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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 

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