same. But now by the retrieving of your old Charters
and having them in your custody it was no more but destroying or
burning Oliver's and concealing it and then by help of the act of
Oblivion al was salved with little or no noise. This I faithfully
assure you is truth and hope you will duly consider of it and
having heard my petition will not only think me worthy of having
ioo THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
my desires gratified therein but of such further kindness and
favour, as you shall esteem consonant to reason And leaving all
this and my self to your Worship's pleasure 1 subscribe myself.
Gent
Your most faithful humble and
obedient Servant in all things
(Signed) Fr. ROLFE.
Lynn, February the 4th., 1677."
Notes on the above document :
The writer of the letter, Francis ROLFE, was elected Town Clerk of
Lynn, 29th. August 1654. He was discharged from the office of
Town Clerk on the 8th. Dec. 1662, but reinstated on the 5th. of
Jan. 1671. He continued in office till his death in 1678.
Thomas TOLL was Mayor of Lynn 1665-6.
Guibon GODDARD, Counsellor at law, was elected Recorder of Lynn,
3ist. Jan. 1650-1.
Major General DESBOROW is mentioned in PEPY'S Diary in these
terms. April i7th. 1667. "In our way in Tower st we met DES-
BOROUGH walking on foot ; who is now no more a prisoner, and looks
well, and just as he used to heretofore".
Footnote in Lord BRAYBROOK'S edition :
" Major General John DESBOROW, CROMWELL'S brother-in-law, and
one of his Council of State ; afterwards promoted to the Chancellor-
ship of Ireland by his nephew Richard CROMWELL."
From Norfolk Official Lists :
" Major General John DISBROW was elected M. P. for Lynn nth.
August 1656 and seems to have succeeded Guybon GODDARD. Was
he put in as a creature of CROMWELL'S ?
Colonel John JONES was impeached under the Commonwealth,
with General LUDLOW and Miles CORBET, for treasonable practices in
Ireland, and was tried in the Star Chamber 1659-60."
PEPYS mentions JESSOP as Secretary to the Commissioners for
Accounts Jan. 3ist. 1667-8. "They have Mr. JESSOP their Secreta-
ry: and it is pretty to see that they are fain to find out an oldfashion-
ed man of CROMWELL'S to do their business for them."
MAR. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 101
Margaret, dau. and coheir of James Sir Francis HEAD, second Baronet.
SMYTHSBYE Esq., and grand-dau. of I
Sir James SMYTHSBYE, Knight
Anne HEAD. Born 1704. Died 5 =The Rev. William EGERTON,LL.D. Rector
March, 1778.
of Penshurst, Kent, Prebendary of Can-
terbury. Born 6 July, 1682. Died 26 Feb.
1737, o.s. Buried in the Church of Pens-
hurst.
Jemima EGERTON, 2nd daughter, and == Ed ward BRYDGES of Wootton Court,
coheir. Born at Penshurst 13 Oct. I Kent. Born Jan. 1712. Died 19 Nov.
1728. Died at Wootton 14 Dec. 1809. I 1780. Marr. 3 March 1747 (n.s.)
I
Ann BRYDGES. Born i March i748,=The Rev. Isaac Peter George LEFROY,
o.s. Married 28 Dec. 1778. Died
1 6 December 1804.
Rector of Ashe, co. Hants, and Compton,
co. Surrey. Born 12 Nov. 1745. Died
15 Jan. 1806.
I
Jemima Lucy LEFROY. Born n Nov.=The Rev. Henry RICE, Rector of Great
1779. Married 1801. Died at Bath I Holland, co. Essex. Died 17 Sept. 1860
ii March 1862. I at 10, Cavendish Place, Bath, aged 83.
I
Sarah RICE. Born 1804. Marr. March^The Rev. T. Douglas HODGSON, Rector
1828. Died April 1842. of East Woodhay. Died February 1884.
I
Sarah Jemima HODGSON. Married ^= The Rev. W. Eycott MARTIN, Minor
April 1856. I Canon of Rochester 1858. Vicar of
h
r
Mary Sophia MARTIN
West Farleigh, 1870.
Raymond Tinne BERTHON.
102
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
©obweff
Christopher DODWELL.
1730. ?from
Stroud, co. Gloucester.
I
Charles DODWELL. Born i75o.=p
Settled at Long Crendon, Bucks
from near Egham, Surrey. " A
free liver and diminished his
estate. " Died 1824.
Christopher DODWELL
of Windsor, Berks.
I
I
John DODWELL= Emanuel DODWELL==
HS
...DODWELL==
William =
DODWELL *t*
Charles DODWELL:
i. Louie, eldest dau.=Herbert DoDWELL,=2. Alice BiSEof Cenarth,
of Eustace LITTLE of J.P., of The Manor, Ranelagh Road, Baling,
Owlswick, Monk's Ris- Long Crendon, W. Marr. at the Baptist
borough, Bucks. Marr. Bucks. Church, West Baling,
at Westbourne Park, Middx. 9 Oct. 1907.
London, 6 July 1891.
Five of the above seven chil
buried in the Baptist Burial Gri
and one in the Churchyard at 1
Crendon.
I
1
1
I. James DOD WELL. = Deborah, dau. of
2. George.
3. Henry DODWELL of — ----
Born 30 Oct. 1809.
DODWELL and niece
^ &^-
Died in
Leighton Buzzard,
Died 1 6 April 1886.
of Christopher DOD-
infancy.
Beds. Born 21 June
WELL. Living at Long
1813. Died 28 July
Crendon 1888.
1866.
b
b
Eliza. Married COOK
and had four children.
NOTE : Edmund B. DODWELL of The Manor House, Brill, near Thame, 1888.
MAR. 1 9i i] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
103
I
Ihristopher DODWELL of Long
Irendon, near Thame. Born
1788. Died 10 Dec.
844. Buried at Long Crendon.
An Ephraim S. DODWELL lived
t The Cottage, Stanley Road, Ox-
>rd. He died 30 Nov. 1893, aSed
4.. Son of a younger brother of
Ihrpr. D. who marr. Martha BOD-
INGTON.
: Martha, dau. of John BODDINGTON
and Ann (WEST) his wife. Born
29 June 1790. Bapt. at Cuddington,
ii July 1790. In Family Bible stated
to have been born 29 June 1792,
but from a bit of glass taken from
a window at Cuddington mill, given
as born 29 June 1789. Marr. at
Long Crendon. Died 29 July 1831.
Buried at Long Crendon.
HIM
Robert DODWELL. Married
& had issue.
Thomas DODWELL. Married
& had issue. Had a farm
near Hitchin, Herts. Died
Buried at
Hitchin.
Elizabeth. Died unmarried
Rebecca. Marr. Thos. SIMS.
Penelope. Died unmarried.
I
. Benjamin DODWELL. Born=pi dau. of
7 March 1815. Died at Great I CROOK.
'armouth 18 October 1884. I 2. Jane. Liv. at
I Norwich 1910.
I \
arah. Married... & had Emma
isue, living in America.
I
5. Hannah. Born =• Solomon DODWELL,
ii Oct. 1816. Of
Waddesdon,
Bucks. Died
1902. Buried at
Long Crendcn.
(first cousin to his
wife) son of Emma-
nuel DODWELL.
I
'ollie. Married ADAMS
f Romford, Essex, and
ad seven children.
Esther. Married FLINT
of Luton, Beds., and had
two children.
I
Emma. Married
GILBERT of Leigh ton
Buzzard.
Patty
104 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
I I I
6. Samuel DODWELL= 7. Emma. Born=Andrew DODWELL, 8. Edward DODWELL:
Born 13 Sept. 1818.
Died at Tetsworth
1903.
12 July 1820. Of (first cousin to his Born 25 Dec. 1821.
Long Crendon. wife) son of Robert. Died 5 Aug. 1881 at
Died 1904. " Decator " (?Dakota)
I \ \
Emma. Married John CHRISTOPHER Ellen Maria Ann. Married G. ELTON
and had two sons. and had issue: Gertrude and Jessie.
b b
James =Deborah.
\ \ \^
Fanny. Married the Rev. Watson DYSON of James DODWELL= Patty. Married G. DYSON
Measham, Derbyshire, and had 7 children. and had issue : Herbert
The eldest, Frank Watson DYSON F.R.S. DYSON, married (5 sons),
Born 1868. Astronomer Royal of England. Minnie, married (i dau.)
Marr. 1904, Caroline Bisset, dau. of Palemon
BEST, M.B., J.P. of Louth Lines. (Two sons;
five daughters.)
MAR. 19"] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
105
1
9. Timothy Do DWELL =
Born 26 Jan. 1825. Of
College Farm, Long
Crendon.Thame. Died
1898.
d
= i. Esther, dau. of
Robert DODWELL
2. Mary Ann
JUGGINS.
d
1
10. Charles DOD-=
WELL. Born 3
March 1829.
Died 1910.
X
1
1 1. Job DOD-
WELL. Born 6
April 1830.
Died 20 May
1842.
1
12. Mary
Ann.
Died in
infancy.
Prede-
ceased
her
husb.
1
Rose. Married
1
Joshua DODWELL. Of the ^=
1
Mary. Married COVE
1
Christopher
Maples, 19, Drayton
and had two children.
DODWELL
Green Road, West Baling 1
Middx., 1911. ^K
6 daughters
John DoDWELL==Emma, dau. of
I Andrew DODWELL
I
Lizzie. Married BRISCOE
and had issue, Marion and
George.
Percy DODWELL. Bertram DODWELL
N
io6
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
c c
Hannah, dau. of Christopher Dodwell= Solomon Dodwell
I
Frederick DODWELL^M WARD
r
Two sons Dead.
I
Lucy. Married
and had issue,
two sons and one
daughter.
I
Alice. Married
andhad issue
two daughters and
one son.
I
Mary. Married G. ROSE, and
had issue :
Sarah, died in infancy,
William ROSE,
Frederick ROSE,
Emily,
Edith,
Pollie,
Ruth,
Two others, died in infancy.
r
Christopher DODWELL=C. WILKINS
I
William DODWELL
and had issue :
Samuel DODWELL,
Richard DODWELL,
William DODWELL,
Daisy,
Bernard DODWELL,
Christine.
=E. WILKINS.
MAR. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
107
I
Philip DODWELL =S REED,
and had issue :
William DODWELL,
Patty,
Harry DODWELL,
Annie,
Lillian.
\
Edwin DODWELL = Rebecca GUEST,
and had issue :
Florence,
Edith,
Ernest DODWELL,
George DODWELL.
I
Henry DODWELL= STEPHEN
Claude DODWELL
I
Lucy. Married J. CROOK
and had issue.
Frederick CROOK,
Bertrand CROOK,
Millicent,
Alice,
Ralph CROOK,
Harry CROOK,
Ronald CROOK.
17
Kate. Married Richard UFF,
(who died Oct. 1905), and
had issue :
Bertram UFF. Died Nov.
1903, aged 20,
Frank UFF,
Bessie,
Alec. UFF,
Dorothy,
Percy UFF,
Margery,
Annie,
Ruby,
[Mrs. Kate UFF my in-
formant.—H.B.]
io8
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
d d
Timothy Dodwdl (1825-98)==!. Esther DodwelL
r
DODWELL Of—
I
-Emma DYSON Eliza Married
1
Louisa. Married , TODD
:on Cheney,
tnptonshire.
X
SYMINGTON of South-
end, and had issue,
three daughters.
of Oundle, Northamptonshire,
and had issue, one son.
Eight children
d d
Timothy Dodwell (i825-98)=2. Mary Ann Juggins.
I
Louis DODWELL== MEERS
of Thame, Oxon. I
I
Clarice
i
Maud
Phyllis
I
Mick DODWELL
I
May
MAR. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 109
I \
Caleb DODWELL==E HARPER Sydney DODWELL^ Married in Australia.
of Long Crendon, I
Bucks.
I
Harold DODWELL. 4 children, i living.
I I
Clara. Married DUDLEY, in America, Edward DODWELL== TAYLOR.
and had issue seven children. of London.
Three children.
H. B.
ETAPLES, PAS DE CALAIS,
no THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
of j£wrpoo£*
Henry PARK was born in Water Street, Liverpool, in one of two
large houses which were demolished not long before 1840. Miss
Elizabeth PARK when writing a memoir of her father, which she print-
ed in 1840, said, "in his ancestry there was little remarkable unless
it were the transmission of an easy competence through many genera-
tions, so that he used to declare not an individual of the race had for
three hundred years evinced c either the talent to enrich or the spirit
to ruin himself ". He went to a school kept by the Revd. Mr. WOL-
STENHOLME, and there commenced Henry PARK'S lifelong friendship
with the Revd. H. ROUGHSEDGE, Rector of Liverpool. At the age of
fourteen he was apprenticed to James BROMFIELD, a surgeon of Liver-
pool Infirmary, an uncle by marriage. During this apprenticeship,
there were 600 French prisoners in the dep6t, whose health was
entrusted to the care of Mr. BROMFIELD'S pupil, apparently without
even the affectation of superintendence. Mr. PARK and his charges
grew much attached to each other. At the end of the first apprentice-
ship Henry PARK went to London and served his second apprentice-
ship in the house of the celebrated Mr. POTT, after whom is named
the fracture known as "POTT'S fracture". From there he went to the
Hotel Dieu at Rouen, France. Mr. POTT urgently recommended
PARK to settle in London, but, influenced by consideration for his
mother, he decided on Liverpool, and about the year 1766, when in
his twenty-second year, he refunded to his mother the expenses of his
education. In 1776 he took a house in Basnett Street, Liverpool,
which was then so much in the outskirts of Liverpool that many
thought the young man presumptuous to expect a practice to follow
him so far. His own length of life enabled him to witness an increase
in the size of Liverpool unparalleled unless in the growth of towns
in America, and when to his own recollections were added the records
with which he had been familiar in his boyhood the change became
astounding. These were received from his father's mother f, whom
he remembered erect in stateliness, till, as Henry PARK used to say
"she died an untimely death, a martyr to the gout, at the age of 96".
She often spoke of the town as she remembered it, consisting of only
four streets, and her temper, which was not the most gentle, would
often suffer if anything reminded her of her husband's want of fore-
sight, in selling for ^90 a piece of land in the vicinity of Liverpool
which she had lived to see sold again for between £400 and £500.
How would she have borne the trial, could her grandson Henry PARK
* See The Pedigree Register, I. 268.
t Ellen BIRCH, widow, of Liverpool, married 20 August 1706 at St. Michael's Church,
Chester, to John PARK, of Liverpool, mariner. Maiden name unknown.
MAR. 19"] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER in
then have predicted that he himself should see this piece of ground in
the heart of the town (1840) again change hands at the price of £4000
and at last attain the value of £32,000 !
In 1788 Mr. PARK removed to Bold Street, and it was during his
time here in 1804 and 1805 that he was present at the duels between
Lieutenant SPARLING and Mr. GRAYSON and Major BROOKS and Colo-
nel BOLTON (see Liverpool Daily Posf, 16 April, 1897.)
In February 1798 the people of Liverpool subscribed £17,000 to
enable the Government to meet the enormous expenses of the War.
Henry PARK subscribed £100 ; he was Surgeon to the Liverpool
Corps of Artillery Volunteers, the appointment of Henry PARK of
Liverpool, surgeon, gentleman, being dated " Court at St. James's
ii May, 1797 ".
In 1788, though his business was great, Henry PARK still found
some leisure for gardening. He was much attached to a piece of land
in Smith Down Lane, near Liverpool, which had belonged, Miss
E. PARK states, to his family from the time of Queen Elizabeth, and
a few stunted trees in 1840 marked the boundaries of that portion of
it, now intersected by Parliament Street, which he cultivated as a
garden.
In 1798 he resigned his office of surgeon at the Infirmary of Liver-
pool, which he had held since 1767. In 1820 he went to live at a
house, Belle Vue, at Wavertree. This house he named " Wavertree
Lodge".
He kept a Register of all the births that he attended, 4000, which
he used to call his " Book of Genesis ". It was deposited after his
death in the Library of the Liverpool Medical Institute.
Henry PARK'S sister, Mary, born 1732 (Miss PARK), in the land
allotted to her, had an interesting parcel of ground near Liverpool,
afterwards known as the Jericho Strawberry Gardens, which had been
held for above 200 years by a three life lease under the house of
MOLYNEUX.
His sister Anne, born 1740, married as her second husband, John
BARNES of Walthamstow and Lincoln's Inn Fields, and was mother of
Lieutenant-General Sir Edward BARNES, G. C. B., K. M. T., M. P.,
Governor of Ceylon, Commander-in-Chief in India, Adjutant-General
of the British Army at the Battle of Waterloo, where he was wounded.
Henry PARK in his lifetime broke twenty-one bones in his body.
He was the first surgeon to operate for excision of the ankle joint.
He and Mr PRESTON (of FAWCETT & PRESTON'S foundry) bore the
expense of sending GIBSON (sculptor of the tinted Venus) to Rome to
study art. The PARK family were friends of Mrs. HEMANS the
poetess.
RAYMOND TINNE BERTHON.
112
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
or
Thomas WILDE of High Wycombe,:
Bucks. Born c. 1660.
:Mary
I
John WILDE. Bapt. at High Wycombe, = Hannah HUNT. Married at High
June 1692 (Par, Reg.) A cooper. Died I Wycombe, 30 Sept. 1723. Died
22 August 1745. I there 14 April 1745.
Sarah. Born
Jan. 1726.
I
John WILDE. Bapt. at High=Mary. dau. of
Wycombe 27 April 1729.
Member of the Coopers' Co.
London. Died 29 Dec. 1801,
aged 72. Buried at St. Lau-
rence Pountney, London
2 Jan. 1802.
Of High Wycombe.
Marr. *7S9-
Died
Buried at St. Lau-
rence Pountney 26
May 1774.
I
Richard WiLDE.=Ann. Died
Bapt. Sept. 1732 at High
at High Wycom- Wycombe
be. Died 12 June 1801.
1775-
John WILD. Born 1760-61.= Ann POWELL. Born
Thomas WILD. Of No 4,=Sarah JONES. Born
Died 6 May 1816, aged 56.
1762.
Green Lettuce Lane, Lon-
Mart.
Buried at St. Martin Orgar,
Marr. at St. L. Pount-
don. Born 1762.
at Stamford Rivers
London. Marble tablet in
ney 25 Nov. 1786.
Bur. at St. LaurencePount-
Essex, tjfy'
St. Clement's, London.
Died 4 Dec. 1828,
ney 8 Oct. 1807, aged45.
Died 1822.
aged 66.
a
a
s
John WILD. Born:
1787-88. Of
Clapham Lodge,
Clapham Common
Surrey, wine-mer-
chant. On Court of
Coopers' Co., Lon-
don. Died 9 July
1 854, aged 66. Bur-
at Norwood Ce-
metery. Will dated
b
Jemima, eldest dau. of
Rev.Henry LAING,DDM (adau.)
of Brighton, Sussex, Marr.
Schoolmaster (i3th
Wrangler Camb.) Born BURN-
1812. Marr. LEY of
1836. Died Ply-
i Jan. 1 863, aged 50. mouth,
Buried at Norwood and
Cemetery. had
issue.
I
William WILD. Born:
2 May 1793. Of Den-
mark Hill, Camberwell,
and 7, Martin's Lane,
London, wine-mercht.
Master of the Coopers'
Co. 1852. Died at Den-
mark Hill 23 Feb. 1865,
aged 71. Buried at Nor-
wood Cemetery. Will
dated
: Elizabeth, dau. of
Joseph HARRISON
of Balham, Surrey.
Born 3 1 May 1801.
Marr. at Streatham
Church, 10 Dec.
1827. Died at S.
Kensington Hotel,
Queen's Gate Ter-
race, 3oNov. 1882,
aged 81.
c
MAR. i9i i] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
Mary. Buried at High
Wycombe, April 1736.
\
Thomas WILDE. Bapt. at = Sarah
High Wycombe July
1737. Member of the
Coopers' Co., London
1783. Living 1801.
JosephWiLDE. Bapt. at High
Wycombe, April 1739.
I
Thomas WILDE
[From this Thomas I believe Lord Chancellor,
Baron TRURO, and the 1st Lord PENZANCE were
descended. Lord TRURO was educated partly by
my grandfather, William BICKNELL. — A.S.B.
im
Four daughters
1
1
~I
Hannah Maria.= PRIOR.
Mary Ann. Born=Richard BRUCKNER
An infant. Buried
Born 1765.
1769.
of the Parish of St.
at St. Laurence
Marr. before
Of St. Laurence,
George, Hanover
Pountney.
1800.
Pountney. Marr.
Square, London.
at St. Mary Ab-
bot' s, Kensington
2 April 1803.
T
Harriet. Marr. Bolton SMITH
of Colchester, Essex, wine-
merchant, and had issue one
son and two daughters.
I
George Nicholas WILD= Harriet FLINT.
Liveryman Cooper's
Co., 1818. Born
1797. Died
1834.
114
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
b b
John Wild= Jemima Laing
\
1
1
Rev. John WILD, M. A., =p Margaret Carew
Ernest WILD
Jemima. Born=Joseph Carew
of Highweek, Newton
HUNT. Died
Born 1838.
1841.
HUNT. Died
Abbot.Born 1836. Died
1898.
Died 1875.
Marr. 1864.
1874.
at Ticehurst I Aug.
Buried at High-
Buried in
at Avenue
1910.
week, Newton
Norwood
Road Church,
Abbot, Devon.
Cemetery ?
London, N.W.
I
I
Three daughters A son died young.
r
1
1
Rev. Robert Walter Carew=(i) Mildred BRYANCE
Reginald
Evelyn = Major DEINERT,
HUNT, M.A. Merton Coll.,
Marr. 1890.
HUNT.
Born
(German Army)
Oxford. Born 1865.
Died 1908.
1866.
Of Wiesbaden.
Vicar of St. Giles. Reading.
(2) Dr. Mary CRUICIC-
Marr.
/
SHANK. Marr. 1909.
S
1891.
s
s
seven children
3 children
I
Charles Augustus;
WILD. Born at
7 Martin's Lane
4 Jan. 1835. Con-
sul at Foo-Chow-
Foo, China. Of
Longdown Lod-
ge, Camberley,
and died there.
Buried at Sand-
hurst, Berks, 28
Jan. 1891.
: Margaret, only dau. of Mars-
hall TWEDDELL of Bolden
Lawn, co. Durham, and Mar-
garet (dau. of Ralph HART).
Born at South Shields 6 Oct.
1844. Marr. at Sunderland 19
Jan. 1870. She marr. (2) Capt.
John CHALLENOR of Black-
wood, Endon, co. Stafford.
Marr. at St. Saviour's, Pad-
dington, London, Dec. 1895.
I
Rev. Robert Louis
WILD, M,A. Born
at East Dulwich,
Surrey, lojun. 1837.
Of Oriel College,
Oxon. Rector of
Hurstmonceux,
Sussex.
I
Ena Winifred. Born
at Harmondsworth,
Middx., 14 Aug, 1877
Bapt. there.
:i. Mary VAUGHAN. Born 5
Jan. . Marr. at Weston-
super-Mare, Somerset. Died
at Hurstmonceux, 24 June
1891.
(2) Caroline, dau. of Herbert
Mascall CURTEIS of Wind-
mill Hill Place, Hurstmon-
ceux, sometime M.P. for
Rye, and Hester, his wife.
Born 25 July 1850. Marr. at
Hurstmonceux 6 Nov. 1894.
I
Charles Hillary WILD, B.A. Born = Hon. Vera Angela, 3rd dau. of the
at Harmondsworth 26 May 1880.
Bapt. there. Of Charterhouse School
and Oriel College, Oxford.
3rd Lord BRA YE and Cecilia his
wife. Born 14 Aug. 1881. Marr. at
SS. Peter & Edward's Church,
Palace Street, Westminster 22 July
I
Charles Edric Verney WILD.
Born at South Ash Manor,
Wrotham, Kent. 29 May 1906.
Bapt. at South Ash Manor 2 June.
I
Reginald Hillary WILD.
Born at South Ash Manor
4 Oct. 1910. Bapt. at
South Ash Manor 12 Oct.
MAR. i9i i] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
c c
William Wild~ Elizabeth Harrison
I
William John WILD
Born at 7 Martin's
Lane, 24 April 1829.
Wine-merchant. On
the Court Coopers'
Co. Died at Denmark
Hill 12 July 1882,
intestate. Buried in
Norwood Cemetery.
1
Frederick WILD.
Born at 7 Martin's
Lane, 19 Feb. 1831.
Died at Denmark
Hill 19 July 1870.
Buried in Norwood
Cemetery.
1
Emily Isabella. Born at=
7 Martin's Lane 23 Apr.
1833. Marr. 28 Aug. 1856.
Died at 36, Hyde Park
Gardens, London, 16 Jan.
1906. Buried at Grateley,
Hants.
x
Thre
Thre
= Emanuel BOUTCHER.
Born 13 March 1824
Died at Gravesend
on yacht " FIONA ",
14 Sept. 1888, aged
64. Buried at Grate-
ley.
e sons
B daughters
Rosa Louisa. Born at East:
Dulwich ii Feb. 1840.
Bapt. at St. Clement's,
London, 19 May 1840.
Marr at St. John's West-
minster, 13 Nov. 1857.
A. Sidney BICKNELL, F.R.A.S., &c. 4th son
of Elhanan BICKNELL of Herne Hill,
Surrey. Born at Herne Hill, 9 Oct. 1832,
(Regd. as "Sidney" at Dr. WILLIAMS' Li-
brary 29 Dec. 1837.) Author, traveller,
Member of theAlpine Club, the Italian
Alpine Club, Reform Club, fife. Of Bar-
combe House, near Lewes, 1911.
Two sons, Four daughters.
Illl
Rev. Herbert Louis WILD
M.A. Born at Uffington
Salop, 2 July 1865. Educ.
Charterhouse & Exeter
Coll. Oxon. Vicar of St.
Giles Oxford.
Ethel
Agnis Maud
Beatrice Mary.
: Helen Christian dau. of
Walter SEVERN, artist,
Earl's Court Square,
Kensington, [son of Jos.
SEVERN, 1793-1879]
Marr. at Private Chapel
Bishop's Palace, Wells,
1903.
n^ i i
Eva Sybil Wilfred Herbert WILD.
Capt. Northumberland
Fusiliers. Born 6 June
1874. Marr. 1906. Violet
Grace dau, of... HARMS-
WORTH. One son ; one
dau.
Robert Vaughan WILD,
M.A. Born 10 June 1876.
Marr. 1904, Edythe Noel
WILSON.
Four sons.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
d d
George Nicholas Wild==Harriet Flint
\
Rev. George WILD, M. A., = Florence, only dau. of John WILD=(I) Georgina, dau. of John
LL.D. Born at 24 Aug.
1825. Sometime rector of
Bisley, Surrey. Died in Lon-
don, 3 Nov. 1909. Cremated
at Golders' Green, Hamp-
stead 5 Nov.
Rev. J. H. ; BRIGHT,
vicar of Adbaston, co.
Stafford. Born 17 May
1832. Marr. at Adbas-
ton 3 June 1851.
Ten children
Seven grandchildren
Three great-grandchildren.
Born at
1827.
KING, of Cape Town.
Marr. at St. George's Han-
over Square, 1856. Died at
Hampstead. Buried in
Brompton Cemetery.
==(2) Isabella dau. of
Marr. 1878.
r
i
Georgina Mark WILD
1
dau.
a a
Thomas Wild==Sarah Jones
r
Sarah 1790-98
II
. Thomasjones WILD.
Born and died 1792.
Maria Esther. Born
1793. Died 1864,
Marr. 1817. Mill
PELLATT, wine mer-
chant (10 children.)
1
Henry WILD. Born=
12 July 1795.
Freeman Coopers'
Co., London, 1817.
Wine-merchant.
Died at Camden
Town 1875. Will
dated.
= Maria eldest dau. of
William John REE-
VES, artists' colour-
man. Born 1799
Marr. 1821.
Died 1854.
1
Mary Sophia
Born 9 Dec. 179
Died 179
I
Charles Kemp WILD. Born===Anne Lucy, second dau. of
2 July 1832. Of REEVES
Sons Artists' colourmen.
Past Master of the Plas-
terers' Co. Living 1911.
James i Reeves WYATT. Born
13 Sept. 1838. Marr. 21 July
1860. Living 1911.
Charles James WILD. Born=Elsie Muriel, only dau. of Thomas
20 Oct. 1865. Educ. Char- DANIELS, of Loudwater, Bucks,
terhouse. Chairman REEVES solicitor. Marr. 4 Aug. 1889.
& SONS, artists' colourmen,
London. Of Wey bank. God-
aiming.
I
Maria. Born 1822. Marr.
1844 Sir William WYATT
Died 1893.
Ten children.
iiini
Two daughters
Four sons
One grandson.
MAR. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
117
1
1
1 1 1
Eliza Ann. Born
Thomas WILD. = Eliza PHILPOT
Sarah Ann. Born 19 April 1803.
1798.
Born 17 Sept,
Marr.
Died 1826. Marr. 1825.
Died
1848.
1801. Died
1823.
EDWARD STEPHENSON.
Marr
1819.
21 Feb. 1860.
Died 1858.
—
Andrew
BADEN,
Stephen Jones WILD. Born
and had
issue 9
x
s
1805. Died 1818.
children
Nine children
—
Eliza. Born 1823.
Died 1896.
I
Henry Bowles WILD.
Born 8 Feb. 1825.
Died 19 July 1882.
Mary Jones. Born 13 Aug. 1807.
Died 1808.
INI
William WILD. Died 1909.
Alfred WILD. Died 1865.
Harriet. Born 1830.
James Frederick WILD. Born
1855. Died 1878.
A. Sidney BICKNELL.
n8 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
ENTRIES IN THE NOTE-BOOK OF JOHN BUNTING, CHURCHWARDEN.
Mr. John BUNTING of the parish of Quainton, Bucks, farmer, some-
time churchwarden, overseer and constable, like a good business man
kept careful accounts of his business, and, no doubt agreeing with
Lord ST. ALBANS that " writing maketh an exact man ", also made
notes of other matters. The extracts here given include all the parti-
culars of genealogical interest. They appear to be notes of those
events which later on were more fully noticed in the Parish Register,
and may have been made in his capacity as churchwarden. In addi-
tion Mr. BUNTING entered the names, etc., of his horses, names of his
fields, crops, prices of produce in Aylesbury Market, comments on the
weather, etc., etc., the whole forming an interesting little record of
village life no years ago. These entries are arranged, for conve-
nience, in order of date.
1759. Mr. BURNHAM born March 29.
1760. Mrs. Eliz. HUGHES born May 29 at 6 hours a.m.
1769. Barbara, Elizabeth, Allice, and Ann CLARK, four daughters
at one birth, Baptised Dec1. I3th. and buried Decr. i5th.
at Towcester, Northants.
1781. John HARRIS (call'd the Lawyers son) born Jan 22nd at
8.0. a.m.
1783. Susanna daughter of Mich1, and Mary ANSTISS born August
23 at 3.0. a.m.
1791. Jos. FRANKLIN a son James born Septr 3d at 1.30 a.m.
1792. — WALDUCK — alias Cox, Sarah, born July 9, 3.7 a.m.
1794. Jos. SHARP a daughter Hannah born May I at Meridian.
1795. John SHEASBY born April 6th at 4.15 a.m.
„ J. WOOD Mard April 23d 1 1.20 a. m. or 40' before noon.
„ E. BUNTING taken ill of a Fever July 25 4 hours a.m.
„ S. LAYTON died August 9, 1.30 a.m.
„ James BUNTING ill of a Billious disorder Septr 4th.
„ Jane CORSBY born October 31 at 11.35 P-m-
„ R* MAYD son bn Decr 12th 2.0 p.m.
1796. Princess of Wales a daughter born Jan. 7 between nine and
ten a.m.
„ Chas. Wm. HUGHES born Feb. 2 at 4.30 a.m.
„ Wm. BRADBURY a daughter, Ann, born Feb. 29 at 4.0 a.m.
„ Thos SHILLINGFORD a daughter, Ann, born March 12 at oh
1 5m a.m.
„ Mr. John HUGHES, 2 sons John and William born April 18
at 5h a.m. John the oldest, 30 minutes.
„ Mr Tho8. BRAZELL a daughter Elizabeth born May 21 at
2.0 a.m.
„ Jane BAKER married June 14th. at 8h a.m.
„ Wn. CORSBY married to a second wife June, 7.
„ Jo8. SHARP daughter Hannah died Sept. i 6h. p.m.
„ John TAYLOR, mason, a daughter born Octr. 2 between 2
and 5 a.m.
MAR. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
1796. Rob*. MAYDON a daughter born October 8th. jh a.m.
„ Jn°. GRANTHAM, a son born Nov. 2oth. at 6h p.m.
„ Joseph CURTIS a daughter died Mary Novr. 25.
„ Martha LAYTON born Decr. 3 at 3h a.m.
1797. William BAKER a son born Febry 6th at 3h a.m.
„ A successful journey to London Feb. 2oth p.m.
„ Charles BUNTING born April 2d at 6.26 a.m.
„ James BURNHAM a son born April 2d at 3 hours p.m.
„ Robert BURNELL a son born May 19 at 4.30 p.m.
„ Charles Alfred MARLOW born June I5th. at 4.30 a.m.
„ John SCRAGGS a daughter born June 25th at 2.30 p.m.
„ Joseph FRANKLIN a son born Septr 2.
„ PRICE — Bet MAINWOOD a son born Septr 16 at 4.0 a.m.
„ Wm. KEEN, a daughter born, Susanah, Sept. 24 at 8.30 a.m.
„ Richd. and Jane BUSBY a daughter born, Sarah, Nov1 i Ith at
11.30 a.m. NB. died August 2nd 1798.
1798. Rob*, and Mary WEB'S (Mary BONE) a son William born
Feb. 19 at n hours a.m. or i hour p.m.
„ John PIDDINTON a son Matthew born Feb. 6.
„ Samuel ROADS a son born Feb1"7 28 at 3h a.m. died next day
March i.
„ Jeremiah GILKS a daughter born May 7th at 9h a.m.
„ Tho8. LAYTON a daughter Elizabeth born July 9th at 6.45 a.m.
„ Rob*. MAYDON a daughter born Aug* 1 6th at oh 5001 a.m.
„ Mathew COOK a daughter born Octr 4 at 9.30 a.m.
„ Hannah FOSTER a daughter (Bastard) born Oct. 23d.
„ March 8th. new additional taxes taken off at 2.30 p.m.
„ Joseph WELCH a son born, Thomas, March 24"*. at 40 or
4.15 a.m.
„ John SMITH a son born March 29 at 9 hours p.m.
„ April ioth I bought Wm. ROBINSON'S House and close North-
end for ninety guineas at 7 hours p.m.
1799. Joseph BRAZELL (Baker) a daughter born Jan17 9*h at 5.0 p.m.
1800. Edwd. and Ann READ a son Edwd born Feb. 26 at 9.14 a.m.
„ Mathew COOK son John born March 9 at i.o p.m.
„ Wm. MARLOW daugh. born March at midnight.
„ Wm. HARDING a daughter born May 28th at 7.0 p.m.
„ James SLEATH a daughter, Mildred, born May 3 0th at 9.0 a.m.
„ Little John TAYLOR a daughter born June 7*h at 7.30 p.m.
„ John WARNER a son born June 10 at I2h p.m.
„ Thos. LAYTON a son born June 1 1 at 5.30 a.m.
„ Wm. NIB a daughter born June 18.
„ Simon SLADE a... born June 22.
„ John SMITH a... born August 12 at 6h a.m.
„ John ELLIMAN a son, Felix, born August 13 at 2h a.m.
„ Simon BRAZELL a... born Sept.
„ Tho8. MAINWOOD a... born Sept.
„ Fra8. BROWNUTT a daughter, Eliza, born Oct. 2 at uh a.m.
W. BRADBROOK,
Bletchley.
I2O
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
Rev. John ASHCROFT, Rector of Fishtoft, co. Lincoln, 1717-39. Will dati
3 May ; proved 27 Nov. 1739, (P.C.C.) Said to have had property in Bostc
America, (see a pedigree of ASHCROFT, by Henry WAGNER, F.S.A., in Be
fordshire Notes & Queries, vol. III. (1892.)
I
ASHCROFT. In
Holy Orders. Qy. of
Lincolnshire. Died
before 1777. Left
estate to niece Mer-
cy TAYLOR.
II
(a dau.) Marr
TAYLOR and had a
dau. Mercy, who m.
her cousin Henry
SHERWOOD.
(a dau.) Marr
HAYES and died
without issue.
I
Martha. Bapt. at Fishtoft, 20 Sept. 1722. Died 25tl
buried 27 July 1754, in Trinity Church, Coventry.
Prayer-book dated 1745, and also in Burial Regist<
called " Martha SHARROD. " ist wife.
r
Margaret MASCALL. Born ^ Henry SHERWOOD. Bapt. at Trinity === Mercy, daughter of TAYLOR.
at Walthamstow, Essex,
2 May 1 748. Her bro. lived
at one time at Mitre
Court, Milk Street, Lon-
don, ist wife.
I
Margaret, Bapt. priva-
tely 29 April 1778.
Reed, into the church
at St. Peter's chapel,
London, i Jan. 1779.
Married abroad
c. 1823.
Church, Coventry, as " Henry
SHARROD. " Died at Clifton. Buried
at Bristol Cemetery 25 March 1804.
Lived . at St. Valery, Abbeville,
France, 1791-6. a
(She was her husband's
Married at St. Peter's
London, 15 May 1779.
cousin.)
Chapel,
I
Henry SHERWOOD. Born at Wood street:
London, i Jan. 1777. Bapt. at St. Peter's
chapel, 3 1 Jan. Educ. at Merchant Taylor's
School. Captain and paymaster 53d Regt,
1797. Died6 Dec. 1849. Buried at Twicken-
ham Cemetery, Middlesex.
Mary Martha. Authoress of The
Fairchild Family &c. &c. Born
at Stanford-on-Teme, 6 May,
1775. Marr. at the High Church,
Bridgnorth, Salop,3O June 1803.
(vide Diet. Nat. Biog.) Lived at
Lower Wick, Worcester,
1821-48. Died at Twickenham,
Middlesex, 22 Sept. 1851.
MAR. 19"] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
121
y, dau. of Richard WHITTINGHAM of Boston, co. Lincoln, and Mercy his
. He died 1716. Buried in Boston Church, Lines. Mary WHITTINGHAM'S
e is in a Prayer-book belonging to the Rev. Henry Martyn SHERWOOD
^hite Ladies. She married at Fishtoft 6 Nov. 1718. Buried there 29 Nov.
'. Her three sisters all married; names unknown.
SHERWOOD=S=
(? SHARROD.)
I
ry SHERWOOD of Coventry, silkman. Born 1715. Died 5th., = Mary, sister of Jonah (? Josiah)
ed 17 June 1790 in Trinity Church. Of the firm of SHER-
>D and REYNOLDS, Wood Street, London. Lived at The Priory,
jntry. Owned a house at Norwood, Surrey, still called
erwood Villa." Will dated 1788, proved 10 July i79o.(P.C.C.)
;scended from the SHERWOODS of Newcastle."
WEDGWOOD of Burslem, Staffs., and
relict of Henry GARRETT. Born c.
1721. Marr. c. 1780-2. Died 1801,
aged 80. Buried in Trinity Church,
2nd wife. s.p.
Thomas SHERWOOD.
Died without issue.
I
Martha. Born at The Priory, Coventry. Bapt. at Trinity
Dhurch, 28 Jan. 1750 as " Martha SHARROD, " as also
n Prayer-book dated 19 Feb. 1769. Brought up by her
nother's cousin Mrs. WOODHOUSE, mother of the Very
Revd. Chapel WOODHOUSE, Dean of Lichfield. Marr. at
Richmond, Surrey, 26 April 1773. Died 1817, aged 66.
Buried at Stanford-on-Teme, Worcestershire.
Thomasin. Married Michael PATTERSON.
Lived at Coventry 1790-96. Died s.p.
Rev. George BUTT, D.D., Vicar of Kidder-
minster,rector of Stanf ord-on-Teme, Worcs.,
and chaplain to George III. (vide Diet. Nat.
Biog.) Son of Cary BUTT of Lichfield, a
physician (1708-1781) and Elizabeth (MAR-
TEN) his wife. Died 29 Sept. 1795.
I
[ohn Marten BUTT. Born 10 March
1774. Adm. to Westminster School,
1788. Of Ch. Ch. Oxon., M.A. 1799.
Vicar of East Garston, 1802. Married
}. Nov. 1806, Mary Ann CONGREAVE,
2) Jemima HUBBAL. Died 3 March
[846.
T
Lucy Lyttelton. Born 29 April = Rev. Charles Richard
(? Nov.) 1781. Marr. 12 June
1806. Died 7 Sept. 1858. (vide
Diet. Nat. Biog.)
CAMERON, M.A., of
Christ Church, Oxon.
122
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
Henry Sherwood^ Mercy Taylor
I
i. John Woodhouse SHERWOOD,= Eliza, dau. of SMITH,
of Crosby Hall (? London.) Born
1785-
of Allhallows,
London.
Barking,
Henry Samuel=j= Esther, daughter o:
SHERWOOD. I ....... TROWBRIDGE.
Two sons
John Woodhouse=pLucinda, dau. of WARATON,
SHERWOOD. I of Bungay, Suffolk.
r
Reuben SHERWOOD.
Born in London
1846.
\
Nelson SHERWOOD.
Born in New York
1851.
\
Adric SHERWOOD.
Born at Norwich,
U.S.A., 1853.
Two daughters.
b b
Henry Sherwood^ Mary Martha Butt
1
Henry SHERWOOD. Born
at Dinapore, India, 25 Dec.
1805. Died 22 July, 1807.
? Buried at Berhampore,
where his tomb is still
(1909) shewn. The original
of Little Henry and his
Bearer, written in 1806.
(seeTheSphere,gOct. 1909.)
1
George
SHER-
WOOD.
Died
young.
1
Lucy Martha,
Born 28 Apr.
1807. Died 2
Sept. 1808.
Buried at
Cawnpore.
1
Henry Martyn SHERWOOD^
Born at Meerut, India,
i July 1813. Of Queen's
Coll., Oxon., M.A. Vicar of
White Ladies Aston, Wore.
1839-1910. (Said to be the
oldest clergyman in the
Church of England.) Liv.
at Per shore 1911.
= Mary Emma, dau. of
Joseph TAYLOR,
D.D., Born at Castle
Martyr, co. Cork,
6 June 1841. Marr. at
St. Luke's, Cork, 24
Nov. 1864. Died at
White Ladies Aston
13 May 1910.
r
Henry SHERWOOD. Onlyr
son. Born at White La-
dies Aston, Wore., 9 June
1867. Of 25, Birchin Lane,
London, and The High-
lands, Harrow-on-the-
Hill.
= Annie Rose Edith, eldest dau.
of the Rev. Hamilton Llewel-
lyn GERTY, D.D.,fefMrs. GERTY
(of Acton) and grand-dau. of
Mrs. William BURLEY. Marr.
at St. Mary's Bryanston Sq.,
London, 4 June 1895.
1
Mary Martha. Born
at White Ladies
Aston. Marr. at St.
Laurence's Peopleton
8 Feb. 1911, Rev.T.
DAVIES of Peopleton
Pershore.
"1
Annie Emily.
Born at White
Ladies Aston.
Living at
Pershore 1911.
1
Henry SHERWOOD.
Born 6 May, 1896.
1
Hamilton Stanley
SHERWOOD. Born
5 March 1899.
1
Martyn Butt SHERWOOD.
Born April 1901.
1
Edwyn Sandys SHERWOOD.
Born Oct. 1907.
MAR. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
123
3. James Taylor SHERWOOD.
Believed to have been killed
at the Battle of Navarino, 1827.
Mercy. Died at
St. Valery, Abbe-
ville, France.
1
1
Mary Henrietta. Born=Rev. Charles Thos.
Lucy Elizabeth. Born = William BAGNALL,
at Morpeth, Northum-
DAWES, rector of
at Cawnpore 18 Aug.
of Hampstead
berland, 20 April 1804.
Adbarton, Staffs.
1809. Marr. at St. He-
Hall, Stafford-
Marr. 13 Dec. 1826.
Of Mount Ephraim,
len's, Worcester, 1834.
shire.
Died 8 Nov. 18...
Faversham, Kent.
Died May 1835. Bur.
Buried at Hernhill.
Died 12 Aug. 1863.
^— — ^— •
ja.i West Bromwich.
•M^^^^^^^H
I I
Sir Edwyn Sandys DAWES, knight. =• Lucy Emily
Born 1838. Died I Married 1859.
Dec. 1903.
I
Sophia. Died at 45, Uxbridge = Hubert Kelly, M.D. Died s.p.
Road, Middlesex, 12 Mch. 1899,
aged 84. Buried at Pinner.
Emily. Died
unmarried.
(Rev.) GEORGE H. CAMERON.
P.O. Box 1131, JOHANNESBURG,
SOUTH AFRICA.
i24 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
A. D. 1790-91.
ALSTON v. MALES.
Vol. 760, continued.
1790, Dec. i. Bequest of Stephen WHITE to a Charity School at Holton,
Suffolk. His will 1 8 Feb. 1773 ; wife Ann. Bequest to rector of Brantham
with East Bergholt. Testator's death 12 April 1773 ; his widow died 31 Dec.
1781. Revd. William COLCHESTER, rector of Holton, is the immediate
successor of the testator, is master of a boarding school in Dedham. He and
his father before him have resided in a house at Dedham nearly 60 years as
masters of the said school. The testator Stephen WHITE resided in Stratford
for 30 years. The parsonage house of Holton is but a thatched cottage.
Ex parte ALLEN.
1790, Dec. 23. Conveyance of lands in Algarkirke [Lines.] Settlement
previous to the marriage of Thomas BEAUMONT, clerk, with the petitioner Eliz-
abeth BEAUMONT, widow, of Spilsby. Stephen POLLEXFEN and Francis
THIRKHILL of Boston, Lincoln, gentleman, parties to a deed.
ANDREWS v. ROCKETT.
1790, Nov. 29. Personal estate of testator John ANDREWS, Jacob ANDREWS
his son, died 19 Oct. 1774, unmarried. Marriage of testator's widow Chris-
tian, with Joseph ALLISON 30 April 1764. Plaintiffs John ANDREWS and
Elizabeth wife of Richard STRONG, only children of Thomas ANDREWS, decea-
sed, brother of the testator John ANDREWS. Schedule of account of administra-
tor Allen PERING. The testator's sloop called the " Mary and Prudence ".
Thomas, son of Mr. Thomas PERING. Mrs. Jane, widow of Mr. Glanville
SMITH ; Miss Ann SMITH his daughter.
ATTORNEY-GENERAL v. AYNESCOMBE.
1790, Dec. 2. Estate of Frances ASHTON, widow, deceased. Luton and
Dunstable, Beds. Receiver's account from 1787 (schedules). Tenants and
tradesmen's names. " Crown " Inn, " White Hart " Inn. Quit rents to
Duke of Bedford and Dean and Chapter of St. Pauls. Paid for discharging
prisoners out of Ludgate, the Marshalsea, the Poultry Compter and Wood
street Compter.
(To be continued).
* Continued from page 91.
MAR. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 125
anb
HERALDIC ANOMALIES. — An excellent little book bearing this title,
published anonymously in 1824 (London : G. and W. B. Whittaker], contains
the following amusing lines which seem well worth reprinting.
" A female of low birth, but great vanity, had married a gentleman who
became a knight ; on the decease of the latter, for fear the heraldic atchievements
on her carnage should no longer shew her to be a Lady, she added the knight's
open helmet to her widow's Lozenge, which was the occasion of the following
jeu d' esprit :.
" Some wedded Dames, unless forsworn
Have oft their husband's small clothes worn
All order to o'erwhelm ;
But woman since fam'd Joan of Arc,
Excuse the freedom of remark,
Ne'er wore the glitt'ring helm.
If Title needs must deck your car
Heraldic laws you should not mar
To trump your knightly fame ;
Though it imply, and so far right,
That Spousy was a simple knight,
And you're a simple Dame.
The Lozeng'd shield's sufficient sure
For widow's purpose — to allure
And all her wants to trace ;
If Coat and small clothes will not do,
But wear you must the Helmet too,
Close it to hide your Face."
The Records of Naval Men, by Gerald FOTHERGILL. London : Chas A. Bernau
1910. 12 mo., pp. 113. Price 2s. 6d. net.
Not long ago when examining the accounts of Aylesbury Gaol we made
many extracts like this :
" 1779. Charges for carrying James DUMBARTON, Edw. KERBY, to the
Marine Society and putting them on board the Tender at the Tower.
Carrying William AYRES and Thos. SMITH to Tower Hill and delivered
them to a Midshipman.
Carrying five convicts to Woolwich, etc."
Instead of imprisonment, or, perhaps, hanging, these sinners were sentenced
126 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
to sea service : a procedure which seems to justify the opinion of Dr. JOHNSON
that " a ship is worse than a gaol... with the additional disadvantage of being in
danger ". Had we been anxious to learn the fate of the above men we should
not have known how to proceed ; but now in The Records of Naval Men,
paragraph 113 tells us where the books dealing with convicts are to be found ;
though, unaccountable omission, this paragraph is not in the Index ! Thus fate
allows us to illustrate at once the great usefulness (and the little weakness) of
this very welcome little volume.
The average sailor of the i8th. century was not usually a born seaman.
Kidnapped by a crimp, seized by a press-gang, transferred from a prison, he was
not devoured by a yearning for life on the ocean in one of His Majesty's ships,
and, " once on board the lugger " his career usually terminated in death abroad;
but, still, some of him had another fate, and the details of his life (and death)
and prize-money are on record. Mr. FOTHERGILL tells us how to proceed,
where to go, and what we shall find in naval records : his book is one of the
essential working-tools of the searcher in these mazes. Every student must use
" Fothergill " in future when designing the history of a ship, a campaign, a
period, a policy, and, in some cases, when writing a biography : e. g. how much
that is new may we not now find concerning SMOLLETT ?
We regret that the index is not a fitting crown to so excellent a work ; we
have read and re-read this " working-tool " with increasing appreciation, and
have annotated the index. Some of our additions refer to " smugglers, 39 ";
" letters of Marque, 42 "; " convicts, 113"; " transports, 58 ".
Vast numbers of men were employed in the Navy during the i8th. century,
for we were at war nearly all the time. Laird CLOWES says that during the
war which ended in 1763, the number of men who served in the Royal Navy
was 185,000. Only 1512 were returned as killed ; and as only 50,000 were
on the books at the end of the war, the missing and died by sickness were
133,000 odd in number. Every family in the Kingdom must have had a
member or members in the service, and be interested in the genealogical value
of the records.
As a proof of that amiable weakness which causes the sailor to be credited
with a wife in every port, Mr. FOTHERGILL writes in par. 96, "Not infrequent-
ly two widows would claim in respect of one man ".
Annah of Two Extinct Families, by Col. J. A. TEMPLE. London : F. V. White
and Co Ltd. 1910. 8vo. pp. xii, 152. Price ros. od.
The two extinct families, that is, extinct in the male line, are VON LUDERS
and LIGHT. The first is traced in Hamburg from 1545, became naturalized in
England in the i8th. century, and settled at Bath, where a member married
into the LIGHT family.
MAR. i9i i] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 127
The LIGHTS of Baglake were a branch of the LYTES of Lytes Gary. Both
families devoted their energies to the public service, civil and military, and did
efficient work without attaining any great distinction. They may be taken as
good examples of those many middle-class families whose members have acquired,
administered and fought for the possessions of the Crown beyond the seas.
Col. Alexander LIGHT in 1832 headed a band of emigrants to Canada, all of
good family, and settled at Woodstock, Ontario. He died in 1857, a"d tne
tablet to his memory states wrongly : (i) his father's name ; (2) his father's post
in India ; (3) his mother's rank and (4) that she was a maid of honour to Marie-
Antoinette !
The twenty-two illustrations of miniatures, portraits, arms, and views, together
with the two very nicely done chart pedigrees, add value to the book ; but the
omission of the surname in describing persons named in the charts makes them
less clear than they might be. There is no index.
How to Trace a Pedigree, by H. A. CROFTON. London : Elliot Stock, 1911.
8vo., pp. 67. Price 2s. od. net.
Probably, having emerged from our novitiate, our power of appreciation is
atrophied for elementary books like How to Trace a Pedigree ; hence our tepid
approval of Mr. CROFTON'S production. To begin with, ten or twelve thou-
sand words is hardly enough to deal properly with the subject. Mr. CROFTON
may have been restricted as to space, but even in that case he might have con-
densed more information. Twice he gives the golden advice to * verify your
information ' ; his instructions how to do so lack lucidity. Parish registers are
mentioned without any details as to their extent, reliability, or the way to
arrange a search : and on p. 31 we are told that at the Registrar-General's office
a search over five years costs five shillings ; perhaps a misprint for one shilling.
On p. 2 1 we read " For nineteenth-century searches Census Returns may be
consulted " ! We rejoiced at this, but will Mr. CROFTON add to our satisfaction
by telling us where they can be seen and by what means we can study them ?
for he has tantalized us by concealing this important knowledge. A study of
" Leading records in Pedigree Cases" (Pedigree Register, vol. I., p. 273) might
have helped our Author, for his sins of omission are as noticeable as his errors of
commission. Finally, he recommends to the neophyte in palaeography a book
which we have found far from " smoothing away our difficulties in a wonderful
manner "; and which, taken with his own, would not enable the beginner to
make much, if any, progress.
This book is more a pleasing evidence that there is a wider interest arising in
genealogy than a satisfactory guide to the pursuit.
The Churchyard Inscriptions of the City of London, by Percy C. RUSHEN.
London : Phillimore and Co., Ltd. 1910. 8vo., pp. xii., 114. Price 8s. 6d.
128 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1911
During those rare intervals when rain was not falling last year, we copied all
the epitaphs in a small country churchyard, and when the occasion seemed
favourable we deferentially hinted to the chief local resident, a gentleman
renowned for geniality and generosity (and substance), that he might like to
print them ; but, verba per attentam non ibunt Ceesaris aurem, perhaps, nisi dextro
tempore, was lacking. He refused the idea, " of no value nor interest ", said he :
and we shut up. That is the sentiment of the public on this matter ; the vul-
gar is of that opinion to this hour. It remains for the discerning enthusiasm of
Messrs. RUSHEN and PHILLIMORE to do good openly, and not change colour to
find it fame by producing Churchyard Inscriptions of the City of London. We
have, none but can have, emphatic commendation for this book. The writer's
preface tells us of some of the difficulties he encountered during his work among
the soot-sodden sepulchral stones of the City in 59 burial yards. As evidence
of atmospheric destructive agencies he mentions having witnessed on one occa-
sion chemical action in visible progress. Until we read his preface we did not
realise how much time we saved on one expedition in our youth, by climbing an
iron railing in the City. Among the inscriptions we notice one of a MAVOR of
spelling-book renown ; another concerning Percival POTT, the famous surgeon
who gave his name to POTT'S fracture, and POTT'S curvature of the spine (it
isn't a curve, by the bye, but an angle), with other members of his family,
spelled " POTTS " on his grave-stone ; in the " D. N. B., " he has no final s.
Also we find GOLDSMITH and Lord Mayor Sir William STAINES, cum multis aim.
There is an index of places, and of armorial bearings, and of names. The
last includes all those baptismal names which appear to be surnames, a most
useful idea. Only one who has worked in churchyards can fully appreciate the
time, labour, enterprise and energy which Mr. RUSHEN has given to this useful
and necessary book.
Lists of Manor Court Rolls in Private Hands. Part. III. The Manorial
Society's Monographs, No. 4. London : The Manorial Society, I Mitre Court
Buildings, Temple, E. C. 1910. 410.. pp. 13.
A sanitarian, discussing sewage, told us that it was not difficult to kill a germ;
the difficulty was to get at the germ. We sympathised, as experiencing an
analogous state of affairs. We do not find it difficult to eviscerate a document ;
the trouble is to get at the document. The Manorial Society does good work
in diminishing part of our complaint by indicating where a certain class of
documents may be found : and in the Lists of Manor Court Rolls in Private
Handsy of which Part III. is now issued, we are told certain particulars in addi-
tion to the name of the present possessor of the record : e. g. the Manor of
Edwin Ralph, 1 4 Rolls, with the names of the various Lords and the dates
covered by the rolls, and a list of the surnames occurring therein. W. B.
The Pedigree Register
JUNE 1911] [VoL. II, No. 17.
Cfaci o
All families, whether of humble or of gentle origin, have some
characteristic traits which are more markedly exhibited in their members
than others. This hereditary property is more marked in houses of
gentle origin, because, with a gentle birth comes, as a natural conse-
quence, family pride, and this pride of race brings with it a pride of
certain natural features, or traits, which, by force of imitation and
mental suggestion, come inevitably to be transmitted from one genera-
tion to succeeding generations.
Thus it is that the CLACK family, a race which, through many vi-
cissitudes, through periods of financial depression or mental obscurity,
has always remembered its gentle origin, and the responsibilities
attaching to it; has maintained its racial traits as perfectly as originally.
The most marked natural characteristics, or physical features, are the
finely- pencilled and slightly arched eyebrows, the Roman nose, the high
and broad forehead, black hair and fine teeth, and the dark blue eyes.
The facial expression generally seems to evince a calm content with
things as they are; with, albeit, a soup9on of contempt, not, be it said,
of persons, but of the trivialities and small things which vex the
common run of mankind — a contempt which is verbally embodied in
the family motto " Aquila non captat muscas." As to dispositional
properties, the temper is mostly, as indexed in the features, calm and
collected, with perhaps an irritable tendency on occasion. An ultra-
Tory state of mind forbids any familiar intercourse with the proletariat;
though, at the same time, the gentle spirit of chivalry always insists
on a sincere consideration and regard for the feelings of the multitude
— a consideration and regard which, unlike the " patronage " of the
parvenu, earn an affectionate gratitude and respect, rather than a passive,
though none the less sturdy, resentment.
This character, as I have lightly sketched it, is the average and most
general one in our family, and, I hope, does not betoken a prejudiced
view through rose-tinted spectacles. Like every family, of whatsoever
standing, the CLACK family has had, and, unfortunately, ever must have,
i3o THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
its black sheep. There have been weak men, there have been strong;
there have been drunkards, there have been mere abstainers; there
have been immoral members, there have been many more thoroughly
pure; there have been bad CLACKS, but there have been many more
who have not unworthily worn the cloth of the Church, or have faith-
fully discharged the duties of the State. Within my own experience
I have known many instances where a CLACK has been recognised by
his bearing and manner, but two cases in which I was the subject seem
to me most remarkable; and, since I am in a position to vouch for
their truth, I record them here.
Whilst on a stay with friends at the Manor, Wiveliscombe, I paid
a visit to Powderham Castle, the seat of my kinsman, the Earl of
DEVON. The whole place was of the deepest interest to me, so that I
did not evince any more interest in one thing than in another. Not-
withstanding this, an old retainer, who must have been close on 90 years,
said to me afterwards (he was not aware of my identity), " If I might
make so bold, Sir, you do remind me of a visitor we had here at the
castle in the old Earl's time, when I was a boy. When you stood
before that picture of the 2nd Viscountess I saw him again; he used
to stand just as you did, only he was copying one of the young ladies
out of the group." Naturally interested, I enquired the name of this
visitor of the past. " Oh, Sir," he replied, " he was a cousin of the
Earl's — a Mr. CLACK he was, and related to the 2nd Viscountess up
there " (pointing to the group). I afterwards learned that the old man
spoke of my great-great-uncle, Richard Augustus CLACK.
The second case was more recent, when, during my stay at Oke-
hampton, Devon, for artillery practice, I went to Moreton Hampstead,
with which place our family has been so long and closely rekted. By
a lucky chance I happened upon a former sexton, and in course of
conversation we discussed every local topic including the rector of
Moreton Hampstead. By no word or gesture had I, to my knowledge,
intimated who I was, and yet, to my surprise, my aged friend suddenly
exclaimed, with the delightful accent and pronunciation peculiar to
Devonians — "I'll be danged, zur, ef you bain't a CLACK — you mind
me of ould Passon — an' Maister Willum too — an' when you smiles I
sees 'em all in one. They be rare 'uns when they laughs and shows
their teeth, an' fine white teeth they had too, the young ladies! "
This reference was to the Reverend William Courtenay CLACK (who
died in 1900, aged 83) and his family, and is the more remarkable in
that our nearest common ancestor is Thomas CLACK, also a Rector of
Moreton Hampstead, my three-times-great-grandfather^ and the Revd.
William Courtenay CLACK'S grandfather.
T. STANLEY CLACK.
JuNEi9n] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 131
[One seems to require a definition of " gentle origin." While in
sympathy with much of the foregoing one may say that no family is
really of gentle origin except in the sense that "Adam was a gentle-
man," and that the " peerage " is more closely akin to each one of us
than seems to be generally recognized. One cannot speak of the
gentle descent of a whole family, because there is none whose ancestors
have not been for longer or shorter periods grossly plebeian.
The CLACK family harks back to an innkeeper, the landlord of
"The Bell" Inn, now "The Lamb," at Wallingford; who lived there
from 1721 to 1759, and had ten children baptized at St. Peter's Church.
That attractiveness of person and strength of character may crop up in
surroundings not by any means conducive to the highest culture is
shewn by the history of three of the daughters. These girls, instead
of having their heads turned by the attentions of aristocratic admirers
and yielding themselves unreservedly, insisted upon their full price,
or else their father saw that it was paid.
Sally married Charles, son of Sir Charles PALMER of Dorney Court,
baronet; Betty married William HONYWOOD, also the son of a baronet;
and Fanny married, 7 May 1762, William COURTENAY, a boy of 19,
whose father had been created a Viscount only the day before (6 May).
The father died almost immediately after (16 May), and the son thus
succeeded to the title, by the veriest chance, as second Viscount
COURTENAY of Powderham Castle, Devon, within a few days of his
marriage to the innkeeper's daughter.
The rise of the family fortunes, therefore, or rather the elevation of
the family to superior surroundings, began with this amorous adven-
ture; for the young Lord COURTENAY made his brother-in-law CLACK
his chaplain and put him into the family living of Moreton Hampstead.
Physical attractiveness does crop up in most unexpected places; but
we do not think it can persist in families without nobility of character.
It has, in this family, so persisted. Wallingford and Oxford lie within
a morning's gallop. A good paper entitled " The Young Blood of
Oxford, its Influence on the Female Population within a radius of
twelve miles" would make interesting reading. — ED.]
132
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9ir
QUa0ont of
Arms. — MASON, of London, Visitation of 1633-4 by Gilbert DETHICK, Garter, to
couped az. a mullet for difference. Crest. — A lion's head couped az.
MASON, of Greenwich, granted 1739. Per f ess Erm. and az. a lion rampant
part guttee des larmes, holding in the dexter hand a comb, and in the
Myles MASON = ...
John MASON. Died young.
George MASON.
I
Robert MASON. = ,
George MASON, of New Windsor =Barbara, d. of John PARKINS, of
& East Greenwich. Will 1608. Flint. Will proved 25 June 1641.
1
Robert MASON, LLD.=
Chancellorof the Diocese
of Winchester. Born
1590. Died at Bath
1662.
1
= i633.Judith,d.of John
Sir Christopher
BUCKLE of Burgh
inBanstead,Surrey.
1
George
Thomas,
a clergy-
man.
Elizabeth, m. Thomas
GEERES, of London.
(Harl. Soc. Proc. Vol.
XV, p. 307.)
Christopher MASON, =
Captain R.N. Born
1 640. Will 2 Aug.
1697.
=Jane (a widow) Robert MASON, = Mar-
d. of Sir Robert of East Green- garet.
ROBINSON. 3rd wich. Will
wife. 1665.
John
MASON
(?) m.
Judith.
Katherine, of Little
Hadham, Herts. Died
unm. Will I Oct.
1678.
1 1
Christopher MASON. Under = Anne, eldest d. of Chris- John
12 years of age in 1678. topher BUCKLE, of Burgh MASON
inBanstead. Marr. 1733.
Bar-
bara
1 1 1
Jane Mary Susanna
I
Sir Christopher MASON, R.N. , Vice-Admiral = Mary SHEPHERD.
of the White. Born 26 Jan. 1745. Died
26 May 1802, s.p. Having no issue he left
his fortune to his mother's brother.
JuNEi9n] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
133
Captain John MASON, Treasurer of the Army, <Arg. a fas, in chief two /ions' heads
between two wings arg.
with rwo heads counterc hanged. Crest. — A mermaid, per fesswa'Vy arg. and az. the upper
sinister a mirror, frame and hair. sa.
William MASON. (?) Will 1536==. .
John MASON J.s.p. Richard MASON.
John MASON, of King's Lynn, = Isabella, d. of
co. Norfolk. Will 1591. STEED, of Yorkshire.
I
Henry Mason = .
I
I
Captain John MASON, Treasurer = Anne, d. of Edward Dorothy
of the King's Army. Will dated
26 Nov. 1635, proved 22 Dec.
1635. (P.C.C. Sadleir 127).
GREEN, goldsmith, of
London. Marr. 29 Oct.
1606. Died 1619.
i in. i i
Jane, m. Nathaniel Barbara Judith m. Elizabeth
HILL, and had a son m. (?) ... REINES, m. Thomas m
Robert. REINES. and had a HULSTON or HARRIS.
dau. Judith. HUDSON.
(a dau. )
John MASON
Anne, heiress, m.
Joseph TUFTON of
Peasmarch, Sussex
(?Betchworth, Surrey.).
i34 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
(fllason of
The first part of this pedigree is taken from the Visitation of London
1634, by Gilbert DETHICK, Garter, (Harl. Soc. Vol. XVII, p. 85)
and the remainder has been compiled from notes of wills and other
information supplied by Mr. W. H. MASON, of Morton Hall, Notts,
and by members of the BUCKLE family.
Robert MASON, LL.D., of Greenwich, also inherited property in
St. Clement Danes from his father, was Fellow of St. John's,
Cambridge, Secretary to the Duke of BUCKINGHAM, Chancellor of
the Diocese of Winchester, and Master of the Requests to
CHARLES I. and II.
He must not be confused with his contemporary, Robert MASON,
LL.D., M.P., Recorder of London.
Captain John MASON was born at King's Lynn, and was baptised
in St. Margaret's Church nth Dec. 1586. He matriculated at
Magdalen College, Oxford, 2fth June 1602, and became Governor
of Newfoundland 1615, Commissary General for Victualling the
Cadiz Expedition 1626, Treasurer and Paymaster of the Army,
1 6 May 1627, and his name occurs in connection with the pay and
victualling of the troops on several occasions in the Irish State
Papers 1628-9. He founded the Colony of New Hampshire 1631,
which would indicate a connection with the Hampshire MASONS,
became Captain of Southsea Castle 1634 and first Vice-Admiral of
New England ist Oct. 1635. He died shortly after and was buried
in Westminster Abbey in December of that year. A tablet, to
replace one which had fallen into disrepair, was unveiled in
St. Alfege's Church, Greenwich, 22nd Oct. 1905, to the memory
of Vice- Admiral Sir Christopher MASON.
W. P. PAKENHAM-WALSH,
Lieut. R.E.
Jubbulpore.
JUNE 19"] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 135
of
Particulars of the Stepney tombstone will be found in Genealogical
Queries, Vol. I, page 72 ; further details in the Genealogical Magazine,
Vol. I, pp. 288 and 362. The marriage licence of Johnathen SHAKE-
SPEARE and Eliz. SHALLETT was for Clapham and was agreed to by
her mother (unnamed) and her uncle Arthur SHALLETT of Southwark
and Clapham, woodmonger (i.e. coal-merchant). Thus her father
was evidently dead. He was probably Francis SHALLETT. The
marriage did not take place at Clapham; very likely at St. Paul's,
Shadwell.
Johnathen the 2nd describes himself as of St. Mary-at-H ill, "lighter-
man," in his will, but mentions his coal business in which his partner
was John MAINTON, his sister's son. He desires to be carried to the
grave in Stepney by six members of the Society at the Sun Tavern
in Billingsgate "of which Society I am a member." His office was
at the Newcastle Coffee House in Billingsgate, and he directs that
his son, then at Mr. BURGH'S boarding school in Newington Green,
be admitted to the coal business when of suitable age. He left to
his brother John SHAKESPEARE " the curious statue of the poet
SHAKESPEARE on a bracket" and various casts in plaster of Paris.
This statue of SHAKESPEARE, John in his turn left to Mr. Thomas
CHILLINGWORTH, Apothecary. There is also mentioned a picture of
Johnathen by SEYMOUR, and a picture of an old woman by Lois.
John SHAKESPEARE died a rich man, as in addition to his house in
Stepney Causeway he left £ 5,000 to his son Arthur, ^4,000 each to
his sons John and David, and £ 18,000 on Trust for his other chil-
dren. He mentions his brother-in-law Colin CURRIE of London, mer-
chant, and makes him one of his executors. He issued a trade token.
The Will of Arthur SHAKESPEARE, M.P., is not in P.C.C., nor is
that of his widow. He apparently had a son, Arthur SHAKESPEARE,
and a grandson, John Matthew SHAKESPEARE, born 2 April 1844.
HYLTON B. DALE.
46 Harcourt Terrace,
Redcliffe Square,
S.W.
136
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
John SHAKESPEARE of Rope Walk, Upper=Martha SEELEY
Shadwell, Middx., Ropemaker. Born
1612. Died 1 689. AdmonzOct. 1685
(Commissary of London).
married 1 4 July
1654. Given
Admon 2 Oct.
1689.
Mary Elizabeth married to
Abraham SHAW of
Stepney. Living a
widow in 1748 and
*7$7=r
/1s-
Martha Johnathen SHAKESPEARE of St. Paul's, =
married Shadwell, Bach, aged 28 in 1698.
to ... Living 1713. Born 6 Feb. 1670.
DELLTON Buried at St. Paul's, Shadwell,
by 1733. Ropemaker. Will 1 6 August 1733;
proved 15 April 1735 (P.C.C.)
Arthur SHAKESPEARE Sarah mard. to
of Stepney, rope- Timothy
maker. Born 3 Nov. MAINTON of Ch.
1699. Died un- Ch., Surrey. A
married gMay 1 749. widow in 1 748
Buried at Stepney. and 1757==
M.I. Will 1 4 Dec.
1748, proved 20
May i749(P.C.C.)
John SHAKESPEARE, Alderman =
of Aldgate Ward. Born 1718.
Died 19 May 1775, aged 56.
Buried at Stepney. M.I. Will
8 August 1 772, proved I June
1775 (P.C.C.). Ropemaker
of Stepney Causeway. Alder-
man 1767, ,"4ieriff 1768.
Master of the Ironmongers'
Co. 1769.
= Elizabeth CURRIE,
Died i 5 Feb. 1807
aged 79. Buried
at Stepney. M.I.
Died at Brandian
(?Bramdean),
Hants.
1
1
1 1 1
Arthur =Jane 3rd daur. of
John
David Colin Samuel
SHAKESPEARE
Matthew RIDLEY,
SHAKESPEARE
SHAKESPEARE SHAKESPEARE. SHAKESPEARE.
of Stepney.
Esq., of Blagdon
2nd son.
3rd son. Living a Living a
M.P. for
in Northumber-
Of age in
Of age in minor in minor in
Richmond,
land. Married
1772.
1772. 1772. 1772.
Yorks.
22 July 1777.
Died Feb.
Died 30 Jan.
i 804, aged
1805, aged 55.
70.
Buried at
Stepney. M.I.
Sister of Sir
Matthew White
RIDLEY, Bart.
JuNEi9ii] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
137
Arms. — On a bend a tilting spear.
Crest. — A falcon wings addorsed inverted
holding a tilting spear in bend.
Elizabeth daur. of ... SHALLETT of London
and grand-daur. of Edmund SHALLETT of
Exton, Hants. Aged 19 in 1698. Faculty
Office License 20 Apl. 1698. Living
1741. Dead by 1749. Buried at St.
Paul's, Shadwell.
John
SHAKESPEARE,
Apprenticed
in 1663 to
John GRANGE
of Shadwell,
chafer.
Samuel
SHAKESPEARE.
"1
Ben
SHAKESPEARE.
I
Bennett SHAKESPEARE.
Born 1707. Died
10 Nov. 1756, aged
49, unmard. Buried
at Stepney. M.I.
Will 1 6 Aug. 1754,
proved 7 Jan. 1757
(P.C.C.).
Johnathen SHAKESPEARE, =
Coal Merchant of
Stepney. Born 1717.
Died 1 6 Feb. 1768,
aged 58^. Buried at
Stepney. M.I. Wilt
12 May 1757, proved
1 8 Apr. 1768 (P.C.C.)
Dead by 1757.
Joseph SHAKESPEARE,
Master Mariner.
Died unmarried
beyond seas.
Admon. i 6 March
i74i(P-C.C.).
Johnathen SHAKESPEARE.
Only son. Living in
1757, being then at
school.
Elizabeth eldest
daur. Died
3 1 March 1 809
aged 57.
Buried at
Stepney. M.I.
Colin
SHAKESPEARE.
Died 2 Dec.
1 760 aged
6 weeks.
Buried at
Stepney.
M.I.
1
Johnathen
SHAKESPEARE.
Died aged
2| months
8 Dec. 1763.
Buried at
Stepney.
M.I.
1
George
Percy
SHAKESPEARE.
Died 25 Feb.
1770 aged
3 years
i o months.
Buried at
Stepney.
M.I.
1 1
Ann Sarah
Martha Jane Mary
All living unmarried and under
age in 1772.
138
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
from
to
James SCRIMGEOUR, Constable of=lst Jonet LYON, 2nd Margaret
Dundee. Of Dudhope. Died
c. 1478 (son of Sir John SCRIM-
GEOUR)
MAITLAND who mar. zndly David
HERING of Lethendy
I
Robert ARBUTHNOT of Arbuthnot. = 2ndly Marietta SCRIMGEOUR
Died c. 1506 youngest daughter. Marriage
contract 10 Sept. 1475. Died
1518
Robert GRAHAM of Morphie and = Giles ARBUTHNOT 4th dau. Mar-
Balmakewan ried c. 1520. Shem. 2ndly An-
drew STRACHAN of Tibberlie,
3rdly Thomas ERASER of Stoney-
wood
Sir William DOUGLAS of Glen- = Egidia GRAHAM. Survived her
bervie, 9* Earl of Angus. Born
c. 1532, died I July 1591 (only
son of Archibald DOUGLAS of
Glenbervie and Agnes KEITH)
husband and was still alive in
1606. Marri?ge contract dated
14 Feb. 1552
John WISHART of Balischyt.=Jane DOUGLAS 2nd dau. Mar-
Nephew and heir apparent of Sir I riage contract dated 31 May
John WISHART of Pittarrow | 1576
Sir David LINDSAY of Edzell. Died =j= Margaret WISHART who sur-
vived her husband. Marriage
contract dated 27 Oct. 1595
Dec. 1648 (eldest son of Sir David
LINDSAY of Edzell & I st wife Helen
LINDSAY dau. of I oth Earl of Craw-
ford) ^_
Hon. Sir James KEITH of Benholm=p Margaret LINDSAY. Married c.
(2ndson ofGeo., 5th Earl Maris- | 1620
chal by his 2nd wife Margaret
OGILVY)
Sir Archibald PRIMROSE of Car- = Ist Elizabeth KEITH, eldest
T
•
rington, Lord Clerk Register.
Born 1 6 May, 1 61 6, Died 27 Nov.
1679 (youngest son of James
PRIMROSE)
daughter & co-heir. Married
c. 1640
JuNEi9n] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
'39
A
I
Sir John FOULIS of Ravelstone.= Ist Margaret PRIMROSE eldest
Born 20 Feb. 1638 (son of Geo.
FOULIS of Ravelstone)
John HAY of Linplum.
before 16 April, 1687
child. Born 31 Dec. 1641.
Died 15 April 1690. Married
5 Sept. 1661
Died = Jean FOULIS. Married 4 July,
' 1685
Lord William HAY of Newhall
Died 31 Oct. 1723 (3rd son of 2nd
Marquess of Tweeddale)
Archibald MURRAY of Murray-
field (2nd son of Alex. MURRAY
of Cringaltie)
= Margaret HAY, heiress. Born
I 30 June 1686. Died Oct. 1753.
I Married c. 1710
I
= Jean HAY 2nd dau. Married c.
I 1740. Died 18 Dec. 1758
= Susan M. MURRAY. Married
14 Nov. 1766
Sir Hay CAMPBELL Bart., of Suc-
coth & Garscube, Lord President
of Court of Session. Born 2 5 Aug.
1735. Died 28 March 1823 (son
of Arch. CAMPBELL of Succoth)
Francis SITWELL of Barmour.=Anne CAMPBELL 3rd dau. Mar-
ried 28 Sept. 1795
Born 1777. Died 10 Feb. 1813
(2nd son of Francis Hart SITWELL
of Renishaw)
John 'TAIT, Advocate, Sheriff of== Mary Amelia SITWELL. Mar-
Perthshire. Born II Feb. 1796. I ried 30 April 1824. Died 29
Died 22 May 1877 I Jan. 1845
Frederick PITMAN of Edinburgh, = Anne Sitwell TAIT. Born 26
W.S. Born 17 Sept. 1832. Died
7 Sept. 1896
May 1836. Married 26 Nov.
1857. Died 6 Sept. 1910
65, Cambridge Terrace,
Hyde Park, W.
H. A. PITMAN.
140 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER []UNE 1911
from
No. 5. LEWIS. (Radnorshire).
The few notes following are written at the end of an old edition of STERNE'S
Sentimental Journey (London, 1784). The name of the owner of the book —
"ROBERT LEWIS Tanner, t Disserth, Radershire (sic) JanT the jth 1791"
— appears on the title-page, and the entries at the end in the same hand-writing
are presumably those of his children.
"8th of Augt. 1772. Fortune LEWIS was Born halfe anour past five in
the morning of Saturday.
3d of June, 1774. Mary LEWIS was Born at aelavan a Clock in the
Evening on a Fryday.
22d April, 1776. Elizabeth LEWIS was Born at halfe anour past Six a
Clock in the Evening uppon a Monday.
24th of June 1778. John Beavan LEWIS was Born uppon awensday
aquarter past Ten a Clock in the Morning.
23d °f Juty 1780. Hannah LEWIS was Born uppon Sunday Evening
halfe anowr past Eight a Clock.
IIth of Aug. 1782. Samuel Beavan LEWIS was Born uppon a Sunday
Evening three quarters of anowr past Seven a Clock in the Evening.
23d of Oclbr. 1784. Robert Beavan LEWIS was Born uppon a Saturday
halfe anowr past five a Clock in the Morning.
4th Feb'T 1788. Jane LEWIS was Born uppon a Monday Morning
quarter past one a Clock in the Morning." F. S. SNELL.
No. 6. THURLBOURN : HAYLES : BOND.
Family Bible (edition 1704) in the possession of the Revd. William BOND,
redlor of Beauchamp Roding, Essex, 14 July, 1871.
" William THURLBOURN & Martha GAME were marryed at Linton,
Camb"11 May 2d 1720.
Thomas son of W. & Martha THURLBOURN born Sep. 17, 1722. Dyed
Feb. 21, 1723/4.
Janr. 2O, 1723/4. A son born who dyed as soon as born.
Martha Daughter of William and Martha THURLBOURN born Feb: 21,
1726/7.
Elizabeth Daughter of William & Martha THURLBOURN was born April
ye first 1731.
Jane Daughter of William and Martha THURLBOURN was born Dec1 2,
1733. dyed the next Day.
* Continued from vol. i, p. 362.
f There are no commas in the original, but Tanner is undoubtedly, I think, the
trade, and not the surname.
JuNEi9ii] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 141
Dec. 1 6, 1733, Dyed Martha the Beloved Wife of W. THURLBOURN.
They having lived together near fourteen years in the Height of Love
& Friendship, enjoying all the Comforts of that happy state, She
was taken away, to the extream griefe of her sincerely affectionate
Husband & to ye unspeakable loss of Her Family. To whom she was
y® best of Wives Mother & Mistress. And entirely regretted by all
who knew her; she has, for her prudence, Piety, Charity, and all
Virtues that can adorn a truly Good Woman Left few Equals.
Richd. HAYLES & Martha THURLBOURN were married at Clare Hall
Chappell in Cambridge 3 Ist of Jan. 1744/5.
[Richard HAYLES died 16 April 1781, aged 67. His widow died
25 Nov. 1799, aged 72. Both buried at St. Botolph's Church, Cam-
bridge.]
Martha the Daughter of Richd. & M. HAYLES was born the 5th of March
1746/7 & dyed ye 3d of Sep* following.
Frances the Daughter of R. & M. HAYLES was born yc 2i8t of February
1747/8 and Dyed ye same Day.
Richard the Son of R. & M. HAYLES was born ye 12 of August, old style,
1751 and died Oc~lb. 30th. 1754.
Millicent the Daughter of R. & M. HAYLES was born the 3d of May
1753 and Dyed the same day.
Mary the Daughter of R. & M. HAYLES was born the 9th of Sep*. 1754.
Died Jan. I, 1822, at Wheatacre & was buried there.
Martha the Daughter of R. & M. HAYLES was born the 13th. of Odl:b.
1758. [Married Revd. William BOND.]
Frances the Daughter of R. & M. HAYLES was born the 18th of O6lb
1760, died Oab. 8, 1804.
[Married 13 August, 1793, the Revd. Francis John Hyde WOLLAS-
TON, Archdeacon of Essex, Rector of South Weald, Prebendary of St.
Paul's, Jacksonian Professor in the University of Cambridge, &c., and
had issue (see BURKE'S Landed Gentry.}"]
Sophia the daughter of R. & M. HAYLES was born the 3d of June 1762.
[Married Richard KERRICH. Had issue one son Richard KERRICH
and several daughters.]
Jane the daughter of R. & M. HAYLES was born 25th. of September 1764.
Died single.
William BOND & Martha HAYLES were married at St. Botolph's Church in
Cambridge nth Janr?. 1790.
William the son of William and Martha BOND was born 2d March 1795.
Mary Elizabeth the daughter of William & Martha BOND was born
30th May 1797: died 17* July 1810 at Norwich & was buried in
St. Michael's of Coslany in that City.
Sophia the daughter of William & Martha BOND was born 29th Aug*.
1798 : died Ist. Sept. following & was buried in the chancel of Wheat-
acre Church.
i42 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
Frances the Daughter of William & Martha BOND was born 24 Decr.
1799. Died 1857, and buried at Cemetery, Cambridge.
Henry John HAYLES, the son of William & Martha BOND was born
22d December 1801.
William BOND, died June 7th. 1832, and was buried June I4th in the
South Aisle of St. Michael's Church, Cambridge, at the age of 86,
being born Novr. 22d 1745.
Martha wife of the above died March 5th. 1851, aged 93, and was buried
March nth. in the new burial ground of St. Benedict's parish,
Cambridge — the vault of St. Michael's being closed after a fire in that
church in 1849 — when the whole area of the church was covered
with concrete to the infinite regret of her children, who knew her
wish to be buried with her dear husband.
[The above was transcribed July I4th. 1871, from the family bible (edn.
1704) in the possession of the Revd. William BOND, Rector of Beauchamp
Roding, Essex.]
[Note by R.S.B. A Miss KERRICH married the Revd. C. H. HARTSHORNE,
Rural Dean, Rector of Holdenby, co. Northants, and Chaplain to the Duke of
Bedford. A Miss KERRICH married the Revd. (?) Matthew Dawson DUF-
FIELD, Canon of Middleham, Vicar of Stebbing, Essex, (see POORE, Bart.).
HARDINGTON: COLUMBINE: BRETT. Several of the last name lie buried in
cloisters of Norwich Cathedral.
The Revd. Charles Freeman MILLARD, Minor Canon, died 2 June 1849,
aged 74. Marianne his wife died 21 May, 1833.
Clare Susan BROWNE-BOHUN, born at Bungay, 7 April, 1800, married Peter
FORSTER of Ditchingham, who bought the Westhall Estate January 1831.
Francis WOLLASTON, of Charterhouse Square, LL.B., Reftor of Chisle-
hurst, of Dereham and S. Vidas, London. Precentor of S. David's, F.R.S.,
b. 23 Nov. 1731; married n May, 1758, Althea 5th daughter of John HYDE,
Esq., and by her (who died 8 June 1798) lefr, at his decease, 31 Oct: 1815,
amongst other children:
Francis John Hyde WOLLASTON, born 13 April 1762, archdeacon of Essex,
Rector of South Weald, Prebendary of St. Paul's, Jacksonian Professor in the
University of Cambridge, &c. He married 13 August, 1793, Frances HAYLES,
and dying 1823, left issue:
Francis Hayles WOLLASTON, born i May, 1803, Rector of Dereham, married
7 June 1825, his cousin, Caroline WOLLASTON, daughter ot Henry Septimus
Hyde WOLLASTON by Mary Ann BLACKENHAGEN his Wife, and died s.p. 1849.
Frances Althea married the Rev. John William TREVOR of Caernarvon, and
died 15 March 1830, leaving issue Edward Salisbury Rose TREVOR of Trows-
coed Hall, co. Montgomery, and Althea Mary married 1845, George BEAD-
NELL, Esq., an officer on the Staff of India.]
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
'43
TIMOTHY PERRY
Of S BENET SHEERnOC E5O
I44
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
(perrg*
[Christopher PERRY of Clevedon,=
Somt. An infant in 1616?].
i I
=Thomas PERRY of Ciren-=Mary
cester, yeoman. Will pr.
1 2 Sept. 1673 (115 Pye).
Buried in the Chancel at
Cirencester. ,
ob. inf.
1673
Perhaps
died at
Glou-
cester.
William PERRY, of= Sarah...
Cirencester,Glouc.,
chandler. Will pr.
12 May 1677 (53
Hale)
s.p.
Died
about
1685.
i I 23
Mercy, Bur.=Thomas PERRY, Esq.,= ? = Hannah
in the Chan-
cel, 1 5 June
1668
of Fisher's House,
Cirencester and Wor-
mingtonPlace,Glouc.,
mercer. Buried in the s.p.
north chancel. Died
20 Mar. 1 706-7, aged
75. Will pr. 5 May
1707 (116 Poley)
[KINGSTON?]
Will pr. 26
Feb. 1725-
6 (30 Ply-
mouth}.
A dau.~John
I TIMBRELL
I 1673.
John PERRY=Mary
ofCirences-
ter. Will pr.
17 Oct.
1681, at
Gloucester.
1681
Mar.
before
1669.
Timothy PERRY of St. Benet=
Sherehog, London, merchant.
Lord of the manor of Worm-
ington, Glouc. Buried at Tur-
ville, Bucks. 30 Jan. 1732, aged
72. Will pr. 24. Jan. 1732-3
(89 Price)
=Jane d. & coh. of John
OVEY, Esq., of Green-
ville Green, Watling-
ton, Oxon. Buried at
Turville, Dec. 1707,
aged 39. Adm. P.C.C.
1 7 Nov. 1712
John PERRY=
Magdalen
Hall, Ox-
ford, a. 17, in
1676. Bach.
Med. 1686.
- Mary=... ONGLE
1732
Elizabeth =
Fac. Off. Mar.
Lie. 1 6 July,
1709. Died
26 Oct. 1771,
aged 79.
Buried at
Beeston.
Jacob PRESTON, Esq., of
Beeston, St. Lawrence,
Norf., Barrister at Law,
Of Lincoln's Inn in
1708. Died 26 Nov.
1753, a. 80. Buried at
Beeston.
Weedon PERRY of St. Bennet:
Sherehog,mercer. Of Turville
Heath, Bucks. Died 1720,
aged 32. Buried at St. Olave's,
Jewry. Will pr. 2 1 Nov. i 720
(238 Shaller)
Elizabeth, third
d. & coh. of Wm.
BARNSLEY, Esq.
Fac.Off.Mar.Lic.,
10 Jan. 1711-12.
Adm°n P.C.C., 24
Jan. 1729-30.
Thomas Charles Frances Tamesin Elizabeth
William PERRY of= Elizabeth gr. d. & coh. of
PRESTON
All
minors in 1 732. Penshurst Place,
Kent. Became 2 1
in 1737. High
Sheriff of Bucks,
1741. Died 4 Nov.
1757-
Sir Robert SIDNEY, Kt.,
of Penshurst, Kent. Mar.
10 Aug. 1738. Will pr.
20 Sept. 1783. (474
Cornwallis)
1
Mary. Born
2 Dec. 1739.
Died unm.
atPenshurst.
Adm.
P.C.C., 26
July 1 769.
William
Bur.
28 Jan.
i 740, at
Turville
Bucks.
1
Elizabeth Jane. =
Born 22 Dec.
1^41. Mar. in
i 7*>9 at St.
James', West-
minster. Bur. at
Penshurst 1 7
May 178 1 !
1 1 1
= Bysshe SHELLEY, Esq., of Jane Anne Algernon
Castle Goring, Sussex. Bornii Born 22 Born Dec.
He mar. i st Mary Cath. Mar. Mar. 3, 1745.
MICHELL, from whom, 1 743 1 744 Adm.
Percy Bysshe SHELLEY (Spinster) (Spinster) P.C.C.,
descended. 26 July
1769.
8
JUNE 19"] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
I
John PERRY=
I
Joan = William ADDIS
1676 I 1673
\ \ \
Sarah Timothy ADDIS Joan=John ROWLAND
James ADDIS
Cirencester
1707
of
1
A dau.=
1677
\
=Wm. MORRIS Samuel PERRY=
1697 of Sinklow
Farm, Rod-
borough,
Glouc. Later
ofCirencester,
clothier. Died
insolvent,
1677-1691
t
= Sarah d. William PERRY Joan 1673
Elizabeth 1673
1073
Edward Mary
NOTT of
Braden,
Wilts.
Died
1682-
1691
i
Sarah 1673
Sarah =... Anne
mar. Died
before before
1707 1707
=y... PHILLIPS, Mary, a .
1 of Broadway spinster
in 1732
/K
I
Charles PERRY
Apprentice in
1706
Europa. A minor
in 1707
2 \ A.
Thomas PERRY of=Elizabeth =John HICKS of Norwich=John COLEMAN = Robert FIELDEN of
St Clement's Lane,
London,gent. Died
Oct. i, 1738, aged
about 2 1 Adm. 5
July ,739 (P.C.C.)
Buried at Turville.
1768
Frances=... POICTIERS
Surgeon. Died about
1750
of Hending-
ham, Norf.
Clerk. Married
before Dec.
1751.
Beighton, Norf.,
gent. Married
before 1758.
William Weedon PERRY= Sarah SPRUNT, niece to John CHRISTMAS
Came of age in 1755. A
linendraper of New Her-
mitage St., Wapping.
Bankrupt in 1760.
of Acle, Norf., butcher. Married 22 Ap.
1758, at Acle.
Charlotte Sidney, 1761.
William Weedon PERRY, 1761.
146
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9ii
1 T 1 ,
Samuel PERRY, Esq.=
= Mary ... Nathaniel PERRY=
= Margery Robt. HAR-=Mary=... BRITAIN.
of Goodman's Fields,
Living of Lord PASTON'S
living FORD. I724-
Died before
Whitechapel, mer-
1 709. Regiment. En-
i 709,
i 69 i.
chant. Born at Sink-
sign, i Mar.i7O4;
then
low Farm, Rodbor-
Captain, 1 708.
of St.
ough, Glouc. J.P. for
Will pr. 1 1 Mar.
Bride's,
Middlesex. Died
1708-9 (g^Lane).
London.
15 Nov. 1723. Will
Died abroad
proved 4 Jan. 1723-4.
28 Feb. 1708.
(15 Bolton.)
•
Arabella, aged 5 in
i 709. Spinster in
1724. Only sur-
viving child.
Mary
Samuel PERRY, of Tower
St., London, Navy Agent.
Died 23 Nov. i 745. Will
pr. 10 Dec. 1745 (333
Seymer) s.p.
William PERRY=... living
of London, 1731.
brewer. Living
'745-
Mary, living i 74 5.== Arthur STEVENS. Died
before i 745.
Sarah minor
in 1722. Sp.
in 1731.
John Bysshe SHELLEY. Born 1 771. = Henrietta, d. of Sir Henry
Created Baronet, 12 Dec. 1818. | HANLOKE, of Derbyshire.
Philip SHELLEY
1783-
Philip Charles Sidney. Born = Lady Sophia FITZCLARENCE,
1 800. Created Baron Delisle eldest daughter of Dorothy
and Dudley, Jan. 1835. JORDON and William IV.
JUNE 191 1] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
1
1
1
.1
)
1
Thomas PERRY, of St.
John PERRY,
Joseph
William
£s Sarah = John
Anne's, Westr. before
Naval Officer
PE R R Y.
PERRY.
A
beth,
Mar- BELL
1711. Of Turville,
& Engineer.
A minor
minor
y
Mar.
r i e d
Bucks, in 1724. Died
Died i 3 Feb.
in 1677.
seaman,
of
after
1676-
15 Dec. 1724. Will
1 782-3, aged
Ratcliff
in
1705.
85
proved 1 5 Feb.
63. Buried at
1691.
Liv-
1724-5 (15 Bolton)
Spald i n g,
i n g
'•A
Lines, i.p.
1724.
Sarah mar.=
about 1711.
Adm.P.C.C.
I733-
=John PLAYER, of Goodman's Fields, = Sophi a
gent., s. of Henry PLAYER, of Alver- A minor
stoke, Hants: Buried in 1764, at St. in 1722.
Mary's, Whitechapel. Will pr. I June Living
1764 (235 Simpson) !749-
Anne mar.=
before
1 722. Liv-
ing 1731.
= Henry BLOMMART,
of St. Mary, White-
chapel, merchant.
Living 1764.
1
PerryPLAYER. Of the
Custom House,Lon-
don, gent, in 1764.
Elizabeth Henry BLOMMART,
1731. of Mile End, Step-
ney, gent., in 1764.
Robert Shelley
1783-
I
Ariana
1783.
Elizabeth-Jane-Caroline
1783.
148 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
AUTHORITIES —
Berry's County Genealogies. Sussex.
The Genealogist, XXIV. 60.
English Army Lists, by Col. C. Dalton.
London Magazine, 1733, 1745.
A History of Buckinghamshire, by G. Lipscombe.
Monumental Inscriptions at St. Glare's, Jewry, by F. A. Crisp.
A History of Turville, Buc{s, by H. W. Aldred.
Records of Buckinghamshire (Bucks Architectural & Archaeological
Society), Vol. VIII.
Monumental Inscriptions at Tunstead, by Walter Rye.
Magna Britannia, by the Rev. Dan. Lysons.
Gentleman's Magazine, 1732, 1738, 1739, 1741, 1743-4, 1745,
1746, 1752, 1757, 1760.
CHANCERY SUITS —
A.D. 1683. Perry v. Daston (Mitf. 340-165).
„ 1691. Perry v. Perry (Bridges 77-14).
„ 1692. Perry v. Perry (Bridges 105-39).
„ 1709. Perry v. Perry (Reyn. 198-41).
„ 1712. Weedon v. Perry (Ham. 365-56).
„ 1719. Perry v. Perry (2595).
„ 1719. Kingston v. Perry (273).
„ 1722. Perry v. Perry (845).
„ 1737. Perry v. Perry (1292).
„ 1745. Coventry v. Perry (2113).
„ 1750. Hicks v. Perry (2135).
„ 175(1). Coleman v. Perry (1435).
„ 1752. Coleman v. Perry (1433).
„ 1761. Fielden v. Perry (1822).
„ 1762. Milner v. Perry 1825).
„ 1768. Perry v. Preston (1971).
JUNE i9i i] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 149
Arms granted, 14 Sep. 1708, to Timothy, s. of Thomas PERRY, of
Cirencester : Az. a fesse embattled argent between 3 pears pendant or.
Crest: From the top of a tower gules , a cubit arm erect in armour ', the
gauntlet holding a sword, allppr. (Add. MS. 14830.)
Arms granted, 24 Mar. 1717-18, to Samuel PERRY, of Goodman's
Fields : Vert a fesse embattled ermine between 3 pears pendant or.
Crest : A castle with two towers gules from the top a cubit arm erect in
armour^ the gauntlet holding a sword allppr. (Add. MS. 14830.)
The above arms occur on a monument at Turville, and the following
on an escutcheon of pretence: — Quarterly. One & four, Vert a
bend sinister or, in dexter chief a mullet of six points of the last. Two
& three, Gules three closed and clasped boo\s or [for OVEY?].
The arms occur also on Thomas PERRY'S tomb at Cirencester
(1707), and on John PERRY'S monument at Spalding, Lines.
0733)-
On the monument at Turville it states that William PERRY, buried in
1677, was the second son of Christopher PERRY, Esq., of Kenn,
Somerset, but this seems improbable. Christopher PERRY, of
Kenn, died in 1619, but left no sons. There was however a
Christopher PERRY, of Clevedon, Somerset, yeoman, living in
1616, who may have been the father of William PERRY.
Thomas PERRY of Turville, whose will was proved in 1725, mentions
his niece, Grace Anna Maria, wife of the Hon. Thos. COVENTRY.
Her maiden name was BROWN, and it is not clear who her mother
was, but she was of Stratfield Turgis, Hants, at the time of her
marriage. The Marriage Licence runs as follows: " COVENTRYE,
Thomas, of Hambledon, Bucks, widower, and Gratia Anna Maria
BROWN, of Stratfield Turgiss, Hants."
The children of William PERRY, of Penshurst, took the name
and arms of SIDNEY in 1752.
I am indebted for the admirable drawings of the arms to Mr. J.
TAVENOR-PERRY. On Elizabeth PERRY'S Lozenge PERRY quarters
BARNESLEY, with SIDNEY on an escutcheon of pretence.
G. S. PARRY, Lt.-Col.
17, Ashley Mansions,
Victoria, S.W.
i5o THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
QUunto : (RoBerfeon
(See page 79.)
Mr. Gilbert ROBERTSON was appointed catechist in the parish of
Coutin 31 August 1726, but he resigned the position a week after
and became travelling tutor to Sir Harry MUNRO, of Fowlis, whom he
accompanied to the academy of the celebrated Revd. Dr. Philip
DODDRIDGE at Northampton, studied Divinity under him, was licensed
to preach the Gospel 22 August 1737, and was ordained by a class of
Nonconformists in Northampton 7 June 1739, Dr. DODDRIDGE
acting as moderator. Mr. ROBERTSON received a Presbyterian call in
1740 to the church and parish of Dingwall, but the commission of
assembly reversed the appointment in November following, the cause
being that the MACKENZIES in Dingwall objected to having as minister
a man who had been tutor to the heir of Fowlis.
On 2 June 1741 Mr. Joseph MUNRO was called to Edderton, but
on the day appointed for moderating in the call, the Presbytery found
that while the heritors were unanimous in his favour, all the elders,
and some of the heads of families in Edderton, desired to have the
Revd. Gilbert ROBERTSON appointed as their minister, and they peti-
tioned the Presbytery accordingly. The Presbytery referred the case
to the Synod of Ross, who, at a meeting held on 13 April 1742,
sustained the call to Mr. Joseph MUNRO. After a petition from the
whole parish of Kincardine, co. Ross (7 April 1742), the Rev4.
Gilbert ROBERTSON was presented by George, Earl of CROMARTY, on
the 10 July, and admitted 31 August 1742 Minister of that parish.
Sir John MUNRO. These details are from Alexander McKENziz's
History of the Munros. He was a member of the Convention of the
estates of Scotland at the Revolution in 1688, and a very zealous
promoter of that change in the Presbytery. During the period which
intervened between the Restoration and the Revolution, from 1660 to
1 68 8, his eminent piety and zeal exposed him to great suffering in the
cause of religion. His estates were harassed by fine and burdened so
that it is said they have never yet recovered. Sir John, with his
mother the Dowager Lady MUNRO of Fowlis, was present in her house
at Obsdale in September 1675, wnen the Lord's Supper was being
administered by the Revd. John MACKILLICAN, Minister of Alnes, the
JuNEi9n] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 151
Revd. Hugh ANDERSON of Cromarty, and Alexander FRASER of Daviot,
Sir Roderick MACKENZIE of Findon, at the instigation of John PATER-
SON, Bishop of Ross, sent a party of soldiers to apprehend Mr.
MACKILLICAN, but before their arrival the communicants had dis-
persed themselves and concealed the ministers. Mr. MACKILLICAN,
according to tradition, escaped capture by a clever ruse. Sir John
MUNRO was a man of Falstaffian proportions. When the officer in
command of the military burst into Sir John's apartment in search of
Mr. MACKILLICAN, Sir John pleaded indisposition, and on that ground
begged to be excused his inability to rise from his chair. The soldiers
retired without taking the liberty of disarranging the ample skirts of
the Baronet's dressing-gown, and consequently without discovering
that the Reverend object of their search was concealed beneath Sir
John's robes.
There are many stories regarding the MUNROS printed in Alexander
MACKENZIE'S History of the Munros. He was an excellent story-
teller and gathered his matter from Dr. AIRD and many of the old
people, but he was a poor genealogist. An instance of his carelessness
and want of grasp of genealogy appears in his History of the Chisholms
regarding the relationship of Sir Kenneth MACKENZIE W. of Coul and
his first wife, and also (in the same History} he put in an Angus
CHISHOLM who never existed; he never looked at the original deed,
but only at the index. The index gives the name as Angus\ the
deed itself is about an Alexander CHISHOLM; consequently in the
History of the Chisholms^ in the direct line of descent, there is an
Angus CHISHOLM of Comar given who did not exist.
R. T. B.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
A distinctive Christian name is of considerable assistance in tracing a pedigree,
I could add much, illustrates this in connection with the name of Joyce, which
appears ten times, and is handed down twice from mother to daughter, thrice
from aunt by marriage to niece. It runs through seven families and is
Surname unknown at present . i BUCK (m. SHERWOOD) . i
SHERWOOD (m. TAYLOR) . . i WALLER i
'Joyce, dau. of . .
Buried at Faversham, Kent,
12 Aug. 1655.
= William BUCK of Faversham, Kent, grocer. Jurat there,
1658. Churchwarden 1657.
(Archd. Cant.).
Will proved 1 9 Sept. 1 669
William BUCK of St. Mary, Whitechapel, grocer. — Elizabeth SPILLETT (daughter of her husband's step-
Arms. — On a bend three mullets. [M.I. to his
dau. Joyce at Faversham and to his son Wm.
BUCK at St. Augustine's, Hackney.]
mother). Marr. Lie. 2 2 June 1 677 (Faculty Office),
and perhaps marr. 2ndly Elizabeth STRILLEY;
Marr. Lie. 19 March 1686/7 (Faculty Office).
I
Born 1684. Marr. Lie. 18 March=Robert SHERWOOD of Faversham, gent., one of the Jurats
1707-8 (Faculty Office). Died 30 Dec.
1749. Buried at Faversham. M.I. there.
of the town. Mayor 1742, 1750, 1756. Will dated
3 Feb., proved 17 May 1758. (Archd. Cant.)
John WALLER of=ANN.
Faversham, hop
merchant. A
widower in
'733-
I
Mar. Lie.
5 March
'733-
Canty.
Joyce.
1754. Buried at Faversham.
M.I. there. Will proved i 3 Aug.
1754 (P.C.C. 238 Penfold).
Marr. Lie. 12 Apr. 1736 Canty.
I
Born 1 71 6. Died 19 July == Thomas TAYLOR of Faversham,
hoyrrian. Born 12 April 1715.
Will dated 1 6 May 1741 ; proved
10 Oct. 1743. (Archd. Cant.)
Said to have died at sea in his
own ship.
I
s.p.
Joyce Buck WALLER
Living 1754.
I
John BROWNJOHN of Walcot, = Elizabeth.
Somerset, afterwards of Totten-
ham, Middlesex.
Bap. 24 May 1748,
Faversham. Marr. i July 1776,
Walcot, Somerset. Died Totten-
ham, Middlesex, 1837.
William GOODMAN = Joyce. Buried
of Tottenham. at Edmonton,
Middlesex,
18
i I
Sarah. Died = George FRY. Born 3 Dec.
about i 864.
1783 at Blandford. Buried
8 Dec. i 8 3 5 at West Hackney,
Middlesex.
Artemisia Julia, dau. of William CLEVERSLEY. = George Samuel FRY of Finchley, Middlesex.
Married u June i 88 i at All Hallows, Tottenham. I Born 18 August 1853 at Finsbury Square.
I
Annie Joyce. Living 1911.
JUNE 19"] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
153
Qtante,
and particularly so on the female side. The following sketch pedigree, to which
may be looked upon as fairly distinctive. During nine generations the name
from grand-mother to grand-daughter, thrice from aunt to niece, and once
distributed as follows :
TAYLOR (m. FRY)
FRY
i BROWNJOHN (m. GOODMAN) I
4 GEORGE S. FRY.
2nd wife Elizabeth, widow of Edward SPILLETT of Faversham, gent. His
will proved 24 Dec. 1665 (Cons. Canty.). Marr. Lie. 24 Sept. 1666 Cant7.
Marr. 24 Sept. 1666 St. Margaret's, Canty. Will proved i Oct. 1675
(Archd. Cant.).
Toh
John TAYLOR of Faversham. Bap. = Sarah LEGGATT, dau. of John LEGGATT of Bland-
24 Sept. 1717 at Davington, Kent.
Buried 1 6 Jan. 1 752/3 at Faversham.
ford, Dorset. Marr. Lie. 7 April 1 74 1, Chichester.
Married 7 April 1741 at St. Martin's, Chichester,
described as of Pagham, Sussex. Re-married
i 76 LEWIS at Blandford.
James FRY. Bap. 3oApril=
1 7 5 1 at Shillingston,Dorset.
Marr. 26 May 1 776 at
Blandford. Died 17 Sep.
1815. Buried St. George's,
South wark.
1
=Mary. Bap. 25 July
1 749 at Faversham.
Buried 20 Oct. 1831,
St. George's, South-
wark.
Thomas FRY. Bap.=
1 1 April 1 760 at
Shillingston, Dorset.
Buried 2 3 Dec. 1817
at Shillingston.
1
=Joyce. Bap. 2 June
1751 at Faversham .
Marr. 18 Aug. 1782 at
Blandford, Dorset.
Buried at Shillingston,
Dorset, 7 March 1841.
Samuel FRY. Born = Elizabeth BUCKINGHAM.
4 June 1781 at Bland-
ford. Died Nov. 1 86 1.
Marr. 5 Sept. 1 803 at
St. Saviour's, Southwark.
Died 1856.
Joyce. Bap. 29 June
i 783 at Shillingston.
Buried there 5 July
1839.
Elizabeth Joyce. Born i 5 August 1828. Marr. 8 July 1852 at = Robert William FRY. Born 23 June
St. Matthew's, Bethnal Green. Died 21 April 1906. Buried
at Tottenham, Middlesex. Will proved i 5 May 1906.
1827. Died 1 7 Oct. i 899. Will
proved i 5 Nov. i 899. Buried at
Tottenham, Middlesex.
Walter FRY of Perth, West Australia. = Elizabeth Harriet Marchelle ARNOLD. Married
Born 19 February 1858 at Tottenham. | 18 Feb. 1879 at Dunedin, New Zealand.
Lilly Elizabeth Joyce. Living 1911 at Sydney,
New South Wales. '
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
Queriee anb
JENNER of Gloucestershire and Wiltshire. — William JENNER of Cains-
ford (Kempsford ?), co. Gloucester, had a daughter, Edith, married to James
VAULX, a physician of Marston Maisey, co. Wilts. She died in 1617 leaving
issue; see mural monument in church of Meysey Hampton and the Heralds'
Visitation of 1623.
Amy JENNER of Kempsford, widow, will dated 20 June 1653; proved
26 May 1655, shows this pedigree:
jENNER=Amy Will
as widow proved
26 May, 1655.
Wm. JENNER. John JENNER. Robt. jENNER=Amy ... Ann=Thomas
(? will 1657. I SYMONDS.
m
r
Robert JENNER (god-son).
Thomas William Amy
JENNER JENNER. (god- John JENNER. Robert JENNER. Amy Ann. Martha,
(god- child). (god-
child), child). Eliza-
Anne, beth.
Mary.
Mrs. JENNER mentions her nephew Robert HALL; also Alice HEDGES, who
was probably identical with Alice JENNER, married at Eisey, Wiltshire, 4 Feb
1624 to Richard HEDGES.
Robert JENNER of Kempsford, co. Gloucester; will proved 1657, snows
1 III
Robert = Amy ... William JENNER John JENNER (sister) =Thomas (sister)
JENNER. 1 of Marston Maisey. of Marston. SIMONS. =Nick.
| | CURTEIS.
1 1
Robert — Thomas
William
JENNER.
lughter).
JENNER 1 JENNER.
(only ™"l
son). Martha (grand-dz
In the preceding will only one daughter is named, but the son mentions his
brother-in-law Nick. CURTEIS, as well as his brother-in-law Thomas SIMONS,
perhaps his wife's brother. Nicholas CURTIS was one of the witnesses to the
JuNEi9ii] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
'55
will of Amy JENNER 1655. In Mr. F. A. CRISP'S Registers of Kempsford
there is the birth of Katheren, daughter of Robert and Amy JENNER 21 May
1655, who may have been a daughter of the above; unless Robert the only son
also married an Amy. If so three JENNERS in succession married an Amy.
Robert JENNER of Widhill, Cricklade, Wiltshire, citizen and goldsmith of
Foster Lane, London, will dated 6 Dec. 1651; proved 17 Dec. 1651, by Henry
and Robert OATRIDGE (P.C.C. 242 GREY). Robert JENNER also made a
nuncupative codicil 14 Feb. 1652 (P.C.C. 35 BOWYER): —
Robert JENNER,= Elizabeth LONGSTON, dau.
M.P. for Crick- of Thomas and Anne.
I I
Jone = Margaret=
lade. Died 7
Dec. 1651. Bur.
in the Widhill
Chapel, Crick-
lade, s.p.
Died 23 Nov. 1658.
Buried in the Widhill
Chapel, Cricklade.
(sis-
ter).
ORACLE
(sister)
Died be-
OATRIDGE.
I
Margery
wife of
Elizabeth
wife of
John
OATRIDGE.
Daniel
OATRIDGE.
FRANCKHAM. ANDREWS.
He mentions kinsmen Henry and Robert OATRIDGE, Robert AYLIFFE, Joseph
ARCHER, Thomas PANTING. Nieces Abigail OATRIDGE, Mrs. Mary WOODCOCK,
Elizabeth, wife of Peter HUDSON, and her daughter Rebecca HUDSON. To
Robert JENNER, son of William JENNER*, commonly called William the elder,
of Marston Meysie, he leaves his manor of Marston Meysie. To John JENNER
the younger, son of John JENNER the elder, he leaves the presentation of a minis-
ter to Marston Meysie. The manor of Widhill was apparently given to John
JENNER the younger prior to the will, and was leased to Henry OATRIDGE until
John JENNER would come of age.
R. J. FYNMORE.
bandgate.
KEYES (see I, 196). — Reginald KEYES, I have assumed to be a younger son
of Richard KEYS or KEYES of Brockley and St. Radegund's, both in Kent, who
was probably so named after his uncle Sir Reginald SCOTT.
Since my communication at the above reference I have found his marriage at
Newington-next-Hythe:
" Reynold KEYS and Joyce MEYNEY 25 Jan?. 1570," and at Hythe his burial:
"Mr. Reignold KEYES was buried 10 Dec. 1592."
In the Birchington Parish Registers (F. A. CRISP, 1899) there are two children,
daughters, of Rainold KEIS, baptised there in 1576 and 1578. One died in
* Unless William the elder was husband of Amy, widow, will 1655, we have no
Robert son of William in the above extracts,
156 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
infancy and was buried 8 Jan. 1576/7. He may have had a son Edward,
whose children to the number of six were baptised in Hythe Church from 1624
to 1639.
Reynolde KEYES held a command under his kinsman Sir Thomas SCOTT in the
Forces raised to resist the Spanish invasion in 1588.
„ , R. T. FYNMORE.
oandgate.
WILDE: PELL ATT (see II, 116).— In this pedigree of the family of
WILDE or WILD there is mention of the marriage of Maria Esther WILDE, to
Mill PELLATT. It may be of interest to supplement this as follows:
Mill PELLATT, a London merchant, third son of Apsley PELLATT and his wife
Mary, daughter of Stephen MABERLY, came of a family of good position, resi-
dent formany generations at Steyning in Sussex. (Sussex Archaeological Collections,
vols. 38 and 39.) He was born 14 Mar. 1795, and died 19 December 1863.
Married 28 July 1817, Maria Esther (born n July 1793; died 9 December
1864) daughter of Thomas WILDE and his wife Sarah JONES, and had issue, ten
children, of whom the fourth son, Henry PELLATT, born 25 February 1830, went
to Canada and was resident many years in Toronto, where he died in 1909. He
married 9 May 1854, Emma Mary HOLLAND, and had issue three sons and three
daughters, of whom the eldest son is Sir Henry Mill PELLATT, K.C.V.O., born
6 January 1859, Honorary A.D.C. to the Governor General, Colonel Com-
manding the 2nd Regiment the Queen's Own Rifles of Canada, a battalion of
which Regiment went to England under his command at his personal cost in
1910, for manoeuvres and training with the Imperial Troops. He commanded
the Canadian Contingent sent to England for the Coronation of King Edward
VII; he is a Lay Canon of St. Alban's Cathedral; member of Corporation of
Trinity College, Toronto, a Trustee of the Toronto General Hospital, etc., etc.
Sir Henry Mill PELLATT married 15 June 1882 Mary, daughter and only child
of Robert DODGSON, and has issue one son, Reginald, born 30 June 1885, Cap-
tain in the above Regiment.
-r r^ A E. M. CHADWICK.
1 oronto, Canada.
DALE (see I. 12, 139, 326). — Baptisms at South Shields.
1770, Jan. 30, John Dick DALE, son of Thomas and Ann.
1771, April 27, ROBERT DALE, son of Thomas and Ann.
1777, Jan. 9, Thomas DALE, son of Thomas and Ann.
1780, Sept. 8, Durham DALE, son of Thomas and Ann
1782, April 2i> Henry DALE, son of Thomas and Ann.
1792, Nov. 7, Maria DALE, daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth.
JuNEi9ii] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 157
It will be observed from these entries that my great-grandfather, Henry DALE,
was not a twin, as stated on page 12. The error arose through his giving a
fictitious age in 1802, when admitted to the old Lyon Lodge of Freemasons in
Whitby. Furthermore, I think his father had only two (not three) wives.
These entries supplement the details at I. 323: —
1617, Nov. 3, Charles DAILE of Stamford, gentleman, and Margaret
ROOME of Helpringham, spinster (for Helpringham).
Lincoln Marriage Licences.
1651, Oct. 23, Charles DALE of Tixover, gent., married at Oxton,
Notts., Ann ANDREWES.
46, Harcourt Terrace, HYLTON B' DALE-
Redcliffe Square, S.W.
EMINENCE AND HEREDITY.— In the Nineteenth Century and After
for May, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. D. WHETHAM suggest that the class distinction
and segregation of type which exist among us and in all civilised races have a real
evolutionary meaning — that social association and like-to-like mating secure
specialisation and the development of the inherent abilities of mankind. " Whether
it would be possible or even desirable to join families of constant emotional and
artistic gifts is a very difficult problem. We may well question whether the balance
of such wayward and elusive talents and perceptions be not too subtle for any sys-
tematic creation. But it is clear that, by the habit of association and the custom of
inter-marriage among families of similar type, social conditions can be established
and maintained by which certain sorts of ability, depending on a combination of
character and intellect, can be brought into existence and made available for
national purposes in constant and regular succession." One imagines that the
reason most people marry near their own class is that it is distinctly uncomfort-
able to marry far out of it. The old rule was for men to move a step up by
marriage; women a step down.
CLASS HATRED. — A correspondent ot wide experience, writing to The
Spectator , thinks that the question of how far "class" exists is one to which the
answer would be probably very surprising. " The criterion of birth is being
gradually rejected; the criterion of money does not allow of division into
classes, as most people think; the criterion of intellect is really hardly recog-
nised; the criterion of moral worth does not exist." Amongst men, we think,
it is merely a question of mutual interest, esteem and agreement. He continues,
" If I say that, among other things, I have been a milk-carrier, an engineering
pupil, a university student, and have worn the King's uniform, I may be allowed
to feel that I have met members of most 'classes.' I have seen tyranny and
158 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
cruelty, to say nothing of blatant self-opinionativeness among the working
classes; I have heard a King's consideration for 'popular' feeling adversely
criticised by a retired tradesman; I have met students whose blood has risen at
the word 'Royal'; I have seen university men almost trembling at the beck and
call of their academic inferiors; I have seen professional dignity supported by
'sweating' worthy of the East End; I have seen spirituality in the Army."
GENIUS AND STATURE.— Writing also to The Speflator, Mr. T. C.
HORSFALL says that it has been ascertained by the careful examination of school
children in Russia, in the United States, and in Germany, that there is a close
connection between cleverness in children and their height and weight, and that
the rule that the heavier and taller children of each age have higher places holds
good through all schools. The decision, he says, as to whether its children
shall be well grown and of good weight, or short and light, rests in great
measure with the Board of Education and our other educational authorities.
THE SIR THOMAS PHILLIPPS MANUSCRIPTS (seel. 174).— On
Monday to Friday, 24th to 28th April, Messrs. SOTHEBY sold a further portion
of this wonderful collection. There were several Cartularies, unknown to
TANNER and DUGDALE, of English and foreign Religious Houses, and much,
of course, of genealogical and biographical interest. Two volumes of the col-
lection of Sir William DUGDALE went to Mr. QUARITCH for £122. We do
not altogether share the generally expressed opinion that such manuscripts
should be all stored away in public libraries. It is better that the originals
should be studied, used, enjoyed and passed from hand to hand, but we think that
the information they contain should be preserved in print. Let our museums
cease to buy, and spend the money instead in printing, cataloguing and indexing;
they are crammed already with material more or less inaccessible, and which is,
in consequence, imperfectly studied, used or understood.
HERTFORDSHIRE PARISH REGISTERS.— The Marriages at Arde-
ley, Bennington, Datchworth, Graveley, Knebworth, Shephall, Walkern and
Watton, printed in Mr. PHILLIMORE'S series, vol. II., have been indexed in
MS. by Mr. W. B. GERISH of Bishop's Stortford, who will answer inquiries as
to whether any particular names occur in them.
Comprehensive Pedigree No. 4. — The JASON Family of Kendal . . . Westmor-
land, [etc.] . . . 1580-1910, by Edward Mil ward Seede PARKER. Weston-
super-Mare, 1910. Folio, pp. 15.
This is in continuation of a scheme of publication last noticed on page 64,
and carries the family of Robert JASON of Enfield, Middlesex, 1588, down to
JUNE 19"] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 159
the children of Sir Robert JASON, the sixth and last Baronet, who died in 1738.
From Frances, (daughter of Sir Robert) who married John Stanford PERROTT
in 1727, the descent is continued to the author's children, in such full detail
and with such accurate and precise recital of evidence as one is seldom so for-
tunate as to find.
CLAPHAM of Clapham, Beamsley, Leeds and Bradford, Torfyhire. — A printed
sheet pedigree, 10 inches by 14! (no place or date, but probably from Yorkshire
Notes and Queries, vol. I.). This pedigree of six generations from John
CLAPHAM of Leeds, born 1723, to the children of John Arthur CLAPHAM, born
1835, shows intermarriages with ROOK, LUMB, SLINGSBY, PEELE, DENNIS,
GOODMAN, LAND, RAWSON, BALL, PORTER, MERLET, JUKES, BRODIE, FER-
RAND, WALKER and WEDMORE. Since this was printed it may be added that
William Henry CLAPHAM, born 1833, died 19 August, 1906; John Peele
CLAPHAM, born 1874, married 5 June, 1907, Janie Henrietta, youngest
daughter of Thomas BARKER, engineer and architect; and that William
Ferrand CLAPHAM, born 1876, is now in British Columbia.
160 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JUNE 1911
The Editor has received the following pedigrees for further proof,
extension and correction.
ADDERLEY of Weddington, Warw. Six generations, from Humphrey
A., died 1598, to Thomas A., 1758. Intermarriages with CAPELL, WARD,
BURTON, BAGOT, DIXIE, OKEOVER, SAVAGE, SHELDON and LIPTROTT.
ACER of Broseley, Salop; Warfield, Berks., and of London. Two genera-
tions from Simon A., 1674, and Hamlet A., 1685, and a note as to their
probable parentage. Intermarriages with HUXLEY, LEGG, HERCY, LANGLEY
and BODDINGTON.
ALLEN of Glasbury, Radnor; Bloomsbury, Middx., etc. Four genera-
tions from Henry A., rector of Kinnersley, Heref., died 1767, to Edward
Howorth A., born 1837. Charles Williams A., afterwards GREENLY.
Intermarriages with WILLIAMS, HOWORTH and ROSSER.
ARNOLD of Kitswell Park, Shenley, Herts.; Brimington, Derbys.; Rod-
borough, Glouc. ; Grafton Fly ford, Wore.; Halifax, Yorks., and Twicken-
ham, Middlesex. Four generations, from Charles A., solicitor to the
Treasury (died 1812). Intermarriages with PIGGOTT, NEWSTEAD, JOICEY,
COMBER, KNOWLES, GRAY, CAWLEY, BIRCH, YORKE and WAKE.
ASHBURNER of Gleaston and Scales Low, Furness, Lancaster, and of
Philadelphia and Baltimore, America. Six generations, from John A.,
of Gleaston, &c. born 1670, to Thomas A., born at Baltimore 1859, an(*
his brothers and sisters. Intermarriages with CHARNLEY, HIND, CLAYTON,
RUDDEROW, EYRE, BLAKISTON, LUCKER, OSBORNE, MURPHY, TABER,
WOLBERT, BOYER and RICHARDSON.
BALL of London, Southwark and Rotherhithe, Surrey, and of Ports-
mouth, Hants., Smyrna merchants, shipwrights, &c. Four generations
from Nathaniel BALL, 1735. Intermarriages with KENT, HARRIS, DANIEL,
BOYLE, GARY, HILLIARD and DRUCE of Winkfield, Berks.
BEDFORD of Crownest in Dewsbury, Yorks., and of Leeds and Hun-
tingdon. Four generations from Robert B., 1668. Intermarriages with
BALLHOUSE, CALVERLEY, WYNNE, NEWSTEAD, BARGRAVE, SQUIER,
WRIGGLESWORTH, THORN, GLOVER and TURNER.
BEECH of Newcastle-under-Lyme, Manchester, Halifax and Wake-
field. Three generations from Thomas B., 1763. Intermarriages with
PICKFORD, BROADHURST and HOLLAND; and of HOLLAND with JONES
KENT, LACEY and BODDINGTON.
BELLAS of Brampton in Long Marton, Westmorland, and of London
and Deptford, Kent. Six generations from Stephen B., died 1671. George
BELLAS, proctor of the Arches Court of Canterbury, and George BELLAS-
GREENOUGH. Intermarriages with CHAPMAN, BLACKETT, STRONG, LANE,
GREENOUGH, JENNER, BILLINGHURST, SMEDLEY and ROGERS.
BLACK ALL of Hackney, Middlesex, the City of London; Haseley, Oxon.;
Loughboro, Leicestershire, &c. Ofspring BLACKALL, Bishop of Exeter.
Seven generations from Thomas BLACKALL of Hackney, who died in
1688. Intermarriages with OFSPRING, MICHELL, LONG, DRAYGATE,
DlLLINGHAM, CLARKE, CoOKE, DREW, WoOLCOMB, COSTARD, PRIMATT,
HOLWELL, FOULKES, LEY, BARNES,CUTLER, ELLICOMBE, GOULD, SHAPTER,
TUCKER, FENWICK, DE PUTSON, WARD and MEERES.
The Pedigree Register
SEPTEMBER 1911] [VoL. II, No. 18.
©eftcienctes
Dr. GIBSON (Bishop of Lincoln) to Dr. CHARLETT.
"Bugden, Aug. 13, 1720.
The more things are entered in the Registers the better, and par-
ticularly of the kinds which you speak of in your letter; but as the
Canon considers it no further than a Register of Marriages, Xtnings
and Burials, we can enjoin no other entries.
In the course of my parochial visitation in Surrey, it was one special
part of my care, to see that the registers were duly kept in all respects;
the titles to estates ofttimes depending on them, besides many other
incidental conveniences in the course of men's lives, and it being so
very reproachful to the clergy when Registers are exhibited in the
Courts of Law, with the slovenly figure and entries which we see in
so many parishes: besides that it may be a question whether they are
any evidence at all, unless it appear that they have been kept and
managed as the Canon directs." HEARNE'S Collections.
An essential quality in the intellectual outfit of the pedigree com-
piler is the power of discriminating between good and bad evidence.
The sum of the possible errors in a pedigree is perhaps equalled by
the sum of the statements contained therein, and as these statements
have to be collected from various documentary sources, the reliability
of the said sources and their possible and probable errors must be
considered by the searcher, who must be conversant with the draw-
backs and frailties inherent in each.
That source of detail, the Parish Register, with its modern continu-
ation, the registers controlled by the Registrar-General, is subject,
perhaps more acutely than any other official record, to all those errors,
both designed and accidental, which afflict human works.
To put it graphically, and in a form we all understand, the genea-
logy of untruth is here stated :
Error = Register.
. r~
Omission ==
Commission --=
Purposed
omission.
Accidental
omission.
Careless
omission.
Clerical
error.
Error of
fact.
~
Misinforma- =
tion
Wilful misinformation. Ignorant misinformation.
U
162 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
The compiler will welcome additions to and corrections of above
pedigree, dates of birth not accurately known, dates of death not yet
required, as every known member of the family is still living. N.B. —
No reward offered for information.
To begin with, our oldest registers (ante 1603) are copies. The
original injunction in 1538 ordered that the "curate" of every parish
should on every Sunday take forth the register book and enter up the
baptisms, burials, and weddings which had taken place during the
preceding week, in the presence of the churchwardens: therefore if
this injunction were carried out the entries were made either from
memory or from notes, and were consequently subject to those errors
and omissions which are the lot of all delayed undertakings. These
early registers were on paper, and with their possibly imperfect or
erroneous entries were transcribed on parchment in obedience to the
canon of 1597: "Because wee wolde have regesters to be faithfully
kepte . . . lett the names whiche are written every weeke in these
bookes be reade openly and plainely by the mynister eu'y saboethe day
. . . the day and monethe beinge seu'ally named in wch they were
p'formed and done," etc. This canon was emphasized in 1603 by
the yoth canon which again ordered the old paper books to be copied
on parchment "especially since the beginning of the reign of the late
Queen." The last words seem to indicate some distrust of the earlier
entries or a deficient appreciation of their worth. The canons, how-
ever, show a strong appreciation of the value of registration and give
minute and exact instructions for the avoidance of error. The direc-
tion that the entries of the previous week were to be read publickly
by the "mynister" every Sunday was an excellent check on error of
every description. In those rare instances where the original paper
book and the parchment copy are both existing, a comparison reveals
condensations, omissions, and other faults of the copyist.
At Aston Abbotts, Bucks, both paper book and parchment book
are preserved. The following sample entries from the paper book
have, within brackets, the words omitted in the parchment copy:
1592. Will'm VYNCHER [FINCHER], [of Aston Abbotts, wydower]
& Margrett BETTAM [of Ashendon, wydow] maryed the
27th. day of Marche.
1574. Agnes [Alice ut puto] daughter of Robert VYNCHER
bap. 6 Feb.
Out of 360 entries in the paper book, the copyist has entirely
omitted three in the parchment copy, and has made thirty-four
SEPT. 19 1 1] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 163
variations in the transcript. Most of these variations are trivial
and do not affect the truth of the entry, but some consist in omitting
valuable detail as is shown in the samples quoted.
In Haslemere register the entries before 1627 are copied from an
"old booke" which was apparently kept in an irregular manner, and
many registers commence with a statement that they are copies: e.g.
Beer Hackett, Penrith, Pitchford, S. Nicholas, Ipswich, etc. Westbury
(Bucks), is a copy of a copy; Thornton (Bucks), begins by stating it
is a "coppie extracted out of the Regesterie of the Archdeacon of
Buckingham," and therefore may be a copy of a copy of a copy of a
copy! The last is probably an extreme instance of recopying and is
in print from a transcript made by the writer (a paineful and careful
scribe), therefore the printed book represents a fifth or sixth re-copy-
ing. Thornton is a small register; begins in 1562, and has added
interest from the fact that a cabman-claimant to the extinct TYRRELL
baronetcy and the Thornton estate accuses the said register of imper-
fection: i.e. hiatus of several leaves caused by the nefarious abstraction
of same by an unlawful (?) possessor during the last century, who
desired to destroy evidence of claimant's descent. (Burton Evening
Gazette^ 18 Aug. 1904.)
So much for the copy and the copyist; now for the original errors
in the original draft. The system of entering up from notes or recol-
lection has never died out, and never will as long as carelessness,
procrastination and forgetfulness are inherent in human nature. The
writer has found undestroyed rough notes on scraps of paper at Fenny
Stratford, Bethnal Green, etc. At the Committee of 1833 the parish
clerk of the last named parish deposed that his rough notes of mar-
riages, burials, etc., were posted once a month; probably an under-
statement. In The Pedigree Register of March 1911 (p. 118) is an
example of the rough notes of a churchwarden of the late 1 8th century.
Such a method of recording is self-condemned. Omission to register
may be accidental and arise from procrastination or sheer negligence;
the writer has several times during the last few years found in modern
church registers burial certificates, etc., between the leaves, and no
entry, and knows of forgotten baptisms. Wilful omission is not
unknown: e.g. "Tunstall, Kent. 1557. From henceforward I omit the
POTTMANS." In the i8th century, when there was, at times, a tax on
the entries, registration was sometimes neglected with the object of
avoiding the tax.
Epidemics, plague especially, causing much sickness and death,
often demoralized all social routine, and omission to register at such
times must have been common: e.g. Middleton St. George, in 1645-7,
164 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
has several entries from "a note of such as died in tyme of the sicknes
forgotten to be sett downe in their proper place." During 1665 the
London plague-pits received thousands of unregistered corpses; many
a genealogy must have been carried back, in London, to this time
and then impassable gulf; whole families were wiped out, leaving
no trace in written record.
Some registers contain evidence of the intrinsic untrustworthiness
of part of their contents, in the written criticism of some stricter or
reforming custodian.
Pitchford, Salop, in 1800, contains a long entry of the "admission
to the Church" of Geo. Ottley SMITH, who was baptized in Wood-
church in 1799, but not entered in the register, because it was not the
custom to enter private baptisms until the infant was brought to
church. As private baptism was very common, many must have
escaped registration.
Upton in Overchurch, begins 1762, with "As there has been no
regular register kept since 1738, ye following list is taken from the
records of private families"; then follows a page of details from half
a dozen families which, having been specially collected, are likely to
be accurate.
Smethcote, Salop. This register is so mixed that it is "chaos": in
1767 is written "This is very puzzling," etc. "This register is quite
foolish; Bad work indeed. This is the most ill contrived Register
that is in England or Wales," etc. Then in another place: "the late
Rector having neglected to register from 1759 to 1777, I, now Curate,
have in 1792, by direction of the Bishop collected the following, "etc.
Then follow several pages of details divided into sections, each section
headed by a statement as to the origin of the information: e.g. "This
is copied from Mr. ROGERS' family Bible," etc. At the end of this
collection is the statement that it was produced before a bench of
Justices and verified upon oath by the Curate. It would be impos-
sible to deny the veracity and credit of these entries, after all the care
and precaution taken.
Battlefield, Salop, 1749. "The old Register was in Paper and very
ill wrote and kept in some places, therefore it is transcribed into this
by me Leonard HOTCHKIS, Curate."
Selattyn, Salop, 1747. "John ELLIS, late Clerk, well qualified for
his office in every respect, keeping this Register during his long
indisposition, and at last great weakness, must have omitted here
SEPT. 191 1] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 165
some names." This is at once evidence of the trustworthiness of
most of the Clerk's recording and the misplaced indulgence which
allows a man to continue in responsible office when no longer fit for
his duty. When the keeping of so many registers was left to the
Parish Clerk in disregard of the canon ordering the "curate" to per-
form the duty, we may feel thankful that so much was done, and
survives as is the case ; for the clerk was more often than not an
illiterate man. After all, total omission is less to be regretted than
doubtful statements. Ignorance is preferable to error : the first
stimulates our energies ; the second, when we are unconscious of it,
leaves us satisfied. Clerical errors are certain to be common always,
but were commoner in the past owing to the illiteracy of the parish
clerks whose untutored minds were given to phonetic renderings of
unfamiliar sounds. In most of this class of error, perhaps, no very
great uncertainty is caused; where we find such variations as GOWER,
GORE, GOOR, GOAR, all in the same book, we know that the same
name is intended; similarly SEER, SERE, SEAR, will not cause confusion.
Francis and Frances were apparently interchangeable in the sixteenth
century, and the uncertain use of these forms may cause trouble.
Errors of fact or substance are the most serious of all; in some
instances it is difficult to account for them, when there is no doubt of
their inadvertency, e.g. Bisham. "The W'shipfull Mr. Thomas
HOBBEY, Knight, bur. 3 Sep. 1565."
The name is usually spelled HOBY; Sir Thomas was ambassador to
France and died in Paris in 1566, being brought home for burial
(D.N.B.). The difference in date is easily verified from other records.
St. Alban's, Worcester. James ANDERSON married in 1739. A
note appended to the entry states that the man applied at a later date
for a certificate of his marriage, and said that the clerk had " mistook
his name, that it shou'd be wrote HENDERSON." Had a descendant
applied after a lapse of years no entry could have been identified as
referring to his ancestor.
A common name in the Meon district (Hants) was spelled ERAKER,
EDDIKER, EARWAK.ER, ERICKER. Even Sir Walter RALEIGH wrote his
name sometimes RALEGH and sometimes RAWLEY.
At Yately (Hants) is written, "The Rev. Mr Thomas having
almost wholly neglected to register from the year 1710 to 1720, to
supply the deficiency the Minister and Churchwardens have collected
what intelligence they could from the memoirs of families in the
parish (public notice being given of that effect in the church) in order
to have the same recorded in the Parish Register."
i66 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
In the Hampshire Registers at least a dozen instances similar to the
last are recorded. One parson seems to make a joke of his own
carelessness: BOLDRE, late in 1646, he notes that on the sixteenth of
last March "I married John NESCIO and Anne of ye Isle of Wight,"
and on 26 October "Thomas CARD married Aimey ignoro of Bewly."
The Incumbent of Deane (Hants) writes in 1766: "I never could
prevail with the Squire of the parish, John HARWOOD, to purchase a
register-book until I had been Rector of this parish for eight
years," etc.
The great deficiency in registers occurred during the period
1640-60.
The elected registers of 1655, whose selection and appointment is
entered in so many register-books, may or may not have been an
improvement on their predecessors "curates" (i.e. incumbents):
certainly some books are kept well after this, but many were entirely
neglected and registration stopped. At their restoration many clergy-
men entered up such information as they could gather. Where this
was done the entries may be regarded as correct, because they would
be supplied by heads of families: e.g. Bradley Green (Worcester),
begin in 1660 with the notice that there had been no registration
since the death of John BAKER, clerk, "who died in the beginning of
the warres"; then follows a list of entries collected by Mr. Thos.
HUNT and comprising information since 1645, cmefty relating to his
own family.
As the "register" was paid I2d. for each marriage entry and 4d.
for each birth and burial, we may suppose that this charge caused
some evasion, apart from the abstinence of political factions.
The writer has examined fifty-one parish registers which have
entries before 1640. Of these, twenty-six have no deficiency during
1640-60: in these the baptisms are entered, only one uses the term
born ; six mention the election of the "register. " The remaining twenty-
five are more or less imperfect, and all show definite indications of
rebel influence. Thirteen possess an hiatus of ten years or more;
the term "born" displaces "baptism" in the minority only, and the
inference is that though the successful rebels were able to stop church
registration (more or less) they were not strong enough to impose
their own system on an unwilling and loyalist people. Shipton has a
note that the book was taken away by soldiers. Rowington notes
the ejection and restoration of its vicar. Moreton Corbet notes the
imperfect registration by an intruder, etc., etc.
SEPT. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 167
The repetition of a baptismal name was not uncommon before
A.D. 1800, and is not unknown now; the practice may cause error and
its possibility should be borne in mind. GIBBON, who was the eldest
of six sons, writes in his Autobiography, " so feeble was my constitu-
tion, so precarious my life, that, in the baptism of each of my brothers,
my father's prudence successively repeated my Christian name of
Edward, that, in case of the departure of the eldest son, this
patronymic appellation might be still perpetuated in the family."
This practice has "worked" profitably in the case of more than one
claimant for the out-door relief euphemistically styled "old-age-
pension."
Doubtful identity may be caused by the assumption of an extra
name in after life: the composer of "Rule Britannia" was baptized
in 1710 by the name of Thomas; he added Augustine, and was
known as Thomas Augustine ARNE.
Interpolations, obvious, are found in every register, and should be
verified.
All the causes and incentives to error in registration act in the
twentieth century with as much strength as in former times; perhaps
intentional error is commoner now than then. In cases of births,
sometimes, parents do not register in order to escape vaccination, or
in order that their own whereabouts may not be traced. Others,
when registering, suppress or distort facts, e.g. representing the parents
of a bastard infant as married. There is no means of checking the
assumption of an alias. In the early years of civil registration, omis-
sion to register births was not uncommon because many people
objected to the system and ignored it; the writer knows several old
people now living whose births were not registered, but whose bap-
tisms were. Tramps, bargees, caravan-dwellers, and nomads usually
fail to register births.
Even in the death register, occasional fraud crops up; registry of
a bogus death, followed by either no burial, or the interment of a
dummy, has taken place more often than is supposed. These cases
are naturally known only to the few (the writer knows of one), as
they mostly escape public enquiry.
Doubtless the great majority of register entries, both ecclesiastical
and civil, is truth and fact; it is the minority which is suspect. In
spite of the care and inspection of Somerset House, the civil regis-
trar, being human, is not free from error, and in some instances, rare,
is guilty of worse than carelessness. Some years ago the writer knew
i68 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
of one registrar, now dead, who was in the habit of increasing his
quarterly account by inserting bogus entries. Probably in this case
no great harm was done, but vital statistics may have received a
shock. Another registrar, also dead, would ask particulars of an
informant and give a certificate, filling in the entry subsequently,
sometimes after an interval of two days, and then invent the details
he had either forgotten or failed to take.
A recently published book, Stranger than Fiction, contains a collec-
tion of weird narratives. One relates to mysterious noises occurring
in the wall of an old house. When necessary repairs caused the wall
to be broken into, the long-lost register-book of the parish was found
concealed therein! Upon the removal of the book the disturbing
noises ceased. The present writer wrote to the author of the book
asking for particulars of parish, date, etc., and received a courteous
answer, regretting the circumstances still forbade the publication of
details, but hinting that the event happened in Wales within the last
ten years. In spite of this example of ghostly interest in registers,
we need not seriously reckon with occult influence when debating the
reliability of a parish register.
WILLIAM BRADBROOK.
SEPT.i9n] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 169
of ^nobfanbt 1Un£
All is not gold that glitters, and all is not gospel truth which is
printed — even when it is a pedigree from a visitation of His Majesty's
Officers of Arms.
In offering the following two parallel pedigrees — one (A) from the
42nd volume of the Harleian Society's Publications, the other (B)
from my own researches, I do not in the least wish to depreciate the
valuable work which the Harleian Society has done, and is still doing
in bringing genealogical information before the public. It is labouring
under two disabilities, the one unavoidable, the other, I trust, one
which may at no distant date be mended.
The former disability is the fallibility of the old Heralds. This is
not peculiar to those who visited Kent, as I know of one pedigree in
the Visitation of Lancaster of 1664, where the head of the family, who
was then alive, was made the son of his eldest brother (SOUTHWORTH
of Samlesbury). This, of course, assuming that the Chetham Society's
copy of the visitation in question is correct.
The other disability of the Harleian and similar Societies is that
they cannot obtain access to the original visitation records. The
Officers of Arms of England are, I understand, almost entirely de-
pendent on fees for their livelihood, and it is, therefore, obviously
against the policy of such a body to publish any official pedigrees,
and so far cut off the stream of their water of life. Were the Officers
of Arms of England made government officials, as are those of Ireland
and Scotland, and given reasonable salaries, and all fees sent direct
into His Majesty's Treasury, the public, of course, would have to pay
for such salaries, but after the rule of small profits and quick returns,
the general public would in the long run gain considerably. If there is
any doubt on the matter, the Irish Estimates will show that the Office
of Arms, Dublin Castle, has regularly returned a balance in favour of
the Treasury ever since that office has been run on government lines.
The only comment I think I need make on the parallel pedigrees
is that clearly to show the parallel "Edw. TILGHMAN de Snodland fil.
et haeres," who married, first, Miss BREWER and, second, Susanna
WHETTENHALL, in the Harleian Society's pedigree, is probably my
"William TILGHMAN of Snodland, co. Kent, gent . . . Testament dat.
9, Will dat. 17 Feb. 1593; prov. 24 Apr. 1594." "Francis TILGH-
MAN iam superstes hoc anno 1619" is the son of Edward the son of
William above-mentioned. This Edward (omitted in the Herald's
pedigree) died between 1610 and 1612.
Reginald M. GLENCROSS
f
loth Sunday after Pentecost, 1911.
iyo
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
(A).
(From Visitation of Kent, 1619, as
Willielmus fil et heres=Emmua filia Tho. AVERY.
filia Will i =j=Richardus TILGHMAN = filia
PORDAGE. ux I de Snodland fil et heres. NEWMAN ux 2 da
Joanna filia =Willelmus TILGHMAN = Maria filia Joh
Andrei
AMIAS.
de Snodland
BEERE de
Rochester.
is= Susanna filia Tho
WHETENHALL de
Peckham.
=Mari;
4ta
conjuj
Margareta filia=Edw TILGHMAN = Susanna filia Tho
BREWER
de Ditton.
de Snodland
fil et haeres
WHETENHALL de Peckha
Ar.
Francis TILGHMAN de Snodland =Margeria filia Adae
iam superstes hoc anno 1619.
SPRACKLING de Elling-
ton in Thanet militis.
Franciscus
obiit infans.
Catharina
infans.
SEpT.i9ii] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
171
printed by the Harleian Society, vol. 42.)
Whetenhall TILGHMAN =
Vlaling fil 2 ex
conjuge secundo.
= Hellenafilia Ric di
REMEKING de
London
Oswald
London
TILGHMAN de
fil 3-
"1
Dorothea
nupta Tho.
St. NICHOLAS
de Ash, Ar.
\ \ .
Isacus Nathaniel!
aets 4 ann. 3 annors.
Samuell Maria
unius anni tilia
et ampl s.
IJ2
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
(B).
(From Wills and
Richard TILGHMAN.
William's will.
In son=Dionisia.
will.
In son William's
William TILGHMAN of =
London.
To be bur. at St. James,
Garlickhithe. Will dat.
15 Sep. 1493. P.C.C.
(2 Vox).
Margaret, widow of
Thomas SAUNDER. She
dead by 1493.
Thomas TILGHMAN. In
bro. William's will 1493.
In son William's will as
dec. 1540.
William TILGHMAN of Snodland co. Kent.= Isabel, daur. of John == Joan. Alive
In Uncle William's will, a younger son 1 49 3 .
To be bur. at Snodland. Will dat. I 3 Feb.
1540; prob. 22 Nov. 1541. Rochester
Court, ix. 362.
Joan. In hus-
band's will as dec.
1540-1. Extrix. of
husband.
r
Richard TILGHMAN. Referred to in=
father's will 1540, but doubtless dec. by
then.
William TILGHMAN of Snodland co. Kent,=
gent. Alive 1540.
To be buried at Snodland. Testament dat.
9, will dat. 17 Feb. 1593; prob. 24 Apr.
1594. P.C.C. (34 Dixy).
Edward TILGHMAN of Snodland co. Ken t,=y Margaret. Extrix. to husband 1612.
gent. In father's will 1593.
To be bur. at Snodland. Will dat. 22 Dec.
1610; prob. 24 Apr. 1612. (Rochester
Court, xx. 396).
Francis TILGHMAN. In father's will 1610.
Tenant in fee in remainder.
SEPT.I9II] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
173
other evidences.)
Y=Joan. In son William's will as dec. I 540.
John TILGHMAN.
Scholar at Oxford
1493.
I
Ralph TILGHMAN.
Alive in 1493.
I
Margaret mar. .
BARBOUR. She
I493-
alive
1
Agnes.
Alive
H93-
= Susan, daur. of Thomas
WHETTENHALL. Alive
1608.
Whettenhall OswaldTiLGHMAN. Under =Eliza-
TILGHMAN. 21,1593. Of St. Mary beth.
Under 21 Abchurch, London,
1593. Alive grocer. Born at Snodland.
1 607. Alive Will dat. 5 ; prob. 2 2 Jan.
1628. 1628-9. (Archd. London
VII, 38.
Charles TILGHMAN. Under
21, 1593. Of St. Dionis
Backchurch, citizen and
draper of London. Will
dat. 9 Apr. 1607. Adm.
c.t.a. ult. June 1608.
P.C.C.(57Windebanck).
I
Dorothy.
Unm.
1593.
I
Richard TILGHMAN.
Alive 1628-48.
Abigail. Of St. Mary Abchurch, London.
Adm. 9 Oct. 1648. P.C.C.
174
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
front t$t (puBfic
[SEPT. 1911
William AMCOTTS of Aishtropp,==Ann. Richard BENNETT of=Elizabeth. Living 1656. She had a
Lines., Esq. Will dated 27 Aug. I A lunatic Amcotts. Died I life interest in a messuage called the
1629. I in 1655. before 1656. I Townhouse, Wrington, Somt.
rn i rn i i i in
William Mildred. = Augustine Henry = Dorothy, =p Christopher Francis Jane, = Robert HIG-
AMCOTTS, Mar.
1629. about
John 1 640,
AMCOTTS. aged 27.
A minor
in 1629.
Margaret
ib. inf.
PERRY,cit. SlDLEY, 1656.
y Joyner 1656.
ofLon-
BENNETTof BENNETT. 1656. GINS, 1656.
London, 1656. Mar- = John
Dr. of Phy- garet PICKERING,
sic. Will ,656. 1656.
dated 3 Eliza- =John
Apr. 1655. beth> FoRDHAM
1656. of London,
Christopher BENNETT. 10 weeks old on 3 Apr. 1655. furrier, 1656.
Deduced from Chancery Proceedings A.D. 1640 PERRY v. BENNETT (Mitford 94-61).
1656 BENNETT v. PERRY (Collins 580-59).
Dorothy BROOKER==Edward LLOYD of Berth Lloyd, Montg.,= Catherine, d. of Sir John
Esq. Living 1690. WITRONGE.
Edward LLOYD =
of Berth Lloyd,
only son. Died
after 1685.
1
= Mary. -
1
p Price Dorothy. =
CLUNNE.
=John LLOYD of
Churchyard
Alley, Midd.,
Esq., i 690.
Jane. = Humphrey
1717. LLOYD.
= Francis
EVANS,
Esq. 1717.
Ursula
1717.
= Richard
WILSON.
1717.
Catherine, = Thomas CLUNNE of Samuel Lloyd. =Constance
sole d. £jf Berth Lloyd, Will proved 1701.
heir. Montg.,Esq.,i7 i 7. 10 Oct. 1701.
Deduced from Chancery Proceedings, A.D. 1717 CLUNNE v. PARRY (27 1 9).
John PARRY of Caerhun, Cam. Living i 7 i i==Jane
Thomas PARRY of Glynn, Caerhun, Cam. Only son
Died 14 Mar. i 758.
.== Jane JONES.
Married about 17 11.
Died 21 Feb
.1763
•
Dorothy ROBERTS. =
Married Nov.
1749. Died
1765.
1
Thomas =
PARRY.
Died 19
March
I773-
Z 2
= Margaret, d. of =
Robert LLOYD,
and sister of John
LLOYD, gent.
Married 25
May i 770.
Living 1774.
Wm.
JONES.
'774-
1
John PARRY
of Coedmawr.
Caerhun,
yeoman, 1774.
Hugh
PARRY
of Caer-
hun,
yeoman,
1774-
Wm.
PARRY.
Died
s.p. be-
fore
1774-
1
Annas.
A spin-
ster in
'774-
Elizabeth. 1774. Jane. Diedini773.
Deduced from Chancery Proceedings, A.D. 1774
PARRY v. JONES (2099).
G. S. PARRY, Lt.-Col.
* Continued from p. 88.
SEPT. i9i i] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 175
fiougpfon.
John de LOUGHTON is presumed to have been the founder of the
Church of Loughton, Bucks, to which he presented his clerk in
1218. William de LOUGHTON and Agnes his wife gave in the same
year to Snelshall Priory a yard-land, abutting on Watling Street and
lying in Little Loughton.
In 1270 a fine was levied between John, son of John de LOUGHTON,
Querent, and John de LOUGHTON, Impedient, of lands and rents in
Great Loughton and of the Advowson of the Church to the use of
John, son of John.
In 1294 John de LOUGHTON granted his capital mansion, with all
the appendages of a manor, to Ivo de LOUGHTON his brother and
Cecilia the daughter of Robert de Stoke Hamond, whom Ivo seems
to have married.
In 1329 a fine was levied between Thomas de LOUGHTON and
Elizabeth his wife, and John HUTCHAM, Chaplain, to the use of John,
who granted the same to Thomas and Elizabeth for life; with re-
mainder to Thomas son of Thomas and the heirs of his body;
remainder to William, brother of Thomas, son of Thomas and the
heirs of his body; remainder to Robert, brother of William, and the
heirs of his body.
Bartholomew de LOUGHTON was instituted Rector of Little Lough-
ton January 4, 1305, and William de LOUGHTON March 9, 1321, on
the presentation of Thomas de LOUGHTON.
William de LOUGHTON was elected Prior of Bradwell Abbey,
Bletchley, July 1336, and died in 1349.
John LOUGHTON of Kimble, Bucks, is mentioned in 1438 as a
party in a fine passed between members of the HAMPDEN family and
others.
In 1460 George de LOUGHTON and Arnethan his wife passed a fine
of the Manor of Loughton Parva, in order to convey it to a purchaser.
The foregoing is gleaned from LIPSCOMB'S History of Bucks
The family is next traced to Uxbridge. At Hillingdon the follow-
ing references are found:
1561, Jan. 12. Laurence LOUGHTON and Joan ASTLE, widow, married.
1567, Jan. 12. Henry LOUGHTON and Bridget PARTRIDGE, married.
176 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEpT.i9ii
1575, Jan. 25. Robert LOUGHTON and Margaret HUTCHING, married.
1607, Nov. 8. John LOUGHTON and Alice GOODE, married.
1633, May 27. Robert LOUGHTON and Isabel SAIE, married.
1639, May i. Roger LOUGHTON and Ellin SMITH, married.
1640, June 24. William LOUGHTON and Jane FINER, married.
1659, Nov. 9. John LOUGHTON and Mary MARTIN, married.
1675, Oct. 25. Roger LOUGHTON and Anne SHAW, married.
1677, May 14. Robert LOUGHTON and Alice BIRDE, married.
1689, Dec. John LOUGHTON and Mary WOOD, marriage at
Wycombe.
1697, May. Mary daughter of William and Ursula LOUGHTON,
baptised.
At Iver, Bucks, are the following references:
1702, Nov. 17. William, son of Robert and Elizabeth LOUGHTON,
baptised.
1705, Jan. Sarah, daughter of Robert and Elizabeth LOUGHTON,
baptised.
1713, April. William LOUGHTON and Dorothy HULL married at
St James, Piccadilly.
1735, July i. John, son of John and Mary LOUGHTON, baptised.
1737, Oct. 7. Hannah, daughter of John and Mary LOUGHTON,
baptised.
1791, Oct. 22. John LOUGHTON, buried.
At Hayes, Middlesex, occurred the following marriage:
1721, Nov. 15. John LOUGHTON and Mary SHAW,
John and Mary LOUGHTON of Iver and St. Bartholomew-the-Great,
London, had surviving issue two daughters: Elizabeth, who married
Robert JONES of London, and Hannah, named above, who married in
1765, at St. James', Clerkenwell, William PONTIFEX, of Beaconsfield
and Iver, Bucks.
E.L.P.
SEPT. 191 1] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
177
from
in t$t (Ru00*n Coffecfton.
Peter SAMBROOKE = .
of St. Anne, Black-
friars, gentleman.
John SAMBROOKE.
Only son.
Living in 1691.
1 1
Sarah. Living Other daurs.
in 1691. Living in 1691
\
John POYNTING of London,
tobacconist. Died before
1705.
Thos POYNTING of Batcombe, ==....
Somerset, yeoman. Died before
1705.
John POYNTING of London,
tobacconist. Son and heir.
Living 1705, aged 37 years
or more.
Also mentioned Margt. POYNTING, widow; living 1689; died before 1705.
The two John POYNTINGS were both probably of the parish of St. Bartholomew-the-
Great.
Coffins.
John COLLINS of Gt. Shellesley, = .
co. Wore., gent. Living in
1718.
Tho* PROSSER of = Mary. Married Joseph COLLINS.
Gt. Shellesley, about 1718. Living 1718.
gent.
* Continued from Vol. I, p. 288.
Other sons and
dau".
I78
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
(TlUjmcfi :
Thos. MEYRICK of ;
Berthllwyd, co. Mer.,
Esq. Died before
1789.
r i
Evan GRYFFYD of = Jonnett, eld. dau. Thos Lloyd ANWYL =p Margaret, 2nd dau
Plas Tan y bwlch,
co. Mer., Esq. Died
before 1789.
Died before 1789.
Rob. GRYFFYD of •= Ann... Born 1720.
Plas Tan y bwlch,
Esq., eld. son. Died
before 1 7 89.
nn... orn
Living 1789.
Evan GRYFFYD of =
Plas Tan y bwlch,
Esq., eld. son. Died
before 1789.
I
Margt. GRYFFYD of— • Wm Oakeley of
Plas Tan y bwlch, Shrewsbury,
only daur. Marr. gentleman,
about 1789.
of Hendiefmur, co.
Mer., Esq. Died
before 1789.
Died before 1789.
Wra ANWYL of
Hendiermur, Esq.,
eld. son. Died
before 1789.
Thos Lloyd ANWYL
of Shrewsbury,
gentleman, eld. son.
Living 1789.
I
Revd Wm ANWYL
Rector of Ashley,
co. Staff., eld. son.
Catherine, dau. of
Elizabeth VAUGHAN
" of Shrewsbury,
widow," in 1795.
Born about 1775.
Married about 1795.
— WINDSOR == Eleanor.
Living 1739.
1
John WINDSOR of = Sarah PRICE of Shrews-
Shrewsbury, 1 7 3 9 .
bury. Married 1739.
Living in 1787.
I
Edwd Chas. WINDSOR of
Harnage Grange, co.
Salop, Esq. Living 1787.
I
Sarah. Of Shrews-
bury. Spinster
1787.
Elizth. Of Shrews-
bury. Spinster
1787.
SEPT. i9i i] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
QJHngfufc :
Thos WINGFIELD of Preston ==
Brookhurst, co. Salop, Esq.
Living 1720.
Jno. WINGFIELD.
Living 1720.
Jno. HILL of Hawkes- ==.
ton. Died before
1720.
I
Borlace WINGFIELD, = E
. . Richd HILL of St.
James's, Midx.
Living 1720.
len
eld.
Married 1720.
L.YSTER of = .
i, Esq.
:forei782. I
Richd LYSTER of = .
Rowton,
Died before 1 782
Edwd LYSTER of Charl-
bury, co. Oxon., Esq.
1782.
Richd LYSTER of Wands- y= Nancy . . . Married
worth, co. Surr., Esq. before 1782.
1782.
Richd LYSTER of Charl- = Mary . . . Married
bury, co. Oxon., Esq. before 1782.
1782.
I
Thos Moses LYSTER.
(Bitten*.
Thos GITTENS of the = Ann . Died
Lake, Westbury, co.
Salop. Died before
1727.
before 1727.
Thos Gittens of the Lake. = Christian, dau. of .
Married 1727.
i8o
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
The sketch pedigree below, illustrating the Chancery suit of
LOADER v. LOADER (Chanc. Proc. "before 1714," Whlttington 533),
is a good example of the kind of information to be got from a family
suit, and, in this case, of the changes of residence of the elder line.
The plaintiff, a Clerkenwell tailor, puts in a title to certain mes-
suages in Nuneaton (tenants of these named in the plea). The
last person actually seised of the premises was Mary LOADER, but as she
died an infant and without issue, the plaintiff claims as cousin and next
heir. The plea is contested by Elizabeth and Mary LOADER,
respectively the mother and grandmother of the last owner, and the
defendants are associated with CLARE and ILIFFE (see pedigree),
together with one Roger STYAN and Anthony TROTMAN. (Date of
suit 26 July, 1698.)
F. S. SNELL.
LOADER —
William
LOADER
of Nuneaton,
Warwick
1.
William
LOADER
of Nuneaton
1
William
LOADER
of Harwell,
Leicester,
ante 1698
William
LOADER
of Allen St.,
Clerkenwell,
Middx.,
tailor,
1698.
1
Edward —
LOADER
ofNun-
eaton.
(I) Jo
Lc
D
an
16
in = Mary
>ADER.
ed
te
98.
Edward (i)William =^ Eli
LOADER. LOADER.
Died, Died
without in the
issue, in lifetime
the life- of his
time father,
of his
father.
zabeth = (2)William John = Elizabeth
Died, married,
s.p., in zndly,
lifetime John
of his ILIFFE.
father.
Mary LOADER.
Died in in-
fancy after
surviving her
grandfather.
SEPT. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
181
Of Uxbridge and Hayes, Middlesex.
Elizabeth FROCKNER.
Married at Iver,
Bucks, 29 June
1724.
Edmund BAILEY == Mary
of Hillingdon j 2nd wife (?)
(Uxbridge), and i
later of Hayes
1 1
1 1 1
Mary =
= Edmund BAILEY = Mary HATCH. Joseph BAILEY.
Rachel. Bapt. at
1st wife.
of Hayes. Will 2nd wife. Bapt. at Hayes
Hayes March 1745.
proved June, 18 Feb. 1742,
Rebecca. Bapt. at
1805. (Prin. Named in
Hayes 2 8 Dec. 1750.
Registry.) brother's will.
Martha. Bapt. at
•• '
Hayes 2oOct. 1752.
. I
Edmund =
1 1
William — Mary,. Born ~
- William PONTIFEX,
BAILEY.
BAILEY. 23 Nov.
son of William and
Bapt. at
Bapt. at 1767. Mar.
Hannah of Beacons-
Hayes
Hayes at St. Bride's,
field and Iver, Bucks.
30 Mar.
1 1 May London,
Of London, £ffc.
1 760. Of
1766. 1 7 July 1 789.
Born 1766. Died
Louisville,
Of Hayes. Died 19 Mar.
1851.
Jefferson
Died/./. 1838. Bur.
City,
at St. John's,
Georgia,
Holloway.
U.S.
America.
/
/
x
I should be glad of more information about this family. — E.L.P.
182
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
I. John HARVEY, Captain of the Custom =p [Deborah. Buried at Wivenhoe,
House cutter " Jean Baptiste." Buried
at Wivenhoe, Ess., 24 Aug. 1 777, a. 93.
Ess., 21 Mar. 1755, a. 63 ?]
Daniel HARVEY, Commander of the= Elizabeth DRAPER of Monmouth or Herefordsh.,
Custom House cutter " Repulse."
Buried at Wivenhoe, 21 Feb. 1794,
a. 71.
gr. d. to Samuel PHILPOTT, of Irelesdee, St.
Weonard, Heref. He died 1773. She was buried
at Stanmore, Midd., 21 June 1806. [Married
about 1775 ?]
Who was the father of John HARVEY, and who his wife ? Where were they married ? Who was the
father of Elizabeth DRAPER ? A family tradition says she was married at St. Bride's, Fleet Street, but
a search made many years ago failed to find the marriage in the Register there.
II.
William THOMPSON of St. Katherine=Ann SWADDELL, related to James SWADDELL of
by the Tower, Surgeon. Will proved
7 May 1775 (209 Alexander).
Colnbrook, Bucks. She died 30 Sep. 1795, at
Holbeach, Lines., and was bur. there. Will pr.
21 Oct. 1795 (615 Newcastle). Aged 75.
William THOMPSON of=
Chudleigh, Devon,M.D., I
in 1792.
Thomas THOMPSON of
St. Katherine's, sailmaker,
in 1792.
Daniel THOMPSON of St.
Katherine's, surgeon, in 1792.
Under 20 in 1774.
A child
ob. inf.
John Torry ELLSTON. Born
at Holbeach, 15 Feb. 1786.
Buried 17 Feb. 1794.
Harriet Eleanor. Born at
Holbeach, 3 Jan. 1787.
Living in 1792.
Daniel HARVEY of Wivenhoe, mariner, was trustee to the will of William THOMPSON (1775)*
his will. How was he connected
III. John HARVEY. = . . . . Died
Living in 1727. I before 1727.
1 1
1 . .1
James HARVEY. = . . . John HARVEY of = Mary, dau.
I s a a c=. . . . William HARVEY
Died 1727-39.
Holbeach, Lines.,
of Gervase
HARVEY.
of Holbeach.
(probably).
grazier. Buried at
PALMER, of
Living in
Buried there
H., 28 Feb.
Holbeach.
1739.
20 June, 1730.
1739-40. Will
Buried there
Will proved at
proved at Lincoln,
9 June
Lincoln, 24 June
24 Apr. 1740. /./.
1728.
1730. s.p.
Esther.
William HAR-
Samuel
John HARVEY of=j=Mary ...
Isaac HARVEY of =Mary .
1739-
VEY. Buried at
HARVEY.
Holbeach,grazier
Buried
Holbeach, grazier.
Buried
H., 12 Jan.
Living
Buried at H., 3
at H.,
A minor in 1739.
at H.,
1746-7, a. 32
1739-
Sep. 1758. Will
1 7 Aug.
Buried at H., 18
6 Aug.
(probably) $.p.
proved 1 6 Oct.
1764.
June 1777. Will
1773-
1758.
proved 1777.
(295 Hutton).
(354 Collier).
Further information is wanted about John HARVEY, the first, and his son, Daniel HARVEY.
SEPT. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
•83
Daniel THOMPSON of St. Katherine =
by the Tower. Living 1783.
George THOMPSON, in the
East Indies in 1792.
Elizabeth. Married Ap.=Torry ELLSTON, of Holbeach,
1783. Lines., farmer. OfWisbeach,
merchant, in 1795-
.1
William ELLSTON.
Born 9 Jan. 1788.
Living 1792.
Daniel ELLSTON,
Born 2 1 May
1789.
1
Charlotte Ann.
Born 1 8 Jan.
1793-
Jol
Ba]
29
John Torry ELLSTON.
Bapt. at Holbeach,
29 Dec. 1794.
and also to the Marriage Settlement of Elizabeth ELLSTON, whose children are mentioned in
to the THOMPSON family ?
Daniel HARVEY. Joseph HARVEY. = Jane ABBOT. Mar-
Living in 1739. Buried at Hoi- ried at H., i Jan.
beach, 27 Sept. 1728-9. Buried at
1767. H., i Apr. 1760.
Mary, i739- = Robert CHAMBERLAIN.
Married before 1727.
Sarah, 1739.= — BELLOWS. Married
before 1727.
Easter, i739.=Thos. TODD of Spalding,
Lines. Married at Fleet,
4 Nov. 1734.
John. Joseph. Samuel. Bap.
Bap. Bap. Mar. May 173 3. Bur.
1730. i73I-2- May 1733.
1 . I
Daniel HARVEY. A minor = Susannah, William
in 1739. Of Holbeach, wid. of John HARVEY of
farmer and grazier. Buried GREEN of London,
atH., 30 May 1779. Will Terrington, butcher, in
pr. at Lincoln, 12 Aug. S.John,Norf. 1755.
1779. Perhaps a half-br. Mar. at H.,
to John. (/./>. probably.) 14 May
1764.
1 1
Esther = Lawrence Samuel HARVEY of
1764. STANROYD Holbeach, grazier,
of Buried at H., 27
Spalding, Mar. 1755. Will
currier, pr. at Lincoln,
1764. 6 July 1755. s.p.
G. S. PARRY, Lt.-Col.
184
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
front QUoffkr fo
William FORBES, tacksman, of Culmailie, = Ann, dau. of George GORDON, tacksman,
of Culmailie. Married before 1748. Served
heir of her brother Robert 24 May 1 769.
She died September 1800.
Anne FORBES. Born about 1754. Married
23 April 1772. Died at Aigburth, near
Liverpool. Buried in the SANDBACH vault,
St. George's, Everton, nr. Liverpool.
Elizabeth ROBERTSON. Born at Kiltearn 14
Dec. 1782. Married at Glasgow (by the
Revd. Mr. Robert BALSOM) i 5 Dec. i 802.
Died at Woodlands 26 Sept. 1859. Buried
at St. George's, Everton.
parish of Golspie, co. Sutherland.
The Rev. Dr. Harry ROBERTSON, minister;
of Kiltearn, co. Ross. Born at the Manse,
Kincardine 2 Nov. 1 748. Licenced to
preach by Presb. of Tain 28 June 1770,
Minister of Clyne i 77 i; of Kiltearn i 776.
Died 28 July 1815. Buried in the Robert-
son burial ground, Kiltearn. Eldest son of
Rev. Gilbert ROBERTSON, minister of Kin-
cardine, i 742-74, by his wife Christian
BAYNE.
Samuel SANDBACH of Woodlands, near;
Liverpool, and Hafodunos, N. Wales.
"Mayor of Liverpool; High Sheriff for co.
Denbigh 1839. A West India merchant.
Born 19 Aug. 1769. Bapt. at Tarporley,
Cheshire, 17 Sept. Son of Adam SAND-
BACH of Tarporley, yeoman, and Martha
OULTON his wife. Died at Woodlands 26
April 1851. Buried at St. George's, Ever-
ton.
John Abraham TINNE of Briarley, Aigburth, ;
nr. Liverpool, Esq., a merchant of Liver-
pool, D.L. and J.P. for co. Lancaster.
Born in Demerara 16 Feb. 1807. Died
at Briarley 20 Jan. 1884. Buried at St.
George's, Everton. He was elder son of
Philip Frederic TINNE of Demerara and
Anna his ist wife, dau. of William ROSE of
MontcofFer, co. Banff.
Henry Whitmore HARRISON of London,;
merchant, son of William HARRISON of 92
Westbourne Terrace, by Charlotte his wife,
dau. of William WHITMORE of the Apley
family. Died i 7 June 1 866. Buried at
Datchet.
Richard HEANE of Newport, Shropshire, = Hilda Margaret HARRISON. Married
solicitor. Died at Newport 3 Sept. 1903. I Oct. 1884.
Margaret SANDBACH. Born 8 Aug. 1811.
Married at Childwall 16 April 1833. Died
at Briarley 10 April 1868. Buried at St.
George's, Everton.
Emily Rose TINNE. Born 22 June 1838.
Married at St. Anne's, Aigburth, near
Liverpool, i 8 June 1857. Died at New-
port, Salop, 25 January 1911. Buried
there.
22
|. I Oct. li
Hilda HEANE.
SEPT. i9i i] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 185
Anne GORDON, Mrs. William FORBES, had two sisters: Grizel, wife
of D. SANDERSON in Cromarty, and Janet, widow, in 1769, of A.
SUTHERLAND of Torbreck.
William FORBES, tacksman of Culmailie, was gardener at Dunrobin
Castle, and seems to have been able to bring his children up well.
They were (besides Anne, Mrs. Harry ROBERTSON) William FORBES,
attorney-at-law in Barbadoes; died 9 February 1789, who had a son
at Eton; George FORBES, a planter in Tobago, married Miss CAMP-
BELL of Campbellstown; James FORBES; Duncan FORBES, died in the
West Indies; and Elizabeth FORBES, married, 16 November 1758, to
the Revd. George McCuLLocK, minister of Loth 1756-1800. SAGE
in his Mem. Dom. says, "the widow and daughters of Mr. McCuLLOCK,
formerly minister of Loth, lived at Kilmote when I was at Loth. The
old lady was very feeble, very good natured, very much addicted to
tea, and exhibited all the loquacity incident to narrative old age. Her
daughter Bell, equally loquacious, and, although considerably advanced
in years, had lost none of her tact in holding fast by one side of an
argument. Her sister Anne was an obsequious and zealous assentor
to any side of an argument which to her appeared to be the strongest."
Mrs. McCuLLOCK, who died 5 April 1814, had also two sons, Mr.
William, and George, a surgeon in the Berwickshire Militia.
Culmailie was a small house or cottage near Dunrobin Castle, and
is believed to be still standing.
The TINNE family came from Holland. Philip Frederic TINNE of
Demerara, who drew up the articles by which British Guiana was
ceded to the English, and who had been Secretary to the Dutch
Ambassador at the Court of St. James, was descended from Johan
Christoffel TINNE of The Hague, born at Blankenburgh, and his wife
(married at The Hague 3 January 1683) Margriet van GELSKERKEN,
bapt. at The Hague 16 January 1661, daughter of Harman van
GELSKERKEN and Anna van RENTEL his wife, married 1649. William
HARRISON, of 92 Westbourne Terrace, was the son of William
HARRISON, known as Justice HARRISON, who died 1812, who was son
of John HARRISON, schoolmaster at Hoghton Tower, Lancashire, son
of Richard HARRISON of Bankfield, yeoman. Nothing is known of
the earlier history of the GORDON and FORBES families, and any infor-
mation regarding them will be most welcome to
c i c RAYMOND TINNE BERTHON.
oelsey, bussex.
186
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
of
of
Readers of The Pedigree Register will remember that in September 1910
an article appeared under the heading of "Proposals for a Society of Genealogists."
It is with pleasure that we now inform them that the Society then contemplated
has been successfully formed, and that this Journal has been appointed its official
organ. In every future number we shall therefore be able to include a quarterly
report of the Society's progress.
Officers of the Society.
PRESIDENT : The Most Honourable William Montagu, Mar-
quess of TWEEDDALE, K.T.
VICE-PRESIDENTS : The Right Honourable John Allan, Baron LLAN-
GATTOCK.
The Marquis DE LIVERI ET DE VALDAUSA.
HON. TREASURER: Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
HON. SECRETARY : George SHERWOOD.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 1911-12.
Cyril Shakespear BEACHCROFT.
Charles Allan BERNAU.
WilliamBRADBROoK,M.R.C.S.
Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
Joseph Cecil BULL.
Frank EVANS.
Gerald FOTHERGILL.
James Reginald Morshead GLEN-
CROSS, M.A., LL.B.
George Frederick Tudor SHERWOOD.
Frederick Simon SNELL, M.A.
Charles William WALLACE, Ph.D.
LIBRARIAN-SECRETARY: Frank Ellis PRICE.
REGISTERED OFFICE AND ROOMS: 227 Strand (by Temple Bar), London,W.C.
FIRST QUARTERLY REPORT, SEPT. 1911.
In the autumn of 1910 a preliminary circular was issued setting forth the
desirability of forming a Society which would devote its energies and funds
more to collecting and indexing genealogical and topographical data than to
printing such matter. It was, and is, strongly felt by all experienced genealo-
gists that, though the Societies publishing annual volumes of Transactions are
doing excellent work, the value of their work in a manner decreases with every
volume they issue, for there are already more such volumes in existence than
the most energetic searcher can ever hope to consult, even should he be one of
the fortunate few who possess the key or have the time and opportunity for
making a thorough investigation of these interesting — but frequently costly —
volumes of Transactions, etc.
A body of fifty representative genealogists immediately signified their hearty
approval of the scheme outlined in the circular, and resolved to bring it to
maturity. At their expense the Society was duly incorporated, with licence of
SEPT.i9ii] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 187
the Board of Trade, on the 8th May, 1911, as an "Association not for profit,"
limited by guarantee (each member's liability, in the case of the winding-up of
the Society, being limited to £2) under the Companies (Consolidation) Act, 1908.
These fifty " Founders and Fellows," under the presidency of the Marquess
of Tweeddale, appointed eleven of their number to form an Executive Commit-
tee, on which the labour of organization has fallen.
A pamphlet of about forty pages describing in detail the scope of the Society
has been issued by the Executive Committee, and copies of it (free of charge)
may be had on application to the Hon. Secretary.
At the first general meeting, held on the 29th June at Prince Henry's Room,
Fleet Street, London, the Chairman (Mr. William BRADBROOK, M.R.C.S.,
F.S.G.) was able to announce that an income of more than ^200 was assured
for the first year's working. At the end of this report a complete list of
Founders, Fellows, Members and Associates, as on the I5th August, 1911, is
given.
One of the chief objects of the Society is to form a Reference Library of
printed books, chart pedigrees, manuscripts, etc., and many gifts have been re-
ceived from members of the Society and others towards this purpose. The
Annual Report for 1912 will contain a complete list of the Society's collections
with the donor's name against each item.
The Reference Library will also contain a great Consolidated Index to re-
cords of various kinds, and many of the members of the Society are already hard
at work preparing slips for inclusion in this Index, which will be so arranged
that it is always capable of having further material added to it.
This and all other work of the Society is carried on by means of Sub-Com-
mittees. Of these there are fourteen in course of formation and others are con-
templated. Three Sub-Committees are actively at work, viz. those on the " Con-
solidated Index," on " Parish Registers" and on "Family Associations." A full
account of the fourteen Sub-Committees will be found in the pamphlet to which
reference has already been made.
Honorary appointments are open to Fellows and Members to serve on any of
the Committees, or act as Local Secretaries for their respective counties, towns,
parishes or districts. Those interested in the branches of research with which
the Sub-Committees respectively deal are recommended to apply for election to
them, that they may at least lend aid with their counsel and advice if not able
to give active assistance. Inquirers desiring special information as to, for exam-
ple, Heraldry, Pedigrees already compiled, Monumental Inscriptions, Parish
Registers, Marriage Licences, School and other Registers, Migration and Change
of Residence, Local Records, will apply to the Hon. Secretary of the Sub-
Committee concerned.
As an example of the work being undertaken by these Committees, it may be
mentioned that the Committee on the Consolidated Index, having obtained official
permission to index will-registers at Somerset House, has six volunteers engaged
on the period 1790 to 1800 in the Prerogative Court, that being the first period
the Committee wishes to see indexed. The length of time the work will take
will naturally depend upon the number of those engaged on it, but of the urgent
need of its being taken in hand there can be no dispute.
i88 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT.i9n
Another Committee, i.e. that on Parish Registers, has a body of voluntary
helpers working on the printed and manuscript parish registers of Great Britain.
Each entry is being copied on a separate slip, and these will be placed alphabeti-
cally in the great Consolidated Index. More than a hundred parishes are
already having or have had their registers dissected in this manner for the
benefit of the Society's members.
It will be seen that with over a dozen Sub-Committees thus pouring index slips
into the great Consolidated Index, it is only a question of a short time before that
Index will supply at a glance more information about any given British family
than might be obtained in twelve months' searching through the national records.
Another object of the Society is to endeavour to secure by legislation and
other lawful means the preservation of records likely to be of service or interest,
whether the same be public records or documents in private possession, and par-
ticularly by urging upon the possessors or custodians of such records the necessity
or expediency of arranging, cataloguing, calendaring and indexing them, and
taking reasonable steps to ensure their protection from fire, injury or theft, and
to allow free and ready access to them. In this connection it may be noted
that the Rev. J. L. E. HOOPPELL, F.S.G., represented the Society at the Con-
gress of Archaeological Societies, held at Burlington House in July, and the
Congress " again decided to ask the Government to direct that arrangements
should be made by the authorities at Somerset House, so that access to all docu-
ments, ecclesiastical as well as probate records, for literary study, might be
given in the same way as at the Public Record Office."
The Annual Subscriptions to the Society of Genealogists are as follows :
"Fellows," elected from among the Members by the whole body of
Fellows, Two guineas per annum. Life composition, ten guineas.
"Members," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Life Composition, seven guineas.
"Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Cannot make Life Composition.
"Corresponding Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, Haifa
guinea per annum. Cannot make Life Composition. Must reside at
least 25 miles from London.
Fellows are entitled to receive quarterly from the Society advice of any fresh
information having accrued respecting certain specified families and places in
which they may be personally interested, the number of which is limited at
present to ten.
As an association "not for profit" (in a pecuniary sense) the Society relies
for increase of membership upon the efforts of individual members to make its
purpose known. If an average of only one new member be enrolled by each
present member, the Society will be established on a sound basis. A form of
application for membership is sent herewith.
SEPT.X9H] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
189
F. & F.=Founder and Fellow.
F. =Fellow by Election; L.F.=Life Fellow.
M. =Member; L.M.=Life Member.
A. =A9«ociate; C.A.=Corresponding Associate-
Herbert Foster ANDERTON, J.P. (F. & F.)
Kington BAKER. (F.)
Miss Katharine BATHURST. (M.)
A. R. BAYLEY, B.A., F.R.H.S. (F. & F.)
C. S. BEACHCROFT. (F. & F.)
F. C. BEAZLEY, F.S.A. (F. & F.)
Chas. A. BERNAU. (F. & F.)
James BERRY, M.B., B.S., F.R.C.S. (F.)
Samuel BIRCH AM. (F. & F.)
Revd. J. Harvey BLOOM. (M.)
Martin BLOXSOM. (C.A.)
Henry BODDINGTON, J.P. (F. & L.F.)
C. E. B. BOWLES, M.A., J.P., F.S.A. (F. & F.)
William BRADBROOK, M.R.C.S. (F. & F.)
W. A. BRIGG, M.A., LL.M. (M.)
Edgar Francis BRIGGS (F. & F.) Hon. Treasurer.
Sydney Chesshyre BRISTOWE. (F.)
Wm. Bradford BROWNE. (C.A.)
Revd. C. J. BUCKMASTER, M.A. (F. & F.)
Joseph Cecil BULL. (F. & F.)
Revd. L. C. W. BULLOCK. (M.)
J. C. BURROWS, B.A. (C.A.)
Arthur CARRINGTON, J.P. (F. & F.)
T. Stanley CLACK. (F.)
H. J. B. CLEMENTS, J.P., D.L. (F. & F.)
Wm. Henning CORKER. (C.A.)
Wm. Roberts CROW. (F. & F.)
Lady Elizabeth CUST. (F. & F.)
Marquis de LIVERI et de VALDAUSA. (F. & F.) Vice-
President.
Charles Holmes DENHAM, B.A. (L.F.)
Revd. H. L. L. DENNY, M.A. (F.)
Ronald DIXON, F.S.A.. F.R.G.S. (F. & F.)
Wm. Randall DUNN. (F.)
Frank EVANS. (F. & F.)
Capt. C. S. F. FERRERS. (M.)
Gerald FOTHERGILL. (F. & F.)
John GARFORD. (M.)
J. R. M. GLENCROSS, M.A., LL.B., F.S.A. (F. & F.)
W. V. S. Gradwell GOODWIN. (F. & F.)
Thos. Walter HALL. (F.)
Miss Alice M. E. HARFORD. (C.A.)
E. McC. S. HILL, Ph.C., &c. (F.)
Eduardo H. HILLMAN. (F. & F.)
F. K. HITCHING. (F. & F.)
Frederic de H. LARPENT. (F. & F.)
F. M. R. HOLWORTHY. (F. & F.)
Revd. J. L. E. HOOPPELL. (F. & F.)
Hon. C. S.lRBY,J.P.(F.&F.)
Lt.-Col. E. F. JEMMETT-BROWNE. (M.)
Norman LAMONT, D.L., J.P., F.S.A.Scot. (L.F.)
Right Hon. Lord LLANGATTOCK. (F. & F.) Vice-
President.
William de MANBEY. (C.A.)
Thos. Wm. MARLEY. (F. & F.)
G. G. MlLNER-GlBSON-CULLUM, M.A., &C. (F.)
O. E. MONNETTE. (M.)
Revd. Charles MOOR, D.D. (F.)
Fraulein Helene MOTHIRBY. (F.)
Alfred A. MUMFORD, M.D. (F. & L.F.)
O. A. R. MURRAY, C.B., M.A. (M.)
Col. G. F. NEWPORT-TINLEY, C.B. (C.A.)
Revd. W. M. NOBLE. (C.A.)
V. L. OLIVER. M.R.C.S. (F. & F.)
C. F. OSMOND. (F.)
Lieut. W. P. PAKENHAM-WALSH. (L.F.)
Edward Milward S. PARKER. (F. & F.)
Col. John PARKER, C.B., D.L., F.S.A. (F. & F.)
John PARKINSON. (F.)
Lt.-Col. G. S. PARRY. (F. & F.)
Geo. C. PEACHEY, M.D. (M.)
Cecil H. Sp. PERCEVAL. (F. & F.)
Major H. R. PHIPPS, R.F.A. (C.A.)
Cuthbert Becher PIGOT. (C.A.)
C. H. C. PIRIE-GORDON, M.A. (F. & F.)
H. A. PITMAN, M.A. (F. & F.)
H. G. PORTER. (F.)
R. C. McCrea POULTER. (F.)
Edgar POWELL. (F.)
Theodore J. PRESTON, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. (F. & F.)
Frank PROTHEROE. (F. & F.)
Capt. B. R. R. RAMBAUT, late R.A. (M.)
Wm. Ridley RICHARDSON, M.A. (L.M.)
The Baroness von ROEMER. (F.)
C. S. ROMANES, F.S.A.Scot. (F. & F.)
Joseph Hambley ROWE, M.B. (F. & F.)
Ashmore RUSSAN. (F.)
C. W. RUSTON-HARRISON. (F. & F.)
B. P. SCATTERGOOD, M.A. (F. & F.)
G. F. T. SHERWOOD. (F. & F.) Hon. Secretary.
Revd. C. P. SHIPTON, M.A. (F.)
Mrs. Wm. Gerry SLADE. (L.F.)
R. H. G. SMALLWOOD. (M.)
John Peter SMITH, J.P. (L.F.)
J. L. SMITHETT, J.P. (M.)
F. S. SNELL, M.A. (F. & F.)
F. Gelderd SOMERVELL. (F.)
S. R. STEVENTON. (M.)
J. Pirn STRANGMAN. (F.)
Mrs. A. STUART. (C.A.)
Mrs. M. Stanton TAYLOR. (F.)
G. P. TOWNEND. (L.F.)
Mrs. TREFFRY. (F.)
Joseph Herbert TRITTON. (F.)
Sir Thomas H. C. TROUBRIDGE, Bt. (F. & F.)
Revd. Joseph Brown TURNER, M.A. (F. & F.)
The Marquess of TWEEDDALE, K.T. (F. & F.) Presi-
dent.
Arthur Hearne TWEEDY. (F.)
Miss E. C. TYLER. (C.A.)
Prof. C. W. WALLACE, Ph.D. (F. & F.)
H. A. WHITCOMBE, M.B., Ch.B. (F.)
Sir H. A. WHITE, C.V.O. (F.)
B. W. M. WHITEHILL, A.C. (F.)
R. E. P. WINTON. (F. & F.)
Campbell WYNNE. (F. & F.)
Revd. Evelyn YOUNG. (F.)
i9o THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
Qtolt** Queries anb (Repfies*
THE MAN OF FAMILY. — Our friends across the water display, at least
in the current American literature which reaches us, so little of the kindly,
liberal spirit which animated Wendell HOLMES, that we think no apology is
needed for reminding our readers of his remarks on "family." We are, per-
haps, too apt to forget that this may still be the outlook of a large class of
American people, and our estimate of the national characteristics might be
modified accordingly.
Other things being equal, in most relations of life I prefer a man of
family.
What do I mean by a man of family? — Oh, I'll give you a general idea of
what I mean. Let us give him a first-rate fit-out; it costs us nothing.
Four or five generations of gentlemen and gentlewomen; among them a
member of his Majesty's Council for the Province, a Governor or so, one or
two Doctors of Divinity, a member of Congress, not later than the time of
top-boots with tassels.
Family portraits. The member of the Council, by Smibert. The great
merchant-uncle, by Copley, full length, sitting in his arm-chair, in a velvet
cap and flowered robe, with a globe by him, to show the range of his com-
mercial transactions, and letters with large red seals lying round, one directed
conspicuously to The Honourable, etc., etc. Great-grandmother, by the same
artist; brown satin, lace, very fine, hands superlative; grand old lady, stiffish
but imposing. Her mother, artist unknown; flat, angular, hanging sleeves;
parrot on fist. A pair of Stuarts, viz.: i. A superb, full-blown mediaeval gen-
tleman, with a fiery dash of Tory blood in his veins, tempered down with that
of a fine old rebel grandmother, and warmed up with the best of old India
Madeira; his face is one flame of ruddy sunshine; his ruffled shirt rushes out of
his bosom with an impetuous generosity, as if it would drag his heart after it;
and his smile is good for twenty thousand dollars to the Hospital, besides ample
bequests to all relatives and dependents. 2. Lady of the same; remarkable
cap; high waist, as in time of Empire; bust a la Josephine; wisps of curls, like
celery-tips, at sides of forehead; complexion clear and warm, like rose cordial.
As for the miniatures by Malbone, we don't count them in the gallery.
Books, too, with the names of old college students in them, — family names;
— you will find them at the head of their respective classes in the days when
students took rank on the catalogue from their parent's condition. Elzevirs,
with the Latinized appellations of youthful progenitors, and Hie liber est meus
on the title page. A set of Hogarth's original plates. Pope, original edition,
SEPT.i9n] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 191
15 volumes, London, 1717. Barrow on the lower shelves, in folio. Tillotson
on the upper, in a little dark platoon of octodecimos.
Some family silver; a string of wedding and funeral rings; the arms of the
family curiously blazoned; the same in worsted, by a maiden aunt.
If the man of family has an old place to keep these things in, furnished with
claw-footed chairs and black mahogany tables, and tall bevel-edged mirrors,
and stately upright cabinets, his outfit is complete.
No, my friends, I go (always, other things being equal) for the man who
inherits family traditions and the cumulative humanities of at least four or five
generations. Above all things, as a child, he should have tumbled about in
the library. All men are afraid of books, who have not handled them from
infancy. Do you suppose our dear didascalos over there ever read Poll Synopsis, or
consulted Castelli Lexicon, while he was growing up to their stature? Not he;
but virtue passed through the hem of their parchment and leather garments
whenever he touched them, as the precious drugs sweated through the bat's
handle in the Arabian story. I tell you he is at home wherever he smells the
invigorating fragrance of Russian leather. No self-made man feels so. One
may, it is true, have all the antecedents I have spoken of, and yet be a poor or
a shabby fellow. One may have none of them, and yet be fit for councils and
courts. Then let them change places. Our social arrangement has this great
beauty, that its strata shift up and down as they change specific gravity, without
being clogged by layers of prescription. But I still insist on my democratic
liberty of choice, and I go for the man with the gallery of family portraits
against the one with the twenty-five cent, daguerreotype, unless I find out that
the last is the better of the two. . . . But now observe this. Money kept for
two or three generations transforms a race, — I don't mean merely in manners
and hereditary culture, but in blood and bone. Money buys air and sunshine,
in which children grow up more kindly, of course, than in close, back streets;
it buys country-places to give them happy and healthy summers, good nursing,
good doctoring, and the best cuts of beef and mutton. When the spring
chickens come to market — I beg your pardon, that is not what I was going to
speak of. As the young females of each successive season come on, the finest
specimens among them, other things being equal, are apt to attract those who
can afford the expensive luxury of beauty. The physical character of the next
generation rises in consequence. It is plain that certain families have in this
way acquired an elevated type of face and figure, and that in a small circle of
city connections one may sometimes find models of both sexes which one of
the rural counties would find it hard to match from all its townships put
together. Because there is a good deal of running down, of degeneration and
waste of life, among the richer classes, you must not overlook the equally
obvious fact I have just spoken of, — which in one or two generations more
will be, I think, much more patent than just now."
192 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1911
Register " WooTTON," 1658, vol. ^, by William BRIGG, B.A. (14 Clifford's
Inn, E.G.), 1911, 4-to, pp. 169. Privately printed for the Subscribers.
Mr. BRIGG brings out another of these excellent volumes, which comprise
abstracts of every will, and not mere selections, proved in the Principal Court
in the year in question. The abstracts include every proper name of person
or place, of those which happen to be mentioned in no less than 772 wills,
and they are fully indexed. George OTTWAY of St. Olave's, co. Surrey, leaves
bequests to certain people, and to South Moulton, Devon, Rockburne in
Hampshire, and St. Olave's, Southwark, "as restitution made for wrong don (in
places forgotten) in the late warrs." In two wills "Naples biscuits" are
offered, Pecksniffian-like, as refreshment for the funeral guests. Amongst
unusual Christian names we find Gratian, Ithiell, Achilles, Filo-Christiana,
Prothera, Mellony, Docy, and a Samevell (Rigsby, Lines) suggestive of
DICKENS. "Lydia LAMKIN" (Twyford, Bucks) recalls the titles of books
dear to the childhood of our parents. To subscribers of half a guinea apiece
these volumes should prove a particularly good investment.
Genealogical Abstracts of PARRY Wills, proved in the Prerogative Court of Can-
terbury down to 1810 . . ., by Lieut. -Colonel G. S. PARRY. London: George
Sherwood, 227 Strand (by Temple Bar), 1911, 4-to, pp. 152. Price los. 6d.
This is a work on the same plan as Register " Wootton" just noticed, but
confined to testators and intestates of the surname PARRY, from 1488 to 1810.
The gist of no less than 689 wills and administrations is given, together with
complete indexes into which few could dip without finding something of value
and interest. Col. PARRY draws attention to the fact that servants are often
relations of testators, and that because a man is employed in trade, or is an
ordinary seaman, it by no means follows he is not of good family. We suspect
that deprecation of retail business — "Our people were never in trade," is a
mark by which one may certainly distinguish newcomers in the professions
who know very little about their "people" indeed.
The Pedigree Register
DECEMBER 1911] [VoL. II, No. 19.
tatt
anb
of
The Prerogative Court of Canterbury at all events takes us no
further back than 1383. Those curious for the earlier period have
the records of the Court of Hustings and some of the provincial
registries to fall back on to get some idea of the daily lives of the
people. True, the legal verbiage of these ancient documents does
not reveal much, except what may be seen, as it were, through the
chinks of their formal setting. The time is well contrasted with
Elizabethan and post-Reformation days, when man had found the
instinct of self-assertion, and no doubt the later sixteenth century
wills have more of the personal touch, the lay spirit, shall we say, of
the egoist, than the older writings, with which this paper is more
especially concerned. English folk as first and chiefly children of the
Church come forth in our study of these early testaments, some
details of which we have set forth below.
Dr. FURNIVALL'S First Fifty Wilh in the P.C.C. is concerned only
with those written in English. They are primarily learned excerpts,
instances in point for philology and the history of the English tongue,
which the antiquary reads for themselves, for their charm as for their
learning. Perhaps, too, by this time he has forgiven the erudite tran-
scriber's omission of the Latin wills, for there still remain for exploita-
tion these partly untouched mines of interest and "unpegged-out claims."
We have, at least, the priests to deal with, who all, or most of them,
drew up their wills and testaments in the official tongue, and a yeoman
or craftsman here and there, of worth and substance, who preferred to
commit his dying intentions to the writing-out of the curate — the
chief trustee of his wishes regarding his own soul or his kinsfolk's
temporal well-being.
The whiteness of the old vellum has gone murky with the march
of time, and the touch of, who shall say, what countless hands? The
rough-edged and crinkled sheepskins are without odour and the gloss
has gone with the years, but their glamour remains through all. So
with the sand, rough forerunner of our modern blotting-paper,
sprinkled by monkish fingers over the glistening ink, and now long
since sunk in the crannies of the binding, though I have shaken
out the crystals from less-used wills of a later date. Such are the
AA
i94 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEc.i9ii
records that lie before us, and with the qualifications noted at the
beginning of this paper, let us concede some little dryness (of the
wordy legal sort) in the making of these old wills. Looked-at from
the broader view, the generalizing eye, say of history, their value may
be quite tributary and relative (though one knows what pitfalls for the
student generalization has) ; their occasional theology, slight and formal
as it is in expression, but chips of scholastic moralia, mere holy pe-
dantry; for churchmanship and devotion a catalogue of vestments and
objects of ritual, lists of church "lights," sacred roods, high altars and
lesser chapels, and beside the frequent mention of nuns and friars,
seculars and sub-orders, some cousinly tributes to the testator's kins-
folk in religion, and lay relatives with a temporal interest in church
lands, or axes to grind in the way of ecclesiastical office. Yet what
more characteristic sources of reference for those days ? Such con-
temporary documents are shadowy but authentic reflections of times
and ways mediaeval. Somebody's essence of life and final word is
here, disguised maybe by legal and theological silver-paper. Thus
the preamble alone of the old wills, with its humble but graceful dedi-
cation of the writer's soul and all that is his "Deo omnipotenti Beatae
Mariae semper virgini et omnibus sanctis " (watered-down after the
end of Catholic rule in England to " In the name of God Amen ") is
evidence for the first place that the Church held in men's minds. It
is allowable to think that the " good father, affectionate husband and
faithful friend " standard of excellence, was only a secondary point (as
a recommendation), in the view of the departing sinner who paid these
formal tributes to the company of Heaven.* The unsophisticated
testator or his clerkly deputy, along with the better instructed, just
wrote in the pious phrase all that was in his mind; and his devotion to
the unseen host, with what subjective concept of winged angel or mist-
clothed cherub Church art had stamped on his intelligence, was as real
as his more material wishes in the way of bolls of wheat to church
lights and altars, and bequests of jewelled vestments for the service of
the sanctuary. One can appreciate this spirit, with indulgence of
another kind for the pathetic inventories of later days, of " the kowe
with the white spot," " Old Cherry " the mare, " ij brasse ketylls and
a potte " and a gift of" iij stor pigges and a ewe lambe."
It is for the student to lighten-up by what imagination he has his view
— for in conception it is the appropriateness of the particular view that
tells — of these hints and shadows of a long-gone past; though it may
* It would seem, too, that testators had not much chance of practising those virtues,
as, to judge by the frequent references to their children as minors, their stay on this earth
must have been a brief one. This is a curious fact, not to be explained by the thinning
processes of war or other causes, as the apparently early demise of testators continued
down to even later times.
DEC.I9II] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 195
not be given to all of us to get as near to an adequate understanding of
mediaeval times, to such zeal and knowledge, for instance, as brighten
up those documents of another sort, under the abstruse learning and
kindly handling of that earnest antiquary, Dr. Augustus JESSOPP, who
has made to live again for us and for the general reader, in some back
pages of the Nineteenth Century, the social and ecclesiastical surround-
ings of old village life.*
The first thing that strikes us in these early wills then is their church
interest. One is carried back to a time when the prosaic (alike with
the denouement) was for the hereafter ; the consideration a post-mortem
one, and immortality as such the business, and not the fleeting
everyday world: mankind resting in gremio ecclesi<ey and all-pervad-
ing mother church not only a sentinel at the three great events in life,
but guide and protector to the individual soul in all its earthly wander-
ings.f So, the churches, with brotherhoods, guilds and all things that
looked to ecclesiastical guidance, come in for special mention in the
wills of the time, with occasional, but by no means negligible references
to books and other matters.
I have among my papers some scores of abstracts of these early wills,
the results of spare time put in on odd mornings at Somerset House.
I bore my transcripts away for digestion and translation, and knocked
out the meaning of them at home with the aid of one Ducange, his
Dictionary of" Middling and infamous Latin." (This neat distortion,
by the way, is the late Cardinal WISEMAN'S, and he ought to have
known.)J
But what ingenious fellows these old scholars of the cloister must
have been; the diligent helpers of a sort of linguistic evolution, with
their diminutives and strange inflexions, their new-coined words,
and power of twisting the old roots ad hoc. Esperanto is nursery
fooling to it. True, there was a big heritage for each generation of
workers (without resorting to our modern gift of slangy compromise),
the old language as used by the Fathers, the canon law and the com-
mentaries on both to expound to moving generations, with daily
examples for the devout in the word-forms of the breviary.
* Now collected in volume form, as The Coming of the Friars, Studies by a Recluse,
etc., etc. I do not forget the learned researches of Father GASQUET, but to Dr. JESSOPP
we must go for charm. '* •f-
t Readers will remember wat,,this aspect of the church has been drawn out in a
beautiful essay of J. A. FROUDE'S, evidently written before his break with the Oxford
Movement, and the aggressive cynScisfci which shows up in his later remarks on the
Roman system. See a paper in his Short Studies on Great Subjects, later essays of which
contain some ruthless attacks on the Church as it was at the Reformation.
J Dinner table-talk noted in Wilfrid WARD'S Life of Wiseman,
196 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1911
From the opening lines of the will of John de WALTHAM, Bishop
of Salisbury (1395)* we take the following passage: "The condition
of the human race in this lower valley of tears being ever one of
changeless fatuity, is not accounted as a fixed abiding state, forasmuch
as being in a state of perpetual motion it continually glides on by the
hidden and unnoticed passage of time to the end preordained to it by
nature, and returneth not. And such as pretend that substance is of
the nature of sense, strive for the non-existent, the prophet testi-
fying that because man was made like unto vanity, coming up as a
flower, he quickly withereth away, and his days pass away as a
shadow ..." and so on. I think that is a fair rendering of the
crabbed old lines. We recognize our prophet in the concluding
words, and it is for the learned to say what particular scholastics they
were who had mixed ideas about substance. Well, the sentiments
are right enough, and straightforward, but one could wish that the
testator had let himself go a little more. However, there was the
business of bequests, personal and otherwise, to deal with, and so
the rest of the will is taken up with curious references to church
vestments and ornaments,f the gatherings presumably of a long life,
and gifts, bestowed, no doubt, at priestly jubilees and commemora-
tions. All of these costly goods were for churches in need of them
(eccijs indigentibs], monasteries, friaries, and nunneries. Cecily, the
writer's sister, comes in for ^20, a basin and a ewer of silver and a
robe lined with fur; her husband is John MOIGNE; her son, Thomas.
All lands of the inheritance of Joan the daughter and heiress of Robert
GREY of Rotherfield, said Joan being under twenty-one and unmar-
ried, to go to his nephew John de WALTHAM. The testator's sister
Joan completes the small list of relatives, and at the end of the will
directions are given for the setting up of inscriptions to the writer's
father and mother. Other bequests are mainly to religious, whose
names are stated, including donations to " my lord the King " and the
two Archbishops.
The will of William AYSCOUGH, another Bishop of Salisbury (1449)^
is interesting for its gifts of books and manuscripts to the Cathedral
Library, including "a new ordinal according to the use of Sarum."
What, one wonders, was " pupilla odi" a book which goes to Sir
Thomas BIRDFORD, the latter probably a priest? Relations mentioned
are, nephew Master Robert AYSCOGH ; nephew Mr. William AYSCOGH;
John AYSCOGH my brother and Matilda his wife; sister Joan;
* Register Rous, fo. 5.
t The actual inventory of these is given in another document " acquietencia de legatis
solutis," etc., at the end of the will,
t Register Rous, fo. 12.
Dic.i9ii] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 197
William TENDERYNG, Esq., and Margaret his wife my niece; Katharine
AYSCOGH, nun of Shaston; Willm AYSCOGH, judge, and Eliz. AYSCOGH
his wife; Elizabeth AYSCOGH, nun of Synethayte and Parnell (Pet-
ronilla) her mother; Elizabeth, daughter of my sister Elizabeth
TURPYN; John TURPYN my nephew; nephew Cristofer AYSCOGH
and Thomas AYSCOGH my kinsman, to his marriage.
The will of John PHILIPP, knight (1415), is worth noting for its
mention of some of the CHAUCERS, though whether of the poet's
family I cannot say. They are, "Thomas CHAUCERS my brother,"
and allusion is made to the testator's mother, wife of Thomas
CHAUCERS, evidently father of the first-named Thomas. A. long
codicil written in Norman-French follows (a translation of which I have
not attempted) though I have a transcript. There is a familiar look
about the start, "Sachent touz genez moy Johan PHLIPP," but then
come the clouds (!) with occasional glints of sound but arid detail,
like " manoir," "apptenncez," "a ses hers males de sonn corps."
Such things keep up one's courage, but the crux is open* to the
first bid.
As to Geoffrey CHAUCER, there is an interesting reference to him in
the will of Richard SOTHEWORTH, clerk (Vicar of Steventon, Berks),
who gives to John STOPYNDEN " quendam libru' meu' de Cant'bury
Tales."* This was in 1417, and as the poet died in 1400 it is early
mention of the " Tales." STOPYNDEN and his bequest still remain to
trace — perhaps the precious parchment even now reposes in one of
our old libraries. STOPYNDEN himself is not to be found in the P.C.C.
calendars, but bibliographers may find him interesting enough to
search for elsewhere. SOTHEWORTH speaks of a few other books, as
" statuta nova & Regr'm novu' cu' meliori basalardo meo huesiato " —
basalardo I take to mean "poniard" (his" best "f one, observe). An
odd company these things, and a hint of times when cassock and
rochet were sometimes thrown aside for a coat of mail; maybe the
shining dirk hung on the wall by the antlers or other restful trophies
of the field; or was the basalardo huesiato\ for home use down the
country lanes, where some graceless marauder might be waiting for
the good father with the weekly " collection," or perhaps his reverence
took journeys to London and elsewhere? St. Dunstan's, Fleet Street,
* I offered this item to "2V. & Q." and it duly appeared, "but no one seemed one
penny the worse" (or better). Perhaps the bibliographers had got hold of the detail
before me.
t Literally, of course, "better," but I find the comparative constantly used in this
sense in the wills — French influence, perhaps.
t This last word, by the way, baffles me, though copied aright from the original, I
think, and Ducange is apparently no good.
198 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DE
and the London friars he names specifically, and there would be the
long jaunt with its wayside perils lurking in the thickset copse, and
the hidden chances of the nearest wood.*
Here is a definite order for a "brass." William BAILLY, citizen
and linendraper of London (1437),! "marble stone to lie over my
grave in said church of blessed Mary of Abbechurch, London . . .
engraved with the image of St. Thomas the Martyr in latten (auricako\
and with an image of the aforesaid William BAILLY and of the said
Thomasine formerly my wife kneeling and praying, with a scroll
(schedule — cedula), inscribed with our names, to the aforesaid image of
St. Thomas." The latter we know was then the special saint of all
patriotic Englishmen, and BAILLY, doubtless a fervid client (speaking
of another church), asks his executors to " represent and adorn in a
picture the lower panel of the high altar in the chancel of said church
of lambhith (Lambeth) with the Assumption of the blessed and
glorious Mary in the centre and an Image of St. Thomas the martyr
on one side and an Image of St. Katherine on the other side." I am
afraid this panel must have gone long since.
Such things are the aura of old-time study, the surviving data for
a period when life was simpler, and faith, in a sense, more real than
now; when (on the secular side) feudalism was the discipline of life
for all, as it is at this day — for the young — in our public schools; the
supernatural a matter of course, and the evidence for a miracle on all
fours with the magic of a flower's growth or the sure wonder of the
coming dawn; when an eye to this world and prudence as to the other
rested on a due cultivation of the members of the heavenly host, with
material tributes to their temples and to the hierarchy here on earth.
So much for the religious reality of the time, constantly borne witness
to by these documents, and especially marked out by the results of
scholars' researches in the history of the guilds.
The sumptuary laws in vogue, through part of the mediaeval
period, must only have taken account of extravagances, and were as
ineffectual to sweep aside the revelry in colour and fashion as a
modern edict might be if launched against some of our hat vagaries of
1911, and it would require more space than a paper of this sort to set
down the items of costume, lay and ecclesiastical, occurring in almost
every will. It would seem that once-worn garments were serviceable
as such, and manifestly there was little market for old clothes in the
* For comment see M. JUSSERAND'S English Wayfaring Lije in the Middle dgft, which,
incidentally, gives some exciting reasons for the clearing of the bush on either side of the
great roads.
t Register Luffenam, fo. 22.
DEC.I9H] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 199
local "Jewries," when fur-lined cloaks, costly gowns and jewelled
tunics came down, with other heirlooms, from generation to generation.
What has become of all the manuscripts named in the testaments?
Where are the early copies of chronicles, laws and statutes constantly
alluded to? For it is probable that the oaken shelves of Duke
Humphrey, or the recesses of the Cambridge University Library, can
hold but a tithe of these mediaeval treasures, chief successors though
they are of the old monastic collections.
The ruffians of Elizabeth and Edward VI have been indicted long
since for their smashings and irreverences on the change of religion,
and every one knows the tale of ecclesiastical pillage of later times that
has been put down to the Protector and his fanatics. And so one
might go on speculating, did we not recognize, with some satisfaction
perhaps, that philosophy is an indulgence, and not the main task, that
this is the generation of the collector; our toil for the historian, for
whom material is being gathered. Nowadays the latter needs be " scien-
tific," and what we add for his arrangement and discernment, by way
of careful copy or indexed transcript, is part of the labour done.
Finally, it is much to be desired that some zealous student, well-
versed in such things, should undertake the full transcription,
translation and editing of one at least — say Rous — of these early
Registers; or it might be a worthy project for some learned Society,
so full as these wills are of details of etymology, book-lore, genealogy,
costume, and social and ecclesiastical history.
F. S. SNELL.
200
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1911
. EDY =
Ewode EDY of London, draper. Will dated 2 Sept.
1447; pr (P.C.C.). Mentions St. Swithin's
church, London, St. Giles, Stony Stratford [Bucks], etc.
[? Thomas] EDY
of London, ci tizen
and clothworker.
Agnes.
John EDY. Will dated "at Malattisde Stony-stratford " 20 Sept. = Jane [? Joan], Died
1487; proved at Lambeth 12 June 1488. (P.C.C.)
before 1487.
James EDY. Proved his
father's will in 1488.
Edmond EDY.
William EDY = Avine [? Avice or Alice].
John EDY = Joan.
I
James EDY of Stony = Philippa
Stratford, Esquire.
Will dated 2 7 June,
proved 2 August
1493. (P.C.C.)
r
Elizabeth. Mar. John PYGOT
[2nd son of Richard P., of
Little Horwood, by Joane,
dau. of Paul DAYRELL of Lil-
lingstone Dayrell].
Margaret.
Mar. William
SHURLEY.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 201
of (gucta <m*> (ttorfflanfe.
"'In 1460 (i Edw. IV.) George de LOUGHTON and Arnethan his
wife' " (see Pedigree Register, II. 175), " 'passed a fine of the Manor of
Loughton Parva, in order to convey it to a purchaser'; and in the
seventh year of that reign (1487) it was conveyed in pursuance thereof,
to Thomas EDY of Stony Stratford, from whom it passed to James
EDY, who in 1493 gave this Manor by will to Philippa his wife, soon
after which it was held by John EDY, whose daughter Isabell carried
it by marriage to John PIGOTT of Beachampton, son of Richard PIGOTT
of Ripon, in Yorkshire, who was a younger brother of that family."
"In 1467 (7 Edw. IV.) John EDY of Stony Stratford, Esq., con-
firmed to Richard, Earl RIVERS, Sir Richard RIVERS his son, etc., his
Manor of Loughton, which he had of the gift and feoffment of John
BOTELER, clerk, and other feoffees of George LOUGHTON and Arnethan
his wife, dated 4th. April, 1460."
"In the same year Loughton Parva passed to James EDY of Stony
Stratford, whose granddaughter, Isabell, carried it in marriage to John
PIGOT of Beachampton."
LIPSCOMB, in his History of Bucks, from which the above is mostly
taken, speaks of William EDY and Thomas OVENDEN owning messuages
in Stony Stratford, Calverton, Wolverton, etc., circa 1401, and subse-
quently refers to William EDY as of London (1439), coupling his name
with John EDY and John EDY, Junr.
William EDY and Avice his wife are referred to in a will of James
EDY (1493) as his "progenitors," whilst John EDY and Joan are re-
ferred to as his parents.
There is no will traceable of William EDY or of his wife, but there
is one of the (presumed) son John EDY (dated 20 Sept. 1487), who
speaks of his wife Jane and of sons James and Edmund, who were to
be his executors, and mentions his Manor of Loughton and lands in
"North Croule, Bucks." This will was proved in London I2th June
1488 (P.C.C. 14 MILLES) by James EDY, the son and executor. Was
Edmund then deceased?
John EDY, who in his will desired to be buried in the churchyard ot
St. Mary Magdalene, appears as a contributor to the building of St.
Giles, Stony Stratford, the church of Calverton, the church of Waddon,
the church of Beachampton, the Prior and convent of Snelsale, the
church of Loughton, the Prior and convent of Bradwell, the church of
Walverton, the church of Cosgrave, Fortlie, Passenham and Wykyn.
BB
202 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEc.i9n
Then follows the will of James EDY, described as of Stony Stratford,
Esquire, dated 2yth June, 1493 (P.C.C. DOGETT 28), desiring to be
buried in the chapel of St. Mary Magdalene there. By this will it would
seem that John PIGOT'S wife was Elizabeth EDY, and not Isabell, as
stated in the pedigree of PIGOT of Beachampton and Loughton.
There is yet another will of an earlier date (2nd Sept. 1447-26 Hen.
VI.) that of Ewode EDY, described as a draper of London, who left
bequests to St. Swithin's Church, London, to the building of the chapel
of St. Giles, Stony Stratford, the Prior of Snellyshale, the Prior of
Bradwell, the building of the chapel of Calverton and the chapel of St.
Mary Magdalene, Stony Stratford. This will (P.C.C. 28 LUFFENAM)
is much faded, but enough is disclosed to show that he had a sister
Agnes and a brother, possibly named Thomas, described as a "citizen
and clothworker of London."
A Thomas EDY is described by LIPSCOMB as the first (£DY) owner
of the manor at Loughton Parva, etc. He conveyed it to John EDY,
but whether as uncle or brother is not disclosed. It is more than likely
that Ewode and Thomas EDY were brothers to William, but this is a
question to be decided by further search.
The name in these three wills is uniformly spelt EDY — whilst the
name Henry EDYE, a Rector of Beachampton (1470-1490), is so sub-
scribed, a circumstance, however, which the Editor tells me is of no
significance.
There was formerly in the east window of Beachampton church glass
inscribed to the memory of" Thome EDIE et Agnetis uxor," with the
arms "Bendy Lozengy Arg. and S ( ?)," (LIPSCOMB'S History of Bucks.
II, 532), whilst " in the north Isle on the pavement was an antient
stone thereon the Effigies of a man and woman in brass, underneath
this inscription on a brass plate being very much worn — Orate pro
anima Johannis EDY et Alicie uxoris Eius qui obijt XVIII de Januarias
(sic) Anno domini MCCCCLXI quorum animabus propicietur deus."
(MS. Willis 100, Parochial History of the Hundred of Newport,
Bucks.)
As far as can be traced Ewode EDY left no issue, nor did probably
Edmund the son of John, seeing that his sister Elizabeth carried the
family property to the PIGOTS.
Of Thomas EDY the clothworker we have no record ; the family
appears to have survived in Northamptonshire, as may be seen from
the entries in the marriage registers of Burton Latimer, as shown here-
under, whilst there are other references at Kettering and in the North-
ampton Registers.
DEC. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 203
A study of the will of John EDY throws some doubt on the accuracy
of the Pedigree of the PIGOTS of Beachampton,as set forth in LIPSCOMB'S
Bucks (11.527). It is therein stated that John PIGOT of Beachampton,
son of Richard PIGOT of Little Horwood, married " Isabella, sole
daughter and heir of John EDY of Stony-Stratford." As a matter of
fact, John EDY had no daughter of that name — neither did the PIGOTS
apparently inherit as LIPSCOMB sets forth.
After making certain bequests, John EDY, who in his will does not
mention his daughters Elizabeth and Margaret, bequeaths the residue
of his property to his sons James and Edmund. Both lived to
inherit — but apparently Edmund died before the demise of his brother
James, who in his will does not refer to his brother, but devises all
his real estate to " my said wife, her heirs, etc." John EDY had two
daughters Elizabeth and Margaret — the former married to John PIGOT
and the latter to William SHURLEY ; and according to the terms of their
brother's will, the reversion of the estate at the mother's death was to
pass "to John PYGOT and Elizabeth his wife my sister and William
SHURLEY and Margaret his wife my sister and their heirs." As the
will was signed 2yth June, and proved 2nd August 1493, ^s evident
Margaret SHURLEY was alive at the first named date, although she may
have been deceased at the second.
Marriages at Burton Latimer.
John COPE & Alis EDYE, m. 2Oth. July 1539.
John EDYE & Esabell ADCOKE, m. 26th. Nov. 1545.
William EDYE & Elizabeth (MANNING?) m. yth. Nov. 1547.
John WORLEY & Esabell EDYE, m. 27th. Nov. 1547.
John GLOVER & Mary EDYE, m. i4th. Nov. 1558.
I shall be glad of any additional information concerning the family.
L. EDYE, Lieut-Col.
30 St. James Street,
Montreal, Canada.
204
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
[DEC. 1911
of <gorfi00ire,
EmmaCowopp(p) Bd = Revd Oliver CARTER, B.D., a famous Puritan Divine. Born c. 1540 at
Manchester Church I Sl John's, and Senior Fellow of Manchester Collegiate Church. (For his
April 21, 1590. I vol. ix.) Burd in choir of Manchester Cathedral. Will proved at Chester
r
Sarah. Born
at Manches-
ter 1573.
1
Dorothie. Born
at Manchester
1575-
Abraham CARTER of Blackley, Lanes. Bap1 8 June=
1578 at Manchester. Will proved 1620 (Chester
Registry).
-Joan
BOLTON.
John CARTER. Men-
tioned in gr. father's will.
I
Peter CARTER.
In father's will.
Alice. In
father's will.
Mary. In
father's will.
Abraham CARTER.
In father's will.
Gilbert CARTER Esq., of Annaghkeene, Lough Corrib, co. Galway, Quartermaster in = Rebecca ....
1664 to Sir Oliver ST. GEORGE'S Troop of Royal Irish Horse (cf. Ormonde Papers), survived her hus-
Buried in Headford Church, co. Galway. Will pr. 1680 (Tuam Diocese). band.
, I
George CARTER.
Heir mentioned
in father's will.
D. s.p.
John CARTER of Annaghkeene. — Mary, dau. of Major Thomas BELL, of Streams-
Subsidy Comr for co. Galway
1698. Died about 1734, in-
testate.
town, co. Mayo, and his wife Elizabeth, dau. of
Henry CROFTON, senior, of Mohill, co. Leitrim.
Mary CARTER'S will proved 1747 (Tuam).
1
.1 n
Oliver CARTER, =. . . . Gilbert CARTER,;
junior. Matric. of Dublin, gent.
T.C.D.; B.A.
= Cath., dr. of Revd Revd Oliver CARTER. Sch. T.C.D. ;=
Joshua WARREN, B.A. 1734. Born 1707 at Galway.
Dub. Marr. Lie. Preb. of Tulla, co. Clare, 1764; of
1736. Grange, co. Rose., 1732. Died at
Lismeen, co. Clare, 1768, s.p. W.
pr. 1768 (Irish Prerog.).
I734--
Joshua CARTER, Dublin. Born=Ann, da. of Caleb WARREN, of
c. 1732. s.p. W. p. 1800. Dublin. Marr. Lie. 1753.
John. Theophilus. Mary.
I
John CARTER of Annaghkeene. Died — Rebecca, eldest dau. of George GERRY, Mayor of Galway.
1 744. Buried in Headford Church,
co. Galway. W. dat. 20 Jan. 1744.
M.L. 31 Decr 1735. Buried in Headford Church. W. pr.
1751 (Tuam). Her mother was Rebecca, dau. of Thos.
SIMCOCKS, Mayor of Galway.
- 1 1
George CARTER. Gilbert CARTER. Born
Born c. 1736. 1737. Ensign 29th Ft.
Died s.p. 1 3 Feb., i 762. d. s.-p.
John BARRETT, =
of Loughrea,
co. Galway.
= Mary CARTER.
Born 1738.
Marr.Sep. 1769.
\
John Carter BARRETT==. . . .
1
George Carter BARRETT.
Gilbert Carter BARRETT, B.A., T.C.D. 1845.
George CARTER of=
Annaghkeene.
Born 1 740. Living
April 17, 1778, in
parish of St. An-
drew's, Dublin.
A
- Dorothea, dau. of Joseph CHAMBERS of
Wexford and co. Meath, by his wife
Mary, eldest dau. of Revd. Stafford
LIGHTBURNE, of Trim, who marrd. in
1766 Hannah, dau. of Willoughby
SWIFT, Dean Swift's first cousin.
\
1
Oliver CARTER=
of Dublin,
winemchl,and
after of co.
Leitrim. Died
c. 1804.
/
= Mary, dau. of John
ECCLES of Kevinport,
Dublin, & of Leitrim,
heiress to her bro.
James ECCLES of Lei-
trim. Married I 770.
a a
bb
DEC.I9H] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
an*
Rokeby, Richmondshire (matric. Regr, Sl John's, Cambridge.) Fellow of=Ales ASCROPTE (?)
life cf. Trans. Cheetham Soc., vol. — , pp. 128-132, and D.N.B.,
4 April 1605.
205
Revd John CARTER. Bapt. 26 Feb. 1581 at Manchester. Ordained=. . . .
c. 1604. A noted Puritan Preacher in Ireland. Vic. Choral of Christ dr. of
Church, Dublin, 1606. Preb. Sl Michan's, Dublin, 1607; elected . . . .
Chanter's Vicar Choral and Preb. of Christ Church, Dublin, 1608. DENI-
Deprived for nonconf. 1613. Probably Rector of Killucan, Dio. Meath, SON.
1622. "A godly Preacher." [It is believed that this John CARTER was
father or grandfather of Gilbert CARTER. But Irish Records are very
deficient, so that proof is lacking and desired.]
Thomas
CARTER.
B. 1583
at Man-
chester.
D. young.
u
Mary.
Rebecca,
d. young.
ront rouyh. skeUJi gf
Seal on. Will cf
Gilbert Porter of Jl-nn.aghJ<etne
Aattd /680.
1 1 III
1 1 1
"1
Oliver CARTER. Subsidy =. . . . Thomas=. . . . Sarah.
Olivia.
Robert
BELL of =Elizabeth
Comr 1698, for co. Gal-
CARTER
Rebecca.
Ellen.
Parance, co. Marr.
way. Prob, same as
of co.
Katherine.
Jane.
Mayo.
1699, as
O.C. Quartermaster h.p.
Galway.
2nd wife.
MORRIS' Dragoons, 1715.
(i) Diana Alicia, Lady AYLMER.
Dr Matthew=p(i) Elizabeth RAY.
John, =
= Mary
Elizabeth,
Marr. Lie. Novr 1732. W.
CARTER, of
Marr. at Sl. An-
draper,
CROAS-
married
p. 1748.
Dublin. Born
drew's Church.
Dublin.
DAILE.
— SWAN-
(2) Mary, dr. of DrThos. BELL,
c. 1710.
1736.
Marr.
WICK, of
and widow of Lynden BELL.
Died 1782.
(2) Grace KENNEDY.
Lie.
co. Mayo.
She died 17 June 1770.
1754-
George. B. 1 740.
D. 1769.
Thomas. Robert.
B. 1753-
Wm. Hugh CROTHERS= Jane Caspar WILLS, =Cath.
_ I 1765-
Elizth. Matthew.
Revd Oliver CARTER. = Mary, da. of Richd WILSON, and sister and coheir
•
Arthur
Edward =Cath-
Born 1707. B.A.,
of Counsellor Joseph WILSON of Ballymoat, psh of
CARTER.
FYNN, of
erine.
T.C.D. 1734. Rector
Tuam, co. Galway. Marr. c. 1739. Died 18 Feb.
Died
Mirehill,
of Knockmark, co.
1770 in Dublin. W. pr. 6 March 1770 (Irish
1743-
co. Gal-
Meath,i747-65.Died
Prerog.). "A most tender parent and affectionate
way.
18 Jan. 1765.
friend" (The Dublin Journal).
I
I
John FYNN. Anne. Rebecca.
Arthur Langford
CARTER of Dublin.
W. pr. 1776.
= Elizabeth
JONES (?)
John CAMP- =
BELL.
= Anne.
Marr. 1765.
W. pr. 1805.
Thos. PHEPOE =
of Dublin,
1764.
= Elizabeth.
W. pr. 1798.
Died at Bristol
David CAMPBELL. Samuel. Bap. Sl Mary's, Dublin, 1765. daur. — GoNNE = Elizabeth
2O6
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1911
a \ a
I I 2
Deborah, dau. of =j= Willoughby Harcourt CARTER of= Frances
John LlGHTBURNE
of Wexford.
Married 20 Aug.
1792.
Annaghkeene. Bapt. 1767 at Sl Elizabeth
Andrew's, Dublin. Of Dublin, PAXTON.
solicitor, and of New Park, Still- Married
organ, co. Dublin. Died 1854. 1834.
Will pr. Dub. 1854.
Oliver CARTER of= Eleanor, dau.
Charleston, South of John
Carolina, U.S.A. LIGHTBURNE
Bapt. 20 July 1 768 of Wexford.
at S* Andrew's,
Dublin.
Joshua CARTER, a Writer of Hon. East India Co. in=Emily Agnes, dau. of Duncan CAMPBELL, of In-
Bengal, 1808-1837. Died 1866 at Pau, in France. verail, and Ross, N.B. Married 1817 in India.
Captain Willoughby Harcourt CARTER, of Annaghkeene. Born==Eliza, dau. of G. PALMES of Naburne
1821. Educated at Harrow, 1834. Capt. 7th Royal Fusiliers. I Hall, York. Born 1830. Died23jan.
Lived at Folkestone till his death, in Oct. 1900, in his 79* year. I 1903 in her 73rd year.
Willoughby Harcourt CARTER. Born
1854. Went to Queensland in 1878.
Living 1903, unmarried.
Colonel Duncan Campbell CARTER, C.B., = Grace, daughter
late Royal Artillery, now Com. London
City Artillery. Born 1856.
of
COLLI!
Dennis Willoughby CARTER.
Born 1907.
b\ b
Revd James CARTER, S.C.L. (son of Oliver CARTER and his wife Mary ECCXES). Born in co. Leitrim.
Matric. at St. Alban's Hall, Oxon., 17 Nov. 1806; oldained deacon Wells, 7 Oct. 1807; priest 1808;
1814; P.C. Sl Augustine's, Bristol, 1823; Vicar of Bathford, Diocese of Bath and Wells, 1824. Died
Revd Eccles James CARTER. Born 1812. Matric. Exeter Coll., Oxon., 1830; B.A. 1834;
Curate of Slimbridge, Glouc., 1835; Minor Canon, Bristol; Vicar of Kingston, Somerset,
Mary. Born Agnes. Born Eccles James CARTER, formerly = Emily Georgina Isabel, dau. of John
Died 1 9 Feb.
1878.
Died 23 Feb.
1894.
of Southend, Essex, now of Pearl-
haven, Canford Cliffs, Bourne-
mouth. Born Oct. 22, 1854.
I
Eccles James CARTER.
Born 21 Sept. 1891.
I
Mary Beatrice. Born
17 Oct. 1893.
Cowper MEE, solicitor, of East Ret-
ford, Notts. Married 26 April 1 890,
at S' Peter's, Bournemouth.
Winifred Mary. Born
9 April, 1897.
DEC. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
207
I
hn CARTER. Died s.p. Howard DOWKER.
Henry FLEETWOOD= Dorothy.
r
r
I
Howard
DOWKER. = Sarah FLEET-
George FLEET- .
. . STEWART= Henrietta.
WOOD. 1825.
WOOD.
jhn CARTER, of i, Clarinda Park, = Julia Adery
ingstown, co. Dublin. Died s.p. GEORGE.
o March 1862. W. pr. Tablet in Marr. Lie.
[onkstown Church, co. Dublin. 1833.
I
Col. Robert = Anna.
WALLACE. Died
1866.
Captain = Margaret.
Robert
WATTS.
17
Lmelia. Died unmarried.
Captain STUART = Isabella Louisa.
:ol. Chas. Herbert Philip
BARTER, C.M.G. Com-
nanding the Scottish
iifles. Born 1864.
Kathleen Maude, Col. BANKS, =
dau. of James late of 7th
HARTLEY. Dragoon
Guards. /
- Frances Dr. John Hoggan=;
Edith. EWART, late of
Folkestone, now of
Hythe, Kent.
"1
= Florence
Georgina.
jeoffrey Willoughby Ronald Hartley Nancy. Molly. Joan Florence. NinaWilloughby. Born
BARTER. CARTER. Born 1900. 1904. Died 1910.
apt. 22 Oct. 1781 at Sl Mary's, Dublin. Matric. T.C.D., I Feb. 1796; == Elizabeth SANZON (?)
urate of Clevedon 1807 to 1808; P.C. Churchdown, co. Glouc., 10 Sept. I Married c. 1811. Died
n 1854; buried in Bathford Church, Oct. 28, 1854. I prob. before 1814.
. 1838 ; Ordained = Mary, dr. of Chas. Kyd BISHOP, of Barbadoes. Mar. 29 April
851. Died 1871. 1851 at Sl James's, Paddington. Died April 1 6, 1889.
levd Willoughby CARTER. Born 1 6 Jan. 1 856. Matric.=p Anne Catherine, dau. of Revd. Philip Walter
CebleColl.,Oxon., 16 Oct. 1876; Exhibr 1879; B.A.
8 80; M.A.I 8 84. Curate of All Saint's, Margaret Street;
ficar of Sc Matthias', Earl's Court, London. Address
1911) 29, Bramham Gardens, S.W.
DOYNE, B.A.,T.C.D.,of Wells, co.Wexford,
and his wife Emily S., dr. of John Goddard
RICHARDS, of Ardamine, co.Wexford. Marr.
9 Jan. 1884. Died 21 Sept. 1887.
I
Stephen Willoughby Doyne CARTER.
Born 14 Sept. 1887.
208 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEc.i9ii
t Qtlanc^ee^t anb
Abstract of will of Rev*1. Oliver CARTER, B.D., 1605.
1604/5, Feb. 22. In the name of God, Amen. Ollyvr CARTER,
Bachelor of Divinitie, being sicke in bodie, etc., makes will, etc. "To
be buried in the Chauncel of Manchester Church, near where Mr.
John BUCKLEYE was buried." "A lease of Tythe of Calf, woll & Lame
in the parish of Manchester." "Son Abraham CARTER." "Alice my
wife." "Three children, Abraham, John and Marie CARTER." "John
CARTER my grandson." "Ales SMYTH my grand.dr." "Ales CARTER
my grand.dr." "Roger ECCARSLEY & Jane BORDMAN my servants."
"Thurston COWOPP my brother-in-law." "Summes of monie wh: I
have bestowed & undertake to geve in mariadg with Dorothie my
daughter." "Brother in law Richard ASSCROFTE." "Exors. Ales my
wife & Abraham CARTER my sonne." "Overseers, John SAMON and
Francis NUTTALL, gent." Witnesses, John HULLE, James PENDLETON,
Wm. BOWKER, Thurston COWOPP, Ales NUTTALL, Grace BOWKER,
Francis NUTTALL. Dettes owing to Testator. Lawrence BARCKHA,
citizen of Exeter, xu. John MOSSE of Altrincha, carrier, iiju. xs.
( Chester Registry. )
In St. Michan's Registers, Dublin, is the burial of John, son ot
Abraham CARTER, 12 May 1663; baptism of same 1660; baptism of
Abraham, son of Abraham and Mary CARTER, i Jan. 1662; of Peter,
son of Abraham and Mary CARTER, 14 Feb. 1665, and the baptism,
14 Nov. 1678, of Nicholas, son of Abraham CARTER, Innkeeper.
Notes from will of Abraham CARTER of Blackley, Lancashire, yeo-
man. " I give inheritance of my mes. & Tenem* in Blakley vr***. house
& building, &c., to my eldest son John CARTER and his heirs lawfully
begotten, and for want of them, to my son Peter and his heirs, Sec.,
and for want of them to my son Abraham and his heirs, See., and for
want of them, to my right heirs. My wife Joane CARTER to make use
of my Tenem1. My son John to pay £80, viz. -£20 to Peter when 21,
£20 to Abraham when 21, £20 to my dr. Alice when 21, £20 to
Mary when 21. My loving friend Adam HALL of Newton and Wm.
NEILD of Morton and my wife Joan to be executors. Mr. PAGET and
my brother in law Rob*. BOLTON to be overseers. (Chester Registry.)
Entries in Manchester Collegiate Church Registers:
" Em'a wife of Olyver CARTER, Preacher, buried in the Coll. Church
April 21, 1590.
!573> Oct. 6- Bapt- Sarah, dr. of Mr. Oliver CARTER, P'cher; burd.
22 April, 1578.
DEC. 191 1] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 209
1575, Oct. 2. Bapt. Dorothie, d. of Mr. Oliver CARTER, P'cher.
1578, June 8. Bapt. Abraham, son of Oliver CARTER, P'cher.
1580/1, Feb. 26. Bapt. John, son of Mr. Oliver CARTER, P'cher.
1583, Sept. 21. Bapt. Thomas, son of Oliver CARTER, P'cher; burd.
July 6, 1586.
1585/6, Feb. 13. Bapt. Mary, dr. of Oliver CARTER, P'cher.
1588/9, Feb. 10. Rebecca CARTER buried.
Notes on Wills and Deeds of CARTER of Annagh Keene.
Irish Prerogative Wills. Will of Dame Alice AYLMER alias CARTER,
1748, alludes to a deed of 1733 made on her engagement in 1733 to
Oliver CARTER, clerk, that she was to pay him £500. Her maiden
name was BROWNE, she married four times. The fourth husband was
Oliver CARTER of the Grange, Co. Roscommon.
Will of Ann CAMPBELL nfa CARTER, dated 1795. Her son David
CAMPBELL of Bristol, will proved 1789, left lands to Thomas PHEPOE,
then of Dublin, for herself and husband. She now leaves them to her
nephew W. H. CARTER. Other legatees, Joshua CARTER, Dublin, her
niece Elizabeth GONNE. "My sister Elizth. PHEPOE alias CARTER."
Will of Willoughby Harcourt CARTER, 1854, with Codicil.
Will of Joshua CARTER of Dublin 1800, mortgage on Annaghkeene
for j£2OO on estate of late George CARTER, demised with other things
to Stafford LIGHTBURNE and Oliver CARTER, son of George CARTER
of Charleston, N. America, in trust to pay £30 per annum to educate
Joshua CARTER, son of Willoughby Harcourt CARTER, until he is 14.
Then £70 per annum until 21. Then said Joshua CARTER to be tes-
tator's heir. Other legatees, John CARTER, Theophilus CARTER,
CARTER and Mary CARTER, children of my late uncle £ i oo each. Henry
GRIFFITHS £100. Executor, Willoughby H. CARTER. In Codicil,
legacies to his kinswoman Anne CAMPBELL alias CARTER. Attested by
John Carter BARRETT.
Will of Arthur CARTER, gent., Dublin, 1776. Legatees, Thomas
JONES, William HALLIGAN £20 to buy mourning. Wife Elizabeth
CARTER. Brothers George and Oliver. Nephews W. H. CARTER
and Thomas PHEPOE. Cousin Joshua CARTER. Executor, Thomas
CARTER. Will signed 13 Aug. 1772, pr. 1776.
Will of Elizabeth PHEPOE n&e CARTER, of Bristol, late of Dublin,
1798. Left everything equally between her son Samuel and her
daughters, all minors.
Will of Hugh CROTHERS, 1810, Alderman of Dublin. Daughter
Elizabeth, son Matthew, wife Jane.
cc
210 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DE
Will of Willoughby LIGHTBURNE, Alderman of Dublin, 1803.
Legatees, brother John, niece Deborah CARTER — grand-niece Mary
CARTER, dr. of Deborah CARTER. ^300 left in trust to W. H.
CARTER for niece Dorothea FLEETWOOD. j£2oo to W. H. CARTER
for Mary DOWKER, widow of Howard DOWKER.
Entries in St. Andrew's Registers, Dublin.
1 740, Novr. 1 1 . Bapt. George ye son of Dr. Matthew and Mrs.
Eliz^ CARTER.
1-736/7, Feb. 26. Mard. by Licence, Matthew CARTER and Eliza-
beth RAY.
1739/40, Feb. ii. Burd. Thomas ye son of Dr. Matthew and
Eliz^ CARTER.
Joshua CARTER, gent., of Dublin, made many deeds in 1753 and
1 754 as to lands in Co's. Cork and Meath. He married Ann WARREN,
in 1757. In 1762 Captain William CROFTON of Dublin made him a
co-trustee of funds in trust for his niece Dorcas LANGLEY. He seems
to have been a grandson of Oliver CARTER, the third son of Gilbert,
who died in 1680.
Entries in St. Andrew's Registers, Dublin.
1767, May 13. Bapt., Willoughby Harcourt, son of George and
Dorothea CARTER.
1768, July 20. Bapt., Oliver, son of George and Dorothea
CARTER.
1765, Jan. 6. Married, Caspar WILLS and Catherine CARTER
(Consist. Lie.).
1782, Sept. 1 6. Buried, Dr. Mathew CARTER.
1769, Nov. 19. Buried, George CARTER.
Note of Deed. Gilbert CARTER, gent., of Dublin, grants to
Thomas GLEADON, merchant, Dublin, houses, etc., one being a house
built by Ebenezer WARREN Esq., December 1738. [This Gilbert
CARTER was perhaps uncle to Joshua CARTER.]
Will of Gilbert CARTER, of Annaghkeene, Co. Galway. To be
buried in the church of St. John Baptist, Headford, Co. Galway.
Wife Rebecca CARTER £30 per annum. Son George my estate.
Three other sons, John, Oliver and Thomas; daughters Sarah,
Rebecca, Katherine, Olivia, Ellen, Jane, Elizabeth. Dated 14 Feb.
1679/80. Sir Oliver ST. GEORGE, Bart., Sir George ST. GEORGE, knt.
[of Headford Castle], Patrick MEINE and Gilbert ORMSBY Esq., my
cousin Andrew DENISON and my wife, executors. (Tuam Diocese.)
DEC. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 211
Will of Mary CARTER alias BELL, of Galway Town, widow of John
CARTER Esq., deceased, and mother of John CARTER of Anakeen, also
deceased, confirms a release of arrears of her jointure out of Anakeen,
due between the deaths of her husband and son. Bequeaths to her
sole legatee, her granddaughter Rebecca FINN, all arrears of same
jointure accrued, due since son's death. Executor, son Oliver
CARTER. Probate to Rebecca FINN. Will made 20 October 1746,
proved 12 September 1747.
Will of Rebecca CARTER, of Galway, widow of John CARTER, junior,
of Annakeen, Co. Galway, gent. To be buried with her husband in
Headford churchyard. First son George, second son Gilbert, a
minor, daughter Mary. Long list of plate. Dated 1751. (Tuam
Diocese.)
Annaghkeene (2,700 acres, Irish) forfeited by theBouRKEsin 1641,
was granted in 1666 to Richard COOTE, Lord COLLOONEY, in whose
Regiment Gilbert CARTER had served, and came to him for services in
that Regiment. Gilbert CARTER bought 300 acres in Co. Galway for
£60 from John LYNCH (cf. Exchequer Bill, Feb. 1679.)
Thomas CARTER of Co. Galway, fourth son of Gilbert CARTER of
Annaghkeene, who died in 1680, appears to have been the father of
several children.
(1) Revd. Oliver CARTER, of Lismeen, Co. Clare, Prebendary of
Tulla 1757.
He was married twice, but had no issue by either wife. His will
proved 1768.
(2) Dr. Matthew CARTER of Dublin, who married Elizabeth RAY in
1736, and died 1782.
(3) Elizabeth, married Mr. SWANWICK, of Co. Mayo.
(4) John CARTER of Dublin.
Joshua CARTER who was of age in 1753, married 1757 Anne
WARREN, and died 1800, was probably grandson to Oliver CARTER.
W. Ball WRIGHT.
York.
212 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEc.i9n
The Rolls of the Court Baron of the Royal Manor of Lyndhurst
in the New Forest, co. Hants, are preserved at the Office of the
Verderers' Court, Abbey Walk, Romsey, for the dates 1666-1675 ;
1696-7; 1710-14; 1714-22. The later rolls after 1722 are at the
King's House, Lyndhurst. At Romsey there is also a fairly complete
series of Swainmote and Attachment Court Rolls from 1665 with
ancient copies of an Attachment Court Roll of 1 607 ; a Justice Seat
1620-2 ; and a Swainmote Roll of 1632.
The following genealogical abstracts and notes from the above are
valuable because the Parish Registers of Minstead (containing also the
earlier entries for Lyndhurst) do not begin till 1682. They were
made by me with the kind permission of Mr. Montague CHANDLER,
the Clerk to the Verderers.
Arthur W. STOTE, M.A.
Holy Trinity Vicarage,
Trowbridge, Wilts.
27. ix. 1911.
P.S. — I should be very glad to hear of the existence of any other
Lyndhurst Rolls beyond the two or three rolls in the Record Office
(For. Proc. Excheq. Treas. of Rec. and For. Proc. Chanc. Modern).
A. W. S.
BATCHELOR, Alice, wid. (died 1674) messuage, copy 1661 ; s. John
and granddau. Joyce, dau. of John; both living 1666.
BRIGHT, Thos. of Lyndhurst, w. Catherine (GAINE) ; s. John
(living 1696, died 1714, dau. Jane); and dau. Catherine, living 1696.
BROCKENSHAW, Joseph, two copyholds at Lyndhurst 1665;
died 1673, daus. Mary, Joane, Susanna and Celene, living 1668.
N.B. James B. of Lyndhurst, yeoman and agister 1620 and 1632-4.
COSTER, Thos. of Lyndhurst Street, grant 1696; s. and dau. Thos.
andEliz.; wid. Eliz. died 1714/15. In i72oEliz. C. wid. of Thos. C.,
among customary tenants of L. Children John, Eliz^ and Thos.
living 1720.
ELCOMBE, Peter, copyhold at L. 1666, died 1714/15; Jo. E. "next
heir." N.B. John ELCOMB, Equitar in 1607, and William E.
HOMAGER in 1634.
ELCOMBE, James, Free tenant of L. 1666; s. and dau. Jas. and
Fliz* living 1666.
DEC.I9H] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 213
FITCHETT, Edward of L. copy 1661, died 1671, s. Wm. living 1666,
dau. Elizth living 1666 and 1673, married . . . MELLIDGE.
FLIGHT, Richard, Reversion 1666, w. Sarah.
GIBBONS, Geo., grant of "Church House" in L. 1696, and dau.
Mary, set. 2 mo. 1696.
GRANT, Thos. sen., copy 1661; sons Jo. and Jas. living 1666.
HATCH, Nicholas, lands, etc., at Marlpooles 1665; s. and dau. Nich.
and Eliz"1 living 1666.
HICKS, Henry, s. of Wm. H., reversion of lands in L. 1674.
HEDGER, Geo., copy 1660; sis. Mary living 1666.
HEDGER, Joanna, wid. (? of above) dau. of Thos. LONGLAND, deed.,
copyhold in L. 1696 for her life and Kath. WOODS, sp. and Chris.
WOODS, her bro.
HENNIST, Richard, copy 1661; s. Jas. living 1666.
HIBBERT, Moses, copyhold in L. 1661 ; died 1671 ; bro. Wm. and
sis. Anne living 1666.
HOBBS, PHILIP, copyhold in Lynwood 1661; s. and dau. Phil, and
Mary living 1666.
KNAPTON, Ferdinand, and s. Ferdinand, both living 1673. Revers.
of lands in L. N.B. John K. (w. Sarah), customary tenant in Bartly
Regis 1715, called bro. of Ferdinand KNAPTON, gent.
MARTIN, Chris., copyhold in Bartly Regis, dated 12 Dec. 1648,
w. Joanna, sons Chris, and Thos. all living 1668.
MERRIWEATHER, Andrew, copyhold in L. 1674/5, s. and dau. Andr.
and Kath. living 1674/5.
MORTIMER, John, sen. and jun., copy 1662, also Jas. M. all
living 1666.
MUSGRAVE, Geo., gent, of " Cuffnell's," etc., in L., copyhold 1665,
died before Jan. 1671 ; sons Simon and Chas., living 1666 ; w. Eliz*
surrendered to Sir John NORTON, Bart., and Chas. and Wm. PAWLETT,
sons of Chas., Lord ST. JOHN, 31 Jan. 1670/1. N.B. Wm. PAWLETT
and Sir Jo. N. were foresters in 1665.
NEWMAN, Thos., copyholds in L. dated respectively 1661 and
12 Dec. 1648; died 1671, daus. Dorothy, Anne and Rebecca all
living 1666.
NEWMAN, Joseph, mess, etc., in London Minstead 1675, s. and
dau. John and Kath. living 1675.
214 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC.i9n
OVER, Robert, jun., "Seaman's" in London Minstead 1666, grant
to him and s. Andrew and to Robert O. sen. N.B. in 1719 grant of
same property to Zechariah O., and his sons Robert and John.
OXFORD, Wm., gent., Free and Customary Tenant of L. 1665; bro.
Arthur OXFORD, jun. (Sub-forester) living 1666. [N.B. Arth. O. sen.,
gent., was Forester 1667 and Verminer 1665] wid. Jane living 1711.
PEIRCE, Wm., copyhold in L. 1696, sons Jo. and Richard. N.B.
Thos. P., tenant of L. 1666-99.
POCOCK, Wm., Regarder and Agister 1666; Freeholder of L.
died 1674, dau. Jane heir.
RICHBELL, John, Robert and Richard, copyhold in Barkly Regis 1664,
N.B. Same land held by copy dated 1692 and surrendered 1716 by
Maria SAMBER (late RICHBELL), wid. of Samuel SAMBER, M.D., for
her life and Edward RICHBELL.
ROBBINS, Anthony, sen., copyhold in Burleigh 1661; sons Anthony
and Henry living 1666.
ROGERS, William, jun., copyhold in Barkly Regis 1661; died 1672;
daus. Dorothy and Anne living 1666. N.B. Wm. R. of Burley
yeoman, Agister in 1620 and 1632.
SHELLEY, Anna, wid., copyhold at L. 1665; daus. Margaret (mar.
Thos. READE by 1674) and Mary (mar. Jo. JURE, by 1674) living 1665.
Grant of same property to Wm. SHELLEY 1674.
SMITH, William, s. of John S., third life in copyhold of Wm. STRIDE,
jun., at Barkly Regis 1668.
SOAFE, John of Minstead and sons Thos. and Geo., all living 1711.
SPARROW, John, copyhold 1661; died 1671; dau. Mary tenant 1671,
with Jo. S., s. of Jo. S. of Groveley.
SPRATT, Thos., copyhold at L. 1668; w. Elizabeth dau. of Elinor
WATERMAN.
STRIDE, William of Barkly Regis, Free and Customary Tenant of L;
sons Wm. and Moses all living 1696. N.B. Wm. STRIDE jun., copy-
hold 1668 to him and son Alban. Wm. STRIDE sen. Agister in 1666.
SUTHERLAND, Owen, of L., gent., copy dated 12 Ap. 1709 ; s. and
dau. Alex, and Eliz111 living 1709; sons Owen and Corbett living 1713 ;
son John living 1720.
WYATT, Agnes, w. of Thos. W., copyhold at Barkly Regis 1661;
dau. Elizth living 1666.
DEc.i9n] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
215
(Boine*
Richard GAINE, sen. =f Katherine
Copyholder in
Lyndhurst 1662.
Died 1672.
Next taker in 1672.
John GAINE.
Living 1666.
Dead before 1672.
Richard GAINE, jun. =
Living 1 666. Died
before Oct. 1696.
? Elizabeth . . .
Next taker 1696
Richard GAINE. =
Living 1666
and 1696.
:= Elizabeth.
Living 1696.
William GAINE of Minstead.=
Grant 1696 of copyhold
there.
P Joanna . . .
Died 1719.
Richard GAINE. John GAINE.
Living 1696. Living 1696.
William GAINE. =
Living 1696.
John CuLL=Margarette.
Living 1696
QtewBoff.
Charles NEWBOLT. Copyhold =p Ann
in Lyndhurst dated
Dead in 1715.
1686.
Will 1728.
r
George =
NEWBOLT.
Living
1 686 and
=Jone...
1
Moses N. =
= Elizabeth,
sister of
Richard
GAINE.
1
Aaron N.=
Ill
= Jo. BUCKLE = Rebecca.
Jo. HENBEST= Katherine.
Thos. BRIGHT= Ann.
1711.
Charles NE
Living 172
WBOLT.
8.
Thos. PE
1
rTY.= Rebecca.
1
Mary, act. 4 mo.
in 1717.
1
Aaron,
living 1 728.
(To be continued)
216 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEc.i9n
1n0cripfton0 in jbt. j^ufie'0 of b Q^uriaf (Btrounbt
^^
This cemetery, now used as a recreation ground for Chelsea Work-
house, in the King's Road at the corner of Arthur Street, was
given to the Parish by Sir Hans SLOANE, Bart., in 1733, and was en-
larged in 1790, by a grant of some ground from Lord CADOGAN.
Thomas FAULKNER in An Historical and Topographical description of
Chelsea, published in 1810, (at p. 106), gives a description of it, and
the names of some of the persons buried there, with the year in which
they died. Inscription No. 126 he gives in full, as follows: — In
memory of John MARTYN | F.R.S., Professor of Botany at Cam-
bridge | And | Eulalia, his wife, the youngest daughter of John KING,
D.D., | Rector of this parish | She died February I3th 1748-9, in the
46th year of her Age; | He, January 29, 1768, in the 69th year of his
Age and both lie here | interred | "The Memory of the Righteous
shall live for ever."
He also mentions the following persons, whose inscriptions have
now disappeared.
Lady Rous, a. 90, 1777, relict of Sir Wm. Rous, Alderman, of
London; Robert HARRIS, Esq., 1783; J. B. CIPRIANI, 1785; John
WILKINS, Lieut. Colonel, i8th Foot, 1789; Lucy Frances, w. of Wm.
FURRELL, 1789; Philip WITHERS, D.D., 1790; James Delanay MUIRSON,
M.D., 1791; James FAULKNER, infant s. of Thomas and Frances
FAULKNER, 1805; John HAMILTON, 1808; A. POWER, 1809.
The ground is enclosed on the south and west sides by iron railings,
and about three yards from the railings a latticed fence serves to pre-
vent the inmates of the workhouse from communicating with persons
in the street. Inscriptions 1-28 are between these fences and com-
mence at the south-east corner. On the workhouse side of the latticed
fence, the ground is divided into "East Side" and "West Side" by a
path, paved with tombstones, running north and south. On the " West
Side" my abstracts begin at the north-west corner, and pass from north
to south, and back from south to north on the east side of this portion
of the ground. On the "East Side" they begin at the south-west
corner, and pass up the west side of that part of the ground, and begin
again at the south-east corner, passing up the east side. But they are
very irregularly disposed. Many stones are now quite or nearly blank.
These abstracts were made in August, 1911.
G. S. PARRY,
Lieut. Col.
DEC.I9U] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 217
1. William OSBORN, of this p., d. Aug. 13, 1841, in his 28th year.
Virginia, d. of the above, d. Nov. 13, 1841, a. i. Elizabeth, niece ot
the above, and d. of George and Charlotte OSBORN, of this p., d. Mar.
6, 1843, a- 1 1 months. Also William OSBORN, b. Feb. 18, 1848, d.
May 2, 1849. Margaret OSBORN, mother of the above, d. Dec. — ,
1851, a. 6(3).
2. John DAVIDSON, Asst. Commissary General in the service of His
Majesty, b. 8 Oct. 1780, d. 8 Dec. 1816. Also George DAVIDSON,
printer, of St. Clement Danes, only surviving bro. of the above, b. Dec.
n, 1778, d. Ap. 9, 1817.
3. Mrs Hester DELACROZE, d. May 15, 1770, a. 60. Mrs. Francis
HAWKINS, d. Dec. 22, 1777, a. 74.
4. James STEVENS, of this [parish], d. Oct. — , a. (5)0. Elizabeth,
w. to above, and second w. to Mr. R. SANDERS, d. June 13, 1800, a.
6(2). Also Mr. John PERRY, of this p., d. Aug. n, i8i[5], a. 54.
Likewise 3 of his children. Mary, relict of the above [Joh]n PERRY,
d. — , i8[4]o, a. 77. Also Elizabeth Char — , sister of ... [Also]
Mary . . . , 1844.
5. Eleanor, w. of Mr. John JUMPSEN, of this p., d. Sep. 22, 1795,
in her 53d year. Mr. John JUMPSEN, husb. of the above, d. Sep. 27,
1818, in his 75th year. Mr. Thomas JUMPSEN, eldest s. of the above,
d. Jan. 26, 1839, in his 64th year. Mrs. Elizabeth JUMPSEN, d. 8 Mar.
1854, a. 83. ~
6. Mr. J — COLQUHOUN, . . .
7. Elizabeth, w. of Mr. Owen GRIFFITHS, of this p., d. i Mar. 1809,
a. 76. Mr. O. GRIFFITHS, d. Dec. 16, 1818, a. 80.
8. Robert, s. of William and Mary BRAY, d. 9 Jan. 1809, in his i ith
month. Rubin BRAY, d. 16 Sep. 1810, a. 10 months. Mary, mother
of the above chn., d. 10 Feb. 1811, a. 35. Miss Jane BUNGEY, sister
to the above, d. Sep. 20, 1822, a. 39. The above William BRAY, d.
22 Nov. 1824, a. 59.
9. Mrs. Sarah SMITH, d. Jan. 15, 1839, a. 32.
10. Family vault of Charles HARWOOD, Esq. Ann, w. of the above,
d. July 6, 1796, a. 36. Also Charles, inf. s. of the above. Also Mr.
William WATSON, f. of the above Ann, d. Feb. 10, 1792, a. 65. James,
s. of the above Charles and Ann HARWOOD, d. Ap. 17, 1821, a. 34.
Ann, w. of the above Wm. WATSON, d. May 14, 1827, a. 96.
Elizabeth, second w. of the above Charles HARWOOD, d. Oct. 24, 1827,
a. 76. The above Charles HARWOOD, d. Oct. 24, 1832, a. 72, upwards
of 50 years an inhabitant of Grosvenor Row near Chelsea, and of
Sutton, Surrey.
DD
ii8 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1911
11. J. C, 1838. M. C, 1842. T. E., 1849.
12. A. P., 1807. M. A. P., 1837.
13. Mrs. Ann .... 1808, a. 7- years.
14. Mr. Thomas SHAILER, of St. Olive's, Southwark, d. 23 May
i798>a- 34-
Dear Wife lament for me no more
Nor for me shed a tear
For I am gone but just before
To meet my Saviour dear
A Virtuous husband and Faithful Friend
A tender husband unto his end
15. Mr. Francis R(ICHARDS), d. June — , a. (21).
16. H. S., 1828. W. H. S., 1829. W.— , 1837.
1 7 The family grave of William and Harriet SANSUM, of this parish.
Harriett, their first ch., b. Aug. 19, 1827, d. Feb. 8, 1828. William
Henry, their second ch., b. Oct. 4, d. Oct. 16, 1829. Wm. Richard,
their fourth ch., b. Jan. 9, d. Ap. 16, 1837. Mrs. Elizabeth SANSUM
gr mother of the above, d. Nov. 2, 1844, a. 85. Mr. Richard
SANSUM, gr. f. of the above d. Dec. 27, 1844, a. 80. Mrs. Sarah
LINFORTH, sister of the above, d. Dec. 7, 18(5)-, a. 55.
1 8. Mr. Thomas LIDDELL, and Elizabeth, his w., died in March
and Nov. 18(3)1. Mr. William HARDING, s. in law of the above, d.
Nov. 8, 18(3)1.
I9 w. of Mr. John [BE]ARD[WELL], \Very doubtful].
20. John WITTY, B[razier], of Prince's St., near Leicester Fields,
d. June 1 6, 176-, a. — . Also
21. Ann PHILLIPS, of this p., d. Oct. — , 1789.
22. Mr. Thomas COLEMAN, d. Dec. 2, 1812, a. 56. Mrs. (Mary)
COLEMAN, . . . . of above. . . . Also Robert, eldest s. of the above,
d. Jan. 27, 1831, a. 35. Also Mr. Edward COLEMAN, d. Ap. 2-, 1831.
23. Mary, wid. of William HAY, Esq., of Edinr., and d. of Sir
John FORBES, Bart., d. 23 Aug., 1808, a. 69.
24. Mr. Edward TRINDER, — Reg4. Dragoon Guards, d. Jan. 6,
1814, a. 52. Robert John SEWELL, nephew of the above, d. 14 Feb.
1827, a. 23.
25. (A.) W., 1784.
DEC. 1911] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 219
26. E. T., 1814. R. J. S., 1827.
27. Lieut. Samuel BRAD , of the Volunteers of Ireland serving
in America, d. M(ay) 8, 1780, a. 21.
28. Mr. (ArcP)hibald C , of this parish ....
Within the latticed fence.
West side.
29. Joanna BETTS, d. of Mr. Nathaniel and Mary BETTS, of this p.,
d. 20 Oct. 1775, in her 28th year. Mary, w. of Nathaniel BETTS,
d. Sep. 24, 1779, a. 63. Louiesa (sic\ d. of the above Mary, d.
27 Aug. [no date~\, a. 22. Mr. Nathaniel BETTS, d. Feb. 8, 1792, a. 77.
Mrs. Elizabeth DANBY, d. 31 Dec. 1821, a. 70. Charles DANBY, Esq.,
d. May 6, 1824, a. 73. Mrs. Sarah DANBY, d. 18 Dec. 1832, a. 77.
30. William HEWS, d. Dec. 13, 1825, a. 6- years. Ann, his w., d.
May 7, 1835, a. 68.
31. Mr. Henry L , . . . , d. Nov. 1812, a. 78. ... Mary
.... Mary Ann L[AWL?]ER, of the Hay Market ....
32. Hannah, w. of Thomas WHITFIELD, jun., of Sloane St., d.
May i, 1843, a- 34- Mr. T. WHITFIELD, sen., husband of Elizabeth
WHITFIELD, d. Oct. 12, 1850, a. 79.
33. Mr. Charles HILL, of this p., d. Ap. 27, 1826, a. 42. Also 3
sons who died in their infancy; Joseph, d. Aug. 22, 1808, a. ly. 9m.;
Charles d. Sep. 9, 1808, a. 3y. rorn. ; George d. Jan. 23, 1810,
a. 1 1 months. Also Mary Ann HILL, d. of the above, d. M — 23, 1831.
34. Francis William LE MAISTRE, Esq., Lieut. Gov of
(Casp ) in (lower) Canada, d. May 12, 1803 in his (45) year.
John HAM[IL]TON, Esq., d. 13 Mar. 1808, a. 70. He was a great
artist and . . . .Mrs. Margaret HAMILTON, w. of the above, d.
Dec. 29, 1822, a. 79.
35 also of his w., Elizabeth Mary . . . . in her 6- year.
3 6. Mary Anne, w. of Lieut-General WALKER, of the Royal Artillery,
d. 7 Jan. 1804, a. 48.
37. Thomas Tonken SPUR[RELL] . . . and Elizabeth SPUR[RELL],
d. Feb. (1808), a. 10. Mrs. Elizabeth SPUR[RELL], mother of the
above, d. 10 Feb. . Also Benjamin SPURRELL, Esq., husb. of the
above, d. 1 1 Nov. 18(45). Many years resident in this parish.
(To be continued)
220 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEc.i9ii
^octef j> of (Beneafogtete
of JSonfcon.
Officers of the Society.
PRESIDENT : The Most Honourable William Montagu, Mar-
quess of TWEEDDALE, K.T.
VICE-PRESIDENTS : The Right Honourable John Allan, Baron LLAN-
GATTOCK.
The Marquis DE LIVERI ET DE VALDAUSA.
HON. TREASURER: Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
HON. SECRETARY : George SHERWOOD.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 1911-12.
Cyril Shakespear BEACHCROFT. Gerald FOTHERGILL.
Charles Allan BERNAU. James Reginald Morshead GLEN-
William BRADBROOK,M.R.C.S. CROSS, M.A., LL.B.
Edgar Francis BRIGGS. George Frederick Tudor SHERWOOD.
Joseph Cecil BULL. Frederick Simon SNELL, M.A.
Frank EVANS. Charles William WALLACE, Ph.D.
LIBRARIAN-SECRETARY: Frank Ellis PRICE.
OFFICIAL ORGAN : The Pedigree Register. Quarterly, los. 6d. per annum.
REGISTERED OFFICE AND ROOMS: 227 Strand (by Temple Bar), London,W.C.
SECOND QUARTERLY REPORT, DEC. 1911.
The Fellows, Members and Corresponding Associates elected since the
1 5th August are as follows :
FELLOWS.
1911, Sept. 7. Robert Henry Gough SMALLWOOD.
Eugene Fairfield McPiKE.
Lionel Edward Gresley GARDEN.
„ Oct. 5. Edward DWELLY.
Ernest Frederick KIRK.
„ Nov. 2. Revd. Henry STAPLETON, M.A. (Cantab).
MEMBERS.
1911, Sept. 7. Lionel Edward Gresley GARDEN.
Eugene Fairfield McPiKE.
Arthur Edmund GARNIER.
„ Oct. 5. Edward DWELLY.
Revd. Reginald E. BROUGHTON, M.A.
John LIVESEY.
Ernest Frederick KIRK.
Francis Alexander SLACKE, C.I.E.
„ Nov. 2. Reginald Burnet MORRIS, M.A., LL.B.
Major-General Robert Charles Boileau PEMBERTON,
Perceval Drewett LUCAS. [C.B., C.S.I.
Revd. Henry STAPLETON, M.A. (Cantab).
CORRESPONDING ASSOCIATES.
1911, Sept. 7. None elected.
„ Oct. 5. None elected.
„ Nov. 2. Lt.-Col. Richard John FYNMORE.
Mrs. Walter Damon MANSFIELD.
David Alfred CHART, M.A.
HONORARY LIFE FELLOW.
1911, Sept. 7 Revd. Edward COOKSON, M.A.
DEc.i9u] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 221
COMMITTEES.
On the 25th August the Society entered into possession of two rooms, con-
veniently situate at No. 227 Strand (by Temple Bar), facing the Law Courts
and within easy reach of the Record Office, the British Museum and Somerset
House. The usual Monthly Meetings of the Executive Committee were held
at the Society's Rooms on yth September, 5th October and 2nd November.
It was resolved on the yth September to appoint a representative to attend the
Meeting in London in 1913 of the Congres International des Sciences Auxiliares
de 1'Histoire, whose Meetings are held every five years ; that of 1903 having
been held in Rome and that of 1908 in Berlin. On the 5th October it was
resolved that the Rooms of the Society be open daily from 1 1 a.m. to 7 p.m.,
and letters and reports were read as to the York Archiepiscopal and Diocesan
Records and the Census Returns. A Committee was appointed to communi-
cate with the Registrar-General and others with a view to gaining access to the
Census Returns of 1841 and 1851 ; the earlier ones, it is understood, being
destroyed or useless for genealogical purposes. The Hon. Secretary lent the
Society a collection of 339 original documents, copies, abstracts and extracts,
arranged in parishes from Bedfordshire to Norfolk, the surnames occurring therein
having been indexed on 4294 of the Society's index-slips. On the 2nd Nov-
ember a large number of Members was elected to serve on Sub-Committees
and the Hon. Secretary directed to take steps towards their formation. The
Hon. Secretary was empowered to lend loose documents, pedigree charts, etc.,
the property of the Society, to Members for purposes of cataloguing and index-
ing, it being desirable that those undertaking such work should have local know-
ledge. A letter dated 5th October from Mr. George Edward MOSER of
Kendal was read, accompanying a pamphlet concerning the custody of Parish
Registers anterior to July 1837, and recommending the cheapening of searches
therein. It was resolved " that this Society is strongly of opinion that the
Parish Registers of England and Wales, before ist of July 1837, be vested in
the Master of the Rolls, deposited in the Public Record Office, and be open to
inspection under the same conditions as the other national archives are." A
letter was read from Mr. W. B. BROWNE, of Blackinton, Berkshire Co., Massa-
chusetts, urging that a more definite appeal be made to American Members by
pointing out that this Society hopes to identify emigrants to America with their
places of residence in the British Isles and the families to which they belonged.
The thanks of the Executive Committee are due to Mr. Kington BAKER for
five guineas and to Mr. G. P. TOWNEND for two guineas, gifts towards the
general purposes fund.
Committee on the Library^ Printed volumes. — The Accessions List enumerates
231 items received by gift, to the various donors of which the Society tenders
its grateful thanks. A number of volumes still remains to be entered. Dr.
BRADBROOK. and Messrs. G. L. APPERSON and C. A. BERNAU presented a con-
siderable number, and fifteen volumes of Manchester Court Leet Records and
Constables' Accounts were presented by the Corporation of Manchester.
Printed Parish Registers are acknowledged by the Committee on Parish
Registers.
Committee on the Library, MS. "Volumes. — The following volumes in MS
have been received.
A Lexicographical List of Wills in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury,
1746-7, with Indexes of surnames and places. Presented by Mr. F.
S. SNELL, M.A.
A Catalogue of 220 Miscellaneous Deeds with Indexes of surnames and
places. Presented by Mr. George SHERWOOD.
An Index to Surnames in "Originalia" (EXCHEQUER) as given in Add. MSS.
6363-6368 in the British Museum. Presented by the Revd. Edward
COOKSON, M.A.
A volume of Miscellaneous Pedigrees by Joseph FOSTER. Presented by
Mr. F. M. R. HOLWORTHY.
222 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DE
A volume of Miscellaneous Pedigrees by Robert HOVENDEN, F.S.A.
Presented by Mr. F. M. R. HOLWORTHY.
Committee on the Library ', Documents. — At a Meeting on the 1 3th Nov., pre-
sided over by Sir Thomas H. C. TROUBRIDGE, Mr. E. F. KIRK was appointed
Hon. Secretary. It was decided to make a special appeal to solicitors and others
to send their obsolete deeds and writings to the Society for safe keeping, so that
their contents may be indexed.
A collection of loose papers and catalogue slips relating to Worcestershire
was received from the Revd. J. Harvey BLOOM, M.A., together with many
catalogue slips referring to Scottish Charters. Sir Thomas TROUBRIDGE pre-
sented to the Society 42 original deeds and papers, of which 39 relate to
Crediton in Devon, 1663 to 1720. The Revd. Evelyn YOUNG presented a
number of abstracts of Suffolk wills.
Committee on the Consolidated Index. — The Hon. Secretary, Mr. F. S. SNELL,
M.A., reports the receipt of between twelve and thirteen thousand index-slips,
including a number to wills in the Prerogative Court, 1790, at present kept
separate. A very large number of index-slips is being dealt with by the Parish
Registers Committee. This Committee suggests that whenever indexing is
contemplated, of either MSS. or printed books, the Society's index-slips be used,
and that when they are transcribed the slips be passed to the Society for sortation
into the Consolidated Index. Blank index-slips are supplied gratuitously on this
understanding.
Committee for Cataloguing Pedigrees. — A meeting was held on the 1 5th of
November, at which the Revd. H. L. L. DENNY, M.A., was elected Chairman
and Mr. Campbell WYNNE, Hon. Secretary. The work of this Committee is
to prepare lists of all accessible pedigrees, whether in print or MSS., and to cata-
logue them in detail, showing what ground is covered by each pedigree and
what its contents are. Its business also is to form as complete a collection as
may be of printed pedigree charts, but Members may file with the Society
copies of any pedigrees not already in the collection, whether they happen to be
in print or in manuscript. Mr. GLENCROSS presented material for supplement-
ary lists of pedigrees in printed books, all the items in which will be entered on
the Society's index-slips.
Committee on Monumental Inscriptions. — The Society is indebted to Colonel
G. F. NEWPORT-TINLEY for index-slips containing copies of English inscriptions
in cemeteries at Boulogne, to Mr. BERNAU and Mr. APPERSON for a long run of
the publications of the Society for the Preservation of Memorials of the Dead in
Ireland, to Captain G. H. HARVEY, A.S.C., for a transcript of inscriptions in Bun-
na-Margie churchyard, Co. Antrim, and to Mr. G. P. TOWNEND for copies
from Keighley and Pudsey, Co. York. The Revd. J. Harvey BLOOM sent lists
of the Warwickshire and Worcestershire churchyards in which inscriptions, prior
to 1812, had been copied by himself, and copies from various churchyards in
Cambridge.
Committee on Parish Registers and Marriage Licences. — The Hon. Secretary
(Mr. R. M. GLENCROSS, M.A., LL.B.) reports most favourable progress. In
the Index the Marriages of eighteen parishes and the baptisms and burials of one
have been incorporated. The Marriages of eight more parishes are waiting to
be dealt with, making in all twenty-six parishes and about 20,000 index-slips.
Index-slips for forty more parishes are definitely promised to be written. A
letter was addressed to the Bishops of the Established Church with respect to
the fees payable for inspection of " Bishops' Transcripts " of Parish Registers
and records of Marriage Licences in the various Diocesan Registries. Many
replies were received and a mass of information has been obtained. Index-slips
are being written referring to the Marriage Licence Allegations in the Bishop
of London's Registry, beginning with the year 1750. Of printed volumes of
Parish Registers almost complete sets relating to Shropshire and Staffordshire
have been presented by Colonel PARRY, while Dr. BRADBROOK has given us a
set of Buckinghamshire. To Dr. BRADBROOK also we are indebted for a collec-
DEc.i9n] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 223
tion of original Marriage Licences relating principally to Bletchley in Bucks,
1761-1793. The Revd. Edward COOKSON, M.A., made the Society a most
valuable gift. We have now on our shelves Mr. COOKSON'S collection of index-
slips referring to parishes in all parts of England, and estimated to contain
1 80,000 references. This fine collection is now being sorted into one alphabet.
Mr. GLENCROSS has presented a MS. list (arranged in Counties) of all the
parishes in England and Wales, with dates showing when the Registers begin
and what has been done towards printing and indexing them.
Committee on Fly-leaf Inscriptions in Family Bibles, etc. — Meetings were held
on the 1st September and I2th November. The Hon. Secretary (Revd. J. L.
E. HOOPPELL) reports that a number of original fly-leaves with inscriptions and
tracings and copies has been received and filed. It is proposed to copy and
index them.
Committee on Records of Migration and Change of Residence. — Attention is
specially directed to the letter of Mr. W. B. BROWNE or Blackinton, Massa-
chusetts, which was placed before the Executive Committee. It was therein
suggested that a more definite appeal be made to American Members by
pointing out that this Society hopes to identify emigrants to America with
their places of residence in the British Isles and the families to which they be-
longed. Mr. Gerald FOTHERGILL presented the Society with MS. Lists of
Emigrants 1773-6, Licences to Pass Beyond Seas, 1631-7, and Lists of persons
likely to emigrate, taken from the State Papers.
Committee on Local Records. — Mr. GLENCROSS was elected to this Committee
on and November, and on 6th July Mr. George Percy TOWNEND, 39 Heidelberg
Road, Bradford, Yorkshire, was elected Honorary Local Secretary for Todmor-
den, Lancashire, and Bradford and Halifax, Yorkshire.
Committee on Family Associations. — A Meeting was held on the 27th May at
which Mr. Edgar Francis BRIGGS was elected Chairman and Mr. Charles Allan
BERNAU, Honorary Secretary. Dr. George C. PEACHEY was elected a Member
on 2nd November. Progress has been made in the compilation of a list of such
Associations and correspondence has resulted.
Committees to deal with Irish, Scottish and Welsh records are in course of
formation. Members wishing to be elected to these are invited to communi-
cate with the Hon. Secretary (Mr. SHERWOOD). There is much that a Com-
mittee can do which an individual cannot do, because there is a quasi officialism
about a Committee that a person cannot assume. Mr. C. S. ROMANES promises
to present a quantity of material, chiefly Scottish, for the attention of the
Scottish Record Committee when formed.
The Annual Subscriptions to the Society of Genealogists are as follows :
"Fellows," elected from among the Members by the whole body of
Fellows, Two guineas per annum. Life composition, ten guineas.
"Members," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Life Composition, seven guineas.
"Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Cannot make Life Composition.
"Corresponding Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, Half a
guinea per annum. Cannot make Life Composition. Must reside at
least 25 miles from London.
Fellows are entitled to receive quarterly from the Society advice of any fresh
information having accrued respecting certain specified families and places in
which they may be personally interested, the number of which is limited at
present to ten.
As an association "not for profit" (in a pecuniary sense) the Society relies
for increase of membership upon the efforts of individual members to make its
purpose known. If an average of only one new member be enrolled by each
present member, the Society will be established on a sound basis. A form of
application for membership is sent herewith.
224 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEc.i9n
t Queriea anb
The Revd. F. E. COOPE, Thurlestone Rectory, Kingsbridge, South Devon,
is interested in the families COOPE, COPE, COAPE, DORMAN and JESSER, and
especially wants the parentage of Richard COOPE Esq., of London and Peckham,
late of Fulham. He was a Director of the South-Sea Company, Master of the
Salters' Company in 1734, and one of the founders of the London Hospital.
He died at Fulham in December 1 765. He married first, at Newbury, in 1712,
Mary MERRIMAN. She belonged to a well-known Roundhead and Independent
family there, and there is evidence that he was of the same persuasion. There
is a mourning ring in memory of Judith COOPE, who died 26 March 1728,
aged 66. She was possibly his mother. Richard bore the arms granted by
Henry VIII. to William COOPE, or COPE, cofferer of the Household to that
king.
JACKSON of Duddington, co. Northampton. — Nicholas JACKSON restored the
house at Duddington in the gth year of Chas. I., and by his will dated
9 Nov. 1643, left his estate there to his son
William JACKSON, who succeeded his father 1662, and by will dated
1 2th November 1667, founded the school at Duddington. His son
Thomas JACKSON, Esq., J.P., succeeded his father 1667. He married
Frances, daughter of Charles THURSBY, Esq., of Castor, co. Northampton, and
by her had issue.
To this Thomas the arms of the family were granted in 1689. Information
is sought as to the place of origin of the above Nicholas, who is traditionally
supposed to have come from the parts of Holland in Lincolnshire.
N. J. HONE.
Sixteenth Century Marriages (1538-1600), by Chas. A. BERNAU, F.S.G.,
(17 Billiter Square Buildings, London, E.G.) 1911, 8vo, pp. 335. 2is. 6d.
"The best of the sport is to do the deed, and say nothing". — (HERBERT'S
Jacula Prudentum^ 1640.) However this may be, the sub-title so well describes
the scope of this excellent work that little further need be said to commend its
usefulness to our readers. The best test of whether it is valuable or not that
we can suggest is to take a printed Visitation of any county and see how many
marriages can be filled in by its aid. The sub-title runs as follows: "The
first of a new series of volumes which, when complete, will enable genealogists
to discover the record, if still in existence, of any marriage solemnized in England
from the commencement of parochial registration (1538) until the end of the
1 6th century. This volume indexes 25,000 individuals married during that
period, giving their surnames, the surnames of those they married, the years in
which they were married, and the names of the churches in which the marriages
were solemnized."
The Pedigree Register
MARCH 1912]
[VoL. II, No. 20.
from Bjwbfluref (Manor
•Authorities quoted: —
W. or A. = Will or Admon. in Probate Registry at Winchester.
P.R. = Parish Register [N.B. — Minstead, including Lyndhurst, begins 1682;
Boldre 1596; Brockenhurst, fragments only from 1629.]
C.B. = Court Baron Rolls of the Royal Manor of Lyndhurst [begin 1666].
Sw. = Swainmote & Attachment Court Rolls at the Verderers Court, Romsey
[1632 & 1665-75, etc.].
C.P. = Chancery Forest Proceedings (Modern) 1634-5.
Wanted:—
(1) Connection between John STOTE IV. & I., II., or III.
(2) Connection between Richard STOTE I. & John STOTE V. or VI.
(3) Connection between George STOTE I. & Milford, co. Hants.
Thomas STOTE of Breamore in co. Southampton, Yeoman. =Johanne
Leased Roundhill & other properties from the Prior of
Breamore [Indenture 28 Sept. 26 H. 8. — Hulse MSS.].
Died between 13 and 15 July 1556 (W.). Will dated
13 July, proved 13 Aug. 1556.
Exix. of hus-
band's will
with son
Nicholas 1 5 56.
Thomas STOTE o
Eling, co. South-
ton. Will dated
22 Dec. 1572;
proved 20 Feb.
1572/3.
Kath-
erine
(Hsw-
ATT)
widow.
Soleexix.
Jhon
STOTE I.
"seconde
son."Liv-
ing 1556
(W.). :
Jhon STOTE
III. "My
iij sone."
Living
1556 (W.).
Nicholas STOTE.
Living 1556,
co-exor. of his
father's will &
inherited farm
at Breamore.
1. Elysa-
beth.
2. Kateryn.
Jhon STOTE II.
" my sone's son."
Living I 5 56 (W.).
John STOTE IV. of Lindhurst in the parish of Minstead, co.=pEllyne ..... sole exix.
Southton, Yeoman. Will dated 20 Nov.; proved 23 Dec. I of her husband's will
i58o(W.). 1580.
r i
Richard STOTE I. Living I 580 (W.) = Amey. Living
& in Lyndhurst 1609 (W.)andalso . 1580 (W.).
1620-7 (subs- Rolls).
Richard STOTE II. of Lyndhurst. Yeo-
man & Agister (C.P. & Sw.) 1632-4.
Served on Grand Jury 1620 (Sw.)
Recognisance in £40 & fined £$ for
offence against the Venison i635(Sw.).
EE
John STOTE V. of Lyndhurst. Cooper
& praepositus for the tithing of Lynd-
hurst 1634 (C-P-)- Surety for Richard
STOTE II. 1635 (Sw.). Living in
Lyndhurst 1638 (W.).
226
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1912
John STOTE VI. of Ljrnd-:
hurst, Yeoman & Equi-
tator for the New Forest
1660-1670 (Sw.). Cus-
tomary Tenant of the
Royal Manor of Lynd-
hurst — Copy of Court
Roll dated 7 Oct. 1662.
Died between 001.1672
& I Jan. 1672/3 (C.B.).
:Alice
" Next taker "
on the death
of her husband
1672/3.
Buried 9 Sep.
1676 (P.R.
of Boldre &
of Brocken-
hurst).
Richard STOTE III. of=
Battramsley in par. of
Boldre, co. Southton,
Yeoman. Held land
under Manor of Lynd-
hurst — Copy dated 12
Apl. 1661. Tythingman
for Battramsley 1670
(Sw.). Buried at Boldre
8 Apl. i679(P.R.).
Rhadigund
(GREENE). Mar.
at Boldre 27 Oct.
1 646 & buried
there 4 Dec.
1679 (P.R.)
Admon. granted
to son Richard
26 Dec. 1679.
John STOTE VII. of Lyndhurst, = Joane (GOLD). Mar. at
Yeoman, Free and Customary
Tenant of the Manor of Lyndhurst
(C.B. and Sw.). Will dated 1 1 Aug.
1706; proved 1 1 Sept. 1707. Bur-
ied 27 June 1707.
Brockenhurst 2 8 July 1653
(P.R.) Bur. at Lyndhurst
22 Mar. 1703/4 (P.R. of
Minstead and Brocken-
hurst).
Ann. Living in
1662 (3rd life
in copyhold of
Richard STOTE
of Battramsley)
(C.B.).
John STOTE VIII. of Lynd-:
hurst, Cooper (W.), Freeholder
& Customary Tenant of the
Manor of L. Bur. at L. 3 Feb.
1735/6 (P.R.). Will dated
8 Dec. 1735; proved 26 Jan.
1737 (W.).
Rebecca
(W.), tenant on
her husband's
death (C.B.).
Buried at Lynd-
hurst 13 Mar.
1 749/50 (P.R.)
Ml
Wm. THORNE of L.,= i. Mary.
Yeoman.
FELTHAM. = 2. Anne.
John WILD of Lynd-=3. Elizabeth,
hurst, gent., Regard er
& Freeholder.
jhn
John STOTE IX. of=Mary
Lyndhurst, Yeoman,
Free & Customary Died
Tenant of L. Co- before
heir with bro. George 2 3 July
1 73 5 (W.). Buried at 1778
L. 29 Sept. 1777. (C.B.).
, r
George STOTE I.
Bap. 19 June
1694 (P.R.);
" next taker "
on his mother's
death 1750
(C.B.).
;Mary
(PiTT).
Mar. at
Boldre
2 8 Dec.
1721
(P.R.).
WmBENHAM=I
of Lynd-
hurst.
Sarah.
Wm RYALL= 2. Rebecca.
ofMinstead.
John STOTE X.
Living 1 73 5 (W.).
Richard STOTE.
Living i75o(C.B.).
Philip STOTE.
Living 1 739 (C.B.).
George STOTE II.
I I
Mary. Richard STOTE IV. of Battramsley, Yeoman. Bapt.=Anne (SCOTT). Mar
at Boldre 14 Mar. 1649. Customary tenant of the
Royal Manor of Lyndhurst. Bur. 8 Apl. 1 706 (P.R.).
Admon. to widow 1707 (A.).
HUM i
|
1
John STOTE = Sarah (WAY-
Richard = William STOTE of=
ofBattrams-
MAN). Mar.
STOTE.
Boldrewood Lodge,
ley, Yeo-
at Milton by
Bap.
gent. Freeholder of
man. Bapt.
lie. 23 Oct.
1681 at
the manor of Lynd-
at Boldre
1722. Bur.
Boldre.
hurst. Will proved
1 1 Sept.
at Boldre 28
1 6 Oct. i772(W.).
1678.
May 1724.
Died /./.
at Boldre 7 Feb.
1675. Buried there
22 Sep. 1720 (P.R.).
•Ann (TRIM-
LETT), widow.
Mar.atWinches-
ter Cathedral 1 7
May 1728. Bur.
at Brockenhurst
30 Jan. 1729.
MAR. i9i 2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
227
John BANNISTER==.
of Lyndhurst,
Hants, copy-
hold 1 66 1.
N.B.— A John B.,
"Regarder,"i632.
.1.
William BANNISTER.
Living 1666 &
1705.
T
Edmund BANNisTER=Mary
Living 1666 &
1705. Regrant
1717. Died 1719.
next taker 1719.
Mary
Edward BANNISTER.
Living 1717.
(Proved to be the same name by the will of Fra. BARROW ah BARRY 1729/30, etc.)
James BARRY of Frith am, =
Hants, agister 1622-32.
r
James BARROW, gent. Regarder= Alice.
1 666, held lands in Fritham, by
copyhold 1 66 1. Died 1714.
1
John BARROW=
: . .
1 1
James BARROW jr. = . . . James BARROW=
Living 1 66 1; Adm. tenant
paid heriot 1714. in reversion of
the Fritham
property 1712.
1
John BARROW
Living 1727.
1
Ann.
Living
1727.
James BARRY of L.
Will 1621.
Benjamin BARROW of Lyndhurst ;= Anna
copyhold 1 66 1. Died before
1673.
r
William BARROW.
Living 1673.
I
Jane. Living== William THORNE of L.
1673. I Yeoman. Willi68i.
r
William THORNE = Mary, dau. of John STOTE &
of L., Yeoman, j Joane (GOLD). Mar. 1692.
228
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 191 2
Q^ronwe :
N.B.— A Thos. B. of
Brockenhurst, Yeoman
& Equitator in 1632.
Thomas BROWNE, sen., gent.,=Joice
of Lyndhurst, Hants. Copy-
holdi665. Died before 1671.
"next taker" 1671.
Regrant 1673.
Thos. BROWNE, jun.
Living 1666.
Susanna^ Wm. OLDING of London Minstead &
Barkly Regis. Living 1673.
Thos. OLDING. Living 167 3. = Rebecca
Customary Tenant 1696.
Arthur BUCKLE. Living in^. . . .
Lyndhurst 1638. Free
Tenant of L. Died 1666.
Henry BUCKLE. = Elizabeth . . .
Customary next taker 1672.
Tenant of L.
Died 1672.
John BUCKLE "heir to Arthur B."=
Inherited property 1666.
John BUCKLE. Living 1673.
Susanna. Living 1673.
MAR. 1 912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
229
N.B.— An Edward
BRIGHT, subforester
in 1632.
Edward BRIGHT, of Lyndhurst, Hants, sen.,:
gent. Riding Forester of Rynefield Lodge
1682. Copyholds at L. 1641 & 1666.
r 1
1
I
Henry =f Nicholas
Edward BRIGHT, jun., gent. Free =
George BRIGHT,=. . .
BRIGHT.
BRIGHT.
Tenant of Lyndhurst & Subfores-
gent. Subfores-
Living at
Subfores-
ter 1692. Died 1717/18. "Next
ter. Copyholds
L. 1661
ter 1 665.
heir" John B. who aliened land
at L. 1714/15
£1675.
at L. to Joshua ELING.
& 1733.
1.
I
1 1
William BRIGHT=. . .
FrancisCi,EVERLY,=Jane. Liv-
Richard BRIGHT. Sarah.
of L. Free & Cus-
gent.,of L. Free- ing 1675.
Living 1714 & Living
tomary Tenant.
holderof L. "jure Widow in
1748. 1717.
Agister 1672-92.
ux." 1720.
«BV-^^^MM»>
Henry BRIGHT. Living
1668. Customary Ten-
ant of L. 1714/15.
James CLEVERLY. Living
1712. Free tenant of
L. 1722.
N.B.— A Richard
GASTIN was Equi-
tator in 1634.
Richard GASTIN, sen. of Lynd-==
hurst, Hants. Admd tenant of
"Tonnes" & "Groves" 1666.
Died before 1671.
GASKIN,
wid. Died
1671.)
\ . r
John GASTIN. Copyhold "Dore-= Richard GASTIN, or GASCOIGNE =;=J
hayes" 1668.
Richard GASCOIGNE of London,^:. . .
"scissor." Grant & surrender
of "Dorehaies" 1696/7.
jun., "next taker
&" Groves" i
r
IN, or tjASCOiGNE =yjoane
er" of "Tonnes" "next
671. Died 1672. I 1672.
taker'
James GASKIN.
Living 1672.
Elizabeth.
Living 1672.
r
Richard GASCOIGNE.
Living 1696.
John GASCOIGNE.
Living 1696.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR.i9i2
Nicholas PHILLIPS. Copy- == Mary ....
hold in Lyndhurst, Hants, I Died 1674.
1 66 1. Died before 1670.
John PHILLIPS of Lyndhurst, r=. . . Nicholas PHILLIPS.
Yeoman; "next taker" 1674. I Living in 1666.
I
Ruth == Thomas HAYTER of Bewly.
Elizabeth.
James PHILLIPS of Minstead, Yeoman. =
Will 1662; proved 1666.
I
James PHILLIPS. Copyhold in Lynd-=Jane ....
hursti66i. Died 1 71 8.
I I
James PHILLIPS. Edward PHILLIPS.
John PURCAS of London Minstead, =. . .
copyhold 1665.
I I
William PURCAS, Yeoman of London =. . . Katherine. Living 1666.
Minstead. Living 1666.
Matthew PURKASS. Regrant 1717 & 1727.=. . .
I I I
Anne. William. Edmund.
All living in 1727.
James PURCAS, sen., of London Minstead ;=. . .
copyhold 1668.
I \
James PURCAS, jun. =? Jane ... Diedl7l4/i5. John PURCAS. Living 1668. =y. . .
Living 1668 & Mary PHILLIPS "next Grant of copyhold in London
1696. taker." Minstead 1713.
John. Living 1713. Edward. Living 1713.
T
MAR. 19 1 2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
231
N.B. — WM. ROGERS, sen.,
of Burley, Yeoman, was
Agister in 1622 & 1634.
: (Bofb,
William ROGERS jun.=p Dorothy
Copyhold in Barkly
Regis. 1 66 1.
Dorothy. Living Maurice GOLD of Lyndhurst. = Anne. Living 1666
1666. Subforester in 1686.
Henry GOLD. Living 1718.
John WYLD sen., Copy-=Mary
hold in Lyndhurst 1711.
John WYLD jun., regrant=Elizabeth, dau. of John
1717. STOTE & Joane (GOLD).
r
John WILD.
Living 1717.
n
James WILD.
Living 1717.
232 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 191 2
in
Cjjefeea—
38. Mr. John HOLLES, of this p., d. July 28, 1810, a. 68. An
honest man is the noblest work of God. Sarah, w. of the above, d.
Dec. 1 8, 1823, a. 84. Lydia HOLLES, d. of the above, d. 10 Aug.
1827, a. 51. Walter, s. of John and Sarah HOLLES, d. 28 Jan. 1832,
a. 54. Ann HOLLES, d. of John and Sarah, d. at an advanced age,
Nov. i, 1852.
39. Thomas ROSSER, d. 13 Sep. 1810, a. 66. Jane, d. of the above,
w. of Mr. Joseph SALMON, d. 17 Feb. 1826, a. 47. Mary, widof the
above Mr. Thomas ROSSER, d. 3 Sep. 1842, in her 89th year. Mr. J.
SALMON, d. Ap. 16, 1849, a. 67.
Great God I own thy sentence just
And nature must decay
I yield my body to the d[ust]
To dwell with fellow [cl]ay.
40. Elizabeth Mary JUMPSEN, d. 19 May 1805, a. 8y. 9m. Mrs.
Cecilia SCHOFIELD, d. Dec. 16, 1821, in her 22d4 year. Mr. Thomas
JUMPSEN, d. Feb. 12, 1829, a. 25. Mrs. Susannah JUMPSEN d. Sep. 13,
1837, a. 68. William JUMPSEN, her husb., d. Jan. 15, 1840, in his
73d year.
41. Entrance to the family vault of Thomas SMITH, Esq., 26 Mar.
1831. [A four-sided monument here, within a railing, which could
not be got at, has a not very legible inscription to SMITH family].
Also Miss Jane SMITH, a sister of Thomas SMITH, d. Mar., 1 8 — , a. 7 1.
42. Mrs. Elizabeth HUMPHREY, of St. Martin in the Fields, d.
Dec. 18, 1765, a. 65. James, s. of David and Esther SPIERS, of said
p., d. May 1 1, 1769, a. 10 months. The above Esther SPIERS, d.
Feb. (15), 177-.
43. Mr. William FULLBROOK, of this p., d. Aug. n, 1842, a. 72.
Ann, w. of the above, d. Ap. 15, 18-2, a. 58. George, s. of the above,
d. Ap. 22, 1837, a. 32. Thomas, s. of above William and Ann,
d. May --- . Also Martha EDWICK, d. of the above, d. Dec. —
44. Elizabeth, w. of P. CHARRON, Esq., d. 24 Nov. 1752, a. 58.
Said P. CHARRON, d. 4 Dec. 1754, a. 75. Their only ch., Mary, w.
of George ELERS, Esq., d. 8. Jan. 1771, a. 40, with 7 of her chn., who
died infants. George ELERS d. 19 Dec. 178(4), a. 64. Charlotte
MAR.I9I2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 233
ELERS, gr. d. of the above, and d. of Carew ELERS by Susanna,
his w., d. 27 Mar. 1790, a. 10 weeks. Thomas FARROW, Esq., d.
12 June 1818, a. 50. Carew ELERS, Esq., d. 15 June, 1821, in his
66th year.
45. Miss Diana WORMULL, d. Jan. 17, 1812. Mrs. Rachel
WORMULL d. 1 8 Aug. 1829, in her 92d year. Mr. Thos. WORMULL,
her husb., d. 15 June 1831, a. 89. Also Mary Rachel, d. of the
above, d. 15 July, 1848, a. 71.
46. Hannah and Ann ASTON, d. 29 June 1800; Hannah, a. 25;
Ann, a. — ; ds. of William and Elizabeth ASTON, of this parish.
47. Mr. John PETTIT, formerly a M(aster) G(unner) in His
Majesty's N(avy). He faithfully served his Country upwards of —
years, and d. Feb. 180-, a. 71. Eleanor, w. of the above, d. Ap. 12,
1816, a. 72. Eleanor STOKES, d. of the above, d. Ap. 12, 18 — , in
her 65th year.
48. Mrs. Margaret SPELMAN, d. 16 Jan. 1812, a. 75.
49. Richard NORTH, Esq., of Westmeath, Ireland, late a Captain in
the Army, d. Aug. 2, 1796, a. 47.
50. Mr. (Emor) NORTH, of this p., Apothecary, and Ann his wife.
He died June 14, 1761, a. 48. She, Sep. 22, 1761, a. 39. Also 4
jof their chn., who died infants. Also Mary, w. of Mr. William NORTH,
Surgeon's Deputy, Chelsea Hospital, d. 27 Mar. 1812, a. 67.
W. NORTH, Esq., husb. of Mary, d. Nov. 23, 1816, in his 72d year.
Harriet, wid. of Philip BURRARD, Esq., d. of the above W. NORTH,
d. 30 Jan. 1867, in her 98th year.
51 Also Mrs. Elizabeth PEARE, mother of the above, d.
May 31, 183-, a. (9)1.
52. [Perhaps belongs to the preceding.] F. W. B. P., 1812.
53. John, s. of Mr. David RIGN[ILL], of this p.,d. May 23, 17(6)1,
in his (i3th) year. Elizabeth RIGNILL, d. of (Mr. and Mrs.) RIGNILL,
of Fields, d. (Jan.) 1770, a. ly.-m. Andrew, theirs., d. Mar. i,
1770, a. 3 months. Miss Susan RIGNILL, d. Jan. i, 1776,3. (i) year.
54. Mr. George CARTER, of this p., d. Nov. 10, 182-, a. (39)-
Ann, wid. of the above, d. Jan. 18(37), a- ^9- William Charles, s. of
the above . . .
55. William BATE, Esq., of Dublin, d. 25 Sep. 1808, a. 40.
56. Margaret MORRISON, d. 9 Ap. 1825, a. 33 . . .
FF
234 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR.I9I2
57. Mr. James NOAD, of this p., d. Sep. 3, 1802, a. 53
Farewell my dear and loving wife,
My children and my friends
I hope in He[aven] [w]e shall meet
Where all earth ends.
58. Richard MASON, cork-cutter, of St. Martin in the Fields, d. 31
Aug. 1745, in his 63d. year.
59. Ann, w. of Henry VANDERESCH, Esq., of this p., d. 20 Oct. 1757,
a. 61. Mary VANDERESCH, d. of the above, d. 10 Aug. 1801, a. 71.
Samuel J. BLUNT, s. of Henry & Mary BLUNT, d. 2 Mar. 179(5),
a. ly. im. Jasper ATKINSON, Esq., formerly of Rotterdam, d. 22 Feb.
180(1), a. 79.
60. Ann, w. of Joseph NAILER, Esq., of Chelsea, d. 6 May 1832,
a. 86. Henry BLUNT, Esq., d. 18 Feb. 1836, in his 69th year. The
above Joseph NAILER, d. 6 June 1835, a. 86.
61. Mary, w. of Thomas DAVEY, d. Aug. 12, 1802, a. 63.
62. Mrs. Elizabeth HOCKLEY
63. Mrs. Elizabeth OLIFF, d. 24 June 1808, a. 66.
64. Mrs. Mary MARJORIBANKS, d. at Chelsea, Ap. 16, 1803 in her
(5) I st. year, wid. of Mr. John MARJORIBANKS, of Edinburgh. Samuel
Edward, s. of the above, d. 24 Jan. 1814, a. 34.
65. Mr. Geo. Willis BOWMAN, d. Dec. 19, 1809, a. i8y. 9 months.
66. Erected by M.E.C. to Mrs. Sarah ALLEN, who in 1764 gener-
ously preferred attending on the former to the lucrative offices
d. May 1776, a. 40.
66A. Joyce, w. of James BAILLY of the Royal Hosp. Row, Chelsea,
d. in childbed, also an inf. son, Sept. (1804).
67. William REEVES, Esq., late Capt. of the Leicestershire Regt. of
Militia, d. 14 Feb. 181 1, a. 74. Elizabeth his relic!:, d
68. Mrs. Jennett EMANS, d. 17 May 1843, a. 65. Miss Frances
EMANS d. 16 Feb. 1847, a. 31. Mr. Edmund EMANS, d. Jan. 15, 1852,
3.79.
69. John MORTHLAND, Esq., d. Mar. 16, 1807, a. 54. Mary, w. of
the above, d. Jan. 31 ,1826, a. 65.
70. Hannah STUART, d. Nov. , in her 63d. year. Mr. Charles
STUART, s. of the above, d. Oct. I-, . Also ....
71. [An obelisk'] Andrew MILLAR, of the Strand, London, book-
seller, ere&ed this near the dormitory intended for himself, and his
MAR.I9I2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 235
beloved w. Jane MILLAR, and in memory of the deceased pledges of
their married love, 1751. Robert MILLAR, a. iy., d. 1736; Elizabeth,
of the same age, d. , buried in the church yard of St. Clement
. Andrew MILLAR, the fleeting joy and lasting grief of those
who dedicate this monument, d. at Scarborough, July 30 1750, a.
5y. 6m. Buried here Aug. 28 following.
Reader ! If ever Pity touch'd thy Heart
Let these sad Lines a tender Thought impart
Think with what sorrow we inscribe this Stone
That speaks us Parents and that speaks us NONE.
Andrew MILLAR, Esq., d. June 8, 1768, a. 61. Dame Jane, wid. of
Sir Archibold GRANT, d. Oft. 25, 17 — , a. 81. Mrs. Mary JOHNSON,
d. July 30, 1757.
Arms: A cross moline, impaling a cross saltire, on a chief 3 (cushions ?).
72. [A four-sided monument.] Ezekiel JEMMETT, Esq., d. 4 Feb.
1754, a. 70. Sarah, his w., d. 18 Jan. 1737, in her 5<Dth year. Bernard
HOLBROOKE, Esq., d. July 23, 1808, a. 73. Mary, his relic!:, d. Feb. 24,
1818, a. 67. George HOLBROOKE, M.A., Trinity Coll., Cambridge, s.
of Bernard HOLBROOKE, of Lambeth, Surrey, Esq., and Mary, his w.,
only d. of Thomas and Mary JEMMETT, d. 10 Ap. 1813, a. 33. Bernard
Thomas HOLBROOKE, Esq., of Chester Place, Lambeth, d. May 1, 1817,
a. 39.
73. John COLLETT, d. Jan. 17, 1771, a. 77. Mrs. Anne MITCHELL,
d. Dec. 21, 1776, a. 78.
74. \A four-sided tomb.] Edmund, s. of Edmund & Sarah Berridge
PUGH, d. Nov. 1 6, 182-, in his (5th.) year. . . .
75. Elizabeth HOWARD ....
76. Mrs. Ann CHITTOCK, d. July 1, 1804, a. 63. Mr. Ellis CHITTOCK,
her husb., d. July 27, 1804, a. 65. Also 7 chn. of the above. Martha,
w. of John JONES, niece of the above, d. 31 Mar. 1810, a. 38. Ann,
their d., d. 24 Aug. 1808, a. 7 months.
77. John INNYS, Esq., of Redland Court, co. of Gloucester, d. 27
Od. 1778, a. 83.
78. The children of John & Tabitha HAMILTON, of Sloane St. ;
James, d. Nov. 15, 1784, a. 7m. nd. ; Margaret, d. Jan. 30, 1801, in her
1 3th yr. ; Mary Ann, d. Aug. 27, 1804, in her I9th. year. The above
Tabitha, d. 16 Feb. 1820, a. 64. Her husb. died, Ap. 10, 1824, a. 75.
79. Mr. William CROSSE, late of Queen's Elms, d. 24 Ap. 1807, a. 56.
William, his s., d. Mar. 11, 1814, a. 14. Ann, w. of Edmund MASON,
Esq., of Kensington Gore, d. 18 Ap. 1827, a. 69. E. MASON, Esq.,
236 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1912
d. 27 May 1830, in his Both. year. Sarah, wid. of Wm. CROSSE, d.
25 May 1842, a. 76. Ann, youngest d. of the above, d. Mar. 1, 1846,
a. 39.
80. James BENNET, Esq., of London, merchant, d. 16 May 1743, a.
66. Jane CHRISTIE, d. June 18(43), a. — . Ann FROUHART, d. Sep. — ,
a. (32).
81. Elizabeth THACKER, of Smith St., Chelsea, d. Feb. — , a. 2(7).
82. Richard DEN ....
83. James William, d. an inf., Ap. 1809 ; Frances TILSON,
d. Sep. 29, 1809, a. 7y. 8m. ; chn. of James TILSON, Esq., of Hans Place,
by Frances his wife.
84. Mary, w. of Charles DOWNES, Esq., of Upper Ranelagh St.,
Pimlico, d. 30 Oct. 1801, a. 51. Also C. DOWNES, Esq., State Page to
his late Majesty, King Geo. IV., d. 14 May 182(1), a. 71. Also Pene-
lope, wid. of the above Chas. DOWNES, d. 5 Feb. 1859, a. 83.
85. Mary GRATLAND, d. Aug. 7, 1794, a. 2 years. Elizabeth GRAT-
LAND, d. Nov. 22, 1799, a- ^ months. Mrs. Catherine BROWN, d.
June 2, 1802, a. 66. Mr. William GRATLAND, d. Sep. 26, 1807, a. 45.
86. GOODWIN, d. 6 June , in her i6th. year. Cornelius
(Lide) GOODWIN, Esq., d. Ap. 1782, in his 73d. year. Henry GOOD-
WIN, Esq., d. June 23, 180(9), a>~-
87. William PRESTON, of Carisbrook, I. of Wight, d. 1792, a. 44.
Martha, his w., d. — . Also their chn., Mary, George, Martha,
William, d. 1831, and Ann, d. — , a. 57.
Central path, beginning at north end.
88. Thomas PEMBERTON, gent., d. Nov. 29, 1801, a. 60. Mary, his
w., d. 3 Dec. 1815, a. 77. The Rev. Wm. Augustus PEMBERTON, s. of
the above, d. Oct. 12, 1816, a. 42. Mrs. Ann Sukey ROGERS, d.
18 Aug. 1818, a. 73.
89. [A four-sided tomb.] Annabella Dundas, w. of the Rev. Weeden
BUTLER, jun., b. 30 Mar. 1779, d. 14 Feb. 1822. George, their 3d. s.,
b. 20 Sep. 1813, d. 13 Mar. 1830. . . .
90. Bridget, d. of .... Also .... Also Elizabeth, also d. of
the above Penelope DEANE, d. Sep. 5, 1828, a. 51. Also Sarah, d. of
P. DEANE, d. Mar. 10, 18 (4-) in her 66th year.
91. J.B., d. 31 Oft. 1808, a. 46.
MAR.I9I2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 237
92. Mrs. Margaret MIDD[LETON], [secojnd d. of Sir Gilbert GRIE
.... agg, Bart., and w. of the [Re]vd. Erasmus MIDDLETON, some
time Curfate] .... parish, d. Jan. 3, 1802.
93. Miss Rebecca QUIN, d. of Mr. QUIN, of this p., b. Oct. 1807,
d. 22 Dec. following.
94. George (ALLIN ), d. 1783.
95. Elizabeth, w. of Mr. Thos. MILWARD, of this p., d. Feb. 7,
1752, a. 33. William, their s., d. Sep. 24, 17(5)4. Elizabeth
MILWARD, d. of the above, d. May 14, 177(5), a. — .
96. Mrs. Ann MOWATT, d. 16 Nov. 1806, a. 63. Mr. Joseph
MOWATT, d. Jan. 30, 1807, a. 83.
97. Jane, youngest d. of Alexander & Mary Anne ADAM, d. 10 May,
1811. Mary Anne, wid. of A. ADAM, Esq., d. 17 Nov. 1823. Miss
Eliza Lucretia ADAM, d. Mar. 8, 1826.
98. Mr. Michael DUFFIELD, of this p., gent., d. 24 Sep. 1761, a. 71.
Catherine, his w., d. 10 May 1744. Catherine, w. of Mr. William
BAKER, surgeon, d. of the above, d. I May 1743, a. 28. Mary, w. of
Mr. Michael DUFFIELD, jun., d. Oft. 21, 1763, a. 41. Charles
DUFFIELD, d. 1794, a. 17. Matthew SLATER, Esq., s. in law of Alexr.
DUFFIELD, d. Sep. 6, 1762, a. 72.
Also four chn. ; Elizabeth, d. 1760, a. 3 yrs. ; Charles, d. June 21,
1771, a. II months ; Henry, d. July 30, 1774; Ge. Fred., d. Ap. 25,
1778, a. 2-J- yrs.
Mr. Michael DUFFIELD, s. of Michael & Catherine, d. 20 May 1798,
in his 75th. year. Mary, his w., d. 24 May 1808, a. 63.
Also three of their chn. : Anne, d. June 12, 1746, a. 7m. ; Saml.
Ocl. 30, 1747, a. 4 m. ; Mary, Ap. 6, 1750, a. 6 yrs.
[The above is a four-sided monument, and it does not state the parentage
of the children.]
Arms : A chevron between 3 [doves ?], impaling a chevron between
3 wheatsheaves.
99. Elizabeth BETTS, d. 30 Jan. ....
100. Mary SHAW ....
101. Mary WHITLOW, d. 1794, a. 92. Jane, w. of Ed. WHITLOW,
plumber, d. Jan. 18, 1801, a. 72. Mr. Edward WHITLOW, husb. of
the above, d. Aug. I, 1802, a. (5)2. Mrs. Elizabeth WHITLOW, w. of
the above, d. Feb. 3, 1829, in her 85th. year.
102. Captain Edward KYFFIN, of H.M. Marine Forces, late of this
p., d. Dec. 3, 1774, a- 76- Frances, his relict, d. Jan. 25, 1783, a. 65.
Lieut. E. STOKES, gr. s. of the above, d. 23 May 1798, a. 23. John
238 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR.I9I2
STOKES, Esq., f. of the above, d. 10 May 1814, a. 71. Frances, his w.,
d. of E. & F. KYFFIN, d. 16 May 1818, a. 64. Mrs. Elizabeth NIXON,
wid., d. of John STOKES, by his first w., Ann, d. Mar. 1834, a- 6(3).
103. Mrs. Ann WHYTE, d. of Dan WHYTE, of the County
. . . . , d. Mar. 31, ....
104. The Rev. SLOANE
105. Thomas BAILLIE, Esq., late Clerk of the Deliveries of H.M.
Ordnance, formerly Lieut. Governor of Greenwich Hospital, d. 13
Dec. 1802, a. 78.
1 06 , a. 87. Also Mrs. Catherine TETHERINGTON, gt.
niece of the above Mr. Richard COLLETT, d. Sep. 23, 1821, a. 62. Mr.
John CURTIS, nephew of R. COLLETT, d. Ap. 26, 1837, a- 71-
107. Mr. Ja . . . Also Mrs. Elizabeth [L]LOYD,
(of ab)ove Mr. James LLOYD, d. O6t., 18 — , a. 7|Y|.
108. Lucretia, w. of Mr. Thomas CRUMP, d. Nov. 3, 1809, a. 54.
Mrs. Frances CRUMP, d. Ap. 17, 1836, a. 64. Mr. T. CRUMP, d. 10
Mar. 1851, a. 89.
109. Henry James, s. of Mr. Robert & Mary MARRIOTT, of this p.,
d. July 28, 1777, in his 2ist year. Mary, mother to H. J. MARRIOTT
d. Nov. 4, 1794, a. 74. Sally, w. of Mr. John JOHNSON, d. of above,
d. 20 Jan. 1795, a. 34. Mr. R. MARRIOTT, f. of above H. J. MARRIOTT,
and husb. of Mary, d. Jan
no. Sarah, w. of Richard WICKS, d. June 21, 1838, a. 62.
in. Harriot, w. of William RYLAND, of Queen St. in this p., d. 20
Sep. 1824, a. 30.
East side of Burial Ground, beginning at the south east corner.
112. Phoebe DICKENS, d. Feb. 15, 1807, a. 21 m. II days.
113. Elizabeth, d. of the Rev. James NEWTON, and Sophia, his w.,
of Old Cleve, Sumersetshire, d. Ap. 28, 1808, a. 16 years.
114. Captain James WRIGHT, of in this parish. [He] was
attached to the British Army, whose honour he sustained with un-
blemished reputation, d. 20 Ap. 183(4), a- 93- J°^n Rogerson
Tomkins WRIGHT, gr. s. of the above, d. Aug. 1824, a. 35.
115. Augustus COURT, d. Ap. , a. 6- years.
116. Grace, d. of Robert & Anne ELFORD, of this p., d. Oct. 13,
1812, a. 2y. 5m. Also Anne ELFORD, mother of the above, d.
Aug. 1 8, 18(4)2, in her 75th. year.
MAR.I9I2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 239
117. George HICKS, Esq., of Cadogan Place, and St. Margaret's,
Rochester, d. 4 Nov. 1819, a. 55.
118. John MOR(GIN) ....
119. Mr. James JONES, of this p., d. Feb. 18, 1802, a. 52.
1 20. Mr. John THRESHER, many years of Kensington, late of this p.,
d. 20 M — , 1801, a. 69. Elizabeth, his relict, d. June 2, 1801, a. 70.
Sarah CLARKE, sister of the above, d. 14 Ap. 1801, a. 73.
121 Also Philip WHITE, Esq., s. of the [above] named
Philip Char(les) WHITE, and Harriet WHITE, d. 12 , a. (28).
122. Philip Chauncy [WHITE], d. . Also Harriet WHITE, the
relid, d. , a. (5)2.
123 Also 4 chn. of the above who d. in their infancy.
Also William BULL, d. Aug. , a. 20. Also Edwin, s. of the above,
d. Ap. 18(2)8, a. ly. um. Also Mr. (John) BULL, f. & husb. of the
above ....
124. Mary Magdalena WILLIAMS, of Sloane St., d. July 29, 1812, a
5(3)-
125. Mr. John ANNETT, of this p., d. Aug. 20, 1809, a. 71. Eliza-
beth ANNETT, his gr. d., d. Oft. 10, 1807, a. 10 yrs. John, s. of Thomas
& Margaret ANNETT, gr. s. of the above, d. Oft. 23, 1815, a. 10 months.
The sd. Margaret, d. Nov. 5, 1821, a. 39. Mr. Thomas ANNETT, d.
1 8 Dec. 1822, a. 40.
126. John MARTYN, F.R.S., — of Botany at Cambridge, and E ,
his w ... John KING, D.D., Reclor of this p . . .
127. Mrs. Ann COOPER, d. 25 Jan. 1837, a. 70. William Foster
SAREL, gt. nephew of the above, d. 18 Feb. 1839, a. 18 months.
Thomas FOSTER, d. 21 May 1810, a. 45. Susannah Grace SAREL, niece
of the above, d. 20 Mar. 1841, a. 8.
128. Mary, w. of Robert WILLIAMS, and d. of John & Mary DIDS-
BURY, d. Feb. 18, 1783, a. 25.
129 Mr. David SCOTT, d. Nov. 1812. Mr. James SCOTT,
bro. of the above ....
130. E.G., 1806. M.C., 1816. M.C., 1824. ;— C, 1828 ;— C,
1829.
131 ret SCOTT, w. of Mr. James SCOTT, of this p., d. Mar. 19,
1797, a. 66. Mrs. Sarah SELBY, d. of above ....
(To be continued]
240
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 19 12
from (fllo^tr to
JOHN IBBETSON =f RATTRAY, sister of Elizabeth,
wife of Vice-Admiral Sir Joseph YORKE,
K.C.B., M.P., and daughter of James
RATTRAY of Atherston.
"I
Richard John BRASSEY, of Ilford, Essex,= Anne IBBETSON.
High Sheriff for Essex 1821,
for co. Essex.
,,J.P, D.L. I
Peter Henry BERTHON, F.R.S., Secretary = Fanny BRASSEY. Born I May 1807. Mar-
ried at Barking, Essex, 21 Feb. 1824.
Died 19 March 1865. Buried in BERTHON
vault at St. Mary's, Leyton.
of Trinity House, Tower Hill, London,
1856-67. Born 8 Sept. 1798. Reg. in
parish of St. Luke, co. Middlesex. Sponsors,
Mr. BERTHON, Capt. COTTON and Mrs.
BARNES. Died at 20, Margaret Street,
Cavendish Square, London, 6 Feb. 1890.
Buried at St. Mary's, Leyton, in the BER-
THON Family vault. Eldest son of Peter
BERTHON of London, merchant, and Ellen
Green PARK his wife. (Marr. 9 Nov. 1 797,
see Gentleman's Magazine, vol. 67, part 2,
p. 1126.)
Charles BROWNING of London. Born = Fanny Ellen BERTHON. Born 21 Nov.
25 Dec. 1812. Died 4 April 1871.
Buried in BERTHON family vault at St.
Mary's, Leyton. Married at St. Mary's,
Walthamstow, Essex, 18 Jan. 1844.
Edward Frederick BLAKE, of Shanklin = Agnes Anne BROWNING. Born 21 Oct.
1824. Married (2ndly) 17 Feb. 1876,
at St. Stephen's, Westbourne Park, Charles
PRICE. Died 8 Jan. 1898, at 187, Crom-
well Road, London. Buried at The
Necropolis, Brookwood, Woking, Surrey.
Towers, Isle of Wight, Esq. Born 24 May
1841. Died at Shanklin, 16 October
1908.
1846. Married 18 Jan. 1866 at St.
Mary's, Bryanston Square, London.
J. Sylvester SICHEL of Walnut Tree Wick, = Agnes Marianne BLAKE. Married 2 No-
Hitchin, Herts, son of Mrs. E. F. SICHEL
of 1 19 Gloucester Terrace, London.
vember 1898, at St. Saviour's, Shanklin,
Isle of Wight.
Violet SICHEL.
Born I 5 June
1902.
MAR.I9I2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 241
From Elizabeth RATTRAY, sister of Mrs. IBBETSON, descended the
4th. Earl of HARDWICK. Fanny BRASSEY (Mrs. P. H. BERTHON) was an
exceedingly pretty woman. She was married very young, and on one
occasion her husband came home from the Trinity House and found
his wife sitting on the floor playing with her dolls.
Peter Henry BERTHON was presented at Court by Lord PALMERS-
TON. The Rev. Edward Lyon BERTHON, vicar of Romsey, Hants,
brother of Peter Henry, was the inventor of the Berthon boat. His
arms have been placed in the window nearest the screen on the
eastern side of the Dining Hall at Magdalen College, Cambridge.
When he was 90 years of age, in 1889, 1 used to go and sit and talk with
Peter Henry BERTHON at his residence, 20, Margaret Street. He
had almost lost the use of his legs, but his memory was wonderful for
the whole of his life, as he remembered recent events as well as those
of his younger days ; but, of course, the early recollections interested
me most.
He told me he could remember the hairdresser coming to curl and
powder his father's hair, and also how, at the time they were living in
Finsbury Square, he and his parents used to drive every Sunday round
Hyde Park, with all the paraphernalia of liveried and powdered foot-
men stuck up behind them. He said the BARNES' (relatives on his
mother's side) used also to live in Finsbury Square. When asked
about the BERTHON livery colours (which are not drawn from the
arms, and of which, for some unknown reason, the BERTHONS are
expected to be proud) he said he could just remember his grand-
father's livery colours russet and orange, or, as he described them, a
dirty-looking brown and orange. The brown he described as being
much the same shade as that used by the HARRISONS (his grandmother,
Mrs. Peter BERTHON, was the daughter of John HARRISON, of Charter-
house Square, a Director of the Bank of England). He said, however,
that the livery colours were never used after his grandfather's death
in 1809, as his grandmother used a sort of grayish blue liveries as mourn-
ing. Mrs. John HINDE (nee Jane BERTHON) a cousin of P. H. BERTHON,
who died at Ilfracombe, 30 March 1888, aged 99 years and four
months, told me in 1887, when calling upon her, that the coat was
russet with collar and cuffs orange ; the waistcoat and knee-breeches
orange. She said to me, " I can remember your father running
about when no higher than the table." He, Captain Charles Harrison
BERTHON, Indian Navy (retired) was then aged 72. Both Peter
Henry BERTHON and his daughter Fanny Ellen lived to be great-
grandparents.
There is a monument in St. Peter's Church, Walthamstow, on the
North wall, to Fanny BERTHON (nee BRASSEY), with arms of the
BERTHON and BRASSEY families. Peter Henry BERTHON was in some
way connected with the founding of the Forest School at Waltham-
stow. On one occasion when visiting him he spoke of King GEORGE IV.
and his ill-fated Queen. He was a strong upholder of the Queen's,
and talked of the affair more with the spirit of a lively partisan than
as though it was a matter of past history.
Raymond Tinne BERTHON.
GG
242 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR.i9i2
'0 ButnBet (Jloonu*
' QJeporte and
[These references often follow and supplement the information to
be obtained from wills. They lead the intelligent searcher to
the pleadings, depositions, orders and decrees in each case, and
from which additional facts are always to be gathered.]
Vol. 760. ALLIX v. SCOTT.
1791, Jan 5. Charles Wager ALLIX of Mere, co. Wilts, clerk,
administrator of Ann (JOHNSON) his late wife, Mary Anton JOHNSON
of Wallazey, co. Chester, administratrix of Ellen JOHNSON her late
sister, Claude SCOTT of Great Alie Street, Goodman's Fields,
Middlesex, executor of Thomas JOHNSON, deceased, and Thomas
JOHNSON an infant. Testator John JOHNSON. The Master approves
of a deed between John HILL of Netherpool, co. Chester, Esq., eldest
son and heir at law of Thomas HILL and Sarah his wife, sister and
co-heir of Thomas WIDDENS of Liverpool, gentleman, deceased,
Thomas STANFORD of Frankby, co. Chester, Esq., eldest son and heir
at law of Thomas STANFORD and MARY his wife, the other sister
and co-heir of Thomas WIDDENS.
BALL v. LEWES.
1790, Feb. 12. Herbert BALL v. John LEWES, Peter BALL, Ralph
BALL, Catherine BALL, widow, John JONES, and Catherine his wife,
John, William and Jane JONES, infants, John George PHILLIPS and Ann
his wife (late Ann BALL, spinster), Maurice STEPHENS of Pool, Maurice
STEPHENS of Landiloes, and Susannah LEWES, widow. Estate of John
BALL who died April 14, 1776. Defendant John LEWES ]his executor,
died Sept. 14, 1786, administration to Susannah his widow. Mar-
riage of defendant Ann PHILLIPS, daughter of John BALL, Jan. 1782.
Catherine BALL, widow of testator, entitled to dower out of estates
called Trecastle, etc., in the parish of Llanwrnog, co. Montgomery,
and in Trevesham in Aberystwith, co. Cardigan, etc. Schedule of
goods in testator's houses in Aberystwith, etc., include " One eye
observing glass or spectacle in a Horn Case found with the Papers in
the Beaufet " ; " Four old Barrels and one Whimsey Keeble."
Debtors include " nephew William BALL " and tenants (named).
" Pd- for Miss BALL'S Entrance at Mrs- ANDERSON'S School £i — I— o ";
"Black Pins and Pomatum for D° I. o " ; " Pd David JONES for
Carre of Mr BALL'S Tomb Stone from Aberystwith Turnpike to
Llanavan 5 . 6 ". Six schedules of account filling 56 pp.
* Continued from page 124.
MAR. i9i 2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 243
BASSETT v. PERCIVALL.
1790, April 30. Anne BASSETT, widow, Douglas CHURCH and
Catherine CHURCH (by Thomas CHURCH), Edward DEERE (by John
DOWNE), Catherine, wife of James BENNETT (late Catherine DEERE)
and Mary DEERE, v. Matthew Deere PERCIVALL, gentleman, Jane, wife
of Digby MACKWORTH, Esq. (late Jane DEERE, spinster), Stephen
WHITE, Esq., and Cecil his wife, William CHURCH, clerk, and Catherine
his wife, Elizabeth Deere, spinster, and others. Sale of estates at
the Bear Inn, Cowbridge, co. Glamorgan.
BASTARD v. BASTARD.
1790, Feb. 13. Thomas BASTARD, Mary BARFOOT and Jane BAR-
FOOT v. Thomas BASTARD, executor of John BASTARD, deceased,
Matthew BRUMFIELD and Sarah his wife (late Sarah BASTARD, widow),
Mary BARFOOT and Mary Magdalen, otherwise Elizabeth WATSON.
Estate of testator John BASTARD. Thomas INGRAM appointed in 1782
receiver in the room of Balthazar BURMAN, deceased.
In re SYLVANUS BEVAN, Esq.
1790, Feb. 26. Lease and release July n and 12, 1785, between
Timothy BEVAN, gent., the said Sylvanus BEVAN (eldest son and heir
apparent of the said Timothy), Iltid THOMAS, late of Swansea, co.
Glamorgan, gent., now deceased, and others. Messuages, etc., in
co. Glamorgan. Iltid THOMAS, eldest son and heir at law of the said
Iltid THOMAS, who died intestate. Thomas HOWELL died intestate
and was buried March 4, 1789, leaving Walter Rice HOWELL his eldest
son and heir at law, now of the age of two years and upwards, and
Jane HOWELL his widow and administratrix. Priscilla and Elizabeth
BEVAN and Joseph Gurney BEVAN and James PHILLIPS, executors and
executrixes of Paul BEVAN, deceased.
In re William BELCHER, Esq., a lunatic.
1790, April 13. George JEMMETT, gentleman, appointed receiver,
Nov. 4, 1784. Charlotte BELCHER, the wife, and William BELCHER, the
son.
BOYNTON v. BOYNTON.
1790, March 6. Sir Griffith BOYNTON, Bart, (eldest son and heir
at law of Sir Griffith BOYNTON, Bart., deceased) v. Dame Mary
BOYNTON, widow, Francis BOYNTON and Henry BOYNTON, her sons,
and others. Estate at Rousby.
244 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR.I9I2
BRADY v. BRETT.
1790, Jan. 26. Ann BRADY, widow, Charles James BRADY, John,
James, George, Anthony, Anne and Louisa BRADY, Elias Arnaud
and Ann his wife, Elias BRUCE, Arnaud John ARNAUD, Frances ARNAUD,
Samuel ATKINS and Henrietta his wife, Henry ATKINS, John ATKINS,
Frances ATKINS, John FENNELL, and Frances his wife, James, John,
George, Thomas, Edward, Henrietta, Mary Ann and Frances FENNELL
v. Sir Percy BRETT, knight, deceased, and others. Estate of Thomas
COLBY, deceased, East Hendred, Milton and Windsor, Berks. Schedule
of account.
BRADFORD v. FOLEY.
1790, Jan. 28. John BRADFORD, assignee of Thomas HAY, deceased,
v. Richard WRIGHT, Robert FOLEY, D.D., Thomas, son of THOMAS
CROMPTON and others. Estate in co. Warwick.
BRIDGES v. GRAVENER.
1790, Feb. 4. Alexander BRIDGES and Robert MUGGRIDGE, execu-
tors of Thomas GASSON, gent., deceased, v. Ann GRAVENER, widow,
Frances, Hannah, James, Nancy and Henry Gravener, her sons and
daughters. The said Ann of Down, near Bromley, Kent, widow of
Henry GRAVENER, gent. The said BRIDGES of Ewell, Surrey, Esq.
The said MUGGRIDGE of Sutton, Surrey, gentleman. The said
GASSON late of Morden, Surrey, gentleman. Robert and John
BRIDGES of Fenchurch Street, London, gunpowder-merchants.
BRIDGMAN v. HARDING.
1790, Feb. 20. Sarah BRIDGMAN, widow, Mary and Lucretia Ann
BRIDGMAN, her daughters and Thurston FORD v. Robert HARDING and
Walter FERDINANDO, executors of Gilbert FORD, Esq., deceased.
Will of said Gilbert FORD. Shares in copper mines. Charles BICK-
NELL, solicitor for the defendants.
BROWNING v. BENNETT.
1790, Feb. 15. Joseph BROWNING and Mary his wife (late Mary
BOULTON, widow), Robert and Timothy SHEWRING v. Richard and
Betty BENNETT. Will of Timothy SHEWRING, former husband of
plaintiff Mary, and father of defendants. His daughter Sarah
SHEWRING (since deceased) under 21.
BURT v. BURT.
1790, Feb. 1 8. Richard Massey Hansard BURT, Esq., and Louisa
his wife v. Robert BURT and others. Estate of William Matthew
BURT, Esq., in the Island of St. Christopher.
MAR. 1 912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 245
BAYLEY v. HODGES.
1790, May 14. John BAYLEY and Elizabeth his wife v. Joseph
HODGES, executor of John SHAW. Settlement on plaintiff Elizabeth
and her issue. Will May, 1782, of William SHAW of Guildford,
apothecary, Sarah his wife and plaintiff Elizabeth, his daughter. Said
John BAYLEY of Castle Street, Falcon Square, St. Giles Cripplegate,
London, merchant. Marriage settlement Nov. 1787, said Elizabeth
then aged 28 and upwards. Her brother William SHAW of Guildford,
apothecary, and Ann STEERE of the same place, spinster, her aunt.
BROWNE v. PARRY.
1790, May 25. Jeremiah Nisbett BROWNE and Innes James
BROWNE v. John PARRY, William BROWNE, Charles HUTTON Esq.,
deceased, and Ann his widow and sole executrix, Mary Ann Nisbett
JOHNSON, Robert SOWERBY and Ann his wife. Estates called Browne's,
Rafnals, and Parkinsons Plantations. Testator's daughter Elizabeth
BROWNE afterwards JEFFERIES ; his widow the defendant Ann HUTTON.
Island of Nevis. Will of James BROWNE, son of the testator, his
executor Robert WILLIS. John WILLIS of Dorchester, gentleman,
executor of the said Robert WILLIS. Maintenance and education of
Mary Ann Nisbett JOHNSON. Defendant William BROWNE, son and
heir at law of testator.
[End of volume 760.]
Vol. 761.
BALL v. STEWARD.
1790, August 3. Burges BALL and Mary his wife v. Francis
STEWARD, John TUCKER and others. Baruch Fox of Beaminster,
Dorset, gent., proposed as receiver of rents in the room of Baruch
Fox, gent., deceased, his late father. Sureties, Thomas Fox the
younger of Mapperton, Dorset, clerk, and Henry SHERIVE of Bridport,
Doctor of Laws.
BANK OF ENGLAND v. SPICER.
1790. June 30. The Governor and Company of the Bank of
England v. John SPICER, Godolphin EDWARDS and others. Estate of
testator Samuel EDWARDS. Refers to a report of 1747. Schedule
of monies due to executors of various creditors.
BARIFF v. RAY.
1790. June 23. Catherine BARIFF, spinster v. Richard RAY, and
Andrew DUNCAN and Catherine his wife (late BARIFF), spinster v.
Thomas DAVIES and George CURLING. Witnesses reside in Co. Bucks.
246 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 19 12
BANISTER v. WAY.
1790, July 14. Thomas BANISTER v. James WAY, Thomas GREEN,
Farmor BULL, James Jones WILMER, John Lambert WILMER, Mary
WILMER, widow, Simon, eldest son of Edward Price WILMER, de-
ceased, William GEDDES, Mary his wife, and Thomas WILLIAMS.
Estate of testator Edward PRICE at Aylesbury, Bucks., and Coblane
Brugnwyn, Wales. Schedule of rents, etc., names of farms and tenants.
" Messrs. GREEN and BULL'S journey into Wales." Herefordshire and
Radnorshire. Messrs. CHILD & Co. testator's bankers. Dr. SMITH'S
attendance on testator. Balance due to the Mercers' Company. Mr.
COLLINS of Thame, surgeon. Legacy to Mary PERKINS late GOOD-
YEAR. A chandelier given to the church at Presteigne. A gravestone
at Presteigne.
BARTLETT v. TIDD.
1790, June 15. William BARTLETT v. Mary TIDD, widow, Richard
MASON the elder, Rebecca MASON, widow, Richard, son of Christopher
MASON (one of the brothers of the testator Thomas MASON), and others.
To inquire whether Sarah Jemima MASON, daughter of testator
Thomas MASON, is dead, etc., and what children, etc., testator's
brothers had. That the said Sarah Jemima MASON died May 10 1784
unmarried. That the testator Thomas MASON, who died in 1777, had
three brothers living when he made his will, namely, jthe defendant
Richard MASON the elder, Edward and Christopher. That his
brother Anthony died aged 14 in 1734, many years before the date
of testator's will, Sept. 26 1770. That testator's brother Christopher
MASON had five children, vizt., the defendant Richard MASON the
younger, John MASON, Agnes, wife of Roger LUPTON, Jane MASON and
Margaret MASON, and five grandchildren, all children of the said
Richard MASON the younger, vizt., Christopher, George, Mary,
Richard and John MASON. That testator's brother Edward MASON
had five children, vizt., Richard, Thomas and Agnes MASON, Margaret
wife of George OVERSBY and Edward MASON, and three grandchildren,
vizt., Dorothy MASON, daughter of the said Thomas and George and
Edward OVERSBY. That Rebecca MASON was buried at Lakenham,
Norfolk, April 6 1786. Testator's freehold in St. Peter Hungate,
Norwich. Schedule of debts, etc.
Vol. 330.
1715, June ii. The Attorney-General for James PARKINSON,
clerk v. Free School of Birmingham, Warwick. Plaintiff appointed
master there April 27 1692. Rents and repairs to said school. Sched-
ules of sums received and names of receivers and payments and by
whom made 1692-1713.
MAR. i9i 2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 247
1715, June 4. The Attorney-General for Sir George WHEELER,
knight and bart., v. William BRAMSTON, S.T.P. Defendant's testatrix
the Lady Johanna THORN HILL, the keys of her lodgings in Somerset
House. The gold, silver, plate, etc., in her possession. Defendant's
late wife and Dr. BRAMSTON his late brother.
1715, May 6. The Attorney-General for Mary GAUDY, Framling-
ham GAUDY, Bart., Theodore WELLS, clerk v. George PITT, John PITT,
Temple CHEVALIER, Patrick LACY, Thomas POKE and John HOLMES.
Mary GAUDY nominates Revd. William SANDERSON of Pembroke Hall,
Cambridge, B.A., to be minister, etc., of the church of Aspall, co
Suffolk.
1715, May 30. The Attorney-General for Thomas LYNDFORD,
S.T.P., v. Sir Joseph ALSTON, Bart., " Metha " SMITH and others.
House in George Yard. Annuity to SMITH'S wife. Schedule of
annuities paid to TRAVELL, EDWARDSTONE and SKINNER.
1715, May 6. The Attorney-General v. Frederick SLARE, M.D.,
and others, executors of Joseph NEALE, Esq., deceased.
1715, May 28. The Attorney-General v. The Mayor, etc., of
Coventry. Lord GUERNSEY now Earl of AYLSFORD. Charter of
2 Elizabeth. The manor of Cheilsmore, co. Warwick. Market and
fair. Fee-farm rent granted to William FINCH of the Inner Temple,
London, Esq. Grant in 1705 to Stephen SMITH and Richard
CLEMENTS of fines, etc., at Court Leet.
1715, May 3. George AYLMER and Mary AYLMER alias BREEDON
his wife, Francis GLASSCOCK and Mary his wife, late Mary AYLMER
alias WHITE, administratrix of John AYLMER, junior, v. Anthony
BLAGRAVE Esq., George BLAGRAVE, John BREEDON of Pangbourne,
John BREEDON of Croton, and Elizabeth his wife, Mary BREEDON,
Hester BREEDON and Elizabeth BREEDON. A legacy of £2,000. John
BREEDON, first tenant for life, died 1710. The manor of Pangbourne,
Berks. Said John BREEDON of Croton is tenant for life.
Vol. 656.
1775, March 3. Sarah and Elizabeth ADAMS, infants, v. James
GOULD, Mary JOLLIFFE, Mary HOLLOWAY, an infant, Mary COOPER,
Margaret COOPER and Radigan TUCKER. Refers to Decree June n
1771 and Order Dec. 24, 1774. Copyhold estates of testator William
ADAMS. Bid by William COOPER of Clement's Inn, Middlesex, gent.
Said estates in Upway, co. Dorset, in the occupation of John BAKER
and Warren LISLE, Esq., in possession of testator, and his ancestors
above 60 years.
248 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1912
1775, March 27. Rebecca ALLEN, widow, v. Philip HOLLINGWORTH
and Henry FAWCONER, executors of Jas. COLLIER Esq., Elizabeth
FAWCONER, spinster, Richard HOLLINGWORTH, Joanna HOLLINGWORTH
spinster, Herman MEYER an infant, by Herman MEYER his father,
Catherine MEYER, spinster, John FAWCONER, Peter FAWCONER and
Catherine Archer, spinster. Refers to Decree July 4 1774, sale of real
estate of James COLLIER Esq., deceased. Offers of defendant Philip
HOLLINGWORTH, Richard HOLLINGWORTH and Mr. MEYER. A farm
at Wimblington, co. Cambridge, in the occupation of Samuel SMITH.
A farm at March, co. Cambridge, in the occupation of Nathan
GRAY.
1775, March 24. Same parties, but defendant " Peter " FAWCONER,
is here called " Pope " FAWCONER. Refers to Decree July 4, 1774.
Sale of real estate of James COLLIER Esq. Farm at Wimblington, co.
Cambridge, in the occupation of John WOODWARD. Lands called
Naylors at Upwell, Isle of Ely, co. Cambridge, in the occupation of
Benjamin NICHOLS and . . . CULY and executors of James DAY. An
estate at Reach and Burwell, co. Cambridge.
1775, March n. John AMYAND, Anna Maria AMYAND, and
Harriott AMYAND an infant v. Sir George CORNWALL, late Sir George
AMYAND, Thomas Rous Esq., John Anthony RUCKER, John Roger
SEIBEL and Roger STAPLES Esquires. Refers to Order May 12, 1770.
Purchase of lands according to second codicil of will of Sir George
AMYAND. Manor and advowson of Monnington, co. Hereford.
Estate of John WHITMORE of the Haywood, co. Hereford, Esq., in
Monnington and Byford. Names of tenants.
1772, May 2. Catherine ANDREWS and Mary KNOLLYS (since
deceased), and William HALL a creditor of Thomas GIBSON and Henry
JACOMB (both deceased) on behalf of himself and the creditors of the
said GIBSON and JACOMB, v. Thomas FORFITT and Benjamin FORFITT
(executors of Oxenbridge HARWOOD, deceased), Charlotte ASHBY,
widow and executrix of Thomas ASHBY (who was sole executor of
Anne ASHBY, deceased, the executrix of Stephen ASHBY, deceased),
Henry HUSBANDS otherwise HUSBONDS the administrator of Alice
GIBSON (who was executrix of Christopher GIBSON, deceased, the
assignee of the estate of Richard SUTTON, a bankrupt), and William
JACOMB the now assignee of the said SUTTON'S estate and effects.
Refers to Decree Dec. 4 1752 and Order Jan. 21 1773. Fee-farm
rents sold to Joshua SHARPE Esq. [not specified.]
1775, April 27. The Attorney-General for Jaques GONSALES v.
Sarah HENRIQUES. Refers to Order April 16 1692. Certificate that
MAR. 19 1 2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 249
Rachel A. ZULAY, of Cook's Court, Camomile Street, London, is
" an orphan of the Jewish nation " and a proper person to receive a
benefaction under the will of Diego RODRIQUES.
1775. Feb. 3. Ann ARDEN and Catherine Alithea ARDEN (daughters
of Henry ARDEN, by Alithea his wife, daughter of Bridget COTTON,
wife of Robert COTTON, Esq., both deceased), Robert COTTON,
Rowland COTTON, William COTTON, Michael COTTON, Thomas
COTTON, Biddy COTTON, Revd. John MANSELL and Mary his wife,
Susanna COTTON, Catherine COTTON, Jane Ann COTTON and Ann
COTTON, sons and daughters (save Revd. John MANSELL) of the said
Bridget and Robert COTTON v. Robert LANDER and Reginald LYGEN
(surviving trustees in Will of the said Bridget) and Walter COTTON
her eldest son and heir at law. Refers to Decree Dec. 15 1774.
Lydia NOBLE survived Robert COTTON and died Dec. 17 1773.
1775, March 18. William ARMIGER v. Francis WYATT Esq., and
Arabella his wife, the Governor, etc., of the Bank of England and
George HUXLEY, Samuel Cox and Henry WILLMOTT Esquires.
(To be continued)
Deduced from Durham Chancery Suits. 25/182. (Public Record
Office, London.)
1625, July 4. John SHACKLOCK, of Murton, =
co. Durham.
f=Rich
Hylton. [Probably dau. of Geo.
DALE of Dalton who died in
1611.] Dead by 1619. istwife.
of Murton. Dead by
1625. Only son.
of
2nd wife. Mar-
ried by 1620.
John SHACKLOCK. Of = Jane, daughter of
Murton. Living mar- Humphrey TAYLOR.
ried in 1625. Married c, 1620.
William SHACKLOCK.
Given adm'on of
his father.
Margaret.
A minor
in 1625.
46, Harcourt Terrace, Hylton B. DALE.
South Kensington, W.
HH
250 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 191 2
Beat?** ftont ;jjfanufj> (^i6fe0t dt*
No. 7 KENDALL.
The following entries are in a Prayer Book published in 1801,
which I purchased some years ago in Holywell Street.
GEORGE S. FRY.
f Alicia, daughter of John & Martha KENDALL was born April the
i6th at about half-past 12 o'clock p.m. in the year of our Lord 1792.
f Laetitia KENDALL was born Saturday July the fifth about a
quarter of an hour after eleven o'clock in the evening in the year of
our Lord 1793.
f Edmund KENDALL was born on Thursday October the second
at eight o'clock in the evening in the year of our Lord 1794.
f Martha KENDALL was born on Tuesday April the twelfth twenty-
five minutes after four o'clock in the evening in the year of our
Lord 1796.
f Elizabeth KENDALL was born on Monday July the thirty-first at
seven o'clock in the morning in the year of our Lord 1797.
The above are the birthdays of the children of John and Martha
KENDALL.
The birthdays of the grandchildren of John and Martha KENDALL:
f Henry Parr the son of Henry and Martha Thicknesse WOODING-
TON, born Deer. 26, 1821.
f Georgiana daughter of George and Alicia BICKNELL born Feby.
20th 1824.
f Emma Elizabeth daughter of Henry & Martha Thicknesse
WOODINGTON born August 16, 1824.
f Alicia Martha daughter of George & Alicia BICKNELL born
Nov. 26, 1828.
f Laetitia daughter of George & Alicia BICKNELL born a quarter of
an hour after 4 o'clock in the morning Octobr. 15, 1832, a posthu-
mous child.
Alicia Martha DICKENSON nee BICKNELL married John DICKENSON
October 25th 1859.
John the son of John & Alicia DICKINSON born Octr. 24 of Octr.
(sic) 1860.
Thomas Gordon the second son of John & Alicia Martha DICKIN-
SON born Feby. i8th 1862.
Harry Kendall the third son of John & Alicia Martha DICKINSON
born May 28th 1867. Died Deer. 9th 1872.
* Continued from p. 142.
\ The names and dates in these instances are recorded again at the end of the book, but
in the case of Laetitia the month is given as "June" & in the case of Edmund as" July."
MAR.I9I2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 251
of
of
Officers of the Society.
PRESIDENT : The late Most Honourable William Montagu,
Marquess of TWEEDDALE, K.T.
VICE-PRESIDENTS : The Right Honourable John Allan, Baron LLAN-
GATTOCK.
The Marquis DE LIVERI ET DE VALDAUSA.
HON. TREASURER: Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
HON. SECRETARY : George SHERWOOD.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 1911-12.
Cyril Shakespear BEACHCROFT. Gerald FOTHERGILL.
Charles Allan BERNAU. James Reginald Morshead GLEN-
WilliamBRADBRooKjM.R.C.S. CROSS, M.A., LL.B.
Edgar Francis BRIGGS. George Frederick Tudor SHERWOOD.
Joseph Cecil BULL. Frederick Simon SNELL, M.A.
Frank EVANS. Charles William WALLACE, Ph.D.
LIBRARIAN-SECRETARY: Frank Ellis PRICE.
OFFICIAL ORGAN : The Pedigree Register. Quarterly, los. 6d. per annum.
REGISTERED OFFICE AND ROOMS: 227 Strand (by Temple Bar), London,W.C.
THIRD QUARTERLY REPORT, March, 1912.
The Fellows, Members and Corresponding Associates elected since the
2nd November are as follows :
FELLOWS.
1911, Dec. 7. Frank GALLSWORTHY.
Captain R. E. FITZGERALD-LOMBARD, R.A., B.A.
R. Burnet MORRIS, M.A., LL.B.
1912, Jan. 4. Robert Vaughan GOWER, F.R.G.S.
Colonel Bordrigge North NORTH, C.B.
James Cronyn BURROWS, B.A.
Feb. 14. Violet, the Lady BEAUMONT.
Ellyn Margaret GWATKIN.
Major-General R. C. B. PEMBERTON, C.B., C.S.I.
St. David Morgan KEMEYS-TYNTE.
MEMBERS.
191 1, Dec. 7. Revd. Edwin Hubert BURTON, D.D., F.R.Hist.S.
Frank GALLSWORTHY.
The Rt. Honble. George Fitz Roy Henry, Baron RAGLAN,
D.L., etc.
Captain Godfrey DRAGE, F.R.G.S.
Charles Francis COLE.
Captain R. E. FITZGERALD-LOMBARD, R.A., B.A.
Colonel Bordrigge North NORTH, C.B.
St. David Morgan KEMEYS-TYNTE.
Mrs. Sarah D. CROPLEY.
1912, Jan. 4. James Edwin BATESON.
Robert Vaughan GOWER, F.R.G.S.
Revd. Thomas Cyril DALE, M.A.
Samuel Trant MCCARTHY.
James Cronyn BURROWS, B.A.
Feb. 14. Violet, the Lady BEAUMONT.
Ellyn Margaret GWATKIN.
Hubert Stuart MOORE, F.S.A.
252 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR.I9I2
Feb. 14. J. T. Herbert BAILY.
Revd. Charles SWYNNERTON, F.S.A.
Robert Stewart LEPPER, M.A., LL.M., F.R.Hist.S.
ASSOCIATE.
1912, Jan. 4. Frederick Vine RAINSFORD.
CORRESPONDING ASSOCIATES.
1911, Dec. 7. Revd. Frank Henry Weston, M.A.
Chrissie M. BARTLE.
Audella HYATT.
Ann Quartly CARTER.
Wilfred James DRAKE.
Revd. Charles Ewart BUTLER, M.A.
|Edmund Francis TOWNEND.
1912, Jan. 4. None elected.
Feb. 14. Oswald Greenwaye KNAPP, M.A.
Lieutenant Oliver HOUGH, B.S.
Henry STUBBS, M.A., D.L., J.P.
William Francis Chalmers WIGSTON.
COMMITTEES.
The Executive Committee has to report favourable progress, the Roll of Mem-
bers, etc., on the I4th February numbering one hundred and sixty-one. The
usual Monthly Meetings of the Executive Committee were held in the Society's
Rooms on 7th December, 4th January and I4th February. On the 7th December
a resolution of profound regret at the irreparable loss sustained by the Society
owing to the death of its President, the late Marquess of TWEEDDALE, K.T., was
unanimously passed. A copy of the resolution of 2nd November, as to the cus-
tody of Parish Registers anterior to 1837, was ordered to be sent to the Arch-
bishops of Canterbury and York, the Prime Minister, the Home Secretary and the
Master of the Rolls. At the Meeting on 4th January it was resolved that the
Meetings of this Committee should be held on the second Wednesday in each
month at 2 o'clock, instead of on the first Thursday as heretofore. A special
letter of thanks was directed to be sent to Mr. Reginald Burnet MORRIS, M.A.,
LL.B., for the work he has done and is doing in sorting the slips of the Con-
solidated Index. In reference to Welsh records it was recommended that when
the Parliamentary Bill for the Disestablishment of the Church in Wales is drafted,
a print be obtained and submitted to this Committee. Steps were taken to place
the Society on the telephone. The Hon. Secretary handed to the Society on
loan 332 more original documents, copies, abstracts and extracts, arranged in
parishes from Bedfordshire to Norfolk, and 191 from Norfolk to Surrey, together
with 1,234 index-slips referring to them, making a total of 852 documents and
5,528 index-slips, all of which have been sorted into the Consolidated Index. In
reply to representations made by a Committee appointed by this Society to take
steps towards getting access to the Census Returns of 1841 and 1851, a letter was
received on the i8th January from the Registrar-General expressing regret that
administrative difficulties prevent their being thrown open as desired. In
January one thousand copies of a new Prospectus of 43 pages were received from
the printers.
Committee on the Library, Printed volumes. — The Accessions List enumerates
338 items received by gift. A number of volumes still remains to be entered.
Advantage was taken by Members of the privilege of borrowing certain books,
and much appreciation of this aid to study and research was expressed, it having
been found in practice that works such as the Society possesses are unobtainable
elsewhere. Mr. W. Roberts CROW resigned his membership of this Committee
on the 1 3th January.
Committee on the Library, MS. volumes. — The following volumes in MS. have
been received : A copy of the Register of Probates, Shrewsbury Canal Company,
MAR. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 253
1833-47, with some annotations and indexes, by R. H. G. SMALLWOOD. Small
quarto, pp. 54. Presented by Mr. R. H. G. SMALLWOOD. Abstract of the Title-
Deeds of the Estates of BUSVARGUS, KEIGWIN, BOSCASTELL, TREGEREAL, CALARTHA,
etc., in the parish of St. Just, Cornwall now belonging to Mrs. Ann
NICHOLAS of East Looe. 1822. (Signed) Nic'as Harris NICOLAS. Small quarto,
pp. 72. Presented by Mr. Campbell WYNNE. A copy of the Parish Register of
Stokenham, Devon, 1574-1591. Small quarto, pp. 49. Presented by Mr. E.
Haviland HILLMAN. A copy of the Parish Register of Etchingham, Sussex.
Baptisms 1561-1726; Burials 1561-1725. Folio, pp. 65. Presented by Mr. R.
M. GLENCROSS, M.A., LL.B. A copy of the Parish Register of Bridgerule, Devon.
Baptisms and Burials 1702-1812. Folio, pp. 43. Presented by Mr. R. M.
GLENCROSS, M.A., LL.B. A copy of an Inclosure Award in the parish of Crop-
thorne, Wore., 1780. Large folio, pp. 239. Presented by Mr. George SHERWOOD.
Committee on the Library, Documents. — Considerable progress has been made
with the collection. Mr. HOLWORTHY presented 35 documents relating to the
families of BOLEYN, BOUCHIER, GREY, HOWARD, LUMLEY and SADLEIR and the
parishes of Bakewell, Derby ; Cheshunt, Herts. ; Chilham, Chislet, Deptford,
Eastchurch, Harbledown, Herne and Minster, Kent ; Melton Mowbray, Leic. ;
Llandecwyn, Merioneth ; Islington, Lincoln's Inn, St. Bartholomew Exchange,
St. George, Hanover Square, St. Peter, Cornhill, East Smithfield, Stepney,
Strand and Whitehall, London and Middlesex ; Thetford, Norfolk ; Carcolston,
Notts., and Stanton St. John, Oxon. Mr. Wynne presented forty documents
relating to Axminster, Devon ; Hawkchurch, Dorset ; St. Botolph, Bishopsgate,
London ; St. Luke, Middlesex ; Tower of London ; Butleigh, Cricket Thomas
and Winsham, Somerset ; and Leamington Priors, Warwick. Mr. J. C. BROOK-
HOUSE presented 20 documents relating to the families of Fox and BRANWHITE
and Whitechapel, Middlesex. Mr. E. F. BRIGGS presented 35 papers relating to
the estate of William HOYS, who died in 1847. Mr. J. F. FULLER, F.S.A., pre-
sented a considerable number of lists, copies and abstracts of FULLER wills, etc.,
from all parts of the kingdom, a most valuable collection. Mr. G. P. TOWNEND
presented material relating to the families of ACKROYD and CRAVEN.
The system pursued is to place loose documents in envelopes and to write
outside all proper names mentioned in the enclosed document ; these names
are copied on to Index-slips, which are sorted in dictionary order. This Com-
mittee invites voluntary help in (a) writing the envelopes, (b) writing the Index-
slips, for any county in which the helper may be interested. Offers of assistance
may be addressed to Mr. E. F. KIRK (Hon. Secretary).
Committee on the Consolidated Index. — Additional instructions for the filling-
in of slips have been issued, and copies may be obtained of the Hon. Secretary,
Mr. F. S. SNELL, M.A. In the work of sortation two additional Members, viz.,
Sir Thomas TROUBRIDGE and the Revd. Dr. MOOR, have kindly undertaken
portions of the alphabet. Besides the additions reported by the Parish Register
Committee, slips dealing with various records have come in, not the least valuable
being the first instalments of an Index to the Journal of the Irish Society for the
Preservation of Memorials of the Dead. The number of Index-sh'ps now
amounts to about 250,000.
Committee for Cataloguing Pedigrees. — A meeting of this Committee was held
on the gth January, Sir Thomas H. C. TROUBRIDGE, Bt., in the Chair. A large
number of printed pedigrees has been catalogued. Members are especially
invited to assist by listing pedigrees contained in printed works or in MSS., and
entering the same on the Society's Index-slips. The work is interesting, not
arduous, and is of great importance to the Society. Offers of help in this direc-
tion should be addressed to Mr. Campbell WYNNE, Hon. Secretary.
Committee on Monumental Inscriptions. — The first meeting -was held on
3ist January, the Revd. J. L. E. HOOPPELL in the Chair. Mr. F. M. R. HOL-
WORTHY was elefted Hon. Secretary. Some progress has been made in the
254 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR.i9i2
compilation of a list of the parishes the inscriptions in which have been copied,
showing where such copies are to be found. A considerable number of copies
and Index-slips have been sorted into the Consolidated Index.
Committee on Parish Registers and Marriage Licences. — Since the last Report
there have been incorporated or partly incorporated in the Consolidated Index
the Registers of seven additional parishes, viz. Irton, Cumberland, to 1 800 ;
Martinhoe and Trentishoe, Devon, Marriages to 1812 ; Upton, Norfolk, Mar-
riages to 1812 ; Witton by Blofield, Norfolk, Marriages to 1809 ; Marlborough
(St. Peter), Wilts., Marriages to 1812 ; Bradford, Yorks., Baptisms and Marriages
to c. 1611. The entries from Irton and Bradford are not in print. Full copies
of the Registers of Bridgerule, Devon, Baptisms and Burials 1702-1812 ; St.
Nicholas, Cole Abbey, London, 1538-1812 ; and Etchingham, Sussex, Baptisms
and Burials 1561-1625, have been acquired by gift. Full copies, baptisms and
burials only, of those of the following twenty-four Cornish parishes have been
kindly lent to the Society for the use of Members by Mrs. J. H. GLENCROSS ;
Blisland, 1706-1812 ; Bodmin, 1558-1812 ; Cardinham, 1701-1812 ; St. Endellion,
1732-1812 ; Helland, 1722-1812 ; St. Issey, 1596-1812; Lanhydrock, 1558-1812;
Lanlivery, 1583-1812; Lewannick, 1660-1812; Lezant, 1539-1812; Linkin-
horne, 1576-1812 ; Luxulyan, 1594-1812 ; St. Mabyn, 1562-1812 ; St. Mellion,
1558-1812; St. Merryn, 1688-1812; St. Minver, 1558-1812; Morwinstow,
1558-1812; Padstow, 1611-1812; Pillaton, 1557-1812; St. Sampson, 1568-
1812; St. Stephen in Branwell, 1695-1812; Warleggan, c. 1549-1812; St.
Winnow, 1622-1812 ; Withiel, 1567-1812. None of these has been printed.
Committee on Family Associations. — Information of value and interest has been
received about the following Family Associations : The HORTON Family Asso-
ciation, the RANDALL Historical Association, and the Clan MOFFAT in America.
The fa6ls will be tabulated and entered on Index-slips. An inquiry has also been
received as to whether there is a HILL Family Association. The names of any
Family Associations will be welcomed.
N.B. — For the convenience of inquirers the names of those Members who
undertake research professionally will be distinguished by an asterisk in the
Annual List of Members now in preparation. Such Members are invited to send
their names to the Hon. Secretary before the 1st of June.
The Annual Subscriptions to the Society of Genealogists are as follows :
"Fellows," elected from among the Members by the whole body of
Fellows, Two guineas per annum. Life Composition, ten guineas.
"Members," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Life Composition, seven guineas.
"Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Cannot make Life Composition.
"Corresponding Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, Half a
guinea per annum. Cannot make Life Composition. Must reside at
least 25 miles from London.
Fellows are entitled to receive quarterly from the Society advice of any fresh
information having accrued respecting certain specified families and places in
which they may be personally interested, the number of which is limited at
present to ten.
As an association "not for profit" (in a pecuniary sense) the Society relies
for increase of membership upon the efforts of individual members to make its
purpose known. If an average of only one new member be enrolled by each
present member, the Society will be established on a sound basis. A form of
application for membership is sent herewith.
MAR. 1 9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 255
Queries anb
STOCKER. — Wanted record (circa 1575-95), of marriage of Thomas STOCKER
to Joane (or Jeanne), daughter of William STEVENSON of Godmanchester, Hunts.,
and any particulars of Henry STOCKER, who married Agnes, the younger daughter
of Richard ROBYNS, who founded Godmanchester Grammar School in 1558. —
C. J. S.
PHIPPS (FYPS, PHIP, etc.), 1500-1810.— Abstracts of most of the wills of
testators of these names, in the Prerogative Court and other registries, with
many other notes and short pedigrees, are in my possession. I am anxious to
correspond with others interested. — Major H. R. PHIPPS, R.F.A., R.A. Mess,
Ferozepore, India.
A Concordance of all Written Lawes concerning Lords of Mannors, iheire Tree
Tenantes and Copieholders, by William BARLEE, 1578. The Manorial Society's
Publications, No. 6. i, Mitre Court Buildings, London, E.G. 1911. Octavo.
pp. 72.
" Keape safelie (I praye yow) All these Articles . . . and hide them from Rasshe
hedded fellowes : lest thei tare yow or yowre frendes to peces I meane lest thei
vexe lords of manors Before my boke maye bee understodended and my tale fullie
tolde ..." thus William BARLEE to the reader, to raise, we fear, hopes of a most
interesting treatise, but which were doomed to disappointment. The book,
unhappily, is not a " Concordance of aU written laws concerning manors," but
rather the heads of chapters of a proposed work which never saw the light. Its
quaint form and discursive language, however, make it well worthy of being
printed by The Manorial Society. We can promise readers an hour or more's
withdrawal from the preoccupations of the twentieth century if they care to
immerse themselves in its pages. The Manorial Society issues therewith its Fifth
Annual Report.
A Quaker Royal Descent, by Josiah NEWMAN, F.R.Hist.Soc. (London) 1911.
4to. pp. 8 [printed on one side only]. This is a table, very well set out,
showing descent from Hugh, Bishop of Coutances in 990, through MORTIMER,
PERCY, CLIFFORD, SUTTON, WROTTESLEY, ONSLOW, SOMERFORD and STANLEY to
PUMPHREY and NEWMAN of the present day. The crucial point, the marriage
of Dorothy ONSLOW and John SOMERFORD about 1619, is proved by record-
evidence quoted at length, and the work finishes with a " Seize Quartier " of
John SOMERFORD of Somerford, co. Stafford, born about 1600.
Coronation Tear Records of the Parish of The Lee (Buckinghamshire), by
A. Lasenby LIBERTY. 1911. 8vo. pp. 60.
The contents of this book include an account of the festivities held in the
village on Coronation Day and during the " octave " thereof : but probably the
real reason for being of the book is, that during 1911, the enlargement of the
parish took place with a consequent very considerable alteration of area and
boundaries : the Church also was re-opened after being closed for some months
during the processes of renovation and extension. It is plain that the whole
constitutes not only an interesting but a highly important record, and The Lee
is to be congratulated on being under the benevolent feudal domination of such
a Manorial Lord as Mr LIBERTY, who brings to the compilation of his excellent
256 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1912
little book the qualities of historian, antiquary (he is chairman of the Bucks
Archaeological Society, see p. 48) and man of the world.
It is a good (and shrewd) idea to print the details of the fancy-dress procession
and the cricket matches. Evidently the compiler is well aware of the exaltation
felt by common clay on seeing its name in print. This alone will insure the
permanent preservation of the book in every cottage of The Lee. Again, the
list of names is a practical census of the population : what would we not willingly
give for a similar record of any parish at the date, say, of Charles II, his coronation,
or on the occasion of Queen Bess, her visit to Kenilworth; or indeed of much
more recent events ?
The account of the proceedings and negotiations preceding the extension of
the parish, which lasted four years, and the reasons thereunto moving, form a
chapter of more importance, and should be studied by those whom fate may cause
to participate in that kind of work. Copies of the official decrees and illustrative
plans and maps are here found, with extracts from DUGDALE, LIPSCOMB, and
other authorities on topographical history. In this connection we might draw
attention to the recent adtion in Chancery (January last), before Mr Justice
EADY, concerning the rights of parishioners in Mitcham common, which demon-
strates the need of preserving in accessible printed form such items of parochial
history as are found in this book.
We deferentially suggest to Mr LIBERTY that he re-introduce the ancient and
laudable custom of beating the bounds on Ascension Day, and cause the record
of the perambulation to be preserved in the Parish Council archives, with a
statement of any rights of common and way that now exist. We draw attention
to the name of the parish, The Lee, and the incorrect description in the Orders
of the Local Government Board and County Council where it is printed, " Lee,"
and deprived of its distinguishing adjeCtive.
The chapter on the improvement of the Church and the re-opening is enriched
by an account of the negotiations and manoeuvres (perhaps the best expression)
preliminary to the building in 1867-9. ^ seems that details and plans having
been elaborated by the promoters, they approached the Bishop and laid before
him, in 1865, a complete scheme for consideration. Bishop WILBERFORCE at
once claimed the work for the diocesan architect and vetoed the promoters'
architect, which aCtion has the appearance of an episcopal job ! The promoters
demurred and dropped the scheme. Two years later the Bishop enquired as to
progress and on being told the condition waived his stipulation. The old
church, a small thirteenth century building, still stands, and there is the old
parish register beginning 1678 (KELLY). We hope Mr LIBERTY will plunge The
Lee and the public still deeper in indebtedness to him — by printing the register.
There are other matters included in the book : e.g. names of all existing
office-holders, such as parish councillors, school managers, local preachers, etc.,
and a plan of the parish in 1783, giving the field-names, always a suggestive
item of history. A long article could be written round this almost unique
book. We wish that such books were universal and recommend this one as a
model for imitation by all those whose position or authority gives the oppor-
tunity of producing the like record for other parishes. We exhort them to study
this work as they do the exemplaria Grceca^ nocturna versate manu, versate diurna,
and then go and do likewise.
There is one omission : no index. Finally, the type, style and production of
this stimulating little volume are evidence of care and judgment.
The Pedigree Register
JUNE 1912] [VoL. II, No. 21.
5<wti% of 3fo0n ®a;, #* (printer of
(F^formafton*
John DAY was born at Dunwich, Suffolk, in 1522. He died at Saf-
fron Walden, Essex, 23 July 1584, and was buried with an interesting
rhyming brass at Bradley Parva, Suffolk, 2 August. He married first
(apparently) Hanna - , by whom he had thirteen children, only
one of whom is known, viz.:
Richard DAY, M.A. Born 1552; Fellow of King's College, Cam-
bridge, 1574; yicar °f Reigate, Surrey in 1583-4, in the room of John
FOXE, the martyrologist. Richard DAY was a printer also, like his
father, and died about 1607.
John DAY married secondly Alice, daughter and heir of Richard LE
HUNTE of Bradley Parva, by Anne, daughter, and eventually heir, of
Francis (or Thomas) KNIGHTON of the same parish. The mother,
Anne, married secondly Thomas SOAME of Bradley, and they were the
parents of, amongst others (fourteen in all), Sir Stephen SOAME, Knt.,
of Little Thurlow, Suffolk, Lord Mayor of London in 1598, who mar-
ried Anne, daughter of William STONE of Segenhoe in Ridgemont,
Bedfordshire.
By Alice LE HUNTE, so the DAY brass at Bradley Parva informs us,
John DAY had another family of thirteen children, making twenty-six
in all; and Alice, his second wife, also married a second time, her second
husband being William STONE of Segenhoe in Bedfordshire (aforesaid).
She, as the rhyming brass at Little Parva humorously expresses it,
" was the last encreaser of his (John DAY'S) Stoore,
Who mourning long for being left alone,
Set upp this toombe her self turnd to a STONE."
Of these thirteen children only three are known, viz.:
(i.) Bartholomew DAY " the sonne of John DAY, Gent., buryed
the 6 of May," 1581, at Bradley Parva.
(2.) John DAY, born " near or over Aldersgate " about 1566. He
was a Commoner of St. Alban Hall, Oxford, in 1582, aged 16;
Fellow of Oriel in 1588; M.A. and B.A.; vicar of St. Mary's,
Oxford, 1609-22, and rector of Little Thurlow, the next
parish to Bradley Parva, to which he was presented by Sir
William SOAME. He died January 1627, aged sixty-one, and
was buried in Little Thurlow church, where there is a monu-
ment erected to his memory by his younger brother Lyonell,
stating that Lyonell was the sole surviving one of the family
of twenty-six brothers and sisters.
ii
258 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
John DAY is best known by his Day's Dyall, 1614, etc. There is an
account of him in BLISS'S Wood's Athenee Oxonienses (Vol. II., col.
412).
His will, dated 28 September 1627, was proved 20 March, 1628, by
his brother Lyonell (P. C. C. 27 BARRINGTON). It is an interesting
will.
(3.) Lyonell DAY, of whom we have been speaking, born about
1570. He was a Fellow of Balliol, and sometime of Oriel
College, Oxon; B.D. June 1608. He was apparently curate
at Chinnor, in Oxfordshire, about 1610-12, and in 1614 was
reclor of Whichford, county Warwick, until his death. He
was the author of several learned books. He died in 1640,
and was buried in the chancel of the church of Whichford,
I May, aged seventy. DUGDALE, in his Antiquities of
Warwickshire, records his burial and the Latin inscription
(ed. 1657, p. 449^.
Lyonell DAY married in 1610 (perhaps at Chinnor) Mary ,
and had issue:
(i.) John (1611-31) to whom his uncle John DAY bequeathed a
valuable library of books, as we shall see later.
(2.) Mary (1612- ) married Philip KING; both living 1649.
(3.) Philip, baptised at Whichford 5 March 1614; eldest surviving
son in 1649, to whom his mother bequeathed a house and
lands at Whichford.
(4.) Anne, baptised at Whichford 2 March 1616, not named in
1649.
(5.) Elizabeth, baptised at Whichford 3 (?) May 1618; married
Mr. STAMP; named in 1649.
(6.) Catherine, baptised at Whichford 28 February 1618; buried
there 2 June 1635, aged 17.
(7.) Joane, born 1618; not named 1649.
(8.) Alice, died about 1620.
(9.) Alice (2), baptised at Whichford 25 April 1621; died about
1622.
(10.) Lyonell, born 1626, executor to his mother in 1649 and
proved her will.
(n.) Richard, born 1627; to whom his mother left £2 in 1649.
(12.) William, baptised at Whichford, 17 April 1628; to whom his
mother made bequests in 1649.
Mary DAY'S will is dated at Whichford, 27 March 1649; anc^ was
proved 7 May following, by Lionel DAY, her son (P. C. C. FAIRFAX 72).
She describes herself as widow of Lionel DAY, clerk and rector of
Whichford, and makes a bequest to the poor there.
In connection with Lyonell DAY, we possess a valuable literary
commonplace-book which formerly belonged to him, and was
No. 24,043 in Sir Thomas PHILLIPPS'S library.
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 259
It is a thick small folio in parchment covers, and is largely filled with
Lyonell DAY'S excellent handwriting in double columns. It contains
comments upon the following,
(i.) John FOXE'S Actes and, Monuments, 2 vols., folio, 1583, printed
by John DAY, father to Lyonell.
(2.) GRIMSTON'S History of Spain, 1612.
(3.) GRIMSTON'S History of the Netherlands, 1609.
(4.) GRIMSTON'S Inventory of France.
This was Edward GRIMSTONE, serjeant-at-law, who married,
as her third husband, Lyonell DAY'S mother, Alice, widow of
William STONE. He died 16 August 1610, aged eighty-six,
and was buried at Rishangles.
(5.) Sir Walter RALEIGH'S History oj the World, 1614.
At the end of the manuscript is
" A new noate of ye bookes w* my Brother John DAY gave unto
my Sonn John DAY," and again, " A noate of such bookes as
my Sonn John hath had of me of the Bookes w011 his Uncle my
deare Brother bestowed on him, 1628."
These lists are most valuable, consisting of no less than nineteen
columns (books and manuscripts), some 622 in all. There can be no
doubt that many of these originally belonged to the great printer, John
DAY.
There is an Index to the book of two columns. Upon the last
page is a family register, which we give exactly as it stands, having, in
the former account of his family, supplied some additional information
from Whichford parish register.
[Lyonell Day's Family Register. .]
I was maryed ye 13 of December 1610 it being Thursday.
John my eldest sonn was borne ye 17 of Nouember 161 1 at 10 a clock
in ye night at Chinnor.
Dyed ye 6 of October, 1631.
Mary my eldest daughter was borne ye 22 of February 1612 at 6 of ye
clock in y* morning it being Munday at Chinnor.
Philip was borne on Shrouemunday 1614 at one of ye clock in ye
morning at Whitchford.
My daughter Ann was borne 1615.
My daughter Elizabeth was borne ye 28 day of Aprill being Tuesday
between 8 & 10 a clock at night at Whitchford 1616.
My daughter Catherine was borne 1617.
My daughter Joane was borne ye 20 of January being Thursday be-
tween 5 & 6 in ye morning at Chinnor 1618.
Two Alices dyed young.
My sonn Lyonell was borne ye 28 of July being Thursday at 1 1 at
night at Whitchford 1626.
260 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
My sonn Richard was borne ye 21 of May being Munday between 10
& II a clock at night 1627.
God bless him.
My sonn Willya' was borne ye first of Aprill 1628.
God bless him.
For further particulars of John DAY, the printer, we must refer to
the Dictionary of National Biography, AMES'S Typographical Antiquities,
and particularly The Gentleman's Magazine for 1832 (Part II., pp.
417-21 and 597-99), where are a valuable " Memoir of John DAYE the
Printer " and " Further Notices of DAYE the Printer." These include
a full-page engraved plate of the Bradley Parva brass, autographs of
DAY, etc., and an account of his family, with a full transcript of the
M.I. to John DAY the younger.
The DAY brass shews three armorial shields, one of the Stationers'
Company, one of DAY with the motto Mihi vita Christus, and the
other of DAY impaling LE HUNTE, UPWELL, HUNTE, FOTHERINGAY,
KNIGHTON, and UNDERBILL.
The brass represents John and Alice DAY in the attitude of prayer
kneeling at a table, at the end of which are represented two chrysom
children. On the table are two open devotional books. Behind John
DAY are six sons, and behind Alice DAY, five daughters, all kneeling in
prayer. The legend is as follows : —
" heere lies the DAYE that darknes could not blynd
When popish fogges had ouer cast the sunne
This DAYE the cruell night did leaue behynd
To view and shew what bloudi Actes weare donne
he set a Fox to wright how Martyrs runne
By death to lyfe Fox ventur'd paynes & health
To give them light DAYE spent in print his wealth
But God with gayn retorn'd his wealth agayne
And gaue to him as he gaue to the poore
Tow wyues he had pertakers of his payne
Each wyfe twelve babes and each of them one more
Als was the last encreaser of his Stoore
Who mourning long for being left alone
Set upp this toombe her self turnd to a STONE.
obiit July 1584."
It may be interesting to add John DAY'S administration acl (P.C.C.),
which runs as follows : —
" 1583-4. Tertio die emanavit commissio Alice DAY relicle
Johis DAYE nuper dum vixit parochie Sancli Anne sive
Agnetis prope Aldergate civiti London defunct h'entis, etc."
So far as we know this has not before been printed.
Godwyn Lodge, JosePh J' GREEN'
Clive Vale, Hastings.
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 261
of ^omerforb (Brawje,
I am indebted to the Editor of The Pedigree Register, to Mr. Her-
bert DRUITT'O£ Christchurch, and to Mr. Henry Gomez Binfield
GOLDWYER (formerly of Kimberley, S.A.) for much assistance in mak-
ing the annexed pedigree.
Somerford, once a grange belonging to the Priory of Christchurch,
in which the last Prior — John DRAPER II. — died in 1552, was inhabited
by this family from before 1596 until 1778, or thereabouts, when it was
purchased by Gustavus BRANDER, a Director of the Bank of England.
The Christchurch Registers do not go above 1576, and gaps occur in
them from 1611 to 1634, an<^ fr°m about 1640 to 1680 (roughly speak-
ing). Tradition says that a curate's wife converted the missing pages
into jam-pot covers !
The burial-place of the GOLDWYERS was the south-quire-aisle of the
Priory Church, which is closed, to the eastwards, by the Chantry-
Chapel of Prior John DRAPER; and there their gravestones may still be
seen.
Their coat of arms — azure, on a bend voided or, three stirrups of the
second; Crest, a stags head -proper attired or; Motto, Caute et Certe —
occurs on the mural monument to members of the younger branch in
St. Martin's Church, Sarum.
1. A certain William GOLDWYER was one of the substitutes to Sir
Walter SANDS, Kt., High Sheriff of Wilts in 1591-2. (P.R.O. Chancery
pleadings. BRIMINGE v. GOLDWYRE, 1603.)
Other entries from register of Upper Clatford, Hants : —
1596 — 9 Aug. Thomas GOULDWIRE marr. Hellin KIDGELL.
1599 — last of Feb. George, son of Thos. GOULDWIRE, bapt.
1570 — 16 Feb. Elizabeth GOULDWIRE bur.
1572 — 12 Jan. John GOULDWIRE bur.
1576 — 28 April, Joane GOULDWIRE, widdowe, bur.
2. On 12 Sept. 1614 a Court was held at Christchurch of the Manor
of Thomas, first Lord ARUNDELL of Wardour, called Ch. Ch. cum mem-
bris, and William GOLDWYER at that time was steward.
Abstract of will of Wm. GOLDWYER, of Somerford, co. Southt. gent.
1629, March 6. To Cathedrall Church of Winchester xiid and to
my pish ch : of Christchurch xls. To my godson and kinsman Wm.
NEWELL xls. To my kinsman and servant John NEWELL £30. To
my sister Malde NEWELL xls, and to the residue of her children xls
apiece, and to her children's children xxs apiece. To Thomas
GOLDWYER my late brother Anthonie's sonne xxs. To my late
262 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
brother George GOLDWYER'S children, viz1 to George ^5 and to each
of the residue xls apiece. To my daughter Charitye ^200. To my
brother George BARTON and his wife, my cozen Roger BARTON and his
wife, my mother in lawe Joan CARTER, my godson Wm. SAMBOROW, my
godson and nephew WM. GOLDWYER his brothers and sisters and my
daughter in lawe their mother (sundry small bequests). To my sonne
Wm. all my books. To the pish ch: of Clatford where I was borne
xxs etc. My meadow called Rackhams and all my tithe hay that I
hold from the Lady BARROW and her sonne Mr. Wm. BARROWE. To
my dau. Charitie my lands at Burly. All the rest of my goods etc. to
Wm. GOLDWYER my sonne and Charitie my dau. equally, executors.
Mr. Harry ELLIOTT and my brother in lawe George BARTON to be
overseers. Total given is ccclxiiij/f. (P.C.C. 12 St. John.)
3. 1635. Feb. 10. Wm. GOLDWYER complains that he paid his
debt of ^5 to Samuel TURNER, first husband of DOROTHY WAVELL,
widow, in the lifetime of said Samuel. Defendant denies complainant
did ever pay said money, but believeth the cause of the forbearance so
long during the life of said Samuel, her husband, was that said com-
plainant's father being a rich man and complainant not allowed by his
father any great livelyhood and knowing that after his father's death he
should enjoye a very good and lardge estate pressed not upon him for
said sum of money. Prays to be dismissed. (P.R.O. Chan. B. & A.
Goldwyer v. Wavell 1635.)
William GOLDWIRE was a Burgess of the Corporation of Christ-
church on 3 Feb. 1641, when he subscribed an agreement not to claim
any of the profits of the Borough.
1646. Feb. II. Arthur LUKE of Lisle Court, co. South'ton, gent.,
and Eliz. his wife, one of the daus. of Francis HANBERY late of Walling-
ton in sd. county, deceased, complain that whereas Queen Elizabeth
by Letters Patent 21 July, 39th year, demised etc. unto Thos.
AWDELEY of London, gent, her farm of Balloxley and lands in North
Cheneton, alias North Neweton, from 1621 for 30 years, his title to
same was settled upon sd. Francis HANBERY, who about I July, 18
James, demised same to Wm. GOULDWYRE of Summerford, co. South'-
ton, gent, for term of 21 years under a yearly rent of .£19 — 9 — 8. That
W. G. paid sd. rent until death of oratrix's father, who died about
13 Mar. in 8th year of H.M.'s reign deceased (sic) whereupon right
etc. of sd. premises by sd. letters patent came upon your oratrix.
Since Michaelmas the iyth year of H.M's reign that now is, when sd.
term of 21 years did end, sd. G. hath refused to pay rent and hath got
into his hands the sd. writings. Prays writ of subpoena.
Defendant W. G., knows of no such Letters Patent. Denies that
HANBERY made him any such lease. HANBURY, pretending such
Letters Patent, did on I July 18 James, demise farm of Balloxley, and
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 263
lands called Bolts, Courtelands, and the Moore, unto W. G. late of
Somerford, gent, this defendant's father since deceased, for 21 years.
Sd. father bequeathed his interest to this defendant and made him and
his sister Charitie joint executors of his will, and afterwards, c. 18 Dec.
6 Chas., died. This defendant purchased from Richard FENNE, alias
VENN, citizen and alderman of London, since deceased, the lord and
fee farmer of the manor of Somerford, a further term and estate of and
in sd. farm of Balloxley etc. by Indenture dated 18 June, 8 Chas.,
directed to John BUTTON of Buckland, co. Southt' Esqr, Henry TULSE
then of Hinton, co South't, Esqr. and John HILDESLEY of Hinton, Esq.
this defendant's nominees, etc. Prays to be dismissed. (P.R.O.
Chan, plead. Luke v. Goldwyer, 1646.)
1650. Jan. 31. John HILDSLEY of Hinton Admirall, co. South'-
ton, Esq. and Margaret his wife, administratrix of goods, etc. of Henry
TULSE late of Hinton, Esq. deceased, former husband of sd. Margaret,
John BUTTON of Buckland, Esq. Thomas HUSSEY of Hungerford, Berks,
Esq. and Thomas HOOPER of Southampton, gent, complain that
whereas King Henry VIII. being seized in fee of Priory of Christ-
church Twineham, etc. by Letters Patent I Mar. 33rd of his reign,
granted to Dean etc. of Winchester, the rectory etc. of pish ch. of
Christchurch etc. That the Dean etc. by Indenture 25 Nov. 1641
granted to TULSE and HOOPER sd. rectory etc. (with the profits of the
Easterbooke and the fishings called Christ's share only excepted) for 21
years at yearly rent of .£58 and .£8 to vicar of Christchurch Twineham.
That TULSE to sever the joint estate, so granted, did by Indenture
20 Jan. 1640 grant to orators BUTTON, HUSSEY, & HILDSLEY, and to one
Stephen CONSTANTINE, clerk, since deceased, his moiety of sd. rectory
etc. for the residue of sd. term in trust for TULSE for life and after his
decease for oratrix Margaret. That there are certain tythes in Somer-
ford belonging to Christchurch. That one Wm. GOLDWIRE of
Somerford, gent, who hath enjoyed and occupied Somerford demesnes
and taken the whole profits thereof ever since 25 Nov. 1641, pretend-
ing to have some estate of inheritance and taking advantage of the dis-
traction of the times, doth refuse to accompt with your orators for the
tithes of wool, lamb, calves, piggs, geese and all other privy tithes, etc.
Pray writ of subpoena.
Defendant utterly denies that Dean & Chapter of Winchester or
any of their farmers or tenants of the parsonage impropriate of
Christchurch Twynham did ever receive the tithe hay or any part
thereof, and as for the tithe of wool, etc. he said that Richard FENNE,
alias VENNE, citizen & alderman of London, being seized of the manor
of Somerford and tithes, granted them 18 June, 8 Chas. I to BUTTON,
TULSE, and HILDESLEY, and that BUTTON & HILDESLEY (TULSE being
dead) granted them by Indenture 25 June, 19 Chas. I. to this defen-
dant. Prays to be dismissed.
264 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
The Replicacon of John HILDESLEY etc. to answer of Wm. GOLD-
WIRE. They maintain matters complained of etc. (P.R.O. Chan.
B & A. Hildesley v. Goldwyer, 1650.)
4. 1669. June 1 6. Edward GOLDWYER of Milton, co. South'ton,
gent., Walter GODDARD of Barnsley in Wimborne, Dorset, gent, and
William RUSSELL of Barnsley, gent, complain that one William NORRIS
of Ringwood, gent., addressed himself to Rebecca GOLDWYER, sister of
Edward, and a marriage between them was accordingly solemnized.
That Wm. GOLDWYER of Somerford, father of Rebecca, was not well
pleased therewith yet was prevailed with to promise her £20 a year for
life and being ancient made his son Edward, and GODDARD and RUSSELL,
his kindred and relations, his trustees who were bound by an obligation,
dated 27 April 1653, to make quarterly payments of .£5 at the Crown
Inn, Ringwood. That payments were made from time to time until
some differences happening between NORRIS & Rebecca the sd. NORRIS
hath forbid yr. orator to pay any more to sd. Rebecca and sues orator
on sd. bond. That he denies payment of .£3 — 10 — o to himself at
orator Edward's house in Bughly, £i — 18 — o to his son William
NORRIS, etc. Prays writ of subpoena.
The answers of Wm. NORRIS clerk, & Rebecca his wife.
That a marriage was solemnized between them about 22 years
since and that .£20 a year was to be marriage portion of Rebecca. Deny
that it was to befor Rebecca's sole use or that William had any doubts of
the ill consequences of sd. marriage or that the complainant obligors
might elecl; to which of sd. parties they would pay the same; or that there
hath happened any such differences between these defendants as in
sd. Bill are untruly suggested. Are willing to allow7 certain payments
to have been made but that the sum of three score pounds is still un-
paid. Pray to be discharged. (P.R.O. Chan. B & A. Goldwire v.
Norris, 1669.)
From the Christchurch Registers: —
Geo. GOULDWYER marr. Joan ETHERIDG(E) 24 Sept. 1607.
Ann, dau. of Geo. G. bapt. 17 May 1608.
Moore, dau.-in-law of Geo. G. bur. 17 Feb. 1608.
Charitie, dau. of Geo. G. bapt. 24 Nov. 1609.
George, son of Geo. G. bapt. 26 Apr. 1612.
Robert TEENER marr. Diner GOULDWYER, widow, 23 Sept. 1613.
Thomas GOULDWIRE marr. Joan PEELE 21 061. 1624.
John, son of Thos. GOULDWYRE, bapt. 2 Aug. 1640.
Mary, dau. of Thos. GOULDWYRE, bapt. 19 April 1649.
William STANDARD marr. Catherine GOWLDWYER 26 Nov. 1659.
Geo. GOLDWYER, bur. 27 Dec. 1663.
Richard HOPKINS, the elder, marr. Catherine GOWLDWYER 16 Oft.
1665.
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 265
Geo. GOLDWYER marr. Ann MORES 2 April 1678.
Susannah G., spinster, bur. 15 Dec. 1686.
Mrs Mary G. bur. 7 July 1694.
Henry, son of Geo. G., bur. 15 Feb. 1696.
Ann, wife of Geo. G., bur. 27 April 1699 or 17QQ-
Samuel HOOKEY marr. Ann GOLDWYER 1711 at Ch. Ch: (Winch:
Dioc: Reg:).
Geo. GOLDWYER, junr bur. 26 Jan. 1730.
Geo. GOLDWYER, bur. 7 May 1735.
(Gabriel AYSCOUGH nominated Burgess of Ch: Ch: 5 Mar. 1735.
Wm. GOLDWYER ditto ditto 21 Aug. 1736.
Wm. GOLDWYER, junr ditto ditto ditto .)
Geo. GOLDWYER marr. Mary PERKINS 22 Feb. 1754.
Wm. GOLDWYER (son of Geo. GOLDWIEAR) bapt. 15 Oft. 1756; bur.
24 Apr. 1757.
Jane FRY, bur. 28 Nov. 1763.
T. HOOKEY, D. 1779.
— HOOKEY, D. 1794.
Anne HOOKEY, D. 1795.
G. G. HOOKEY, D. 1796.
H. HOOKEY, D. 1797.
5. The vicar of Christchurch was a correspondent and ally of
Henry HYDE, second Lord Clarendon, in his opposition to the Exclu-
sion Bill by means of which Lord SHAFTESBURY and his followers
endeavoured to exclude James, Duke of YORK (Clarendon's brother-
in-law) from the Throne. I have on the present occasion given only
such descendants of the Vicar as were absolutely necessary for the
immediate purpose in hand.
6. Abstract of will of Wm. GOLDWYER of Somerford, co. Spton,
gent. 1723, Aug. 16. My dau. Elizabeth G. £600.
Dau. Mary, now wife of Wm. HOOKEY 5s.
Daus. Henerita, Edith, and Anne G. ^600 each at 21 or marriage.
Son George G. £1000 at 21 or marriage.
Son William G. sole executor.
Loving kinsmen Mr George LEWEN (v. Pedigree Register I, 6), Mr
William TULSE, Mr William GOLDWYER, and Mr William RUSSELL,
guardians of my children and overseers. (P.C.C. 165 Bolton.)
7. Abstract of will of George GOLDWYER of Somerford, Esqr. 1749,
April II. To my wife Mary G. all my estate and to be executrix.
(P.C.C. 50 Herring.)
A. R. BAYLEY.
St. Margaret's,
Malvern.
KK
266
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
I. William GOLDWYER=?:
of Upper Clatford, co.
Southampton.
Bridget =
= 2. William GOLDWYER. Bapt. Upper Clatford, =
17 Aug. 1572. Of Somerford Grange, Christ-
church, co. Southampton; Steward of Manor
of Christchurch 1614; Died 1 8, buried 2 3 Dec.
1630, in S. quire-aisle, Christchurch Priory.
Will dated 6 Mar. 1629, proved 18 Feb.
1630/1.
= Charity MOYLE. William =
Married 1604. GOLDWYER.
Died 1 7 Feb. Dead in
1626. Stone in 1629.
Christchurch
churchyard.
Buried
9 Jan.
1602/3.
^harit
1 1
Son. Bapt. 29 3. William GOLDWYER. Bornio =
Jan. 1596/7. July 1597. Of Somerford Grange.
Buried I Apr. Burgess of Christchurch in 1641.
i 5 9 7 at Christ- Died 16 Feb. 1677/8. Buried at
church. Christchurch.
= Sar
Bui
166
chi]
ah Thomas GOLD- (
•ied 20 Oct. WYER. Bapt.
3, at Christ- 13 Jan. Buried
rch. 17 June 1600,
at Christchurch.
(?) William
GOLDWYER.
4. Edward GOLD- =
WYER of Somer-
ford. Died 2 1 Oct.
1 68 1; Buried at
Christchurch.
= Mary
George GOLD- Ann.
WYER. Buried
ii Apr. 1694
at Christ-
church.
r
Mary. Buried
1 6 Dec. 1674
at Christ-
church.
Sara
Died 4 July
1 694. Buried
at Christ-
church.
6. Captain William GOLDWYER of Somerford. = Elizabeth FISHER of Southampton
Born 1655. Admitted Free Burgess of Lym-
ington in 1699. Died 16, buried 21 Aug.
1723, at Christchurch. Will dated 16 Aug.
1723, proved 4 July 1724.
Deed of Settlement dated 18 Dec.
1693. Died 23, buried 27 Sept.
1708 at Christchurch.
William
NoRRIS
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
267
flaude. Married 1 6 Sept. =f John NUELL.
590, at Upper Clatford.
ilive in 1629.
^homas GOLD-
VYER. (?) Bur-
ed at Upper
Clatford, 24
uly 1660.
George GOLDWYER. Bapt. 1 3 Feb.
1573, at Upper Clatford. Dead
in 1629.
I
George GOLDWYER.
Bapt. 28 Nov. 1602.
Buried 6 Jan.
1602/3 at Christ-
church.
I III I
William John George
NEWELL. NEWELL. GOLD-
I I
WYER.
Iridget.
Bridget.
William — Rebecca.
5. Henry GOLDWYER. In- =
= Elizabeth
iuricd 14
Bapt. 10
NORRIS,
Married
stituted Vicar of Christ-
Buried 1 1 Apr.
tf ay 1636,
Sept. 1639,
clerk.
c. 1647.
church, 6 Aug. 1673. Died
1694, at Christ-
t Christ-
at Christ-
30 Jan., buried 2 Feb.
church.
hurch.
church.
1 638/9, at Christchurch.
George GOLDWYER. Bapt.
1670. Died 8 Aug. 1 68 1.
Buried at Christchurch.
William GOLDWYER. Born c. 1665 in = Mary SMITH. Married at St.
Ireland. (?) Surgeon of New Sarum.
Died in the Close, 29 June 1748;
buried in St. Martin's, Sarum.
Martin's, 18 Dec. 1690, by
licence. Died 3 May 1738,
aged 7 1 ; buried there.
268
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
Captain William GOLDWYER = Elizabeth FISHER.
a \a
a Id
William GOLDWYER =
of Somerford.
Admitted Free
Burgess of Lyming-
ton in 1726.
Burgess of Christ-
church 1728.
Buried 24 May 1 74.0
at Christchurch.
Will dated 9 May
1740.
= Mary, daughter of
and
John LESTER. Died
intestate, seised of
•ith, succeeded by
eldest brother
Isaac LESTER of
Poole, merchant,
who m. Amey . . . .
succ. by only bro.
Benjamin LESTER
of Poole, who m.
= Elizabeth. £th coheir
of Wm. GOLDWYER.
Marr. 9 Apr. 1725,
at Christchurch. Died
in husband's lifetime
(?) 8 Nov. 1770.
>
Mary AYSCOUGH
of Winchester.
Marr. settlement
dated 3 Dec. 1725.
William GOLDWYER.
Bapt. 14 Sept. 1726,
at Christchurch.
Died i Mar.,
buried 4 Mar.
1727/8, at Christ-
church.
Mary.
William HOOKEY
of Christchurch,
eldest son. Burgess
of Christchurch
in 1735. Died 3,
buried 6 Oct.
1 7 59, aged 34,
at Christchurch.
p Elizabeth
John HOOKEY.
Died 20 Nov.
Buried
1759, aged 24.
13 May
Buried at
1763,
Christchurch.
aged 32,
at Christ-
church.
Samuel
HOOKEY.
Died
22 Feb.
1758.
Buried at
Christ-
church.
Charles REEKS of = Elizabeth.
City of London. in right of grand-
Deputy King's
Waiter of H.M.'s
cushions (sic,
•ith coheir
O
(?) for Customs).
mother; infant and
heir 1756. Bapt.
20 Apr. 1756, at
Christchurch.
Edward STILLINGFLEET. = Edith. Bapt. 2 3 Mar. = Christopher WOODWARD, gent. Married be-
1698/9, at Christchurch. fore 24 Sept. 1764, heir of wife's £th. Will
Died c. 1775.
In 1758, of Cran-
borne, Dorset, gent.
Will proved i Dec.
1760, by wife, sole
ex'ix., s.p. ist husband.
dated 4 Oct. 1776, whereby he leaves ^th in
trust for children by former marriage, Edward
Charles WOODWARD, William Robert WOOD-
WARD, and Mary Lydia Ann WOODWARD.
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
269
1
~r
William HOOKEY =Mary.
Francis FRY. Burgess of = Henrietta. Bapt. 2 June
of Christchurch,
Bapt.
Christchurch in 1735.
1697, at Christchurch.
gent. Married
22 Mar.
Son of John FRY of
Widow, £th coheir in
before 16 Aug.
1695/6.
Alvideston, Wilts., who
1756. Married after
1723. Burgess
Buried
died 1 8, buried 23 Mar.
16 Aug. 1723.
of Christchurch
1 8 Sept.
1726 at Edmondsham,
in 1728. Buried
1750, at
Dorset, and of Phila-
5 Sept. 1 77 1, at
Christ-
delphia HUSSEY, who
Christchurch.
church.
died 19, buried 24 Dec.
1 748, at Edmondsham.
(V. HUTCHINS, iii. 424.)
John FRY.
Bapt. 23 June
1730. Died
27, bur. 30
July 1759,
at Christ-
church.
Thomas FRY.
Died 31 May
173 1, aged 9
weeks. Buried
3 June 1731,
at Christchurch.
William FRY.
Bapt. 1 8 July
1733. Died
24, bur. 2 6 Dec.
1 73 5, at Christ-
church.
William = Philadelphia. Bapt.
BOWER. I Sept. 1732,3!
(see Christchurch. "Feles
page th. d. of Mr. Francis
270.) FRY." Sole heiress
of ^th. Heiress of
O
Edmondsham, £ffc.
Died Mar. 1791,
s.p.
Ann. Married = William = " Mrs. Mary GOLD-
after 16 Aug.
1723.
BOWER,
mercer,
of
Bristol.
WYER " of Christ-
church. Marr. at
Lymington, 1 6 Jan.
1740 (perhaps Mary
AYSCOUGH, widow of
William GOLDWYER
of Somerford) . Died
1753/4- (P-C.C.
Adm'on. Act Book.)
George GOLDWYER. Bapt.
20 Nov. 1705, at Christ-
church. The last of Somer-
ford. Burgess of Christ-
church in 1735. Will
dated 1 1 Apr. 1 749,
proved 17 Feb. 1757,
by widow, ex'ix. Buried
30 Jan. 1756/7, at Christ-
church.
; Mary TUCKER,
"eldest daughter
of Rev. — UCK — ,
A.M., of the —
Bristol." Died
26, buried 29
May 1778, at
Christchurch.
2 JO
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
*
f
*
William =f Ann
Ge
)rge GOLDWYER, surgeon, =j= Elizabeth. Died 1793,
BOWER.
GOLDWYER.
of Marlborough. Died 1771,
aged 92. Buried in
c
c
about 70 years old. Buried
St. Martin's, Sarum.
in St. Martin's, Sarum.
William BOWER, clerk. Born at=Philadel-
Captain Edmond BowER, = Elizabeth. Born = James HIL
Bristol 1731.
Eldest son, and phia FRY
R.N.
Of Hanover House,
1 746. Married
of Prospec
heir 1756 to
£th. B.A. Oriel (see page
Walcot.Died atEdmonds-
James HILL by
Hill, Berks
Coll., Oxon,
1752. Rector of 269).
ham 5 Aug. 1 8 1 1 . Mar-
licence, at St.
Buried at
Edmondsham, and of
Sutton
ried 30 Aug. 1768, at
Peter's, Marl-
St. Mary's
Walrond. Died 7, buried 1 2
Chalbury.
borough, 27
Reading,
Jan. 1782, at
Edmondsham.
Nov. 1766.
23 May
Lt. Gen. William Hector =f Philadelphia. Eldest daughter
MONRO. Governor of
Trinidad, etc. Died at
Bath 3 Jan. 1821, aged 5 2 .
and heiress, of Edmondsham,
etc. Born 26 Sept. 1 769. Died
9 Jan. 1836. (See HUTCHINS
iii, 424.)
I
W i 1 1 i a m = Ann. Second daughter
ROBERT- Born 26 Nov. 1771.
soN,M.D., Marr. 4 Apr. 1801.
of Bath. Died July 1843.
Flora BOWER, youngest child. = William Rutter BAYLEY, i 813-1879.
Born at Edmondsham, 5 Mar.
1815. Married 1835. Diedat
Bournemouth 1900.
Only child. Queen's College, Oxon.
Of Cotford, near Sidmouth, Devon-
shire. J.P.
Thomas E. = Harriet.
M. MARSH,
of Bath.
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
271
William BAYLEY, grocer, of=?Damaris HUGHES of Hodson
Marlborough. Died 1730. Farm, Chiseldon, Wilts.
Samuel BAYLEY (second^ Hannah
son). Of St. Peter's
parish, Marlborough,
brewer. Died 1752.
GOULDING.
William GOLDWYER.
Eldest son. Born
23 May 1727.
Surgeon of Bristol.
Died 1792.
Sarah GREEN of Marlborough. [In
1 807 William Henry GOLDWYER
says of his copy of Stow's edition
of Chaucer that it belonged about
1670 to his maternal grandfather,
Henry DUDLE Y, vicar of Broad Hin-
ton, Wilts.]
William BAYLEY, third
son. Bapt. 15 Oct.
1751, at St. Peter's,
Marlborough. B.A. St.
Mary Hall, Oxon,
1790. Died 1 6 Dec.
1827. Clerk.
Charles BLA-=
GRAVE of Ber-
keley Square.
Died 1 6 Apr.
1828, aged
69. Buried at
E well, Surrey.
Eliza beth=Thomas CALVERLEY
Goldwyer. of Ewell Castle.
Born 1 8 Marr. I June 1829
Oct. 1767. at St. George's,
Died 3 Oct. Han. Square. Died
1833. 1842, aged 74.
Buried at Ewell.
Dorothea
AYREY. Of
Society of
Friends. Died
9 Oct. 1839,
aged 69.
William Henry GOLD-
WYER. Born 1762.
Surgeon of Bristol.
Died 7 Mar. 1820,
second son. M.I. in St.
Nicholas Churchyard,
Bristol.
: Harriet GRIMSTEED,
1765-1835. Mar-
ried 7 Mar. 1793,3!
St. Martin's, Sarum,
by licence. Of Yat-
ton, Somerset.
Henry GOLDWYER, eldest son, M.D.,= ASHE.
of Bristol. Died 1 845, aged 49. M.I.
in St. Nicholas, Bristol.
Louisa. =pjc
IB
Jc
dau.
.=pjohn Edward GOLDWYER. Second son.
Born 1839. Of Briton Ferry,
Glamorgan.
CO.
A. R. BAYLEY.
272
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
Qflturraj),
MURRAY ===
William MURRAY.
Edward MURRAY.
ment, 1774. Lieut 1777. Resigned
1784. Died at Wexford 1 796. Will
proved 25 Nov. 1796.
Ens. 57th Regi- =^ Henrietta Alicia, daughter of John
GOOD ALL of Wilmont, Co. Wexford.
Marr. 30 Sept. 1773, at Wexford.
Henry John MURRAY of;
Woodbrook, Trinidad, West
Indies. Born 1774 at Kin-
sale. Ensign 57th Regiment
1794. Lieut. 1795. Resigned
1800. Died in Trinidad,
2 Nov. 1841.
Louise Rose, daughter of
Louis Alexander, Marquis
de ROCHARD. Born in Gren-
ada 1779. Marr. i Apr.
1799, at Port of Spain,
Trinidad. Died in Trinidad
5 Feb. 1868.
I.
Maria Alicia. = Eneas McGRATH.
Married (Son of Eneas
Apr. 1802. MCGRATH of
Knockmain, Co.
Roscommon.)
Edward MURRAY of Woodbrook. = Catherine Josephine Adelaide, daughter of M. Pierre Auguste
Marshal of the Island of Trinidad.
Born 24 June 1800. Died 9 June
1874.
ROGET de Belloquet. Born in Trinidad 5 Mar. 1803.
Married 7 Oct. 1822, at Port of Spain, Trinidad. Died at
Clifton 28 Aug. 1877.
I
Adelaide Jane, daughter of Colonel = Henry Augustus MURRAY. = Anne, daughter of Rev. the Hon.
E. N. WILFORD, R.A., Comman-
dant R.M. Academy. Born 23 Jan.
1831. Marr. 185 9 at St. George's,
Hanover Sq., London. Died 16
May 1 860. (ist wife.)
Formerly in the 79th High-
landers. Born 3 Sept. 1823.
Died 3 May 1 88 3,
F. N. CLEMENTS. Born 1840.
Married 1873 at St. George's,
Hanover Square. Raised to the
rank of an Earl's daughter by
Royal Warrant, 1 878. (2nd wife.)
Arthur Harris MURRAY. Born
1 6 May 1860. Educated at the
Royal Military Academy, Wool-
wich. 2nd Lieut. Royal Artillery
1879. Retired 1886.
Edward Croft MURRAY. Born = Jnlia Elizabeth, youngest
5th Oct. 1847. Educated at the child of George WILLOCK,
Royal Military College, Sandhurst. K.L.S., formerly a Major
Ensign gth Regiment, 9 Nov. in the Madras Cavalry.
1866. Retired from the Army Married 16 Jan. 1879,
with the rank of Major, Dec. 1887. at St. Peter's, Brighton.
As I am anxious to carry my pedigree further back than Edward MURRAY
and Henrietta GOODALL, and to know more about Eneas McGRATH, and
William CLIFFORD, perhaps some of your readers may be able to help me.
E. C. MURRAY,
Peri vale, Ryde, Isle of Wight.
JUNE 19 12] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
273
John MURRAY. Died before 1796.
William CLIFFORD. = Maria. Married
(Son of William Oct. 1795.
CLIFFORD of
Castle Annesley,
Co. Wexford.)
Thomas John MURRAY, M.D., = Charlotte, daughter of John GALWAY, formerly
F.R.C.S., Eng. Born 28 Sept. in the 57th Regiment. Born in Trinidad
1804. Died in Trinidad I o Nov. 1810. Married 10 Feb. 1825, at Port of
1888. Spain. Died in Trinidad 1854.
Edward MURRAY. For-
merly a Captain in the
3rd Middlesex Militia.
Born 3 Mar. 1 8 2 5 . Died
at Brighton 1893.
I I I I
Four sons.
Grace, only child of Sir Thomas Elmsley
CROFT, Bt., formerly in the Grena-
dier Guards. Born 1826. Married
5 Mar. 1 846, at All Souls, Langham
Place, London. Died at Brussels I 3 Jan.
1898.
1 1 1
Three
sons.
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Eight daughters.
Denman Croft MURRAY. Born II June 1849. = Mary Margaret, elder daughter of Henry
Educated at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. Davis WILLOCK, Bengal Civil Service. Marr.
Ensign 6th Regiment, 23 Jan. 1869. Retired with 17 Dec. 1885, at St. Mary's, Bryanston
the rank of Lieut. -Col., 1893. Square, London.
William Raymond Croft MURRAY. Born 21 Jan. 1887. Educated at Eton.
LL
274 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
in bt. BuRe'0 ofb
132. Mr. Thomas JONES, d. 30 June 1799, a. 44.
133. Mr. William GARDINER, of this p., late of Rayleigh, Ess., d.
3 June 1798, a. 73.
134. Elizabeth, w. of William JEFFREYS, of this p., d. Mar. 1, 1800,
a. 60.
135. Margaret PRESTON, d. Oct. 8, 1800, a. 66. Nicholas PRESTON,
her husb., d. Mar. 16, 1801, a. 68. Ann PRESTON, sister to the above,
d. May 14, 1807, a. 71.
136. Ann DUVERNET, d. Mar. 21, 1800, a. 81.
137. Frances, d. of Samuel & Elizabeth RICHARD, of this p., d. Sep.
24, 1798, a. 21. Miss Frances CHILD, gr. d. of above, d. Mar. 15, 1799,
a. 5 m. The above Eliz. RICHARD, d. Sep. 14, 1779, a. 59. Samuel
RICHARD, d. 12 June 1803,3.66. Ellin, w. of Richard NELSON, d.
25 Nov. 1813, a. 66. Richard NELSON, Esq., husb. of the above, d.
28 Aug. 1839.
138. Edward Augustus WEST, d. July 17(9)5, a. I y. 401.
139. Charles, s. of Doctor KER, of Sloane St., d. 19 Ap. 1812, a.
13 y. 8 months. His sister, Jane KER, d. 3 Mar. 1813, a. 1 8 y. 8 months
140. Sarah HUGHES, d. Nov. 21, 1797, a. 71. Mr. Edward HUGHES,
husb. of the above, d. Mar. 10, 1803, a. 78. Edward Corby HUGHES,
s. of the above, d. 30 June 1806, a. 46.
141. Thomas, s. of Thomas & Mary SYMONS, b. Mar. 4, 1795, d.
Mar. 28, 1795. Jenny Ma — croft SYMONS, d. of the above, b.
- mber 24, 1791, d. - mber 6, 1803. - , d. 1815. Ja[ne],
d. of above, d. - , a. 8 yrs. Ellen, d. of above, d. a. 21. Mary
SYMONS, d. of above, d. 29 J - , a. 26. William, s. of above, d. 19
M — , 1824, a. 19. Richard, s. of above, d. - , a. 16. Also - .
Also Mr. Thomas SYMONS, d. Mar. 1838, a. 72.
142. Mr. John EVANS, of this p., d. Feb. 14, 1797. Ja(y?) -
BERGALL, d. Dec. 31, - , a. 16 months. Mary, w. of the above, d.
25 Oct. 1818, a. 68.
143. Catherine BROWN, d. 1800, a. — days.
144. Joseph SUTTON, d. Jan. 13, 1794, a- ^7-
* Continued from page 239.
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 275
145. [Two monuments within a railing. One, a slab, could not be got
at, and is very dirty. The other, as follows'] : — Mr. William WHITE-
HEAD, builder, for many years one of the King's tradesmen, d. 8 May
1816, a. 55. A man who with an uncommon share of natural talent,
great strength of mind, unwearied and inexhaustible industry in per-
forming whatever he undertook raised himself to a state of compara-
tive affluence, and gained the respect of everyone who knew him. Many
National works bear testimony to his skill as a builder, and many of
the improvements which have greatly benefited this parish originated
with him. He was an affectionate husband, an indulgent parent, the
friend of the industrious poor, the enemy of no man.
[There is also an inscription on the top of this four-sided monument.]
146. [A tablet attached to the railing of above monument.]
Captain W. B. POTTER, 22nd. Cheshire Regt., only s. of William &
Eleanor POTTER, d. at Peshawar, India, 4 July 1882, a. 32.
147. John FULCHER, d. Jan. 28, 1810, a. 50. William FULCHER,
d. Nov. 5, 1820, a. 30.
148. Robert MOATE, Esq., late of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, eldest
s. of Robt. MOATE, of Westwood House, Abbotts Langley, Herts, by
Mary, eldest d. of William BIRKS, Esq., of Warren Hall, York, b.
3 Oct. 1779, d. II Jan. 1825. He mar. Mary Anne, eldest d. of John
WILLIAMS, Esq., of Holloway House, Midd., by whom he left seven
surviving chn. ; Charles Robert, Ellen Maria WILLIAMS, Anne
Catherine, Eliza, Albert, Henry Francis, Septimus.
149. Elizabeth, d. of Samuel & Mary Anne MOGFORD, of this p.,
d. 2 Ap. 1828. John HUTCHINSON, first cousin of the above, s. of
Saunders & Amelia HUTCHINSON, of this p., d. May 12, 1828, a.
2 y. 5 m. 25 days. Robert, s. of Sam. MOGFORD, d. Feb. 26, 1830, a.
10 months. William, his bro., d. 21 Dec. 1838, a. 6 y. 6 months.
Mr. Samuel MOGFORD, d. 15 Sep. 1811, a. 66. Mary Anne, his w., d.
2 Aug. 1843, a. 49 y. 8 months.
150. . . . Henry HAILSTONE, Esq., husb. of the above Mary, d.
26 Mar. 181(2), in his 8 1st year.
151. Henry HAILSTONE, Esq., late of Sloane St., d. 26Mar.i8i2, a. 81.
152. Charles Thomas, s. of the late James & Mary POTTER, of this
p., d. May 9, 1822, a (31?). Margaret, his w., d. May 31, 1828, in her
(3)7th. year. John VINCENT d
153. [Four-sided, within a railing]
Mr. James POTTER, late of this p., d. July 13, 1813, a. 57. Mary, w.
of the above, d. Jan. 14, 1827, in her 67th. year. William, theirs.,
d. 29 Nov. 1 835, in his 45th. year. Mary Anne, his wid., d. 2 Feb.
18(5)0, a. 65 "
276 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
154. Martha, d. of Samuel & Martha YAPP, of this p., d. May 8,
1799, a. 3. Samuel, s. of the above, d. Mar. 1800, a. i year. Richard,
d. Dec. 29, 1808, a. 8. Martha YAPP, mother of the above, d. May 24,
1826. Susanna YAPP, d. Sep. 9, 1788, a. 38. Elizabeth YAPP, her
sister, d. Mar. 13, 1800, a. 43. Richard, their bro., d. Mar. 8, 180(5),
a. 48. Mrs. Hannah GILES, sister to Mrs. YAPP, d. Oct. 20, 1833,
a. 60.
155. Sarah, w. of John Metcalfe CARLETON, d. 8 Dec. 1809, a. 43.
J. M. CARLETON, of on House, Richmond, d. 21 Nov. 1829, a. 75.
156. Mr. William FREAME, d. 21 July 1797, a. (6)2.
157 Also [Wiljliam KEN , a. 80. Also Elizabeth BELL,
d. of the above, d. 29 Aug. 181-, a. 47. William GILLISO , a. 36.
158. Mary, w. of John CHAINEY, of this p., d. Feb. 25, 1790, a. 56.
The above mentioned the first buried in the new ground.
Rest on thy balmy Wing awhile my Dear,
Perhaps my Dissolution may be near,
As our Souls once were joined in mutual love
Together let us seek the Realms above.
For why should I endeavour to delay
My shortest progress to Eternal Day
Fly on dear Spouse into that happy place,
Wliere joys abound, and pleasures never cease.
Mr. John CHAINEY, husb. of the above, d. Mar. 2, 179(5), a. 72.
159. Mr. William Co AXES, d. Oct. 20, 1812, a. 64.
160. Mrs. Susanna FRASER, d. Mar. 21, 1834, a- 7^- William
FRASER, s. of the above, d. Jan. 22, 1835, a. 43.
161. Mary, w. of John HAMSHAW, of this p., d. July 29, 1800, a. 60.
Also five of her gr. children. William HAMSHAW, [no date], a. 44.
The above J. HAMSHAW, d. Oct. n, 1818, a. 88. Robert HAMSHAW,
d. Nov. 25, 1842, a. 66.
162. Mr. Wales CLODD, late Master of H.M.S. Vanguard, d. —
Feb., 1 8 — , a. 45. Also Mrs. Eliz , wife . . . . d. 13 June, a. 59.
Sarah Elizabeth LOCKYER, d. Oct. 5, 1816, in her 32d. year. Henry
LOCKYER, d. May 23, 1825, in his I9th. year. Mr. Charles LOCKYER,
uncle to Henry, d. 3 June 1835, a. 39.
163. Elizabeth WALTER, w. of John WALTER, of this p., d. July I,
1799, a. -6.
Catherine MITCHELL, her sister, d. Nov. 23, 1799, a. 53. The
above John WALTER, Esq., d. 5 May 1825, a. 81. Erected by his
widow.
(To be continued).
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 277
Baw'0 ButnBer (goom/
(gowe an& (Foe euite from Cflancerp
1652/3, February 10. William ROE of Budocke, co. Cornwall, the
nephew of Robert HUMPHREY. Answer of John BRAGG and Dorothy
his wife. (Reynardson 13/122.)
1653, October 24. Nicholas ROWE of Pounstock, co. Cornwall,
against Walter YEO, clerk, of Grade, co. Cornwall. Answer of Walter
YEO. (Reynardson 14/187.)
A.D. 1663. Thomas ROE, eldest son and heir of John ROE late of
Trescott in St. Stephens [Cornwall], Answer of Martha JEFFERY,
widow, Thomas BAWDEN, and Mary his wife. Premises in Launceston.
(Reynardson 94/76.)
1667, December 5. Samuel Row of Long Itch, co. Warwick,
rector of same, married Margaret the daughter of Margaret WATKINS
of Burford, co. Oxon, widow, and sister of William WATKINS, of Bur-
ford, clothier. (Reynardson 410/157.)
1681, October 24. Sir William LEIGHTON,==WILLIGIFORT.
Knight, of co. Salop. I (? Christian or surname.)
1 ; i
Harecourt LEIGHTON. = Elizabeth, daughter Robina =f William ROE,
Marr: sett: dated of Sir John
20 April, i o James I. DAUNTSEY, of Laving-
Will dated 1656. ton, co. Wilts.
of Plash, co.
Salop.
i r
Edward ROE, of =p Robina = William HAMMOND,
Westminster. late of Plash.
Edward ROE, of Great Yarmouth, co. Norfolk.
Answers of Rowland HUNT, William HAMMOND and Robina his wife.
(Reynardson 91/88.)
1682, February 12. Henry ROE and Frances his wife, versus John
ROE and Thomas his son. Messuage in Launceston, Cornwall. (See
also Reynardson 94/76.) (Reynardson 418/131.)
1689, June 26. Richard ROWE, of Padstowe, co. Cornwall, mariner,
son of Joseph ROWE, who was grandson of Margery LYNAM, widow.
Endellion. (See MACLEAN, Sir J., Deanery of Irigg Minor , 1873-79,
vol. I., p. 260.) (Reynardson, 424/144.)
1692, June 10. Francis ROE of Llanerchkeela, co. Montgomery,
clerk, versus Blanch HARRISON and Ellen ROE, widows. Inventory of
personalty of Thomas ROE (brother of plaintiff, deceased).
(Reynardson 135/23.)
* Continued from page 249.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
1692, November. William Row, of Hartland, co. Devon, yeoman.
Thomas Row, of same, deceased, will dated 5 May 1677. A mortgage
dated 10 June 1680 to Thomas BROWNE, whose now widow Ursula is
defendant. (Reynardson 43 1 /$6.)
1695, September 28. William SMITH . Emma.
of London.
I. Andrew SMITH. =? Hannah.
I
John FERNEY, citizen = Frances. Only
and draper of London. dau. Died
Died intestate. intestate.
rilli<
I
I
William SMITH. Henry Row of = Christian. Sole sister William FERNEY of
London, mer- and heir of William. Croydon, Surrey,
chant. Plaintiff. Died intestate.
Answer dated 1695, November, of George FORD Esq., one of the de-
fendants. Premises in St. Leonard, Bromley, Middlesex.
(Reynardson 434/127.)
1702, October 29.
Thomas ROE. Died intestate, == Mary
seized of two messuages in
Eyton, co. Salop about 1668.
1
.1
1
I. Thomas ROE of = Ellen
Francis ROE
Priscilla. = B
Lichfield, apothe- [De-
of Llanerch-
? daugh-
oi
cary. Died intestate. fend-
keela, co.
ter or
IV
Adm'on Consistory ant.]
Montgomery,
sister.
L
Lichfield.
clerk.
cl
[plaintiff.]
1 1
Mary. Elizabeth
Bold ROE = Alice
of Carlton [deft]
Magna,co.
Lincoln,
clerk.
(Reynardson 172/54.)
1709, October 28. John ROE of Whitchurst, co. Bucks, clerk. ROE
gave a bond conditioned on his marriage with Frances the daughter of
William JENNINGS of Hardwick, co. Bucks. Frances did not consent
and though ROE and herself both found other partners the bond was
not cancelled. (Reynardson 487/16.)
A.D. 1710.
TREVELYAN. == Mary.
I
Thomas ROWE = Mary,
of Staverton,
co. Devon.
[plaintiffs.]
John TREVELYAN
of Bazell in South
Cleather, co.
Cornwall. His
will recited in full.
Hugh = Prudence = Edward BURLASSE
FRANCES of S. Michael,
[defendants.] Penkevell, co.
Cornwall.
2nd husbd.
W.Mc B. & F. MARCHAM.
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
279
A.D. 1751.
William HUGHES of= Katherine. Thomas EDWARDS. = Dorothy. Died Ann. Died
Holywell, Ft., gent. 1716. Died before 1751. (before 1751. spinster.
Died Mar. 1716-17.
William ED WARDS. ==
Died about 1729.
\
Thomas EDWARDS.
1751.
1
1
|
1
|
William
Cathe-
Thomas PARRY ^Elizabeth.
Thos.CoLHNs=Mary.
Margaret
EDWARDS.
rine.
of Longford
Married,
of Newport,
1751.
of Long-
Ob. inf.
Died a
Hall, Salop,
Mayi743.
Salop, cutler.
ford, sp.
about
spinster.
Esq. Aged 36
Aged 2 7 in
Protestant.
R.C.
I73I-
in 1751. R.C.
1751. R.C.
1751.
1751.
1
1 |
|
Peter PARRY. Born
Elizabeth. Born Thomas
PARRY. Born
Catherine. Born
II May
1744.
7 Aug. 1745. 4 Sept. 1747.
13 June
1750.
(COLLINS v. PARRY, 1758-1800, Bundle 1766.)
A.D. 1724-1725.
John COWLEY of St. Giles-in-the-=
Fields, Carpenter. Died 6 Dec.
1714. Owned the " Star" Alehouse.
I
John COWLEY. Owned =
messuages in Cross
Lane, St. Giles. Died
17 Apr. 1718, intestate.
p Martha, sister to -~
1
:Adau.
...Mo(o)RE.=j=Adau
i
Henry WHITE, of BURCH-ELL.
St. Giles, gent.
Died 2ojuly 1718.
Symon PARRY,= Elizabeth, only child. Aged 1 1
junr, of St. in 1718. Married about 1724.
Giles, gent. Living 1725.
1725.
William =Ann. A minor
BULPITT. in 1712. Liv-
1725. ing 1725.
r
I
|
|
|
LOVEGROVE. = Elizabeth.
John BURCHELL.
Ann.
Thomas
Edward
Died be-
Minor in 1702.
Spinster.
BURCHELL.
BURCHELL.
fore 1724.
Living 1725,
1725.
1725.
1725.
then over 21.
Edward LOVEGROVE.
Aged 15 in 1725.
Cowley LOVEGROVE.
Ob. inf.
(WHITE v. PARRY, Bundle 2004;
PARRY v. WHITE, Bundle 60 ;
PARRY v. BULPITT, Bundle 289.)
G. S. PARRY, Lt.-Col.
28o
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
PRESIDENT :
of Bon&on.
Officers of the Society.
The late Most Honourable William Montagu,
Marquess of TWEEDDALE, K.T.
VICE-PRESIDENTS : The Right Honourable John Allan, Baron LLAN-
GATTOCK.
The Marquis DE LIVERI ET DE VALDAUSA.
HON. TREASURER: Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
HON. SECRETARY : George SHERWOOD.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 1911-12.
Cyril Shakespear BEACHCROFT. Gerald FOTHERGILL.
James Reginald Morshead GLEN-
CROSS, M.A., LL.B.
George Frederick Tudor SHERWOOD.
Frederick Simon SNELL, M.A.
Charles William WALLACE, Ph.D.
Charles Allan BERNAU.
William BRADBROOK,M.R.C.S.
Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
Joseph Cecil BULL.
Frank EVANS.
LIBRARIAN-SECRETARY: Frank Ellis PRICE.
OFFICIAL ORGAN : The Pedigree Register. Quarterly, IDs. 6d. per annum.
REGISTERED OFFICE AND ROOMS: 227 Strand (by Temple Bar), London,W.C.
FOURTH QUARTERLY REPORT, June, 1912.
The Fellows, Members, and Corresponding Associates elected since the I4th
February are as follows :
FELLOWS.
Francis VERDON, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P.
Henry James Theodore WOOD.
None elected.
Colonel Richard Hugh Lambart BRICKENDEN.
MEMBERS.
Francis VERDON, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P.
Wilfrid GUTCH.
Gilbert TAYLOR.
Henry James Theodore WOOD.
John Crowe HARLAND.
Colonel Richard Hugh Lambart BRICKENDEN.
Sidney Vernon Leslie HARFORD.
Henry Frederick FULLER, M.A.
Lady Frances LAYLAND-BARRATT.
Rev. Edmund R. NEVILL, B.A., F.S.A.
Philippa Swinnerton HUGHES.
Philip Hugh LAWSON.
ASSOCIATES.
None elected.
CORRESPONDING ASSOCIATES.
Ralph Harry STEPHENSON.
Edward Marion CHADWICK, K.C.
Edward Charles FIN LAY.
Arthur Weight MATTHEWS.
Mary Harriet CLAXTON.
William Clement KENDALL.
COMMITTEES.
The Executive Committee held its usual Monthly Meetings in the Society's
Rooms on the I3th March, loth April, and 8th May; the second Wednesday in
1912, March 13:
April 10:
May 8:
1912, March 13
April 10:
May 8:
1912, March 13;
April 10:
May 8:
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 281
each month, at 2 p.m., being the day and hour now fixed for meeting. Meetings
of Fellows to elect new Fellows are held on the same day and at the same place,
at 3.30 p.m. On the I3th March it was resolved to make a bid on behalf of
the Society for Linton's Gretna Hall Marriage Registers, 1825-44, with the
original certificates of marriage, signed by the parties, and an Index. These
were to be put up at auction at Sotheby's on the 29th March, and a circular
accordingly was sent to every Member asking for subscriptions, with the result
that the Society was in a position to bid £190. The lot was sold, however, for
£420. At the meeting on 8th May the Executive Committee learned, with
regret, of the transfer of the Archdeaconry of Richmond Wills from London
to York, and a resolution was passed urging the authorities not to make further
transfers of ancient records from London, where they are chiefly required for
purposes of research. Amendments were proposed to Sections 4 and 28 of the
Welsh Disestablishment Bill now before Parliament, in reference to Welsh
records, and copies were to be sent to the proper quarter.
In our Annual Report for 1912 there will be an alphabetical list of the families,
places, and matters in which our Members are personally interested. Fellows
only are entitled to special quarterly advices as to matter accrued to the Society's
collections of personal interest to themselves, but ordinary Members, Associates,
and Corresponding Associates may have as many as Jive such " interests " entered
in the printed alphabetical list, notification of which should be sent to the
Hon. Secretary at once. A favourable opportunity is presented to intending
Members to put up for election at the next meeting (July loth), so that their names
and " interests" may be in time for inclusion in this year's Annual Report.
Committee on the Library, printed volumes. — The Accessions List enumerates
376 items, nearly all received by gift. The privilege of borrowing books is
one that should be to members most useful and interesting, as many of the
volumes are unobtainable elsewhere. We have added a number of Record
Office publications to our collection.
Committee on the Library, MS. volumes. — The following volumes in MS.
have been received: Pedigrees of Peers and others, temp. Elizabeth. MS. bound
in vellum, oblong, 6 inches by 8 inches; 234 folios. Presented by the Revd.
E. H. BURTON, D.D. A Copy of the Parish Register of St. Tudy, CORNWALL,
baptisms and burials, 1559-1812. Transcribed by Mrs. GLENCROSS. Lent by
Mr. R. M. GLENCROSS, M.A., LL.B.
Committee on the Library, Documents. — A very large number of original docu-
ments as well as abstracts has been received, and voluntary help is urgently
needed in the work of cataloguing them on the " envelope system." Abstracts
of 234 wills relating principally to the families of BANGER (5), BEALE (n), FRENCH
(44), JERMYN (6), PLAYSTED (30), PRIMATT (8), SKINNER (u), SMITH (9), STONIER
(6), STREET (38), WOODIN (8), and YARWORTH (9), were presented by Mr. Oswald
Greenwaye KNAPP. A large collection of Original Deeds (about 2,500) relating
to the eastern portion of KENT and dating from the end of the I4th century
to the igth century was presented by a firm of solicitors.
Committee on the Consolidated Index. — The work on the Consolidated Index
progresses steadily, all the letters of the alphabet having been now, for the first
time, properly sorted out, thus making the collection as a whole available for
consultation. The number of index-slips, apart from the COOKSON collection, is
approximately 79,440. The Society's important scheme for indexing the
Marriage Licences in the Bishop of London's Registry is methodically being
taken in hand, some six or seven members of the Society now being engaged in the
writing out and arrangement of the slips concerned. The work of indexing
large collections like the Marriage Licences and also the Wills of the Prerogative
Court is still, however, held back by the want of contributors, but progress is
nevertheless being made, and it is hoped that the difficulty will be overcome by
MM
282 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
an increased membership of the Society, and also as the result of a special appeal
to present members drawn up by the Society's Hon. Secretary, and now being
circulated among them.
Committee for Cataloguing Pedigrees. — The pedigrees contained in the follow-
ing printed works have been catalogued on index slips and the slips sorted into the
Consolidated Index:
Harleian Society's Publications, vols. 50 to 55.
The Genealogist, New Series, vols. 18 to 24.
The Ancestor, vols. 2 to 12.
Misc. Gen. et Heraldica, 4th Series, vol. i.
CRISP'S Visitations oj England and Wales,
vols. i to 13; and Notes, vols. I to 6.
The Genealogical Magazine, vols. 5 to end.
Manuscript copies of the following pedigrees from the Public Records have
been presented by the Revd. T. C. DALE:
BOOTH of Gilligate, co. Durham.
BRASSE of Brasserton, co. Durham.
CLARKE of Great Lumley, co. Durham.
DALE of St. Bee's and Egremont, Cumberland.
EWBANCKE of Blackwell, co. Durham.
FRANCIS of Chipping Lambourne, Berks, and of London.
FRANCIS of Easton, Marlborough and Ramsbury, Wilts.
FRANK of Kneeton and Middleton Tyas, Yorks.
LITTLEFAIRE of Bowes, Yorks.
MASON of Durham.
MORPETH of Stillington, co. Durham.
TETHERINGTON, or TITTERINGTON, of Essex.
TIMBRELL of London, Sevenhampton, co. Glouc., and Barbadoes.
WALTON of Durham, Yorks, etc.
WREN of Binchester, co. Durham.
A vellum roll pedigree (temp. Jac. I.) of GAMAGE, and printed charts of
HAMILTON (Dukes of), CECIL, HOWARTH, LEWIS, PARSONS and PERCY, were pre-
sented by Mr. G. Rutter FLETCHER. A manuscript pedigree of CLARK of Moulton,
co. Lincoln, was presented by Mr. Campbell M.WYNNE. A number of printed
accounts of old Philadelphia families was presented by Mrs. M. Stanton TAYLOR.
Committee on Monumental Inscriptions. — The Society is indebted to Mr. R. H.
STEPHENSON for copies of inscriptions at Stretton Magna, Little Stretton, and
Burrough on the Hill, LEICESTERSHIRE, with index-slips written for the
same; to Mr. G. P. TOWNEND for copies from the Chapel yard of Thornton in
Bradford, YORKSHIRE (261 pp.); to Mr. J. Edwin BATESON for copies from
the churchyards of Aston Tirrold, St. Mary le More, Wallingford, and Mouls-
ford, BERKS, Checkendon, Nuffield, North Stoke, South Stoke and Woodcote,
OXON, and Caen, NORMANDY. We are glad to enter on our index-slips the
name of any parish whose inscriptions have been copied and information as to
where copies are to be found.
Mr. Arthur Weight MATTHEWS presented two charming little volumes con-
taining, in manuscript, copies of inscriptions in the following DORSETSHIRE
churchyards: Allington, Askerswell, Beaminster, Bothenhampton, Bradpole,
Bridport, Chideock, Eype, Loders, Lyme Regis, Netherbury, Puncknole, Shipton
Gorge, Swyre, Symondsbury, and Walditch. A third contains inscriptions in
STAFFORDSHIRE and WARWICKSHIRE churchyards as follows: In STAF-
FORDSHIRE: Armitage (Independent), Drayton Bassett, Edingale, Farewell,
Harlaston, Lichfield (St. Chad's and St. Michael's), Longdon, Rugeley, Shinstone
and Whittington. In WARWICKSHIRE : Ansley, Baddesley, Berkswell, Bicken-
hill, Birmingham (Kaye Hill Cemetery), Brinklow, Bulkington, Coleshill,
Erdington, Fillongley, Hampden-in-Arden, Kingsbury, Mancetter, Nuneaton,
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 283
Polesworth, Rugby (Holy Trinity), Shustoke, Sutton Coldfield, Tamworth,
Over Whitacre and Nether Whitacre.
A collection of 94 inscriptions, carefully copied (verb, et lit.) from rubbings of
Monumental Brasses in the counties of Bedford, Buckingham, Gloucester,
Lincoln, Norfolk, Somerset and Carnarvon, with an Index of Names, was pre-
sented by Mr. Frank M. CURTIS.
Committee on Parish Registers and Marriage Licences. — Copies of the Registers
of Michaelstow, CORNWALL (Baptisms 1680-1812; Burials 1544-1812), and
of St Tudy, CORNWALL (Baptisms and Burials 1559-1812) have been lent to
the Society by Mr. R. M. GLENCROSS. Entries in the Registers of the following
parishes are already copied or are being copied on index slips :
CAMBRIDGESHIRE: St. Edward, Cambridge; Fen Drayton and
Knapwell.
CORNWALL: Advent.
DURHAM: Dalton-le-Dale.
HAMPSHIRE: Beaulieu.
LONDON & MIDDX: St. Nicholas, Cole Abbey, Acton and Hil-
lingdon.
NORFOLK: Acle, Brundall, Burlingham (St. Peter) and
Hemblington.
NOTTINGHAMSHIRE: Bleasby, Halloughton, Morton, Southwell
and Upton.
SUFFOLK: Capel St. Mary, Combs, Exning St. Martin,
Martlesham, Thrandeston, Great and
Little Wenham.
WARWICKSHIRE: Anstey, Atherstone-on Stour, Bourton-on-
Dunsmore, Butler's Marston, Charle-
cote, Long Compton, Fenny Compton,
Ettington, Halford, Honington, Idlicote,
Leamington Priors, Prior's Hardwick,
Temple Grafton and Whitchurch.
WILTSHIRE: Marlborough (St. Mary) and Preshute.
WORCESTERSHIRE: Dormstone and Kington.
YORKSHIRE: Bradford and Leeds (St. John).
Committee on Fly-leaf Inscriptions in Family Bibles. — The Hon. Secretary
(Revd. J. L. E. HOOPPELL) reports that he has in preparation a blank form of
Family Register to take the place of the, often unsatisfactory, method of record-
ing vital facts in the Family Bible. Original fly-leaves and copies of entries on
fly-leaves have been received concerning the following families : SANDEMAN, FULLER;
HUNT, POWER; WILSON, GARDNER; LUDLOW; WHITEHOUSE, MALPAS, ASHWELL;
CLIFFE; DEACON, HUME, NICHOLL, DODGSON; BACON; STEEMSON; GRIFFIN;
MERCIER; COMY, RANDOLL; SHARPE; KING, GORDON.
Committee on Family Associations. — The following have been added to the
list, and steps are being taken to obtain details: The BICKNELL Family Association,
Providence, R.I., U.S.A.; the FOGG Family Association, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.;
the LINDSAY Family Association of America, Roslindale, Mass., U.S.A.; the
READE Historical and Genealogical Association, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
A Committee on IRISH Records is being formed, the present Members being
Captain R. E. FITZGERALD-LOMBARD, Lieutenant W. P. PAKEN HAM-WALSH,
R.E., and Mr. W. Roberts CROW.
For the convenience of inquirers the names of those Members who undertake
research professionally will be distinguished by an asterisk in the Annual Report
now in preparation. Such Members are invited to send their names at once to
the Hon. Secretary.
284 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
Coffege
1679*1800.
Bromley College at Bromley in Kent, ten miles from London, the largest and
most ancient foundation for clergymen's widows in England, was founded in
1666, by John WARNER, Bishop of Rochester (of whom there is a very fine por-
trait in the Chaplain's house), for the residence and support of the widows of
loyal and orthodox clergymen. The original endowment was augmented by
many subsequent benefactions and at the present time there are resident in the
college forty-five ladies; i.e. forty houses for widows, and five houses for un-
married daughters who have lived with their mothers in the College. I am per-
mitted to take this transcript of the Register of Admissions and Deaths by the
Chaplain, the Revd. James WHITE, M.A., to whom I express my obligations.
F. M. R. HOLWORTHY, F.S.G.
Bromley, Kent.
NAMES OF WIDOWS WHO HAVE DIED IN BROMLEY COLLEGE AS
APPEARS BY YE PARISH REGISTER
Jane WORREL, buried May 23rd, 1679.
Mrs. JERRY,* buried July 31, 1681.
Mrs. Martha JACKSON, buried Octobr 18, 1683.
Mrs. Elizabeth HILL, buried Janry n, 1684.
Mrs. DOBSON, buried July 25, 1686.
Mrs. ANTROBUS|, buried Decemr. 17, ditto.
Mrs. SHALLETTI, buried Aug. 24, ditto.
Mrs. LENNARD, buried March 27, 1687.
Elizabeth TURNER, buried June 2, 1692.
Annie HAYNES, buried March 23, ditto.
Mary KING, buried Augt. 30, 1693.
Grizell PROCTER, buried May 29, 1694.
Muriel ALBRIGHT, buried March 17, ditto.
Elizabeth YOUNG, buried May 31, 1695.
Katherine MASON, buried May 18, 1696.
[The following in a later hand, written on a slip and pinned in this place.]
Katherine DAVIDSON, buried January 1823, at Rickin Hall near Diss.
Jane MILNE, buried November nth, 1823.
Mary GILDER, buried October 2Oth, 1823.
* of ye College, not exprest Widow.
f Ro. ANTROBUS was Minesf of Bromley as appears by his signing ye Register for
Marriage 1643.
t thus placed in ye Register.
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 285
A list of ye several widows of Bromley College who have died, and been ad-
mitted since ye Feast of St. Michael, A.D. 1696, from ye Register of H. BAG-
SHAW, Chaplain.
[The wording in each case is the same, unless otherwise shown.]
A.D.
1696. Mrs. CRAIGE, died October 10, and was succeeded by Mrs. PAR,
Novr. 4, following.
Mrs. FEATLY, died Decembr. 13; succ. by Mrs. BENNET, Jan. 12.
1698. Mrs. FAREWELL, died July 13; succ. by Mrs. JIL, Sept. 12, or
thereabouts.
1699. Mrs. PAR, died March 10; succ. by Mrs. POLLINGTON, April 2.
1700. Mrs. GODWIN, died Apl 6; succ. by Mrs. MOREHOUSE, May 27.
1701. Mrs. GATFORD, died March 27; succ. by Mrs. DAVIDSON, Apl. 25.
Mrs. CROFTS, died Augt. 19; succ. by Mrs. CLERK, Sept. 29.
Mrs. JIL, died April 12 ; succ. by Mrs. WORTHINGTON, May I4th.
1702. Mrs. NIGHTINGALE, died April 19 ; succ. by Mrs. GEPSON, May I4th.
1704-5. Mrs. EDWARDS, died March i ; succ. by Mrs. MELVIN, March 28.
1705. Mrs. BURNET, died April 12; succ. by Mrs.VANDERLEUR, June nth.
Mrs. ASHTON, died June 17; succ. by Mrs. HANCOX, March 18.
Mrs. JIFFORD, died July 7; succ. by Mrs. GERMIN, March 18.
1707. Mrs. CLERK, died May 2; succ. by Mrs. SLAUGHTER, Augt. 14
[SLATER ?]
Mrs. DAVIS, died June 7; succ. by Mrs. HAMES, Aug. 1707.
Mrs. SAVOURY, died Novr. 5; succ. by Mrs. HIGGINS, Novr. 29.
1708. Mrs. BARTON, died Decembr. 8th; succ. by Mrs. TRUELOVE,
Augt. 19.
1709. Mrs. MOREHOUSE, died March 14; succ. by Mrs. CHADWICK,
Sepr. 4.
1711. Mrs. WORTHINGTON, died Decembr. 2; succ. by Mrs. MONCKTON,
May 7, 1713.
1712. Mrs. OLIVER, died June loth; succ. by Mrs. JOANS, May 7, 1713.
1713. Mrs. DAVIDSON, died July 9; succ. by Mrs. GREGORY, May 13.
1714. Mrs. CHADWICK, died May 6; succ. by Mrs. CREW, May 13.
Mrs. VANDERLEUR, died June 29; succ. by Mrs. FEN, June 5, 1716.
1716. Mrs. FEN, died Octbr. 2d; succ. by Mrs. AXE, Janry. 8.
Mary AXE, Relict of Mr. James AXE Vic. of Stroud near Rochester
& Stokebury in ye Diocese of Canterbury.
1716. Mrs. CHAMBERS, died March 2; succ. by Mrs. BROWN ye June
following.
1717. Mrs. CLERK, died Octobr. 23; succ. by Mrs. WINTERBOTTOM,
Jany. 14.
Mrs. JERMIN, died Decembr. 29; succ. by Mrs. PRAT, Jany. 14.
1718. Mrs. PITS, died Decembr. 28; succ. by Mrs. TURNER, Jany. 13.
286 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
A.D.
1718. Mary TURNER, Relict of Mr. Edw. TURNER of Halstow in ye
hundred of Hoo, Diocese of Rochester.
1719. Mrs.WiNTERBOTTOM, died Jany I ; succ. by Mrs. COLLIER, Jany. 12.
1721. Mrs. COLLIER, died July 8; succ. by Mrs. DAVIDSON, Septr. 12.
1722. Mrs. TROTTER, died Decemb. 12 ; succ. by Mrs. WARD.
Sarah WARD, Relict of Mr. William WARD, Rectr of Woldham in
ye Diocese of Rochester.
1723. Mrs. BENNET, died Septr 29; succ. by Mrs. HILL.
Elizabeth HILL, Relict of Mr. — . HILL Vicar of E. Mailing, Kent.
1724. Mrs. PRAT, died July i6th; succ. by Mrs. CORNWAL.
Ann CORNWALL, Relict of Dr CORNWAL Recr of Speldherst in ye
Diocese of Rochester.
Mrs. DAVIDSON, died at London in Novr. ; succ. by Mrs. SANDFORD
yn Janry following.
1727. Mrs. POLLINGTON, died Decembr. ; succ. by Mrs. REED Janry
following.
1728. Mrs. CHAPMAN, died Janry 13; succ. by Mrs. BIRCH March 18.
Mrs. HAYMES, died the next day & [&c. &c.] succ. by Mrs. SKINNER
March ist.
Mrs. JONES, died in London Febry. 15 ; succ. by Mrs. HUNTINGDON
March 7th.
Mrs. HUNTINGDON married and was succeeded by Mrs. WHITE.
Mrs. HIGGINS, died March 5th; succ. by Mrs. BIRKBECK.
1729. Mrs. TRUELOVE, died May 17; succ. by Mrs. SATUR, June 19.
1730. Mrs. HANCOX, died Janry; succ. by Mrs. VIGURES Febry I3th.
Florence VIGURES, Relict of Mr. John VIGURES, Recr. of Birknor
in ye Diocese of Canterbury.
1730. Mrs. MELVIN, died Febry 26; succ. by Mrs. WINTERLEY, Novr 6,
1734-
(To be continued.)
(pedigree Qfyjiefer" QJecorfc of (£>tr$0,
<Hppoitt6nente, (preferment, efc*
MATHER-MORLEY.— On the i8th of April, at St. Paul's Church, Rusthall,
Tunbridge Wells, by Bishop WELLDON, Dean of Manchester, assisted by
the Rev. F. N. EDEN, vicar of Rusthall, Loris Emerson, son of the Right
Hon. Sir William MATHER, of Bramble Hill, Bramshaw, New Forest, and
Manchester, to Gwendoline Marion Leila, younger daughter of John
MORLEY, Esq., of Glendore, Camden Park, Tunbridge Wells.
JuNEi9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 287
(Hofe0t Queries anb
THE EXCISE. — From the time of Charles II. to the beginning of the nine-
teenth century, the duties from the Excise were granted to and formed part of
the revenue of the Crown.
The head office was in London and the head officers — Commissioners, were
appointed by the King.
The Officers in the Excise were Commissioners, Collectors, Supervisors,
Examiners and Gagers. In the year 1796 England and Wales were divided into
49 "Collections." Each "Collection," of which a " Colledor " was head,
was divided into " districts "; each " District," of which a Supervisor was head,
was divided into " out-rides," and " foot-walks," presided over by a " Gager "
or " Officer."
When anyone wished to enter the service he had to petition the Commissioners
for an order that he might be instructed in his duties and take an oath. He
paid nothing to be instructed. He had to send his Baptismal Certificate,
showing he was 21 years of age and under 30, had to pass an examination and
show that he was free from debt, and, if married, had not more than two chil-
dren. " Two persons to be bound with him sufficient to answer £200 for the
due execution of his office." " The petitioner to get a certificate and recommen-
dation signed by so many gentlemen as he can and well affected to the Govern-
ment." Though an applicant had an order to be instructed, "yet if the
petitioner cannot obtain the countenance of some gentleman (a Member of
Parliament is best) that is personally acquainted with one of the Commissioners
to remind them his petition will certainly come to nothing."
I give a copy of an officer's commission. " To all to whom these shall come,
greeting, know ye that we whose hands and seals are hereunto set being the major
part of the Chief Commissioners and Governors for the management of the
Receipt of the Excise . . . reposing especial trust and confidence in the knowledge,
skill, industry, integrity, fidelity and circumspection of A.B., gentleman, have
nominated and appointed and for his majesty's service do nominate and constitute
him the said A.B. to be one of the surveyors, messengers, gagers and officers . . .
The office during the pleasure of us the said present commissioners. . . . Given
under our hand and seal at the chief office of Excise and for the said duties
in ................... this .......... day ........ in the year of our Sove-
reign Lord George, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, France and Ireland,
King, Defender of the Faith, Annoque Domini 174-.
(Signed) [by five Commissioners]."
Before an applicant could take office he had to take the oath of office, allegiance
and supremacy, and six months after his admission take the oath and subscribe
the declaration against Transubstantiation at the Quarter Sessions. If he acted
before taking the oaths he would forfeit £50 a month.
The Minute Books have recently been moved from Somerset House to the
Library at the Custom House, Lower Thames Street, London. They are
complete, and date back to 1695. The Establishment Books date back to 1789.
The study of the Minute Books (each contains an alphabetical index) proves that
the officers were frequently moved from place to place, and the books are a
288 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [JuNEi9i2
record of every appointment. There are three Lists of Officers holding com-
missions in the years 1688, 1689 and 1694 in the British Museum. (Harleian
MSS. 7428, 7424-7427, 7431.)
The best account of appointments to the Excise, before the Excise was
altered at the beginning of the nineteenth century, is to be found in The Royal
Ganger by Charles LEADBETTER, 1743. In that year there were nearly 3,000
persons holding Commissions, namely
9 Commissioners.
49 Collectors.
190 Supervisors.
2700 Officers.
Rayne Rectory, C. HUTCHINSON.
Essex.
MOTHERBY: HOTHAM: GREEN: BAYLEY.— Wanted, date of mar-
riage of George MOTHERBIE of Hambleton and Anne HOTHAM of Walton, about
1720-1724. Birth date of Anne HOTHAM, daughter of Robert.
Dates of birth, marriage and death of Mary GREEN of Hessle, co. York, and
of Mary BAILEY (or BAITEY) of North Cave. ' Mary, daughter of ... BAYLEY, Esq.
of North Cave, is said to have married William GREEN Esq., of Hessle. Query,
when and where?
Who were the parents and ancestors of Robert HOTHAM of Welton? I should
be thankful for any hints and pleased to help in return.
Konigsberg i/p, Helene MOTHERBY, F.S.G.
Tragheimer Pulverst, 44.
Germany.
Buckinghamshire Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, — Edited by William
BRADBROOK, vol. I (New Series): Aston Abbots, 1559-1837; Edgcott, 1538-1837.
London. (Chas. A. Bernau, 17 Billiter Square Buildings, E.G.) 1912. 8vo.,
pp. 209. IDS. 6d.
The outstanding features of this new series of printed Parish Registers are,
firstly, the quantity of matter which can be given for half-a-guinea ; secondly,
the fact that the copy is brought up to 1837, when general registration in
England and Wales began (the proper date for printed copies to finish); and,
thirdly, the excellent index. It may be added that a small map of the adjacent
country in each case is given, with statistical details, thus doing the whole thing
properly and needing no further commendation from us.
The BOYNE Peerage Case. A family episode of the XFIIIth century. By the
Rev. Wm. Ball WRIGHT, M.A. (reprinted from The Genealogical Magazine of
1900). York. (Yorkshire Printing Co., Ltd., Hull Road, 1912) 8vo. pp. 16. is. 6d.
This is a most interesting account, with portraits, showing how, apparently by
carelessness or worse, the title of Viscount BOYNE was lost to a branch of the
HAMILTON family. It is accompanied by a pedigree of the Lords BELLEW of
Duleek from temp. William the Conqueror to 1770, and a Report of a general
search in Ulster's office, with observations by Mr. G. D. BURTCHAELL, M.R.I.A.,
Athlone Pursuivant.
The Pedigree Register
SEPT. 1912] [VoL. II, No. 22.
jbcottizfy jjfamifg in
A writer in Notes and Queries remarked, in 1860 (2nd series, X. 99),
that the Earls of GOSFORD took their title from an estate that their
ancestors in the direct line had never possessed.
That there ever existed in Ireland a branch of the ACHESON family
diredlly so descended no one seems to have noticed.
No history of the ACHESON family in Scotland has hitherto been
written, nor is it known for certain what was the immediate ancestry
of Sir Archibald, the first baronet. On the strength of his funeral
certificate he is described as a son of Captain Patrick ACHESON, but
nothing further is known about the last-named. He is assumed to
have been a younger brother of Alexander ACHESON, the first of
Gosf ord, but no proof of this has been found.
It is from this Alexander that the family of which this article
treats traces descent.
I. Alexander ACHESON purchased Gosf ord in Haddington in 1577
(Register of Scottish Deeds, vol. 64). He married Helen REID. His
Edinburgh will is dated 21 Feb. 1606; that of his widow 15 July 1614.
Their children were :
(i.) George, of Gosf ord in 1605. His natural son, Mark, was
apprenticed to William NEMOCK, tailor, 4 Dec. 1605.
(2.) Alexander, of whom presently.
(3.) Helen, who married, first, Gavin HOME of Johnscleugh (con-
tract dated 28 Jan. 1598) and had issue Alexander HOME,
later of Johnscleugh. Her second husband was Robert
HOME, the younger of Heuche, who was living in 1620, when
she executed a deed, to which Sir Archibald ACHESON,
advocate, was a witness, and Sir John HOME of Berwick,
kt., a party.
II. Alexander ACHESON succeeded to his father's estate of Gosford
in 1605. He married Elizabeth (or Isabella) DOUGLAS, daughter of
the laird of Bonejedward (Adi of Parliament 1633 and Betham-
Phillips MS.). With his son and heir-apparent, Alexander, he was
cautioner in a bond dated I June 1616 (vol. 273). He sold Gosford,
and in 1633 Sir John ACHMOOTIE was enfeoffed of it. (A61 of Park.
NN
290 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEpT.i9i2
1633.) The children of Alexander and Elizabeth ACHESON then
living were :
(i.) Alexander,
(2.) William, of whom presently,
(3.) Patrick, and
(4). Jean, who married Cornelius AINSLEY, advocate, Edinburgh,
and had a son, Archibald.
III. William ACHESON, the second son, obtained a grant of lands in
Co. Wexford from King James I. (Betham-Phillips MS.). At the
time of the rebellion, in 1641, he became Lt.-Colonel in Sir William
COLE'S Regiment of Foot, at Enniskillen, afterwards commanding a
regiment of his own.
He married Jean CRANSTOUN, who survived him, and married
secondly, —, — HUME. Colonel ACHESON died at Skeagh, Co. Fer-
managh; his will is dated 4 November 1656, and was proved in the
Prerogative Court of Dublin. From proceedings in connection with
the proving it appears that he had been resident in Ireland from 1632,
or earlier, and his wife from 1626, or earlier. He left his property to
his wife and children :
(i.) Alexander, of whom presently,
(2.) George, buried at Enniskillen 28 Jan. 1668-9.
(i.) Agnes.
He appointed as overseers, Major Hugh Ross, Captain Adam
CATHCART, and Captain Patrick HUME.
IV. Alexander ACHESON, his only surviving son, is mentioned in a
book by my friend the Rev. H. B. SWANZY, The Family of Hassard, to
which I am indebted for a part of what follows.
Alexander ACHESON became a captain in Colonel Abraham CREIGH-
TON'S Regiment of Foot. He served as High Sheriff of the county of
Fermanagh in 1703, and made his will 23 Sept. 1707, which was proved
23 Feb. 1710-1. He married Catherine, daughter of Nicholas
MONTGOMERY, of Blessingbourne, reclor of Carrickmacross (see
Alexander's will and Burke's Landed Gentry}. In Cleenish church
may still be seen a tombstone creeled by himself to the memory of
himself, his wife and children.
There is a Royal Letter to Captain ACHESON, dated 29 Jan. 1702,
preserved in the Record Tower of Dublin Castle.
Sir Nicholas ACHESON, fourth baronet, left him, in his will dated
8 Nov. 1701, a mourning ring. Sir Nicholas was present with Captain
ACHESON at the siege of Enniskillen.
He was survived, in 1707, by the following children, all then minors :
(i .) George, eldest son, who died young (probably).
(2.) Alexander, of whom presently.
SEPT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 291
(i.) Sarah,
*(z.) Ann, who married Henry CRAWFORD, of Millwood (Marriage
License Bond 1718). He was High Sheriff in 1738. For
their children see Lord BELMORE'S History of the Corry
Family.
(3.) Catherine, who married, in 1743, George NIXON, of Nixon
Hall, Fermanagh, and had issue. Her daughter married a
HASSARD.
(4.) Mary, who, in 1720, married William HASSARD, of Skea.
V. Alexander ACHESON, of Corrard, Co. Fermanagh, married (1724)
Angel, elder daughter of William RICHARDSON, of Springtown, Co.
Tyrone, by his wife, daughter of William WRAY, of Ards, Co. Donegal,
by Angel, second daughter of Colonel James GALBRAITH, M.P. for
Strabane, 1639.
On 1 8 Feb. 1745, Alexander ACHESON filed a Chancery Bill against
his brother-in-law Henry CRAWFORD, and another, in which he com-
plained that " in 1734 he unfortunately fell into the habit of excessive
drinking of strong and spirituous liquors, which by degrees increased
to such a height as greatly to impair his reason, senses and understand-
ing, in so much that your suppliant was for many years incapable of
transacting business with any common degree of reason or understand-
ing. Further, that Henry CRAWFORD . . . having intermarried with
your suppliant's sister, and being resident in your suppliant's neigh-
bourhood, and having an old acquaintance and intimacy with your
suppliant, and having by degrees brought himself entirely into your
suppliant's confidence and esteem, said Crawford found a scheme of
getting said estate into his hands, and for that end supplied your
suppliant from time to time with small sums of money, the better to
continue in his course of excessive drinking . . . and got into possession
of a great part of your suppliant's estate . . . said Crawford, having
carried his designs into execution, in manner above-mentioned, and
refusing to supply your suppliant with money to buy strong liquor as
he had formerly done, your suppliant being scarce able to afford the
necessaries of life for himself and his family, much less to support
himself in his former course of drinking, by degrees recovered his
reason."
It is not surprising to find CRAWFORD in his answer putting a totally
different complexion on the matter.
(To be continued?)
* O'HART wrongly states that Catherine, daughter of Col. Alexander ACHESON (younger
son of Sir Arthur, 5th Bart.), married Henry CRAWFORD. Sir Arthur had no such brother,
and CRAWFORD married Ann ACHESON.
292 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEpT.i9i2
of
The manor of Malveysin Berwick, Berwick Mavesyn, or in its
modern corrupted form, Berwick Maviston, lying near the banks of
the Severn, within the parish of Atcham, in Salop, was the chief of the
Shropshire fees granted as a reward for his knighthood in the conquest
of England by William the CONQUEROR to his companion, Walter de
MALVOISIN, or MALVEYSIN, whose name stands recorded in the famous
Roll of Battle Abbey. Here, for many generations, the senior line of
his blood, lords of Berwick Mavesyn, flourished, " in the days of our
Henrys and Edwards, a knightly, gallant, race, in the age of gallantry;
foremost, like their Norman kindred, in deeds of arms and works of
piety " (SHAW, Hist, of Staff.) until, in the time of Henry IV, John
MAVESYN, the last of his house, was slain in a skirmish following a
hunting-match, on the Wrekin. John MAVESYN was succeeded by
Edith, his niece, twelfth in descent from MALVEYSIN, the CONQUEROR'S
knight, the only child of his dead brother Adam, and by her marriage
with Thomas WHITCOMBE (some notes of whose ancestry have already
appeared in The Pedigree Register, Vol. II., pp. 52-57), the lordship
passed to a branch of the family of WHITCOMBE, or WYDECOMBE, of
Martock in Somerset.
In like manner, Mary, the elder daughter and ultimate sole heir of
Richard WHITCOMBE of Berwick Mavesyn, conveyed the estate to
Thomas GRANT of Hambrook in the county of Gloucester, esquire.
They were succeeded by their son Richard, whose son and heir, Richard
GRANT, esquire, sold his ancient heritage, in 1777, to Thomas HILL,
of Tern Hill, ancestor of the present Lord BERWICK.
The alienator of Berwick Mavesyn left at his death, in 1788, four
daughters and co-heirs, of whom the eldest married Sir Cornelius
CUYLER, bart., and their great grandson, Sir Charles CUYLER, is the
senior co-heir general of the families of MAVESYN, WHITCOMBE and
GRANT.
With the possible exception of Francis WHITCOMBE (b. at Atcham,
1629), of London, of whom there is no record that he married or had
issue, and of Francis and Mavesyn WHITCOMBE, the son and grandson of
the third William of Berwick (1611-1696), both of whom are believed
to have died in childhood, the male descendants of Francis WHIT-
COMBE are extinct; for the Uppington WHITCOMBES have also expired.
Next in seniority are the descendants of Edward WHITCOMBE of the
Morrey whose present heir male is Philip Sidney WHITCOMBE of New
Zealand, esquire; perhaps the heir male of all the Shropshire WHIT-
COMBES. Their pedigree, as shown in the following pages, is perfectly
complete, though there may be some doubt as to John, son of the said
Edward, who is stated to have died without issue.
The descendants of John WHITCOMBE of London, fourth son of
William II, of Berwick, are lost in the maze of London's greatness.
SEpT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 293
John, the son of Thomas IV, of Berwick, lived and died at Atcham,
and as there are no records of his children found in the registers or
elsewhere, I conclude he had none. There may be descendants of
Richard and Robert, sons of William I, but if there are they are cer-
tainly impossible to trace. I know no other children than those here
recorded of the first two Thomases, nor whether the third Thomas
had other issue than those named, whereof even Hugo and John are not
placed beyond doubt : it appears likely that Hugo died without issue.
Arms. WHITCOMBE of Berwick Mavesyn and Hardwick and of the Morrey.
Quarterly of Eleven :
1 . Paly of Six Or and Sable, three eagles displayed counterchanged (WHITCOMBE).
2. Or, three torteatix (BOLONIA).
3. Sable, three plates between two combs Argent (WHITCOMBE Rebus).
4. Gules, three bendlets, Argent (MAVESYN).
5. Or, two bars gules (MAVESYN — Ancient).
6. Argent, a chevron engrailed between three mullets pierced Sable (KYNASTON
through MAVESYN).
7. (MUNETON through MAVESYN).
8. Azure, a rose within a bar Jure engrailed Ermine (AsTLEY through MAVESYN).
9 . Gules, afesse within a bordure, both engrailed Ermine ( ACTON through ASTLEY) .
10. A fesse between three cinquefoils Sable (TYLER).
1 1. Ermine, two lions passant in pale Gules ( through TYLER).
WHITCOMBE of New Plymouth and Sevenoaks.
Quarterly of Twenty Five :
I — ii. as WHITCOMBE of Berwick Mavesyn.
12. Argent, a chevron between three boars' heads couped close Sable (NORCOP).
I 3. Argent, a lion rampant Gules, armed and languid Azure between three fleurs-
de-lis of the last (WINNALL).
14 — 25 as i — 12.
WHITCOMBE of the Whittern.
Quarterly of Thirteen :
I — 12 as WHITCOMBE of New Plymouth and Sevenoaks.
13. Or on afesse between three boars passant Azure, as many annulet i of the field
(HOOPER).
WHITCOMBE of Cleobury Mortimer.
Quarterly of Thirteen :
i — 12 as WHITCOMBE of New Plymouth and Sevenoaks.
13. Vert, three wedges argent, in chief a fleur-de-lis Or (EYSAM).
Crest. Out of a ducal coronet Argent, a demi-eagle displayed and collared per gule Sable and
Or, wings and collar counterchanged,
Thomas WHITCOMBE, lord of Berwick Mavesyn, co.== Edith, sole issue and heir of Adam
Salop. Descended from WHITCOMBE of Whitcombe, I MALVEYSIN (MAVESYN) of Berwick
co. Somerset (v. Fed. Reg.,Vo\. II, p. 53). I Mavesyn, esq.
Thomas WHITCOMBE, alias DE BERWICK, lord ot Berwick Mavesyn, patron =;= Elizabeth,
of the Dominican Friars of Shrewsbury, 1484. I occ. 1484.
r
Thomas WHITCOMBE, lord of Berwick = Isabel, daur. of Thomas POYNER, lord of Bislow
Mavesyn, freeman of Shrewsbury, 1493.
(descended from King Edward the First).
294
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT.i9i2
a I a
William WHITCOMBE, lord of Berwick =j= BLANCHE, daur. of John STURRY,
Mavesyn. Will 1551. I lord of Rossal, co. Salop.
I
Hugo WHITCOMBE, of Bridge-
north, gent. Died 1566.
Margaret, daur. of Thos.— Thomas WHITCOMBE, === Elizabeth, daur. of Roger
POYNER, lord of Bislow, lord of Berwick Mave- I BEST of Atcham (desc.
co. Salop, ist wife. s.f. syn. Will 1587. I from Edward I). 2nd wife.
Elyn. A beneficiary
in father's will 1551.
William WHITCOMBE, lord of Berwick Mavesyn = Dorothy, eldest daur. and coh. of Richard TYLER,
and Hard wick, co. Salop. Will 1612. I lord of Hard wick, co. Salop.
I
William WHIT-
COMBE, freeman of
Shrewsbury, gent.
Died /./., v.p.
Francis WHITCOMBE, lord == Jane, daur. of
of Berwick Mavesyn and
Hardwick. Bur. at At-
cham 1644.
Thos. LATHORP,
lordofLathorp,
co. Staffs.
I
Sarah, wife of
Thos. BURLEY,
lord of Male-
hurst, co. Salop.
Martha, wife of
George RUSSELL,
of Shrewsbury.
.1 .
Abigail. Born
1613.
Judith, wife of
William CROSSE,
lord of Yorton.
Elizabeth, wife of
Adam COLDFOX,
of Merrington.
I
Anne, wife of
Ric. BAGOTT,
of Hargreaves.
I
Margaret.
Died an in-
fant 1626.
William WHITCOMBE, lord of Ber-:
wick Mavesyn and Hardwick. Cap-
tain in the Parliamentary Army.
Borni6n. Freeman of Shrewsbury
1676. Bur. at Atcham, co. Salop,
1696, act. 85.
Judith, daur.
of Robert
OWEN, lord
of Wood-
house, CO.
Salop.
Richard WHIT-
COMBE, of Ber-
wick Mavesyn,
gent. Bapt.
1622. Died
unm. 1646.
John WHIT- = Elizabeth
COMBE, of Ber- CRUMP-
wick Mavesyn, TON, of
gent. Bapt. Dawley,
1625. Died co. Salop.
s.p. 1652.
I
William WHITCOMBE, of Up-=
ton Magna, gent. Freeman
of S'bury 1676.
= Elizabeth
WARNER
of Upton.
1
Anne, wife of
Thomas TAYLOR
of Upton.
James WHITCOMBE. = Mary,
Mar. at Church CARES-
Aston 1698. WELL.
Walter WHITCOMBE,
of Uppington, co.
Salop. Died 1714.
I
John WHITCOMBE,
of Uppington, co.
Salop. Died 1717.
I I
Mary. Richard WHITCOMBE, of Berwick Mave-:
Born syn and St. John's Coll., Cambr., gent.
1637. Born 1639. Died v.p. 1675.
Anne, daur. of Robert William WHiT-=Mary.
CLYVE, lord of Styche, COMBE, of Atcham,
co. Salop. co. Salop, gent.
I
Thomas GRANT, of Ham- = Mary, elder daur. and ulti-
brook, co. Gloc., lord of
Berwick Mavesyn jure uxoris.
mate sole heir. Born 1666.
Bur. at Atcham 1720.
Anne. Born
1668. Died
unm. 1707.
Mavesyn WHITCOMBE.
Bapt. 1692 at Astley,
co. Salop.
SEPT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
295
Margaret, wife of John AST- Jane, wife of Thomas MEDLI- John WHITCOMBE, of Stoneleigh,^; Mary
LEY, lord of Astley, co. Staffs. coTT,ofWhitley,co. Salop, gent. co. War., gent. Will I 558. I WRIGHT.
I
Richard WHITCOMBE. A Robert WHITCOMBE. A
beneficiary in father's beneficiary in father's
will 1551. will 1551.
Mary. A beneficiary Frances. A beneficiary
in father's will 1558. in father's will 1558.
1 1
Elizabeth, wife of John WHITCOMBE. Buried
Francis PIGOTT. co. Salop, 1632. ? /./.
at Atcham, Priscilla. Buried at Atcham
1623.
Edward WHITCOMBE, =
of the Morrey, co.
Salop, gent.; freeman
of Shrewsbury. Will
1644.
b
/
=Joan
DlCKIN.
b
\
1
John WHITCOMBE,
of London, gent.
Left issue (v.
Visitation of
London, 1634.)
1
Thomas WHITCOMBE,=
of Lacon and Hodnet,
co. Salop, gent. Buried
at Hodnet 1633.
= Eliza- Peter WHIT-
beth. COMBE, of
Upton Magna,
co. Salop, gent.
Died s.p.
Admon. 1646.
1 1
Dorothy. Judith. Bap. 1632.
Bapt. 1631. Died unmar. 1697.
Thomas WHITCOMBE, =
of Upton Magna, co.
Salop, gent. Bap.
1627. Freeman of
Shrewsbury 1676.
Died 1701.
= Dorothy.
Died
1668.
1
Margaret.
Bap. 1627.
Twin with
Thomas.
Francis WH ITCOMBE,
of London, gent.
Born 1629. ? issue.
Dorothy. Benefactress to
the church of Atcham,
co. Salop. Born 1632.
Died unm. 1697.
1
Elias WHITCOMBE,
of Uppington, co.
Salop. Died 1709.
John WHITCOMBE, =p Jane,
of Uppington, co. 1
Salop. Died 1 706. I
Francis WHITCOMBE.
Born 1667. Died
1668, an infant.
Thomas WHITCOMBE,
of Uppington. Born
1677. Died an infant.
I
Walter WHITCOMBB, of Upping-— Mary.
ton. Freeman of Shrewsbury
1721. Murdered 1723.
Robert WHITCOMBK. Born
1685. Died an infant 1687.
Martha.
Judith.
J 1
Francis Rob
Died
WHITCOMBE. syn,
1695.
Shre
Robert WHITCOMBE, of Berwick Mave-
gent. Born 1646. Freeman of
Shrewsbury 1685. Died unm. 1694.
Jane. Born
1714. Died
1723.
John WHITCOMBE. Born
at Uppington 1715. Bur.
there 1721.
Martha.
Born 1722.
296
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEpT.i9i2
b I b
A daughter, wife of Richard William WHITCOMBB, of the Morrey, esquire. Free- == Mary POOLE, of Oak-
BARNET, gent., 1644. man of Shrewsbury 1676. Will 1688. Died 1689. I ley Park, co. Salop.
John WHITCOMBE. Died 1644, Rev. Edward WHITCOMBE, M. A., of Brasenose Coll., Oxon, chaplain to
an infant. Horse Guards, rector of Great Sheldesley, lord of the Morrey, co. Salop,
and ofOrleton and Eastham, co. Wore. Born 1650. Died unm. 1720.
1
1
1
1
William.
Mary, wife of
Edward WHITCOMBE, of Sheldes-=f Elizabeth, daur. of
Elizabeth.
Born
John BESFORD,
ley Beauchamp,
co. Worcester,
Francis BUTLER, of
Born 1687.
and died
of Drayton,
lord of Orleton
. Born 1685.
Drayton, co. Salop,
1681.
gent.
Died 1734.
gent.
1
1
1
I
Elizabeth.
Elizabeth.
Edward WHITCOMBE, lord of=Elizabeth, daur. and
Frances. Died
Died inf.
Born 1718.
Orleton, High Sheriff of
heir of Rev. Francis
unm. 1759.
1716.
Died 1735.
Worcester 1 777. Born 1 727.
MORTON, lord of
Will 1797. Died 1797.
Goldhill, Heref.
Frances, wife of George MUNRO,
esq., major in the Army.
Catherine, wife of John NIBLKTT, of
Haresfield Court, co. Gloc., esq.
i. William.
2. Edward.
Twins.
Died inf.
4. Philip WHITCOMBE,=
lord of Eastham, co.
Worcester. Born 1724.
Died 1767.
:Anne, daur. of
Edward WHIT-
COMBE, of Orle-
ton, esq.
. 1
5. Elizabeth, wife of
William JENNINGS,
surgeon.
6. Mary, wife of
Rev. Thomas
GWYNNE. Born
1728. Diedi78o.
c
/
r
\
Elizabeth. John Steventon WHITCOMBE. Born
Born 1754. 1756, "long since unheard of but
Died 1755. believed not to have married."
1
I
1
3. Rev. William WHITCOMBE, B.A.,=^:Martha, daur. of Samuel
10. Thomas.
II. Anne.
of Brasenose Coll., Oxon. Rector
SANDFORD, of Whitchurch,
Born and
Born and
of Eastham. Born 1723. Died 1775.
Salop, gent.
died 1735.
died 1737.
i r i
Samuel. Rev. Sandford William WHITCOMBE, B. A. , = Susanna, daur. of Martha.
Born and of Balliol Coll., Oxon. Rector of Eastham. Francis MILWARD Born and
died 1748. Born 1750. Died 1780 j.;>. ofBickley. died 1751.
SEpT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
297
John WHITCOMBE,
1644. Died s.p.
Rev. Edward WHITCOMBE, rector of Great = Mary.
Sheldesley, co. Wore., 1644. Died s.p.
I
William WHITCOMBE, lord of the Morrey, Orleton=pMary
md Eastham, in succession to his brother. Free- I HASSALL.
nan of Shrewsbury 1676. Born 1653. Died 1720. I Died 1743.
1
Joan, wife of
BRADELEY.
I
Catherine. Died
unm. 1711
Rev. William WHITCOMBE, B.A., of= Elizabeth, daur.
Srasenose Coll., Oxon, and M.A. of
King's Coll.. Camb. Rector and Lord
)f Eastham. Born 1690. Died 1758.
and heir of Philip
NORCOP, of Dray-
ton, gent.
I
Robert WHITCOMBE, lord
of the Morrey. Freeman
of Shrewsbury by descent.
Born 1692. Died s.p.
\ .
Catherine. Born
1696. Died
unm. 1724.
vlary, wife of Rev.
*Vm. WARD, of
Eiarborne, co.
Worcester.
1
Anne, wife of
Philip WHIT-
COMBE, of East-
ham, esq.
Catherine, wife
of Edward TAY-
LOR, of Pen, co.
Wore.
Jane, wife of
William NASH,
of Upper Hen-
ley, co. Wore.
fudith, wife of Sir William HICKS, of
iiVhitcombe Park, co. Gloc., bart.
I
f. IXUUCIL VV M11CUMBJ£,=
)f Kington, co. Here-
brd, gent. Born. 1730.
Died 1810.
d
/
EjuiZBDCUi} uaur. ui
Richard HOOPER,
of the Whittern,
co. Hereford, esq.
d
•*
V^itLllCrillC, UttUl.—
of John STEVEN-
TON, of Drayton.
1st wife.
-o. iLumuiiu YTHM--
COMBE, of Cleobury
Mortimer, M.R.C.S.,
L.S.A., esq., coroner
of Salop, Born 1732.
Died 1782.
= iviiii ma,
daur. of Wm
EYSAM, of
Cleobury
Mortimer,
gent.
e
\
Vlartha.
Born 1757.
Died 1760.
Clarinda. Born Elizabeth Catherine. Martha. Born e
1759. Died Born 1761. Died 1762. Died /
unm. 1786. 1768. unm. 1787.
12. Catherine, wife
>f John EVANS, of
Ludlow. Born 1739.
13. Thomas Pitts
Lechmere. Born
and died 1741.
9. Rev. John WHITCOMBE, M.A.,=Elizabeth, daur. of Har-
of Balliol Coll., Oxon, rector of
Walesby, co. Line., prebendary of
Lincoln. Born 1733. Died 1801.
ford JONES, of the Whit-
tern, co. Hereford, gent.
Martha, wife of Shelley PEN NELL,
of Sudbrook, co. Line., esq.
(To be continued.)
00
298 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT.i9i2
in jbt. Bute's oft (^uriaf <£rounb,
164. [RJobert B(ELL). Mr. John DURSTON.
165. Jacob FENDER, Esq., d. Feb. 17, 1795.
166. Mr. Richard PICKING, of this p., d. July 17, 1792, a. 66.
Eleanor, wife of above, d. Nov. 23, 1797, a. 51.
167. Ann, relict of Lieut. John BRADLEY, of the late iO4th Regt.,
d. 14 Dec. 1836, a. 60. Erected by her d., Mary BRADLEY.
168. Mr. Samuel LANGFORD, d. Feb. 16, 1800, a. 33. Mr. Charles
WILSON, d. May 14, 1800, a. 36.
169. Mr. John WYETH, d. 17 Ap. 1793, a. 63. Mr. Richard MANN,
d. 9 Nov. 1821, in his 70th. year. Sarah, his wid., d. Jan. 1826, in her
7ist. year. Mary Ann, d. of R. & M. MANN, d. June 1837, in her 8th.
year. Mr. Richard MANN, s. of the above, d. 22 Aug. 1847, in his
50th. year.
170 ..... d. 1788. Maria [EV]ANS, d. June 21, 179(5), a. 4
months. Anne EVANS, d. June 179(5), a. 2 y. 9 m. Mr. John HILL,
gr. f. of the above chn., d. Feb. 1801, a. 75. Harriot EVANS, d. Sep. 21,
1803, a. 5 months. Mr. Charles Wild EVANS ....
171. Elizabeth, w. of John MAY, d. Feb. 4, 1810, a. 39. Susan,
her d., d. Mar. 17, 1810, a. 6 weeks. Elizabeth, her d. Mar. 17, 1810,
a. 6 weeks. Eliza, d. of the above, d. Feb. 14, 1811, a. 7. Said John
MAY, d. Mar. 18, 1829.
172. Jeheaddan, relict of Rear Admiral A. F. EVANS, d. 21 Aug.
1833, a. 60. Elizabeth FORSSTEEN, relict of William FORSSTEEN, Esq.,
formerly w. of Thomas James COTTON, Esq., d. 20 Ap. 1836, a. 71.
William Henry FORSSTEEN, gr. s. of above .... Elizabeth WISE, d.
6 July 1837,3.7 (4). " Not as a servant but .... a sister beloved."
173. John POWELL .... Isabella, d. of the above, d. 6 June 1812,
a. — . Olive, w. of John POWELL, d. Feb. 13, 1819, a. 85. Hannah
Sarah, d. of above, d. June I, 1836, in her 59th year. Mary Anne
POWELL, d. Oct. 27, 1847, a. 7(4).
174. Sarah SHEPARD .... John SHEPARD .... Elizabeth,
wife of the above .... 182(1), a. 7 (i).
175. Elizabeth SEYM[OUR], .... a. 67. Captain Phineas SEY-
MOUR, late of H.M. Royal Navy, which he had honourably served for
24 yrs., d. 1 8 Nov. 1803, in his (8)ist year.
176. Benjamin BEARCRO — — , d. May 182-, a. 7(2). Mrs. Judith
BEARCRO -- , -- of the above, and d. of Phineas SEYMOUR, Esq.
• • • •
* Continued from page 276.
SEpT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 299
INDEX.
ADAM 97; ALLEN 66; ALLIN — 94; ANNETT 125; ASTON 46;
ATKINSON 59 ; B. 91 ; BAILLIE 105 ; BAILLY 66a ; BAKER 98 ; BATE 55 ;
BEARCRO — 176 ; BEARDWELL 19 ; BELL 157, 163 ; BENNET 80 ; BETTS
29, 99 ; BIRKS 148 ; BLUNT 59, 60 ; BOWMAN 65 ; BRAD 27 ;
BRADLEY 167; BRAY 8; BROWN 85, 143; BULL 123; BUNGEY 8 ;
BURRARD 50 ; BUTLER 89 ; C. 28, n, 130 ; CARLETON 155 ; CARTER 54 ;
CHAINEY 158 ; CHARRON 44 ; CHILD 137 ; CHITTOCK 76 ; CHRISTIE 80 ;
CLODD 162 ; COATES 159 ; COLEMAN 22 ; COLLETT 73, 106 ; COLQUHOUN
6 ; COOPER 127 ; COURT 115 ; CROSSE 79 ; CRUMP 108 ; CURTIS 106 ;
DANBY 29; DAVEY 61 ; DAVIDSON 2 ; DEANE 90 ; DELACROZE 3;
DEN 82 ; DICKENS 112 ; DIDSBURY 128 ; DOWNES 84 ; DUFFIELD
98 ; DURSTON 164 ; DUVERNET 136 ; E. n ; EDWICK 43 ; ELERS 44 ;
ELFORD 116 ; EMANS 68 ; EVANS 142, 170, 172 ; FARROW 44 ; FENDER
165 ; FORBES 23 ; FORSSTEEN 172 ; FOSTER 127 ; FRASER 160 ; FREAME
156; FRINDER 24; FROUHART 80; FULCHER 147; FULBROOK 43;
GARDINER 133 ; GILES 154 ; GILLISO 157 ; GOODWIN 86 ; GRANT
71 ; GRATLAND 85 ; GRIFFITH 7 ; HAILSTONE 150 , 151 ; HAMILTON 34,
78 ; HAMSHAW 161 ; HARDING 18 ; HARWOOD 10 ; HAWKINS 3 ; HAY
23 ; HEWS 30 ; HICKS 117 ; HILL 33, 170 ; HOCKLEY 62 ; HOLBROOKE
72 ; HOLLES 38 ; HOWARD 75 ; HUGHES 140 ; HUMPHREY 42 ; HUTCHIN-
SON 149 ; INNYS 77 ; JEFFREYS 134 ; JEMMETT 72 ; JOHNSON 71, 109 ;
JONES 76, 119, 132 ; JUMPSEN 5, 40 ; KEN 157 ; KER 139 ; KING
126; KYFFIN 102; LANGFORD 168 ; LAWLER 31; LE MAISTRE 34;
LlDDELL 1 8 ; LlNFORTH IJ ; LLOYD 107 '•> LoCKYER 162 ; MANN 169 J
MARJORIBANKS 64 ; MARTYN 126 ; MASON 58, 79 ; MAY 171 ; MIDDLE-
TON 92 ; MILLAR 71 ; MILWARD 95 ; MITCHELL 163 ; MOATE 148 ;
MOGFORD 149; MORGIN Il8; MORRISON 56; MoRTHLAND 69;
MowATT96; NAILER 60 ; NELSON 137; NEWTON 113; NIXON 102;
NOAD 57; NORTH 49-50; OLIFF 63; OSBORN i; P. 12, 52;
PEARE 51 ; PEMBERTON 88 ; PETTIT 47 ; PHILLIPS 21 ; PICKING 166 ;
POTTER 146, 152, 153 ; POWELL 173 ; PRESTON 87, 135 ; PUGH 74;
QUIN 93 ; REEVES 67 ; RICHARD 137 ; RICHARDS 15 ; RIGNILL 53 ;
ROGERS 88 ; ROSSER 39 ; RYLAND in ; S. 16, 26 ; SALMON 39 ; SANSUM
17 ; SAREL 127 ; SCHOFIELD 40 ; SCOTT 129, 131 ; SELBY 131 ; SEWELL
24; SEYMOUR 175-6 ; SHAILER 14 ; SHAW 100 ; SHEPARDI74; SLATER
98 ; SMITH, 9, 41 ; SPELMAN 48 ; SPURRELL 37 ; STEVENS 4 ; STOKE 47,
102 ; STUART 70 ; SUTTON 144 ; SYMONS 141 ; T. 26 ; TETHERINGTON
106 ; THACKER 81 ; THRESHER 120; TILSON 83; VANDERESCH 59;
VINCENT 152 ; W. 25 ; WALKER 36 ; WALTER 163 ; WATSON 10 ; WEST
138 ; WHITE 121-2 ; WHITEHEAD 145 ; WHITFIELD 32 ; WHITLOW 101 ;
WHYTE 103; WICKS no; WILLIAMS 124, 128, 148; WILSON 168 ;
WISE 172; WITTY 20; WORMALL 45; WRIGHT 114; WYETH 169;
YAPP 154; IO4 BERGALL 142.
G. S. PARRY, Lt.-Col.
[Note how seldom there is more than one monument to one
surname — ED.]
3oo THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
Quieter, 1679;: 1800.*
1731. Mrs. MONCKTON, died - ; succ. by Margaret LAMB, Relict of
Mr. Charles LAMB, Recr. of Trostcliffe in ye Diocese of
Rochester, April 13, 1731.
1732. Mrs. GEPSON, died Febry. 25 ; succ. by Mrs. OWEN, May 24.
Mrs. SLATER, died - ; succ. by Mrs. Ann LORD, Relict of Mr.
Samuel LORD, Rectr of Corringham & Vicr of Navestock in
Essex, Febry. loth, 1731.
1734. T. BAGSHAW, chap, by Cession, Febry. 18.
1735. Mrs. WHITE, died Janry 15.
Mrs. GILMAN, admitted Febry. nth.
Ann GILMAN, Relict of Mr. GILMAN Prebendary of Rochester,
Rectr of Kingsdown, Kent and Vicr of St. Nicholas, Roches-
ter.
1736. Mrs. REED, died Novembr. 17.
Mrs. BERESFORD, admitted March 23.
Esther BERESFORD, Relict of Robert BERESFORD, Vicar of
Goudhurst, in ye Diocese of Canterbury.
1737. Mrs. WINTELLEY, died May 6.
Mrs. BARHAM, admitted June 24.
Mary BARHAM, Relict of Mr. James BARHAM, Vicar of Bethers-
den in ye Diocese of Canterbury.
Mrs. SANDFORD, died Octobr. 1st.
Mrs. BINGHAM, admitted Nov. 24.
Dorothea BINGHAM, Relict of Mr. Joseph BINGHAM, Rectr.
of Havant, Hampshire, & author of ye Antiquities of ye Xn
Church.
Mrs. GREGORY, died Novembr. 4.
Mrs. HILDESLEY, admitted Decembr. 9.
1739. Mrs. BIRKBECK, died May I4th.
Mrs. STUBBS, admitted July 5.
Mary STUBBS, Relict of Mr. STUBBS, Archdeacon of St. Albans
and Rector of Launton, Oxfordshire & chaplain of ye Royal
Hospital at Greenwich.
Mrs. CREW, died Janry. 14.
Mrs. CRAYKER, admitted March 28, 1740.
Margaret CRAYKER, Relict of Mr. Jos. CRAYKER, Rector of
Witherstone in ye Diocese of Bristol, and curate of Town-
Mailing in ye Diocese of Rochester.
1742. Mrs. MAUD, died Novr. 18.
* Continued from page 286.
SEPT.i9i2j THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 301
1743. Mrs. JAMES, admitted April 7.
Rose JAMES, Relict of Mr. Andrew JAMES, Rectr of Lanvi-
hangel yr Groion in ye Diocese of Landaffe.
Mrs. SATUR, died June 16.
Mrs. LOVE, admitted May 25, 1744.
Mrs. HILDESLEY, died Novr. 25.
Mrs. NORBURY, admitted March 7.
Ann NORBURY, Relict of Mr. Thos. NORBURY, curate of
Otford, Kent.
Mrs. OWEN, died Febr. 25.
1744. Mrs. GOODALL, admitted Octobr. 9.
Esther GOODALL, Relict of Mr. Richd. GOODALL, Rectr. of
Bentham, in ye county of Yorkshire and Diocese of Chester.
Mrs. CRAYKER, died July 23.
Mrs. TOWNSON, admitted Septembr. 21.
Lucretia TOWNSON, Relict of Mr. John TOWNSON, of Much
Lees, in ye County of Essex.
1745. Mrs. GILMAN, died May 2d.
Mrs. PRINCE, admitted Novr. 29.
Mary PRINCE, Relict of Mr. George PRINCE, Rectr. of Bag-
hurst, Hampshire.
Mrs. SKINNER, died Jany. 26.
1746. Mrs. HICKS, admitted Octobr. 21.
Joanna HICKS, Relict of Mr. Robt. HICKS, Vicr. of Potton,
Bedfordshire.
Mrs. JAMES, died Decembr. 18.
Mrs. MILES, admitted Janry. 29.
Rose MILES, Relict of Mr. Wm. MILES, Rectr. of Offham,
in ye Diocese of Rochester.
1749. Mrs. BERESFORD, died Sepr. 1st, 1749.
Mrs. PETER, admitted 3Oth.
Magdalen PETER, Relict of Mr. Richard PETER, Vicar Eltham,
in ye Diocese of Rochester.
1750. Mrs. WARD, died July 26.
Mrs. RICHARDS, admitted Octobr. nth.
Elizabeth RICHARDS, Relict of Mr. George RICHARDS, Vicr.
of Hadlow in ye Diocese of Rochester.
Mrs. CORNWALL, died Febry. 24th.
1751. Mrs. BROWN, admitted April igth.
Lydia BROWN, Relict of Mr. Charles BROWN, Vicr. of West
Mailing, in ye Diocese of Rochester and Vicr. of Cheshunt
in ye Diocese of London.
302 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEpT.i9i2
1752. Mrs. AXE, died June 3d.
Mrs. HUDDLESTON, admitted July 7th.
Frances HUDDLESTON, Relicl of Mr. Wm. HUDDLESTON,
Reclr. of Newynden in ye Diocese of Canterbury.
1753. Mrs. HILL, died April 27th.
Mrs. BANSON, admitted May 28.
Frances BANSON, Relicl of Mr. John BANSON, Vicr. of St.
Bartholomew the less in ye City of London.
1754. Mrs. HICKS, died Febry. 16.
Mrs. D'OYLY, admitted May 6th.
Mary D'OYLY, Relid of Mr. James D'OYLY, Reftr. of Ren-
dlesham and Orford in ye Diocese of Norwich.
Mrs. TURNER, died July 22d.
Mrs. SWINDEN, admitted Decembr. 9th.
Ann SWINDEN, Relicl: of Mr. Tobias SWINDEN, Vicr. of Lam-
berherst, in ye Diocese of Rochester and Rector of Kings-
down in ye Diocese of Canterbury.
1755. Mrs. BINGHAM, died April 2ist.
Mrs. THOMPSON, admitted June loth.
Dianah THOMPSON, Relicl: of Mr. George THOMPSON, Vicr. of
Bapchild in ye county of Kent and Diocese of Canterbury.
Mrs. BIRCH, died Odlobr. nth.
1756. Mrs. HODGSON, admitted Augt. 3Oth.
Frances HODGSON, Relicl: of Mr. Wm. HODGSON, Reclr. of
Woodroston, in ye County of Norfolk.
Mrs. BROWN, died Janry. 22.
1759. Mrs. OARE, admitted July loth.
Ann OARE, Relicl of Mr. John OARE, Redlor of Ditton and of
Allington in ye Diocese of Rochester.
Mrs. STUBBS, died Feby. 1st.
Mrs. SCAN, admitted July 7th.
Elizabeth, Relicl of Mr. Charles SCAN, Vicar of Grain Isle,
one of ye Peculiars of Canterbury in ye Diocese of Roches-
ter and Vicar of Hartlipp in ye Diocese of Canterbury.
Mrs. LORD, died March 3d.
Mrs. PERFECT, admitted June 9.
Sarah PERFECT, Relicl of Mr William PERFECT, Vicar of East
Mailing in ye Diocese of Rochester.
Mrs. LOVE, died March 3d.
1760. Mrs. CURTIS.
Mary CURTIS, Relicl of Mr. Csesar CURTIS, one of ye minor
Canons of ye church of Rochester.
SEPT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 303
1760. Mrs. LAMB, died October 28th.
Dame Mary BURDETT, admitted March 2yth.
Dame Mary BURDETT, Relict of Sir Hugh BURDETT, Baronet
Vicar of Newington in the Diocese of Canterbury.
Mrs. CURTIS made a vacancy by marriage.
Mrs. WEBSTER, admitted March 6th.
Catherine WEBSTER, Relict of Wm. WEBSTER, D.D., and vicar
of Ware in ye Diocese of London.
1761. Mrs. TOWNSON, died Janry. 3d.
Mrs. BRANSBY, admitted Janry. 21.
Frances BRANSBY, Relief of Mr. Charles BRANSBY, Rector of
Wickham Bishops in ye County of Essex and Diocese of
London.
Mrs. GOODALL, died April 27th.
Mrs. WILLIAMS, admitted June.
Hannah WILLIAMS, Relict of Walter WILLIAMS, LL.D., late
Rector of Cascob in the Diocese of St. Davids.
Mrs. MILES, died Decembr. 9th.
1762. Mrs. WATSON, admitted Janry. 22.
Mary WATSON, Relict of Mr. Samuel WATSON, Rector of Har-
ridge in ye county of Bucks and Diocese of Lincoln.
1763. Mrs. VIGUERS, died March 8th.
Mrs. Ann ANDREWS, admitted June 22d.
Ann ANDREWS, Relict of Mr. ANDREWS, late Vicar of Farning-
ham, a Peculiar of the Archbishops.
Mrs. D'OYLEY, died March I9th.
Mrs. Sarah ATTERBURY, admitted May I2th.
Sarah ATTERBURY, Relict of Mr. Osborne ATTERBURY, late
Rector of Oxhill, in Warwickshire.
F. M. R. HOLWORTHY, F.S.G.
(To be continued)
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT.i9i2
Arms. — Argent, a chevron between
I o cross crostlets sable.
r
Lomer SHALLETT. Bapt.
13 Nov. 1633. Buried
7 Feb. 1655/6. Coelebs.
I \
Francis SHALLETT. Bapt. = daughter of John SHALLETT.
15 Nov. 1635. Lived I Married be- 27 Jan. 1637/8.
at Shadwell in London. ;: fore 1679. Living 1698. I Sept. 1640.
Dead by 1698.
Bapt.
Buried
Elizabeth. Born 1 679. Married April
1698 to Johnathen SHAKESPEARE, of
Shadwell (vide Ped. Reg. II., 135).
Frances. Married about 1 700 to John DALEofWap-
ping, master mariner, who died at Barbadoes in 1714.
She was buried 26 Feb. 1738/9 at Whitby, Yorks.
Daniel SHAL-
LETT. Living
1712.
RichardSHAL- Elizabeth. Married Joseph SHALLETT. Bapt. 26June 1 65 5. Merchant of London.
LETT. Bapt. 20 May 1673 to Richard Died 4 Aug. 171 3, unmarried. Buriedat Clapham, Surrey.
2 5 May 1 646. RUSSELL of Deptford. Will 20 Feb. 1712/3, proved 18 Aug. 1713 (P.C.C.).
I I I
Bennett SHALLETT, eldest son. Joseph SHALLETT. Arthur SHALLETT, of Clapham in 1710. Mer-
Died unmarried at Clapham. Died unmarried chant of London. Died unmarried. Will
Admon. in P.C.C. in 1715 at Clapham before 30 Nov. 1749. proved 16 March 1749/50
and 1733. Aug. 1719. (P.C.C.).
1
Edmund Lomer SHALLETT, of=
SHALLETT, Meonstoke, nr. Ex-
Bapt. ton. Bapt. 18 Feb.
29 Dec. 1664/5. Living 1713.
1669. Dead by 1723.
=Joan, daur. of FORDER, Susan. Bapt. 6 Oct. 1666.
of Barton Priors. Marriage Married 28 Nov. 1689 Wm.
license 20 Jan. 1693/4 for St. GATES, of St. Mary's, South-
Cross. Will 6 April 1723, ampton.
proved 7 April 1724 in P.C.C. ^
Lomer SHAL-=
LETT, of
Meonstoke.
Bapt. 2 July
1695. Dead
by Nov. 1735.
= Martha, daur. of
KNIGHT,
\ \ \
Joseph SHALLETT, of Thames Eliza- Robert SHALLETT, of St.
Street, London, cheese- beth. Clement Danes, tobacco-
monger. Bapt. i 2 Nov. 1696. Bapt. nist. Bapt. 1 7 Sept. 1 700.
Died unmarried. Will i6Aug. Obiit coelebs. Will 1 7 Nov.
23 Aug. 1727, proved 1698. 1735, proved 27 April
29 Aug. 1727 (P.C.C.). 1755 (P.C.C.).
of Droxford. Mar-
riagelicense 5 Aug.
1720 for Drox-
ford. Living 1767.
r i i i i
Lomer SHALLETT. Martha. Ann. Elizabeth. Edward SHALLETT.
Born 1721. Died B. 1726. B. 1728. Born 1729. Died/./.
I739»'*' D- 1737-
SEPT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
305
dmund SHALLETT, of Exton, Han ts,=p Frances, daughter and heir of LOMER, of Exton.
;nt. Died there 15 June 1683, aged I Married before 1633, but not at Exton. Died there 2 Oct.
5, but buried elsewhere. I 1682, aged 72, but buried elsewhere.
1
1
l
1
1
dmund = Susan, daur.
Alice. Bapt.
Anne. Bapt.
Elizabeth.
Mary. Bapt.
KALLETT.
of Robert
2 Feb.
1 2 Feb.
Bapt.
1 8 Jan.
apt.
EYLES.
1641/2.
1643/4.
9 April
1652/3.
May
Married
Married to
Married
1649.
640.
4 Aug. 1663.
Jn. SPACK-
27 Dec.
Buried
uried
Buried
MAN, of
1670, to
21 Nov.
Oct.
1 8 May
Shadwell,
John WOODS,
1657.
^92.
1693.
by 1712.
of West Dean,
*
Sussex.
rthur SHALLETT. Bapt. 3 May 1650. Woodmonger= Sarah, daur. of Joseph BENNETT, of St. Olave's, South-
"Southwark and merchant of London. Will dated
April 1710, proved 15 Feb. 1710/1 (P.C.C.).
wark. Marriage License dated 9 June 1674. Then
aged 1 8 . Will dated 1 6 April 1719, proved 2 7 Aug.
1720 (P.C.C.)
DMUND SHALLETT, merchant, of Clapham = Susanna, daur. of Born
id London. Died i.p. 27 June 1733, aged !9Mayi694. Married after 1719.
2, atClapham. Buried there. Will 23 Dec. Died in 1770. Will 22 July 1766,
729, proved 20 July 1733 (P.C.C.). proved 23 Oct. 1770 (P.C C.).
\
Sarah. Living 1710.
Died unmarried.
Admon. 14 April
1747 (P.C.C.).
ranees. Bapt. 10 Aug. 1672.
larried 10 May 1692 to Richard
RICKLETON of North W^ltham,
1 .
Honoria, Bapt.
6 June 1677. Mar-
ried to
1
Mary.
Bapt.
20 Dec.
1
Ann,
Bapt.
6 April
[ants.
THRESHER by 1712.
1678.
1680.
dmund SHALLETT, of Sutton Place, =
urrey, and Broad Sanctuary, West-
inster. Bapt. 15 Jan. 1702/3. Died
April 1770 at Westminster. Will
Sept. 1767, proved 12 May 1770
' C C 1
• ^>'*\M'* !•
= Hanr
ah, daur. of
WHEATLEY.
intestate in
ninster.Ad-
1 7 April
(P.C.C.).
1
Mary. Bapt. 15 Jan.
1704/5. Married
after 1727 to R.
FIELDER, of Ports-
mouth. Living 1771.
%
1
Carlotta. Married
after 1735 to
Chandler RALEIGH.
Died s.-p. in 1791
at Exton. He died
in 1753.
Died
West!
mon.
1771
[annah, only child. Married 14 Sept.
752, to Caleb LOMAX, of Childwick-
ury, Herts. Living 1770 (vide Berry's
'frts Genealogies').
Frances. A minor
in 1723 and 1727.
Living in 1 749
unmarried.
Sarah.
Living
unmarried
in 1723.
Ann. Died unmarried
at Exton. Will i o July
1771, proved 12 Oct.
1771 (P.C.C.).
PP
3o6 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEpT.i9i2
Edmund SHALLETT is said to have come out of Oxfordshire, but that,
no doubt, was but a passing sojourn, and he was really descended from
the SHALLETTS of Bosham near Chichester.
The family was probably of French or Swiss origin, and cannot be
traced in England earlier than the end of the fifteenth century.
There exists still in Exton, Hampshire, a field called " The Shalletts,"
which marks the site of their old home, since pulled down.
All baptisms, etc., in this pedigree, where not otherwise stated,
refer to Exton. Meonstoke is the adjoining parish.
The last Edmond SHALLETT was of Sutton Place, Surrey; but Mr.
Frederic HARRISON informs me this is not the well-known Tudor
residence of Lord NORTHCLIFFE, but some other of the same name.
Saving some £600 given in legacies, all his property came to the LOMAX
family; and from them, three generations later, to Lord ABINGER.
The younger branch of the family mostly resided in Stepney and in
Clapham, Surrey, where most of them were buried. They exhibited
strong nonconformist tendencies.
In 1694 Arthur SHALLETT was appointed one of the Commissioners
of the Lieutenancy for the City of London. He traded much in coal
from Newcastle-on-Tyne and in wine and soap from Barcelona, in
partnership with Gilbert HEATH COTE, and had a factory in Barcelona.
His name occurs in the list of merchants who petitioned the House of
Lords for a charter for the East India Company. His brother Joseph
had lands in Harting parish, Sussex, under John CARILL. Doubtless
these were the lands which one William SHALLETT sold to John CARILL
in 1648. In his will (1712) he mentions certain nephews and nieces
whom I have been unable to trace. These include Daniel SHALLETT,
Edmund BLUNKETT and his wife, Herbert and Mary HUGHES, Elis
GARDINER, Ann OSBORNE, John and Frances COLTMAN and Mary
CARFOOT, John WOODS and his wife, John DALE and Frances his wife.
Arthur SHALLETT was a nonconformist minister in 1712 and a
merchant of London. He left £1,000 as a fund for poor dissenting
ministers, and £200 to the Gravel Lane School, Southwark. He had
property and lands in Bennett Street in the parish of Christchurch,
Surrey. He also left £250 to Peter DALE, son of his cousin Frances
DALE.
Another branch of the SHALLETT family was living at the same time
in Somerset.
Hylton B. DALE.
46, Harcourt Terrace,
South Kensington.
SEPT. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 307
Bum6*r (Room*
Cflancerg (JttaBfetB* (Reports anb Certificates.
BARSTOW *. ELLAMES.
1790, June 25. Thomas BARSTOW, gentleman, and Grace his wife,
Richard RICHARDSON, Joseph DUKE, Peter ELLAMES v. Patterson
ELLAMES and Margaret his wife and others. Estate of Peter ELLAMES
the younger. Plaintiff Grace BARSTOW formerly RICHARDSON.
ex -parte Sir Francis BASSETT, Bart.
1789, June 23. Particular of an estate, part of the Barton of
Tregonian in the parish of St. Michael Penkevel, Cornwall.
BAUGH v. REED.
1790, July 12. Isaac BAUGH, Esq., and Charlotte his wife v. James
REED Esq., William REED, Thomas REED, Sarah, wife of William JONES,
clerk, (late Sarah REED), Abraham ELTON, Sarah DYSON, Richard
FYDELL, Mary his wife, and Mary FYDELL. Estate of James REED, of
Bristol, deceased. That he had six children, namely, James, the said
Sarah, Mary, William, Thomas and Charlotte Reed, legatees under the
will of their grandfather Martin. Said Mary now Mary FYDELL.
The house of John Kirkpatrick ESCOTT, James REED and Co., of Lime
Street, London, who, in 1783, did the testator's business. Marriage
articles of said Mary and Richard FYDELL dated 24 March 1784.
Testator's daughter Charlotte and her husband Isaac BAUGH, their
marriage settlement dated 31 August 1785 (she under 23). Said Sarah
REED in 1784 of Bristol, spinster, executed a deed at Woodford, Essex,
in the presence of her brother William; her marriage in 1786 about
eight months after her father, the testator's, death in November 1785.
BEARE v. WALLIS.
1790, July 31. Thomas BEARE (lately deceased) and Frances his
wife v. Thomas WALLIS and Henry ROBINSON. Petition of Shirley
David BEARE the son and only child of the plaintiffs. Said Frances
formerly ROBINSON, spinster. Their marriage settlement in 1763
Henry ROBINSON, her brother. James DUNCAN of Lincoln's Inn,
successor to James COUPLAND, attorney for many years to Thomas
BEARE. Marriage of said Thomas and Frances BEARE 26 April 1763,
and their issue two sons only, namely, Henry BEARE the eldest, who died
aged six weeks, and Shirley David BEARE, born 28 April 1765, baptized
in the Precinct of the Savoy, co. Middlesex, 16 May following, and is
now of the age of 24 years and upwards. Bequests to said Frances by
her great uncle Henry ROBINSON of Wandsworth, Surrey, Esq., after
* Continued from page 246.
3o8 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEpT.i9i2
the decease of James ROBINSON his brother and Frances his wife, both
of whom died several years ago. Will of said Thomas BEARE dated
29 December 1778; administration P.C.C. 13 January 1781. The late
plaintiff Frances BEARE buried at Wandsworth 9 May 1790, aged 41.
BEDFORD v. KING.
1790, June 15. Elizabeth BEDFORD and Charles SMART v. William
KING, John BEDFORD, Robert CHAPMAN and Nathaniel SPRY. Appoint-
ment of the defendant KING, a married man, as guardian of plaintiff
Elizabeth, now in the I9th year of her age; her maintenance by KING
since the death of the testator 7 April 1784. Freehold houses on
Snow Hill, London, and in Duke Street, Old Artillery Ground,
Middlesex. Account for plaintiff's maintenance April 1784 to April
1788. " Paid for cutting hair, gloves, ribbon, gauzes, tape and sun-
dries." " To Miss WARNER for board, dancing, writing and music."
" To Miss HAGAN, mantua maker." " To gravedigger for looking at
her mother's grave." (5^ pp.) 1790, June 21. Robert SMART of
Denmark Street, St. Ann's, Westminster, taylor, a surety.
BIRD v. CURRIE.
1790, August 4. Henry, Samuel, Dorothy and Betsey BIRD v.
William CURRIE and George CROSBY (both now deceased), Isaac
LEFEVRE, Esq., Thomas PANTON, Esq., and Elizabeth his wife, Richard
HARMAN, Ann PRYCE, Charles PRYCE, Peter CURRIE and Sarah CURRIE.
The said Dorothy now wife of William SYMONS, the said Betsey now
wife of William WINSTONE. What children of Henry BIRD, the
nephew of testator Elias BIRD, were living on 27 July 1788, 21 years
after said testator's death, &c., and what children of his niece Elizabeth
PRYCE, and what children of his niece Ann HARMAN. Henry BIRD of
Ridgway, near Plimton, Devon, Esq., nephew of testator Elias BIRD,
then had four children only, viz., the plaintiffs Henry, Samuel,
Dorothy, wife of William SYMONS and Betsey, wife of William WIN-
STONE. The said Henry was baptized 14 October, 1748, Samuel 12
October 1749, Dorothy 28 April 1751, and Betsey 29 October 1758.
Marriage settlement of William Hayward WINSTONE and Betsey
7 February 1782; her legacy from Ann HARMAN. Elizabeth PRYCE of
Cornhampton, Hampshire, widow, is niece of testator Elias BIRD, and
had living on 27 July 1788, four children only, viz., Ann, Charles, David
and Josiah PRYCE. The said Ann, baptized I June 1749, David,
i May 1751, Josiah, 14 May 1753, and Charles, 18 July 1755. The
said Ann HARMAN (sister of the said Elizabeth PRYCE) died in 1767,
without leaving issue; will dated 3 December 1762, her husband
Richard HARMAN executor; codicil mentions her adopted son the
defendant Richard HARMAN, the children of her brother Henry
BIRD and of her sister Elizabeth PRYCE.
SEPT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 309
BLACKBURN v. FARMER.
1790, June 18. John BLACKBURN, Esq., executor of John MOORE,
Esq., v. William Gamuel FARMER, John MOORE and Louisa MOORE,
Joel STONE, Leah his wife, Lewis MOORE and John MOORE, &c. Will
of John MOORE, Esq., 22 July 1780, his bequests to the infant John
MOORE, now aged 17, and lately removed from Mr. WILLIAMS'S
boarding school at Blackheath to Mr BUTLER'S academy at Chelsea.
The Military Academy at Brunswick is recommended by General
CON WAY and Lord DOVER; Monsieur BOUTMIS the master there.
Account subjoined of the annual expenses of a young gentleman at
the said Academy £300 to £400 per annum. The Rev. Mr. WILKIN-
SON the infant's guardian proposes to set out on the 24th of the
present month.
BLOUNT v. UTHWAT.
1790, July 12. Michael BLOUNT, Esq., v. Frances UTHWAT, widow,
Henry Uthwat ANDREWS, clerk, and Henry Andrews ANDREWS his
son, Sophia, Harriet and Catherine KNAPP and others. Henry
UTHWAT, Esq., late husband of defendant Frances. William FENWICK,
Esq., deceased, father of defendant William FENWICK.
BRANDER v. BRANDER.
1790, July 12. John Spicker BRANDER, Esq., v. Charles BRANDER,
Esq., and Mary his wife, Gustavus Joakin SPICKER, by the said Charles
BRANDER his uncle, Thomas ASTLE, Esq., and John TOPHAM, Esq.
Estate of Gustavus BRANDER, Esq., who died 21 January 1787;
Elizabeth his widow. Their marriage settlement 5 February 1780.
Edward son of defendant Thomas ASTLE. Defendant Charles BRAND-
ER, brother of the testator, and Mary his wife. Estate at Nea in the
parish of Christ Church Twyneham, co. Southampton. Plaintiff
aged 21 on 16 February 1789. Marriage settlement of said Charles
BRANDER and Mary his wife 16 February 1762. That they have no
issue. Schedules (40 pp.) rents in Christ Church (tenants' and trades-
men's names), " salmon caught in the mill stream." Legacy under the
will of Mrs. Bridget Catherine BRANDER, sister of the testator. An
organ given to Christ Church. Testator's chambers in the Inner
Temple. Premises in Mills Lane and Fan Court, London (tenants'
names).
BROWN v. BROWN.
1790, July 26. Charles BROWN, William, Mary, Caleb, Thomas,
John, Martha, Elizabeth and Robert Ladbroke BARNETT, Mary TRED-
GOLP, James Ross and Rhoda his wife v. William BROWN, Thomas
TOWNSEND, George, Cornelius, Charles, Sarah, Elizabeth, Cornelius
3io THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 191 2
the younger, Lucy and John BERRY, John LOMAX and Mary his wife,
Caleb BARNETT and Mary his wife, etc. Estate of William BERRY who
died 6 March 1779. Schedule of legacies. Caleb BARNETT adminis-
trator of his son Robert Ladbroke BARNETT. Plaintiff Charles
BROWN and defendant William BROWN sons of testator's late niece
Ann BURGESS. Defendant Mary HARRIS, late Mary TREDGOLD,
daughter of testator's late niece Ann SEDGLEY. Defendant Elizabeth,
daughter of testator's late brother. Cornelius BERRY and Cornelius
BERRY the younger, his son.
BRYAN v. CORNECK.
1790, July 5. Guy BRYAN, an infant, by Deodatus BYE, his next
friend v. James CORNECK and Henrietta his wife, and others. Estate in
South Okingden and Brentwood, Essex. Will of Guy BRYAN,
deceased, grandfather of plaintiff. Guy BRYAN, father of plaintiff,
died 31 May 1783, intestate. Estate in Vine Court, Spitalfields,
Middlesex. Walter Wren DRIFFIELD, clerk, brother of Henrietta
CORNECK. Mary BRYAN, widow, plaintiff's grandmother, died 20 July
1787. Said Henrietta CORNECK late wife of Guy BRYAN, the father.
BURROWS v. BURROWS.
1790, June 19. Stevens Christopher BURROWS v. Christopher
BURROWS, James SPAGG and Mary BURROWS. Estate at Limehouse and
Poplar, Middlesex. Schedule of rents (tenants' names). Miss
Charlotte STEVENS, deceased.
BYRD v. NETTLETON.
1790, July 26. William BYRD, Sophia OTWAY, Alicia OTWAY (now
wife of Sackville Stephens BALE, clerk), Aurea OTWAY (now wife of
Multon LAMBARD, Esq.), Grace OTWAY and Maria OTWAY v. Robert
NETTLETON, Richard BEACH and John TATTERSAL.
What children of Francis OTWAY and Sarah his wife, named in the
will of Elizabeth EDWARDS, were living at the time of the death of
Richard BEACH. Said Elizabeth EDWARDS, formerly of Church Lane,
Chelsea, her will dated 18 June 1758. Her nephew and niece Francis
OTWAY, Esq., and Sarah his wife. Said Richard BEACH died April 1783,
and was buried at Wokingham, Berks. Said Francis OTWAY and
Sarah had eight children, viz., Ann, who afterwards married Edward
CUNNINGHAM, Sarah, who married Robert MAYNE, Sophia, Alicia,
Aurea, Grace Maria, and Jane OTWAY. Ann CUNNINGHAM and Sarah
MAYNE both died in the lifetime of Richard BEACH and were buried at
St. Marylebone, Middlesex, and Gatton, Surrey. Sophia married
Rev. Thomas LAMBARD, died in March 1787, and was buried at
Sevenoaks, Kent.
(To be continued.)
SEPT. 1 9i 2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
from
No. 8 HARRISON.
Taken from a copy by the Revd. Thomas HARRISON of a paper drawn out by Mr.
John HARRISON.
Children of John and Charlotte HARRISON married 28 July 1747 .
Sponsors.
Charlotte, born Jany. n, 1748. O.S.
Bapt. Jany. I 5,
Inoculated April 6, 1753. N.S.
Mary, born May 6, 1750. O.S.
Bapt. May 13.
Inoculated April 6, 1753. N.S.
Sarah, born Aug. 15, 1751. O.S.
Bapt. Aug. 25.
Inoculated April 6, 1753. N.S.
Ann, born Oct. 25, 1752. O.S.
Bapt. Oct. 29.
Inoculated April 6, 1 75 3. N.S.
Amelia, born Jan. 9, bapt. Jan. 13, 1754.
Inoculated May 9, but the smallpox
not appearing was inoculated again
May 22, 1761.
John, born Oct. 30, bapt. Nov. 16, 1755.
Inoculated May 9, but the smallpox
not appearing was inoculated again
May 22, 1761.
Sophia, born March 28, 1757.
Bapt. April 3.
Died March 9, 1759.
Catherine, born Feb. 14 1759.
Bapt. Feb. 21.
Died April 14, 1760.
Benjamin, born Aug. 30, 1760
Bapt. Sept. 1 1 .
Inoculated May 9 1761.
Elizabeth, born Aug. 9, 1763.
Bapt. Aug. 25.
William, born Sept. 6, 1765.
Bapt. Oct. 2.
Died Dec. 8, 1766.
Wm. BRAUND.
Mary BRANFILL.
Ann PEAD.
Leonard PEAD.
Mary BRANFILL.
Mary BRAUND.
Samuel BRAUND.
Mary BRANFILL.
Ann PEAD.
Charles HARRISON.!
Mary BRANFILL.
Mary RUSSELL.
Rivers DICKINSON.
Mary RUSSELL.
Amelia BRANFILL.
John RUSSELL.
Rivers DICKINSON.
Mary BRANFILL.
Champion BRANFILL.
Mary BRANFILL.
Sarah DICKINSON.
Benjamin BRANFILL.
Mary BRANFILL.
Ann BRANFILL.
Rivers DICKINSON.
Benjamin BRANFILL.
Mary RUSSELL.
Rivers DICKINSON.
Mary RUSSELL.
Elizabeth BRANFILL.
William BRAUND.
Benjamin BRANFILL.
Sarah DICKINSON.
* Continued from page 250.
t HARRISON in the copy. Doubtless a clerical error for Charles HARRIS, who married
Amelia BRANFILL; no Charles HARRISON occurring in this HARRISON family at this period.
Mar. Lie. from Faculty Office, 17 July 1747, for the marriage of John HARRISON, of
Upminster, Essex, upwards of 21, Bachelor, and Charlotte BRANFILL, of same parish,
upwards of 21, Spinster; to marry at Upminster.
Married at Upminster 28 July 1747:
" John HARRISON, Esq., and Miss Charlotte BRANFILL."
John HARRISON, born 30 October 1755, became of Denne Hill, co. Kent, and was
High Sheriff for Kent in 1806.
R. T. BERTHON.
3i2 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT. 1912
No. 9. GARRARD. — Entries from a black-letter Bible, 1586,
written by some former owner, probably in London or neighbourhood.
I have copied them as near as possible to the originals. — H. STUBBS,
Danby, Ballyshannon.
Janurey ye 4, 1705. Bemon GERRARD born.
May ye 17, 1707. Elizabeth GERRARD born.
Dionea GERRARD born ye 8 of Janurey 1708.
June ye 17, 1715. Beamont GERRARD dide.
January ye 16, 1710. Dianae GARRARD dide.
January ye 23, 1710. Elizabeth GARRARD dide.
No. 10. SMITH: LOCKINGTON: FISHER. — Inscriptions contained in a
Prayer Book, 1708, in my possession. — R. J. FYNMORE. (Lt.-Col.).
1738. Henry SMITH.
George SMITH the Sun of Henry & Elesebth SMITH was Born
1 5th July in the year 1752.
Ann LOCKINGTON the daughter of George and Allise LOCKINGTON
was Born 25 December in the Year 1762.
George FISHER the son of John and Ann FISHER was born in the
year i8l4february nth.
No. ii. FYNMORE. — Family entries in Bible, printed by Mark
BASKETT, 1764:
William the son of William and Elizabeth FYNMORE
was born in Saint Jago De La Vega in the Island of Jamaica on
Wednesday the 22d Day of February between the Hours of Nine &
Ten in the Forenoon and in the year of our Lord 1758 and was bap-
tized on the 29th Day of March following. His Sponsors were the
Honble. Samuel WHITEHORNE, and Stephen Richard REDWOOD Esqr
and Anne his Wife own sister to Eliz: FYNMORE. Testis. Willm
FFYNMORE Senior.
N.B. By the Death of the above Samuel WHITEHORNE I lost
Twelve Hundred pounds and upwards Money lent him in Bond. W. FF.
Thomas George, son of the last named William FYNMORE and of
Jane his wife formerly Jane STUBBS was born on Tuesday the 3ist day
of October 1 797, in the Parish of St Martin in the fields.
This Bible which was his Grandfather's is to be given to him at my
death. W.F.
[On another page] :
I desire my son William FYNMORE may have this Book for to learn
him his Duty toward God and his parents. W. FF.
SEpT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 313
[On another page] :
My Son when I am dead, Bury me, and despise not thy Mother, but
honour her, and grieve her not.
Remember my Son, that she saw many dangers for thee when thou
wast in her womb; and when she is dead, bury her by me in one Grave.
NOTES.
William FYNMORE, eldest son of William FYNMORE of North or
Ferry Hinksey, Berks, born 14 July 1708, went to Jamaica 1744, where
he practised as an attorney. He had a patent of 300 acres of land there,
dated 14 June 1758. Married Elizabeth REAR in Spanish Town church,
23 December 1753. Appointed Ensign in Lt. Col. MURRAY'S Com-
pany of Foot 13 October 1753, and Lieutenant on the 30 November
1756 in Major-General Ballard BECKFORD'S regiment.
He returned from Jamaica in 1767.
Samuel WHITEHORNE was a Member of the Assembly for St. Ann,
1736, 1745, 1749, 1752, 1754-57. Called to the Council 1757.
Stephen Richard REDWOOD, born in Spanish Town, I December,
1726, married Ann REAH. He was for many years one of the repre-
sentatives in Assembly for St. Thomas in the Vale, and died 8 Decem-
ber 1781. His son Philip was Speaker of the House of Assembly 1802,
and Chief Justice of Jamaica 1808; died 1810.
The Bible was also mentioned in the Will of William FYNMORE, the
younger, dated 21 July 1832. " I give unto my said son Thomas
George the large Bible which was his Grandfather's." Thomas George
FYNMORE, solicitor, died 4 December 1870. The Bible ultimately
came into my possession a few days before the death of my father
William Stubbs FYNMORE who died 19 May 1883.
No. 12. FYNMORE. — Family entries in Prayer-book, printed at the
Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1781.
Memoranda relatg to the Family of Wm FYNMORE.
1 789, Augt 1 1 th. I was Married to my wife Jane STUBBS.
1790, Jan. nth. My Father died in the 83d. year of his Age and
was buried at Upmr in Essex.
1796, freb. 24th. My wife after having had several Still born
childn. was this day deld of a Son baptized by the name of
William.
1797, Apl 3d. My Son died and was buried at Saint Martin's
Octr 31. My Wife was deld. of a Son baptized by the names
of Thomas George, his Sponsors were Mr Thomas FYNMORE,
Mr James LEWIS Junr & Mrs STUBBS.
QQ
3i4 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEpT.i9i2
1799, Dec. 28. My wife was delivered of a Son who was soon
afterwards half baptized by the names of William Stubbs.
1 800, July 29. My Mother died in the 85 th year of her Age & was
buried at St Martin's. W.F.
1801, March 22d. My Wife was deld. of a Son who was on
April 28 half baptized by the names of Arthur Rodon.
May 15. My two last Childn William Stubbs and Arthur
Rodon were Christened, their Sponsors were for the Elder
my friend Mr. STUBBS, myself & my friend Mrs Thos
FYNMORE — for the younger Mr Serjt. ONSLOW, the Honble.
Mr RODON and Miss STUBBS. The Ceremony was performed
by the Revd. Mr ROGERS Curate of this Parish St Martins.
Wm. F.
1803, ffeb : 22d. My Wife was delivered of anor. son who was on
Mar 6th baptized by the name of James by the Rev. Mr FELL
8th My Son J ames died and was buried at St Martins
WmF.
1805, Oft. nth. My Wife was delivered of a Daughter who was
Novem 9th Hah0 baptized by the names of Elizabeth Lewis.
1807, Janry 21. My Daughter was Christd by the Rev. Mr.
HOWLETT, Curate of this Parish. Her Sponsors were Mrs
Eliza BOGGIS late STUBBS, Miss Eliza LEWIS and Captn George
STUBBS for whom I stood Proxy.
NOTES.
Jane was the only daughter of Captain Thomas STUBBS, 52nd. Regi-
ment, who died 1782, and niece of Mr. George STUBBS, attorney, of
Great George Street, Westminster, to whom her future husband was
articled.
William FYNMORE, the elder, was buried at Upminster, Essex,
17 January 1790, where many of the STUBBS family are buried.
Thomas George, eldest surviving son, was a solicitor in Craven
Street, Strand, retiring in 18152. He died s.p. 1870. Of his sponsors,
Mr. Thomas FYNMORE, of Camberwell, Surrey, was a cousin; Mr.
James LEWIS was a Jamaica connection, probably through the RED-
WOODS, and Mrs. STUBBS, the widow of Captain Thomas STUBBS,
mother of Mrs. W. FYNMORE, and grandmother of the infant. She
died in 1814.
William Stubbs FYNMORE was my father. He died in 1883. Of
his sponsors, Mr. STUBBS was, no doubt, Mr. George STUBBS of Great
George Street; the godmother was Lydia, formerly ATKINSON, wife
Mr. Thomas FYNMORE of Camberwell.
Of Arthur Rodon FYNMORE'S sponsors, Arthur ONSLOW was
Serjeant-at-law, and in Grand Lodge Report of Freemasons, 4 May
1785, he introduced William FYNMORE as his successor in the office of
Grand Steward. The ONSLOWS were also connected, I believe, with
SEPT. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 315
Jamaica. The Hon. Mr. RODON was John, one of His Majesty's
Honourable Privy Council of Jamaica. Miss STUBBS (Mary Esdaile)
married Cordell BROOKS Esquire, of Great George Street.
The name of the Curate under date 21 January 1807 is not very clear.
Elizabeth Lewis FYNMORE'S sponsors. Mrs. BOGGIS, was a daughter
of Mr. George STUBBS. She married in 1805, the Rev. Isaac Rolfe
BOGGIS. Miss Eliza LEWIS was probably daughter of Mr. James
LEWIS. The godfather, Captain George STUBBS, was Mrs. FYNMORE'S
younger brother. He was killed at Salamanca, 22 July 1812, " at the
memorable battle of Salamanca the command of the regiment (6ist.)
devolved on him and whilst gallantly leading on his men fell in the
midst of victory." His only brother, Sir Thomas William STUBBS,
after serving a few years in the British army, rose to high rank in that
of the Portuguese and was created Viscount VILLA de Nova Gaia.
No. 13. FYNMORE.— Memoranda pasted in a prayer book, 1801 :
Sunday 23 Deer 1753. William FYNMORE was married to Eliz:
REAH in Spanish Town Church by Mr John VENN the Rector.
N.B. Gave the Parson £9 i o. o.
Wednesday, 22 Febry 1758 at i hour past nine in the morning
my son William was born.
29 March following he was Baptized — The Honble Saml WHITE-
HORNE, Ste : Richd REDWOOD and his wife were Sponsors.
Other entries:
Sunday 2nd Deer 1750 Dyed in Spanish Town the wife of Henry
BYNDLOssEsqr.
19 Sept 1752. Arrived Gov : KNOWLES.
16061.1752. Dyed Tho. HILL Esq:
1 7 March 1753. Chief Justice PALLMER [indistinct]
2 June 1755 AYSCOUGH.
24 July 1755. Dyed my good Friend H. BYNDLOSS, Att: Genl.
28 Oct. 1755. M. CROSS was Delivered of a 7 months child being
herself 14 years and 3 months old.
I2jan. 1756. AnnREDWooD.
30 Nov. 1 75 8 . Her Mother Dyed.
NOTES.
Henry Morgan BYNDLOSS, Attorney-General for the Island of
Jamaica, 1754.
BYNDLOSS and FYNMORE appear to have matriculated on the same
day, 2 April 1726, at Magdalen Hall, each aged 19.
Charles KNOWLES was appointed Captain-General and Governor-in-
Chief , November 1751. Retired 1 756.
John PALMER was Chief Justice of Jamaica, married Mary BALLARD,
daughter of Colonel Peter BECKFORD.
R. J. FYNMORE.
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
of
[SEPT. 1912
of
Officers of the Society.
PRESIDENT.
VICE-PRESIDENTS : The Right Honourable John Allan, Baron LLAN-
GATTOCK.
The Marquis DE LIVERI ET DE VALDAUSA.
HON. TREASURER: Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
HON. SECRETARY : George SHERWOOD.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 1912-13.
Sir Thomas Herbert Cochrane
TROUBRIDGE, Bart.
Charles Allan BERNAU.
William BRADBROOK,M.R.C.S.
Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
Joseph Cecil BULL.
Frank EVANS.
LIBRARIAN-SECRETARY: Frank Ellis PRICE.
OFFICIAL ORGAN : The Pedigree Register. Quarterly, los. 6d. per annum.
REGISTERED OFFICE AND ROOMS: 227 Strand (by Temple Bar), London,W.C.
Gerald FOTHERGILL.
James Reginald Morshead GLEN-
CROSS, M.A., LL.B.
George Frederick Tudor SHERWOOD.
Frederick Simon SNELL, M.A.
Charles William WALLACE, Ph.D.
FIFTH QUARTERLY REPORT, September, 1912.
The Fellows, Members, and Corresponding Associates elected since the 8th
May are as follows :
FELLOWS.
1912, June 12: Charles HeskethFLEETWOOD-HESKETH,M.A.,J.P.,D.L.
Minnie Fogel MICKLEY.
Edward George CHURCH.
July 10: Hyacinth Lambart BOUWENS.
Francis Henry CHURCH.
August 14: Arthur Tomkyns DEW.
George James LIND, F. S.A.Scot.
1912, June 12:
July 10 :
MEMBERS.
Charles Hesketh FLEETWOOD-HESKETH, M.A., J.P.,D.L.
John BROMLEY.
Minnie Fogel MICKLEY.
John Kingsley Lunn MARTIN.
Arthur John Christopher GUIMARAENS.
Frank GLEADOW.
Edward George CHURCH.
Hyacinth Lambart BOUWENS.
Hutton GUY.
Francis Henry CHURCH.
Charles Edmund LART.
SEPT. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 317
August 14: Sara M. Libbey HALEY.
Arthur Tomkyns DEW.
Charles Edward SHEFFIELD.
George James LIND, F. S.A.Scot.
ASSOCIATES.
None elected.
CORRESPONDING ASSOCIATES.
1912. June 12: Emily Talbot WALKER (Mrs. Cyrus WALKER.)
Violet GURNEY (Mrs. Walter GURNEY.)
July 10: None elected.
August 14: James Walter ALDRIDGE.
ANNUAL MEETING.
The Second Annual Meeting was held on Friday, the 28th June, at No. 17
Fleet Street, Mr. BRADBROOK being voted to the Chair. The balance-sheet, June
to December, 1911, was read and approved. Lord LLANGATTOCK, one of the
vice-presidents retiring in accordance with the Rules, was unanimously re-elected.
Of the retiring members of the Executive Committee, Messrs BEACHCROFT,
BRIGGS, BULL and FOTHERGILL, the last three were re-elected. Sir Thomas H. C.
TROUBRIDGE was elected to serve in the room of Mr. BEACHCROFT.
COMMITTEES.
The Executive Committee met in the Society's Rooms on I2th June, loth
July, and I4th August, the second Wednesday in each month, at 2 p.m. Meetings
of Fellows to elect new Fellows are held on the same day and at the same place,
at 3.30 p.m. On the I2th June the resignation of Mr. BEACHCROFT from the
Executive Committee was accepted with regret. Mr. HOLWORTHY offered to
prepare for the Society's use a Calendar of Chancery Proceedings, Elizabeth,
being those documents in Series I. omitted from the official calendar. The offer
was gratefully accepted, and a Committee formed to arrange for the work to be
printed. It is proposed to print in parts of 24 pp., at 35. 6d. per part to Asso-
ciates, Corresponding Associates and the public. Some discussion took place on
the question of the formation of an Examining Committee to give advice on
the method of tracing pedigrees.
On loth July the Report of the Committee of the Law Society on the subject
of the Custody of Parish Registers was read. A form of application to land-
owners, inviting them to deposit with or give to the Society ancient deeds for
which they had no further use, was read and approved of. On the I4th August
a clerk was engaged to assist the Librarian- Secretary. Members are invited
to attend on the days of the Monthly Meetings, at 3.45 to 5 o'clock, a round-
table conference to discuss genealogical problems, expeiiences and suggestions.
In compliance with a petition, signed in 1910 by a number of literary inquirers,
the President of the Probate Division has ordered the Literary Research Depart-
ment at Somerset House to remain open during the Long Vacation, with the
exception of ten days, when it will be closed for cleaning purposes — the hours
ii till 3; on Saturdays 10 till I. It has not been found possible to comply
with a request by this Society that copies of all such printed Calendars of
ancient probate records as are obtainable should be placed on the open shelves,
318 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT.I9I2
but an effort will be made, it is understood, to obtain, for public use, copies
of printed calendars and lists of ancient documents actually in the Principal
Registry. GEORGE SHERWOOD (Hon. Secretary).
(1) Committee on the Library, printed -volumes. — The Accessions List enumerates
414 items, nearly all received by gift. The thanks of the Society are due to the
donors and the gifts are much appreciated.
(2) Committee on the Library, MS. volumes. — From Mr. GLEN CROSS we have
received a volume in MS. containing a collection of Pedigrees from Wills, etc.,
including the families of KNOX, GORGES and PETER (pp. 53, size 8 by I2|). A book
entitled Quarto Miscellanea, volume I, has been provided for the reception of
" stray notes." Forty pages have thus been filled with memoranda concerning
the families of ARUNDELL, BAYLY, BLINCOE, COLLISON, COSBY, CUFFE, DE GENNES,
LAMY, LUCAS, McHENRY, NESBIT, NISBETT (pp. 12-37), SMITH and SPENCE,
principally of Ireland.
(3) Committee on the Library, Documents. — From Mr. Oswald Greenwaye
KNAPP we have received about 200 abstracts of Wills, Deeds, etc., relating princi-
pally to the families of KNAPP, SAXTON, GODDARD, CARLETON, POOLE, PILCHER,
BARTHOLOMEW, SIMEON, CLARKE, HOLBECHE, WILLOUGHBY, BREARTON, MORE,
FRENCH, PUCKERINGE, EGERTON, HAYWARD, LACY, SEBRIGHT, SOUTHEND and
WHEATE. Also additions and corrections to BURKE'S Armoury concerning the
armorial bearings of BOSTOCK and KNAPP. From Dr. T. H. PRESTON: Extracts
concerning PRESTON of Norfolk, from the MSS. of Anthony NORRIS, antiquary
(1711-1786). From Mrs. Swinnerton HUGHES: An illuminated MS. on vellum
(28 by i8i), being a copy of a Grant of Arms and Certificate of Nobility, by
Rudolf, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, to Matthew WACKER, Doctor of
Laws, his brothers James, John and Michael and their lawful descendants.
Granted at Prague 24 October 1581. Certified at Breslau 10 November 1586.
The Society is glad to file any list of documents, long or short, relating to any
family or place, provided it is clearly shown where such documents are to be
seen. Lists should each be confined to one particular surname or one particular
place. The collection of KENT deeds is being arranged under parishes.
E. F. KIRK (Hon. Secretary).
(4) Committee on the Consolidated Index. — The work accomplished during the
last quarter will find incidental mention in the summary for the year included
in the Annual Report of the Society in the section dealing with this Committee.
Some interest, however, attaches to the miscellaneous items sent in during the
last few months, which deal with an uncommon source of reference, viz. old
lists of persons subscribing to books, mainly of the i8th and first half of the igih
century. The writing of these index slips is comparatively easy work, and such
references are useful as supplying details of the addresses, and one may add
tastes of individuals, at a time when books were more frequently published on
the " subscription " basis. These names also supplement the omissions of the
early directories, and it is much to be desired that such a list, for example, as that
prefacing LEWIS'S Topographical Dictionary of England, should be written on
slips for the Society. This list contains the names and addresses of some 12,000
people living all over England in 1831, and is probably the longest of its kind.
It should be noted that there has been a gratifying increase in the number of
slips in the Place Index, though this part of the collection is still somewhat
neglected, and probably does not at present number more than 12,000 slips.
F. S. SNELL (Hon. Sec.).
SEpT.i9i2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 319
(7) Committee for Cataloguing Pedigrees, — From Mr. Edmund LUCAS we have
received a MS. pedigree of LUCAS of Wootton Wawen, Warwickshire; from
Messrs. STOKES and Cox a MS. pedigree, on parchment (29$ by 28^), of
BARNSLEY of Worcestershire, London, etc., eleven generations to c. 1800; from
Mr. GLENCROSS a MS. book of pedigrees referred to herein by the Secretary of
the Committee on the Library — MS. volumes; from the Revd. Edward COOK-
SON, M.A., copies of pedigrees of COOKSON of Penrith, Cumberland, and of
TEMPEST (large sheets). A list of the pedigrees, estimated at between three and
four thousand, contained in DAVY'S Suffolk Collection in the British Museum
(Add. MSS.), is being incorporated in the Consolidated Index. A " Pedigree
Analysis Form " is being sent this quarter to every Member of the Society.
C. M. WYNNE (Hon. Sec.).
(9) Committee on Parish Registers and Marriage Licences. — Mr. G. E. C.
CLAYTON has presented an Index to Marriages at Leyland, LANCASHIRE,
1711-83; about 2,300 references, quarto, ff. 112. Mr. W. C. KENDALL: A copy
of Tunstall, LANCASHIRE, Parish Registers, 1627-1754; about 400 ff. Mr.
O. G. KNAPP: A copy of Stock Gaylard, DORSET, Parish Register, 1567-1685.
The entries in this have also been entered on index-slips by Mr. KNAPP and
sorted into the Consolidated Index. A copy of the Registers of St. Stephen's by
Launceston, CORNWALL, baptisms and burials, 1566-1812 (pp. 118 and 129)
has been received on loan. R. M. GLENCROSS (Hon. Sec.).
(n) Committee on Fly-leaf Inscriptions in Family Bibles. — Mr. O. G. KNAPP
has obliged us with copies of entries in thirteen family Bibles concerning the
families of BAKER, BEALE, COOPER and KNAPP. Miss GWATKIN has sent a list of
names written on fly-leaves of books in the possession of the Revd. Thomas
GWATKIN. J. Leonard E. HOOPPELL (Hon. Sec.).
(15) Committee on Irish Records. — The Hon. Mr. Justice MCCARTHY has con-
sented to serve on this Committee and has been duly elected.
R. E. FITZGERALD-LOMBARD (Hon. Sec.).
The Annual Subscriptions to the Society of Genealogists are as follows :
"Fellows," elected from among the Members by the whole body of
Fellows, Two guineas per annum. Life Composition, ten guineas.
"Members," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Life Composition, seven guineas.
"Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Cannot make Life Composition.
"Corresponding Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, Haifa
guinea per annum. Cannot make Life Composition. Must reside at
least 25 miles from London.
Fellows only are entitled to receive quarterly from the Society advice of any
fresh information having accrued respecting certain specified families and places
in which they may be personally interested, the number of which is limited at
present to ten. They are entitled also to borrow printed books. Members,
Associates and Corresponding Associates have access to all the printed books,
indexes, manuscripts or documents in the library of the Society.
As an association "not for profit" (in a pecuniary sense) the Society relies
for increase of membership upon the efforts of individual members to make its
purpose known. A form of application for membership is sent herewith.
32o THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [SEPT.i9i2
LYNDHURST MANOR ROLLS (II. 212, 225).— Among the HULSE MSS.
is a charter, dated 1464, which mentions Johannes ESTOTE. This charter con-
cerns the manor of South Charford, the next parish to Breamore. Other Hamp-
shire variants of the name are STOT, STOTTE, STOITE, STOATE and STOOTE, but the
most persistent form is STOTE. I suppose " le stot " would easily become
" estote " and " stote."
I should be very glad of any hint of the origin of Thomas STOTE of Breamore
(died 1556). I have no note of him before- 1534.
The will of John STOTE IV. of Lyndhurst was proved in the Bishop's Court at
Winchester in 1580, and has an interesting inventory attached. This inventory
mentions " cart timber " and a " sheffe of arroos." Is this an indication that he
too was a customary tenant and a. forest official? What is a " porsnett "? And
what is " the trine vessell "? The acreage under cultivation agrees well with
the known acreage of " Stotes," the customary tenancy which the extant Court
Rolls prove to have been " in the family " from 1661 till the end of the eighteenth
century.
I am most anxious to hear of any Lyndhurst Court Records before 1660, or any
other Records of minor Forest Officials of the sixteenth and early seventeenth
centuries if they are in existence.
The line of George STOTE I. seems to have been continued at Milford and
Hordle, on the edge of the New Forest ; but beyond the coincidences of names of
wife and children I as yet lack evidence to identify the George STOTE of Lynd-
hurst, who married Mary PITT at Boldre in 1721, with the George STOTE and
Mary, whose children are baptized at Milford soon after that date. " George
STOTE the elder " was buried at Milford 24 August 1770. Philip STOTE was
buried there in 1771 and George STOTE junior in 1803. The name Rebecca, as
mother of George STOTE I., and daughter of George STOTE the elder of Milford,
is another link in this chain that I want to make stronger.
Can it be proved that the line of Thomas STOTE of Eling was continued in two
branches, one at Romsey till the Commonwealth, and another at Ringwood,
which seems to have been extinguished by smallpox in the early eighteenth cen-
tury? I have these and other fragmentary early pedigrees which I should be
pleased to communicate if desired.
ARTHUR W. STOTE.
Holy Trinity Vicarage, Trowbridge, Wilts.
The Pedigree Register
DEC. 1912] [VoL. II, No. 23.
antifp in Jrefon*.*
(SUfkeone.
Whatever was the result of the litigation, the family never recovered
from the blow to its fortunes dealt by Alexander's unlucky character.
His children :
(i.) George,
(2.) William, and
(i.) Letitia, filed a bill (while still minors) in the Exchequer
Court, 28 Oct. 1742, against their parents and others.
Henceforward we find no trace of them, unless we are to identify
with Alexander's son, one William ACHESON, who in 1776 and 1781
was defending, with his wife Mary ATFIELD, of the Co. Clare, a
Chancery action brought by the executors of Hull ATFIELD. (Repertory
of Decrees, v. 89.)
The Betham-Phillips MS. History of Fermanagh gives the follow-
ing arms as belonging to Captain Alexander ACHESON :
" This family beareth in their atchievmts. and ensigne Armorial,
Argent, an Eagle displayed wth. 2 heads sable, but now he gives ye
eagle surmounted on ye breast of an inescutcheon argent, chargd. with
a saltire sable, two spurs ravell or; For ye crest A cock standing on a
trumpet proper. For ye motto Vigilantibus, &c."
The description is a little hard to follow, and I believe that there is
no record in Ulster's office of a coat exactly answering to it.
Tombstones of ACHESONS with somewhat similar arms are found at
Templecarne (Pettigo) on the borders of Donegal and Fermanagh,
including one dated 1765.
These ACHESONS are found at Pettigo as early as 1681, when the
intestate estate of Patrick ACHESON, gentleman, was administered by
his wife Mary.
The name Patrick is significant, and suggests that he may possibly
be identical with one Patrick ACHESON, who, on 23 Aug. 1662, was
married at Derry to Mary SMITH, and who in 1663 was taxed for three
hearths at his house in Silver Street, Derry.
It is at least possible that both of these Patricks may have been the
third son of Alexander the second of Gosf ord.
Of the Templecarne ACHESONS I have very full notes extending
from 1705 to the present year, and I hope some day to publish them.
The family held considerable property, mostly on leases renewable for
ever, from the LESLIE family, which in turn held the lands on the same
terms from the See of Clogher.
John Fleetwood ACHESON, M.A., late principal of Pretoria College,
still owns a fraction of them in the beautiful little sporting estate of
" The Lusties," a string of islands in Lough Erne.
W. ROBERTS CROW.
* Continued from page 291.
RR
322
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 19 12
Compiled from The Memorial Book of Alderman Thomas Pembroke, 1703-54, in the Library of Garretstown
co. Cork, from Pedigrees compiled by Richard CAULFEILD, LL.D., of Cork, 1872, supplied by Colone
POOK, by Mr. G. WINTHROP, from Mary RYLAND'S Will, and from family papers in my possession.
Arms of PEMBROKE: Arg. on a bend between two lions rampant sa., a wyvern of the first.
William PEMBROKE.
Born 1675. Died
young.
David ROCHFORD.:
Born 1664. Died
17 Oct. 1727.
1
= Elizabeth. Born
1 8 Sept. 1677.
Mar. 21 Dec.
1693. Died
6 Sept. 1741.
Benjamin WINTHROP,;
of Cork. Born 1678.
Died 30 Nov. 1729.
= Bridget. Born
23 Mar. 1679.
Mar. 2 1 Jan. 170*
Died 1 5 Oct. 1 744]
Patrick ROCHFORD, c
Cork, merchant.
Rev. Richard BALDWIN, Rector of Rathclaren,=Mary. Born
Bandon. Died 22 Nov. 1742. 16 Nov. 1703
1
r r
David ROCHFORD. Henry WRIXON, of Glenfield and Blossomfort,^= Bridget. Mar. 13 April 1746.
co. Cork.
I
Rev. John WRIXON, Vicar = Catherine, sister of Rev. Thomas WHITE,
Choral of Cork Cathedral. I rector of Kilnaglory. Mar. 1750.
Thomas WRIXON, an
officer in the Army.
Anne.
DEC.I9I2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
323
Thomas PEM BROCK. Came to Ireland=
with his brother William, from Cam-
bridgeshire, and settled in Cork.
1T]
'<
William PEMBROKE, of Cork. Born =|= Mary WHEADON (? VEREKER). Born 1645.
1651. Died 30 Dec. 1707. Buried I Died 17 Feb. 1723. Buried in St. Peter's,
in St. Peter's, Cork. I Cork.
II
Margaret.
*eter
'EMBROKE.
Thomas PEM BROKE. = Sarah, dau. of Hugh
High Sheriff of MURPHY. Born
Cork 1724. Mayor 23 Apl. 1691. Mar.
1733. Borniljan. 18 Apl. 1711. Died
1683. Died j./. 7 Dec. 1750. Buried
19 Sept. 1754. in St. Peter's Church.
Bur. in St. Peter's
Church.
Richard RYLANDS, =
of Dungarvan, co.
Waterford. Died
31 Mch. 1751.
"1
=Mary. Born 6 Aug.
1686. Mar. 6 Feb.
1713. Died I June
1758. Will dated
24 May 1758, pr.
6 July 1758.
•or the history of the WINTHROP family,
ee History of the Family of Maunsell or
Wansel, by R. G. MAUNSELL.
Robert GROVE, of Ballyhimock,^=Mary. Mar. 1 1 June 1740.
uncle to the Earl of CLARE. I Died 1 2 Feb. 1 749.
1
"1
"1
Charles
Winthrop
George SBALY, of^=Anne. Mar. Francis Charles, ist Earl=Mary. Born 25 Dec
BALDWIN, of Bath.
Burleysfield and
20 Apl.
of ANNESLEY. Died s.p.,
1742.
Mar.
1766
)ied /./
>., 1817.
Gortnahona.
1749.
19 Dec. 1802.
Died 25
Aug.
1791
lev. George SBALY, L.L.D., Rector=Alicia, dau. of
•f St. Paul's, Cork, and Inchigula. Anthony LANE,
fook surname of BALDWIN on sue- Clerk of the
ceding to his uncle's property. Crown and Peace.
)ied s.p.
William MAUNSBLL=Mary.
of Caherdavin and
Flag House, co.
Limerick.
See History of Maunsell or Manse/,
by R. G. MAUNSELL.
The WINTHROP Pedigree is not given here, being published in the above-
lamed book.
I shall be glad of further information about the PEMBROKES.
W. P. PAKEN HAM-WALSH, Lieut. R.E.
324 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEc.i9i2
in t$t £0urc0>arb of j^t.
This burial ground, now a public garden, is divided into two
unequal portions by a footpath running east and west to the north
of the church. The inscriptions from the northern portion were
copied by Mr. F. S. SNELL, about 1883, from stones, some against,
and some immediately under, the west wall. In this part of the
ground there still remain some inscriptions to be copied, and it is
hoped to be able to complete them next summer.
In the southern portion, that immediately surrounding the church,
the inscriptions (Nos. 92-161) were taken down by myself in July,
1912. More than half of them had been already copied by Mr. SNELL
in August, 1906. The two copies have been compared, and certain
details, not now legible, obtained from the earlier copy, are inserted,
and placed between square brackets. In three instances whole in-
scriptions have practically disappeared since 1906.
Mr. SNELL thinks that a f preceding an inscription most probably
indicates a Catholic interment.
G. S. PARRY.
ST. MARY'S, PADDINGTON GREEN.
NORTHERN PORTION. STONES STANDING AGAINST THE WEST WALL.
1. f Collette Palmire GARCIA, d. Aug. 8, 1833, a. 50.
2. David Louis PERROTTET, Esq., d. Nov. 7, 1851, a. 58.
George Henry Skipsey PEROTTET, his s., d. Jan. 29, 1853, a. 21.
3. Mr. John CHILD, d. Oft. 15, 1851, a. 52. Mary Ann, his w.,
d. Ap. 12, 1830, a. 33.
4. The family grave of C. TRUMAN. Francis Wickham JACKSON,
d. Jan. 14, 1852, a. 7 y. 8 m.
5. Mrs. Ann MIDDLE, widow, d. May 7, 1854, a- 64. Erected by
her dau., Maria.
6. William John CHEESE, second s. of Henry & Elizabeth CHEESE,
d. Jan. 13, 1850, a. 19. Mary Ann CHEESE, his sister, d. May 27, 1854,
a. 21.
7. Letitia Hill HILL, dau. of George HILL, Esq., of Calcutta,
and his late w., Evelina Virginia, b. at Calcutta, July 25, 1836, and
d. at Bayswater Hill, in this p., Aug. 7, 1848, a. 12 y. 14 days. Her
only surviving sister, Maria HILL, b. at Calcutta, Dec. 20, 1840, d.
Feb. 4, 1851, a. 10 y. I m. 16 days.
8. Ellen Harriett PERRY, d. Feb. 23, 1850, in her I4th year.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 325
9. Anthony SHERMAN, d. Nov. 21, 1849, a. 49. Erefted by his
widow.
10. Mrs. Susanna RICE, d. Ap. 23, 1849, a. 74. Sarah NORTH,
her sister, d. July 25, 1850, a. 73.
11. Mr. John NORTH, d. Oft. 6, 1847, a. 54.
12. Eliza ARCHER, d. Mar. 18, 1849, a. 6 y. 6 m. Edward Bird
ARCHER, d. a. 2 y. 5 m. William ARCHER, d. a. 5 y. 5 m.
13. Mrs. Sarah MANN, d. May II, 1849, a. 60. Jane, w. of Mr.
John BAKER, and dau. of the above, d. Dec. I, 1853, a. 26. Her
inf. s., Edward Cornelius, d. a. 4 m.
14. Esther, w. of William JONES, of Gt. Grove St., d. Ap. 13, 1847,
a. 53.
15. Joseph Herbert HOY, gr. s. of Joseph & Pamela Graves HOY,
b. Feb. 21, 1841, d. May 9, 1851. Wm. LANCASTER, b. Nov. 14,
1796, d. Sep. 14, 1854. Pamela Graves, w. of Joseph HOY, b. Oft. 27,
1789, d. May 9, 1853. Mary, first w. of Joseph HOY, b. May 5, 1785,
d. Mar. 3, 1818. Joseph, s. of Joseph & Mary HOY, b. Oft. 21, 1816,
d. June 6, 1837.
16. Benjamin THOMAS, Esq., of the Haymarket, St. James's, d.
Oft. 12, 1821, a. 68. Isabella Mary, w. of John CUTTING, b. Aug. 15,
1780, d. Dec. 13, 1846.
17. Mrs. Mary BEAUMONT, of St. George, Han. Square, d. June 10,
1823, a. (14?). John BEAUMONT, of Lower Brook St., St. Geo., Han.
Square, husband of the above, d. Mar. 25, 1833, a. 55.
1 8. Annetta MURPHY, d. July 1818, a. 2 years. Erefted by A. M. H.
19. Harriet, w. of Richard JENKINS, of Praed St., dau. of Nicholas
& Sarah MOTT, of Rotherwick, Hants, d. Dec. 21, 1835, a. 38.
20. f Mr. Peter MAGUIRE, of Blandford St., St. Mary-le-bone,
d. Jan. 27, 1824, a. 73. R.I.P.
Mrs. Matilda MAGUIRE, his w., d. June 17, 1828, a. 70.
21. Mr. George GREEN, many years a resident in St. Mary-le-bone,
d. Mar. 27, 1824, in his 73d. year. George GREEN, his s., d. Nov. 23,
1826, in his 44th. year. Job GREEN, his s., d. Oft. 16, 1828, in his
42d. year. Charlotte MORRIS, his dau., d. May 14, 1830, in her 33d.
year. Also her inf. s., a. I day.
t Also in memory of Mrs. Sarah GREEN, and Thomas GREEN,
her s., who d., Mar. 4, 1840, a. 13. Mrs. Sarah GOLDING, dau. of
George & Sarah GREEN, d. Jan. 22, 1857, a. 73.
22. Alexander, s. of William & Fanny HOUSTON, d. Aug. 30, 1842,
a. 4 y. 8 m.
326 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
23. [Altar tomb.] Mr. John DEARLE, of 10 Old Church St., in
this p., d. June 25, 1843, a. 71. Elizabeth Sarah, w. of Mr. James
PADGETT, of Davies St., Berkeley Square, d. Feb. 5, 1826, a. 28.
Martha DEARLE, sister of the above, d. July 18, 1826, a. 15. Frederick
William, s. of John DEARLE, jun., & Emma, his w., d. Oct. 20, 1829,
a. 7 m. Mary Ann PADGETT, d. of the above, d. Dec. 14, 1831, a.
9 y. Sarah Ann DEARLE, d. Ap. 13, 1837, a. n m. Emma Elizabeth
DEARLE, d. Sep. 16, 1838, a. 7 y. n m., dau. of the above.
Cecil Idonia DEARLE, w. of John DEARLE, sen., of Old Church
Street, Paddington, d. Mar. 14, 1839, a. 67. Sarah, his w., d. Oft. 17,
1842, a. 57. James Frederick, s. of Wm. & Elizabeth DEARLE, d.
Jan. 30, 1843, a. 10 months.
24. t Alice, dau. of William & Susan GREATOREX, b. Nov. 30, 1825,
d. June 29, 1827.
25. Mary, w. of William FORSTER, of this p., d. Mar. 4, 1837,
in her 43d. year. Their children, Edward, d. Ap. 3, 1827, a. i|y.;
Martin d. Aug. 9, 1833, a. 2 y. n m.
26. Mrs. Barbara SMEED, d. June 2, 1827, a. 53. Mr. Sylvanus
SMEED, her husband, of Upper Lisson St., St. Mary-le-bone, d.
Dec. n, 1839, in n^s 64th. year.
27. t Mrs. Elizabeth COUTANCH, d. June 23, 1824, a. 80. Elizabeth,
w. of Mr. Jonathan JONES, of Duke St., Grosvenor Square, d. Aug. 19,
1827, a. 60. Also their three infant children. Jonathan JONES,
their eldest s., d. May 15, 1830, a. 31. Jonathan JONES, senr., d.
Nov. 29, 1843, a. 78. Elizabeth, d. of the above, d. 24 ,
a. 17.
28. George Huxham PARROTT, d. Aug. I, 1833, a. 32.
29. William SHORT, killed by a fall from a chapel, Oft. 16, 1816,
a. 50. Ann, his w., d. Sep. 6, 1825, a. 56. And three of their infant
children. John SHORT, their s., d. Dec. 7, 1830, a. 34.
30. Mr. George PUTTNAM, d. Oft. 14, 1825, a. 16. Ellen, his w.,
d.Jan. 7, 1843, a. 54.
31. Eleanor HARDING, of High Ercall, Shropshire, d. May 19, 1831,
a. 51.
32. Mr. Thomas HOWSON, of Park St., Dorset Square, d. Mar. 6,
18(3)7, a- 32-
33. Alexander FRANCE, d. Ap. 29, 1826, a. 3 months.
Thomas James FRANCE, d. Sep. 18, 1826, a. 4 y. 9 m.
Harry FRANCE, d. Oft. 7, 1843, a. 13 y. 3 m.
34. Helen, d. of William & Margaret GREEN AWAY, d. June 17,
1827, a. 3 y. ii m.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 327
35. Mr. Richard LOUKES, d. Sep. (16), 18(24), a. 58.
36. Mrs. Elizabeth ATTLEY, of Jermyn St., d. Aug. 16, 1819, a.
51. Mrs. Jane DENNIS, d. Aug. 3, 1836, a. 51. John Edward DENNIS,
s. of Edward & Elizabeth DENNIS, b. May 26, d. June 16, 1837.
37. Henry, s. of Thomas Levy and Elizabeth BIGGS, d. Nov. 12,
1827. The above Thos. Levy BIGGS, d. Mar. 13, 1837, a. 60.
William, s. of the above, d. July 22, 1841, a. 33.
38. Mary, w. of Mr. Charles WADE, d. Nov. I, 1838, a. 68. The
above Charles WADE, d. Jan. 23, 1841, a. 73. Henry Smith WADE,
his eldest s., d. Jan. 16, 1847, a. 54.
39. William GILLMAN, d. May 25, 1818, a. 52. Mr. James KEELEY,
bro. in law to the above, d. May 20, 1828, a. 62. Hannah, w. of Wm.
GILLMAN d. Mar. 3, 1825, a. 56.
40. Anna Maria Cannell DAVY, d. of George Cannell DAVY, of
this p., late of Old, Northants, d. Jan. 14, 1836, a. 18. Henry Sep-
timus, s. of G. C. DAVY, d. May 8, 1832, in his 2d. year. Charles
Thomas DAVY, d. June 8, 1832, a. 3.
41. Mrs. Susanna DELAFIELD, of Winsley, Wilts, d. Sep. 10, 1821,
a. 86. James BROAD, her nephew, d. Mar. 30, 1830, a. 18.
42. Mrs. Anne KING, d. Nov. 12, 1840, a. 74.
43. Robert WHITELAW, carpenter, d. Nov. 22, 1848, a. 23.
44. Josephine, d. of John ROBERTSON, surgeon, of 10 Paddington
Green, b. 28 Sep., 1831, d. Oft. I, 1831, also three da us., and her
bro. Loaring Kinnear ROBERTSON, b. at Berkhampstead, Herts,
Feb. 12, 1829, d. in London, 30 Jan., 1835, a. 5.
45. Frederick, s. of Frederick & Eliza LOMAX, d. June 16, 1831,
a. 4 months. Walter, 4th. s. of Samuel & Eleanor LOMAX, July 26,
1831, a. 22. Mrs. Eliza LOMAX, d. Dec. 2, 1831, a. 27. George,
2d. s. of Samuel & Eleanor LOMAX, d. Sep. 15, 1834, a* 34-
46. Samuel LOMAX, d. Dec. n, 1847, a. 81. Eleanor, his wid.,
d. July 29, 1856,3.85.
47. Amelia COGGER, dau. of Thomas & Elizabeth COGGER, of
Crawford St., St. Mary-le-bone, d. Jan. 28, 1826, a. 20. Thomas
COGGER, d. Feb. 16, 1826, on board the Hon. E. I. Co.'s ship
" Windsor," homeward bound, being his 3d. voyage, a. 26.
(To be continued.}
328
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
r
I
1
Elizabeth.
Philip Norcop WHITCOMBE,= Elizabeth, daur. of
Mary, wife
Born 1749.
of the Court House, Eastham,
William JEFFRIES, of
of William
Died 1752.
esq. Born 1751. Died 1822.
Tenbury, co. Wore.
PHILLIPS.
Frances, wife of
Thomas WALKER,
gent. Born 1786.
Philip WHITCOMBE, of = Hettie, daur. of
Bockleton, co. Wore., esq. I Philip WALKER,
Born 1787. Died 1827. I of Grimley, gent.
I
Elizabeth.
Born 1791.
Died unm.
I
Mary Ann.
Born 1792,
Died
Philip Norcop WHITCOMBE, of == Elizabeth Gore Sutton,
Bockleton and later of Manchester, I daur. of John WALKER,
Born 1826. Died 1883. I of Liverpool, gent.
esq
Ada Elizabeth, wife
of John HEARN, of
Dawlish, co. Devon.
Philip Sidney WHITCOMBE, of New= Marion Elizabeth, daur. and
Plymouth, N.Z., esq. In New Zea-
land Civil Service. Born 1856.
coheir of William WINNALL,
of Leominster, gent.
Herbert Winnall
of New Plymouth,
tect and surveyor.
WHITCOMBE Kathleen Marion,
gent., archi- Born 1884.
Born 1883.
1
Percy Blyth WHITCOMBE
of New Plymouth, gent.,
surveyor. Born 1887.
Dorothy. Born
1 8 87. Twin with
Percy Blyth.
Geoffrey Leonard WHIT-
COMBE of New Plymouth,
engineer. Born 1893.
Eilene Thelma. Phyllis Nina.
Born 1896. Born 1897.
d I d
Robert WHITCOMBE
the Whittern, gent.
Born 1757. Died 1790.
of = Sarah, daur. of
Sir Henry GOTT,
of Newland Park.
William. Winifred, wife of Rev. James
Born 1758. HODGSON, of Barwick, co.
Died infant. York. Born 1759. Died 1831.
Henry Robert WHITCOMBE, = Louisa
of the Whittern, gent. Born I BROOKS-
1786. I BANK.
Anne, wife of John
HODGSON, of Lincoln's
Inn, barrister-at-law.
Sarah Anne, sole heir, wife of Robert
McMuRDO, J.P., D.L., of Hereford, esq.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
329
f
William.
Born and
died 1756.
John. Born
and died
•757-
Fanny, wife of
Edw. BURNELL.
Born 1759.
Anne. Born
1762. Died
unm. 1788.
imund WHITCOMBE =
Eastham, gent. Born
789. Died 1862.
= Susannah, daur.
of John WALKER, of
Rolling Rock, gent.
Emma, wife of
Dr. CLARKE, of Wor-
cester. Born 1794.
Edmund WHITCOMBK, of Mary Ann.
Eastham, gent. Born 1824. Born 1827.
Died unmar. v.p. 1848. Died 1837.
I
Emma.
Born 1829.
Died 1848.
Catherine, wife of
Samuel NICHOLLS, of
Manchester. Born 1799.
Elizabeth, wife of William
WINNALL of Leominster,
gent. Born 1835.
Herbert Edmund WHITCOMBE, John Walker WHITCOMBE^ Katharine Louisa, daur.
gent. Born 1857. Died of Sevenoaks, co. Kent, gent. I and coheir of William WINNALL
unmar. 1879. Born 1859. I of Leominster, gent.
Harold Gore WmTCOMBE,=Jose Helen HOOD
of Santa Afia, California, of Missouri,
Born 1884. Died/./. 1910. U.S.A.
Winnall Gore WHIT-
COMBE of South Wales,
gent. Born 1886.
r
Muriel Gore.
Born 1888.
Died 1892.
Kathleen Gore.
Born 1891.
Died 1892.
Hugh Martin Donald Gore
WHITCOMBE of Coventry,
engineer. Born 1893.
Sidney Stewart Gore
WHITCOMBE. Born 1899.
I
Richard WHITCOMBB of=z= Sarah, daur. of
Bollingham, co. Hereford, I Rev. John HUYSHE
Born 1761. I of Pem bridge.
I
Elizabeth.
Born 1764.
gent
r
i
Anne, wife of Rev.
Francis COKE, M.A.,
rector of Aylton.
Richard WHITCOMBE, M.A., of Trinity Coll., Cambr., and of Lincoln's Inn, barrister-at-law,
esq. Born 1794. Died unm. 1834. He recorded at the College of Arms a pedigree of
the Morrey WHITCOMBES to 1 8 1 8, shewing their descent from the Berwick Mavesyn WHIT-
COMBES as registered at the Visitation of Salop 1623.
* Continued from pages 296, 297.
SS
330
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 19 12
e e
Edmund.
Born 1767.
Died 1768.
Edmund WHITCOMBE, M.R.C.S., L.S.A., of=Maria, daur. of William BANCKS,
Cleobury Mortimer, esq., coroner of Salop.
Born 1769. Died 1848.
of Corbyns Hall, co. Staffs, gent.
Edmund Bancks WHIT- ^= Emma, daur.
COMBE, M.R.C.S., L.S.A.,
of Cleobury Mortimer,
gent. Sworn freeman of
Shrewsbury 1863. Born
1805. Died 1869.
of William
DoWNES, of
Cleobury
Mortimer.
I
Martha
Maria.
B. 1806.
0.1807.
Caroline.
Born 1 808.
Died un-
mar. 1889.
.1
William WniTcoMBE^Anne
M.R.C.S., of Pres-
teigne, co. Radn.,
gent. Born 1810.
Died 1850.
Daniel,
daur. of
Geo.
GUISE, of
Worcester.
Edmund Charles George Guise. Born 1839. Died circ. 1 848.
Philip Percival WHIT-
COMBE, V.D., M.B.,
M.R.C.S., L.S.A., of
London, esq. Lieut.-
Colonel R.A.M.C.T.
Sworn freeman of
Shrewsbury 1909.
Born 1859.
; Blanche Beatrice,
daur. of Geo.
Fred. BUSBRIDGE,
of Maling, co.
Kent, gent.
. r
Philip Sidney.
Born 1893.
I
Rt. Rev. Robert Henry WHIT- ^= Annie Maria Ver-
COMBE, D.D., M.A., of New Coll.,
Oxon, lord bishop of Colchester.
Consec. 1909. Born 1862.
non,dau. of Samuel
Thos. EVANS, of
Eton College, gent.
Elizabeth Maude.
Born 1895.
Arthur Cyril.
Born 1897.
Henry Maurice.
Born 1900.
Gwendolen Blanche.
Born 1887.
Margaret Stuart. Denys Mavesyn Percival WHITCOMBE, of New Coll.,
Born 1889. Oxon, gent. Student of Medicine. Born 1890.
Fanny
Bancks.
Born
1856.
Died
unmar.
1911.
Elizabeth Robert Henry WHITCOMBE, V.D., M.A.,
Annie. of Gonville and Caius Coll., Camb., of
Born Bewdley, esq., solicitor. Major A.S.C.T.
1858. and Hon. Capt. in Army. Served in
South African War 1900—1. Sworn free-
man of Shrewsbury 1909. Mayor of
Bewdley 1912-3. Born 1859.
Maria
Isabel.
Born
1861.
I
Agnes
Helen.
Born
1862]
Emma
Downes.
Born
I839-
Maria Bancks.
Born 1840.
Died unmar.
1870.
I
Martha Eysam, wife
of Thomas WOOD-
HAM, of Kingsom-
bourne, co. Wilts,
esq. Born 1841.
Edmund Bancks WHiTCOMBE,=Emily Jane Blount,
M.B., Ch.B., M.Sc., M.R.C.S.,
L.S.A., of Birmingham, gent.
Professor of Lunacy, Birm.
University. Sworn freeman of
Shrewsbury 1878. Born 1 843.
Died 1911.
daur. of John CLAY,
M.R.C.S., of Bir-
mingham, gent.
Edmund Stanley
WHITCOMBE of Bir-
mingham, gent., en-
gineer. Born 1880.
Douglas WHIT-
COMBE, of Bir-
mingham, gent.,
auctioneer. Born
1882.
Rev. Leonard WHIT-
COMBE, B.A., of Trinity
Hall, Camb. Curate of
S. Thomas, Oxford.
Born 1886.
1
Mabel Emily
wife of Rev. Cav-
endish MOXON,
B.A., of Croydon.
Born 1887.
"1
Beresford WHIT-
COMBE, of Birm.
gent., engineer.
Born 1889.
DEC. i9i 2] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
331
I
Philip WHITCOMBE, of London, gent.,=pMary Martha, daur. of John
merchant. Born 1771. Died 1813.
HARDMAN of Birmingham.
MM
Elizabeth. Born and died 1774.
William. Born and died 1775.
Mary. Born and died 1776.
William. Born and died 1777.
1
Elizabeth, wife
of Christopher
Piggott BANCKS,
of Bewdley,
>ent. Born
1812. Died
1884.
1
Philip WHITCOMBE, =
M.R.C.S., L.S.A.,
of Gravesend, co.
Kent, gent. Sworn
freeman of Shrews-
bury in 1 909. Born
1816.
= Sarah Maria, Robert Henry WHIT- = Frances, dai
daur. of Thos. COMBE, of Bewdley, of William
Sankey GOWL- co. Worcester, gent., BANCKS, of
LAND, of Bex- Solicitor. Sworn free- Bewdley,
ley Heath, co. man of Shrewsbury, gent.
Kent, gent. 1871. Born 1821.
Died 1909.
1
Robert Henry.
Born 1860.
Died 1 86 1.
.1
William Sandford WHIT-:
COMBE, M.D., L.S.A.,of
London, gent. Born 1864.
== Josephine Miriam, daur. Arthur John WHITCOMBE,
of Ric. Sankey GOWL- of Gravesend, esq., under-
LAND, of Ealing, London, writer. Major T.F. Born
gent. 1868.
1
Edgar Vernon.
Born 1906.
1 1 III
Guy Rowland. Robert William. Katherine Mar- Rosalind Effie. Horace Mervyn.
Born 1909. Born 1904. jorie. Born 1905. Born 1906. Born 1907.
1 1 1
Richard Cuthbert Percival WHITCOMBE, of King's Coll., Hilda Monica. Philip Harold.
Camb., gent. Student of Medicine. Born 1891. Born 1894. Born 1900.
Philip William WHITCOMBE, J.P., of Bewdley, == Constance Emily, daur. of Edwin Luther BULLOCK,
esq., solicitor. Sworn freeman of Shrewsbury | of Handsworth, co. Staffs.
1909. Born 1864.
•f
I
I
Emily Mildred. Born 1891.
Edwin Philip. Born 1893.
1
Elizabeth
Bancks.
Born 1 844.
Died 1847.
1
Margaret Louisa,
wife of Richard
BAINTON,R.N.R.,
of Eastbourne.
Born 1851.
William Philip WHITCOMBE,:
T.D., L.S.A., J.P., of
= Caroline Lydia,
daur. of Thomas
CORN FORTH, of
Birmingham,
gent.
Susan
Emma
Born
1855.
Birmingham, esq. Colonel
R.A.M.C.T. Sworn free-
man of Shrewsbury, 1878.
Born 1853.
Edith Harold Arthur WHITCOMBE, =
Mavesyn. M.B., Ch.B., F.S.G., of Dudley,
Born co. Wore., gent. Sworn freeman
1880. of Shrewsbury 1907. Born 1882.
r i
= Frances Myra, daur. Doris Ethel, Kathleen Annie,
of Edmund wife of Lieut, wife of C. Harold
HOWARD, of Yardley, Col. Joseph Fletcher BENT-
CO. Wore., gent. Clement LEY, B.A. Oxon,
LEVY, of of Liverpool,
Brazil. Born gent. Born
pt. 1884. 1886.
Judith Howard Mavesyn. Ba
at Atcham, co. Salop, 1912.
332
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [Dsc. 1912
f\f
Margaret Seaford, daur. of Rev. = Rev. Philip WHITCOMBE, M.A., of Erase- =p Charlotte, daur. of
William EVANS, rector of Kings-
land, co. Hereford, 1st wife.
nose Coll., Oxon. Vicar of Holy Cross and
St. Giles, Salop. Sworn freeman of Shrews-
bury 1857. Born 1803. Died 1881.
Francis MAPP, of
Richards Castle, co.
Hereford, 2nd wife.
William Philip WHircoMBE,=Annie ALD-
M.R.C.S., of Ballarat, Vic- ERSON of
toria, Australia, gent. Born Melbourne.
1829. Died s.p. 1896.
Henry Pennell WmTCOMBE=Mary Elizabeth,
of Colchester, co. Essex, gent., daur. of Dr. John
solicitor. Born 1831. Died s.p. JOSE, of Colchester.
Richard Edmund WHITCOMBE,
of Shrewsbury, gent. Born
1839. Died unmar. 1867.
Mary Margaret, wife of Charles Robert WHITCOMBE,
William FELL, of Am- of Ramsey, Isle of Man, gent,
bleside. Born 1840. Born 1842. Died s.p. 1877.
I \
Frances Elizabeth, wife of Lucy Jane.
Dr. James Adamson BELL, Born 1850.
of Gloucester. Born 1848. Died 1865.
I
George John WHITCOMBE,
of Manchester. Born 1854.
Died unmar. 1908.
Frederick Sandford WHITCOMBE,= Elizabeth Jane WILSON,
of Birmingham, surveyor. Born I of Burton-on-Trent.
1844. Died 1910.
T1
t
Charlotte Isabelle, wife ot
W. H. Halton DAVIS, of New
South Wales. Born 1847.
I
Mabel Frances,
wife of Bert
HANDS.
Wilson Berwick WHITCOMBE,
of Birmingham. Born 1871
(unmar.).
Clarinda Mary.
Born 1873.
Kathleen Isabelle
Allegra, wife of
Fred. HARRISON.
Frederick Philip WHITCOMBE, of= Florence Hilda
Birmingham. Born 1877 (/./.). BLACKBURN. Jane.
Claude Raoul WHITCOMBE,
of New Zealand (unmar.).
My chief authorities in compiling the above are pedigrees in the College o
Arms, London ; the Visitations of Shropshire and other counties ; various Shropshir
MSS, especially those of Joseph MORRIS, and the valuable collection preserved is
the Shrewsbury Museum Library: Wills, Parish Registers of the counties of Salop
Worcester and elsewhere; Rolls of Freemen of Shrewsbury, Alumni Oxoniensei
Family Notes and Memorials, Monumental Inscriptions, Pedigrees of Roya
Descents, etc.
Dudley, Wore.
HAROLD A. WHITCOMBE.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 333
(grotnfep £o%e (Regfefer, 1679*1800.*
1763. Mrs. WILLIAMS, died June 11.
Mrs. LANGWITH, admitted July 25.
Sarah LANGWITH, Relic! of Benjamin LANGWITH, D.D., late
Re&or of Petworth, in Sussex, and Prebendary of
Chichester.
1764. Mrs. BANSON, died April 27.
Mrs. BROOKBANK, admitted Sept. 12.
Jane BROOKBANK, Relict of Mr. John BROOKBANK, late
Reftor of Bednall-Green.
1765. Mrs. PRINCE, died April 5.
Mrs. JONES, admitted O&ob. 4.
Sarah JONES, Relict of Mr. Nicholas JONES, late Rector of
Pawlerspury, Northamptonshire.
1766. Mrs. SOAN, died April 20.
Mrs. RUSSEL, admitted Sept. 25.
Mrs. SMITH, widow of ye late Rector of North Cray, was chosen
into ye place of Mrs. SOAN, but resigning very soon.
Mrs. RUSSEL succeeded. Susanna RUSSEL, Relict of Mr. John
RUSSEL, Vicar of Debtlin, in ye Diocese of Canterbury.
1767. Mrs. RICHARDS, died Novr. 19.
Mrs. LE MOINE, admitted March 3.
Ann LE MOINE, Widow of Mr. Abraham LE MOINE, Rector
of Everley, in ye county of Wilts & Diocese of Chichester.
1769. Mrs. PERFECT, died June 21.
Mrs. PALMER, admitted Septr. 12.
Mary PALMER, widow of Mr. Edward PALMER, vicar of
Ringmere, in ye County of Sussex & Diocese of Chichester.
1771. Mrs. PETER, died December 28.
1772. Mrs. CLARK, admitted Febry. 17.
Elizabeth CLARK, Widow of Mr. Abraham CLARK, vicar of
Sarnsfield, in ye Diocese of Hereford.
1773. Mrs. PALMER, died March 5.
Mrs. HOWELL, admitted May 12.
Margarett HOWELL, widow of Mr. John HOWELL, Vicar of
Long Claxton, in ye county of Leicester & Diocese of
Lincoln.
Mrs. SWINDEN, died Octob. 24.
* Continued from page 303.
334 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 19 12
1774. Mrs. STEEL, admitted May 19.
Ann STEEL, Widow of Mr. Joseph STEEL, Vicar of Yardley,
in ye Diocese of Worcester.
Mrs. HODGSON, died June 28.
1775. Mrs. Mary LAMBE, admitted Jany. 25.
Mary LAMBE, Widow of Mr. John TAYLOR, Late Rector of
Keston, in the Deanery of Shoreham & in the Diocese
of Rochester.
Mrs. BRANDSBY, died Decembr. 9.
1776. Mrs. Margaret STEVENS, admitted May 16.
Margaret STEVENS, widow of Mr. John STEVENS, Rector of
Colwall, in the Diocese of Hereford.
Mrs. BROOKBANKE, died February 20.
Mrs. Mary BANSON, admitted June 5.
Mary BANSON, widow of John BANSON, D.D., Rector
of Jacobstow, in the County of Devonshire & Diocese
of Exeter.
1777. Mrs. RUSSEL, died February 6.
Mrs. Mary CLENDON, admitted May 22.
Mary CLENDON, widow of Mr. Thomas CLENDON, Vicar of
Sturrey & Reculver in ye Diocese of Canterbury.
1777. Mrs. LE MOINE, died May 20.
Mrs. FAWKES, admitted Nov. 29.
Ann FAWKES, widow of Mr. Francis FAWKES, Rector of
Hayes, within this Diocese, a Peculiar of the Diocese of
Canterbury.
Mrs. WEBSTER, died January I.
Mrs. HEBBES, admitted March 13.
HEBBES, widow of Mr. HEBBES, Vicar of Hernhill, in the
Diocese of Canterbury.
1779. Mrs. ANDREWS, died Janry. 2.
Mrs. DAVIE, was chosen April 3 & died before admission.
1780. Mrs. ELLISON, admitted April 29.
Mrs. Sarah ELLISON, widow of Stanhope ELLISON, Vicar of Bocton,
or Boughton under Blean, & of Wittrisham, in the Isle
of Oxney, Kent.
Mrs. NORBURY, died May 23.
Mrs. RUDD, chosen June 19.
Elizabeth RUDD, widow of Abraham Joseph RUDD, of
Louisborough & Burnby, in ye Diocese of York, E. R.
Mrs. RUDD, died September 30.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 335
Mrs. BATE, admitted December 23.
Catharine BATE, widow of Charles BATE, Vicar of Bridge
Solars & Curate of Hatfield, in the Diocese of Hereford.
1783. Mrs. BARHAM, died Nov. 24.
Mrs. WHITE, admitted April 8, 1784.
Mary WHITE, wife of John WHITE, Vicar of Ware & Thun-
dridge, Herts, in the Diocese of London.
Mrs. HOWELL, died December 23.
1784. Mrs. BROWN, admitted July 15.
Eliz. BROWN, widow of Tobias BROWN, Rector of Benning-
ton, & Vicar of Alford, Lincolnshire.
Mrs. LONGWITH, died Feby. 8.
Mrs. THOMAS, admitted March 31.
Margaret THOMAS, Widow of John THOMAS, Vicar of St.
Mary Hill, Glamorganshire, in the Diocese of Landaff.
1786. Mrs. HUDDLESTON, died May i.
1787. Mrs. OARE, died April 26.
1787. Mrs. GILDER, admitted June 24.
Mary GILDER, Widow of Jonathan GILDER, Rector of Aspen-
den, Herts, Diocese Lincoln.
1787. Mrs. OARE, died April 26. (Two entries.)
Mrs SHIELS, admitted June 25.
Harriet SHIELS, widow of Benjamin SHIELS, perpetual
Curate of Little Dunmore, in Essex.
Revd. Andrew PRICE, Chap., Feb. 5, 1788, came into residence
Octr. 2, 1788.
1789. Mrs. ATTERBURY, died Janry. 5.
Mrs. HARDY, chosen July u, admitted Sepr. 21.
Mary HARDY, widow of the Revd. Joseph HARDY, Vicar of
Headcorn, Kent, and of Monkton, in the Isle of Thanet,
and of Bissington, Kent.
Mrs. THOMAS, died July 6.
Mrs. REEVES, chosen July n, admitted Augt. 14.
Elizth REEVES, Widow of the Revd. Jonathan REEVES,
minister of Kingstand Chapel, and Lecturer of White
Chapel, Middlesex, and Lecturer of West Ham, Essex.
Memo. Should any one of the Widows die before the middle of a
Quarter, the original stipend of that Quarter, viz. : £5 together with the
original stipend of the succeeding Quarter is taken by the Treasurer for
the repairs of the College. But if the Widow survives the middle of
the Quarter, then her Executors are entitled to the whole stipend of the
336 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
Quarter in which the widow dies. The new elected widow receives no
stipend till the third Quarter from the original Charity, but is usually
put into the immediate receipt of other benefactions to Bromley College
to which she may appear to be entitled.
N. B. At Lady Day is paid besides Bishop WARNER'S Charity.
Bishop PEARCE .£3 10 o.
E. G. Mrs. THOMAS died July 6, 1789, the beginning of the Michael-
mas Quarter, the original stipend of which, together with the original
stipend of the next Quarter, the Treasurer places to the College Account.
But Mrs. REEVES, who will not be entitled to any payment from the
original Charity till Lady Day, has received seven Pounds, which was
paid at Michaelmas from other Benefactions.
N.B. At Michs. is paid besides besides Bishop WARNER'S Charity.
Bishop PEARCE 3 10 o
Mr. HETHERINGTON 300
Lady GOWER 10 o
Ll ° °
1790. Mrs. REEVES, died Jany. 2.
Mrs. FRANCIS, chosen May 14.
resigned Augt. 7.
Sarah FRANCIS, Widow of John FRANCIS, late Vicar of Soham,
Cambridgeshire.
1791. Mrs. HARPER, admitted Augt. 3.
Sarah HARPER, Widow of the late HARPER, Vicar
of Tunbridge, Kent, and in the Diocese of Rochester.
1792. Mrs. SHIELDS, died Jany. I.
Mrs. ROSE, elected May 17, admitted.
Elizabeth ROSE, Widow of Charles ROSE, L.L.D., Rector
of Graffham, Sussex.
Mrs. WATSON, died Feby. 23.
Mrs. LEACH, elected May 17, admitted.
Susanna LEACH, Widow of John LEACH, Rector of Would-
ham & Vicar of Hailing, Kent.
Dame Mary BURDETT, died May 9.
Mrs. BASELEY, elected May 17, Admitted May 21.
Susanna BASELEY, Widow of Henry BASELEY, Vicar of Wei-
ham, Leicestershire & Rector of Beeby DO.
1793. Mrs. THOMPSON, died Feby. 25.
Mrs. STONE, elected Novr. 13, 1794.
Rebecca STONE, Widow of Dr. STONE, late Prebend &
Custos of the Cathedral Church of Hereford.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 337
1794. Mrs. WHEELER, elected Novr. 13, 1794, on Mrs. BETTENSON'S
Foundation.
Hannah WHEELER, Widow of the Revd. James WHEELER,
Rector of Madewell, Northamptonshire.
Sarah SHUTTLEWORTH, elected Novr. 13, 1794.
Sarah SHUTTLEWORTH, Widow of the Revd. John SHUTTLE-
WORTH, Rector of Nether Compton, Dorsetshire.
Mary FREE, elected Novr. 13,1 794.
Mary FREE, Widow of John FREE, D.D., Vicar of East
Coker, Somersetshire.
1795. Marina ILIFFE, elected June 26, 1795.
Marina ILIFFE, Widow of the Revd. George ILIFFE, Rector
of Chadwell St. Mary, Essex.
Sarah COBBOY, elected June 26, 1795.
Sarah COBBOY, Widow Widow of the Revd. Wm. COBBOY,
Curate of St. George's in the Fields, Middlesex.
1795. Amanda MORLEY, elected June 26.
Amanda MORLEY, Widow of the Revd. John MORLEY,
Rector of Elcouthy, Somersetshire.
Mary HODGES, elected June 26.
Mary HODGES, Widow of the Revd. John HODGES, Vicar of
Otterington, Yorkshire.
Ann EVANS, elected June 26.
Ann EVANS, Widow of Owen EVANS, Clark Rector of Slaug-
ham, Sussex.
Mary MORGAN, elected June 26.
Mary MORGAN, Widow of the Revd. Dr. MORGAN, Con-
fessor of his Majesty's Household.
Margaret SUNDERLAND, elected June 26.
Margaret SUNDERLAND, Widow of the Revd. John SUNDER-
LAND, Curate of St. Martins in the Fields.
1796. Mrs. BATE, died Jany. 23, 1796.
Mary OWEN, elected June 6, 1796.
Mary OWEN, Widow of the Revd. Dr. Henry OWEN, Vicar
of Edmonton, Middlesex.
Elizabeth WARING, elected June 6, '96, in the room of Sarah
ELLISON, who resigned at Michs., 1795.
Elizabeth WARING, Widow of Henry WARING, Rector of
St. Lukes, Middlesex.
(Continued on page 352.)
TT
338 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
©escenfe front (flicker to
©aweon to
Jonathan DAWSON, of Croft Head, Water- = Elizabeth S . . . [? SLEE]. Married 30 August
1744, at Watermillock. Buried there 8 June
millock, co. Cumberland. Baptised there
25 Octr. 1719. Buried there 8 Nov. 1804,
aged 85.
Revd. Joseph THWAITS, Perpetual Curate of = Elizabeth DAWSON. Married 3 June 1775,
Watermillock for 56 years. Died 9 Jan. I at Watermillock. Died 14 Jan. 1832, aged
1826, aged 79. Buried there. M.I. I 8l. Buried there. M.I.
John RAW, of Watermillock, Esq. Died = Catherine THWAITS. Baptised 28 April
3 April 1851, at Penrith, co. Cumberland,
aged 77. Buried at Watermillock. M.I.
1782, at Watermillock. Married 9 January
1808, at Bolton le Moors, co. Lancaster.
Died 27 March 1844, aged 62. Buried at
Watermillock. M. I.
William IRVING, of Penrith, F.R.C.S. Born= Jane RAW. Born 21 November 1808. Bap-
22 September 1808, at Wigan, co. Lan-
caster. Died 21 May 1870, in London.
Buried at Watermillock. M.I.
James HESKETH, of Bolton le Moors. Born
there 27 September 1841. Died 17 Novem-
ber 1876. Buried at Great Lever, co.
Lancaster.
Stephen SIMPSON, of Preston, co. Lan-:
caster, Esquire, M.A. Oxon. Major 2nd
West Lanes. Bde. R.F.A. Born 17 Septem-
ber 1863 at Preston. (See Pedigree Register,
tised at Watermillock. Married there
8 Feb. 1832. Died 10 Feb. 1867. Buried
there. M.I.
Nathalie Mary IRVING. Born 21 April
1846, at Penrith. Married 29 September
1869, at Great Lever.
Nathalie HESKETH. Born 6 November
1873, at Bolton le Moors. Married
10 April 1902, at Christ Church, South-
port, co. Lancaster.
Nathalie Mary SIMPSON. Born 20 August
1904, at St. John's Wood, London.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 339
In the Watermillock Registers, the capital letter " S " in the
surname of the wife of Jonathan DAWSON, is alone decipherable.
She is believed to have been Elizabeth SLEE, daughter of Joseph
SLEE, of Thackthwaite, in the parish of Watermillock, who was
baptised there 10 December, 1724.
The DAWSON family was settled at Watermillock for some con-
siderable time, and their pedigree can be clearly traced, from the
Registers alone, for four generations. Elizabeth DAWSON'S only
brother, Thomas DAWSON, of Brompton, Middlesex, gentleman,
died without leaving issue, and was buried 28 February, 1803, at
Kensington. His will, dated 24 September, 1799, was Prove£l m
the Prerogative Court of Canterbury 2 May, 1805.
I should like to know the place of origin of the Revd. Joseph
THWAITS. He was ordained Deacon and licensed to Penrith 6 August,
1769; licensed to Watermillock 15 February, 1771, and ordained
priest 1 8 August, 1771.
John RAW was the only son of John RAW, of Barnard Castle,
Durham, by his wife Jane ROBINSON, and succeeded to the family
property of his uncle, John ROBINSON, of Watermillock, who was
Alderman and Mayor of Appleby in 1770, and High Sheriff of Cumber-
land for the 9th year of George III.
The IRVINGS, of Penrith, claimed descent from the IRVINGS of
Bonshaw, in Scotland, and a short pedigree of the Penrith family
is recorded in Colonel IRVING'S new book The Book of the Irvings,
an old Scots Border dan. Dr. William IRVING, F.R.C.S., was a noted
surgeon in the North of England, and had the distinction of being the
medical officer on board the Great Eastern, during its voyage for the
laying of the Atlantic cable.
STEPHEN SIMPSON, M.A. Oxon.
Major R.F.A. (T.F.)
Preston, Lancashire.
340
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
to
Henry BARNS, of Farrington, co. Lan- = Mary
caster, yeoman. Will dated 18 February I 1783.
1773; proved at Chester 19 Feb. 1774.
John PICKERING, of Gregson Lane, Walton
le Dale, co. Lancaster, linen manufacturer.
Born 29 December 1744. Baptised there.
Died I June 1823. Buried there.
James FORSHAW, of Preston, surveyor of:
Customs. Born 19 Dec. 1775, at Preston.
Died 25 June 1837. Buried there.
Richard YATES, of Preston, gentleman. Born ;
there 3 April 1798. Died 19 August 1862.
Buried at Preston cemetery.
John James MYRES, of Flookburgh Lodge, :
co. Lancaster, formerly of Preston, civil
engineer. Born 26 March 1841. Baptised
at parish church, Preston.
William Edward WHITEHOUSE, of St. ;
John's Wood, London, professor of music
at Royal College and Royal Academy,
London. Born 20 May 1859, at Oxford
Terrace, Kensington, Middlesex.
Living 28 July
Mary BARNS, 5th daughter. Born 16
August 1746. Baptised at Walton le Dale.
Married 15 Oct. 1768, at Penwortham.
Died i September 1820. Buried at Walton
leDale.
Jane PICKERING, 2nd daughter. Born 22
July 1776. Baptised at Walton le Dale.
Married there 24 June 1799. Died 19 March
1815. Buried at Preston.
Isabella FORSHAW, 2nd daughter. Born 18
March 1802. Baptised at Preston. Mar-
ried 24 July 1832, at Walton le Dale. Died
1 January 1872. Buried at Preston Ceme-
tery.
Esther YATES, 2nd daughter. Born I April
1836. Baptised at Preston. Married there
2 Sept. 1863. Died 9 June 1899. Buried
at Preston cemetery.
Esther Isabella MYRES, 2nd daughter. Born
25 March 1867, at Preston. Married n
Jan. 1890, at South. Shore, Blackpool, co.
Lancaster. Died 1 6 October 1896. Buried
at Kensal Green cemetery, near London.
Esther Louisa Helen WHITEHOUSE, only
child. Born 12 January 1891, at Warwick
Road, Paddington, Middlesex.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 341
Information is wanted as to the maiden name of Mary, the wife
of Henry BARNS. She is believed to have been a sister of Thomas
GREGSON, of Liverpool, blockmaker, the father of Matthew GREG-
SON, F.S.A., author of The Portfolio of Lancashire Fragments.
Mary BARNS, Mrs. John PICKERING, had four sisters; the eldest,
Margaret, married John CLARKE, of Liverpool, merchant, and was the
ancestress of the families of CLARKE, of Kirkland Hall and Cockerham,
co. Lancaster, BIRLEY, of Bartle Hall, co. Lancaster, and WEBSTER
and ASPINALL, of Liverpool. The third, Ellen, married Alexander
SOLOMON, of Bexley, Kent. The fourth, Ann, married Thomas
BUTTERFIELD, of Barrowford, co. Lancaster. Her only brother,
Thomas BARNS, probably died unmarried before 1773, as he is not
mentioned in his father's will.
There was a family of BARNS, of Bolton le Sands, Lancashire,
from which Henry BARNS is said to have been descended, but proof is
wanted. A member of this family, the Revd. Francis BARNES, D.D.,
was Master of St. Peter's College, Cambridge, 1788-1838, and
bequeathed to the College a considerable legacy by his will, proved
in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, 15 May, 1838.
There are two sisters of Esther YATES (Mrs. John James MYRES)
now living, viz. Jane, widow of the late Stephen SIMPSON, of Preston,
Esq., and Miss YATES (Isabella), of St. Mary Church, South Devon.
The former is my mother.
STEPHEN SIMPSON, M.A. Oxon.
Major R.F.A. (T.F.)
Preston, Lancashire.
342 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
B*at>e0 from $anttfj> Q|3i6fe0t rfc/
No. 14 CASH, SUPPLE, etc.
7. John CASH, born 8 August 59.
3. Isabella CASH, born 17 June 63.
8. Charlotte SUPPLE, born 24 Aug. 65
John and Isabella CASH married 22 Feb. 1783, their issue:
Sponsors.
( Richard TUDOR.
George, born 24 July 1784 . \ Jeremiah SULLIVAN.
( Mary MILLS
Mary Bell, born 23 Aug. 1785. ( Mary TUDOR.
Died in March 1787. j Mary MATHERS.
( Michl. MILLS.
Richard, born 6 Nov. 1786. C John WHITE.
Died in June 1787. ! Timy. LEAKED.
I Charlotte TUDOR.
John Andrew, born 30 Nov. 1787.
Robert BURTON.
John TUDOR.
Mary TUDOR.
William, born Nov. 88 — died soon after.
John WHITE.
Henry Christmas, born 25 Dec. 90. - William MATHERS.
Mary MATHERS.
Margaret Jane, born 9 March 1792.
Died in three weeks after.
Charlotte Rebecca, born 4 Feb. 1794. ' Reoecca BURTON.
Married to John Kingston JAMES
13 April 1812.
Charlotte SUPPLE.
James WHITESTONE.
Michl. MILLS.
William Robert, born 20 June 1795. { Catherine BOOKER.
Died ii Sept. 1801 at MontpelierJ Oliver MILLER.
B'Rock. I Epaphn. ANDREWS.
Six years with life he laboured,
then deceaset To keep the Sab-
bath of eternal rest.
Maria Jane, born 26 July 1797. ( Rebecca MILLER.
Married to George KINAHAN] Charlotte SUPPLE.
15 July 1815 I Nugent BOOKER.
Printed slip from some newspaper, 28 January 1869:
JAMES — January 28, at his residence, 9, Cavendish Row, Rutland Square,
Dublin, Sir John Kingston JAMES, Bart., in his 85th year, deeply regretted.
* Continued from page 315.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
343
Printed slip from Daily Express, Dublin, I Dec. 1900:
CASH — November 29, at The Swiss Cottage, Miltown, County Dublin, Isa-
bella M. G. CASH, daughter of the late John CASH. Funeral on Monday, 3 De-
cember, at 9 a.m., for Mount Jerome Cemetery.
The above particulars of the family of John and Isabella CASH are copied from
entries in a Book of Common Prayer. Cambridge. By John BASKERVILLE, printer
to the University, by whom they are sold, and by B. DODD, bookseller in
Ave Mary Lane, London. 1760.
The within mentioned Prayer Book is in my possession.
G. WESTBY, M.R.C.P.I., and L.R.C.P.I.
29, Sefton Park Road, Liverpool.
31 August, 1912.
No. 15 PARK.
Copy from the PARK family Bible in possession of the widow of the late Revd.
George Lloyd Blair WILDIG (i.e., Elizabeth Charlotte WILDIG, nee LANE).
Henry PARK, born 2 March 1744-5, married Eliza-
beth, eldest daughter of Mr. John RANICAR, of
Westleigh (born 15 January 1748-9) on the first of
May 1776, had by her:
1. Ellen Green, born 5 March 1777, \ past 6 a.m.,
baptizd. 2 April at St. Peter's. Sponsors, E. RANI-
CAR, M. PARK & J. BARNES.
2. Mary Lyon, born 7 June 1778, 5 a.m. baptizd.
July at St. Peter's. Sponsors, M. RANICAR, M.
PARK Jur. & Js. RANICAR.
3. John RANICAR, born n May 1779, \ past 12
mat., baptizd. 10 June at St. Peter's. Sponsors, Ar.
ONSLOW, W. ORSETT & E. RANICAR, Junr.
4. Elizabeth, born 25 Aug. 1780, 9 a.m., baptizd.
21 Sept. at St. Thomas's, regd. at St. Peter's.
Sponsors, T. STATHAM, A. ORSETT, J. Moss.
5. Ann, born 2 August 1781, at 7 a.m., baptizd.
31 Aug. at St. Thomas's. Sponsors, E. ALANSON,
Al. ONSLOW, Ann BARNES.
6. Elizabeth, born 18 Dec. 1782, at \ past 7 mat.,
baptizd. 17 Jan. 1783 at St. Thomas's. Sponsors,
James RANICAR, Alni ONSLOW & Mary RANICAR.
7. Ann GREEN, born 5 April 1784, at \ past 7 mat.,
baptizd. 6 May 1784, at St. Thomas's. Sponsors,
Thomas STATHAM, Ann BARNES, Ann ORSETT.
Ellen Green BERTHON.
Died April 3 1854.
Mary Lyon.
Died June 4 1795, aged 16.
John RANICAR.
Died Dec. 14 1847, aged 68.
Elizabeth.
Died 1781, aged one year,
three months.
Ann.
Died 1781, aged about three
months.
Elizabeth.
Died the 6 of June 1855,
aged 72.
Ann Green WILDIG.
Died the 4 July 1862, aged
78.
344 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
8. Henry, born 13 April 1785, at \ past 9 a.m., Henry,
baptizd. 13 April 1785, at St. Thomas's. Sponsors, Died 1790, aged 5.
E. LYON, James RANICAR and Margt. ORSETT.
9. Charlotte Catherine, born 19 July 1786, at \ Charlotte Catherine,
before 2 mat., baptizd. 18 Aug. 1786, at St. Died the I4th of January
Thomas's. Sponsors, T. STATH AM, Charlotte LYON 1872.
& Catherine COTES.
When it pleased God to remove the affectionate It pleased God to take the
Mother on Tuesday, 21 Nov. 1786. revered Father to his rest
— Jan. 22 1831 — aged 86.
RAYMOND TINNE BERTHON.
No. 1 6 HUTTON.
The following particulars are from Registers and tombstones at Crosthwaite,
in Cumberland, and from an old Bible and correspondence.
Children of Thomas HUTTON, christened 15 March 1746/7, as son of George
HUTTON at Cartmel Priory Church, Lancashire.
The above-named Thomas HUTTON married Sarah DICKINSON 26 Nov. 1769,
at Crosthwaite. He died there 19 March 1831. She died 30 May 1819, in
her 69th year.
Children :
Elizabeth, born 28 March 1770; died at Nicolaief, Russia, widow of DE
HUMBERT, leaving issue.
Mary, born 6 Oftober 1772; died 20 October 1833; widow of Joseph SHELTON,
of Moresby, co. Cumberland.
Geoige, born 13 May 1775 ; died 20 January 1815. Left issue.
Sarah, born 24 March 1777; died 17 November 1808.
Hannah, born 6 September 1778; died 14 December 1855, a spinster.
Jane, born 23 August 1780; wife of John OGLETHORPE; died April 1836.
Ann, born 26 Oftober 1782; widow of John GUY; died 20 March 1851.
Bella and Peggy, twins, baptized 26 April 1784; died 1785 and 1786".
Sophia, born 16 May 1786.
Thomas, born 18 March 1788; married Elizabeth BEAN, of East Grinstead.
Descendants now living.
Dinah, born 7 June 1790; married EDMONDSON.
John, born 22 May 1792; died 8 February 1872, at Liverpool.
Eleanor, born 23 May 1795; married HUGHES.
" MISTLETOE."
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
345
PRESIDENT.
of Bon&on.
Officers of the Society.
VICE-PRESIDENT : The Marquis DE LIVERI ET DE VALDAUSA.
HON. TREASURER: Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
HON. SECRETARY : George SHERWOOD.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 1912-13.
Sir Thomas Herbert Cochrane Gerald FOTHERGILL.
TROUBRIDGE, Bart.
Charles Allan BERNAU.
William BRADBROOK,M.R.C.S.
James Reginald Morshead GLEN-
CROSS, M.A., LL.B.
George Frederick Tudor SHERWOOD.
Frederick Simon SNELL, M.A.
Charles William WALLACE, Ph.D.
Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
Joseph Cecil BULL.
Frank EVANS.
OFFICIAL ORGAN : The Pedigree Register. Quarterly, los. 6d. per annum.
REGISTERED OFFICE AND ROOMS: 227 Strand (by Temple Bar), London,W.C.
SIXTH QUARTERLY REPORT, December, 1912.
The Fellows, Members, and Corresponding Associates elected since the
1 4th August are as follows:
FELLOWS.
None elected.
Lewis George Nicholas KEMMIS, J.P.
Rev. William Doveton KEITH-STEELE.
Alfred Percival SMITH.
Rev. Ernest Salisbury Butler WHITFIELD.
1912, September u
Oftober 9:
November 13:
1912, September n
Oftober 9:
November 13:
MEMBERS.
Edmund Vivian GABRIEL, C.V.O., C.S.I., B.A., J.P.
George Jasper NICHOLLS, LL.B.
Lewis George Nicholas KEMMIS, J.P.
Mrs. Laura BENNETT.
Miss Armorel Romney BENNETT.
William M. MERVINE.
Rev. William Doveton KEITH-STEELE.
Alfred Percival SMITH.
Rev. Ernest Salisbury Butler WHITFIELD.
Rev. Edmond Rochfort YERBURGH.
Robert Armstrong YERBURGH, M.P.
ASSOCIATES.
None elected,
u u
346 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
CORRESPONDING ASSOCIATES.
1912, September n: None elected.
Odober 9: Herbert Frank ROE, R.N.
November 13: Rev. Lawrence John CHAMBERLEN.
COMMITTEES.
The Executive Committee met as usual in the Society's Rooms on the second
Wednesday in each month, at 2 p.m. Meetings of Fellows to elect new Fellows
are held on the same day, and at the same place, at 3.30 p.m. On the gth October
a resolution of profound regret was passed on the death of our Vice -President,
the late Lord LLANGATTOCK. Mr. PRICE, the Librarian-Secretary, having
resigned his post on I2th October, Miss WOODS was, on the 3ist October, tem-
porarily appointed to fill his place.
On 22nd September Miss BRADFIELD was engaged to assist the Parish Register
Committee. Racks have been fitted in the inner room to hold the drawer-
boxes of the Consolidated Index, providing enough space to accommodate
460 such boxes, each containing 2,500 slips, or 1,150,000 index-slips in all. We
now possess about half a million. Two hundred thousand blank slips were ordered.
All our available space is rapidly being filled, and an extension of the Society's
Rooms will soon be imperative. The number of Fellows, Members and Associates
is now 207.
GEORGE SHERWOOD (Hon. Secretary).
(1) Committee on the Library, Printed Volumes. — The Accessions List enume-
rates 442 items, nearly all received by gift. The thanks of the Society are due
to the donors. We especially invite gifts of printed Family Histories, lists and
abstracts of original documents, wills, etc., the publications of the Record Com-
missions and blue-books of a similar character. An incomplete set of 86 volumes
of the Gentleman's Magazine, 1731 to 1817, was bought.
(2) Committee on the Library, MS. Volumes. — The Revd. T. C. DALE has
presented: DALE WILLS; Abstracts from Wills in the Archdeaconry of Suffolk,
1478 to 1811; Consistory of Norwich, 1560 to 1811; Archdeaconry of Norfolk,
1625 to 181 1, MS. 49 pp. Small quarto. (Ace. No. 417.)
DURHAM CHANCERY SUITS, Notes from, 1618 to 1620; 1681 to 1682, etc.
MS. 49 pp. Small quarto. (Ace. No. 442.)
(3) Committee on the Library, Documents. — From the Revd. T. C. DALE we
have received: COBHAM FAMILY. References to entries on the De Banco
Rolls, A.D. 1391 to 1399. Quarto, pp. 26.
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES relating to the families of BRODRICK, DALE, LEWIN,
MALLCOTT, MASON, RICHARDSON and TIMBRELL.
The Society is glad to file any lists of documents, long or short, relating to
any family or place, provided it is clearly shown where such documents are to be
seen. Lists should each be confined to one particular surname or one particular
place. The collection of KENT deeds is being " enveloped " and arranged under
parishes. Mr. S. V. L. HARFORD has been elected a Member of this Committee.
E. F. KIRK (Hon. Secretary)
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 347
(4) Committee on the Consolidated Index. — Before mentioning briefly matters
connedled with this Committee, I would remind members of the forthcoming
Annual Report, which besides giving a summary of this year's work in connexion
with this Committee, includes references to important additional matter that
has accrued since my last report.
I am happy to be able to say that a member has kindly undertaken to write
on to slips the valuable list of subscribers to LEWIS'S Topographical Dictionary
of England, 1831, to which I referred as desirable in my last notes.
The first instalments of an index to the BEDFORDSHIRE Poll-Book of 1775
have also been received, and are specially worthy of mention, as the contributor
has gone to the trouble of putting the varied information of each entry on to
five separate slips (names, places, etc.). The index to the Marriage Licences,
Bishop of London's Registry (1751-1755) will probably be finished in the course
of a week or two. Mr. R. Burnet MORRIS, M.A., LL.B., and Mr. S. V. L. HAR-
FORD have been elected to serve on this committee.
F. S. SNELL (Hon. Secretary).
(5) Committee on the Library. Subject Index. — Members, Messrs. BEACH-
CROFT, BRIGGS and FOTHERGILL.
(6) Committee on Heraldry. — Members, Messrs. BRADBROOK, BRIGGS, EVANS,
PEACHEY, PIRIE-GORDON and WYNNE.
These Committees have held no meetings and still await organization by a
Member who will undertake the duties of Honorary Secretary.
(7) Committee j or Cataloguing Pedigrees. — Meetings were held on the i8th
June and zgth October. The Pedigree Analysis Forms sent out as mentioned
in last quarter's Report have met with a gratifying response. A copy of FOSTER'S
SIMS' Index was bought for the library. From Mrs. Stanton TAYLOR we re-
ceived a valuable set of newspaper articles from the North American, illustrated
with portraits from old miniatures, silhouettes, etc., concerning the families
of ATLEE, BROOKE, CLARKSON, Du BARRY, EYRE, KEIM, LEIPER, LONGSTRETH,
MC!LVAINE, MARSHALL, MEIGS, PEALE, POTTS, PRATT, RALSTON,ROBERTS, SMITH
(Daniel), SMITH (Samuel), SNOWDEN, TYSON, WALLACE, WELCH and WURTS.
Mr. A. Weight MATTHEWS presented: MATHEW, MATTHEWS, etc., of Staf-
fordshire and Warwickshire. Tables and notes. MS. z pt. ff . 20 and 20. F'cap
folded.
C. M. WYNNE (Hon. Secretary).
(8) Committee on Monumental Inscriptions. — We have received from Mr. R. H.
STEPHENSON:
LEICESTER (All Saints). Copies of 207 Monumental Inscriptions
in the churchyard, with index of surnames. Typewritten. Large
quarto, ff. 57. (Ace. 432.)
LEICESTER (St. Mary de Castro). Copies of 656 Monumental
Inscriptions in the churchyard, with indexes of surnames and places.
Typewritten. Large quarto, ff. 184. (Ace. 431.)
WANLIP, co. LEICESTER. Copies of 73 Monumental Inscrip-
tions in St. Nicholas' churchyard, with indexes of surnames and places.
Typewritten. Large quarto, ff. 19. (Ace. 433.)
The names of a large number of places, the inscriptions in which have been
copied or are printed, have been entered in the Society's " Index of Places.''
F. M. R. HOLWORTHY (Hon. Secretary).
348 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
(9) Committee on Parish Registers and, Marriage Licences. — Since the date of
the Fourth Quarterly Report twenty-two parishes have been fully or partially
incorporated with the Consolidated Index.
BUCKS. Westbury.
CUMBERLAND. Gosforth.
DEVON. Countisbury, Ipplepen, Kingskerswell, Uffculme, Wer-
rington.
LONDON. St. James', Duke's Place.
MIDDLESEX. Cowley, West Drayton, Greenford, Hanwell, Har-
lington, Hayes, Hampton, Heston, Ickenham, Northolt, Teddington and
Twickenham.
NORFOLK. Burlington (St. Andrew), Forncet St. Peter.
R. M. GLENCROSS (Hon. Secretary).
(10) Committee on School, College, Apprenticeship and Admission Registers
to Companies, Guilds, etc. — Members, Messrs. FOTHERGILL, GLENCROSS, Gui-
MARAENS and POWELL. No meetings have been held. This Committee still
wants an Honorary Secretary to undertake its organization.
(n) Committee on Fly-leaf Inscriptions in Family Bibles, etc. — Mr. A. J. C.
GUIMARAENS has been elefted to this Committee. We are indebted to Dr.
Eleanor HEISTAND-MOORE, of Philadelphia, for a copy of LEWIS entries, 1769
to 1791, written in a volume of RUSHWORTH'S Historical Collections, 1682.
J. LEONARD E. HOOPPELL (Hon. Secretary).
(12) Committee on Records of Migration and Change of Residence. — Members,
Messrs. BRIGGS and FOTHERGILL. No meetings have been held.
(13) Committee on Local Records. — Members, Messrs. GLENCROSS, HILL and
ROMANES. No meetings have been held.
(14) Committee on Family Associations. — Full details of the proceedings of
this Committee will appear in the Society's Annual Report, now in preparation.
CHAS. A. BERNAU (Hon. Secretary).
(15) Committee on Irish Records. — Members, The Hon. Mr. Justice MCCARTHY,
Captain R. E. FITZGERALD-LOMBARD and Mr. W. Roberts CROW. No notice
of meetings held has been received.
The Annual Subscriptions to the Society of Genealogists are as follows :
"Fellows," elected from among the Members by the whole body of
Fellows, Two guineas per annum. Life Composition, ten guineas.
"Members," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Life Composition, seven guineas.
"Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per
annum. Cannot make Life Composition.
"Corresponding Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, Haifa
guinea per annum. Cannot make Life Composition. Must reside at
least 25 miles from London.
Fellows are entitled to receive quarterly from the Society advice of any fresh
information having accrued respecting certain specified families and places in
which they may be personally interested, the number of which is limited at
present to ten.
As an association "not for profit" (in a pecuniary sense) the Society relies
for increase of membership upon the efforts of individual members to make its
purpose known. A form of application for membership is sent herewith.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 349
t £luerie0 anb
FAMILY CHARACTERISTICS (II. 129).— The Editor's note to my article
under the above title furnishes a debatable topic, and in one respect I stand
corrected, namely, in my lax use of the term " gentle origin." The Editor
very rightly remarks that no family is of gentle origin unless indeed Adam
were a gentleman. Well, Adam was not a gentleman. The term " gentle "
means " purely bred," and Adam, though of pure oiigin, was not bred, but
created !
But I was (arbitrarily, if you will) taking the Conquest as the rough " origin "
of birth distinctions in English families, and at that time, the fact that the then
representative of the family, CLAC of Lindsey, co. Lincoln, was a tenant-in-chief
of the Conqueror, would entitle him to a style equivalent, at least, to our present
term " gentleman."
Now, as to the " innkeeper " fable. This story owes its circulation entirely
to HEDGES' History of Wallingford, but HEDGES was too artistic for an historian,
and preferred to draw pretty comparisons between imaginary " innkeeper's
daughters " and the " writer of the Commentaries," to placing on record,
in a true and genealogical spirit, facts that, if less romantic, would be, at least,
less misleading to future generations.
The Editor, in face of Mr. HEDGES' story, felt, I suppose, justified in his
remarks, but, unfortunately, he was not in possession of the full facts of the
case, nor conscious of the woeful inaccuracy throughout this narrative of HEDGES.
The following instances of the latter are noteworthy. The historian of Walling-
ford states that Miss Elizabeth CLACK married Sir John HONEYWOOD, of Eving-
ton,in Kent, when in reality, she was the wife of William HoNEYWOOD,of Mailing
Abbey. Further, he says that another daughter of Mr. Thomas CLACK married
" some titled person, but whose name I cannot find," when the most elementary
research would have enabled him to state that she became the wife of Charles
PALMER, of Dorney Court, Bucks, son of Sir Charles PALMER, Baronet.
Again, Mr. HEDGES says that all Thomas CLACK'S children were baptized in
St. Peter's, Wallingford — " the eldest in 1721." As a matter of fact the eldest
child, Richard, was baptized on the 26th July, 1720. The historian goes on
to say that "the belles of the Bell were in number three only," whereas, if,
according to his own standard, a " belle " is a lady who marries in the " upper
class," there were four, for another sister married the Revd. Charles LOCK,
Rector of North Bovey, co. Devon.
HEDGES, in short, related the story as a piece of romantic tradition rather
than as the incontrovertible genealogical fact that the Editor appears to be-
lieve it.
350 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
My ancestor, Thomas CLACK, the father of the 2nd Viscountess COURTENAY,
of Mrs. PALMER, of Mrs. HONEYWOOD, and of Mrs. LOCK, is described in con-
temporary documents (among them, the grant of arms in 1768 to his eldest
son Richard CLACK, of Hereford Cathedral) as " gentleman." He certainly
did hold a lease of the " Bell Inn " in 1754, but it was sub-let, and in the occupa-
tion of an under-tenant while he lived at Shilton, co. Berks, in a house belonging
to his kinsman, Philip CLACK, of Shilton, a large landed proprietor there. Thomas
CLACK was Churchwarden of St. Peter's, Wallingford, during the years 1742-
1744 (probably by virtue of the property he leased in the parish), and he had all
his children baptized in the same church; but the faft that neither of the two
sons who died young were buried there seems to suggest that his family burial
place was elsewhere — probably at Shilton. He died intestate in 1761, and
administration of his goods was granted to his widow, Elizabeth CLACK, by the
Archdeaconry Court of Berks, on the 8th August, 1761.
His son, Thomas, matriculated at Brazenose College, Oxford (as the " son of
Thomas CLACK, of Wallingford, gentleman "), a year after his sister's marriage
to Lord COURTENAY — surely an impossible feat for an uneducated " inn-keeper's "
son?.
In no documents, either printed or in MS., are Lady COURTENAY, Mrs. PALMER
and Mrs. HONEYWOOD ever referred to familiarly as " Fanny," " Sally," and
" Betty " respectively. That is the Editor's imagination!
The runaway Scotch marriage, and the subsequent confirmation of it at
Powderham, no doubt held out irresistible possibilities for romance to Mr.
HEDGES, but it was by no means the illicit, patched-up connexion of an irre-
sponsible noble minor, with a sedudtive, and not too scrupulous village hoyden.
That is the impression that, it seems to me, both Mr. HEDGES and the Editor
have obtained.
May I, in conclusion, point out that the family did not owe any social " rise "
to the COURTENAYS? The CLACKS were an extremely well-placed (.if not ar-
migerous) family on the borders of Berkshire and Oxfordshire, two hundred
years before the COURTENAY alliance.
T. STANLEY CLACK, F.S.G.
MOTHERBY, HOTHAM, GREEN, BAYLEY.— Wanted, date of marriage
of George MOTHERBIE, of Hambleton, and Anne HOTHAM, of Welton, daughter
of Robert HOTHAM and Mary GREEN, of Hessle (?), Heanley (?), co. York. Dates
of birth, marriage and death of these and of William GREEN, Esq., of Hessle or
Heanley, and Mary, daughter of ... BAYLEY, Esq., of North Cave, are desired.
Who were the parents and ancestors of Robert HOTHAM, of Welton? I should be
thankful for any hints, and pleased to help in return.
HELENE MOTHERBY, F.S.G.
Konigsberg i/p,
Tragheimer Pulverst. 44,
Germany.
DEC. 1912] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
JENKINS : DAVIES : VAUGHAN.
From a draft deed of revocation and appointment, dated 13 February, 1807.
Mrs. Elizabeth DAVIES to Messrs. LOWDER and PHILLOTT.
William JENKINS, of Wei-:
beck Street, Cavendish
Square, Middlesex, Es-
quire, dead in 1791.
William DAVIES, of Combe = Elizabeth, of Combe Grove,
Grove, par. of Monkton co. Somerset. A widow in
Combe, co. Somt., Esq., 1807, seized of the manor
dead in 1808. and advowson of Priston, co.
Somerset.
Mary Caroline, of Edgar
Buildings, Walcot, Bath,
' spr. Will dated 28 Sept.
1785; pr. 8 Feb. 1791
(P.C.C.) Devised half the
manor of Priston to her
sister Elizabeth.
William VAUGHAN, Esq.,
Agent-Victualler of the
Navy of Gibraltar, nephew
of William DAVIES 1791.
George VAUGHAN, of Bath.
Lieutenant Royal Navy.
Dead in 1807. Another
nephew of William DAVIES.
DUFF. — In a MS. pedigree of the GORDONS, of Cairnfield, co. Banff, there
occurs the marriage of Jane GORDON (born 7 December 1761) with James
DUFF, Esq., wine-merchant, of " Madeira and London."
A note to this entry says that James DUFF was " brother to the English Consul
at Cadiz," and that two brothers of his were " Colonel DUFF, of Carnussie,
and General Patrick DUFF, a famous Indian sportsman, well-known as Tiger
DUFF."
Also it states that their mother was a Miss GORDON, of Letterfourie, co. Banff.
I should be glad to have any further note as to the ancestry of James DUFF.
His son, James Gordon DUFF, of Harley Street, London (died 1845, aged about
70), is said to have been born at Nairn, co. Banff, and to have been connected
with the Duke of FIFE'S family. He bore for arms on Seal and plate — Vert,
on a fesse dancettee erm. between a stags head cabossed in chief and two escallops
in base or a crescent (? sa.). Crest. A hand holding an escallop shell. Motto.
Virtute et opera.
Could anyone inform me what City Company (? Spe&aclemakers) he joined?
ARTHUR W. STOTE.
352 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [DEC. 1912
The Manor and Manorial Records, by Nathaniel J. HONE, with 57 illustrations.
Second edition. (METHUEN &f Co., London) 1912. 8vo. pp. 411. 7$. 6d.
A second large edition has been called for, as we fully expected, of this excellent
handbook on Manorial records. In our copy, to which we constantly refer, is
carefully kept a small parchment certificate, which runs as follows. It illustrates
the advantages of living on a manor of ancient demesne. One may learn, in
the present work, precisely what ancient demesne is.
MANOR OF "j These are to certify that
J is the Occupier of a Tenement called
Part of my aforesaid Manor which is ANCIENT DEMESNE,
by virtue of which he is free and exempted from all
Toll, Lastage, Stallage, Piccage, and Standage for all
Cattle, Goods, Wares, and Merchandise, as well in
Fairs as Markets, throughout England. Witness my
Hand this Day of
Lord of the said Manor.
SEARLE, Printer, Barnstaple.
The genealogical import of which is that if you happen to find an ancestor
with one of these documents, it serves as a certificate of residence and leads to
the Manor Court Rolls, from whence further genealogical data might be gleaned.
The value of Mr. HONE'S book is much enhanced by the Index of Plates, show-
ing where some hundreds of Manor Court Rolls are now to be found. It has
also a useful list of elliptical phrases often occurring in such rolls.
1679*800.*
[1796.] Elizabeth COLLET, elected June 6, 1796.
Elizabeth COLLET, Widow of the late Peter COLLET, Redtor
of Danton, Sussex.
Anna Fox, elected June 6, 1796.
Anna Fox, Widow of John Fox, Chaplain of Sheerness,
Kent.
1797. Elizabeth CLARK, died Feby. i, 1797.
Margarett YOUDE, elected March 26, 1798.
Margaret YOUDE, Widow of John YOUDE, Vicar of Higham,
Kent.
1798. Ann FAWKES, died Octr. 16, 1797.
Ann FORSTER, elected March 26, 1798.
Ann FORSTER, Widow of Samuel FORSTER, D.L.L., Rector
of Grinstead, Essex, and Registrar of the University of
Oxford.
Rebecca STONE, died May, 1798.
1800. Elizabeth SHAW, elected Ap. 25, 1800.
Elizabeth SHAW, Widow of John SHAW, Curate of Edin-
bridge, Kent, and in the Diocese of Rochester.
Mary HARDY, died May 5, 1800.
Elizabeth Augusta POTE, elected July 2, 1 800.
came to reside Sepr. 15, 1800.
Elizabeth Augusta POTE, Widow of Joseph POTE, late Rector
of Milton, Kent.
F. M. R. HOLWORTHY, F.S.G.
* Continued from page 337.
The Pedigree Register
MARCH, 1913] [VoL. II, No. 24.
Gravestone of Robert THOMPSON, grandfather of the poet, in Holy Trinity
Cemetery, Tunbridge Wells (sandstone cross):
ROBERT THOMPSON|Died January loth i853|R.I.P.
Gravestone of Mary Jane THOMPSON, grandmother of the poet, in St. Mary's
Cemetery, Kensal Green (stone cross, No. 7987):
Of|your charity prayjfor the repose of the soul of|Mary Jane Thompson,)
who died March 4th 1867, [aged 82 years, |on whose soul, Jesu, have
mercy.
Gravestone of Joseph MORTON, maternal grandfather of the poet, in Rusholme
Road Cemetery, Chorlton-on-Medlock (Yorkshire stone lying flat, 3 ft. by 6 ft.,
No. 1615):
JOSEPH MORTON Born 2nd March 1789 Died 27th December 1867
MARGARET ANN MASON Daughter of the above died Jany. 27th
1910 aged 85 years
ROBERT Son of JOSEPH and HARRIET MORTON of Manchester who
died on the 29th July 1821 aged 3 years
ELLEN their Daughter died Jany. 2ist 1822 aged 13 weeks
SARAH their Daughter died 3rd April 1823 aged 3 years and 3 months
EMMA their Daughter died Feby. 2nd 1827 aged 7 weeks
FANNY their Daughter wife of JOE TAYLOR FISHER died May 2nd
1849 aged 21 years
CHARLES HENRY their Son died July 28th 1851 aged 41 years
Gravestone of Harriet MORTON, maternal grandmother of the poet, in
Brompton Cemetery (upright stone, face crumbling) :
In Memory of|HARRIET, wife of JOSEPH MORTON | formerly of
Manchester | Born 3ist January 1789, died nth April 1 85 5.) Also | LUCY
EMMA, wife of ALFRED MORTON | Born i8th July 1834, died [— ] APril
1 864. | And I give unto them eternal life, and they|shall never perish,
neither shall any man pluck|them out of my hand.
Gravestone of Charles and Mary THOMPSON, parents of the poet, in Dukinfield
Cemetery (marble cross on a square base, with marble kerb):
Of your Charity pray for the Soul of MARY, wife of CHARLES THOMP-
SON, who departed this life Dec. i8th 1880 aged 58 years. Also the above
CHARLES THOMPSON who departed this life April gth 1896 aged 72
years. R.I.P.
Gravestone of Francis THOMPSON, the poet, in St. Mary's Cemetery, Kensal
Green (stone altar tomb, designed and sculptured by Eric GILL):
East end: FRANCIS|THOMPSON|i859-i9C>7|Look for me in the]
nurseries of Heaven.1 West end: Wreaths of laurel and thorns, and below:
Requiescat | in Pace
Memorial Tablet at Owens College, Manchester:
To the memory ofjFRANCIS THOMPSON, POET|i859-i9O7JStudent
of Owens College|i877-i884|Whatso looks lovelily|Is but the rainbow on
life's weeping rain. | Why have we longings of immortal pain, | And all we
long for mortal? Woe is me, | And all our chants but chaplet some decay,] As
mine this vanishing — nay, vanished day.2
1 From the verses " To my Godchild." * From the "Ode to the Setting Sun."
XX
354
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR.I9I3
John COSTALL, of Market Overton, Rutland, surgeon. ==.
of JVond
Caroline = Thomas
Charlotte. Lucretia.== William
John CosTALL,=j=Mary
Robert COSTALL
Anne. LAM-
Died un-
MAY,
of Market
Elizth.
Died aged 83,
Died BERT.
married.
of 13,
Overton,
HOP-
unmarried.
s.p.
Great
M.R.C.S.
KINSON.
Trinity
1816.
Lane,
London,
surgeon.
Edward COSTALL, of Mar-
ket Overton. Died No-
vember, 1907, aged 78,
unmarried.
Edward Healy THOMP-:
SON, Clerk in Holy Or-
ders. Curate of Calne
(1838), St. Marylebone,
Ramsgate, and St. James,
Westminster (1844).
Bapt. 14 June 1813, at
Oakham. Educated Oak-
ham School and Eman-
uel College, Cambridge
(M.A., 1840.) Died at
the Lodge, Cheltenham,
21 May 1891. Author of
theological and contro-
versial works. A convert
to the Church of Rome.
= Harriet Diana, fourth
and youngest daughter of
Nicolson CALVERT, of
Hunsden House, Herts.,
sometime M.P. for Hert-
ford, by Frances, younger
dau. and co-heir of Ed-
mund SEXTEN, 1st and last
Viscount PERY. Born 1 1
September 1 8 10. Married
30 July 1844, at St. Mary-
lebone, Died 21 August
1896, at Pery Lodge,
Cheltenham. A convert
to the Church of Rome.
Robert Costall THOMP-=^
SON. Baptised 27 August
1814, at Oakham. Went
to Australia.
I
I
Henry THOMPSON, Clerk:
in Holy Orders. Chaplain
to the Earl of WESTMOR-
LAND and curate of Upton
Scudamore (1845), Lang-
ton Maltravers (1847),
Sturminster Marshall
(1848), Little Chart
(1850), Kirk Hammerton
(1861), Greatham, Hants.
(1864), and Long Cross,
Surrey (1865). Bapt. 7
April 1816 at Oakham.
Educated at Magdalen
Hall, Oxon. (B.A. 1840).
Ordained priest 1844.
Died 3 April 1900 at Wes-
ton-super-Mare. Buried
in Highgate Cemetery,
Middlesex. He published
a sermon entitled The
New Birth by Water and
the Spirit, 1850.
Charlotte Anne Hech-:
stetter Yea, Born 21 Feb-
ruary 1845, at Upton
Scudamore, Wilts. Mar-
ried 20 July 1869, at
St. Gabriel's, Warwick
Square, London. Died
25 March 1910, at .33
Elm Park Gardens, Lon-
don. Buried in Brompton
Cemetery.
Ralph Abercrombie CA-
MERON, elder son of Revd.
Alexander CAMERON, by
Charlotte, dau. of the
Very Revd. the Honble.
Edward RICE, D.D.,
Dean of Gloucester.
Jane Julia Eleanor Tre-
velyan. Born 27 April
1847, at Langton Mal-
travers, Dorset.
Julia Eliza, youngest
of Sir Wm. Wtr. YEA, 21
Bt., of Pyrland Ha
Somt. Marr. 23 Apl. 184
at West Knighton,Doi
Died 28 Oct., 1885, i
London, aged 70. Buried f
in Highgate Cemetery.
MAR. 1 9 13] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
355
.obert THOMPSON, H.M.:
urveyor of Taxes at
lakham ; late at Bath (3,
riory Place, Lyncombe);
id at Salisbury (Exeter
treet). Later of Culver-
enColonnade,Tunbridge
fells. Borne 1789. Died
5 January 1853, age<^
(.. Buried in Holy Tri-
ity Cemetery ,Tunbridge
fells. A convert to the
hurch of Rome.
:Mary Jane. Born about
1785. Marr. at Oakham
psh. ch. by lie. 5 Aug.
1812. After her husband's
death of 6, Grove Road,
St. John's Wood, and lat-
terly of 327, City Road,
London. Died there 4
March, 1867, aged 82.
Buried in St. Mary's
Cemetery, Kensal Green.
A convert to the Church
of Rome.
Joseph MORTON. Clerk in
the bank of Messrs.
JONES, LLOYD and Co.,
Hulme, later actuary and
secretary to the Manches-
ter Assurance Co., Born
2 March 1789. Died at
the house of his son-in-
law, Charles THOMPSON,
226, Stamford Street,
Ashton-under-Lyne, 27
Deer., 1867. Buried in
Rusholme Road Ceme-
tery, Manchester.
; Harriet SICLEY. Born 31
Jan. 1789. Died at 10,
Limerstone Street, Chel-
sea, n April 1855. Buried
in Brompton Cemetery.
(See page 356.)
.mes THOMPSON. Bapt.:
: Apl. 1818, at Oakham,
utland. Went to S. Africa
id joined a police force,
lid to have been killed
the performance of his
ity.
!ary Jane. Bapt. 19 Jan.
20, at Oakham.
John Costall THOMPSON,:
Clerk in Bank of Eng-
land. Bapt. 22 Aug. 1822
at Oakham. Died 23 Mch.
1889 at Margate, Kent.
Author of A Vision of
Liberty and other Poems,
privately printed 1848. A
convert to the Church of
Rome.
Mary Ann WEIR, of Swan-
sea, Glam. Born about
1824. Died 1872, at Ver-
non Road, Homerton,
Middx. Buried in the
City of London Ceme-
tery, Ilford. (ist wife.)
Jane Belinda, dau. of John
HUMPHREY. Marr. 5 June
1876 at St. Mary and St.
Dominic, Homerton. Died
15 Dec. 1904 at 79, Fin-
borough Road, Fulh.im.
Buried in St. Mary's Ce-
metery, Kensal Green. A
convert to the Church of
Rome. (2nd wife.)
stin
OMPSON.
nt to
Stanislaus =f Agatha.
MARTIN,
of Lon-
don. Died
1 5 Dec.
1895.
Born
4th Oct.
1853.
Charles=Mary
THOMP- Anne
SON, of Elizabeth
Leyton, BOSHELL.
Essex.
Living
Beatrice. Died
at the Ursuline
Convent, Mon-
taigu, Belgium,
aged 15 years.
Agnes = Arthur PAUL.
356
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
a I a
Mary Turner, dau. of Joseph =|= Charles THOMPSON, medical = Anne, dau. of George RICHARD-
MORTON (see page 355). Born
6 Deer. 1822, at 25, Brasenose
Street, Manchester. Married
24 Sept. 1857 at St. John the
Evangelist, Salford. Died 19
Dec. 1880, at 226, Stamford St.,
Ashton-under-Lyne. Buried in
Dukinfield Cemetery. A con-
vert to the Church of Rome,
(ist wife.)
practitioner at Bristol; Man-
chester (House Surgeon at the
Homoeopathic Dispensary) ;
Preston (12, St. Ignatius Square;
7, Winckley Street; 33A, Winck-
ley Square; 5, Latham Street)
and Ashton-under-Lyne. Bapt.
I June 1824, at Oakham. Edu-
cated at Oakham School and
King's College Hospital, London
(M.R.C.S., L.S.A., 1847). Died
9 April 1896, at 226, Stamford
Street, Ashton-under-Lyne.
Buried in Dukinfield Cemetery.
A convert to the Church of
Rome.
of Alma Park, Levens-
hulme, solicitor. Married 27
April 1887, at St Mary's, Le-
venshulme. Living 1913. (2nd
wife.)
Norbert Charles Joseph THOMPSON.
Born 15 June 1890. Educated at
St. Bede's College, Manchester, and
the Xaverian College, Bruges.
Charles Joseph THOMPSON.
Died in infancy.
Francis Joseph THOMPSON. Poet
and Author. Born 18 Dec.
1859, at 7? Winckley Street,
Preston. Educated at Ushaw
College and Owens College,
Manchester. Died 13 Nov.
1907, in the hospital of St.
John and St. Elizabeth, St.
John's Wood, Middlesex. Buried
in St. Mary's Cemetery, Kensal
Green.
Mary. A Nun of the Presenta.
tion. (Sister Mary Austin Jo
seph of the Sacred Heart). Bon
27 June 1861, at 33A Wincklej
Square, Preston. .
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
357
Anne Healy. A Sister of Mercy
(Sister Mary Ignatius). Bapt.
15 September 1825, at Oakham.
Died 9 April 1888. Buried
in Arnos Vale Cemetery, Bris-
tol. A convert to the Church
of Rome.
Charlotte. A Nun of the Good
Shepherd (Sister Jane Frances
de Chantal). Bapt. 5 Aug.
1827, at Oakham. Died 1st
March 1856. Buried in the
Convent Cemetery, Fulham
Palace Road, Hammersmith. A
convert to the Church of Rome.
ielen Mary. Born 23 October,
862, at 33A Winckley Square,
reston. Died 15 January 1864,
t 5 Latham Street, Preston.
Richard Henry RICHARDSON,^ Margaret Mary. BornigAug
of Manitoba, Canada (son of
George RICHARDSON as above).
1864. Marr. 26 Feb. 1892, at St.
Mary's, Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Living 1913.
Dorothy Mary. Born
6 Mch. 1893.
Winefride Mary. Born
31 Dec. 1895.
Francis Xavier RICHARDSON.
Born 10 Jan. 1899.
Henry RICHARDSON.
Born Sept. 1901.
358 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
of
In the index to wills in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, the following
names are bracketed as being synonymous: STOKER, STOKKER, STOCKER,
STARCKER.
The family appears to have been at Eaton Socon, Bedfordshire, and its
immediate neighbourhood, at an early date. In Domesday Book (1086) one reads
that a STARCKER lived at Lestone (Leightone or Eaton), Beds., as a theyn of
King Edward the Confessor, owning seven hides of the King's land there. In
the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries a circle of fifteen miles diameter, with
Eaton as the centre, would probably have enclosed more STOCKER families than
were in the whole of England besides.
It is necessary to remember that the villages of Eaton, Barford (Bereford)
and Wybiston (Wyboldstone) are all contiguous, that STOCKERS are found in all
these in early times and later extended to Godmanchester, St. Ives, Willingham
and other villages close to Eaton, but in Huntingdonshire.
In 1272, Margaret STOCKER is found as a tenant of the Abbye of Oseneye in
the town of Langport in the hundred of Stodfold, county of Bucks.
In 1273, in the catalogue of the Court of Hustings (London) Wills, is men-
tioned Eleanor la STOCKER de Lillingstone, Bucks.
In the Patent Roll of 1312 Richard de STOCKER is mentioned in a case at
Buckingham. In the Patent Roll of 1327-30 Stodfold is said to be in the county
of Beds. Lillingstone or Lidlington is less than twenty miles from Leighton,
Beds., where the earliest STOCKERS are spoken of as living.
In the Patent Roll of 1336 Roger le STOCKER is mentioned at Buckingham. In
that of 1340 John STOKKER of Caysoe (Keysoe), Beds., is spoken of. In that of
1384 William STOKKERE of Bedford is mentioned. In that of 1384 William
STOKKERE of Eaton, Beds., is mentioned. William is mentioned several times
about this date, and he was probably the father or brother of William who is
recorded in BLOMEFIELD'S History of Norfolk as having been appointed to the
living of Forncet in 1391 by the Countess of Norfolk. His will was proved in
the Prerogative Court in 1408.
An Inquisition at Bereford in 1428 was signed by William STOCKER (see
Feudal Aids').
In the Visitation of Bedfordshire, 1634, Thomas STOCKER of Wybiston, 1433,
is mentioned, as he is also in the Patent Roll of 1434, where he is said to be at
Bedford.
In early Chancery Proceedings, 1436-1437, Robert STOCKER, a woolman, is
mentioned, together with Harry STOCKER of Wybiston, Beds. Robert and
Harry both belonged to the Drapers' Company. In the 1439 Patent Roll John
STOCKER, draper (i.e. member of the Drapers' Company), is mentioned; the
same year Robert STOCKER of Wyboldstone is mentioned, and also William
STOCKER. Two STOCKERS were Masters of the Drapers' Company.
A John STOCKER was Alderman of London in 1458-1464, and in early Chancery
Proceedings, 1460, John and William STOCKER, merchants of London, are
mentioned.
It is recorded in the Patent Roll of 1450 that John STOCKER of London was
appointed to arrest two ships for the King's Ambassadors to Prussia, one in the
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 359
Port of London and the other in the port of Kingston-upon-Hull. In the same
year John and Henry STOCKER are appointed to go on an embassy to Prussia.
This embassy is mentioned in PALGRAVE'S Antient Kalendars and Inventories, and
also in RYMER'S Foedera, II., 681.
John STOCKER, Master of the Drapers' Company, 1480, was evidently a
merchant exporting beyond the sea, asking assistance from the Crown to protect
five ships off the Isle of Wight, and that nine ships of Holland and Zealand lying
in wait may be arrested. He traded to Morocco, lent money to the King, and
in return was granted licence to retain the customs and subsidies in wools,
woolfells and other merchandise for the satisfaction of the loan. He was eledted
alderman for Langbourne Ward, London, and represented the City in Parlia-
ment.
In 1471 William STOCKER was knighted by Edward IV. He was sheriff of
London in 1473 and Master of the Drapers' Company, 1475-1479. STOW says:
" He was sonne to Thos. STOCKER of Eaton in Com. Bedf." John and William
were brothers, and were probably in partnership in business. Sir William
founded the chantry of St. Mary and St. Thomas in 1476, was Lord Mayor in
1485, and died the same year. He was one of two Mayors who died from the
sweating sickness. His will exists.
In the Visitation of Bedfordshire 1634 (Harl. Soc. XIX. 143)' is a short
pedigree from which the following is taken :
Henry STOCKER, =
of Wyboston in I
com. Bedf.
Thomas STOCKER =
John STOCKER of Wy boston =
in com. Bedf. Cosen to the
Alderman STOCKER of Lon-
don. A» 4 H. VII. [1489]
Sir William STOCKER, to whom I have just referred, was a brother of John,
whose will (P.C.C. LOGGE 15) exists, dated 1485; but Sir William is said by
STOW in his Survey of London to have been " sonne to Thomas STOCKER of Eaton
in the County of Bedford."
On the other hand, in the Visitation pedigree John STOCKER of Wyboston is
also said to be the son of Thomas. Consequently the Visitation pedigree can be
enlarged as follows:
Henry STOCKER^:
Thomas STOCKER ==
John STOCKER Sir William STOCKER
360 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR.i9i3
The will of John STOCKER, 1485, mentions his wife Elizabeth and brother Sir
William, but no children.
The will of Sir William STOKKER, 1485 (P.C.C. LOGGE 26) mentions " my
mother Dame Margaret CROKE " (mother-in-law, evidently), " my own
mother," " daughter Margaret," " wife Margaret," " John STOCKER of Wyboston
and Johan and Margaret children of my brother Robert." So that the Visitation
pedigree when extended reads:
Henry STOCKER =
Thomas STOCKER ==
John STOCKER =p Sir William == Margaret Robert ==
STOCKER. I CROKE. STOCKER
John STOCKER Margaret Johan Margaret
STOCKER
This can be still further enlarged, as the following extract from early Chancery
Proceedings 1515-1529, Bundle 580, No. 18, proves: "John son and heir of
John STOCKER v. Roger BASTARD late the husband of Margaret, formerly married
to Richard JAY, sergeant-at-law, and to William STOKKER, Kt. Detention of
bonds relating to messuages in St. Michael's, Cornhill, and St. Christopher's,
London."
At present nothing more is known of John, the son of John and nephew of Sir
William, whether he was married or when he died, but it is evident he lived to
grow up, for in the trial to recover from Roger BASTARD the action was not
brought by a minor. He was probably born at Wyboston, the home of his
father, where his family had been since Domesday, and that it continued to do
so for still much longer is certain, for in the wills at Lincoln, Book 1585, is a will
of John STOCKER of Wyboston, 1583, who desired to be buried at Eaton, and
leaves money to the vicar of that parish for the poor.
He mentions his wife Margaret, son John, sons Richard, Henry and Henry's
son Thomas, daughters Cicely, Margaret, Blanche, Jane and her husband
GOODWYNE.
This John STOCKER'S will was a most important one as regards the pedigree,
for it definitely links the Bedfordshire STOCKERS with those of Huntingdonshire;
proving indeed that the family through John STOCKER'S family moved almost
entirely from the one county to the other.
John speaks of his daughter Jane and her husband GOODWYNE. Now in a
will of Richard ROBYNS (1558) of Godmanchester, John GOODWYNE is mentioned,
and also the daughters of Henry STOKER.
John STOCKER'S son Henry (then living at St. Ives, close to Godmanchester)
married Agnes, daughter of Richard ROBYNS, the founder of the Godmanchester
Grammar School (see Fox's History of Godmanchester), and had two sons; the
first, Henry, married Jane WILSON of Godmanchester in 1588 and died 1591 ; the
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 361
second, Thomas, who is mentioned in the will of John STOCKER (as well as his
father Henry) of Wyboston, thus doubly proving the connexion between the
Hunts and Beds families.
The above Thomas lived at Godmanchester and married Joan, or Jane,
STEVENSON, as is proved by the wills of William STEVENSON the elder (Archd.
Hunts., 1597) and of John STEVENSON the elder of Gcdmanchester, 1606 (P.C.C.
STAFFORD, 56).
Thomas died at Godmanchester in 1613. His will is amongst the Hunts
wills. He mentions his sons John, Richard and Henry, daughters Agnes, Mary
and Elizabeth. His wife predeceased him in 1607.
Thomas was a tanner, and had served with " Qualivir " and sword at the
Spanish Armada, as recorded amongst " The names of the soldiers and the
weapons yt they are appoynted to serve withall, taken and delivered into the
charge of Mr. Oliver CROMWELL esquire out of the hundred of Tosland at St.
Neots, the 3 of June 1588." (Huntingdonshire and the Armada, by Revd. W.
M. NOBLE.)
John, the son of the above-named Thomas, married, first, at Godmanchester
in 1604, Susan BRAZIER, who died in 1633, and secondly Sarah , who died
1659. John himself died in 1662 at Godmanchester. By his first wife he had
two children, born at Godmanchester: John, baptized in 1613; Ann, in 1617.
This last John was bailiff of Godmanchester in 1664, 1669 and 1675, and is men-
tioned as a frank pledge there in 1657; after his death the post of bailiff was held
more than thirty times by some member of the family.
Thomas's daughter Agnes married William WATSON at Godmanchester in
1619. His son William was baptized there in 1605 and died there in 1666.
The register of birth of Thomas's son Richard is wanting. He is spoken of as
Richard of Sutton (in the Isle of Ely, on the same River Ouse as St. Ives and
Godmanchester, and close to both), and is mentioned in the will of Thomas.
He married at Sutton in 1615 Elizabeth CASTELL, lived at Godmanchester for
some time, and his children were born there; the first, Robert, was baptized at
Godmanchester in 1616 and died there in 1627. The second, Thomas, was
baptized at Godmanchester in 1619. The last-named, Thomas, married first,
Elizabeth , who died in 1649, and had children; John, baptized at St.
Ives, 1644, died 1645; and Elizabeth, baptized 1648, died 1649; both at St.
Ives. Thomas married secondly Elizabeth , and had Ann, baptized 1651,
Eliza, baptized 1652, Mary, baptized 1655, Sarah, baptized 1657, and Thomas,
baptized 1659, a^ at ^t- ^ves< ^is Thomas (grandson of Richard) was bailiff
of Godmanchester 1701 and 1710, and died when coroner.
Richard's third son was Richard, baptized at Godmanchester in 1629. He
married at St. Ives in 1654, Sarah BOND, and his will was proved at Huntingdon
in 1667. He had three daughters and one son (all at St. Ives), Elizabeth, bap-
tized 1656, Elizabeth, baptized 1658, Ann, baptized 1661, and Richard, baptized
1663.
Richard, son of Richard STOCKER and Sarah BOND, baptized at St. Ives in
1663, married there in 1684, Mary FILTON, and died there in 1725. His children
were: Richard, baptized at St. Ives, 1686; died there 1686; Richard, baptized
at St. Ives, 1688, of whom hereafter; Thomas, baptized at St. Ives, 1689, died
there 1694.
YY
362 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
Richard (the second son of Richard STOCKER and Mary FILTON), baptized
1688, married at St. Ives, in 1718, Elizabeth DEAN; died 1742. He had three
children: Thomas, baptized at St. Ives, 1721, buried there 1723; Richard,
baptized at St. Ives, 1723; Thomas, baptized at St. Ives, 1735, married there in
1760, Susan PAULSON; died there 1780.
Thomas, the last-named, son of Richard STOCKER, had the following children,
all born at St. Ives: Luff, baptized 1761, died 1845; Annie, baptized 1763, died
1763; Jane, baptized 1765; Susan, baptized 1768; George, baptized 1770, of
whom hereafter; Thomas, baptized 1771; Martha, baptized 1773; Elizabeth,
baptized 1775; Anne, baptized 1778.
George STOCKER, the fifth child of Thomas and Susan, baptized at St. Ives in
1770, married in 1800 Amy WETENHALL at the Round Church, Cambridge;
lived the greater part of his life at Godmanchester and died at Bedford in 1839.
He was a maltster and had eleven children, all born at Godmanchester, as follows :
Emma, born 1801; Eliza, born 1802, married Mr. ELLESMERE; George, born
1804, married Miss CARPENTER; Luff, born 1805, married Miss PERRIN; Jane,
born 1807, married Mr. PEAT; Martha, born 1809, married Mr. GIDDINGS;
Edward, born 1811, married Miss CHURCH; Sarah, born 1812, married Mr.
HENSMAN; Thomas, born 1813, married (i) Miss HUMBLYX (2) Miss BEALE;
James, born 1815, of whom hereafter; Catherine, born 1817.
James STOCKER, the tenth child of George STOCKER and Amy WETENHALL, was
born at Godmanchester in 1815. He married in 1843, at Hail Weston, Mary
Roberts BANKS, and died at Stratford in 1887, having had the following seven
children:
Arthur, born at Bedford; Elizabeth, born at Bedford, died at Stratford in
1892; Emily, married Rev. S. SMITH, M.A. (Cantab.), rector of Westhall, Suffolk;
Charles Joseph Stocker, of whom hereafter; Fanny, married Richard CAREY,
M.A. (Cantab.), and had three children, Richard, Violet and Frances; Annie,
married Rev. Walter WRIGHT, M.A. (Cantab.), rector of New Catton, Norwich,
and had three children, Eric, James and Vera; Alice Maud May, living in 1913,
unmarried.
Charles Joseph Stocker STOCKER, the fourth child of James STOCKER, married at
Hampstead, in 1878, Emma, daughter of Simon PHILLIPS, and had two children,
Mary Harriet and Charles James.
It will be noted that in many of the later entries in the pedigree, for instance,
Richard, born 1723; John, 1613; William, 1605; and others, the names of
their wives and families have not been given; this is simply because it would
enormously enlarge the pedigree. As I have the whole of the registers for
Godmanchester, St. Ives, Willingham, etc., I could easily give the information
if required, but I only wish here to trace my own descent. The tabular form
follows.
C. J. S.
(To be continued,!)
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 363
This pedigree has been compiled from Quaker records, wills, &c.,
at Chichester and in the Principal Registry, and private information.
No clue to the parentage of Thomas HORNE (d. 1718) has been
found. The name does not occur in the Arundel parish register,
nor to any extent in the will calendars at Chichester prior to 1700.
He is first traced at Arundel in 1673 as witness to a Quaker marriage
in that year. His signature on a deed referring to Arundel property
of date 1705 is in the possession of Mr. Perceval LUCAS. Earthenware
plates marked with the initials T. S. H. are also extant.
Coming to the second generation of the family, an autograph letter
of Robert HORNE (1692-1756) written 12 February 1718/9, is
among the Sloane MSS. in the British Museum (4065, 289). It is
addressed to James PETIVER, F.R.S., the naturalist, offering to send,
if thought of sufficient interest, a curious animal found near Arundel.
Probably this Robert HORNE, and certainly his son and grandson, used
Swanbourne Mill at Arundel, the last mentioned being killed by the
accidental starting of the water wheel in 1813. The mill was pulled
down in the early 'forties, but lives in a picture by CONSTABLE (en-
graved by David LUCAS) now in the possession of Lady WERNHER.
Quakerism at Arundel died out about 1820, and the burial ground in
Tarrant Street is now a private garden. . The only gravestone is that
of the above-named Robert HORNE, 1813.
The descendants of Edward HORNE, the emigrant (1688-? 1735),
through his second son, William, are recorded at length in the
Genealogy of the Sharpless Family, by Gilbert COPE, Philadelphia, 1887.
Benjamin HORNE of London, coalfactor (1698-1766), died, ac-
cording to The Gentleman's Magazine, " said to be worth £70,000."
His line is remarkable for the long and unbroken connexion of seven
consecutive generations with the coal trade (and, incidentally, with
historic Bankside), and also for an allegiance of nearly equal duration
to the Clothworkers' Company; the family from Thomas HORNE
(1726-1802) onwards always having been represented on the Livery.
The commercial history of this branch has been dealt with by Mr.
Sidney Neale HORNE in The Coal Merchant and Shipper, 5 October
1912, in an article entitled " A Notable London Coal Trade Family,"
based on a collection of partnership deeds and other documents in the
compiler's possession.
Though a large proportion of the descendants of Robert HORNE
(1692-1756) remain in membership with the Society of Friends, the
connexion of the line of Benjamin HORNE (1698-1766) with Quaker-
ism ceased entirely during the nineteenth century.
Sidney Neale HORNE.
Perceval LUCAS.
364
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 191 3
del, Sussex, glover, a 1st Feb. 1733/4. WiU> as
Quaker. Died 27 April of Arundel, shopkeeper,
i7i8.Willda. 21 July 1713 da. 7 Mch. 1731, pr. 30
pr. 12 June 1719 at Chi- Oct. 1734, at Chichester.
Chester.
Ill 1
Sarah. Born 10 Nov. Edw
1 68 1. Died 26 Nov. 1748, chesi
Bur. in Friends' Burial 1724
Ground, Arundel. mere
. . rfififl
ard HORNE, of Chi-:
:er, grocer; later,
, of Philadelphia,
:hant. Born 30 July
. Died about 1735.
1
= Elizabeth, Robert =
dau. of HORNE,
Wm. of Arun-
SCRASE, of del, mil-
Torting- ler. Born
ton. Marr. 6 Feb.
27 Jan. 1692.
1712, at Admon.
Friends' 26 May
Meeting 1756,
House, P.C.C.
Arundel. .
=Mary, dau. of Johi
GROVE, of Brighthelm
stone. Marr. 5 Mch 111
1726/7, at the house ol
John SNASHALL, Hurstlr
pierpoint. Died 6 Septl]
1772, in London, aged 7311'
Buried in Friends' Burial
Ground, Long Lane,
Bermondsey, Surrey.
,
John HORNE. Born 24
Aug. 1684. Died 2 Sept. Mar
1704. 1690
y. Born 25 Sept.,
. Died in infancy.
Thomas HORNE. Born
20 Aug. 1686. Died II
Mch. 1708/9.
William HORNE. Born 7 June=
1714. Died ii Nov. 1772. Of
Darby, Penna., U.S.A. A
minister for 25 years in Society
of Friends.
= Elizabeth, dau. Sarah. John HORNE, of=
of John DAVIS. Born Arundel, miller.
Married 1737. 14 Born 2 Mch.
Sept., 1730/1. Died
1718. 18 Apl. 1788.
Buried in
= Sarah, dau. of Joseph
RICKMAN, of Chilshan
Farm, Hurstmonceui.
Marr. 14 Dec. 1768, a
F.M.Ho., Lewes, Sussei
Died 31 Dec. 1817, age<
77. Buried in F.B.Gr.
Arundel.
LF.B.Ground,
William =Phebe, dau. of Thomas Edward Arundel.
HORNE. HORNE. S WAYNE. Born 1750. Of East HORNE.
Marlboro', Chester, Penna.
Had 9 children. Died 1829.
Robert HoRNE,of Mai- ^Elizabeth, dau. of Elizabeth, Born=John Sarah. Born=John RICK
travers Street, Arun- Caleb RICKMAN, of I Jan. 1775. GLAISYER, 5 April 1766, at MAN, of
del, miller. Born 27 Hookland Park Marr. 2 Sept. of Ship Arundel. Marr. Lewes,brew
Oct. 1769. Lessee of Farm, Shipley. 1799, at Street, 8 Feb. 1797, at er, after o
Swanbourn Mill. Marr.iS Aprili792, F.M.Ho., Arun- Brighton, F.M.Ho., Wellinghair
Killed by an accident at F.M.Ho., Hor- del. Died 16 druggist. Arundel. House,Ring
in the mill I Jan. 1813. sham. Died 21 Oct. April 1871. Died 3 Died 27 Feb. mer, Lewes
Buried F.B.Gr., Arun- 1833, at Poole, aged Burd.inF.B.Gr., Oct. 1844, 1856, at Lewes. Died 16 Ma;
del. 68. Buried there. Brighton. aged 68. i8S9,aged85
I
Grover KEMP, druggist, = Susannah. Born 2 Feb.
of Brighton. Died 21 1793. Marr. 13 June 1 8 16,
Dec. 1869, aged 77. Bur-
ied Black Rock F.B.G.,
I
Brighton.
at F.M.Ho., Chichester.
Died 27 Mch. 1882. Bur-
ied in F.B.Gr., Black
Rock, Brighton.
George PENNEY, ship-= Sarah. Born 10 Dec
owner, of Poole. Died 3 1794. Marr. 11 Sept
Feb. 1853, aged73. Buried
in F.B.Gr., Poole. J. P.,
and Mayor of Poole.
1817, at F.M.I
Chichester. Died I
Jan. 1857. Burd
F.B.Ground, Poole.
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
365
II
I
I
Margaret. = William MATTHEWS, of
Benjamin HORNE. = Mary, dau. of
Mary. Born 8 Mch.
orn 2 Dec.
Houndsditch, London,
Of St. Katherine
Simeon WARNER,
1701/2. Died 1765, s.p.
1694. Died
citizen and currier.
by the Tower,
of St.MaryMag-
Marr. istly 15 Aug. 1735,
yMch.
Marr. 28 Feb. 1720, at
later of Bermond-
dalen, Bermond-
at Friends' Meeting
722/3.
Devonshire House,
sey, coal-factor,
sey. Died 1 8
House, Arundel, John
urd. in
Friends' Meeting
and of Tottenham
July 1782, aged
DOWNER of Cuckfield,
Viends'
House, London. Died
High Cross. Born
75. Buried in
miller. 2ndly. n Sept.
urial
27 May 1727, aged 41.
8 Sept. 1698 at
Friends' Burial
1748, at Friends' Meeting
Sround,
Buried in Friends'
Arundel. Died
Ground, Long
House, Arundel, John
Vhitechapel
Burial Ground, White-
25 May 1766.
Lane, Bermond-
GORHAM, of NorthMund-
Mount.
chapel Mount,
Buried at Friends'
sey.
ham, miller, who married
Burial Ground,
again, and died 21 Dec.
msannah.
Long Lane, Ber-
1778, aged 70. Buried in
orn 1 8 Nov.
mondsey.
Friends' Burial Ground,
1696.
Arundel.
(See p. 366.)
ohn KEMP, of Grange= Elizabeth. Born 24
/alk,Bermondsey, and Apl. 1732, at Arundel.
12, Coal Exchange, Marr. 6 July 1764, at
:oal factor. Died 10 F.M.Ho., Arundel.
Aug. 1785, aged 55. Died 24 July 1817, at
urd. in F.B.Gr., Southwark, Surrey,
jong Lane, Bermond- Burd. in F.B.Gr.,
icy. Long Lane.
Susannah.
Born 23
Jan.
i733/4>a*
Arundel.
Died 3
May
1743-
Thomas HORNE, of
Peckham, Surrey, coal-
factor. In business at
12, Coal Exchange, in
1790, with brother-in-
law, " HORNE and
KEMP." Died 15 Dec.
1793, at Birmingham.
:i. Sarah, dau. of
Robert BURTON,
of Mancester,
Warwick; marr. 28
March 1786. 2.
Mary COOPER of
Rotherhithe, Sur-
rey, widow.
jhn
ohn HORNE, of Basing- =;= Elizabeth, dau. of Wm.
toke, grocer, after of
look Street, Newnham,
lants, farmer. Born 12
reb. 1779. Died I Sept.
834. Buried in F.B.Gr.,
Jasingstoke.
HACK, of Basingstoke.
Died 13 Sept. 1859,
aged 80. Buried in
F.B.Gr., Black Rock,
Brighton.
(&/p.368.)
Samuel LAMLEY, of=Mary. Born 1 8 May 1796.
Southampton, drug- Married 27 Oct. 1825, at
Ijist, late of Maiden- F.M.Ho., Chichester.
lead. Died 27 Feb. Died 4 April 1864, at
869, aged 78. Maidenhead.
Thomas HORNE, of Hook
Benjamin =Anne
House, Newnham, Hants,
HoRNE,of Arun-
TUR-
farmer. Born 26 Oct.
del, baker. Born
NER.
1780. Died 12 Nov. 1832,
6 June 1783.
at Brighton. Buried in
Died 1 8 Nov.
F.B.Gr., Ship Street,
1818. Buried in
Brighton.
F.B.Gr.,
Arundel.
John HORNE. Born 17=
= Mary Elizabeth, dau. of
July 1818. Died 28 Dec.
1903. Buried in F.B.Gr.,
Black Rock, Brighton.
LYNN. Died 8 May
1895, at Brighton, aged
66. Bur. F.B.Ground,
Black Rock.
366
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
Benjamin HORNE (see p. 365).= Mary WARNER.
Thomas HORNE, of St.:
Saviour's, Southwark, cit-
izen and clothworker, and
coal factor, and of White
Hart Lane, Tottenham.
Born 2 March 1725/6, at
Burr Street, St. Bot. Aid-
gate. Died 1 8 March
1802. Buried in F.B.Gr.,
Long Lane, Bermondsey.
;Mary, dau. of James
HILL, of St. Saviour's,
Southwark. Marr. 1 3
March 1753, at F.M.Ho.,
Hammersmith. Died 21
Jan. 1798, aged 64. Buried
F.B.Gr., Long Lane, Ber-
mondsey.
Simeon HORNE, of Totten- = Jane, dau. of Thos. STEELE.
ham. Born 8 Oct. 1733,
at Mill Street, Bermond-
sey. Died 24 May 1772.
Buried in F.B.G., Long
Lane, Bermondsey.
Marr. 4 Mch. 1756, at
F.M.Ho., Chichester.
.1
Benjamin HORNE.
1757. Died 1783.
Born Thomas HORNE. Born
22 May 1763, at St Bar-
tholomew's, Chichester.
Mary. Born:
26 July 1 756,
at Three
CrownCourt
St. Saviour's,
Southwark.
Died 5 Aug.
1823. Bur.
in F.B.Gr.,
Winchmore
Hill.
= Edward JAN-
SON, of the
Borough,dis-
tiller, later of
Tottenham.
Diedi4Mch.
1813, at
White Hart
Lane, Tot-
tenham, aged
60.
I. Elizabeth, dau. of Fos-
ter REYNOLDS, of Mit-
cham, Surrey. Marr.
1 3 Mch. 1781, at F.M.Ho.,
Wandsworth. Died 27
Jan. 1787, aged 26. Bur.
F.B.Gr., Long Lane,
Bermondsey.
: Anthony HORNE, of Bank-;
side, Southwark, coal
merchant, citizen and
clothworker. Born 17
Feb. 1758, at St. Sa-
viour's, Southwark, later
of The Grove, Great
Bookham. Died 28 March
1816, aged 82. Buried in
F.B.Gr., Bermondsey.
:2. Elizabeth, dau. oi
James STIRRIDGE, of
George Court, Lombard
Street. Marr. n March
1788, at F.M.Ho., Tot-
tenham. Died 8 July
1841, at Clapham Rise,
aged 82. Buried in
F.B.Gr., Wandsworth.
Thomas HORNE. Born =p Ann Jane, dau. of Abra-
10 July 1782. Of Bank-
side, citizen and cloth-
worker, and coal mer-
chant, and of Stamford
Street, Blackfriars. Died
1864. Buried in
Highgate Cemetery.
ham Purshouse DRIVER,
of Kent Road. Marr.
30 Sept. 1802, at F.M.Ho.
Kingston-on-Thames,
Surrey. Buried at High-
gate Cemetery.
Reynolds HORNE. Born = Caroline Mary.
5 Nov. 1783, at Bankside.
Citizen and clothworker,
Later of Edmonton. Died
29 Nov. 1838. Burd.
F.B.Gr., Croydon, Sur-
rey.
Anthony HORNE.
Born 23 March
1807, at Edmon-
ton.
Mary. Born
and died
1817.
Eliza Emma.=David TYRIE, of The
Born .... Mount, Upper Norwood.
Married 10 March 1853,
at Edmonton.
r
Abraham =
HORNE.
Born
14 Mch.
1806, at
Bankside
Died
4 June
1867.
/
(top
= Ann. Born 23 Jan 1803 1
""homas HORNE. Born
oOct. 1809.
— H BENNETT of
Alfred HORNE. Born 10
Jan. 1811. Died ....
Died 1886. Bur. I
at Highsjate 9
Bloomsbury.
Louisa. Born 13 Jan.
1812. Died
Elizabeth. Born 5 July
1808 Died
— PRICE.
Maria. Born 15 July
1813. Died 1890.
= George SHUTTLE-
WORTH.
. 368.)
Thomas HORNE.
Bessy Ann. Born
22 Jan. 1849.
Henry Napper HORNE.
Born 4 Oct. 1848.
Lavinia.
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
367
[artha. Born I Oct. = Henry STERRY, of Snow
^35, at Mill Street, Ber- Hill, citizen and currier,
londsey.
Marr. 8 April
at F.M.Ho., Hors-
ydown. Died 25 Oct.
Died 29 Nov. 1787, aged
57, having married again.
Buried F.B.Gr., Long
Lane. Line extinct.
Benjamin HORNE. Born
30 Mch. 1739, near Nut-
kin's Corner, Bermondsey.
Died 31 Aug. 1769. Bur.
F.B.Gr., Long Lane,
Bermondsey.
Mary. Born 21 May 1741,
near Nutkin's Corner.
Died, aged 7 months.
Anna. Born 9 July 1729,
at Burr Street, St. Bo-
tolph's, Aldgate. Died,
aged 3 years.
A son. Stillborn. 8 July
1732.
. 1
i
1
lizabeth. Born 2 Oct. = John BARTON, of Hert- Martha. Born 2
Mch. Susannah. = Thomas
760. Marr. 13 Dec. 1787, ford, maltster. Died 4 1765, at Bankside.
Died Born 5 Mar. BIGG, of
t F.M.Ho., Red Cross April 1789, aged 84. Burd. 2 Sep. 1850. Burd. in 1767,31 Swansea,
treet, Southwark. Died in F.B.Gr., Long Lane, F.B.Gr., Tottenham. Bankside. Glam.,
J Aug. 1833. Buried in Bermondsey.
Marr. copper
.B.Gr., Chichester.
27 Apl. 1819, smelter.
at F.M.Ho., (Memoir in
Anna. Born 3 Dec. 1768, Winchmore Annual
at Bankside. Died, aged Hill. Died Monitor,
9 months.
7 Mch. 1852. 1854.)
h
/illiam HORNE, of the=Mary, dau. of James Hill James HORNED
=Mary Ann, Edward HORNE.
lanor House, Clapham.
HOOPER, of Tooley Street. F. R. S.
dau. of Wil- Born 20 June
orn 29 Nov. 1785, at
Marr. I. Jan. 1807,
at Born 17 Dec.
liam DRIVER, 1790 at Clap-
ankside, coal merchant
F.M.Ho., Wandsworth. 1788, at Bank-
of Surrey ham. Died
ad citizen and cloth-
Died 15 Apl.l 88 1, aged 94, side. Died
Square, Kent 1 8 Mch. 1851,
Corker. Died 17 Nov.
at Carshalton. Buried in 26 Oct. 1857.
Road. Marr. at Florence.
348, at Camberwell.
Great Bookham Church- Buried in
15 April 1813,
urd. in Lady Chapel at
yard.
F.B.Gr.,
at F.M.H.,
t. Saviour's Cathedral.
Croydon.
Wandsworth.
Memorial window, N.
Died 13 Sept.
»le.)
1870, aged 79.
/
s
/
s
(S*f?.37o.)
(Sftp
• 370-)
eale HORNE. Born i7=Louisa, dau. of Henry HORNE. Born
George HORNE. Born Emma.
me 1815, at Brixton,
Win. FLOWER, of 25 Aug. 1816. Died
15 Aug. 1819. Died Born
urrey. Coal merchant at
Upper Bedford Dec. 1896.
1878. Burd. 21 July
alcon Wharf, Bankside,
Place, Russell =
r Lavinia, dau. of Thos.
at Brooklands, Man- 1821.
id later at Royal George
Square. Born
WELLS, of Upton St.
Chester. Died,
liarf, Bankside, South-
1819. Marr.
Leonard's, Glouc., citi-
= Harriett, dau. of aged
ark (HORNE and HIN-
21 Dec. 1844, at
zen and clothworker.
Edward KITCHEN, 5 years.
DN). Admitted cloth-
Rickmansworth.
Marr. 6 Aug. 1846 at
of Geelong. Died
orker 7 Dec. 1836. Died
Died 1893. Burd.
Dorking.
1912. Burd. at Park-
164. /
xat Norwood.
stone, Dorset.
(See p. 372.)
r~
1 T
1
.... HALL = Emily. Alice. = George PITT,
Jessie. Albert
HORNE. =Edith WARDEN, Addie.
of Beckenham.
of Manchester.
368
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
John HORNE (1779-1834) (see -p. 365). = Elizabeth HACK.
William HORNE.
Died in infancy.
John Carter
HORNE. Born
3 April 1809,
at Basing-
stoke. Died
6 April 1818.
Mary. Born
28 June 1810.
Died 30 April
1842. Buried
in F.B.Gr.,
Basingstoke.
Reuben Craven = Elizabeth Rickman. Boi
PAYNE, chemist, i July 1 8 1 2 at Hook Hous
of Bridgewater. Marr. 24 Nov. 1836,
Died 27 June F.M.Ho., Basingstoke.
1874, a§ed 64. Died 17 March 1862.
I
Isaac Gray BASS, of = Sarah. Born 17 Aug.
Brighton, grocer, after of 1815, at Hook House.
The Crayg, Cockermouth.
Mayor of Brighton. Bur-
in F.B.Gr., Ship Street,
Brighton.
Marr. 20 April 1837, at
F.M.Ho., Basingstoke.
Died 13 Sept. 1843,
at Brighton.
Josiah BROWN, of = Sophia Heath. Bo
Edmonton, tea 26 Aug. 1817, at Ho
dealer. Died House. Marr. 3 Ja
22 Sept. 1877, I86l> at F.M.Ho., We
aged 67. minster.
Abraham HORNE (1806-67) (see P- 366).=.
Edward Lawson HORNE. Born 20 Nov. 1834, at=
Kennington, Surrey. Clothworker. Died 15 March
1912, at Brixton. Buried at Norwood Cemetery.
= Elizabeth, daughter
Married 15 April 1868
of Matthew DENZILO
, at Allington, Dorset.
Lawson Le Gros HORNE.
Born 25 Feb. 1869.
Charles Denziloe HORNE. = Anne Jane, dau. of Jo!
Born I Aug. 1871. J CARLING. Marr. I Ap
1907, at Lancaster.
T
John Denziloe HORNE.
Born 8 Jan. 1908:
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
369
:. Jane, dau. of Samuel:
DARTON. Marr. 20 April
[843, at F.M.Ho., Leigh-
ion Buzzard. Died 4 July
[8157, aged 40. Bur.
F.B.Gr., Stoke Newing-
:on.
; Robert HORNE, of 12
Hornsey Lane, and 41
Gracechurch Street, Lon-
don. Born 23 Dec.
1813, at Hook House.
Died 3 April 1883.
2. Ann, dau. of Francis
MAY, of Reigate. Marr.
21 April 1859, at F.M.Ho.,
Reigate. Died 8 Jan. 1881,
aged 48. Bur. in Hast-
ings Cemetery.
[. Sarah, dau. of Joseph=Thomas Benjamin HoRNE=Rebecca COWAN, of Edin-
LUCAS, of Hitchin. Marr. of Brighton, surgeon, burgh, dau. of John, Lord
after of Torquay. Born 8
Feb. 1819, at Hook House.
Died 23 Nov. 1876. Bur.
in Torquay Cemetery.
jo Dec. 1847, at F.M.Ho.,
Brighton. Died 20 May
[874 at Marychurch.
COWAN, Lord of Session,
etc., and Solicitor-Gene-
ral of Scotland, 1851.
I
Emma. Born 8 Aug. 1837,
it Kennington. Died
7 Aug. 1911.
Mabel.
1876.
Born 6 Feb.
Charles Augustus = Harriet. Born at Ken-
WRIGHT. nington. Marr. 1864 at
Hove. Died Dec. 1868.
Burd. Norwood.
Maud Mary. Born 8 July= Albert Howard Fox.
1880. Marr. 13 Aug.
1910.
Julia Truman. Born at
Kennington. Died Oct.
1880, unmarried. Burd.
Norwood.
Elizabeth Anne.
4 Aug. 1911.
Born
z z
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
William HORNE (1785-1848) (see p. 367). = Mary HOOPER.
Elizabeth. Born 2
Nov. 1807. Died, aged
2 mths.
II 1
Mary Anne. Born 2 Frederick
Dec. 1808. Died 21 HORNE. Born
Sept. 1856, at Great 7 Feb. 1814.
Bookham. Died in Aus-
Bryan COR- = Laura. Born
CORAN, of 1816. Died 8 Marcl
Mark Lane, 1909- Bur. Islingtor
engineer. Cemetery.
Henry HORNE. Born
30 Oct. 1810. Died,
aged 4 mths.
Ellen.
1812.
1899,
Born
Died 26 Dec.
at Sutton.
Arthur HORNE. Borr
1818. Marr
COWEN. Died
1892, in Australia.
rfflis
William Edgar HORNE, of:
Hall Place, Shackleford.
Citizen and clothworker.
A Director of the Pruden-
tial Assurance Co. Presi-
dent of Surveyors' Insti-
tute, 1911. M.P.forS.W.
Surrey since 1910. Born
21 Jan. 1856, at 10 Wo-
burn Square, Bloomsbury.
: Margery, dau. of George
ANDERSON, Mayor of El-
ford, Staffs. Marr. 7 Oct.
1886, at Harthill, Yorks.
John Irvine Bos- = Ellen Elizabeth. Borr
WELL, M.D., J.P., 5 Nov. 1857. Marr.
of Crawley Grange, 1884, at St. George's
Bucks. Bloomsbury.
Phyllis Margery.
Born 26 Aug. 1888,
at Shackleford.
Allan Edgar HORNE. Citi-
zen and clothworker. Born
19 Sept. 1889, at Shackle-
ford.
I
William Guy HORNE, Citi-
zen and clothworker. Borr
19 Sept. 1889, at Shackle-
ford.
Twins.
James HORNE (1788-1857) (see p. 367).=Mary Ann DRIVER.
James HORNE. Citi-
zen and clothworker
and coal merchant,
of 5 Halkin Ter-
race, S.W., and of
Brighton. Born
4 March 1814, at
Bankside. Died
I Dec. 1868. Bur.
at Battersea.
=Mary Mihill
Anne SLAUGH-
TER. Born
Marr.
Died I Jan.
1900, aged 8l.
Bur. Battersea.
Anthony HORNE.
Born 14 Nov.
1815, at Bank-
side. Died aged
II mths.
Binsted GASELEE,=
of Montague
Place, Russell
Sq. Barrister-at-
law. Died 4 Feb.
1850, aged 37.
Bur. at Kensal
Green.
/
= Sophia Elizth. Born ll
Aug., 1817, at Denmarl
Hill. Marr. 27 July 1841
at Battersea. Livinj
19*3-
Susan. Born 30 Apri
1821, at Denmark Hill
Died c. 1897, unmarried
Bur. at Warley, Essex.
\
James Edward HORNE. = Flora, dau. of Col. R.
Citizen and clothworker, H.BEDDOME, Madras S.C.,
barrister-at-law, M.A.,
Cantab. Born 28 Feb.
1841. Died 27 Oct. 1908,
at Earlsfield Road, S.W.
Joseph White HORNE, = Katherine, dau. o
of Sispara, Putney,Wands-
worth. Marr. 8 April
1896, at Trinity Ch.,
Wandsworth.
M.A. Citizen and cloth-
worker. Master 1910-11.
and Clerk in Holy Orders.
Born 12 Jan. 1846.
Edward JAMES, o
Plymouth.
James Anthony HORNE. Born
, 1892, at Islington.
Mary. Born 1894.
Joseph Christopher William
HORNE. Born , 1900.
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
. Maria, dau. of Wm.=Edgar HORNE. Citizen and=2. Anna Maria, dau. of
JURRELL, of Flitcham,
tforf., and widow of
rhoS. EVERSFIELD, of
Vestminster. Marr.
855. Died
Jur. at Eastbourne, Sus-
ex.
widow of
Bur. there.
clothworker. Master
1878-9. Founder and BOYD. Died 24 Jan. 1906,
Director of Prudential at The Hall, Witley.
Assurance Co., and chair-
man 1877-1905. Born 17
April 1820, at Clapham.
Died 18 Dec. 1905, at
The Seven Gables, East-
bourne. Buried at Wit-
ley, Surrey.
Alderson Burrell HoRNE,=Maud, daughter of Fredk.
of Ditton Place, Bal-
combe, Sussex. Citizen
and clothworker. Born
22 Nov. 1863.
Janet Maud. Born 22
Feb. 1894.
Wm. PORTER, of Moyle
Tower, Hythe, Kent.
Marr. 22 Dec. 1887, at
St. George's, Bloomsbury.
David Edgar Alderson
HORNE. Born 14 July
1898.
Rosma.=John A.
Born PHILLIPS.
1823.
'harles HORNE, =
f the Bengal
XS. Born 6
une 1823, at
)enmark Hill.
)ied 28 March
872. Bur. Bat-
:rsea.
= Flora, dau. of Frederick =
Chas. White
MACSWEEN, WHITE.
Chief Justice of Died 20
Agra. Marr. 7 Sept. 1862,
Oct. 1 850. Died aged 53.
24 April 1904. Bur. at
Bur. Battersea. Christ-
church,
Hants.
/
, 1 1
= Fanny. Born Edward HORNE, of = Laura Elizth.,dau.
4 April 1825 Park House, Rei- of Robt.Wildman
at Denmark gate. Born 23 Feb. BARCHARD. Marr.
Hill. Marr. 1829, at Clapham 10 Oct. 1855.
20 May 1856. Common. Died Living 1913.
Died 9 July 27 Oct. 1898. Bur.
1911. Sidlow, nr. Rei-
gate.
s
1 III
harles Edward Flora Mary. John =
!ORNE. Born 24 Mar- Born 14 McLeod
me 1851, at garet. Sept. HORNE.
fyneeTal.Died Born 1856, at Born 25
Oct. 1852. 3ojuly Bareilly. June
1852, 1859, at
at Clap-
Nynee ham. Of
Tal. San
Fran-
cisco.
= Sarah Edward Hastings HORN E.= Laura Whish,
DEUTSCH, Citizen and clothworker. dau. of Wm.
of San Clerk in HolyOrders.M.A. Edwd. Parry
Francisco. Oxon. Rector of Garsing- HOOPER, of
ton, Oxon., 1912. Born 20 Tunbridge
Sept. 1862, at Benares, Wells. Marr.
India. 18 Oct. 1905,
Alice Christina Jessie.Born Wells.
loAug. 1 869, at Norwood.
A missionary in Japan.
372
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
Neale HORNE (1815-64) (see p. 367).:== Louisa FLOWER.
Neale Flower HORNE, of=
Bankside, citizen and
clothworker and coal mer-
chant, and of Upper
Norwood and Blackheath.
Deputy Chairman Royal
Ventnor Consumption
Hospital. Born 21 Oct.
1844. Died 19 May 1899,
at Ventnor. Bur. Nor-
wood Cemetery.
II
=Mary, dau. Robert HORNE.
of Thomas Born 1846. Died
PIKE, of 1868.
William HORNE. Charles=
Born 1850. Died HORNE.
1875. Bur. Nor- Born
wood. 23 Dec.
._.,., ifiCfl
= Alice, dau. of
Fredk. Spence
Adolphus
FRANCE. Marr.
5 June 1879,
at Ch. Ch., N.
Brixton.
Berks. Mar- Alfred HORNE.
ried 1 1 June Born 1848. Died
1872, at 1870. Burd.
Bath. Norwood.
1054.
Louisa Flower.
Born 1852.
Rev. Arthur = Violet Louisa.
Carruthers at Stockwell.
STRATTON,M.A. at St. Bride's,
Born 10 May 1880, Charles Walter HORNE.
Marr. 29 Apl. 1911, Born 30 Nov. 1882,
London. at Stockwell, Surrey.
I
Sidney Neale HORNE, citi- = Ida Francis, dau. of
zen and clothworker, and
coal merchant, and of
Blackheath. Born 30 May
1873, at Upper Norwood.
Henry Ramsay Cox,
late of Forest Hill.
Marr. 17 Feb. 1898,
at Folkestone.
Laura May
Flower. Born
15 May 1874,
at Upper
Norwood.
Arthur Charles =
HORNE. Born
22 Aug. 1875,
at Upper Nor-
wood.
= Marguerite Annie,
dau. of Fredk. BRID-
GES, of Brockley,
Kent. Marr. 24 April
1906, at St. Peter's,
Brockley.
Lester Neale HORNE. Geoffrey Cyril HORNE. Marjorie Avis. Born Muriel Joan. Born 5
Born 17 Sept. 1899, Born 2 April 1901, at 19 June 1902, at Black- May 1906, at Black-
at Woodside, Surrey. Woodside. Died, aged 5 heath. heath.
months.
MAR.I9I3] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
373
rank HORNE. Born:
• Aug. 1856. Died
Dec. 1903. Bur.
orwood Cemetery.
=Laura, dau. of Thomas Walter HORNE. Born 29=Katherine, dau. of Al-
PROWSE. Marr. 10 May May 1858. Clerk in bert HEINEKEY, of
1883, at North Brixton. Holy Orders. Vicar of St. Streatham. Marr. April
Died 28 June 1908, aged Saviour's, Brixton, after 1895, at Emanuel
51. of Felixstowe. Church, Streatham.
Air j tr _ p ^
i i r~ n
fred HORNE. Stanley Ruby. Born Daisy. Born
Born 4 March HORNE. Born 4 July 1887, 24 Feb. 1889,
1884, at Brix- 9 Aug. 1885, at at Brixton. at Brixton.
ton. Brixton.
Olive. Born Doris. Born 10
23 Sept. 1892, June 1895, at
at Norwood. Norwood.
ssie Agnes. Born 6 Jan.
77, at Upper Norwood.
rcy Walter HORNE.
»rn 14 Feb. 1878, at
pper Norwood.
Edgar = Ethel Maud. Born 28 Harry Bertram HORNE. Florence
Cecil March 1879, at Upper Born 21 April 1880, at Mary. Born
Ramsay Norwood. Marr. 17 Anerley, Surrey. Clerk 26Junei88i,
Cox. Aug. 1904, at St. Mar- in Holy Orders. M.A., at Anerley.
garet's, Lee, Kent. Oxon.
rbara Annie. Born
April 1907, at Tulse
11, Surrey.
Margaret Mary. Born
I Oct. 1909, at Tulse Hill.
374
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
o
JOHN PITT, of Blandford, Dorset, Clerk of = Joan SWAYNE, of Blandford.
the Exchequer under Queen Elizabeth.
Sir Willi
iam PITT, of Strathfieldsaye, Hants. Died 1636, aged 7/.==Edith CADBURY, of Wareham, Dorset
Edward PITT, of Strathfieldsaye. Buried = Rachel, dau. of Sir Geo. MORTON, of Milborne St. Andrew
there 1643. | Dorset, Bt.
I
George PITT, of = Jane, Lady CHANDOS, eld-
Strathfieldsaye.
Died 1694.
est dau. of John SAVAGE
2nd Earl of RIVERS.
Thomas PITT, 1653-1726,== Jane, dau. of Sir Jas. INNES, of Reid
by Lady Grize
Earl of MORAY.
-L UWUMM -i. A A A » J J / J I I C*AA\^j \_itl U.. \J-L. W J. 1. I I
, Governor of Madras. I hall, co. Moray,
(Diet. Nat. Biog.,XLV, 347.) I STUART, dau. of E;
I
George PITT,=
= Lucy PILE. Robert PITT, = Harriet, dau. Thomas PITT, Gen. James =
= Lucy PITT.
M.P. for
of Boconnoc.
of Hon. Edw. 1st Earl of STANHOPE, ist
Died 1723.
Wareham and
M.P. for Old
VILLIERS, of LONDONDERRY. Earl.(Z).7V.5.,
co. Hants. Died
Sarum, etc.
Dromana, co. (D.N.B., XLV, LIV, 14.)
1734, aged 72.
Died 1727.
Waterford. 349.)
George PITT,=
of Strathfield-
saye. Buried
there 1745.
= Mary Louisa Thomas PITT,=
BERNIER. of Boconnoc,
M.P. for Old
Sarum, etc.
Lord Warden
of Stannaries
and Steward of
Duchy of
=Christian Hester GREN-=
LITTLETON, of VILLE, sister of
Frankley. Richard, Earl
TEMPLE.
= William PITT, Philip, 2nd
1708-78. Earl STANHOPE.
ist Earl of
CHATHAM.
(Diet. Nat. Biog.,
XLV, 354.)
Cornwall.
George PITT, M.P. for=Penelope, dau.
Shaftesbury. Cr. Baron of Sir Henry
RIVERS of Strathfield-
saye and of Sudeley
Castle. Died 1803,
aged 83.
ATKYNS, of
Clapham,
Surrey, Bt.
I
Thomas PITT, = Anne
ist Baron
CAMELFORD.
Died 1793.
(D.N.B., XLV,
35°-)
WILKINSON.
John PITT, 2nd
Earl of CHAT-
HAM, K.G.
o.s.p. 1835.
(D.N.B., XLV,
344-)
Thomas PITT, 2nd Lord CAMELFORD. Killed in a duel 1804. (D.N.B., XLV, 352.)
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
375
.omas PITT, purchased advowson of Blandford St. Mary.=Priscilla SEARLE, of Hayle, Devon.
William PITT, Mayor
of Dorchester, o.s.p .
Rev. John PITT, Rector of Blandford=p Sarah JAY, of
St. Mary 1645. Died 1672, aged 62.1 Wichampton,
I Dorset.
ert PITT, of Bland- = Margaret
ford Forum, M.D. I GUY.
Robert PITT, 1653-1713. Of Blandford= Martha, dau. of John
Forum, M.D. Fellow of Wadham Coll. NOURSE, of Wood
Oxon.F.R.S. (Diet. Nat. Biog.,XLv, 346.) Eaton, Oxon.
(C) Christopher PITT, 1662-= Elizabeth ....
1723 (2 Aug.). Of Bland- I Died 22 Oct. 1743,
ford Forum, M.D. I aged 69.
bert PiTT,=Mary (D) Christopher
Henry PITT. Eliza- =(E) Wm.
Mary.=Geo. Luc
:rk. Fellow
.... PITT. 1699-
Fellow of beth.
GOLD-
WHIT-
Wadham,
1748. Of Win-
Exeter Coll.
WYRE, of
MARSH, of
ctor of
chester College.
Died 173 3.
Bland-
Wilton,
ermoigne,
Clerk. Fellow
ford,
Wilts,
rset. Died
of New Coll.
Surgeon.
Apothe-
;o. Trans-
Rector of Pim-
cary.
zd into
perne. (Diet.
tin five
Nat. Biog., XLV,
)ks of Mil-
342, and
l's Paradise
Johnson's
•t.
Lives of the
••••^H
Poets.)
™
BASKETT,
Clerk,
of co.
Lincohi.
iry, only
i. and heir.
Mary.=Capt. MUSTON,
R.N.
Jane, of the
Close, New
Sarum. Bur. at
St. Martin's,
1800.
Margaret. = Rev. Edw.
BUTT, of Wim-
borne Minster,
Rector of
Aldbourne,
Headmaster of
Grammar
School, New
Sarum. Died
1781.
Martha. = James TALMAN,
Buried
at
Ch. Ch.
1762.
B.A. Balliol
Coll., Vicar of
Christchurch,
Hants, 1756.
William PITT.
1759-1806.
(D.N.B., XLV,
3670
Hester = Charles, 3rd Earl STANHOPE.
' (D.N.B., LIV, i.)
Lady Hester Lucy STANHOPE. (D.N.B., LIV, 12.)
376 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
PITT OF BLANDFORD, DORSET
(A.) The Rev. A. C. ALMACK, Rector of Blandf ord, St. Mary, kindly
pointed out that on p. 454 of The Great Civil War in Dorset, 1642-60
(1910) I had confused Dr. John PITTS, Warden of Wadham College
and Rector of Chardstock, with the Rector of Blandford, who was
never sequestered. The latter's second son, Governor PITT, whose
letters have been recently published in The Dropmore Papers, bought,
in 1710, the old Chettle manor in Blandford, restored the church
and erected a tablet to the memory of his parents. The Governor
and his sons lie buried in the same church. (See Mr. ALMACK'S paper
on the PITTS in Proceedings of the Dorset Nat. Hist, and Antiq. Field
Club, xxxi, 165.)
(B.) Robert PITT was an original member of the Oxford Chemical
Society (October 1683), and Deputy-Professor of Anatomy. The
historian of Wadham College says : " He deserves special remembrance
as being one of the first physicians who ventured to protest against
the folly of taking too much physic, and against some of the popular
drugs in the pharmacopoeia of the day, such as mummy or powdered
vipers. As might be expected, his book, The Craft and Frauds of
Physick Exposed, involved him in a storm of controversy."
(C.) Christopher PITT the elder contributed the Plague of Athens
to Thomas CREECH'S translation of Lucretius, a work dedicated to
George PITT of Strathfieldsaye. CREECH, himself a native of Bland-
ford, had been at Wadham under Robert PITT'S tuition. HUTCHINS
(Dorset, 3rd edn., iv, 91, " PITT of Shroton ") makes the elder
Christopher son of Robert, the physician, but from the dates (CREECH'S
Lucretius being first published in 1682) he seems more likely to have
been his brother. The D.N.B., under Christopher the younger,
says that Robert, the physician, was probably the poet's great-uncle,
and Governor Thomas his first cousin. But the physician and the
Governor were both born in the same year. The old parish registers
of Blandford Forum appear to have perished in the fire of 1731. I
have given the elder Christopher's dates from his tombstone in
Blandford (Forum) church. From the last-named downwards I am
indebted to the kindness of Mr. E. A. FRY, who worked out the pedi-
gree from a Recovery Roll of Easter Term 1775 in the P.R.O. The
document itself is the deed of sale of the manors of Tarrant Gunvill
and Tarrant Launceston (Launston), Dorset, by Richard, Earl
TEMPLE, to Richard GLOVER and Benjamen ALLEN (probably nominees
for other parties), dated 4 January, 15 Geo. III. The daughters of
Christopher PITT, M.D., were owners of a tenement in Tarrant
Launston and lands called Muston's Tenement, and, at some time
previous to the deed of 1775, had sold the property to George Bubb
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 377
DODINGTON, Lord Melcombe, who lived at Eastbury in Tarrant
Gunvill.
(D.) HUTCHINS makes the poet-parson marry his mother, and father
his elder brother. While still an undergraduate, Christopher pub-
lished a Poem on the Death of the late Earl of Stanhope. Humbly
Inscribed to the Countess of Stanhope (1721). Lady STANHOPE was his
second cousin. In 1727 he dedicated to George PITT his Poems and
Translations, and issued in 1740 his translation of Virgil's JEneid in
heroic couplets with a dedication to Frederick, Prince of WALES. He
suffered from an early age from a very severe form of gout — the
family disease.
(E.) This William GOLDWYRE was son of William GOLDWYRE,
surgeon of New Sarum (d. 1748), and Mary SMITH ; and elder
brother of George GOLDWYRE, surgeon of Marlborough (d. 1771),
who married Elizabeth BAYLEY of that town. (See The Pedigree
Register, ii, 267, 270.)
A. R. BAYLEY.
St. Margaret's, Malvern.
A A A
378 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
of
Officers of the Society.
PRESIDENT:
VICE-PRESIDENT: The Marquis DE LIVERI ET DE VALDAUSA.
HON. TREASURER: Edgar Francis BRIGGS.
HON. SECRETARY: George SHERWOOD.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 1912-1913.
Sir Thomas Herbert Cochrane Joseph Cecil BULL.
TROUBRIDGE, Bart. Frank EVANS.
Charles Allan BERNAU. Gerald FOTHERGILL.
Henry BODDINGTON, J.P. George SHERWOOD.
William BRADBROOK, M.R.C.S. Fredk. Simon SNELL, M.A.
Edgar Francis BRIGGS. Chas. Wm. WALLACE, Ph.D.
LIBRARIAN-SECRETARY: Miss WOODS.
OFFICIAL ORGAN : The Pedigree Register, quarterly, IDS. 6d. per annum.
REGISTERED OFFICE AND ROOMS: 227 Strand (by Temple Bar), London, W.C.
SEVENTH QUARTERLY REPORT, March, 1913.
The Fellows, Members and Corresponding Associates elected since the 1 3th November
are as follows :
FELLOWS :
1912, Dec. nth Edward MEYNELL.
1913, Jan. 8th None elected.
„ Feb. 1 2th The Rev. Arthur W. STOTE, M.A.
Captain Richard Durand TEMPLE.
HON. LIFE FELLOW:
1912, Dec. nth James Reginald Morshead GLENCROSS, M.A., LL.B.
MEMBERS :
1912, Dec. nth Edward MEYNELL.
1913, Jan. 8th Charles Joseph STOCKER, M.R.C.S.
„ Feb. 1 2th Mrs. Annie Florence Pitcairn AMAN.
Sir Clifford John CORY, Bart.
William FARRER, Hon. D.Litt.
Leoline Jenkins GRIFFITH.
Evan Davies JONES, J.P.
Thomas Percy Claude KIRKPATRICK, M.D., F.R.C.P.I.,
M.R.I.A.
Clarence George PAGET.
Towson William RUNDELL.
ASSOCIATES :
1912, Dec. nth None elected.
1913, Jan. 8th None elected.
„ Feb. 1 2th John KELSALL, J.P.
CORRESPONDING ASSOCIATES:
1912, Dec. nth Alfred Lionel LEWIS, F.C.A., F.R.A.I.
1913, Jan. 8th None elected.
„ Feb. 1 2th Arthur Herbert DUKE.
James HACKETT.
George MINNS.
William Edwin NANCE.
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 379
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
The Executive Committee met as usual in the Society's Rooms on the second Wednesday
in each month at 2 p.m. Meetings of Fellows to elect new Fellows are held, on the same
day and at the same place, at 3.30. On the 1 3th December the resignation of Mr.
GLENCRossfrom the Executive Committee was accepted with regret, and Mr. BODDINCTON
was elected on the 7th January to fill his place.
In reply to representations by this Society, the Registrar of the diocese of Southwark
wrote that a copy of a statement as to the monuments in St. Paul's churchyard, Deptford,
in accordance with the Open Spaces Act, 1906, will be filed in that Registry before the
Faculty issues for converting that churchyard into a recreation ground.
On the zjth January, Mr. FOTHERGILL and Mr. GLENCROSS, representing the Society,
appeared before the Royal Commission on Public Records, and the former gave much
valuable evidence as to probate and other ancient ecclesiastical records at Somerset House.
Attention was called by Mr. BEAZLEY to the regrettable transfer of Lancashire, West-
morland and Yorkshire Wills from London to York, where they will certainly be less
accessible to inquirers.
Sir Thomas TROUBRIDGE consented to represent the Society at the International
Congress of Historical Studies to be held at Burlington House in April, and to read a
Paper on the scope and objects of this Society. The Membership Roll is now 218.
George SHERWOOD, Hon. Sec.
SUB-COMMITTEES.
(1) Committee on the Library, Printed Volumes. — The Accessions List now reaches 472
items, nearly all received by gift, for which the Society thanks the donors. The Secretary
of the Committee on the Consolidated Index is issuing a list of works which it is desirable
should be indexed on the Society's slips.
(2) Committee on the Library, MS. Volumes. — The Rev. T. C. DALE has presented:
DURHAM CHANCERY SUITS, Notes from, A.D. 1618-20, 1681-82, etc., by Rev. T. C.
DALE; MS., 49 pp., small quarto; Ace. No. 442. Abstracts of 35 DALE and 12 other
wills relating to persons named DAYE, GAUNT, LYE, and STOCKDALE, A.D. 1570-1805,
from Northampton and Peterborough Registries; MS., ff. 40, I2mo.
From Mr. S. C. BRISTOWE: IFIELD, SUSSEX, the original tithe-book, 1702-1757,
giving the names of those who paid tithes each year and the amounts. Limp vellum
bound, 60 leaves, 14 ins. by 6 ins.
(3) Committee on the Library, Documents. — Mr. Charles EVERETT has presented: HALES
OWEN, SALOP. Eight deeds relating to, A.D. 1736-81, concerning the families of
INGRAM, BROMLEY, MILWARD, GROVE, BLOOMER, RICHARDS and KITCHIN. OLD SWIN-
FORD, WORC. Lease dated 1729, Edward MILWARD to Joseph Cox, The Grange Farm.
Witnesses, Thos. PALMER, John WINWOOD. Heraldic seal of Edward MILWARD.
Mr. Henry BODDINGTON has presented: WILMSLOW, CHESHIRE. 23 deeds, dated
1601-1747, and a plan (? c. 1713) relating to Pownall in MORLEY, CHESHIRE. A
deed, dated 1729. CASH, HARRISON and others to WORRALL.
Mr. O. C. KNAPP has presented: Abstracts of 234 wills relating principally to the
families of BANGER (5), BEALE (n), FRENCH (44), JERMYN (6), PLAYSTED (30), PRIMATT (8),
SKINNER (n), SMITH (9), STONIER (6), STREET (38), WOODIN (8), YARWORTH (9). BRISTOL,
GLOUC. Abstracts of about 264 wills in the Great Orphan Book of Bristol, and 21
relating to Bidford, WARWICKSHIRE.
The KENT deeds are being gradually " enveloped " and the names written outside.
Offers of help in this useful work are invited, for which purpose bundles of a dozen or
two dozen deeds can be sent at a time.
E. F. KIRK, Hon. Sec.
380 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
(4) Committee on the Consolidated Index. — Accessions for the quarter include a com-
plete copy 'of the inscriptions of St. Margaret's, LEICESTER, an index to the pedigrees
(LINCOLNSHIRE) in volume 50 (Harleian Society), and the first instalment of 1,200
slips (letters A and B) indexing the Subscribers' List to LEWIS'S Topographical Dictionary
of England. Mention should also have been made in our last report of a valuable series
of slips, numbering 3,774, referring to the BODDINGTON Family, 1837-1900.
I am able to announce the completion of part of an index to the Marriage Licences at
the Bishop of London's Registry. The period covered (1751-55) will be written out
within the next few weeks and the original slips sorted into the Great Index. A start has
now been made on another period of five years, but — more workers, please !
A circular is issued with this report inviting the gift of odd copies of eighteenth and
early nineteenth century newspapers and periodicals, for the purpose of having them
indexed, advertisements and all. Periodicals such as The Gentleman's Magazine, in the
Society's possession, copies of which can be lent to members undertaking this class of
work, are enumerated. The gift of odd copies of The London Gazette, printed evidence
in law cases, celebrated trials, commissions of inquiry, etc., all of which are full of
genealogical and biographical evidence, badly in need of indexing, is invited. Fellows and
members not already contributing Index slips are specially invited to offer to meet the
expense of having some written. The Hon. Treasurer will be glad to receive contribu-
tions for the purpose.
F. S. SNELL, Hon. Sec.
(5) Committee on the Library, Subject Index. — Members, Messrs. BRIGGS and FOTHER-
CILL.
(6) Committee on Heraldry. — Members, Messrs. BRADBROOK, BRIGGS, EVANS, PEACHEY,
PiRiE-GoRDON and WYNNE. These Committees have held no meetings, and still await
organization by a member who will undertake the duties of Honorary Secretary.
(7) Committee for Cataloguing Pedigrees. — There have been no meetings of this Com-
mittee during the quarter, but the following books have been analysed on the Society's
" Pedigree Analysis Forms," and these are now filed in the Document Collection : Descent
and Alliances of Croslegh of Scaitdiffe, analysed by Mr. Hutton GUY; The House of Crom-
well, analysed by Miss Alice HARFORD ; Upper Wharf edale, The Transcript vf the Registers
of Bretforton, and the History of Dagenham, analysed by Mr. Oswald G. KNAPP; The
History of the Ball Family, analysed by Mr. W. F. C. WIGSTON (in progress). The
pedigrees in other books are still in course of analysis.
Mrs. Stanton TAYLOR continued the valuable series of articles from the North American,
illustrated by copies of silhouettes, portraits, etc., on the families of BARTON, BORIE,
BOUDINOT, BROWNE, CHAUNCEY, CRESSON, DRAYTON, GRATZ, PATTERSON, SELLERS,
RANDOLPH, WARDER and YORKE.
C. M. WYNNE, Hon. Sec.
(8) Committee on Monumental Inscriptions. — From Mr. R. H. STEPHENSON we have
received: Belgrave (St. Peter's), LEIC. Copies of 266 Monumental Inscriptions in the
churchyard, with an Index of names; typewritten, ff. 230, large quarto.
From Mr. Frank GLEADOW: LEICESTER (St. Margaret's). Copies of 730 Monu-
mental Inscriptions in the church and churchyard, in dictionary order; with lists of the
mayors of Leicester, 1622 to 1871, of the vicars of St. Margaret's, 1615 to 1911, and a
note as to the charities. MS., 735 loose sheets, small octavo.
Providing the permission of the town clerk or borough council of St. Pancras, LONDON,
can be obtained, Colonel PARRY has promised to make for the Society an abstract of the
council's copy of all the inscriptions on monuments in that borough.
F. M. R. HOLWORTHY, Hon. Sec.
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 381
(9) Committee on Parish Registers and Marriage Licences. — From Mr. J. H. TRITTON
we have received a copy of Canterbury Marriage Licences, 1619-1660, by J. M. COWPER,
1894. Mr. SCATTERGOOD sends a complete set of the publications of the Yorkshire Parish
Register Society. He offers to contribute half the cost of subscribing for Mr. PHILLI-
MORE'S Worcestershire Parish Registers if another Member will pay the other half (55. 3d.
per volume). The volumes will be the property of the Society, and, of course, available
to Fellows on loan. Mr. BERNAU presented: WALTON-ON-THAMES, SURREY. Index
slips to the Marriage Registers, 1639-1777, surnames only, arranged under first letters.
About 1,100 slips.
A. J. C. GUIMARAENS, Hon. Sec.
(10) Committee on School, College, Apprenticeship and Admission Registers to Companies,
Guilds, etc. — Members: Messrs. FOTHERGILL, GUIMARAENS and POWELL. No meetings
have been held. This Committee still wants an Honorary Secretary to undertake its
organization.
(n) Committee on Fly-Leaf Inscriptions in Family Bibles, etc. — Fly-leaves have been
collected by the Honorary Secretary of this Committee, and copies of most interesting
entries in Family Bibles and other old books have been kindly made and sent. We have
received a fly-leaf of The Bee, vol. i, 1733; from Miss NOBLE, a fly-leaf, "Wm. and Henry
CHARLESON," with dates of their births; from the Rev. Evelyn YOUNG, fly-leaves from
Deodatus' Annotations on the Bible, printed by Miles FLESHER for Nicholas FISSELL, 1648.
The Society's Family Register is being brought to the stage of completion for issue,
and the Committee bespeaks for its use the help of every member in preparing to give
it a wide adoption and circulation.
J. Leonard E. HOOPPELL, Hon. Sec.
(12) Committee on Records of Migration and Change of Residence. — Members: Messrs.
BRIGGS and FOTHERGILL. Captain B. R. R. RAMBAUT was elected a Member of this
Committee on I2th, February and intimated his willingness to act as Secretary.
(13) Committee on Local Records. — Dr. STOCKER, of Pinewood, Budleigh Salterton,
offers to act as Honorary Local Secretary for Devon.
(14) Committee on Family Associations. — Mr. G. P. TOWNEND, of Australia, has sent
the Honorary Secretary of this Committee the address of another Family Association in
the United States, that of JOWETT and JEWETT, with which we are now corresponding.
No meetings of this Committee have been held during the last quarter.
(15) Committee on Irish Records. — Members: The Hon. Mr. Justice MCCARTHY,
Captain R. E. FITZGERALD-LOMBARD, Lieut. W. P. PAKEN HAM -WALSH and Mr. W.
Roberts CROW. No notice of meetings held has been received.
The Annual Subscriptions to the Society of Genealogists are as follows :
" Fellows," elected from among the Members by the whole body of Fellows, Two
guineas per annum. Life Composition, ten guineas.
" Members," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per annum. Life
Composition, seven guineas.
" Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, One guinea per annum. Cannot
make Life Composition.
" Corresponding Associates," elected by the Executive Committee, Half a guinea
per annum. Cannot make Life Composition. Must reside at least 25 miles from
London.
Fellows are entitled to receive quarterly from the Society advice of any fresh informa-
tion having accrued respecting certain specified families and places in which they may be
personally interested, the number of which is limited at present to ten. They may
borrow printed books in the Society's Library.
As an association " not for profit " (in a pecuniary sense) the Society relies for increase
of membership upon the efforts of individual members to make its purpose known. A
form of application for membership is sent herewith.
382
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
(tto&0t
<wb (Reviews*
JENNER of Gloucestershire and Wiltshire:
William JENNER of Kemisforde,=
Glouc. Will dated I Nov. 1638.
(P.C.C. HARVEY 2.)
=Amie (see will at page 154.)
= Richard
HEDGES.
William =
JENNER
of Mar-
John
JENNER.
Robert
JENNER.
Annis — A daughter.
SIMONS. "
son.
••••^H
•— —
A son.
Annis.
Will dated I November 1638, signed William JENNER, the elder; proved
23 January 1638/9 by wife and grandchild William FORDER. Overseer of will,
Mr. Robert JENNER of Wyddhill. Witnesses, John JENNER, Richard HEDGES,
Thomas HEDGES, William JENNER. Poor of Kemisforde 405., of Northmarson,
2os. In a bequest to his son William of £5, he states that it is " to enable him
the sooner to estate his son in reversion in the copyhold tenement wherein he
now dwells in Marson." He bequeaths to his grandson, William FORDER, ^30,
" provided my wife yield up her jointure in two yards of land in Northmarson,
which I bought of Sir Thomas SACKVILE, knt., she to have the £30."
John JENNER of Crudwell, = Margaret
Wilts., yeoman. Will Probably identical with
dated 29 Oct. 1647. Margaret JEENER, donor
of church plate to Crud-
well, 1688.
Will proved 17 July 1648 by the executor, Henry OTTRIG (OATRIDGE) (P.C.C.
114 PEMBROKE). Mentions brother Robert JENNER, cousin Marie HAYWARD,
kinsman Harry OTTRIG. Overseers, Robert JENNER, and neighbour, Nicholas
WHITE of Escote. Witnesses, Robert MILLS, William CARTER, Henry LINSEY,
William HUDSON.
JAQUES, JAQUETTS, or JACKETTS :
Thomas JAQUES. Buried at =p Alice JAQUES, alias JAQUETTS,
Meisey Hampton, Glouc.
A daughter. = William JENNER.
of Marston Meysey, Wilts.,
widow. Willdat.2 Mayi648.
(P.C.C. 156 PEMBROKE.)
I
Robert JENNER. Thomas JENNER.
A daughter. = William PEARSE.
Katherine. Alice. Henry PEARSE.
MAR. 1913] THE PEDIGREE REGISTER 383
Testatrix desires " to be buried by the hands of my Christian brothers and
sisters in the Church yard of Meisey Hampton." She describes William JENNER
as her " good son-in-law " and mentions " one other of my grandchildren, John,
£20," without surname. William JENNER is appointed executor. " My kins-
man " Edward DRIVER of South Cerney and John JENNER of Marston, overseer.
Witnesses, Edward DRYVER, John JENNER, John TAYLOR. Proved 25 October
1648 by the executor named.
There is in Maisey Hampton church a wooden lectern with the following
roughly carved on it:
Christ
ian
IACKETTS
1622
I have a note that there is a will (130 ST. JOHN) of a John JACKETTS of North
Marston, parish of Hampton Meysey, Glouc., 1631, proved by relict Alice, and
daughters Margaret and Alice. The will of Alice, however, expresses the wish
" to be buried as near as possible unto my dear deceased husband Thomas."
Since sending the notes on JENNER published in June 1911, I referred to a
manuscript in the British Museum and find that the entry in the Heralds'
Visitation of 1623 is Camsford and not Cainsford, evidently copied or printed
incorrectly from the Visitation. The wills do not reveal the identity of Edith
JENNER, the wife of Dr. VAULX.
R. J. FYNMORE.
Sandgate.
BURTON. — Can anyone give me any information about Sir James de BURTON,
shield-bearer to King Richard II, and Master of the Forest of Needwood? He
is mentioned in Harleian MS. 1439, fo. 7, also in NICHOLS' Leicestershire, page
635.
B. N. NORTH.
MOTHERBY, HOTHAM, GREEN, BAYLEY (II, 350).— The marriage
in question of George MOTHERBIE of Hambleton, co. York, and Anne HOTHAM
of Welton, took place about 1720-24. The date, it is hoped, will help in the
discovery of where it was solemnized.
HELENE MOTHERBY, F.S.G.
Konigsberg i-p, Tragheimer Pulverst. 44, Germany.
We have received 'The Berks, Bucks and Oxon Archaeological Journal (C.
SLAUGHTER & Son, Reading) for January, completing volume 18, from which we
regret to see the valuable Berkshire Feet of Fines discontinued; the preliminary
number of International Notes and Queries (E. F. McPiKE, 135 Park Row,
Chicago, U.S.A.); the quarterly number of The Utah Genealogical Magazine
(60 East South Temple Street, Salt Lake City), in which the recording of
genealogical facts is raised to a religious principle; the quarterly number of The
Journal of the Friends' Historical Society (Devonshire House, Bishopsgate
384 THE PEDIGREE REGISTER [MAR. 1913
Street, London), excellent for its yearly indexes; and the announcement of a
new monthly to be called 'The Genealogical Record (34 Forest Drive, Manor
Park, London, E.).
Mr. E. M. F.-G. BOYLE announces Records of the Town oj Limavady, 1609 to
1808 (William COLHOUN, Sentinel Office, Londonderry), see THE PEDIGREE
REGISTER, vol. i, pp. 77, 270, 301; and Mr. J. E. GRIFFITH, J.P., announces
The Pedigrees oj the Old Families oj Anglesey and Carnarvonshire (the Author,
Bryndinas, Upper Bangor, North Wales).
Mr. J. C. BULL sends Part III of Miscellaneous Notes, Pedigrees, etc.. Relating
to Persons oj the Surname oj BULL, printed for private circulation; and Mr.
Victor C. SANBORN a reprint from The New England Register on Thomas LEVET
oj Exeter and. Hampton (America). The latter deals with the LEVETTS of Nor-
manton and Melton, Yorks, and gives extracts from English Records.
The Manorial Society (i Mitre Court Buildings, Temple, E.G.) has issued its
Sixth Annual Report. It is printing a series of " Lists of Manor Court Rolls in
Private Hands," and invites notification of such rolls as are known to exist.
The saving of Manor Court rolls from destruction and making them accessible
to searchers is work of primary importance to every genealogist.
" All errors and mistakings as shall fall out, I entreat the Learned-modest
Reader to correct with his Pen."
Page 46, line 14. For " 1204," read " 1304.
„ 52, „ 14. For " Robert," read " Richard."
„ 71, „ 19. For " 1736," read « 1726/7."
„ 74, „ 1 8. For " Long Martin," read " Long Marton."
„ 80, „ 23. For " John," read " Robert."
»> 80, „ 34. For " Culnashea," read " Culnaskea."
„ 182, „ 26. Delete drop-line from " Isaac HARVEY, 1739."
„ 201, „ 4. For " 1487," read " 1467."
„ 204, „ 37. For " 1766," read " 1714."
„ 225, „ 32. Add " Served on Grand Jury 1620 (Sw.) " after
" Richard STOTE I."
„ 225, „ 35. Delete " Served on Grand Jury 1620 (Sw.)."
„ 227, „ 14. Add drop-line from " John BARROW."
„ 248, „ 27. For " 1772," read " 1775."
„ 250, „ 30. For " DICKENSON," read " DICKINSON."
„ 277, „ 8. For " 1663," read " 1683, May 19."
» 293» >» 39- F°r " per gule Sable" read " per pale Sable."
» 352> » 21. For " Index of Plates," read " Index of Places."
Supplement to THE PEDIGREE REGISTER, March, 1913.
(Record of (J)arenfo<jet Before 1837*
FIRST THOUSAND.
It is often desirable, sometimes necessary, to prove the parentage of .a person
born before general registration of births began in England and Wales in 1837. The
following list is compiled from various Public and other records (not including
Parish Registers), and the precise reference to authority can be supplied. In every case
of strict proof of parentage being required application should be made direct to
GEORGE SHERWOOD, 227, STRAND (by TEMPLE BAR), LONDON, W.C.
Approximate
date of
record.
1820. ABELL, Geo. Mutlow, Glouc.
1821. ACLAND, Anne Maria, Hants.
1818. A'CouRT, Elizth., Wilts.
1821. ACTON, Rd. F'cis, Naples.
1800. ADAMS, Amelia, Surrey.
1655. ADAMS, Edward, Northants.
1650. ADAMS, Elizth., Staffs.
1780. ADAMS, Frances, Salop.
1762. ADDERLY, John, Glouc.
1800. ADDISON, Mary, Suffolk.
1790. ADEY, Anne, Somerset.
1765. ADSTON, Dorothy, Yorks.
1684. ACER, Frances, Berks.
1572. AGMONDSHAM, John, Surrey.
1800. AGNEW, William, Boulogne.
1613. AILMER, Cicily, Herts.
1621. AISHLEY, Dawnes, Devon.
1587. ALABASTER, Anne, Suffolk.
1595. ALBONE, John, Suffolk.
1623. ALCOCKS, John, Salop.
1582. ALDEN, Peter, Essex.
1530. ALDERMAN, Gilbert, Suffolk.
1590. ALDERSEY, Nicholas, Middx.
1817. ALDERSON, Richard, Yorks.
1596. ALDRICH, Richard, Norfolk.
1762. ALDUS, Ralph, Middx.
1520. ALDWORTH, Joan, Berks.
1520. ALDYN, Harry, Essex.
1793. ALEXANDER, Mary, Somerset.
1638. ALFORD, Avis, Hants.
1625. ALGER, Anthony, Suffolk.
1605. ALISTON, John, Suffolk.
1785. ALKINS, John, Warwick.
1750. ALLAMBRIDGE, John, Dorset.
Approximate
date of
record.
1593. ALLARD, Francis, Kent.
1813. ALLARDYCE, Mary, Glouc.
1817. ALLATT, Horace, France.
1550. ALLEN, Bartholomew, Lines.
1596. ALLEN, Josias, Herts.
1557. ALLEY, Thomas, Bucks.
1821. ALLINGHAM, F'ces Mary, Ireland.
1770. ALLINSON, John, Salop.
1620. ALLMEY, Mary, Leicester.
1770. ALLOTT, Edward, Yorks.
1810. ALLWOOD, John, Derby.
1658. ALLYN, John, Devon.
1822. ALMENT, Elizabeth, Londonderry.
1660. ALMEY, Susan, Leic.
1605. ALMOND, Richard, Oxon.
1634. ALSTON, Abraham, Suffolk.
1542. ALY, Andrew, Berks.
1780. AMBROSE, Mary, Cambs.
1802. AMES, Amelia, Devon.
1826. AMEY, Augusta, Lanes.
1824. AMISS, Hannah, Salop.
1783. AMYES, Elizabeth, Heref.
1804. ANDERSON, Samuel, Devon.
1760. ANDREWS, Dummer, Hants.
1821. ANGELO, Augustus, France.
1822. AN GUY, Elizabeth, Glasgow.
1786. ANLEY, Mary Charlotte, Jersey.
1757. ANNESLEY, Martin, Berks.
1821. ANTHONY, Sarah, Derby.
1820. ANTILL, Alice, Lanes.
1805. ANTON, James Alexr., Barbadoes.
1752. ANWYL, Thos. Lloyd, Merioneth.
1756. APPLEYARD, Ramsden, Yorks.
1802. ARBUTH NOT, Walter, Kincardinesh'e.
2 RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, .BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND.
Approximate
date of
record.
1803. ARCHDEACON, William, Durham.
1790. ARCHER, Anne Augustine, Hants.
1825. ARMSTRONG, George, Co. Tipperary.
1752. ARMYTAGE, Anthony, Yorks.
1767. ARNOLD, Henry, Kent.
1815. ARPE, Hamond, Kent.
1772. ARROWSMITH, Elizabeth, Durham.
1760. ARUNDELL, John, Cornwall.
1816. ASHE, Richard, Ireland.
1762. ASHLEY, George, Staffs.
1535. ASHPOOL, William, Berks.
1823. ASHWOOD, Eliza, Salop.
1816. ASKEW, Georgianne, Glouc.
1749. ASPINALL, William, Lanes.
1748. ASTELL, Richard, Surrey.
1817. ASTUTO, Girolama Concetta, Sicily.
1814. ATCHERLEY, Jane, Salop.
1750. ATHAWES, Edward, London.
1816. ATHERLEY, Jane, Cumberland.
1830. ATHEY, Joseph, Northumberland.
1800. ATKINS, Mary Ann, Somerset.
1822. ATKINSON, Charles, Dorset.
1760. ATTREE, William, Sussex.
1762. ATWOOD, Charles, Salop.
1765. AUDLEY, Ralph, Chester.
1826. AUSTIN, Julian, Wexford.
1803. AVENT, John, Cornwall.
1575. AWGAR, Margaret, Middx.
1803. AYLMER, John, Sussex.
1 8 10. AYLMER, Maria, Sussex.
1815. AYRES, John Robert, London.
1760. AYRTON, Thomas, Middlesex.
1590. BABINGTON, John, Chester.
1695. BABINGTON, Dorothea, Ireland.
1825. BACCHUS, Wm. Henry, Sussex.
1806. BACE, Fredk. Peter, Ireland.
1824. BACKHOUSE, Catharine Jane, Kent.
1752. BACON, Edward, Lanes.
1824. BACON, Frances Hale, Isle of Man.
1820. BACOT, Ellen, London.
1794. BADEN, Sarah, Glouc.
1815. BADHAM, Anne, Monmouth.
1823. BAERTLING, Alicia, Hanover.
1775. BAGGOTT, Thomas, Wore.
Approximate
date of
record.
1824. BAGOT, Chas. Samuel, Ireland.
1768. BAGSTER, Mary, Herts.
1823. BAGWELL, Chas. Wm., Ireland.
1762. BAILEY, John, Somerset.
1810. BAILLIE, Charles, Hants.
1820. BAILY, Elizabeth, Somerset.
1818. BAIN, Edward, Caithness.
1620. BAINBRIGG, Anthony, Yorks.
1784. BAINES, Hewley Mortimer, Yorks.
1825. BAIRD, Andrew Francis, Beaufort.
1640. BAKER, Anne, Suffolk.
1765. BAKER, Thomas Cox, Berks.
1771. BAKER, Lydia, Essex.
1748. BALDWIN, Hugh, Lanes.
1792. BALL, Thomas, Essex.
1817. BALL, Jane, Ireland.
1755. BALLARD, John, Hereford.
1814. BALLINGALL, Eliza F., Edinburgh.
1778. BALLINGER, Samuel, Somerset.
1820. BALMAIN, Frances, London.
1823. BALNEAVIT, Henry Colin, Malta.
1801. BAMFORD, John, Middx.
1819. BAND, Chas. Edward, Somerset.
1814. BANESTER, Anne, Glouc.
1808. BANKS, Anne, Staffs. .
1824. BANNATINE, Fredk. Wm., Somt.
1813. BANNER, Rob't Murray, Lanes.
1764. BARBER, John, Yorks.
1822. BARFOOT, Wm. Gordon, Hants.
1763. BARHAM, Rd. Harris, Kent.
1818. BARING, Sophia Clara, Hanover.
1650. BARKELEY, Anne, Northants.
1753. BARKER, Chrpr., Northumbd.
1823. BARKLEY, Chas. Wm., Dorset.
1815. BARLOW, Ann Waterloo, Cheshire.
1823. BARLOW, John Rhodes, Berks.
1815. BARNES, Edward, Cumbd.
1746. BARNESLEY, Benjn., Middx.
1757. BARON, Thos., Glouc.
1816. BARR, Sarah Ellen, Sussex.
1819. BARRETT, Philadelphia, Yorks.
1823. BARRINGTON, Catherine, Ireland.
1750. BARROW, John, Chester.
1758. BARSTOW, Jeremiah, Yorks.
RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND. 3
Approximate
date of
record.
1774. BARTLETT, Elizth., Carmarthen.
1697. BARTON, Bashua, Middx.
1750. BARWELL, Edward, Surrey.
1816. BARWICK, Wm., Ireland.
1800. BASS, Charlotte, Leicr.
1752. BASSETT, John, Hants.
1764. BATEMAN, Thos. Champion, Surrey.
1813. BATES, Amelia, France.
1772. BATH, Sarah, Wore.
1820. BATT, Molyneux, Abergavenny.
1822. BATTERSBY, John Prevost, Ireland.
1753. BATTERSON, Wm., Surrey.
1758. BATTESWORTH, Joseph, Hants.
1815. BATTY. Ann, Scotland.
1813. BATWELL, Andrew, Ireland.
1630. BAUGH, Anne, Essex.
1758. BAUNTON, John, Wilts.
1760. BAWDEN, Henry, Devon.
1749. BAXBY, John, Yorks.
1803. BAXTER, Geo. Trotman, Montgom'y.
1755. BAYLAY, John, Devon.
1617. BAYLEY, Alice, Hants.
1800. BAYLIS, Joseph, Glouc.
1752. BAYLY, Francis, Wilts.
1811. BAYNTUN, Charles, Wilts.
1822. BEACHCROFT, Fanny Margt., Kent.
1818. BEADON, Annabella, Somt,
1822. BEALE, Wm. Jas. Lane, Glouc.
1760. BEALL, Elizabeth, Yorks.
1778. BEARCROFT, Catherine Maria, Glouc.
1790. BEATTY, Frances, Ireland.
1822. BEAUCHAMP, Chas. Fois, Middx.
1762. BEAUMONT, Chas., Yorks.
1810. BEAVAN, Thomas, Hereford.
1750. BEAZLEY, David, London.
1765. BECKER, Wm., Notts.
1810. BECKETT, Wm. Thos., London.
1815. BECKHAM, Edgar, Suffolk.
1806. BECKWITH, Wm., Durham.
1800. BEDELL, Walter, Essex.
1752. BEDFORD, James, Hants.
1770. BEEBY, Joseph, Leic,
1752. BEECH, Thomas, Somerset.
1809. BEECROFT, Beal, Herts.
Approximate
date of
record.
1824. BEERE, Margaret, Ireland.
1800. BEEVOR, Maria Janette, Norfolk.
1792. BELL, Catharine, Durham.
1800. BELL, James Thomas, Cumberland.
1771. BELL, Sarah, Devon.
1798. BELLAIRS, Eleanor, Northumbd.
1805. BELLAMY, John, Wore.
1806. BELLETT, Ann, Somerset.
1814. BELTON, Matilda, Ireland.
1775. BENISON, Anne, Yorks.
1765. BENN, Thomas, London'.
1780. BENNATTS, Elizth., Cornwall.
1826. BENNETT, Frederic, Somerset.
1816. BENNETT, Wm. Acotes, Ireland.
1750. BENSON, Elisha, Berks.
1790. BENSTON, John, Staffs.
1762. BENT, John, Lanes.
1826. BENTHAM, Harriett, London.
1802. BENTON, Agnes, Scotland.
1821. BEN WELL, Edwd. Thos., Middx.
1753. BERESFORD, Francis, Derby.
1815. BERFORD, Mary Ann, Hants.
1822. BERKELEY, Anne, Ireland.
1824. BERNARD, Alvera, Devon.
1766. BERRINGTON, Mary, Leicester.
1768. BERRY, Thomas, Devon.
1830. BERRY, Margaret, Lanes.
1804. BERWICK, Ann, Yorks.
1768. BEST, Thomas, Wore.
1802. BESWICK, James, Lanes.
1777. BETHELL, George, Heref.
1823. BETHUNE, Alexander, Scotland.
1823. BETTESWORTH, Jas. Trevanion, Kent.
1818. BETTS, Eliza Ann, Berks.
1748. BEVIS, William, Middx.
1766. BEWLEY, Charles, London.
1795. BIBBY, Alice Mary, U.S.A.
1766. BICKNELL, Charles, London.
1781. BICKNELL, Mary, Somerset.
1752. BIDDLE, Matthew, Glouc.
1826. BIDWITH, Charlotte, Devon.
1822. BIGGAM, Caroline, Ireland.
1748. BIGGLESTON, James, London.
1800. BIGGS, Harriott, Jersey.
4 RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, -BEFORE 1837"— FIRST THOUSAND.
Approximate
date of
record.
1677. BILLINGHAM, Thomas, Durham.
1760. BILLINGTON, John, Kent.
1765. BINDLOSS, Cecilia, Lanes.
1825. BINDON, Edwd. Augustus, Ireland.
1750. BINSTED, George, Hants.
1756. BINSTEED, George, Hants.
1750. BIRCH, George, Lanes.
1765. BIRD, Fenwick, Glouc.
1810. BIRKETT, Edward, Kent.
1820. BIRNEY, Chas. B. Bally Gilbert.
1822. BIRNIE, Agnes, Scotland.
1746. BISHOP, Henry Mallory, Sussex.
1802. BISSET, James, Scotland.
1820. BLACK, Charlotte, Devon.
1815. BLACKADDER, Euphemia, Scotland.
1832. BLACKBURN, Quintin, Northd.
1774. BLACKBURROW, Jemima, Somt.
1758. BLACKDEN, Benjn., London.
1822. BLACKETT, Edwd., Algernon, Northd.
1852. BLADWELL, John, London.
1834. BLAGROVE, Isabella, London.
1762. BLAINEY, Thomas, Wore.
1764. BLAKE, William, Somerset.
1770. BLAKELOCK, Ralph, Yorks.
1818. BLAKENEY, Theodosia, Ireland.
1745. BLAKEWAY, Thomas, Salop.
1816. BLAKISTON, Ellenor F'ces, Hants.
1771. BLANCH, Anne, Glouc.
1825. BLATHWAYT, Chas. Pye, Ireland.
1752. BLENCOWE, George, Cumberland.
1750. BLETTSOE, James, Oxon.
1770. BLEWETT, John, Cornwall.
1830. BLIGH, John, Cornwall.
1822. BLISS, Martha, Glouc.
1820. BLOOD, William, Leic.
1815. BLUNTISH, Archibald, France.
1746. BOLLAND, Thomas, Yorks.
1740. BOOTE, Daniel,-Ghester.
1772. BOUGHTON, Alice, Glouc.
1765. BOWER, James, Derby.
1746. BRADLEY, Richard, Herts.
1763. BRIGGS, Henry, Lanes.
1756. BROOME, Richard, Wilts.
1766. BROUGHTON, John, Glouc.
Approximate
date of
record.
1752. BROWNSWORD, William, Cumbd.
1766. BUCK, Charles, Norfolk.
1833. BUDDJ Fred. Edwd., Wilts.
1750. BUDDEN, Richard, Hants.
1748. BULL, Farmer, Oxon.
1757. BURGH, Allatson, Yorks.
1808. BURKITT, Samuel, Ireland.
1490. BURTON, Elizabeth, London.
1750. BUSKER, John, Glouc.
1755. BUTLER, Weeden, Kent.
1752. BUTTERFIELD, Henry, Yorks.
1748. BYLES, George, Hants.
1760. CADELL, Philip, Glouc.
1762. CANNON, John, Kent.
1793. CARELESS, William, Glouc.
1544. CARPENTER, Agnes, Berks.
1760. CARR, William, Yorks.
1758. CARRUTHERS, Richard, Cumbd.
1761. CARTHEW, John, Cornwall.
1776. CARTWRIGHT, Edmund, Notts.
1760. CARVELL, Edward, Beds.
1767. CARY, Joseph, Essex.
1758. CAWNE, John, Beds.
1780. CEELY, William, Somerset.
1768. CHADWICK, Sir Andrew, Lanes.
1760. CHALCRAFT, Henry, Hants.
1779. CHALLEN, Cassandra, Sussex.
1782. CHAMBERS, Anne, Berks.
1779. CHANDLER, Jane, Somerset.
1753. CHAPPELL, James,' Devon.
1748. CHAVASSE, Saml. Castle, Oxon.
1754. CHIPPENDALE, John, Yorks.
1763. CLAY, Catherine, Notts.
1768. CLEATHER, Thomas, Devon.
1761. CLIFF, Edward, Devon.
1805. COLCHESTER, Arabella, Glouc.
1549. COLSON, Johane, Surrey.
1833. COLY, Sir John Dutton, Heref.
1765. COMBE, Harvey C., Hants.
1779. CONDON, Chas. Mellish, Notts.
1787. COOKE, Hannah, Yorks.
1755. COOPER, Samuel, Chester.
1751. COPLESTON^ Richard, Devon.
1787. CORBET, John,' Heref.
RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND. 5
Approximate
date of
record.
1807. CORT, Thos. Langton, Lanes.
1771. COTTEREL, Anne, Radnor.
1762. COURTENAY, George, Devon.
1752. COWARD, John, Somerset.
1760. COWLES, Elizth., Hereford.
1783. Cox, Susannah, Hereford.
1765. COXON, Chrpr., Lincoln.
1830. CRACKNELL, Julia, Somerset.
1763. CRANTON, Anne, Dorset.
1753. CRESWICK, Henry, Glouc.
1784. CREWE, Ann, Chester.
1783. CRIDLAND, Frances, Somt.
1753. CRISPIN, Robert, Middlesex.
1825. CROMECK, Thos. Hartley, Yorks.
1760. CROOME, Jas. Bridger, Somt.
1812. CRIDLAND, John, Somerset.
1783. CUNNINGHAM, Maria, Wore.
1781. CURLE, Rebecca, Hereford.
1763. DAINTREY, Marmaduke, Hants.
1763. DAINTY, Thomas, Cambs.
1764. DALE, Robert, Derby.
1752. DALISON, Maximilian, Kent.
1750. DAMPIER, Ludwell, Somerset.
1764. DANGERFIELD, Susannah, Wore.
1760. DARLINGTON, Benjn., Salop.
1758. DASHWOOD, John Rd., Norfolk.
1754. DAVIS, Samuel, Beds.
1774. DAWBNEY, George, Somerset.
1759. DAWSON, Henry, Lanes.
1752. DEACON, Thomas, Essex.
1756. DEANE, Henry, Berks.
1783. DEATH, Anne, Suffolk.
1755. DENHAM, Thomas, London.
1747. DENNETT, Thomas, Sussex.
1760. DEVERELL, Dagnall, Bucks.
1800. DEWEY, Susannah, Dorset.
1758. DICAS, William, Chester.
1754. DICKINS, Wm., Warwick.
1836. DICKSON, Anne, Yorks.
1756. DIDIER, Abraham, Essex.
1753. DIGHTON, Chrpr., Surrey.
1760. DISNEY, John, Lincoln.
1751. DIXON, Jacob, Cumberland.
1838. DIXON, John Horsfall, Yorks.
Approximate
date of
record.
1754. DOBLE, John, Cornwall.
1756. DODSON, Thos., Sussex.
1773. DONE, Anne, Chester.
1589. DORINGTON, Margt., Suffolk.
1809. DORRELL, Edward, Worcr.
1766. DORRINGTON, Wm., Glouc.
1771. DOUSTON, Starkey, Chester.
1679. DOUTHWAITE, John, Durham.
1754. DOWDING, Nathl., Wilts.
1788. DOWLER, Elizth., Salop.
1755. DOWN, William, Kent.
1760. DOWNES, John, Hants.
1755. DRAKE, Thomas, Devon.
1759. DREWE, Wm., Devon.
1757. DREWETT, Saml. John, Glouc.
1762. DUGARD, Mary, Wore.
1748. DUKE, John, Wilts.
1830. DUMBLETON, Sarah Anne, Bucks.
1767. DUNN, Thomas, Yorks.
1755. DUPONT, John, Yorks.
1683. DURHAM, Elizth., Durham.
1757. DYER, John, Oxon.
1817. DYKES, Ellen B., Cumberland*
1747. DYNE, William, Kent.
1764. EADES, Thos. Beech, Wore.
1747. EARL, Thomas, Bucks.
1765. EASON, John, Hants.
1752. EAST, Chas. Wm., Kent.
1763. EASTABROOK, Chas. J., Devon.
1766. EASTON, William, Hants.
1776. EATON, Maud, Devon.
1752. EDGILL, James, Devon.
1759. EDMUNDS, Rd., Montgomery.
1761. EDWARDS, James, Hereford.
1757. EDWARDS, Wm., Somerset.
1771. EDGE, Elizth., Flint.
1786. EDMONDS, Thos., Glamorgan.
1764. EELES, Thos., Yorks.
1763. ELBECK, John, Westmorland.
1747. ELCOCK, Francis, Cheshire.
1798. ELFORD, Mary Anne, Cornw.
1757. ELLAMES, Peter, Lanes.
1752. ELLIOTT, John V., Surrey.
1761. ELLIOTT, Edward, Yorks.
RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND.
Approximate
date of
record.
1776. ELLIS, Thomas, Denbigh.
1563. ELMESTONE, Joan, Kent.
1756. ELSWORTH, George R., Hants,
1792. ELTON, George, Glouc.
1752. ERWOOD, James, Wilts.
1828. ESSINGTON, Emma, Norfolk.
1579. ESTE, Agnes, Herts.
1832. EVANS, Herbert, Pembroke.
1766. EVANS, John, Notts.
1777. EVANS, Rebecca, Cardigan.
1751. EVANS, Thomas, Montgomery.
1764. EVELEIGH, John, Devon.
1589. EVERARD, John, Suffolk.
1765. EVEREST, John, Kent.
1754. EVES, Francis, Hereford.
1748. EVITT, Thomas, Surrey.
1679. EWBANKE, Tobias, Durham.
1792. EWER, James, Herts.
1755. EYES, John, Lanes.
1768. EYRE, Charles, Yorks.
1754. FAIRBROTHER, Isaac, Notts.
1759. FAIRFAX, William, Yorks.
1765. FAITHFULL, Wm., Hants.
1765. FALKNER, Thos., Lanes.
1751. FANSHAW; John, Berks.
1779. FARNCOMBE, Cassandra, Sussex.
I755- FARNES, Thomas, Sussex.
1812. FARR, Jane, Hereford.
1760. FARRER, Thomas, Yorks.
1577. FAUNTLEROY, John, Dorset.
1764. FAWCETT, Hy. Godfrey, Kent.
1766. FA WELL, Joseph, Westmd.
1810. FENNER, Thomas, Lincoln.
1753. FENTON, William, Yorks.
1777. FEN WICK, Anne, Yorks.
1764. FEN WICK, James, Middlesex.
1767. FERDINANDO, Rd., Yorks.
1598. FETTIPLACE, Margt.,' Berks.
1774. FIELD, Hannah, Warwick.
1759. FIELDEN, John, Lanes.
1765. FILLITER, George, Dorset.
1754. FiNCHETT, Thos., Middx.
1758. FINNEMORE, Mary, Staffs.
1753. FISH, .Palmer Jeremy, Beds.
Approximate
date of
record.
1754. FISHER, Thos., Warwick.
1608. FISKE, Thos., Suffolk.
1747. FLETCHER, Thos., Sussex.
1767. FLOYD, Henry, Bucks.
1750. FLOYER, Peter S., Berks.
1809. FOOT, John, Wilts.
1766. FORD, James, Lanes.
1761. FORWARD, Samuel, Devon.
1767. FOTHERGILL, Francis, Yorks.
1758. FOULKS, Rees, Flint.
1757. FOWLE, Joseph,- Glouc.
1759. FOWLER, Sir Wm., Salop.
1760. FRANCIS, Robt., Norfolk.
1758. FREEBORNE, John L., Dorset.
1760. FREEMAN, Samuel, Bucks.
1756. FREEME, Isaac, Wilts.
1616. FRENCH, William, Durham.
1748. FRETWELL, Johnson, Yorks.
1757. FREWEN, Wm., Sussex.
1754. FRIGGENS, Thos., Cornwall.
1755. FRITH, Michael, Hants.
1812. FRIZELL, Wm., Cumberland.
1769. FROUDE, Margt., Devon.
1767. FRY, Joan, Devon.
1763. FRYER, Margt., Glouc.
1830. FUREER, Ambrose W., Dorset.
1753. GABB, Thomas, Monmouth.
1768. GADD, John, Somerset.
1598. GAGES, Henry, Suffolk.
1765. GAISFORD, John, Somerset.
1758. GALE, Robert, Kent.
1810. GANT, Frances, Lincoln.
1629. GARDINER, Elizth., Suffolk.
1766. GARHAM, Thos., Cumberland.
1662. GARRETT, John, Suffolk.
1786. GARTSIDE> John, Chester.
1825. GASKELL, John Dakin, Lanes.
1617. GATES, Bryan, Norfolk.
1782. GAUDERN, Stephen, Northants
1768. GAWNE, Thomas, Sussex.
1760. GEARE, Harry, Devon.
1786. GEATRELL, William, Glouc.
1764. GEORGE, William, Berks.
1525. GERYNG, Alice, Berks,
RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND. 7
Approximate
date of
record.
1752. GIBBS, Charles, Northants.
1765. GIBSON, Jos., Durham.
1782. GIDDINQS, John, Wilts.
1768. GILBERT, John, Hants.
1635. GILL, Robert, London.
1629. GIRLINGE, Ursula, Lines.
1767. GLYNN, William, Devon.
1748. GODWIN, John, Hants.
1786. GOLLEDGE, Edward, Glouc.
1764. GOODALL, Edwd. Vernon, Somt.
1623. GOODERSHAM, Mary, Suffolk.
1662. GOODING, Anney Suffolk.
1759. GOODLAKE, Thomas, Berks.
1762. GORGES, Richard, Heref.
1761. GOULTON, Thomas, Yorks.
1767. GRAVES, Danvers, Wore.
1747. GRAYHURST, Wm., Glouc.
1783. GREENAWAY, Peggy, Glouc.
1763. GREENING, Ann, Dorset.
1757. GREENWOOD, John, Yorks.
1747. GREY, Isaac, Berks.
1754. GRIGG, John, Glouc.
1748. GRIMSTEED,. Rd., Glouc.
1625. GUINNET, John, Salop.
1753. GULLETT, Chrpr., Devon,
1757. GULLY, Rd., Cornwall.
1783. GUNSTON, Sir Trios., Somt.
1770. GURNEE, Benjamin, Glouc.
1757. GWATKIN', Thomas, Heref.
1767. GWILT, Charles, Suffolk.
1780. GWYNN, William, Brecon, . f
1747. GYLES, William, Glouc.
1767. HADDEN, Bridget, Leicr.
1805. HADLEY, Thomas, Wore.
1618. HALL, Cuthbert, Durham.
1629. HAMERSTON, Thos., Surrey.
1759. HANCOCK, Anne, Glouc.
1767. HARGOOD, Benjn^, Kent.
1682. HASWELL, George, Durham.
1757. HATFIELD, Francis, Yorks.
1755. HATT, Thomas, Berks.
1762. HAVELLAND, Geo., Dorset.
1616. HAWDON, Ellinor, Durham.
1759. HAWKESFORD, Richard, Wore.
Approximate
date of
record.
1807. HAYXINGS, Catherine, Wore.
1765. HEAPEY, Robert, Lanes.
1763. HEART, Thomas, Gloucester.
1754. HEBDIN, James, Yorkshire.
1768. HEMENS, Elizth., Somerset.
1751. HENDY, Samuel, Cornwall.
1753. HEPWORTH, John, Yorks.
1640. HERON, Elizabeth, Suffolk.
1749. HEWIT, John, Cumberland.
1776. HEYSHAM, Robt. T., Essex.
1750. HICKS, James, Kent.
1759. HIERN, William, Devon.
1752. HIGGINS, John, Hants.
1760. HILL, Chrpr., Yorks.
1767. HILLMAN, James, Wore.
1748. HINDE, John, Kent.
1764. HITCH, Wortham, Cambs.
1756. HOBART, Francis, Somerset.
1784. HOCKENHULL, Cath., Chester,
1763. HODDER, Mary, Dorset.
1820. HOGHTON, Susannah, Lanes.
1775. HOLDER, Anne, Glouc.
1763. HOLE, Robert, Devon.
1777. HOLLAND, Hannah, Hants.
1748. HOLLIST, Wm., Sussex.
1763. HORROCKS, Thos., Yorks.
1759. HOSKINS, Kedgwin, Glouc.
1750. HOUGHTON, Robert, Norfolk.
1759. HOVELL, Wm., Suffolk.
1772. HOWSE, Keziah, Glouc.
1764. HOYLAND, John, Yorks.
1756. HUGHES, James, Glouc.
1792. HUGHSON, John, Chester.
1767. HULKE, Benjamin, Kent.
1759. HUMPHREYS, Edwd., Middlx.
1767. HUNTINGFORD, James, Hants.
1776. HURRELL, John, Devon.
1772. HYDE, Mary, Chester.
1747. I'ANSON, John, Kent.
1777. ILETT, William. Somerset.
1760. INCE,, Thomas, Notts.
1759. INCLEDON, John, Devon.
1763. IRISH, Ruth, Devon.
1767. JAMESON, Wm., Yorks.
8 RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND.
Approximate
date of
record.
1806. JEFFERSON, Mary, Cumbd.
1751. JORDAN, John, London.
1766. JOYSEY, James, Bucks.
1770. JULIAN, John, Devon.
1754. KEATE, Jonathan, Kent.
1761. KEDDON, Ralph, Hants.
1763. KELLY, John, Devon.
1754. KEMP, Charles, London.
1751. KENTISH, Thomas, Herts.
1754. KESTELL, John, Cornwall.
1791. KILMISTER, Anne, Glouc.
1765. KILVINGTON, Jane, Yorks.
1757. KIRKBY, Henry, Notts.
1761. KNOWLES, Smith, Chester.
1751. LACY, George, Cambs.
1753. LAMBERT, John, Glouc.
1765. LANE, William, Kent.
1624. LANG, Chrpr., Devon.
1764. LAPORTE, James, Essex.
1768. LASKEY, John, Devon.
1761. LAVERACK, Michael, Yorks.
1761. LAW, Henry, Lanes.
1784. LAWTON, Phillip, Staffs.
1758. LEEN, John, Chester.
1787. LEGGITT, John, Yorks.
1764. LEIGHTON, Wm., Durham.
1767. LEM, William, London.
1764. LETHBRIDGE, Thos., Cornwall.
1683. LEWEN, George, Durham.
1764. LEWIS, Francis, Glouc.
1764. LIGHTFOOT, Robt., Cumbd.
1788. LILLY, William, Wore.
1780. LINSEY, Thos., Norfolk.
1790. LISNARD, Frances, Ireland.
1766. LISTER, Nathl., Herts.
1758. LITCHFIELD, John, Northts.
1775. LITTLE, Josiah, Glouc.
1824. LIVESAY, Rd. Redfearn, York.
1763. LLOYD, Hugh, Carnarvon.
1757. LOCKE, Wadham, Wilts.
1786. LOMAX, Anne, Somerset.
1753. LONG, Robert, Essex.
1832. LOTHIAN, Lettice, Cumbd.
1747. LOWE, Samuel, Notts.
Approximate
date of
record.
1751. LUCAS, William, Lanes.
1763. LUDLOW, James, Glouc.
1782. LUMBARD, Anne, Glouc.
1807. LUPTON, John, Rutland.
1763. LUXTON, George, Devon.
1753. LYDALL, John, Oxon.
1759. LYDE, Sophia, Hereford.
1765. LYNE, John, Cornwall.
1837. LYNOTT, Harriet, Herts.
1766. LYON, Joseph, Lanes.
1752. MABBETT, Richard, Gloucester.
1765. MACLEAN, Archibald, Warwick.
1768. MADDOCKS, Mary, Salop.
1756. MAIR, John, Kent.
1748. MALBON, Micajah, Middlesex.
1628. MANN, Susan, Suffolk.
1758. MARCHANT, Susannah, Somt.
1818. MARPLES, Margt., Derbyshire.
1768. MARSDEN, Francis, Yorks.
1771. MARTELLI, Elizth., Hants.
1766. MARTYR, John, Surrey.
1605. MASLIN, John, Berks,
1767. MASON, Jackson, Westmd.
183.1. MASSEY, Anne, Staffs.
1764. MATSON, John, Kent.
1763. MATTHEWS, Elizth., Devon.
1765. MAULE, George, Hants.
1763. MAWDESLEY, George, Lanes.
1760. MAXWELL, Wilkinson, Durham.
1766. MAY, Henry, Sussex.
1765. MEADE, Joseph, Warwick.
1529. MEENE, Henry, Suffolk.
1763. MEGGITT, George, Lines.
1783. MELLSOM, Betty, Glouc.
1755. MENDHAM, Thos., London.
1750. MERRICK, Joseph, Lanes.
1773. MERRILL, Charles, Wore.
1762. MERRIVALE, Elizth., Devon.
1765. MEYNELL, John, Yorks.
1752. MIDDLETON, Chrpr., Durham.
1769. MILLETT, Humphrey, Cornwall
1763. MILNE, Nathaniel, Lanes.
1793. MINIFIE, James, Somerset.
1755. MINSHALL, John, Yorks.
RECORDS OK PARENTAGE, BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND. 9
Approximate
date of
record.
1753. MITCHELL, John Perry, Hants.
1616. MITCHESON, Philip, Durham.
1758. MONK, George, Kent.
1832. MONKHOUSE, Jane, Cumberland.
1766. MOORE, John, Oxon.
1765. MORFEE, Peter, Sussex.
1797. MORGAN, Mary, Somerset.
1753. MORSHEAD, Philip, London.
1752. MORTON, John, Surrey.
1765. MOSELEY, Wtr. Hy., Staffs.
1753. MOTT, William, Kent.
1766. MOULT, Mary, Leicester.
1758. MOWER, Edmund, Derbyshire.
1761. MULES, Chrpr., Devon.
1570. MUSTIAN, Mary, Surrey.
1783. MYND, Anne, Glouc.
1753. NAIRN, Charles, Sussex.
1756. NANKIVELL, Benjn., Cornwall.
1821. NAYLOR, Edmund, Lanes.
1804. NEALE, Jane Theodosia, Warw.
1818. NEEDHAM, Martha, Derby.
1638. NELSON, Anne, Glouc.
1758. NELSON, Samuel, Lanes.
1767. NEVITT, John, Lanes.
1765. NEWLAND, John, London.
1752. NEWLAND, Thomas, Surrey.
1764. NEWMAN, Chas., Middx.
1769. NEWMARSH, Anna Maria, Lanes.
1806. NEWTON, Abigail, Cumberland.
1789. NICHOLETTS, Gilbert, Wore.
1765. NICHOLSON, Lucas, Yorks.
1787. NIGHTINGALE, Evan, Montgomy.
1820. NISBET, Helen, Glouc.
1767. NODDER, Alexr., Derby.
1828. NOKES, Wm. Graham, Essex.
1786. NOLL, Edward, Norfolk.
1752. NORCOP, Lawrence, Salop.
1596. NORGATE, Thomas, Norfolk.
1833. NORREYS, Mary, Lanes.
1756. NORRIS, George, Middx.
1777. NORTH, Henry, Lanes.
1761. NoRwooD,*George, Kent.
1763. NOWELL, Thomas, Lanes.
1697. NOYES, Elizth., Berks.
Approximate
4ate of
record.
1755. NUTCHER, Ambrose, Hants.
1764. NUTTALL, Robert, London.
1803. OAKLEY, Elizth., Dorset.
1753. O'BRIEN, Henry, Northants.
1747. ODDIE, Edward, Yorks.
1765. OGDEN, Edmund, Lanes.
1763. OKE, Walter, Devon.
1766. OLIVER, John, Dorset.
1794. ORMSTONE, Esther, Cumbd.
1766. OSBORNE, Jeremiah, Glouc.
1776. OVERMAN, Mary, Herts.
1783. OWERS, Elizth., Cambs.
1767. PALMER, John, Devon.
1830. PAPPY, Robert, Denbigh.
1753. PARDOE, Robert, Wore.
1763. PARKINSON, John, Yorks.
1756. PARNELL, Hugh, Glouc.
1753. PARROTT, George, Chester.
1830. PARRY, Peter, Denbigh.
1768. PARSONS, Rd., Hants.
1749. PASKE> Isaac, Essex.
1764. PATE, Jane, Chester.
1622. PAULE, Chrpr., Leicester.
1760. PAVEY, Catherine, Devon.
1747. PAYNE, John, Middx.
1773. PEACH, Elizth., Staffs.
1827. PEARCE, Sarah, Kent.
1763. PEARSON, Wm., Durham.
1751. PECK, John, Surrey.
1770. PEIRCE, Richard, Hants.
1618. PEMBERTON, Michael, Durham.
1767. PENLERRICK, Wm., Cornwall.
1753. PENNINGTON, Wm., Lanes.
1759. PENNYMAN, Dorothy, Yorks.
1751. PEPYS, Edmund, Kent.
1655. PERRY, Ralph, Essex.
1757. PHELPS, John, Wilts.
1753. PHILLPOTTS, Thos., Monm.
1763. PHIPPS, Martha, Glouc.
1776. PICTON, Thos., Pembroke.
1761. PITMAN, George, Devon.
1774. PLANT, Sarah, Warwick.
1770. POLE, German, Derby.
1761. POTTER, Gerrard, Lanes.
io RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND.
Approximate
date of
record.
1765. PRENTICE, John, Suffolk.
1755. PRICHARD, Rd., London.
1750. PRIDHAM, Edward, Devon.
1753. PROCTER, George, Yorks.
1800. PUGH, Cath., Merioneth.
1751. PURNELL, Wm., Somerset.
1786. PUSEY, Betty, Lanes.
1749. PYLE, James, Hants.
1613. QUARLES, Thomazin, London.
1756. RAINSFORD, Harry, Salop.
1753. RAISBECK, John S., Durham.
1769. RAMSDEN, John, Notts.
1766. RANDALL, Thos., Suffolk.
1758. RAVENSCROFT, Saml., London.
1837. RAWLINS, Elizth., Derby.
1753. RAWLINSON, Thos., Derby.
1764. RAY, Charles, Middlesex.
1747. RAYMENT, Thos., Essex.
1764. RAYNES, Wm., Sussex.
1815. REA, James, Northd.
1754. READE, Savill, Chester.
1765. REES, Catherine, Devon.
1757. REEVE, Thomas, Hants.
1805. REMINGTON, Alexr., Middx.
1755. RENELL, William, Devon.
1807. REYNOLDS, Susannah, Wore.
1832. RHODES, Samuel, Wilts.
1787. RICH, George, Somerset.
1768. RICHARDS, Thomas, Warwick.
1758. RICHARDSON, Martin, Yorks.
1748. RICHMOND, John, Wilts.
1763. RIDDING, Thomas, Hants.
1760. RIDER, Robert, Yorks.
1764. RIDOUT, John, Devon.
1768. RIDSDALE, John, Durham.
1749. RIGGE> John, Lanes.
1761. RING, Richard, Somerset.
1760. RIPLEY, James, Herts.
1502. RISSHEBROKE, Margt., Suff.
1805. Rix, Mary, Norfolk.
1783. ROACH, Mary, Glouc.
1748. ROADES, Thomas, Glouc.
1761. ROBERTS, Owen, Salop.
1770. ROBERTS, Dr. John, Heref.
Approximate
date of
record.
1838. ROBERTS, Elizth., Anglesey.
1749. ROBEY, Wm., Middx.
1777. ROBINSON, Ralph, Lanes.
1768. ROBINSON, Martha, Suffolk.
1765. ROGERS, Robert, Lanes.
1768. ROLFE, John, Kent.
1762. ROOKE, George, Devon.
1748. ROSE, Richard, Kent.
1758. ROSEWELL, Wm., London.
1749. ROUND, Thomas, Berks.
1758. ROYLANCE, John, Chester.
1767. RUDDOCK, Nich., Northd.
1760. RUNDLE, Henry, Cornwall.
1770. RUSSELL, Elizth., Heref.
1758. RUTTER, Henry, Lincoln.
1768. SALMON, Elizth., Somerset.
1714. SALT, Elizth., Staffs.
1755. SANDERS, Carew, Surrey.
1766. SANDHAM, Wm., S.ussex.
1750. SANTER, John, Lanes.
1618. SAYER, Thomas, Hants.
1633. SCARLOTT, John, Suffolk.
1781. SCHOLES, Anne, Lanes.
1752. SCOTCHER, Thos., Middx.
1758. SEALY, Benjn., Sussex.
1786. SEEDE, Wm., Glouc.
1838. SELBY, George, Northd.
1629. SELFE, Ursula, Suffolk.
1753. SERJEANTSON, Wm., Yorks.
1781. SHATTOCK, Malachi, Somt.
1762. SHELLABER, Elizth., Devon.
1747. SHOTTER, Wm., Sussex.
1777. SIDES, John, Salop.
1617. SIGGLESWICK, Jervase, Durham.
1828. SILKE, Blanch, Devon.
1764. SINGLETON, Rd., Lanes.
1616. SKURFIELD, Ralph, Durham.
1809. SKYRME, Wm., Wore.
1759. SMART, John, Kent.
1764. SMELT, Thomas, Yorks.
1765. SOLLY, Joseph, Kent.
1769. SOTHERON, Frank, Yorks.
1756. SOUTH, George, Wilts.
1640. SPARROW, Elizth., Suffolk.
RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND, n
Approximate
date of
record.
1752. SPEARMAN, John, Lanes.
1832. SPILLER, Loveday, Cornwall.
1754. STAINFORTH, John, Yorks.
1767. STANDISH, Cecilia, Lanes.
1753. STANTON, John, Warwick.
1749. STEELE, Richard, Kent.
1758. STEELE, George, Chester.
1750. STENT, Stephen, Glouc.
1755. STEPHENS, Henry, Wilts.
1759. STEPHENSON, Stephen, Denbigh.
1793. STERNHOLD, Mary, Hereford.
1589. STILL, Nathaniel, Suffolk.
1758. STORY, John Lacock, Notts.
1773. STOVIN, Cornelius, Yorks.
1764. STREET, Saml. Denny, Surrey.
1811. STRUDWICK, Wm., Surrey.
1755. STUBBS, Thomas, Kent.
1629. SWANE, Ursula, Lincoln.
1783. SWINBURNE, Sir Edwd., Northd.
1804. SYDENHAM, Jane, Somerset.
1750. SYMONS, Thos., Somerset.
1755. TAPPENDEN, James, Kent.
1683. TATAM, Robert, Durham.
1829. TATE, Sarah, Durham.
1757. TAUNTON, Elias Wm., Oxon.
1783. TAYLOR, John, Wore.
1774. TEDD, Wm., Warwick.
1762. TEMPLER, James, Surrey.
1753. TENNANT, John, Lanes.
1759. TERRY, Robert, Middx.
1830. TEUXBURY, Sarah, Dorset.
1760. THOMAS, Edward, Glamorgan.
1766. THOMPSON, John, Cumberland.
1752. THORP, Wm., Nottingham.
1760. THORNTON, James, Durham.
1762. THORY, Henry, Middx.
1801. THRALE, Thos., Herts.
1766. THRING, John, Wilts.
1597. THROCKMORTON, Elizth., Norf.
1605. THURSTONE, Mary, Berks.
1765. TIMEON, Rd., Berks.
1811. TIMPERLEY, Frances, Lanes.
1760. TINNEY, Wm., Dorset.
1749. TISSEN, Wm., Middx.
Approximate
date of
record.
1812. TOMKINS, Mary, Hereford.
1753. TONGE, John Smith, Kent.
1761. TONKIN, Peter, Devon.
1759. TOOVEY, Samuel, Oxon.
1814. TOTHILL, Rd., Devon.
1555. TOVY, Joan, Berks.
1758. TOWNLEY, Cecilia, Lanes.
1790. TOWSEY, John, Chester.
1759. TRAVERS, Matthew, Dorset.
1804. TREGONWELL, St. Barbe, Somt.
1768. TREISE, Sir Chrpr., Cornw.
1772. TREVEN, Mary, Chester.
1761. TROUT, Thomas, Glouc.
1782. TRUMPER, John, Hereford.
1812. TRUSS, Mary, Essex.
1753. TUCKER, John, Somerset.
1763. TUCKER, Robert, Glouc.
1832. TUCKEY, Cordelia, Wilts.
1829. TUCKLEY, Richard, Wilts.
1749. TUDER, Jamas, Monmouth.
1781. TUPPEN, Anne, Sussex.
1751. TURNER, John, Devon.
1747. TUTET, Gerard, Middx.
1829. TWEMLOW, Anne, Cheshire.
1759. TYLDESLEY, Thomas, Lanes.
1758. TYNDALE, Geo. Booth, Glouc.
1747. TYSSEN, William, Middx.
1752. UMFREVILLE, Thos., Lanes.
1767. UNDERWOOD, John, Glouc.
1825. UNETT, Anne, Staffs.
1778. URRY, John, Hants.
1756. USHER, Robert, Wilts.
1747. VALENS, John, Lanes.
1617. VALLION, Oliver, Durham.
1798. VAUGHAN, Jennett, Brecon.
1754. VERCHILD, James, London.
1759. VERE, John, Bucks.
1816. VESEY, William, Middx.
1751. VIGARS, Wm., Glouc.
1759. VINER, Giles M., Glouc.
1748. VIVIAN, James, Cornwall.
1829. VOSPER, Jane, Devon.
1754. WADDINGTON, Wm., Kent.
1759. WADE, George, Yorks.
12 RECORDS OF PARENTAGE, BEFORE 1837— FIRST THOUSAND.
Approximate
date of
record.
1780. WAKEMAN, Benedict, Glouc.
1766. WADSWORTH, Silvester, Yorks.
1801. WAKE, Dame Mary, Yorks.
1748. WALBANCK, Abraham, Glouc.
1755. WALMSLEY, Nicholas, Lanes.
1764. WALSHMAN, John, Lanes.
1616. WALTON, John, Durham.
1765. WAPSHARE, Chas. Wm., Wilts.
1763. WARDELL, Robert, Durham.
1784. WARLOW, Elizth., Pembroke.
1750. WARREN, Thomas, Oxon.
1783. WATERS, Mary, Cambs.
1780. WATKINS, Mark, Glouc.
1765. WAY, Samuel, Dorset.
1765. WEBB, Edward, Cornwall.
1768. WEEDON, Wm., Middx.
1761. WEIGHELL, John, Yorks.
1749. WELLARD, Thomas, Sussex.
1764. WESTFIELD, Robert, Kent.
1752. WHELPDALE, Thos\, Cumbd.
1810. WHITCOMBE, Anne, Hereford.
1792. WHITESIDE, John, Cumbd.
1815. WHITTAKER, James, Chester.
1756. WHITTALL, Richard, Yorks.
1815. WILKINSON, Benjn., Hants.
1769. WILLIAMS, Barbara, Pembroke.
Approximate
date of
record.
1764. WILLIS, David, Beds.
1752. WILLOUGHBY, Harry, Wilts.
1769. WILLY, Mary, Pembroke.
1680. WILSON, Marmaduke, Durham.
1795. WILTON, Sarah, Glouc.
1771. WINDLE, Samuel, Worcester.
1750. WINDUS, William, Herts.
1766. WINGFIELD, Thos., Salop.
1768. WINTER, Elizth., Somt.
1761. WINTON, John, Sussex.
1758. WISE, Edward, Berks.
1765. WITTS, Henry, Glouc,
1767. WOOD, Thomas, Yorks.
1763. WOODGATE, Henry, Sussex.
1756. WOODROFF, James, Monmouth.
1831. WORMALD, John, Yorks.
1769. WORTH, Bridget, Cornwall.
1757. WRIGHT, James, Lanes.
1764. WRIGHTON, John, Durham.
1753. WYATT, James, Wilts.
1761. WYBORN, Charles, Kent.
1758. YARKER, John, Yorks.
1783. YERWORTH, Robert, Glouc.
1758. YORK, Josias Bull, Warw.
1768. ZELLY, John, London.
To understand the conditions of record research in England^ so greatly facilitated the last few years^ it is
necessary to study
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
The official organ of -the Society of Genealogists of London.
Published QUARTERLY: Imperial 8vo. Price 2s. 6d. net; by post 2s. y-j-d.
i os. 6d. per annum, post free.
The Seventh Year of issue and Third Volume begin in June 1913.
Volume I. began in June 1907. A few copies still on sale.
Volume II. began with No. 13 in June 1910. Less than a dozen copies left.
Volume III. begins with No. 25 in June 1913.
GEORGE SHERWOOD, 227, STRAND (by TEMPLE BAR), LONDON.
INDEX
TO
THE PEDIGREE REGISTER
VOL. II. (1910-1913)
The more important references are shown in heavy type.
Abbot, Abbott, 22, 183.
Abdy, 89, 90, 91.
Abinger, 306.
Abram, 96.
Acheson, 289-291, 321.
Achmootie, 289.
Ackroyd, 253.
Acland, 89.
Adon, 293.
Adams (Adam), 41, 103, 237, 247.
Adcoke, 203.
Adderley, 160.
Addis, 145.
Adey, 15.
Ager, 1 60.
Ainsley, 290.
Aird, 79, 80, 81.
Airey, 73.
Alanson, 343.
Albery, 36.
Albright, 284.
Alcock, 41.
Alden, 77.
Alderson, 332.
Aldred, 148.
Alexander, 29.
Allen (Allan), 80, 124, 160, 234, 248, 376
Allinson, 73.
Allison, 124.
Allix, 242.
Almack, 376.
Alston, 22, 24, 124, 247.
Altham, 22.
Amcotts, 174.
Ames, 260.
Amias, 170.
Amiel, 90.
Amphlett, 23.
Amyand, 248.
Ancestry, The Study of, Some Re-
flections, i.
Anderson, 151, 165, 242, 370.
Andree, 23.
Andrews, 22, 23, 124, 155, 157, 248,
3°3> 3°9> 334» 342-
Annals of Two Extinct Families, 126.
Annesley, 323.
Annett, 239.
Anstiss, 1 1 8.
Antoinette, 127.
Antrim, 77.
Antrobus, 284.
Anwyl, 178.
Arbuthnot, 138.
Archaeological Journal, Berks, Bucks and
Oxon, 383.
Archer, 23, 90, 155, 248, 325.
Arden, 249.
Aris, 6.
Armiger, 249.
Armstrong, 27.
Armytage, 90.
Arnaud, 244.
Arne, 167.
Arnold, 22, 153, 160.
Arnum, 50.
Arthur, 39.
Arundell (Arundale), 12, 261, 318.
Ascrofte, 205, 208.
Ash, 271, 285.
Ashburner, 160.
Ashby, 248.
Ashcroft, 1 20.
Ashton, 124, 285.
Ash well, 283.
Askew, 25.
Aspinall, 25, 341.
Aspinwall, 25.
386
INDEX
Astle, 175, 309.
Astley, 293, 295.
Aston, 233.
Atfield, 321.
Atkins, 244, 374.
Atkinson, 234, 314.
Atlee, 347.
Atterbury, 303, 335.
Attley, 327.
Atye, 85.
Aubery, 24.
Austin, 24, 25.
Autographs, Title Page, and a Diary, 65.
Aveling, 96.
Avery, 170.
Awdeley, 262.
Axe, 285, 302.
Ayliffe, 155.
Aylmer, 205, 209, 247.
Aylsford, 247.
Aynescombe, 124.
Ayres, 125.
Ayrey, 271.
Ayscough, 196, 197, 265, 268, 269, 315.
Bach, 87.
Backhouse, 71, 72.
Bacon, 283.
Baden, 117.
Bagnall, 123.
Bagot, 1 60, 294.
Bagshaw, 285, 300.
Baguley, 83.
Bailey, 181.
Baillie, 238.
Bailly, 198, 234.
Baine, 96.
Baines, 22.
Bainton, 331.
Baisley, 50.
Baitey, 288.
Baker, 86, 118, 119, 166, 237, 247, 319,
Baldwin, 322, 323.
Bale, 310.
Ball, 159, 160, 242, 245, 380.
Ballard, 315.
Ballhouse, 160.
Balsom, 184.
Bamford, 14.
Band, 84.
Banger, 281, 379.
Banks, 207, 330, 331, 362.
Bannister, 227, 246.
Banson, 302, 333, 334.
Barbour, 172.
Barchard, 371.
Barckha, 208.
Barfoot, 243.
Bargrave, 160.
Barham, 300, 335.
Banff, 245.
Barker, 159.
Barkham, 31.
Barlee, 255.
Barnes, in, 160, 240, 241, 340, 341, 343.
Barnet, 296, 309, 310.
Barnsley, 144, 149, 319.
Barrett, 204, 209.
Barrow, 227, 262.
Barry, 227, 347.
Barstow, 307.
Bartholomew, 318.
Bartlett, 246.
Barton, 262, 285, 367, 380.
Baseley, 336.
Baskerville, 343.
Baskett, 312, 375.
Bass, 368.
Bassett, 243, 307.
Bastard, 243, 360.
Batch, 87.
Batchelor, 212.
Bate, 233, 335, 337.
Baugh, 307.
Bawden, 277.
Bayfield, 91.
Bayley, 29, 245, 265, 270, 271, 288, 318,
35°, 377, 383-
Bayne, 80, 184.
Beach, 310.
Beadnell, 142.
Beale, 281, 319, 362, 379.
Bean, 344.
Bearcro , 298.
[Be]ard[well], 218.
Beare, 307, 308.
INDEX
387
Beaumont, 124, 325.
Beauvoir, 20.
Beck, 75.
Beckford, 313, 315.
Beddome, 370.
Bedford, 160, 308.
Beech, 160.
Beere, 170.
Bekergast, 37.
Belcher, 243.
Bell, 147, 204, 205, 211, 276, 298, 332.
Bellas, 1 60.
Bellas -Greenough, 160.
Bellew, 288.
Bellows, 183.
Bel more, 291.
Benham, 226.
Bennett, 65, 174, 236, 243, 244 ,285,
286, 305, 366.
Bent, 78.
Bentley, 331.
Benyon, 90.
Beresford, 300, 301.
Bergall, 274.
Bermingham, 39, 44.
Bernau, 63, 165, 224, 288.
Bernier, 374.
Berriman, n, 13.
Berry, 148, 305, 310.
Berthon, 79, 80, 81, 82, 101, in, 151,
185, 240, 241, 311, 343, 344.
Berwick, 292, 293.
Besant, 3.
Besford, 296.
Best, 104, 294.
Bethune, 80.
Bettam, 162.
Bettenson, 337.
Betts, 219, 237.
Bevan, 243.
Bevins, 90.
Bicknell, 113, 115, 117, 244, 250, 283.
Bigg, 367-
Biggs, 327-
Billinghurst, 160.
Bindloss, 315.
Bingham, 300, 302.
Binning, 17.
Birch, 160, 286, 302.
Bird, 84, 176, 308, 310.
Birdford, 196.
Birkbeck, 286.
Birks, 275.
Birley, 341.
Births, Marriages, Deaths, etc., 59, 286.
Bise, 102.
Bishop, 207.
Bispham, 48.
Bjornson, 3.
Black, 21, 97.
Blackall, iob.
Blackburn, 309, 332.
Blackenhagen, 142.
Blackett, 160.
Blagrave, 247, 271.
Blair, 67.
Blake, 240.
Blakiston, 160.
Blincoe, 318.
Bliss, 258.
Blois, 54.
Blommart, 147.
Bloomer, 379.
Blount, 309.
Blunkett, 306.
Blunt, 234.
Boddington, 5-9, 31, 103, 160, 380.
Boggis, 314, 315.
Bohun, 142.
Boldre, 166.
Boleyn, 253.
Bolonia, 52-57, 293.
Bolton, 90, in, 204, 208.
Bonaparte, 89.
Bond, 140, 141, 142, 361.
Bone, 119.
Booker, 342.
Booth, 282.
Bordman, 208.
Borie, 380.
Boscastell, 253.
Boshell, 355.
Bostock, 318.
Boswell, 370.
Boteler, 201.
Bottomley, 22.
Bouchier, 253.
Boudinot, 380.
388
INDEX
Boulogne, 54.
Boulton, 244.
Boupshell, 71.
Bourke, 211.
Boutcher, 115.
Boutmis, 309.
Bower, 269, 270.
Bowker, 208.
Bowley, 9.
Bowman, 234.
Boyce, 68, 69.
Boyd, 21, 78, 371.
Boyer, 160.
Boyle, 28, 93, 160, 384.
Boyne, Viscount, 288.
Boynton, 243.
Bradbrook, 51, 63, 64, 119, 168, 288.
Bradbury, 118.
Bradeley, 297.
Bradford, 31, 244.
Bradley, 87, 298.
Brady, 244.
Bragg, 277.
Bramston, 247.
Brander, 261, 309.
Brandsby, 334.
Branfill, 311.
Brans by, 303.
Branwhite, 253.
Brasse, 282.
Brassey, 83, 84, 240, 241.
Braund, 311.
Bray, 114, 217.
Brazell, 118, 119.
Brazier, 361.
Brearton, 318.
Breedon, 247.
Breons, 95.
Brett, 142, 244.
Brewer, 169, 170.
Briance, 114.
Brickleton, 305.
Bridges, 244, 372.
Bridgman, 244.
Brigg, 192.
Bright, 116, 212, 215, 229.
Briminge, 261.
Brinley, 96.
Briscoe, 105.
Britain, 50, 146.
Broad, 327.
Broadhurst, 160.
Brockenshaw, 212.
Brockman, 40.
Broderip, 23.
Brodie, 159.
Brodrick, 346.
Bromfield, no.
Bromley, 379.
Bromley College Register, 1679-1800,
284, 300, 333, 352.
Brooke, 347.
Brookbank, 333, 334.
Brooker, 174.
Brooks, in, 315.
Brooks bank, 328.
Brown(e), 38, 149, 209, 228, 236, 245,
274, 278, 285, 301, 302, 309, 310,
335, 368, 380.
Browne-Bohun, 142.
Browning, 240, 244.
Brownjohn, 152, 153.
Brownutt, 119.
Bruce, 27, 28, 29, 244.
Bruckner, 113.
Brumfield, 243.
Brus, 27.
Bryan, 310.
Brydges, 101.
Buck, 152.
Buckingham, 153.
Buckle, 132, 134, 215, 228.
Buckley, 208.
Bucks. Baptisms, Marriages and Burials ,
288.
Bull, 239, 246, 384.
Bull, Miscellaneous Notes, 384.
Buller, 89.
Bullock, 331.
Bulpitt, 279.
Bungey, 217.
Bunting, 118, 119.
Burchell, 279.
Burdett, 303, 336.
Burgess, 310.
Burgh, 135.
Burke, 89, 141.
Burlasse, 278.
INDEX
Burley, 122, 294.
Burman, 243.
Burnell, 119, 329.
Burnet, 285.
Burnham, 118, 119.
Burnley, 112.
Burrard, 233.
Burrell, 371.
Burrows, 310.
Burt, 244.
Burtchaell, 288.
Burton, 160, 342, 365, 383.
Bury, 69, 70.
Busbridge, 330.
Busby, 119.
Bussy, 95.
Busvargus, 253.
Butcher, 61, 62.
Bute, 29.
Butler, 45, 236, 296, 309.
Butt, 121, 122, 375.
Butterfield, 341.
Button, 263.
Bye, 310.
Byers, 21.
Byndloss, 315.
Byrd, 310.
Cadbury, 374.
Cadogan, 216.
Calartha, 253.
Calverley, 160, 271.
Calvert, 354.
Camelford, 374. .
Cameron, 23, 121, 123, 354.
Campbell, 139, 185, 205, 206, 209.
Cape, 88.
Capell, 160.
Card, 1 66.
Careswell, 294.
Carew, 18, 20.
Carey, 362.
Carfoot, 306.
Carill, 306.
Carleton, 276, 318.
Carling, 368.
Carpenter, 362.
Carter, 204-211, 233, 262, 382.
Gary, 160.
Cash, 342, 343, 379.
Castell, 361.
Catalogue of Books, Central Public
Libraries, Newcastle-on-Tyne, 64.
Cathcart, 290.
Caulfeild, 322.
Cawley, 160.
Cecil, 282.
Chadwick, 156, 285.
Chainey, 276.
Challenor, 114.
Chamberlaine, 19, 183.
Chambers, 204, 285.
Chance, 88.
Chancery Masters' Reports and Certi-
ficates, 22, 89, 124, 242, 307
Chancery Pleadings, 277.
Chancery Proceedings, Pedigrees from,
279.
Chandler, 212.
Chandos, 374.
Chapman, 160, 286, 308.
Charleson, 381.
Charlett, 161.
Charnley, 160.
Charron, 232.
Charters of Lynn Regis, Norfolk, 97.
Chatham, 374.
Chatterton, 32, 93.
Chaucer(s), 197.
Chauncey, 380.
Checker, 16.
Cheese, 324.
Chest, 86.
Chesterfield, 2.
Chevalier, 247.
Child, 246, 274, 324.
Chilli ngworth, 135.
Chisholm, 151.
Chittock, 235.
Christie, 236.
Christmas, 145.
Christopher, 104.
Church, 243, 362.
Churchyard Inscriptions of the City of
London, 127.
Cipriani, 216.
Clack, 129, 130, 131, 349, 350.
390
INDEX
Clapham, 159.
Clare, 180, 323.
Clark(e), 70, 78, 118, 160, 239, 282, 285,
3i8, 329. 333, 341, 352.
Clarkson, 347.
Class Hatred, 157.
Clay, 330.
Claypoole, 77.
Clayton, 96, 160.
Clements, 247, 272.
Clendon, 334.
Cleverly, 229.
Cleversley, 152.
Cliffe, 283.
Clifford, 255, 272, 273.
Clive, 90, 294.
Clodd, 276.
Clowes, 126.
Clunne, 174.
Clyve, 294.
Coape, 224.
Coates, 62, 276.
Cobboy, 337.
Cobham, 346.
Cogger, 327.
Coke, 329.
Colby, 244.
Colchester, 124.
Coldfox, 294.
Coldham, 75.
Cole, 290.
Coleman, 145, 148, 218.
Coles, 10.
Colhoun, 384.
Collett, 235, 238, 352.
Collier, 248, 286.
Collins, 177, 206, 246, 279.
Collison, 318.
Collooney, 211.
Colquhoun, 217.
Coltman, 306.
Columbine, 142.
Comber, 160.
Comprehensive Pedigree: Paston, 64;
Jason, 158.
Corny, 283.
Congreave, 67, 121.
Constable, 7, 40, 363.
Constantine, 263.
Conway, 309.
Cooke, 38, 102, 119, 160.
Cookson, 319.
Coope, 224.
Cooper, 247, 319, 365.
Coote, 211.
Cope, 203, 224, 363.
Corbett, 84, 100.
Corcoran, 370.
Corneck, 310.
Cornforth, 331.
Cornwall, 12, 248, 286, 301.
Coronation Tear Records of the Parish of
'The Lee (Buckinghamshire), 255.
Corsby, 118.
Cosby, 318.
Costall, 354.
Costard, 160.
Coster, 212.
Cotes, 7, 86, 344.
Cotton, 249, 298.
Coupland, 307.
Court, 238.
Court enay, 78, 350.
Coutanch, 326.
Cove, 105.
Coventry, 148, 149.
Cowan, 369.
Cowen, 370.
Cowley, 279.
Cowopp, 204, 208.
Cowper, 64.
Cox, 49, 249, 372, 373, 379.
Crackanthorp, 69, 70.
Craige, 285.
Cranstoun, 290.
Craven, 253.
Crawford, 28, 40, 291.
Crayker, 300, 301.
Creagh, 39.
Creech, 376.
Creed, 89, 91.
Creighton, 290.
Cressett, 31.
Cresson, 380.
Crew, 285, 300.
Crichton, 51.
Cridland, 89.
Crisp, 148, 155.
INDEX
Croasdaile, 205.
Croft, 273.
Crofton, 127, 204, 210.
Crofts, 285.
Croke, 360.
Cromarty, 150.
Crompton, 244.
Cromwell, 63, 77, 97, 100, 361.
Crook, 103, 107.
Crosby, 308.
Croslegh, 380.
Cross(e), 47, 235, 236, 294, 315.
Crother, 205.
Crothers, 209.
Crow, 321.
Crowder, 61, 62.
Crozier, 41.
Cruickshank, 114.
Crukerne, 52.
Crump, 238.
Crumpton, 294.
Cuffe, 318.
Cull, 215.
Culy, 248.
Cunningham, 310.
Curling, 245.
Currie, 135, 136, 308.
Curteis, 114, 154.
Curtis, 119, 154,238, 302, 303.
Cutler, 1 60.
Cutting, 325.
Cuyler, 292.
Daccombe, 18.
Daffey, 18.
Dain, 22.
Dale, 30, 83-85, 135, 156, 157, 249, 282,
304, 306, 346, 379.
Dalton, 148.
Danby, 219.
Daniel, 160.
Daniels, 116.
Danton, 89.
Darton, 369.
Daston, 148.
Dauntsey, 277.
Davenport, 47.
Davey, 234.
Davie, 334.
Da vies, 62, 122, 245, 351.
Davis, 50, 285, 332, 364.
Davy, 327.
Dawes, 123.
Dawson, 338, 339.
Day, 67, 248, 257-260, 379.
Dayrell, 200.
Deacon, 283.
Dean(e), 236, 362.
Dearie, 326.
De Beauvoir, 20.
De Berwick, 293.
Deere, 243.
De Gennes, 318.
De Humbert, 344.
Deinert, 114.
Delacroze, 217.
Delafield, 327.
Dellton, 136.
Denison, 205, 210.
Dennis, 159, 327.
Dent, 31, 72, 74.
Denziloe, 368.
De Putson, 160.
De Rochard, 272.
Desborow, 98, 100.
Despencers, 95.
Dethick, 132, 134.
De Trafford, 47.
Deutsch, 371.
Dickens, 238.
Dickenson, 250.
Dickin, 295.
Dickinson, 250, 311, 344.
Didsbury, 239.
Dillingham, 160.
Disbrow, 100.
Distinctive Christian Name, 152.
Dixie, 1 60.
Dixon, 72, 75, 76.
Dobbins, 18.
Dobson, 284.
Dodd, 343.
Doddridge, 150.
Dodgson, 156, 283.
Dodington, 377.
Dodwell, 102-109
Dorman, 224.
392
INDEX
Dome, 7.
Douglas, 80, 138, 289.
Dover, 309.
Dowie, 51.
Dowker, 207, 210.
Downe, 243.
Downer, 365.
Downes, 236, 330.
D'Oyly, 302, 303.
Doyne, 207.
Draper, 182, 261.
Draygate, 160.
Drayton, 380.
Drew, 1 60.
Driffield, 310.
Drinkwater, 25.
Driver, 366, 367, 370, 383.
Druce, 160.
Druitt, 261.
Drull, 39.
Drummond, 28.
Drury, 77-78, 93.
Du Barry, 347.
Dudley, 109, 271.
Duff, 351.
Duffield, 142, 237.
Dugdale, 158, 256, 258.
Duke, 307.
Dumbarton, 125.
Duncan, 245, 307.
Durston, 298.
Duvernet, 274.
Dychefield, 47.
Dyson, 104, 108, 307.
Eady, 256.
Eames, 78.
Earwaker, 165.
Easton, 29.
Eastwick, 96.
Eccarsley, 208.
Eccles, 204, 207.
Ecclesiastical Records at Somerset
House, 60.
Eddiker, 165.
Eden, 286.
Edmondson, 344.
Edwards, 245, 279, 285, 310.
Edwardstone, 247.
Edwick, 232.
Edye, 200-203.
Egerton, 101, 318.
Elcombe, 212.
Elers, 232, 233.
Elford, 238.
Ellames, 307.
Ellesmere, 362.
Ellicombe, 160.
Elliman, 119.
Elliott, 85, 88, 262.
Ellis, 164.
Ellison, 334, 337.
Ellston, 182-183.
Elphinstone, 29.
Elton, 104, 307.
Emans, 234.
Eminence and Heredity, 157.
England, 58.
Englefield, 95.
Entail, A Case of, 61.
Episcopal Documents, Worcester, 94.
Eraker, 165.
Ericker, 165.
Erskine, 28.
Erth, 27.
Esam, 89, 90.
Escott, 307.
Estote, 320.
Etheridg(e), 264.
Evans, 58, 174, 274, 297, 298, 331, 3 3 2,
337-
Eveleigh, 88.
Evelin, 18.
Everard, 45.
Eversfield, 371.
Ewart, 207.
Ewbancke, 282.
Exchequer Miscellanea, 95.
Excise, The, 287.
Eyles, 305.
Eyre, 160, 347.
Eysam, 293, 297.
Fairbanks, 78.
Family Bibles, 140, 250, 311, 342.
Family Characteristics, 129, 349.
INDEX
393
Family of John Day, 257.
Family, The Man of, 190.
Farewell, 285.
Farmer, 309.
Farquhar, 89.
Farrow, 233.
Faulkner, 9, 216.
Fawcett, 73, 74, 75,76, in.
Fawconer, 248.
Fawkes, 334, 352.
Fazakerley, 47.
Featly, 285.
Fell, 314, 332.
Feltham, 226.
Female Descents, 101, 138, 184, 240,
338.
Fen, 285.
Fender, 298.
Fenne, 263.
Fennell, 244.
Fenwick, 160, 309.
Ferdinando, 244.
Ferguson, 17.
Ferney, 278.
Ferrand, 159.
Fielden, 145, 148.
Fielder, 305.
Fiennes, 55.
Fife, 351.
Filton, 361, 362.
Finch, 247.
Fincher, 162.
Finn, 211.
Fisher, 266, 268, 312, 353.
Fissell, 381.
Fitch, 22.
Fitchett, 213,
Fitzclarence, 146.
Flecher, 18.
Fleet wood, 77, 207, 210.
Fletcher, 18, 77.
Flesher, 381.
Flight, 213.
Flint, 103, 113, 116.
Flower, 367, 372.
Fogarty, 40.
Fogg, 283.
Foley, 244.
Forbes, 80, 86, 184, 185, 218.
Ford, 88, 244, 278.
Forder, 304, 382.
Fordham, 174.
Forfitt, 248.
Forrester, 27.
Forshaw, 340.
Forssteen, 298.
Forster, 93, 142, 326, 352.
Foster, 119, 221.
Fothergill, 71-76, 125, 126.
Fotheringay, 260.
Foulds, 61, 62.
Foulis, 139.
Foulkes, 1 60.
Fountayne, 90.
Fowler, 1 8.
Fowlis, 79.
Fox(e), 89, 245, 253, 257, 259, 260, 352,
369-
France, 326, 372.
Frances, 278.
Francis, 282, 336.
Franckham, 155.
Frank, 282.
Franklin, 24, 118, 119.
Franquefort, 41.
Fraser, 26, 137, 151, 276.
Freame, 276.
Free, 337.
Freeman, 3.
French, 4, 281, 318, 379.
Friends' Historical Society, 383.
Frockner, 181.
Froude, 195.
Frouhart, 236.
Fry, 152, 153, 250, 265, 269, 270, 376.
Fulcher, 275.
Fullbrook, 232.
Fuller, 253, 283.
Furnivall, 193.
Furrell, 216.
Fydell, 307.
Fynmore, 155, 156, 312-5, 383.
Fynn, 205.
Fyps, 255.
Gage, 21.
Gaine, 212, 215.
394
INDEX
Galbraith, 291.
Gale, 88,
Gallard, 31.
Galton, 2.
Gal way, 273.
Gamage, 282.
Game, 140.
Garcia, 324.
Gardiner, 274, 306.
Gardner, 283.
Garnett, 48.
Garrard, 312.
Garrett, 121.
Garrood, 22.
Garth, 49.
Gascoigne, 90, 229.
Gaselee, 370.
Gaskin, 229.
Gasquet, 195.
Gasson, 244.
Gastin, 229.
Gates, 304.
Gatford, 285.
Gaudy, 247.
Gaunte, 379.
Geddes, 246.
Geeres, 132.
Gelskerken, 185.
Genealogical Abstracts of Parry Wills,
192.
Genealogical Letters, 79.
Genealogical Magazine, Utah, 383.
Genealogical Problem, 31.
Genealogical Record, 384.
Genealogists' Pocket Library, 63.
Genealogists' Society, Proposals for, 33.
Genealogists, Society of, 92; Quarterly
Reports of, 186, 220, 251, 280, 316,
345, 378.
Genius and Stature, 158.
Gennes, 318.
George, 207.
Gepson, 285, 300.
Gerard, 46.
Gerish, 158.
Germaine, 62.
Germin, 285.
Gerrard, 312.
Gerry, 204.
Gerty, 122.
Gibbon, 167.
Gibbons, 213.
Gibson, in, 161, 248.
Giddings, 362.
Gilbert, 103.
Gilder, 284, 335.
Giles, 276.
Gilks, 119.
Gill, 58.
Gilliso , 276.
Gillman, 41, 327.
Gilman, 300, 301.
Gittens, 179.
Glaisyer, 364.
Glasscock, 247.
Gleadon, 210.
Glencross, 169.
Glover, 1 60, 203, 376.
Goddard, 78, 98, 100, 264, 318.
Godfrey, 72.
Godwin, 285.
Gold, 226, 227, 231.
Golding, 325.
Goldsmith, 128.
Goldwyre, 261-271, 375, 377.
Gonne, 205, 209.
Gonsales, 248.
Good, 176.
Goodall, 272, 301, 303.
Goodman, 50, 152, 153, 159.
Goodwin, 236, 360.
Goodyear, 246.
Gordon, 21, 184, 185, 283, 351.
Gorges, 318.
Gorham, 365.
Gosford, 289.
Gosling, 90.
Gott, 328.
Gould, 1 60, 247.
Goulding, 271.
Gower, 336.
Gowland, 331.
Gragle, 155.
Graham, 49, 138.
Grange, 137.
Grant, 213, 235, 292, 294.
Grantham, 119.
Gratland, 236.
INDEX
395
Grattan, 45.
Gratz, 380.
Gravener, 244.
Gray, 160, 248.
Grayson, m. %
Greatorex, 326.
Green, 133, 183, 226, 246, 260, 271 ,
288, 325, 350, 383.
Greenaway, 326.
Greenly, 160.
Greenough, 160.
Greenwood, 25, 91.
Gregory, 24, 285, 300.
Gregson, 341.
Grenville, 374.
Grey, 196, 253.
Griffin, 283.
Griffith(s), 209, 217, 384.
Grimsteed, 271.
Grimston(e), 259.
Grove, 323, 364, 379.
Gryffyd, 178.
Guernsey, 247.
Guest, 107.
Guex, 25.
Guise, 330.
Guy, 344, 375.
Gwynne, 296.
Hack, 365, 368.
Hackett, 43-45.
Hackett-Mandeville, 45.
Hacking, 46.
Hagan, 308.
Hailstone, 275.
Haldane, 29.
Hall, 15, 65, 94, 154, 208, 248, 367.
Halligan, 209.
Halliwell-Phillips, 4.
Halls, 28, 29.
Hames, 285.
Hamilton, 216, 219, 235, 282, 288.
Hammond, 277.
Hampden, 175.
Hamshaw, 276.
Hanbury, 262.
Hancox, 285, 286.
Hand, 84.
Hands, 332.
Hanloke, 146.
Hanning, 203.
Hanway, 22.
Harding, 12, 119, 218, 244, 326.
Hardington, 142.
Hardman, 331.
Hardwick, 241.
Hardy, 2, 335, 352.
Harford, 146.
Harman, 308.
Harms worth, 115.
Harold, 39.
Harper, 109, 336.
Harrington, 78.
Harris, 50-51, 118, 133, 160, 216, 310.
Harrison, 84, 112, 115, 184, 185, 241,
277, 306, 311, 332, 379.
Hart, 114.
Hartley, 24, 91, 96, 207.
Harvard, 86.
Harvey, 21, 182-183.
Harwood, 217, 248.
Hassall, 297.
Hassard, 291.
Hatch, 181, 213.
Haviland, 18-20.
Hawkins, 217.
Hay, 139, 218, 244.
Hayden, 40.
Hayes, 120.
Hayles, 140, 141, 142.
Haymes, 286.
Hayne, 24, 284.
Hayter, 230.
Hayward, 318, 382.
Head, 101.
Heane, 184.
Hearn, 328.
Heathcote, 306.
Hebbes, 334.
Hedger, 213.
Hedges, 154, 349, 350, 382.
Heinekey, 373.
Hemans, in.
Henbest, 215.
Henderson, 165.
Hennist, 213.
Henriques, 248.
396
INDEX
Hensman, 362.
Heraldic Anomalies, 125.
Herbert, 224.
Hercy, 160.
Hering, 138.
Herne, 6.
Heron, 22.
Herts. Parish Registers, 158.
Hesketh, 338.
Hetherington, 336.
Hewatt, 225.
Hewetson, 73, 74, 75, 76.
Hews, 219.
Hibbert, 213.
Hicks, 20, 145, 148, 213, 239, 297, 301,
302.
Higgins, 61, 62, 174, 285, 286.
Hildesley, 263, 264, 301.
Hill, 91, 133, 179, 219, 242, 254, 270,
284, 286, 292, 298, 302, 315, 324,
366.
Hilliard, 160.
Hillman, 20.
Hilton, 23.
Hind, 160, 241.
Hindley, 46.
Hinton, 367.
Hitching, 63.
Hoalme, 87.
Hobbey, 165.
Hobbs, 213.
Hoby, 165.
Hockley, 234.
Hodges, 86, 245, 337.
Hodgson, 101, 302, 328, 334.
Hogarth, 67.
Holbeche, 318.
Holbrooke, 235.
Holbrow, 14.
Holditch, 24.
Holland, 156, 160.
Holies, 232.
Hollingworth, 248.
Hollins, 86.
Holloway, 247.
Holmes, 190, 247.
Hoi well, 1 60.
Holworthy, 284, 303, 352.
Homager, 212.
Home, 289
Hone, 224, 352.
Honeywood, 349, 350.
Hood, 329.
Hookey, 265, 268, 269.
Hooper, 263, 293, 297, 367, 370, 371.
Hopkine, 87.
Hopkins, 6, 264.
Hopkinson, 354.
Hoppin, 96.
Home, 363-373.
Horsfall, 158.
Horton, 254.
Hotchkis, 164.
Hotham, 288, 350, 383.
Houghton, 59.
Houston, 325.
Hovenden, 222.
Howard, 23, 235, 253, 331.
Howarth, 282.
Howell, 243, 333, 335.
Howells, 87.
Howland, 96.
Hewlett, 314.
Howorth, 160.
Howson, 326.
Hoy, 325.
Hoys, 253.
Huband, 61.
Hubbal, 121.
Huddleston, 302, 335.
Hudson, 133, 155, 382.
Hughes, 118, 271, 274, 279, 306, 344.
Hull, 176, 208.
Hulston, 133.
Humbert, De, 344.
Humbly, 362.
Hume, 283, 290.
Humphrey, 232, 277, 355.
Hunt, 112, 114, 166, 257, 260, 277, 283.
Huntingdon, 286.
Husbands, 248.
Husbonds, 248.
Hussey, 263, 269.
Hutcham, 175.
Hutching, 176.
Hutchins, 270.
Hutchinson, 275, 288.
Hutton, 245, 344.
INDEX
397
Huxley, 31, 160, 249.
Huyshe, 329.
Hyde, 142, 265.
Ibbetson, 240, 241.
Ibsen, 3.
Iliffe, 1 80, 337.
Ingleby, 97.
Inglis, 29.
Ingram, 243, 379.
Innes, 374.
Innys, 235.
Inquisitions Post Mortem, 95.
International Notes and Queries, 383.
Irving, 338, 339.
Jacketts, 382, 383.
Jackson, 15, 90, 224, 284, 324.
Jacomb, 248.
James, 61, 62, 88, 147, 301, 342, 370.
Janson, 366.
Jaques, 382.
Jaquetts, 382.
Jason, 158, 159.
1*7, 375-
Jeff cries, 245.
Jeffery, 277.
Jeffreys, 274.
Jeffries, 328.
Jelly, 4°-
Jemmett, 235, 243.
Jenkins, 23, 325, 351.
Jenner, 154*155, 160, 382, 383.
Jennings, 278, 296.
Jermyn, 281, 285, 379.
Jerry, 284.
Jesser, 224.
Jessopp, 98, 99, 100, 195.
Jewett, 381.
Jifford, 285.
Jil, 285.
Johnson, 126, 235, 238, 242, 245.
Johnstone, 59.
Joicey, 160.
Jolliffe, 247.
Jones, 17, 61, 62, 98, 100, 112, 116, 156,
160, 174, 205, 235, 239, 242, 274,
285, 286, 297, 307, 325, 326, 333.
Jose, 332.
Jowett, 381.
Joyce, 40, 41, 152, 153.
Juggins, 6, 105, 108.
Jukes, 159.
Jumpsen, 217, 232.
Jure, 214.
Jusserand, 198.
Kaye, 23.
Keeley, 327.
Keen, 119.
Keigwin, 253.
Keim, 347.
Keith, 138.
Kelly, 123, 256.
Kemp, 364, 365.
Ken , 276.
Kendall, 250.
Kennedy, 41, 82, 205.
Kent, 14, 1 60.
Kenyon, 25.
Ker, 274.
Kerby, 125.
Kerrich, 141, 142.
Kettlewell, 40.
Keyes, 155, 156.
Kidgell, 261.
King, 116, 216, 239, 258, 283, 284, 308,
327-
Kingston, 144, 148.
Kinloch, 41.
Kinman, 61, 62.
Kirk, 22.
Kitchen, 367.
Kitchin, 379.
Knapp, 309, 318, 319.
Knapton, 213.
Knewstubb, 71.
Knight, 304.
Knighton, 257, 260.
Knollys, 248.
Knoostop, 71.
Knowles, 160, 315.
398
INDEX
Knox, 79, 318.
Kyffin, 237, 238.
Kynaston, 293.
Lacy, 1 60, 247, 318.
Laing, 112, 114.
Lake, 50.
Lamb(e), 300, 303, 334.
Lambard, 310.
Lambert, 354.
Lamkin, 192.
Lamley, 365.
Lamy, 318.
Lancaster, 30, 325.
Land. 159.
Lander, 249.
Lane, 160, 323, 343.
Langford, 298.
Langley, 160, 210.
Langwith, 333.
Latham, 40.
Lathorp, 294.
Lathum, 30.
Lawford, 89, 90, 91.
L[aw]ler, 219.
Layton, 118, 119.
Leach, 336.
Leadbetter, 288.
Leared, 342,
Lee, 38.
Lefevre, 308.
Lefroy, 40, 101.
Legg, 1 60.
Leggatt, 153.
Legitimist Kalendar, 64.
Le Hunte, 257, 260.
Leigh, 48, 49, 83, 85.
Leigh-Pemberton, 49.
Leighton, 277.
Le Maistre, 219.
Le Moine, 333, 334.
Leiper, 347.
Lennard, 284.
Leslie, 321.
Lester, 268.
Levet, 384.
Levy, 331.
Lewen, 265, 346.
Lewis, 140, 153, 242, 282, 314, 315, 348.
Ley, 1 60.
Liberty, 255.
Liddell, 218.
Light, 126, 127.
Light burne, 204, 205, 209, 210.
Lincoln, Bishop of, 161.
Lindsay, 138, 283.
Linforth, 218.
Linsey, 382.
Lipscombe, 148, 201, 202, 203, 256.
Liptrott, 1 60.
Lisle, 247.
Little, 78, 102.
Littlefaire, 282.
Littleton, 374.
Livingston, 27, 28.
Lloyd, 57, 96, 174, 238.
Loader, 180.
Lock, 349, 350.
Lockington, 312.
Lockyer, 276.
Lofft, 66, 68.
Lois, 135.
Lomax, 305, 306, 310, 327.
Lomer, 305.
Londonderry, 374.
Long, 1 60.
Longland, 213.
Longston, 155.
Longstreth, 347.
Longwith, 335.
Lord, 300, 302.
Lorimer, 91.
Lott, 22.
Loughton, 175, 176, 201.
Loukes, 326.
Love, 301, 302.
Lovegrove, 279.
Lowder, 351.
Lowe, 40.
Lucas, 318, 319, 357, 363, 369.
Lucker, 160.
Luders, 126.
Ludlow, 100, 283.
Luke, 262, 263.
Lumb, 159.
Lumley, 253.
Lupton, 246.
INDEX
399
Lutz, 40.
Lycett, 89.
Lye, 379-
Lygen, 249.
Lynam, 277.
Lynch, 211.
Lyndford, 247.
Lynn, 365.
Lyon, 48, 138, 344.
Lysons, 148.
Lyster, 179.
Lyte, 127.
Lytton, 65.
Maberly, 156.
Me Cullock, 185.
Mac Donnell, 77.
Me Grath, 272.
Me Henry, 318.
Me Ilvaine, 347.
Mackenzie, 29, 150, 151.
Mackillican, 150, 151.
Mackworth, 243.
Maclean, 277.
Me Murdo, 328.
Me Neil, 80.
Mac Pike, 93, 383.
Macsween, 371.
Macye, 84.
Maguire, 325.
Mainton, 136.
Mainwood, 119.
Maistre, Le, 219.
Maitland, 138.
Males, 22, 124.
Mallcott, 346.
Malmesbury, 51.
Malpas, 283.
Malveysin, 53, 56, 292, 293.
Malvoisin, 292.
Mandeville, 45.
Mann, 298, 325.
Manor and Manorial Records, 352.
Manor Court Rolls in Private Hands, 128.
Manorial Society, 384.
Mansell, 249, 323.
Mapp, 332.
Marat, 89.
Marcham, 278.
Marjoribanks, 234.
Marlow, 119.
Marriott, 238.
Marsh, 87, 270.
Marshall, 347.
Marston, 88.
Marten, 36, 86, 121.
Martin, 14, 49, 101, 176, 213, 355.
Martyn, 216, 239.
Mascall, 120.
Mason, 40, 132-134, 234, 235, 246, 282,
284, 346.
Mather, 286.
Mathers, 342.
Matthews, 70, 365.
Maud, 300.
Maugridge, 78.
Maunsell, 323.
Mavesyn, 292, 293.
Mavor, 128.
May, 298, 354, 369.
Mayd, 118.
Maydon, 119.
Mayne, 310.
Medlicott, 295.
Mee, 206.
Meers, 108, 160.
Megaw, 49.
Meigs, 347.
Meine, 210.
Mellidge, 213.
Mellor, 87.
Melvin, 285, 286.
Mercier, 283.
Merlet, 159.
Merriman, 224.
Merri weather, 213.
Merryett, 36.
Messing, 22.
Methuen, 352.
Meyer, 248.
Meyney, 155.
Meyrick, 178.
Michell, 144, 1 60.
Middle, 324.
Middleton, 21, 237.
Mil bourn, 24, 25.
Miles, 301, 303.
4OO
INDEX
Millar, 234, 235.
Millard, 142.
Miller, 342.
Millikin, 41.
Mills, 342, 382.
Milne, 284.
Milner, 72, 148.
Milward, 64, 237, 296, 379.
Mitchell, 235, 276.
Moate, 275.
Moffat, 254.
Mogford, 275.
Moigne, 196.
Moine, Le, 333.
Molineux, 46.
Molyneux, 47, in.
Monckton, 285, 300.
Monro, 27, 29, 79-82, 270.
Monte Acuto, 55.
Montgomery, 29, 290.
Monumental Inscriptions, St. Luke's
Chelsea, 216, 232, 274, 298; Pad-
dington Green, 324.
Moorcroft, 94.
Moore, 67, 74, 279, 309, 318.
Moray, 374.
Morebathe, 55.
Morehouse, 285.
Mores, 265.
Morgan, 337.
Morgin, 239.
Morley, 286, 337.
Morpeth, 282.
Morris, 41, 45, 57, 145, 325, 332.
Morrison, 233.
Morse, 78.
Morthland, 234.
Mortimer, 213, 255.
Morton, 296, 353, 355, 356, 374.
Moss(e), 32, 93, 208, 343.
Motherby, 288, 350, 383.
Mott, 325.
Moulden, 91.
Moulton, 88.
Mountagu, 55.
Mowatt, 237.
Mowbray, 30.
Moxon, 330.
Moyle, 266.
Muenster, 63.
Muggridge, 244.
Muirson, 216.
Muneton, 293.
Munro, 79-82, 150, 151, 296.
Murphy, 160, 323, 325.
Murray, 49, 139, 272, 273, 313.
Murthwaite, 71.
Musgrave, 213.
Muston, 375.
Myres, 340, 341.
Nailor, 96, 234.
Nash, 297.
Nation, 89.
Neal, 12.
Neale, 247.
Neild, 208.
Nelson, 89, 274.
Nemock, 289.
Nesbit, 318.
Nescio, 166.
Nettleton, 310.
Neville-Rolfe, 97.
Newbery, 96.
Newbolt, 215.
Newell, 261, 267.
New England Register, 384
Newman, 170, 213, 255.
Newstead, 160.
Newton, 238.
Nib, 119.
Niblett, 296.
Nicholas, 253.
Nicholls, 248, 283, 329.
Nickson, 41.
Nightingale, 285.
Nisbet, 93, 318.
Nixon, 238, 291.
Noad, 234.
Noble, 249.
Noel, 22, 23, 49, 70.
Noon, 58.
Norbury, 301, 334.
Norcop, 293, 297.
Norfolk, 14.
Norris, 47, 264, 266, 267, 318.
North, 7, 233, 325, 383.
INDEX
401
Northcliffe, 306.
Norton, 213.
Nott, 145.
Nourse, 375.
Nurse, 36.
Nuttall, 208.
Oakeley, 178.
Oakley, 61, 62.
Oare, 302, 335.
Oatridge, 155, 382.
Of spring, 1 60.
Oglethorpe, 344.
O'Hart, 291.
Okeover, 160.
Olding, 228.
Oliff, 234.
Oliphant, 51.
Oliver, 285.
Olmius, 24.
Olney, Bucks., Parish Registers, 64.
Ongle, 144.
Onslow, 255, 314, 343.
Ormsby, 210.
Orr, 41.
Orsett, 343, 344.
Osborne, 160, 217, 306.
Ottrig, 382.
Ottway, 192.
Otway, 310.
Oulton, 184.
Ovenden, 201.
Over, 214.
Oversby, 246.
Ovey, 144.
Owen, 294, 300, 301, 337.
Oxford, 214.
Padgett, 326.
Paget, 208.
Painter, 22.
Pakenham-Walsh, 40, 45, 94, 134, 323.
Palmer, 182, 315, 333, 349, 350, 379.
Palmerston, 241.
Palmes, 206.
Panting, 155.
Panton, 308.
Parish Register Deficiencies, 161.
Park, 110-111, 240, 343, 344.
Parker, 64, 80, 85, 158.
Parkins, 132.
Parkinson, 246.
Parr, 46, 285.
Parrott, 326.
Parry, 59, 88, 149, 174, 183, 192, 216,
245, 279, 299, 324.
Parsons, 282.
Partridge, 175.
Paston, 64, 146.
Patterson, 121, 380.
Paul, 13, 355.
Paulson, 362.
Pawlett, 213.
Paxton, 206.
Payne, 78, 368.
Pead, 311.
Peale, 347.
Pearce, 336.
Peare, 233.
Pearse, 382.
Pearsehouse, 87.
Peat, 91, 362.
Pedigree, How to Trace, 127.
Pedigree of Clayton, 96; Clapham, 159.
Pedigrees from Lyndhurst Manor Rolls,
212, 225, 320.
Pedigrees, Anglesey and Carnarvonshire,
.384-
Pedigrees Received, 160.
Peele, 159, 264.
Peerage Case, Boyne, 288.
Peirce, 214.
Pelham, 31.
Pellatt, 1 1 6, 156.
Pelly, 21.
Pemberton, 46-49, 236.
Pembroke, 322-323.
Pendleton, 208.
Penn, 14.
Pennell, 297.
Penney, 364.
Penzance, 113.
Pepys, 100.
Percivall, 243.
Percy, 255, 282.
Perfect, 302, 333.
402
INDEX
Paring, 124.
Perkins, 246, 265.
Perottet, 324.
Perrin, 362.
Perrott, 159.
Perrottet, 324.
Perry, 41, 58, 59, 87, 143-149, 174, 217,
324, 354.
Peter, 44, 301, 318, 333.
Petit, 37, 44.
Petiver, 363.
Pettit, 233.
Petty, 215.
Phepoe, 205, 209.
Philipp, 197.
Phillimore, 127, 128, 158.
Phillipps, 4, 6, 61, 62, 145, 158, 218,
230, 242, 243, 258, 328, 362, 371.
Phillipps MSS., 61, 158.
Phillott, 351.
Philpot, 117, 182.
Phip, 255.
Phipps, 255.
Pickering, 174, 340, 341.
Pickford, 160.
Picking, 298.
Piddington, 119.
Piggott, 1 60.
Pigott, 201, 202, 203, 295.
Pike, 78, 372.
Pilcher, 318.
Pile, 374.
Pinchin, 40.
Piner, 176.
Pinson, 88.
Pitman, 139.
Pitt, 88, 226, 247, 320, 367, 374-377.
Pitts, 285, 376.
Player, 147.
Playsted, 281, 379.
Plessets, 95.
Plymouth, 23.
Pocock, 214.
Poic~tiers, 145.
Poke, 247.
Pollexfen, 124.
Pollington, 285, 286.
Pomfret, 24.
Pontifex, 176, 181.
Pook, 322.
Poole, 296, 318.
Poore, 142.
Pope, 41.
Porter, 24, 25, 159, 371.
Pote, 352.
Pott, no, 128.
Potter, 66, 275.
Pottman, 163.
Potts, 347.
Poulson, 32.
Powell, 112, 298.
Power, 38, 216, 283.
Poyner, 293, 294.
Poynting, 177.
Pratt, 86, 88, 285, 286, 347.
Preston, 27, ill, 144, 148, 236, 274, 318.
Price, 178, 240, 246, 308, 335, 366.
Primatt, 160, 281, 379.
Primrose, 138, 139.
Prince, 301, 333.
Prior, 113.
Procter, 71, 284.
Prosser, 177.
Prowse, 373.
Pryce, n, 16, 308.
Public Records, Pedigrees from, 58, 86,
174.
Public Records, Royal Commission on,
94;
Puckeringe, 318.
Pugh, 235.
Pumphrey, 255.
Punch, 67.
Purcas, 230.
Purchase, 230.
Purkis, 230.
Puttnam, 326.
Pygot, 200, 203.
Quaker Royal Descent, 255.
Quaritch, 158.
Quin, 237.
Rainy, 79, 82.
Raleigh, 259, 305.
Ralston, 347.
INDEX
403
Randall, 254.
Randoll, 283.
Randolph, 380.
Ranicar, 343, 344.
Rattray, 240, 241.
Ravenhill, 86.
Raw, 338, 339.
Rawlins, 86.
Rawson, 159.
Ray, 205, 211, 245.
Read, 119.
Reade, 85, 214, 283.
Reah, 313, 315.
Records of the Town of Limavady, 384.
Redwood, 312, 313, 315.
Reed, 107, 286, 300, 307.
Reeks, 268.
Reeves, 116, 234, 335, 336.
Register " Wootton," 192.
Reid, 289.
Reines, 133.
Relph, 73.
Remeking, 171.
Rentel, 185.
Reynolds, 121, 366.
Rice, 77, 101, 325, 354.
Rich, 69.
Richards, 207, 218, 274, 301, 333, 379.
Richardson, 14, 25, 160, 291, 307, 346,
356, 357-
Richbell, 214.
Rickman, 364.
Ridley, 87, 136.
Rignill, 233.
Rivers, 201, 374.
Roads, 119.
Robbins, 214.
Roberts, 41, 174, 347.
Robertson, 79-82, 150-151, 184, 185,
270, 327.
Robespierre, 89.
Robins, 244, 255, 360.
Robinson, 31, 119, 132, 307, 308, 339.
Robson, 73.
Rochard, 272.
Roche, 39.
Rochebois, 22.
Rochford, 322-323.
Rockel, 44.
Rockett, 124.
Rockley, 44.
Rodon, 314, 315.
Rodriques, 249.
Rogers, 160, 164, 214, 231, 236, 314.
Roget, 272.
Rokel, 37.
Rolfe, 97-100.
Rook, 159.
Roome, 157.
Rose, 106, 184, 336.
Ross, 290.
Rosser, 160, 232.
Rosseter, 62.
Roughsedge, no.
Rous, 216, 248.
Rousseau, 67.
Rowe, 277, 278.
Rowland, 145.
Rowley, 87.
Rucker, 248.
Rudd, 334.
Rudderow, 160.
Rudyeard, 85.
Rudyerd, 84.
Rushen, 127, 128, 177.
Rushen Colle&ion, 177.
Russell, 264, 265, 294, 304, 311, 333,
334-
Rutherford, 91.
Ryall, 226.
Rye, 148.
Ryland(s), 238, 322, 323.
Sackville, 382.
Sadler, 14, 253.
Saie, 176.
St. Albans, 118.
St. George, 210.
St. John, 213.
St. Nicholas, 171.
Salmon, 232.
Samber, 214.
Samborow, 262.
Sambrooke, 177.
Sanclo Claro, 54.
Sandbach, 184.
Sandeman, 283.
404
INDEX
Sanderson, 185, 247.
Sandford, 286, 296, 300.
Sandilands, 27.
Sands, 261.
Sankey, 46.
Sansum, 218.
Sanzon, 207.
Sarel, 239.
Sarratt, 41.
Satur, 286, 301.
Saunder, 172.
Savage, 160, 374.
Savoury, 285.
Saxton, 318.
Schofield, 232.
Scott, 90, 155, 156, 226, 239, 242.
Scottish Family in Ireland, The Ache-
sons, 289, 321.
Scottish Records, 26.
Scraggs, 119.
Scrase, 364.
Scrimgeour, 138.
Scriven, 62.
Sealy, 323.
Searle, 352, 375.
Sebright, 318.
Sedgley, 310.
Seeley, 136.
Seibel, 248.
Selby, 24, 239.
Sellers, 380.
Senden, 39.
Sephton, 48.
Severn, 115.
Sewell, 218.
Sexten, 354.
Seymour, 135, 298.
Shaddock, 249.
Shaftesbury, 265.
Shailer, 218.
Shakespeare, 4, 69, 135-137, 304.
Shallett, 135, 137, 284, 304-306.
Shapter, 160.
Sharman, 91.
Sharp, 1 1 8, 248, 283.
Sharpies, 87.
Sharrod, 120, 121.
Shaw, 136, 176, 237, 245, 352.
Sheare, 13.
Sheasby, 118.
Sheldon, 160.
Shelley, 63, 144, 146, 214.
Shelton, 344.
Shepard, 298.
Shepheard, 73.
Shepherd, 132.
Sheppard, 38, 40.
Sherborn, 62.
Sherive, 245.
Sherle, 13.
Sherman, 325.
Sherwood, 67, 92, 120-3, 152.
Sherwood, Mrs., the Authoress, Pedi-
gree of, 1 20.
Shewell, 93.
Shewring, 244.
Shields, 336.
Shiels, 335.
Shillingford, 118.
Short, 326.
Showell, n, 12.
Shrimpton, 77.
Shurley, 200, 203.
Shuttleworth, 337, 366.
Sichel, 240.
Sidley, 174.
Sidney, 144, 149.
Sigley, 355-
Simcocks, 204.
Simeon, 318.
Simons, 382.
Simpson, 74, 76, 338, 339, 341.
Sims, 91, 103.
Simson, 8, 9.
Sit well, 139.
Sixteenth Century Marriages (1538-1 600),
224.
Skarbrough, 75.
Skinner, 247, 281, 286, 301, 379.
Skyrme, 86.
Slade, 119.
Slare, 247.
Slater, 300.
Slaughter, 285, 370, 383.
Sleath, 119.
Slee, 73, 74, 76, 338, 339.
Slingsby, 159.
Sloane, 216, 238.
INDEX
405
Smart, 308.
Smedley, 160.
Smeaton, 59.
Smeed, 326.
Smith (Smyth), 7, 15, 31, 81, 84, 87, 96,
113, 119, 122, 124, 125, 164, 176,
208, 214, 217, 232, 246, 247, 248,
267, 270, 278, 28l, 312, 318, 321,
333, 347, 362, 379.
Smithett, 32.
Smollett, 126.
Smytheot, 32.
Smythsbye, 101.
Snashall, 364.
Snell, 4, 70, 140, 1 80, 199, 324.
Snowden, 347.
Soafe, 214.
Soame, 257.
Soan, 302, 333.
Solomon, 341.
Somerford, 255.
Somerville, 27.
Sotheby, 62, 158.
Sothe worth, 197.
Southend, 318.
South worth, 169.
Sowerby, 245.
Spackman, 305.
Spagg, 310.
Sparling, ill.
Sparrow, 214.
Spelman, 233.
Spence, 318.
Spicer, 245.
Spicker, 309.
Spiers, 232.
Spillett, 152, 153.
Sprackling, 170.
Spratt, 214.
Sprunt, 145.
Spry, 308.
Spurrell, 219.
Squire, 23, 160.
Staines, 128.
Stamp, 258.
Standard, 264.
Standish, 77.
Stanford, 242.
Stanhope, 374, 375, 377.
Stanley, 91, 255.
Stanroyd, 183.
Staples, 25, 248.
Stapleton, 37.
Statham, 343, 344.
Steed, 133.
Steel, 334, 366.
Steemson, 283.
Steer e, 245.
Stephen, 107.
Stephens, 242.
Stephenson, 117.
Steptoe, 6, 8.
Sterne, 140.
Sterry, 367.
Stevens, 146, 217, 310, 334.
Stevenson, 255, 361.
Steventon, 297.
Steward, 245.
Stewart, 29, 207.
Stillingfleet, 268.
Stirridge, 366.
Stoate, 320.
Stock, 24.
Stockdale, 379.
Stocker, 255, 358-362.
Stoite, 320.
Stokes, 233, 237, 238.
Stonard, 91.
Stone, 257, 259, 260, 309, 336, 352.
Stonier, 281, 379.
Stoote, 320.
Stopes, 4.
Stopynden, 197.
Stot, 320.
Stote, 212, 225-226, 227, 231, 320, 351.
Stotte, 320.
Strachan, 138.
Stratton, 372.
Street, 281, 379.
Stride, 214.
Strilley, 152.
Stringfellow, 59.
Strong, 124, 1 60.
Stuart, 207, 234, 374.
Stubbs, 36, 300, 302, 312, 313-5.
Sturry, 294.
Styan, 180.
Sullivan, 342.
406
INDEX
Sully, i, 2.
Sunderland, 337.
Supple, 342.
Surnames, References to English, 63.
Sutherland, 82, 185, 214.
Sutton, 248, 255, 274.
Swaddell, 182.
Swanwick, 205, 21 1.
Swanzy, 290.
Swayne, 364, 374.
Swinburne, 51.
Swinden, 302, 333.
Symeon, 30.
Symington, 108.
Symonds, 12, 154.
Symons, 274, 308.
Taber, 160.
Tait, 139.
Talman, 375.
Tanner, 158.
Tattersal, 310.
Tavenor-Perry, 149.
Taylor, 16, 109, 118, 119, 120, 122, 152,
' 153, 249, 294, 297, 334, 383.
Teale, 58.
Teener, 264.
Tempest, 319.
Temple, 126, 374, 376.
Tender yng, 197.
Tetherington, 238, 282.
Thacker, 236.
Thirkhill, 124.
Thomas, 36, 243, 325, 335, 336.
Thompson, 72, 74, 87, 182, 183, 302,
353-7.
Thompson, Francis, the Poet, 353.
Thorn(e), 160, 226, 227.
Thornhill, 247.
Thorowgood, 36, 84.
Thorpe, 30.
Thresher, 239, 305.
Thurlbourn, 140, 141.
Thursby, 224.
Th waits, 338, 339.
Tidd, 246.
Tilghman, 169-173.
Tilly, 70.
Tilson, 236.
Timbrell, 144, 282, 346.
Timerson, 9.
Tinne, 184, 185.
Tippetts, 10-17.
Titterington, 282.
Todd, 108. 183.
Toovey, 91.
Topham, 309.
Townsend, 309-310.
Townson, 301, 303.
Trafford, 47.
Trapp, 62.
Travell, 247.
Travers, 91.
Tredgold, 309-310.
Tregereal, 253.
Trevelyan, 278.
Trevor, 142.
Trimlett, 226.
Trinder, 218.
Trotman, 91, 180.
Trotter, 20, 286.
Trowbridge, 122.
Truelove, 285, 286.
Truman, 324.
Truro, 113.
Tucker, 160, 245, 247, 269.
Tudor, 342.
Tufton, 133.
Tulse, 263, 265.
Turner, 58, 160, 262, 284-6, 302, 365.
Turnly, 21.
Turpyn, 197.
Tweddell, 114.
Tweeddale, 92.
Tyler, 293, 294.
Tyrie, 366.
Tyrrell, 163.
Tyson, 347.
Tyssen, 90.
Udall, 71.
Uff, 107.
Ulster, 30.
Underbill, 260.
INDEX
407
Upwell, 260.
Uthwat, 309.
Uvedale, 95.
Van Arnum, 50.
Vanderesch, 234.
Vanderleur, 285.
Vane, 31.
Van Senden, 39.
Vaughan, 114, 178, 351.
Vaulx, 154, 383.
Venn, 263, 315.
Vereker, 323.
Viguers, 303.
Vigures, 286.
Villa, 315.
Villiers, 374.
Vincent, 275.
Von Luders, 126.
Vyncher, 162.
Wacker, 318.
Wade, 327.
Wagner, 120.
Wake, 1 60.
Waldron, 23.
Walduck, 1 1 8.
Walker, 159, 219, 328, 329.
Wall, 38, 45.
Wallace, 4, 33, 94, 207, 347.
Waller, 152.
Wallis, 307.
Walsh, 40, 45, 94, 134, 323.
Walter, 276.
Waltham, 24, 196.
Walton, 30, 62, 282.
Waraton, 122.
Warbrooker, 84.
Ward, 70, 106, 160, 195, 286, 297, 301.
Warden, 367.
Warder, 380.
Waring, 337.
Warner, 119, 284, 294, 308, 336, 365,
366.
Warren, 204, 210, 211.
Wase, 96.
Waterman, 214.
Waters, 50.
Watkins, 277.
Watson, 102, 217, 243, 303, 336, 361.
Watts, 207.
Wavell, 262.
Way, 246.
Wayman, 226.
Weare, 86.
Webb, 1 8, 25, 119.
Webber, 88.
Webster, 303, 334, 341.
Wedgwood, 121.
Wedmore, 159.
Weedon, 148.
Weir, 355.
Welch, 119, 347.
Weld, 69.
Welldon, 286.
WeUs, 24, 247, 367.
Wentt, 12.
Wentworth, 90.
Wernher, 363.
West, 23, 103, 274.
West by, 343.
Westmorland, Earl of, 354
Wetenhall, 362.
Whaley, 73, 75.
Wheadon, 323.
Wheate, 318.
Wheatley, 305.
Wheeler, 247, 337.
Whetenhall, 170.
Whetham, 157.
Whettenhall, 169, 173.
Whitcombe, 52-57, 292-7, 328-332.
White, 22, 38, 39, 68, 124, 126, 238,
239, 243, 247, 279, 284, 286, 300,
322, 335, 342, 371, 3^2.
Whitehead, 275.
Whitehorne, 312, 313, 315.
Whitehouse, 283, 340.
Whitelaw, 327.
Whiten, 8.
Whitestone, 342.
Whitfield, 219.
Whitlow, 237.
Whitmarsh, 375.
Whitmore, 184, 248.
Whittaker, 125.
408
INDEX
Whittingham, 93, 121.
Wickham, 58.
Wicks, 238.
Widdens, 242.
Wilberforce, 256.
Wild(e), 112-117, 156, 226, 231.
Wildig, 343.
Wilford, 272.
Wilkins, 41, 106, 216.
Wilkinson, 23, 309, 374.
Williams, 115, 160, 239, 246, 275, 303,
309, 333-
Willigifort (?), 277.
Willis, 245.
Willmott, 249.
Willock, 272, 273.
Willott, 87.
Willoughby, 318.
Wills, 205, 210.
Wills, Commissary Court of London, 95.
Wills of the late Fourteenth Century
and Beyond, 193.
Wilmer, 246.
Wilson, 1 6, 59, 73, 87, 115, 174, 205,
283, 298, 332, 360.
Winckley, 62, 63.
Windle, 46.
Windsor, 178.
Wingfield, 179.
Winnall, 293, 328, 329.
Winstone, 308.
Wintelley, 300.
Winterbottom, 285, 286.
Winterley, 286, 300.
Winthrop, 41, 322-323.
Winwood, 379.
Wise, 298.
Wiseman, 195.
Wishart, 138.
Witdecombe, 53, 56.
Withers, 216.
Witronge, 174.
Witty, 218.
Wolbert, 160.
Wollaston, 141, 142.
Wolstenholme, no.
Wood, 1 1 8, 176.
Woodcock, 49, 155.
Woodham, 331.
Woodhouse, 121.
Woodin, 281, 379.
Woodington, 250.
Woods, 213, 305, 306.
Woodward, 248, 268.
Woolcomb, 160.
Woolcott, 58.
Worley, 203.
Wormington, 69, 70.
Wormull, 233.
Worrall, 379.
Worrel, 284.
Worsley, 46.
Worthington, 285.
Wray, 291.
Wren, 282.
Wrigglesworth, 160.
Wright, 93, 211, 238, 244, 268, 295, 362,
369-
Wrixon, 322.
Wrottesley, 255.
Wurts, 347.
Wyatt, 116, 214, 249.
Wycherley, 67.
Wydecombe, 52-57, 292.
Wyeth, 298.
Wykeham-Martin, 49.
Wyld, 231.
Wylks, 6.
Wynne, 160.
Yapp, 276.
Yar worth, 281, 379.
Yates, 89, 90, 340, 341.
Yea, 354.
Yeo, 277.
Yorke, 160, 380.
York, Duke of, 265.
Youde,- 352.
Youn, 72.
Young, 21, 284.
Zola, 3.
Zulay, 249.
cs
410
P5
v.2
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