tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3100927704825540532024-03-16T21:36:57.020-07:00THE PIGOTT FAMILY OF QUEEN'S COUNTY, IRELAND; SOME ANCESTRAL CONNECTIONS.Some details of the lives of Bartholomeo COMPAGNI, Florentine Merchant in London; Giovanni Battista CASTIGLIONE, Groom of Elizabeth I's Privy Chamber; Thomas KEYES, Sergeant-Porter; Sir Robert PIGOTT of Dysart, Queen's County; Major John PIGOTT of Grangebegg; Sir William GILBERT of Kilminchy; Captain John PIGOTT of Stradbally, M.P.; Rev Henry Robert PIGOTT of Dublin, Ceylon & N.S.W.; Rev John Eustace GILES; & Henry Robert Maguire PIGOTT, M.H.R.Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.comBlogger73125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-45240470995237183112024-03-01T12:15:00.000-08:002024-03-01T12:39:49.856-08:00GEORGE BENNETT<div style="text-align: left;"><b><span style="font-size: large;"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiUzduvkyu_cO-UQ76HTTokoFa8WmLoAa0fqoKh40z_rYq90F8Rp_FDrAqJ87ODMuUsK_mvdQfp9pWoUS25czLrJYcY9PR3kD6ChhzXQVGFCbzMRBOIWmecQjph3YKQW18yhkKTRV31L_pCY2LM-4m8XhFakacjUCcQTEJgPMtFrtDlRswOOmCls_wWczrs/s3724/20240228_150246.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="3724" data-original-width="2793" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiUzduvkyu_cO-UQ76HTTokoFa8WmLoAa0fqoKh40z_rYq90F8Rp_FDrAqJ87ODMuUsK_mvdQfp9pWoUS25czLrJYcY9PR3kD6ChhzXQVGFCbzMRBOIWmecQjph3YKQW18yhkKTRV31L_pCY2LM-4m8XhFakacjUCcQTEJgPMtFrtDlRswOOmCls_wWczrs/s320/20240228_150246.jpg" width="240" /></a></div><br />WILLIAM LANG BENNETT</span></b>.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">William Lang BENNETT; born in England, 1763; Organist; married in 1793, to Elizabeth DEBELL; they had issue, including:</div><div style="text-align: left;">1. George BENNETT. See next below.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b><span style="font-size: large;">GEORGE BENNETT</span></b>.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">George BENNETT, born at Plymouth, 31 January 1804; M.D., Glasgow; he visited Oceania in 1832, and settled in Sydney in 1836.</div><div style="text-align: left;">George died at his residence. William Street, Darlinghurst, Sydney, 29 September 1893; the funeral notice (S.M.H.) recorded that he was to be buried at Camperdown Cemetery, but he was buried at Rookwood, Church of England, Section 2.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">George was married firstly, at St James's church, 28 November 1835, to Juliana Ludovina CAMERON, second daughter of the late Lieut Colonel Charles CAMERON, 3rd Regiment of Foot (Buffs); she died at Elizabeth Street, Sydney, 13 June 1846, from an overdose of prussic acid, and was buried at Devonshire Street Cemetery.</div><div style="text-align: left;">They had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;">1. George Edward BENNETT, born at Spring Street, Sydney, 14 September 1866; he died there, 27 October 1836, an infant.</div><div style="text-align: left;">2. Caroline Esther BENNETT, born at Spring Street, Sydney, 25 December 1838; she died 22 March (?) 1840.</div><div style="text-align: left;">3. Amelia Gould BENNETT, born at Spring Street, Sydney, 9 December 1840; she died at her husband's country residence, 1 Park Terrace, Hanwell, 30 November 1870, aged 29 years, and was buried in Hanwell Cemetery; she was married at Trinity Church, Paddington, London, 16 February 1860, to Thomas Collins VIDLER, B.A., third son of the late John VIDLER, Esq, of Rye, Sussex.</div><div style="text-align: left;">4. Ludavina Eliza Debell BENNETT, born at Elizabeth Street, Sydney, 16 July 1842; she was married firstly, at Bombay, 24 July 1861,to John T. HOPE, Esq, of Bombay, P.& O. Company; she was married secondly, at St Stephen's Westbourne Park, 23 April 1868, to D. Turner FAIRFIELD, of Liverpool; she died at 93 Talgarth Road, West Kensington, London, 17 February 1886, aged 43 years, widow of the late Daniel TURNER, Esq.</div><div style="text-align: left;">5. George Frederick BENNETT, born at Elizabeth Street, Sydney, 5 March 1844; he died at his residence, Kulgoi, Northgate, Brisband, 12 March 1919, aged 75 years; he was married at All Saints Church, Brisbane, 3 June 1871, to Amelia Matilda JAMIESON, eldest daughter of the late Philip JAMIESON, Esq, of Greenwich Park, Goulburn.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">George was married secondly, at Christ Church St Lawrence, Sydney, 10 December 1846, to Charlotte James ELLIOTT, second daughter of James ELLIOTT, Esq, of Balmain, and of Pitt Street, Solicitor; she died at her residence, Elizabeth Street, 20 February 1853, aged 35 years.</div><div>They had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;">6. Frederick Owen BENNETT, born at Elizabeth Street, Sydney, 8 November 1847; N.S.W. Lands Department; he died at his residence, Kurkilla, 7 Wilga Street, Bondi, 25 February 1929, and was buried at Waverley Cemetery; he was married to Ida.</div><div style="text-align: left;">7. Emily Annette BENNETT, born at Elizabeth Street, Sydney, 4 September 1849; she died there, 6 November 1850.</div><div style="text-align: left;">8. Edith Agnes BENNETT, born at Elizabeth Street, 14 July 1851; she died there, 10 January 1853.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><div>George was married thirdly, by Special License, at Ryde, 4 January 1854, to Sarah Jane ADCOCK, eldest daughter of the late Henry ADCOCK, Esq, of Birmingham; she was married again, at St Mark's, Darling Point, 20 December 1894, to the Rev C.F. PRIDDLE.</div><div>They had issue:</div><div>9. Charles R. BENNETT, born at Elizabeth Street, 14 February 1853; he died there, a few hours later.</div></div><div style="text-align: left;">10. Edward H. BENNETT, born at Elizabeth Street, 9 February 1855; he died there 19 February 1855.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">? William Edmund BENNETT; as the second surviving son, he was married at Rimbanda, New England, N.S.W., 17 October 1876, to Jane Isabella BELL, eldest daughter of David BELL, of Rimbanda.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"> </div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-382262674622106152022-07-10T01:28:00.025-07:002022-08-17T19:29:13.768-07:00JEREMIAH VICKERS OF DUBLIN AND DUNDALK<p> </p><p>This is a revised version of an earlier section of my tribute to my VICKERS ancestors of Dublin.</p><div style="text-align: left;">See:</div><div style="text-align: left;">www.pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com/2018/07/a-vickers-family-of-dublin.html</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">I first encountered Jeremiah VICKERS (1681-1757) while doing research in the 1980s and 1990s - but fairly quickly comprehended that he was not an ancestor of mine, and was unlikely to be related to the man who was, Captain James VICKERS (about 1641-1705).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">My very recent revisit to the Jeremiah VICKERS branch has been made easier due to recent progress in the digitalisation of older records, and much more detail is now available.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Some of it, however, appears to have become a little confused, especially the distinction between the two Jeremiah VICKERS, both Merchants in Dublin, and then in Dundalk, County Louth - they being, it would appear, a son and a grandson of the original Jeremiah VICKERS (ca 1681-1757), Tanner; these later two were probably not father and son, and were probably uncle and nephew. </div><div style="text-align: left;">But it would appear that the terms "Elder" and "Younger" have not always been stated accurately.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">The results of my research are not conclusive, in particular when it comes to determining the parentage of three VICKERS men who were born in County Louth after 1800, and who had issue who used the middle name of WYNNE. </div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">I hope this version is a little clearer than my earlier attempt.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Any suggestions, particularly any supported by family records not yet in the public domain, would be most welcome.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Chris PIGOTT, Potts Point, N.S.W</div><div style="text-align: left;">cgpigott5@gmail.com</div><div style="text-align: center;">____________________________________</div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><b><i>* * * THIS IS A WORK IN PROGRESS * * *</i></b></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><b><i><br /></i></b></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><b><i>WHILE THIS NOTICE REMAINS, ADDITIONS AND ALTERATIONS ARE LIKELY TO BE MADE.</i></b></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><b><i><br /></i></b></span></div><div style="text-align: center;">_________________________________</div></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>THE DIXON PAPERS PEDIGREE.</u></i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>For the record, the following is my transcript of the VICKERS Pedigree which appears in the DIXON Papers, MS 8522 (2), which I made in the 1990s during a visit to the Genealogical Office, in Kildare Street, Dublin.</div><div><div><div><br /></div><div>The full dates of birth are as recorded, and remain uncorroborated from any other source.</div><div>I expect that these birth dates probably appeared in the parish register of St Catherine's (C.of I.), Dublin, or perhaps instead the neighbouring parish of St Nicholas Without.</div><div><br /></div><div>They were probably abstracted by William Jackson PIGOTT (1842-1921), who died in the year before the Four Courts fires of 1922, which destroyed much original material held there in the Public Records Office.</div><div>W.J.P. was a keen family historian, and was a first cousin of my great-grandfather, Henry Robert PIGOTT (1838-1904). There is a manuscript "cover note" to the DIXON Papers, in handwriting which matches that of W.J.P. in some of his original letters now lodged in the Library of the Society of Genealogists in London.</div></div><div>Naturally, W.J.P. was particularly interested in our common ancestors, including Captain James VICKERS (ca1641-1705), who had arrived in Dublin about 1677, but appears to have no direct connection to the following family.</div></div><div style="text-align: center;">_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _</div><div><br /></div><div><i>Jeremiah VICKERS, of Vickers Street, Dublin; buried St Nicholas Without, 21 February 1718.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><i>Jeremiah VICKERS, of Dolphins Barn, Tanner, 1735; of Crooked Staff, Tanner, 1740; born 15 December 1681; died at Crooked Staff, and buried at Crumlin, 15 March 1757; married firstly Joyce, daur of Robert and Joyce JACKSON (Tanner, Dolphins Barn and Crooked Staff, 1711), M.L.B. 30 July and married 5 August 1707; issue:</i></div><div><i> 1. Robert VICKERS, born 2 August 1708 (bapt Mr STRONG).</i></div><div><i> 2. William VICKERS, born 3 August 1710; marr Lydia EMERSON his step-sister.</i></div><div><i> 3. - - - , born 13 April 1712 (bapt Mr STRONG).</i></div><div><i> 4. Elizabeth VICKERS, born 23 April 1714 (bapt Mr STRONG); died 10 December 1714.</i></div><div><i> 5. - - - , born 21 September 1715.</i></div><div><i> 6. Elizabeth VICKERS, born 11 April 1717 (bapt Mr STRONG); bur Crumlin, 31 May 1748.</i></div><div><i> 7. Anne VICKERS.</i></div><div><i> 8. Sarah VICKERS, born 28 February 1722-23, and baptised 6 March.</i></div><div><i> 9. Susannah VICKERS, born 17 September 1725 and baptised 24 September.</i></div><div><i> 10. Grace VICKERS, born 19 February 1727; married by Licence, 1750, Richard WILKINSON.</i></div><div><i> 11. Catherine VICKERS; marr 1740, St Catherine's, Samuel GOFF.</i></div><div><i> 12. Lydia VICKERS; marr 18 February 1747, John EMERSON.</i></div><div><i>Jeremiah married secondly (M.l. 15 April) on 20 April 1732, to Anne, widow of Robert EMERSON, Chandler (Admo'n 20 June 1729); she died 17 December 1788, will dated 13 June 1767, proved 6 February 1789; issue by first marriage see above; issue by second:</i></div><div><i> 13. Jeremiah VICKERS, born 25 June 1733; Merchant, Inns Quay, 1765-85'; Welting Club; VICKERS and LORD, Merchants, Inns Quay, 1773; died unmarried; will dated 8 October 1816, proved 4 March 1818.</i></div><div><i> 14. Thomas VICKERS, born 5 February 1734; Tanner, Crooked Staff, 1758-66; MLB 10 September 1757, Alice SHERLOCK, of Nass; issue:</i></div><div><i> a. Jeremiah VICKERS; Lane (?) Meadow, Kilmainham, & Inns Quay, 1782; married 1782, Frances, daur of John PAGE of Dundalk; issue - Frances, married PURCELL.</i></div><div><i> b. Lydia VICKERS; will dated 1832, proved 1837; married George CARTWRIGHT.</i></div><div><br /></div><div>In addition, there was the following drop-line pedigree:</div><div><br /></div><div><i> Jeremiah VICKERS ===</i></div><div><i> from Scotland |</i></div><div><i> settled in Dublin ca 1690 |</i></div><div><i> ______________| </i></div><div><div><i> |</i></div><div><i> Son === - - - WYNNE</i></div><div><i> settled Co Louth | niece of Mr BRERETON</i></div><div><i> died young |</i></div><div><i> partner of KIRKLAND |</i></div><div><i> Issue</i></div><div><i> several children</i></div><div><i> _______________|_______________</i></div><div><i> | |</i></div><div><i> Mrs S. W. Marion</i></div><div><i> ARMSTRONG VICKERS</i></div><div><i> Booterstown, 1888. 18 Booterstown Ave</i></div><div><i> Died Dec 1912.</i></div><div><br /></div><div>There appears to be a serious shortcoming in this second and limited pedigree.</div><div>The son who <i>"settled Co Louth"</i> may have been either Jeremiah VICKERS (but his wife appears to have been Frances PAGE), or his younger brother Thomas VICKERS (whose wife was Alice SHERLOCK, by whom he did have a son named Jeremiah, the younger, who did also settle in County Louth, and is much more likely to have been the WYNNE spouse) - there may simply be, and most probably is, a missing generation here, between the Scot who settled in 1690, and the "younger" settler in County Louth.</div><div><br /></div><div>The "several children" here inevitably included a son, William VICKERS/VICARS (1804-1879), and possibly another, named James (1813-1902) who emigrated to Canada.</div><div><br /></div><div>William's mother, who died in Collon, County Louth, in 1860, was named Mary Ann - she was probably the "Miss WYNNE" mentioned above.</div><div><br /></div><div>And Mr BRERETON was probably William BRUERTON or BRERETON, of Toberdoney, County Louth, who was buried at Stabannon parish churchyard, 6 January 1816, aged 74 - there was a branch of the WYNNE family who also resided in Stabannon parish, but in do not find any relevant marriages between the two families.</div><div>See further below.</div><div><br /></div><div>As far as I am aware, the DIXON Papers have not yet been digitalised. On my last visit to Dublin in 2010, the Genealogical Office was no longer open to the public. It does occur to me that getting the file of papers digitalised might be possible, but would probably incur a fee.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>BURIALS AT CRUMLIN CHURCHYARD.</u></i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>The DIXON Papers also detail of a number of burials at Crumlin, County Dublin, which appear to have been transcribed from a register in existence before the 1922 fires in the Public Record Office, then located in the Four Courts building in Dublin City, on the north bank of the River Liffey.</div><br /><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiIXqQ0jXiXfp7DBI90do_2B4-YimocOmd_W_Y2TKPge2bUn2SeoWt6QlEZOH3x6n7onmUk4aBpKnCp-jXKli82Hnvg_-SAjrvUORVGzFNe7brNVxHhs0m-qjmdQ30ftM2JyQ6EaD0IcnhAvCCLrl5XjqhLprPXAsb6QyHPbzHMSoCswrDhzUa11VVPbw/s2477/20220710_132257.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1344" data-original-width="2477" height="217" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiIXqQ0jXiXfp7DBI90do_2B4-YimocOmd_W_Y2TKPge2bUn2SeoWt6QlEZOH3x6n7onmUk4aBpKnCp-jXKli82Hnvg_-SAjrvUORVGzFNe7brNVxHhs0m-qjmdQ30ftM2JyQ6EaD0IcnhAvCCLrl5XjqhLprPXAsb6QyHPbzHMSoCswrDhzUa11VVPbw/w400-h217/20220710_132257.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[These images, from a double page photocopy made by me in Dublin in the 1990s, are unsourced in my notes. They may not have been in this form in the DIXON Papers, but the information there was probably derived from these two consecutive lists.]</i></div><br /><div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/a/AVvXsEg5ck_nEXPEqN1LfiVsCs4hjS-KYS-PQ370UcC4NEda-BYLd6Sw1evUd1BjvPjxekSQaUmcEKgNPVZ5Dn3QyS0nfPIK2oKm8TFJ7jCttZsxajjOF_8DHobVjoANQFxgw3LHolZU5ga5FExYRL0Ff5SjrCYYbWZE2DgTweX42xz2RmLYNAsdJLWUGsFRRQ" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="" data-original-height="147" data-original-width="320" height="184" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/a/AVvXsEg5ck_nEXPEqN1LfiVsCs4hjS-KYS-PQ370UcC4NEda-BYLd6Sw1evUd1BjvPjxekSQaUmcEKgNPVZ5Dn3QyS0nfPIK2oKm8TFJ7jCttZsxajjOF_8DHobVjoANQFxgw3LHolZU5ga5FExYRL0Ff5SjrCYYbWZE2DgTweX42xz2RmLYNAsdJLWUGsFRRQ=w400-h184" width="400" /></a></div><br /></div><div>The VICKERS burials include the following, most of whom are evidently related to Jeremiah VICKERS, the Tanner:</div><div><br /></div><div>1743 - Ann, daughter of William and Lydia VICKARS, 13 September.</div><div>1744 (or 1745) - William, son of William VICKARS, 27 May.</div><div>1748 - Elizabeth, daughter of Jeremiah VICARS, 31 March.</div><div><br /></div><div>1756 - Jeremiah, son of William VICKARS, 24 August.</div><div>1757 - Jeremiah VICKERS, 15 March. [The Tanner.]</div><div>1759 - Mary VICKERS, wife of John, 4 September [Brewer, of Aledrape - unrelated].</div><div><br /></div><div>1763 - Mary, daughter of Samuel VICARS, 21 January.</div><div>1763 - Easther, daughter to Joseph VICKARS, 21 June. [Weaver, of Chambre Street - unrelated.]</div><div>1767 - Mary VICKARS, daughter of Joseph, 6 July. [Ditto.]</div><div>1768 - VICKERS (no other details recorded), 30 November.</div><div>1769 - Abraham VICKERS, 6 April.</div><div><br /></div><div>1776 - Mrs VICKERS, mother of Mr Jeremiah VICKERS, 18 January.</div><div>1776 - Alicia, daughter of Joseph VICKERS, 5 March. [Weaver, of Chambre street - unrelated]</div><div>1778 - George VICKARS, 17 May.</div><div><br /></div><div>1781 - Samuel, son of William and Elizabeth VICKERS, 3 March.</div><div>1785 - Ann VICARS, 27 July.</div><div>1786 - Harriet, daughter of Jerry VICARS, 9 September.</div><div>1788 - William, son of Robert VICKERS, 25 April.</div><div><br /></div><div>1790 - Liddy*, daughter of Robert VICARS, 14 June. [Footnote* - Lydia in Visitation return.]</div><div>1790 - Elinor VICARS, wife of Robert, 3 August.</div><div>1790 - William VICKERS, 10 September.</div><div>1793 - William, son of John VICKERS, 27 November.</div><div><br /></div><div>1813 - Lydia, daughter of John and Mary VICARS, 15 August.</div><div>1818 - Robert VICKARS, 2 January.</div><div><br /></div><div>1828 - Mary VICARS, wife of John, 18 September.</div><div><br /></div><div>These details may have achieved the status of primary source material.</div><div><br /></div><div><u><br /></u></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>A CHRONOLOGY OF VITAL DATES FOR FIVE OR MORE JEREMIAH VICKERS.</u></span></i></b></div><br />1681 - Jeremiah VICKERS [A] was born on 15 December.</div><div><br /></div><div>1690 - Jeremiah VICKERS settled in Dublin about 1690 [DIXON Papers].</div><div>It is not clear who this "settler" was - Jeremiah [A] would only have been aged just under 10 years, so presumably had arrive arrived with his father, who may have been the Jerimy who died in 1718 (see below)? </div><div><br /></div><div>1707 - Jeremiah VICKERS [A], aged 26, was married, 5 August, to Joyce JACKSON, daughter of Robert JACKSON and Joyce SHAW.</div><div><br /></div><div>1716 - Jeremiah VICCARS [probably A] was named as co-defendant in a Court of Exchequer Bill, entered 4 April, together with John VICCARS, Elizabeth, Samuel and George HEATH, and Daniel FOY; the Plaintiffs being Charles GANNON and Margaret GANNON otherwise HEATH, his wife.</div><div><br />1718 - Jerimy VICKERS, of Vickers Street, Dublin, was buried at St Nicholas Without, 21 February 1717-18. This may have been the 1690 settler, or his father, or perhaps instead his grandson, an unrecorded son of [A] by his first wife Joyce JACKSON, and if so, then aged under 10 years?</div><div><br /></div><div>1732 - Jeremiah VICKERS [probably A], of St Catherine's parish, Dublin, Brazier, was married, by Prerogative License dated 15 April, to Ann EMERSON, of St Luke's parish, Widow.</div><div><br /></div><div>1733 - Jeremiah VICKERS [C] was born 25 June, son of the above Jeremiah VICKERS and his second wife Ann EMERSON.</div><div><br /></div><div>1756 - Jeremiah VICKERS was buried at Crumlin churchyard, 24 August, son of William VICKERS.</div><div><br /></div><div>1757 - Jeremiah VICKERS [A], an eminent Tanner, died at Crooked Staff, Dublin, in March 1757; he was buried at Crumlin churchyard, 15 March.</div><div><br /></div><div>1758-60 - Jeremiah VICKERS [E] was born, son of Thomas VICKERS and Alice SHERLOCK (they were married in September 1757).</div><div><br /></div><div>1762 - Jeremiah VICKERS [D] was born (from his age at death in 1816).</div><div><br /></div><div>1776 - Mrs Ann VICKERS died at Inns Quay, Dublin, January 1776, at an advanced age, mother of Mr Jeremiah VICKERS. </div><div><br /></div><div>1782 - Jeremiah VICKERS [probably C], of Inns Quay, Merchant, was married to Frances PAGE, of Dundalk, County Louth, on 11 December.</div><div><br /></div><div>1795-96 - Jeremiah VICKERS [E] was born (from age at death in 1816).</div><div><br /></div><div>1801 - Mr Jeremiah VICKERS [probably C] was buried at St Nicholas Churchyard, Dundalk, 8 September.</div><div><br /></div><div>1816 - Jeremiah VICKERS [E] was buried at Stabannon, County Louth, 6 June, aged 20 years.</div><div><br /></div><div>1816 - Jeremiah VICKERS [D] was buried at Stabannon, County Louth, 27 September, aged 54 years</div><div><span style="font-family: times;"><br /></span></div><div><span style="font-family: times;"><br /></span></div><div><span style="font-family: times;"><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>JEREMIAH VICKERS, OF DUBLIN, TANNER.</u></i></b></span></span></div><div></div><div><br /></div><div>The following is derived from the DIXON Papers pedigree (see above), to which later additions have been made, including some very recently digitalised sources.</div><div><br /></div><div>[A] Jeremiah VICKERS, born 15 December 1681 [DIXON Papers]; named in his father-in-law Robert JACKSON's will, dated 23 February 1711 [BETHAM's Abstract - see also deed abstract of it, above]; Admitted Freeman of Dublin, Michaelmas 1712, Tanner's Guild, by Service; of the parish of St Catherine's, Dublin; named in a Court of Exchequer Bill, dated 4 April 1716, with John VICCARS (as a joint Defendant), in a case brought by Charles GANNON and his wife Margaret alias HEATH, his co-defendants being Elizabeth, Samuel and George HEATH, and Daniel FOY; of the City of Dublin, Tanner, when he was Grantee of Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 11 and 12 October, 1721 [Memorial 19916, Book 31, Page 451], along with John VICKERS, of Ballynabarna, County Westmeath (and perhaps his relation), as joint first party of the Release, to Henry PEMBERTON, of Dublin, Merchant (further details pending); of the County of Dublin, Tanner, when he was named as Grantee of a deed of Lease, dated 23 September 1728 [Memorial 40351, Book 45, page 519], by which Rev William JACKSON, of Clonmell, County Tipperary, <i>"... demised and set unto him all taht and those the holding and tan yard wherein Robert JACKSON, deceased, formerly lived, situate on Crokked Staffe, in the Liberty of Thomas Court and Donore and County of Dublin, with all houses, out houses, gardens, yards, back side, house of ease, and appurtenances thereunto belonging in as large and ample manner as Robert JACKSON deceased formerly enjoyed the same, an as the said Jeremiah VICARS then held and enjoyed the same, to hold for 61 years from 25th March last past, at the yearly rent of ₤40 sterling, with 7 shillings sterling per annum dutys for every dwelling house that are or shall be built on the said premises, which said Lease and Memorial s witnessed by John FOX, of the City of Dublin, Cutler, and Samuel HEATH, of the said city, Tanner</i>"; of Crooked staff, 1729, when was named as one of two Tanners (with Rowland ATKINSON, of Dolphin's barn) among members of the Common Council of the City of Dublin [Gentleman's and Citizen's Almanac]; of the City of Dublin, Tanner, when he was named as third party to a Deed, dated 17 March 1732 [Memorial 58280, Book 81, Page 444], of which the first party was James WILLMOTT, of Dublin, Dyer, and the second party was Robert ADAM, of Dublin, Weaver, concerning land in Upper Combe (which was disposed of in August 1761 by his widow Ann and son William); Tanner's Guild representative, Dublin Municipal Council, 1732; Tanner, of Dolphins Barn, 1735 [DIXON]; ditto, of Crooked Staff, 1740 [DIXON]; Tanner's Guild, Electors for M.P., Dublin Voter's Book, October-November 1749.</div><div>Jeremiah died at Crooked Staff, March 1757, <i>"... an eminent Tanner"</i> [Dublin Gazette, March 1757, citing other dates, on same page, of 18 and 19 March], and was buried at Crumlin, 15 March.</div><div>Jeremiah was married firstly, by License dated 30 July 1707, on 5 August, to Joyce JACKSON, daughter of Robert JACKSON and Joyce SHAW; she was named in her father's will, 1711, as Joyse VICCARS [BETHAM]; she appears to have died about 1730 (if it was her husband who married again in 1732).</div><div>Jeremiah and Joyce had issue:</div><div><i>1. Robert VICKERS, born 2 August 1708, baptised Mr STRONG [DIXON - parish unidentified].</i><br /><i>2. William VICKERS, born 3 August 1710. See [B] below.</i></div><div><i>3. unknown, born 13 April 1712, baptised Mr STRONG [ditto].<br />4. Elizabeth, born 23 April 1714; died 10 December 1714.</i></div><div><i>5. unknown, born 21 September 1715.</i></div><div><i>6. Elizabeth VICKERS, born 11 April 1717, and baptised by Mr STRONG; buried Crumlin, 31 march 1748 [DIXON].</i></div><div><i>7. Ann VICKERS. No details.<br />8. Sarah VICKERS, born 28 February 1722-23, and baptised 6 March [DIXON].</i><br /><i>5. Susannah VICKERS, born 17 September 1725, and baptised 24 September [DIXON].</i><br /><i>6. Grace VICKERS, born 19 February 1727; of the parish of St Catherine's, Spinster, she was married by License, 10 January 1750(-51?), to Richard WILKINSON, of the City of Dublin, Chandler [BETHAM].</i><br /><i>7. Catherine VICKERS; married at St Catherine's, Dublin, by M.L.B. dated 8 August 1740, to Samuel GOFF or GOUGH, of Dublin, Merchant [DIXON; but BETHAM'S Abstract records her name as Anne]; they had issue:</i></div><div><i> a. Jeremiah GOUGH; named in his brother Mathew's will, 1773; he was married, with issue:</i></div><div><i> i. Eldest son.</i></div><div><i> ii. Mathew GOUGH, the second son; named in his uncle Matthew's will 1773.</i></div><div><i> b. Mathew GOUGH; of the City of Dublin, his will dated 28 June 1773, proved 22 June 1785; he was married to Ann JONES; she was named in his will, 1773.</i></div><div><i>8. Lydia VICKERS; of the parish of St Catherine, Spinster, when she was married, by License dated 18 February 1747, to John EMERSON, of the City of Dublin, Writing Clerk [BETHAM].</i></div><div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</i></div>Jeremiah VICKERS, Brazier, of St Catherine's Parish, Dublin, was married by License dated 15 April 1732, on 20 April, to Anne EMERSON of St Luke's Parish, Dublin, Widow [BETHAM's Abstract], the widow of Robert EMERSON (of Dublin, Chandler, his administration, dated 20 June 1729, granted to Anne, his widow and relict) - available evidence indicates that this may have been a second marriage for the "former" Tanner (unless the the Tanner had an older son named Jeremiah, although available archived documents do not support this); Ann VICKERS, of the City of Dublin, made an Indented Deed of Assignment, dated 10 September 1757 [Memorial 127594, Book 192, Page 265], as the <i>"Executrix of Jeremiah VICKERS, late of the said City, Tanner, deceased,</i>" by which she demised to her son Thomas VICKERS, Tanner, her late husband's House and Tan Yards in Crooked Staff, which deed was witnessed by Samuel and Jeremiah VICKERS (probably sons of Jeremiah, the deceased Tanner); she was probably the Ann VICKERS, who inserted a notice in the Freeman's Journal, Dublin, 24 December 1763:</div><div><i>"CANDLES AND SOAP. Ann VICKERS, Tallow Chandler, who some years ago followed business in Truck Street, has now opened a Shop on Crooked Staff near Newmarket on the Comb, and hopes for Encouragement from her Friends and the Public, as she is determined, by the quality of her Goods, and by the greatest Diligence and Care in executing their demands, to do everything on her Power to deserve their Favour."</i></div><div>Ann VICKERS, of Crooked Staff, County Dublin, Widow, was first part to an Indented Deed of Lease, dated 17 May 1764 [Memorial 152124, Book 228, Page 488], by which she demised unto Samuel HOLT of Thomas Street, City of Dublin, Tanner, and Isaac WILLIAMS, also of Thomas Street, Merchant, the leasehold of <i>"... all that dwelling house in Chamber Street in the County of Dublin, together with the Tan yard, Bark house, Mill, Stable, Drying lofts, in as ample manner as Wm VICKERS, Tanner, lateley held and enjoyed the same...term of 21 years... yearly rent of ₤20 sterling... witnessed by Thomas VICKERS of the City of Dublin, Tanner..."</i> </div><div>Ann died on 17 December 1788; her will dated 13 June 1767, proved 6 February 1789, of the City of Dublin, Widow, naming her late husband Jeremiah, Tanner, her daughter Lydia the wife of William VICKERS, her sons Thomas and Jeremiah VICKERS, and her grandchildren Jeremiah (son of Thomas) and Lydia VICKERS; by her he had further issue:<br /><i>9. Jeremiah VICKERS, born 25 June 1733. </i><i>See [C] below.</i></div><div><i>10. Thomas VICKERS, born 5 February 1734. See [D] below</i><i>.</i></div><div><br /></div><div>Curiously, a burial in Crumlin churchyard, 18 January 1776, was recorded as "Mrs VICKERS, mother of Mr Jeremiah VICKERS."</div><div>As Mrs Ann VICKERS otherwise EMERSON died in 1788, it is unclear which "other" Mr Jeremiah this may have been.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>WILLIAM VICKERS, TALLOW CHANDLER.</u></i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>[B] William VICKERS, born in Dublin 3 August 1710; he was admitted Freeman of Dublin, Christmas 1740, Tanner's Guild, by birth; Tanner's Guild, Electors for M.P., Dublin Voter's Book, October-November 1749; he was a party to the Deed of Settlements, dated 13 September 1757 [Memorial 127595, Book 192, Page 266], for the marriage of his half-brother Thomas VICKERS to Alice SHERLOCK, and which deed and the memorial of it was witnessed by Samuel VICKERS, of the City of Dublin, Merchant, and John WOLFE of County Kildare; William was joint grantor, together with his widowed step-mother Ann, in a Deed dated 3 August 1761 [Memorial 139894, Book 213, Page 90], by which they disposed of the late Jeremiah's land in Upper Combe; he was of Chambre Street, County Dublin, Tanner, 1762, April 1763, 1764-70; Tallow Chandler, Crooked Staff, 1767, at Francis Street, 1768-70, and at 74 Francis Street, 1774-90; he was named in the will of his nephew Mathew GOUGH, dated 28 June 1773 (proved 22 June 1785); Tallow Chandler, 74 Francis Street, 1782 [Directory].</div><div>William VICKERS, Chandler, died in 1790, Intestate; he was buried at Crumlin, 10 September 1790; administration dated 1791, granted to his wife Letitia (perhaps in error for Lydia?); he was married in 1742 to his step-sister Lydia EMERSON (born 1726, daughter of Robert and Anne EMERSON). </div><div>The DIXON Papers record that William VICKERS, second son of Jeremiah VICKERS and his first wife Joyce, died in 1790, having assigned his lease of 74 Francis Street to his son Robert VICKERS, dated 29 September 1787, at an annual rental of £60, for 52 years.</div><div>This is confirmed by Memorial 273002 [Book 418, Page 198, Dublin Deeds Registry], being an Indenture of Lease, bearing that date, made between:</div><div><i>"William VICKERS, of the City of Dublin, Tallow Chandler, of the one part; and Robert VICKERS, son of the said William, of the said City, Tallow Chandler, of the other part; Reciting that said William VICKERS for many years then last past carried out the Trade of a Tallow Chandler and soap boiler in his dwelling house and concerns in Francis Street in the County of the City of Dublin, and was then possessed of a stock of Tallow, Soap, Candles, Coppers, Utensils and other articles belonging to said trade, the particulars of whereof was (set forth) in a schedule marked No 1 hereunto annexed, and that the said William VICKERS was then possessed of Household goods and Furniture, Plate, China, and other effects, in his said house, set forth in the schedule marked No 2, thereunto annexed; also reciting that said William VICKERS, from natural love and affection to his said son Robert VICKERS, not only the entire establishment in said trade, but also to assign and make over to him all the before mentioned stock in trade... the sum of £467 and 6d halfpenny... thenceforth for and during the time that William and Lydia VICKERS, or either of them, should continue to live with the said Robert VICKERS; In which deed, of which this is a memorial, is contained a covenant that said Robert should provide his said father William and his mother Lydia VICKERS during their several lives with (?) and a convenient Apartment or Apartments for their residence in said dwelling house, or in lieu thereof... a yearly sum of </i><i>£</i><i>70 to be paid by Robert... witnessed by Ab'm WILKINSON, M'cht, and Abel CARTER, Gent, both of the City of Dublin..."</i></div><div>William and Lydia had issue:</div><div>1. Ann VICKERS; buried at Crumlin, 13 September 1743.</div><div>2. William VICKERS; buried at Crumlin, 27 May 1744 or 1745.</div><div>3. Jeremiah VICKERS; buried at Crumlin, 24 August 1756.</div><div>4. Robert VICKERS - probably the next.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>ROBERT VICKERS, TALLOW CHANDLER.</u></i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div><div>Robert VICKERS, born about 1754; probably Master of the Corporation of Tallow Chandlers, or Guild of St George, Dublin, March 1804 [Saunders's Newsletter, 28 March]; Mr Robert VICKERS died at his residence, Monkstown, 24 November 1835, in his 81st year [Dublin Evening Packet, 28 November]; as Mr VICKARS, of Francis Street, he was buried at Crumlin, 26 November 1835, aged 81 [FFOLLIOTT Abstracts]. Perhaps the next.</div></div><div><br /></div><div>Robert VICKERS, probably born in or before 1768; Admitted Freeman of Dublin, Easter 1790, Chandler's Guild, by Grace Especial; Tallow Chandler, 74 Francis Street, Dublin, 1791-99, 1804 [WILSON's Directory], 1809-15; ditto and Soap Boiler, sane address, 1820, 1824 and 1832.</div><div><br /></div><div>Robert VICKERS, born about 1805; probably Secretary, Tallow Chandlers of the City of Dublin, September 1845 [Dublin Evening Post, 6 September]; he died at 71 Frances street, Dublin South, 23 July 1873, Widower, aged 67, Chandler, of Typhoid Fever, informed by Mary REED, same address, present at the death; he was probably married at St Nicholas Without, Dublin, 30 July 1832, to Ursula PENDRED otherwise PHILLIPS, Widow; she probably died at Dublin South, 2nd quarter 1866, aged 67 [image of registration not yet digitalised]; they had issue.</div><div><br /></div>Robert (? or Thomas) VICKERS; of the City of Dublin, Tallow Chandler, he was married at St Nicholas Without, Dublin, 16 October 1796 [BETHAM; Church Records on the www.irishgenealogy.ie web-site], to Sarah MOORE, of Francis Street.<div><br /><div>John VICKERS, born about 1762; Tallow Chandler, 74 Francis Street, 1793-94; he was buried at Crumlin, 18 February 1844, aged 82; he was probably married at St Nicholas Without, 15 February 1793, to Mary JONES, of Francis Street.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>THOMAS VICKERS, TANNER.</u></i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>[D] Thomas VICKERS, born 5 February 1734; he was named in his mother's Indented Assignment, dated 10 September 1757 [Memorial 127549, Deeds Registry]; Tanner, of Crooked Staff, 1758-70; of Crooked Staff, November 1765, when he was named in an item published by the Dublin Society, <i>"... who tanned with oak dust only, 204 calf skins and one hyde"</i> [Dublin Gazette, 28 November]; named in his mother's will, dated 13 June 1766 [BETHAM 's Abstract]; he was named in a 'To Be Let' Notice, March 1773, <i>"... for any term that may be agreed upon, the House and Tan yard at Crooked Staff, lately occupied by Thomas VICKERS; the house is large, convenient, and well situated. Apply to William JACKSON, Tanner, Mill Street..."</i> [Saunders's Newsletter, 31 March]; of the City of Dublin, Merchant, when he was married, by License dated 10 September 1757, to Alice SHERLOCK of the parish of Naas, County Kildare, Spinster [BETHAM's Abstract]; their Marriage Settlements, dated 13 September 1757 [Memorial 127595, Book 192, Page 266], of the City of Dublin, Tanner, to Alice, <i>"... daughter of Mary SHERLOCK, of Naas, Widow,"</i> of the third part, the second party of Trustees including William VICKERS, of the County of Dublin, Tanner, and witnessed by Samuel VICKERS of the City of Dublin, Merchant; married <i>"... last week, Mr Thomas VICKERS, an eminent Tanner of this City, to Miss Alice SHERLOCK, of Naas"</i> [Pue's Occurrences, Saturday 17 September 1757]; they had issue:</div><div> a. Jeremiah VICKERS. See [E] below.</div><div> b. Lydia VICKERS; she was named in her grandmother VICKERS' will, 1766; she was married to George CARTWRIGHT, with probable issue:</div><div> i. Jeremiah Vickers CARTWRIGHT; admitted to the Freedom of Dublin, Midsummer 1820, Merchant's Guild, by Service; he died at his residence, Trimbleston, M<span>errion, 4 August 1835</span>.</div><div> ii. Mary CARTWRIGHT, born at Patrick Street, Dublin, 8 April 1791, and baptised at St Nicholas Without, 17 April.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>A PROBABLY RELATED SAMUEL VICKERS, GROCER</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div>Samuel VICKERS, perhaps born about the 1720s?; of the City of Dublin, Merchant; Grocer, Winetavern Street, Dublin, 1768-69; he was married at St Peter and St Kevin, Dublin, by Settlements dated 5 March 1754 [Memorial 111969, Deeds Registry], to Mary WHITMORE, of the City of Dublin, Spinster, the daughter of the late William WHITMORE, of Dublin, the second party to the Settlements (probably as trustees) including William VICKERS, of Dublin, Tanner; Samuel was named in an Indented Deed of Assignment, dated 13 December 1758 [Memorial 130701, Deeds Registry], concerning a dwelling house in Oxmanstown, purchased from him, for £100 paid to him by Jeremiah VICKERS of the City of Dublin, Merchant; Samuel VICARS, Dublin, Merchant, Administration 1769, Intestacy, #164 [Index to Wills, Probates, Administrations, etc, Ireland].<br />Mary VICKERS was named in the will of her sister, Elizabeth WHITMORE, dated 7 February 1756, and proved 11 March 1756 [BETHAM], in which Elizabeth also mentioned her aunt Mary WHITMORE, brother Samuel WHITMORE, sisters Olivia and Martha WHITMORE, aunts Olivia GRATTAN, Margaret COCKSEDGE and Olivia MASON, uncle William LUNELL, and cousins Elizabeth JENNINGS and Mary GRATTAN.</div><div>They probably had issue:</div><div>1. Mary VICKERS; buried at Crimp in, 21 January 1763.</div><div><br />Samuel and the VICKERS Tanners are very likely to be related, probably as brothers or half-brothers.</div><div><br /></div><div>Samuel VICKERS, of the City of Dublin, Merchant, was married to Ann CODERE, of the parish of St Nicholas Without, Dublin, by M.L.B. dated 22 March 1765 [BETHAM's Abstracts]; probably a second marriage for the above?</div><div>Mr Samuel VICKERS, Grocer, died at Winetavern Street, November 1768 [Freeman's Journal (Dublin), 29 November - 3 December].</div><div>Ann VICKERS, of the City of Dublin, widow and executrix of Samuel VICKERS, late of the said City of Dublin, Merchant, deceased, was Grantee of a Deed of Surrender, dated 6 June 1771 [Memorial 187146, Book 286, Page 276], to Thomas KEATING, of the City of Dublin, Merchant, of <i>"... all that new dwelling house built by the said Thomas KEATING situate at the corner of Winetavern Street and Wood Quay, in the said County of Dublin."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>She may have been the Mrs Ann VICKARS, who died at Inn's Quay, January 1776, at an advanced age, and was buried at Crumlin, 18 January, <i>"... mother of Mr Jeremiah VICKERS"</i> [DIXON Papers].</div><div><br /><div><br /></div><div><span style="color: #2b00fe; font-size: large;"><b><i><u>A TALE OF THREE JEREMIAH VICKERS, MERCHANTS</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>There now appear to be three Jeremiah VICKERS who were merchants in Dublin, and of who at least two moved to County Louth.</div><div>I am not confident that all of the mentions in archived records pertaining to these three will be successfully identified, but will do my best.</div><div><br /></div><div>They are as follows:</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>JEREMIAH VICKERS, THE TOBACCONIST</u>.</b></i></span></div><div><br /></div><div>[C] Jeremiah VICKERS, born 25 June 1733; he was named in his mother's will, dated 13 June 1766 [BETHAM's Abstract]; probably the Tobacconist of Parliament Street, Dublin; it has been noted, perhaps incorrectly [DIXON Papers], that he may have died unmarried; Tobacconist; he had served as apprentice to Lundy FOOT, Tobacco Manufacturer, and had <i>"... some time since transacted business for himself,"</i> when he opened his own shop at No 1 Parliament Street, opposite the Royal Exchange, Dublin, in March 1780, <i>"... where he manufactures and sells all sorts of high and low Toast Snuff, Roll Tobacco, Pigtail, Grasscut, and every kind of Smoaking Tobacco, with a great Assortment of Foreign and Irish Rapees, which he will dispose of at the moast reasonable terms"</i> [Dublin Evening Post, 11 March]; he was obliged to move his premises to No 12 Parliament Street, by December 1782, due to street widening; he was declared Bankrupt, September 1785; notice was given of the sale, by auction, on 13 September, of <i>"... all his Household Furniture, Plate, China, House Linen, likewise every proper utensil for Manufacturing Snuff and Tobacco"</i> [Saunders's News-Letter, 12 September]; a further notice was published on 21 September next, for the sale of his leasehold of the house at No 12, and the warehouse in Crane Lane, directly opposite the residence, with direction to apply to the Assignees, Jeremiah VICKERS (the younger) of No 11, Inns Quay, and Alexander ROBINSON, No 33, Ushers Quay.</div><div><br /></div><div>Mr Jeremiah VICKERS, Esq, died at Dundalk, September 1801 [Star (London), Tuesday 15 September], <i>"... formerly an eminent merchant in Dublin</i>" [WALKER's Hibernian Magazine, 6 October 1801], and was buried, 8 September, at St Nicholas parish church (known locally as the Green Church), Dundalk [FOLLIOTT Collection]. It appears very likely to me that he was the bankrupt Dublin Tobacconist; and that he was the the husband of Frances PAGE, and that his death resulted in her having achieved widowed status before 1808.</div><div><br /></div><div>Jeremiah VICKERS, Junior, of the Inns Quay, City of Dublin, Merchant, was married, by Prerogative Court License dated 6 December 1782, at Dundalk, 11 December, to Frances PAGE, of the parish of Dundalk, County Louth [BETHAM's Abstract] - <i>"Jeremiah VICKERS, Jun'r, Esq, of the Inns Quay, to Miss Fanny PAGE, daughter of John PAGE, of Dundalk, Co Louth" </i>[The Hibernian Journal; or Chronicle of Liberty (Dublin), of Wednesday 18 December 1782]. The use of the term Junior here appears to have been in error for the elder Jeremiah - or I have got it all wrong.</div><div><br /></div><div>Frances PAGE was baptised at St Nicholas parish church, Dundalk, 4 November 1764, a daughter of John PAGE of Dundalk, by his wife Letitia WYNNE, who were married at St Nicholas parish church, Dundalk, 27 October 1757). See further below.</div><div>Frances was named in her father's will, dated 23 July 1797 [BETHAM]; she was of Dundalk, a widow, January 1808, when she was named as joint fourth party to the Deed of Marriage Settlements [Memorial 407973, Book 601, Page 169] for her only daughter Letitia; Frances died at Dundalk, January 1837, and as Mrs VICARS, was buried at St Nicholas churchyard, 28 January 1837; Frances VICKERS, of Dundalk, Widow, 1837 [Public Record Office of Ireland, Testamentary Index, 1837 #wa 72; also Index to Prerogative Wills, 1811-58]; she died after Sir William BETHAM had stopped making his abstracts.</div><div><br /></div><div>Jeremiah and Frances had issue, evidently an only surviving daughter: </div><div> 1. Letitia VICKERS; named in her PAGE grandfather's will, 1797; as Letitia PURCELL, of Dundalk, County Louth, her death was recorded on 21 January 1828, and Administration (limited) was granted in London, 9 January 1900 [England and Wales National Probate Calendar]; as a spinster, and the only daughter of Frances VICKERS, of Dundalk, Widow, Letitia was married, by Settlements dated 29 January 1808 [Memorial 407973, Book 601, Page 169], to Joseph PURCELL, the eldest son and heir of Tobias PURCELL of Dundalk, Esq, with several other parties, including John and Robert PAGE, both of Dundalk, Esq's, uncles of the bride; the marriage was celebrated at St Nicholas parish church, Dundalk, by license, 4 February 1808, she being named as Laetitia VICKERS, niece of John PAGE, Esq; she had issue:</div><div> a. Tobias John PURCELL; of Dundalk, County Louth, Esq, he was second party to a Deed of Conveyance, dated 3 January 1831 [Memorial 587494, Book 887, Page 494], to which the first party was Anthony Richard BLAKE, Esq, Chief Remembrancer of H.M.'s Court of the Exchequer - Tobias was named as the<i> "... eldest son and heir of Letitia PURCELL otherwise VICKERS, deceased, who was in her lifetime grand-daughter and heiress-at-law of Jeremiah VICKERS the elder, late of the City of Dublin, Merchant, deceased, the surviving trustee named in the therein recited deed of 21 December 1785, of the second part; ..."</i></div><div>My reading of this clause suggests that Letitia ought not to have been an heir-at-law in her own right if she had lawful brothers - and other "evidence" suggests that Frances PAGE and Jeremiah VICKERS had grandchildren who used WYNNE as a middle name - currently surmised to be through likely sons of Frances?</div><div>However, it is also evident, from other archived records, that Jeremiah VICKERS the elder was the bankrupted Tobacconist of Dublin, whereas his nephew Jeremiah the younger was the Merchant of Inn's Quay, who was the husband of Frances PAGE of Dundalk.</div><div><br /></div><div>Lieutenant Tobias PURCELL, 46th Foot, was married at Faughert church, County Louth, October 1826, to Letitia PAGE, eldest daughter of John PAGE, of Dundalk [Dublin Morning Register, 25 October]; they had issue, including:</div><div> 1. a daughter, born at Seatown-place, Dundalk, 1 April 1833 [Belfast Commercial Chronicle, 20 April].</div><div><br /><div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>JEREMIAH VICKERS, A DUBLIN BANKER</u>.</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>An on-line pedigree has a photo of a page in a published book, being a list of Governors, Directors and Original Subscribers, probably of the Bank of Ireland, at page 597:</div><div><i>"VICKERS, Jeremiah (1783-85), a member of the original Board and a merchant free of the ten and four, of 11 King's Inn Quay. His ancestors were tanners in the city. He subscribed £10,000 to the capital of the Bank, and a further £600 in conjunction with Abraham WILKINSON. He died at Holyhead in 1796."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>I have not been able to verify this detail of his death.</div><div><br /></div><div>But he was evidently the Merchant of Inns Quay, who has been referred to in a number of Dublin deeds and other sources, as Jeremiah VICKERS the younger, who married Frances (Fanny) PAGE of Dundalk, and appears to have gone to live in County Louth. See above and below.</div><div><br /></div><div>He appears to have been one of the Assignees in the Bankruptcy proceedings of Jeremiah VICKERS the Elder, the Tobacconist of Dublin. </div><div>They are probably named in the lists of subscribers to the Dublin Chamber of Commerce, founded in February 1783, as:</div><div><i>"Jeremiah VICKERS, (& Co.) Linen Drapers, Director, Bank of Ireland.</i></div><div><i>"Jeremiah VICKERS Jun'r, (& Co.), Linen Drapers."</i></div><div>I suspect this is the same two Jeremiah VICKERS who were the Tobacconist and the Merchant.</div><div> </div><div>Also in this list was Abraham WILKINSON, Merchant, and Director, Bank of Ireland, who is also named in a number of Bills entered in the High Court of Chancery, Dublin, as a joint defendant, together with Jeremiah VICKERS, in Bills brought by James MAHON (27 January 1780, and 29 April 1786), and Nicholas DONNAGH (8 June 1782); and, as executors of the late William ORD, they were co-Plaintiffs in another Bill, entered 15 December 1779, against William MORRIS, the Defendant.</div><div><br /></div><div>In another Chancery Bill, entered 25 January 1788, by Elizabeth ORD, Widow, together with Arthur ORD a minor by the said Elizabeth his mother and next friend (a quaint legal way of identifying her as his guardian), Hannah HUGHES, John HUGHES a minor by said Elizabeth his grandmother and next friend, Thomas ORD Gent, and William ORD a minor by said Thomas his father and next friend, the Defendants were named as Jeremiah VICKERS the Elder, Jeremiah VICKERS the younger (who both answered 7 February 1789, and again on 25 September 1789), together with Abraham WILKINSON, John and Thomas ORD, John BACHELOR and Richard MERCER.</div><div>BETHAM [Abstracts] records details of the will of William ORD, of Dublin, Cooper, dated 19 February 1778, and proved 24 June 1778, naming his step-mother Martha ORD, his brothers John and Arthur ORD, his sons Thomas and Arthur ORD, his daughter Hannah HUGHES and son-in-law John HUGHES, his four grandchildren, William and Thomas the sons of his brother John ORD, and John and Elizabeth HUGHES, and his sisters Mary CLERKE and Susanna LAMBERMOUNT. With not a VICKERS in sight!</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>JEREMIAH VICKERS, THE THIRD</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>Mrs Ann VICKERS, mother of Mr Jeremiah VICKERS, died at Inns Quay, Dublin, in January 1776, at an advanced age [Death Notice, source pending], and was buried at Crumlin churchyard, County Dublin, 18 January [DIXON Papers]; Widow, Prerogative will, 1774.</div><div><br /></div><div>It is not yet clear whether her son was the merchant of Inns Quay, currently thought (by me) to have gone to live in Dundalk, or another - but the widow of Jeremiah VICKERS (1681-1757) does appear to have been the Ann VICKERS who died in 1788 (see above).</div><div>It is possible he, or one of the other two, was instead a son of Samuel VICKERS, who may have been yet another son of Jeremiah the Tanner.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>AN EXCHEQUER BILL</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>Court of The Exchequer, Dublin; Bill entered 8 January 1791; Plaintiffs - Francis BENNETT and Allen BELLINGHAM, Assignees of Jeremiah VICKERS the Elder, a Bankrupt; Defendant - Robert VICKERS.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>A LETTER TO THE EDITOR</u>.</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>The Dublin Evening Post, of Thursday 3 April 1783, published this letter:</div><div><i>"Sir, I am extremely happy to have it in my power to acquaint you, and through you the Citizens of Dublin, That on Mr READ's being this day brought to Court, and declaring he was ready to take his trial on the charge made against him of setting fire to the office of James FORDE, agent to Lord Clanbrassil, there was not any prosecution; and though some other things were laid to his charge, the Judge, without the smallest hesitation, admitted him to bail. His friends here are convinced that he must be acquitted with the greatest honour.</i></div><div><i>"Respectfully, I am, Sir, Your most obedient servant,</i></div><div><i>"JER. VICKERS, Jun.</i></div><div><i>"Dundalk, April 1, 1783."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>Here again is Jeremiah VICKERS Junior, and writing from Dundalk, County Louth. </div><div>It again asks the question - was Jeremiah Junior the same person as Jeremiah the Younger?</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>JEREMIAH VICKERS, THE ELDER, IN COUNTY LOUTH</u>.</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div><div>[E] Jeremiah VICKERS, born ; named in his grandmother Ann VICKERS' will, dated 13 June 1766 [BETHAM's Abstract]; named in his aunt Elinor SHERLOCK's will, dated 22 September 1793 [BETHAM's Abstract]; as Jeremiah Junior, of the Inns Quay, City of Dublin, Merchant; named in his aunt Elinor SHERLOCK's will, dated 22 September 1793 [BETHAM's Abstract]; he probably died at Dundalk, County Louth, September 1816, as Jeremiah Senior, and was buried at Stabannon, 27 September, aged 54 years.</div><div>It appears likely that he was probably married, with issue - but details are hard to find. His wife may have been either Ann (mother of Robert, died in 1801), or Margaret Anne (mother of William, born about 1804), and perhaps a member of the WYNNE family?</div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div>Jeremiah and Frances may also have had further issue - unless these were instead sons of the other Jeremiah VICKERS (the elder, and the uncle?), and perhaps by a wife named Ann:</div><div> 2. Jeremiah VICKERS, born about 1795-96 (his mother appears unlikely to have been Frances, as he was not named in his PAGE grandfather's 1797 will); he was buried at Stabannon, 6 June 1816, aged 20.</div><div> 3. Robert VICARS; died in 1801 - mother recorded as Ann. </div><div> 4. William VICARS, born about 1804; of Collon, County Louth, Farmer; his mother Mary Anne died at Collon in 1860.</div><div> 5. James VICKERS, born in Ireland, 1813; he emigrated to Canada in 1873, with two sons, and where the younger son Robert appears to have honoured part of his Louth ancestry by using the middle name of WYNNE, and passing it on to several of his children. See below.</div><div><br /></div></div><div><br /></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>A PETITION TO THE IRISH HOUSE OF COMMONS</u>.</span></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div>Journals of the House of Commons (Ireland), Volume 20, 3 November 1781:</div><div><i>"A Petition of Jeremiah VICKERS, John PAGE Junior, Archibald WRIGHT, John McCAUL and William CROMBIE, Manufacturer of Kentings, Cambricks, Lawns, Catgut, Gauze, Leoneaus, Spa Cambricks and Thread, setting forth, among other things, that the Petitioners Archibald WRIGHT, John McCAUL and William CROMBIE, who are natives of Scotland, were applied to to settle in this Kingdom, and to carry on the above Branches of business, have entered into partnership with the other Petitioners, and have taken land near Dundalk, in the County of Louth, on which they have erected several Houses and Mills, which they now are and have been for some time fully employed; that the petitioners have, at great expense, brought over from Scotland six young gentlewomen, who were acknowledged to be the best manufacturers of thread in Scotland, and 41 other Manufacturers, all capital in the several branches in which they are employed...</i></div><div><i>... expenses on building, of £1564, and of bringing the works over £400, and articles implemented (?) with them of £1,700 and upwards... (having) since May last they have created goods worth £4,000..."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>Clearly, the several Jeremiah VICKERS, Dublin Merchants, were already engaged in investments in County Louth before one of them married the daughter of John PAGE.</div><div><br /></div><div>On 4 February 1785, the Chancellor of the Exchequer presented the following to the Irish House of Commons:</div><div><i>"Petition of Jeremiah VICKERS senior, Jeremiah VICKERS junior, Archibald WRIGHT, John McCALL and William CROMBIE, Manufacturers of Kentings, Cambricks, Lawns, Thread, Catgut, Leneauze, Spa Cambricks, Ounce and Stocking Thread, Stockings and Muslin; praying that the bounty of their manufactures may be continued, and such aid granted to petitioners as may enable them to extend their buildings."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>On 9 February, it was Ordered that the above Petition:</div><div><i>"... now lying on the Table, be referred to the Committee appointed to enquire into the Expenditure of the sum of £50,000 granted last session of Parliament for the Purpose of paying Bounties on the sale of the following Manufactures of this Kingdom; that is to say, the Manufactures of Wool, of Wool mixed, of Cotton mixed, Thread, Kentings, and Manufacturers of Iron and Copper."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>This investment was probably associated with the Townland of Balrigan, to the north-west of Dundalk, as described by Joseph MARTIN, in his "Old Title Deeds of Co Louth," County Louth Archaeological and Historical Society Journal, 1942, Volume 10, Number 2, at Page 142 - by courtesy of Nigel CURTIN, Dundalk Library], as follows:</div><div><i>"Balrigan, 1823-1827.</i></div><div><i>"13. Made October 20th 1827. John OGLE, Carrickedmond, to Richard BRYANS, John HERD, George HAWORTH. John OGLE in 1823 leased for 21 years part of the Townlands of Balrigan to Hugh SHERRY and Owen SHERY. In 1825 Hugh and Owen SHERRY transferred their interests to to John and Patrick CALLAN. Later in 1825 the CALLANs mortgaged the property to the BRYANs, HERD and HAWORTH, subject to redemption on payment of £1,750. As this money was not paid within the stipulated time, John OGLE leased to the above gentlemen, the premises, i.e. : - All that part of the lands of Balrigan formerly in possession of widow MATHEWS, afterwards in possession of Jeremiah VICKERS, Archibald WRIGHT, John McCAUL and William CROMBIE, subsequently in the possession of Thomas GATAKER, and lately in the possession of Hugh and Owen SHERRY..."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>We recognise these latter four names from the 1781 Petition above.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>AN UNPLACED JEREMIAH VICARS</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>Jeremiah VICARS; he was a nephew of Mrs BARRINGTON, who was a "great friend" of Elizabeth WOLFE; he died before July 1816; he was married, with issue:</div><div> 1. Miles VICARS; she was bequeathed £100 in the will, dated 10 July 1816, of Elizabeth WOLFE, the eldest daughter of Richard WOLFE, of Baronrath, Esq (he died in 1779).</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>SOME VICKERS DEEDS OF POSSIBLE RELEVANCE</u>.</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>Memorial 156354; Book 242; Page 206:</div><div><i>Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 19 and 20 November 1764; the Lease made between William VICKERS of the County of Dublin, Chandler, eldest son and heir of Jeremiah VICKERS, late of Crooked Staff, County Dublin, Tanner, deceased, who was surviving trustee named and appointed in and by the last will and testament of Samuel HEATH, late of Kilmainham, County Dublin, Tanner, and William JACKSON of Millstreet in County Dublin, Farmer, only son of Lydia HEATH deceased, widow of the said Samuel HEATH, of the one part; and John HUNT, of Chambre Street in County Dublin, Cloathier, of the second part. And the Release made between the said William VICKERS, of the first part; and Ann VICKERS, Widow and Executrix of the said Jeremiah VICKERS who was one of the legatees named in the last will and testament of the said Samuel HEATH, Lydia GANNON, Widow, King MELDRUM of the City of Dublin, Grayner, and Elizabeth MELDRUM otherwise SANDERSON otherwise JACKSON his wife (which said Lydia GANNON and Elizabeth MELDRUM are daughters of the said Lydia HEATH and legatees named in the last will and testament of the said Samuel HEATH), of the third part; and the said John HUNT of the fourth part...</i></div><div><br /></div><div>Memorial 349463; Book 532; Page 393:</div><div><i>Indented Deed of Assignment, dated 8 July 1800, made between Jeremiah VICKERS, Junior, formerly of the City of Dublin but then of Dundalk in the County of Louth, Merchant, and Allan BELLINGHAM, of the City of Dublin aforesaid, Merchant, the surviving Assignee of the Estate and Effects of the said Jeremiah VICKERS who was heretofore declared a Bankrupt, of the one part; and Robert BROWNE, formerly of Dundalk aforesaid, but now of the City of Dublin, Esq, of the other part; Whereby, after reciting...</i></div><div>And citing <i>"... a leased dated 16 August 1787, and made between Thomas READ of Dundalk, Esq, and Jeremiah VICKERS..."</i> - which 1787 Deed I have been unable to locate, so not yet sighted.</div><div><br /></div><div>Here, immediately, is a small problem - previously, the Bankrupt had been identified as Jeremiah VICKERS the Elder!</div><div><br /></div><div>And it would not surprise me if this led to the association by Jeremiah VICKERS with the Presbyterians in Dundalk, whether he was the spouse of Frances PAGE, or not.</div><div>Don JOHNSTON, in his "Gaelic-Speaking Presbyterian Ministers of Dundalk/Ballymascanlan" [County Louth Archaeological and Historical Society Journal, 2013, Volume 28, Number 1], wrote:</div><div><i>"The church in Meeting House Lane, had twenty-two pews on the ground floor with galleries on the north and south sides each containing three pews. Thomas BRADFORD, Robert DICKIE, Joseph COULTER, Jeremiah VICKERS, Robert RANSON, the McALLISTER and CRAIG families, all had family pews in 1786.</i>" [Courtesy of Nigel CURTIN, Dundalk Library.]</div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="color: red;">* * * MORE TO COME * * *</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>The last entry I can find in the Deeds Registry, Index to Grantors, identifying a Jer'h VICKERS (with another), was dated 1810, Book 618, Page 484, Memorial 426101, to USHER. But the deed is not at that location, and I am unable to find it.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>CHANCERY AND EXCHEQUER COURT BILL BOOKS</u>.</span></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div>There are a number of entries in these Dublin Bill Books to Jeremiah VICKERS, and other members of the VICKERS family [viewable on Findmypast.co.uk].</div><div><br /></div><div>Court of Exchequer:</div><div>1716, 4 April - Charles GANNON and Margaret his wife o'rw'se HEATH, Plaintiffs; Eliz'th HEATH, Samuell HEATH, George HEATH, John VICAARS and Jeremy VICCARS, the Defendants.</div><div>1745</div><div>1771</div><div>1772</div><div>...</div><div>1811</div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="color: red;">* * * TO BE CONTINUED * * *</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>Court of Chancery:</div><div>1736, 24 April - VESEY and GORE (minor) vs Jeremiah VICKARS and KANE, ROTHERY & ASHWORTH.</div><div>1745, 16 April - Jeremiah VICCARS and Lydia HEATH vs William WHELAN.</div><div>1745, 16 November - William WHELAN vs Jeremiah VICCARS, Lydia HEATH and Mary WILKINSON.</div><div>1765, 15 May - Adam FLEETWOOD vs Jeremiah VICKERS, Wm LUNNELL, Anthony GRAYSON + 2 others.</div><div>1770, 4 May - Andrew GIBBONS vs Thomas and Anne VICCKERS, William JACKSON, Nicholas MORRISON and Joseph SIRR.</div><div>1771, 16 November - John ROBNETT vs Jeremiah VICKARS, and Messrs KEOGH, CLARKE, and GRAYBURNE.</div><div><br /></div><span style="color: red; font-style: italic; font-weight: 700;">* * * TO BE CONTINUED * * *</span><div><br /></div><div>1788 - Jeremiah VICKERS and others.</div><div>1788 - Jeremiah VICKERS Senior and others.</div><div>1788 - Jeremiah VICKERS Junior and others.</div><div>1788 - Jeremiah VICKERS Senior and others.</div><div>1788 - Jeremiah VICKERS Junior and others.</div><div>1789 - Jeremiah VICKARS and others.</div><div>1789 - Jeremiah VICKERS and others.</div><div>1790 - Jeremiah VICARS and others.</div><div>1791 - Jeremiah VICKERS Junior and others.</div><div>1792 - Jeremiah VICKARS and others.</div><div>1792 - Jeremiah VICKARS and others.</div><div>1792 - Jeremiah VICKARS and others.</div><div>1793 - Jeremiah VICARS and others.</div><div>1798 - Jeremiah VICKERS and others.</div><div>1801 - Jeremiah VICKERS and others.</div><div>1802 - Jeremiah VICARS and others.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>A COURT EDICT</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div><div>J. BUTTERWORTH, in his " Reports of Cases on Appeals and Limits of Error, Returned in the High Court of Parliament," Volume 6, 1803, at page 403, wrote:</div><div>"Statutes.</div><div>"On 30th day of December 1771, the appellant Jeremiah VICKARS, and John LORD, his late partner, did import into the port of Dublin 80 hogsheads, containing 81,000 lbs of tobacco, of British Plantations, upon which certain duties were payable to his majesty, according to the acts and rates before mentioned, and the additional duty of 3 pence halfpenny per pound, which amounted to ₤1,063 2s 6d.</div><div>"But the appellant Jeremiah VICKARS, and his partner, having refused to pay the said additional duties, his majesty's then attorney general in Ireland, on 30th January 1773, exhibited an information in the court of exchequer in that Kingdom, against the said Jeremiah VICKARS, and John LORD his partner, for recovery of the said ₤1063 2s 6d...</div><div>"... the suit having been abated by the death of the said John LORD, his majesty's then attorney general of Ireland, on 18 January 1776, filed his bill of revivor against the appellant Jeremiah VICKARS and John MATHEW, merchant, executors of the said John LORD deceased...</div><div>"... on 24 November 1776, the appellant, Jeremiah VICKARS, in his own right, and he, together with the said John MATHEW, put in their answer..."</div><div><br /></div><div>These Exchequer Bills should have corresponding entries in Bill Books - to be added shortly, when located.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><b style="font-size: x-large;"><i><u>A JACKSON WILL</u>.</i></b></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-family: times;">REGISTRY OF DEEDS, DUBLIN: </span><span style="font-family: times;">Book 7, Page 464, Memorial 2897:</span></div><div><span style="font-family: times;">JACKSON, Robert, late of Crooked Staff, Liberty of Donore, County Dublin, Tanner; bearing date the 23rd Feb'y 1711. Narrate, 1 p., 13 March 1712. Wife Joyce JACKSON. Eldest son Robert JACKSON. Sons William, John and Thomas JACKSON. Son-in-law Jeremiah VICKERS. <i>"His brother Samuel CARD."</i> Exors. Samuel CARD, and Joseph MARRIOTT, Dublin, gent. His dwelling house, tan yard, tan house, bark house, mill, and other buildings, and improvements made thereon, excepting the passage of gateway backward from Chambre Street. in Crooked Staff, ground etc. in Chambre Street, and between Cork Street and Chambre Street [Dublin]. Witnesses: Abraham SPENCE, Dublin, brewer, David CARTON, of same, clothier, John BLAND, servant to said Joseph MARRIOTT. Memorial witnessed by: Rich. CRADOCK, Wm. BARRY, John BLAND. 7, 464, 2897 William JACKSON (seal).</span></div></div><div><br /></div><div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>HEATH OF KILMAINHAM</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>Samuel HEATH, of Kilmainham, near Dublin, Tanner; he died in 1741, his will proved 1742 [Index to Prerogative Wills]; he was married to Lydia (m.s. unknown); of County Dublin, Widow, her will, dated 4 November 1763, proved P.CI., 29 August 1776, naming her kinsman William VICKERS, her son William JACKSON, and her three daughters, Elizabeth MELDRUM, Ann VICKERS and Lydia GANNON.</div><div>This Ann VICKERS may have been the widow EMERSON, step-mother of William VICKERS.</div></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>A SIBTHORPE CONNECTION</u></b>.</i></span></div><div><br /></div><div>Memorial 149637; Book 231, Page 206:</div><div>Deed of Lease and Release, one dated 3 February 1764, named Robert SIBTHORPE, of Dublin Esq, as second party to the Lease, and as third party to the Release, named John PAGE of Dundalk, County Louth, and Anne PAGE otherwise PEPPER his wife (daughter of John PEPPER of Ballyhoe, County Meath).</div><div><br /></div><div>Litigation resulted from Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 20 and 21 December 1785 [Memorial 249237, Book 368, Page 374], made between Robert SIBTHORPE, of the City of Dublin, Esq, and his only son and heir-apparent Stephen James SIBTHORPE, of Duneary, County Louth, of the first part; John PAGE of Dundalk, County Louth, Esq, and Jeremiah VICKERS the Elder, of the City of Dublin, Merchant, of the second part; and to which the third party comprised a long list of creditors of the said Robert SIBTHORPE, to the sum of £31,275 14 s. 6d., involving upwards of 9,300 statute acres in the Baronies of Dundalk and Ferard, in County Louth.</div><div>Issues arising resulted in a Deed of Conveyance, dated 23 January 1831 [Memorial 587494, Book 887, Page 494], made between Anthony Richard BLAKE, Chief Remembrancer of his Majesty's Court of Exchequer in Ireland, of the first part; Tobias John PURCELL of Dundalk, County Louth, Esq, eldest son and heir-at-law of Letitia PURCELL otherwise VICKERS, deceased, <i>"... who was in her life-time grand-daughter and heiress-at-law of Jeremiah VICKERS the Elder, late of the City of Dublin, Merchant, deceased, the surviving trustee named in the therein recited deed of 21 December 1785,"</i> of the second part; John PAGE of Dundalk, County Louth, Esq, surviving trustee named in the last will and testament of Robert SIBTHORPE, late of Duneary, County Louth, Esq, deceased, and also sole surviving executor of such will, of the third part; ... [<span style="color: red;">TO BE CONTINUED</span>].</div><div><br /></div><div>Herein lies the dilemma - Letitia was grand-daughter and heir-at-law of Jeremiah VICKERS the Elder - not the Younger!</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red;"><i><b>IT DOES APPEAR THAT NOT ALL THE WRITTEN STATEMENTS FOUND IN REGISTERED DEEDS MATCH THOSE FOUND IN ABSTRACTS OF WILLS AND MARRIAGE LICENSE BONDS!</b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red;"><i><b><br /></b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red;"><i><b>PERHAPS THERE HAS SIMPLY BEEN A MISREADING OF THE EARLIER (1780's) TAGS OF "ELDER" AND "YOUNGER" IN LATER (POST 1800) DOCUMENTS?</b></i></span></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>A JEREMIAH VICKERS GOES TO STABANNON</u>.</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>Jeremiah VICKERS, born about 1761-62; as Junior, he was a Church-warden at Stabannon, County Louth, 1799; he was buried at Stabannon parish church, 27 September 1816, aged 54 years; he was married, probably to the somewhat shadowy "Miss WYNNE" (mentioned in the rather vague drop-line pedigree in the DIXON Papers), as either Ann of Mary Anne:</div><div>1. Jeremiah VICKERS, born about 1795; he was buried at Stabannon, 2 September 1816, aged 20 ["History of Kilsaran Union of Parishes in the County of Louth," by James B. LESLIE, 1908, Dundalk, at pages 249 and 276].</div><div><br /></div><div>Jer'h VICARS and his wife Ann had issue:</div><div> a. Robert VICARS; he died of smallpox, and was buried at Stabannon, 25 August 1801, age not recorded, but presumably, given the mention of his parents in the church burial register entry, a child.</div><div>This spouse is Ann, not Frances or Fanny - perhaps there was another Jeremiah, or there was an error in the Register?</div><div><br /></div><div>Thomas VICARS, born about 1811; of Collon, County Louth; he died in May 1840, and was buried at Stabannon, 28 May, aged 29.</div><div><br /></div><div>William VICKERS, born about 1846; also of Collon; he died in April 1851, and was buried at Stabannon, 11 April, aged 4 years; possibly son of the last? Or the next?</div><div><u><br /></u></div><div><u><br /></u></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>WILLIAM VICARS OF COLLON</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>William VICARS, born about 1804; of Collon, Farmer, July 1864, when he was granted adminstration of the estate of his mother, Mary Ann VICKERS, late of the Town of Collon, Widow, who died there, 27 September 1860, effects under £450 [Will Calendars, National Archives of Ireland]; of Collon, County Louth, he died at his residence there, 10 November 1879 [Belfast Morning News, 14 November], aged 75, Farmer, of Senile Decay, informed by John VICKERS, of Collon, present at the death (relationship not recorded); administration of his personal estate was granted to Marian VICARS, of Booterstown Avenue, County Dublin, Spinster, the daughter; he was married to Sarah, possibly born a WYNNE; his wife Sarah died there, 16 February 1878, after a short illness [Irish Times, 19 February], aged 67, "of the farming class," of paralysis, informed by S. Wynne VICARS, of Collon, present at the death (relationship not recorded); they had issue:</div><div> a. Marion VICKERS, born in County Louth, about 1856; she was at Booterstown Avenue, Blackrock, 1901 an 1911 Censuses, residing with her widowered brother-in-law, George David ARMSTRONG; she died at Jervis Street Hospital, Dublin, 22 December 1912, aged 56, Spinster, House Keeper, late of 18 Booterstown Avenue; Administration of her Estate, valued at £1,636 4s, was granted 8 February 1913 to John VICARS, Farmer (presumably a relation?).</div><div> b. Sarah Wynne VICARS; as S. Wynne VICARS, of Collon, County Louth, February 1878, when she informed her mother's death; as Sarah Winne VICARS, of 13 Ranelagh Road, County Dublin, she proved the will of Frederick MARTIN, late of Merville, Bray, County Wicklow, a Quaker, as his sole executrix, who died on 6 March 1887 [Ireland, Calendar of Wills & Administrations]; as Sarah W. (Winnie) VICARS [Northern Whig (Belfast), 14 September], of 13 Ranelagh Road, a daughter of William VICARS, Farmer, she was married at Christchurch, Leeson Park, Dublin, 12 September 1888, to George David ARMSTRONG, Commercial Traveller, of 18 Booterstown, son of George ARMSTRONG, Farmer, by the Rev W. Falkiner WILKINSON, Rector of Ballyhaise, and witnessed by Maryanne VICARS and George FLANAGAN [Civil Records, irishgenealogy.ie]; he was at Booterstown Avenue, Blackrock, 1901 Census, aged 54, Commercial Traveller, born County Cavan, a widower; ditto, 1911, aged 64, Dividends; he died at his residence, 18 Booterstown Avenue, County Dublin, 18 May 1915, aged 69, and was buried at Dean's Grange [Irish Independent, 20 May].</div><div><br /></div><div>John VICARS, born in Dublin about 1850; possibly the John VICKERS of Collon, County Louth, who informed the death of William VICKERS in November 1879 (see above); he was at Lissany, Loughdavin, County Cavan, 1901 Census, aged 45, Steward, Unmarried, with two young male farm servants; at Aghateeduff, Ballyhaise, County Cavan, 1911 Census, aged 60, Farmer, Unmarried, with one male farm servant; he may have been the Farmer who was granted Administration of Marion VICARS in 1913 (see above); as John VICKERS, he probably died at Antiduff, Ballyhaise, on or just before 28 September 1914, a bachelor, aged 65, of heart failure, his death informed, via the Coroner, by Robert BAIR, Sergeant, Royal Irish Constabulary, who found the body.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>BRERETON FAMILY OF STABBANON</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>William BRUERTON, born about 1703; of Richardstown, parish of Stabannon, County Louth; he was named in the will of his brother-in-law, Thomas MARTIN of Knockatuber, County Louth, Farmer, dated 12 January 1762 [BETHAM]; he died on 20 August 1775, aged 72 years [M.I., Stabbanon Churchyard]; he was married to Esther MARTIN; she was named in the will of her brother Thomas MARTIN, of Knockatuber, January 1762 [BETHAM]; she was buried at Stabannon, 16 July 1784, aged 73 years, as Mrs BRUETON, Relict of William, died of Apoplexy [Parish register], as Hester, aged 74 [M.I., Stabannon]; they had issue:</div><div>1. Thomas BRUETON, baptised at Stabannon, 27 March 1738, of Richardstown; he was probably buried at Stabbanon, 11 June 1739 (as BRERETON).</div><div>2. Esther BRUERTON, baptised ditto, 27 March 1739, ditto.</div><div>3. Ann BRUETON, baptised ditto, 9 August 1730, ditto; named in her uncle Thomas MARTIN's will, 1762.</div><div>4. William BRUETON, baptised ditto, 30 June 1742, ditto; anmed in his uncle Thomas MARTIN's will, 1762; he died at Toberdoney, 3 June 1816, aged 74, and was buried with his parents [M.I.], at Stabannon, 6 June 1816 [Parish Register].</div><div>5. Sarah BRUERTON, baptised ditto, 3 October 1744, ditto; named in her uncle Thomas MARTIN's will, 1762.</div><div><br /></div><div>Francis BRUERTON was buried at Stabannon, 1 July 1745.</div><div><br /></div><div>It is very likely that one of the William BRUERTONs above was the Mr BRERETON who was mentioned [DIXON Papers] as being uncle of Miss WYNNE, who was married to Jeremiah VICKERS - and that this William, the younger, died in 1816, just months before both Jeremiah VICKERS, Junior and Senior, were buried in the same churchyard.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>PAGE FAMILY OF DUNDALK</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>John PAGE; he had issue baptised at Dundalk St Nicholas:</div><div> 1. Stephen PAGE, baptised 27 February 1730.</div><div> 2. Sidney PAGE, baptised 23 October 1733, a daughter.</div><div> 3. John PAGE, baptised 12 September 1737. Possibly the next.</div><div><br /></div><div>John PAGE; as Mr John PAGE, of Dundalk, together with Mr Jeremiah VICKERS, of Inns Quay, Dublin, he was named as contact for enquiries in the Lease Notice, December 1778, for the house in Sackville Street wherein Robert BIRCH, Esq, lately lived [Dublin Evening Post, 5 December; Saunders's News-Letter, 26 December]; ditto, with Mr Jeremiah VICKERS, Merchant, Dublin, in March 1781, entered a Wanted Notice, for <i>"Two Thousand Pounds, on a fee simple estate within 40 miles of Dublin, the interest, as may be agreed upon, to be paid into any Bank the lender pleases, either in London or Dublin... The security must please any person having such a sum to lend, as none can be better"</i> [Dublin Evening Post, 15 March; and 14 April]; as John PAGE of Dundalk, County Louth, Esq, he was named as a joint first party to an Indented Deed, dated 29 March 1797 [Memorial 329404, Book 510, Page 161], along with Letitia PAGE otherwise WYNNE his wife, the second party being Murtagh KELLY, of Clarra in the King's County, Esq, concerning Lands in the Barony of Moycastle, County Meath.</div><div>John PAGE, Senior, Esq, was buried at Dundalk St Nicholas, 20 November 1799; his will, dated 23 July 1797, was proved P.C.I. 4 December 1799, naming his wife Letitia, sons John, Samuel and Robert, daughter Frances VICKERS, son-in-law James FOORDE, grand-daughter Letitia VICKERS, and grandson James FOORDE, only son of the aforesaid son-in-law by his daughter Sarah Ann [BETHAM's Abstract]; in this will, John PAGE gave <i>"... to dau Frances VICKERS an annuity of £22 15s, chargeable on his Co Louth estates devised to John junior in residuum... for her sole and separate use, over which her Husband is to have no control or dominion whatsoever... she is not to sell it, or it goes back into residue"</i> [Journal of the County Louth Archaeological Society, 1949, Volume 12, Number 1, in "Historical Notes on the Townlands of Drakestown and Kilpatrick," by Dermot McIVOR]. </div><div>John was married at Dundalk St Nicholas, 27 October 1757, to Lettice WYNE.</div><div>As Letitia PAGE, Widow, she died at Dundalk, 1812 [Administration Grants, Ireland, 1591-1866 - an Intestacy]; no details yet found of her burial.</div><div>They had issue [Printed transcript of the "The Parish Register of Dundalk, Diocese of Armagh," Film #007942314, Familysearch.org web-site] :</div><div> 1. Susanna Mariah PAGE, baptised 10 September 1758, "daughter to Mr John."</div><div> 2. John PAIGE, baptised 2 December 1759, "son to John, Junier."</div><div> 3. Stephen PAGE, baptised 8 January 1762, "son to John."</div><div> 4. Samuile PAIG, baptised 7 August 1763, "son to John Juner."</div><div> 5. Frances PAIGE, baptised 4 November 1764, "daughter to John Juner."</div><div> 6. Catrin PAIGE, baptised 4 October 1767, "daughter to John."</div><div> 7. Ann Harriet PAIGE, baptised 26 January 1770, "daughter to John."</div><div> 8. Sarah Ann PAGE, baptised 15 February 1773, "daughter to John Jr."</div><div> 9. Robert PAGE, baptised 12 October 1774, "son of John and Leticia."</div><div> 10. Fairfax PAGE, baptised 29 June 1776, "son to John and Letitia."</div><div><br /></div><div>John PAGE, born about 1758; of Dundalk, Esq, Irish Lottery Commissioner, he died in December 1838, aged 80 years [Waterford Mail, 19 December]; probably the eldest son above.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>WYNNE FAMILY OF COUNTY LOUTH</u></span></b></i>.</div><div><br /></div><div>There was a WYNNE family connected with Dundalk, County Louth.</div><div><br /></div><div>Letitia WYNNE, baptised at Dundalk St Nicholas, 24 April 1733, daughter of Thomas WYNNE; probably, as Letitia PAGE, Widow, she died at Dundalk, 1812 [Administration Grants, Ireland, 1591-1866 - an Intestacy], said to have been aged about 81; if so, as Lettice WYNNE, she was probably married at Dundalk St Nicholas, 27 October 1757, to John PAGE, of Dundalk; as John PAGE Senior, he was buried at Dundalk St Nicholas, 20 November 1799, aged about 61; they had issue, said to have been four sons and seven daughters, including:</div><div>1. Frances (or Fanny) PAIGE, baptised at Dundalk St Nicholas, 4 November 1764, daughter of John PAIGE Junior.</div><div>2. Alice PAGE, born at Dundalk, 1766; she died at Dundalk, 4 August 1832; she was married to Edward TOWNLEY (1863-1842).</div><div><br /></div><div>There was a branch of the WYNNE family connected with Stabannon parish, Diocese of Armagh, probably related to the VICKERS family, and perhaps also the WYNNE family in Dundalk.</div><div><br /></div><div>Mrs Jane WYNNE, born about 1694; of Ardee, County Louth; she was buried at Stabannon, 19 August 1782, aged 88. Possibly mother of the next?</div><div><br /></div><div>William WYNNE, born about 1728; of Dromgoolstown, County Louth; he died of dropsy, December 1782, and was buried at Stabannon, 12 December, aged 54. Possibly husband of the next?</div><div><br /></div><div>Mrs Ann WYNN, born about 1740; of Dromgoolstown; she died of dropsy, January 1795, and was buried at Stabannon, 10 January, aged 54. Possibly wife of the last and mother of the next?</div><div><br /></div><div>Robert WYNNE, born about 1769; of Dromgoolstown; he was buried at Stabannon, 2 September 1859, aged 90. </div><div>Possibly father of the following:</div><div> 1. Anne WYNNE, baptised at Stabannon, 25 March 1808, daughter of Robert and Amelia (? Mary); she was buried at Stabannon, 30 June 1810, aged 18 months.</div><div> 2. Albert WYNNE, baptised at Stabannon, 12 January 1812, son or Robert and Mary.</div><div> 3. Maria WYNNE, baptised at Stabannon, 13 May 1813, daughter of Robert and Mary.</div><div> 4. Charlotte WYNNE, baptised at Stabannon, 17 February 1815, daughter of Robert and Mary.</div><div>Given his age, it is not unlikely that he may have had other issue before 1808?</div><div><br /></div><div>Amelia WYNNE, born about 1779-80; died at Toberdoney, August 1852, and was buried at Stabannon, 8 August, aged 72. Her marital status was not recorded - perhaps the wife of Robert of Dromgoolstown, who also used the name Mary? </div><div><br /></div><div>Alicia WYNNE, born about 1819-20; of Drogheda; she was buried at Stabannon, 2 June 1853, aged 33. Possibly another daughter of the above Robert and Mary?</div><div><br /></div><div>Joice WYNN, of Toberberdony, was married there, 3 November 1825, to Thomas WILSON, of Ardee.</div><div><br /></div><div>Robert WYNNE, of Toberdoney, County Louth; he was married at Stabannon, 5 August 1841, to Alicia HUDSON, both of Toberdoney; they had issue:</div><div> 1. Mary Virginia WYNNE, baptised at Stabannon, 20 November 1842; she was buried there, 6 January 1853, aged 10.</div><div> 2. Amelia Sarah WYNNE, baptised at Stabannon, 11 August 1844.</div><div> 3. Elizabeth WYNNE, baptised at Stabannon, 24 May 1846.</div><div> 4. George Ives WYNNE, baptised at Dromin parish (late part of Collon parish), November 1849.</div><div> 5. Alicia Frances WYNNE, born at Dromin, 30 June 1851, and baptised there, 1 September.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>SAMUEL VICKERS, ROYAL IRISH CONSTABULARY</u>.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>Samuel VICKERS, born in County Louth, about 1800 [R.I.C. Service Record]; entered the Royal Irish Constabulary, 1832, #1305, aged 30, height 5' 10", Constable 1 February 1833, 2nd Chief Constable 1 September 1837, Pensioned 1 April 1855 [R.I.C. Service Record]; he died at Victoria Place, New Ross, County Wexford, 13 August 1883, aged 86, Widower, Retired Head Constable, old age (certified), informed by Elias T. VICKARS, of Victoria Place, son, present at the death; he was married on 28 July 1849, his wife, un-named, a native of Armagh [R.I.C. Service Record] - this marriage was not recorded in C.of I. marriages (1845-1863); as Elizabeth VICKARS, she died at Victoria Place, 18 October 1880, Married, Pensioner's wife, of paralysis, informed by Elias T. VICKARS, of Victoria Place, Occupier [Death Registration], <i>"... the beloved wife of Samuel VICKERS"</i> [Wexford People, 20 October]; they had issue:</div> 1. Henrietta Mary VICKERS, born about 1851; she died at Victoia Place, New Ross, 11 April 1876, Spinster, aged 24, School Mistress, of Phthisis, informed by Elias T. VICKERS, present at the death, of Victoria Place.<div> 2. Elias Thackeray VICKERS, born in County Louth, about 1855 [age in 1901 Census]; residing at Victoria Place, New Ross, he informed the deaths of both parents, 1880 and 1883; he was at South Street, New Ross, 1901 Census, aged 45, Solicitor's Assistant, Solicitors Clerk, of full age, with his second wife and his two children, and four boarders; he died at New Ross, 21 June 1908, registered as E.T. VICKERS, Married, aged 44, Solicitor's Clerk, of bronchitis, informed by his son R.G. VICKERS, present at the death; he was married firstly, at Drumcannon parish church, County Waterford, 27 September 1881, to Caroline FEGAN, Spinster, of County Waterford, daughter of William FEGAN, Retired Head Constable; they had issue:</div><div> a. William Samuel VICKERS, born at Victoria Place, New Ross, 22 September 1882.</div><div> b. Reginald George VICKERS, born ditto, 5 January 1886; he died at South Street, New Ross, 20 February 1914, aged 28, Bachelor, Watch Maker, of pneumonia, the death informed by Eleanor VICKERS, Step-mother, present at the death.</div><div> c. Caroline E. VICKERS, born in County Wexford, about 1889; aged 10, with her father, 1901 Census; aged 21, with her step-mother, 1911 Census.</div><div>Elias, Solicitor, South Street, New Ross, Widower, was married secondly, at St Mary's R.C. Chapel, New Ross, 27 April 1897, to Ellen O'GORMAN, full age, Spinster, of Mary Street, New Ross, daughter of William O'GORMAN, Farmer and Trader; she was aged 29, with her husband and his two children, 1901 Census; she was at South Street, New Ross, 1911 Census, aged 38, Widow, R.C., born Wexford; she probably died at Houghton Hospital, New Ross, 16 January 1920, as Ellen VICKERS, Widow, aged 52, Housekeeper, the death informed by a hospital employee.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>A VICKERS BRANCH WHICH EMIGRATED TO CANADA</u></span></b></i>.</div><div><br /></div><div>Jeremiah VICKERS, Merchant, was the father of:</div><div><br /></div><div>James VICKERS, born in Ireland, 20 February 1813 [1901 Census, Canada], perhaps in County Louth; he resided in Tintern House, Saltmills, County Wexford, about the early 1840s, which was <i>"... intended for the incumbent of Tintern prish, but instead originally occupied by James VICKERS, owing to a dispute"</i> [National Inventory of Architectural Heritage, on the www.buildingsofireland.ie web-site]; as James VICARS, of the Village of Saltmills, 1853 [Griffith's Valuation], for a House, Office, Yard, Garden and Land, at £8, with New Shop and Bake House, held under a lease from Caesar COLCLOUGH (no record yet found in Dublin Deeds Registry holdings); and as James VICKERS, ditto, Parish of Tintern, for land only, held of Jane BOYNE; aged 55, Labourer, he emigrated to Canada on the ship 'Scandinavian' from Liverpool via Londonderry, arriving at Quebec, 16 July 1873, with his sons Jeremiah and Robert VICKERS, aged 22 and 20 respectively, both also Labourers; James was aged 65, Labourer, Widower, born Ireland, C.of E., Township of York, East Side, Ontario, 1881 Census, residing with Eliza REID, aged 79, Widow, all ditto (she was the widow of Ross REID, all ditto in 1871 Census, a Brickmaker - he may have employed James VICKERS' two sons as Brickmakers); he was aged 80 [1891 Canada Census], residing with his son Robert, Toronto St Stephen's Ward, and his family; he was aged 88 [1901 Canada Census], residing with his son Jeremiah, East York, Ontario, and his family</div><div>James VICKERS, of Hamilton, Ontario, Labourer, died at the General Hospital, Toronto, 5 January 1903, aged 90 years, and was buried at Mount Pleasant Cemetery, in Plot 1938, a single grave purchased by Miss Edith (written over Jeremiah struck through) VICKERS, and removed to K-17-11 on 7 October 1904.</div><div>James was married at Tintern, County Wexford, 7 July 1845 (father named in Registration, as Jeremiah VICKERS, Merchant, but no indication as to whether he was dead or alive), to Anne STEPHENSON, the daughter of Robert STEPHENSON, Architect; she appears to have died before James emigrated to Canada in 1873, but there are no relevant death entries Registered for her after 1864.</div><div>James and Anne had issue:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>1. Kate VICKERS, born about 1849; she died at Kilcullin, Naas, County Kildare, 12 January 1881, aged 32, wife of Constable, R.I.C., of peritonitis, the death informed by her husband [irishgenealogy.ie], <i>"...at Kilcullen Constabulary Barracks, at 11 o'clock p.m... after 3 weeks illness, in the 32nd year of her age... the only daughter of J. VICKERS, Esq, of Saltmills, County Wexford"</i> [The Kildare Observer, 5 January]; she was aged 20, Spinster, of the parish of Tintern, County Wexford, and daughter of James VICKERS, Farmer, when she was married, at Tintern parish church, 22 December 1868, to Thomas CALDBECK, of Newtown (indec word), of age, bachelor, Acting Constable, Royal Irish Constabulary, son of Edward CALDBECK, Farmer; he died at The Cottage, Tullow, County Carlow, 9 May 1917, aged 80, Police Pensioner, of heart disease, the death informed by his son Richard, present at the death, of Tullow; they had issue:</div><div> a. an un-named male, born at Saltmills, New Ross, 12 November 1869, informed by the mother Kate formerly VICKERS; probably Richard CALDBECK, who informed his father's death in 1917.</div><div> b. an un-named daughter, born at Saltmills, 19 April 1871, informed by Frances (X) CAULFIELD, of Saltmills, present at the birth, perhaps a mid-wife.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>2. Jeremiah VICKERS, born in Wexford, Ireland, 14 February 1851 [1901 Canada Census]; probably indexed in Royal Irish Constabulary, Service Records, 1867 [Findmypast]; he was aged 22, Labourer, when he arrived in Quebec, 16 July 1873, with his father and younger brother; he was at East York, Ontario, 1881 Census, aged 30, Brickmaker, with his wife and son; at St Matthew's Ward, York County, 1891 Census, aged 39, Guard, Jail, with wife and five children; at East York, Ontario, 1901 Census, aged 50, Jail Guard, with his three sons, three daughters and his widowered father; Brickmaker, of 62 McPherson Avenue, Toronto, 1886; Jeremiah died at 647 Gerrard Road, Toronto, County York, 21 July 1924, aged 73 years 5 months, residing at this residence 6 years, and in Toronto 53 years, parents named, his mother as STEPHENS, the death informed by his son William VICKERS, of 692 Milverton Boulevarde, Toronto; he was buried at Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto; he was married, York County, Ontario, 11 October 1880, to Agnes McDONALD; she died at Claremont, Ontario, 31 July 1891, aged 36, and was buried at Mount Pleasant Cemetery; they had issue:</div><div> a. James Roy VICKERS, born in Ontario, 20 February 1881; age 2 months, with his parents, 1881; aged 10, with his parents, 1891; aged 20, with his father, 1901 Census, Furrier; he died in York County, Ontario, 30 March 1925; he was married firstly, in British Columbia, 25 November 1903, to Hannah Mary SCHAEFER, with issue a daughter Gertrude Kathleen Mary (1904-1930); he was married secondly, 1 September 1908, to Gertrude Madeline SCHAEFER (believed to have been a sister of Hannah Mary), with further issue sons John Roy Junior (1909-1930) and Edwin Kent (1913-1941), and a daughter Phyllis V. (born 1919).</div><div> b. Edith Mary VICKERS, born in Ontario, 22 January 1883; aged 8, with her parents, 1891; aged 18, with her father, 1901, occupation Biscuit Packer; she died in 1941; she was married at York County, 10 August 1911, to Harry Garfield ALLEN (1884-1937).</div><div> c. Catherine VICKERS, born in Ontario, 1 May 1884; as Kate, aged 7, with her parents, 1891; aged 16, with her father, 1901.</div><div> d. William Edward VICKERS, born at 62 McPherson Avenue, Toronto, 13 February 1886; aged 5, with his parents, 1891; aged 15, with his father, 1901; he informed his father's death, 1924; a Cabinet Maker; he was married firstly, at Carleton, Ontario, 24 September 1912, to Mabel Mary YORKE; she died in 1924; they had issue [Lynda PRETTIE Family Tree on Ancestry.com]:</div><div> i. William Leslie "Gordon" VICKERS, born Ontario, 1 September 1914; he died at Newmarket, Ontario, 9 February 1981; he was married to Marion Joyce SCRUTON, with issue a son and daughter.</div><div> ii. Ivor Leslie VICKERS, born 1917; died 1987.</div><div> iii. Allan Jeremiah VICKERS, born 1919; died 1945.</div><div>William was married secondly, in Toronto, 15 October 1926, to May (or Mary) Margaret FOLEY, a Widow; she died in 1941.</div><div> e. Charles Graham VICKERS, born at Bracondale, Ontario, 12 March 1889; aged 2, with his parents, 1891; aged 12, with his father, 1901; he died at Toronto, 3 July 1950, and was buried at St John's Norway Cemetery, The Beaches, Toronto [M.I., memorial on the findagrave.com web-site]; he was married to Violet E. GILES; she died 26 September 1971, aged 73, and was buried with her husband.</div><div> f. Margaret Elizabeth VICKERS, born at 649 Gerrard Street, East Toronto, 7 May 1891; aged 9, with her father, 1901; she died in 1974; living at 90 Hamilton Street, Toronto, when she was married there, 24 February 1915, to Walter George PRETTIE.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>2. Robert VICKERS, born in Ireland, 13 May 1852 [1901 Canada Census] or 1853 [Memorial on Findagrave]; he was aged 20 on arrival in Quebec, with his father, in July 1873; he was at East York, Ontario, 1881 Census, aged 28, Irish, C.of E., Brickmaker, with wife Ann (sic), aged 24, and one daughter Sarah (evidently an enumerator's error and ommission - Robert's wife was Margaret, and their elder daughter was Ann or Anna, who was aged 2 years); as Robert Wynne VICKERS, Brickmaker, of 60 McPherson Avenue, Toronto, he informed the Registrar in Toronto, June 1883, of the birth of his third daughter Eva; he was at York West, Ontario, 1901 Census, aged 47, Gardener, with his wife Margaret, two sons, seven daughters, and his Widower father; he died at 13 Earnbridge Street, Toronto, 29 December 1923, aged 71 [the death informed by his son Robert B. VICKERS, same address], and was buried at Park Lawn Cemetery, Toronto [Memorial on Findagrave, with grave photo], with his wife Margaret McDONALD (born 28 August 1856, of Scottish parents, and died 10 April 1927) and two daughters.</div><div>Robert and Margaret had issue:</div><div> a. Anna VICKERS, born in Ontario, 8 (or 18) April 1878; aged 12, with her parents, 1891; ditto, Seamstress, 1901; she was probably married in Toronto, 27 April 1904, to Herbert S. MARTIN (1872-1926) - see his memorial, with grave photo, on the www.findagrave.com web-site.</div><div> b. Sarah Isabella VICKERS, born at 11 Stafford Street, Toronto, 29 October 1879 (her mother named as Maggie McDONALD); aged 11, with her parents, 1891; ditto, Seamstress, 1901; she died in 1936, and was buried in a HAMILTON family plot, Park Lawn Cemetery, Toronto; she was married at Toronto, 27 April 1915, to Ernest Willoughby HAMILTON, aged 34, son of Robert HAMILTON and Elizabeth BURNETT; they were buried in her sister's MARTIN grave at Park Lawn Cemetery, Toronto.</div><div> c. Wallace VICKERS, born in Ontario, 7 July 1881; aged 9, with his parents, 1891; ditto, Teamster, 1901.</div><div> d. Eva Wynne VICKERS, born at 60 McPherson Avenue, Toronto, 11 June 1883; aged 7, with her parents, 1891; ditto, Domestic, 1901.</div><div> e. Queenie VICKERS, born in Ontario, 6 October 1885; aged 5, with her parents, 1891; ditto, Seamstress, 1901; she died at 1195 College Street, Toronto, 4 March 1948, aged 62; she was married at York County, 25 May 1904, to John Andrew GREGG.</div><div> f. Frederick Wynne VICKERS, born in Ontario, 18 April 1888; aged 3, with his parents, 1891; ditto, 1901; as Fred W. VICKERS, he arrived in Detroit, Michigan, 26 June 1916, pattern maker, recording his next of kin as Robert VICKERS, his father, of 52 Strachan Street, Toronto; as Fred Wynne VICKERS, his Draft Registration Card, dated 5 June 1917, of Columbus, Ohio, Pattern Maker, married; he was married at York County, 9 August 1916, to Irene Catherine BRETT.</div><div> g. Grace VICKERS, born in Ontario, 27 March 1890; aged 1, with her parents, 1891; ditto, 1901; she died 23 August 1924, and was buried in her parents grave; she was married at York County, 19 November 1913, to John Alfred LILLIE.</div><div> h. Mary E. VICKERS, born in Ontario, 29 October 1891; with her parents, 1901; she died 14 April 1922, and was buried in her parents grave.</div><div> j. Alice Mabel VICKERS, born in Ontario, 31 August 1893; with her parents, 1901; she was married in Toronto, 29 March 1927, to Walter Reginald BUTTON, aged 32, an Anglican, born in England.</div><div>Robert's son, Robert B. VICKERS, who informed his father's death, does not appear in either of the 1891 or 1901 Census returns for his parents.</div><div> k. Robert Stephenson VICKERS, born at York County, 3 July 1902; he died in 1962, and was buried at Park Lawn Cemetery, Toronto; he was married at York County, 11 October 1918, to Victoria Alexandria WALKER; she died in 1973, and was buried with her husband [gravestone image on billiongraves web-site].</div><div><br /></div><div>Of likely interest to the forebears of this family - a James VICARS, was named in Griffiths Valuation (hand-written entry), in 1853, for premises in the Village of Saltmills, County Wexford, being a House, Office, Yard, Garden and Land, valued at £8 per annum, along with a New Shop and Bake House, all held under a lease from Caesar COLCLOUGH, of Tintern, County Wexford.</div><div>Probably the same as James VICKERS, also named in Griffith's Valuation (printed record), 1846-64, for land in Ballygarrett Townland, Parish of Tintern, Barony of Shellburne, County Wexford, held of Jane BOYNE.</div><div>Neither of these "suggested" leasing arrangements appear to have been registered under these surnames in Deeds held in the Deeds Registry, Henrietta Street, Dublin.</div><div>I do note, with interest, that a GREGG/FERGUSON family tree published on Ancestry.com does record birth dates for two sons of James VICKERS and Anne STEPHENSON - Allan Jeremiah VICKERS, born in County Wexford, 14 February 1851; and Robert Wynne VICKERS, born at Saltmills, County Wexford, 12 March 1853.</div><div>The same tree records that these two emigrated to Ontario, and there married sisters - Allan Jeremiah to Agnes R. McDONALD, and Robert Wynne to Margaret McDONALD, daughters of Graham and Sarah McDONALD.</div><div>Further, there is a mention in the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage [the www.buildingsofireland.ie web-site], for a <i>"Rectory, erected by Caesar COLCLOUGH (1776-1842), of Tintern Abbey, representing an important component of the early 19th century domestic built heritage of Saltmills... one intended for the incumbent of Tintern Parish, but instead occupied by James VICKERS, owing to a dispute..."</i></div><div>______________________________________________<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong><u>AN EMERSON FAMILY OF DUBLIN</u>.</strong></em></span><br /><br />John EMERSON; he was married at St Catherine's, Dublin, 24 June 1666, to Mary PRICE.<br /><br />John EMERSON, baptized at St Catherine's, Dublin, 11 May 1708, son of Luke EMERSON and his wife Joan. Luke also had a daughter Rose baptized there on 1 July 1699.<br /><br />Robert EMERSON; of Dublin, Chandler; he died in 1729; Administration granted 20 June 1729, to Anne EMERSON, the widow and relict [BETHAM]; she was of Dublin, Widow, when she was married secondly, by License dated 15 April 1732, to Jeremiah VICKERS, of St Catherine's, Dublin (his second wife - see above).<br /><br />Maria EMERSON, of Dublin, Spinster, was granted Administration, on 20 January 1728, of her father John EMERSON, of COLES's Dragoons, and of her two uncles Thomas EMERSON, of SADLER's Regiment, and William EMERSON, of COLES's Regiment [BETHAM].</div></div></div></div></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-39108914621660417412022-05-02T20:02:00.362-07:002023-03-06T00:51:40.250-08:00WOORE AND DICKSON OF SYDNEY<p><br /></p><p>By way of explanation, I do not descend from anybody named in this post.</p><p>I take an interest in them, as I am related to someone who was, but by a marriage or two of separation.</p><p>Amy MACLEAN (1862-1931), whose mother was Catherine WOORE (she was born at Harrington Park, Cowpastures, in October 1842, elder daughter of John WOORE by his second wife Elizabeth DICKSON - see below), was the first wife of Walter Edward ADAMS, and he was married secondly, shortly after Amy's death, to my great-aunt Ellen Corbett (Nellie) PIGOTT, my grandfather's youngest sister.</p><p>Corrections or additions most welcome.</p><div style="text-align: left;">Chris PIGOTT, Potts Point, N.S.W.</div><div style="text-align: left;">cgpigott@yahoo.com.au</div><div style="text-align: left;">May 2022.</div><div style="text-align: left;">cgpigott5@gmail.com</div><div style="text-align: left;">July 2022.</div><div style="text-align: left;">_____________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><p><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>THOMAS WOORE IN LONDONDERRY.</b></i></span></p><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas WOORE, born about 1774 (from age at death - unless his grave inscription has been misread as 51 instead of 54 - a birth about 1771 appears more amenable to his subsequent military career); possible origins in Herefordshire are not yet established (? perhaps connected with Ross on Wye, Herefordshire, where, on 27 October 1764, a Thomas WOORE was married to Jane CLARKE - it would be interesting if she turns out to be a forebear of William J. CLARKE, the husband of Mary WOORE, Thomas's third daughter).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas served in the Fifeshire Regiment of Fencible Infantry, which was raised on 20 October 1794, under Lieutenant-Colonel James DURHAM, after the out-break of the Napoleonic Wars; Thomas was promoted Captain (sixth of six) in that Regiment, 27 April 1795 [Caledonian Mercury, 2 May], probably in England (or Scotland), suggesting that he may have had previous Army service; DURHAM took his Regiment to Ireland in 1796, probably to Londonderry; Thomas was recorded as Captain, 4th Scots Fencible (Fifeshire), and stationed in Ireland, 1800 [Edinburgh, Field Officers Almanacs, 1758-1800, Findmypast]; the Fencibles Regiment also served in Enniskillen (1797), Strabane (1797-99), and returned to Londonderry in 1799; on January 1797, Mr Edward WOORE was appointed Ensign, Fifeshire Fencible Infantry, vice HADDOCK, superceded having never joined the Regiment [Dublin Gazette, 17-19 January] - Edward was probably related to Thomas; the regiment was disbanded at Kilkenny on 11 April 1803, after the Peace of Amiens (1802).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas clearly remained in Londonderry, with his wife; as Esq, he was sworn into office, as Sheriff-elect, at Londonderry, February 1808, for the ensuing year [Saunders's Newsletter, 12 February]; he was the fourth in a list of eight Stewards who signed an address to General STEWART, to mark his return from the Peninsular Wars, May 1813, and invited him to attend a dinner at the King's Arms, Londonderry [Government Gazette, India, 13 May]; and on 22 May 1813, a dedication was written, probably by Thomas, and perhaps marking an important family date, in the half-title page of "Miscellaneous Works. With Memoirs of his life and writings, etc," by Edward GIBBON, Volume III, published in 1796, in Dublin, for P. WOGAN:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhULwh2HNh6gw7YKB6aPEuXgK3KaabAUrtvmoaUcO6ShDI_UQzDXvD7TdM9IQ9BXW9-tjLCIa8Bf4HX7eYG-A8lyBRXW5SEN9zPLJ2g8vnJaoSNbAygmQ5cQzlh-tpl2HV4_c0y7HXmvGedhXOOvKeYT79QqasSSIrs3hKdX0aySg2tnkuaUuzHtBtjAQ/s363/WOORE.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="167" data-original-width="363" height="147" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhULwh2HNh6gw7YKB6aPEuXgK3KaabAUrtvmoaUcO6ShDI_UQzDXvD7TdM9IQ9BXW9-tjLCIa8Bf4HX7eYG-A8lyBRXW5SEN9zPLJ2g8vnJaoSNbAygmQ5cQzlh-tpl2HV4_c0y7HXmvGedhXOOvKeYT79QqasSSIrs3hKdX0aySg2tnkuaUuzHtBtjAQ/w320-h147/WOORE.JPG" width="320" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Image courtesy of the ABE BOOKS web-site.]</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: left;">It is not clear whether Mrs WOORE was Thomas's wife (likely), or perhaps instead his step-mother.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">On 17 November 1813, a Bill was entered in the Court of the Exchequer, Dublin, by the Rev William Henry MARDOCK and his wife Margaret, as Plaintiffs, the Defendents being John DARCUS Junior, Solomon DARCUS and Letitia DARCUS, along with thirteen others whose names had been struck through, by order dated 4 May 1814, including Thos WOORE and Catherine his wife (see below); Thomas WOORE, Esq, and his wife Catherine, both of the City of Londonderry, were named as joint second party to a Deed of Mortage dated 16 December 1816 [Memorial 485911, Book 709, Page 576], to which the first party was Robert BATEMAN, of Milltown Lodge, County Londonderry, and the third party was James SCOTT, of Willsboro, County Londonderry, Esq, the sole surviving trustee of Thomas and Catherine's 1798 Marriage Settlements (see below), concerning lands in County Tyrone; Thomas was present at the delivery of an impressive sermon in Londonderry Cathedral, 28 December 1817, by Rev James Spencer KNOX, A.M., and was co-signatory of an address in reply, dated 30 December, with 22 others; he was recorded as being of Inch House, County Donegal, in the marriage notice, July 1821, of his second daughter Frances to Charles SIMEON (see below), and as being of Nash, Herefordshire, Island of Inch, County Donegal, and of Thornhill, County Londonderry, 1821 [FOSTER's Baronetage and Knightage, 1881 - pedigree of SIMEON]; Thomas was second of twelve Jurors, sworn before the Derry Assizes, September 1821 [Freeman's Journal, 8 October - Irish Circuits]; Captain, Londonderry Legion, 5 December 1821 [A List of the Officers of the Militia and Yeomen Cavalry, Army, 1825]; of Inch, County Donegal, with Rev Henry SCOTT, 1824 [15th Report of the Society for Promoting the Education of the Poor in Ireland, page 85]; Thomas WOORE, J.P., among a long list of Citizens of Derry (some 180 or more) who were signatories to an address to the Bishop of Derry, May 1824 [Sun (London), 28 May]; Esq., of Ship-quay Street, Londonderry, 1824 [PIGOT & Co's Directory].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas died at Thornhill Cottage, City of Londonderry, 10 November 1825, aged 51 years, and was buried in St Augustine's Church of Ireland Churchyard, within the old walls of the City [courtesy of the genealogy@derrystrabane.com web-site]; he is named in Indexes to Prerogative Court of Ireland Probate Grants, of Londonderry, 1826 #219 - however, he is not mentioned in Sir William BETHAM's Abstracts of them; no death notice has yet been found for him in currently available digitised newspapers.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas was married, probably in Londonderry, 30 August 1798, to Catherine Anne DARCUS, eldest daughter of John DARCUS, Esq, Chief Magistrate, County Londonderry [Edinburgh Magazine, or Literary Miscellany, September 1799, page 240] - see DARCUS family below; the marriage was the subject of Settlements, dated 23 August 1798 [Dublin Deeds Registry, Memorial 337501, Book 514, Page 443], made between John DARCUS of the City of Londonderry, Esq, of the first part, Catherine DARCUS, of the said City, Spinster, of the second part, Thomas WOORE, Captain in His Majesty's Regiment of Fifeshire Fencible Infantry, of the third part, and James SCOTT of Wills(borough) in the said county of Londonderry (see SCOTT family, below) and Whitney Upton GLEDSTANES, of the City of Dublin, Esq (ditto, below), as the trustees, for the sum of ₤1350 sterling, chargeable on lands in Inch, County Donegal, with the interest to go to Thomas for life, then Catherine may dispose of it by deed or will, but if she die without issue, it is to revert to Joshua Swettenham DARCUS, her brother; - likewise for the interest on an additional ₤650 to be raised after John DARCUS's death [Images of Deeds Memorial Books are browsable on the familysearch.org web-site - however, the Registry Clerk who made the Memorial mis-read Thomas's surname as MOORE!].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Catherine died at Waterloo Place, Derry, 23 September 1830, relict of the late Thomas WOORE, Esq [Londonderry Sentinel, 25 September; Belfast News-Letter, 28 September], aged 58 years [source pending]; she was buried with her husband, at St Augustine's Churchyard, aged 37 years (which would have her aged 5 in 1798, clearly impossible for a marriage in that year - perhaps 57, and the ageing inscription misread in the transcription of it); Catherine Anne WOORE, of Londonderry, 1830 [Index to Prerogative Court of Ireland, Wills and Administrations], but, like her husband, no mention made by BETHAM in his Abstracts.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">They had issue, including two sons and three daughters:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">1. Catherine WOORE, born about 1799; she died at Rose Hill, Fahan, 10 July 1839 [Belfast Commercial Chronicle, Monday 15 July], and was buried at Derry Cathedral, aged 39 [M.I., SCOTT family - although her death date was recorded as 9 July]; as the <i>"... eldest daughter of the late Thomas MOORE (sic), of Thornhill Lodge, Esq,"</i> she was married at Muff Church, Donegal, by the Very Reverend Dean of Derry (Thomas Bunbury GOUGH), 7 September 1826, to Rev Henry SCOTT, <i>"... only son of William SCOTT, M.D. of Derry"</i> [Belfast Commercial Chronicle, Saturday 16 September]; he was born about 1796; he entered Trinity College, Dublin, 2 November 1812, as Pensioner (Mr KNOX), aged 16, born Derry, son of William, Medicus - Scholar 1815, B.A. Verne 1817 [Alumni Dublinenses]; he died at Foyle Hill, Derry, 16 January 1868, aged 71 [Newry Telegraph, 21 January], a grandson of Henry SCOTT [M.I., Londonderry Cathedral]; they had issue:</div><div> a. William Thomas SCOTT, born at Inch House, County Donegal, 15 March 1828 [Belfast News-Letter, 21 March]; he died 27 January 1855, aged 26 [M.I., Derry Cathedral].</div><div> b. Thomas Woore SCOTT, born at the residence of his grandmother, Waterloo Place, Derry, 15 February 1830 [Belfast News-Letter, Friday 19 February]; Lieutenant, 19th Regiment; he died at Foyle Hill, near Londonderry, 9 July 1855, aged 25 years [Londonderry Standard, 19 July; M.I., Londonderry Cathedral].</div><div> c. a daughter, born 2 March 1832 [Londonderry Sentinel, Saturday 10 March]; probably Catherine Ann Swettenham SCOTT, who was married at Londonderry Cathedral, 31 December 1857, to her probable cousin, Solomon DARCUS, of Gardenmore, Larne, County Antrim, Captain, Prince of Wales's Donegal Militia (see below).</div><div> d. a daughter, born at Fahan, 22 June 1834 [Belfast News-Letter, Friday 4 July].</div><div> e. Dickson Coningham SCOTT, born at Fahan, 23 August 1836 [Belfast Commercial Chronicle, 29 August]; he died at Foyle Hill, 13 January 1867, aged 30 [M.I., Derry Cathedral].</div><div>See SCOTT family below.</div><p>2. Thomas WOORE, born in Londonderry, 1804. See [A] below.</p><p>3. John WOORE, born in Londonderry, 1805. See [B] below.</p><div style="text-align: left;">4. Frances WOORE, born about 1806; she was with her husband, at Columban House, Jersey St Helier, 1851 Census, aged 47, born Ireland; she was at Beauchamp Walk, Leamington Spas, Warwickshire, 1861 Census, a Widow, aged 55, with two of her daughters; she died at Boulogne-sur-Mer, France, 7 December 1882, <i>"... relict of the late Rear-Admiral SIMEON"</i> [Australian Star (Sydney), 15 July]; as the <i>"... second daughter,"</i> she was married, by the Very Reverend Dean of Londonderry (GOUGH), 5 July 1821, to Charles SIMEON, Esq, Captain of His Majesty's Ship 'Arab,' third son of Sir John SIMEON, Bart, of Grazely, Berkshire [Globe, 17 July - location not mentioned, perhaps Londonderry Cathedral?]; he was born 7 November 1791; he entered the Royal Navy, October 1811; Lieutenant, 2 June 1812; served on H.M.S. Bulwark, 74 guns; Commander, 13 June 1815; appointed to H.M.S. Arab, Sloop, November 1828, while she was being fitted out for the Irish Station; Captain, 10 March 1827; he was at Columban House, Jersey St Helier, 1851 Census, aged 58, Captain, Half Pay, R.N., with his wife and five younger children; he died in Paris, 12 November 1858, aged 67; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Charles SIMEON, born at Quay Street, Londonderry, 25 July 1822; he went to South Australia, 1850; of Glenelg, and Kensington, Adelaide, before moving to Sydney; of Marchmont, Macquarie Street North, Sydney, 1882; he died at Summer Hill, near Sydney, 15 July 1904, aged 81, and was buried at Rookwood Cemetery [Anglican, Section 4, Plot 2444]; he was married at Trinity Church, St Marylebone, 16 December 1849, to Magdalena Emma Sophia MOLZ, daughter of Ernst Ludewig MOLZ, Secretary of the Royal Landrospei, Hildersheim, near Hanover; she died at Waverley, near Sydney, 4 September 1907 aged 80, and was buried with her husband; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> i. Helene SIMEON, born at Tam O'Shanter Belt, South Australia, 8 October 1850 [Adelaide Times, 9 October]; she married her cousin, John Chadwick WOORE, and died in September 1923, aged 72 (see below).</div><div style="text-align: left;"> ii. Charles Edwin SIMEON; he died at Kensington, Adelaide, 6 March 1853, aged 11 months [S.A. Register, 12 March]</div><div style="text-align: left;"> iii. Ralph Henry Gowland SIMEON, born at Kensington, 20 February 1854 [Adelaide Times, 22 February]; he died there, 30 August 1854, an infant [Adelaide Times, 31 August.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> iv. a daughter, born at Kensington, 27 June 1855 [Adelaide Times, 28 June].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> v. Edwin SIMEON, born at Kensington, 8 July 1857 [S.A. Register, 10 July]; he died there, 16 August 1861, aged 4 years [S.A. Register, 17 August].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> vi. a daughter, born at Kensington, 7 March 1859 [S.A. Register, 9 March].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. Richard Godin SIMEON, born at Londonderry, 3 July 1823; Lieutenant-Colonel, Staff Corps, Bengal Cavalry [Monumental Inscription]; he died at Srinigar, Cashmier, 1 July 1867, of Cholera [Dundee Advertiser, 9 September], aged 43; he was married, 11 October 1847, to Charlotte EARL, daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel William Henry EARL; with issue two sons and four daughters.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> c. Edward SIMEON, born in Ireland, December 1824; Lieutenant-Colonel, Royal Artillery, Bengal; he was at No 1 Clifford Place, Jersey St Saviour, Channel Islands, 1881 Census, aged 56, Lt-Col, Retired List, with his wife and three sons; he died at Moyne Lodge, Gisborne, N.Z., 11 July 1898, aged 74, <i>"... third son of the late Rear-Admiral SIMEON, and brother of Charles SIMEON of Summer Hill, N.S.W."</i> [S.M.H., 6 August]; he was married at Delhi, India, 7 February 1860, to Lavinia WILLOWS (aged 45 in 1881, born Ireland), daughter of Major Geoffrey WILLOWS; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> i. Edward Archibald SIMEON, born in the East Indies, 25 November 1860; aged 20, Scholar (Medical Student), with his parents, 1881.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> ii. George Ernest SIMEON, born in the East Indies, 11 December 1862; aged 18, Scholar, ditto, 1881.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> iii. Herbert Richard SIMEON, born in the East Indies, 26 January 1866; aged 15, Scholar, ditto, 1881.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> d. Letitia SIMEON, born in Ireland, about 1830; aged 19, with her parents, 1851; aged 30, with her mother, 1861; she died in 1917; she was married, 5 July 1869, as his second wife, Henry Charles HAMILTON, Bengal Civil Service, C.I.S. (Bart), who died in 1872 [FOSTER's Baronetage].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> e. Thomas Woore SIMEON, born at Londonderry, 18 December 1834; Cadet, Royal Navy, 29 November 1848; he died at St Servan, Paris, 5 November 1871, aged 36 [Cork Constitution, 23 November], without issue; he was married, 20 December 1868, to Matilda KEMP, second daughter of the late Edward KEMP, of Bury St Edmunds; she was married secondly, 28 October 1876, to Francis John TYARS, of London [FOSTER's Baronetage].</div> f. Henry Scott SIMEON, born in Ireland, March 1836; Captain, 27th Regiment; Lieutenant-Colonel in the Army; at St Botolph, Colchester, 1871 Census, aged 34, with his wife Isabella, and a number of military men; he was at 82 Rouge Bouillon (Honeyden), Jersey, 1891 Census, aged 55 living on his own means, with wife Isabel; he died at Honeyden, Jersey, 2 April 1897, aged 61 years [Hampshire Advertiser, 10 April]; he was married, 3 December 1861, to Isabel Maria MacCREIGHT, daughter of the late Daniel Chambers MacCREIGHT, Irish Botanist, of Hauteville, Jersey, and grand-daughter of Sir William PAXTON, of Middleton Hall, Carmarthenshire [FOSTER's Baronetage; Clonmel Chronicle, 11 December].<div> g. Eliza SIMEON, born in Cheshire, England, about 1838; aged 12, with her parents, 1851; aged 22, with her mother, 1861; she was married, 14 January 1862, to Rev Charles Erlington McKAY, Vicar of Laracor, Trim, Ireland [FOSTER's Baronetage].<div> g. Catherine Thomasine SIMEON, born in France, about 1839; aged 11, with her parents, 1851; she died in 1911; she was married to Walter J. GOODMAN [FOSTER's Baronetage]. Another source has her marrying Charles Edward PIGEARD?</div><div> k. John SIMEON, born in England, 22 January 1841; he died at his residence, 29 Allen's Avenue, Petersham, near Sydney, 1 October 1903, <i>"... leaving a wife and family of little children to mourn their sad loss"</i> [S.M.H., 3 October].<div style="text-align: left;"> h. Albert SIMEON, born 26 November 1844 (?).</div><div> j. Harriet SIMEON, born at Londonderry, 1828; she died in 1907 or 1911?; she was married at St Saviour's Church, Jersey, 19 April 1849, to James LE QUESNE (born 1821), late Royal Jersey Artillery; with issue:</div><div> i. Henrietta Thomasine LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 1851; died 1898; married Frank Aubin HOLLAND.</div><div> ii. Eliza Frederica LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 1852.</div><div> iii. James Simeon Coningham LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 1860.</div><div> k. Augusta Wilhelmina SIMEON, born at Londonderry, 1832; died 12 March 1907?; she was married firstly, on 1849, to Gifford Nicholas LE QUESNE, of Jersey; he died 30 January 1877; she was married secondly, 12 January 1880, to Thomas MAYHEW, Captain, Royal Artillery; issue by her first marriage i. Frances Wilhelmina LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 1851 ; married in 1874, to William Samuel WHITTUCK.</div><div> ii. Augustus Simeon LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 1853.</div><div> iii. Gifford Simeon LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 1860.</div><div> iv. Augustus Sarah LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 1862; married in 1881, William Taylor MITCHELL.</div><div> v. Ferdinand Simeon LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 2863; died 1950.</div><div> vi. Albert Simeon LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 1865.</div><div> vii. Mabel Isabella LE QUESNE, born Jersey, 1866.</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">5. Mary WOORE; <i>"... youngest daughter of the late Thomas WOORE, Esq, of Thornhill Lodge, county Derry,"</i> when she was married at Muff parish church, County Donegal, 26 March 1829, to William J. CLARKE, Esq, of the 77th Regiment [Belfast Newsletter, Tuesday 7 April]; they had issue, including:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. a son, born at Londonderry, 10 December 1829, to the <i>"... the Lady of W.G. CLARKE, Esq, 77th Regiment"</i> [Londonderry Sentinel, 12 December].</div><p style="text-align: center;">______________________________________________</p><p style="text-align: center;"><br /></p><p style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>DARCUS OF LONDONDERRY.</b></i></span></p><p style="text-align: left;">John DARCUS; Sheriff of County Londonderry, 1717, 1721 and 1733; he was dead before 4 February 1737, when he was mentioned as deceased in the Marriage Settlements, bearing that date [Memorial 63618, Book 88, Page 534], for his son, Henry DARCUS, to Katherine KIRKPATRICK, daughter of William KIRKPATRICK, of the City of Londonderry, Merchant, concerning two houses in the City of Londonderry, one in Pump Street and the other on the north side of Bishop Street, which were vested in his widow Margaret DARCUS for her natural life, by virtue of his will; he was married to Margaret (-?-); they had issue, a son Henry DARCUS. Probably the next.</p><div style="text-align: left;">Henry DARCUS, perhaps born in or before about 1720; Sheriff of County Londonderry, 1737-39; he was married, by settlements dated 4 February 1737, to Katherine KIRKPATRICK (see above); probably father John - see next.</div><div style="text-align: left;">The wife of Henry DARCUS died in September 1777 [Londonderry Journal, 30 September].</div><div style="text-align: left;">Henry DARCUS died at Castlefin, late June or early July 1789 [Saunders's News-Letter, Friday 3 July].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John DARCUS, born in or before about 1750; eldest son and heir of Henry DARCUS, of the City of Londonderry, Esq; he was named in an Indented Deed of Release, dated 11 January 1772 [Memorial 190036, Book 179, Page 29], made by his father Henry DARCUS, Esq (as first party), with his son John DARCUS and Mary DARCUS otherwise SWETTENHAM his wife (the second party), reciting <i>"... certain articles entered into before the intermarriage of the said John and Mary DARCUS,"</i> and concerning all the messuages, tenements, warehouses, the numbers 28 and 29, situate on the north side of Bishop Street in the said City of Londonderry, and to which deed John RICHARDSON of Summerseat (?), in County Londonderry, and Thomas SCOTT, of the City of Dublin, Esq, Barrister-at-Law, were the third party, and possibly as trustees.</div><div style="text-align: left;">Major John DARCUS supervised the military contingent which paraded through Londonderry, August 1789, to celebrate the birthday of the Prince of Wells, and the anniversary of the relief of the Siege of Londonderry [Saunders's News-Letter, Wednesday 19 August].</div><div style="text-align: left;">John DARCUS and Mary his wife were named as co-defendents in a Bill brought before the Court of Chancery, Dublin, 3 February 1790, by George GLEDSTANES, the father and next friend of George and Joshua GLEDSTANES, both infants, as the Plaintiffs, and to which the other Defendents were Catherine SWETTENHAM, Widow, Thomas BATESON, James SCOTT (here the names of John and Mary DARCUS appear), Catherine DARCUS (perhaps John and Mary's daughter), Thomas SWETTENHAM, Susannah GAMBLE, Rev James LOURY, his wife, and John McCLEAN. </div><div style="text-align: left;">Mary DARCUS, the wife of John DARCUS, died in or shortly before 1794, when she was named in Indexes to Prerogative Court Wills [Phillimore and Thrift].</div><div style="text-align: left;">John DARCUS was again named as a Co-Defendent in another Chancery Court Bill, entered 9 March 1795, by Ann SWETTENHAM, Widow and Adm'x of William SWETTENHAM deceased, the Plaintiff, and to which the other Defendents were Catherine SWETTENHAM, George GLEDSTANES and Catherine his wife, and Richard SCOTT.</div><div style="text-align: left;">John DARCUS, of the City of Londonderry, appears to have been married secondly, in Dublin, by License of the P.C.I., 16 August 1798, to Letitia RICHARDSON, of the parish of Stillorgan, County Dublin, Spinster; she died at her residence, Pump Street, Londonderry, 4 October 1854, at a very advanced age, <i>"... Letitia, relict of the late John DARCUS, Esq"</i> [Londonderry Sentinel, 6 October].</div><div style="text-align: left;">John DARCUS, of the City of Londonderry, died in or shortly before 1812, his will P.C.I. [Phillimore and Thrift].</div><div style="text-align: left;">John DARCUS and Mary SWETTENHAM probably had issue, including:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 1. Catherine Anne DARCUS, who was probably the wife of Thomas WOORE. See above.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 2. Joshua Swettenham DARCUS; named in the marriage settlements, 1798, of his sister Catherine; he was probably married at Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, 24 July 1804, to Elizabeth MANNING.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John DARCUS, of the City of Londonderry; probably Mayor of Londonderry, 1798 (elected 30 September 1797), 1799 (sworn in, 2 February), and 1803; in April 1807, he was occupier of a dwelling house in the suburbs of the City of Londonderry, in front of three stores, a warehouse and yard, which were advertised for sale by auction, they being located at the rear of John DARCUS's dwelling, on the south side of Stewart's Lane, near the Ship Quay [Dublin Evening Post, 7 April]; by his (probable second) wife Letitia RICHARDSON, he was possibly father of:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 3. Benjamin DARCUS, born about 1805, probably at Mountcharles, County Donegal; Church of Ireland Curate; he probably solemnized the marriage, in 1857, of Solomon DARCUS to Catherine Anne SCOTT (see above); he died at Wood Lodge, Londonderry, 31 July 1867, <i>"... Incumbent of Mountcharles, County Donegal."</i></div><div style="text-align: left;">Possibly the next.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John DARCUS, Margaret DARCUS and Catherine DARCUS, perhaps siblings, were named by Darcus MacBRIDE, in her will, dated 9 April 1789, and proved P.C.I., 8 November 1790, as her cousins.</div><div style="text-align: left;">This Catherine DARCUS may have been Thomas WOORE's wife.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Darcus MacBRIDE was a daughter of James EVORY, late of the City of Dublin, Merchant, who left his property to her as part of her marriage settlements, dated 19 February 1747, to her former husband George CUMMIN, also of Dublin, Merchant; a Bill concerning these matters was advertised to be entered in the Court of Chancery in Dublin, shortly after 8 July 1789 [Saunders's News-Letter, 9 July].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Margaret DARCUS; as the youngest daughter of the late John DARCUS, of the City of Londonderry, Esq, she was married in the Cathedral Church of Derry, 26 December 1839, to Andrew BOND, of Shantalow, County Londonderry [Belfast News-Letter, 3 December].</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">The SWETTENHAM family associated with Inch Island, County Donegal, may well account for John DARCUS acquiring lands there:</div><div style="text-align: left;">Tristram SWEATENHAM, of Inch Island, his will proved 1643.</div><div style="text-align: left;">George SWETENHAM, of Inch Island, County Donegal, his will proved 1720.</div><div style="text-align: left;">George SWETTENHAM, of Letter, County Donegal, his will proved 1743.</div><div style="text-align: left;">Frances SWETTENHAM, of Templemore, her will proved 1785.</div><div style="text-align: left;">George SWETTENHAM; Esq, of Inch, County Donegal; will proved 1788.</div><div style="text-align: left;">Katherine SWETTENHAM, the widow of Joshua SWETTENHAM, Esq; of the City of Londonderry, her will proved 1808.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Catherine SWETTENHAM, and her husband Joshua, were named as joint defendants in a Bill brought before the Court of the Exchequer, Dublin, 12 August 1772, entered by Edward SPENCE, Clerk, the Plaintiff, and with four other co-defendants, including Thomas GLEDSTANES.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">By an Indented Deed of Mortgage, dated 15 December 1768 [Memorial 173816, Book 260, Page 423], made between Joshua SWETTENHAM, of the City of Londonderry, Esq, of the one part; and Thomas GLEDSTANES, of Tandross, in the County of Tyrone, Esq, of the other part; concerning lands in the Island of Innis otherwise Inch, in County Donegal.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">By Indented Articles, dated 21 September 1782 [Memorial 234625, Book 349, Page 254], made by George GLEDSTANES, of Daisy Hill, County Tyrone, Esq, administrator of all and singular the goods, etc, of his father James GLEDSTANES, of Daisy Hill, Esq, deceased, of the first part; Joshua SWETTENHAM, of Londonderry, Esq, and Catherine SWETTENHAM, Spinster, second daughter of the said Joshua SWETTENHAM, of the second part; George SWETTENHAM, Esq, Captain in H.M.'s 9th Regiment of Foot, the eldest brother of the said Catherine SWETTENHAM, of the third part; and William SWETTENHAM, of the City of Londonderry, Esq, youngest brother of the said Catherine SWETTENHAM, of the fourth part; Whereby, after reciting therein... a marriage was intended to be shortly had and solemnise between the said George GLEDSTANES and Catherine SWETTENHAM... in consideration of the intended marriage and the sum of ₤1,000 sterling as a marriage portion... witnessed by John DARCUS of the City of Londonderry, Esq, and Robert BELL...</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">The wife of Henry DARCUS died in September 1777 [Londonderry Journal, 30 September].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Henry DARCUS, born about 1788; Mayor of Derry; he died at his residence, William Street, Londonderry, 11 August 1869, aged 81 years [Londonderry Sentinel, 24 August]; he was probably married, at Middletown, County Armagh, 11 August 1836, to Eliza HARRIS, third daughter of Hugh HARRIS of Ashford, County Armagh (and grand-daughter of the late Right Rev John PORTER, D.D., Lord Bishop of Clogher); they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 1. a son, born at Derry, November 1838; probably Henry Richardson DARCUS, who, as the eldest son, was married at St Peter's parish church, Dublin, 28 December 1861, to Gertrude Mary MAUGHAN, eldest daughter of Rev John D. MAUGHAN, of Pembroke Terrace, Dublin [Derry Journal, 1 January 1862]; M.D., Londonderry; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. a son, born at Ranelagh Road, 7 February 1863 [Cork Examiner, 11 February].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. Herny Richardson DARCUS, born at 18 Great James Street, Londonderry, 23 December 1865, the birth informed by his father, Physician.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> c. Rosamund Maria DARCUS, born at 17 Clarendon Street, Londonderry, 12 June 1867, the birth informed by her father, Doctor of Medicine [also Belfast Morning News, 17 June]; she was married, at the Register Office, Pancras, London, 22 August 1898, to Frederick A. LOTTIN, elder son of Frederick James LOTTIN, manager of singing at the Grand Opera, Paris [The Stage, 25 August].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> d. Charles Prior Gooch Maughan DARCUS, born at Kingstown, County Dublin, 15 September 1872, and died there on 30 September 30, aged 15 days [Belfast News-Letter, 18 September and 3 October].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> e. Gertrude Mary DARCUS, born at 27 Clarendon Street, Londonderry, 19 November 1875, her father a Physician.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 2. Hugh Harris DARCUS, born 13 October 1840 [Derry Journal, 20 October]; he died, 27 October 1840, infant son of Henry DARCUS, Esq [Derry Journal, 3 November].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 3. a daughter, born at Great James Street, Londonderry, 29 October 1844 [Derry Journal, 5 November].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 4. Maria DARCUS; she died at her residence, 42 Park Street, Bath, 14 March 1925, <i>"... widow of the late Digby HAMILTON, Esq, of Oxton, Cheshire,"</i> and was buried at Belingon, Cheshire; as the youngest daughter, she was married at St George's church, Dublin, 14 December 1875, to Digby HAMILTON, eldest son Lt-Col Digby HAMILTON, of Bath [Belfast News-Letter, 17 December].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 5. Robert Joseph DARCUS, born about 1858; he died at his father's residence, 66 William Street, Londonderry, 16 February 1869, aged 10 years.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Solomon DARCUS, born about 1784, and probably in Londonderry; said to have been a son of Henry DARCUS and Mary SPEER [Family Tree on Ancestry.com], and probably related to John DARCUS (above); he was named as a defendant of a Bill entered into the Court of the Exchequer, Dublin, 17 November 1813, jointly with John DARCUS Junior and Letitia DARCUS, along with thirteen others whose names had been struck through shortly after, including Henry DARCUS, Letitia DARCUS Widow, Benjamin DARCUS, Henry DARCUS, John DARCUS and Jane his wife, Catherine Ann DARCUS, and Marie DARCUS, as well as Thomas WOORE and his wife Catherine, and to which Bill the Plaintiffs were Rev William Henry MARDOCK and his wife Margaret [Court of Exchequer Bill Books, on Findmypast]; Solomon died at Gardenmore, Larne, County Antrim, 29 November 1849, aged 64 years, <i>"... for more than 40 years Clerk of the Peace for County Antrim" </i>[Coleraine Chronicle, 8 December] - however, his M.I., in St Cedma Burying Ground, Larne, recorded his age as 66 years [Billion-graves web-site]; he was married, to Anne (maiden surname not yet known); she was at Larne, 1851 Census, aged 59, married in 1810, Widow, Annuitant, with son and daughter [her late husband was also named, as having died in winter 1849, aged 66]; she died at Larne, 22 May 1884, Widow of the late Solomon DARCUS, Esq, of Gardenmore, aged 80 (or ? 89) years [Belfast News-Letter, 9 August]; they had issue:</div><div>1. Letitia DARCUS, born about 1812; eldest daughter; she died at Larne, 3 October 1831, aged 18 years [Belfast Newsletter, 7 October].</div><div>2. Henry John DARCUS, born about 1821; eldest son; he died at Gardenmore, Larne, 5 November 1837, aged 15 years [Belfast Commercial Chronicle, 8 November].</div><div>3. Solomon DARCUS, born about 1824; admitted to the Bar, January 1848; with his mother, 1851, aged 26, unmarried, non-practicing Barrister, Land Owner; later Lieutenant-Colonel; he died at Gardenmore, Larne, 24 June 1881, aged 57 years [Belfast Newsletter, 7 July; Monumental Inscription]; Captain, Prince of Wales's Own Donegal Militia, when he was married at Londonderry Cathedral, by Rev Benjamin DARCUS, 31 December 1857, to Catherine Annie SCOTT, daughter of the Rev Henry SCOTT, Foyle Hill, Londonderry [Belfast Morning News, 4 January 1858]; she died at her residence, Drew Villa, Londonderry, 9 March 1887, <i>"... widow of the late Lt. Col. DARCUS, of Gardenmore, Larne... and elder daughter of the late Rev Henry SCOTT, of Foyle Hill, Londonderry"</i> [Belfast News-Letter, 10 March]; they had issue, an only son:</div><div> a. Solomon Henry DARCUS; probably the Solomon H. DARCUS who was principle beneficiary of the will of John WOORE, late of Guernsey, 1879, and probably related to him (see below); he was married, at Glenarm church, County Antrim, 5 August 1885, to Mary Helen CAULFIELD, eldest daughter of John CAULFIELD, of Glenarm [Belfast News-Letter, 6 August].</div><div>4. Anne DARCUS, born about 1828; aged 22, with her widowed mother, 1851, unmarried, annuitant.</div><div><br /></div><div>Henry DARCUS, born about 1804; he died at his residence, Great James Street, City of Londonderry, 18 June 1895, aged 80, Married, Land Agent, the death informed by his son, Benjamin DARCUS, same address, present at the death.</div><div>He was probably married to Eliza; she died at her residence, Great James Street, City of Londonderry, 10 November 1890, Widow of a Landlord, the death informed by her son, S.L. DARCUS, same address, present at the death.</div><div>They appear to have had issue:</div><div>1. Henry Richardson DARCUS; he was married at St Peter's parish Dublin, 28December 1861, to Gertrude Mary MAUGHAN, daughter of Rev John DICKSON MAUGHAN.</div><div>2. Solomon L. DARCUS; he informed his mother's death.</div><div>3. Benjamin John DARCUS, born about 1850; he was married at Christ Church, parish of Templemore, County Londonderry, by license, 28 May 1891, aged 40, to Rebecca CAMPBELL, daughter of John CAMPBELL, of Lower Road, City of Londonderry; they had issue:</div><div> a. Mabel DARCUS, born at 35 Argyle Terrace, City of Londonderry, 3 April 1898, the birth informed by her father, Gent.</div><div style="text-align: left;">___________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>SCOTT FAMILY OF LONDONDERRY.</b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">William SCOTT, born about 1679; of Londonderry; he died 7 October 1751, aged 72, and was buried in <i>"... an enclosed burial place on the south side of Derry Cathedral"</i> [M.I. - detailed account of burials in his family plot, as follows]; he was married to Everina; she died 29 August 1737, aged 45 [M.I.]; they had issue, including;</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. James SCOTT, born about 1719; he died in April 1737, aged 18 years (? instead 12).</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. Frances SCOTT; died 22 September 1775.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> c. Margaret SCOTT; died 22 June 1775.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> d. Everina SCOTT; died 11 April 1789.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> e. Henry SCOTT, born about 1729; he died in August 1797, aged 68; he was married to Margaret; she died in March 1806, aged 72; they had issue an only son William SCOTT:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">William SCOTT, born about 1765; M.D., of Derry; as Alderman of Derry, he died 11 April 1834, aged 68; he was married to Eleanor (maiden surname not yet known); she died in August 1800, aged 28; they had issue, including an only son:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Rev Henry SCOTT, born about 1796. See above.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas SCOTT, born about 1756; he died in February 1823, late of Foyle Hill, Londonderry, aged 66 years [Dublin Weekly Register, 1 March]; his widow died at Foyle Hill, January 1837 [Belfast Commercial Chronicle, 30 January].</div><div style="text-align: left;">____________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i>GLEDSTANES OF COUNTY TYRONE.</i></b></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John GLEDSTANES, born about 1603; Captain; he died 10 December 1674, aged 71, and was buried at Clogher Cathedral; he was married to Margaret; she died 27 April 1671, aged 80 years, and was buried at Clogher Cathedral.</div><div style="text-align: left;">Probably parents of the next two?</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Albert GLEDSTANES, born about 1629; Cornet; he died 13 April 1665, aged 35 years, and was buried at Clogher Cathedral.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">James GLEDSTANES, born about 1629; Captain; he died 9 December 1689, aged 57 years, and was buried at Clogher Cathedral; he was married to Anne GALBRAITH; she was born about 1642; she died 3 June 1718, aged 75 years, and was buried with her husband.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">An on-line family tree for a James GALBRAITH, of Roscavey, Captain, records that he was married to Mary, widow of Captain James GLEDSTANES of Fardross, and left an only son, John GALBRAITH (born about 1670, and died in 1742).</div><div style="text-align: left;">But this does not yet fit with the BURKE pedigree information, date-wise at least - which suggests that there may be some omissions and/or conflations in the GLEDSTANES pedigrees.</div><div style="text-align: left;">Indeed, a footnote to another pedigree [Burke's Landed Gentry, 1862] mentions that a Robert GALBRAITH, Esq, of Cloncorrick Castle, married Anne, sister of GLEDSTANES of Fordross.</div><div style="text-align: left;">However, Mistress Margaret GLEDSTANES, the wife of Captain Robert GALBRAITH, died 7 July 1682, aged 27 years, and was buried at St Macartan's Cathedral, Clogher, in the burial place of John GALBRAITH, of Rascavey, who died 28 May 1668, aged 48 years.</div><div style="text-align: left;">John GALBRAITH, of Blessington, County Tyrone, Gent, his will dated 12 July 1668 (or date of probate), naming his first son Robert GALBRAITH (his house at Glasgow), his father Archibald, grandfather John, daughters Janet, Anne, Elizabeth and Isabel, his cousin James GALBRAITH of Ramaren, County Fermanagh, and his brother-in-law James GLEDSTANES.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">Mr GLEDSTANES; perhaps a son of the above Captain James? - or even the above Captain himself given that his wife was 13 years his junior); he had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 1. James GLEDSTANES, born about 1670; of Fardross, County Tyrone; he died in 1746, aged 75 years; he was married to Miss GRAHAM, of Hockley, near Armagh [Burke's L.G. of Ireland, 1921, page 268], with issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Thomas GLEDSTANES, born about 1718; he died in 1778, aged 59 years; unmarried.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. Ann GLEDSTANES; she was married to Matthew JACOB, of St Johnstown and Mobarnane, County Tipperary.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> c. Mary GLEDSTANES; she was married, 1775, to Arthur JOHNSTON, of Rademon, County Down, M.P. for Killyleagh.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> d. Margaret GLEDSTANES; she was married, 1767, to Ambrose UPTON, Major, 13th Dragoons, of Hermitage, County Dublin.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> e. Catherine GLEDSTANES; she was married to Charles KING, M.P. for St Angelo, County Fermanagh.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 2. George GLEDSTANES, born about 1680; of Lisburne, and of Daisy Hill, Esq, both in County Tyrone; he died 16 December 1739, aged 59 years, and was buried at Clogher Cathedral (St Macartan's); his will, dated 8 November 1738, was proved 1739; he was married to Ann.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 3. Thomas GLEDSTANES; he died before 1745.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 4. Catherine GLEDSTANES; her will, dated 6 August 1749, proved 29 October 1760; she was married to Rev John RIDDLE, of Cross Hill, County Antrim.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Hannah GLEDSTANES; a niece of George GLEDSTANES, and named in his will, 1738; she died in 1772; she was married to William SCOTT (1705-1776), Irish lawyer and judge; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 1. Thomas SCOTT; he died 1770.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 2. James SCOTT. he inherited Willsborough; he (or perhaps instead his son ?) was named as a trustee of the 1798 Marriage Settlements for Thomas WOORE and Catherine DARCUS; James was married to Catherine LESLIE.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 3. Anthony SCOTT.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Ann GLEDSTANES, a niece of George GLEDSTANES, and named in his will, 1738; she was married to Mr GORE.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">George GLEDSTANES was named as guardian of his two infant sons, George and Joshua GLEDSTANES, as joint Plaintiffs in a Bill entered in the Court of Chancery, Dublin, 3 February 1790, to which the defendants were Catherine SWETTENHAM, Widow, Thomas BATESON, James SCOTT, John DARCUS and Mary his wife (m.s. SWETTENHAM), Catherine DARCUS, Thomas SWETTENHAM, and three others.</div><div style="text-align: left;">Another Bill, entered in the same Court, 9 March 1795, by Ann SWETTENHAM, Widow and Administratrix of William SWETTENHAM, deceased, as Plaintiff, and to which the Defendants were Catherine SWETTENHAM, John DARCUS (now evidently a widower), George GLEDSTANES and Catherine his wife, Richard SCOTT, and others.</div><p>__________________________________________</p><p><br /></p><p><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>JOHN DICKSON OF SYDNEY.</b></i></span></p><div style="text-align: left;">John DICKSON; born in Scotland, 1774; Merchant and Engineering Manufacturer at Dockhead, Lambeth and Southwark, London [see his entry in the Australian Dictionary of Biography, by G.P. WALSH]; he arrived in Sydney on the ship 'Earl Spencer' in October 1813, with a large amount of capital; he received substantial grants of land, including 15 acres at Cockle Bay (Darling Harbour), where built a flour mill, equipped with the colony's first steam engine (manufactured at his Southwark factory), and 3,000 acres at Bringelly, near Camden; charged with forgery in 1833, he absconded to England, leaving his family behind; he died in London, 23 June 1843, <i>"... at his residence, Brook Street, Holborn... late of Sydney, N.S.W., aged 69 years"</i> [Bell's Life in London & Sporting Chronicle, 4 June].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John had issue, in Sydney, by his "house-keeper" Susannah MARTIN; she is said to have died in Sydney, 1833, aged 33:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">1. Lilias DICKSON, born 1818; she died in 1869; she was married in 1834 to Willoughby James DOWLING, with issue.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">2. Mary Ann DICKSON, born in Sydney, 27 April 1819, and baptised at St Luke's Anglican Church, Liverpool, 15 May 1820 [familysearch.org]; she was married to Thomas WOORE. See [A] below.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">3. John DICKSON, born 1821; died 1851.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">4. Elizabeth DICKSON, born in Sydney, 29 March 1823, and baptised at St Luke's Anglican Church, Liverpool, 21 September 1833 (? in error for 1823?); she was married to John WOORE.</div><div style="text-align: left;">See [B] below.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">5. James DICKSON, born 1825.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">6. Susannah DICKSON, born 1829; died 1898.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">7. David DICKSON, born 1833.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">In his entry in the on-line version of the Australian Dictionary of Biography [source details pending]:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>" ... from an alliance with his housekeeper, Susannah MARTIN, DICKSON had three sons and four daughters. Lily, eldest daughter, married in 1834 to Willoughby James, son of Vincent George DOWLING, and nephew of Sir James DOWLING... two other daughters married brothers John and Thomas WOORE, and in turn, John's daughters married Jesse GREGSON and Robert BREILLAT."</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: left;">David DICKSON was married at St James's, Sydney, 6 July 1852, to Helen Susan DICKSON, niece of Thomas BARKER, Esq, of Roslyn Hall, Darlinghurst [S.M.H., 8 July].</div><div style="text-align: left;">They had issue, including:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 1. A daughter, born at Roslyn Hall, 28 March 1853 [Empire (Sydney), 30 March].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Roslyn Hall was built in 1833 by Thomas BARKER (1799-1875), who had been apprenticed to John DICKSON in London, and arrived with him in Sydney, on the 'Earl Spencer' in October 1813.</div><div style="text-align: left;">BARKER was married firstly, at St Phillip's church, Sydney, 4 June 1823, to Joanna DICKSON, a niece of John DICKSON, and a daughter of his brother James DICKSON, of Bringelly, by his wife Helen DUNCAN (see next below); she died in 1851, without issue; he was married secondly, in 1857, to Katherine Heath GRAY, by whom he had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 1. Thomas Charles BARKER, born 1863; died 1940.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John's brother, James DICKSON (1775-1845), and his wife Helen DUNCAN (died 29 August 1823 - registered as Ellen DIXON), also emigrated to Sydney, arriving on the ship 'Skelton,' 24 December 1822; a pedigree on the Australian Royalty web-site records his birth in West Linton, Peebleshire, 12 December 1775, a son of Jonathan DICKSON and Margaret YOUNG; James and Helen resided at Bringelly, near Liverpool, N.S.W.; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 1. James DICKSON; he died in 1834; as the<i> "... third son of Mr James DICKSON of Bringelly,"</i> he was married, by the Rev Dr LANG, 15 December 1827, to Mary Ann GRAY, <i>"... third daughter of Mr Charles GRAY, late Chief Clerk in the Navy Office"</i> [Sydney Gazette, 21 December].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 2. Joanne DICKSON, born 1800; she died in 1851; she was married in 1823 to Thomas BARKER (see above).</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 3. Margaret DICKSON, baptised at Larbert, Stirlingshire, Scotland, 19 August 1803 [Familyserach.org]; she died at Bong Bong, May 1833, and was buried at Liverpool St Luke, 20 May, aged 28 years; she was married to Henry BADGERY (1803-1880), with issue three sons.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> 4. Mary DICKSON, born 1808.</div><div style="text-align: left;">____________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>THOMAS WOORE JUNIOR, R.N., AND N.S.W.</b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">[A] Thomas WOORE, born at Londonderry, 29 January 1804; entered the Royal Navy, December 1819, and served on ships suppressing smuggling activity on the south coast of England [Australian Dictionary of Biography - as for most of the following]; he transferred to H.M.S. 'Thetis,' 1823, and resigned his commission in February 1826, to settle his father's estates in Ireland; he rejoined later that year, and was posted to H.M.S. 'Alligator,' conducting hydrographic experiments off the coast of North America; in an obituary, he is said to have been given command of the 'Woodlark' from which he conducted a survey of the Shetland Islands, made observations of the Gulf Stream, made a survey of Penang Island while on the Indian Station, and discovered and laid down a new channel leading to the anchorage at Swan River, Western Australia [Goulburn Herald, 6 July 1878].</div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas first arrived in Sydney, as Lieutenant, on H.M.S. 'Zebra,' 1829 - Mate, 'Zebra,' Madras, 2 May 1829 [British Royal Navy Personnel, Findmypast - Ref 37/8503]; his "Panorama of Sydney Harbour," in ink, dated 1829, is in the Mitchell Library, Sydney; Admiralty Mate, H.M.S. Southampton, Bombay, 30 March 1830, discharged 9 January 1831, Promotion [Ditto -Ref 37/8358]; he served briefly on H.M.S 'Crocodile' - A/Lieut, Trincomalee, 9 January 1831 [Ditto - Ref 37/7951]; A/Lieut, H.M.S. 'Satellite,' on route to Bombay, 24 January 1831, discharged 8 April 1831, H.M.S. 'Crocodile' late H.M.S. 'Southampton' [Ditto - 37/8348]; then, from 1832, on H.M.S. 'Alligator,' until he resigned his commission at the end of 1834, due to ill health.</div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas returned to England from Sydney on the ship 'Governor Harcourt,' 15 February 1835, with his new wife [The Colonist, 19 February]; he spent some time in his native Londonderry, where his first child is said to have been born.</div><div style="text-align: left;">They arrived back in Sydney, 14 December 1836, <i>"... from the Downs, yesterday, having sailed from thence on 20 August, the ship 'Spartan,' Orlando BULL, Master,</i>" as passengers <i>"... Lieutenant Thomas WOOER, Mrs WOOER and child"</i> [Sydney Herald, 15 December] - this indicates that the suggested birth of their first child in Londonderry in September of that year (see below) was not possible, and that she was probably instead born in the previous year, 1835.</div><div style="text-align: left;">T. WOORE, Esq, inserted a Wanted Notice, December 1836, seeking a Coachman, Butler, Cook and Nurse, to apply to him at Mr BARKER's, Sussex Street [Sydney Herald, 26 December]; Thomas WOORE, Esq, advertised for two Overseers, February 1837, to apply to Messrs BARKER and HALLEN's, Sussex Street [Sydney Herald, 6 February]; in June 1837, he was assigned a convict Ostler, in Sydney [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 28 June]; in September 1837, he was at Nonorrah, at Cowpastures, near Sydney, when named as contact for the return of a horse stolen from John DICKSON's estate, Mummel, near Goulburn [Sydney Herald, 7 September]; still at Nonorrah, March 1838, when he advertised for an Overseer <i>"... who is perfectly capable of conducting a large Farming Establishment"</i> [Sydney Herald, 5 March]; ditto, April 1838, when he advertised the loss of two Bills, each for ₤150, dated at Goulburn Plains in March 1838 [Sydney Herald, 16 April 1838]; he was residing at Harrington Park, also at Cowpastures, July 1839, when he was assigned six convicts as labourers [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 10 July]; appointed Magistrate, 22 December 1839, of Harrington Park [Government Gazette, 1 January 1840]; Mr and Mrs WOORE, with Miss DICKSON, attended the Governor's Ball, May 1840, in celebration of the Queen's Birthday; this Miss DICKSON was probably Elizabeth, who would shortly be married to his brother John WOORE (see below), October 1840, just four months after his arrival from India, and who gave birth to her first child at Harrington Park in October 1842; Thomas was assigned a convict as Painter's Apprentice, Harrington Park, July 1840; his pencil on paper drawings, "Bridge and Village of Camden," and "John OXLEY's Kirkham Mill," at Cowpastures, are both dated 1842 [His "Rough Sketch Book, 1834-1869," Mitchell Library, Sydney]; he advertised Harrington Park to be let for five years in July 1843.</div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas eventually settled at Pomeroy Station, on the Wollondilly River, near Goulburn, probably by deeds dated 29 February 1840, comprising three lots in County Argyle, of 650, 996 and 1198 acres [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 31 March]; Major WOORE (possibly his brother John) and Thomas WOORE, J.P., were driving their Tandem in a convoy, on the road to Goulburn, near the Bargo River, 3 March 1842, when they were held up by bushrangers [The Australian, 8 March]; in May 1846, after the Government refused to have a survey made of the proposed southern railway line from Sydney, WOORE, on his own initiative and at his own expense, examined possible routes, and reported his results at a public meeting on August [A.D.B. entry, 1976, by G.J. ABBOTT]; he also made suggestions concerning the water supply for Sydney, recommending a dam be built on the Warragamba River; he advertised Pomeroy for sale in January 1875, and went to live with his BUSBY daughter at Double Bay; he died at Double Bay, East Sydney, 21 June 1878, and was buried at St Jude's Anglican Cemetery, Randwick; his will was proved 27 May 1879, the Principal Beneficiary being Solomon H. DARCUS (see above).</div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas was married at Roslyn Hall, Darlinghurst, 1 January 1835, to Mary Ann DICKSON; she was a born in Sydney, 27 April 1819, daughter of John DICKSON and Susannah MARTIN (see above); widowed in June 1878, she went to England; she died at Islington, London, 13 August 1883, aged 64, <i>"... widow of the late Thomas WOORE, Lieutenant R.N., of Pomeroy, Goulburn"</i> [S.M.H., 9 October 1883]. </div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Thomas and Mary Ann had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> </div><div style="text-align: left;">1. Catherine Anne WOORE, said to have been born at Thornhill Lodge, Londonderry, 29 September 1836 [genie.com family tree] - date not yet corroborated, but as her parents were at sea on that date, perhaps the year in error for 1835?; she probably arrived in Sydney with her parents, December 1836, a child; she and her husband, with their infant daughter, sailed for London on the 'Duncan Dunbar,' 11 March 1857 [letter of her father, dated at Pomeroy, 8 March 1858 - PRONI, D2263 - viewable on trove]; after her husband died, she went back to England; she died at Bramham Gardens, Earl's Court, London, 8 May 1910 [Sydney Morning Herald, 13 May - by cable], aged 73 years; she was married at St James's, Sydney, 20 December 1856, to William BUSBY (born in England, 15 January 1813); he arrived in Sydney with his parents, 1824; involved in BUSBY's Bore, by which water was tunneled from Lachlan Swamp to Hyde Park; pastoralist at Dalkieth Station, Cassilis, N.S.W., by 1859 (visiting Surrey); M.L.C.; he died at his residence, Redleaf, Double Bay, 23 June 1887, aged 74 years, and was buried at St Jude's Cemetery, Randwick; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Katherine Annie BUSBY, born at Potts Point, Sydney, 20 October 1857; she died in Sydney, 20 October 1948, aged 91, and was buried with her husband at South Head Cemetery (she is memorialised on her father's vault at Randwick); she was married at St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney, 9 December 1880, to John Bloyd DONKIN (son of Rev Thomas DONKIN, B.D.); John died in Sydney, 18 February 1920, aged 72, late of Wyalong, and was buried at South Head Cemetery [Section L, General, Plots 362-363]; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> i. Harriet Beatrice DONKIN, born Woollahra, 1882; she died 1 April 1958, aged 71, and was buried with her parents.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> ii. William Dalkieth DONKIN, born Woollahra, 1863; he died at Paddington, 16 September 1952, and was buried with his parents; he was married in Sydney, 1914, to Nora Louise BRENAN (born at Parramatta, 1888, daughter of Justin Joseph BRENAN and Emilie Rose De MILHAN); she died in 1962, and was buried with her husband.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> iii. Edwin Gordon DONKIN, born Woollahra, 18 April 1865; he died 15 May 1970, and was buried with his parents.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. Thomas Woore Frederick BUSBY, born at Firfield, Addlestone (near Chertsey), Surrey, 20 December 1859 [Registered March quarter 1860, Volume 2a, Page 28]; he died at Woollahra, 1941 #27662.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> c. Frances Mary BUSBY, born at Leamington, Warwickshire, 4 March 1861; she died in 1909.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> d. Alice Maud BUSBY, born at Cassilis, N.S.W., 25 July 1862 #6996; died there, 1867 #4721.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> e. Lily Florence BUSBY, born at Cassilis, 1864 #7608; she died 1952.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> f. Marian BUSBY, born Cassilis, 23 August 1865 #7890; she died there, 1867 #4722.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> g. Ella BUSBY, born at Cassilis, 1867 #8283; died 1954.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> h. Alexander Hamilton BUSBY, born at Cassilis, 18 September 1869 #8262; he died in Sydney, 1910 #12003.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> j. William Barker BUSBY, born at Cassilis, 1 May 1870 #8585; he died at Manly, 1946 #28790.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> k. Sarah Kennedy BUSBY, born at Cassilis, 24 May 1872; died at Paddington, 1872 #2334, aged 1 day.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> l. Edith Octavia BUSBY, born 3 January 1874 (not registered in N.S.W.); she died in 1954.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">2. Thomas WOORE, born at Harrington Park, Cowpastures, near Camden, 7 July 1839 [Sydney Gazette & N.S.W. Advertiser, 11 July]; he died 14 May 1853, aged 13 years, and was buried at Camperdown Cemetery.</div><div style="text-align: left;">_____________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>JOHN WOORE, H.E.I.C.S.</b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">[B] John WOORE, born at Londonderry, 19 September 1805; Hon. East India Company Service; Cadet for the Cavalry, 1822 [East India Register]; promoted to Cornet, Cavalry Cadet, 1824 [Asiatic Journal, 1824]; at Bhurtpoor, September 1829 [India Office and Burma List]; Lieutenant, 10th Light Cavalry, <i>"... to be captain of a troop,"</i> 10 September 1832, Fort William [Naval & Military Gazette, 23 February 1833]; Lieutenant, 10th Regiment, Bengal Light Cavalry, permission to go on furlough, 1833, to Europe [National Archives of India, Bombay General Orders, 1830]; Lieutenant, Bengal Cavalry, 1833, possibly as Passenger on the ship 'Cervantes,' HUGHES, for Cape [Asiatic Journal & Monthly Miscellany], probably on his way back to India, where he was married in March 1834.</div><div style="text-align: left;">John first arrived in Sydney, 18 July 1840, on the ship 'Indus' from Calcutta (20 March) via Port Adelaide (1 June), as Passenger Capt WOORE, 10th Bengal Light Dragoons [Register (Adelaide), 6 June; The Colonist, 21 July], perhaps with his young son John Chadwick; Captain J. WOORE, 10th Light Cavalry, <i>"... is permitted to resign the service of the East India Company, from this date"</i> [Military Appointments, Promotions, &c, June 1842]; he sailed from Sydney, 6 May 1843, on the ship 'St George' bound for London, with his wife and two children [Australian Chronicle, 6 May]; he was residing at Bentinck Terrace, St Marylebone, Westminster, Captain in the Army, July 1846, when his daughter Lilly was baptised at Christ Church</div><div style="text-align: left;">His wife Elizabeth evidently returned to Sydney (where she died in 1863 - see below), probably with her two daughters - probably the Mrs WOORE who sailed from Gravesend, 2 April 1847 on the ship 'John Fleming,' arriving in Sydney 26 July 1847, with her child [The Shipping Gazette and Sydney General Trade, 31 July], and another, an infant.</div><div style="text-align: left;">John settled in the Channel Island of Guernsey, possibly as early as mid-late 1847; he was enumerated at Moule de Bas, Rohais Street, Guernsey St Andrews, 1851 Census, aged 45, Captain Half Pay, H.E.I.C.S, born Ireland, with third "wife" Mary Ann (aged 24, born England), son John Chadwick (aged 15, born E. Indies), two daughters and an un-named infant son; he was at Caches House, Grand Rue, Guernsey St Martin, 1861 Census, aged 56, Captain, East Indies, Retired, with wife, four sons and four daughters; he was at Villette House, Villette Road, Guernsey St Martin, 1871 Census, aged 65, Captain, Retired List, Army, with his wife, four sons and five daughters; he died at his residence, Ashburton House, Lower Rohais, Guernsey St Andrew, 21 November 1879, late 10th Bengal Cavalry, aged 74 years [The Star (Guernsey), 29 November]; details of his burial have not been established, and may not have taken place on Guernsey; </div><div style="text-align: left;">Administration of his will was granted in London, 3 February 1880, to Mary Anne JAMES WOORE, of Ashburton House, parish of St Andrew, the Widow, Relict and sole Executrix, for his personal estate, valued at ₤1,200.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John was married firstly, at Kurnaul, Archdeaconry and Diocese of Calcutta, 28 March 1834, to Arabella Georgina DICKSON, witnessed by Major CHADWICK, Artillery, and Cornet MOSLEY, 10th Light Cavalry [India Office Marriages]; she died at Muttra, 29 May 1839 [Parbury's Oriental Herald & Colonial Intelligencer, 1839], and was buried at Agra; it is not yet known whether she was related to the DICKSON family in Sydney.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John and Arabella had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">1. John Chadwick WOORE, born at Muttra, West Bengal, 16 May 1835 [Derry Journal, 15 December 1835]. See [C] below.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">2. Thomas WOORE, born in India, 19 February 1837, and baptised at Muttra, 12 March; he died at Muttra, 1838, <i>"... infant son of Capt J. WOORE, 10th Cavalry"</i> [Oriental Herald].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John, a Widower, of Harrington Park, was married secondly, by Special License, at St Andrew's Scots Church, Sydney, 13 October 1840, to Elizabeth DICKSON, Spinster, of Sydney (a younger sister of his sister-in-law Mary Anne); probably the Mrs WOORE who sailed from Gravesend, 2 April 1847 on the ship 'John Fleming,' arriving in Sydney 26 July 1847, with her child [The Shipping Gazette and Sydney General Trade, 31 July], and with her infant daughter; possibly also the Mrs WOORE who arrived at the Royal Marine Hotel in or near Wollongong, October 1856, with Miss WOORE [Illawarra Mercury, 13 October], and there joined by Mr J. WOORE (perhaps the son John Chadwick, returned from Guernsey?) and the two Misses WOORE [Illawarra Mercury, 27 October]; Mrs E. WOORE, of Balmain, donated 10 shillings to a subscription fund for the completion of St Andrew's Cathedral [S.M.H., 29 July 1857]; in February 1859, a <i>"... remarkable neat stone-built veranda cottage in Twenty-Man Street, about 2 minutes walk from Crook's Ferry,"</i> in Balmain, was advertised for sale by auction, <i>"... well known as the property of Mr John WOORE, and was built by himself, not for sale, but for his own residence... in consequence of ill-health requiring him to leave Sydney"</i> [S.M.H., 16 February]; Mrs WOORE was named as the present occupier of a <i>"... romantically situated cottage residence, with garden and orchard, within 5 minutes of the Gladesville Ferry,"</i> in Gladesville, which was listed for sale [S.M.H., 21 February 1861]; Elizabeth died at Gladesville, 9 July 1863, <i>"... the wife of Captain John WOORE, formerly of the H.E.I.C. Bengal Cavalry"</i> [S.M.H., 14 July], and was buried at Ryde Anglican churchyard [Memorial, with photo, on the Austcemindex web-site]; notice of her probate, recorded her as <i>"... wife of John WOORE, of the Island of Guernsey, Esq"</i> [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 13 July 1863].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John had further issue by Elizabeth:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">3. Catherine WOORE, born at Harrington Park, Cowpastures, near Camden, 2 October 1842. See [D] below.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">4. Lilly Frances WOORE, born in London, 9 June 1846. See [E] below.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John may have been "married" thirdly, about 1847, probably in Guernsey, to Mary Ann, whose maiden surname, JAMES, was recorded on the burial record for their son Isaac - however, as his second wife Elizabeth did not die until 1863, and there does not appear to have been a divorce, John was probably not able to lawfully re-marry until then; Mary Ann was born in St Minver, Cornwall, about 1826 (as recorded in the 1891 Census - a Mary Ann JAMES was baptised at St Minver, 24 December 1826, daughter of Mary JAMES); she may have been the Mary JAMES, aged 15 (+), born England, who was at Amballes Road, St Peters Port, Guernsey, 1841 Census, Domestic Servant to William WHITE, aged 75, Commander, R.N., and Mary WHITE, aged 30+, both born England; Mary Ann was aged 24 in the 1851 Census for Guernsey, with her WOORE "husband," her step-son, and her two daughters and infant son; she was aged 34 in 1861, with John and their seven children; aged 44 in 1871, with John and their nine children; she left Guernsey in 1880, having been mentioned in an Auctioneer's Notice, June 1880, advertising <i>"... the sale by auction of several lots of Household Furniture and Farming Stock and Effects, the property of Mrs WOORE, removing from the Island"</i> [Star (Guernsey), 12 June]; she was at the Cottage, Haccombe with Combe, Devon, 1891 Census, aged 65, Widow, Living on own means, born St Minver, Cornwall, with son and two daughters; she was at Chelston Cottage, Torquay, Devon, 1901 Census, aged 75, Widow, Living on Own Means, born at Padstow, Devon, with four unmarried children, three visitors and two domestic servants; she was buried at Torquay Cemetery, 31 July 1909, aged 84 years, late of Chelston Cottage, Torquay.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John had further issue by Mary Ann JAMES:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">5. Ruth WOORE, born at Guernsey St Andrew, about 1847-48; aged 3 in 1851; aged 13 in 1861; aged 23 in 1871; possibly the Miss WOORE who arrived in Lyttleton, near Christchurch, in April 1875, on the ship 'Cicero,' from London 23 January, as a passenger in steerage [Lyttleton Times, 16 April]; she is said to have died at New Plymouth, New Zealand, 28 May 1879 [Registered 1879, #12], aged 31 years [Memorial 203668452, Findagrave.com].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">6. Arabella Georgina WOORE, born at Guernsey St Andrew, about 1849; as Arabella, aged 1, 1871; aged 11, 1861; as Arabella G., aged 21, 1871; aged 52, with her mother, 1901 Census; she was at Chelston Cottage, Torquay, 1911 Census, aged 61, with three siblings, two visitors and three domestic servants; she was buried at Torquay Cemetery, 28 May 1934, aged 84, late of Cheslton Cottage, Torquay.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">7 un-named son, aged 1 month, Captain's son, with his parents, 1851 Census.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">8. Arthur John WOORE, born Guernsey St Martin, about 1852; aged 8, Scholar, in 1861; as Arthur J., aged 18, Scholar, in 1871; aged 36, with his mother, 1891; possibly in New Zealand, August 1879; possibly buried at Birdlip, Gloucestershire, 17 June 1936, but at age 80, a bit young; as the <i>"... second son of the late Major WOORE, 10th Bengal Cavalry,"</i> he was married at St Peter's, Shaldon, Derbyshire, 25 August 1920, to Mary, <i>"... widow of H.E. CHAMBERLAINE, of Combe Dale, Chard"</i> [Derbyshire Advertiser and Journal, 10 September]; a Mary WOORE was buried at Birdlip, Gloucestershire, 14 April 1937, aged 68.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">9. Francis WOORE, born at Guernsey St Martin, about 1854 (from ages in Censuses), but recorded as born in Guernsey, 24 November 1856 [Elizabeth College Register, Page 290]; aged 7, Scholar, 1861 Census; aged 16, Scholar, 1871; he left Elizabeth College, 1873; L.R.C.P. and L.R.C.S., Edinburgh, 1882; Assistant Surgeon, R.N., 1882 [Elizabeth College Register]; promoted to Staff Surgeon, Royal Navy, 28 August 1894, after twelve year's full pay service [The Navy, 8 September]; ditto, December 1912; Staff Surgeon, Retired, December 1913, Sick Quarters, Torquay and Babbicombe [Navy List], residing at Chelston Cottage, Old Mill Road, Torquay (his late mother's residence); he was buried at Torquay Cemetery, 31 January 1930, aged 70, late of Chelston Cottage, Chelston, Torquay (aged 75 in Registration); Staff Surgeon, H.M.S. Canada, the <i>"... third son of Captain John WOORE, 10th Bengal Cavalry, and Mrs WOORE of Netherton, near Newton Abbot,"</i> when he was married, at St Andrew's parish church, Kingston, Jamaica, 30 October 1894, to Helen LONGSDON, <i>"... third daughter of the late Robert LONGSDON, of Church House, Bromley, Kent, and Mrs LONGSDON of Beaulieu, South Norwood Hill"</i> [Totnes Weekly Times, 1 December]; she was probably the Helen WOORE who died at Newton Abbot, Devon, March quarter, 1926, aged 58 [Volume 5b, Page 204]; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Lillian Frances Longsdon WOORE, born at Strathallan, Upper Norwood (? London), 8 May 1896, daughter of the <i>"... wife of Frank WOORE, Staff Surgeon, R.N."</i> [Home News for India, China and the Colonies, 15 May]; as Lilian F.L. WOORE, she may have been married at Newton Abbot, December quarter 1921, to Harold S. ADAMS [Volume 5b, Page 263], and as Lilian F. L. ADAMS, died there in December quarter 1941 [Volume 5b, Page 331].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">10. Augustus WOORE, born Guernsey St Martin, about 1856; aged 4, 1861; aged 14, Scholar, 1871; as Gus, aged 45, with his mother, 1901; aged 54, with his sister Arabella, 1911.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">11. Theodore WOORE, born at Guernsey St Martin, about 1858; aged 2 in 1861; as Theodore J., aged 12 in 1871.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">12. Isaac WOORE, born at Guernsey, August 1859; he died on 21 September 1859, aged 6 weeks [information from findagrave photo volunteer, Graeme of Guernsey, who was unable to locate any burial details for his father, John WOORE, in 1879].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">13. Mary Ann WOORE, born at Guernsey St Martin, 1861; aged 4 weeks in 1861 Census; aged 10, Scholar, 1871; Marion WOORE was buried at Torquay Cemetery, 25 September 1919, aged 58, late of Torquay Hospital.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">14. Leila Ada WOORE, born at Guernsey St Martin, about 1863; aged 7, 1871; she was buried at Torquay Cemetery, 19 December 1932, aged 69, late of Chelston Cottage, Torquay.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">15. Jemima WOORE, born at Guernsey St Martin, about 1866; aged 4, 1871; probably Edith Mina, aged 24, with her mother, 1891 Census; as Edith WOORE, born at Guernsey, about 1866, aged 34, with her mother, 1901 Census; Edith Mina WOORE died at Chelston Cottage, 15 August 1946, aged 79, and was buried at Torquay Cemetery.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">16. Emily Charlotte WOORE, born at Guernsey, about 1872; aged 18, with her mother, 1891; aged 28, with her mother, 1901 Census, aged 38, with her sister Arabella, 1911; her death was registered at Newton Abbot, Devon, March quarter 1947, aged 74 [Volume 7a, Page 751]; unmarried.</div><div style="text-align: left;">______________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b><i><span style="font-size: large;">JOHN CHADWICK WOORE.</span></i></b></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">[C] John Chadwick WOORE; he was baptised at Muttra, Chaplaincy of Agra (in the Archdeaconry and Diocese of Calcutta), 5 July 1835, son of John WOORE, Captain, 10th Bengal Cavalry, and Arabella Georgiana his wife; he was educated at Elizabeth College, Guernsey, leaving in 1846 [Elizabeth College Register, page 147]; he was at Moule de Bas, Rohais Street, Guernsey St Andrew, 1851 Census, aged 15, born E. Indies, with his father, step-mother and two young step-sisters and an infant step brother; he left Guernsey for Victoria, about 1852, where he went gold mining (until 1858), and farmed in the southern districts of N.S.W. until 1862 [Elizabeth College Register].</div><div style="text-align: left;">John was in New South Wales by July 1861; he sailed from Sydney, 4 July 1861, on the "Telegraph," Steamer, bound for Brisbane [Empire, 5 July]; he arrived back in Sydney, 22 September 1861, on the "Boomerang," Steamer, from Gladstone (16 Sep) and Rockhampton (18 Sep) [S.M.H., 23 September].</div><div style="text-align: left;">John joined the N.S.W. Public service in 1862 as assistants Commissioner for Crown Lands, Warrego District; he was promoted to Commissioner for Crown Lands, N.S.W., Albert Division, 1863 [Elizabeth College Register], having written <i>"... that I selected the site for the town (of Wilcannia) a year or less after I took charge of the district... as the Commissioner of Crown Lands in 1863. Before that I was... stationed at Fort Bourke, Sir Thomas MITCHELL's fortified camp on the Darling River"</i> [artresearch.com.au web-site - the Scheding Index of Australian Art and Artists, citing the Hordern House Catalog, July 2018, concerning his wife Helene SIMEON's Nineteenth Century Keepsake Album, Glenelg, S.A., 1865]; ditto, August 1867, for the Wilcannia District; Police Magistrate, Wilcannia, October 1869 [Sydney Mail, 16 October]; his wife was residing at "Sea View," Glenelg, March 1873, for the birth of a son [South Australian Advertiser, 11 March]; Police Magistrate, Queanbeyan, August 1887; City Coroner, Sydney, 31 January 1889, acting during the further absence on leave of Mr Henry SHEILL [S.M.H., 9 January]; he retired as Coroner, on a pension, 30 November 1903, having <i>"... nearly completed 42 years service as a public official"</i> [The Telegraph Brisbane), 30 November]; at 258 Walker Street, North St Leonards, N.S.W. Electoral Roll, 1913, Independent Means, with wife Helene and daughter Magdalena WOORE, both Domestic Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;">He died at residence, Tallandra, North Sydney, July 1915, and was buried at Gore Hill Cemetery, C.of E, Section X, Plot 50, aged 80; his parents were named in the Index to his Death Registration as John and Chabella G., inevitably in error for Arabella; by his will, he appointed his wife Helene and daughter Magdalena Kate WOORE as his executrices and trustees, and bequeathing lands in Wilcannia to his sons John Maurice Simeon and Norman Leycester Chadwick WOORE.</div><div style="text-align: left;">He was married at St Peter's church, Glenelg, near Adelaide, 26 October 1867, to his cousin, Helene SIMEON, eldest daughter of Charles SIMEON, Esq, of Glenelg, Adelaide, and grand-daughter of the late Rear-Admiral SIMEON [S.A. Register, 14 October]; she died at Crows Nest, 6 September 1923, aged 72, and was buried at Gore Hill Cemetery, C. of E., Section X, Plot 52; her parents were named as Charles and Magdalena E. [Index to Death Registration].</div><div style="text-align: left;">They had issue, including:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">1. Magdalene Kate WOORE, born at "Seaview Cottage," Glenelg, 7 July 1868 [S.A. Register, 9 July]; she was in attendance at her brother's wedding in Camden, 1909; she died at Rydalmere Mental Hospital, 9 October 1954, aged 86, and was buried with her mother.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">2. John Maurice Simeon WOORE, born at "Seaview," Glenelg, near Adelaide, 8 March 1873 [Empire (Sydney), 31 March]; he died in 1958; he was married firstly, at Christ Church, Claremont, W.A., 14 April 1903 #128, to Eleanor Mary HOLE, fourth daughter of the late Charles HOLE, Esq, Windsor, and Jane E. HOLE, Iona, Manly [S.M.H., 4 May]; she died at Kellandi, May Street, Northam, 6 October 1908 [Western Mail (Perth), 10 October]; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. a son, born at Northam, 23 February 1906 [Western Mail, 10 October].</div><div style="text-align: left;">John was married secondly, also at Claremont, 1911 #11, to Daisy E. CORDINGLY; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. a daughter, born at Northam, 24 September 1912 [West Australian, 28 September].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">3. Norman Leycester WOORE, born at Casino, Richmond River, N.S.W., 4 August 1882 [S.A. Register, 9 September]; Analytical Chemist, Port Kembla, 1913 Electoral Roll, N.S.W., with his wife Frances Harriette WOORE, Domestic Duties; he died in Adelaide, 7 August 1944; he was married at St John's church, Camden, 7 January 1909, to Frances Harriette GARRARD, second daughter of the late Charles Augustus GARRARD, Bank of N.S.W., Camden [S.M.H., 20 February; they were divorced in 1934; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Thomas Garrard WOORE, born at Mount Morgan, 25 November 1909; he died at Adelaide, 4 October 1969; he was married at Crafers, 18 December 1935, to Alison Mary PACKER.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. Richard Leycester WOORE, born at Mount Morgan, 22 January 1912; he died at Adelaide, 14 April 1978; he was married at Adelaide, 31 march 1934, to Geraldine Alice Aunger GILL</div><div style="text-align: left;">_____________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">[D] Catherine WOORE, born at Harrington Park, Cowpastures, near Camden, 2 October 1842, and baptised at St Peter's, Campbelltown, 23 October; she arrived back in Sydney, from England, July 1847, with her mother and younger sister Lilly; she died at North Waratah, 23 March 1899 [Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 25 March], and was buried at Sandgate Cemetery, Newcastle; she was married firstly, at St Anne's, Ryde, 6 April 1861, to Alexander Grant MACLEAN, <i>"... second son of Captain J.L. MACLEAN, late 43rd Regiment"</i> [Empire (Sydney), 11 April]; he was born at Urquhart, Inverness-shire, 29 May 1825, son of John Leyburn MACLEAN and Jane Eliza GRANT (the family arrived in N.S.W. in 1837); as Allister, he died at Mulgoa, 29 September 1862, aged 37 years, and was buried at St Thomas's churchyard, Mulgoa; they had issue an only child:</div><div> a. Amy MACLEAN, born at St Leonard, 23 March 1862; shed died at Cremorne, 1931; she was married in 1931, as his first wife, to Walter Edward ADAMS (who was married secondly, to my great-aunt, Ellen Corbett PIGOTT); they had issue, an only child:</div><div> i. Natalie Katherine ADAMS, possibly born in America, about 1886; she died in N.S.W., 1975 #30031; she was married at her mother's residence, The Gunyah, Milson Road, Cremorne, 5 June 1920, to Allen Richard Callaway HULL [S.M.H., 4 September].</div><div>Catherine was married secondly, in Sydney, 1 August 1870, to Jesse GREGSON; he was born in Kent, England, 4 August 1837, son of William GREGSON and Caroline Augusta HILDER; he emigrated to N.S.W. in 1856; he died at Katoomba, 3 August 1919, and was buried with his wife at Sandgate Cemetery; they had issue:</div><div> b. Helen GREGSON, born at Cassilis, 28 June 1871; of Cremorne, 1949; she died at Sandringham, Melbourne, 10 December 1949, and was buried with her parents at Sandgate Cemetery, Newcastle; evidently unmarried.</div><div> c. William Hilder GREGSON, born at Newcastle, 16 April 1879; 1st A.I.F.; killed in action, France, 14 November 1916, and buried at Calais; he was married at Mosman, February 1912, to Grace RANKEN; they had issue;</div><div> i. Catherine G. GREGSON, born at Chatswood, 19 June 1914.</div><div> d. Bessie GREGSON, probably born at Newcastle, 9 September 1879; she died at St Leonards, 1967; evidently unmarried.</div><div> e. Edward Jesse GREGSON, born at Newcastle, 26 April 1882 [Wiki-tree of Jay WICKHAM]; Lieutenant, 1st A.I.F.; of Mount Wilson, 1949; he died at Katoomba, 25 November 1955, and was buried at Mount Wilson Anglican cemetery [his memorial on Findagrave]; one of his executors was Helen Ingleby GREGSON, a likely relation; he was married at St John's, Woolwich, 11 December 1920, to Margaret JEFFERSON, only daughter of Charles W. JEFFERSON, of Schenectady, New York [S.M.H., 18 December]; they had issue:</div><div> i. Helen Ingleby GREGSON, born 6 June 1924; died 3 October 2012 [her memorial on Findagrave], and buried at Mount Wilson Anglican Cemetery; she was married to Mr WARLIKER.</div><div style="text-align: left;">______________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">[E] Lilly Frances WOORE, born in London, 9 June 1846, and baptised at Christ Church, St Marylebone, Westminster, 3 July; arrived in Sydney in July 1847, with her mother and older sister Catherine; she died at her residence, 'Northcote,' Sydney Road, Balgowlah, 28 November 1902, and was buried at Manly Cemetery [C.of E., Section B, Plot 630]; she was married in 1871 to Robert Grahame BREILLAT; he was born at Glebe, December 1841, son of Thomas Chaplin BREILLAT and Mary CREED, who arrived in N.S.W. from London in 1834; he died on 23 May 1930, and was buried in Murwillumbah Old Cemetery; they had issue:</div><div> a. Robert Chaplin BREILLAT, born at Enmore, 26 November 1870 #5163; he was living in Auckland in 1930.</div><div> b. Mabel L. BREILLAT, born at Newtown, 7 February 1872 #3641; she died at Hunters Hill, 1927 #9803; she was married at Manly, 20 September 1902, to Basil W. TURNER.</div><div> c. Arthur Cyril BREILLAT, born at Marrickville, 26 January 1876 #7818; he died on 5 March 1958, and was buried at Murwillumbah General Cemetery [Findagrave memorial, which records his birth on 26 February 1876]; he was married at Lismore, 1900, to Mary E. MACDONALD; she died on 14 March 1944, aged 78, and was buried at Murwillumbah General Cemetery.</div><div> d. Katie Eliza BREILLAT, born at Marrickville, 14 September 1877 #6355; she died at Murwillumbah, 1962 #26565; she was married at Leichhardt, 1902, to Christopher LEAN.</div><div> e. Leslie Woore BREILLAT, born at North Annandale, 20 July 1879; he died at Chatswood, 14 July 1954; he was married in Sydney, to Pauline Celeste HOLE; she died in Sydney, 26 April 1960, aged 80 years; they had issue a daughter and two sons.</div><div> f. Bessie Mary BREILLAT, born at Balmain, 24 September 1880 #4328; she died at North Annandale, 30 April 1881, aged 7 and a half months.</div><div> g. Wilfred G. BREILLAT, born at Glebe, 14 April 1884 #7258; he died at Woolwich, 30 April 1913 #5155.</div><div> h. Edgar Dowling BREILLAT, born at Glebe, 11 July 1888 #8216; he was married at Murwillumbah, 21 July 1915, to Jeannie (Tot) MACKENZIE; she died in Brisbane, 1978.<br /></div></div></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-35696035555847022952021-12-23T19:47:00.048-08:002022-07-30T21:26:26.610-07:00THE POEMS OF LAETUS<p><br /></p><p>Henry Robert PIGOTT (1899-1981) was a graduate of the Royal Military College of Australia, Duntroon (1920), acquired Bachelor degrees from Sydney University in Arts (1928) and Science (1932), and made a career as a School Master in the Independent system (The King's School, Parramatta, 1923-35 and 1953-70; and St Peter's College, Adelaide, 1936-47), with a short spell in between as Headmaster (Brisbane Grammar School, 1948-52).</p><p>He was my father.</p><p>He also wrote poetry.</p><p>During his first stint at T.K.S., he published a small number of them in the School Magazine (published three times a year, at the end of each term, in May, September and December), under the pseudonym of LAETUS.</p><p>I am unsure as to who LAETUS actually was - some stalwart creative figure in ancient Rome, I imagined.</p><div>Four possible candidates were mentioned by John LEMPRIÈRE (ca 1765-1824), M.A. Oxon, in his "Bibliotheca Classica" (or "Classical Dictionary"), Reading, 1788, as having lived during the days of the Roman Empire:</div><div><i>1. A friend of CICERO, resident at Naples. CICERO (106-43 B.C.) was banned from Rome in 58 B.C.</i></div><div><i>2. A Roman condemned to death by COMMODUS (161-192 A.D.), Roman Emperor (jointly with his father, Marcus Aurelius) from 176, and on his own right from 180 until his death. This led to LAETUS conspiring against him and raising PERTINAX (126-193 A.D.) to the throne for the first three months of 193 A.D. Probably Quintus Aemilius LAETUS (died 193), a Praetorian Prefect (191-193), having been appointed by COMMODUS .</i></div><div><i>3. A General under SEVERUS (145-211 A.D.), he was executed for his treachery to that Emperor, or, according to others, for being popular! SEVERUS reigned as a despotic Emperor from about 194 until his death. Perhaps Quintus Maecius LAETUS, another Praetorian Prefect (205-211).</i></div><div><i>4. A writer on Phoenecia, mentioned by CLEMENS of Alexandria (150-215 A.D.).</i></div><div>It appears to me that none of these obviously put their hands to be H.R.P.'s "hero" - but I may be wrong.</div><div><br /></div><div>I have also wondered whether he may have used the Latin name of Julius Pomponius LETO (1428-98), an Italian Humanist (by some accounts, not a good one), who was born in Salerno, studied in Rome under Lorenzo VALLA, whom he succeeded in 1457 as professor of eloquence at the Gymnasium Romanum, and shortly after founded the Academia Romanum, a semi-secret society devoted to archaeological and antiquarian interests and the celebration of ancient Roman rites - and who adopted Latin and Greek names, hence his variant LAETUS!</div><div>He fell foul of Papal authority in 1466, while on a visit to Venice, and spent a short time in prison on a charge, it is said, of sodomy.</div><div>Not, methinks, a man whom H.R.P. would have adopted as his poetic hero...?</div><p>H.R.P. did not publish the rest of his poetry, which he left after his death as a collection of manuscript works, some with a number of revisions, some very short, others longer, most on nature themes, some very few of his family, with one rather short one addressed to the five of his grand-children who were born before his death, which he had his daughter-in-law type up for him, had photo-copies made, but which were evidently not delivered to them.</p><div>I wonder whether I have any right to publish these, as he evidently chose not to do so himself.</div><div><br /></div><div>So, I will limit this post to those that he did publish, and see whether I might be persuaded to continue with the rest, if my six siblings agree.</div><div><br /></div><div>Chris PIGOTT.</div><div>cgpigott5@gmail.com</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div>Copyright © reserved to the legatees of the late Henry Robert PIGOTT (1899-1981).</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div>1. Written at his maternal grandmother's home in Rushcutter's Bay, 22 May 1926, after attending, with his sister Elsa (aged 19), a matinee performance by the acclaimed Russian Ballerina, Madame Anna PAVLOVA, of the Ballet "Snowflakes" (and several other works), at Her Majesty's Theatre, then in Pitt Street.</div><div>Published in the T.K.S. Magazine, September 1926:</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>PAVLOVA.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Think of cygnet's down</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Floating through light,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Moving with Venus' grace</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Through the clear night.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Dream of a fairy flower</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Blown by a breath,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Yielding a petal soft</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Rising from death.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>See now a falling flake</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of whitest snow,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Drifting and wondering </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Where it will go.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Gather and weave</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>These spirits of light</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Into exquisite beauty</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Soaring in flight.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>2. A form of the following manuscript in H.R.P.'s files was published in the T.K.S. Magazine, December 1926:</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Why should I seek to soar above the stars,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Or on some flashing meteor shoot through space</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>From shadow into light and thence in peace</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Float calmly on to everlastingness?</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Why should I want to wander to the moon</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And wonder at the soft attracting power</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>She holds for sunbeams searching from afar,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Transforming them to waves of white romance?</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And why upon an almost cloudless day,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Pray to a swiftly moving curlèd cloud,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To fold me in her fleeciness and fly</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Through azure sky beyond the universe,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To golden sanded shore where light was born</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To weave such beauty in her dear deep eyes</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>I need not. There was a reason once but now</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Eternity, or love, lies in the heart</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>I've seen it rest in sweet content. In those two hours</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Which mark the trysting place of night and day</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>I've seen the colours changing in the sky</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Through tender softness of a twilight eve</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Beyond the half-light to the cool calm night</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Where peace seems pouring in from the starlit [indec]</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And rest is rising from reflecting depths.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And all is one sweet singing dream of joy</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>I love my earth for all the flowers she bears</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Flowers beautiful of form and breathing forth</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>A fragrance gathered from the breath of God.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>I love her for the singing birds she feeds</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Her birds sing sweetly not for gain or fame</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>But from a joy of having heard in heaven</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The voice of all Love's tender loveliness.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>3. Published in the T.K.S. Magazine, May 1928:</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>THE SCHOOL.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Back to the willows in the later Spring,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To hear again those cicadas sing;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To watch the old world river drift away</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Beneath a School, stone clad in yellow-grey;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To work a little, and again to play</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>With fellows clear and clean as Summer's day;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To wander, hands thrust deep in red striped pants,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And swarm o'er Bill at break, like sugar ants;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To march in file and crunch with soldiers' feet</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The gravel paths through flower beds smelling sweet;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To enter then a chapel rich with song</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>That rings heart echoes down the ages long.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Back must we fly, as fledglings to my tree,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Back in spirit, dream, and memory;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Oft leaving her with heart of youth aflame</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>For deeds that tarnish not her lustrous name.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>4. Published in the Blayney press [source pending - not found on trove]:</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>MY YOUTH.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>(Anonymous Native.)</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Blayney, thou cradle of my youth,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>How often have I rocked in Thee,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To sleep made roseate with</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>My dreams at dawn.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>How often as a god I've waked,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And wandered through the briared lanes,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Hearing thy singing birds,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Breathing thine air.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Oh Time, </i><i>when thou hast turned thy course,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Bring me to Blayney in the Spring;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And let me draw again</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>One long deep breath.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>5. Dated winter 1928. </div><div>Published in the T.K.S. Magazine, December 1928:</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>WATTLE.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Oft have I watched the cold, grey drops</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of winter rain;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And heard them dripping branch from branch</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To frozen plain.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Darkly they pass through moaning pine</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of gloomy green;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Starkly they hang on leafless boughs</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of life unseen.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Then have I yearned for golden rain</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of Southern sun,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>That gilds the new-born buds with joy</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of Spring begun.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>6. Published in the T.K.S. Magazine, September 1928 - the school colours were sky blue and white:</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>LIGHT BLUE AND WHITE.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Noonday clouds of curling white</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Drifting through the deeps of light;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Billowed sails that racing make</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Airy foam and lacèd wake;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>White winged gulls that wheel and cry</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Mid the blue of sea and sky;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Rising at the dawn of time</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Blue and white were wed to rhyme</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>In a poem writ o'er space</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Blue for beauty, white for grace.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Now a wren with azure wings</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>From an arum cluster sings;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Carvèd stones of purest white</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Hold a garden's soft blue light,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Light of evening after rain</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>When all beauty breathes again.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>7. Published in the T.K.S. Magazine, September 1929, accompanied by Illustrations by "Robbo":</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>SPRAYING.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>1. EXTERNAL EVIDENCE.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Some archèd tongues are so tremendous that</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>They fill the mouth with latent orat'ry,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Guarding cavernous throated parasites</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>From purging sprays and modern alchemy.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>But joy of joys, there too are tiny tomgues,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Pursed like a rose-bud for the morning dew;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And down their gently curving channels flow</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Drops dealing death to Captain Scarlet's crew.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>2. INTERNAL EVIDENCE.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"Say Ah," they say. T'were better far to drown</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>In deeps made saline with an age of tears,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Than suffer this with epiglottis up,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The noisome show'ring of six squeezèd fears.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Better by far to drown and drown and drown,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Than to allow the nobly Roman nose</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To fill with evil oily merchandise,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And lose the beauty of its classic pose.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>8. Published in the T.K.S. Magazine, May 1933:</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>OLD BOY MEMORIES.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Among the ashes of my fading fire</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Life's thoughts are grey</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Until the breathing of a memory</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Upon its way</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Stirs static embers to the crimson glow</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of youth's own day.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>I feel the leathern magic in my hands</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Full time is nigh</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And light blue-jersied comrades run so true</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>That even I</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Grow wingèd feet and score I know not how</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The winning try.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>When summer clothèd cricket leads to where</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The river bends</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Around an oval fringed with dear green trees</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And dearer friends</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To me an old school spirit of the past</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>His genius lends.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Come moments fraught with stern limbed poise and power</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>From training done,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Strong moments when the power is unrestrained</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>By starter's gun</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To send one's heart a'racing to the roar</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"The School has won."</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Come tested moments when the mind is filled</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>With wanted lore</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Come thou to stay and weave within my heart</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>A cherished store</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of blue and white beauty and their followers</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>For ever more.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>9. Written in November 1935.</div><div>Published in the T.K.S. Magazine, December 1935:</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>JACARANDA.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Rising above the fronded grove:-</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Blending a luminous living mauve</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>With noon-day deeps of the bluest day,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Or among the gently clouded gray.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Bell-like the blossoms are that fall</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To the star-lit fairies' softest call - </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Fall to a cadence low and sweet,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The rhythm of dancers' tiny feet.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Oh, that the mystic veils would rise,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Or that the spirit fully wise</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Could see the Beauty within the sells</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And hear the music of the bells.</i></div><div>___________________________________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><i><span style="font-size: large;"><br /></span></i></div><div><i><span style="font-size: large;">THE OTHER WORKS OF HENRY ROBERT PIGOTT.</span></i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Not yet published.</div><div><br /></div><div>Numbers 1-5 remain unlocated.</div><div><br /></div><div>6.</div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>SERVICE</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Give me a small piece of blue sky,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The waving branch of a tree,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And a singing bird and I</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Shall dream of paradise.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>But give me the same piece of sky, </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The same whispering bough,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Two singing birds and a kindred soul,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And I shall dream, yes, and wake in paradise.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Eternity from the sky;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Music from the songs of birds;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And love from a kindred soul.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>But if you can't find me a kindred soul;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Give me the whole of mankind instead,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And an understanding heart,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And I shall gain heaven in my service.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>18. Published in the Blayney-West Macquarie Newspaper, of unknown date.</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>BLAYNEY'S HILLS.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Reflections of a "Come back."]</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Some mountains frown, and rugged lose</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Their height in Heaven's cloud.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Some scarred and worn by Nature's power</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Seem old and harsh and proud.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>But Blayney's hills are smiling oft,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And in round smoothness rest,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Containing Nature's other self,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The self of love more blest.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>With little mountains joining hands</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>These hills like angels rise,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>To guard our peace from worlds beneath</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And point us to the skies.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And when spring clothes their singing souls</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>With wondrous growth of green;</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Then surely there, no fairer place</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Since Paradise, was seen.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>By a native, who is happy to have come "Back to Blayney."</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>19. </div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>CONCERNING BLAYNEY'S UGLY MAN.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[With apologies to Rudyard KIPLING.]</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The peace of Blayney was disturbed</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>By wrangling mortal's fuss,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Each strove amain to be acclaimed</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The man most hideous.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And one was BROWN, another BLACK,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of many trades they were.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>A PORTER dark, an ancient CLARK,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>A COOK, a GARDINER.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The lords MACAULAY two were out</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>For PILE at any PRICE</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Nor HILL, nor BULLOCH's blinding charge,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Could stop them being crowned twice.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Not BEDDIE, BEMBRICK, CROFTS, nor CRANE,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Nor Highland DAKER's flail,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Nor KIERNAN could withstand the lash</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of Blayney's WINTER hail.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"O'NEILL to MOAD" said OLIVER,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"And ask him for more light,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"For PIGOTT's face and LUTON's pace,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"Lose virtue in the night."</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>But sad to say, young MATTHEWS made</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>His laughter rather free,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Till CHETTLE's ears roused CONROY's fears.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And GLASSON failed to see.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of others MALLON, O'MALLEY.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And PATRICK, ROWLANDS too,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>R. MARSHALL and CHENEY, alas,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Their handsomeness will rue.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And VIDLER, MARTIN, MOLONEY,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And COLBERT and QUIGLEY,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Are fairer far than those before,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And so defeat will see.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i> - ANON.</i></div><div><br /></div><div>See [A] below, for identification of some of the above Blayney surnames.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>32. Dated 30 July 1926.</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>ASPIRATION.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Oh I could dream away the long Spring day</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>In soaring to some shining mountain place</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Where I would hear in soft arboreal shade</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>the happy music of a moving stream.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Where lying in newborn peace upon a cloud</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Soft woven from the rolling mountain mists</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>My outward self would quite dissolve away</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And leave my heart alone in Beauty's home.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>With senses purified those songs I'd hear</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Which speed an angel to his task of love</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of nightless nightingale to pain unknown</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And lark whose unseen singing thrills the sky.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>A scent distilled from twilit garden bowers</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>With incense breathed from purity of soul</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Descending as the summer's blossoms showers</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Would fill me with a fragrant ecstasy.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>I should not gaze, for sights would follow thought</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>In one amazing glory of ascent</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Through universal sunrise to the source</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of clear unveilèd Beauty, God himself.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>I cannot muse away the short Spring day</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>While earth holds anything but purest joy</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>But from my flashing dreams I'll gather flowers</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>For service to the searching hearts of men.</i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>41. Undated.</div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>TO MOTHER.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Thrush coloured eyes of gray</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>That seem to say:</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"Dear children will you see</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>My love for thee?"</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Love-woven mother heart,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>A wingèd dart</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Leaves luminous the way</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Thy children stray.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Dark gypsy wisps of hair,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Waving in air</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Are fleeced with flakes of snow</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The wind years blow.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>In old Arcadian dale,</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The nightingale</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Would pause, then sing again</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Thy voice to strain.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Let not the memory</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Of melody</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Dim hair and holy eyes</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>With ageing sighs.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>But hold firm faith that we</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>By works will be</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>More worthy of thy sacrifice</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>And dear grey eyes.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">_____________________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">[A] SOME OF BLAYNEY'S MEN IDENTIFIED:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">BEDDIE, David S., Blacksmith/Engineer; of Adelaide Street, Blayney, Engineer, 1908 (with Elizabeth, Home Duties), 1928; signatory to the Rev James ADAM's Illustrated Address, 1908; married at Blayney, 1914, to Elsie M. DAVIDSON.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">BEMBRICK, Emil James, Blayney, Storekeeper, 1928, with Ethel Blanche, Home Duties</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">BLACK, James William, Adelaide Street, Blayney, Saddler, 1908, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;">BLACK, Thomas Alfred, Adelaide Street, Compositor, 1908, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;">BLACK, Joseph BLACK, Blayney, Packer, 1908.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">BROWN, Charles; signatory to the Rev James ADAM's Illustrated Address, 1908.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">BULLOCH, Edward (1880-1955); buried at Blayney Cemetery, with his wife Bertha Alice (LUCK); issue - Laurence C. (born 1905).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">CHENEY, George Alfred (1870-1950; buried in Blayney Cemetery, with his wife Jane Paynter (ROWE).</div><div style="text-align: left;">CHENEY, Thomas George (died 1966, aged 63), buried in Blayney Cemetery, husband of Florence and father of Henry, Noel, James and Colin.</div><div style="text-align: left;">CHENEY, Thomas Herbert (died 1955, aged 82), buried in Blayney Cemetery, and his wife Hannah (WALLACE).</div><div style="text-align: left;">CHENEY, Keith Albert (died 1973, aged 62), buried in Blayney Cemetery, with his wife Joan veronica may (STONESTREET).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">CLARK, William Senior; signatory to the Rev James ADAM's Illustrated Address, 1908, along with Rev Alexander CLARK, and Miss Mary CLARK.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">COLBERT, Daniel James, Adelaide Street, Blayney, Grocer, 1928, with Ethel Rebecca, Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">CONROY, Lionel B.H. (1880-1026), Physician, buried at Blayney Cemetery.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">COOK, John, of Brown's Creek, Labourer, 1908, 1928, with Amy, Home Duties, 1908; signatory to the Rev James ADAM's Illustrated Address, 1908, with Mrs COOK senior; married at Blayney, 1907, to Amy JUDD.</div><div style="text-align: left;">COOK, Samuel, signatory to the Rev James ADAM's Illustrated Address, 1908.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">CROFTS, Bernard (1860-1919); buried at Blayney, with his wife Ellen (1862-1946), and sons Arthur (see next) and Harrie (1890-1958).</div><div style="text-align: left;">CROFTS, Arthur (1884-1952), was married secondly, at Blayney, 1917, to Lila Belle CLEMENTS (died 1974, aged 83).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">DAKERS, Charles John, Osman Street, Blayney, Police Constable, 1928, with wife Florence Lily; served as police Constable in Blayney for 19 years; the Daker's Oval in Blayney was named in his honour; he died in Lithgow, April 1945. </div><div style="text-align: left;">DAKERS, Albert John, Blayney, Labourer, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;">DAKERS, William (1860-1934), Blayney, Retired Ganger, 1928; buried at Blayney, 1934, father of Charles, William and Albert.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">GARDINER, Julian (1866-1935), of King's Plains, Teacher, 1908, 1928; buried at Blayney with his wife Katherine Jane; issue - Dorothy C. (born 1897); Archibald K. (born 1900); Norman C. (born 1908).</div><div style="text-align: left;">GARDINER, Archibald Keith, of King's Plains, Orchardist, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;">GARDINER, Alice Aloise, King's Plains, Home Duties, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">GLASSON, Richard (1837-1895), and his wife Aphra Maria (LANGLEY); she was at Atholl, Blayney, Home Duties, 1908; she died 22 September 1925, aged 81.</div><div style="text-align: left;">GLASSON, James Russell (1845-1890); married to ...</div><div style="text-align: left;">GLASSON, John (died 6 March 1920, aged 72); signatory to the Rev James ADAM's Illustrated Address, 1908; married to Anne Margaret (died 13 April 1944, aged 79); they had issue - David Havelock GLASSON (k.i.a., Macedonia, 12 March 117, aged 29), John Cyprian (1886-1887), Dorothy Margaret (1892-93), and William Allen (1897-98).</div><div style="text-align: left;">GLASSON, J.F., signatory to the Rev James ADAM's Illustrated Address, 1908.</div><div style="text-align: left;">GLASSON, Richard Mervyn, of Blayney, Independent Means, 1908; Mr and Mrs R. GLASSON were signatories to the Rev James ADAM's Illustrated Address, 1908.</div><div style="text-align: left;">GLASSON, Claude Russell, Trevellyan, Blayney, Pastoralist, 1928, with Valerie Edith, Home duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">HILL, Archibald Ulster, Blayney, Agent, 1908, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">LUTON, William Wheeler, Blayney, Bank Manager, 1928, with Priscilla Judith, Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">MACAULAY, Alan Dudley, Lindon, Charles Street, Blayney, Storekeeper, 1928, with Vera Annie, Home duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;">MACAULAY, John Leslie Henderson, Charles street, Blayney, Storekeeper, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">MATTHEWS, James, Plum street, Blayney West, Agent, 1928, with Selina Ethel Jane, Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;">MATTHEWS, John, Gilchrist street, Blayney, Farmer, 1928, with Sarah, Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;">MATTHEWS, William Henry, Willow Vale, Blayney, Farmer, 1928, with Martha Elizabeth, Home Duties; also Henry, Farmer, and Elizabeth, ditto.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">MOAD, William M.; married at Blayney, 1895, to Elizabeth C. BRAILEY; issue born Orange - William O. (born 1898); Myrle (born 1910).</div><div style="text-align: left;">MOAD, Arthur, Blayney, Engineer, 1928, with Charlotte Jane, Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">MOLONEY, James, Blayney, Chemist, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">MARSHALL, Richard Robert, Butcher, 1928, with Hilda Mary, Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">MARTIN, Kingsley, Mount street, Blayney, Engine Driver, 1928; married at Blayney, 1911, to Violet May LUCK.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">O'MALLEY, Martin, Hill Street, Blayney, Labourer, 1928, with Annie, Home Duties; and John Junior, Labourer, ditto.</div><div style="text-align: left;">O'MALLEY, Phillip, Adelaide Street, Blayney, Labourer, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;">O'MALLEY, Annie, Mary Rose and Winnie, all of Blayney, Home Duties, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">OLIVER, Robert Milburn, Blayney, Farmer, 1908, and of Blayney, Grazier, 1928; married at Blayney, 1911, to Ruby Millicent SOUTHWELL; she was with him in 1928, Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">PATRICK, George Edward, Blayney, Butcher, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;">PATRICK, George Tabour, Blayney, Farmer, 1928, possibly with Ella Mary, Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;">PATRICK, Edward, Tuckwood Farm, Blayney, 128, with Esther and Edith Mary, both Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">PIGOTT, Henry Robert Maguire (1866-1949), Auctioneer and Land Agent; father of the poet Laetus.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">PILE, George, Adelaide Street, Solicitor, 1908, and of Hill Street, Solicitor, 1928; married at Blayney, 1896, to Elizabeth Margaret DEATH; issue - Victoria (born 1901), George A. (born 1902); Norah J. (born 1911).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">PRICE, (Wesley) Creel (1897-1994), assistant auctioneer to H.R.M. PIGOTT; of Osman Street, Auctioneer, 1928, with Eva, Home Duties; buried at Blayney, with his wife Eva Ellen (STONESTREET).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">QUIGLEY, Thomas, The Square, Blayney, Farmer, 1928, with Annie and Bernard; married firstly, Vina S.; issue - William P. (born 1910); he married secondly, at Blayney, 1909, to Sophia A. WATSON; issue - Alice T. (born 1913).</div><div style="text-align: left;">QUIGLEY, Edward, Osman street, Blayney, Farmer, 1928, with Mary and Annie, both Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;">QUIGLEY, John Michael, of Osmon street, Blayney, Vigneron, 1928.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ROWLANDS, Alfred James, The Pines, Neville, Farmer, 128, with Helen Ewing, Home Duties.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">WINTER, Albert; married at Blayney, 1919, to Marion E. BOYD.</div></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-123102809878969502021-05-24T20:06:00.158-07:002022-08-17T19:32:11.537-07:00Major Walter PIGOTT<div><br /></div><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>WALTER PIGOTT OF QUEEN'S COUNTY AND ANTIGUA</u>.</b></i></span><br /><br /><br /><b>Walter PIGOTT</b> was born at Dysart, Queen's County, Ireland, about October 1665, give or take a month or so.<div>He was, it appears, the third son of Thomas PIGOTT (about 1641 - late 1702) and his wife Elizabeth WELDON (they were married by License of the Diocese of Dublin dated 28 April 1663).</div><div>And he was a younger brother of Robert PIGOTT (about February 1664 - 1730) of Dysart; and of John PIGOTT (about December 1664 - 1710) of Antigua and Kilcromin.<div><br /></div><div>In November 1686, a Bill was brought before the Court of Chancery in Ireland by Francis MOORE, the Plaintiff [Court of Chancery, Dublin, Bill Books, 1627-1884, on Findmypast.co.uk]. </div><div>The Bill, prosecuted) by Jo: LOGAN and Rob: ROCHFORT, was entered on 8 November. The defendants were Mrs WELDON, Walter WELDON, <b>Walter PIGOTT</b>, and Adam LOFTUS. </div><div>The only Answer, by Celia WELDON, was dated 17 November 1686. Details of the case have not survived. </div><div>Francis MOORE was probably the Rector of Athy (born about 1664, son of Rev John MOORE, Archdeacon of Cloyne, and his wife Jane WELDON), who died in 1729, having married Catherine WELDON, who appears to have been a younger half-sister of his mother!</div><div>Celia was probably the wife of Walter WELDON (he married Celia LOFTUS on 2 May 1683), and she may perhaps have been the aforesaid Mrs WELDON.</div><div>If, as I suspect, any party to a legal action in their own right would be required to be of age (in other words, not a minor), then <b>Walter </b>ought to have been aged 21 or more, and therefore born in or before November 1665, just 2 years and 7 months after his parents were married - just possible, but a bit of a tall order for Elizabeth to have been delivered of three sons in that relatively short time! </div><div>And the obvious question arises - where are his two older brothers, Robert (the heir) and John, and his parents Thomas and Elizabeth, and what link, if any, did <b>Walter</b> have with the WELDON family that they didn't?</div><div><br /></div><div>This is the first mention of any Irish PIGOTT named Walter that I have yet found. I fully expect, therefore, that the name came directly from the WELDON side - his mother Elizabeth had a grandfather, a brother, an uncle, and a first cousin, all named Walter WELDON.<br /><div><br /></div><div>Like most of his older brothers,<b> Walter </b>served in the Army, from the time of the brief Jacobite supremacy, in 1689-90, and through into the War of the Spanish Succession.</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhGQ2OSuvmUfpmBsb2svygS8lBLw_kgAtUxfNFDd3SyH9f2LppW-XRWF5_tEYn6S4MP1p2-N1DvpKoAcbF-iABnrhIkWmSngMl5rzJSzGe4FerKDREPl-3yxo32UVaNwUfl6TbvsQlTD9kb/s439/DALTON2.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="439" data-original-width="375" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhGQ2OSuvmUfpmBsb2svygS8lBLw_kgAtUxfNFDd3SyH9f2LppW-XRWF5_tEYn6S4MP1p2-N1DvpKoAcbF-iABnrhIkWmSngMl5rzJSzGe4FerKDREPl-3yxo32UVaNwUfl6TbvsQlTD9kb/w546-h640/DALTON2.JPG" width="546" /></a></div><div><br /></div><div><div>According to Charles DALTON ["English Army Lists and Commission Registers, 1661 - 1714"], a Walter PIGOTT, who I am presuming likely to have been our Irish <b>Walter</b>, had served in William NORTHCOTT's Regiment of Foot (Captain, 16 February 1694), and later in Colonel George VILLIER's Regiment of Marines (Captain, 10 March 1702; Brevet-Major, 15 September 1706; Resigned his commission in the same Regiment of Marines, now Colonel Josiah CHURCHILL's, on 18 June 1708). </div><div>See details of DALTON's Regimental List in a separate section below.</div><div>However, it appears that another Walter PIGOTT, from Shropshire in England, may have, at some time, been serving as a Captain in the same Marine's Regiment. This would have caused some confusion and/or conflation - and to avoid further confusion, and distinguish between them, Irish <b>Walter</b> may have dropped the use of his given name, especially after he acquired the rank of Brevet Major. </div><div>See details of this English Walter further below.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>Walter</b> was named as the first of a number of joint Plaintiffs, of a Bill brought before the Court of the Exchequer in Dublin, 1 February 1708(-09), together with John PIGOTT, Alexander PIGOTT, Thomas PIGOTT, Robert PHILLIPS and his wife Ann PHILLIPS alias PIGOTT, and Samuel BOOKER and his wife Martha BOOKER alias PIGOTT; to which Bill the Defendants were Walter WELDON, and Adam KIDDER and his wife Celia KIDDER alias WELDON [Court of Chancery, Bill Books, on Findmypast]. Details of the case have likewise not survived. </div><div>It is inevitable that these were the surviving PIGOTT siblings, without their eldest brother (and heir to their late father) Robert, taking an action-at-law against several of their WELDON cousins. </div><div>BOOKER is a frequently used variant spelling for BOWKER.<br />
<br /><b>
Walter</b>, after his service in the said War of the Spanish Succession, appears to have gone to the West Indies; he was probably the Major PIGOTT who was appointed, in 1718, by Thomas OTTLEY, of St Kitts, to command a small group of armed men to protect his vessels against French pirates.</div><div>Curiously, there is no other mention of him actually living in Antigua in Vere Langford OLIVER's monumental account, "The History of the Island of Antigua," other than in the PIGOTT Family pedigree, and associated Irish documents, apart from this "engagement" in 1718.</div><div>
<br /><b>
Walter PIGOTT</b>, of the Queen's County, Gent, was witness to an Indenture of Lease, dated 11 November 1720 [Memorial 17360, Book 30, Page 221], by which his brother-in-law Lancelot SANDES of Kilcavan (the widower of <b>Walter</b>'s late sister Elizabeth PIGOTT) made a lease of 600 profitable acres in the Townlands of Ballymacrossan and Couldonagh, Barony of Phillipstown, King's County, to Walter BIRMINGHAM of Grange, County Kildare.<div><br /></div><div><b>Walter</b> was named in the will, dated 5 January 1728, of his eldest brother, Robert PIGOTT (about 1664 - 1730) of Dysart in the Queen's County, as follows:</div><div><i>"... To my nephews Pigott and Richard SANDES </i><em>£</em><i>300 in trust for my brother <b>Walter PIGOTT</b>."</i> [Vere Langford OLIVER, in his "History of the Island of Antigua," Volume 3, Page 25.]</div><div><div>It would appear that Robert may not have been fully aware of the circumstances of<b> Walter</b>'s where-abouts and/or his family. </div><div>And it is quite possible that his SANDES nephews may have alerted <b>Walter</b> to the fact that his brother had made his will, and of the bequest made to him in trust - in much the same way as their father had done, 26 years earlier, when Robert PIGOTT, then in London, had been advised that his father, Thomas PIGOTT (about 1641 - 1702), had begun to break-up the inheritance by installing his second son, John PIGOTT (about 1664 - 1710), then married with issue, including a son and heir, in the Dysart estate home of Kilcromin. </div><div>These later testamentary arrangements were confirmed in a Deed of Assignment, dated 30 September 1730 [Memorial 44375, Book 65, Page 63] - see below.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>Walter</b> was named in a number of entries in Registers of Tythe Sufferings of Members of the Society of Friends [Quaker Records, Ireland, Findmypast], for the parish of Dysart-enos, Queen's County.</div><div>The first was probably taken during the harvest of 1728, perhaps about the time of the Quarter Day (25 September) nearest to the autumn equinox (21 September):</div><div><i>"John RIDGWAY had taken from him for tithe... And by <b>Walter PIGOTT</b> and his assistance, Tithetaker under said Pigott SANDS - 25 car loads of hay and 2 ridges of potatoes, worth £3:10:0."</i></div><div>At this time, although his eldest brother Robert had sold Dysart, he had retained the right to keep dwelling there, and the right of receiving the tythes.</div><div>In the next entry, the new owner, Emanuel PIGOTT, Robert's second cousin, was recorded as the Improprietor:</div><div>
<i>1730: </i><em style="font-style: italic;">"John RIDGWAY had taken from him for tithe... by <strong>Walter PIGOTT</strong> and his assistants, Tithe-taker under said Emanuel PIGOTT - 30 carloads of bere, 3 carloads of wheat, 270 stooks of oats, 32 carloads of hay and 2 ridges of potatoes, worth £10:12:0. All worth £22:12:0."</em></div><div>It was not long before Emanuel had passed the baton over to the new tenants at Dysart, the BALDWINs:<br />
<div>
<em>1731: <em>"John RIDGWAY had taken from him for tithe..</em><em>.</em><em> by <strong>Walter PIGOTT</strong>, Tithetaker under said BALDWIN - 20 carloads of bere, 5 carloads of oats, 3 carloads of wheat and 28 carloads of hay, worth </em><em>£7:0:0. </em><em>All worth </em><em>£20:10:0."</em></em><br />
1732: <em>"John POWER had taken from him for tithe... by <strong>Walter PIGOTT</strong> and his assistance - 5 carloads of bere, worth 12:0..."</em><br />1733:<em> <em>"John RIDGWAY had taken from him for tithe...</em><em> by <strong>Walter PIGOTT</strong>, Tithetaker under said BALDWIN - 10 carloads of bere, 15 carloads of oats, 6 carloads of barley, 26 carloads of hay, and 2 ridges of potatoes, worth £11:10:0. All worth £22:10:0.</em></em><br />
<em>"John POORE had taken from him for tithe, by said <strong>Walter PIGOTT</strong> and FITCHPATRICK and assistance - 13 carloads of bere, 15 carloads of oats, 2 carloads of pease, 1 carload of barley, 2 carloads of hay and 4 ridges of potatoes. All worth </em><em>£</em><em>7:11:0." </em><br />
1734: <em>"John RIDGWAY had taken from him for tithe... by <strong>Walter PIGOTT</strong> and his assistance, Tithetaker under J. BALDWIN - 34 carloads of hay, 11 carloads of bere, 2 carloads of barley, and 2 ridges of potatoes, worth </em><em>£</em><em>6:11:0...</em><br />
<em>"John POORE had taken from him for tithe... by ye aforedsaid <strong>Walter PIGOTT</strong> and his assistance, Tithetaker under J. BALDWIN - 3 carloads of hay, 10 carloads of oats, 2 carloads of pease, and 5 ridges of potatoes, worth £2:13:0. All worth </em><em>£</em><em>7:15:0."</em><br />1735:<em style="font-style: italic;"> <em>"John RIDGWAY had taken from him for tithe... </em><em>by <strong>Walter PIGOTT</strong> and his assistants, Tithetaker under said BALDWIN - 25 carloads of hay, 17 carloads of bere, 7 carloads of wheat, 22 carloads of Oats, 8 carloads of pease, and 2 and a half ridges of potatoes, worth </em><em>£10:17:0. </em><em>All worth </em><em>£21:8:0."</em></em></div>
<br /><b>Walter</b> was named in the above-mentioned Deed of Assignment, dated 30 September 1730 [Memorial 44375, Book 65, Page 63], executed by Pigott and Richard SANDES (as Trustees), <b>Walter</b> and Thomas <b>PIGOTT</b> (as Parties) and Richard WARBURTON of Garryhinch (connected with an earlier set of deeds); and reciting those earlier Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 17 and 18 May 1725 [Memorial 28893, Book 46, Page 352], concerning the sale of Dysart, with other lands, in the Queen's County, by Robert PIGOTT of Dysart, to his cousin Emanuel PIGOTT of Chetwynd, County Cork.</div><div>And further therein reciting that Robert PIGOTT of Dysart, by his last will and testament, dated 5 January 1728, did:</div><div><i>"... charge and encumber the said Lands of Dysart, and the said other lands, with the sum of </i><em>£</em><i>900 sterling, and did, inter alia, leave and bequeath unto his brother <b>Walter PIGOTT </b>the sum of </i><em>£</em><i>300 sterling, part of the </i><em>£</em><i>900, charged on the said lands of Dysart and said other lands, and by a will remaining as of record in His Majesty's Prerogative Court of this Kingdom may more at large appear, a Probate of which will, administration cum testamento annexo, was by the said Court granted and committed unto Thomas PIGOTT, nephew of the said Testator and of <b>Walter PIGOTT</b> the Devisee."</i></div><div>And by the said (30 September 1730) Deed of Assignment:</div><div><i>"They the said Pigott and Richard SANDES, Esq's, Trustees, and <b>Walter PIGOTT</b>, Devised, and Thomas PIGOTT, Administrator, did, for and in consideration of the said sum of </i><em>£</em><i>300 sterling, to them some or one of them paid or secured to be paid, Assign, Transfer and Make Over unto the said Richard WARBURTON, his Heirs Executors Administrators and Assigns..."</i></div><div>This Deed was witnessed by John BOWKER, of Coolchrie, and Matthew CASSAN, of Maryborough, both in the Queens County.</div><div><br /><b>Walter</b> was probably identified as <em>"... old Major PIGOTT"</em> of Antigua, July 1732 - see (*) below. However, this date corresponds with a period when <b>Walter</b> appears to have been back in Ireland. Although these may not necessarily have been mutually exclusive conditions.</div><div><br /></div><div>In 1744, <b>Walter PIGOTT</b> was Plaintiff in a Bill brought before the Court of the Exchequer in Ireland [Court of Exchequer, Bill Books, Findmypast]. The Defendents were listed as Pigott SANDYS (sic), Thomas PIGOTT, and John BOWKER. The Bill was undated, but SANDES' answer, per Mr DEMPSEY, was dated 20 April 1744; a reply by Mr CASSAN Attorney, was dated 30 November; a further rejoinder by DEMPSEY for SANDES was dated 26 February 1744(-45); and <b>PIGOTT</b>'s answer, by Mr GREEN, was dated 21 May 1746. The details of the case have not survived, but the story of it is probably illustrated by the deeds already mentioned.<br /><br /><b>Walter</b> was of Stradbally, Gent, when he made Articles of Agreement, dated 16 June 1751 [Memorial 132594, Volume 201, Page 233], which were the Settlements for the marriage of his youngest daughter Margaret PIGOTT (as the joint first party), to William GRAY of Maryborough, Gent (the second party), and for which the witnesses were Francis COSBY of Stradbally, Gent, and his servant Joseph HILL, with <b>Walter</b>'s signing and sealing being witnessed by the said Joseph HILL and Richard GRAY of Stradbally, shoemaker. This deed was not registered until 21 June 1759, and that belated registration may have been associated with, and perhaps brought on by, <b>Walter</b>'s death.</div><div>The description of her as the <i>"youngest daughter"</i> might reasonably be construed to indicate that she had at least two older sisters.</div><div>
<br /><b>
Walter PIGOTT</b>, of Ballymadock, Queen's County, died in or shortly before 1759; he was so named as deceased in a List preceeding the one detailed in a <i>"Handlist of the Voters for (the Borough of) Maryborough, 1761,"</i> which was published in 1954 by F.H. KEARNEY in "Irish Historical Studies" [Volume IX, Number 33, March 1954, at pages 53-83], the joint journal of the Irish Historical Society and the Ulster Society for Irish Historical Studies.</div><div>There were apparently three consecutive lists, recorded in a manuscript note-book, now in the National Library (in Kildare Street, Dublin), among the Earl of Drogheda Papers [Ms 1726]. KEARNEY only published the final list, which was an up-grade inevitably used by political agents for the 1761 General Election. The list mentioning <b>Walter PIGOTT</b> was the preceding list, undated but probably made about 1758-59, or perhaps earlier. I have not yet seen the unpublished lists, and was advised of <b>Walter</b>'s entry by library staff about 18 months ago - their advice was that the published list was actually dated 1760, and that the preceding list was dated 1759.</div><div>The Earl of Drogheda probably came into possession of the note-book after he was appointed as Governor of Maryborough in the 1770s. </div><div>It's authorship remains, as yet, unknown - but it would not surprise me if it turned out that one or other or all of the then Burgomasters were involved.</div><div>
<br /><b>
Walter</b> was evidently married (details unknown), with issue, probably including:</div><div><br />
<span>1. <span style="color: #009900;">John PIGOTT</span>, probably born about 1712, give or take a year or two; a Mariner; in 1732 he delivered, by his own hand, a written introduction from John GUNTHORPE in Antigua, to Abraham REDWOOD Junior (1710-1788), a Merchant in Newport, Rhode Island (his father, Abraham REDWOOD Senior, had been a plantation proprietor in Antigua from 1687 until 1712, by virtue of his marriage to a daughter of Jonas LANGFORD, whence he removed to Salem, Massachusetts, and thence to Newport in 1729, shortly before his death).</span><br />
<span>GUNTHORPE's letter, dated at</span><span style="font-family: "times new roman" , "new york" , "times" , serif;"> Antigua on 24 July 1732 [published in a paper entitled "Commerce of Rhode Island, 1726-1800," Volume 1, 1726-1774, Page 28, Collection of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, 1914], included the following paragraph:<br /><i>"Deare Abraham...</i></span><i><br /><span style="font-family: "times new roman" , "new york" , "times" , serif;"><span>"I beg leave to recommend the Bearer, Mr John PIGOTT, Son to old Major (*) PIGOTT of our Island, to </span></span></i><i><span style="font-family: "times new roman" , "new york" , "times" , serif;"><span>your </span></span><span style="font-family: "times new roman" , "new york" , "times" , serif;"><span>Friendship and favour, and if you can be any way servisable to him by assisting him to get an Employment in the C</span></span><span style="font-family: "times new roman" , "new york" , "times" , serif;"><span>ommand of some goode Vessel; I shall take it as a very greate favour, for He is truely a young Gentleman of Meritt, being, very modest, sober, industrious, a brisk Sayler, and goode Artist, which I aver to be the Character given to me of him by two Captains of Men of War, he had the honour to serve under as Midship Man for four years last past. Capt. MALBONE I am in hopes will provide for him, and use your interest with him to that end."</span></span></i></div><div>
<span>The writer was inevitably Colonel John GUNTHORPE (about 1683-1740), the son of Major John GUNTHORPE and his wife Feelove COOKE, and so a first half-cousin of Captain John PIGOTT (about 1704-1763), who was likely to have been this Midshipman PIGOTT's first cousin german.</span><br /><span>And very likely to have been the second Captain John PIGOTT, who is mentioned by Robert PIGOTT in his 1808 Petition, as having returned to Ireland about 1760 <i>"... after many years service abroad."</i></span></div><div><br />
<span>2. Eldest daughter (implied by the wording of the marriage settlements of their "youngest" sister in 1751).</span></div><div><br />
<span>3. Middle daughter (or perhaps daughters?).</span></div><div><br />
<span>4. <span style="color: #009900;">Margaret PIGOTT</span>; as the "youngest" daughter, she was married at Stradbally, by settlements dated June 1751, to William GRAY of Maryborough (with issue), and to which deed her father was a party (see above). They had issue, including:</span></div><div><span> a. Letitia GRAY; she was married at Stradbally, by License of the Diocese of Ossary, 1 September 1768, to James BARRINGTON, of Stradbally, Coachmaker [the laoishouses.wordpress.com web-site]; they had issue, mentioned in a family tree on ancestry, as:</span></div><div><span> i. Henry BARRINGTON.</span></div><div> ii. John BARRINGTON.</div><div> iii. Richard BARRINGTON.</div><div> iv. Letitia BARRINGTON, born about 1782; she was married, by an Indented Deed of Settlement, dated 17 May 1817 [Memorial 489237, Book 715,Page 302], made between James GREENHAM of Cork Street, Dublin, Merchant (the groom), of the first part, James BARRINGTON of Stradbally, Merchant, and his daughter Letitia, Spinster, of the second part, to which Ann GRAY and Elizabeth GRAY of Stradablly, Spinsters, and maternal aunts of Letitia, were the Trustees, and in which several of the properties involved were leaseholds of Richard GRAY.</div><div> v. Thomas BARRINGTON.</div><div> vi. Robert BARRINGTON.</div><div> vii. William BARRINGTON.</div><div><br /></div><div>See below, at the end of this article, for the descent from Margaret PIGOTT and William GRAY.</div><div>_____________________________________________</div><div>
<br />
<u><br /></u>
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>WALTER PIGOTT, MAJOR IN VILLIER'S REGIMENT</u>.</b></i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><br /></i></span>
<br />
English Army Lists and Commission Registers, 1661-1714, by Charles DALTON [Volume V, 1702-1707, at page 144]:<br />
Colonel George VILLIER's Regiment of Marines.<br />
All Commissions dated 10 March 1702...<br />
Captains 1st Lieutenants 2nd Lieutenants<br />
George VILLIERS (Colonel) Thjo. HORNER (Capt-Lieut) Hy RAINSFORD<br />
Alex. LUTTERELL (Lt-Col) Walter ELLIOTT Jno. BECKWITH<br />
Tho. CAREW (Major) Jno. SALTER Jno. THURSTON<br />
Robt HEDGES James CLARKE Cutts HASSAN<br />
George BLAKENEY Robt FLOWER Jno. ANDERSON<br />
Ben BULLER Mark HILDESLEY Jas DESBORDES<br />
Philip DOCTON Jno. TAYLOR Ric. DOYLE<br />
Fras BLINMAN Sol BALMIER Wm BISSET<br />
Edward TYNTE Jno. CAWARDIN Tho. NORTHCOTE<br />
Tho. ADAMS Robert STAWELL Danl WINTER<br /><b>Walter PIGOTT</b> (fn 11) Fleetwood WATKINS Saml BELL<br />
Wm COURTNEY (Grenadiers) David EVANS Tho. SUTTON<br />
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Chaplain, Tho. ROSE. </div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
Adjutant, Abr. COAKLEY. </div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
Quarter Master, Jno. ANDREWS. </div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
Chirurgeon, James CHURCH.</div>
Footnote 11 [Page 146]:<br /><b>Walter PIGOTT</b> - Appointed Captain in Col Wm NORTHCOTE's Regiment of Foot, 16 February 1694; Bt Major 15 Sep 1706; resigned his Commission in Jos CHURCHILL's Regiment of Marines, 18 June 1708.<br />
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<div><br /></div><div>Colonel George VILLIERS drowned off the Spanish coast in December 1703, and was succeeded as Colonel of the Regiment by Alexander LUTTERELL, commissioned on 6 December; he died in early 1706, and was succeeded by Josiah CHURCHILL on 1 February; he was, in turn, succeeded by Sir Harry GORING on 1 March 1711. </div><br />
Muster Roll, 31st (Huntingdonshire) Regiment of Foot (also known as the 2nd Regiment of Marines), taken at the Siege of Alicant, Spain, in March 1707, for the 61 days from 5 April 1707 to 4 June 1707 (both dates included):<br />
Joshua CHURCHILL, Colonel; and as Captain of his own Company, comprising one 2nd Lieutenant, one Captain, one surgeon, one sergeant and 23 privates.<br />
Captain ADAM's Company, with one 1st Lieutenant (Cutts HASSAN) and one private.<br />
Major <b>PIGOTT</b>'s Company, with one 1st Lieutenant (Fleetwood WATKIN), one Corporal (Nicholas STURCH), and five privates (John CAMPDEN, John DRAB, Ferdinand ROBERTS, William STOCK and James EDMONDSON).<br />
Captain MARSHALL's Company, with one 1st Lieutenant (John BECKWITH), two sergeants and 18 privates.<br />
Captain TAYLOR's Company, with one corporal and 11 privates.<br />
John PHILIPS, Chaplain.<br />
Alexander WILSON, Surgeon.</div><div>
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em>_________________________________________________________</em></span><br /><span style="font-size: x-small;"><em><br /></em><div style="font-size: medium;"><br /></div><div style="font-size: medium;"><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>AN ARMSTRONG MARRIAGE?</u></b></i></span></div><div style="font-size: medium;"><br /></div><div style="font-size: medium;"><br /></div><div style="font-size: medium;">Frances GRAY; in 1761, a Spinster, she was named as the niece of John PIGOTT of Prospect, Queen's County, Esq, in the Articles of Agreement, dated 15 January 1761 [Memorial 222628, Book 328, Page 545], which were the Marriage Settlements for her and Warneford ARMSTRONG, of Ballycumber, King's County, Esq; the trustees were Thomas ARMSTRONG of Morook (?) and Andrew ARMSTRONG of Gallen, both of King's County, Esq'rs; and the witnesses were Thomas PIGOTT of Prospect, Esq, and William LONG, servant to Mr George ARMSTRONG.</div><div style="font-size: medium;"><br /></div><div style="font-size: medium;">This was Warneford ARMSTRONG's third marriage; he was born at Ballycumber in 1699, a son of Andrew ARMSTRONG and Lucy CHARNOCK; his first wife was Elizabeth BAGGOTT (married in 1719); and his second was Jane JONES (married in 1742).</div><div style="font-size: medium;"><br /></div><div style="font-size: medium;">The second trustee, Andrew ARMSTRONG, was married to Constantia Maria PIGOTT, the younger daughter of John PIGOTT (he was living at Prospect about this time).</div><div style="font-size: medium;"><br /></div><div style="font-size: medium;">The first witness, Thomas PIGOTT, was either a first cousin of John PIGOTT, or instead his brother.</div><div style="font-size: medium;"><br /></div><div style="font-size: medium;">Warneford died in 1767; there appears to have been no issue of this, his third marriage.</div><div style="font-size: medium;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><em>_________________________________________________________</em></span><br /></div></span>
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em><div><span style="font-size: x-small;"><em><br /></em></span></div><br /></em></span>
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i style="font-size: x-large;"><b><u>WALTER PIGOTT OF SALOP AND DORSET</u>.</b></i></span><br /><span style="font-size: x-small;"><em><br /><br /></em></span>
There was another Walter PIGOTT, born about 1670 (from the age he recorded on the Allegations of his third marriage in 1706), a son of Thomas PIGOTT of Chetwynd, County Salop, by his first wife Elizabeth LOET.<br />
He was therefore distantly related - as about 7th or 8th cousin - to our <b>Walter PIGOTT</b> of the Queen's County.</div><div>
It does appear that he may have been a candidate for the Captain in William NORTHCOTT's Regiment of Foot, 1694; Captain, George VILLIERS' Regiment of Marines, 1702; and served in the War of the Spanish Succession.</div><div>However, he advertised rewards for information on deserters from his company, 1702, then residing at Wimborne Minster, Dorset.</div><div>But, as we see below, English Walter was not a Major (that appears much more likely to have been the Irish <b>Walter</b>, who survived until the late 1750s - see above). </div><div>Perhaps Irish <b>Walter</b> was just visiting his very distant relation, English Walter?</div><div><br />
In Hilary Term, 1711, Walter PIGOTT, Esquire, executed his complaint in the High Court of Chancery, probably in London, against Joshua CHURCHILL and Edward CASTLE, claiming money due to him, his servants, and his company, for services as Captain of a Regiment of Marines commanded by Joshua CHURCHILL; the original document containing this information is indexed under date of 9 November 1719, which is after English Walter's will was proved - so perhaps that document was a final answer delivered by the Court after his death?</div><div>Was this instead our Irish <b>Walter</b>? I think not, as by this time, Irish <b>Walter</b> had been promoted to Brevet Major in 1706, and had resigned his commission in the Regiment in 1708.</div><div><br />English Walter's will, dated 1716, was proved P.C.C., January 1719, late of North Bowood Farm, Netherbury, Dorset.</div><div><br />
Walter was married firstly, at Winterborn Zelstone, Dorset, 12 February 1697-98, to Amy COMPTON, widow of Joseph HUSEY of Stourpaine and Wimborne (his Administration dated 24 July 1695). A further probate grant was made for her first husband Joseph HUSSEY on 15 February 1703, naming Thomas HOBY as the principal creditor, Amy PIGOTT alias HUSSEY, the relict, deceased, and her brother Robert HUSSEY and sister Mary FRAMPTON, Widow, the original 1695 grant being renounced. Yet another grant was made on 14 November 1708, when Walter PIGOTT was named as principal creditor of goods not administered by Thomas HOBBY, now dead, and Mary FRAMPTON the sister (of Joseph HUSSEY), the 1703 grant being renounced.</div><div><br />
Walter was a Widower, of the parish of Hampton, County Middlesex, when he was married secondly, by License for the Royal Chapel, Hampton Court, 16 September 1703, to Rebecca ENGLISH, Spinster, of the same parish:</div><div><br /></div><div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjFSakD2XokYFYPm20EwHX9kiv5wjeFYBM3fljI_o97oTAeuTd6CPIZ-Lsi_FpVnNk-ff3BDuw_wqpIdSeCgTqKlsiYgAZStXoiik1l0amiNhnKysUFmgdiM8lCEpTU5_J55FgOIHOLkzHD/" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="" data-original-height="583" data-original-width="590" height="395" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjFSakD2XokYFYPm20EwHX9kiv5wjeFYBM3fljI_o97oTAeuTd6CPIZ-Lsi_FpVnNk-ff3BDuw_wqpIdSeCgTqKlsiYgAZStXoiik1l0amiNhnKysUFmgdiM8lCEpTU5_J55FgOIHOLkzHD/w400-h395/image.png" width="400" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Image courtesy of Ancestry.com - London and Surrey Marriage Bonds and Allegations, 1597-1921.]</i></div></div><div><br />
Walter was again a Widower, aged 35 years, of the parish of St Clement Danes, Middlesex, when he was married thirdly, by License dated 26 April 1706 for Trinity Chapel, parish of St Martin-in-the-Fields, London, on 27 April 1706, to his cousin Mary STEVENS, Spinster:</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgfStuJmjpVYJiGC2bVVAadOxi_6sO5HhgVgukvHSbKdGp3x5ZCI9LiUkC91KjRdZ5AyzdiWBqQR0t0hQSOtJFeGum7p6Ejej_nRoNATKge_hOtW7Q8wAd5Q-rPdg2uA8NR05ZSP88Lhf-k/s659/WALTER+PIGOTT.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="659" data-original-width="592" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgfStuJmjpVYJiGC2bVVAadOxi_6sO5HhgVgukvHSbKdGp3x5ZCI9LiUkC91KjRdZ5AyzdiWBqQR0t0hQSOtJFeGum7p6Ejej_nRoNATKge_hOtW7Q8wAd5Q-rPdg2uA8NR05ZSP88Lhf-k/w359-h400/WALTER+PIGOTT.JPG" width="359" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Image courtesy of Ancestry.com</i><span style="text-align: left;"><i> </i></span><span style="text-align: left;"><i>- London and Surrey Marriage Bonds and Allegations, 1597-1921.]</i></span></div><div><br /></div><div>The Marriage Settlements recorded Walter at Wimborne Minster, Dorset - and she was daughter of Maximilian STEPHENS by Mary PIGOTT of Chetwynd, Salop.</div><div>
Walter's signatures on both of the allegations for the above licenses were identical, and one of them mentioned his "Militare" status.</div><div><br />
Mary died on 10 September 1737, aged 48 years, was buried in Totteridge Parish Churchyard (Totteridge is bounded by the Parishes of Hendon and Finchley), as the <em>"...relict of Captain PIGOTT"</em> [Country Journal or Craftsman (London), Saturday 17 September 1737], and the tabular stone on her grave records her as the <em>"...widdow of Captain PIGOTT, and daughter of Maxemilian STEVENS, Esq</em>" [History of Hertfordshire, by Edward CUSSANS, 1972, Volume 2, page 302].<br />
These two mentions of his rank as Captain does tend to confirm that the Brevet Major was another Walter.<br />
<br />
Walter and Mary had issue:<br />
1.<span style="font-size: 13.6px;"> <span style="color: #009900;">Ann PIGOTT</span> (baptised at St Martins-in-the-Fields, London, 6 July 1708).</span><br />
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However, the footnote in DALTON's Commissions Register records that Walter PIGOTT, of VILLIER's Marines, received a brevet promotion to the rank of Major in September 1706; and that he resigned from Josiah CHURCHILL's Regt (formerly VILLIERS'), with the rank of Major, in 1708.<br />
If the rank of Mary's late husband was correctly recorded as Captain, then it would appear to confirm that there were two Walter PIGOTTs, who both had Army connections, and perhaps with the same regiment.<br />
There is therefore a possibility that some of this Army career recorded above may have been about our <span style="color: red;">Walter</span> of Dysart.</div><div style="text-align: center;">___________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>RELATED DOCUMENTS, THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES, KEW.</b></i></span></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>C 10/357/29</div><div>COMPTON v. PIGOTT.</div><div>Plaintiff - Henry COMPTON.</div><div>Defendants - Walter PIGOTT and Amy PIGOTT his wife, Robert HUSSEY and Mary FRAMPTON.</div><div>Subject - Marriage contract, Hampshire.</div><div>Document type - two bills and answer.</div><div>Date 1699.</div><div>[Kew].</div><div><br /></div><div>C 10/414/6</div><div>COMPTON v. PIGOTT</div><div>Plaintiff - Hoby COMPTON.</div><div>Defendants - Walter PIGOTT, William HIGHMORE, Clerk, Edward YARD, Amy COMPTON, Widow, Robert HUSSEY and others.</div><div>Subject - Marriage contract, Hampshire.</div><div>Document type - bill and answer.</div><div>Date - 1701</div><div>[Kew].</div><div><br /></div><div>C 6/397/7</div><div>COMPTON v. COMPTON</div><div>Plaintiffs - Elizabeth COMPTON, of Hampshire, next friend, Elizabeth COMPTON infant, Henry COMPTON infant, Katherine COMPTON infant, and Anne COMPTON the younger infant.</div><div>Defendants - Hoby COMPTON, infant, Thomas HOBEY, Esq, guardian, Sir Dewey BULKELEY, Kt, Maurice BUCKLAND, Esq, Henry HOOKE, Esq, and John WILLIS, Gent.</div><div>Subject - The Plaintiff Elizabeth's claim against the executors and trustees of the will of Henry COMPTON, Esq, of Bisterne, Hampshire, her late husband. She wanted to be re-imbursed for the maintenance of her eldest son and was concerned that her younger children's portions would be compromised if the trustees paid an annuity to her brother-in-law: mentions Richard COMPTON, Esq, of Bisterne, Hampshire, Amy PIGOTT (alias Amy HUSSEY alias Amy COMPTON) his wife: property in Crow, Hampshire; Exbury Farm, Exbury, Hampshire; Leape, Hampshire; Totton, Hampshire; Berkeley Minstead, Minstead, Hampshire; and Brook, Hampshire.</div><div>Document type - Bill, four answers, two schedules.</div><div>Date Range - 1705-1706.</div><div>[Kew].</div><div><br /></div><div>C 8/625/91</div><div>PIGOTT v. COMPTON</div><div>Plaintiff - Walter PIGOTT.</div><div>Defendants - Hoby COMPTON, Thomas COMPTON, William HIGHMORE, Mary FRAMPTON, Hubert HUSSEY, John SLORSCH and others.</div><div>Subject - personal estate of Richard COMPTON, Bisterne, Hampshire.</div><div>Document type - two bills and three answers.</div><div>Date - 1706.</div><div>[Kew].</div><div><br /></div><div>C 6/362/53</div><div>PIGOTT v. HIGHMORE.</div><div>Plaintiff - Walter PIGOTT, Esq.</div><div>Defendants - Anne HIGHMORE, widow, Mary FRAMPTON (alias Mary HUSSEY), widow, and George FILLISTER, gent.</div><div>Subject - Response to an earlier judgement relating to a marriage agreement and the inheritance of lands and effects in Dorset and Hampshire.</div><div>Document type - Answer only.</div><div>Date - 1706.</div><div>[Kew].</div><div><br /></div><div>C 11/741/37</div><div>PIGOTT v. EALES</div><div>Document type - Bill and answer.</div><div>Plaintiffs - Walter PIGOTT, Esq, of North Bowood, Dorset.</div><div>Plaintiff - Mary EALES.</div><div>Dateof Bill (or first document) - 1715.</div><div><br /></div><div>PROB 18/35/79</div><div>Probate law suit, THORNHILL v. PIGOTT, concerning the deceased Walter PIGOTT of Bowood, Netherbury, Dorset, but [who died ?] in the precincts of Bridewell, London. Allegation.</div><div>Date - 1719.</div><div>[Kew].</div><div><br /></div><div>D/PIT/T417</div><div>North Bowood Farm; ground on the south side of Witch Street, St Mary le Strand, Middlesex, in deed of 1720; marriage settlement of Walter PIGOTT of Wimbourne Minster and Mary STEPHENS of Middlesex, 26 April 1706; copy will of Thomas HAWES, Esq, of St Margaret's, Westminster (21 May 1743). (WECKETT, THORNHILL, PIGOTT, STEPHENS, SNAPE, TONGE, GALLOP, WALLER, POLE, MUNDAY, POLLARD).</div><div>Date range - 1706 - 1743</div><div>[Dorset History Centre].</div><div><br /></div><div>C 11/1990/37</div><div>PIGOTT v. PIGOTT</div><div>Bill and two answers.</div><div>Plaintiffs - Ann PIGOTT of St Paul, Covent Garden, Middlesex (only daughter of Walter PIGOTT, Esq, deceased, late of North Bowood, Dorset, and Mary PIGOTT his wife), infant (by said Mary PIGOTT, her mother).</div><div>Defendants - Robert PIGOTT, Esq, Andrew SNAPE, D.D., Maximillian STEPHENS, Esq, Jeremiah THORNHILL and Mary THORNHILL.</div><div>Date of Bill (or fist document) - 1720 JFP</div><div>[Kew].</div><div><br /></div><div>C 11/1435/18</div><div>PIGOTT v. WECKETT.</div><div>Bill, Answer and Plea.</div><div>Plaintiffs - Mary PIGOTT (widow of Walter PIGOTT, Esq, deceased, late of North Bowood, Dorset), Ann PIGOTT, aged 14 (sole daughter and heir of the said Walter PIGOTT and Mary PIGOTT his said wife), infant (by her said mother) and Maximillian STEPHENS, Esq, of Surton, Surrey.</div><div>Defendants - William WECKETT, gent, and Mary WECKETT his wife, Jeremiah THORNHILL and Elizabeth THORNHILL his wife.</div><div>Date of Bill (or first document) - 1723.</div><div>[Kew].</div><div><br /></div><div>C 11/1329/75</div><div>WEKETT v. THORNHILL</div><div>Document type - Bill only.</div><div>Plaintiffs - William WEKETT, Clerk, of Brancepeth, Durham, and Mary WEKETT his wife (executrix and residuary legatee of Walter PIGOTT, Esq, deceased, of North Bowood, Dorset).</div><div>Defendants - Jeremiah THORNHILL, Mary RAYNOR and (unknown) RAYNOR.</div><div>Date of Bill (or first document) - 1728.</div><div>[Kew].</div><div>__________________________________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><b><i><span style="color: red; font-size: medium;">* * * THIS PART IS A WORK IN PROGRESS * * *</span></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><b><i><u><span style="font-size: large;">THE GRAY FAMILY OF DESCENDANTS</span></u><span style="font-size: medium;">.</span></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div>
<b>Walter PIGOTT</b>'s daughter Margaret married into the GRAY family of Maryborough, Queen's County.</div><div><br /></div><div>BETHAM's Abstracts record that a William GRAY, of Cudicha (?), in the Queen's County, made his will (or it was proved P.C.I.) on 8 April 1723, naming his sons William, George and Jonathan, and daughters Jane, Rebecca and Margaret GRAY.</div><div>This son William may have been the next?</div><div><br /></div><div>William GRAY may have been a widower when he and Margaret PIGOTT were married in June 1751.</div><div>Several on-line family trees suggest that he had issue born earlier, or that there may have been more than one William GRAY of Maryborough?</div><div> </div><div>These were:</div><div><br /></div><div>1. Frances GRAY, said to have been born in 1742, and to have died in 1807; she was married, by Settlements dated 15 January 1761, to Warneford ARMSTRONG, of Ballycumber, in the King's County, Esq - she was here recorded as the niece of John PIGOTT of Prospect, in the Queen's County, Esq, and one of the witnesses was Thomas PIGOTT, also of Prospect.</div><div><br /></div><div>2. Humphrey GRAY, said to have been born in 1744; he was married to Sarah FRENCH; with issue.</div><div><br /></div><div>William's marriage to Margaret PIGOTT appears to have produced at least another three daughters, as follows:</div><div><br /></div><div>3. Letitia GRAY, probably born about 1751 or 1752; she is said to have died in 1810; if she was Margaret's daughter, she would have been aged about 16 or 17 when she was married at Stradbally, by License of the Diocese of Ossory, 1 September 1768, to James BARRINGTON, a Coachmaker; he is said to have been born in Rahinelusk, County Wexford, about 1743, and to have died in 1817.</div><div>They had issue, and from the information in the on-line family trees, after a gap of almost 10 years (or there were older children who did not survive?):</div><div> a. Henry BARRINGTON; said to have been born in 1778.</div><div> b. John BARRINGTON, ditto 1779.</div><div> c. Richard BARRINGTON, ditto 1780; said to have died in 1837.</div><div> d. Letitia BARRINGTON. See [Z] below.</div><div> e. Thomas BARRINGTON, ditto 1784.</div><div> f. Robert BARRINGTON, ditto 1791.</div><div> g. William BARRINGTON.</div><div><br /></div><div>4. Anne GRAY; a spinster when she was named in her niece Letitia's Marriage Settlements, 1817.</div><div><br /></div><div>5. Elizabeth GRAY; ditto 1817.</div><div><br /></div><div>[Z] Letitia BARRINGTON, said to have been born in 1782; she died in Dublin, 18 April 1853, <i>"... in her 72nd year... relict of James Dyas GREENHAM, of Cork Street, and Greenville, in the County Dublin, Esq"</i> [Saunders Newsletter, 22 April]; she was married, by Settlements dated 17 May 1817, as his second wife, to James GREENHAM, of Cork Street, County Dublin, Merchant; he died in Dublin, September 1826 [mjpa Lynch Family Tree on Ancestry.com]; by his first wife, Jane E. HORNIDGE, he had issue:</div><div> a. James Hornidge GREENHAM, born 1799; died in 1816.</div><div> b. Leonard GREENHAM, born 1799; died in 1862.</div><div> c. John Robinson GREENHAM, born 1801.</div><div> d. Edward Joshua GREENHAM, born and died in 1802.</div><div> e. Robert GREENHAM, born in 1803; died in Australia in 1869.</div><div> f. Greage GREENHAM, born in 1805.</div><div> g. Margaret Jane GREENHAM, born 1808; she died in 1873; was was married at St Catherine's parish church, Dublin, 15 August 1830, to Richard STARR, of St Mary's parish; as Jane E. STAR, she witnessed her half-sister Letitia's marriage in 1851.</div><div> h. Francis GREENHAM, born 1817; died in 1879.</div><div>By Letitia BARRINGTON, he had further issue:</div><div> j. Lavinia GREENHAM, born 1854; died in 1928; she was married at Naas, County Kildare, 15 July 1875, to William Nassau CUTLER.</div><div> k. Jemima Letitia GREENHAM, born and died in 1821.</div><div> l. Letitia Elizabeth Barrington GREENHAM, born at Ballintore, County Kildare, in 1822; she died at Harrington Street, Dublin, 18 November 1890; she was married at Baltinglass parish church, Parish of Timolin, County Kildare, 30 August 1851, to Ebenezer MOLLOY, aged 27, Bachelor, son of Robert MOLLOY, of Nass, Merchant.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Edward GRAY, of Maryborough, Queen's County, Gent, was grantee of a Lease, dated 16 February 1737 [Memorial 62917, Book 89, Page 218], by which Sir John Denny VESEY, of Abbey Leix, Queen's County, Baronet, demised and let unto the said Edward GRAY <i>"... all that part of the Lands of Knocknagowre lately held by John BENN, and now in the actual possession of the said Edward GRAY...</i>"</div><div>Edward GRAY, of Maryborough, Esq, was Grantor in Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 25 and 26 November 1751 [Memorial 101119, Book 147, Page 496], by which he demised unto Mary TODD, of the City of Dublin, Widow, for ₤500 sterling, <i>"... all that great store house or tenement formerly in the occupation of Joseph PARTRIDGE, Gent, and afterwards in the occupation of Edward DODSWORTH, Esq, deceased, and Judith his widow, and then in the possession of the said Edward GRAY, together with the tenements thereto adjoining... all situate... in the Town of Maryborough, and the Brew House, stable, yards... as then held by the said Edward GRAY..."</i>, and witnessed by Edward STIRLING and Samuel HEATLEY, both of Dublin. </div><div>Edward was named as Grantee in a Deed Poll dated 10 September 1753 [Memorial 109728, Book 161, Page 515], whereby William WALL, also of Maryborough, Esq (one of the M.P.s for the Borough of Maryborough) demised and set unto him <i>"... all that shop, the malt house, store house and kiln house, now in the possession of the said Edward GRAY, situate in the west end of the Town of Maryborough..."</i>, which deed was witnessed by Bartholomew William GILBERT of Killminchy, Esq, Richard SWORDS, Gent, and Jacob KNOWLES, Cordwainer, both of Maryborough, all in the Queen's County.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Richard GRAY, of Stradbally, Queen's County, Cordwainer, was the Grantor in Articles of Agreement, dated 14 September 1734 [Memorial 56768, Book 80, Page 521], by which he demised a vacant block of ground, between his dwelling house and the gable end of the new dwelling house of Elizabeth ROBERTS, in the Town of Stradbally, to the said Elizabeth ROBERTS, of Stradbally, Widow.</div><div>In June 1751, Richard GRAY of Stradbally, Shoemaker, was witness to <b>Walter PIGOTT</b> (also of Stradbally, Gent) signing and sealing the Marriage Settlements, dated 16 June 1751 [Memorial 132594, Book 201, Page 233], for his youngest daughter Margaret, a Spinster, and William GRAY, of Maryborough, Gent.</div><div>I speculate that this Richard and William GRAY were probably related, perhaps as brothers? However, he was not mentioned in the 1723 Will/Probate of William GRAY (see above).</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><span style="font-size: large;"><b>A BARRINGTON FAMILY IN STRADBALLY.</b></span></i></div><div><br /></div><div>William BARRINGTON is said to have been born in Stradbally, about 1772 ["Wendy" Family Tree on Ancestry.com]; and to have died in Dublin on 26 November 1852, having married Catherine PURCELL, with issue including:</div><div> a. Richard Wellington BARRINGTON (1814-1891); probably the Solicitor who married Kate BARRINGTON (see below), and perhaps his cousin.</div><div><br /></div><div>In July 1795, Mr William BARRINGTON, of Stradbally, Queen's County, was married to Miss PURCELL, of College Green [Saunders News Letter (Dublin), Wednesday 29 July].</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard BARRINGTON is said to have been born at Stradbally about 1780; he died at Rathkeale Lodge, Queen's County, 5 September 1837; he is said to have been married firstly, in India, to a "creole of Mauritius," by whom he had issue:</div><div> a. Kate BARRINGTON, born in Bombay, 20 March 1816; she is said to have died at Malden, Massachusetts, on 4 August 1890; she was married on <i>"... 2 June 1840, at St Anne's parish church, to Richard BARRINGTON, of Lower Ormond Quay, Solicitor"</i> [Dublin Evening Mail, 18 June].</div><div>He was married secondly, by M.L.B. dated 1827, to Elizabeth ROBERTS (1784-1847), the widow of Godfrey WILLS (1768-1825).</div><div><br /></div><div>In December 1801, Thomas BARRINGTON, of Stradbally, was married to Miss CAHILL, daughter of John CAHILL, of the said place, Merchant [Saunders News Letter (Dublin), Friday 1 January 1802].</div><div><br /></div><div>James BARRINGTON, born about 1804, perhaps at Stradbally; of Stradbally, Queen's County, when he died at New York, 14 December 1858, aged 54 years [Waterford Mail, Saturday 22 January 1859].</div><div>___________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div>Chris PIGOTT,</div><div>Potts Point, N.S.W.</div><div>cgpigott5@gmail.com</div><div><br /></div>
</div></div></div></div></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-43800277553778949162021-04-05T22:08:00.155-07:002022-07-26T14:47:06.213-07:00Edmund KING, a PIGOTT Spouse; Transported Convict; Shepherd<div style="text-align: left;"> </div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i><span style="font-size: large;"><b>EDMUND KING, A PIGOTT SPOUSE.</b></span></i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Edmund KING</b>, born about 1795 (from age at marriage); he was of Swathling, North Stoneham, Hampshire, Bachelor, Yeoman, aged 24, when he made allegations of his intention to marry Constantia Maria PIGOTT, by means of a Sarum Marriage License Bond dated 30 June 1819 [transcript of Archdeaconry of Sarum Marriage License Bonds, Findmypast].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgw3hagmxZx99PJ6EahErEUwVh8T-U2ak0vDw3ybnjDsntxG6Rr13uO8hOs1BtQFfRXaOAbQiJXM4jBSzv10r8_VGRThe7lnklTAyuO4vcIkCehIpz8nEwCJi1A-_N547b2E9mIEzpDKHe/s1024/CC+CHURCH.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="768" data-original-width="1024" height="300" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgw3hagmxZx99PJ6EahErEUwVh8T-U2ak0vDw3ybnjDsntxG6Rr13uO8hOs1BtQFfRXaOAbQiJXM4jBSzv10r8_VGRThe7lnklTAyuO4vcIkCehIpz8nEwCJi1A-_N547b2E9mIEzpDKHe/w400-h300/CC+CHURCH.jpeg" width="400" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>St Michael's, Compton Chamberlayne.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image courtesy of the escapetobritain.com web-site.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">He was married in the parish church of St Michael, Compton Chamberlaine, Wiltshire, by the Rev T.H. SOUTH, A.M., on 1 (some newspapers) or 2 (other newspapers, and church records) July 1819, to <b>Constantia Maria PIGOTT</b>, Spinster, aged 34, of Compton Chamberlaine, third daughter of the late Captain John PIGOTT, and niece of the late Baron POWER of Ireland [Gentlemen's Magazine, Volume 89, Part 2, July-December 1819, page 87; Hampshire Telegraph, 5 July (on Thursday 1st); Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 5 July (on Friday 2nd); British Press, 5 July (1st); Public Ledger and Daily Advertiser, 6 July (1st); Oxford University and City Herald, 10 July; Hampshire Chronicle, 12 July (2nd)], and aged 34, Spinster, Bondsman FIGES, Hatton, Linendraper, of Romsey, Hants [Sarum Marriage License Bond]:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEge3zqbAGGNyzu5mGDOo7bSHCD721K9GxAV36Ct2zlfX8oKfD-icHqgiueuvakgaH9srTGCSi5I_KKMADZsJmxrYf6DtNxoddWQZXLDWfqfN1SkNv7zMzZySSvRn9QJoX2irG1OZHvz9Szh/s1252/KING-PIGOTT.MARRIAGE.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="645" data-original-width="1252" height="330" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEge3zqbAGGNyzu5mGDOo7bSHCD721K9GxAV36Ct2zlfX8oKfD-icHqgiueuvakgaH9srTGCSi5I_KKMADZsJmxrYf6DtNxoddWQZXLDWfqfN1SkNv7zMzZySSvRn9QJoX2irG1OZHvz9Szh/w640-h330/KING-PIGOTT.MARRIAGE.JPG" width="640" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image courtesy of Ancestry.com.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Wiltshire, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1754-1916, Compton Chamberlayne.</i></div><blockquote><div style="text-align: left;"><i><b><span style="color: red; font-family: georgia;">I find no further reference to this Edmund KING in English records. It is possible that this Edmund KING was the next, but the age difference, if all has been stated and recorded correctly, suggests otherwise</span></b></i>.</div></blockquote><div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i><span style="font-size: large;"><b>EDMUND KING, TRANSPORTED CONVICT # 36/2589.</b></span></i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Edmund KING</b>; indications, from the following convict records, are that he was born about 1801, at Porchester, Hampshire.</div><div style="text-align: left;">This was 7 or 8 years later than the date indicated for the Edmund KING who was married to Constantia Maria PIGOTT, in Wiltshire, in 1819. Some doubt remains as to whether these were the same Edmund KING.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">On 2 July 1835, at the Police Court, Queen's Square, Westminster [Morning Advertiser (London), Friday 3 July 1835]: </div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"A respectable looking man, <b>Edmund KING</b>, who said he was a farmer, in Hampshire, was... brought before Mr GREGORIE (*) upon an alleged charge of forgery. </i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Mr GILPIN, the land-lord of the Mitre and Dove, King Street, Westminster, stated that he knew the prisoner by his using his house when he came to town for some years past. On Saturday fortnight, he came and asked witness if he could accommodate him with a bed. He lived at the house until Saturday last, when he left, having previously borrowed £5 on a promissory note of £10, payable on demand, and drawn upon Messrs MASTERMAN and Coy, the bankers, by one Thomas SMITH, whom the prisoner stated to have been his Solicitor, residing at No 14 Lincoln's Inn-fields. Upon the bill being presented it was dishonoured, no such person as the drawer being known there; and inquiries having been made in Lincoln's Inns-fields, the pretended Mr SMITH was not to be found. Complainant then applied to an officer of this establishment, and the prisoner was apprehended. </i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"DAWKINS, the officer, said that from some documents found upon the prisoner, he had every reason to believe that he was a man of property.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"The prisoner, in reply to the charge, said that in consequence of his father's death he had lately become entitled to considerable property, a portion of which consisted of a farm in Hampshire; he had come to town to sell out some of the stock, and had employed a person of the name of SMITH, who had been introduced to him as a solicitor, to settle his father's affairs. He was short of cash, and applied to this person, who drew the bill upon Messrs MASTERMAN, who he stated were his bankers. He had given this man a power of attorney to sell out the stock, upon which security he had received the promissory note.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Mr GREGORIE - Do you know where to find this attorney?</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Prisoner - No; he gave me his address in Lincoln's Inns-fields; but he was introduced to me in a casual manner.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"He was ordered to be remanded till Saturday, in order that one of Messrs MASTERMAN's clerks should be in attendance; and also that a person might attend who could identify the prisoner's handwriting."</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><blockquote>(*) David William GREGORIE, Esq, A Magistrate of the Police Court at Queen Square, Westminster, who died on 16 October 1842, aged 52, and was buried in Westminster Abbey.</blockquote></div><div style="text-align: left;">On 9 July 1835, <b>Edmund</b>, as <i>"... a middle aged man who stated himself to be possessed of considerable property, a part of which was an estate in Hampshire,"</i> he was further examined by a Mr GREGORIE, <i>"... on a charge of forgery, preferred against him by John GILPIN, the landlord of the Mitre and Dove, King Street, Westminster,"</i> stating, in his defence (inter alia) <i>"... that he had come to town to settle the affairs of his father, who was lately dead</i>" [Evening Mail, Friday 20 July].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">On 18 July 1835, <b>Edmund KING</b>, a Farmer, was <i>"... committed by D.W. GREGORIE, Esq,... (for) Feloniously uttering a forged order for £10, well knowing the same to be forged, with intent to defraud John GILPIN...</i>" [London, England, Newgate Calendar of Prisoners, 1785-1853, Ancestry.com]. </div><div style="text-align: left;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Edmond KING</b>, aged 33, was formally tried by judge and jury at the Central Criminal Court (the Old Bailey), 17 August 1835, on the same charge, of uttering a forged order for £10, stating in his defence that he had gone to see Mr HILL, at the Inner Temple, and there met a person named SMITH, who told him HILL was no longer there, but as he was an Attorney, offered to assist -<i> "I told him I was entitled to some money in the funds belonging to my sister and me, and wished his advice as to selling the Stock out,"</i> adding that when SMITH returned with a power of attorney, he signed it,<i> "... gave it to him to take to Mr BROOKES, a Stock Broker, who had done business for my family for many years, with instructions to sell the stock out,"</i> and that <i>"... after going to the Zoological Gardens, I went to Knightsbridge Barracks - I was formerly in a regiment - I stopped there all night..."</i> [Old Bailey trial reports, on-line]<i>.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Edmond</b> was found guilty, and sentenced to Transportation for Life. </div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Under Prisoners on Orders, Middlesex, for prisoners Under sentence of Transportation for Life, he was recorded as:</div><div><i>"<b>Edmund KING</b>, 33, August 1835, Hulks" </i>[London, England, Newgate Calendar of Prisoners, 1785-1853, Ancestry.com]. </div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">He was transferred from Newgate Prison, 14 September 1835, to the prison hulk 'Leviathan,' moored at Portsmouth [U.K. Prison Hulks Registers].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">The National Archives, at Kew, lists the following record (not yet sighted);</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>HO 17/100/125.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Prisoner name - <b>Edmund KING</b>.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Prisoner age - 33.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Prisoner occupation - Farmer and sheep and cattle dealer.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Court and date of trial - Old Bailey Sessions, August 1835.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Crime - Forgery, Uttering a false cheque for £10.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Initial sentence - Transportation for Life.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Gaoler's report - 'Character not known; Connections Respectable.'</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Annotated (Outcome) - Nil.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Petitioner(s) - The Prisoner.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Grounds for Clemency (petition details) - Prisoner is young and from a respectable family with Naval connections; prisoner is innocent but did not have counsel nor all of the witnesses he expected to attend; prisoner was duped into committing the crime.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Other papers - Letter from Viscount Palmerston to Hon H. Manners SUTTON.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Letter from [Robert KILLOCK], Leviathan Hulk Ship, to John Henry CAPPER.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Additional information - Prisoner was ordered to Leviathan hulk ship. Prisoner was formerly in the Royal Regiment of Horse Guards.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>Date Range - 1835-1843.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;">A letter from PALMERSTON to <b>KING</b>, dated 1843, appears in full further below.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Edmund</b> sailed for Van Diemen's Land on the convict transport barque 'Henry Porcher,' 485 tons, HART (Master), from Portsmouth, 1 August 1836, as one of 258 male prisoners, and arriving in Hobart, 15 November 1836, being recorded as a Widower, with one child, a brother of <i>"... Captain George KING, now Port Officer in Van Diemen's Land,"</i> and claiming to be worth between £8,000 and £9,000 [Convict Arrival Indent, www.stors.tas.gov.au web-site].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgE9zCXDOXlW2LfwEYXDu9QCEt3UdVzeTQeWBRJt4yC65LCmvFPuH-28YPk8qUuE8fhLUa400ZYEwwnnm50-xJNdGfj58ObgHzJQp45T6S7orE5n7sb7lhJVfQPg2i1qEZGlZcsrUiKrP7B/s669/E.KING.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="361" data-original-width="669" height="346" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgE9zCXDOXlW2LfwEYXDu9QCEt3UdVzeTQeWBRJt4yC65LCmvFPuH-28YPk8qUuE8fhLUa400ZYEwwnnm50-xJNdGfj58ObgHzJQp45T6S7orE5n7sb7lhJVfQPg2i1qEZGlZcsrUiKrP7B/w640-h346/E.KING.JPG" width="640" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image courtesy of the Libraries Tasmania On-line Collection. </i><i>CON 31-1-26, Image 149.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"Principal Superintendent of Convicts; </i><i>Alphabetical Record Book of </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Convicts arriving in Van Diemen's Land: </i><i>'J' 1834-1835, 'K' 1830-1836."</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Transferred from the Sheriff's Office, Hobart, 6 December 1951, to </i><i>the </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Tasmanian State Archives:</i><i> Accession Number 2/156, File 2(b).</i></div></div><div><div style="text-align: left;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Edmund</b>'s arrival in Van Diemen's Land appears to have sent officials there into a bit of a flurry of organisational activity.</div><div style="text-align: left;">On 21 November 1836, the Colonial Secretary, Van Diemen's Land, wrote to his counterpart in Sydney:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Sir,</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"(re) Edmund KING, Life.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"I have the honor to acquaint you, for the information of His Excellency Sir Richard BOURKE, that the convict whose description is herewith enclosed, and who recently arrived here by the 'Henry Porcher,' has been placed on board the Barque 'Lady Nugent' with a view of his serving the term of his Transportation at New South Wales.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"The individual in question being the brother of Captain KING, R.N., Port Officer at Hobart Town.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"His Excellency Colonel SNODGRASS has no doubt that the notions which induce the adoption of this course will be obvious to His Excellency Sr Richard BOURKE.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"I have the honor to be, Sir, Your most obedient Servant, - (indecipherable signature)."</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">The convict transport barque, 'Lady Nugent,' FAWCETT (Master), 535 tons, had arrived three days earlier, from Sheerness, with 306 male prisoners.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">One of the attachments to the above letter, was a report, of same date, written by the Muster Master in Hobart, J.G. EMMETT:</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhOGo00BAs-4dIeObC_64xSTSRZJDSPmybWYSUhDo_wtur622_8kZj7bc3oBVeGhxYhyfTjp-cGnvOpu_Ikg_BvHNoNTeimGC2C5LO3uqJW1K_xjj-TsBIi72ndjkButqM0KZKWaCTyytJf/s758/thumbnail.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="758" data-original-width="612" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhOGo00BAs-4dIeObC_64xSTSRZJDSPmybWYSUhDo_wtur622_8kZj7bc3oBVeGhxYhyfTjp-cGnvOpu_Ikg_BvHNoNTeimGC2C5LO3uqJW1K_xjj-TsBIi72ndjkButqM0KZKWaCTyytJf/w516-h640/thumbnail.jpg" width="516" /></a></div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Image of Muster Master ELLIOTT of Hobart's letter. </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>State Archives of N.S.W., Kingswood; AO Reel 2423, Colonial Secretary, Musters and other papers relating to Convict Ships, 1817-1840; 'Lady Nugent,' 1836, Ref 2/8264-66, from page 25.]</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div>One significant item in this report was the identification of his siblings, as follows:</div><div><i>"... one Brother is Captain George KING now Port Officer V.D. Land, William, Frederick, Augustus, Charles, 1 at Chesterfield, a Tanner, 1 at America, 1 on Sea Coast Station, 1 sister at Cape Town, 1 sister died at V.D. Land was married to Mr HAMMOND..."</i></div><div>And another, on a separate page, was his very detailed physical description, inevitably made by the Muster Master as <b>Edmund</b> stood, unshod, before him:</div><div><i>"Personal description of <b>Edmond KING</b>.</i></div><div><i>"Trade - Ploughman and Farm Servant.</i></div><div><i>"Height (without shoes) - Five feet eleven inches & three quarters.</i></div><div><i>"Age - Thirty Five.</i></div><div><i>"Complexion - Dark.</i></div><div><i>"Head - Oval.</i></div><div><i>"Hair - Black to Grey.</i></div><div><i>"Whiskers - Black.</i></div><div><i>"Visage - Long.</i></div><div><i>"Forehead - High.</i></div><div><i>"Eyebrows - Brown.</i></div><div><i>"Eyes - Dark Hazel.</i></div><div><i>"Nose - Long.</i></div><div><i>"Mouth - Wide.</i></div><div><i>"Chin - Large.</i></div><div><i>"Native Place - Porchester.</i></div><div><i>"Remarks - Bald top of forehead."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>The 'Lady Nugent' sailed for Sydney, 24 November 1836, with "passengers," and 21 male prisoners.</div><div>On his arrival in Sydney, 2 December 1836, another convict indent recorded the following details:</div><div><i>"List of Male Convicts by the ship 'Lady Nugent,' James FAWCETT, Master, DUBIE, Surgeon Superintendent, Arrived from the Cape of Good Hope and Hobart Town, 5th December 1836:</i></div><div><i>No 19. <b>Edmund KING</b>; Age, 35 years; Born, Portchester; Employment, Ploughman and Farm Laborer; Trial Crime, Uttering forged order; Tried at London, 17 August 1835; Trial sentence, Life; Height 5 feet 11 and 3/4 inches, Complexion dark, Hair black-to-grey, Eyes dark hazel, Top of forehead bald, forehead high, long nose - brother in Van Diemen's Land"</i> [Convict Indents, N.S.W., 1836, Ancestry.com; Biog Item No 170612664, Biographical Data Base of Australia]. </div><div>There were no details entered in it for his Religion, Marital status or Former convictions.</div><div><br /></div><div>Further "instructive" correspondence arose - The Colonial Secretary of N.S.W., the addressee of the 21 November 1836 letter from his counterpart in Van Diemen's Land (see above), wrote to The Principal Superintendent of Convicts, Sydney, on 6 December 1836 [Letters Sent re Convicts, Ref 443, 4/3682, Reel 1049]:</div><div><i>"Sir,</i></div><div><i>"I do myself the honor to transmit to you the accompanying Muster Roll of eighteen Prisoners from the Cape of Good Hope, and two from Hobart Town, arrived yesterday in the Ship 'Lady Nugent.'</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"...</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"<b>Edmund KING</b> The Prisoners named in the margin, arrived from</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Life Hobart Town, are to be sent by the earliest</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i> opportunity, the first to Port Macquarie, <u><b>as a special,</b></u></i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Nathaniel and LAURENCE to Norfolk Island, under his</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"LAURANCE sentence to that settlement.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Life I have the honor to be,</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i> (sign) Alex'r McLEAY."</i></div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Ancestry.com, under "N.S.W., Australia, Convict Records, 1810-1891," records the following details, under the sub-heading of "Phoenix Hulk, Entrance Books":</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"<b>Edmund KING</b>, Lady Nugent, Protestant, Farmer, Life.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Admitted - 5 December 1856, from the 'Lady Nugent.'</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Purpose - F. orders.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Disposed of - by orders, for Port Macquarie, on 26 December 1836."</i></div><div style="text-align: left;">It would appear that the reference to the Hulk 'Phoenix' here probably referred to the previous 18 entries in the list, for those convicts transported all the way from England on the 'Lady Nugent' who were not landed at Hobart Town, and not the extra two who had joined them there, transferred from the 'Henry Porcher.'</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Edmund</b> was first listed in monthly returns for Port Macquarie, on 31 January 1837 [AO Reel 827, 4/5646].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><div>On 20 January 1843, <b>Edmund KING</b> wrote to Viscount Palmerston (*), concerning the status of his sentence, to which he replied, from London, 31 August 1843, addressed to "<b>Edmund KING,</b> Convict, Port Macquarie, N.S.W.," and date stamped in Sydney, 18 March 1844, and Port Macquarie, (indec) 1844, as follows:</div><div><i>"I received some little time ago your letter of the 20th of January last, in which you say that in May 1836, before you sailed for New South Wales, the Master of the 'Leviathan,' the Hulk in which you were confined, received a notice from Mr CAPPER (**) that your sentence of Transportation had been mitigated, so that instead of being for life it was to be for seven years: you further state that no warrant or authority for such mitigation has been received in the Colony. Upon receiving your letter, I made inquiry at the Office of the Secretary of State for the Home Department, and I have been there informed that you are mistaken in supposing his sentence was mitigated. For although an application was made for a mitigation of tat sentence, that application was not complied with and your sentence remains therefore such as it originally was.</i></div><div><i> "I am &c,</i></div><div><i> "Palmerston."</i></div><div>To which was added a note by Sir Henry PARKES, stating that <i>"... this letter lay in the Convict Office, Sydney, unclaimed until 1866"</i> [State Library of N.S.W., A 31/p.44, Ref Code MIC 336500].</div><div></div><blockquote><div>(*) Henry John TEMPLE (1784-1865), 3rd Viscount Palmerston; a British M.P., he was Foreign Secretary, 1835-41, and 1846-51, so in Opposition when he wrote this letter; he was Prime Minister, 1855-58 and 1859-65.</div><div>(**) John Henry CAPPER, Esq, a Home Office Clerk in 1814, when he became Inspector of Hulks; by 1844, he had been elevated to Superintendent of Ships and Vessels Employed for the confinement of Offenders under sentence of Transportation, at Whitehall.</div></blockquote></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Edmund KING</b> obtained his Ticket of Leave on 13 February 1845:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Ticket Number 45/364; Prisoner's Number 36/2589; Ship, Lady Nugent, Master FAWCETT; Place of Trial, Central Criminal Court, 17 August 1835; Life; Allowed to remain in the District of Port Macquarie on recommendation of Same Bench. Dated October 1844"</i> [Ticket-of-Leave Butts (NRS 1202), N.S.W.].</div><div style="text-align: left;">In this printed pro-forma, no details were included under headings for Native Place, Trade or Calling, Offence, Year of Birth, or Physical Features.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div><b>Edmund</b>'s Ticket-of-Leave, Number 45/364 (see above), was endorsed, in handwriting, crossways in the margin, with the following:</div><div><i>"Cancelled for absence from District, 6th November 1850. Vide Governor's minute on list, Registered No 60/325/ when apprehended. See Letters from same Reg 51/2375 respecting (indecipherable word) deeds."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>On 1 May 1851, <b>Edmund KING</b> was reported absent from his District (Port Macquarie), and illegally at large:</div><div><i>"<b>Edmund KING</b>, Lady Nugent, 50, Porchester, farm labourer, 5 feet 8 inches, fair complexion, light brown hair, light blue eyes, top of forehead bald, forehead high, nose long; from Ticket of Leave, Port Macquarie, since November 1850</i>" [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 2 May].</div><div>But, apart from having a high and bald forehead and a long nose, this looks like a different man to the one who arrived in Hobart, then Sydney, in late 1836!</div><div><br /></div><div>In September 1865, the following Memo was sent by the Police Convict Branch, to the Principal Secretary, with the intention of publishing details in the Police Gazette:</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgPpSeXLEQ6fosOZh61MuJR1x0YEdB06xK96Bj8ixCQrcY6MVbzdgMVBz3ophyphenhyphenDgJyAO0uO1rk_ovoKiS6mS1bMt3p7iWXNtRrgcSYw1ZRKY46z5Q0RgZ9LwltnYx0q6jJfycy6KVyjGWkV/s792/E.KING+CONVICTS+WHO+DIED.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="502" data-original-width="792" height="406" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgPpSeXLEQ6fosOZh61MuJR1x0YEdB06xK96Bj8ixCQrcY6MVbzdgMVBz3ophyphenhyphenDgJyAO0uO1rk_ovoKiS6mS1bMt3p7iWXNtRrgcSYw1ZRKY46z5Q0RgZ9LwltnYx0q6jJfycy6KVyjGWkV/w640-h406/E.KING+CONVICTS+WHO+DIED.JPG" width="640" /></a></div><i><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>State Records Authority of N.S.W., </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"Annual Return of Convicts who Died, 1867-1891," Volume 4/4552.</i></div><div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Also listed under "Police Convict Branch, Letters to Officials, 1862-1892."</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image courtesy of Ancestry.com.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: left;">There do not appear to be any more entries in Gazettes for convict <b>Edmund</b> alias <b>Edward KING</b> after 1851.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><blockquote><div style="text-align: left;"><b><i><span style="color: red; font-family: georgia;">I find no further reference to this Edmund KING in Australian records. It is possible that he was the next.</span></i></b></div></blockquote><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i><span style="font-size: large;"><b>EDMUND ALIAS EDWARD KING, OVERSEER AND SHEPHERD.</b></span></i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">In January 1849, an <b>Edmund KING</b> was engaged to be married to Mary SADLER, a widow, but his bride-to-be was allegedly murdered by the man <b>Edmund</b> had sent to fetch for the wedding. At the inquest, <b>Edmund</b> deposed to the Coroner that he was a Superintendent for George WYNDHAM at Glendon Brook.</div><div style="text-align: left;">I had originally thought that this <b>Edmund KING</b> was the convict who arrived on the 'Lady Nugent' in 1836, but despite some circumstantial clues, there is no conclusive evidence that he was. </div><div style="text-align: left;">George WYNDHAM, a pioneer of the present Wyndham Estate Winemaking dynasty, grew up on Dinton, Wiltshire, a village a little over a mile north of the village of Compton Chamberlaine, where he may well have been acquainted with the family of Constantia Maria PIGOTT, who, in 1819, was married to <b>Edmund KING</b>.</div><div>But, in the absence of conclusive evidence, it remains a possibility that the 1819 PIGOTT spouse, the 1836 convict arrival, and WYNDHAM's 1849 Overseer in 1849 may have been three different men. Although I think that is unlikely. </div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Edmund</b>'s Ticket-of-Leave, Number 45/364 (see above), was endorsed, in handwriting, crossways in the margin, with the following:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"Cancelled for absence from District, 6th November 1850. Vide Governor's minute on list, Registered No 60/325/ when apprehended. See Letters from same Reg 51/2375 respecting (indecipherable word) deeds."</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">On 1 May 1851, <b>Edmund KING</b> was reported absent from his District (Port Macquarie), and therefore judged to be illegally at large:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"<b>Edmund KING</b>, Lady Nugent, 50, Porchester, farm labourer, 5 feet 8 inches, fair complexion, light brown hair, light blue eyes, top of forehead bald, forehead high, nose long; from Ticket of Leave, Port Macquarie, since November 1850</i>" [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 2 May].</div><div style="text-align: left;">But, apart from having a high and bald forehead and a long nose, this looks like a different man to the one who arrived in Hobart, then Sydney, in late 1836!</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">On 7 April 1851, <b>Edmund KING</b>, of the District of Paterson, Widower, was married at the Church of St Mary, Allen's Creek, by License, to Amelia NEWTON, of the same District, Spinster, by J.W. ADDAMS, in the presence of Alfred ALSON, of Alleyn River, and Bruce Williamson HUME, of Nevallyn [Volume 37B #643, State Library of N.S.W., AO Reel 5012, SAG Reel 3073; image of marriage registration, Ancestry.com]:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2UNgOyqQIMIUdAn8KXayNipyERYSB8OHhpdXapI2pKv9o3zpIimuNYiufbeToiedEJoOGHhj4myyVQcn7Cq3dLGxLkKc2MtjPtEaN6ASf2xjFoEvsltg80Nni51YugiMz6HgI2Uz8xV4O/s800/CHURCH.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="600" data-original-width="800" height="300" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2UNgOyqQIMIUdAn8KXayNipyERYSB8OHhpdXapI2pKv9o3zpIimuNYiufbeToiedEJoOGHhj4myyVQcn7Cq3dLGxLkKc2MtjPtEaN6ASf2xjFoEvsltg80Nni51YugiMz6HgI2Uz8xV4O/w400-h300/CHURCH.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>St Mary's Anglican Church, Allyn River, Allynbrook.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image, by Tania HACKETT, courtesy of the findagrave.com website.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">A notice was published in Bell's Life in Sydney and Sporting Reviewer, Saturday 24 May 1851:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"MARRIED. April 7, at St Mary's Church, Allen River, by the Rev P.W. ADAMS, Mr <b>Edward KING</b>, late of Glendon Brook, to Miss Amelia NEWTON, of Glenthorn, Gosford.</i>"</div><div style="text-align: left;"><blockquote><span style="color: red;"><i><span style="font-family: georgia;">The image of the Allen's Creek church register page indicates that all of the additional entries inserted into the printed pro-forma are by the same hand, and probably that of the Officiating Minister. Sadly, we therefore cannot make a comparison with the actual signature of <b>Edmund KING</b> in the 1819 Church Register entry for his marriage in the Compton Chamberlaine parish church to Constantia Maria PIGOTT (see above)</span>.</i></span> </blockquote></div><div style="text-align: left;">Amelia died <i>"... at her residence, near Glen Innes, New England, September 28th, 1855, after giving birth to a son, which she survived only 8 hours, Mrs <b>Edmund KING</b>, leaving a disconsolate husband and four children to mourn their loss</i>" [Sydney Morning Herald, 10 October]; another death notice recorded her death <i>"At Glen Innes, on the 28th ult, in childbed, Amelia, the beloved wife of <b>Edward KING</b>, leaving her husband and four infant children to deplore their loss. The deceased was 30 years of age, and was highly respected by all who knew her</i>" [Maitland Mercury, etc, 10 October].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">They had issue five children, of whom the four survivors, two sons and two daughters, in about 1857, went to live with their uncle and aunt, Mr and Mrs John MEANLEY (%), at Casino:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">1. William George KING, born at Muswell Brook, 24 November 1851, and baptised by the Minister of the Parish of Rowan, County Durham, 29 December, a twin, father an Overseer; he died in Newcastle Hospital, 8 September 1915, of West Wallsend, late watchman of Carrington Wharf, and was buried at Sandgate Cemetery, C.of E., 10 September [Newcastle Morning Herald and Miner's Advocate, 10 September]; of Brisbane, when he was married at St John's, Brisbane, 5 March 1880, to Elizabeth Rachel BULLOCK, third daughter of Richard BULLOCK, of Garford, Berkshire [The Telegraph (Brisbane), 9 March]; she died at Wallsend Hospital, 8 August 1904, aged 49 [Newcastle Morning Herald, etc, 13 August]; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Meanley KING, born at Brisbane, 10 May 1880.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. Ada Bertha KING, born in Qld, 8 December 1881; she was married at St Paul's, Stockton, 29 December 1900, to Edward Joseph BOWLING, of West Wallsend [Newcastle Morning Herald, etc, 13 August].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> c. Edmund James KING, born in Qld, 19 October 1884; he died in Qld, 31 March 1885, an infant.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> d. Flora Gladys KING, born in Qld, 31 January 1886.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> e. Elsie Mary KING, born in Qld, 20 July 1890.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">2. Edmund James KING, all ditto, the other twin; he appears to have died in infancy.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">3. Annie Maria KING, born at Clairevaulx (*), 18 February 1853, and baptised at St Peter's parish church, Armidale, New England District, 24 April 1855, her father an Overseer; she died at Costin Street, Valley, Brisbane, 13 January 1921 (parents named in registration as Edmund James KING and Amelia NEWTON), and was buried at Toowong Cemetery; of Greenwood, Richmond River, N.S.W., when she was married at Rockhampton, 10 June 1875, to William KING, eldest son of Mr T. KING, Ipswich [The Queenslander (Brisbane), 26 June]; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Ethel Adelaide KING, born in Qld, 13 August 1878.</div> b. William Henry KING, born in Qld, 24 September 1880.</div><div> c. Florence Mabel KING, born in Qld, 10 March 1882.</div><div> d. Elsie KING, born in Qld, 18 August 1883.</div><div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">4. Bertha Louisa KING, born at Clairevaulx, 8 July 1854, and baptised with her older sister; she died at her residence, South Casino, 12 September 1914, <i>"... a well known resident of Casino, had been ailing for some time. During her last illness, her sister, Mrs KING of Toowoomba, Qld, was in constant attendance upon her"</i> [Richmond River Express, etc, 15 September]; she was married firstly, at Ipswich, Qld, March 1873, to John Alfred EAMES; they were divorced, Decree Nisi August 1899, Decree Absolute March 1900; he died in Townsville Hospital, 11 December 1900, aged 51 years; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Annie Amelia Isabella EAMES, born in Qld, 20 July 1874 (father James Alfred in Index).</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. Oswald Vivian EAMES, born at Richmond River, N.S.W., 1880.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> c. Nita Iliece EAMES, born at Richmond (River?), 1881.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> d. Aubrey R.C.R. EAMES, born at Casino, 1883 or 1884.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> e. Nita E. EAMES, born at Casino, 1886.</div><div style="text-align: left;">William Robert Davey KING and Annie Maria KING, probably the same couple, had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> f. Ivy Maria (or Moira?) Spencer KING, born in Qld, 16 October 1884.</div> g. Robert Davey KING, born in Qld, 23 March 1886.</div><div> h. Edward John KING, born in Qld, 25 November 1887.</div><div> j. Nita KING, born in Qld, 9 May 1889.</div><div> k. Ida Helen KING, born in Qld, 21 September 1890.</div><div> l. Walter Harold Norman KING, born in Qld, 10 January 1892.<br /><div style="text-align: left;">Bertha was married secondly, in Brisbane, 18 August 1910, to Charles Hugh BENGER.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">5. John Meanly KING, born at Stonehenge, near Armidale, 28 September 1855, and baptised at St Peter's parish church, Armidale, 3 October 1855, father a Shepherd - he later identified his birthplace as Farrickaba Station, near Glen Innes; probably at Syntax Street, Ipswich, 1905 [Moreton Division], Cab Proprietor; ditto, 1913, at Brisbane Street, Ipswich, with wife Mary, Home Duties; he was of Greenwood, Richmond River, when he was married, by Rev'd Father O'REILLY, at Spring Hill, Brisbane, 9 June 1876, to Mary JACKSON, only daughter of John Henry JACKSON, of Brisbane [Queenslander (Brisbane), 17 June; she died in Qld, 6 December 1933:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjUPle5DqRJYY31BE7nlWBEnGM5gzOYw6O-dIeWwyWlGii7aUlqljt6q713pRVyiNws4aqZVcuwQmTf4QEmR3eGIi6vpHjdT1ucIBlf7cOiFVpm4qa0k9sTsyAvs7EOzemIEuuggNJJ_TQf/s1984/JOHN+MEALEY+KING.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1488" data-original-width="1984" height="300" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjUPle5DqRJYY31BE7nlWBEnGM5gzOYw6O-dIeWwyWlGii7aUlqljt6q713pRVyiNws4aqZVcuwQmTf4QEmR3eGIi6vpHjdT1ucIBlf7cOiFVpm4qa0k9sTsyAvs7EOzemIEuuggNJJ_TQf/w400-h300/JOHN+MEALEY+KING.jpeg" width="400" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The KING family grave, Ipswich General Cemetery, R.C. Section B.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image posted on the findagrave.com web-site, courtesy of "Anne - here lies."</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">John and Mary had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> a. Annie Amelia KING, born in Qld, 17 June 1877; she appears to have had illegitimate issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> i. Isabell Stephenson KING, born in Brisbane, 5 August 1897 (#6085), daughter of Annie Amelia Meanley KING; she died in Qld, 28 July 1970 (her grand parents were registered as her parents), and was buried in Ipswich general Cemetery, aged 72 [M.I.]; she was married in Qld, 6 August 1932, to Joseph McHUGH; he died in Qld, 12 September 1962, aged 65 [M.I.].</div><div style="text-align: left;"> ii. Patrick KING, born in Brisbane, 11 January 1900, son of Annie Amelia KING. </div><div style="text-align: left;">Annie was married in Victoria, 1903 (#898), to William Michael McCLELLAND; of Melbourne, 1939; he died in June 1949, and was buried at Fawkner Cemetery.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> b. John Meanley KING, born at Unumgar, Richmond River, N.S.W., 17 August 1879 [Brisbane Courier, 1 September]; of Boonah, Qld, 1939; he died at Ipswich, 6 November 1947, and was buried at Ipswich General Cemetery, aged 68; he was married in Qld, 23 April 1902, to Josephine Agnes CORDON; she died 29 June 1966, and was buries at Ipswich General Cemetery, aged 84; they had issue, including:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> i. William Joseph Meanley KING, born in Qld, 18 September 1902</div><div style="text-align: left;"> ii. Muriel Josephine KING, born about 1904; she died 29 June 1933, and was buried with her parents, aged 28 years.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> iii. Charles Vincent KING, born in Qld, 30 June 1907; he died Qld, 2 November 1972.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> iv. Mary Beatrice KING, born in Qld, 18 June 1910; she was married Qld, 7 October 1933, to Colin James O'BRIEN.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> v. Phyllis Ena KING, born in Qld, 6 March 1913; she died 9 September 1920, and was buried with her parents, aged 7 years.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> vi. John Meanley (Jack) KING, born in Qld, 10 September 1915; he died in Qld, 20 November 1940.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> vii. Cyril Francis KING, born in Qld, 20 March 1918.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> c. William Joseph Meanley KING, born in Qld, 5 May 1882; he died at Ipswich Hospital, of typhoid fever, 23 March 1900, aged 17 years and 10 months [Queensland Times and Ipswich Herald, 27 March]; he was buried in his parent's grave (see image above).</div><div style="text-align: left;"> d. George Edmund Meanley KING, born in Qld, 4 June 1885; at Joyce Street, West Ipswich, 1919 [Moreton Division], Carpenter, with wife Anne, Home Duties; he died in Qld, 2 June 1957; he was married in Qld, 5 June 1912, to Annie McCRYSTAL; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: left;"> i. Evelyne May KING, born in Qld, 30 June 1913; she was probably married in Qld, 15 August 1936, to Robert Oswald BORN.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> ii. Allen George KING, born in Qld, 16 October 1915; he died in Qld, 19 August 1953.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> iii. Monica Ann KING, born in Qld, 20 January 1920; she died in Qld, 6 September 1992, and was buried with her husband, aged 72; she was married in Qld, 19 December 1942, to Mervyn Morgan DALE; he died in Qld, 5 July 1963, was buried at Ipswich General Cemetery, aged 46.</div><div style="text-align: left;"> e. Joseph Meanly KING, born in Qld, 30 November 1887; he died in Qld, 23 August 1956, and was buried at Boonah General Cemetery, aged 68.</div> f. Cyril Alphonsus KING, born in Qld, 2 August 1890; he died in Qld, 22 June 1956.</div><div> g. Mary Meanley KING, born in Qld, 30 April 1893; she died in Qld, 14 May 1895, a child; she was buried in her parent's grave (see image above).</div><div> g. Kathleen Beatrice KING, born in Qld, 14 May 1896; she died in Qld, 20 March 1974; she was married Qld, 9 August 1922, to James Daniel BYRNE; both of Bundaberg 1939.<br /><div style="text-align: left;"> h. Victor Louis KING, born in Qld, 8 November 1898; he died in Qld, 7 September 1946; he was married in Brisbane, 4 July 1928, to Eva Mary DRAPER; of Brisbane, 1939.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><blockquote>(%) John MEANLEY, born at Aldridge, Staffordshire, 22 August 1820; he was of Casino, Northern Rivers, N.S.W.; he died at Tabulum, N.S.W., 11 August 1860; he was married, N.S.W., 1849 [Volume 34C, #25], as her first husband, to Maria NEWTON, a daughter of Willliam NEWTON, of Crowcombe, Taunton, Somerset, by his wife Anne RICHARDS, and an older sister of Amelia NEWTON (the wife of <b>Edmund KING</b>); John and Maria, then in Casino, "adopted" her four surviving young KING nephews and nieces in about 1857; Maria was married secondly, at Greenwood, Richmond River, N.S.W., 12 June 1873, to John WHITE, second son of John WHITE, Esq, of Parton, Cumberland, England [Evening News (Sydney), 30 June].</blockquote></div><div style="text-align: left;"><blockquote>(*) Clarevaulx alias Clairvaux Station, near Glen Innes, was the 28,000 acre property of Captain Philip DITMAS, late 66th Regiment (he died at Beaminster, England, in 1871), and his wife Anastatia FAUNT (she died at Clarevaulx in 1860); they had arrived in N.S.W. from London on the ship 'Douglas,' 29 September 1839; their only son and heir, Philip Clarevaulx DITMAS, was born in N.S.W. in about mid 1840, and was killed in a fall from his horse, 10 March 1861, just a few months short of his 21st birthday.</blockquote></div><div style="text-align: left;">An Edward KING appeared before the Police Court, Maitland, October 1855, claiming to have paid £40 to Mr RAVENSCROFT, a Clerk of Petty Sessions (but since resigned), as an Immigration remittance, desiring to bring out a friend from Great Britain, but due to be returned to him, as he claimed, because the party in G.B. had since married, and the £40 had become an insufficient amount [Maitland Mercury, etc, 21 November].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">An Edward KING, otherwise GALLAGHER, died at or near Murrurundi, 2 February 1862:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"MURRURUNDI - A correspondent writes:- A man named KING, or GALLAGHER, this morning cut his throat in a most fearful manner. He had been for some years employed at stations on the plains as a shepherd, but has for some time been ailing, and only ten days since absconded from the hospital here in the night. No cause can be assigned for the act he has committed. He was taken to the hospital, and placed under the care of Dr GORDON, but died shortly after."</i> [Sydney Morning Herald, 4 February].</div><div style="text-align: left;">An inquest was held at Murrurundi:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"An Inquest was held this day by Captain WHEELER upon the body of Edward KING, or GALLAGHER, who committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor. Evidence was given which left no doubt upon the minds of the jurors, that deceased committed the act while in a state of temporary insanity, and they returned a verdict accordingly"</i> [Maitland Mercury, 8 February].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">The Index to Statutory Death Registers in N.S.W. records that his death (by reduction, on 2 February) was registered at Murrurundi, 1862 #4853, <i>"Age 59, Died Murrurundi."</i> </div><div style="text-align: left;">These last two entries undoubtedly substitute for the absence in the Register of parental details, and is not an uncommon feature when the Registrar has been informed by a Coroner. As KING was for the second time a Widower, it is quite possible that no-one then living knew his parents names anyway.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhheI8PYLjcAgCcOcnts8sC4mRRrVSV3MxiUtNZkOjQDxpoFxk_1s5wPbKAz5YN84h5mW9BYIJURAsvTBHvrdUOOCHfjQONtm26DA7ADY6w2y9EBm3-SlRhGBCD676bmwyW89jyqzUjn2qB/s2048/20211001_085408.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="2048" data-original-width="1375" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhheI8PYLjcAgCcOcnts8sC4mRRrVSV3MxiUtNZkOjQDxpoFxk_1s5wPbKAz5YN84h5mW9BYIJURAsvTBHvrdUOOCHfjQONtm26DA7ADY6w2y9EBm3-SlRhGBCD676bmwyW89jyqzUjn2qB/w269-h400/20211001_085408.jpg" width="269" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Courtesy of the Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages, New South Wales Government.]</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">His death certificate records that he was a Shepherd, age 59 years, was born in England, and had been in New South Wales for about 30 years. There are no details of marriage or children.</div><div style="text-align: left;">The informant was Dr W.H. GORDON , of Murrurundi.</div>His burial was recorded at Haydenton, with no oficiating minister. I expect that his grave is probably unmarked.</div><div><br /><div style="text-align: left;">It is not yet confirmed that this was the absconding prisoner, <b>Edmund KING</b>. But the fact that his occupation is listed as shepherd is of interest, given that the youngest son of Edmund and Amelia KING, born in 1855, was recorded as a son of a shepherd.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">______________________________________________</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><div><b><span style="font-size: large;"><i>JAMES KING OF TITCHFIELD, HAMPSHIRE.</i></span></b></div><div><br /></div><div>James KING; he was probably buried at Titchfield, Hampshire, 15 February 1785; he was married at Titchfield, 19 November 1767, to Rachel KNIGHT; she died on 13 October 1830, <i>"... at the residence of her son-in-law, Capt. SHORT, Titchfield... at the advanced age of 86 years, sincerely beloved and regretted by all who knew her</i>" [Hampshire Telegraph, 25 October], and was buried at Titchfield, 19 October 1830; they are said to have had issue:</div><div>A1. James KING, said to have been born in 1768-69, and died in 1829. Probably [A] below.</div><div>A2. Thomas KING, 1770-1856.</div><div>A3. Solomon KING, 1771-1781.</div><div>A4. Rachel KING, 1774-?</div><div>A5. Mary Moira KING, 1776-1783.</div><div>A6. William KING, 1778-?</div><div>A7. Sarah Ann KING, 1779-1811; she was married at Titchfield, 28 January 1806, to William SHOVELLER; they had issue, including:</div><div> a. William King SHOVELLER, baptised at Gosport, Hampshire, 14 June 1809; Royal Marines; he proved the will of his aunt Eliza Wimbleton SHORT, 1865; he died at Leinster Terrace, Dalkey, Rathdown, 9 April 1887, aged 77, Major, Royal Marines Light Infantry (retired); he was married to Georgina (-?-); she died at Northumberland Avenue, Rathdown, 25 December 1891, aged 80, widow of Major; they had issue:</div><div> i. Henry James King SHOVELLER, born about 1855; he died at 133 Rathgar Road, Rathmines, 23 September 1875, aged 20, Bachelor, Inflammation of lungs, informer by his father.</div><div>A8. George Rodney KING, 1782-?<br /></div><div>A9. Elizabeth Wimbleton KING, baptised at Titchfield, Hampshire, 2 November 1786; she was at Mill Street, Titchfield, 1841 Census, aged 55+, Independent, born in County, with two domestic servants; ditto, 1851 and 1861, Widow, Fund Holder, born Titchfield, aged 66 and 76 respectively; she died at Titchfield, 26 February 1865, her will proved at Winchester, 21 March, effects under £3,000, on the oath of William King SHOVELLER, of Balloncor, near Sligo, Captain, Royal Marines, the nephew and sole executor [National Probate Calendar, England and Wales]; she was married at Swanwick, near Titchfield, 21 June 1810, to James SHORT, Captain, Royal Marines; his will, dated 26 February 1831, was proved P.C.C., 27 February 1833, mentioning his wife Eliza Wimbleton SHORT, and his cousin William James Barefoot HAMMOND.</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;">JAMES KING OF NORTH STONEHAM, HAMPSHIRE.</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>[A] James KING, born about 1769 (from age at burial); of Swathling (Swaythling), parish of North Stoneham, Hampshire, January 1829, when he died, and was buried at Fareham St Peter and St Paul, 5 January, aged 59 years [Hampshire Burials, Findmypast]; of Swathling, parish of North Stoneham, County of Southampton, Tanner and Farmer, when he made his will, dated 7 July 1822, leaving his whole estate to his <i>"... dear wife Sarah,"</i> whom he appointed sole executrix, and was witnessed by W'm R'd B'n DAVIES, Thomas CHURCHER and Benj'n ROSE; a notice, dated 17 January 1829, was inserted in the Salisbury and Winchester Journal [Monday 19 January], by which "<i>A.H. PERKINS respectfully informs the Public that he is instructed to Submit to Auction, without the least reserve, on the premises at Swathling, 3 miles form Southampton, on the latter part of the present month, the LIVE & DEAD STOCK, FARMING IMPLEMENTS, together with the HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, late the property of Mr James KING, deceased</i>"; another notice, dated 16 January, was published in the Hampshire Chronicle [Monday 26 January], advising that <i>"All Persons having any account against James KING, late of North Stoneham, in the county of Southampton, tanner and farmer, deceased, are desired to send the particulars thereof forthwith to Mr BARNEY, Southampton, and all persons indebted to the estate of the deceased are requested to pay their accounts to Mr BARNEY for the use of the Representatives of the deceased</i>"; James's will was proved P.C.C., 22 January 1829, by his daughters Sarah Ann FOWLER the wife of Mattheas FOWLER, and Rachael KING, Spinster, as <i>"... Sarah KING the wife, sole executrix and universal legatee died in the lifetime of the testator."</i></div><div>James is said to have been married at Hursley, Hampshire, 27 July 1789, to Sarah PORTER; she died at Swathling, and was buried at Fareham St Peter and St Paul, 9 November 1827, aged 56 years; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>1. James KING, "... admitted born" 29 March 1790, as recorded in the Baptismal Register of Fareham St Peter and St Paul, 15 April 1804. Possibly a witness to the will of Frances PIGOTT of Compton Chamberlaine, dated 9 August 1838 (unless a member of the KING family of that town, who may have been related to this family?).</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>2. George KING. Probably [B] below.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div>James and Sarah are believed to have had other issue, for most of whom no baptismal details have been found, and including siblings mentioned by one of them in 1836:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>3. <b>Edmund KING</b>, born about 1795 (from age at marriage); he was of Swathling, North Stoneham, Hampshire, Bachelor, Yeoman, aged 24, when he made allegations of his intention to marry, by Sarum Marriage License Bond dated 30 June 1819, to <b>Constantia Maria PIGOTT</b>, of Compton Chamberlaine, third daughter of the late Captain John PIGOTT. See above.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>4. William KING, possibly born in 1796; mentioned in his brother Edmund's Convict Indent, November 1836; possibly the William KING, who joined the 43rd Regiment of Foot, 5 June 1817, aged 21, born Portchester, Hampshire, Labourer, 5 feet 10-and-a-half inches, Brown hair, Grey eyes, Fresh complexion, Stout.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>5. Sarah Ann KING, born at Porchester, about 1797-98 (Census returns); she was probably the Sarah Ann KING who witnessed <b>Edmund KING</b>'s marriage in 1819 to Constantia Maria PIGOTT; she proved her father's will, 1829; she was of St Maurice Winchester, May 1831, when she gave her consent, as sister and guardian of Charles KING, of Martyr Worthy, a minor aged 20, for a license (of the Bishop of Winchester), dated 16 May, for his marriage to Mary DELLER, of Droxford; Sarah Ann was at London Street, Basingstoke, 1841 Census, aged 50+, with her husband; she was at Merrow Road, Stoke-next-Guildford, Surrey, 1851 Census, aged 53, born Porchester, Hampshire, with her husband; she died at Shalford, near Guildford, Surrey, 14 July 1856, <i>"... the wife of Mr Matthias FOWLER, formerly of the Star Inn, Guildford" </i>[West Surry Times, 19 July]<i> "... and daughter of the late James and Sarah KING of Swathling, near Southampton, aged 58"</i> [Hampshire Advertiser, 19 July], and was buried at Shalford St Mary the Virgin, 19 July; she was married at North Stoneham, Hampshire, 7 October 1824, to Matthias FOWLER; he was an Inn Keeper, at the Anchor and Hope Inn, October 1832, when he moved to the Angel Hotel and Commercial Inn, Lymington, an <i>"... old established Hotel and Posting House</i>" [Hampshire Advertiser, 13 October]; in May 1836, he inserted a notice - "<i>TO LET, from midsummer next, the Angel Hotel, Commercial Coach and Posting House"</i> [Hampshire Advertiser, 14 May]; he was declared bankrupt, 1837, and in May, the "<i>First Rate Freehold Posting House, Hotel, Tavern and Commercial Inn, in the centre of the High Street of that fashionable Watering place the Town of Lymington bordering on the New Forest</i>" was notified <i>"... FOR SALE BY AUCTION, on the premises, on Thursday 18th May, at six o'clock in the evening, by Mr YOUNG, before the major part of the Commissioners named and authorised in and by a Fiat of Bankruptcy awarded and issued forth against Mathias FOWLER, of Lymington, Hants, Wine Merchant, and under instructions of the Assignees, that highly valuable and Old Established INN, THE ANGEL"</i> [Hampshire Independent, 6 May]; he was at The George Inn, London Road, Basingstoke, 1841 Census, aged 50+, Inn Keeper, with wife and three sons; in May 1845, the License for the Star Inn, in the parish of St Mary, Guildford, was transferred to Jessie BOXALL, the premises <i>"... lately and until now in the occupation of Mathias FOWLER"</i> [Sussex Advertiser, 6 May]; he was at Merrow Road, Stoke-next-Guildford, 1851 Census, aged 62, Retired Inn Keeper, born Newburgh, Berkshire, with wife Sarah; he was at Basingstoke, 1861 Census, a Widower, aged 72, Fund-holder, a lodger; he died at Gloucester Street, South Lambeth, 12 October 1862, aged 74 years [Hampshire Chronicle, 18 October].</div><div>Sarah Ann and Matthias appear to have had issue:</div><div> a. Matthias James FOWLER, baptised at Southampton All Saints, 20 February 1825; he enlisted in the 7th Dragoon Guards, in London, 17 April 1848; he transferred to the 5th Dragoon Guards, 29 January 1858; he was at Preston Barracks, Brighton, 1861 Census, District H.Q., 5th Dragoon Guards, aged 35, born Southampton, Soldier; he was discharged at Cahir, Ireland, November 1863, aged 38 years 8 months, after 14 years 62 days service, intending to reside at Gloucester Street, Lambeth, Surrey; he was at 55 Mawdley(?) Street, Lambeth, 1871 Census, aged 46, Railway Clerk, born Southampton, with his wife Mary (aged 35, born Norfolk) and son Percy (aged 2, born Lambeth); his death was registered in London, September quarter 1879 [Volume 1b, page 331], aged 54, his body having been found in the River Thames, in a sack, on 29 June 1879, last seen alive on 23 June, latterly of 12 Dalywell Road, Stockwell, having <i>"... been in service of the London and South Western Railway Company for over 9 years, as Chief Clerk in the goods department at Nine Elms Station"</i> [Morning Post, 3 July]; a Railway Clerk, of 57 Mawbey Street, he was married, at St Barnabas church, South Lambeth, Surrey, by Banns, 21 October 1867, to Mary RICHES, full age, spinster, daughter of John RICHES, Farmer.</div><div> b. Henry FOWLER, born about 1826; aged 14, with his parents, 1841 Census.</div><div> c. George FOWLER, born about 1827; aged 13, with his parents, 1841 Census; he is said to have died at Reading, Berkshire, on 22 September 1898.</div><div> d. Robert FOWLER, baptised at Lymington, Hampshire, 28 August 1830, son of Matthias and Sarah Anne; possibly the Robert FOWLER was buried there, 11 April 1831, aged 0.</div><div> e. John Sowter FOWLER, baptised at Lymington, 5 September 1833, son of Matthias and Sarah Anne; he was aged 8, with his parents, 1841 Census.</div><div> f. Alfred Porter FOWLER, baptised at Lymington, Hampshire, 14 September 1836; he was probably the A.P. FOWLER who was residing at Shirley Common , Millbrook, 1841 Census, aged 5 years, with his probable aunt R. KING, in the household of George STRATTON; as Alfred P. FOWLER, he was at 18 High Street, Guildford Holy Trinity, Surrey, 1851 Census, aged 15, born Lymington, Hampshire, an Apprentice to Peter AUSTEN, Grocer and Tea Dealer; as <i>"... Manager of the Brompton business of Messrs COPEMAN and LACEY, army contractors"</i> in Chatham, Alfred Porter FOWLER died at Brompton, in May 1860, aged 24, from an overdose of opium, medically administered for the treatment of rheumatic fever [Berkshire Chronicle, 2 June], and was buried at Gillingham St Mary, Kent, 27 May</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>6. Frederick KING; mentioned in ditto, 1836.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>7. a daughter; mentioned in 1836, as being in Cape Town. Possibly the Miss M. KING, of No 5, New Street, Covent Garden, October 1835, when Mrs FOWLER, the wife of Mathias FOWLER, of the Angel Inn, Lymington, sent by post a letter enclosing a 10 pound note, which was intercepted by a postal officer in the G.P.O., and was prosecuted by FOWLER for embezzlemen [Albion and the Star, 29 October].</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>8. Eliza KING, born about 1804-05 (age at death); the <i>"... second daughter of Mr James KING, Tanner, of Swathling, near Southampton, and a niece of Captain SHORT</i>,<i>"</i> when she was married, 22 June 1823, to "<i>James HAMMOND, Esq, of Shadwell, London, Merchant, nephew of Captain SHORT of Titchfield"</i> [Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 9 June]; she was mentioned in her brother's Convict Indent, 1836, as having died in Hobart in 1831, the wife of Mr HAMMOND; she first arrived in Hobart Town, Van Diemen's Land, 15 April 1824, on the ship 'Heroine,' 450 tons, Captain W. OSTLER, from London (15 November 1823) via the Cape (29 February 1824), with her husband; she sailed from Hobart, 19 February 1826, on the ship 'Andromeda,' bound for London direct, as Mrs HAMMOND with one child [Colonial Times and Tasmanian Advertiser, 23 September]; she arrived back in Hobart, 11 January 1830, on the ship 'Chatham,' 354 tons, Captain BRAGG, from London (14 September 1829), Plymouth (19 September), and touching at St Jago (6-9 October), with her husband (charterer, with merchandise) and two children [Hobart Town Courier, 16 January]; she died at Hobart, 16 June 1831.</div><div>Eliza was married at Lurgashall, Sussex, 22 May 1823, to John Meers HAMMOND (son of William HAMMOND, and named in his will, proved P.C.C. in 1824, together with siblings William James Barefoot HAMMOND, Thomas Mitchell HAMMOND, and Elizabeth PILGRIM); James first arrived in Van Diemen's Land,15 April 1824, on the ship 'Heroine' from London, with his wife and two children, accompanying James GRANT and his wife Caroline (NEVE), who had chartered the vessel; after a return visit to England, James arrived back in Hobart, 13 June 1828, on the ship 'Sarah,' Captain G. KING, from Land's End (8 February) touching at St Jago, which James had chartered, with goods and passenger; he was due to return to England, shortly after September 1828, <i>"... with the intention of immediately returning to the Colony"</i> [Hobart Town Courier, 20 September]; he returned to Hobart on the ship 'Chatham,' December 1829; he died, shortly after arrival in Hobart, 1 June 1830, of a fever taken at St Jago, from which he never recovered.</div><div>James and Eliza had issue:</div><div> a. Rachel Anne HAMMOND, born, probably on the voyage to Tasmania, 1824; she was probably buried at Brixton St Matthew, Surrey, 25 February 1829, aged 5 years.<br /></div><div> b. Thomas Mitchell HAMMOND, born at Hobart, 15 September 1825 [Colonial Times, and Tasmanian Advertiser (Hobart), Friday 23 September -<i> "... the Lady of J.M. HAMMOND, of a son"</i>]; he was probably buried at Brixton St Matthew, Surrey, 25 February 1829, aged 3 years; an uncle, Thomas Mitchell HAMMOND, Medical man, resided at Brixton.</div><div> c. Maria HAMMOND, born in 1827, probably in England; sole surviving daughter; she arrived in Hobart with her parents, January 1830; she was married to John MEREDITH.</div><div> d. Eliza HAMMOND, born at sea, between December 1829 and January 1830, on the ship 'Chatham,' shortly before reaching Hobart on 11 January 1830; she died in Hobart Town, 23 April 1831, Merchant's daughter, aged 15 months [Libraries Tasmania web-site; Ref 1831 #901]..</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div>9. Rachael KING, born at Titchfield, Hampshire (three Census enumerations), about 1810; she proved her father's will, 1829; she was at Lymington, Hampshire, March 1837, when she was listed as a Petitionary Creditor to the Bankrupt Matthias FOWLER, her brother-in-law [Perry's Bankrupt Gazette, 4 March]; as R. KING, she was probably residing at Shirley Common, Millbrook, Hampshire, 1841 Census, aged 25+, Independent, born in county, in the household of George STRATTON, and with her nephew A.P. FOWLER (aged 5); she was at Sussex Place, Millbrook, Hampshire, 1851 Census, Unmarried, aged 39, Annuitant; she was at 11 Latimer Street, Southampton St Mary, 1861, Head, Unmarried, aged 47, Lodging House Keeper, with two male lodgers, both Mariners (aged 20 and 21); she was back at Sussex Place, Millbrook, 1871, Head, Unmarried, aged 64, Annuitant; she died at in March 1862, at Hanwell Cottage, Wellington Road, Freemantle, Hampshire, a Spinster, aged about 65 years [Hampshire Telegraph, 6 March], Registered at South Stoneham, March quarter (Volume 2c, page 55), aged 65; she was buried at Millbrook, 2 March 1875 [Parish Burials, Findmypast].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="text-align: left;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</span></div><div>10. Charles KING, born about 1810-11; mentioned in ditto, 1836; he was of Martyr Worthy, aged 20, when he obtained a License, dated 16 May 1831, to marry Mary DELLER, of Droxford, with the consent of Sarah Ann FOWLER, his sister and guardian [Southmapton Archives, calm.hants.gov.uk web-site].</div><div>_____________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;">YALDWYN OF BLACK-DOWN, LURGASHALL, SUSSEX.</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>Richard YALDWYN, born about 1762; matriculated, University College, Oxford, 7 December 1781, aged 19, of Blackdown, Sussex, son of John YALDWYN of Lodsworth [Alumni Oxonienses]; he died in September 1807, and was buried at Lurgashall St Laurence, 21 September; his will, dated 29 November 1803, with a codicil dated 12 September 1807, was proved P.C.C., 3 February 1808, on the oath of Martha YALDWYN, widow, the relict and sole executrix.</div><div>Richard cohabited with Martha SEARLE, the daughter of R. SEARLE, Esq, a tenant on Richard's Blackdown estate, by whom he had issue:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>1. Richard YALDWYN, born about 1792; he was named in his father's will, November 1803; admitted as Pensioner, Peterhouse, Cambridge, 25 June 1817, of Blackdown, Sussex; Clerk in Holy Orders; he went to Tasmania in 1831; he died at Hobart Town, 10 July 1834, <i>"... late of St Peter's College, Cambridge, aged 41 years"</i> [The Hobart Courier, 25 July].</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>2. Harriot Matilda YALDWYN, born on 19 March 1793, and baptised at Sunbury-on-Thames, London, 11 December 1795; named in her father's will, November 1803; she was married to George KING, Captain, R.N. See below.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>3. Frances YALDWYN, born 29 August 1794, and baptised at St Mary's church, Sunbury-on-Thames, 19 November; named in her father's will, November 1803; she was buried at Lurgashall, 26 May 1804, aged 10 years.</div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="text-align: left;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</span></div><div>4. Mary Ann YALDWYN, born 13 November 1795, and was baptised at Sunbury-on-Thames, 11 December 1795, with her older sister Harriot; named in her father's will, November 1803.</div><div>Richard YALDWYN, Esq, of the parish of Lodsworth, County Sussex Bachelor, was married by License, at the church of St Andrew Holborn, London, 23 May 1797, to Martha SEARLE, of the parish of Saint Andrew Holborn, Spinster, in the presence of Catherine and Peter MARTIN; she was at Blackdown, Lodsworth parish, 1841 Census, aged 70+, Independent, born in County, with John YALDWYN, aged 8 (not born in County), and four domestic servants.</div><div><br /></div><div>They had further lawful issue:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div>5. Caroline YALDWYN, probably born about 1797; named in her father's will, November 1803.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>6. Jane YALDWYN, baptised at Lurgashall, 26 July 1799; named in her father's will, November 1803.</div><div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>7. William Henry YALDWYN, born at Blackdown, Lurgashall, 6 September 1801 [Melbourne Athanaeam Inc.'s www.mahistory.org.au web-site]; he was married at Cuckfield, Sussex, 22 July 1839, to Henrietta Mary BOWLES [ditto, www.mahistory.org.au].</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div>8. John Whitehead YALDWYN, baptised at Lurgashall, 24 May 1803; named in his father's will, November 1803; he was buried at Lurgashall, 24 January 1879, aged 75 years.</div><div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>9. Martha YALDWYN, born 27 February 1805, and baptised at Lurgashall, in 1807; named in the codicil to her father's will, September 1807.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>10. Catherine YALDWYN, probably born about 1807; ditto; named in the codicil to her father's will, September 1807.</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;">GEORGE KING, CAPTAIN/COMMANDER, R.N.</span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>[B] George KING, "... admitted born" 2 June 1791 29 March 1790, as recorded in the Baptismal Register of Fareham St Peter and St Paul, Hampshire, 15 April 1804, a son of James and Sarah KING.</div><div>Two weeks after his teenage baptism, on 1 May 1804, George entered the Royal Navy:</div><div><i>"... as a Midshipman, on board 'Utrecht,' 64 guns, Captains John Wentworth LORING, Fras PICKMORE and Henry INMAN, lying in the Downs; and from January 1805, until his promotion to the rank of Lieutenant, 3 September 1810, was employed under the present Sir Edw. W.C.R. OWEN, latterly as Master's Mate, in the Imortalite' and 'Clyde' frigates. He was consequently present in several affairs with the enemy's flotilla, also in the attack made with CONGREVE's rockets on the town of Boulogne, in October 1806, and in the ops against Flushing in 1809. On the occasion of his promotion, as above, Mr KING joined the 'Ariel,' Sloop, Captain Daniel ROSS, and sailed for the Baltic. From March 1812 until within a few days of his attainment of the rank of Commander, 15 June 1814, he served off the mouth of the Scheldt in the 'Inconstant,' 36 guns, and the 'Cornwall,' 74, both commanded by Captain Owen. He has since been on half-pay. Commander KING is a Magistrate at Van Diemen's Land. Agents, HALLETT and ROBINSON"</i> [A Naval Biographical Dictionary].<br /></div><div>... <span style="color: red;">TO BE CONTINUED</span>...</div><div>George was of Brook, parish of Witley, Surrey, March 1820 (birth of eldest daughter); at Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, January 1827 (baptism of second daughter); his wife was at Haslemere, Surrey, August 1828 and July 1830 (baptisms of their youngest daughter and only son respectively).</div><div>...</div><div>Captain George KING, R.N., commanded the ship 'Sarah' on a voyage from Land's End, 8 February 1828, touching at St Jago, and arriving in Hobart Town, 13 June 1828, with goods and 28 passengers, including Mr J.M. HAMMOND, who had chartered the vessel, and was George's brother-in-law; the 'Sarah' set sail on her return voyage from Hobart, 15 February 1829, Captain KING, direct to London, with a cargo of Colonial produce, and several passengers. </div><div><div>George KING sailed from London, 6 August 1832, as a passenger on the barque 'Duckenfield,' 317 tons, Captain RIDDELL, bound for New South Wales, via Hobart Town (December 1832), with a general cargo and passengers, arriving at Sydney on 30 December [Sydney Gazette, 1 January 1833]; he sailed from Sydney, 19 January 1833, still on the 'Duckenfield,' Captain Adam RIDDELL, on her return voyage to Hobart Town, with 22 horses and local produce, with part of her original London cargo [The Sydney Herald, 21 January].</div><div>...</div></div><div>He was in Launceston by October 1833, when he was appointed to the Committee, and as Secretary, of the newly formed Cornwall Agricultural Association.</div><div>George KING, Esq, Commander, R.N. was appointed, October 1836, to be Port Officer, Hobart Town, from the 1st of December, in the room of William MORIARTY [The True Colonist, Van Diemen's land Political Despatch, etc, (Hobart), 21 October 1836].</div><div>George was appointed Assistant Police Magistrate of Bothwell, December 1845 [Cornwall Chronicle, 3 December; Launceston Advertiser, 25 December; he was farwelled from there, in June 1850, to his old post as Port Officer, Hobart [Britannia and Trade's Advocate (Hobart Town), 4 July].</div><div>George KING, Captain, R.N., Port Officer, Hobart, was listed as a Member of the Royal Society of Van Diemen's Land, in 1852.</div><div>...</div><div>George died at his residence, Golbourne Street, Hobart Town, 21 October 1858, aged 65 years, of Apoplexy, Informed by Samuel SMITH, Friend, of Brisbane Street [Registration, 1858 #1171; image viewable on the Libraries Tasmania web-site], or died on 20 October, his funeral to take place at St David's Cathedral, at 3 o'clock, Saturday 23rd [The Courier (Hobart), 21 October].</div><div><br /></div><div>George was married at Lurgashall, Sussex, 3 June 1818, to Harriot Matilda YALDWYN; she was born on 19 March 1793, and baptised at Sunbury-on-Thames, London, 11 December 1795, daughter of Richard YALDWYN of Blackdown House, Sussex, and his wife Martha SEARLE.</div><div>As Mrs Captain KING, she arrived in Hobart Town, 4 September 1834, on the ship 'Thomas Laurie,' 297 tons, from London (4 April) via Rio de Janeiro, in the Cabin, with her four children.</div><div>She died at Adelaide Street, Hobart, 6 August 1869, aged 76 years, also of Apoplexy, Informed by William HAMILTON, Undertaker, Elizabeth Street [Registration, 1869 #7986].</div><div><br /></div><div>George and Harriot Matilda had issue:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>1. Frances KING, born at Brook, Surrey, and baptised at Witley, 26 March 1820; aged 14 on her arrival in Hobart, 1834; she was married in Launceston, 1836, to Robert Pringle STUART, of North Esk.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>2. Matilda Adelaide KING, baptised at the British Chapel, Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, 8 January 1827; aged 7 on her arrival in Hobart, 1834; she died at 178 Macquarie Street, Hobart, 31 March 1867 [The mercury (Hobart), 2 April]; she was married at St David's Cathedral, Hobart Town, 10 August 1857, as his first wife, to Robert Patten ADAMS, of Hobart, Barrister-at-Law; he was born at Matock, Somerset, in 1831, and died in Hobart, 1911, having married again, with further issue; Robert and Mathilda had issue, mentioned in 1887 as five children:</div><div> a. Robert Percival ADAMS, born at Hobart, 1859; a pupil at Hutchins School, he was nominated for a Naval Cadetship, 1872, entering the Navy on board H.M.S. Clio at Sydney [Cornwall Chronicle (Launceston), 1 July 1872]; he died in 1894; he was married at Glebe, Sydney, 1 September 1883, to Caroline (Carrie) G. ELLIOTT, eldest daughter of the late Henry Sherman ELLIOTT, of Lismore [N.S.W. Indexes to Marriages, 1883 #2561; Northern Star (Lismore), 2 February 1884].</div><div> b. Adelaide Laura ADAMS, born at Holbrook Place, Hobart Town, 1 December 1860 [Launceston Examiner, 4 December]; she died in 1936.</div><div> c. Violet Isabel ADAMS, born in Hobart, about November or December 1861; she died at Holbrook Place, Hobart 8 March 1862, aged 4 months [The Mercury (Hobart), 10 March].</div><div> d. Guy L'Estrange ADAMS, born at Holbrook Place, Hobart, 16 November 1863 [Cornwall Chronicle (Launceston), 21 November]; he died there, 18 March 1864, aged 4 months [The Mercury (Hobart), 21 March].</div><div> e. no particulars yet found.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>3. Martha Maria KING, baptised at Haslemere, Surrey, 18 August 1828; aged 6 on her arrival in Hobart, 1834; as the youngest daughter, she was married at St George's church, Hobart Town, 24 March 1852, to Lieutenant Charles Talbot COMPTON, R.N., H.M.S. 'Fantome' [Launceston Examiner, 27 March].</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>4.William KING, baptised at Haslemere, Surrey, 15 July 1830; aged 4 on arrival in Hobart, 1834; he died at Helensburg, N.S.W., 11 July 1895, and was buried at Woronora Cemetery [Anglican Monumental, Section A, Plot 2]; he was married at St James's church, Sydney, 24 April 1852, to Emily GRIFFITHS, of Woolloomooloo; she was born in Dorset, 1833, the third daughter of John Gordon GRIFFITHS (1810-1857), Actor, Theatre Manager, and Publican, in England, Sydney and Manly, by his wife Anne Rosina WYATT; Emily died in Sydney, 30 October 1884, and was buried at Rookwood [Anglican Section R, Plot 1117], aged 50; they had issue:</div><div> a. William KING, born in April 1853; died in 1854.</div><div> b. Matilda Adelaide KING, born in Woolloomooloo, 1855; died in Sydney, 1859 #1207, parents named [also 1859, Volume 122B, # 7996 - the burial details].</div><div> c. Ernest George KING, born in 1857; he died at 62 Amherst Street, North Sydney, August 1927 (Registered #12434, parents William F. and Emily), and was buried at St Thomas's churchyard, West Street, North Sydney, 16 August [Daily Telegraph, 16 August]; he was probably married at Sydney, 1881 #1556, to Sarah Jane MEAD; she died at Neutral Bay, 20 November 1924, and was buried at St Thomas's Church of England Cemetery, 22 November, aged 68 yeas [S.M.H., 6 December]; they had issue:</div><div> i. Harold Tasman KING, born at St Leonards, 1883 #9876; he died at North Sydney, 1939 #3804.</div><div> ii. Phillis KING, born at St Leonards, 1884 #11684; he died at North Sydney, 1953 #17280.</div><div> iii. Florence Jane KING, born at St Leonards, 1885 #12067; he died there, 1968 #38844.</div><div> iv. William G. KING, born at St Leonards, 1887 #13141, a twin; he died there, 1887 #5481, infant.</div><div> v. Ernest J. KING, ditto, #13142, the other twin; as Ernest A., ditto, 1887 #549, an infant.</div><div> vi. Percy KING, born at St Leonards, 1888 #13566; he died at North Sydney, 1949 #7678.</div><div> vii Maynard KING, born at St Leonards, 1892 #32957; he died there, 1964 #22532.</div><div> viii. Roy KING, born at St Leonards, 1896 #7240; he died there, 1896 #3968, an infant..</div><div> d. Florence Emily KING, born in 1861; she died at Camperdown, 23 March 1936, late of Newtown, and was buried privately, at Rookwood C.of E., aged 76 [S.M.H., 25 March]; she was married at Redfern, 1887, to Alfred Hugh McCLUSKEY; he probably died at Newtown, 1916 #5563, son of Hugh and Marianne; they had issue:</div><div> i. Alfred Moore McCLUSKEY, born at Redfern, 1889 #8479; named in his mother's death notice, 1936; he died at Dunedoo, 1940 #26514, parents named Alfred Hugh and Florence Emily.</div><div> ii. Darcy Royal McCLUSKEY, born at Glebe, 1892 #13423; he died at Newtown, 1927 #4504, parents named Alfred H.C. and Florence E.; named as deceased in his mother's death notice, 1936; she was sole executrix of his will, proved in 1927.</div><div> iii. Jack A.S. McCLUSKEY, born at Glebe, 1895 #22279; named in his mother's death notice, 1936.</div><div> iv. Albert E. McCLUSKEY, born at Newtown, 1901 #5884; named in his mother's death notice, 1936.</div><div> e. a son, born and died at Balmain, 1863.</div><div> f. Josephine A. KING, born at Balmain, 1864.</div><div> g. William F. KING, born and died in Sydney, 1867.</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;">ROBERT PIGOTT OF IRELAND.</span></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div>Robert PIGOTT was born about 1697, perhaps in Antigua, or at Kilcromin, in the Queen's Count, a younger son of John PIGOTT (about 1667 - 1710), of Antigua and Kilcromin, by his wife Frances PROCTOR, and so a grandson of Thomas PIGOTT (about 1641 - 1702) of Dysart, Queen's County, by his wife Elizabeth WELDON.</div><div>Robert was named in his father's will, 1708 ["History of the Island of Antigua," by Vere Langford OLIVER, 1898, Volume 3]; named in his sister Francis PIGOTT's will, 1726 [BETHAM's Abstract]; named in will of his uncle, Robert PIGOTT of Dysart Queen's County, dated 1728, as the second son of his late brother John, and with a bequest of £700; he probably witnessed the deeds of Lease and Release, dated 17 and 18 May 1725, by which his uncle Robert sold Dysart to his (Robert senior's) second cousin Emanuel PIGOTT of Chetwynd, County Cork.</div><div>Lieutenant in Hon Brigadier NEWTON's Regiment (formerly Colonel Richard COOTE's), when named in Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 5 and 6 November 1730, concerning lands in Gaulstown, County Kilkenny, sold by Benjamin MORRIS, Alderman of Waterford, for £1,000 paid by Robert [cited in Memorial 51091, Dublin Deeds Registry].</div><div>Captain, in Colonel Hon Thomas WENTWORTH's Regiment of Foot, when he was grantor of Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 7 and 8 May 1733, of same lands in Gaulstown, to Elizabeth PAUL, of Dublin, Widow, Joshua PAUL, of Dublin, Esq, and Lawrence STEEL, of County Kildare; Captain -Lieutenant, same Regiment, in Kinsale, 1734.</div><div><br /></div><div>He was probably married (details unknown), with issue:</div><div><span style="text-align: center;"> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</span></div><div>1. John PIGOTT. See [A] below.</div><div><span style="text-align: center;"> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</span></div><div>2. Frances PIGOTT; of Clonmell, County Tipperary, when she was married there, 9 July 1757, to Richard POWER, Esq, Counsellor-at-Law [Faulkner's Dublin Journal, 6 August], and sister of John PIGOTT, of the 39th Regiment [BURKE's Baronetage, 105th Edition], by License of the Prerogative Court of Ireland [BETHAM's Abstract].</div><div>Richard was admitted to the Middle Temple, 1752; Irish Bar, 1757; 2nd Baron of the Exchequer, Ireland, 1772; summoned to render an account, as Usher of the Court of Chancery, but it is believed that he so resented the order, that he drowned himself in the River Liffey in February 1794.</div><div>They had no issue, and his property went to his POWER nephew.</div><div><br /></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;">JOHN PIGOTT OF COMPTON CHAMBERLAYNE, WILTS.</span></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div>[A] John PIGOTT, born about 1730, probably in Ireland; he may have been a son of Robert PIGOTT (born about 1697), a Lieutenant, in Colonel NEWTON's Regiment (1730), and in Colonel WENTWORTH's Regiment (1733) - the same Regiment that would become the 39th; if so, he was a grandson of Captain John PIGOTT (about 1667 - 1710), of Antigua and Kilcromin, Queen's County, by his wife Frances PROCTO</div><div><br /></div><div>John PIGOTT was Ensign, Colonel John ALDECRON's Regiment of Foot, Ireland, January 1751 (soon after numbered the 39th Regiment); he sailed with them from Kinsale, 23 March 1754, on the ship 'Primus of India,' in a fleet of six ships under the command of Admiral WATSON, bound for the East Indies, via Funchall (6 April, for 2 weeks) and Madagascar (18 July, for three weeks); at Fort David, Madras, 1754; promoted to Lieutenant, at Madras, 19 June 1755; believed to have been a survivor of the Black Hole of Calcutta, 20 June 1756; transferred as Lieutenant to the 36th Regiment of Foot, 21 September 1757; probably transferred as Lieutenant to the 74th Regiment of Foot, 1 May 1760; grantee of a Deed of Lease, dated 5 April 1775, from Charles PENRUDDOCKE, of a Messuage, Dwelling House, Orchard Garden and Back-side, in Compton Chamberlayne, for £8 and an annual rental of 2s., for the term of three lives (his wife Jane, and two children Elizabeth and John PIGOTT junior); John senior was promoted to Captain, 12th Regiment of Foot, 26 December 1778, possibly in Gibraltar; transferred as Captain to the Independent Regiment of Invalids, Portsmouth, 7 February 1780; Captain, Royal Invalids [M.I.].</div><div><br /></div><div>John died at Compton Chamberlayne, 19 May 1788, aged 58 years [M.I.], and was buried at Fovant Churchyard, 23 May 1788; died lately, <i>"... Captain PIGOTT of Compton Chamberlain, Wiltshire; one of the 23 persons who providentially escaped the fate of their fellow prisoners suffocated in the Black Hole of Calcutta in 1756, of whom, except Governor HOLWELL, he has not, we believe, left a survivor</i>" [Gentleman's Magazine, June 1788].</div><div><br /></div><div>John was married by Banns, at Compton Chamberlayne parish church, 25 February 1764, to Jane BENNETT, witnessed by Thomas GUILD and John MERCHANT; Jane was the first life for the term of her husband's deed of lease, April 1775.</div><div><br /></div><div>On John's death, his widow Jane made her petition:</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh3dn3y5aIAk8qrfFTl9NaLBPdg4xjKcCXa3g-mO7lJdfZsjkACmeZ4FSkUXHMJOndiTLY20_NAGLi2tAmz4J2QXVFRKSPYtlbyp3M2xMWq1FTa4fTKHYvucsfhZKcEV2vSVAj8_m1g4y_u/s653/JANE+PIGOTT+1.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="653" data-original-width="379" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh3dn3y5aIAk8qrfFTl9NaLBPdg4xjKcCXa3g-mO7lJdfZsjkACmeZ4FSkUXHMJOndiTLY20_NAGLi2tAmz4J2QXVFRKSPYtlbyp3M2xMWq1FTa4fTKHYvucsfhZKcEV2vSVAj8_m1g4y_u/w373-h640/JANE+PIGOTT+1.JPG" width="373" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image courtesy of Ancestry.com, </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>U.K. British Army and Navy Birth, Death and Marriage Records, 1730-1960 </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[citing TNA, Kew, WO 42, Piece 038, p. 155-319, Q. 1-8].</i></div><div><br /></div><div>Jane died at Compton, and was buried with her husband in Fovant churchyard, 7 June 1794, aged 48 years [M.I.]; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>1. Elizabeth PIGOTT, baptised at Broad Chalke, Wiltshire, 3 February 1765; second life for the term of her father's deed of lease, April 1775; she died in August 1816, <i>"... suddenly, at Compton Chamberlain, Wiltshire, much respected... eldest daughter of the late Capt. PIGOTT, of Royal Invalids, one of the survivors of the Black Hole, of Calcutta"</i> [Bristol Mirror, 31 August]; she was buried at Compton Chamberlayne churchyard, 22 August 1816, aged 50 years; her will, dated 5 August 1809, was proved P.C.C., 25 February 1817, mentioning her brothers John and Robert (a mourning suit each), and sisters Frances, Maria and Sophia.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div>2. John PIGOTT, baptised at Broad Chalke, 19 July 1767, a twin; third life for the term of his father's deed of lease, April 1775; named in his sister Elizabeth's will, 1809; he was buried at Compton Chamberlayne churchyard, 10 January 1941, aged 73 years; Probate, Archdeaconry Court of Sarum, 1841.</div><div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>3. Robert PIGOTT, baptised at Broad Chalke, 19 July 1767, the other twin; his Deed of Lease, dated 4 March 1806, from John Hungerford PENRUDDOCK, for the "Close" as part of the Manor of Compton Chamberlaine; named in his sister Elizabeth's will, 1809; he was buried at Compton Chamberlayne churchyard, 16 December 1831, aged 63 years.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>4. Joseph PIGOTT, baptised at Compton Chamberlayne, 14 September 1769. No further particulars.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>5. Frances PIGOTT, baptised at Compton Chamberlayne, 22 August 1773; joint executrix of her sister Elizabeth's will, 1809, and proved it in 1817; she died at Compton Chamberlaine on 25 February 1841; a Spinster, of Compton Chamberlaine, she made her will on 9 August 1838, naming John SWAYNE, of Wilton, and Robert Henry NEWLAND, of Romsey, Hampshire, as joint trustees, devising to them her "Messuages, Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments situate in the Kingdom of Ireland and elsewhere" in trust for her sister Sophia KEMP and after her to her niece Frances Sophia NEWLAND, the will witnessed by James KING, and proved P.C.C., 26 August 1841; a further administration was made on 14 August 1872, to her niece Frances Sophia (now) WARWICK.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>6. <b>Constantia Maria PIGOTT</b>, baptised at Compton Chamberlayne, 22 March 1775; as Maria PIGOTT, she was joint executrix of her sister Elizabeth's will, 1809; as <b>Maria KING</b>, she was buried at Compton Chamberlayne churchyard, 1 October 1837, aged 62 years; she was aged 24, Spinster, when she was married, by License, at Compton Chamberlayne parish church, 1 or 2 July 1819, to <b>Edmund KING</b>, of Swathling (see above).</div><div>7. Sophia Moore, baptised at Compton, 5 July 1783; married William KEMP, with issue.</div><div>______________________________________________</div></div></div><div style="text-align: left;"> <br /></div></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-60803150783873076402021-03-07T16:14:00.104-08:002022-10-11T19:47:57.550-07:00G.T.M. ROACH, a South Australian Artist<p></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br />By Chris PIGOTT.<div>cgpigott@yahoo.com.au<div>- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div><br /></div></div></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhaiuuXr4_nGggRl5leuQ-jirSRyAqSHSL473QJttJD5GxIznZRFSb4SfuDJosimK2ce59BbAYnjmOvDjvXAHDgghZ2PYhkotUL2cmhpB-7lNAtQl-oEDR66zntifiXfapQy6u5NKIyg6Rz/s226/1004537322-size-exact-300x0+%25282%2529.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="226" data-original-width="166" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhaiuuXr4_nGggRl5leuQ-jirSRyAqSHSL473QJttJD5GxIznZRFSb4SfuDJosimK2ce59BbAYnjmOvDjvXAHDgghZ2PYhkotUL2cmhpB-7lNAtQl-oEDR66zntifiXfapQy6u5NKIyg6Rz/w294-h400/1004537322-size-exact-300x0+%25282%2529.jpg" width="294" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><b>Gilbert Thomas Meredith ROACH</b>. About 1919.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Gilbert</b> <b>ROACH</b> was born at St Peter's/Norwood, Adelaide, on 3 July 1895, and probably at Harrow Road, College Park (the fifth and youngest child, his was the only birth for which there was no published birth notice).</div><div style="text-align: left;">He was the youngest son of Thomas ROACH and Sophia Stuart SANDERS, who were married at St David's, Burnside, 16 February 1888; his father Thomas died at Kent Town Private Hospital, 1 June 1912, aged 50; and his mother Sophia died at Ravenswood, S.A., 17 December 1920, late of Clifton Street, Widow, aged 61, and was buried at North Road Cemetery, Nailsworth.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Gilbert</b> was youngest brother of:</div><div style="text-align: left;">1. John Stuart ROACH, born at Rose Street, Norwood, 19 April 1889; Anglican Minister; he died in Buderim, Qld, 20 January 1958; he was married to Hildred Christina CARLILE.</div><div style="text-align: left;">2. Marjorie Edgeworth ROACH, born at Elmwood, College Park, 3 March 1891; she died in 1986; she was married, 24 December 1944, to Ernest Marshall LUXMORE, of Morphettville.</div><div style="text-align: left;">3. Kenneth Douglas ROACH, born Elmwood, Harrow Road, College Park, 4 May 1892; Anglican Minister; School Master; he died in Armidale, N.S.W., 1 May 1939; unmarried.</div><div style="text-align: left;">4. Sylvia Mary ROACH, born at Elmwood, Harrow Road, College Park, 14 February 1894; she died on 26 April 1924, and was buried with her mother; unmarried.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;">His father, Thomas ROACH, was born at Penwortham, Clare District, South Australia, on 15 October 1861, the youngest son of John ROACH, of Burra and Penwortham, Flour Miller (a native of Towednack, Cornwall), by his wife Jane HOSKIN or HOSKING (who had arrived together in South Australia in 1854, by the ship "Cressy"); John died at Aberdeen, Burra, on 4 October 1881, aged 61; Jane died there on 25 February 1896.</div><div style="text-align: left;">They had two older sons born at Penwortham - John ROACH, on 3 October 1856 (he was married at Penwortham, 24 May 1881, to Louisa Lloyd COX), and Henry ROACH., born 9 June 1858 (he was married at Kooringa, 24 August 1882, to Minetta LANE).</div><div style="text-align: left;">As a 12 year old, young Thomas gave evidence at an inquest, in December 1873, into the cause of a fire which destroyed his father's Mill at Penwortham, having been the last person to have been inside, some hours before the fire took hold, and making sure that he was careful with his candle.</div><div style="text-align: left;">So far, I have not been able to formally identify Thomas's occupation. He may well have been the younger partner in the firm of ROACH Brothers, Sharebrokers, of 15-18 Pirie Chambers, Pirie Street, Adelaide, who was elevated to the partnership, on the retirement of Mr Henry ROACH in December 1889, joining his brother John ROACH. He may later have been in partnership with Gilbert HILLMAN, carrying on business at 17 Waymouth Street, Adelaide, as Land and Estate Agents and Sharebrokers, as HILLMAN and ROACH, when he withdrew from the partnership.</div><div style="text-align: left;">The three sons above present as a likely set of candidates!</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Gilbert</b> attended St Peter's Collegiate School, in Adelaide; he was awarded the Form IV prize for Physics, Speech Day, December 1908 [Advertiser, 16 December].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Gilbert</b> began studies at the Adelaide School of Art, in about 1912. In May 1913, at the annual Student's Exhibition, held in the rooms of the Exhibition Building, <b>G. ROACH</b> was mentioned, in the elementary classes in Wood Carving, with "good studies" in pencil [The Register, 23 May].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">When <b>Gilbert</b> signed up to fight in what became known as the Great War, he was not yet 20 years of age. He enlisted just fourteen days after Britain had declared war on Germany. </div><div style="text-align: left;">He was young, but he was keen. </div><div style="text-align: left;">And he was talented - he was signed up into the 1st Divisional Signals Company, perhaps with a bit of help from his schoolboy interest in Physics.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">However, on his A.I.F. Attestation form, his occupation was recorded as Law Clerk.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><b><span style="font-size: large;"><i>WORLD WAR 1.</i></span></b></div><div><br /></div><div><b>Gilbert</b> was enlisted as a Sapper, 1st Divisional (28th) Signal Company, Keswick, Adelaide, 18 August 1914, aged 19.</div><div>He embarked in Melbourne, 20 October 1914, on the ship "Karoo" (code named A10), for service in Europe, initially stationed in Egypt to protect the Suez Canal, and keep it open for allied shipping.</div><div>He served at Anzac, Gallipoli, returning to his Division, 16 December 1915. </div><div>He was promoted to Corporal, at Serapeum, Egypt, 1 April 1916.</div><div>Shortly after he was transferred to 4th Australian Division Signal Company, at Tel El Kebir, Egypt, 6 April 1916.</div><div>He was embarked at Alexandria, on the "Kinfauns Castle," 2 June 1916, and disembarked at Marseilles, 8 June.</div><div>He served on the battlefields of the Somme.</div><div>S.N. 111. Corporal <b>Gilbert Thomas Meredith ROACH</b> was Mentioned in Despatches, 20 September 1916:</div><div><i>"Corporal <b>G.T.M. ROACH</b>'s duty of carrying despatches took him along Sausage Valley in the vicinity of Pozieres during this Division's turns in the lines, during August/September. Where on many occasions he was faced with many enemy barrages, but he always succeeded in delivering his despatches, showing great pluck combined with utter disregard of shell-fire. He set an excellent example to his juniors. He has by his push, determination and organisation at all times, brought his section to a high state of efficiency. Recommended by O.C. 4th Aust. Div. Signal Coy."</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgiYFgl3VaWHKNxgWEhjQJXKl2z14h-v3BNEGRkSK5VtjwAU2NctHlniYW2b_mZYIHiRMLx9EIL23SGsbCQi3fiw_XO-q5SwamileGSRgmTVUjz7voIRuDldm818DbE3OxAP0saArpDG_1L/s460/GTM+ROACH+PORTRAIT+%25282%2529.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="460" data-original-width="265" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgiYFgl3VaWHKNxgWEhjQJXKl2z14h-v3BNEGRkSK5VtjwAU2NctHlniYW2b_mZYIHiRMLx9EIL23SGsbCQi3fiw_XO-q5SwamileGSRgmTVUjz7voIRuDldm818DbE3OxAP0saArpDG_1L/w368-h640/GTM+ROACH+PORTRAIT+%25282%2529.jpg" width="368" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>A wintry and "Informal portrait" of <b>G.T.M. ROACH</b>, dated 26 December 1917. </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image courtesy of the Australian War Memorial, Ref. EO1 562.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: left;">He returned to Australia, from London, 23 October 1918, on the "D 30" ("Port Lyttleton"), arriving 4th M.D. (South Australia), 25 December 1918; and was discharged at Keswick Barracks, Adelaide, 23 February 1919.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b><span style="font-size: large;"><i>RETURN TO AUSTRALIA.</i></span></b></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">After his return to Australia, <b>Gilbert</b> brought his sketches back from Europe, and took up his art work with a passion. He returned to his old Adelaide School of Art, now called the South Australian School of Arts and Crafts, and completed his studies in 1922, "graduating" with Honours in Drawing and Painting from Life, Grade II [The Register, 5 January 1923].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">He drew in pencil and charcoal, painted in oils and water-colours, and created editions of etchings, mostly monochrome, but some with aquatint overlay. </div><div style="text-align: left;">He held a number of Exhibitions of his works during the 1920s and into the 1930s, in the Gallery of the Society of Arts, on North Terrace, Adelaide (see below).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Some of his war-time drawings had already been published by C.E.W. BEAN in "The Anzac Book," put together on board ship in the Aegean Sea, in December 1916. Another fourteen works, completed after his return, were purchased in 1938 by the Australian War Memorial in Canberra.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">During the late 1920s and early 1930s, in the Mount Lofty area, <b>Gilbert</b> joined a circle of friends of my maternal grandfather, Peter GORRIE, M.D., and went on several "expeditions" with them into the "wilds" of South Australia, including to the Coorong, and into the north:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEheLanuYjHbvEKimlCkbTZ6wmyGgYHgDKt-0jl61ugvTGabmgOj5BqPsvuid6m-G9z90rGouZSQymIuhhfbg_ShNPhYlW6t5cB_32wIK5YE3wecrBdBdcr2ravKIagjREV32dtbU_n7SxAs/s1513/ROACH+%2526+GORRIE.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1513" data-original-width="1134" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEheLanuYjHbvEKimlCkbTZ6wmyGgYHgDKt-0jl61ugvTGabmgOj5BqPsvuid6m-G9z90rGouZSQymIuhhfbg_ShNPhYlW6t5cB_32wIK5YE3wecrBdBdcr2ravKIagjREV32dtbU_n7SxAs/w300-h400/ROACH+%2526+GORRIE.jpg" width="300" /></a></div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><b>Gilbert ROACH</b> and Dr Peter GORRIE (with signature pipe), in the bush, about 1930. </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Photo courtesy of my brother Bill PIGOTT.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Gilbert</b> paid his way on these trips, for want of ready cash, by gifting several of his art works to the Doctor. which works remained in the possession of his elder daughter, Betty GORRIE, the wife of H.R. PIGOTT, then a Master it <b>Gilbert</b>'s old school, St Peter's Collegiate School (my parents, both now deceased).</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><div><b>Gilbert</b> continued that friendship with the GORRIE family after the Doctor returned to Scotland. He evidently resided in an "outhouse" in the back yard of a house Mrs Janet GORRIE and the four children moved into in Fowler's Road, Glenunga, after leaving St Anne's, in Stirling, probably about 1933. He used it as a studio, and evidently young Peter GORRIE Junior, my uncle, bunked in there as well. </div><div>Janet evidently offered him motherly advice about his exhibitions, insomuch as that he should not swamp the market by putting too much of his work up for sale at the one time. I think she got given a few extra prints as the result of her sound advice.</div><div><br /></div></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Gilbert</b> retained the family friendship with my mother:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifBdp7pxe33epUtudbJvQMT3_L1ViS_LBCKopRIIYauSxdhxS7vai5MMv5pMl08Lgr6VXabc3IATRBMSaFJ4GZIm0K3fgMcSJGSQlfQ99Lhmdk684VA2En3U8VLVNQvbwRpwW_DK78WfhG/s261/BETTY+GORRIE+AND+ROACH+%25282%2529.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="261" data-original-width="192" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifBdp7pxe33epUtudbJvQMT3_L1ViS_LBCKopRIIYauSxdhxS7vai5MMv5pMl08Lgr6VXabc3IATRBMSaFJ4GZIm0K3fgMcSJGSQlfQ99Lhmdk684VA2En3U8VLVNQvbwRpwW_DK78WfhG/w294-h400/BETTY+GORRIE+AND+ROACH+%25282%2529.jpg" width="294" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Betty GORRIE and <b>Gilbert ROACH</b>, possibly on the banks of the Murray in Renmark.</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>The photo is not dated - perhaps mid-late 1930s, and before her marriage?</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Photo courtesy of Bill PIGOTT.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">That continued after Betty GORRIE married my father in Adelaide in 1938, and during the war, in which her father and both of her brothers were killed in action. My mother remembered that when news of her younger brother Peter's death in 1942 was confirmed, <b>Gilbert</b> returned her brother's old school cap to her - there being no other member of the GORRIE family then left in Australia.</div><div style="text-align: left;">On one occasion, as my mother also remembered, <b>Gilbert</b> showed my father a poem he had written, to which my father, who wrote a lot of poetry himself, suggested that <b>Gilbert </b>might do better to stay with his etchings! Rather unkind!!!</div><div style="text-align: left;">My family moved from Adelaide to Brisbane in 1947, and appear to have lost touch with <b>Gilbert</b>. </div><div style="text-align: left;">I do not remember mum meeting up with him in a return visit she made to Adelaide from Sydney, about 1960, with six of her children in the family car, and towing a caravan.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><b><br /></b></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Gilbert</b> volunteered for service again in W.W.2, again, it would appear, in Signals.</div><div style="text-align: left;">His second Attestation, as S111808, dated 21 May 1942, for an Artist, Painter and Etcher, and Mechanical Craftsman, indicates that he was taken on strength for Part Time duty, Home Training, under the notation "L. of C. Sigs, P.M.G.," was promoted to Corporal, 4 August 1944, but was on duty for only 12 and a half days betwen 1942 and 1944 [Australian National Archives].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">He also published a small book, "Come in Willie," illustrated, and published in Adelaide in 1952 [The Age, 2 August]:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgDYPQMru0amIcXPJ7vVqS31C2oxty7Nd8etDz6gVeLmxeVMDLPKKCpyVAv_c7uloVE7K0m-_nXnmY18xanWKdbxTqrWEmTm9NLoHpw3s2rAliUJXyfFfEESG0D-m2wRm0QE9ZUx4_PpCKg/s694/WAGTAIL.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="502" data-original-width="694" height="462" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgDYPQMru0amIcXPJ7vVqS31C2oxty7Nd8etDz6gVeLmxeVMDLPKKCpyVAv_c7uloVE7K0m-_nXnmY18xanWKdbxTqrWEmTm9NLoHpw3s2rAliUJXyfFfEESG0D-m2wRm0QE9ZUx4_PpCKg/w640-h462/WAGTAIL.JPG" width="640" /></a></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><br /></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Review published in The Age (Melbourne), 2 August 1952.</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">In later life, I have an impression (from comments of my mother) that he put his illustrating skills to use with the Commonwealth Government, initially working as a draftsman for the P.M.G. Department in Adelaide, and later at the Weapons Research Establishment at Salisbury.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><b>Gilbert</b> died on 2 July 1978, at a Repatriation General Hospital, near Adelaide, late of 16 Wiggins Avenue, Salisbury; his remains were cremated at Centennial Park. He was unmarried.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><p><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>A CATALOGUE OF HIS KNOWN WORKS OF ART.</b></i></span></p><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><i><b>DRAWINGS FROM THE GREAT WAR.</b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">HOLDINGS OF THE AUSTRALIAN WAR MEMORIAL:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 000 31 002 - "A Turkish man's head." Gallipoli, 1915. Drawing in pen and ink on paper, 7.3 cm x 4.3 cm. Published in "The Anzac Book," December 1916, bottom of page 112 (but not associated with "The Happy Warrior," instead separating "The Caveman," a poem by J.M. COLLINS, 9th Battalion, from "An Anzac Alphabet," by J.W.S. HENDERSON, R.G.A., and not evidently connected with either item):</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhjj0ProXutMc_35UuKUMXivd6oGMxEwFM1rqa364NQOSmzDf0_RKYvEkrudVr4Q2JmypOOBwnk_QIIMydJyRVgD8diIllvsIQfXxuYtNfcrVo8YkdAwwZrBNG1PoKU-fPJf-rSV1CmW_7/s218/TURK%2527S+HEAD.PNG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="218" data-original-width="169" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhjj0ProXutMc_35UuKUMXivd6oGMxEwFM1rqa364NQOSmzDf0_RKYvEkrudVr4Q2JmypOOBwnk_QIIMydJyRVgD8diIllvsIQfXxuYtNfcrVo8YkdAwwZrBNG1PoKU-fPJf-rSV1CmW_7/w310-h400/TURK%2527S+HEAD.PNG" width="310" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 000 60 - "Achi Baba, from Anzac Cove, August 1915," depicting the dugouts and paths in the foreground; above them on the skyline is the massive Kilid Bahr plateau; near the promontory in the centre is Gaba Tepe; and above is the peak of Achi Baba. Drawing in pencil on paper, 20.2 x 32.9 cm. Published in "The Anzac Book," December 1916, at page 37:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgEqluICdtJCFyB1x1lxs13HLPgrziHP-Zlqr4C9sYe1PS2Cdw5MJmFL_Ls2GN_VDKFxHEuAGi9DDc3vPhdN-DEczx42Dwwso4PKq-Ao-D5fuputJbqxuM1bKEM1zZJfcXFBXe2RC02WXVB/s504/GTMR+ANZAC+%2540+%25282%2529.PNG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="283" data-original-width="504" height="225" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgEqluICdtJCFyB1x1lxs13HLPgrziHP-Zlqr4C9sYe1PS2Cdw5MJmFL_Ls2GN_VDKFxHEuAGi9DDc3vPhdN-DEczx42Dwwso4PKq-Ao-D5fuputJbqxuM1bKEM1zZJfcXFBXe2RC02WXVB/w400-h225/GTMR+ANZAC+%2540+%25282%2529.PNG" width="400" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br /></div><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13623 - "View of the Landing at Suvla Bay," depicting the landing of Australian troops, looking north from the Sphinx near H.Q. 1st Australian Division, with small boats landing troops on the beach as bursting shells fire from destroyers in the harbour land on the slopes north of Salt Lake, Kuchuk Anafarta. Gallipoli, 9 August 1915. Drawing, pencil on paper.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13624 - "Anafarta landing," depicting Australian troops landing at Suvla Bay, looking north-east from a point near the 1st Australian Division Head Quarters. Gallipoli, 1915. Drawing, pencil on paper, sheet 20.4 x 39.9 cm, image 14.8 x 32.4 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13625 - "Turkish trench mortar captured at Lone Pine." Gallipoli Peninsula, August 1915. Drawing in pencil on paper, sheet 20.5 x 32.8 cm, image 13 x 25.2 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13626 - "Anzac Cove water scheme," depicting water tanks in the course of preparation in the middle foreground. In the distance we can see the landmark named 'the Sphinx,' and to the right, Suvla bay, Salt Lake and Anafarta Heights in the distance. Gallipoli, 1 August 1915. Drawing, pencil on paper, sheet 20.2 x 32.8 cm, image 16 x 32.4 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13627 - 1st Australia Division H.Q., Anzac Cove, looking north-east, showing the dug-outs of Division Commanders and Staff , and encompassing the sea of B. and C., beaches with Balloon ships, Destroyer and Supply and Troop Ships in the harbour. Gallipoli, August 1915. Drawing, pencil on paper, sheet 20.2 x 32.8 cm, image 19 x 32 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13628 - A farm-house at West Mudros, on the Aegean Island of Lemnos, Greece, first sketched in 1915. Etching printed on wove paper, plate 7.4 x 13.4 cm, sheet 11.6 x 16.5 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13629 - Wind mill, with villagers and cart in foreground, on the Greek Island of Lemnos, first sketched in 1915. Etching printed on wove paper on backing, plate 10.4 x 10.3 cm, sheet 14.2 x 13.9cm, backing 35.5 x 23.6 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13630 - Three Australian soldiers outside the trenches and dugouts, Gallipoli, first sketched in 1915. Etching printed on laid paper, plate 7.4 x 12 cm, sheet 15.2 x 22 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13631 - A group of Turkish Prisoners awaiting interrogation, Gallipoli, first sketched in 1915. Etching printed on wove paper, plate 6.5 x 7.6 cm, sheet 12.3 x 16.2 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13632 - Two Australian Stretcher Bearers with a patient, who is an officer, lying on the stretcher, first sketched at Gallipoli, 1915. Etching printed on wove paper on backing, plate 6.2 x 10.2 cm, sheet 11 x 14 cm, backing 23.6 x 23.6 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 13633 - Three soldiers and an ambulance on a bridge over the railway tracks that lead to Villers-Bretonneux, France, first sketched in June 1918. Etching printed on wove paper on backing, plate 13.6 x 14.6 cm, sheet 19.3 x 25 cm, backing 23.5 x 40.6 cm.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ART 92201 - Head piece for "A Grey Day in Gallipoli," depicting the hills of Gallipoli around the Aegean sea, and the sky is grey and gloomy. Gallipoli, 1915. Drawing in pen and ink on paper, 5.3 x 18.6 cm. Published in "The Anzac Book," December 1916, at page 106, above a story of that title by N. NASH, 11th A.A.S.C.:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhjAmE_sdrmpLn5TQBK3CVF_kAaqN_6oNrF7bvsjO4ukfwAwv29pVuqlop9cYG2sNloQkViRXMYZlL-GGKbVHbUauAVr9YXF4v38fx2ZR-nGgzVlfXv51xs9YO7JTFCRqNlaSZNSo6tuIhs/s412/GRAY+DAY+IN+GALLIPOLI.PNG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="237" data-original-width="412" height="230" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhjAmE_sdrmpLn5TQBK3CVF_kAaqN_6oNrF7bvsjO4ukfwAwv29pVuqlop9cYG2sNloQkViRXMYZlL-GGKbVHbUauAVr9YXF4v38fx2ZR-nGgzVlfXv51xs9YO7JTFCRqNlaSZNSo6tuIhs/w400-h230/GRAY+DAY+IN+GALLIPOLI.PNG" width="400" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Destroyer on the Flank." Published in "The Anzac Book," December 1916, at page 13:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiJT53Qnstt47-Z5GL09N3uJssOd08ThaUTTB_JQg8Y1JCEHgt3vWTtv5I-_tx9yXdt2_mZ5AWcfB9GIpa6CBBdYc39gE9Xyri2XHpqca-VXxhW_FM9SzoVo0nwJakxaWKYozUQHiN1yepP/s503/GTM+ANZAC+%25282%2529.PNG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="294" data-original-width="503" height="234" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiJT53Qnstt47-Z5GL09N3uJssOd08ThaUTTB_JQg8Y1JCEHgt3vWTtv5I-_tx9yXdt2_mZ5AWcfB9GIpa6CBBdYc39gE9Xyri2XHpqca-VXxhW_FM9SzoVo0nwJakxaWKYozUQHiN1yepP/w400-h234/GTM+ANZAC+%25282%2529.PNG" width="400" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">OTHER WORKS.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">OILS:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Landscape - "Sand in the Coorong." Gifted to Peter GORRIE, M.D. Now in the PIGOTT family collections:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEglYjyFH02Cr6eHxvM1QOpoIGOsqDDOGgLUv0Cm5_2XU6eoL9athC5ObpaDXPVg5Vrl9T2m2Aq3NEhOq1V4qHZKHmIP1iXVKjvsluz4cltFtm2Bc8ncfZISeo3L9O1iPb2ZRLN-CnYQHLX8/s2048/SANDHILLS.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1487" data-original-width="2048" height="290" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEglYjyFH02Cr6eHxvM1QOpoIGOsqDDOGgLUv0Cm5_2XU6eoL9athC5ObpaDXPVg5Vrl9T2m2Aq3NEhOq1V4qHZKHmIP1iXVKjvsluz4cltFtm2Bc8ncfZISeo3L9O1iPb2ZRLN-CnYQHLX8/w400-h290/SANDHILLS.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Seascape - Waves on Rocks, South Australian Coast. Gifted to Mrs Margaret PIGOTT whilst on a visit to Adelaide, probably to assist with the birth of one of her grandsons. PIGOTT family collections.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEU_RQTTgwvwE66HhSxrwm_7Al1Zl3OewSAiSUN43YbP5m1ioKBUA2SnSQltXvvVTb08DJiXYgNlkaHn3adCIurQQi4Qfe4-f82N8lxzt5AxTIv-VnsOn5BNqAV9ZWVCwr4pYyAelsKW3K/s2048/ROCKS.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1503" data-original-width="2048" height="294" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEU_RQTTgwvwE66HhSxrwm_7Al1Zl3OewSAiSUN43YbP5m1ioKBUA2SnSQltXvvVTb08DJiXYgNlkaHn3adCIurQQi4Qfe4-f82N8lxzt5AxTIv-VnsOn5BNqAV9ZWVCwr4pYyAelsKW3K/w400-h294/ROCKS.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Still Life - Still Life. Vase of Carnations, in Mrs Janet GORRIE's house, Glenunga, Adelaide. PIGOTT family collections:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwNUIVN_wg3pkVZrd3w62B5fNKKs2PDWjzjspPQbbl9JwSLdiGgcUJFWQzJuisAyaXnWxOFLa3m3M3VP29duGhiV9mUgv8E9M0tAn5UKFuibJ6ovY_VKIJQA0MLBCsGicDR52RXyrN5Jn-/s1080/thumbnail.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="940" data-original-width="1080" height="349" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwNUIVN_wg3pkVZrd3w62B5fNKKs2PDWjzjspPQbbl9JwSLdiGgcUJFWQzJuisAyaXnWxOFLa3m3M3VP29duGhiV9mUgv8E9M0tAn5UKFuibJ6ovY_VKIJQA0MLBCsGicDR52RXyrN5Jn-/w400-h349/thumbnail.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">WATERCOLOURS:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Landscape - View of Port Augusta. PIGOTT family collections:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhVUxyVViwtPV_iBTu6z0J3JGs2fRCRX4M9mfrgK57kzeXZEWg08sSQxjbUK4x1T_eIb0Ag-oqZb1xtVbWlCsJ2kR_RNXfrdlCyV5r8VwmtSiXh0pYeiPagaOO8h_zssWOxuMbjmrx9Ldq0/s882/GTMR-PORT+AUGUSTA.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="654" data-original-width="882" height="296" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhVUxyVViwtPV_iBTu6z0J3JGs2fRCRX4M9mfrgK57kzeXZEWg08sSQxjbUK4x1T_eIb0Ag-oqZb1xtVbWlCsJ2kR_RNXfrdlCyV5r8VwmtSiXh0pYeiPagaOO8h_zssWOxuMbjmrx9Ldq0/w400-h296/GTMR-PORT+AUGUSTA.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">DRAWINGS:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"Cairo," about 1920. NGA.94.18. Probably first sketched in early 1915:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5FD-OMTSw0V_ecUaglZVBzOD_wjdJERFM_dWGtJOrMmyUbRtWfNiILbN8binUIJ1lyM_P9hjTK_TkpSgu9ThM40kRczBNyZX_rCLIwTVGp4WTaETR2i0Lbv3k1afRcRmLwG2Tt02l3K5H/s355/thumbnail.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="288" data-original-width="355" height="325" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5FD-OMTSw0V_ecUaglZVBzOD_wjdJERFM_dWGtJOrMmyUbRtWfNiILbN8binUIJ1lyM_P9hjTK_TkpSgu9ThM40kRczBNyZX_rCLIwTVGp4WTaETR2i0Lbv3k1afRcRmLwG2Tt02l3K5H/w400-h325/thumbnail.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div><br /></div><i><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image courtesy of the Centre for Australian Art, on their</i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Australian Prints and Printmaking web-site.</i></div></i><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">ETCHINGS:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Valley," 1924. Edition of 30. NGA.79.1878, #28/30. PIGOTT family, #29/30:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiJVJbD8VaK982dYjgZ1524ttup26FUNpmHBAh83OWTcRjEIHXbvybVdCGgkAq8izuoaATZAMcMz_4T159GAGNyg7ZWp71eS3QW96DfelkHVl0x9HNfWqM0WnBn3HyQjQT9bk6sLsHwAPI7/s428/GTMR-The+Valley+1924.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="428" data-original-width="343" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiJVJbD8VaK982dYjgZ1524ttup26FUNpmHBAh83OWTcRjEIHXbvybVdCGgkAq8izuoaATZAMcMz_4T159GAGNyg7ZWp71eS3QW96DfelkHVl0x9HNfWqM0WnBn3HyQjQT9bk6sLsHwAPI7/s320/GTMR-The+Valley+1924.jpg" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: right;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Gippsland Steamers," circa 1924. Edition of 35. NGA.77.43, #13/25 (?).</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Deserted Mill," 1929. Edition of 40. NGA.84.1317, #22/40.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"In an Aldgate Hollow." PIGOTT family:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVkpd-ZKcYzl6Ez-DkF5oUawEdjah9fevmGEiUxdCsISh84Jn43nTQwn95twyR8p9aVb3g0zVtRMy2rvomwSF8j8dAOT1qudcGIh_vn50lCNb0uxdCRU5mW6JWjARzXGNGg9xyIHX_UDnY/s528/GTMR-InAnAldgateHollow+%25282%2529.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="528" data-original-width="432" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVkpd-ZKcYzl6Ez-DkF5oUawEdjah9fevmGEiUxdCsISh84Jn43nTQwn95twyR8p9aVb3g0zVtRMy2rvomwSF8j8dAOT1qudcGIh_vn50lCNb0uxdCRU5mW6JWjARzXGNGg9xyIHX_UDnY/s320/GTMR-InAnAldgateHollow+%25282%2529.jpg" /></a></div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"Winter." PIGOTT family:</div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdOL5lnbUM7dP-1kxLZImqSthQ4YAxxWDF9Zi-ifeF4o7NMD4sKc2UlRgvaVG1BB6jQOWUpTIWWILHWoazRHdk1QNmY3syDZlpFOYhiprD71FBPGlwiDEClZndIbS8eTEEy-t-kxxj0_FU/s1021/GTMR-ETCHING.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="533" data-original-width="1021" height="209" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdOL5lnbUM7dP-1kxLZImqSthQ4YAxxWDF9Zi-ifeF4o7NMD4sKc2UlRgvaVG1BB6jQOWUpTIWWILHWoazRHdk1QNmY3syDZlpFOYhiprD71FBPGlwiDEClZndIbS8eTEEy-t-kxxj0_FU/w400-h209/GTMR-ETCHING.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdOL5lnbUM7dP-1kxLZImqSthQ4YAxxWDF9Zi-ifeF4o7NMD4sKc2UlRgvaVG1BB6jQOWUpTIWWILHWoazRHdk1QNmY3syDZlpFOYhiprD71FBPGlwiDEClZndIbS8eTEEy-t-kxxj0_FU/s1021/GTMR-ETCHING.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em; text-align: center;"><br /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"Scotch College, Adelaide." PIGOTT family:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiygsfIZ6t9Kq6Lcv8IviX3yHfjBGPNiP5216RxZi1G0fWJLxFtPdPtzk4ZRTwPIKJ3RCFYZdISDe_V2MxDF33upJtoJwjR-cmsxgdfuXvgp0y7Y8-wmOLYTpeQUe2wnOQ-bHiu9VVrvZm0/s773/GTMR-ScotchCollege+%25282%2529.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="379" data-original-width="773" height="196" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiygsfIZ6t9Kq6Lcv8IviX3yHfjBGPNiP5216RxZi1G0fWJLxFtPdPtzk4ZRTwPIKJ3RCFYZdISDe_V2MxDF33upJtoJwjR-cmsxgdfuXvgp0y7Y8-wmOLYTpeQUe2wnOQ-bHiu9VVrvZm0/w400-h196/GTMR-ScotchCollege+%25282%2529.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"St Peter's College, Adelaide." PIGOTT family.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjb_kEuek7L_U1EqIO98uORbGe10xohhgluLHc7fe_qa8qDJBLGo-I75A1nxzzWyNh4L_aBz03T58yoqgxPQfwJV5_LFg3-mvjsQNjO5a9XzHIMY_o9asr61-fFyU6cLsfHv_lp9eJ4ctQd/s800/St+Peters+College.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="391" data-original-width="800" height="195" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjb_kEuek7L_U1EqIO98uORbGe10xohhgluLHc7fe_qa8qDJBLGo-I75A1nxzzWyNh4L_aBz03T58yoqgxPQfwJV5_LFg3-mvjsQNjO5a9XzHIMY_o9asr61-fFyU6cLsfHv_lp9eJ4ctQd/w400-h195/St+Peters+College.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">EXHIBITIONS:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">PEACE EXHIBITION, April 1920:</div><div style="text-align: left;">Group 1, Fine Arts:</div><div style="text-align: left;">Oil Painting, War Subject, Landscape, Division 1 - G.T.M. ROACH, Bronze Medal.</div><div style="text-align: left;">Portrait, all ditto [Daily Herald, 10 April]. Perhaps that of Sergeant PENNELL (see below).</div><div style="text-align: left;">These two works were recorded elsewhere as a water-colour, and a "black and white or sepia" war subject [Observer, 17 April].</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">AUGUST 1925, Gallery of the Society of Arts, North Terrace, Adelaide:</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Rain on the Edwardstown Road."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Blue and Gold Murray."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Cottage Under the Hill."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Evening Light."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"By the Pool."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Scrub Cathedral."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Canopy, Cairo." Probably sketched in early 1916.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Down on the Murray."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"From an Italian Window." Probably sketched while on leave in Rome, 1917.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"On the Banks of the Nile." Probably sketched in early 1916.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"A Destroyer on the Flank." Possibly the above mentioned "Achi Baba, seen from Anzac," which evidently includes a Destroyer moored in the distance, near Helles Point (although it does not appear in the image above).</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Portrait," of Sergeant PENNELL, D.C.M. Edwin William PENNELL, S.N. 1454, 4th Division Signal Company; Military Medal, October 1916, with Bar, June 1917; Distinguished Conduct Medal, October 1917.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Across the Paddocks."</div><div style="text-align: left;">ETCHINGS (in a separate part of the exhibition):</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Aldgate Press."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Mail Building."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Lone Gum."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The University of Melbourne."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Clare Town and Belfry."</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">OCTOBER 1928, same gallery:</div><div style="text-align: left;">WATERCOLOURS:</div><div style="text-align: left;">"A Summer Night."</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhuay6LB48NhbK6FNhIL_LAltjwpFT_OzCgQtP4cEaExJHUVtZmItpIVy-XXjf84zmSO0Ex9E_ZvQasy3OulXsHTFqk6_XqtvA2FUwWe-Y0BhXUZZPAg9ovNCUDkVo0GTVPPO1XgcsVgaVU/s2048/20211117_135327.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1502" data-original-width="2048" height="235" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhuay6LB48NhbK6FNhIL_LAltjwpFT_OzCgQtP4cEaExJHUVtZmItpIVy-XXjf84zmSO0Ex9E_ZvQasy3OulXsHTFqk6_XqtvA2FUwWe-Y0BhXUZZPAg9ovNCUDkVo0GTVPPO1XgcsVgaVU/s320/20211117_135327.jpg" width="320" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"Poplar and Evening sky."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Autumn Evening."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Summer Blue"</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Nocturne, River Mist."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Grey Winter."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"July Sunset at Piccadilly Valley."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Winter Sunlight."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Winter Morning at Aldgate."</div><div style="text-align: left;">OILS:</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Evening on a lonely Road."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"An Old Gum, Glenalta."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Mainland from Granite Island." Seascape.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Roses." See above (PIGOTT family collections).</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Venetian Study." Still Life, Flowers.</div><div style="text-align: left;">CHARCOALS:</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Valley Mist."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Stormlight."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Mill."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Sunlight."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Kaya Lami."</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">NOVEMBER 1931, same gallery, with exhibit number.</div><div style="text-align: left;">OILS:</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Waterfall Gully," #20.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Winter Light," #22.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Approaching Storm," #26.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Port Elliot," #28.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Sand in the Coorong," #29. PIGOTT family collections (see image above).</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Don of the Mill," #31.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Bluff," #32.</div><div style="text-align: left;">ETCHINGS SECTION:</div><div style="text-align: left;">"St Peter's College"</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Prince Alfred College."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Scotch College."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Red Gums," #5. PIGOTT family collections:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi7oCYVz9o6U1Tekot4jFlZnYE0cEU5f1jWhQcujW7iSbQP-Atyq-ZqkDK9LSEpCww8eVetTl5_a7wofLKcsXlvzKoWoWjs-d1SNkUrmlulqtbd04UHmiBl7lT7e6eBMFhMipfTvYUsY7KM/s469/GTMR-RedGums+%25282%2529.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="391" data-original-width="469" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi7oCYVz9o6U1Tekot4jFlZnYE0cEU5f1jWhQcujW7iSbQP-Atyq-ZqkDK9LSEpCww8eVetTl5_a7wofLKcsXlvzKoWoWjs-d1SNkUrmlulqtbd04UHmiBl7lT7e6eBMFhMipfTvYUsY7KM/s320/GTMR-RedGums+%25282%2529.jpg" width="320" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Pool," with nude figures, #9.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Valley," #14.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Little Avenue." PIGOTT family collections:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi6O6unWOpTHivxJ1d1H5ALRTbmUSibDxxLjQy5LTEAOpgSwgxz1sEyUSBpJViJuBbNGgscPMKfekOnXdJSxjmXnIASi_lN0P4zKuT8YXlkAqm0zDSyo9SRzJyA7EIF9dbI6RaETlKfE2Xm/s527/GTMR-LittleAvenue+%25282%2529.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="279" data-original-width="527" height="211" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi6O6unWOpTHivxJ1d1H5ALRTbmUSibDxxLjQy5LTEAOpgSwgxz1sEyUSBpJViJuBbNGgscPMKfekOnXdJSxjmXnIASi_lN0P4zKuT8YXlkAqm0zDSyo9SRzJyA7EIF9dbI6RaETlKfE2Xm/w400-h211/GTMR-LittleAvenue+%25282%2529.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">1936, at the same gallery:</div><div style="text-align: left;">17 Oils; 17 Watercolours; 13 Etchings; including:</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Pastoral," Oils, #9.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Passing of Winter," #10.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Piccadilly Valley."</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Sunlight," Etching, #43.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"At the Big Gumtree, Glen Osmond," Etching, #47.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">APRIL 26 - MAY 8, 1937, at the Margaret MACLEAN Gallery, 252 Collins Street, Melbourne:</div><div style="text-align: left;">"River Murray." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Old Tree on the Murray." 7 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Smoky Morning." 7 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"On the Bridge." 6 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Red Rock in Renmark." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Valley Mists, Mt Lofty Ranges." 10 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Trees in the Wind." 7 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Summer Heat." 6 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Fisherman's Hut." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Poplars." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Midday Heat." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"The Wet Road." 6 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Morning Shadows." 7 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"After the Rain." 10 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Cliffs on the Murray." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">" 'Angove's,' Renmark." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Landscape." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Over the Logs." 10 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Evening on a Country Road." 6 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Quiet Pastures." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Sunlight and the Fisherman." 10 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Morning Light." 7 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Settler's Bend." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Afternoon by the River." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Grey Morning." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"On the River Bank." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;">"By the Pool." 6 guineas. Probably first shown in 1925 (see above).</div><div style="text-align: left;">"Evening." 6 guineas:</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhYC_oxzKF_82gxEJYjjovTGpdKL6hpjlJoa8kBlTWwC4UBtaBmsRhp6G9gINYXhRoPTKG-vN_zlSl1VMkBvTJoZwAFG6m1A9no5uArMVaFhJ5wMJz-20KoB98sxhsfG4zDtPTD-0XF1jau/s293/EVENING.PNG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="284" data-original-width="293" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhYC_oxzKF_82gxEJYjjovTGpdKL6hpjlJoa8kBlTWwC4UBtaBmsRhp6G9gINYXhRoPTKG-vN_zlSl1VMkBvTJoZwAFG6m1A9no5uArMVaFhJ5wMJz-20KoB98sxhsfG4zDtPTD-0XF1jau/s0/EVENING.PNG" /></a></div><div><br /></div><i><div style="text-align: center;"><i>"Evening." Courtesy of the rsasarts.co.au web-site.</i></div></i><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">"Nocturne." 8 guineas.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br /></div><br /><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-family: georgia; font-size: large;"><b><i>* TO BE CONTINUED *</i></b></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><p>The Mail (Adelaide), 18 July 1936, courtesy of the Trove web-site of newspaper holdings of the National Library of Australia:</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgUTW1wbiPFMAWOcK12fbj30LOO2pd1BDwjS-duzDC7gzaUxtsroSbJ7dEDknsto3HlJ8NSl1FaSI3zZRKzzg36f4V4x6rrAR2QB4loLPbROnuHccbGRmiga2f6hXJOivWFispL1-A23wyn/s625/GTMR.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="625" data-original-width="202" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgUTW1wbiPFMAWOcK12fbj30LOO2pd1BDwjS-duzDC7gzaUxtsroSbJ7dEDknsto3HlJ8NSl1FaSI3zZRKzzg36f4V4x6rrAR2QB4loLPbROnuHccbGRmiga2f6hXJOivWFispL1-A23wyn/w206-h640/GTMR.JPG" width="206" /></a></div><br /><p></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwBKfQdQTWSQITjroLJQeabg4YWM_ByUkItuggXBhcVQaQmoN8xugRDLdASdAXwLuCHcSKeEcLJv4RAsfzWb6GxpQWm6EffbMjJWZSP-AixxFZ5OmplK0YyUa4M2SkUf10K29_SeUETlT0AYTMb5q3kkWIe1m1YLV8eMzY7Jx3911bgeX7X6yupgYGYw/s1584/GTMROACH2.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1249" data-original-width="1584" height="252" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwBKfQdQTWSQITjroLJQeabg4YWM_ByUkItuggXBhcVQaQmoN8xugRDLdASdAXwLuCHcSKeEcLJv4RAsfzWb6GxpQWm6EffbMjJWZSP-AixxFZ5OmplK0YyUa4M2SkUf10K29_SeUETlT0AYTMb5q3kkWIe1m1YLV8eMzY7Jx3911bgeX7X6yupgYGYw/s320/GTMROACH2.jpg" width="320" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Image courtesy of the invaluable.com web-site, for Lot 100, of an auction held by Vickers and Hoad, Sydney, in July 2021.]</i></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-88970926664830854442021-01-11T15:45:00.225-08:002022-07-26T14:59:22.962-07:00ROGERS, OF BRISTOL AND CORK<div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div><i style="font-size: x-large;"><b><u>ROBERT ROGERS OF BRISTOL, MERCHANT.</u></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Richard ROGERS, perhaps born around 1530; possibly Warden, Soap-makers and Chandlers Company, Bristol, 1590; Common Council, Old Bristol Corporation; Master, Soap-makers and Chandlers, 5 March 1592 ["The Company of Soapmakers," Bristol Records Society, Volume X, page 46]; Sheriff, 8 March 1595; he died about June 1599 ["Bristol Lists, Municipal and Miscellaneous," by Rev Alfred B. BEAVEN, Bristol, 1899, page 195]; his will, dated 21 May 1599, was proved P.C.C., mentioning his sons Mathew and Richard ROGERS, and daughters Mary, Elinor and Elizabeth ROGERS (unless this was instead the son); he was evidently married, with issue:</div><div> a. Richard ROGERS, probably born between 1557 and 1560; received into the fellowship of the Soapmakers and Chandlers Company, Bristol, 22 August xxiii Elizabeth (1581), having served as an apprentice to his father Richard for 14 years; on 5 March 1592, Mr Richard ROGERS succeeded as the new Master of the Company, and his Wardens were Humphry READ and Robert ROGERS; perhaps instead the above 1599 will maker?</div><div> b. Robert ROGERS, probably born between 1552 and 1565; apprenticed to his father Richard, 6 October 1579, for 7 years; received into the Soapmakers and Chandlers Company, 12 August 1585; not named in the 1599 will of Richard ROGERS, Soapmaker of Bristol. But for this last-mentioned hurdle, possibly the next.</div><div><br /></div><div>Robert ROGERS; Soapmaker and Chandler of Bristol; he had apprenticed Miles ANDREWS, who died in service in 1601; a member of the Society of Merchant Venturers, of Bristol, 3 December 1605, when he was, with others, appointed to "... Committees for the Merchant's Ordinances" ["The History of the Society of Merchant Venturers of the City of Bristol," by John LATIMER, Bristol, 1903, at page 64]; another member appointed to the same committee was John ROWBERO.</div><div>He may have been the same as Robert ROGERS, of Bristol, Sheriff 1607-08, Alderman (St Thomas) 1620-33, Mayor 1621-22, who died on 11 April 1633, aged 80 ["Bristol Lists, Municipal and Miscellaneous," complied by Rev Alfred B. BEAVEN, M.A., Bristol, 1899, Page 306]; his will, dated 18 March 1629, with "codicil" (or second will) dated 8 April 1633, was proved P.C.C., 9 May 1633, requesting to be buried in St James's church, near his former wife Elinor, and mentioning his now loving wife (un-named) to whom he was married by articles dated 28 October 5th of His Majesty's reign (probably James I, and if so in 1608), and mentioning his daughter Ellen RODWAY the wife of Mr Richard RODWAY of London (and their three children), his daughter Sarah BILLINGSLY the wife of Henry BILLINGSLY Esq (and their children Henry, George, Richard, Robert and Mathew BILLINGSLY), his cousins Ellen THYNE (and her husband Francis), Mary TURNER (and her son Robert TURNER), Abel ROGERS and Mathew ROGERS the sons of my cousin Mathew ROGERS deceased, Elizabeth HOLBROOKE (?) the daughter of my now wife, Susan LEWES another daughter of his second wife, her five sons William, Edward, Thomas, (indecipherable) and John LEWES, and his son Richard ROGERS, Knight, the sole executor.</div><div>Robert ROGERS was probably married firstly, in Bristol, 13 January 1593[-94?], to Elinor COOPER [England Marriage, 1538-1973, Findmypast]; they had issue:</div><div> a. Richard ROGERS, probably born about1599; he was apprenticed to his father Robert, 24 December 1613, for 7 years. and paid for his entrance on 3 March 1613-14.</div><div><br /></div><div>I had wondered whether they may have had further issue, a son Francis ROGERS. But as he was not named in the 1633 will, this seems very unlikely.</div><div><br /></div><div>John ROWBEROE (or ROWBERO) was Sheriff of the Bristol Municipality, 1606; Treasurer of the Society of Merchant Venturers, 1608, and a Common Councillor; he died about May 1614 [BEAVEN, Op.Cit. , Pages 132, 196 and 222].</div><div><br /></div><div>Could it be a possibility that John ROWBERO may have been father of Katherine ROWBOROW, who was married in 1631 to Francis ROGERS, who, in turn, may have been a son of Robert ROGERS??? See next below.</div><div>_____________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>FRANCIS ROGERS OF BRISTOL</u></b></i>.</span></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Francis ROGERS; possibly born in Gloucestershire in 1605-06; he has been recorded in an on-line family tree as having been born instead in 1608, and died in Ireland in 1662, but there is no surviving archived evidence yet found (by me) to corroborate this assertion; Francis was married at Bristol, 3 February 1630(-31?), to Katherine ROWBOROW; they appear to have had issue:</div><div>1. Francis ROGERS, baptised at St James's, Bristol, 23 January 1632(-33?). Possibly the Merchant in Cork - see [A] next below - as suggested in several on-line family trees, although conclusive evidence has not yet been found.</div><div>They may have had other issue, including:</div><div>2. William ROGERS, born in Bristol, 11 March 1634-35 [English Births and Baptisms, Findmypast]. See [B] below.</div><div>It is also possible that Francis may also, perhaps by a second wife, have had further issue:</div><div>3. Robert ROGERS. An Irish M.P. See [C] below.</div><div>4. George ROGERS. Also an Irish M.P. See [D] below.</div><div><br /></div><div>These four are clearly identified in several archived documents as brothers, the elder two of whom became Quakers, and the younger two Irish M.P.s, as we shall see below.</div><div><br /></div>A Katherine ROGERS was buried at Bristol, 4th 4mo 1686, late of Castle Precinct, Bristol [a Quaker burial record]. I wonder whether this may have been the widow of Francis ROGERS Senior, aged in her late 70s or early 80s? And if so, perhaps her maiden surname was ROWBEROE.<div>There were a number of entries for ROGERS family events citing that address from 1711 - see below.<div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>FRANCIS ROGERS SENIOR, OF CORK AND BRISTOL</u>.</span></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>The father, Francis ROGERS, Senior, perhaps the above spouse of Katherine ROWBOROW, may also have gone to Ireland.</div><div><br /></div><div><div><i>"This family was early remarkable for its loyalty and attachment to the crown. A ring is still preserved as an heir-loom, which was presented to its ancestor by King Charles I, during his misfortunes. After the death of that monarch, Francis ROGERS, who settled in Cork, became an eminent merchant. In the year 1657 he was presented Freedom of the City. He left, with a daughter married to Joseph PIKE, two sons"</i> [BURKE, "Landed Gentry of G.B. and Ireland, Volume II, London, 1846, at page 1139].</div><div>But, it is unclear whether this Francis was the father, or instead the son.</div><div><br /></div><div>Francis ROGERS was evidently married, and perhaps secondly, about the early-mid 1640s, to a wife identified by C.M. TENISON, B.L., M.R.I.A. [in his "Biographical Dictionary of Irish M.P.s," Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society, Volume II, 1896, at page 225], as <i>"... a daughter of Joseph PIKE."</i> </div><div><b><span style="color: red;"><i></i></span></b><blockquote><b><span style="color: red;"><i>But I am somewhat suspicious of TENISON's theory here, perhaps conflating information about Francis's son-in-law of the same name - unless his father Richard PIKE, who was himself a second son, had an older brother named Joseph?</i></span></b> </blockquote></div><div>In the "History of The Irish Parliament," Volume VI, paged 185-6, Francis was recorded as the father, by an un-named daughter of Joseph PIKE, of both Robert and George ROGERS, the M.P.s - although this detail was probably sourced from TENISON's information.</div></div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>FRANCIS ROGERS JUNIOR, OF CORK AND BRISTOL, A QUAKER</u>.</span></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>[A] Francis ROGERS, Junior, probably born in England, and before 1634. </div><div><br /></div><div>Thomas WIGHT and John RUTTY, in their "A History of the Rise and Progress of the People called Quakers, in Ireland, from the year 1653 to 1700," London, 1800, at pages 81-82, wrote:</div><div><i>"In the beginning of this year (1655) also came over, and landed in Dublin, Elizabeth FLETCHER and Elizabeth SMITH...</i></div><div><i>"Their service was also great in the southern parts, particularly at Youghall...; and the same two women were the first people called Quakers that came to the city of Cork, in the same year 1655; and with Edward BURROUGH and Francis HOWGIL, who also arrived the same year, were instrumental to the convincement of many in the Province of Munster, and particularly in Cork, viz.<b> Elizabeth ERBERRY</b>, <b>Alexander ATKINS</b> and <b>Ann</b> his wife, Thomas MITCHELL and Susannah his wife, Philip DYMOND, <b>Richard PIKE</b> and <b>Elizabeth</b> his wife, <b>Francis ROGERS</b>, <b>William ROGERS</b>, Stephen HARRIS and his wife, George WEBBER, George GAMBLE, Henry FAGGETER Thomas RIDGE, and others."</i></div><div>The names in bold type appear further in this story, below, and several others also play a part in the family of Emanuel PIGOTT in Chetwynd, near Cork.</div><div>If I am right in presuming that these people named were probably all of age, then it is clear that both Francis and William ROGERS would have been born before 1634.</div><div><div><br /></div><div>Francis was a Merchant in Cork. He spent several years in Bristol, between 1668 and 1674, before returning to Cork. He and his brother William were named in several entries in the Bristol Men's Meeting in September and December 1669 </div><div><br /></div><div>In October 1679, an Epistle given forth at the Province Meeting in Limerick, which had been recommended to several particular Meetings in Munster, was read out in Cork, and fifteen Friends signed the epistle, including Francis ROGERS, James DOWLEN, Thomas WIGHT, William END, Alexander ATKINS and George WRIGHT ["A History of the Rise and Progress of the People Called Quakers in Ireland," Op.Cit., page 392].</div><div><br /></div><div>He later returned to Bristol, where he was buried, 20th 1mo (March) 1693-94 [England and Wales, Society of Friends, Burials, 1578-1841, Findmypast].</div></div><div><br /></div><div>Francis ROGERS made an Account, at Corke, 28 January 1688, <i>"... of my estate as it now lyes in my bookes, the respective folio directing to the folio in my ledger, and first here and is in England and in Foreign Parts..."</i>; it included one <i>"To Joseph PIKE to balance £400 principal in partnership with him in serges for Holland and Flanders, besides profit, £213 11s 9d"</i>; and another to the estate of Susanna DOWLAN, including £497 16s 5d <i>"... due from myself"</i> and £100 <i>"... from my father's Edn ny bond"</i>; with mentions of monies due from brother William <i>"... of money due to me in Ireland, </i>£<i>400"</i>; and monies due from Ebenezer PIKE <i>"... by bond, </i>£<i>300, with a year's interest due 1st April next, total £330</i>"; he mentioned that the Account was made on 12th January, and signed it F. ROGERS; he added a further note - <i>"If it should happen I should die without makeing any will, I leave it wholly to my Brothers William and George ROGERS to dispose of my Estate to my wife and children, desiring they be very kind and Brotherly to my wife and dispose of such a part to her as that she may live comfortably as is fitt for my wife, and to leave as much to my son as to my daughters, and make noe difference between my children by this wife than my other children, onely respecting their age - Fra. ROGERS</i>"; an endorsement, dated 13 July 1694, stated - <i>"Which day appeared personally Robert ROGERS, of Corke, Senior, Alderman, naturall and lawfull Brother to the said Francis ROGERS deceased, and William MASTERS of the same City, Merchant, and being sworn upon the holy evangelists,</i>" gave their assurances that the writing of the Account was that of Francis ROGERS; probate was granted 1 August 1694 to <i>"Commissio Georgio ROGERS, fratri naturali et legitimo et unie (indec) commissarys nominat in testamento Francisci ROGERS nuper de Civitate Bristol defuncti."</i></div><div><span style="color: red;"><i><b></b></i></span><blockquote><span style="color: red;"><i><b>From this record, it is evident that Francis ROGERS had three brothers - William and George, both charged, in 1688, with disposing of his estate if he died intestate, and Robert, of Cork, who affirmed in 1694 that the hand-writing of the 1688 accounts was Francis's. And if so, why does BURKE not record Francis and William in his 1846 Pedigree of ROGERS of Lota (see below) - was it because they were Quakers? Or have I got the lineage wrong???</b></i></span></blockquote></div><div><div>The probate grant appears custom made to end up in court - and very evidently was soon contested:</div><div><div>i. TNA C 8/551/8. Chancery Court.</div><div>Short title - ROGERS v ROGERS.</div><div>Plaintiffs - Francis ROGERS, Katherine ROGERS, Mary ROGERS, Joseph PIKE and Elizabeth his wife; Joseph HOARE and Rachel his wife.</div><div>Defendants - George ROGERS, William ROGERS, and William END.</div><div>Subject - Personal estate of Francis ROGERS.</div><div>Document type - two answers and schedule.</div><div>Date - 1695.</div></div><div>ii. TNA C 8/551/75. Chancery, Six Clerks Office, Equity side.</div><div>Short title - ROGERS v ROGERS.</div><div>Plaintiffs - Katherine ROGERS, Widow; Francis ROGERS; Katherine ROGERS, Mary ROGERS, Elizabeth ROGERS, and Rachel ROGERS.</div><div>Defendant - George ROGERS.</div><div>Subject - Personal estate of Francis ROGERS, Bristol, Gloucestershire.</div><div>Document type - two bills and answer.</div><div>Date - 1694.</div><div>I have not seen either of these documents. I imagine they may well contain a full statement of the relationships between all who are named in them. They would, I believe, have been inevitably directly related to the deceased.</div><div><br /></div><div>Francis ROGERS was married in Cork, 25th 7mo (September) 1660, to Elizabeth ERBERRY (evidently a bachelor, as she was stated to be his first wife - which is supported by the WHITE and RUTTY information above, that Francis ROGERS did not have a wife in 1655); details of her death not yet found; they had issue:</div><div>1. Elizabeth ROGERS, born at Cork, 24 6mo 1662; she is recorded in the entry for Joseph PIKE (1658-1729 [Dictionary of Irish Biography], as his wife, and the daughter of Francis ROGERS and Elizabeth ERBURY; if so, she was married in Cork, 5th 4mo 1682, to Joseph PIKE (born at Kilcreagh, near Cork, in 1657, second son of Richard PIKE, a Lieutenant in CROMWELL's Army, by his wife Elizabeth JACKSON, of London); shortly after his marriage in 1682, he joined his brother Richard, in opening a linen-draper's shop in Cork, the first of its kind in the City, and which business frequently took him to England, Holland and Flanders; Joseph was named in Francis's probate accounts, 1688, as a business partner; he was granted large acreages in Pennsylvania; he died in 1729; they had issue fourteen children, of whom seven survived until about 1722 [see "Life of Joseph PIKE," in "The Friends Library...," by William EVANS, 1838, page 353], including:</div><div> a. Francis PIKE, born at Cork, 13th 6mo 1683; buried at Cork, 27th 8mo 1683, aged 10 weeks.</div><div> b. Joseph PIKE, born at Cork, 5th 6mo 1685; buried at Cork, 25th 10mo 1686, aged 1 year and a quarter.</div><div> c. Richard PIKE, born at Cork, 29th 11mo 1686.</div><div> d. Joseph PIKE, born at Bristol, 23rd 11mo 1687; buried at Cork, 16th 11mo 1689, aged 2 years.</div><div> e. Mary PIKE, born at Bristol, 6 8mo 1690; she was married to Thomas BEALE, son of Joshua BEALE of Mountmellick, Quakers.</div><div> f. Elizabeth PIKE, born at Bristol, 20th 9mo 1691; she was married to Joshua BEALE, a brother of her brother-in-law Thomas.</div><div> g. Joseph PIKE, born at Cork, 4th 10mo 1692.</div><div> h. Francis PIKE, born at Cork, 29th 10mo 1693; Freeman of the City of Cork, 6 September 1714; he probably died before about 1722.</div><div> j. Abigail PIKE, born at Cork, 4th 12mo 1694; buried at Cork, 28th 4mo 1696.</div><div> k. Rachel PIKE.</div><div> l. Sarah PIKE, born at Cork, 21st 10mo 1697, buried at Cork, 30th 5mo 1706, aged 8 years and a half.</div><div> m. Samuel PIKE, born at Cork, 19th 4mo 1700.</div><div> n. Benjamin PIKE, born at Cork, 9th 7mo 1701.</div><div> p. Anne PIKE, born at Cork, 16th 9mo 1703.</div><div><br /></div><div>Francis ROGERS was married, probably secondly, in Cork, 12 2mo 1662 or 1666, to Jane DRING, of London (unlikely to be the widower of Elizabeth ERBERRY, unless the 1666 year date is the right one); Jane was buried at Cork, 30th 9mo 1679, wife of Francis; they had issue:</div><div>1. Jane ROGERS; she was buried at Cork, 8mo 1669.</div><div>2. Francis ROGERS, born at Bristol, 24th 6mo 1668; buried at Cork, 7mo 1668, aged 1 month.</div><div>3. Mary ROGERS, born at Bristol, 26th 1mo 1670; as the daughter of Francis ROGERS of Cork, she was probably married at Bristol Men's Meeting, 24th 4mo 1691, to Ebenezer PIKE, late of Cork (having laid their first intentions on 4th 3mo 1691), the marriage witnessed by 25 Society members, including Mary ROGERS, Elizabeth PIKE, Robert ROGERS, Noblett ROGERS and William ROGERS [England and Wales Society of Friends Marriages, Findmypast].</div><div>4. Isabella ROGERS, born at Bristol, 5th 5mo 1671; she may have been buried at Bristol, 15th 6mo 1671, daughter of Francis, or instead at Cork, date not recorded (probably after 1692).</div><div>5. Rachel ROGERS, born at Bristol, 13th 4mo or 7mo 1674.</div><div><br /></div><div>It appears that Francis ROGERS, a Quaker of Cork, made a proposal, about the early 1680s, to marry Isabel YEAMANS, the widow of William YEAMANS, a Bristol Merchant and Quaker, to which she evidently agreed; however, in 1684, ROGERS withdrew his proposal, citing concerns about YEAMANS' financial situation [her wikipedia entry, citing Charlotte Fell SMITH, 1915, "Isabell YEAMANS." Journal of the Friends Historical Society, 12. (2). 53-58].</div><div>Earlier, in 1669, William ROGERS (Francis's brother) and William YEAMANS were requested by the Bristol Men's Meeting to search out the truth of rumours that another Friend, Henry DEDICOT, was unwilling to have one of his daughters go through the approbation process of the Quaker marriage discipline, because of the lengthy delays involved ["Matrimony in the True Church: The Seventeenth Century Quaker Marriage Approbation Discipline," by Kristianna POLDER, 2016].</div><div><br /></div><div>Francis ROGERS was married, probably thirdly, at Youghall, 8th 11mo (January) 1684[-85?], to Catherine END, of Moyallow, the widow of James DOWLEN (parents of Susannah DOWLAN, whose Account is mentioned in Francis ROGERS of Cork's probate Accounts, 1688), whom she had married in 1676, and who died in 1682, leaving her with two daughters (Susanna and Ann DOWLEN) [BETHAM's Abstract]; Francis and Catherine's burials were recorded at Cork, both of Bristol, without dates (probably after 1692 and before 1703); her will, dated 13 March 1694, was proved P.C.C. 18 May 1695 [TNA, PROB 11, 425, IRBY, Quire nos 82-84], stating that her will and desire was for her father and mother, William and Anne END, may have the care and tuition of her children Susanna DOWLEN and Francis, Katherine and Mary ROGERS during their minority, but if they died before reaching 18, or were married, then the bequests would then go the her brothers and sister, Michael and William END and Mary SLEIGH and to their children; they had issue:</div><div>1. Catherine ROGERS, born at Cork, 5th 1mo 1685-86; named in her mother's will, 1695.</div><div>2. Anne ROGERS, born at Cork, 28 4mo 1687; she was buried at Cork, 13th 3mo 1689.</div><div>3, Francis ROGERS, born at Cork, 21 8mo 1688; he was buried at Cork, 25th 2mo 1689, aged 6 months.</div><div>4. William ROGERS, born at Cork, 18th 3mo 1690; he was buried at Cork, 5 6mo 1692, aged 2 and 1/4 years.</div><div>5. Francis ROGERS, born at Cork, 14th 10mo 1691; named in his mother's will, 1694, with a bequest of his father's great gold signet and gold button, and all his father's linen.</div><div>6. Mary ROGERS, born at Bristol, 8th 2mo 1694; named in her mother's will, 1695.</div></div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i style="font-size: x-large;"><b><u>WILLIAM ROGERS OF BRISTOL</u></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><div>[B] William ROGERS, son of Francis ROGERS, Gunsmith; Soap Maker, Merchant and Quaker of Bristol; probably in Ireland, 1655, when he joined the Society of Friends in Cork, along with Francis ROGERS, probably his brother; if so, he evidently "returned" to Bristol sometime between 1655 and 1660; of Lewin's Mead (1660), Broadmead (1670), Castle Precincts (1683), Lower Easton (1706), and Stapleton, 1709-11; he was admitted to membership of the Society of Merchant Venturers, Bristol, May 1667, as a Redemptioner (paying a fine for entry, rather than by service); he died in 1711, and was buried at Mangotsfield, Frenchay Monthly Meeting. He was described [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography] as a Quaker schismatic; he wrote the "Christian Quaker" in defence of John STORY and John WILKINSON, who caused a schism during the mid to late 1670s [information from Susanna Harris HUGHES].</div><div>William was married to Elizabeth SMITH, as mentioned in a family tree made by P.K. STEMBRIDGE [in his "The Goldney Family. A Bristol Merchant Dynasty," Bristol Record Society, University of Bristol, 1998, at Page 164], who was a sister of Martha SMITH (the wife of Thomas SPEED), and of Mary SMITH (the wife, firstly of TOMLINSON, and secondly of Richard ALDWORTH), with known issue sons Francis and William, and daughters Mary, Elizabeth, Sarah and Martha; Elizabeth died before her husband, in 1709.</div><div>William and Elizabeth had issue [Non-Conformist Baptisms, Ancestry.com], recorded in the Frenchay Quaker register:</div><div>1. William ROGERS, born in Bristol, 14th 7mo 1660; apprenticed by his brother Francis, Society of Merchant Venturers, November 1697, disputed, and accounted for satisfactorily by March 1698.</div>2. Mary ROGERS, born at Bristol, 24th 1mo 1661; she died at Calne, Wiltshire, in 1748; she was married, in 1679, to John NEATE.<br />3. Sarah ROGERS, born at Bristol, 16th 6mo 1663; she was married to Benjamin WALL of Bristol.</div><div>4. Joseph ROGERS, born at Bristol, 12th 1mo 1664-65; died at Bristol, 13th 4mo 1664, and buried at Hazell (probably in error for 1665 or 1666?).</div><div>5. Joseph (2) ROGERS, born at Bristol, 2nd 2mo 1667.</div><div>6. Elizabeth ROGERS, born at Bristol, 3rd 2mo 1668; married to CARTER?</div>7. Francis ROGERS, born at Bristol, 16th 2mo 1670; Ship Owner; Member of the Bristol Council, 1700-07; his indenture as member of the Society of Merchant Venturers was objected to on claims it was "collusive," and his father William was called to make an explanation; Francis was admitted to membership on 14 November 1695 on payment of £30 [see Judith ARDINE's 2005 postings on genealogy.com]; he was married at Bristol Men's Meeting, 21st 11mo (January) 1691-92, to Hannah NEALE (their first intentions dated 1st 4mo 1691), the marriage witnessed by Society members, including Mary ROGERS, Elizabeth PIKE, Rob't ROGERS, Noblett ROGERS and William ROGERS.</div><div><div>8. Martha ROGERS, born at Bristol, 31st 5mo 1671; she was married, in July 1706, to Jonathon BARROW of Monmouth.</div><div>9. Ann, born at Bristol, 26th 11mo 1672.</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i style="font-size: x-large;"><b><u>JOSEPH PIKE OF CORK</u>.</b></i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Richard PIKE, born in Newburgh, Berkshire, 1627 [Quaker Register, Cork]; a very early member of the Society of Friends in Cork, 1655; he died while prisoner for his Quaker principals, and was buried at Cork, 4mo 1668, aged 41 years, husband of Elizabeth; he was married to Elizabeth JACKSON, of London; she was buried at Cork, 7th 9mo 1688, aged 53 years, wife of Richard; they had issue:</div><div>1. Eliza PIKE, born at Sarsfield Court near Cork, 12th 3mo 1656.</div><div>2. Joseph PIKE, born at Killcreagh Castle, County Cork, 15th 11mo 1657; a wealthy Quaker merchant, of Cork, 3 December 1705, when William PENN granted him, by Patent, a tract of over 10,000 acres of land lying north of the Great Valley, in Pennsylvania; he died in 1729he was married at Cork, 5th 4mo 1682, to Elizabeth ROGERS, daughter of Francis ROGERS; they had issue.</div><div>3. Ebenezer PIKE, born at Ballyhendoe, County Cork, 28th 4mo 1662.</div><div>4. Sarah PIKE, born at Ballyhendoe, 2nd 8mo 1663.</div><div>5. Richard PIKE, born at Ballyhendoe, 4th 10mo 1664; in about 1682-83, he opened a linen-draper's shop in Cork, in partnership with his brother Joseph.</div><div>6. Benjamin PIKE; he died the same day as his father, 1668.</div><div><br /></div><div>Ebenezer PIKE, late of Cork, at the Men's Meeting, City of Bristol, 24th 4mo 1691, declared his intention to marry Mary ROGERS, daughter of Francis ROGERS of Cork, with the signatures of Society members present, including William ROGERS, Geo. ROGERS, Joseph PIKE, Mary ROGERS, Elizabeth ROGERS (two different signatures), Elizabeth PIKE, Henry WHEEDON and Elizabeth WHEEDON </div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i style="font-size: x-large;"><b><u>ROBERT ROGERS OF LOTA, M.P</u>.</b></i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>[C] Robert ROGERS, eldest son, born in Cork, about 1647; of Lota, County Cork; Alderman of Cork City, and Mayor of Cork, 1680; M.P. for Cork City, 1692, 1695-99; he received extensive land grants in Ireland from Charles II; named in his brother Francis's probate account, 28 January 1688; named in his brother George's will, 1709-10; he died in 1717, will dated 7 March 1717 and proved 6 November 1718, mentioning his (evidently late) son Francis ROGERS of Bristol, Merchant, and his daughter-in-law Sarah, a widow (and his/their children Robert, Sarah, Corsley, Francis, Richard and Elizabeth), son George, son Noblett (and his children Noblett, George, Elizabeth and Rebecca), son Christopher, his cousin Robert ROGERS of North Fort, Marsh of Cork, and nephews Robert and William ROGERS of Ashgrove, County Cork, Gentlemen [BETHAM's Abstract]; executors to the will were named as joint first party to a Deed of Assignment dated 2 October 1719 [Memorial 20429, Book 32, Page 454], as William ROGERS of Ashgrove, Gent, John BLENNERHASSETT of Ballysedy, County Kerry, Esq, Francis ROGERS of Marywell, County Cork, Gent, and Joseph ROGERS, of the City of Cork, Doctor of Physick, the second party being Edward WEBBER, of the City of Cork, Gent; Robert was married in 1673 to Elizabeth DUNSCOMBE, daughter of Alderman Noblett DUNSCOMBE of Cork, by Mary HULL; they had issue:</div><div>1. Francis ROGERS, born in Bristol, about 1673???; Merchant, later in Bristol; his will dated 17 February 1714 [P.C.C.], mentioned his father Robert, wife Sarah (possibly born CORSLEY, and if so, sister of Humphrey CORSELER), son Robert and daughter Sarah, brothers Noblett, George and Christopher ROGERS (and George's wife), brother Humphrey CORSELER and his wife, sisters HAWKESWORTH and MASON, and his children Robert, Sarah, Corseley, Francis, Richard, George and Elizabeth ROGERS; married Sarah; with issue;</div><div> a. Robert ROGERS; named in his father's will, 1714.</div><div> b. Sarah ROGERS; named in her father's will, 1714.</div><div> c. Corsley ROGERS; named in his father's will, 1714; apprenticed in 1716 to Richard CHAMPION, of Bristol, Merchant; possibly buried at Redcliff Gate Cemetery, Bristol, 16th 6mo 1575 (recorded as son of Francis, but also as Corsely Junior?); he was married at Bristol Men's Meeting, 17th 12mo 1725, to Susanna LLOYD, daughter of the late Edward LLOYD, of Bristol, Merchant, the marriage witnessed by Society members including Richard ROGERS, Sarah ROGERS and Francis ROGERS; they had issue:</div><div> i. Corsely ROGERS, born at Castle Green, Bristol, 10th 3mo 1729; he was probably apprenticed in 1744 to William GAYNOR, of Bristol, Grocer; he was married at Bristol, 22nd 6mo 1752, to Sarah JEPSON, daughter of Arthur JEPSON of Bristol, Merchant.</div><div> d. Francis ROGERS; named in his father's will, 1714.</div><div> e. Richard ROGERS; named in his father's will, 1714.</div><div> f. George ROGERS; named in his father's will, 1714.</div><div> g. Elizabeth ROGERS; named in her father's will, 1714.</div><div>2. George ROGERS; named in his brother Francis's will, 1714; married Hannah HAWKINS [H.I.P.]; his will, dated January 1721, mention his wife Hannah, the executrix, daughters Elizabeth and Jane ROGERS, brother Christopher ROGERS, and father Robert ROGERS [Memorial 20162, Book 33, Page 228]; they had issue:</div><div> a. Elizabeth ROGERS; named in her father's will, 1721, not yet of age.</div><div> b. Jane ROGERS; ditto 1721, ditto.</div><div>3. Noblett ROGERS; witness to the 1692 marriage in Bristol of his probable relation Francis ROGERS, son of William ROGERS of Bristol, to Hannah NEALE; Noblett was named in his brother Francis's will, 1714; he was probably of the parish of St Mary, Shandon, City of Cork, Gent, when he was married by P.C.I. License, dated 28 September 1697, to Rebecca RICHARDSON, of the parish of St Werburgh, Dublin, Spinster [BETHAM's Abstract].</div><div>4. Christopher ROGERS, born in Cork, about 1684; entered Trinity College Dublin, Pensioner (Mr JONES, Cork), 7 September 1701, aged 17; B.A. Vern 1706; entered the Middle Temple, London, 26 August 1706, as the fourth son of Robert ROGERS, of Cork, Ireland, Esq; Irish Bar, 1713 [Alumni Dublinenses]; named in his brother Francis's will, 1714; of Lotamore, County Cork; Freedom of the City of Cork, 3 November 1718, Esq, Lawyer; his will, dated 11 June 1740, was proved 22 January 1740-41 [BETHAM], naming, inter alia, his wife Martha, three sons and five daughters, brother George, and two married sisters; he was married by License, Diocese of Cork and Ross, and settlements dated 6 March 1717, to Martha OSBURN [M.L.B. Index] or OSBORNE, a daughter of Quintin OSBORNE of the City of Cork [Memorial 16091, Book 27, Page 142]; she probably died in September 1764, <i>"... at her lodgings near St Peter's church, Cork, Mrs ROGERS, relict of the late Col. Christopher ROGERS, and mother of Robert ROGERS of Lota</i>" [Freeman's Journal, 22 September]; they had issue:</div><div> a. Robert ROGERS; named in his father's will, 1740; entered the Middle Temple, 23 September 1747, of Mount Pleasant, Ireland.</div><div> b. Quintin ROGERS; ditto, 1740; entered the Middle Temple, 23 September 1747, of Mount Pleasant, Ireland.</div><div> c. Christopher ROGERS; ditto 1740; he probably died at Lota, 25 April 1778, <i>"... youngest brother of Robert ROGES, Esq</i>" [Hibernian Chronicle, 30 April].</div><div> d. Hannah ROGERS; named in her father's will, 1740; she probably died in Cork, 8 April 1759, <i>"... after a lingering illness, Miss Hannah ROGERS, youngest sister of Robert ROGERS of Lota"</i> [Cork Advocate, 12 February].</div><div> e. Elizabeth Webber ROGERS; named in her father's will, 1740.</div><div> f. Martha ROGERS; ditto 1740.</div><div> g. Katherine ROGERS; ditto 1740.</div><div> h. Mary ROGERS; ditto.</div><div>5. sister; married HAWKESWORTH?</div><div>6. sister; married MASON?</div><div>7. Elizabeth ROGERS; named as wife of Edward RICHARDSON in her brother Christopher's will, 1740.</div><div>8. Jane ROGERS; named as wife of Richard SMYTHE of Bally?stra, Esq, in her brother's will, 1740.</div><div><br /></div><div>Robert ROGERS, of Lota, Esq, was appointed High Sheriff of County Cork, for the year 1756 [Pue's Occcurences, 6 March].</div><div>In Cork, 21 August 1766, it was reported that <i>"... we have had for three Market Days past, new oats sent in by Robert ROGERS of Lota, Esq, for which, it is remarkable, he used no seed, but what unavoidably was shed in saving the crop last season, and raised the present produce by tilling, lightly, the stubble of the former crop. Its quality is so extraordinary as to return him £1 6s per barrell"</i> [Dublin Courier, 15 August].</div><div>On 15 March 1787, Robert ROGERS, of Lota, County Cork, Esq,<i> "... dropped down while shaving himself, in the Globe Tavern in Waterford, and immediately expired. He was on his way to Bath for the recovery of his health"</i> [Saunders's News-Letter, 19 March].</div><div><br /></div><div>In 1782, died <i>"... on Milltown Road, the relict of Robert ROGERS, aged 70"</i> [Saunders's News-Letter, 2 April]. Clearly not the widow of Robert ROGERS of Lota, who died in 1787.</div><div></div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i style="font-size: x-large;"><b><u>GEORGE ROGERS OF ASHGROVE</u>.</b></i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /><div>[D] George ROGERS, second son, born about 1649 (or 1650 from age on M.I.); of Ashgrove, County Cork, and of Ballyknavin, County Tipperary; M.P. for Midleton and Lismore, 1692, and sat for the latter [C. M. DENISON, "Cork M.P.s"]; he died on 11 May 1710 [History of the Irish Parliament, Volume I, page 185], and was buried in the now ruined church of Clonmell, near Queenstown, County Cork; his Monumental inscription records his age as 68:</div><div><br /></div><div>George's second will, dated 18 November 1709 [Memorial 1403, Volume 6, Page 51, Dublin Deeds Registry], mentioned his wife Mary, sons Francis, William, Joseph and Robert, grandson George ROGERS son of Francis (under 12 years), daughters Katherine and Lucy (both unmarried), daughter Mary <i>"that married Edward WEBBER,"</i> grand-daughter Anne FARMER, and grandson George WEBBER.</div><div>George was married firstly, in 1668, to Anne ATKINS, daughter of Alexander ATKINS, Esq; they had issue:</div><div>1. Francis ROGERS; of Marywell, North Liberties of the City of Cork; first party to both Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 10/11 September 1715 [Memorial 21531, Book 37, Page 106], with Joseph ROGERS of the City of Cork, Doctor of Physick, as second party to both; and Robert ROGERS of Ashgrove, County Cork, Gent, as third party to the Release only, and reciting a deed made by his late father George ROGERS, dated 13 July 1706, being the settlements for his (Robert's) marriage to Agnes BLENNERHASSETT (see below).</div><div>4. Robert ROGERS; recorded in "H.I.P." as second son; of Ashgrove; named as living on his father's M.I.; he died before 1718, when details of his will, dated 10 June 1718, were mentioned in a Deed of Assignment dated 22 October 1719 [Memorial 20429, Book 32, Page 454]; he was married in 1706 to Agnes BLENNERHASSET, daughter of John BLENNERHASSETT, Esq, M.P., the marriage settlements, dated 13 July 1706, being recited in Deeds of Lease and Release dated 10/11 September 1715 [Memorial 21531, Book 37, Page 106]; they had issue:</div><div> a. John ROGERS; of Ashgrove; High Sheriff of County Cork, 1733; died s.p.</div><div> b. Robert ROGERS; died s.p.</div><div> c. Agnes ROGERS; she was married, by Settlements dated 28 September 1737 [Memorial 62213, Volume 87, Page 376], to Richard FRANKLAND, of Cork City, Doctor of Physick (unless ? instead the earlier deed therein recited, dated 10 June 1718); M.P.</div><div>2. William ROGERS; named as living on his father's M.I.</div><div>3. Joseph ROGERS. See [E] below.</div><div>5. Elizabeth ROGERS; married Jasper FARMER; issue:</div><div> a. Anne FARMER; named in her grandfather's will, 1709.</div><div>George was married secondly, to Mary WAKEHAM, who survived him, and was named in his will; by her he had further issue ["H.I.P." entry]:</div><div>6. Daniel ROGERS.</div><div>5. Mary ROGERS; she as married, before 1709, to Edward WEBBER, M.P. for Cork City, 1727-30; he died on 12 November 1730 [H.I.P.]; his will was dated 7 May 1730 [Memorial 130837, Book 196, page 491]; they had issue:</div><div> a. George WEBBER, eldest son; named in his grandfather's will, 1709; joint first party to an Indented Deed dated 13 December 1758 [Memorial 130837]; entered Trinity College, Dublin, 26 January 1727, aged 18.</div><div> b. Edward WEBBER; entered the Middle Temple, London, 6 October 1736.</div><div> c. Mary WEBBER; she was married to Henry MITCHELL, M.P.</div><div> d. Katherine WEBBER; she was named, as the third daughter, as a joint first party to her brother's Deed [Memorial 130837].</div><div>7. Catherine ROGERS; she was married to Richard BOELS, Esq, of Ballinalty.</div><div>8. Lucy ROGERS; she was named on her father's M.I.; she was married in 1710 to Emanuel PIGOTT, of Chetwynd, County Cork.</div><div><br /></div><div>[E] Joseph ROGERS, born in Cork, about 1678; admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, 14 June 1696, aged 17, son of George, Mercator, born Cork [Alumni Dublinenses]; Doctor of Physick (M.D.), of the City of Cork; last surviving trustee of the will of Edward WEBBER, Senior, who died in 1730 [Memorial 130837]; Freedom of the City of Cork, 6 July 1731, Esq, M.D.; Joseph died before December 1758 [Memorial 130837]; he was married, by License of the Diocese of Cork and Ross, 1719, to Margaret BAYLY, a daughter of John BAYLY, of Castlemore, County Cork, Esq, J.P., by his wife Anne TUCKEY, a daughter of Alderman TUCKEY; they had issue:</div><div>1. Bayly ROGERS. See [F] next below.</div><div>2. Joseph ROGERS; probably entered the Middle Temple, 25 January 1753, second son of Joseph ROGERS, City of Cork, Doctor of Medicine; Freedom of the City of Cork, 19 November 1779, as Joseph Junior, M.D.; named in his brother Bayly's will, 1782.</div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>[F] Bayly ROGERS, born in Cork, about 1726; entered Trinity College Dublin, 4 April 1744, as a Pensioner (Mr PARKINSON), aged 17, son of Joseph, Medicinae Doctor [Alumni Dublinenses]; M.D.; Freedom of the City of Cork, 31 January 1758; sole executor to his father's will, as joint second party to George and Katherine WEBBER's Indented Deed, dated 13 December 1758 [Memorial 130837]; he died on 20 January 1786 [Cork Evening Post, 23 January]; his will, dated 22 December 1782, was proved P.C.I., 9 March 1786 [BETHAM's Abstract]; his will, with seven codicils, was also proved P.C.C., in London, on 31 July 1787, requesting to be buried in Christchurch, Cork, early in the morning, and that his body should <i>"... be kept until evident marks of putrefaction appear,"</i> and mentioning his wife Augusta, four sons (the youngest, Alexander, under age)and three daughters (one, Margaret, married to Rev George Sackville COTTER), his late brother-in-law George PIGOTT, and Thomas PIGOTT, Esq (who owed him </span>£750).</div><div><span>Bayly was married firstly, by M.L.B. (Diocese of Cork and Ross), 1750, to Martha PIGOTT, daughter of Emanuel PIGOTT, of Chetwynd, County Cork; she died on 5 December 1781, wife of Bayly ROGERS, Esq, M.D. [Hibernian Chronicle, 6 December]; Bayly appears to have been married secondly, 4 December 1781, to Mrs WEBBER, relict of the late Edward WEBBER, Counsellor at Law [Hibernian Chronicle, 6 December], and by Settlements dated 30 November 1781, to which the third party was his brother Joseph ROGERS, of Cork City [Memorial 230552, Volume 347, Page 3]; she was mentioned in his will, 1782, as Augusta; she died 18 February 1785 [Hibernian Chronicle, 21 February].</span></div><div><span>Bayly and Martha had issue:</span></div><div><span>1. Joseph ROGERS, born in Cork, about 1754; entered Trinity College Dublin, 1 February 1773, as a Pensioner (Mr LEWIS), aged 18, son of Bayly, Medicus [Alumni Dublinenses]; as eldest son in his father's will, 1782; of Seaview, County Cork; probably also a Physician; he may have died at Kinsale, County Cork, 7 February 1823,<i> "... M.D., for many years a respectable inhabitant of this city"</i> [The Constitution, 12 February]; he was married, in June 1782, to Miss LAVALLIN, the daughter and heiress of Mr LAVALLYN [Hibernian Chronicle, 17 June], identified as Mary L'AVALLYN, one of the heiresses of Philip L'AVALLYN, Esq, of Waterpark, Carrigaline, County Cork ["Annals of Ireland," Volume 5, edited by John DONOVAN, 1848, Appendix, page 2469], by his wife Sarah KINGSTON; they had issue nine children, including:</span></div><div><span> a. Robert Atkins ROGERS, born about 1797; of White Church, County Cork, 1860; late Captain, Royal Artillery, of Oldcastle County Sligo, 1868 (his daughter Laura's second marriage notice); he died at 18 Summer Hill, City of Dublin North, 11 April 1877, aged 79, a Widower, retired Artillery Officer, the death informed by Frederick COSGARVE, present, same address; he was married by License of the Diocese of Cloyne, in 1823, to Martha ROGERS, and in 1832, to Alicia GREGORY; Robert probably had issue:</span></div><div><span> i. an elder son</span></div><div><span> ii. Robert ROGERS, born about 1836, second son; he died on 23 May 1857, aged 20, on board the ship 'Parana" homebound from the West Indies, of the yellow fever, of the R.M.S.P. Company's service.</span></div> iii. Susanna Gumbleton ROGERS, eldest daughter; she was married at Ballyclough Church, 28 September 1853, to Horace CATTLEY, Esq, of 15 Great Cumberland Place, Hyde Park, London [Cork Examiner, 1 August].<div><span> iv. </span>Laura Katherine ROGERS; she was married firstly, at the British Consulate, Ostende, 10 October 1865, to Captain Henry Grantham FULFORD, eldest son of Major FULFORD, R.A. [Cork Examiner, 19 October]; she was married secondly, at St Mary's, Spring Grove, Isleworth, 20 June 1868, to Frederick Wiliam BLUMBERG, Esq, Captain, 17th Lancers.</div><div><span> v. Alice Flora ROGERS; she was married at Bruges, 10 May 1860, to Edmund de Pentheny O'KELLY.</span></div><div><span> b. Martha ROGERS; she was married to Hamelin TRELAWNY, Colonel, Royal Artillery and Governor of St Helena, a son of Sir Henry TRELAWNY, Bart.</span></div><div><span> c. Maria ROGERS; she was married to Timothy O'DONOVAN, Esq ["Annals of Ireland," Ibid.]</span></div><div><span> d. Joseph Richard Frankland ROGERS.</span></div><div><span> e. Anne ROGERS, possibly baptised at Clonmell (Queenstown), 16 October 1798, daughter of Dr Jospeh and Mary his wife [FFOLLIOTT Irish Marriages]; as a daughter of the late Dr Joseph ROGERS of this City, she was probably married in or before early January 1824, at Dumfries, Scotland, to William SEALY, Esq [The Constitution, Cork, 7 January 1824].</span></div><div><span> f. Jane ROGERS; as the fourth daughter of Joseph ROGERS, Esq, M.D., of this city, she was probably married in March 1821, <i>"... last week,"</i> to Robert JOHNSON, Junior, Esq, of Grenville Place [Cork Morning Intelligencer, 22 March].</span></div><div><span> g. possible other issue Alexander and Margaret?</span></div><div><span><div><span>2. Richard Henry ROGERS; named as second son in his father's will, 1782; Clerk in Holy Orders; LL.D.; Rector of Killeagh and Castlemagner; he was married to Susannah GUMBLETON; they had issue:</span></div><div><span> a. Richard Henry ROGERS, born in County Cork, about 1785; entered Trinity College, Dublin, 15 January 1801, ss a Pensioner (Private Tutor), aged 15; B.A., Vern 1808; Clerk in Holy Orders; Rector of Yougall, County Cork; he was probably married, by License of the Diocese of Cloyne, 27 June 1811, to Augusta LYSTER; they had issue:</span></div><div><span> i. Richard Henry ROGERS. See [X] below.</span></div><div><span> ii. Joseph Pigott ROGERS; he was married to Susan FOOTT, a daughter of Colonel John FOOTT, with issue.</span></div><div><span> iii. George ROGERS, youngest son; he was married at St John's Church, Manchester, 17 April 1849, to Mary Elizabeth FOOT, third daughter of the late Thomas Wade FOOT, Esq, of Springfort House, Mallow [Cork Examiner, 27 April].</span></div><div><span> iv. Heloise Susanna ROGERS; she was married at St Paul's Church, by the Rev Dr COTTER, Rector of Buttevant, 14 July 1849, to George Robert LAURENCE, Esq, of Mount Verdon, eldest son of the late George LAURENCE, Esq [Cork Examiner, 16 July]..</span></div><div><span> v. Katherine ROGERS; she was married to John Thomas CRAMER, of Ballindinisk House, Cork; with issue.</span></div><div><span> vi. Margaret Massey ROGERS; she was married at Rosbercon Church, 26 August 1848, to Robert Alexander NAPPER, Esq, Lieutenant, 55th Bengal Native Infantry [Cork Examiner, 1 September].</span></div><div><span> vii. Martha Georgina ROGERS, born about 1833; youngest daughter; she died in 1902, aged 69 years; she was married at Rosbercon Church, 4 September 1850, to Henry Goulburn HINSON, of New Ross, Solicitor; with issue.</span></div><div><span> b. George Gumbleton ROGERS, born in County Cork, about 1786; entered Trinity College Dublin, 15 January 1801, as a Pensioner (Private Tutor), aged 14; B.A., Vern 180l: M.D.</span></div><div><span> c. Joseph Pigott ROGERS; he probably died at 4 North Brunswick Street, Dublin, 1 November 1866, formerly of Youghal, County Cork, and lately of 72 Upper Dominick Street, Dublin, M.D. [Probate grant, 1874, to William Browning GARDNER, Solicitor]; he was married in London, 4 June 1818, to Margaret Frances LIMRICK, youngest daughter of the late Paul LIMRICK of Calcutta [Southern Reporter, 9 June]; as Mrs Frances PIGOTT, she and her husband were named in a Remittance Account of her late mother Mrs Margaret LEMRICK, 1844 [London Gazette], as was her sister Charlotte and her husband Littleton LISTER, both daughters of the deceased; she died at Ballyphelane, County Cork, 6 December 1861 [Probate granted 1877, to William Browning GARDNER, Solicitor, Administrator of the husband].</span></div><div><span>3. George Pigott ROGERS, born in Cork, about 1763; entered Trinity College Dublin, 17 June 1779, aged 16; entered the Middle Temple, 8 October 1781, as third son of Bayley ROGERS, Cork, Ireland, Esq; named as third son in his father's will, 1782; he was married on 9 January 1789, to Miss BEECHER, daughter of the late Michael BEECHER, of Creagh, Esq [Cork Evening Post, 12 January]; she died at Grand Parade, Cork, 12 July 1804, after a long and lingering illness [Cork Mercantile Chronicle, 13 July].</span></div><div><span>4. Alexander ROGERS; named in his father's will, 1782.</span></div><div><span>5. Margaret ROGERS; named in her father's will, 1782, as wife of Rev George Sackville COTTER; they had issue:</span></div><div><span> a. Martha COTTER; named in her grandfather's will, 1782.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>Joseph Pigott ROGERS; he was married by License, Diocese of Cloyne, 1814, to Margaret Massey GUMBLETON. Perhaps the next.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>Joseph Pigott ROGERS; Doctor; he was married with issue:</span></div><div><span> a. Joseph Pigott ROGERS, born in or before 1865; of full age, bachelor, of 24 Colerain Street, Clerk, when he was married at St Michan's City of Dublin (North), 1 October 1866, to Emily CASEY, daughter of Samuel CASEY, Merchant; they had issue:</span></div><div><span> i. Joseph Pigott ROGERS, born at 49 Barrack Street, Dublin, 16 August 1867, and baptised at St Paul's parish church, Dublin, 12 September, father a Teacher.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>[X] </span><span>Richard Henry ROGERS; of Devonshire House, Cork; Medical Practitioner; he died at Knockanewry, Youghal, County Cork, 9 March 1901, aged 95 (this age would suggest a birth about 1806, about 5 years before his parent's marriage); he was married at Glanmire Church, 24 December 1844, to Anne FOOTT, second daughter of the late Thomas Wade FOOTT, Esq, of Spring Fort House, County Cork [Cork Examiner, 30 December]; she died 12 March 1873 [Dublin Probate Rcords, Administration grant]; they probably had issue, including:</span></div><div><span> a. Mary Kate ROGERS, born about 1848; she died at Devonshire Place, Youghal, 6 November 1889, aged 40.</span></div><div><span> a. George Pigott ROGERS; of full age, a bachelor, Captain, Waterford Artillery, residing at 18 Bloomfield Avenue, Dublin, and son of Richard Henry ROGERS, M.D., when he was married by License at St Peter's parish church, Dublin, 2 August 1877, to Marguerite Susanna OLIVER, Widow, of 3 Tyrconnel Terrace, South circular Road, daughter of Joseph Henry Lyttleton ROGERS.</span></div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: medium;"><b><i>A CORK ROGERS IN DUBLIN.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>John ROGERS, of Marlborough Street, City of Cork, a Gentleman, Bachelor, son of John ROGERS, was married at the Cork Registry Office, 3 April 1856, to Isabella Susanna FREEMAN, a minor, a Lady, daughter of Robert Francis William FREEMAN, and witnessed by Christopher John KEAS and B. WALLIS.</div><div><br /></div><div>John and Isabella had issue:</div><div>A1. Edward Joseph Freeman ROGERS, believed to have been born about 1859.</div><div>A2. Freeman ROGERS, born at 5 Frankford Terace, Lower Gloucester Street, Dublin, 21 September 1865, son of John ROGERS, of the same address, Gentleman, and Isabella S.M. ROGERS formerly FREEMAN, who informed the Registrar.</div><div><br /></div><div>There remains some confusion as to whether these two children may have been one and the same.</div><div><br /></div><div>Edward Joseph Freeman ROGERS died at Sydney Hospital, 30 December 1925, and was buried at Waverley Cemetery, Section 20, C.of E. Ordinary, Plot 5759, with his wife Phoebe Pearl (AXAM). A memorial on the www.findagrave.com web-site records his birth in Dublin on 21 September 1865!</div><div>His death was registered as Edward Joseph ROGERS, 1925 #16006, aged 67, at Sydney, parents names not known.</div><div><br /></div><div>Edward Joseph Freeman ROGERS was married in Queensland, 11 March 1892, C/1368, to Ellen FERGUSON.</div><div><br /></div><div>Edward ROGERS and Phoebe AXAM had issue:</div><div>A1. Laura I. ROGERS, born Sydney, 13 January 1909 #3491.</div><div><br /></div><div>An Edward Joseph Freeman ROGERS was named in a report, published in the Queensland Times (Ipswich), 22 February 1890, as having been recently been liberated from imprisonment at St Helena, whence he had been transferred from South Brisbane Gaol, in about 1885.</div><div>It appears that his incarceration may have been connected with his having served as a crew member on the ship 'Hopeful.'</div><div><br /></div><div>Edward's great-grand-daughter has contacted me, and states that Edward was a Cook at the Royal Military College at Duntroon, in the year 1917, the same my father was enrolled as a Staff Cadet there.</div><div>He had sought to enlist in the 1st AIF, but was evidently found to be unfit for active service, and had understated his age by fifteen years as well! I have been unable to confirm this from the microfiches of early Electoral Rolls in the State Library of N.S.W.</div><div>________________________________________</div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span><div style="text-align: left;">AS YET UNPLACED.</div><div><br /></div><div>Francis ROGERS, a Quaker, and his wife Mary had issue:</div><div>1. Elizabeth ROGERS; buried at Cork, 10th 4mo 1712.</div><div>2. Francis ROGERS; buried at Cork, 8 2mo 1713, aged 3 weeks.</div><div>3. Francis ROGERS, born at Sunday's Wells, Cork, 17 9mo 1713.</div><div>4. Sarah ROGERS; buried at Cork, 22 5mo 1728.</div><div>5. Joseph ROGERS; buried at Cork, 29 8mo 1728.</div><div>6. Francis ROGERS, born in early 1737; buried at Cork, 16 4mo 1737, aged 3 months, died at John PHILLIP's in Limerick. Perhaps, given the 9 year gap, of a different generation?</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div></span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>MARRIAGE LICENSES, DIOCESE OF CORK AND ROSS.</u></b></i></span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>1668 - George ROGERS and Anne ATKINS.</span></div><div><span>1680 - Richard ROGERS and Mary WATTS.</span></div><div><span>1683 - Edward ROGERS and Frances PHAIRE.</span></div><div><span>1684 - William ROGERS and Frances GUPPY.</span></div><div><span>1685 - John ROGERS and Martha ANDREWES.</span></div><div><span>1692 - Edward ROGERS and Elizabeth PHAIRE.</span></div><div><span>1699 - Joseph ROGERS and Hester REYNAUD.</span></div><div><span>1703 - Thomas ROGERS and Anne CLARKE.</span></div><div><span>1703 - Margaret ROGERS and Robert JEPHSON.</span></div><div><span>1710 - Lucia ROGERS and Emanuel PIGOTT.</span></div><div><span>1711 - Mary ROGERS and Barnaby BOWEN.</span></div><div><span>1712 - Elizabeth ROGERS and Onesipherus GAMBLE.</span></div><div><span>1713 - Noblet ROGERS and Elizabeth FITZGERALD.</span></div><div><span>1715 - Martha ROGERS and John GODFREY.</span></div><div><span>1717 - Christopher ROGERS and Martha OSBURN.</span></div><div><span>1719 - Joseph ROGERS and Margaret BAYLY.</span></div><div><span>1719 - Allen ROGERS and Mary BROOKMAN.</span></div><div><span>1719 - Christian ROGERS and John LAMB.</span></div><div><span>1719 - Elizabeth ROGERS and Bartholomew BRETON.</span></div><div><span>1720 - Jane ROGERS and Andrew FORRESTER.</span></div></span></div>1723 - Rebecca ROGERS and Michael DAVIES, Clerk.</div><div>1727 - Elizabeth ROGERS and Robert RAYMOND.</div><div>1728 - Elizabeth ROGERS and Edward RICHARDSON.</div><div>1728 - Elinor ROGERS and John GOGGIN.</div><div>1729 - Amy ROGERS and David GILL.</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i style="font-size: x-large;"><b><u>A ROGERS IN EARLY SYDNEY, WHO RETIRED TO CORK.</u></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>I had initially wondered whether the following George ROGERS was of the Cork family, as he lived in Mallow from about 1858 until his death. But it now appears that he was instead of a line of Westminster Solicitors.</div><div><br /></div><div>George John ROGERS was probably born in late 1807 (ages in 1828 Census, at first marriage, and at death) - an on-line family tree records his birth in London, without corroborating evidence; George arrived in Sydney, New South Wales, on the ship Hooghley, 24 February 1828, after a voyage of 110 days - on the same vessel as did Judge James DOWLING (1787-1844) and his family, to take up his position of a Piusne Justice of the Supreme Court of the Colony of New South Wales - the fact that George named his first son after the Judge, makes me wonder if he may have arrived in Sydney as a part of DOWLING's retinue; in November 1828, he was recorded as aged 20, came free on the Hooghley, Protestant, Clerk to the Supreme Court, Phillip Street, Sydney [1828 Census]; George first appears in Sydney newspapers as a Law Clerk in the Office of the Supreme Court of N.S.W. in 1829; also in 1829, he was a Commissioner of the Supreme Court, swearing affidavits on 9 April and 9 July of that year [Commonwealth of Australia, "Governor's Despatches to and from England," Volume XV (June 1829 to December 1830), Library Committee of the Commonwealth Parliament, 1922, at pages 48 and 61], and in September [Sydney Gazette, 3 September]; in 1830 he began in practice as a Solicitor in Sydney, in partnership with Mr OWEN; he made a number of property transactions, in Balmain, Petersham, Woolloomooloo, and elsewhere; he purchased Craigend, on the Darlinghurst Ridge (Woolloomooloo), and took up residence about 1842 - it had been built in the 1820s by Surveyor- General Thomas MITCHELL; George was the proprietor in 1845, when the view from the villa, looking towards Government House and the Domain, was painted, in oils on canvas, by George Edward PEACOCK, now in the holdings of the Dixson Library, State Library of N.S.W.:</div><div><br /></div><div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIBdN_CfunMhgMLJgk1Js1HmAVr3zluuyowDhR-6PTB4FqjfLOqtQ3tWIHXOPFBxXimGYeL_w0XVQzpnbmlzZr4p9QYiWcvqsPO5-SZ4WgDW1U4WGjWhNgPYvkTpYVPGVJd08jXn5Q6gPu/" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="" data-original-height="1027" data-original-width="1400" height="294" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIBdN_CfunMhgMLJgk1Js1HmAVr3zluuyowDhR-6PTB4FqjfLOqtQ3tWIHXOPFBxXimGYeL_w0XVQzpnbmlzZr4p9QYiWcvqsPO5-SZ4WgDW1U4WGjWhNgPYvkTpYVPGVJd08jXn5Q6gPu/w400-h294/image.png" width="400" /></a></div></div><div><br /></div><div>George later went into partnership with William SPAIN, and dissolved that partnership on 31 December 1853, on account of his departure for Europe [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 3 January].</div><div>George went to London, then settled in Mallow, County Cork, perhaps his native place, or that of his parents?; in fact, a George J. ROGERS was named in a list of contributors to the Patriotic Fund, in the Mallow Petty session's District, giving £2 [Cork Examiner, 1 December 1854], which, if him, suggests that he visited what would become "home" before returning to London; Goerge died at his residence, Mallow, 16 January 1863, <i>"... formerly of Manchester-buildings, Westminster, and late of Sydney, N.S.W."</i> [Sun, London, 20 January], aged 56, late of Craigend, Sydney [Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier, 17 January; Empire (Sydney), 24 March].</div><div>George was aged 25 when he was married firstly, at St James's parish church, Sydney, 12 November 1832, to Catherine Rebecca WINDEYER, aged 15, third daughter of Charles WINDEYER, Esq, of Sydney; she died at Union Cottage, Parramatta Road, Petersham, 2 November 1834; they had issue:</div><div> a. James Dowling ROGERS, born at Upper Castlereagh Street, Sydney, 20 August 1833 [Sydney Gazette, 22 August], and probably named in honour of the Piusne Judge of N.S.W.; he attended Sydney College, April 1841 to December 1841 [Peter YEEND, "The Sydney College, 1835-1850," August 1992]; he went to New Zealand; of Maronau, Stockholder, Christchurch County District Electoral Roll, by leasehold, 1858; of the Hind, September 1864, when appointed Justice of the Peace for the colony of New Zealand [Lyttleton Times, 15 September]; of Hinds River, by freehold, house and land in Cashel Street, Electorate of Christchurch City, 1865-66; he died, by suicide, in August 1866 [Nelson Evening Mail, 13 August]; of Marouan Station, when he was married at Heathcote Temporary Church, 1 June 1859, to Amy MORGAN, second daughter of William MORGAN, of Cwm House, Heathcote Valley [Lyttleton Times, 4 June]; they had issue:</div><div> i. Catherine Mary ROGERS, born at Maronaw, River Hinds, 12 December 1860 [Lyttleton Times, 18 July], Reg'd N.Z., 1861 #326.</div><div> ii. George William ROGERS; as the eldest son, he was married at St Luke's church, Foxhill, 2 February 1894, to Lily Jane TIDD, daughter of Thomas Samuel TIDD, of Foxhill, Nelson [Nelson Evening Mail, 5 February].</div><div> iii. James Warrington ROGERS, born in N.Z., 1865 #15403; probably of Cardiff, Taranaki, whose son George William Dowling ROGERS enlisted in the NZEF, 10th Reinforcements, 4th Battalion, World War 1 (who, as the youngest son, he was married in July 1924, to Annie Elizabeth GRAY, second daughter of Mrs GRAY of Waihou [Te Puki Times, 18 July]).</div><div> b. Mary Russell ROGERS; of full age, spinster, when she was married at Mallow parish church, 29 November 1870, to Robert Gibbings WESTROPP, Captain, 106th Regiment, Light Infantry, a son of Edward WESTROPP, Gent, the marriage witnessed by Adolphus ROGERS.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>George was married secondly, at St James's parish church, Sydney, 28 July 1838, to Martha RUSSELL, daughter of Major RUSSELL of Orthes, near Cawdor, late H.M.'s 29th Regiment of Foot [Sydney Gazette, 31 July]; hey had issue:</div><div> c. a daughter, born at Elizabeth Street North, Sydney, 17 May 1839.</div><div> d. Sarah C. ROGERS, born at Elizabeth Street North, Sydney, 12 January 1841 [Sydney Gazette, 14 January].</div><div> e. Adolphus Warrington ROGERS, born at Craigend, 4 December 1842 [S.M.H., 5 December], and baptised at St James's, Sydney, 26 December.</div><div> f. Emily Mary ROGERS; of full age, spinster, when she was married at Mallow parish church, 12 January 1864, to William Raymond BOULTON, Lieutenant, R.N., of H.M.S. Ajax, Kingston, Mallow, a son of Charles BOULTON, Gent, witnessed by James ROGERS.</div><div> g. Ansonia Anne ROGERS, probably born about 1845-47 or 1849-50; a minor, spinster, when she was married at Mallow parish church, 28 July 1866, to William Henry BOURNE, of Mallow, Gent, a son of Richard BOURNE.</div> f. George Burridge ROGERS, born at Craigend, Woolloomooloo, 9 September 1848 [S.M.H., 11 September], and baptised at St Mark's Anglican church, Darling Point, 4 October; Gentleman Cadet, Royal Military College, appointed 1 April 1868, to be Ensign, 19th Foot, by purchase (vice BUTLER, transferred to 3rd Foot) [London Gazette, 31 March]; transferred 16 June 1868, as Ensign, 48th Foot [Edinburgh Gazette, 16 June]; he served in Madras Presidency, India - India List, 1877, 48th (Northamptonshire) Regiment of Foot, which arrived in India 26 February 1872, and transferred from Bellary to Canannore 16 December 1875, and listed as Lieutenant, Date of Commission in Regiment, 28 October 1871, Depot, Wellington; he was promoted 1 May 1881, to be Captain, 48th Foot, vice G.A. LEWES [London Gazette, 7 June]; he was at 17 St George's Place, Northampton, 1881 Census, aged 32, Lieutenant, 48th Regiment, born Australia, with wife and son; he died at Lindeville, Blackrock, County Cork, 11 December 1884, formerly of Verdun Terrace, City of Cork, late a Captain in H.M.'s 48th Regiment of Infantry, probate granted 17 February 1885 to his sister Mary Russell WESTROPP, Widow, of Sunny Hill, Mallow, County Cork, one of the executors; George was married at St Jude's parish church, Portsea, Southampton, by Banns, 5 December 1874, to Maud HOWARD, aged 20, Spinster, of Southsea, daughter of John HOWARD, Solicitor; she was with her husband, 1881 Census, aged 26, born Portsmouth; they had issue:</div><div> i. Howard Ware ROGERS, born at Bellary, Madras Presidency, 12 September 1875 [Belfast Newsletter, 15 October], and baptised 21 October, by Frank George LYS, Army Chaplain [British India Office Ecclesiastical records, Findmypast], he was with his parents, 1881, aged 5, born Madras; he died at Portsmouth, 2 May 1887, aged 11, <i>"... only child of Maud and the late George Burridge ROGERS"</i> [Cork Constitution, 12 May].</div><div><div> h. a daughter, born at Manor-park-terrace, Streatham, near London, 24 June 1856 [Morning Chronicle (London), 27 June; S.M.H., 25 September].</div><div>Streatham Hill, County Surrey, was recorded as the address, in 1837, of Rebecca ROGERS, Widow, who was joint party to the Articles of Clerkship, dated 26 May 1837, of her son John Warrington ROGERS, to his uncles and her brothers-in-law, James ROGERS and Charles ROGERS (see below).</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div><br /></div><div>George was instead more likely to have been linked to the Legal family of several generations of John Warrington ROGERS, Solicitors, Barristers and Judges, of London and Australia.</div><div><br /></div><div>One on-line family tree records the following details (as yet not all details corroborated by me):</div><div><br /></div><div>George ROGERS; he was married at Kinver, Staffordshire, 16 April 1704, to Mary SIMMS; they had issue, including:</div><div>A1. Martha ROGERS, baptised at Kinver, 30 April 1715. Possibly the next.</div><div><br /></div><div>Martha ROGERS had issue, baptised at Enville, Staffordshire (about 2 miles south of Kinver), but for whom no father was identified:</div><div>A1. Harry Groby ROGERS, base son, baptised 8 September 1733. See [U] below.</div><div>A2. Mary Frances ROGERS, base daughter, baptised 6 October 1734.</div><div>A3. Warrington ROGERS, base son, baptised 29 August 1736; buried at Enville, 18 April 1737.</div><div><br /></div><div>William and Mary ROGERS and John and Elizabeth ROGERS were also having children baptised at Enville parish church about the same time.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>Of possible interest here, <b>Harry</b> GREY (18 June 1715 - 30 May 1768), the 4th Earl of Stamford, was born at Enville Hall, in Staffordshire, and died there. On 18 May 1736, he was married at St James's, Westminster, to Lady Mary BOOTH, the only daughter and heiress of George BOOTH, 2nd Earl of <b>Warrington</b>. The GREY family had landed estates in Leicestershire, and the 5th Earl, Harry's son George <b>Harry</b> GREY, evidently based himself at Enville during the 18th century; after they removed to Dunham Massey, in Cheshire, they kept a hunting lodge at their <b>Groby</b> Estate, which may have been in Cheshire.</div><div>And yet another Warrington ROGERS descendant mentions a Lord GREY of <b>Groby</b> - probably born about 1623, and died in 1657 while his father was still living, the eldest son of Henry GREY, the 1st Earl of Stamford, </div><div>Martha ROGERS may well have been acquainted with this genteel family, perhaps even as a servant at Enville Hall?</div><div>Her naming her sons, to an unidentified father, as Harry Groby ROGERS and Warrington ROGERS, all appears to be entirely co-incidental, but remarkably intriguing! Especially since the young Lord Harry was only 18 when Martha had her first child, and was married before her third base child was born.</div><div>There were also a number of baptisms in Enville, over the same period, for the children of John and Mary ROGERS.</div><div><br /></div><div>[U] Harry Groby ROGERS, born in 1733, evidently a son of Martha ROGERS, of Enville, Staffordshire, by an un-named father;he was rated for Land Tax, 1760, 1761, at Trott's Court, parish of St George, Middlesex, at £1 4s.; he was a Trott's Court, in the parish of St George, County Middlesex, June 1761, when his son John was born; Harry ROGERS, formerly of Trott's Court, parish of St George, and late of Cranborn Alley, near Leicester Fields, in the same County, Gentleman, then a Prisoner in the King's Bench Prison in County Surrey, for debt, June 1765, when he was listed in the First Notice (London Gazette,1 June) of his claim from the benefits of the Act lately passed for the Relief of Insolvent debtors (in the fifth of King George III - 1765-66), and also in the Second Notice (ditto, 4 June) [www.thegazette.co.uk]; he was probably the Harry ROGERS who (ap)proved the execution of the Articles of Clerkship, dated 15 June 1782, for five years, of John Warrington ROGERS to (Master) William Joseph CROOKS [U.K. Articles of Clerkship, Ancestry.com] - see further below; probably at Red Lion Row, Newington, 1784 and 1785, when he was Rated for Land Tax at £8 13s 4d, and also in 1789, at £8 10s 8d; he was possibly the Harry ROGERS, of Manchester Buildings, Westminster, 2 January 1804, when he witnessed the Articles of Clerkship of John Warrington ROGERS Junior to John Warrington ROGERS Senior [ditto] - and if so, close to his death, and for his son and grandson; he died at Pig Hill (alias Peak Hill), Sydenham, and was buried at Lewisham St Mary the Virgin, London, 12 February 1804, aged 70 [London Metropolitan Archives, DW/T1037]; of the parish of St Botolph, Aldgate, of age, bachelor, when he made his Marriage License Allegations, 24 June 1758, to Rachel THOMAS, of age, spinster, of the parish of All Hallows Barking; they were married by Rev Brewer KIDMAN, Minister, at the All Hallows parish church, 1 July, both signed (she as Rachel), witnessed by George LONG Senior and Anthony THOMAS; they had issue:</div><div>A1. Harry ROGERS, born 24 May 1759, and baptised at All Hallows, Barking by the Tower, 11 June.</div><div>A2. John Warrington ROGERS, born at Trott's Court, parish of St George, County Middlesex, about 3 June 1761. See [V] below.</div><div>A3. Martha Catherine ROGERS, baptised at St George the Martyr, Southwark, 27 April 1764; she died on 27 March 1833, and was buried at St Bartholomew, Sydenham, aged 65 [M.I.].</div><div>A4. Charlotte Mary ROGERS, baptised at St Mary Newington, 21 October 1773; died 1841; possibly married Anthony ASSENTI; a Mary Charlotte ASSENTI was a witness to the 1832 will of John Warrington ROGERS (Junior) of Westminster (proved 1836); Anthony ASSENTI, of Bridge Street, Westminster, Auctioneer, together with Daniel WITHERELL, appeared personally, 27 August 1830, and made oath that they were "well acquainted" with John Warrington ROGERS, Senior, immediately prior to his probate grant.</div><div>A5. James Anthony ROGERS, baptised at St Mary, Newington, 10 May 1782; Surveyor of Taxes; of Pig Hill, Sydenham, 1809; Lee, 1814; he was buried at St Bartholomew, Sydenham, 29 August 1840, aged 58; of Lewisham, bachelor, when he was married, by license, at Newington St Mary, Southwark, 23 May 1807, to Mary GOODWIN, of the parish, Spinster, witnessed by William HOLDSWORTH and Julia BRIGGS; Susannah died on 31 May 1844, aged 58; they had issue:</div><div> a. James Anthony ROGERS, born at Pig Hill, Sydenham, 15 April 1809, and baptised at Sydenham St Bartholomew, 12 May.</div><div> b. Caroline Harriet ROGERS, born at Lee Lane, 20 July 1812, and baptised at Lewisham St Mary, 20 August.</div><div> c. Harry Grooby ROGERS, born at Lee, and baptised at St Mary's, Lewisham, 19 April 1814; he was at Bronte Place, Newington St Mary, 1841 Census, aged 25+, Solicitor's Clerk, with his first wife and daughter; he was at Walworth St Peter, Newington, Surrey, 1851 Census, aged 37, Solicitor's Managing Clerk, born Sydenham, with his second wife and two children by his first; Harry was married firstly, about 1840, to Susannah (-?-); she was aged 20+, with her husband, 1841 Census, born in Middlesex; she probably died at 18 Manor Road, Walworth, December 1845, and was buried at Nunhead Cemetery, 27 December, aged 28; they had issue:</div><div> i. Susannah ROGERS, born at Walworth, about 1841; aged 5 (mos) with her parents, 1841 Census; aged 10, with her father, 1851 Census.</div><div> ii. Harry Groby ROGERS, born at Walworth, about 1843; aged 7, with his father, 1851 Census.</div><div>Harry, as a Widower, was married secondly, at Walworth St Peter, parish of Newington St Mary, 24 September 1848, to Sarah MILLER, Spinster, of 26 Bronte Place, daughter of William MILLER, deceased, Hatter; she was with her husband, 1851 Census, aged 37, born Southwark, Surrey.</div><div> d. Charles John ROGERS, born 1816.</div><div> e. Eliza Martha ROGERS, born at Queen's Row, Walworth, 14 October 1820, and baptised at Newington St Mary, 10 November.</div><div> f. Thomas Goodwin ROGERS, born at Queen's Row, 8 January 1824, and baptised at Newington St Mary, 13 March 1825; he died in 1844.</div><div><br /></div><div>[V] John Warrington ROGERS, born about 3 June 1761, and baptised at St George in the East, Tower Hamlets,7 July 1761, son of Harry ROGERS by Rachel, of Trott's Court, aged 34 days - however, Docklands Ancestors Ltd records that he was baptised at St George in the East, Stepney, same details; John was probably admitted to Merchant Taylor's School, 1770 (date of birth not recorded, but probably aged about 10 or 11) - there were two ROGERS admissions there, both in 1740, named Nathaniel (no birth date recorded) and Charles (born 17 February 1732), but it is clear from other evidence that neither were his father; John was a Solicitor in London; he was implicated, in 1784, in causing injuries to Mary L'ARGENT, a young serving girl who had been apprenticed in about 1781 to Priscilla HAWKES (before she married ROGERS), after she had, with the help of a passing coachman, sought help at the Foundling Hospital for those injuries, from where she had originally been apprenticed to HAWKES, and where she was admitted to the Infirmary for three weeks ["Children in Domestic Service, ca 1760-1830," by J.A. DYER, 2016, Ph.D. Thesis, Oxford Brookes University, at page 160, citing London Metropolitan Archives, FH/A/12/023/001, 1775-91, 24 November 1786]; Articles of Clerkship, to William Joseph CROOKS (Master), of Crown Court, Russell, Covent Garden, dated 15 June 1782, for five years, sworn 29 June 1784, filed 7 November 1785, and read in Court 21 June 1787, execution proved by Harry ROGERS (perhaps his father - see above); he was at 22 Manchester Buildings, Westminster, 1802, Attorney [London City Directory]; ditto, 1811, with his son John Warrington ROGERS Junior, Attornies[ditto].</div><div>John died at Westminster, 12 August 1830, aged 68; he was buried at St Margaret's, Westminster,<i> "... aged 6(0) years"</i> as inscribed on, or interpreted from, a <i>"... flat stone near front of west door"</i> [Notes and Queries, 26 December 1931, page 452]; his will, dated 21 June 1827, mentioned Harriet HAWKES (evidently a sister of his wife Priscilla, who had died in 1794) <i>"... to whom I am in fact bound in contract, and was living with me for life,"</i> his <i>"... several natural children James ROGERS, Harriet ROGERS, Charles ROGERS, George ROGERS, Edward William ROGERS and Emily ROGERS, when they shall reach the age of twenty one or as they shall attain such age,"</i> his <i>"... dear daughter"</i> Priscilla ROGERS (a Legacy of £500), and his son John Warrington ROGERS, with whom he had carried on in business, and whom he appointed sole executor, and was proved P.C.C. 3 September 1830, with concurrence of his eldest son, and of <i>"Harriott HAWKES, Spinster"</i> [TNA, Kew, PROB 11/1776/179].</div><div>John Warrington ROGERS, of the parish, bachelor, was married at St Mary Newington, Southwark, Surrey, by William CRAWFORD, Curate, and by license, 19 June 1783, to Priscilla HAWKES, spinster, of the parish, the marriage witnessed by James DUCHAR and William HAWKS; she was baptised at St Giles's, Camberwell, 29 October 1759, daughter of John HAWKES; Priscilla ROGERS was buried at St Giles's, Camberwell, Southwark, 28 February 1794.</div><div>John and Priscilla had issue, including:</div><div> a. John Warrington ROGERS, baptised at Newington St Mary, Southwark, 10 June 1784, son of John Warrington and Priscilla ROGERS; a member of the Select Vestry of St Margaret's, Westminster; Articles of Clerkship, 2 January 1804, by which he bound himself to his father, as a Clerk, for 5 years, the Articles witnessed by William BARCLAY and Harry ROGERS (perhaps his grandfather - see above), all of Manchester Buildings, Westminster, and sworn at Westminster Hall, 21 February; of 22 Manchester Buildings, Westminster, 1811, with his father, Attornies [City of London Directory]; Attorney, Manchester Buildings, Westminster, 1821-22 [Baptismal record for his eldest son]; John died at Norwood, 22 August 1836, aged 52, Solicitor, of Manchester Buildings, Westminster [Gentleman's Magazine, October 1836, page 440]; his will was proved P.C.C. [full copy yet to be sighted, but previewed on the TNA web-site], evidently naming his eldest so John Warrington ROGERS, daughter Rebecca Mary ROGERS, son James ROGERS, and brothers James and Charles ROGERS; he was probably married about 1813 to Rebecca STONE; she was at Motcombe Street, Motcombe, Dorset, 1861 Census, a widow, aged 73, Freeholder, born Middlesex, with her daughter and Sophia GRANGER; she died at Motcombe, 17 September 1867, and was buried at Gillingham parish church; they had issue, including:</div><div> i. John Warrington ROGERS. See [W] below.</div><div> ii. Rebecca Mary ROGERS, born Middlesex, about 1820; named in her father's will, proved 1836; aged 40, unmarried, with her widowed mother, 1861 Census; she died at Frome Selwood, 4 September 1878, aged 65 years, the only surviving daughter [Western Gazette, 13 September; Bath Chronicle, 19 September].</div><div> iii. James Charles Warrington ROGERS, born at Westminster, 12 May 1825, and baptised at St Margaret's, 11 June [City of Westminster Archives]; as James, named in his father's will, proved 1836; B.A., Exeter College, Oxford; appointed Curate of Motcomb, Dorset, July 1851 [Morning Post, 14 July]; he was named in his father's obituary; he was married at Crewkerne parish church, Somerset, 5 October 1852, to Emily Augusta BOWDAGE, full age, spinster, daughter of Emanuel BOWDAGE, Surgeon, witnessed by Emanuel and Lydia BOWDAGE and his sister Rebecca Mary ROGERS.</div><div> iv. Charles ROGERS; not named in J.W.'s will, proved 1836, but named in his father's obituary (perhaps instead the uncle?</div><div> b. Charles Henry Standfast ROGERS, born at Westminster, 25 November 1785, and baptised at St Margaret's, 25 January 1786.</div><div> c. Priscilla Mary ROGERS, born at Westminster, 28 October 1787, and baptised at St Margaret's, 10 December [City of Westminster Archives]; she was a witness, in April 1804, at the trial of Mary EDWARDS and her daughter Mary Ann, for the felonious stealing of the wearing apparel of her younger half-sister Charlotte, and stating that<i> "... her sister, of three years of age, had been taken from the door of her father's house on 2nd March, and was not heard of until the evening of the same day, when information was brought to the house that a child was at Mr FLAX's Corn-chandler, on the Surrey side of Westminster Bridge, who had been found on the flight of steps leading to the water. Witness's two brothers went to the house, where they found the child, and restored it to its parents"</i> [Sun (London), 7 April]; she was named in her father's will, 1827.</div><div> d. Harry ROGERS, born at Westminster, 6 August 1790, and baptised at St Margaret's, 17 December.</div><div> d. George Grooby ROGERS, born Westminster, 9 January 1793, and baptised at St Margaret's, 23 October, son of Jno Warrington and Isabella (probably read or transcribed in error for Priscilla); he evidently died in infancy, before 1806.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>After the death of his wife Priscilla in 1794, his sister-in-law, and her younger sister Harriott, evidently stepped in to care for the children; she remained with John for the rest of his life, and was named in his will as Harriot HAWKES, and in the probate grants as a Spinster, clear evidence that they were not formally married; she is said to have died in 1830 - a Harriott ROGERS was buried at St Margaret's, Westminster, 26 September 1830, aged 50, the officiating minister probably informed by one of her her children, using their family surname.</div><div>John Warrington Senior had further issue by Harriot HAWKES, the children identified in his will as his "natural" children:</div><div> d. Mary Harriot, born at Westminster, 5 August 1796, and baptised at St Margaret's, 4 September.</div><div> e. George Warrington ROGES, born at Westminster, 17 September 1797, and baptised at St Margaret's, 1 March 1798.</div><div> f. Charlotte Ames ROGERS, born at Westminster, 13 February 1800, and baptised at St Margaret's, 19 March; aged 4 when she was abducted, 2 March 1804, stripped of her clothing, and left naked under Westminster Bridge [Hampshire Chronicle, 19 March], for which crime Ann EDWARDS and her 9 year old daughter were convicted and sentenced to transportation for 7 years [Northampton Mercury, 14 April 1804]; she died 15 June 1827, and was buried at St Margaret's Westminster, aged 27 years [Notes and Queries, 26 December 1931, page 452].</div><div> g. James Grooby ROGERS, born at Westminster, 25 April 1801, and baptised at St Margaret's, 16 September; named in his father's will, dated 1827, but he was named in his brother John Junior's will, proved 1836; at Cannon Row, St Margaret's parish, Westminster, 1841 Census, aged 40+, Solicitor, with Antonia ROGERS, aged 30+, and John ROGERS, aged 1, born Middlesex; at 3 Deans Yard Terrace, St Peter's parish, Westminster, 1851 Census, aged 49, Solicitor, <i>"I believe born St Margaret's,"</i> with wife and four children; at Dean's Yard, Westminster, 1871 Census, aged 69, Solicitor, with his wife and four adult children; he died on 13 May 1872; a memorial on the south wall of St Margaret's. Westminster, under a sculpted bust by Robert JACKSON, is the inscription - <i>"In memory of James Grooby ROGERS, of Dean's Yard, Westminster, who for upwards of 29 years filed the office of Vestry Clerk of the united parishes of St Margaret and St John, Westminster. Born April 23rd, 1801. Died May 13th, 1872. This monument was erected by several of his friends in remembrance of his faithful services and as a token of their esteem. 'The things which are seen are temporal, but the things that are not seen are eternal.' II Cor. IV, 18"</i> [westminster-abbey.org web-site]:</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgJQE9AE39o_NNYY0ktkjjBOMALK48FheSFRD0E4Fy1ynyp5qYBIUQN0lenBb52iOzfV_kznG4QlwD9wHgapEEw_-9Bf-wj-EfLJN3AoRIVeVjN-U0TgXshTlP52kXFfR0i81U6exV-Cle_/s897/james-grooby-rogers-st-margarets.webp" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="897" data-original-width="750" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgJQE9AE39o_NNYY0ktkjjBOMALK48FheSFRD0E4Fy1ynyp5qYBIUQN0lenBb52iOzfV_kznG4QlwD9wHgapEEw_-9Bf-wj-EfLJN3AoRIVeVjN-U0TgXshTlP52kXFfR0i81U6exV-Cle_/s320/james-grooby-rogers-st-margarets.webp" /></a></div><div><br /></div><i><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image copyright of Westminster Abbey [from the westminster-abbey.org web-site].</i></div></i><div>James was married, about 1839, to Ansonia or Antonia Amelia BURRIDGE); she was born at St John's parish, Westminster, about 1804; she died at 8 Great Deans-yard, Westminster, 21 March 1881 [London Evening Standara, 23 March]; they had issue:</div><div> i. James Charles Frampton ROGERS, baptised at St Margaret's, Westminster, 27 May 1840; aged 1, with his parents, 1841; aged 10, ditto, 1851; ditto, aged 30, 1871; he died in 1905.</div><div> ii. Annie (Pratt) ROGERS, born about 1842; aged 9, with her parents, 1851; ditto, 1871, aged 9 years.</div><div> iii. Ada (Marianne) ROGERS, born about 1844; aged 7, with her parents, 1851; ditto, 27, 1871.</div><div> vi. Ellen ROGERS, born about 1846; aged 5, with her parents, 1851; ditto, aged 25, 1871.</div><div> h. Harriet Georgina ROGERS, born at Westminster, 22 June 1803, and baptised at St Margaret's, 15 December; ditto 1827.</div><div> j. Charles ROGERS, born at Westminster, 4 February 1805, and baptised at St Margaret's, 6 March; named in his father's will, 1827; at 22 Manchester Buildings, St Margaret's parish, Westminster, 1841 Census, aged 35+, Solicitor, born in Middlesex, with Ann ROGERS, aged 22, not born in Middlesex, and two female domestic servants.</div><div> k. George ROGERS, born about 1806; ditto 1827. Probably the Solicitor in Sydney who retired to Mallow. See above.</div><div> l. Edward William ROGERS; ditto 1827; See [X] below.</div><div> m. Emily ROGERS; ditto 1827.</div><div><br /></div><div>[W] John Warrington ROGERS, born at Manchester Buildings, Westminster, 26 May 1821, and baptised at St Margaret's parish church, 4 July 1822; Articles of Clerkship, dated 26 May 1837, for five years, to James ROGERS and Charles ROGERS, of Manchester Buildings, Westminster, Gentlemen, Attornies of H.M.'s Court of King's Bench at Westminster and Solicitors to the High Court of Chancery (carrying on business in co-partnership), the Articles made jointly with his mother, Rebecca ROGERS, Widow, of Streatham Hill, County Surrey (John's Guardian, as he was under age); probably the candidate who passed H.T. Examination, Superior Courts, Hilary Term, 1843, and was articled or assigned to James and Charles ROGERS, Manchester Buildings, Westminster [Legal Observer or Journal of Jurisprudence, Volume 25, page 294] - probably either his uncles or older brothers; of King's Bench Walk, Temple, 1848, Barrister [London City Directory]; of 4 Brick Court, Temple, 1850, special pleader, Home Circuit, Surrey Sessions [ditto]; he went to Tasmania, arriving in Melbourne, 30 September 1855 on the ship "Oliver Lang," via Launceston on the steamer "Royal Shepherd," and by Mail coach to Hobart, 4 August [Colonial Times, 6 August], bearing the despatch from the Secretary of State, with Royal Consent to the Act of Council establishing a Parliament in Van Diemen's Land; he moved to Victoria in 1858, but returned home in 1893...</div><div style="text-align: center;"><i><b><span style="color: red;">* * * TO BE CONTINUED * * *</span></b></i> </div><div>John was at 14 Abingdon Villas, Earl's Court, Kensington, 1901 Census, aged 79, King's Council retired from practice (Solicitor), born City of Westminster, with his wife Eliza, daughter Ada, and one domestic servant; John died at his residence, 5 Longfield Road, Ealing, 10 February 1906, aged 84, K.C., eldest son of John Warrington ROGERS, of Westminster [London Daily News, 13 February], <i>"... Service at St Saviour's, The Grove, Ealing, on Thursday, the 15th inst., at 12.15. Interment at Westminster Cemetery, Hanwell, 1.15"</i> [The Times (London), 13 February].</div><div>John was married, by the Bishop of Tasmania and by License, at New Town parish church, Hobart, 10 July 1856, to Eliza CARTER, aged 21, Spinster, witnessed by Mrs CARTER, Emina and Laura CARTER, A.E.T. YOUNG, and Lavington and Lydia ROOPE; she was born at Hobart, 19 November 1834, daughter of William CARTER and Mary Ann CLARKE, and baptised 15 December; Eliza was with her husband and daughter, 1901 Census, aged 65, born Tasmania; she survived him, and arrived back in London, from Melbourne, on the ship "Commonwealth", 29 August 1907, aged 64, with Miss ROGERS, aged 31; Eliza died at Menton South, France, 7 April 1910 [Leader (Melbourne), 16 April], and was buried at Trabuquet Cemetery, Menton, Province of Alpes-Cote d'Azur; they had issue, including five sons (who remained in Australia) and four daughters [Australian Dictionary of Biography]:</div><div>A1. John Warrington ROGERS, born at South Yarra, 15 September 1857 [Hobart Courier, 18 September], Registered #14251; at Hodgson Downs Station, August 1906, 1909; he sold Urapungie Station, 1917; Grazier, Roper Valley Station, 1930; he died at Mataranka, N.T., 28 January 1935, aged 77 years; he was married at Camooweal, Queensland, 31 January 1901 [# C/160], to Catherine Matilda McCAW, eldest daughter of James McCAW, of Uranangie, Queensland [Australasian (Melbourne), 16 February]; she died at Melbourne, 11 August 1921 [N.T. Times and Gazette, 13 August]; they had issue an only child:</div><div> a. John Warrington (Jack) ROGERS, born in Qld, 4 December 1901 [1902, # C/892]; he died in Katherine, N.T., 1943.</div><div>A2. Harry Warrington ROGERS, born about 1859; he died at Paddy's Lagoon, Roper River, N.T., 2 February 1911, aged 51 years [Australasian, 25 February], #7/443.</div><div>A3. William Warrington ROGERS, born about 1861; Barrister and Solicitor; he died at his residence, 263 Dorcas Street, Melbourne South, 3 January 1928, #2748, age 66, and was buried at Brighton Cemetery; he was of of 9 Post Office Place, South Melbourne, bachelor, aged 48, when he was married by Banns, at St Peter's church, Eastern Hill, Melbourne, 15 December 1909, to Florence Lucy GILL, Spinster, 28, of Castlemaine, daughter of Frank Lloyd GILL, Postmaster , witnessed by J.C. Warrington ROGERS and William Lewis AITKEN.</div><div>A4. a son, born at Buninyong, 9 January 1863 [Herald (Melbourne), 14 January]; probably James Charles Warrington ROGERS, who died at his home, 1958 Malvern Road, Malvern East, 19 April 1944 #3404, aged 81, late of Sandringham, father of Frank and Nan, and grandfather of Kathleen [The Age, 22 April].</div><div>A5. a daughter, born at Bunninyong, 16 June 1864 [Argus, 23 June]; probably Mary ROGERS, eldest daughter, who was engaged to be married, August 1888, to Lieutenant BERESFORD, R.N., of H.M.S. 'Ranger,' Indian waters [Table Talk (Melbourne), 3 August]; as Mary Rebecca, she married him at Holmwood, Surrey, England, 27 August 1891.</div><div>A6. a son, born at Buninyong, 28 December 1865 [Ballarat Star, 1 January 1866].</div><div>A7. a daughter, born at Buninyong, 3 October 1867 [Argus, 5 October]; probably Alice Amy ROGERS, second daughter, who was married 4 February 1891, to Lieutenant Stewart V.Z. MESSUM, Commander of the Victorian gun-boat 'Alert' [Table Talk, 6 February].</div><div>A8. a son, born at Buninyong, 4 January 1869 [Ballarat Star, 6 January]. Probably Edward, who died at Lismore, 15 February 1927, aged 58, "eldest" son of the late Judge ROGERS [S.M.H., 16 February]</div><div>A9. Stanley Warrington ROGERS, born at Buninyong, 3 October 1870 [Ballarat Star, 4 October].</div><div>A10. Ada Harriet W. ROGERS, born at Buninyong, 22 July 1872 [Ballarat Star, 24 July]; she was with her parents, in London, 1901 Census, aged 28, born Australia; she was at 6 Linkenholt Mansions, Stamford Brook Avenue, City of London, 1902 [Post Office Directory]; she sailed from Southampton, 10 October 1934, on the ship 'Esperance Bay,' bound for Melbourne, aged 64, Domestic; she died at Sandringham, Victoria, 23 July 1951, <i>"... daughter of the late Judge John Warrington and Eliza ROGERS, formerly of Brighton, Vic, and London, England"</i> [The Age, 25 July], aged 81, #9081.</div><div>A11. Herbert Warrington ROGERS, born at St Kilda, 23 September 1873 [Telegraph (St Kilda), 27 September]; he died on 23 February 1874, aged 5 months [Argus, 24 February].</div><div>A12. Russell Warrington ROGERS, born 30 November 1874 [Argus, 1 December]; as sixth son, he died at Onslow, Western Australia, 8 April 1905 [Australasian, 22 April]..</div><div>A13. a son, born 19 December 1879 [Australasian (Melbourne), 3 January 1880].</div><div>A14. Laura ROGERS; third daughter, when she was married in Singapore, 31 May 1899, to Alan HAMILTON, fourth son of the late Sir Robert HAMILTON, formerly Governor of Tasmania [Argus, 5 July].</div><div><br /></div><div>[X] Edward William ROGERS; ditto 1827; probably sailed to Australia on the ship "Alfred" in 1833; of Elizabeth Street North, Sydney, 1841; of Hutchinson's Buildings, York Street, Sydney, 1842; of Reiby Cottage, George Street, Sydney, 1843; at 170 Pitt Street, Sydney, 1845, 1847, of the Office of the Principal Superintendent of Convicts, Sydney; of Emily Cottage, Glebe (Sydney), 1847, 1849; of Ryde, Kissing Point, 1856; his last mention in Sydney newspapers appears to have been in February 1859, when a W.E. ROGERS, seventh clerk in the Customs Department, Sydney, was, with a number of other officers, dismissed for being involved in the fraudulent loss of £2,500 in duties connected with the brigantine 'Louisa' in the previous Ocotber [S.M.H., 15 February]; he went to N.Z.; of Sophia Street, Timaru, April 1867, where, in the late residence of Mr G. HALL, his wife opened a Select School for Young Ladies [Timaru Herald, 27 April]; later of Christchurch; he probably died at his son's residence, Temuka, New Zealand, 15 September 1875, aged 65 years [Timaru Herald, 20 September], <i>"... son of the late John Warrington ROGERS, Solicitor, Westminster, brother of the late G.J. ROGERS, Solicitor, Sydney, uncle to George ROGERS, Victoria, and cousin to Sir Arthur WARRINGTON, Bart"</i> [Australian Town and Country Journal, 6 November]; he was married at St James's parish church, Sydney, 23 June 1840 [Vol.24B #149], to Mary Anne TROOD, only daughter of A.S. TROOD, of York Street, Sydney [The Australian, 25 June] - her father later identified as Abel Salter TROOD, of Belle Vue Hall, Sydney, who died at Newton Abbott, 24 May 1868, aged 72, father of Mrs W.E. ROGERS of Timaru and formerly of Belle Vue Hall, Sydney, and grandfather of Mr Edward ROGERS, Tekapo Lake, Mackenzie Country [Timaru Herald, 10 February 1869].</div><div>William Edward and Mary Anne had issue:</div><div>A1. William Warrington Brent Trood ROGERS, born at Elizabeth Street North, Sydney, 3 June 1841 [Sydney Monitor, 7 June], Vol.25A #575; he died in April-May 1876, without issue; as the eldest son of Mr W.E. ROGERS of Christchurch, he was married at Avonside, Church of the Holy Trinity, 31 December 1874, to Amelia Frances INWOOD, only daughter of Mr Henry INWOOD, Farmer, of Christchurch [Nelson Evening Mail, 8 January].</div><div>A2. Edward Clements Graham Salter ROGERS, born at Hutchinson's Buildings, York Street, Sydney, 30 June 1842 [Sydney Herald, 1 July], Vol.26A #565; he died in Christchurch, New Zealand, 5 May 1916, and ws buried at Woolston Cemetery; he was married to Isabella BENNETT..</div><div>A3. Mary A.H.A. ROGERS, born at Reiby Cottage, George Street, Sydney, 4 September 1843 [The Australian, 8 September], Vol.27A #2539. Unless instead Emily Amy Marrion ROGERS, the eldest daughter of the late W.E. ROGERS, of Canterbury, N.Z., who died at Murrawombie, 11 March 1876, of consumption, beloved sister of G.A. ROGERS [Evening News (Sydney), 22 March].</div><div>A4. a daughter, born at 170 Pitt Street North, Sydney, 11 April 1845 [Commercial Journal and General Advertiser (Sydney), 16 April]; probably Maude du Moulin Henrietta ROGERS, who as the second daughter of W.E. ROGERS, Esq, late of Sydney, was married at Christchurch, N.Z., 27 June 1870, to George Henry THOMPSON, of Yorkshire, England [Timaru Herald, 23 July]. </div><div>Unless instead Emily Amy Marrion ROGERS, the eldest daughter of the late W.E. ROGERS of Canterbury, N.Z., who died at Murrawombie, 11 March 1876, of consumption, beloved sister of G.A. ROGERS [Evening News (Sydney), 22 March].</div><div>A5. George A.J.C. ROGERS, born at Emily Cottage, Glebe, 10 February 1847 [S.M.H., 13 February], Vol.32A, #513.</div><div>A6. Sydney J.A.F. ROGERS, born at Emily Cottage, Glebe, 3 February 1849 [S.M.H., 5 February], Vol.34A #361.</div><div>A7. Ernest Frances ROGERS, born at Sydney, 1850 Vol.35 #1941; he died at Manly, 1937 #11967; as the son of Dr W.E. ROGERS, late of Enmore Lodge, Sydney, he was married at St Peter's Church, Cook's River, N.S.W., to Elizabeth Browne MILLAR, daughter of James MILLAR, of Wyanbone, Walgett [Mount Hilda Chronicle (N.Z.), 26 April]; they had issue:</div><div> a. Gertrude B. ROGERS, born at Dubbo, 1884 #14349, a twin.</div><div> b. Hubert E. ROGERS, born at Dubbo, 1884 #14359, the other twin.</div><div> c. Rupert M. ROGERS, born at Nyngan, 1887 #16278.</div><div> d. Elsie W. ROGERS, born at Nyngan, 1888 #13682.</div><div> e. Harold G.F. ROGERS, born at Nyngan, 1890 #26579.</div><div> f. Jannita S.F. ROGERS, born at Nungan, 1892 #27271.</div><div> g. Lindsay W.R. ROGERS, born at Nyngan, 1901 #6064.</div><div>A8. Gertrude F. ROGERS, born at Sydney, 1853 Vol.39A #1316; as the third daughter, she was married at Hardy Street Church, Nelson, N.Z., 1 February 1875, to the Rev W. B. MARTEN, Wesleyan Minister [Press (N.Z.), 1 March].</div><div>A9. Edith Harriett ROGERS, born at Penrith, 2 October 1854 Vol.42B #3381 [Bells Life in Sydney, 7 October]; she was married at St John's, Latimer Square, Christchurch, N.Z., 14 May 1874, to Thomas William LEWIS, formerly of Nelson, eldest son of the late William and Ellen Goulstone LEWIS, of Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorganshire [Nelson Evening Mail, 14 May]</div><div>A10. Florence E. ROGERS, born at Ryde, Kissing Point, 9 October 1856, [Empire, 11 October], Baptism Registered 1857 Vol.159 #1134; she died at her father's residence, Sydney, 8 January 1858, the fifth daughter, of effusion of the brain [Empire (Sydney), 11 January], #305.</div><div>A11. Warrington John ROGERS, born in Sydney, 21 November 1857 [Empire, 24 November], #1198; he died at the residence of his father, Sydney, 29 November 1857, sixth son [Empire, 1 December], #2180.</div><div>A12. Ida ROGERS, born at Redfern, 16 November 1858 [S.M.H., 22 November 1859], Registered Chippendale #2943.</div><div>A13. Violet ROGERS, born about 1859-60, youngest daughter; she died at Perth W.A., April 1918; as the youngest daughter, she was married at St Saviour's church, Temuka, 28 April 1880, to Leslie Athol NORMAN, eldest son of E.A. NORMAN of Huon River, Tasmania [Temuka Leader, 29 April]; Leslie was a Journalist; they had issue. </div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Indeed, it was the death notice for the above George John ROGERS, published in the London Sun, 20 January 1863, which recorded him as <i>"...formerly of Manchester-buildings, Westminster."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>And yet another clue is contained in the Australian Dictionary of Biography's entry for John Warrington ROGERS Junior (1822-1906) - where it is observed that on being offered the post of Solicitor-General of Van Diemen's Land in November 1854, <i>"... despite good prospects in England, he accepted probably because of impressions of the colony imbibed as a boy from an Uncle who made a fortune there."</i></div><div>If this uncle was "our" George John ROGERS of Craigend in Sydney, who did indeed make a lot of money in N.S.W., then we have more than just a connection, but quite a close one.</div><div>____________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>BLURRY SIGNATURES ON A QUAKER MARRIAGE CERTIFICATE.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjAdNIRDKLCY9YT3uXhDwYaBmASyx-EOuyCwhLMSfHG-alEeHWQmXAWKQC5jUwQsSksBj5Y7nmNdA0Vu7nGAWq7XhJsZnDzvcVmwgHm4jgnwcFyczE6fTwPCiTDX6dvRZRfVXeH1asyMX74/s353/Capture.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="353" data-original-width="143" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjAdNIRDKLCY9YT3uXhDwYaBmASyx-EOuyCwhLMSfHG-alEeHWQmXAWKQC5jUwQsSksBj5Y7nmNdA0Vu7nGAWq7XhJsZnDzvcVmwgHm4jgnwcFyczE6fTwPCiTDX6dvRZRfVXeH1asyMX74/w261-h640/Capture.JPG" width="261" /></a></div><br /><div><br /><div><br /></div></div></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-62850885260205685732020-11-01T19:46:00.809-08:002021-09-26T01:19:34.405-07:00ROBERT MACLAGAN OF PERTH.<div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><br /></span></i></b></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;">WILLIAM MACLAGAN OF PERTHSHIRE.</span></i></b></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>William MACLAGAN; of Moness, Parish of Dull, Perthshire; he may have been baptised at Dull, 11 February 1720, son of Thomas MACLAGAN and Isobel McCALLEN; he was proclaimed for marriage at Logierait, 15 November 1746, and married at Dull, 23 December, to Isobel ANDERSON of Aberfeldy; they had issue:</span></div><div><span>1. Charles MACLAGAN, born at Mains of Moness, and baptised at Dull, 10 January 1748; Wright; he was probably buried at Perth, 7 March 1812, aged 63; he was probably proclaimed for marriage at Dull and Weem, 22 December 1781, to Christian McGREGOR; she was probably buried at Perth, 14 February 1810, aged 60; they appear to have had issue:</span></div><div><span> a. William MACLAGAN, baptised at Weem, 12 March 1783; probably married at Methven, 24 April 1814, to Janet FORBES, with issue.</span></div><div><span> b. Donald MACKAGAN, baptised at Weem, 8 Februay 1785.</span></div><div><span> c. Janet MACLAGAN, baptised at Weem, 15 October 1787.</span></div><div><span> d. Christian MACLAGAN, baptised at Weem, 24 May 1790.</span></div><div><span> e. Charles MACLAGAN, baptised at Weem, 26 Novenber 1793.</span></div><div><span>2. William MACLAGAN, born at Margmore (about a mile south of Aberfeldy, near the Falls of Moness), and baptised at Dull, 29 May 1750. Probably [A] below.</span></div><div><span>3. Duncan MACLAGAN, born at Tomangay, and baptised at Dull, 30 December 1752.</span></div><div><span>4. Catherine MACLAGAN, baptised at Dull, 2 March 1754.</span></div><div><span>5. Dougal MACLAGAN, born at Tomnageer, and baptised at Dull, 26 May 1756 (but mother named as Elspeth).</span></div><div><span>6. Patrick MACLAGAN, born 23 November 1758, and baptised at Logierait.</span></div><div><span>7. Thomas MACLAGAN, at Borlick of Killieshassie, and baptised at Logierait, 8 October 1762.</span></div><div><span>8. Margaret MACLAGAN, born at Coul of Killieshassie, and baptised at Logierit, 3 August 1766.</span></div><div><span>Killieshassie, Borlick and Cuil all lie in Weem Parish, within a half mile of each other, and about 3/4 of a mile north of Aberfeldy.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>Robert Maclagan GORRIE (my mother's paternal uncle), recorded in 1969 that his maternal grandfather Robert MACLAGAN's forebear William MACLAGAN was the son of Thomas MACLAGAN, of Weem or Ardeonaig in Killin, by his second wife.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>[A] William MACLAGAN; Servant to James DUNCAN of Tibbermalloch, 1783; Fisher in Burnfoot, 1785; Wright in Perth, 1787-1799; Wright in Pomarium, Perth, 1799; he died in Perth, 31 May 1818, aged 68, and was buried 2 June [Perth Burial Register, Perth Library]; he was married at Methven, by proclamation dated 2 February 1783, to Helen CRICHTON [Methven Parish Session record]; they had issue:</span></div><div><span>1. William MACLAGAN, born at Pittheavlees, 1 July 1783, and baptised at Perth, 7 August; possibly the Weaver buried at Perth, 7 August 1838, aged 55.</span></div><div><span>2. James MACLAGAN, born at Burnfoot of Craigie, 4 March 1785, and baptised at Perth, 10 March.</span></div><div><span>3. Helen MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 12 January 1787, and baptised 18 March; probably died young.</span></div><div><span>4. <b>Thomas MACLAGAN</b>, born at Perth, 20 July 1789, and baptised 26 July <i>"... by Rev Msr John DUFF, Minister of the Gospel in Perth"</i>. See [B] below.</span></div><div><span>5. Robert MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 1 February 1792, and baptised 2 February; died of Smallpox, 2 December 1796, and buried at Perth, 3 December, aged 4 years.</span></div><div><span>6. Helen MACLAGAN, born in Perth, 30 March 1794, and baptised 1 December; she died of smallpox, 1 December 1796, and was buried at Perth, 3 December, aged 2.</span></div><div><span>7. John MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 21 August 1796, and baptised 1 September.</span></div><div><span>8. Isabel MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 17 October 1799, and baptised 7 November; possibly at Pomarium West, Perth, 1841 Census, as Bell MACLAGAN, aged 40+, Winder.</span></div><div><span>___________________________________________________________</span></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><br /></span></i></b></div><div><b><i><span style="font-size: large;">SCRIMGEOUR OF PERTH.</span></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div>John SCRIMGEOUR; Tailor, Pomarium, Perth; living in 1817; he was found dead on 28 March 1840, aged 75, Taylor, and was buried at Perth, 31 March; he was married in Perth, by Mr Duncasn McFARLANE, Minister of the Gaelic Chapel in Perth, 2 November 1790, to Janet OGILVIE, daughter of James OGILVIE, Oilmilner in Perth; they had issue:</div><div>1. John SCRIMGEOUR, born at Perth, 19 August 1791, and baptised same day.</div><div>2. James SCRIMGEOUR, baptised at Perth, 1 August 1793.</div><div>3. <b>Beatrix SCRIMGEOUR</b>, born at Pomarium, Perth, 9 August 1795, and baptised 13 August by Mr Richard BLACK, Minister of the Associate Congregation in Perth; she was married to<b> Thomas MACLAGAN</b>. See [B] below.</div><div>4. Mary SCRIMGEOUR, born at Perth, 28 September 1798; probably as Margaret, died 13 August 1799, of smallpox, aged 7 months, and was buried at Perth, 15 August.</div><div>5. William SCRIMGEOUR, born at Perth, 9 October 1800, and baptised 16 October.</div><div>6. Robert SCRIMGEOUR, born at Perth, 14 January 1803, and baptised 16 January; at Pomarium East, 1841 Census, with his wife, children and nephew John MACLAGAN; Weaver, Pomarium, 1845-46, and at 47 Pomarium, 1850-57 [Directories]; at Pomarium, 1851 Census, Handloom Weaver, with his wife, children and nephew Robert MACLAGAN; at 55 Pomarium, 1861 Census, Cotton Handloom Weaver, with wife and two children; at 59 Pomarium, 1872 and 1882; he was married at Perth, January 1824, to Isabella STEWART; they had issue.</div><div>7. David SCRIMGEOUR, born on the Sabbath, 22 February 1807, and baptised 26 February; he probably died in Perth, 27 February 1848, Seaman, of Pomarium, aged 40 years, born in Perth.</div><div>_________________________________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;">THOMAS MACLAGAN OF PERTH.</span></b></i></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><br /></span></b></i></div><p>[B] <b>Thomas MACLAGAN</b> was probably born in Perth, Perthshire, 20 July 1789, son of William MACLAGAN and his spouse Helen CRICHTON; <b>Thomas</b> was a Weaver, at Pomarium West Side, 1841-49 [Perth Directories]; he was at Pomarium West, 1841 census, with his two sons and his brother-in-law; he died in Perth, 19 September 1849, aged 60, Weaver, and was buried at Wellshill Cemetery; he was a Weaver, in Pomarium, Perth, when he was married in West Church Parish, Perth, 2 May 1817, to <b>Beatrix</b> (<b>Betty</b>) <b>SCRIMGEOU</b>R, also of Pomarium; she died in Perth, 7 March 1832, of decline, aged 36 [Perth Burial Register]; they had issue:</p><p>1. William MACLAGAN, born in Perth, 25 November 1819, and baptized 28 November; Winder, with his father, 1841 Census; he died at Lower Craigie Street, Perth, 12 March 1866, aged 45, of Consumption, the death informed by his brother Robert; he was married at 27 Canal Street, Perth, 13 June 1859, to Margaret RILEY (born 1822, daughter of James RILEY, Billiard Saloon Proprietor, and his wife Margaret McKAY); they had issue:</p><p> a. William MACLAGAN, baptized at Perth, 12 December 1861; Tailor and Clothier's Clerk; he died at 411 Paisley Road West, Govan, 8 February 1914, unmarried and without issue.</p><p>2. John MACLAGAN, born in Perth, 5 March 1822, and baptized 10 March; Ship's Carpenter's Apprentice, 1841 Census, residing with his uncle Robert, aunt and cousins; Ship's Carpenter, Pomarium, 1850; at Cross Street, Perth, 1851 Census, Ship's Carpenter, with wife; Railway Guard, 2 Kinnoul Causeway, Perth, 1856-7 [Directories]; at 35 Scott Street, Perth, 1861 Census, with three children; at 25 Pomarium, 1871 Census; of West Parish, when he was married firstly, in Perth, by Rev John NEWLANDS, D.D., minister of South United Church, 22 November 1850, to Cecilia BAIRD, of East Parish, Perth (daughter of Robert BAIRD, Labourer); she died at 35 Scott Street, Perth, in 1860; they had issue:</p><p> i. Thomas MACLAGAN, born at Stirling, about 1854; with his father, 1861, Scholar; ditto, 1871, Clerk; residing at 14 Milton Terrace, Langside, Glasgow, March 1885, when he informed the death of his brother Robert.</p><p> ii. Janet Cunningham (Jessie) MACLAGAN, born at Stirling, 31 May 1855p withe her fathe, 1861, Scholar; with her father, 1871, Machinist.</p><p> iii. Robert MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 26 May 1857; with his father, 1861; ditto, 1871, Cloth Glazer; he died at St Leonard's Hall, Perth, 22 March 1885, Dyer's Finisher, the death informed by his brother Thomas.</p><p>Cecilia died at 35 Scott Street, Perth, in 1860; John was married secondly, at 59 Glover Street, Perth, 22 June 1871, to Christina BAIN (daughter of Alexander BAIN, Mail Guard, and his wife Isabella ROSS); she was at 56 South Street, Perth, 1881 Census, aged 40, Railway Guard's Widow, with her daughter Elizabeth her son John A. CAMERON (aged 21, a Stockbroker's Clerk), and her widowed mother Isabella BAIN (aged 73); by her John had further issue:</p><p> iv. Elizabeth MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 19 October 1872</p><p>3. <b>Robert MACLAGAN</b>. See [C] below.</p><p>4. Thomas MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 5 July 1826, and baptised 9 July; Scots Fusiliers, Crimea; he died at Sebastapol, 1 February 1855, in the trenches, of dysentery; evidently unmarried and without issue.</p><p>5. David MCLAGAN, born at Pomarium, 24 January 1829, and baptised 1 February; he was buried at Perth, 7 November 1829, aged 9 months.</p><p>6. An adopted daughter named Mary GIBSON, born 1816, and died on 8 October 1876, unmarried.</p><p>________________________________________________________________</p><p><br /></p><p><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>ROBERT MACLAGAN, STATION MASTER OF PERTH.</b></i></span></p><p><span style="font-size: large;"> </span></p><p>[C] Robert MACLAGAN was born in Pomarium, West Church Parish, Burgh of Perth, 1 April 1824.<br /></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi76uS3nhPqcEqAhcuuf-5RZiSR1WNX9ckOqzrK1ttfw3wKMoebtGMR2ohfBLrKCp6QzUAWazYclZw3EiKpAQ7eCOaSzxxmIa-vmws8Nxy0CqBx61aZ_mnC22y3YnARMw3rR9diA8tn5Gvq/s2048/IMG_8985+%25282%2529.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="2048" data-original-width="1549" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi76uS3nhPqcEqAhcuuf-5RZiSR1WNX9ckOqzrK1ttfw3wKMoebtGMR2ohfBLrKCp6QzUAWazYclZw3EiKpAQ7eCOaSzxxmIa-vmws8Nxy0CqBx61aZ_mnC22y3YnARMw3rR9diA8tn5Gvq/s320/IMG_8985+%25282%2529.JPG" /></a></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><b>Robert</b> was at Pomarium West, Pert, 1841 Census, a Weaver, with his widowed father Thomas, his brother William, and uncle John SCRYMGEOUR; he was directory listed at Pomarium, Weaver, 1845-46; he was at Pomarium, 1851 Census, Handloom Weaver, with his uncle Robert SCRYMGEOUR and family; he was at 11 Cross Street, Weaver, 1852-53.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">Very shortly after, <b>Robert</b> joined the service of the Scottish Central Railway Company, at the Friarton signal box at the entrance to the Moncrieffe Tunnel, as pointsman and telegraph operator; about 1853, he was promoted to the Ticket Office of Perth Statio; he was directory listed at 11 Cross Street, Porter, 1854-55, an</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">In May 1856, <b>Robert</b> severed his connection with the Scottish Central R.C., and was appointed by the Joint-Station Committee as Assistant to Mr CHALMERS, Station Master, Perth General Station (this committee represented the four Railway Companies which terminated at the Joint-Station - the Dundee, Perth and Aberdeen Railway; the Scottish Midland Railway; his former employer the Scottish Central Railway; and the Perth section of the Edinburgh, Perth and Dundee Railway); <b>Robert</b> was directory listed at 11 Cross Street, Ticket Collector, 1856-59, and at 19 Leonard Street, Perth, 1860-61; then as Railway Guard, same address, 1862-69. </div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">In the 1861 Census, he was at 19 Leonard Street, Perth, Railway Servant, with wife and family.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">By letter dated 23 October 1869, Robert was appointed to succeed CHALMERS as the Superintendent of the Perth Railway Station.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">In the 1871 Census, <b>Robert</b> was at Leonard Hall, Perth, Station Master at the head of 40 men, with his wife and family; he was directory listed at St Leonard's Hall, Newtown as Station Master, 1872-78, and at St Leonard's Hall, Glover Street, 1880-85.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">In the 1881 Census, he was still at St Leonard's Hall; thereafter he was directory listed at Croft Park, Craigie, 1887, and finally at 5 King's Place, Perth, 1889-92; in the 891 Census, he was there with his wife, and his married daughter Janet M. GORRIE (aged 37) and grand-daughter Mary GORRIE (aged 3).</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><b>Robert</b> died at 5 King's Place, Perth, on 8 January 1893, aged 68; he was buried at Welleshill Cemetery:</div><br /><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0AHE3C-Pq1ndTu5nN0hf111r_Ge_GPqWX54Fdmx4WO2ND5PPH8zFQWLssMD45psADZliDchnhGhp1o_l9a2qi9Wij_fK9HQPttIZKUb5r9Cyktfkduw8dZJ1fXgOHL9m3KKlC6G5joXVd/s971/37392262_124304584303.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="971" data-original-width="555" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0AHE3C-Pq1ndTu5nN0hf111r_Ge_GPqWX54Fdmx4WO2ND5PPH8zFQWLssMD45psADZliDchnhGhp1o_l9a2qi9Wij_fK9HQPttIZKUb5r9Cyktfkduw8dZJ1fXgOHL9m3KKlC6G5joXVd/w366-h640/37392262_124304584303.jpg" width="366" /></a></div><div><br /></div><i><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Family gravestone in Welleshill Cemetery.</i></div></i><p><b>Robert MACLAGAN</b>, Railway Servant, was married in Perth, 31 December 1851, to <b>Isabella CRICHTON</b>; as a widow, she was directory listed at 5 King's Place, 1893-96; at 28 Queen Street, Perth, 1897-1910; and at 8 Moredun Square, Craigie, Perth, 1911-12; she died there on 16 January 1925, aged 94, and was buried with her husband.</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiBnm8N_vtv42ZLRmvWi67KCXvub8aLxjy-CHVvKjJgcpXzMpxZxSdR55FxxtsmZvsTq0lnAeJqaZweUKeQJmIEWk1ddIO1vWcOJWtld3MpZmY1nS5Dj9BOgrsk45at56R4_usTCJ7k21F0/s2048/20210922_155751.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1455" data-original-width="2048" height="284" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiBnm8N_vtv42ZLRmvWi67KCXvub8aLxjy-CHVvKjJgcpXzMpxZxSdR55FxxtsmZvsTq0lnAeJqaZweUKeQJmIEWk1ddIO1vWcOJWtld3MpZmY1nS5Dj9BOgrsk45at56R4_usTCJ7k21F0/w400-h284/20210922_155751.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><p style="text-align: center;"><i>[Robert MACLAGAN, aged 50, sitting centre, nursing Margaret, 3; Isabella CRICHTON, 44, sitting next to the left, nursing Helen, 1; Thomas, 23, standing right; Janet, 21, sitting right of Thomas; William, 17, at the back; Elizabeth, 15, standing back left; John, 13, sitting left; Isabella, 11, sitting far right; Mary, 8, sitting far left; and Robert, 5, standing centre in front of John. </i><i>Photo was in possession of Sheila MACLEODMACLEOD formerly GORRIE.]</i></p><p><b>Robert</b> and <b>Isabella</b> had issue:</p><p>1. Thomas MACLAGAN, born at Alva, Stirlingshire, 15 November 1852; Scholar, with his parents, 1861 Census; Telegraph Clerk, ditto, 1871; Chief of Telegraphs, Manchester; he died 1 February 1910; he was married in Edinburgh, 1861, to Isabella OGILVY.</p><p>2. <b>Janet Bissett MACLAGAN</b>, born at Perth, 20 February 1854; she was married on 28 September 1880 to<b> Daniel GORRIE</b>. See his separate blog-post.</p><p>3. Robert MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 17 November 1855; he died at Perth, 27 November 1857, aged 2 years.</p><p>4. William MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 16 June 1858; he went to South Africa; General Manager of the National Bank of the Orange Free State; he died at Bloemfontein, 23 July 1897; he was married, 10 May 1883, to Effie FOTHERINGHAM.</p><p>5. Elizabeth Scrymgeour MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 17 July 1860; she was married at Perth, 28 April 1887, to John MALLOCH.</p><p>6. John MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 23 August 1862; Accountant; he was married at Edinburgh, 29 June 1895, to Alice MITCHELL.</p><p>7. Isabella Crichton (Bee) MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 7 August 1864; Scholl Board Teacher; died 7 August 1924, unmarried.</p><p>8. Mary Gibson (Polly) MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 1 November 1867; School Board Teacher; she died in Glasgow, 3 September 1931; she was married at Perth, 14 July 1897, to John William BROOME.</p><p>9. Robert MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 4 April 1870; he went to South Africa; he was married at Natal, 18 July 1894, to Jean McKILLICAN. </p><p>10. Margaret Ann MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 3 January 1872; she was married at Perth, 5 August 1896, to Robert SCOTT.</p><p>11. Helen Crichton MACLAGAN, born at Perth, 3 March 1874; she died at Selkirk, 8 November 1925; she was married to William CRICHTON.</p>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-57969803457103139072020-05-17T17:29:00.691-07:002023-02-05T22:10:39.155-08:00The WARBURTON family in Ireland.<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="text-align: center;"><br /></blockquote>
Richard WARBURTON, of Dublin, is first mentioned in 1622 [BURKE's Landed Gentry, 1847], although corroborative evidence for this "sighting" has not yet been found.<div><br /><div>Indeed, the earliest date I can find in surviving archived documents, or abstracts from them, is 10 February 1628(-29), when he was named as Plaintiff in a Bill, entered in the High Court of Chancery, Dublin, the Defendant being named as Thomas BOONE. See further below.</div><div>
<br />
Richard WARBURTON, Senior, was recorded in the 1659 "Census" in the King's County, "with" Richard Junior. As his eldest grandson of the same name was not born until about 1664, this was evidently the original settler and his son.<br />
He was later thought to have been of Garryhinch, in the King's County (Offaly) - unless this was a case of him and his son Richard being "conflated." See also, further below.<br />
<br />
No details have yet been found of his death, probably in Ireland, and, if he was born about the mid to late 1590s, probably before the early to mid 1670s. Although a somewhat "flawed" pedigree constructed by Sir William BETHAM [Chief Herald in Ireland, from his Abstracts of "genealogically useful" information from archived documents in the Public Record Office, Four Courts Building, Dublin, prior to 1830], does suggest that he died in 1669. Again, see further below.</div><div><br />
Evidence, not yet formally corroborated from original sources, suggests that he was married, probably about the early 1630s, to Elizabeth L'ESTRANGE, probably a daughter of Thomas L'ESTRANGE, of Moystown, in the King's County.<br />
<br />
It is apparent [from Sir William BETHAM's Abstracts] that they had issue:<br />
1. Richard WARBURTON. See [A] below.<br />
2. George WARBURTON. See [B] below.<br />
3. John WARBURTON. See [C] below.</div><div>And from the BURKE and FOX-DAVIES pedigree, a daughter:</div><div>I. Susannah WARBURTON. See below.<br />
<br />
Circumstances of his advent into Ireland, and of his origins in England, remain somewhat obscure, although one line of thought, that he was, for some time, a Haberdasher in London, is discussed in detail below.<br />
<br />
Several other possibilities are found in family trees and WARBURTON blog posts, including Ray WARBURTON's comprehensive study at www.warburton.onename.net - but none are conclusive.</div><div>
<br />
But, before detailing the Irish branch of the family, a quick survey of the WARBURTON's of Arley, in Cheshire, might be in order; and in particular, the remaining evidence, if any, of the rather massive £8,000 royal "loan."<br />
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<i><b><u><span style="font-size: large;">WARBURTON IN CHESHIRE.</span></u></b></i><br /><br />
The Herald's Visitation of Cheshire, 1613, recorded a pedigree for WARBURTON of Arley, which appears below, with additional details from JOHNSON and KIMBER's "Baronetage of England," Volume 2, at page 54, Rev William BETHAM's "The Baronetage of England, or The history of the English Baronets," Volume 2 [London, 1802, at pages 105-107] , and some editions of BURKE's series of "Landed Gentry" volumes:<br />
<br />
Johannes WARBURTON, of Arley, Miles; Sheriff of Cheshire, 4th of Elizabeth; he was married to Johanna STANLEY, daughter of William STANLEY, Domini Comerarii; they had issue:<br />1. Petrus WARBURTON, of Arley; he died on 5 June 1550, Inq. p.m. 4 Edward VI; he was married to Elizabeth WINNINGTON, daughter and heir of Richard WINNINGTON [JOHNSON and KIMBER appear to have her as daughter of John WARBURTON of Arley?]; she died in 1558; they had issue:<br />
a. Johannes WARBURTON, of Arley, Miles; born about 1523; he died in 1575, and was buried in the south aisle of the chapel at Great Budworth, with the inscription<i> "Hic jacet Johannes WARBURTON, Miles, de Arley, in Com. Cestr., qui duxit in Uxorem, Mariam, filiam Willi. BRERETON, in com. praedict., Mil., per quam habuit 4 filios et 5 filias; obit 1575, Aetat 52"</i> [as recorded by Rev William BETHAM, Op. Cit.]; he was married to Mary BRERETON, daughter of Sir William BRERETON; they had issue:<br />
i. Petrus WARBURTON. See [AA] below.<br />
ii. George WARBURTON. See [BB] below.<br />
iii. John WARBURTON.<br />
iv. Anne WARBURTON; she was married to Sir Robert MARKHAM of Cotingham, Nottinghamshire.<br />
b. Peter WARBURTON; he was married to Catherine COUPE (possibly COOPER), and was ancestor of the Hefferston WARBURTONs.<br />
c. Richard WARBURTON.<br />
d. Jane WARBURTON; she was married to Sir William BRERETON, of Brereton, Knight.<div>
e. Anne WARBURTON, second daughter, born 1 May 1527 [Memorial Brass, St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin]:</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0-29shAQsZ52nb2RijvEzWry9Z5j2psf71IIHBdHoJatH7CdK24jZEpf6zTBGXJDwwZnCkWeyvew541IegF6dDiOcu3lPF8FRjlpbpbbymgeKZNaD9EYLfnoFgeqvrXprwmdFMylQZ7S9/s1400/bottom.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="778" data-original-width="1400" height="357" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0-29shAQsZ52nb2RijvEzWry9Z5j2psf71IIHBdHoJatH7CdK24jZEpf6zTBGXJDwwZnCkWeyvew541IegF6dDiOcu3lPF8FRjlpbpbbymgeKZNaD9EYLfnoFgeqvrXprwmdFMylQZ7S9/w640-h357/bottom.jpg" width="640" /></a></div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Image courtesy of the humphreysfamilytree.com web-site.]</i></div><div><br /></div><div>She died in Dublin, 9 January 1573, and was buried in St Patrick's Cathedral [M.I.]; she was married as a child, 19 January 1739 [Memorial Brass], to Sir Edward FITTON, of Gawsworth, Cheshire, and of Dublin, Knight; he died in 1579, and was buried with his wife; they had issue - nine sons and six daughters.</div><div>
f. Elizabeth WARBURTON; she was married to Sir William BOOTH, of Dunham-Massey, Knight, with issue [Rev William BETHAM, Op.Cit.].</div><div><br />
[AA] Peter WARBURTON, Armiger; he died at Gafton, 22 July 1626, and was buried at Tilston, Cheshire, without surviving male issue; he was married to Mary HOLCROFT, daughter of Sir John HOLCROFT of Holcroft, County Lancaster, Knight; they had issue nine daughters, including:<br />
1. Mary WARBURTON; she was married to Sir Thomas WILBRAHAM of Woodhey, Cheshire, Baronet.<br />
2. Elizabeth WARBURTON; she was married to Ralf EGERTON of Ridley, Esq.<br />
3. Jane WARBURTON; she was married to William BRERETON of Ashley, Esq.<br />
4. Elinor WARBURTON; she was married to Thomas MERBURY of Merbury, Esq.<br />
5. Alice WARBURTON; she was married, as his third wife, to Sir Peter WARBURTON of The Grange, a Judge of the Common Pleas.<br />
6. Bridget WARBURTON.<div>7. Frances WARBURTON.<br />8. Isabell WARBURTON; she was married to Edward STANLEY, of Bickerstaff, County Lancaster.</div><div>9. Anne WARBURTON.<br />
<br />
[BB] George WARBURTON, Gent, of The Lodge, Crowley; he died on 1 January 1612; he was married to Elizabeth HOUGHTON, widow of Alexander HOUGHTON, and daughter of Gabriel HESKETH; they had issue:<br />
1. Peter WARBURTON, aged 28 [so born about 1584].<br />
2. John WARBURTON.<br />
3. Robert WARBURTON; a Clergyman.<br />
4. Thomas WARBURTON.<br />
5. Gabriel WARBURTON.<br />
6. Alice WARBURTON; she was married to Nicholas RIGBY of Horrock, County Lancaster, Esq.<br />
7. Mary WARBURTON.<br />
<br />
An Indenture, dated 10 February 1626 [The National Archives, Kew, WARD 2/4/19A/3], was made between Peter WARBURTON of Arley, Cheshire, Esq, of the one part; and John WARBURTON of Winnington, Cheshire, Gent, younger brother of (the said) Peter WARBURTON, Peter WARBURTON of Hefferston Grange in the parish of Weaverham, Cheshire, Esq, John WARBURTON of Pulford, Cheshire, Gent, Robert WARBURTON of 'Hollins' in Aston, Cheshire, Gent, and John WALTHAL of Over Whiteley, Cheshire, Gent, of the other part; by which Indenture the said Peter WARBURTON, because he had no male heirs, leased unto the said Peter, John, Robert and John the Manors of Warburton Aston, Aston of Bidwell, Sutton by Hatton, Pelford, Budworth by Acton, Appleton, Stockton Hill, Comaband, Noved, Sale, Stretton, Hatton Walton inferior, Nowton by Daresby, and Woodhall, 500 messuages, etc, etc... for the term of the minority of the (said male) heirs of Sir John WARBURTON, deceased, father of (the said) Peter WARBURTON (the grantor).<br />
<br />
Further, there is a pedigree on Wikipedia, which records the following (as yet not fully corroborated) details:<br />
Peter WARBURTON, born in 1588, eldest son of Peter WARBURTON of Hefferston GRANGE, Cheshire (and grandson of Sir Peter WARBURTON of Arley), by Magdalen MOULTEN, daughter of Robert MOULTON of St Albans, Wood Street, London; he died in 1666 (aged 78); he was educated at Oxford (Brasenose College), 1604-06, and became an English Barrister and Judge, who was married to Alice GARDENER, with issue a son Robert WARBURTON.<br />
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<b><i><u><span style="font-size: large;">A "FORCED" LOAN TO KING CHARLES.</span></u></i></b><br /><br />
Richard CUST, in his "Charles I, the Privy Council, and the Forced Loan" [Journal of British Studies, Volume 24, Number 2, at page 208-235, courtesy of JStor], wrote:<br />
<i>"The forced loan of 1626-27 has traditionally been regarded as one of the milestones of early 17th century politics. The great 19th century historian S.R. GARDINER saw it as the product of the 'new counsels' by which Charles I came increasingly to rely on the royal prerogative, and he depicted the opposition to this as principled defence of the Englishman's liberties... Thus the loan has been presented as the climax to a first stage of struggle between 'court' and 'country' or as a staging post on the 'high road to Civil War'...</i><br />
<i>"In origins the Forced Loan was a response to Christian of Denmark's defeat at the Battle of Lutter. News of this reached England on 11 September 1626, and caused the king to act immediately. He cut short his summer progress and hurried back to London, where... he assured the Danish Ambassador 'that he would render his uncle every assistance'...</i><br />
<i>"The council responded promptly... (and) came up with a proposal to send 4,000 troops to Denmark, financed by a loan from the king's subjects.</i><br />
<i>"The Forced Loan was thus, ultimately, born out of a foreign political crisis and the urgent need for funds that this had created. However, there was more to the decision to collect alone simply than this. The official reason given - 'tyme not admitting the way of Parliament'- implied that the council had no choice in the matter...."</i><br />
<br />
Oliver CROMWELL (1599-1658) would make his first entry into Parliament shortly afterwards, in March 1628, as the Member for Huntingdon.<br />
Antonia FRASER ["CROMWELL, Our Chief of Men," (Methuen) London, 1985, page 32], has noted that in 1627, <i>"... certain members of Parliament had suffered imprisonment rather than subscribe to the king's financial expedient - the Forced Loan - and these prisoners had included six of CROMWELL's relations."</i><br />
So, from the outset of his interrupted political career, CROMWELL was firmly associated with opposition to the King, and as a Puritan, particularly so, on the matter of Religion. And by early 1629, he was, inevitably, among those who refused to adjourn at the King's command until the House had voted on a resolution condemning popery and illegal subsidies. Charles dissolved that Parliament, the third in his short reign, in March 1629.<br />
<br />
It would appear likely that the WARBURTON family may well have been among those who obliged the king, and duly "paid" up their "forced loan" - indeed, it may well be matters relating to this loan which were not finally resolved until 1635, and in Dublin, with an Edict resulting inevitably from the outcome of a Case heard in the High Court of Chancery (see below).<br />
<br />
And if this was the case, then it seems apparent that the WARBURTONs would naturally have been on the other side of the then emerging political divide in the early years of King Charles's reign.<br />
<br />
The next Parliament was not summoned until April 1640. CROMWELL, having retired to the country in the interim, did not appear to have overtly engaged in political activity during this time. So whether the supposed perception that the WARBURTON sons were "active loyalists" (see next below) who were forced to leave Lancashire was due to any particular activity of CROMWELL himself would appear to be unlikely.<br />
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<u><i><b><span style="font-size: large;">A ROYAL LOAN, AND A CHANCERY DECREE OF 1635.</span></b></i></u><br /><br />
BURKE, in his "History of the Landed Gentry," 1847 [Volume 2, Page 1511], recorded that John WARBURTON, Esq, <i>"... advanced £8,000 to Charles I in his necessity,"</i> and that he <i>"... went to Ireland, where he married and had a son Richard."</i><br />
This John WARBURTON was there recorded further as being the son of George WARBURTON of The Lodge, Crowley, and who was married to Miss HOLT of Stubley, in Lancashire, and had issue, including five sons who <i>"... were forced to leave Lancashire, being greatly persecuted by CROMWELL's party as known Loyalists"</i> - and that the eldest two of them, George and John, went to Ireland.<br />
Meanwhile, John WARBURTON's wife, with their younger children, <i>"... remained at the family seat, where their father lay for a long time in a cave, which was contrived to shelter him from the animosity of the party of parliament."</i><br />
<br />
However, it was not George, or John, but a Richard WARBURTON whose name appears in Ireland, perhaps in 1622, probably by early 1629, but certainly by 1635, when he was mentioned as a Merchant.<br />
<br />
A currency calculator, on the web-site of The National Archives, Kew, reckons that £8,000 in 1630 would be worth "approximately" £977,193 and 60 pence in today's money (or was that last week).<br />
This was no small amount of money, and it would appear likely (to me) that it was probably well above what would have constituted a "reasonable" amount, even (or especially) for a "forced loan" in 1627-28.<br />
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Co-incidentally, another loan, of similar proportions, is mentioned in one of my other articles on this blog page, which I posted on 5 March 2015, entitled:<br />
<i>"Frances BARROW of Potterspury, Northamptonshire. Was she the wife of John COOKE the Regicide?"</i><br />
In it, I refer to Sir Francis CRANE, who is named in a Deposition dated 1634, found among the holdings of the Northamptonshire Record Office [NRO, Reference Ph 35288], which mentioned a Mr Edward BARROES (BARROW), deceased, who had:<br />
<i>"... carried twoe loads of the like stone... from the honor howse of Grafton to Stoke lodge since Sir Francis CRANE came thither."</i><br />
Edward was almost certainly the father of Frances BARROW (1620-1693) of Potterspury, who appears to have been married three times - firstly to John COOKE, the junior Barrister who was briefed by CROMWELL to prosecute the legal case against King Charles (and was subsequently executed as one of the Regicides in 1660 for his efforts); secondly to William PROCTOR of Falmouth Bay, Antigua (their daughter Frances PROCTOR was the wife of John PIGOTT of Kilcromin, Queen's County, who was possibly, but more likely an older brother of, my direct ancestor); and thirdly to Acquilla STOUGHTON of Antigua, whom she survived.<br />
Also co-incidentally, when Edward BARROW died, his widow Elizabeth was re-married, to none other than Isaac COOKE, the widowered father of CROMWELL's prosecuting Barrister - which means that his son John COOKE was married to his father's now step-daughter, or to his own step-sister.<br />
But back to the monetary matter in hand!<br />
Sir Francis CRANE (1579-1636) was a highly successful Tapestry dealer and manufacturer in Mortlake, Surrey, and was a Member of Parliament; in 1628, he made a loan of £7,500 to the Crown (King Charles), with a parcel of the Honour of Grafton in Northamptonshire (an old Royal hunting demesne, used by Henry VIII) as security, which he would have if the loan principal was not repaid within two years (it evidently was not, as CRANE took possession of it).<br />
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<div dir="ltr" id="yiv0596954762yui_3_16_0_1_1425352121541_4030" style="background-color: white;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">The point of my mentioning this other loan here is to make the obvious comparison.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">And given that the monetary amounts involved are both very large, and quite similar, I would be suspecting that the WARBURTON loan may also have been of the same vintage, time-wise - i.e., one of the larger "forced" loans of 1626-27-28. And if so, it should probably also have been similarly conditioned by a default position, probably also involving property as a security, if the repayment of it went into default.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Which may well have ended up being contested in the High Court of Chancery, and perhaps some years later (even as late as 1635), by the lender, or perhaps even by his heirs or assigns, and possibly even in Ireland?</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Which might well admit a possibility that the 1635 Edict may have involved WARBURTON family members who were not the loan-maker, but one of his descendants.</span></div>
______________________________________________</div><div>
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<br /></div>
<br />
<i><b><u><span style="font-size: large;">HEFFERSTON, AND THE BETHAM PEDIGREE.</span></u></b></i><br /><br />
Sir William BETHAM filled the office of Ulster King of Arms, the Chief Herald in Ireland, from about 1830 till 1855. It was during his previous term, as Deputy to his predecessor, that he systematically made his celebrated "genealogically useful" abstracts (already mentioned above).<br />
<br />
What we find in these Abstracts are a number of probate grants involving Cheshire WARBURTONs who, listed with English abodes, do not appear to have actually lived in Ireland, and so probably had acquired property interests there. BETHAM only abstracted this "genealogically useful" information, and did not identify property connections, other than to record an abode, if it was mentioned. All he really bothered himself with were peoples names and their stated relationship to the testator.<br />
<br />
One of these abstracts related to the 1617 will of Peter WARBURTON of Hefferston Grange, evidently proved both in the P.C.I. in Dublin, and also in Cheshire. Inevitably, the Cheshire will (not yet sighted) should have much more detail in it than BETHAM's abstract.<br />
<br />
Firstly, the non-residential WARBURTONs:<br />
<br />
(1) "Isabel WARBURTON, of Carrington, in ye parish of Bowdon, Widow. 4 January 1607.<br />
"Daughter Joan.<br />
"Son Ewen W. Eliz.<br />
" ---- John W.<br />
" ---- Hannet W."<br />
<br />
(2) "John WARBURTON, of Halton, in the parish of Eccles (Eigles in transcription), in Co Lanc., Husbandman. 5 August 1609.<br />
"Wife Ellin.<br />
"Son John W.<br />
"Daughters Ellin, Dorothy, Eliz, Judith.<br />
"Son John W. the younger, Esq."<br />
<br />
(3) Robert WARBURTON, of Brough (obscure) Lyn, Husbandman. 18 January 14 James I, 1617.<br />
"Wife Elizabeth.<br />
"Sons Thomas, John, Robert, Francis and William.<br />
"Thos W. of Ha...(obscure)."<br />
<br />
(4) "Peter WARBURTON, of Hefferston Grange, Esq. 24 June 1617.<br />
"Wife,<br />
"1 son Peter W.<br />
"4 son George W.<br />
"2 son William W.<br />
"3 son Thomas W.<br />
"Cousin WARBURTON of Arley.<br />
"Cousin Mary WILBRAHAM.<br />
"1 daughter Mar...(obscure).<br />
"2 daughter Theodosia.<br />
" ------- GARNET.<br />
" ------- Mary.<br />
" ------- Bene (obscure)<br />
"Brother William W."<br />
<br />
(5) "Robert SOMERS, of London, Grocer. 19 February 1637.<br />
"Daughter Theodosia.<br />
"Sister Elizabeth JACKSON.<br />
"Nephew Robert TWISLINGTON.<br />
"Mother-in-law Magdalen WARBURTON.<br />
"Brothers Peter, William, Thomas and George WARBURTON."<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ </div>
<br />
Eventually, BETHAM, or his staff, used these abstracts to construct drop-line pedigrees, which were linked, where it appeared relevant, with others to form larger pedigrees, enhancing greatly the details of Armigerial families already on their files.<br />
<br />
Not all of BETHAM's so constructed pedigrees are correct. And I may cite one he constructed for the English origins of my own Irish PIGOTT family ancestors as a case in point (see a separate post on this blog page).<br />
But his efforts remain monumental, and his abstracts, now viewable on-line on the subscription web-site, Findmypast.co.uk, have attained the status of de-facto primary source material.<br />
<br />
His Abstracts record the following pedigree of the Hefferson or Hefferston (Grange) branch of the WARBURTON family of Cheshire, and is the only one I find which includes a Richard WARBURTON associated with Ireland.<br />
<br />
How accurate it is, is hard to say.<br />
Firstly, no other published pedigree matches his information about Richard of Ireland.<br />
And secondly, it does appear that modern DNA evidence indicates that the Irish WARBURTON's do not match the Cheshire branch descendants, so one or other branch would appear to have been the subject of a "non-paternal" event, as the quaint saying goes! See Ray WARBURTON's one-name study web-site.</div><div>
<br />
But it does have some death dates, and that is a good start to see if we can establish where BETHAM may have derived his information:<br />
<br />
Sir Peter WARBURTON, of Arley == Elizabeth, daughter of Richard WINNINGTON.<br />
____________________|_____<br />
| |<br />
Sir John WARBURTON Peter WARBURTON == Catherine, daughter of<br />
(marr to) of Hefferston | John COOPER of Hefferston<br />
Mary BRERETON |<br />
_____________________________________|__________________<br />
| | |<br />
Peter WARBURTON == Magdalen William WARBURTON Richard WARBURTON<br />
of Hefferston | MOLTON Knight.<br />
___________|____________________________________________________<br />
| | | | | | | |<br />
Peter WARBURTON William WARBURTON == Anna, daur of Thomas Mary<br />
of Hefferstone ob. 1653 | Richard W. of --------- ------------<br />
| Boonfield de la George Theodosia<br />
| ROLLES (?) ------------<br />
| ob. Dec 1661 Frances<br />
___________________________________|_______________________________<br />
| | | | |<br />
Anna Elizabeth William Frances John Richard<br />
WARBURTON WARBURTON WARBURTON == daur of WARBURTON WARBURTON<br />
wife of of Shelton | Rob... ob. s.p. ob. 26 ...<br />
John C. Co Notts | of Elston 1663 or 1669<br />
| of Ireland<br />
___________|____________<br />
| | | |<br />
George Frances Anne<br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span>
<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
<span style="color: blue; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">[The "drop-lines" of the generational arrangement of this pedigree was close when I posted, but appears to get distorted in the process. Apologies for matters out of my control.]</span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEivX88A_xObPnaNObdXsjMZSkzsu01iB2_fQ__CduBP7YiBR1LAQvmW-V3IrDl7H3mcKA3Zn2GOaRhomwi0lCzZNlTfFxa66dZHYaxMd-c9b-PgXei4wLJkOb9zTmZVpo5_3w3QEhdJTbLs/s1600/PED.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="596" data-original-width="394" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEivX88A_xObPnaNObdXsjMZSkzsu01iB2_fQ__CduBP7YiBR1LAQvmW-V3IrDl7H3mcKA3Zn2GOaRhomwi0lCzZNlTfFxa66dZHYaxMd-c9b-PgXei4wLJkOb9zTmZVpo5_3w3QEhdJTbLs/s640/PED.JPG" width="422" /></a></div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
<em><span style="color: red;">Image of a note-book page, under Betham's Abstracts, courtesy of the </span></em></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<em><span style="color: red;">Findmypast.co.uk subscription web-site. </span></em></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<em><span style="color: red;">This is probably not Sir William BETHAM's handwriting. </span></em></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<span style="color: red;"><em><strong>Copyright of the National Archives of Ireland</strong></em>.</span></div>
<br />
Here is Richard WARBURTON, "...of Ireland" - and with a death year, although the last digit of it was hard to make out - it was either a 9 or perhaps a 3 - which is clarified by another BETHAM Abstract which records that Richard WARBURTON was alive in 1665, when mentioned in the will of his brother-in-law Henry L'ESTRANGE of Moystown (and see further below):<br />
<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjgtqdY4xT2VTUmHzklGR1tE8rpke-FKz_UsKOFcCsyolIlwR8GjLTykZFw-HAwAtWD5BLi_9zP97GwCBprc7WWc98nkWhQ1CZ3Rm9M2giEDsDfYSxZZjqfT5gru2x5oSRfgdWhQiB50vdw/s1600/1665.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="129" data-original-width="389" height="132" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjgtqdY4xT2VTUmHzklGR1tE8rpke-FKz_UsKOFcCsyolIlwR8GjLTykZFw-HAwAtWD5BLi_9zP97GwCBprc7WWc98nkWhQ1CZ3Rm9M2giEDsDfYSxZZjqfT5gru2x5oSRfgdWhQiB50vdw/s400/1665.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
<em><span style="color: red;">Image copyright of the National Archives of Ireland, courtesy of the </span></em></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<em><span style="color: red;">Findmypast.co.uk subscription web-site, Betham's Abstracts.</span></em></div>
<br />
This indicates that the obit date is more likely to be 1669. And this is in the right order of time for Richard the Dublin Merchant.<br />
That year date must have cropped up somewhere in BETHAM's collected information.<br />
BETHAM no doubt had a reason for attaching him to this pedigree - but what evidence he had is still anybody's guess.<br />
<br />
Some of the other events mentioned in it can now be corroborated from other sources.<br />
<br />
"London Marriage Licenses" [page 1410], recorded the following:<br />
<i>"WARBURTON, Peter, of Lincoln's Inn, Gent, bachelor, aged 30, and Magdalen MOULTON, spinster, of St Alban, Wood Street, daughter of Robert MOULTON, of same, Esq, by gen. lic. 1 February 1585-86."</i><br />
[This alone creates a problem for BETHAM's pedigree - their second son William could scarcely have married much before 1609, which suggests that his third listed son Richard, if his, could not have been born much before 1611. Far to young for the 1622 mention by BURKE, and probably still too young for a successful merchant in 1631.]<br />
<br />
"Lincoln's Inn Admission Register," Volume 1, 1420-1799, published at Lincoln's Inn, 1896, page 87:<br />
<i>"1578. Folio 48. December 9 - Peter WARBURTON, of Cheshire, late of New Inn."</i><br />
<br />
BOYD's "Inhabitants of London" records the following family:<br />
Robert SOMERS, Citizen and Grocer of London; died 1637, P.C.C. Will 1638; he was married by Cheshire Marriage License, 1626, to Theodosia WARBURTON, daughter of Peter WARBURTON and Magdalen MOULTON; they had issue:<br />1. Theodosia SOMERS; she was married to Peter WARBURTON, grandson of Peter WARBURTON. It would appear likely that these were the Peter WARBURTON and his wife Theodosia who were joint Plaintiffs in a Bill lodged in the Chancery Court, Dublin, 25 February 1668, to which the Defendant was Hugh MONTGOMERY, 2nd Earl of Mount Alexander, evidently a minor, and under the guardianship of Dame Jean, his probable paternal grandmother (see below).</div><div>2. Hester SOMERS; she was married to John WARBURTON, great-grandson of (ditto).<br />
<br />
"Marriage Licenses granted within the Archdeaconry of Chester in the Diocese of Chester," Volume III, 1624-32, edited by William Fergusson IRVINE [The Record Society, 1909], at page 82:<br />
<i>"11 March 1625-26. Robert SOMERS of London, Grocer, and Theodosia WARBURTON, Spinster. At Weaverham, Cheshire."</i><br />
<br />
BETHAM's Abstracts includes the following will details, presumably from a Prerogative Court of Ireland probate grant with will copy:<br />
<i>"Robert SOMERS, of London, Grocer; will dated or proved 19 February 1637, naming his daughter Theodosia, his sister Elizabeth JACKSON, his nephew Robert TWISLINGTON, his mother-in-law Magdalen WARBURTON, and his brothers (-in-law) Peter, William, Thomas and George WARBURTON."</i><br />
That he also had his will proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury does indicate that he probably had property interests in both England and Ireland. The P.C.C. will transcript is more detailed, as follows:<br />
<em>"... I give and bequeath unto Thoedocia, my daughter, being her Orphanage Parts (?) according to the C... of the City of London, and I will and desire that my daughter shall and may inherit the lease of my estate...</em><br />
<em>"I give and bequeath to Robert TWISLINGTON my nephew... his brother Richard TWISLINGTON my nephew...</em><br />
<em>"I give and bequeath to my Sister Elizabeth JACKSON 50 pounds...</em><br />
<em>"Item, I give my mother-in-law Mrs Magdalen WARBURTON ten pounds to buy her a ring.<br />"Item, I give to my brother-in-law Peter WARBURTON Esq're ten pounds to buy him a ring.</em><br />
<em>"Item, I give to each of my three brothers-in-law William WARBURTON, Thomas WARBURTON and George WARBURTON tenn pounds apiece...</em><br />
<em>"... my late brother Thomas SHINSHAM (?), and Frances his late wife...</em><br />
<em>"Item, I give to my cosen Jeffery WARBURTON of Lower Loughton in the Countie of C'nt'y 25 pounds..."</em><br />
<br />
And we can now see where that part of BETHAM's pedigree (the four brothers of Theodosia) came from. But there is no mention of a Richard WARBURTON.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i>THE WARBURTONS OF SHELTON, NOTTS.</i></span><br />
<br />
William WARBURTON and Richard HURD, in their "The Works of the Right Reverend William WARBURTON, D.D., Lord Bishop of Gloucester" [Volume 1, London, 1811, at page 1], wrote:<br />
<i>"WILLIAM WARBURTON...</i><br />
<i>"Was descended from an antient and very considerable family in Cheshire.</i><br />
<i>"... his grandfather, of the same name, distinguished himself in the Civil Wars... of the Royal party, and showed his zeal and activity in that cause, by serving under Sir George BOOTH at the affair at Chester...</i><br />
<i>"All that I know of him is that he married Frances, daughter of Robert AWFIELD of Etson, in the County of Nottingham, by whom he had three sons, the second of whom, George, was Mr WARBURTON's father.</i><br />
<i>"It seems probable, that upon his marriage he moved into Nottinghamshire. His residence was at Shelton, a village about six miles from Newark, where he died."</i><br />
And in the parish church of St Mary, at Shelton, there is a carved stone WARBURTON Coat-of-Arms inside the church, commemorating the burial there in 1669 of William WARBURTON, the Civil War Royalist. </div><div>He had resided at Shelton Manor from shortly after the Restoration - and that Manor was identified as having been part of the marriage settlements, dated 23 January 1578-79, for the marriage of Robert MARKHAM, of Cottham (or Cotteham), to Ann WARBURTON, daughter of Sir John and Dame Mary WARBURTON [www.nottsvillage.blogspot.com].</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>A synopsis of these settlements can be found in the on-line Discovery Index of The National Archives, Kew, for a holding in the Nottinghamshire Archives [Ref 157 DD/P/8/17], as follows:</div><div>Robert MARKHAM of Cottham, Esq (of the one part), Dame Mary WARBURTON, widow of Sir John WARBURTON (of the second part), and Sir Francis LEEKE, Peter WARBURTON of Arley, Co Chester, and Thomas MARKEHAM and Henry MAYNWARING of Carrinchum (possibly Carrington?), Co Chester (of the third part); (being settlements for the) marriage of Robert, son and heir of the said Robert MARKHAM, to Ann, daughter of the said Dame Mary WARBURTON (of Morton, Co Chester), and (concerning) the Manors of Cotteham, Great Markham, Shelton, Stoke near Newark, Maplebeckend of Claypoole, Co Lincs, all the property of the said Robert MARKHAM (senior)... (and other lands); all witnessed by John MARKEHAM, William MARKEHAM, George WARBURTON, Richard WARBURTON, Phillippe BELLOT, William DRAKEFIELD, Richard COKE and John SYDENHAM; (with an annexed) Feoffment naming Robert MARKHAM the father, Sir Francis LEEK, Peter WARBURTON and Thomas MARKHAM.</div><div>Robert MARKHAM Senior (1536-1606), of Cotham, was M.P. for Nottinghamshire and Grantham; he was married to Mary, daughter of Francis LEEK; their eldest son, Robert Junior, was born at Cotham in 1563.</div><div>Dame Mary WARBURTON's maiden surname was BRERETON; her daughter Ann died on 17 November 1601, and was buried at St Michael's Church, Cotham; her monument was later relocated to St Mary Magadalen church, Newark, Notts.</div><div>Robert MARKHAN Junior, her widower, was married secondly, in June 1602, to Winifred THOROLD; by Ann, he had issue five sons (the third was Daniel) and three daughters. There was no son named Nathaniel MARKHAM (see below).</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div><div>However, an intriguing possibility emerges - as we shall see below, there was a Bill, dated November 1636, brought before the High Court of Chancery in Dublin, by Samuel RICHARDSON, Plaintiff, vs Nathaniel MARKHAM, Richard WARBURTON and John KENDALL, Defendants.</div><div>I am presuming it likely that this was our Richard WARBURTON, the Merchant of Dublin. It is not yet known whether there is any kinship connection between Robert and Nathaniel MARKHAM.</div><div><br /></div><div>Indeed, it would be interesting to see the full case notes for the 1670 Bill at Kew, to ascertain whether Richard and Elizabeth are further identified, either by kinship with each other, or with the WARBURTONs of Shelton.</div></div><div><br /></div><div>Several much later documents, held at The National Archives, at Kew, indexed as Chancery Bills, Six Clerks Office, may be relevant: </div><div><i>"Pleadings, COLLINS - GILL v WARBURTON. Plaintiffs: Robert GILL and Anne GILL his wife. Defendants: Richard WARBURTON, Elizabeth WARBURTON, Dormer WARBURTON and Bernard DEWHURST.</i><i> Subject: Money matters. 1669. Two answers"</i> [TNA, C 6/221/41].</div><div>And:</div><div><i>"Pleadings, WHITTINGTON - WARBURTON v. WARBURTON. </i><em>Plaintiffs: Richard WARBURTON and Elizabeth WARBURTON. </em><em>Defendants: Frances WARBURTON, Widow. </em><em>Subject: Property in Shelton, Notts. </em><em>Bill Only. 1670. </em><em>Litigation" </em>[TNA, C 10/491/187].</div><div><br /></div><div>I had initially suspected that these two in 1670 were brother and sister versus Frances, the widow of the above William WARBURTON of Shelton. The arrangement of Defendants names in 1669 suggests that Richard and Elizabeth were unlikely to have been husband and wife.</div><div><br /></div><div>In a book entitled "Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century; comprizing Biographical Memoirs of William BOYWER," by John NICHOLS, 1812, Volume 5, at page 529, under the heading of "No XI, BISHOP WARBURTON," is the following foot-note:</div><div><i>"The WARBURTONs are descended from Adam DUTTON, a younger son of Hugh, grandson of Hudard, or Odard, who came over with William the Conqueror. Sir </i><i>Peter DUTTON, great-grandson of Adam, in the reign of King Edward the 2nd, settling at WARBURTON in Cheshire, assumed the name of his residence; and his descendants moved to Arley, where the family mansion was built by Peter WARBURTON, Esq, who died in 1495 (LYSONS 'Cheshire,' p. 361).</i></div><div><i>"Sir John WARBURTON, son of Peter, was one of the Knights of the Body of King Henry VII, Sheriff of Cheshire for life, and died in 1524. His son, John WARBURTON, who died in 1575, aet 52, had four sons, of whom Peter, the eldest, was called to the degree of sergeant-at-law in 1594, and one of the Judges of the Common Pleas in 1601. He died July 22, 1626, without male issue, but left nine daughters, one of whom, Alice, was married to her relation, </i><i>Peter WARBURTON of Helperstone (sic) Grange, who was born in 1588, made one of the Justices of Cheshire by the Parliament in 1647, and afterwards one of the Justices of the Court of King's Bench. He died at Polsden, in Surrey, February 28, 1665-66, and was buried at Fetcham. </i></div><div><i>"Of his three sons, the two eldest died in infancy, and the youngest, Richard WARBURTON, Esq, of the Grange, married Elizabeth, daughter of Alderman BARKLEY of </i><i>London... He died April 14</i><i>, 1696, leaving one son, Dr WARBURTON, of Abbots Bromley, Staffs, and one daughter, Mary, second wife of Rev Matthew HENRY, celebrated Dissenting Minister...</i><i>"</i></div><div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div>
John AUBREY, in his "Natural History and Antiquities of the County of Surrey" [London, 1718, at page 262], recorded the following Monumental Inscription in Fetcham Church (or churchyard) in the Deanery of Stoke, on a black marble grave-stone:<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>PETER WARBURTON, OF HEFFERSTON</i></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>GRANGE, IN THE COUNTY PALATINE OF</i></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>CHESTER, ESQ. BORN THE 27. DAY OF</i></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>MARCH 1588. DYED THE 28TH DAY OF</i></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>FEBRUARY 1665.</i></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>CHRIST IS A CHRISTIAN'S ALL.</i></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>RESURRECTURUS.</i></div>
______________________________________________<br />
<br /><br /><i><b><u><span style="font-size: large;">RICHARD WARBURTON OF LONDON, A HABERDASHER.</span></u></b></i><br /><br /></div><div>Richard (Richus) WARBORTON, was bound, 8 November 1611, as Apprentice to Thomas INCE, Master Haberdasher of London, the son of George WARBURTON, of Hulce, Cheshire, Gent [City of London, Haberdashers, Apprentice's Freedoms, 1526-1933, citing London Metropolitan Archives, Ref CLC/L/HA/C/011/MS 15860/004, image on Findmypast.co.uk].</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard WARBURTON; his Freedom, Haberdasher's Company, 24 September 1619, Thomas INCE, Master [ditto].</div><div><br /></div><div>Apprentices were traditionally bound at age 14, for a period of 7 years, by the end of which time they would have reached their majority. If Richard had followed this tradition, he would have been born around about the year 1597.</div><div><br /></div><div>And Richard (Rico) WARBURTON, Master Haberdasher, of London, 13 September 1627, for the apprenticeship of Peter (Petrus) WARBURTON, son of George (Georgius) WARBURTON, of Boughton in Cheshire, Gent (Generosus), deceased (defunctus) [ditto].</div><div><br /></div><div>It appears to me that this may well have been the <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> who went to Dublin, where, in February 1628(-29), he was named as Plaintiff in a Bill before the Chancery Court of Ireland, vs Thomas BOONE, Defendant. </div><div>And, in October 1631, as the Principal Creditor, he was granted the P.C.I. Administration of the Irish assets of William FAWCETT, Haberdasher of London, deceased (see next section below). </div><div>But probably not the last mentioned, if he was already in Dublin by 1622 (see ditto, although I am starting to think this date is unlikely).</div><div><br /></div><div>William FAWCETT was bound in 1606 as apprentice to Thomas THORNTON, Master Haberdasher in London; in 1623, as Master Haberdasher, in London, he bound Jeoffry CARTWRIGHT as his apprentice.</div><div>And, it would appear that Jeffry CARTWRIGHT probably went to Dublin, and was in a mercantile partnership with a <b>Mr WARBURTON</b> at the time he made his will in 1636.</div><div><br /></div><div>Of possible interest, there was a Richard WARBURTON baptised at Waverton, near Chester, 11 August 1595, a son of George WARBURTON [Familysearch.org]; a George WARBURTON was married at Great Budworth, 4 August 1584, to Elizabeth LITLETON [ditto]; and GENUKI records that Hulse was a township in the parish of Great Budworth, Hundred of Northwich, and Palatine County of Chester.</div><div><br /></div><div>While none of these are necessarily relevant, there are, as the saying goes, so many coincidences here that they are starting to look a bit like something else!</div><div>And whilst we cannot yet claim this Haberdasher to be the Dublin settler, he remains a person of considerable interest!</div><div>____________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i>THE WARBURTONS OF GREAT BUDWORTH.</i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>As mentioned above, George WARBURTON and Elizabeth LITLETON were married in Great Budworth parish church in 1584.</div><div><br /></div><div>Another George WARBURTON, and his wife Elizabeth MYDDLETON were buried there - Sir George in May 1676, aged 56, and Elizabeth, his first wife, in 1650.</div><div>______________________________________________<br />
<br /><br />
<i><b><u><span style="font-size: large;">RICHARD WARBURTON (GEN 1) OF DUBLIN.</span></u></b></i><br /><br /></div><div>As mentioned in the introduction above, John BURKE's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry (1847) mentions Richard WARBURTON of Dublin in 1622. BURKE did not source this detail - and it may simply have been part of his "received" version of WARBURTON family lore.<br />
In the expectation that this "sighting" was of a man who had probably reached his majority, it suggests he was born about 1600, but probably considerably earlier.</div><div>And if he was the 1611 Haberdashers' Apprentice in London (see above), then he would probably have been born about 1595, give-or-take a year or two.</div><div><br /></div><div>The earliest date I can find in surviving archived documents, or abstracts from them, is 10 February 1628(-29), when <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> was named as Plaintiff in a bill brought before the Court of Chancery, Dublin, to which the defendant was named as Thomas BOONE [Ireland, Court of Chancery Bill Books, 1627-1884, Dublin, on Findmypast.co.uk].</div><div>
<br /><b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, of Dublin, was granted Administration in the Prerogative Court of Ireland (P.C.I.), 14 October 1631, as Principal Creditor, to the Irish assets of William FAWCETT, of London, Haberdasher [BETHAM's Genealogical Abstracts, Findmypast]. This detail suggests that Richard may well have become FAWCETT's Creditor in London, rather than in Dublin?</div><div><br /></div><div>Nathaniel MARKHAM and <b>Richard WARBERTON</b> were joint Plaintiffs in a Bill brought before the Court of Chancery, Dublin, 11 January 1635-36, the Defendant being John KENDALL.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>Richard</b> <b>WARBURTON</b> was the second of three Defendants in a Chancery Bill, entered in November 1636, by Samuel RICHARDSON, the Plaintiff - the other two Defendants being Nathaniel MARKHAM and John KENDALL; Answer of <b>WARBURTON</b>, 5 November; Answer of KENDALL 31 March 1637.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - </div><div>Not much is recorded on family history web-sites concerning this, or any other Nathaniel MARKHAM of his vintage. One was a member of the Vintner's Company in London, and bound a number of Apprentices to him between 1612 and 1621. He was married at St Mary on the Hill, London, 19 January 1611(-12), to Mary COZENTON, with issue baptised there between November 1612 and June 1620. He appears to have left no further trace in London. </div><div>He, or another, is first mentioned in Dublin in 1631 (a Chancery Court Bill Book entry, and a separate BETHAM's Abstract); and he is named as a defendant in two Chancery Court Bills prosecuted by Dame Elizabeth SMITH in 1636 and 1637 [CROSSLE's Abstracts]. </div><div>I find no mentions of his baptism in English records, so whether he was a descendant of Robert MARKHAM of Cottham, Notts, who was married in January 1580 to Ann WARBURTON, a daughter of Dame Mary (formerly BRERETON), the widow of Sir John WARBURTON of Arley, is not yet known. But, the possibility does exist. See above.</div><div>And if so, it does appear that the connection with <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> in litigation in Dublin may have been by kinship (unlikely on DNA evidence), or otherwise through the following Forced Royal Loan saga?</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - </div><div><b><br /></b></div><div><b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, of Dublin, Merchant, was evidently named in a Chancery Decree, dated 8 February 1635(-36?), concerning a loan of £8,000 which had been made to King Charles. </div><div>I have not yet located the actual source for this information, although it is likely to have been mentioned in correspondence between Conrad SWAN, York Herald in Arms in Ordinary, London, and James Arthur WARBURTON (1890-1982), of Canada, during the 1970s or thereabouts.<br />In my view, the close proximity of these two dates does indicate that this February Decree was inevitably the result of the January Bill - but only if BETHAM mis-understood that the date was a Julian Calendar date.</div><div>
Sir William BETHAM, who occupied the Office of the Chief Herald in Ireland (from about 1830 until his death, about 1855) further identified this Richard as the son of Peter WARBURTON of Hefferston Grange, by his wife Magdalen MOULTON. </div><div>Which appears unlikely, if he was the 1611 London Apprentice, identified as the son of George WARBURTON of Hulce (Hulse), Cheshire, Gent.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>Richard</b> <b>WARBURTON</b> was named as Defendant in a Chancery Bill, dated 17 January 1636-37, brought on by William DEERING; Mr FANSHAW (or NESHAW?) presiding.</div><div><br /></div><div>Another London Haberdasher appears to have gone to Dublin. Jeffery CARTWRIGHT, of Dublin, Merchant, made his will (or it was proved P.C.I.) on 23 January 1636(-37?), naming his wife Elizabeth, his brother Richard CARTWRIGHT, his father-in-law George CANNING, his brother- and sister-in-law Paul and Ann CANNING, and <i>"... his partner Mr <b>WARBURTON</b>"</i> [BETHAM's Abstracts, Findmypast.co.uk]. I know of no other WARBURTONs in Ireland at that time.</div><div>This was undoubtedly the family which included Edward CANNING, mentioned in an old Irish debt involving <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> in 1646 (see below).</div><div><br /></div><div>On 5 June 1640, <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, as the Plaintiff, entered his Bill in the High Court of Chancery Court, Dublin, against Defendants James NUGENT, John DAVIS and James ARCHBOLD; AYSCOUGH (presiding); LAYTON (attorney); Answer of ARCHBOLD, 13 June.</div><div><br /></div><div>In February 1641(-42), <b>Richard</b> <b>WAR</b><b>BERTON </b>was joint Defendant, with John BOOTH and John PERRY, in a case brought before the High Court of Chancery in Dublin by John NEWMAN the plaintiff; PARKINSON (presiding); EXHAM (attorney); there were no Answers.</div><div><br /></div><div>In February 1642(-43), <b>Richard WARBERTON</b>, Bartholomew DROPE and John HILL, were Defendants in a Chancery Bill, entered 23 February 1642(-43) by Thomas BIRD and Thomas HARRALD, Plaintiffs; there were no Answers.</div><div><br /></div><div>That there were no answers to the last two Bills is not inconsistent with <b>Richard</b>, as a defendant, being temporarily absent in England.</div><div>_____________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>REBELLION BREAKS OUT IN IRELAND.</u></b></i></span></div><div><br />
In late October 1641, Rebellion broke out in Ireland. </div><div>By April 1642, Commissioners, who had been appointed by the Government, began to investigate losses endured by loyal subjects at the hands of the Rebels, by taking witness statements, or depositions.<br />
These have survived, as "The 1641 Depositions," now lodged in the Library of Trinity College, Dublin. </div><div><b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, Merchant, was named in one of them, not as a deponent, but by one of his former servants, John LEWYS [transcript in on-line access - MS 810, folios 162r-162v], taken in Dublin, 29 April 1642:<br />
<i>"John LEWYS of the Cittie of Dublin, Merchant, late servant unto <b>Richard WARBURTON, of the same place, merchant</b>, sworne and examined, deposeth and sayth that he hath lived with the said <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> as a Journeyman for the space of foure years (last past) and upwards, and during that tyme hath beene, and now is, well apprised and acquainted with his shop, Bookes and Accompts, by which appeareth to be due unto him the said <b>WARBURTON</b>, as per the particular Accompts which this deponent verily beleeveth to be trewly wrytten and contrived, at the beginning of this presente Rebellion, and at this tyme, Sundry somms of money by divers persons within the kingdome of Ireland (which are eyther knowne by this deponent to be in actuall Rebellion, or otherwise are apprehended and imprisoned for the same, and the rest for very strong reasons is perswaded, are alsoe turned Rebells) Amounting unto the somme of Twelve hundred seaventy Eight pownds five shillings three pence.</i><br />
<i>"And by the same Accompts and Bookes appeareth to be dew unto him the said <b>WARBURTON </b>by divers other persons, whom this deponent beleeveth the Rebells have slayne, Robbed, dispoyled and made unable to satisfie, Amountinge unto the somme of fowre Thowsand Eigth hundred twenty fowre pownds and seaventeene shillings more.</i><br />
<i>"And by the same Accompts and bookes itt alsoe appeareth, that when the Rebellion began and this tyme divers persons within the Citty Dublin, and else-wheare which the Rebellion and theise misserable tymes have disabled to make sattisfaction as he conceiveth weare and are indebted unto the said <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> the somme of seaven hundred fiftie seaven pownds thirteen shillings and fowre pence more.</i><br />
<i>"And further sayth that the said <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> since the beginninge of the said insurreccion hath been and is by the Rebells (and by reason of this Rebellion) within the Countie of Dublin whose names he knoweth not, deprived, rob'd or otherwise, dispoyled or prejudict of his goods and Chattles in kishork (with arrearages of rent) Consistinge of Beasts, Cattle, howse hold stuffe and other Goods And unto the somme of one hundred pownds.</i><br />
<i>"And that the said <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> by meanes of the said Rebellion is deprived and dispoyled to his further loss in the lyinge wast and damage by his howses </i>[end of folio 498 - start of folio 499] <i>and shop, and by reason of the giving over and losse of the bennifitt of his Tradinge and by his estate and meanes lyinge out of his hands, with <b>Transporting his wife and children into England</b>, the somme of six hundred pownds more. In all Amountinge unto the somme of Seaven Thowsand five hundred and sixty pounds sterlinge or thereabouts.</i><br />
<i>"And this deponent further sayth that at the tyme of the begininge of this rebellion and at this instants tyme, sundry persons within the said kingdom of Ireland, whoe are wyther in Rebellion, or deprived of theyre estates by this Insurreccion are and stand indebted unto him this deponent severall somms of money ammountinge to the somme of one hundred thirty one pounds five shillings and Ten pence Sterling, and that by meanes of this Rebellion he hath lost his present imployment and bennifitt of his Tradinge by which, and for want of his money, he is likely to be dampfied one hundred pounds more at Least, Soe as his owne propper losses by means of this rebellion Amounteth unto the somme of 231 li. 5s. 10d. sterling.</i><br />
<i>"Per me John LEWYS.</i><br />
<i>"'Jurat: Apr 29o 1642.</i><br />
<i>"Hen. BRERETON.</i><br />
<i>"Roger PUTTOCKE."</i><br />
<br />
This account was later abstracted by Annaleigh MARGEY, Eamon DARBY and Elaine MURPHY, in their book "The 1641 Depositions and the Irish Rebellion" [at page 68], under the sub-heading of "Merchant Debts Due and Oweing," with some spelling improvements, some numerical simplification, and an error or two:<br />
<i>"Similarly, John LEWYS, servant to the late Dublin Merchant, <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, claimed that 'divers persons within the kingdom' known by the deponent to be in actual rebellion, or imprisoned for their part in it, owed his master £1,278 5s 3d. A further £4,824 17s more was owed by 'other persons' he believed the rebels had 'slayn, robbed and despoiled and made unable to satisfie.' In addition to this, he said, 'Persons within the citty of Dublin' were indebted to his master the further amount of £757 13s 4d...</i><br />
<i>"Likewise, LEWYS deposed that another £600 more was added to the debts listed (which amount to almost £7,000) 'by reason of the giving over and loss of the bennefitt of his Trading, and by his estate and means lyeing out of his hands, with Transporting his (<b>WARBURTON</b>'s) wife and children into England'."</i><br />
This abstract appeared, at first glance, to suggest that <b>Richard</b> was already dead.<br />
But the full original version does not confirm that reading, the term "late" clearly applying to LEWYS's term of employment by WARBURTON<b>,</b> and not WARBURTON himself, or his career as a merchant (although he may by then have been "late" of Dublin); and the reference to his wife and children, (rather than "widow"), does indicate that Richard was still alive.<br />
It is the only Deposition that mentions anyone named WARBURTON, with variant spellings also checked. This would appear to indicate that Richard was himself no longer in Dublin, or he would have made his own deposition.<br />
And if so, it would appear that he may very likely already gone to England, and ahead of his family - perhaps even having already gone there on a visit when the rebellion broke out?<br />
And that is all fairly clearly indicated further by the evidence, shown next, that he was still living, and probably back in Dublin, by 1646.</div><div>______________________________________________<br />
<br />
<u><b><br /><i><span style="font-size: large;">AN INTERLUDE IN ENGLAND, FROM ABOUT 1641.</span></i></b></u><br /><br /><br /></div><div>
J. MADDEN and <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> were signatories to a financial document, dated 8 September 1643, being a:<br />
<i>"Written receipt for </i><i>£</i><i>25 from Wm ADAMS, citizen and draper of London. He is to have a printed receipt on producing a writing between himself and Abraham BABINGTON, in whose name he says that he formerly adventured </i><i>£</i><i>100. P.1/2. Signed by J. MADDEN and <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>. Erased, End'd, Ibid 200"</i> ["Calendars of State Papers relating to Ireland preserved in the Public Record Office, Reign of Charles I, 1625 - ...", edited Robert Pentland MAHAFFY, 1900, Volume cclxii, page 317].<br />
<br />
Receipt dated 9 August 1643, <i>"... by J. MADDEN and <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, for £66 13s 10d from the same (*); with a note by the Treasurers of July 1643, certifying the receipt. P 2/3. S.P. Ireland. 300, 132" </i>[Ditto. page 342].<br />
Previous, or the same (*), was <i>"... from Sir John CORDELL, Kt, and Alderman of London."</i><br />
<br /><b>
Richard WARBURTON</b> was named in minutes of a Committee meeting held on 16 October 1646, attended by the Lord Lieutenant, STAPLETON, CLOTWORTHY, TEMPLE, NORTON, LISLE and CHALONER ["Calendars of State Papers relating to Ireland preserved in the Public Record Office, Reign of Charles I, 1625 - ...", edited Robert Pentland MAHAFFY, 1900, Volume cclxii], who heard that:<br />
<i>"<b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, who is employed by the Relief Loan Treasury for Ireland, is being sued by Mr Edward CANNING for an old debt incurred in Ireland, which, owing to his losses there, he cannot pay. He has offered reasonable satisfaction. This committee expect that <b>Mr WARBURTON</b> may not be prevented from doing his public service by Mr CANNING's acting rigidly in the matter."</i><br />Undoubtedly the same CANNING family into which Jeffrey CARTWRIGHT was married - he was a partner of <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> in Dublin (see above).</div><div><br /><b>
Richard WARBURTON</b> was named in minutes of a Committee Meeting held at Derby House, 16 November 1647, chaired by the Earl of Warwick, with ten others in attendance, and which covered a number of financial requests and payments, including:<br />
<i>"Other sums paid to MONKE and JONES; and to Mr MADDEN, <b>Richard WURBURSTON</b> (sic), and Mr DAVIES, the provision dealer"</i> [Calendar of the State Papers relating to Ireland, ditto, 1900].<br />
<br />
And he was again named in "Further Orders of the same," 24 March 1648 [Westminster], attended by ANNESLEY, NORTON, ROLL, TEMPLE, PRESTLY, KNIGHTS, JEPHSON, CORBETT and LISLE, which received:<br />
<i>"The petition of <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> and John MADDEN to be considered by the treasurers at Grocer's Hall"</i> [Ditto, page 89].<br />
<br />
From these entries, it hard to avoid getting the impression that <b>Richard</b> was probably involved in the provisions side of merchanting. And that he was, inevitably, still in England, and probably living in London.<br />
<br />
In 1653, Chancery Court records [TNA, C 10/17/144], WARBURTON v. Lord KERRY:<br />
<em>"Plaintiff: <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>.</em><br />
<em>Defendant: Patrick (FITZMAURICE) Baron KERRY.</em><br />
<em>Subject: Money matters, Ireland.</em><br />
<em>Document type: Bill and Answer."</em><br />
Probably too early for the son Richard Junior, presuming this Richard to have been the original Irish settler.</div><div><br /></div><div>"<i>A Census of Ireland circa 1659, with Supplementary Material from the Poll Money Ordinances (1660-1661)</i>," Edited by Séamus PENDER, M.A., was published in Dublin in 1939; the Census is believed to have been part of the Down Survey made by William PETTY, between December 1654 and the year 1659 (as part of the Cromwellian land confiscations used to reward Merchant Adventurers, and English soldiers for their arrears of pay); at page 444 is this entry, for the Barony of Garriecastell, in the King's County:</div><div><div><i>"Parish - Bellegally; Place - Kincorre; Numbers - 28; Tituladoes Names - <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, Senior, Gent, and Richard WARBURTON Junior, Gentle; Numbers 3 English and 25 Irish."</i></div></div><div>As there were only two Richard WARBURTONs living in Ireland in 1660, it is evident that these two were father and son, aged about 65 and 26; but, as there were only three English people in residence, it does ask the question as to who was the third WARBURTON, and why was there only one more? However, the term "tituladoes" used by PETTY may not mean that they actually possessed Kincorre - as suggested by PENDER in his preface. Perhaps they did not both reside there either?</div><div>After this "Census," a number of these named citizens were <i>"... appointed to be Commissioners for putting in execution"</i> the Poll Money Ordinances of 1660 and 1661,<i> "... for the speedy Raising of Moneys for His Majesty's Service."</i> These documents had been safely lodged in Marsh's Library, Dublin.</div><div>The List of Commissioners for the First Ordinance was ordered to be printed on 24 April 1660; the King's County list appears on page 622, with twenty-eight named, including eighteen Esquires, five Gentlemen, and another five Esquires - sixth in the first list of Esq's was Henry L'ESTRANGE, and first in the list of Gents was his brother-in-law,<b> Richard WARBURTON</b>.</div><div>The List for the Second Ordinance was ordered to be printed on 1 March 1660(-61); the Queen's County list appears on page 640, with the High Sheriff and the Burgomaster of Maryborough (both for the time being), three Knights and thirty-six Gents - thirty-third in this list was <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, and fortieth was William L'ESTRANGE (perhaps his brother-in-law, or nephew); the King's County list appears on the same page, with the Sheriff, two Knights, and twenty-nine Gents - sixth in this list was Henry L'ESTRANGE, but there were no WARBURTONs.</div><div><br />
By 1667, <b>Richard</b>'s second son George was working in the Post Office in Dublin; he was described by Anthony John HUGHES [his "Post Office in Ireland," 1638-1840, 2015, at page 55], under a sub-heading of "Stagnation and neglect in Post Office management during the Restoration era," as:<br />
<i>"... George WARBURTON, <b>son of a wealthy Dublin Merchant</b>..."</i><br />
<div><span>HUGHES did not indicate whether the wealthy Merchant was still living, but that is likely, although not yet guaranteed, as follows.</span></div><div><span style="font-size: medium;">_________________________________________</span></div><div><span style="font-size: medium;"><br /></span></div><div><span style="font-size: medium;"><br /></span></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>THE DEATH OF RICHARD WARBURTON (THE FIRST)</u></b>.</i></span></div><div><br /></div><div><span>The details of the death of <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, the spouse of Elizabeth L'ESTRANGE, remain a mystery.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>Sir William BETHAM, in his WARBURTON of Hefferston Pedigree [his Abstracts, on Findmypast], did record a death in 1669 for a Richard WARBURTON of Ireland, but without a source citation, and for which I have been unable to find any corroborating evidence.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>The Chancery Court of Ireland Bill Books [Findmypast] have no mentions of <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> from 1641 until 1662 (when his sons Richard and George were both adults). No entries appear in the Exchequer Court Bill books until 1674, when both George and Richard do appear.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>The lack of mentions of Richard from 1641 until 1662 does raise the question - did <b>Richard </b>and his wife Elizabeth actually return to Ireland after the 1641 Rebellion, and the consequent Cromwellian Inter-regnum? </span></div><div><span>However, the total number of Chancery Bills being entered did begin to drop in 1641, and substantially so from 1645 to 1648; and in the years 1649 through 1654, there were none at all.</span></div><div><span>So, it cannot be construed from these records whether <b>Richard</b> Senior was living in England or Ireland; nor is there any solid indication in them as to his demise.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>Indeed, there is no indication in any archived record what part he, or his three sons, played in that post-civil-war Commonwealth period, which ended with the Restoration in 1660.</span></div>
<div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><u><span style="font-size: large;"><b>RICHARD WARBURTON'S FAMILY.</b></span></u></i></div><div><br /></div><div><span><b>Richard WARBURTON</b> appears to have been married, probably in Dublin, about the early 1630s, to Elizabeth L'ESTRANGE, daughter of Thomas L'ESTRANGE, of Moystown, in the King's County (see next below); no details have yet been discovered concerning her death.</span></div><div><span>They had issue three sons:</span></div><div><span>1. Richard WARBURTON, born about the mid 1630s. See [A] below.</span></div><div><span>2. George WARBURTON, born about the late 1630s. See [B] below.</span></div><div><span>3. John WARBURTON, born about the early 1640s. See [C] below.</span></div><div><span><br /></span></div><div><span>BURKE and FOX-DAVIES [Landed Gentry, 1912, page 746] recorded that <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, <i>"... of Dublin, and living there in 1622,"</i> also had a daughter named Susannah, who was married firstly to Captain Thomas ASKE, of Thurles; and secondly to Daniel GAHAN, of Coolquil, County Tipperary; it is said (on Wiki-tree) that in 1666, Daniel GAHAN and his wife Susan, daughter of Richard WARBURTON of Dublin, the widow of Thomas ASHE</span>, were granted land in the Barony of Slievardagh, County Tipperary, and that O'HART recorded three sons of this second marriage - Sir Daniel, George and John GAHAN.</div><div>It appears that an earlier BURKE [Landed Gentry, 1847] may have erred in the 1622 date; but whether the information about the GAHAN marriage is correct, and whether the first husband was ASKE or ASHE, I have not yet verified.</div><div>It is possible, perhaps even likely, that this second husband was the Captain Daniel GAHAN who was the Postmaster in Dublin, shortly before 14 October 1667, when he and his successor, George WARBURTON, jointly petitioned the Duke of ORMOND with a plaint of debt against Edward GILLIGAN and another [TNA, MS Carte 154, folio 152].</div><div><span style="font-size: medium;">_________________________________________</span></div>
<br />
<br /><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b>THE ERASMUS SMITH TRUST AND THE HIGH SCHOOL, DUBLIN.</b></i></span><br /><div><br /></div><div>[Despite my using bold type here-under, it is likely, given the extended date range, that the following entries were for the son, and not the father.]</div><div><br /></div><b>
Richard WARBURTON</b>, of Dublin, Esq, was named in an Indenture, dated 26 January 1666[-67], by which Richard KINGDON, Esq, for the sum of <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">£</span>209, granted him the Town and Lands of Brackenagh, Kilcloncorkery, Conbrok, Balleshane and Pollagh - Mc Grage (except 260A:2R:26P retrenched lands in the last), next to Clonast in he Barony of Coolisowne, King's County.<br />
[Image of original document for its sale (the document) on-line - "17th Century Sale of Lands, Co Offaly"].</div><div><br /></div><div>On 8 June 1667, Richard COOTE , Esq, and <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, were Plaintiffs in a Chancery Bill, to which the defendants were Jerome SANKEY, Daniel HUTCHINSON, Richard LEIGH, John PRESTON, Robert CLARKE and Erasmus SMITH [Chancery Court of Ireland, Bill Books, on Findmypast.co.uk].</div><div><br /></div><div>On 2 May 1668, <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> was named as the sole Defendant in a Chancery Bill, brought on by a number of k, including Richard KINGDON. The first Plaintiff was Erasmus SMITH, Esq; the other six were Henry Lord Bishop of Meath; John BYSSE, Lord Chief Baron of the Court of the Exchequer; Heiram SANKEY; Richard TEIGH; Daniel HUTCHINSON; and John PRESTON.</div><div>On 18 November 1674, Richard COOTE, Esq, was sole Plaintiff to a Chancery Court Bill, in which the Defendants were the same Henry Lord Bishop of Meath, John BISSE, Jerome SANKEY, Erasmus SMITH, and Daniel HUTCHINSON, as well as Edward ROBERTS, <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> and John PRESTON.</div><div><br /></div><div><b>Richard WARBURTON</b> was Plaintiff to two Bills, entered in the Chancery Court, Dublin, on 1 July 1678, and 21 April 1680, in both of which Richard COOTE was the Defendant.</div><div><br /></div><div>There can be little doubt that these were a series of Bills, connected with the Erasmus SMITH Trust, as follows.</div><div><br />
W.R.T. WALLACE, in his "Faithful to our Trust. A History of the Erasmus SMITH Trust and the High School, Dublin" [Dublin, 2004, at pages 45, 55], mentioned:<br />
<i>"The other two who were in serious arrears were Colonel COOTE and <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, whose joint lease dated from 1657. The sub-committee divided their arrears into two parts. The first dated from 17 August 1666, that is from the new arrangements made under the Transmitted Bill, to 1673, when the new Trust was established. The second period was from 1673 to 1677. In all, COOTE owed <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">£</span>1015 12s 6d for the two periods combined; <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> seems to have paid the earlier period, because he was only billed <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">£</span>427 for the period after 1673."</i><br />
<br />
But WALLACE went on to effectively identify which Richard this was, at page 55, as follows:<br />
<i>"... by 1697... The long struggle to secure the arrears from COOTE and <b>WARBURTON</b> resumed with limited success. Their lease was due to run out in 1699, which strengthened the Governor's position. On 6 April 1699, <b>WARBURTON</b> secured the lease of the joint holding for 21 years at a rent of £370. He paid off almost <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">£</span>500, and <b>his son Richard </b>gave a bond for a further <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">£</span>1,000."</i><br />
<br />
Clearly the last mentioned father and son did not include the first settler, Richard (Gen I); although it is not clear whether the original lease involved the original settler, or his son Richard (Gen II) below - however, I suspect that the original settler was probably not involved.</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br />
<br /><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>SOME ERRORS IN THE LITERATURE.</u></i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>
BURKE's 1847 Dictionary of the Landed Gentry and its errors drew an early response, published in a letter to the editor of the December 1847 edition of Gentleman's Magazine [Volume 18, page 562]:<br />
<i> "Stephen's Green, Dublin.</i><br />
<i>"Dear URBAN,</i><br />
<i> "I am a dabbler in genealogy, and, I may add, a lover of antiquities, because they illustrate the history of man. I wish to encourage publications of family history, and am possessor of both editions of Mr BURKE's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry.</i><br />
<i> "I love truth, and therefore address you, who have been a lover of truth. I do not entirely blame Mr BURKE for the errors he publishes in what he receives on the credit and responsibility of his contributions. It is impossible for him to scrutinise the pedigrees sent him; but when they are published they are open to criticism and observation: and no gratification of personal vanity will justify a violation of the truth.</i><br />
<i> "I am acquainted with the Irish family of WARBURTON, and have perused the statement given by Mr BURKE, upon which I offer you a few remarks: viz't 'the Royalist character of the family in the 17th century, and the sufferings from the Cromwellites!'</i><br />
<i> "<b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, the Clerk of the Privy Council when Richard CROMWELL was Lord Lieutenant in 1654! absolutely in the usurper's service instead of being 'a persecuted loyalist.'</i><br />
<i> "Secondly. The said Richard was not son of John WARBURTON. His father was William, and he was the same <b>Richard WARBURTON </b>who was the M.P. for Portarlington, and is called by Mr BURKE second son of Richard and brother of George and John. Mr BURKE has him father to himself.</i><br />
<i> "Now a deed is in existence to which the said George and John WARBURTON are parties in trust for their 'elder brother <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>,' of Garryhinch 'alias' Timberton, which proves the inaccuracy of the pedigree, and I am sorry to say there are many such mis-statements in the Dictionary of Mr BURKE within my own knowledge, on which I only speak.</i><br />
<i> "The Irish WARBURTONs are undoubtedly branches of the Cheshire family, but not descended in the way mentioned by Mr BURKE.</i><br />
<i> "Yours, etc.</i><br />
<i> "W.S. BUTLER."</i><br />
<br />
Of course, as it appears to me, BUTLER did not get it right, either - having omitted to identify the father of the three brothers, Richard, George and John, as Richard (1622), who may, in turn, have been a son of either John or William, although I have not yet found hard evidence of the which, if indeed either. And arguably so if he was the London Haberdasher, whose father was George.<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br /></div>
Further, James Arthur WARBURTON (1892-1982), in his "The WARBURTONs of Garryhinch," and published on the www.warburton.one-name.net web-site, wrote:<br />
<i>"I have a document from the Dublin College of Arms (fn), noting that one <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> of Dublin, Merchant, named in a chancery decree dated 8th February 1635, and married to Elizabeth L'ESTRANGE, was father to three young men, Richard, George and John, of whom Richard was the eldest."</i></div><div><i>"Footnote - ... probably from Conrad SWAN, the York Herald of the College of Arms."<br /></i>
<br />
Which, I do believe, gets us a lot closer to the "truth."<br />
______________________________________________<br />
<br />
<br />
<b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>SEVERAL PRE-REGISTRATION IRISH PROPERTY DEEDS</u>.</span></i></b><br /><br />
In March 2005, I down-loaded a detailed account of the Irish WARBURTON family which appeared on the www.irishmidlandsancestry.com web-site. It was entitled:<br />
<i>"Richard WARBURTON - memoir of the WARBURTON Family of Garryhinch."</i><br />
There were two dates included, which are unexplained (but perhaps they may refer to two Editions of BURKE's Landed Gentries?):<br />
<i>"Dublin, 1848; 2nd Edition, 1881."</i><br />
The author of the memoir is elsewhere identified as Michael Henry GILL, with contributions by Henry KEMMIS and Richard WARBURTON, and was privately printed by University Press, Dublin, in January 1848.<br />
<br />
In setting out to untangle the three sons of the "original" Richard WARBURTON of Dublin, the memorial included mentions of the 1695 Marriage Settlements for Richard WARBURTON and Elizabeth PIGOTT (see further below), with confirmation Deeds of Lease and Release made in 1698, as follows:<br />
<br />
<i>"By articles, previous to the marriage of Richard WARBURTON Junior, only son of Richard Senior, with Elizabeth PIGOTT, bearing date 1695, and made between George WARBURTON and John WARBURTON, Esqrs, both of the City of Dublin, <b>in behalf of Richard WARBURTON of Garryhinch, in the King's County, their elder brother</b>, of the one part; and John PIGOTT of Kilfenning (Kilfinney), in the County of Limerick, Esq, of the other part; large estate of the said Richard Senior in the King's and Queen's Counties, and County of Limerick, were covenanted to be settled in the usual manner, to provide a maintenance for Richard Junior, and a jointure for his intended wife, and the usual limitations to the issue of said marriage."</i><br />
<br />
The author, with evident good reason, observed that:<br />
<i>"Richard WARBURTON Senior was no party to these articles, but they prove that he had two younger brothers, George and John."</i><br />
Although he failed to make the distinction between this Richard WARBURTON Senior and first Dublin settler of 1628/1635.<br />
<br />
The memoir continued:<br />
<i>"By Deeds of Lease and Release of the 17th and 18th of June 1698, made between <b>Richard WARBURTON Senior</b>, of Garryhinch, in the King's County, of the first part; the Hon. Robert ROCHFORT, Sir Francis BLUNDELL, and John USHER, Esq, of the second part; Sir Thomas SOUTHWELL, <b>Richard WARBURTON the son of George WARBURTON</b>, and Henry WARREN of Grangebeg, Esq, of the third part; <b>Richard WARBURTON, Esq, eldest and only son of the said </b></i><b><i>Richard WARBURTON</i></b><i><b> Senior</b>, and Elizabeth WARBURTON alias PIGOTT, eldest daughter of John PIGOTT of Kilfenning in the County of Limerick, of the fourth part; reciting that the said marriage was had, and the portion of the said Elizabeth of £1,400 has having been paid; the said <b>Richard WARBURTON Senior</b>, in pursuance of the said articles, grants and conveys to the said Robert ROCHFORD and the other trustees and their heirs, all the lands comprised in the said articles, upon the trusts in the said deed contained."</i></div><div>
Clearly the case of Richard WARBURTON Senior playing catch-up, having been contracted in the earlier marriage settlements in his absence by his two younger brothers on his behalf.<br />
<br />
The Deeds Registry in Dublin did not commence operations until 1708. The above deeds will therefore not be among their holdings - unless they were "recited" in detail in other deeds made after 1708. I have not yet seen any later deeds which include such citations (they may exist), but neither do I have any reason to suspect the veracity of the above details of the two earlier deeds.</div><div>_____________________________________________</div><div>
<br />
<br />
<b><i><u><span style="font-size: large;">SOME DETAILS OF THE FAMILY OF L'ESTRANGE.</span></u></i></b><br /><br /></div><div>
Hamon L'ESTRANGE, born about the 1560s; of Castle L'Estrange, County Roscommon; he died before 7 March 1639; he was married to Dorothy MOORE, fourth daughter of Sir John MOORE of Croghan, County Roscommon, by Dorothy LOFTUS (fifth daughter of Rev Adam LOFTUS, Archbishop of Dublin - another of his daughters was Martha LOFTUS, the wife Thomas COLCLOUGH of Tinterne, County Wexford, whose daughter Martha COLCLOUGH married John PIGOTT of Dysart, who are my direct ancestors); Dorothy was married secondly, in 1644, as his second wife, to Captain Richard ST GEORGE of Athlan Castle; Hamon and Dorothy had issue, including:<br />
1. Thomas L'ESTRANGE, born about the 1590s; of Castle L'Estrange; in 1633, he purchased an estate at Moystown, King's County, from Sir Thomas ROTHERHAM (he was related to Thomas's daughter Elizabeth L'ESTRANGE, the wife of Alexander COSBY of Stradbally - see below); Thomas died in 1655; his will, dated 1651, was proved in 1655 [I have yet to sight BETHAM's Abstract of this probate grant - I will when Libraries re-open after the Covid-19 shut-down]; he was married to a sister of John GAY of Halverton, County Norfolk; they had issue:<br />
a. Henry L'ESTRANGE, born about the 1610s; of Moystown, King's County; he joined CROMWELL's Army in 1649, and served under Colonel Robert VENABLES in Ulster; High Sheriff of King's County, 1656 [SADLIER]; he died on 20 January 1665-66, and was buried at Tesaran parish church; his will was proved P.C.I., 8 December 1666, and mentioned his son Thomas L'ESTRANGE, his brother(-in-law) <b>Richard WARBURTON</b>, and Mr HAMILTON [BETHAM], and further detailed in the THRIFT Abstracts as mentioning his brother William L'ESTRANGE, son Hamon L'ESTRANGE, daughters Ann and Dorothy L'ESTRANGE, son Alexander COSBY, nephew Henry L'ESTRANGE son to his brother William, sister SHORT, brother-in-law Christopher SHORT, sisters GOUNEN and KEALLE(?), and appointing as his executors William SANDES, William HAMILTON (he was married to Ann SANDES, sister of Mrs Elizabeth L'ESTRANGE and Mrs Judith WARBURTON), Richard WARBURTON, Alexander COSBY and Thomas L'ESTRANGE, Esqrs - with a codicil declaring to his brother William (of Castlecuff, Queen's County) that it was his will that when his eldest son Hamon should attain the age of 21 years, he should be seen as capable (of inheriting...?); he was married to Elizabeth SANDES, daughter of William SANDYS of Dublin (and so she was a sister of Judith and Ann SANDES - see next below); they had issue:</div><div>
i. Elizabeth L'ESTRANGE; she was married (between 1657 and 1664) to Alexander COSBY, of Stradbally, Queen's County.<br />
ii. Anne L'ESTRANGE; she was married to Richard WARBURTON of Garryhinch, King's County (see below).<br />
iii. Dorothy L'ESTRANGE; she was married to George WARBURTON of Garryhinch.<br />
iv. Thomas "Old Tom" L'ESTRANGE, born about 1645; of Moystown; first M.P. for Borough of Banagher, King's County, 1666, 1692, 1703, 1711 (succeeded by Peter HOLMES in 1713); High Sheriff of King's County, 1684 and 1685 [SADLIER]; he died in 1732, aged 76; he was married to Frances Peisley ATKINSON; with issue.<br />
b. William L'ESTRANGE; of Castle Cuffe, Queen's County; High Sheriff of King's County, 1666 [SADLIER]; he died in 1677 [SADLIER]; he was married to Graney MALONE - they were ancestors of the L'ESTRANGEs of Kooltown, County WEXFORD.<br />
c. Susannah L'ESTRANGE.<br />
d. Mary L'ESTRANGE; she was married to Meade SWIFT, J.P., of Lynne, County Kilkenny.<br />
e. a daughter; married to John ROTHERHAM, a son of Sir Thomas ROTHERHAM (see above).<br />
f. Elizabeth L'STRANGE; the wife of <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> (mentioned in his brother-in-law Henry's will, 1665-66).<br />
2. Elizabeth L'ESTRANGE; she was married to John CROFTON of Kilbeggan, County Roscommon.<br />
______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><b><i><u><span style="font-size: large;">SOME DETAILS OF THE FAMILY OF SANDES</span></u></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div><div style="text-align: center;"><i style="color: red;"><b>* * * THIS IS NOW A WORK IN PROGRESS * * *</b></i></div>
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">William SANDES, of Dublin; probably son of Henry SANDES and Helena FLETCHER of Cumberland; one of the "49 Officers" who received lands grants in County KERRY; probably an executor of Henry L'ESTRANGE, 1666 (unless instead his son William SANDES?); he is said to have died in 1668, aged 71, and to have been married to Elizabeth FERNLEY (who died in 1658); with issue, including:</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> a. Elizabeth SANDES; died in 1695; the wife of Henry L'ESTRANGE (1610 - 1666).</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> b. Judith SANDES (1640 - 1730); the wife of Richard WARBURTON (1636 - 1717).</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> c. Anne SANDES (born 1650); the wife of William HAMILTON. </div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> d. Lancelot SANDES; he is said to have died in 1668, and to have been married to Margaret STOUGHTON; said to have had issue, including:</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> i. William SANDES; died at Carrigafoyle, County Kerry, about 1721; said to have married to Mary COWARD, with issue two sons (William and Lancelot) and three daughters (Margaret, Katherine and Elizabeth).</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> ii. Lancelot SANDES.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> iii. Ellen SANDES.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> iv. Henry SANDES.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> v. John SANDES. Perhaps father of the next?</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">John SANDES; Captain; of Kilcavan, Queen's County; he was married to Ann (-?-); they are said to have had issue:</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> a. Lancelot SANDES, born 1672. See next below.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> b. William SANDES; died in 1685.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> c. Richard SANDES, born 1671(?); died 1697.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> d. George SANDES; died in 1694.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">Lancelot SANDES; born about 1672, possibly the eldest son of John SANDES; of Kilcavan, Queen's County; he was Captain, 2nd or the Queen Dowager's Regiment of Foot, June 1692; wounded at the Battle of Landen, Flanders, 29 July 1693; wrote to his cousin, Robert PIGOTT, in London, 1701, advising him of some "irregularities" in dealings over the family property at Kilcromin; J.P., Queen's County, 1707; Sheriff of Queen's County, 1716; M.P. for the Borough of Portarlington, from 19 September 1723 (in the room of John SHORT, Esq, deceased), until 1727; he died at Easter 1728; his will, dated 19 April 1728, was proved P.C.I., 6 May 1729, naming his son Pigott SANDES, aunt WARBURTON, and son Richard SANDES [BETHAM's Abstract]. </div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">He was married firstly, about 1694, to Elizabeth PIGOTT (daughter of Thomas PIGOTT, of Dysart, and Elizabeth WELDON); she evidently died about 1705.<br />Lancelot was married secondly, by Settlements dated 7 March 1706, to Elizabeth (unknown, perhaps L'ESTRANGE, or WARREN?); she made an Indented Deed, dated 20 July 1745 (Memorial No 81840, Deeds Registry, Dublin), in which she relinquished all right and title to an annuity and another charge made on her late husband's estate to Pigott SANDES and his son and heir apparent Lancelot SANDES the younger (this deed cited two earlier deeds made by Lancelot SANDES the elder, now deceased - one dated 6 March 1706, charging his lands with the sum of £300 to go to his wife Elizabeth in the event she had no issue by him - the other dated 7 March, 5th year of the Reign of Queen Ann, i.e. 1706, being Articles made prior to his marriage with the said Elizabeth, and making a charge on his lands of an annuity of £40 per year to go to his said wife Elizabeth in the event she died before him having had issue by him - the deed further recited <i>"... that said Elizabeth had no issue by said Lancelot"</i>); she died in 1757, evidently without issue; her will dated 10 May 1753, was proved P.C.I., 9 July 1757, naming her late husband Lancelot SANDES, her daughter-in-law Susanna SANDES wife of Pigott SANDES (and his youngest son Richard SANDES), her niece Elizabeth WARREN married to Henry THOMPSON late of Dublin, Silk Mercer (and their two children Richard and Elizabeth), her niece Charity WARREN wife of John KELLY (and their sons John and Charles), and her cousin Elizabeth STRINGER of Cuff Street, Dublin [BETHAM's Abstract].</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">By his first wife Elizabeth PIGOTT, Lancelot had issue:</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> a. Lancelot SANDES.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> b. Pigott SANDES; a minor, in July 1706, when he was named as joint Plaintiff in an Exchequer Court of Ireland Bill, dated 10 July, with Richard and Ann SANDES (probably his younger siblings), under the guardianship of John PIGOTT (probably of Kilcromin, Queen's County), vs Lancelot SANDES and Robert PIGOTT (probably of Dysart, Queen's County), the Defendants [Exchequer Court Bill Books, Findmypast].</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> c. Richard SANDES; probably ditto, July 1706.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> d. Ann SANDES; probably ditto, July 1706.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> e. another daughter (perhaps Ann?); married to Samuel LOW, of County Meath, Esq.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">______________________________________________</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>WARREN FAMILY.</u></i></b></span></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">[From the www.ashefamily.info web-site]</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">Henry WARREN, of Grangebegg; married, with some, including:</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> a. William WARREN; married, with issue, including a son Henry, the next.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">Henry WARREN; of Grangebegg; "fled" from Ireland in 1688, and was Attainted by the Jacobite Parliament in 1689; his will, 2 September 1723; he was married to Susanna WARBURTON, eldest daughter of Richard WARBURTON of Garryhinch, Queens County, M.P.; they had issue:</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> a. Richard WARREN, of Grangebegg; M.P. for Kildare, 1715-35; High sheriff for County Kildare, 1715; he died 6 February 1734-35.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> b. Maurice WARREN, of Grangebegg and Dublin; he died without issue, his will proved 22 November 1726.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> c. George WARREN, of County Carlos.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> d. Elizabeth WARREN.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;"> e. Susanna WARREN; she was married to Pigott SANDES; they were named in the will of her mother-law (or perhaps step-mother) Elizabeth, the second wife and widow of Lancelot SANDES, dated 10 May 1753.</div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">
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<br />
<b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>RICHARD WARBURTON (GEN II).</u></span></i></b><br /><br />
[A] Richard WARBURTON appears to have been born about 1634 (although I have seen no age evidence related to any event for him); which makes him on the somewhat youngish age (still a minor) when he was appointed Under Clerk to the Council, 1654, evidently under the patronage of Henry IRETON (Cromwell's son-in-law) as Chief Clerk, and in the service of Henry CROMWELL (Oliver's son) as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, at a salary of £l50 per annum ["History of the Irish Parliament"]; as Richard Junior, Gent, with his father, "Census" of 1659, at Kincarre, Parish of Benegally, Barony of Garriecastell, King's County; Clerk Assistant to the House of Commons, Dublin, from 8 May 1661 until 6 August 1666; in 1665, he petitioned the House of Commons in Dublin <i>"... for his services, and was eventually awarded £600 on top of the £150 he had already received; 30 years later he was still trying to get the money, but this time he was more successful"</i> [History of the Irish Parliament, JOHNSON-LIIK].</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard WARBURTON appears to have made his first appearance in the High Court of Chancery, Dublin, on 2 October 1662, in a Bill brought on by John, Lord Bishop of Ardagh, the Plaintiff, and Richard as first of twelve Defendants, followed by John SHEPHERD and Frances his wife, Robert PERCIVAL and Mary his wife, Warner WESTENRA, Sir Robert NEWCOMEN and Dame Katherine his wife, Tymothy GRALEERE and Jane his wife, and Robert NEWCOMEN and Elizabeth his wife; Answers of WARBURTON, two SHEPARDs and Robert and Elizabeth NEWCOMEN, 13 October 1662; Answer of Sir Robert and Dame Katherine Newcomen, 7 November 1662; Messrs MORGAN, REYNELLS, SOUTHWELL, ROOKE and DAVIS (presiding) [Chancery Court, Bill Books, Findmypast].</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard WARBURTON was the second of two Defendants, with Alexander COSBY, in the Chancery Bill of Thomas CARRE, Esq, the Plaintiff, entered on 10 December 1667; Thomas POWER (presiding).</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard WARBURTON to James CLARKE, <i>"9 at night,"</i> 28 February 1669(-70?):</div><div><i>"Recites various circumstances concerning the appointment of the writer's brother to an office under H.R.H., the Duke of York, in relation to the postal and pacquet service between England and Ireland. Gives assurance of his said brother's faithfulness and loyalty. Asks his correspondent's good offices with H.R.H. and with the Duke of ORMOND, in relation to some pending proceedings as to the office aforesaid."</i> [TNA, MS Carte 54, fol 350 - Bodleian Library].</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard WARBURTON, the Plaintiff, entered his Chancery Bill on 27 July 1671, Sir Abraham YARNE(?), the Defendant; Answers of Def't 29 August and 21 November 1671; Jo' TEMPLE (presiding). </div><div>Sir Abraham YARME's cross-bill, entered 13 December 1672; Defendant WARBURTON's Answer, 25 March 1673.</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard WARBURTON, Plaintiff, entered his Chancery Bill, 24 October 1673, vs Sybilla DUNN, William L'ESTRANGE and Daniel DUNLANY, Defendants; Answer of all Def'ts 27 January 1673(-74); Answer of DUNN and DELANY, 22 May 1674; John USHER (presiding), by Comm. </div><div>Sybilla DUNN was the widow of Barnaby DUNN, and before him of Richard COSBY of Stradbally Hall; she was born about 1592-93, the eldest daughter of Sir Robert PIGOTT of Dysart, Queen's County, by his first wife Anne ST LEGER.</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard WARBURTON, first Defendant, with William L'ESTRANGE, in the Chancery Bill of Richard COOTE, Plaintiff, entered 6 November 1677; Rob't ORMSBY and Jno USHER (presiding); Answer of WARBURTON, 13 July 1678. </div><div>Richard WARBURTON's Bill (perhaps a cross-bill) as sole Plaintiff, entered 1 July 1678; Defendant COOTE's Answer 27 January 1678(-79); two Rejoinders, 19 August and 17 October 1679; Jno USHER and Rob't ORMSBY (presiding).</div><div>Richard WARBURTON's second cross-bill, entered 21 April 1680; Defendant Richard COOTE's Answer, 9 June 1680; Peter MARTYN and Rob't ORMSBY (presiding).</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard WARBERTON, Defendant in the Chancery Bill of Anthony FRENCH, Plaintiff, entered 22 November 1677; Thomas RYCHARD and Wm SCOTT (attorneys).</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard was High Sheriff of the King's County, 1691 [Journal of the County Kildare Archaeological Society, Volume VIII, 1915-17, by Thomas Ulick SADLIER]; recommended to be added to the list of Commissioners of Array for the Queen's County, about April 1691, with his son Richard Junior, and John SPRANGER, Stephen FITZGERALD, Alexander COSBY, Esq's, and Captain Thomas PRIOR ["The History of the Life and Reign of William-Henry, Prince of Nassau and Orange," by Walter HARRIS, Dublin, 1749, Appendix, Page lxxii]; M.P. for Ballyshannon, 1697-99 and 1703-13.</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard WARBURTON, Senior, of Garryhinch, Esq, was named in a deed of Mortgage by Lease and Release, dated 19 and 10 October 1709 [Memorial 704, Dublin Deeds Registry], together with his son and heir apparent Richard WARBURTON Junior, also of Garryhinch, Esq, and Elizabeth WARBURTON the wife of the said Richard WARBURTON Junior, by which their lands of Garryhinch alias Timbertowne, and other lands, were mortgaged to William WHITSHED of the City of Dublin, Esq, the mortgage also naming Richard WARBURTON of Dublin, Esquire, of the third party, the said lands mentioned to have been devised to the said Richard WARBURTON Senior and Junior by the Governor and Company for making Hollow Sword Blades in England, by an indenture dated 24 June 1709, for and during the natural lives of the said Richard WARBURTON of Dublin, and Richard and John WARBURTON the sons of the said Richard WARBURTON Junior.</div><div><br /></div><div>Richard died in February 1717.</div><div><br />
Richard was married, by Banns of Matrimony proclaimed at St Michan's parish church, Dublin, 3, 10 and 17 April 1656, to Judith SANDS, <i>"... and had their certificate"</i> [published register images on the www.irishgenealogy.ie web-site] - the marriage itself was not recorded in the register, and may have taken place elsewhere; she was a daughter of William SANDES, of Dublin, who it appears had been Clerk Assistant to the Parliament in Dublin from July to November 1634 (he is identified in a SANDES family pedigree as having been born in Cumberland in 1597, went to Ireland and lived in Carrigafoyle, County Kerry, died in 1668, and was married to Elizabeth FEARNLEY, who died in 1658).</div><div>
Richard and Judith had issue:<br />
1. Elizabeth WARBURTON, baptised at St Michan's parish church, Dublin, 8 April 1658.<br />
2. Richard WARBURTON, born about 1664. See [D] below.<br />
3. Susannah WARBURTON, born about 1675; her will, dated 1745, of Mountmellick, Queen's County, Widow [Diocesan and Prerogative Wills and Administrations Index]; she was married to Henry WARREN, of Grangebegg, County Kildare; they were named in the Marriage Settlements, dated 8 and 9 July 1724 [Memorial 28836, Book 46, Page 333], for their son and heir, Richard WARREN, to Mary PERCY, Spinster, the daughter of Henry PERCY of the City of Dublin, Esq, with a marriage portion of ₤3,000, and for which the Trustees included Richard WARBURTON Junior, of Garryhinch (probably her nephew), and Richard WARBURTON of the City of Dublin (perhaps her cousin); of Grangebegg, County Kildare, his will was proved 2 September 1723 [BETHAM], naming his wife Susanna, sons Richard, Maurice and George, cousin Henry son of Walter STEPHENS, Esq, and grand-daughter Susanna SANDS; they appear to have had issue:</div><div> a. Richard WARREN, eldest son; of Grangebegg, County Kildare, Esq, his will dated 2 February 1734-35, proved P.C.I., 12 February 1734-35, naming his wife Mary, and brothers George WARREN and Pigott SANDES [BETHAM]; he was married, by Settlements dated 8 and 9 July 1724, to Mary PERCY, Spinster, daughter of Henry PERCY of the City of Dublin, Esq [Memorial 18836, Book 16, Page 333]; they had issue, including:</div><div> i. William WARREN, named in the will of his uncle, Maurice WARREN, 1725.</div><div> b. Maurice WARREN; of the City of Dublin, Esq, his will, dated 24 June 1725, proved 22 November 1726 [BETHAM], naming his brothers Richard and George, his mother Susanna and father Henry, brothers-in-law Pigott SANDS and Rev George WARBURTON (and his wife Charity), niece Susanna SANDS, Aunt NUTTAL and her daughter Mary NUTTAL, nephew William WARREN son of his brother Richard, and cousin Frederick TRENCH.</div><div> c. George WARREN.</div><div> d. Susan WARREN; of the parish of Gilltown, County Kildare, Spinster, when she was married, by P.C.I. License dated 23 February 1716(-17?), to Pigott SANDES, of the parish of Tennyhinch, Queen's County, Esq [BETHAM]; with issue, including a daughter Susanna SANDS, named in the will of her grand-father, Henry WARREN, 1723, and of her uncle, Maurice WARREN, 1725 [BETHAM].<br />
4. Elizabeth WARBURTON; born about 1675; she was married to Frederick TRENCH of Garbally, and were ancestors of the Earls of Clancarty.<br />
5. Anne WARBURTON, born about 1680; she was married to the Very Rev John TRENCH, Dean of Raphoe, who died in 1725; they were ancestors of the Ashtown TRENCH family.<br />
6. Margaret WARBURTON, born about 1681; she was married, 29 April 1701, to Charles NUTTALL, of Bolybegg, County Kildare; he died on 11 February 1722-23, aged 50; his will, dated 9 November 1722, named as his executors Richard WARREN of Grnagebeg, County Kildare, and his brother Joseph NUTTAL, Of Dublin; they had issue, including:</div><div> a. Henry NUTTALL, the eldest son; he inherited the farm at Bolybeg.</div><div> b. Richard NUTTALL.</div><div> c. Joseph NUTTALL, of Dublin, Merchant; afterwards of Glasshosue, County Kildare; he died in November 1784 in County Kilkenny; he was married in 1746 to Elizabeth DIXIE of Drogheda; without surviving issue.</div><div> d. Anne NUTTALL; she was aried toJohn LYNDON, son of Rev Roger LYNDON, of Dublin.</div><div> e. Mary NUTTALL; named in her cousin Maurice WARREN's will, dated 24 June 1725 [BETHAM]; she was married to Rv Robert PINSENT.</div><div> f. Margaret NUTTALL; died in 1756, unmarried.<br />
<br />
Margaret was not the first WARBURTON to marry a Charles NUTTALL - and the earlier marriage may be another pointer to Richard WARBURTON Senior's origins, perhaps instead in Lancashire.<br />
Three generations earlier, Charles NUTTALL was married, by License of the Archdeaconry of Cheshire, dated 11 March 1625-26, to <i>"... Elizabeth WARBURTON, Parish of Bury, Lancashire, Spinster. Bondsman James KEY. At Bury or Haslingden, Lancashire"</i> ["Marriage Licenses granted within the Archdeaconry of Cheshire in the Diocese of Cheshire, 1624-1633," edited by William Fergusson IRVINE, The Record Society, 1909, at page 54].<br /><div style="text-align: center;">______________________________________________</div>
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<b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>GEORGE WARBURTON (GEN II).</u></span></i></b><br /><br />
[B] George WARBURTON, born about 1640; of Aughrim, County Galway, and Firmont, County Kildare; of Dublin, Gent, when he was examined in Dublin, 11 October 1664, by Sir John TEMPLE and others, under direction of the Earl of Ossory (Lord Deputy), <i>"... in respect to a conspiracy for the circulation of counterfeit pieces of eight in the kingdom of Ireland"</i> [The National Archives, CARTE MS 37, folio 683 - Bodleian Library, Oxon], it having involved <i>"... some intercepted correspondence addressed to George WARBURTON, one of the persons lately under examination here,"</i> 14 October 1647 [ditto, MS 33, folio 681, ditto]; his petition, <i>"... now Post Master,"</i> along with that of Captain Daniel GAHAN <i>"... the late Post Master,"</i> addressed to the Duke of Ormond, 14 October 1667 [ditto, MS 154, folio 152]; his <i>"... good conduct in his management of the Post Office in Dublin, under an agreement with Lord Arlington"</i> was certified by DAVYS to ORMONDE, 9 May 1668, his appointment having been <i>"... opposed by some persons in England"</i> [ditto, MS 36, folio 311].</div><div>George first appears in High Court of Chancery in Ireland Bill Books in 1668; on 7 May 1669, he entered his Bill in the Chancery Court, Dublin, with his wife Dorothy, as joint Plaintiffs, against Defendants William SANDES, William HAMILTON, William L'ESTRANGE, Richard WARBURTON, Alexander COSBY and Thomas L'ESTRANGE (they were the executors of Henry L'ESTRANGE, January 1665-66); he was mentioned twice more in 1669, then again in 1671, 1673 (3 times), 1675, 1677, 1678, 1681, 1682, 1683, 1690, 1692, 1693, 1700, 1701 (3), 1703 and 1704; he is also mentioned in High Court of the Exchequer of Ireland Bill Books, in 1674, 1676, 1684, 1685, 1686, 1689, 1694 (3), 1698 (2), and 1701. </div><div>George was granted a lease (with renewal for ever), dated 25 October 1698, from the Earl of Arran, of the Manor of Aughrim, for a term of three lives, being his three sons Richard, John and George [BETHAM's Abstract].</div><div>George was M.P. for Gowran, 1692-93; and first Member for the Borough of Portarlington, 1695-99 (his nephew Richard was the 2nd Member).</div><div><br /></div><div>George died on 14 November 1709.</div><div><br /></div><div>He was married to Dorothy L'ESTRANGE, daughter of Henry L'ESTRANGE of Moystown (see above); she was buried at St John's parish church, Dublin, 23 April 1716, as Mrs Dorithy WORBERTON, a Widow.</div><div><br /></div><div>George and Dorothy had issue:</div><div>
<br />1. Richard WARBURTON, born in Dublin, about 1673; he entered Trinity College, Dublin, Pensioner (tutor Mr NEWBURGH, Eton School), 22 September 1691, aged 17, born Dublin, Ll.D., Vern (speciali gratia), Vern 1719 [Alumni Dublinenses]; named as the eldest son in his father's lease, 1698; of Donneycarney, County Dublin; of the City of Dublin, Counsellor-at-Law, 22 April 1712, he and Nathaniel CASTLETON, Senior and Junior, were bound to Right Honourable Lady Letitia RUSSELL,<i> "... in </i><i>£</i><i>2000 for the payment and accounting for several sums of money,"</i> witnessed by Jonathan WINDER and Thomas COGHLAN [TNA, DR 37/2/Box 98/229 - not at Kew]; of Rathrumshane, 2nd M.P. for the Borough of Portarlington, 1715-27, and for Ballynakill, 1727-47 [SWANZY, 1908]; executor of the will of George WARBURTON, of Dublin, Esq, dated 29 June 1726, and proved P.C.I., 28 February 1731; his will, dated 30 July 1744, was proved P.C.I., 30 January 1746-47, mentioning his sister Elizabeth WARBURTON, cousin William WARBURTON of London, nephew George WARBURTON of Firmount, brother George WARBURTON, niece Anne HARMON otherwise WARBURTON, daughter of brother John WARBURTON and wife of Robert HARMON, brother Nathaniel CASTLETON and his son Alexander, nephews Richard and George WARBURTON, eldest and second sons of his brother George, and John, Henry, Thomas and Susannah, other children of his said brother George, and wife Anne [BETHAM's Abstract]; of the Middle Temple (although he does not appear in their Admissions Register), Esq, Bachelor, aged 24, when he was married, by License of the Faculty Office of the Archbishop of Canterbury in London, 19 April 1699, to Anne CASTLETON, of St Paul's Covent Garden, Middlesex, Spinster, aged 18, with the consent of her uncle and guardian Nathaniel CASTLETON, of the Middle Temple, Esq; at St Paul's Covent Garden [Harleian Society Journal, Volume 24, 1886, page 233]; of the City of Dublin, Widow, her will, dated 29 May 1753, was proved P.C.I., 21 July 1753, naming her late husband Richard, and her nephew Nathaniel CASTLETON of Hampstead near London, Esq [BETHAM]; they had no issue.</div><div>
<br />2. George WARBURTON; probably born about 1690; named as the third son in his father's lease, 1698 [BETHAM's Abstract]; admitted Trinity College, 1708; a Clerk in Holy Orders; of Parsonstown; Prebendary of Killaloe, 1719; Prebendary of Lackeen, 1722; Prebendary of Tomgraney, 17 October 1724; Prebendary of Cloneamery, Diocese of Ossory; he and his wife Charity were named in the will of his brother-in-law Maurice WARREN, dated 24 June 1725 and proved P.C.I. 22 November 1726 [BETHAM]; he was the Grantee of an Indenture of Lease, dated 1 April 1727 [Memorial 39214, Book 58, Page 211], made by William GREY, of Castletown, King's County, concerning the Town and Lands of Castletown, <i>"... for the natural lives of the said George WARBURTON partie to the Indenture, Richard WARBURTON his eldest son, and Charity WARBURTON alias WARREN his wife"</i>; he resigned his prebendary for the Vicarage of Birr (otherwise Parsonstown); he died at Birr, 27 March 1760; he was married to Charity WARREN, daughter of Henry WARREN of County Kildare; she was named as the third life for the term of her husband's lease, 1727; they had issue [BURKE, Landed Gentry of Ireland, 1847 - not yet corroborated from other sources]:</div><div> a. Richard WARBURTON, born in Tipperary, about 1723, eldest son; named as the second life for the term of his father's lease, 1727; named in his uncle Richard's will, 1744; Rector of Banagher. See [E] below.</div><div> b. George WARBURTON, second son; named in his uncle Richard's will, 1744.</div><div> c. John WARBURTON; named in his uncle Richard's will, 1744.</div><div> d. Henry WARBURTON; named in his uncle Richard's will, 1744; Ensign, 1st Regiment of Foot; he died intestate, with P.C.I. Administration grant dated 7 July 1760, to William ABBOTT, Principal Creditor, brothers Reverend Richard, Clerk, George, John and Thomas Esqs, and sister Susanna NETHERCOTT [BETHAM's Abstract].</div><div> e. Thomas WARBURTON; named in his uncle Richard's will, 1744; of Britannia; he died in 1762, without issue; his will, dated 24 February 1762, and proved 26 May 1762, named his aunt Elizabeth (possibly EWART? - but recorded as WARBURTON in a second abstract, so perhaps wife of his uncle John), brothers George and John WARBURTON, sister Susanna NETHERCOTT and her two children George and Elizabeth, cousins Anne and Susanna WARREN, and brother Rev Richard WARBURTON of Britannia, as sole executor [BETHAM's Abstract].</div><div> f. Susannah WARBURTON; named in her uncle Richard's will, 1744; married to NETHERCOTT; they had issue:</div><div> i. George NETHERCOTT; named in his uncle Thomas WARBURTON's will, 1762.</div><div> ii. Elizabeth NETHERCOTT; named in her uncle's will, ditto.<br />
<br />3. John WARBURTON; named as second son in his father's lease of the Manor of Aughrim from the Earl of Arran, dated 25 October 1698 [BETHAM's Abstract]; of Fairmount, County Kildare, 1738; he was married to Elizabeth WARREN, daughter of Maurice WARREN; they were named as second party to his brother Richard's Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 18 and 19 Apri1 1738 (see above), they being the Marriage Settlements for their own son George; they had issue:</div><div>
a. George WARBURTON, born about 1713; he possibly entered Trinity College, Dublin, Pensioner (no Tutor named), 1 July 1731, aged 18, son of ..., Dux, born County Kildare [Alumni Dublinenses], but appears not to have taken a degree; M.P. for County Galway, 1750-53 [H.I.P. - #2170]; mentioned in his uncle Richard's will, 1744; he died at his residence, Abbey Street, Dublin, on 9 March 1753; of Firmount, County Kildare, his will dated 5 March 1753, proved P.C.I. 20th same month, naming his wife Elizabeth, son Richard, daughter Mary, and brother-in-law Robert (possibly PA...? or perhaps NORMAN?) of Millicent, County Kildare [BETHAM's Abstract]; he was married at St Mary's parish church, Dublin, 12 April 1738, to Elizabeth TRENCH, daughter of Mary TRENCH, of Dublin, Widow (as mentioned in his uncle Richard's will, 1744), and by Marriage Settlements dated 19 April [Memorial 63343, Volume 89, Page 306], to which the additional parties were Richard WARBURTON of Donnecarny and his wife Anne (joint first party), John WARBURTON of Fairmont (brother of the said Richard) and his wife Elizabeth, parents of the groom (joint second party), and Mary FRENCH of the City of Dublin, widow of John FRENCH, Esq, deceased, parents of the bride (fourth party); she died at York, England, Intestate, her P.C.I Administration grant dated 29 July 1811, to her daughter Mary BURGH, only next-of-kin [BETHAM's Abstract]; they had issue:</div><div> i. Richard WARBURTON, baptised at St Audoen's parish church, Dublin, 22 November 1739; Captain in a Regiment of Foot; his will, dated 28 May 1762, proved P.C.I., 3 June 1767, Captain in Colonel POMROY's Regiment of Foot, and naming his mother Elizabeth, only sister Mary, his aunt Anne NORMAN, and kinsman William VAUGHAN [BETHAM's Abstract].</div><div> ii. Mary WARBURTON, born in Dublin, 6 June 1742, and baptised at St Mary's parish church, 29 June; married, by P.C.I. license dated 25 June 1768, to W0illiam BURGH, of Bert, County Kildare, M.P.; they were both names in her mother's P.C.I. Administration grant, 1811.</div><div> b. Anne WARBURTON; she was married to Robert HARMON; they were both named in her uncle Richard's will, 1744.<br />
<br />4. Judith WARBURTON; she was buried at St Nicholas Within, Dublin, 14 March 1685, daughter of George, Esq.<br />
<br />5. Ann WORBERTON, baptised at St John's parish church, Dublin, 19 January 1693, daughter of George and Dorithy.<br />
<br />6. Dorithy WORBERTON, baptised at St John's parish church, Dublin, 27 April 1696, daughter of George and Dorothy, at 15 days old; she was buried 29 December 1700, daughter of George WORBERTON, Esqr.<br />
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<b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>JOHN WARBURTON (GEN II).</u></span></i></b><br /><br />
[C] John WARBURTON, born about 1645; of the City of Dublin; one of the Six Clerks in Chancery, from 26 September 1669 until his resignation in 1700 ["The Families of FRENCH of Belturbet and NIXON of Fermanagh, and their descendants," by Rev Henry Biddall SWANZY, M.A., Dublin, 1908, page 34].</div><div>John was mentioned in High Court of Chancery Bill Books in 1669, 1671 (3 times), 1675, 1679 (4), 1681, 1685, 1692 (2), 1694, 1696, and 1697; ditto, Court of Exchequer, 1680 (2), 1681, 1688, 1691, 1698, and 1701.</div><div>John was named as a co-executor of the will, dated 25 April 1688, of his father-in-law Mathew FRENCH or FFRENCH (together with Mathew's wife Ellinore and son Mathew Junior - Mathew FRENCH Junior had, by his wife, Mary MEADE, one son and eleven daughters, of whom the ninth, Deborah FRENCH, became the wife of Rev John PIGOTT, elder brother of Emanuel PIGOTT, of Chetwynd, County Cork, whose third wife was Judith WARBURTON).</div><div>John was M.P. for Belturbet, 1692-93 and 1695-99.</div><div><br /></div><div>John made his will on 29 June 1703; it was proved P.C.I., 11 February 1703-04, naming his wife Mary, daughter Mary, and sons Richard and George WARBURTON [BETHAM].</div><div><br /></div><div>John was married, by Consistorial License, dated July 1672, to Mary FRENCH; she was the elder daughter of Mathew FRENCH, of the City of Dublin, and of Belturbet, County Cavan, Merchant, by his wife Ellinor (formerly JOHNSTON), the widow of Daniel DESMINIERES; Mary received aa hi marriage settlement of £500 sterling from her father; Mary had an additional bequest of £40 sterling in her father's will, 1688; of Dublin when she made her own will, dated 17 November 1727, and proved P.C.I., 12 September 1729, naming her son George WARBURTON, Master-in-Chancery, her son Richard (deceased), only daughter Mary WARBURTON, and nephews Mathew FRENCH of Ballyhubbock, Esq, and Humphrey FRENCH of Dublin, Alderman [BETHAM].</div><div><br /></div><div>John and Mary had issue:</div><div><br /></div><div>1. Richard WARBURTON, born about 1674; admitted Trinity College Dublin, as a Pensioner (Tutor Mr NEWBURGH, Eton School), 22 September 1691, aged 17, born Dublin, B.A. 1696, M.A. 1699 [Alumni Dublinenses]; he died unmarried, and was buried at St Michael's parish church, 6 February 1707-08; administration was granted to his mother Mary, 3 February 1707-08 [SWANZY, Op. Cit, page 34 et seq].</div><div><br /></div><div>2. Mathew WARBURTON, baptised at St Nicholas Within, Dublin, 19 January 1676; died young.</div><div><br /></div><div>3. George WARBURTON, baptised at St Nicholas Without, 20 May 1681; Master in Chancery, by patent dated 3 April 1712, and renewed by Geo.I, 12 January 1714; his will, dated 29 May 1726, and proved 26 February 1731, to be buried at Kentstown churchyard, County Meath; he died on 1 December 1730 [the year recorded on the irishheraldry.blogspot.com web-site], and was buried there, but the year date is unreadable on the M.I., as was his age (40 or 46 - but inevitably the latter); he was married by License dated 25 July 1720, to Hannah SMITH, of Dromenagh, County Fermanagh; they had issue, including daughters:</div><div> a. Hannah WARBURTON, born about 1720-21; eldest daughter; she died on 15 May 1733, and was buried at Kentstown Churchyard, aged 12 years [Journal for the Association for the Preservation of Memorials for the Dead in Ireland, 1911, page 608].</div><div> b. Mary WARBURTON; she died in February 1748; she was married, 19 February 1740, to Sir Quaile SOMERVILLE, 2nd Baronet, of Brownstown, County Meath; he died on 5 December 1772, having married secondly, 11 April 1755, to Sarah TOWERS, of Archerstown, County Meath [see the irishheraldry.blogspot.com web-site]; he had issue by his first wife, including:</div><div> i. James Quaile SOMERVILLE, born about 1641; the 3rd Baronet, of Somerville, County Meath; he died on 19 July 1797, and was buried in Kentstown Church, under a flat slab <i>"... near the flight of stairs leading down to the stove chamber"</i> [M.I., ditto, page 608]; he was married to Catherine CROFTON.</div><div> c. Catherine WARBURTON; she was buried with her father and elder sister (date not recorded, or unreadable, on the Monumental Inscription).</div><div><br /></div><div>4. John WARBURTON; buried at St Nicholas Within, 28 April 1687.</div><div><br /></div><div>5. Mary WARBURTON.</div><div><br /></div><div>6. Ann WARBURTON; buried at St Nicholas Within, 17 September 1678.</div><div>
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<b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>RICHARD WARBURTON (GEN III).</u></span></i></b><br /><br />
[D] Richard WARBURTON, born in King's County, about 1664; he entered Trinity College, Dublin, Pensioner (Tutor Mr ARCHIBALD), 9 July 1679, aged 15 [Alumni Dublinenses], but appears not to have proceeded to as degree; he was admitted to the Middle Temple, London, 8 May 1683, <i>"... son and heir of Richard WARBURTON of Garryhinch, King's County, Ireland, Esq"</i> [Admissions Register]; Minutes of Parliament (Middle Temple), 23 October 1691, <i>"...on the petitions of Messrs W. TRENCH and <b>R. WARBURTON</b>, alleging their hardships in Ireland, the suits against them for commons and other duties shall be staid till the first Parliament in Easter Term" </i>[Middle Temple Records, page 1403]; ditto, 15 April 1692, <i>"... the suits of Messrs W. TRENCH and <b>R. WARBURTON </b>for their commons and duties shall be proceeded in"</i> [page 1407]; ditto, 25 November 1692, <i>"... on Mr W. TRENCH's petition, all his vacations and assignments are remitted. His bond, and that of Mr <b>R. WARBURTON</b> shall be returned, as they have paid pensions and other duties and charges of suit"</i> [page 1412].</div><div>Richard was M.P. for the Borough of Portarlington, from 1692 until his death in 1715, as second Member to Daniel GAHAN (1692), Sir Joseph WILLIAMSON (August 1695), George WARBURTON (1695), Thomas CARTER (1703), Ephraim DAWSON (1713, and Richard WARBURTON (1715) - although this last entry may have resulted in the two of them swapping positions (see below).</div><div>Richard was High Sheriff of King's County, 1701; of Garryhinch, Junior, when named in Deeds dated 6 and 7 July 1713 [Memorial 43161]; in August 1714, on the death of Queen Anne, he stood for election as Knight of the Shire, with Dudley COSBY, as recorded by his son Pole COSBY (in his "Autobiography"), who identified Richard as being a son of his (Pole's) great-uncle WARBURTON (effectively identifying a L'ESTRANGE relationship).</div><div><br />
Richard WARBURTON, of Portnahinch, Esq, now the 1st Member for the Borough of Portarlington, attended his last House of Commons sitting on 22 December 1715, while his father was still living. The House was adjourned until 16 January next (1715-16), during which sitting it was:</div><div><i>"Ordered that Mr Speaker do issue his warrant to the clerk of the Crown, to make out a writ to the Sheriff of the Queen's County, for electing a Burgess, to serve in this Parliament, in the Room of Richard WARBURTON, deceased"</i> [Journals of the House of Commons of the Kingdom of Ireland, Volume VI, Page 154].</div><div>This session ended when the sitting on 8 March 1715 adjourned until Thursday 3 May next, 1716 [ditto, Page 221] - which establishes that the Irish Parliament did use the Julian Calendar.</div><div>Richard WARBURTON therefore died some time between 23 December 1715 and 15 January 1716 (Gregorian or modern day style).</div><div>In December 1763, another M.P. died in office - John PIGOTT, Member for the Borough of Banagher, King's County - the press notices of this death and the writ being issue for his replacement were 10 days apart, which may have been standard, and if so, Richard may have died before 5 January.</div><div><br />
Richard was married, by Settlements dated 9 January 1695, to Elizabeth PIGOTT, daughter of John PIGOTT of Rathkeale, County Limerick; they had issue:<br />
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1. Richard WARBURTON, born on 6 December 1696 [footnote to his entry in the Westminster Abbey Burial Register]; admitted to the Middle Temple, London, 25 June 1716, <i>"... son and heir of Richard WARBURTON of Garryhinch, King's County, Esq. Called 24 May 1723</i> [Admissions register]; Parliament of 24 January 1723-24, <i>"... Mr <b>R. WARBURTON</b>, upon payment of Duties, may have his bond"</i> [Middle Temple Records, page 195]; he was elected Knight of the Shire for Queen's County, 12 October 1729 (in the room of Dudley COSBY, defeating Pole COSBY, and after the withdrawal of St Leger GILBERT, and then of Sir John BYRNE); he thereby became the M.P. for the Queen's County, 1729-61; he was named in a number of PIGOTT family property deeds, 1727-43; he died at his apartments, Jermyn Street, London, 23 October 1771, and was buried on 29 October in the South Cloister of Westminster Abbey - <i>"The Funeral Book, which says that he died 23 October, also gives his age as 80, although he is said to have been born 6 December 1696. He had been many years M.P. for Queen's County. He died at his apartments in Jermyn Street, according to the Journals of the day, unmarried, having devised Garryhinch and his other estates to his fourth brother, Peter WARBURTON, Esq"</i> ["The Marriage, Baptismal and Burial Registers of the Collegiate Church or Abbey of St Peter, Westminster," by Joseph Lemual CHESTER, London, 1876, page 414].<br />
<br />
2. John WARBURTON; he was bequeathed £100 in the will of his maternal grandfather, John PIGOTT, 1716-17.<br />
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3. George WARBURTON. See [Y] below.<br />
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4. Peter WARBURTON, born at Timberton, King's County, about 1708.<br />
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5. William WARBURTON, born 24 December 1698; admitted to the Middle Temple, London, 11 October 1732, <i>"... fifth son of Richard WARBURTON of Garyhinge, Queen's County, Ireland, Esq. Called 1 June 1739"</i> [Admissions Register]; of London, April 1743, when named in an Irish property deed [Memorial 77291]; he died 7 June 1779; he was married to Barbara LYTTON, with issue.<br />
Probably the William WARBURTON of the City of London, deceased before 1792, when he was named as brother of Miss Alicia WARBURTON, a cousin of Rev Charles MONGAN. See below.<br />
<br />6. Judith WARBURTON, probably born in or before 1710; she was married, by Settlements dated 13 June 1727 [Memorial 35602, Volume 52, Page 630], and as his third wife, to Emanuel PIGOTT of Chetwynd, County Cork, the trustees being Lancelot SANDES of Kilcavan and Southwell PIGOTT of Cappard (joint second parties) and Richard WARBURTON of Dublin City and Richard WARBURTON of Garryhinch (joint third parties); they had issue.<br />
<br />7. Jane WARBURTON; she was married to George PIGOTT of Knapton, Queen's County, son of Emanuel PIGOTT of Chetwynd by his first wife; they had issue, including:<br />
a. Thomas PIGOTT; he was married in 1763 to his first cousin Priscilla CARDEN (see above).<br />
<br />? Alicia WARBURTON, not yet found attached to this family in any published pedigree; she was unmarried in 1792, when she was cited by "her cousin-german" Rev Charles MONGAN (later the Bishop of Cloyne - see below) as desiring him to change his surname to WARBURTON by Royal Warrant, perhaps to improve his prospects of promotion to the ecclesiastical status of Bishop.<br /><br />8. Gertrude WARBURTON, born about 1715, and if so, very shortly before her father's death; she was bequeathed £100 in the will of her maternal grandfather John PIGOTT, 1716-17; she was married to William CARDEN, of Lismore, Queen's County; they had issue:</div><div> a. Priscilla CARDEN; she was married, November 1763, to her cousin Thomas PIGOTT, the son and heir of George PIGOTT, of Knapton, Queen's County, by Gertrude WARBURTON.<br />
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<br />
[Y] George WARBURTON; late of Shaw's Court, Dublin; possibly of the High Court of Chancery; he was named in PIGOTT family deeds, 1735-38; he was married at St Peter and St Kevin, Dublin,2 December 1729, by P.C.I. License dated 1 December [BETHAM], to Jane Le HUNTE, daughter of Thomas (or Richard) Le HUNTE, of Artramont, County Wexford; she died at her house, Grafton Street, Dublin, 22 January 1772, the widow of George WARBURTON of Shaw's Court, Dublin, mother of John, and sister of the late Richard Le HUNTE, for many years the M.P. for Enniscorthy [Freemans Dublin Journal]; she was buried at St Paul's, Dublin, 25 January 1772; P.C.I. Will Index, 1772, of Dublin, Widow; they had issue, including a son:<br /><br /></div><div>John WARBURTON; mentioned in his mother's death notice, January 1772 [Freeman's Journal]; possibly the Captain who witnessed a Deed dated 18 April 1764 [Memorial 61164]; he served under General WOLFE at the Capture of Quebec; of Huntingdon Lodge, Knight of the Shire for the Queen's County, September 1784, when he inherited Garryhinch from his uncle Rev Peter WARBURTON [Saunders's News-Letter, 30 September]; M.P. for Queen's County, 1179-94; he died in 1806, of Garryhinch, Esq [P.C.I.Wills Index]; he was married at Newby Park, the seat of Hon. Mr Justice ROBINSON, a few days before 7 July 1774, to Martha BENSON, daughter of the late Richard BENSON of Dublin; they had issue:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>1. John WARBURTON; died young.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>2. Richard WARBURTON, born about 1778 (perhaps a few days before 7 October 1777), although he was said to have been born at Garryhinch in 1773 [a Family Tree on Ancestry.com]; of Garryhinch; High Sheriff of Queen's County, 1801; Deputy Lieutenant and J.P. for King's County; he took his family to the South of France during the 1820s; he is said to have died at Garryhinch, 15 July 1853 [Dublin Evening Mail, 25 July 1853], although he appears to have been buried with his recently deceased wife, in Nice, Alpes-Maritime, France, in the churchyard of Holy Trinity Anglican Church (established in 1820, under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of London, the present church built in 1860); a case was brought in the Court of Chancery, in 1855, by Richard WARBURTON, Administrator of Richard WARBURTON, deceased, to which the respondents were George, William, Peter, James, Robert, Thomas Kemmis, Anne and Mary WARBURTON, Martha WEHRUNG and Charles William WEHRUNG her husband, Susan CICOGNARA and Charles CICOGNARA her husband, and Richard WARBURTON an infant, concerning the affairs of Richard WARBURTON, late of Garryhinch, Esq, deceased [Saunders News-Letter, 29 May 1855].</div><div>Richard was married in May 1800, to Anne KEMMIS, daughter of Thomas KEMMIS of Kildare Street, Dublin (the settlements were dated 10 May 1800); she died at Nice, France, 29 August 1852, aged 76 [Freeman's Journal (Dublin), 8 September], and was buried at the Holy Trinity Anglican churchyard, Nice; they had issue:</div><div> a. John WARBURTON, born about 1801-02; of Garryhinch; High Sheriff of Queen's County, 1829; Church Warden, Cloneyhurke Parish, April 1832, when he was mentioned in a report of the death threat against his father, in connection with collection of the Church cess; he was killed in a duel in Paris, December 1839, eldest son [Dublin Morning Register, 26 December].</div><div> b. Thomas WARBURTON, born about 1802-03; probably the Master WARBURTON who died in late November 1818, <i>"... at Mr BURROWES' school, Eniskillen, after a few hours illness... second son of Richard WARBURTON of Garryhinch, Esq"</i> [Carlow Morning Post, 7 December].</div><div> c. Richard WARBURTON, born in March 1804. See [***] next below.</div><div> d. George WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, about 1805; mentioned in his brother James's admission as Cadet, Hon East India Company Service, 1829, and for his brother Robert, June 1829; he arrived in Australia on the ship "Hannah Maria," from London 6 May 1853, bound for Melbourne, with goods, purchased in Paris, worth over 1,000 pounds, calling in at Port Adelaide on 9 September, but she ran aground at Lacepede Bay, near Cape Jaffa, on 10 September; he engaged in litigation against the crew of the "Hannah Maria," and with the keeper of the bonded stores in Port Adelaide, over his cargo; he was granted a Storekeeper's License, as a Merchant, Grenfell Street, Adelaide, June 1854 [S.A. register (Adelaide), 13 June]; Proprietor, Wine, Spirit and General Store, Grenfell Street, Adelaide, October 1854, when he advertised the sale of <i>"... a Varied assortment of Goods from the first Manufacturers of France, consisting of Silks, Gauzes, Cashmeres, Velvets..."</i> [S.A. register, 21 October]; first Insolvency Notice, February 1855 [S.A. Register, 16 February]; hearing adjourned until 30 May 1855 [Adelaide Observer, 28 April]; Audit Meeting, 1 October [Adelaide Observer, 8 September]; Dividend Meeting, 5 November [Adelaide Observer, 13 October]; he very soon after moved to Sydney; District Registrar for Births, Deaths and Marriages, District of Paddington (Sydney), 28 February 1856 [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 29 February]; appointed Enumerator, 1861 Census, for Paddington [Empire (Sydney), 6 March 1861]; George was at Paddington, D.R. (District Registrar), in 1863 [so named in his brother Richard's death notice, Sydney Mail, 25 April 1863]; he was appointed District Registrar (B.D. & M.'s) for Redfern and Botany, 3 July 1863 [S.M.H., 4 July]; he died at his residence, Cleveland Street, Redfern, 30 October 1865, aged 61 [S.M.H., 1 November], Registered #1858, of Cleveland Street, Chippendale, of Carcinoma (12 months), parents Richard WARBURTON and Ann KEMMIS, informed by his daughter Mary A. WARBURTON, of the same address, [Transcript of Statutory Deaths Registration]; a funeral notice was inserted in the S.M.H., 3 May, by his brothers-in-law Anthony C. DONLAN (sic), Charles DEVINE, Christopher J. McCOFFREY and John ENGLISH; he was buried at St Thomas's Catholic Churchyard, Petersham (exhumed in 1923 to enable widening of the Rail Corridor, and re-interred at Rookwood, Mortuary 2, Section 13, Lewisham (Petersham) Lots, Plot 345).</div><div>George was married in Dublin to Catherine (Jeanette) TOOLE or O'TOOLE - his death registration recorded this event in Dublin, "about 1843," which is at odds with the mention in his widow's death registration that she was married at age 20, which would suggest the year was about 1837 (if aged 65 at death, as in two of her death notices), or in 1839 (if aged 62 at death, as in two more of her death notices); Catherine died at the residence of her son-in-law (A.C. DONELAN), Glen View, Liverpool Street, Darlinghurst (East Sydney), 18 February 1882 [Registered at Sydney, #439, aged 65, parents John O'TOOLE and Ann FOSTER - issue recorded as <i>"... one male living, one daughter deceased"</i>], or aged 62, <i>"... niece of Lady CARDEN, sister-in-law of Sir Frederick STODEN (sic - STOVIN), cousin of Lord TALBOT of Malahide, and loved mother of C.J.S. WARBURTON of Redfern and Mrs A.C. DONELAN of Glen View"</i> [Freeman's Journal, Sydney, 4 March], and as <i>"... Catherine, relict of the late George WARBURTON, of Redfern"</i> [S.M.H., 20 February]; she was buried on 20 February, at R.C. Cemetery, Petersham, with her husband (and re-interred with him at Rookwood); they had issue:</div><div> i. Christopher John WARBURTON, born about 1838; mentioned in his father's Court action in Port Adelaide in November 1854, against Mr John NEWMAN, as a witness, despite his evidently still being a minor [Adelaide Times, 24 November]; he was appointed as Tide-waiter, Department of Customs, Sydney, April 1864 [S.M.H., 20 April]; he succeeded his late father as District Registrar for B.D. & M.'s, for Redfern and Botany, November 1865 [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 7 November], but he was not mentioned in his father's death registration; of 82 Pitt Street, Redfern, February 1882, when he informed his mother's death registration, and witnessed her burial at Petersham, by Rev YOUNG, Church of Rome; Christopher died at his residence, 82 Pitt Street, Redfern, 2 May 1886, aged 47 [S.M.H., 3 May], parents George and Catherine [Index to Statutory Death Registrations] and was buried at Waverley Cemetery, R.C. Section 12, Ordinary, Plot 497; he was married in 1870 to Rosetta Grahame DEVINE, eldest daughter of John DEVINE; she died 26 March 1910, aged 59, and was buried with Christopher at Waverley Cemetery; her funeral notice mentioned her as the sister of Mrs John ENGLISH, and of John, Thomas and Charles DEVINE.</div><div> ii. Mary Anne WARBURTON, born about 1847; she was residing with her parents when she informed her father's death registration, 1865; she died at Randwick, 16 May 1922, #7739 (parents George and Catherine), aged 74, <i>"... dearly beloved mother of Reginald DONLON, of Eglantine, Shakespeare Street, Campsie"</i> [S.M.H., 18 May], and was buried at Rookwood Necropolis, Mortuary 1 (R.C.), Section A, Plot 729, with three of her children:</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEz0v5PcQq3Pg2vZFJNOMrg1BN6KIj1Mls7ZaqP8xAsl1E40H4jgr7ReAvn1ToLuhosUrX7D8wMxnObj2QlpiKUra-0depxKE30tp0d3CEE8JNQQchIgZPyE2vOTaC-_N9Z7wgDZ9qhaSMU-RJIDbBo7E8oCRL2wKfUojIaWApMJ4TStMdK-UPEsco4g/s640/237222343_9422ce96-965a-400d-875f-e5015ba3c19e.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="427" data-original-width="640" height="214" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEz0v5PcQq3Pg2vZFJNOMrg1BN6KIj1Mls7ZaqP8xAsl1E40H4jgr7ReAvn1ToLuhosUrX7D8wMxnObj2QlpiKUra-0depxKE30tp0d3CEE8JNQQchIgZPyE2vOTaC-_N9Z7wgDZ9qhaSMU-RJIDbBo7E8oCRL2wKfUojIaWApMJ4TStMdK-UPEsco4g/s320/237222343_9422ce96-965a-400d-875f-e5015ba3c19e.jpeg" width="320" /></a></div><br /><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgUtbcw_juyBNhvkET3yO_ASahC4TMdWijbF5LCUyfPBKAqtXxKKjrqbu1xERb0yok606Q_ipHutP0HzhqeEKRFuxxjTw9IjjKobFtOGNEGTJlhr5T_qqWZE_7p--Jj34YMePKtlBovTjgNPewWZ-0ErJHdvuyjTevU7_ss1GeOo5lFVKbE1EfzBOpWRg/s640/237222343_00751530-7060-4251-bd3b-7977ba90dc35.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="640" data-original-width="427" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgUtbcw_juyBNhvkET3yO_ASahC4TMdWijbF5LCUyfPBKAqtXxKKjrqbu1xERb0yok606Q_ipHutP0HzhqeEKRFuxxjTw9IjjKobFtOGNEGTJlhr5T_qqWZE_7p--Jj34YMePKtlBovTjgNPewWZ-0ErJHdvuyjTevU7_ss1GeOo5lFVKbE1EfzBOpWRg/s320/237222343_00751530-7060-4251-bd3b-7977ba90dc35.jpeg" width="214" /></a></div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div>Mary Anne was married at Sydney, 22 October 1870 #1015, to Anthony Charles DONELAN, H.M. Customs; they had issue two sons and four daughters, including Adeline Clarice DONELAN (died 20 October 1882, aged 1, and was buried with her WARBURTON grand-parents).</div><div> iii. ? another daughter, mentioned as deceased in her mother's death Registration, February 1882.</div><div> e. William WARBURTON, born in Dublin, 22 October 1806, the fourth son; admitted Trinity College, Dublin, 1827; B.D.; D.D., 1853; named in the Chancery Case, 1855, concerning the affairs of the late Richard WARBURTON, of Garryhinch; Doctor of Divinity; Dean of Elphin, 1848-98; he died at Birchwood, Chiselhurst, London, 3 May 1900, aged 93 years; he was married firstly, at Leamington Spa, 18 May 1835, to Emma Margaret STOVIN, youngest daughter of the late Lieutenant-Colonel Richard STOVIN by his wife Frances ACLAND [the peerage.com; Waterford Mail, 25 April]; she died at the Deanery, Strokestown, County Roscommon, 4 January 1876, aged 68 years, the death informed by her husband William, the Dean; they had issue:</div><div> i. Richard Stovin WARBURTON, born 28 February 1836; died 1924.</div><div> ii. Joseph William WARBURTON, born 2 April 1837; died 1914.</div><div> iii. Frederick Tynte WARBURTON, born 22 March 1839.</div><div> iv. Emma Lydia WARBURTON, born about 1842; she died 2 June 1864, and was buried in Florence, Tuscany, aged about 21 years, a Spinster; she was recorded in a later probate grant, dated in Dublin, 20 March 1902, as being late of the Deanery, Elphin, County Roscommon, to Charles J. WALLACE, Esq, effects £671 10s halfpenny (previous grant 29 March 1901).</div><div>William was married secondly, at Bayonne, France, 25 March 1878, to Emily Elizabeth BLAND, eldest daughter of the late Loftus H. BLAND, of Blandsfort, Queen's County [Southern Times and Dorset County Herald, 30 March]; she died at Malvern, Worcestershire, 21 July 1901.</div><div> f. Peter WARBURTON, born in 1807; living in 1855.</div><div> g. Henry WARBURTON, born in 1809; he died at 19 Brighton Square, Rathmines, 28 August 1883, Married, aged 74 years, J.P. for King's County, of acute bronchitis (4 days), informed by H.M. WARBURTON, same address, present at the death, and was buried in his own plot at Mount Jerome Cemetery, Dublin (with a Monumental Inscription), <i>"... formerly of Cloneyhurke, in the King's County" </i>[M.I.]; he was married at Cloneyhurke Church, Parish of Geashill, King's County, 5 May 1845, to Elizabeth Susan HUME, of Kilmalogue, a daughter of John HUME, Surgeon [irishgenealgy.ie web-site]; she died at 19 Brighton Square, Dublin South, 19 March 1892, aged 71, widow of Gentleman, as informed by her daughter Henrietta M.; she was buried with her husband [M.I.]; they had issue:</div></div><div> i. Sarah Anne WARBURTON, born in the King's County, about 1855; she was at Glasthule Road, Kingstown, County Dublin, 1911 Census, aged 70, unmarried, an Unsectarian Protestant, Hospital Sister, Unmarried, with her sister Elizabeth Susan, and Mary BATEMAN, aged 78, a Visitor and a Widow (possibly related to them?); she died at 19 Brighton Square, Rathmines, 24 June 1940, aged 84, and was buried in the family plot at Mount Jerome Cemetery.<div> ii. Anna Louisa WARBURTON, born about 1850; at Glasthule Road, Kingstown, County Dublin, 1901 Census, aged 62, Unmarried, Income from land, a Boarder; she died at 7 Sandycove Avenue, Kingstown, County Dublin, 23 February 1917, Spinster, aged 66, of Independent means, of Influenza, informed by E.S. WARBURTON, Sister, of Beulah, Glenageary; she was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery [M.I.].</div> iii. Harriett Margaret WARBURTON; third daughter, died 29 August 1887 [M.I.].<div> iv. Elizabeth Susan WARBURTON, born about 1851; living with her sister Sarah Anne, 1901 Census, age recorded as 80, also a Hospital Sister and unmarried; she died at Beulah, Glengarry Hill, Rathdown, (Kingston No 2), 5 November 1918, Spinster, aged 66, Lady Companion, of a cerebral haemorrhage, informed by Louisa JACKSON, same address; she was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetry [M.I.].</div><div> v. Martha WARBURTON, born about 1859; she died on 24 March 1908, late of 28 Glasthule Road, Kingstown, aged 48 years, Hospital Nurse, informed by the Hospital.</div><div> vi. Henry Hume WARBURTON, born Ireland, 21 May 1861; informed his father's death, 1883; emigrated to Canada in 1885; he died at Vancouver, 31 January 1903; he was married in 1891 to Agnes E. POTTS, with issue a daughter Beatrice (born B.C., 1892) and a son Henry Egerton WARBURTON (born 1893).</div><div> vii. Henrietta Maria WARBURTON, born at Cloneyhurke, 10 December 1866, the seventh daughter; she died at Rest for the Dying Hospital, Dublin City, 5 October 1931, Spinster, aged 65, of 19 Brighton Square, Nurse, of Liver Cancer; she was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery [M.I.].</div><div> h. James (Kemmis) WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, 25 November 1810, and baptised at Coolbanagher parish church, Queens County, 8 December, as Certified in his Cadetship Admission Papers, May 1829, Hon East India Company Service; mentioned in his brother Robert's will, May 1861, as then living in Prince Edward Island; a Bachelor, when he was married on Prince Edward Island, Canada, 19 July 1837, to Martha Compton GREEN, Spinster, witnessed by Harry GREEN and Arthur COMPTON; they had issue, including:</div><div> i. Mary Elizabeth WARBURTON; mentioned in her uncle Robert WARBURTON's will, May 1861, with a bequest of £100.</div><div> ii. George Arthur WARBURTON, born at Prince Edward Island, Canada, 28 March 1850; Indian Medical Department, of Shillong, near Rawalpindi, Assam, when he was married, 8 October 1881, to Augusta Maud COMBER; they had issue.</div><div> j. Robert WARBURTON, baptised at Coolbanagher parish church, Queen's County, 8 March 1812, <i>"... ninth son of Richard WARBURTON, Esq, of Garryhinch, by Anne his wife"</i> [Cadet Admission papers, Hon East India Company, Findmypast.co.uk]; College of Angers, South France (probably at Boulogne, under Rev Dr TOMKINS); attended Addiscombe House, 1828-31; nominated in August 1829 to be a Pupil, Hon East India Company Artillery and Engineer Seminary; Bengal Artillery, 1830; Afghan Campaign, 1839-42; Lieutenant-Colonel, H.M.'s Regiment of Bengal Artillery, 1861; he died at Peshawar, North West Province (Punjab), 10 November 1863; his will, dated 8 May 1861, was proved in the High Court of Judicature, Fort William, 5 March 1864, by his executors, Robert WARBURTON Junior, <i>"... commonly called"</i> his son, and Arthur WARBURTON his brother, leaving his household goods and rents of his houses in India to Shah Jahan Begum,<i> "... whom I consider to be my wife, and to have been so since 1840, as a small mark of my regard for her, as a brave and affectionate woman, and a true and faithful one, in times when these qualities were not very common - also a slight compensation to a woman of high family and connexions, becoming an outcast from her country, family and relatives for me, when there was no absolute necessity for her doing so,"</i> and also mentioning his brother James WARBURTON <i>"... now in Prince Edward Island"</i> [India Office, Wills and Probates, Findmypast.co.uk]; he is said to have been married in November 1849 to <i>"... a noble Afghan Lady, a niece of Amir Dost Mohammed"</i> [their son Robert's autobiography, "Eighteen Years in the Khyber, 1879-1898," London, 1900, Pakistan reprint, 1970, Chapter 1]; they had issue, including:</div><div> i. Robert WARBURTON, born at Ghilzai Fort, Afghanistan, 11 July 1842, and baptised at Gwalier, Bengal Presidency, 10 June 1849, son of Robert WARBURTON, Officer of Artillery, his mother a native [India Office, Baptisms, Findmypast.co.uk]; named in his father's will, May 1861, as then being <i>"... a Cadet in the Military College of Woolwich"</i>; residing in the Great Southern Hotel, Town of Calcutta, March 1864, Lieutenant, Bengal Regiment of Artillery, when he proved his father's will.</div><div> k. Anne WARBURTON, born in Ireland, about 1811; aged 47, unmarried, with her brother Arthur, 1861 Census; aged 57, unmarried, with her brother Arthur, 1871 Census.</div><div> l. Arthur WARBURTON, born in Ireland, about 1812; he was at 2 Paradise Place, Lambeth St Mary, 1851 Census, aged 36, Office of Inland Revenue, with Mary J. WITHERS, his wife's sister; he was at 3 Marlboro Villas, Lambeth, Surrey, 1861 Census, aged 46, Inspector Stamps (?), with his wife Hannah, daughter Ann H. and sister Anne (unmarried, aged 47, born Ireland); he was at 1 Park Lane, Croydon, Surrey, 1871 Census, aged 56, Instructor, Inland Revenue, with wife, two sons and sister Anne; he died at 14 Brighton Square, Rathmines, Dublin South, 23 February 1897, a widower, aged 84, Retired Civil Servant, of senile debility and apoplexy, informed by A.J. WARBURTON, present at the death, same address; he was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery, in his brother Henry's grave; he was married at Kensington, St Mary Abbot, on 27 July 1841 [Dublin Monitor, 29 July], by allegations dated 19 July 1841, to Hannah WITHERS, both aged 21 and upwards, the second daughter of the Rev E. WITHERS, of Phillimore Place, Kensington; they had issue:</div><div> i. Arthur N. WARBURTON, born at Lambeth, Surrey, about 1850; aged 20, Scholar, with his parents, 1871 Census.</div><div> ii. Charles G. WARBURTON, born at Monmouth, Wales, about 1854, with his parents, 1871 Census.</div><div> m. Thomas Kemmis WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, about 1817, the youngest son; he emigrated to New Zealand in 1840-41; he and his newly married wife arrived in Nelson, 18 May 1842, on the Schooner "Blossom" from Port Nicholson [Nelson Examiner, 21 May]; Landlord of the Commercial Hotel and Billiard Room, Bridge Street, Nelson, December 1842; he and his wife, withj three children, arrived in Wellington from Nelson, 19 February 1847, on the Barque "Elera," (en route from England) [N.Z. Spectator, 20 February]; Merchant, and Importer of Fancy Goods, at Lambton Quay, Wellington, March 1849; ditto, 1872; in January 1898, he and his wife were reported [Daily Telegraph, Sydney, 13 January], as having been among passengers for Europe by M.M. Steamer <i>Polynesian</i> on 29 December, <i>"... proposing to spend the remainder of their days in the south of France"</i>; they clearly returned to Wellington; he died at Wellington Terrace, 8 September 1907, aged 89, <i>"... the youngest and last surviving son of Richard WARBURTON of Garryhinch, near Portarlington"</i> [N.Z. Times, 11 September], and was buried at Korari Cemetery [M.I.]; he was married at St Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Wellington, in April 1842 (Registered 1842 #1), to Naomi HUNT; she died at her residence, 102 The Terrace, Wellington, 16 March 1914, aged 89 [Evening Post, 18 March], and was buried at Korari Cemetery [M.I.]; they had issue:</div><div> i. James Kemmis WARBURTON, born in Nelson, shortly after May 1842; early education in Wellington, then "back Home," returning to N.Z. in 1863 [Obituary, Manawatu Standard, 3 July 1923]; Auditor and Controller-General, N.Z.; he died in Wellington, 30 June 1923, aged 81, and was buried with his parents [M.I.]; unmarried.</div> ii. Anne Elizabeth WARBURTON, born in Nelson, 1843, the second child living February 1847; she died on 18 August 1915, and was buried with her grandparents in the churchyard of Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Nice, Alpes-Maritime, France.</div><div> iii. Mary Carden WARBURTON, the third child living in February 1847; living in Nice, 1923, and unmarried [her brother James's obituary]; she died in Purley, Surrey, 21 September 1929.</div><div><div> iv. Arthur WARBURTON, born in N.Z., 1848, youngest son; he died 27 June 1930; he was married on 15 August 1879, to Clara Mary LUCENA, eldest daughter of William Lancaster LUCENA, of Pigeon Bush, Featherstone [N.Z. Mail, 23 August]; she died on 30 August 1937, aged 76; they had issue, including Arthur Lucene (born 1880), Richard (1882), George (1883), Violet (1885), Gerald Egerton (1890-1956) and Rollo (1902).</div><div> v. Martha Lydia WARBURTON, born in N.Z., 13 November 1852, the third daughter; she died on 4 July 1944; she was married at St Paul's Cathedral, Wellington, 16 February 1876, to Robert William KANE [N.Z. Mail, 26 February]; they had issue, including Lilian Maude (1877) and Mary (1878).</div><div> vi. Naomi Lavinia WARBURTON, born N.Z., 5 November 1855; she died at Wellington Terrace, 15 August 1906 [N.Z. Times, 18 August], and was buried at Karori Cemetery [M.I.].</div><div> n. Martha WARBURTON; second daughter, was married at Bonn, Switzerland, April or May 1850, to Charles Guillaume WEHRUNG, of Bienne [Freeman's Journal (Dublin), 9 May 1850].</div><div> p. Susan WARBURTON; fourth daughter of the late Richard WARBURTON, she was married at the British Embassy, Naples, late 1851, to Lieutenant Carlo CICORRARA, of the 13th Piedmontese Light Infantry [Dublin Evening Mail, 4 January 1852]; she died at Bergamo, Italy, 5 April 1891, "... wife of Major CICOGNARA, and sister of the late Richard WARBURTON, Esq, of Garryhinch, King's County" [Irish Times, 13 April].</div><div><span style="text-align: center;"> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</span></div><div>3. Peter WARBURTON; Major in the Army; he died in 1827; he was married by a Deed of Settlement dated 1807 [Memorial 201748], to Elizabeth MALONE, daughter of Edmond MALONE; she was probably lodging at No 2 York Place, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, 1851 Census, aged 60, born Ireland, with her two younger daughters; they had issue:</div><div> a. John WARBURTON.</div><div> b. Peter WARBURTON; he died in 1808.</div><div> c. Anne WARBURTON.</div><div> d. Martha WARBURTON, probably born in Ireland, about 1822; aged 28, with her mother, 1851 Census; boarding at 2 Cambridge Road, Willesdon, Msx, 1881 Census, aged 59, with her sister Elizabeth</div><div> e. Elizabeth WARBURTON, probably born in Ireland, about 1826; aged 24, with her mother, 1851 Census; aged 54, with her sister, 1881 Census.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>4. Martha WARBURTON; she was married to William Augustus Le HUNTE, of Artramont.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>[***] Richard WARBURTON, born in March 1804; of Garryhinch; <i>"... 88th Regiment of Foot, To be Ensigns... Richard WARBURTON, Gent, from the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich. Dated 8 April 1825"</i> [London Gazette, Part 1, 1825, Page 652]; Ensign Richard WARBURTON, to be Lieutenant, by purchase, vice BULLER, 88th Regiment of Foot, dated 4 May 1826 [Edinburgh Gazette, 23-26 May]; Lieutenant (3rd in list of 14), 88th Regiment of Foot (or Connaught Rangers), 1833, Rank in Regiment 20 May 1826, Rank in Army 27 May 1822 [War Office List, 1833]; Captain (3rd in list of 10), 88th Regiment, Rank in Regiment, 11 November 1836, Rank in Army 5 July 1833 [War Office Lists, 1839 and 1840]; Deputy Lieutenant and J.P.; High Sheriff of the King's County, 1845, and of the Queen's County, 1849; at Hesketh Cause???, Newton Abbot, Devon, 1861 Census, aged 57, Landed Proprietor, born Ireland, with wife Mary E., aged 43, born Lancashire, and daughters Kate, Elinor and Jessie.</div><div>Richard WARBURTON, Esq, D.L., died at Garryhinch, 15 December 1862 [Dublin Evening Mail, 18 December] (although some reports suggest this event may have occurred in Firenze in Tuscany) -another notice appeared in Sydney, <i>"... at Garryhinch, Richard WARBURTON, Esq, Deputy Lieutenant of the King's and Queen's Counties, Ireland, formerly Captain of the 88th Regiment, and brother to George WARBURTON, Esq, D.R. (District Registrar), Paddington</i>" [Sydney Morning Herald, 23 April 1863]; Richard's executors, Mrs Mary Ann KELLY and the Very Rev William WARBURTON, were named in a Chancery Decree, July 1865, concerning <i>"... the creditors and residuary legatees of Richard WARBURTON, late of Garryhinch, in the King's County, Esq, deceased</i>" [King's County Chronicle, 5 July].</div><div>Richard was married, in Clonbullock church, 6 November 1844, to Mary Eleanor KELLY [Dublin Weekly Nation, 16 November], daughter of Lieutenant Colonel KELLY, of Millbrook, King's County (by settlements dated 5 October 1844); she died on 14 November 1862, probably at Garryhinch (ditto Florence in Tuscany?), and was mentioned in the subsequent death notice of her husband, occurring <i>"... only a few weeks since it was our painful task to announce the death of his excellent lady"</i> [Dublin Evening Mail, 22 December].</div><div>They had issue:</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>1. Richard WARBURTON, born 18 March 1846 (or 1849?); as a minor, he was named in a Chancery Edict, with his seven younger surviving siblings, July 1865 [King's County Chronicle, 5 July]; Deputy Lieutenant and J.P., of Garryhinch; he was at Garryhinch, 1901 Census, aged 55, D.L.and J.P., with his second wife Bridget Mary and daughter Olga Victoria; at Garryhinch, 1911 census, aged 65, with wife and four children; he died at Cloneyhurke House, 27 May 1921, aged 67, Gent, a Widower; he was married firstly, by special license, at Timoney Park, parish of Corbally, County Tipperary, 18 July 1867, to Georgina Wilhelmina Henrietta HUTCHINSON, daughter of William H. HUTCHINSON, of Timoney Park, Esq, deceased; she died at Garryhinch, 14 August 1891, aged 45 years; they had issue, including:</div><div> a. Mary Anne WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, 7 November 1871; she died there, 13 November 1871, aged 6 days. </div><div> b. Jessie Georgina Hutchinson WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, 25 September 1873; she was a minor, spinster, of 24 Crosthwaight Park West, when she was married at Mariner's Church, Kingstown, County Dublin, 3 January 1894, to Herbert Goldsmith WHITON, full age, bachelor, Bank Clerk, of 2 Charlemont Terrace, son of Frederick A. WHITTON, Accountant.</div><div> c. Richard Hutchinson Dutton John WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, 30 September 1877.</div><div>Richard, a Widower (of 38 days), was married secondly, at the R.C. Chapel, Portarlington, 22 September 1891, to Bridget Mary McNAMARA, Housekeeper at Garryhinch, daughter of John McNAMARA, Farmer; she was aged 28, born Queen's County, with her husband and child, 1901 Census; aged 38, ditto, 1911 Census, with Richard and four children; she died at Portarlington, 28 September 1915, aged 43, Married, Housekeeper.</div><div>By her, Richard had further issue:</div><div> d. Olga Victoria WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, 24 January 1901; aged 2 months, 1901 Census; aged 9, with her parents, 1911 Census.</div><div> e. Irene WARBURTON, born King's County, about 1901; aged 5, Scholar, with her parents, 1911 Census.</div><div> f. Vera Jane WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, 31 August 1905.</div><div> g. Violet Lucinda WARBURTON, born at Garryhich, April 1908 (day obscured in register image); aged 2, with her parents, 1911 Census.</div><div> h. Richard Haskell WARBURTON, born King's County, 1910; aged 9 months, 1911 Census; as Richard Henry Haskell, a Clerk in Holy Orders, of Moyne Rectory, Ballinglen, County Wicklow, when he was married at St Andrew's church, Malahide, County Dublin, 24 April 1840, to Enid May HUGHES, of 6 Castle terrace, Malahide, daughter of William Jack HUGHES, Sergeant, R.I.C.</div><div><br /></div><div> (TO BE CONTINUED).</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>2. A daughter, born at Millgrove, the seat of Lt.-Col KELLY, 15 April 1847 [Tipperary Indicator, 21 April].</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>3. Catherine Janette WARBURTON, born on 3 October 1849 [Dublin Evening Mail, 5 October]; as Kate, aged 10, with her parents, Devon, 1861 Census; second named sibling, a minor, July 1865; a minor, when she was married firstly, at Monkstown church, Dublin, 11 July 1870, to Charles Lockhart HAMILTON, Esq, 72nd Highlanders - one of the witnesses was William KEMMIS; she was married secondly to Crosbie BARTON.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>4. Elinor Mary Ann WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, November 1850 [Cork Examiner, 25 November]; aged 10, with her parents, Devon, 1861 Census; third named sibling, July 1865; as Eleanor, of Garryhinch, full age, spinster, she was married at Cloneyhurke church, Mountmellick, 22 June 1875, to James Hill POE, of Belfast, Lieutenant, 94th Regiment, son of John J. POE, Gent.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>5. Jessie Isabelle WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, 10 February 1852 [Dublin Evening Mail, 13 February]; aged 9, with her parents, Devon, 1861 Census, born in Ireland; fourth named sibling, July 1865; she was married at St James's, Piccadilly, 15 September 1896, to the Right Honorable Justice Dodgson Hamilton MADDEN, of Nutley, County Dublin.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>6. Frances Sophia WARBURTON, born 26 June 1855 [Armagh Guardian, 29 June]; fifth named sibling, July 1865; she died at Stonehouse, Stillorgan Road, Dundrum, 3 September 1931, aged 76, Widow, Gentlewoman, the death informed by R.A. OLPHERT, same address, present at the death; she was a spinster, of 11 Longford Terrace, Monkstown, when she was married, by special license of the Archbishop of Dublin, at Monkstown parish church, Kingstown, County Dublin, 5 December 1882, to Robert Fannin OLPHERT, full age, bachelor, Barrister-at-Law, son of Wybrants OLPHERT, Esq; he died at Elpis (?) Hospital, South Dublin, 10 January 1915, aged 63; they had issue:</div><div> a. Wybrants OLPHERT, born at 19 Herbert Street, South Dublin, 1 October 1883.</div><div> b. Marian Jessie Constance OLPHERT, born at 19 Herbert Street, 28 November 1994; she died there, 12 January 1887, aged 2 years.</div><div> c. Robert Hugh OLPHERT, born at 19 Herbert Street, 10 February 1886; he died there, 13 September 1888, aged 2 years 7 months.</div><div> d. Albert Victor OLPHERT, born at 19 Herbert Street, 10 May 1889.</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>7. Ada Blanche WARBURTON, born 17 July 1857 [Dublin Evening Mail, 22 July]; sixth named sibling, July 1865; she is said to have died on 25 August 1943; she was married, 21 June 1887, to Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Walter TRENCH, 2nd Queen's Regiment.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>8. Allan Alexander WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, 27 October 1858 [King's County Chronicle, 3 November]; he died in 1860.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>9. Maude Aleyne WARBURTON, born in 1860; seventh named sibling, July 1865; she died in July 1938.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div>10. Hugh Dutton WARBURTON, born at Garryhinch, November 1862 [Carlow Post, 22 November]; as Dutton, eighth and youngest sibling, July 1865; 11th Hussars; he died in Surrey, England, 15 February 1946; he was married firstly, at St Peter's, Eaton Square, London, 28 July 1886, to Ethel Louisa WILLIAMS, only daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel WILLANS (sic) of Beenham Lodge, Berkshire [Sydney Morning Herald, 12 October]; he appears to have been married secondly to Ethel Beatrice MOFFAT; he is said to have had issue:</div><div> a. Leila Ethel Josephine WARBURTON, born 1887: died 1889.</div><div> b. Richard WARBURTON, born 1895; died 1952.</div><div><br />
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<b><i><span style="color: red; font-size: large;">TO BE CONTINUED.</span></i></b></blockquote>
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<i><b><u><span style="font-size: large;">WILL OF ROBERT PIGOTT OF DYSART, 1728.</span></u></b></i><br /><br />
Robert PIGOTT, of Dysart, Queen's County, was the last proprietor of that estate in the senior line of descent from the original settler and grantee, his great-times-four grandfather John PIGOTT, who received his Patent for it in 1562, and died in 1570.<br />
Robert, made his will on 5 January 1728, having already sold the estate a few years earlier to his second cousin, Emmanuel PIGOTT, of Chetwynd, County Cork, but reserving himself the right to continue living there until his death.<br />
It was proved in the Prerogative Court of Ireland, 30 April 1730, about a fortnight after his death.<br />
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The will [from an abstract published in Vere Langford OLIVER's "History of the Island of Antigua," Volume 3, page 26-27], recorded the following:<br />
<i>"... to be buried in the vault in Dysart Church with my father, mother and wife... £1,400 is due by bond from <b>Richard WARBURTON </b>of Garryhinch, Esq, and Captain <b>John WARBURTON</b>, his brother; £600 from <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> of Donnecarney, Councillor; ..."</i><br />
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The remains of Dysart "Castle," and the unroofed ruins of the second parish church, lie about a mile south of the Rock of Dunnamaise, between the towns of Maryborough (now Portlaois) and Stradbally, in the Queen's County (Laois). I am a direct descendant of one of Robert PIGOTT's younger brothers, probably Walter.<br />
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Emanuel PIGOTT was related to the Garryhinch WARBURTONs, by his third marriage, to Judith WARBURTON. Robert and Emanuel's nearest common ancestor was John PIGOTT of Dysart (1591-1646), the eldest son and heir of Sir Robert PIGOTT of Dysart (1565-1642) by his first wife Anne ST LEGER.<br />
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John PIGOTT of Rathkeale, whose daughter Elizabeth was married to Richard WARBURTON in 1695, was another "Dysart" PIGOTT, but of an even younger branch than Emmanuel - his line was associated with the separate Queen's County estate of Cappard, in Rosenallis parish, near Mountmellick. This estate was inherited separately from Dysart, by the eldest son of Sir Robert PIGOTT's second marriage (about 1603) to Thomasin PEYTON, the widow of Peter CASTILLION.<br />
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Details of these PIGOTT families may be found in other posts on this blog site.<br />
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Shortly after Robert's death, a Deed of Assignment, dated 30 September 1730 [Memorial 44375, Book 65, Page 36], was executed between Pigott SANDES and Richard SANDES of Kilcavan, in the Queen's County, Walter PIGOTT and Thomas PIGOTT, unto <b>Richard WARBURTON</b> of Garryhinch, in the King's County, Esq; reciting that whereas, by deeds dated 17 and 18 May 1725, made and perfected between Robert PIGOTT then of Dysart in the Queen's County, of the one part, and Emanuel PIGOTT of Chetwind in the County of Cork, Esq, of the other part (the sale of the Dysart estate for £4,000).<br />
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The SANDES family of Kilcavan, Queen's County, were also related to the Dysart PIGOTTs.<br />
Pigott and Richard SANDES were sons of Lancelot SANDES, who was married to Elizabeth PIGOTT, a sister of the above Robert PIGOTT.<br />
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<b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>REV RICHARD WARBURTON, RECTOR OF BANAGHER.</u></span></i></b><br /><br />[E] Richard WARBURTON was born in Tipperary, about 1723; he entered Trinity College, Dublin, as a Pensioner (Matriculation Tutor Dr TOWERS), 30 April 1740, aged 16, son of George, Clericus [Alumni Dublinenses]; B.A. Vern (Autumn) 1744; M.A. Autumn 1749; Rector of Brittas alias Ballybrittas; Rector of Rynagh, Union of Ferbane, King's County, 1754, where his successor, Henry MAXWELL, was collated in 1798 [John HALY, "History of the Diocese of Meath," Volume 2, 1908, page 339]; Rector of St Mary's church, parish of Rynagh, in the town of Banagher, King's County; he was also Principal of the Diocesan School there from 1777:</div><div><i>"Banagher, in the King's County, is also a school of Royal foundation... </i></div><div><i>"The lands belonging to the school contain 204 acres of profitable ground, and produce </i><i>£</i><i>163 a year. They were let by the present master for 21 years, providing his incumbency should so long continue. There have been some encroachments upon these lands by the neighbouring tenants in the time of the former master.</i></div><div><i>"There is not any school-house belonging to this School. The master is the Rector of Banagher, and resides in the Glebe House. </i></div><div><i>"The Rev Richard WARBURTON, A.M., was appointed by the King's Letters Patent, on 26 August 1777, to be master of the school, at His Majesties pleasure. Mr WARBURTON has not a single scholar"</i> [Reports of the Commissioners of Irish Education Inquiry, 1791, published in Parliamentary Papers, House of Lords, 1858, Volume 22, Part 3, page 347].</div><div>Dublin Evening Post, Saturday 3 September 1785:</div><div><i>"BANAGHER FREE SCHOOL.</i></div><div><i>"At Britannia, in the Liberties of the said borough.</i></div><div><i>"Term will commence on Monday 12th September.</i></div><div><i>"The Rev Richard WARBURTON, Master of the School, returns his most sincere thanks to those Gentlemne, his Friends, who have thought him worthy of the important trust of educating their children, and approved his methods. Many have completed their course, and become a credit too him.</i></div><div><i>"He not having regularly advertised every Vacation thinks it necessary now to inform his Friends and the Public, that the said school is still open on the same terms as ususal, with the same care and attention to his Pupils... at the usual prices, on the whole, at 25 Guineas a year."</i></div><div>Richard was examined by earlier Commissioners, in 1788; the Banagher School lands were let by the Hon and Reverend Richard PONSONBY in 1799.</div><div>
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Richard died in 1802 [Limerickcity.ie/media - "Banagher Royal School," by Michael QUANE].<br />
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Rev Richard was of Birr, when he was married, 9 April 1752, to Miss ELLIOTT of Waterford [The London Magazine and Monthly Chronologer, page 121], and by Settlements dated April 1752, he of Firbane, King's County, she, Anne ELLIOT, the eldest daughter of Colonel (Bartholomew) ELLIOT, deceased, late of Mountelliot, New Ross, County Wexford [image of Registration, Church Records, www.irishgenealogy.ie web-site]; no information has yet been found of her death.<br />
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Richard and Anne had issue:<br />
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1. Bartholomew Boyd WARBURTON, born about 1757; of Birrview, King's County, Esq; he died in February 1823, aged 66 [Monthly Magazine, 1 April 1823]; of Birrview, when he was married, about 1778, to Elizabeth BATT, daughter of Benjamin BATT of Ballywilliam, Esq; they had issue:<br />
a. George WARBURTON, born about 1781; of Aughrim, County Galway; Major; Chief Police Magistrate, Kilrush, County Clare, February 1818; he was at Cambr... House, Clevedon, Somerset, 1841 Census, aged 50+, Independent, born Ireland, with his wife Anna and three younger children; he died in Somerset on 23 December 1845 (on-line family tree), <i>"Lately, at Southfield, Frome, aged 64, Major George WARBURTON, late Inspector-General of the Constabulary Force in Ireland"</i> [Gentleman's Magazine, February 1846, page 220, between other deaths dated December 29 and January 5], and reputed (incorrectly) to have been <i>"... the eldest lineal representative of the ancient Norman family of WARBURTON in Cheshire, and uncle to the Messrs WARBURTON of this city"</i> [Sydney Morning Herald, 15 July 1846]; he was married, 3 July 1806, to Anna Maria ACTON, of Killmacurragh, County Wicklow, daughter of Thomas ACTON of Westaston, County Wicklow; she was aged 45+, with her husband at Clevedon, Somerset, 1841 Census; she was at Kingston, near Surbiton, Surrey, 1851 Census, aged 67, with her daughter and son; she was at Iffley, Oxfordshire, 1861 Census, aged 77, widow, with her unmarried son Acton; they had issue:</div><div>
i. Bartholomew Eliot WARBURTON, born at Tullamore, King's County, about 1810; B.A., Cantab, 1834, and M.A., 1837; Irish Bar, 1837; he did not follow the law, but became an author and traveller; he died at sea, 4 February 1852, on the ship "Amazon," en route for the Panama Isthmus; he was married in 1848 to Matilda Jane GROVE, of Shenstone Park, Staffordshire.<br />
ii. George Hartopp WARBURTON.<br />
iii. Thomas Acton WARBURTON, born in Ireland, about 1814; at Kingston Upon Thames, Surrey, 1851 Census, aged 39, Barrister not practising, with his widowed mother and younger sister; as Acton WARBURTON, aged 47, Perpetual Curate of Iffley, Oxfordshire, 1861 Census, unmarried, with his widowed mother Anna; author of "Rollo and his Race; or, Footsteps of the Normans"; he died at Hastings Lodge, Dulwich Wood, England, 22 August 1894.<br />
iv. George Drought WARBURTON, born in Wicklow, 2 June 1816; R.M.C. Woolwich; Royal Artillery; he died on 23 October 1857, by his own hand; he was married in 1853 to Elizabeth Augusta BATEMAN-HANBURY, of Shobday, Herefordshire; they had an only daughter, Augusta WARBURTON, who was the wife of Edward SPENCER-CHURCHILL, only son of the Duke of Marlborough.</div><div> v. Sydney WARBURTON, born in Ireland, about 1817; aged 23, with her parents, Clevedon, Somerset, 1841 Census; a writer; she died in 1858.</div><div> vi. Elizabeth WARBURTON, born in Ireland, about 1820, second daughter; aged 22, with her parents, Clevedon, Somerset, 1841 Census; she died at Tunbridge Wells, 10 February 1849, second daughter of the late George WARBURTON, Esq, of Aughrim [Dublin Evening Mail, 14 February].</div><div> vii. Matilda WARBURTON, born in Ireland, about 1821; she was at Clevedon, Somerset, 1841 Census, aged 21, with her parents and two older siblings; she was at Kingston Upon Thames, 1851 Census, aged 30, Unmarried, with her widowed mother and elder brother.<br />
b. Benjamin WARBURTON; born about 1783; Captain, Royal Navy; he died on 21 November 1828.<br />
c. Bartholomew WARBURTON; born about 1785; probably Chief Magistrate in Ballinasloe, County Galway, October 1831; he witnessed his brother Henry's marriage at Abbeleix, July 1845; he resigned his position as Resident Magistrate, October 1859, in favour of his son Augustus WARBURTON; he died at Kilbeggan, Westmeath, 16 December 1860, aged 75; he was married, about May 1820, to Lucinda BAILEY; she died 8 January 1875, and was buried at St Brigid's; they had issue:</div><div> i. Edward Bayley WARBURTON.</div><div> ii. Mildred Deborah WARBURTON.</div><div> iii. Augustus WARBURTON; Royal Irish Constabulary; he was appointed Resident Magistrate, October 1859, in the room of his father [Cork Constitution, 25 October].<br />
d. John WARBURTON, born about 1788; he died at his residence, Crinkle, Parsonstown, 26 October 1865, Esq and J.P., aged 78 [Cork Examiner, 1 November]; he was married to Mary Carleton PERCIVAL, sister of Colonel PERCIVAL of Temple House, Sligo; she died at Crinkle, 6 May 1854, and was buried in <i>"... the family vault, in the interior of the old parish church of Birr"</i> [King's County Chronicle, 10 May]; they had issue:</div><div> i. Robert WARBURTON; 48th Regiment.</div><div> ii. Jane Frances WARBURTON.</div><div> iii. Georgina Deborah WARBURTON; as <i>"... daughter of the late John WARBURTON, Esq, of Crinkle, Parsonstown,"</i> she was married at the parish church, Oakham, 19 January 1877, to the Rev Bernard ROBINSON, M.A. [Freeman's Journal (Dublin), 25 January].<br />
e. Samuel WARBURTON.<br />
f. Deborah WARBURTON, eldest daughter; she died on 21 June 1878; she was married at Monkstown, 27 December 1840, as his second wife, to William Featherston MONTGOMERY, M.D.<br />
g. Elizabeth WARBURTON; she died at Mespil Road, Dublin, 11 June 1885; she was married at St Mark's parish church, Dublin, 21 December 1824, to Henry ROOKE, Solicitor, eldest son of Thomas and Eleanor Ward ROOKE.<br />
h. Henry Benjamin WARBURTON; Officer, at Abbeyleix, 1845; Sub-Inspector, Royal Irish Constabulary, Ballickmoyler, 1848; he died at Ballickmoyler, 18 April 1850; he was married at Abbeyleix parish church, 15 July 1845, to Elizabeth HARVEY, second daughter of the late Ambrose HARVEY of North Great Georges Street, Dublin.<br />
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2. John WARBURTON; Rector of Valentia, County Kerry. See [F] below.</div><div><br /></div><div>A wiki-tree records additional sons Richard WARBURTON, Lieutenant, 67th Regiment of Foot; and Peter WARBURTON, Captain, Royal Artillery, who died in London in 1800, shortly after returning from the West Indies<br />
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3. Frances WARBURTON, born 1778; of Garryhinch; she died at Mountmellick, 19 February 1823, <i>"... wife of Charles MEREDITH, Esq, and younger daughter of the late Reverend Richard WARBURTON, formerly Rector of Banagher and Principal of the Diocesan school there"</i> [Freeman's Journal (Dublin), 27 March]; she was married in 1798, as his first wife, to Charles Coote MEREDITH; they had issue:<br />
a. Frances MEREDITH, born about 1800; she was married to William WYLY.<br />
b. Mary MEREDITH, born 29 January 1801; she was married to William JERMYN.<br />
c. Richard MEREDITH, baptised at Rosenallis, Queen's County, 30 January 1803; he went to Canada; he was married at Montreal, 17 September 1835, to Letitia MITCHELL.<br />
d. Rice MEREDITH, born about 1805; he went to Canada; he died on 3 December 1871, and was buried at Ingersoll Rural Cemetery, Ontario; of Montreal, when he was married in Quebec, 30 July 1831, to Amelia ATKINS.<br />
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e. Elizabeth MEREDITH; she went to Brooklyn, New York, 1846; she died in 1858.</div>
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f. William MEREDITH, born about 1809; he was buried at Clontarf, County Dublin, 16 February 1872; he was married firstly, in 1837, to Eliza CLIFFORD, and secondly, at Castletown, 1860, to Elisa G. THOMAS.</div>
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g. Charity MEREDITH; she went to Canada; she was married at St Luke's Church, Dalhousie, Ontario, 3 January 1856, to Senator Harcourt BULL.</div>
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h. Frances (Ruth) MEREDITH, baptised 25 September 1810 [R.C.B. Library]; she was married, 1833, to Robert WYLY; they emigrated to Victoria; she died at Carlton, Melbourne, 11 March 1853, about a month after their arrival.</div>
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j. Henry MEREDITH; of Finglass, County Dublin, 1870; he died at Portland, County WAterford, 21 October 1874.</div>
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k. George MEREDITH, born about 1817; he died on 5 February 1897; he was married at Ballymaccormac church, County Longford, 10 December 1857, to Lillie Anne BIRNEY.<br />
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4. Mary WARBURTON; she was named, as the widow JACKSON, in the marriage settlements, dated March 1827, of her eldest daughter Anna Maria to William WARBURTON [Memorial 553907, Book 823, Page 172]; she was married in Ireland, 1805, to Nathaniel JACKSON, of Mountmellick, Queen's County; he died before 1827, and was named in the marriage settlements of his daughter Anna Maria as having died intestate, leaving his widow Mary, eldest daughter Anna Maria, and younger daughters Elizabeth and Frances, as his only children surviving him [ditto]; they had issue:<br />
a. Anna Maria JACKSON, eldest daughter; she was married at Mountmellick, Queen's County, by settlements dated 5 March 1827 [Memorial 553907, Volume 823, Page 172], to William White WARBURTON, Captain, H.M.'s 67th Regiment [Westmeath Journal, 22 March]; he was appointed Cornet, 67th Foot, 17 August 1809; Lieutenant, 2 April 1812; Captain, 5 May 1826; Major, 23 November 1841; Lieutenant-Colonel, 67th Foot, 28 November 1854; he <i>"... served in the Nepaul campaigns of 1817 and 1818, and subsequently in the Decean, including the capture of the Forts at Rhyghur and Asseerghur"</i> [Army Lists, 1869, page 61, footnote 12]; he died at his residence, 8 Lower Buckingham Street, Dublin, Widower, aged 84 years, of senile decay, informed by Margaret CROLY, same address.</div><div> b. Elizabeth JACKSON, second daughter; she was married at St Thomas's Church, by Rev F. SHORTT, 1 September 1835, to James FLEETWOOD, of Willow Lodge, County Tipperary (late of the 74th Regiment) [Saunders's News-Letter, 5 September]; they were named as .</div><div> c. Frances (Fanny) JACKSON, born about 1810; she died at Fairview, County Dublin, 25 May 1841, aged 31, <i>"... youngest daughter of the late Nathaniel JACKSON, Esq, of Mountmellick, and grand-daughter of the late Rev Richard WARBURTON, Rector of Banagher"</i> [Dublin Evening packet, 27 May]; she appears to have married Crawford SHORTT.</div><div>
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5. Thomas WARBURTON, the fifth son; he was married to Sarah KNIGHT, second daughter of Alderman Abraham KNIGHT, of Drogheda; Thomas WARBURTON and Sarah his wife gave an answer, on 13 June 1791, to a Bill brought before the Chancery Court, Dublin, 17 November 1787, by Thomas NORMAN, Gent, as Plaintiff - Thomas and Sarah's names were added to a list of 12 other defendants, probably as guardians to Dorcas Jane WOODSIDE, a minor; Thomas WARBURTON and Sarah his wife were joint defendants in another Bill, ditto, 18 December 1795, by James REILLY; they were joint defendants, with Thomas GUNSTON, in another Bill, ditto, 7 August 1816, by Mary GIBBONS, Plaintiff - Sarah gave her answer, 19 February 1817; Sarah died at 45 Maryborough Street, Dublin, 30 November 1856, aged 85 [Boston Pilot, 3 January 1857], and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery, <i>"... relict of the late Thomas WARBURTON, of the King's County. She died on 20 November 1856, aged 84 years"</i> [M.I., Mount Jerome - I.G.P. Headstone Project].</div><div>
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6. Charity WARBURTON; probably born in or before 1783, and perhaps well before; she was married in 1801 to John DAVIS, of Borris-in-Ossory, Esq [Walker's Hibernian Magazine], as the daughter of the Rector of Banagher, although he was recorded there in error as Rev C. WARBURTON.</div><div><br /></div><div>7. Robert WARBURTON; mentioned in his brother Rev John WARBURTON's death notice in November 1829, as being Captain WARBURTON, of the Royal Navy, formerly Impress Service in Limerick [Kerry Evening Post, 21 November], and recorded in Ray WARBURTON's one-name web-site as a son of Rev Richard WARBURTON and Anne ELLIOTT.</div><div>Robert served in the Royal Navy; Commander of the H.M.S. <i>Childers</i>, May 1794, in the room of Commander Joshua MULLOCK, and was succeeded in March 1795 by Commander Richard DACRES; as Captain, he was transferred, about 1795, to the Port of Limerick; Regulating Officer for the port of Limerick, October 1807, when he received orders from Vice Admiral WHITESHEAD <i>"... for the removal of eight prisoners-of-war who are to be conveyed on board H.M.'s tender Perseverance (to)... inink England"</i> [Limerick General Advertiser, 6 October].</div><div>Robert died at his house in George's Street, Limerick, 17 November 1807, <i>"... for 12 years regulating officer of this port, which trust he has executed with honour and humanity... a few days ago appointed by the Admiralty to the port of Dublin, where he intended to remove this week... yesterday his remains were interred in St John's churchyard"</i> [Limerick General Advertiser, 20 November]; he was married at Milhooke, Queen's County, 10 September 1796, to Anne CROKER [The National Archives (Kew), ADM/6/345/6]; she died at Kingstown, 17 May 1854, widow of Captain Robert WARBURTON, R.N., and daughter of John CROKER, Grange Hill, County Limerick [Limerick.ie/Library/Local_Studies]; they may have had issue (unless some were instead children of Thomas and Sarah):</div><div> a. William White WARBURTON, born at William Street, Limerick, 13 July 1799; of 8 Buckingham Street, Dublin, 1868 [THOM's Irish Almanac and City Directory]; he died at 8 Lower Buckingham Street, Dublin, 4 October 1878, his will proved 1 February 1879, by William Adamson SCOTT, of Banagher, King's County, Agent of the Bank of Ieland, as the executor.<br /> b. Cosby WARBURTON, born 9 December 1800 [FFOLLIOTT Abstracts]; Captain, Ceylon Rifles; he died at sea, 4 March 1846, off Aden, on a voyage from Colombo to England, and was buried at sea.<br /> c. Catherine Susan WARBURTON, eldest daughter; she was married in Dublin, June 1828, to Captain Richard Charles ELLIOT.</div><div> d. Abraham WARBURTON, born in July 1805; at 8 Charleville Mall, North Strand, Dublin, 1843 [P.O. and Annual Directory]; Vestry Clerk, St Thomas's Church, Dublin, of 23 Summer Street North, 1858 [P.O. Dublin Directory]; imprisoned for Debt, Kilmainham Prison, 3 November 1860, on the complaint of Mary A. GAVAN; he died at 74 Lower Gardiner Street, Dublin, 11 July 1862, aged 63 years [Warder and Dublin Weekly Mail, 19 July]; he was married to Lucinda; she died at Charleville Mall, 4 July 1846, <i>"... wife of Abraham WARBURTON, Esq, daughter of the late Thomas SHORT, Esq, of Winfield, County Tipperary"</i> [Cork Examiner, 7 January; Warder & Dublin Weekly Mail, 10 January], and was buried at St John's (C.of I.), Dublin, aged 67.<br /> e. Frances WARBURTON, youngest daughter; she was married in Holyhead, Anglsea, North Wales, July 1834, to George Perrin WALLACE, of Rochestown, County Dublin [Limerick Chronicle, 19 July].</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div><br /></div><div>? Richard WARBURTON; he died at Banagher, late November or very early December 1833, late Lieutenant, King's County Militia [Dublin Morning Register, 2 December].</div><div><br /></div><div>? Charity WARBURTON; died at Banagher, June 1840, <i>"... daughter of the late Richard WARBURTON, Esq"</i> [Clare Journal and Ennis Advertiser, 11 June]. Possibly the wife of John DAVIS?</div><div><br /></div><div>? Ann WARBURTON died at Banagher, 7 January 1879, Spinster, aged 90 years, Lady, of Old age, the death informed by Mary (X) EGAN, of Banagher, present at the death.</div><div>Her parentage has not yet been established - perhaps a younger daughter of Rev Richard WARBURTON and Anne ELLIOT?</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i>ANOTHER DUBLIN WARBURTON WITH A JACKSON HUSBAND.</i></span></div><div><br /></div><div>John WARBURTON, born at Blankney, Lincolnshire, December 1732, son of John WARBURTON (Somerset Herald at Arms) and Mary BURY his wife; John Junior spent much of his later life in Dublin; he was probably mentioned in two notices, in March 1780, advertising the lease of <i>"... a commodious house, No 38, situate on the south side of Stephen's Green, inhabited by Mr John WARBURTON, Esq, with every necessary fixture..."</i> [Saunders's News-Letter, 11 March], and <i>"... in Mecklenburgh Street,</i><i> the house No 43, wherein Mr J. </i><i>WARBURTON lately lived, with every necessary fixture..."</i> [Ditto, 28 March]; he died on 27 May 1809, and was buried at Chapelizod Church, County Dublin, in the family plot [Journal of the Association for the Preservation of Memorials for the Dead in Ireland, Volume VIII, 1911]; he was married, either clandestinely, of Doctor's Commons, March 1751-1754, to Ann Catherine MORES, of Whitechapel, or at Camberwell St Giles, London, 7 August 1756, to Anne Catherine MORES, only daughter of Rev Edward MORES, of Walthamstowe, Essex, and and for nearly 30 years Rector of Tunstal, Kent (this later date does not accommmodate the births of the first two daughters); she died in Dublin, 24 September 1791, and was buried at Chapelizod Church, County Dublin [M.I., ditto]; they had issue:</div><div>1. Anne WARBURTON, born 1755 (?); died 1757.</div><div>2. Amelia WARBURTON, born 1753; a Miss Amelia WARBURTON died at the residence of H.V. JACKSON, Esq, Mecklenburgh Street, Dublin, in September 1827, aged 67 [Cork Constitution, 22 September].</div><div>3. John WARBURTON, born at St Thomas's, City of Dublin, 1762; he died in 1768, and was buried at Chapelizod, County Dublin.</div><div>4. Sarah WARBURTON, born at Dublin, 1764. See [###] below.</div><div>5. Jane WARBURTON, born at Dublin, 1767; she died in 1768.</div><div>6. John WARBURTON, born at Dublin, 1768.</div><div>7. William WARBURTON, born at Dublin, 1769. See [!!!] below.</div><div>8. a son, born at Stephen's Green, Dublin, shortly before 5 July 1776 [Saunders's News-Letter].</div><div><br /></div><div>[###] Sarah WARBURTON, possibly born about 1767, but probably the above birth (5) in 1764; she died on 14 March 1851, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery, Dublin; she was married by M.L.B., 26 May 1792 [BETHAM's Abstract - the year date overwritten, it appears, and in error, as 1798], to Henry Vincent JACKSON, of Fairy Hill, Bray, County Wicklow (this marriage has been attributed a later date of 20 May 1798, which does not accommodate the birth of the first son in 1794); he was born about 1768, probably a son of Peter JACKSON, of Dublin, and his wife Mary VINCENT; Henry was mentioned as assistant to Peter JACKSON [King's Inn Admission Papers - as cited in the silver-bowl web-site]; he practiced as a Solicitor, of Mecklenburgh Street, Dublin; he entered his Bill in the Chancery Court, Dublin, 17 January 1821, as joint plaintiff (with his four children Peter, William Sally and Matilda), he defendants being Thomas Lord NEWCOMEN, James EVERY and their mother and grandmother Anna Maria Nichola WARBURTON, Widow (her answer, 26 January 1821); he died at his residence, Fairy Hill, Bray, 26 May 1843, aged 74 years [Saunders's News-Letter, 30 May]; they had issue:</div><div>1. George Ernest Augustus JACKSON, baptised in St Peter's, Dublin, 3 April 1794; he was married in 1817, to Emma HARDEN.</div><div>2. Frederick Adolphus JACKSON, born in Dublin, 1797; he was married to Louisa HUTCHINSON.</div><div>3. Peter Warburton JACKSON; of Narrara, County Wicklow; he died 8 September 1887, late of Cheltenham, Gloucestershire; he was married to Anna Burdett NESS.</div><div>4. William Henry JACKSON, born in 1811; he died in Dublin, 4 July 1877; he was married at St Peter's Church, Dublin, 5 April 1842, to Cecelia WESTROPP, youngest daughter of the late John WESTROPP, of Attyfin, County Limerick [Dublin Evening Mail, 6 April].</div><div>5. Sarah Georgina JACKSON, baptised at St George's, Dublin, 30 August 1801; she was married at Bray Church, March 1849, to Rev Thomas E. ANDERSON, T.C.D. [Clare Journal, and Ennis Advertiser, 22 March].</div><div>6. Elizabeth Matilda JACKSON, second daughter; she was married by settlements dated 4 December 1826 [Memorial 551587, Book 819, Page 252], to Thomas KETTLEWELL, Lieutenant, Infantry Regiment.</div><div><br /></div><div><div>[!!!] William WARBURTON, probably the 1769 birth (7) above; probably in partnership as JACKSON & WARBURTON, Attornies, Mecklenburgh Street, Dublin, 1812 [Treble Almanac]; his will, dated 10 May 1817, by which he bequeathed property to his wife Maria Nichola WARBURTON, and appointed her executrix; he died in Dublin on 6 or 10 December 1820, aged [?] 51 years, late of Marlboro Street, Dublin, and of Guildford, County Down, and was buried at Chapelizod, in the family plot of his father John WARBURTON [M.I., ditto]; as Anna Maria Nichola WARBURTON, widow, she was a joint Defendant, with Thomas Lord Newcomen and James EVERY, to a Bill entered 12 January 1821, Chancery Court Dublin, by Plaintiffs Henry Vincent, Peter, William, Sally and Matilda JACKSON; she was of Marlborough Street, Dublin, widow and executrix of the late William WARBURTON she was first party to a deed dated 1 June 1822 [Memorial 523465, Book 772, Page 530], to which the second party was Henry Vincent JACKSON, of Mecklenburgh Street, Dublin, Esq, concerning lands in the Barony of Ratoath, County Meath; she died 23 February 1854, and by her will, dated 7 May 1849, bequeathed all her property remaining after legacies to Peter Warburton JACKSON and William Henry JACKSON, and their sisters Sarah Georgina ANDERSON and Matilda KETTLEWELL.</div></div><div>
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<u style="font-size: x-large; font-style: italic; font-weight: 700;">REV JOHN WARBURTON, RECTOR OF VALENTIA.</u><br />
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[F] John WARBURTON, born King's County, about 1753; he entered Trinity College, Dublin, as a Pensioner (Private Tutor), 6 January 1772, aged 19, son of Richard, Clericus [Alumni Dublinenses]; B.A. Aest (Summer) 1781; probably Curate to his father at Banagher; Rector of Valentia, County Kerry (Barony of Ivragh); his letter, dated at Valentia Island, 19 October 1823, to Henry GOULBURN, Chief Secretary, Dublin Castle, <i>"... concerning the difficulties in obtaining tythes, observing that 'the parish in its present situation will not support me.' Emphasising his financial distress. Refers to his former work as Curate to his late father, the C.of I. Rector of Rynagh, Banagher, King's County, and the assistance he gave to his father in the management of the Free School of Banagher... Requests government relief"</i> [The National Archives of Ireland, CSO/RP/1823/1733]; his subsequent letter, dated at Tralee Jail, 10 December 1823, <i>"... referring to his arrest for debt, and renewing his application for government relief,"</i> and noting that "<i>... his family must beg, and I starve"</i> [NAI, ditto].<br />
John died in November 1829, <i>"Nov. 7, at Valentia, county of Kerry, the Rev John WARBURTON, Rector of that parish"</i> [Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent, Tuesday 17 November], and <i>"... brother of Captain WARBURTON, of the Royal Navy, formerly of the Impress Service in Limerick</i> [Kerry Evening Post, Saturday 21 November 1829]; the Valencia Burial Register [Typed Transcript, FOLLIOTT Abstracts, Findmypast.co.uk, page 8] records his burial on 10 November, as <i>"WARBURTON, Rev John, Kilmore, 72" </i>- however, the www.irishgenealogy.ie web-site, curiously citing "other date information", records his burial at Dromod, County Kerry, also on 10 November 1829, and aged 72 years (Dromod Church of Ireland or St Finian's Churchyard, Waterville, on the eastern side of Ballinskellig Bay). He was succeeded as Rector of Valentia by his late Curate, Rev Godfrey DAY, by appointment of the Government (the Rectory was not within the gift of the Bishop of Limerick).</div><div>Another death notice [Gentleman's Magazine, Volume 99, part ii, page 646], suggested, in error, that he was the Precentor of Limerick, and related to theBishop of Cloyne - but this was another John WARBURTON, who was the Rector of Kill, County Kildare (see the MONGAN-WARBURTON section below).</div><div>
John was married, about 1804, to Anne, probably BIRRELL; on 3 July 1826, Rev John WARBURTON recorded the burial at Valentia of Peter BERRELL, Esq, Deenglass, aged 84 years, a possible relation of his wife?<br />
Ann, as a widow, emigrated to New South Wales, probably in 1840 or shortly after; she died at her son's residence at Pyrmont, near Sydney, on 29 March 1842, <i>"... widow of the late Rev John WARBURTON, Rector of Valentia, Ireland"</i> [Sydney Herald, 30 March]; and was buried at Camperdown Cemetery.<br />
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John and Ann had issue:<br />
<br />1. Anne WARBURTON, probably born about 1805; she may have died in 1852; she was married, 26 August 1824, to Thomas JERMYN, of Castlecove, Kenmore, as the <i>"... daughter of the Rev John WARBURTON, Rector of Valentia"</i> [T.C., Friday 20 August 1824 - FOLLIOTT Abstracts]; they appear to have had issue:</div><div> a. David JERMYN, born 1826; died 1892.</div><div> b. Thomas JERMYN, born 1826; died 1912.</div><div> c. John Warburton JERMYN, born 1827; died 1901.</div><div> d. Bessie JERMYN, born 1832; died 1869.</div><div> e. Anne Meredith JERMYN, born 1836; died 1900.</div><div>
<br />2. John WARBURTON, born about 1808. Emigrated to New South Wales. See [G] below.<br />
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3. William WARBURTON, born about 1812; he emigrated to N.S.W.; W. WARBURTON, with his brother J.E., both of Pyrmont, were named as owners of the ship "Burnett," 137 tons register, which foundered in Newcastle Bight , on a voyage to Sydney, May 1869 [Empire (Sydney), 11 May]; he died on 13 May 1876, <i>"... at his brother's residence, Derwent Street, Glebe... second son of the late Rev John WARBURTON, Rector of Valentia, Ireland, in the 64th year of his age" </i>[Evening News, Sydney, 15 May]; he was buried at Rookwood Necropolis [Anglican, Section B, plot 375].<br />
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<br />4. Sylvester Birrell WARBURTON, born about 1816. See [#] below.<br />
<br />5. George W. WARBURTON, born about 1822; he probably emigrated to N.S.W. in 1840, with his brother and widowed mother (he had been in Sydney 20 years by 1860); Assistant (or Supernumery) Clerk, Police Department, Sydney, August 1843, at 6 shillings per diem, when he was recommended to be placed upon the establishment; Deposition Clerk, Police Department, Sydney, December 1847; Chief Clerk, Central Police Department, Sydney, 1858; he was guest of honour at a farewell dinner in Sydney, 1860, at which Thomas SPENCE, a Sydney Alderman (and my great-great grandfather), was present - George had just been appointed Registrar of the District Court, Mudgee; he died at the residence of his brother-in-law, Mr G.L. FULLER, Kiama, 20 August 1876, <i>"... youngest son of the late Rev John WARBURTON of Valentia and Werah, Ireland, aged 54 years"</i> [Sydney Mail, 2 September; Australian Home and Country Journal, same date], and was buried at Kiama Cemetery, and recorded on his gravestone as <i>"Late Police Magistrate, Mudgee" </i>[Memorial 48915584, Findagrave.com]; he was married by Special License, at St Michael's Anglican Church, Wollongong, 28 June 1850, to Sarah Jane FULLER, daughter of Mrs Ann FULLER of Wollongong [S.M.H., 1 July]; she died 2 December 1918, aged 58, and was buried with her husband, her maiden surname recorded as FULLARTON.</div><div>
<br />6. Bartholomew WARBURTON, born about 1823; he was buried at Valentia, 7August 1828, of Kilmore, aged 5 years [FOLLIOTT Abstracts, Valentia Burial Register, page 8]. The same abode as Rev John a year later suggests he was probably a son.<br />
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<b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>THE WARBURTON FAMILY OF PYRMONT, SYDNEY.</u></span></i></b><br />
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[G] John WARBURTON, born about 1808; of Valentia, County Kerry (where he grew up), and of Cappanarra House, Abbeyleix, Queens County, 1832-1854 (where he married and had children); he probably arrived in Victoria, 6 December 1856, on the ship <i>Marco Polo</i>, from Liverpool (1 August), aged 40, Labourer, bound for Sydney, with two of his children; he settled in Pyrmont, where his brothers had been established since emigrating in about 1840; Coal Merchant and Ship Owner, of Pyrmont; he had his letter to the Editor published in the S.M.H. of 28 April 1863, in connection with the coal trade, and as one of the owners of vessels trading between Sydney and Newcastle; he died on 23 September 1873, <i>"... at his residence, Pyrmont... eldest son of the late Rev John WARBURTON, Rector of Valentia and Iveragh, Ireland, in his 65th year"</i> [S.M.H., 24 September], and was buried at Rookwood Necropolis [Anglican, Section B, Plot 374]:</div>
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<i>[The western face of the WARBURTON family marble obelisk, Rookwood Necropolis, in the original Church of England (or Anglican) Portion, Section B, Plots 372-375 with three more adjoining Plots, 416-419, in the next row to the east.</i></div>
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<i>Photos taken by the author in late 2019 and early 2020.]</i></div>
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<br />His will was proved on 23 November 1873, with grant to Sylvester WARBURTON, and Thomas John FULLER of Kiama [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 25 November]. </div><div><br /></div><div>
John was married firstly, at Abbeyleix parish church, 24 July 1832, to Harriett MURPHY, both of the parish; she was the eldest daughter of the late Charles MURPHY, of Durrow, and a niece of the Irish missionary Rev Gideon OUSLEY and of General OUSELEY of the Portuguese Service [undated newspaper notice in an e-mail from Alan WARBURTON - evidently the Limerick Chronicle, 4 August]; she died at Abbeyleix, and was buried there, 21 Jul 1844, aged 33 years [Abstract from the Parish register, Representative Church Body (R.C.B.) Library, Churchtown, County Dublin, made by John O'GRADY of Dublin in 2005]; John was married secondly, at Mountrath parish church, Clonnenagh, Queen's County, 16 January 1846, to Sarah CARTER, aged 35, Widow, daughter of William PILSBURY, Apothecary; there is no appropriate death registration in N.S.W. Statutory Indexes, so it appears that Sarah probably died in Ireland, sometime before 1855.<br />
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John and Harriet had issue:<br />
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1. Anna Maria WARBURTON, baptised at Abbeyleix parish church, 11 April 1832 [R.C.B. Library], but this date clashes with her parents marriage; she died at Cappannara, and was buried at Abbeyleix churchyard, 24 October 1854, aged 21 years [R.C.B. Library].<br />
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2. Charles George WARBURTON, baptised at Abbeyleix parish church, 12 July 1835 [R.C.B. Library]; he may have emigrated to Victoria on the ship "King of Algeria," 1857; he settled in Sydney, and became part of the family concern at Pyrmont; the will of Adam SCHWOEBEL, late of Marrickville, was proved in early December 1888, to George Eliot WARBURTON, of Marrickville, Wood and Coal Merchant, <i>"...in the said will called Charles George WARBURTON"</i> [N.S.W. Government Gazette, 7 December]; he died at Manly, in 1915, and was buried at Rookwood:</div>
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<i>[The southern face of the WARBURTON obelisk.]</i></div>
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Charles was married at Kiama, 20 August 1863 [#2058], to Sarah ALLEN, of Albion Park, N.S.W. (South Coast); she died on 19 December 1891, <i>"... at her residence, Esplanade, Manly, the beloved wife of C.G. WARBUTON, aged 52 years"</i> [S.M.H., 21 December], daughter of John and Margaret ALLEN, and sister of Eliza, the wife of Sylvester WARBURTON; they had issue:</div><div>
a. a daughter, born in Sydney, 1864.<br />
b. Annie Marie WARBURTON, born in Sydney, 1866.<br />
c. John W. WARBURTON, born in Sydney, 1867; he died at Ryde, 1937.<br />
d. Charles H. WARBURTON, born in Sydney, 1869.<br />
e. Elliot H. WARBURTON, born at St George (south Sydney), 1870; he died at Manly, 1941.<br />
f. Harold Herbert WARBURTON, born at St George, 1871; died aged 6 and a half years:</div>
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g. Sarah Louise WARBURTON; she died at Manly, 1940 - perhaps (a) above, or the next?<br />
h. Louisa WARBURTON - perhaps the above?<br />
j. Florence Mary WARBURTON, born in Sydney, 1874; died aged 11 and a half months.<br />
k. Aimee WARBURTON, born in Sydney, 1877; she died in 1879.</div>
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l. Albert T. WARBURTON, born in Sydney, 1878; he died in Sydney, 1878.<br />
m. Ernest Oscar WARBURTON, born in Sydney, 1879; he died at Chatswood, 1953.</div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div><br /></div><div>
3. (?) Ralph Henry WARBURTON; he was buried at Abbeyleix parish church, 9 May 1839, an infant (parents not named in register) [R.C.B. Library].<br />
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4. Gideon WARBURTON, born about 1840, probably in Queen's County; he probably arrived in Victoria on the <i>Marco Polo</i>, 6 December 1856, with his father and sister, en route to Sydney - but his age, 11 years on the indent, is understated by 5 years (perhaps to secure a cheaper passage as a child) he died at his father's residence, Pyrmont, after a fall from his horse, 3 December 1860, aged 19 years [Empire, Sydney, 8 December], and was buried at Camperdown Cemetery (also known as St Stephen's Churchyard, Newtown].<br />
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5. William WARBURTON, born about 1841, probably in Queen's County; he died at his residence, 'Kalara,' Singleton, 31 December 1890, <i>"... third son of the late John WARBURTON, of Valencia and Cappanara House, Queen's County, Ireland, aged 49 years"</i> [S.M.H., 3 January 1891], Registered at Singleton, 1891 #13564; of Singleton, Coal Merchant, probate of his will was granted to Mary Ellen WARBURTON, of Singleton, the widow and sole exectrix; he was married at All Saints Anglican church, Singleton, 10 August 1871, to Mary Ellen KINGSTON, second daughter of William KINGSTON, of Singleton, Esq [Evening News, Sydney, 28 August]; she died at Singleton, 1956 #17574, parents William and Mary A.; they had issue:<br />
a. William Kingston WARBURTON, born at Pyrmont, 15 July 1872 [S.M.H., 18 July], #2047; he died at Murrumburra, 1 September 1915 #11066, and was buried at Rookwood, Anglican, Section 2, Plots 367-70, aged 44 years; he was married to Emma Mary BARNETT; she died 26 May 1908, aged 38, and was buried with William.</div><div> b. Mary Elizabeth WARBURTON, born at Sydney, 1874 #1692.</div><div> c. Stanley WARBURTON, born at Sydney, 1876 #1231; of Boggabri, 1932; he died at Chatswood, 1951 #20796.</div><div> d. Kingston Ousley WARBURTON, born at Patrick's Plains, 1879 #21292; of Singleton, 1932; he died at Chatswood, 1956 #19493.</div><div>
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6. Harriet Susannah WARBURTON, born about 1845, probably in the Queen's County; she was aged 10 on arrival in Victoria on the <i>Marco Polo</i>, 6 December 1856, with her father and brother, en route for Sydney; she died at her residence, Albert Parade, Ashfield, 27 January 1878, after a short illness, aged 32 [S.M.H., 2 February] , and was buried at Rookwood Necropolis [Anglican, Section B, Plot 375]:</div>
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Harriet was married at Bowood, near Penrith, 14 November 1877, to Thomas GAMBLE [S.M.H., 14 December].<br />
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[#] Sylvester Birrell WARBURTON, born about 1816, probably at Valentia, County Kerry; he emigrated to New South Wales, perhaps in 1840 with his widowed mother and younger brother; Coal Merchant in Pyrmont, and also of Glebe; he died on 4 April 1880, <i>"... at his residence, Birrview, Beresford Street, Glebe... third son of Rev John WARBURTON, Rector of Valentia, Ireland, aged 63 years" </i>[Evening News, 6 April], and buried at Rookwood Necropolis [Anglican, Section AA, Plot 319]:<br />
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<i>[The second WARBURTON family plot at Rookwood, about 90 metres further to the south-east of the first, in the same original Anglican portion, Section AA, plots 318-320. The sandstone headstone, erected on the footer kerb, has fallen backwards onto the plot, breaking in two, but lying face-up.</i></div>
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<i>Photo taken by the author in June 2020.]</i></div>
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<br />His will was proved in April 1880, late of Hereford Street, Glebe, Gent, with grant to George Eliot WARBURTON, of Hereford Street, Glebe, the sole executor [N.S.W. Government gazette, 16 April].</div><div><br /></div><div>
Sylvester was married in the Presbyterian Church, Wollongong, 25 August 1845, to Eliza ALLEN (she was born in County Fermanagh, daughter of John ALLEN and Margaret WALLACE, and arrived with her parents from Ireland in 1842, with her sister Sarah, who married Sylvester's brother Charles George WARBURTON); Eliza died at her husband's residence, Pyrmont, 10 May 1864, aged 37 years [S.M.H., 14 May], and was buried at Camperdown Cemetery (her parents were not named in her death registration); they had issue:<br />
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1. John WARBURTON, born about June 1846; he died at Pyrmont, 27 September 1846, aged three and a half months [S.M.H., 30 September].<br />
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2. Annie WARBURTON, born at McArthur's Buildings, Pyrmont, 1 October 1847 [S.M.H., 2 October]; she was buried at Rookwood Necropolis, 9 July 1930 (with her husband, see below); the only daughter when she was married, at St Bartholomew's Anglican Church, Pyrmont, 16 December 1874, to George Elliot WARBURTON, the only son of the late Henry WARBURTON of Birr (formerly Parsonstown), King's County, Esq [S.M.H., 29 December]; he was probably buried at Rookwood Necropolis, August 1906, aged 58 years [Anglican, Section AA, Plot 318].<br />
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They had issue:<br />
a. Sylvester Henry WARBURTON, born at Glebe, 1875; he died at Newcastle, 1962.<br />
b. Arthur Elliot WARBURTON, born at Birrview, Hereford Street, Glebe, 26 June 1877 [Sydney Mail, 7 July]; he died at Manly, 1943; he was married at Scot's Kirk, Sydney, 1 March 1917, to Millicent HANNAY, only daughter of Mr and Mrs Peter HANNAY of Willowbank, Tenterfield [Newcastle Morning Herald, 5 May].<br />
c. George Elliot WARBURTON, born at Birrview, Hereford Street, Glebe Point, 27 June 1879 [S.M.H., 3 July]; as George Sydney WARBURTON, he died at Mosman, 1955 (parents named).<br />
d. Howard Montgomery WARBURTON, born at Birrview, Illawarra Road, Marrickville, 16 October 1881 [Sydney Mail, 29 October]; he died at St Leonards, 1966 #26868 [parents George Elliot and Annie]; he was married at Lismore, 1911 #19318, to Constance Emily KING; they had issue issue:</div><div> i. George K. WARBURTON, born at Lismore, 1912.</div><div> ii. Constance Montgomery WARBURTON, born at Lismore, 1914; she died at Manly, 1958 #2760, unmarried.<br />
e. Allen L. WARBURTON, born at Birrview, Illawarra Road, Marrickville, 9 January 1884 [S.M.H., 23 January].<br />
f. Henry A. WARBURTON, born at Marrickville, 1888; he died at Birrview, Marrickville, 3 December 1889, aged sixteen months [Sydney Mail, 7 December].<br />
g. Raymond Parker WARBURTON, born at Marrickville, 1891; he died in 1981.<br />
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3. William Louis WARBURTON, born about May 1849; he died at Wollongong, 28 August 1850, aged 13 and a half months, late of Pyrmont [S.M.H., 2 July].<br />
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4. Thomas WARBURTON, born in N.S.W., December 1851; he died at Campbelltown, 21 February 1852, aged 2 months [S.M.H., 24 February].<br />
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5. Eliza A. WARBURTON, born in N.S.W., 1853; she died 21 October 1853, and was buried at Camperdown Cemetery.</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><b><i><u><span style="font-size: large;">EARLY WARBURTONS IN NEW SOUTH WALES.</span></u></i></b></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Hannah WARBURTON, born about 1756; Middlesex Gaol Delivery, 1792, sentenced to 7 years, for theft; arrived in N.S.W. on the "Belona," on 16 January 1793; she died in N.S.W., 1835, Volume 19, #2046, aged 78 years.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Rosetta WARBURTON, born about 1779; Lancaster Quarter Sessions, 1798, sentenced to 7 years; arrived in N.S.W. on the "Britannia," 18 July 1798; she died 29 March 1851, and was buried at Camperdown Cemetery, aged 72 years; she was married firstly, in N.S.W., 1810 Vol. 147A, #426, to Hugh OWENS (he arrived on the "Marquis Cornwallis," 1795); he is said to have died at Wilberforce, 1835; she was married secondly, at Windsor, 31 January 1839, to Samuel DAW or DAWES (he arrived on the "Isabella," 1818); he died in Sydney, 1845.</div><div>Rosetta had issue:</div><div>1. Thomas WARBERTON, born 1802, Volume 148, #339.</div><div>2. a daughter; as the infant daughter of Rosetta WALBURNE (sic), she died at Parramatta, 19 May 1803, <i>"... in consequence of her clothes taking fire some days before, by which accident she was shockingly burnt"</i> [Sydney Gazette, 22 May 1803].</div><div>3. James WARBERTON, born 1804, Vol. 1A, #1296 (parents Hugh OWEN and Rosetta WARBURTON).</div><div>4. Jane OWEN, born 1806, Vol. 1A, #1702 (parents ditto).</div><div>5. Catherine OWEN, born 1809, Vol. 1C, #2085 (parents Hugh and Rosetta OWEN).</div><div>6. Thomas OWEN.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Thomas WARBURTON, born 1786; Chester Quarter Sessions, sentence 7 years; arrived in N.S.W. on the "Shipley," 26 September 1820; application to marry, dated 19 March 1829, to Elizabeth CARPENTER; married at St John's, Parramatta, 1829, Vol. 3B, #4597.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Samuel WARBURTON; Sheffield Quarter Sessions, Yorkshire West Riding, 7 years; arrived in N.S.W. on the ship "Guildford," 15 July 1822.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>John WARBURTON; Chester Quarter Sessions, 7 years (married with two children); arrived in Van Diemen's Land on the ship "Albion," 21 October 1823; married at Hobart, 6 August 1855, to Mary MILLER.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Thomas WARBURTON, born at Altringham, Cheshire, 9 November 1803; Chester Quarter Sessions, 1828, sentenced to 7 years; arrived in N.S.W., 3 November 1828, on the "Albion"; probably obtained his Certificate of Freedom, 18 May 1835; he died at Bombala, 6 February 1879, [Registered #4484, parents Thomas and Ann, evidently m.s. BAILEY]; he was married at Benandra, N.S.W., 25 May 1841, to Mehali PIPER; as Mahalath, she died at Bombala, 1901 [Registered #4673, parents Richard and Lucy, evidently m.s. RANSOME, widow of Edward PIPER, Richard SMITH being her second husband]; she was evidently born at Catsfield, East Sussex, 24 September 1825, daughter of Edward PIPER and Lucy RANSOME (Lucy married secondly, in 1827, to Richard SMITH); Thomas and Mahalath had issue (full dates from memorials on Findagrave, evidently the pre -registration births also at Bombala):</div><div>1. Elizabeth WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 6 February 1843 Vol. 27A #1492; as Mahala, she was married at Bombala, 1867, to John WHITBY.</div><div>2. William Thomas WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 1845, Vol. 30A, #2336; he died at Bombala, 1909 #4656; he was married at Bombala, 1876, to Emma Jane HUMBLE.</div><div>3. John WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 1847, Vol. 33A, #1978; he was married at Bombala, 1881, to Ellen COWELL.</div><div>4. Joseph WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 10 August 1850, Vol. 25, #3248; he died at Bombala, 24 June 1922 #5571, aged 72, a bachelor [Bombala Times, 30 June].</div><div>5. Richard WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 22 February 1852, Vol.38A, #3391; he died at Bombala, 22 September 1929 #16864, aged 77 [Bombala Times, 27 September]; he was married at Bombala, 1876, to Margaret EALTON; she died in Sydney, April 1918, aged 65, shortly after arriving to visit her daughter, Mrs W. OLIVER [Bombala Times, 26 April], a native of Scotland, who was the widow of Mr C. ELTON.</div><div>6. James WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 23 April 1854, Vol.40, #1747; he died at Bombala, 21 August 1932, aged 78, a bachelor [Bombala Times, 26 August].</div><div>7. Mahalath WARBURTON, born Bombala, 27 May 1856; as Mahala, she was married at Bombala, 1880, to John Michael EVANS.</div><div>8. Sarah WARBURTON, born Bombala, 1858.</div><div>9. George WARBURTON, born Bombala, 1860; he died at Bombala, 1939 #24226; he was married at Bombala, 1893, to Ivy C.M. SCOTT.</div><div>10. Charlotte WARBURTON, born Bombala, 1863; she died in July 1931, aged 67 [Bombala Times, 10 July]; she was married at Bombala, 1884, to Amos BELLCHAMBERS, who died before her; two of her sons died in France (Private Harry and Lance-Corporal Arthur), and she was survived by five sons (George, Claude, Fred, Marshall and Ray) and one daughter (Mrs F. GILMORE) [Bombala times, 10 July].</div><div>11. Mary Esther WARBURTON, born Bombala, 23 November 1865 (Registered 1866); she died in July 1935 [Bombala Times, 26 July]; she was married to Isaac DENT or DENTON, of Bendoc, Victoria.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>James WARBURTON, born about 1788; he died in N.S.W., 1841, Vol. 25B, # 998, aged 53 years.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Thomas WARBURTON, born about 1786; probably arrived in N.S.W. as a convict; he died at Brisbane Waters, N.S.W., 24 September 1864 [# 3314, parents named Samuel and Mary], and was buried at Point Frederick Pioneer Cemetery, aged 77. </div><div>Possibly father, by Elizabeth, of:</div><div>1. Samuel Joseph WARBURTON, born about 1832; he died at Newtown, 11 January 1899 #2585, aged 66 years, and was buried with his wife; funeral notices were inserted by his daughters Mrs Thomas BOYCE, Mrs Francis GIBSON, Mrs GRANT, and Clara WARBURTON; he was married at Gosford/Kincumber, C. of E., 1854, to Catherine Teresa DUFFY; she died 16 November 1887, aged 49, and was buried at Rookwood, R.C. Mortuary 1, Section F, Plot 180; they had issue:</div><div> a. Samuel J. WARBURTON, born at Gosford, 1856; he died at Brisbane Waters, 1871.</div><div> b. Emily A. WARBURTON, born at Gosford, 1858; an Emily GRANT was buried at Rookwood, in the other half of Samuel and Catherine's plot; she was married at Sydney, 1891 #1523, to Charles GRANT.</div><div> c. William H. WARBURTON, born at Gosford, 1860; he died at Sofala, 1872.</div><div> d. (female) born at Gosford, 1862; possibly Margaret E., who died at Lambton, 1877.</div><div> e. Edwin G. WARBURTON, born at Gosford, 12 November 1863 (registered in 1864); as Edwin T., he inserted a Funeral Notice for his mother, 1887; as Edwin Thomas, he died at Newtown, 11 February 1939, and was buried at Rookwood R.C., Mortuary 2, Section 16, Plot 36.</div><div> f. Ada M. WARBURTON, born at Brisbane Waters, 1866; she was married, at Sydney, 1890 #1238, to Francis G. GIBSON.</div><div> g. Herbert G. WARBURTON, born at Brisbane Waters, 1868; he died at Newcastle, 1880.</div><div> h. Alfred E. WARBURTON, born at Brisbane Waters, 1871; possibly Albert E., who died at Brisbane Waters, 1876.</div><div> j. Mary Teresa WABURTON, born at Sofala, 1874; she was married at Newtown, 1893 #5426, to Thomas A. BOYCE.</div><div> k. Clara Cecelia WARBURTON, born at Lambton, 1876; unmarried in 1899.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Thomas WARBURTON, born in Atherton, Lancashire; he emigrated to N.S.W. in about 1839; he died at Berrima, N.S.W., 1867 #4431, son of Joseph [N.S.W. Statutory Death Indexes]; he was married at Pemberton, Lancashire, 28 May 1836, to Sarah FRODSHAM; she died at Wingecarribee Shire, N.S.W., 17 September 1867; they had issue, including:</div><div>1. Sarah Ann WARBURTON, born Campbelltown, N.S.W., 8 May 1840 [Volume 47, #1045].</div><div>2. Benjamin WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 1842 [Vol. 53, #28]; he died in 1876 - a Benjamin WARBURTON was buried on 20 December 1876, aged 35, at Rookwood, Old Methodist, Section 3A, Plot 743.</div><div>3. Isaac WARBURTON, born at Mittagong, N.S.W., 1843; he died at Newtown, Sydney, 18 June 1901, and buried at Rookwood Cemetery, Anglican, Section 4, Plot 4255 (with his grand-daughter Alma MASON):</div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/a/AVvXsEhoxH3L8U1xPyAJ7uEkpWfAKOy66j0vMV5vmXqfS1awzU4kbMWHoZ89CyYMQx-Qr8pBh_OYOBC9-y-0luNeHM8UBKcCugDqdcqXagPL9nAtIMuXpsjUkVFTtODSZyvfpZAyoUO5wtfgEuit3puiSpR1pFuPPB1B2bfQqDrskz7Rhhcg_rkjIOQ9pOhVYQ=s2844" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="2844" data-original-width="1978" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/a/AVvXsEhoxH3L8U1xPyAJ7uEkpWfAKOy66j0vMV5vmXqfS1awzU4kbMWHoZ89CyYMQx-Qr8pBh_OYOBC9-y-0luNeHM8UBKcCugDqdcqXagPL9nAtIMuXpsjUkVFTtODSZyvfpZAyoUO5wtfgEuit3puiSpR1pFuPPB1B2bfQqDrskz7Rhhcg_rkjIOQ9pOhVYQ=w279-h400" width="279" /></a></div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/a/AVvXsEgW96U2sKx63dZvNB4A3fH32xFDeU99CFFajiE06b-OUql5f77Jp5fFZTxXkFNurDNmr2hJ04wBWB9zI74uKKJJcrDcZ-TYj4L73RCi3lblX2csJHYCXNJLwHy1ir51IFIie-dp0nz-oGiNO4phBDxfHnmcdSnwNVwaYkGGyMHRuR6DLW35QRs6Y95U6A=s2036" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1390" data-original-width="2036" height="272" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/a/AVvXsEgW96U2sKx63dZvNB4A3fH32xFDeU99CFFajiE06b-OUql5f77Jp5fFZTxXkFNurDNmr2hJ04wBWB9zI74uKKJJcrDcZ-TYj4L73RCi3lblX2csJHYCXNJLwHy1ir51IFIie-dp0nz-oGiNO4phBDxfHnmcdSnwNVwaYkGGyMHRuR6DLW35QRs6Y95U6A=w400-h272" width="400" /></a></div><br /><div>Isaac was married at All Saints Church, Sutton Forest, 22 March 1865, to Jane CLOUT; she died at Berrima, 1886 #7802; they had issue, including:</div><div> a. Isaac Lorne WARBURTON, born at Goulburn, 1871; died 3 May 1952, and was buried at East Lismore Cemetery [Anglican Portion, Row 2A, Plot 2]; he was married at Bowral, 1896 #7058, to Edith E.A. YOUNG; she died 24 May 1925, aged 51, and was buried at East Lismore [same pot as Isaac].</div><div>Isaac was married secondly, at Berrima, in 1886, to Mary Eliza CLEARY.</div><div>4. Thomas WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 1847 [Vol. 34A, #1737]; he died at Berrima, 1884 #7490?</div><div>5. Mary WARBURTON, born Mittagong, N.S.W., 9 June 1849 [Vol. 34A, #1736].</div><div>6. John WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 1850 [Vol.37A, #1818]; he died at Moss Vale, 1916 #11531.</div><div>7. James WARBURTON, born N.S.W., 1852 [Vol. 38A, #1770]; he died at Moss Vale, 1921 #8813].</div><div><br /></div><div><div><br /></div><div>Henry WARBURTON, born about 1855; he appears to have arrived in Central Cumberland, N.S.W. shortly before 1888; living in Granville, 1898; later resided in Auburn; he died at his residence, 1 Normanby Road, Auburn, 16 March 1939, aged 83, husband of Hannah J., and father of Albert, Anne, Sydney and Elsie [S.M.H., 25 March]; he was married to Hannah Jane (possibly PETTINGER); she died at the same place, 12 November 1946, aged 89 years [S.M.H., 15 November; they were both privately cremated (probably at Rookwood); they had issue:</div><div>1. Albert WARBURTON, evidently born about 1880, before his parents arrived in N.S.W.; named in both his parents' death notices; he died in Sydney, 27 January 1969 #679, parents Henry and Hanna Jane, and buried in one of the BREMNER plots at Waverley Cemetery [Section 16 (General), Select, Plot 2958], aged 88; he was married firstly, at Granville, September 1906, to Edith Elizabeth SALMONS; she emigrated from England with her parents; she died at Granville, 23 February 1908 #1549, aged 26 years 7 months, and was buried at Rookwood, Old Methodist, Section 2C, Plot 344; they had issue:</div><div> a. Albert Francis Howard WARBURTON, born Granville, 1908 #3940; he died at Edgar Street, Auburn, 8 June 1909, aged 11 months, and was buried with his mother.<div>Albert married secondly, at St Leonards, 1911 #14517, to Frances A. MUNCASTER; she died at Waverley, 1941 #5041, parents William and Jane; by her, Albert had further issue:</div><div> b. Douglas A. WARBURTON, born Waverley, 1913 #37404.</div><div> c. Mona A. WARBURTON, born Waverley, 1916 #38324.</div><div> d. Howard E. WARBURTON, born at Waverley, 1920 #51177.</div><div> e. Raymond WARBURTON.</div><div> f. Nellie WARBURTON.</div></div></div><div>2. Annie WARBURTON; named in both her parents' death notices; she died at Auburn, 1960 #2147.</div><div>3. Sydney (Sid) WARBURTON, born at Central Cumberland, 1888 #19519; named in both his parents' death notices; he died at Auburn, 1961 #1076.</div><div>4. Elsie WARBURTON, born at Granville, 1898 #3088; named in both her parents' death notices; she died in N.S.W., 1980 #17580 (parents named); she was married in Sydney, 1924 #160, to Alexander Joseph NORTON; they had issue:</div><div> a. Ronald Eric NORTON, born in 1930; he died at Canterbury, N.S.W., 1944 #23529 (parents named).</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>WARBURTON IN SOUTH AUSTRALIA.</u></i></b></span></div><div><br /></div><div>Charles WARBURTON, probably baptised at Hutton, Somerset, 7 October 1827, son of John WARBRITTON (1791-1879), of Hutton, Shoemaker, and Ann JONES (they were married at Hutton, 22 April 1816); Charles was aged 13, with his parents at Hutton, 1841 Census; he was at Llangattock (near Crickhowell), Breconshire, Wales, 1851 Census, aged 23, a Miner, and lodging with William BINGER, his wife Margaret and their two sons; he emigrated to South Australia on the ship "Monsoon," from Liverpool (10 December 1856), arriving in Adelaide, 17 March 1857, with his wife Annie and two daughters (although only one, Emma, was named in the passenger list [S.A. Register, 18 March]; he died at his residence, Hatwell Street, Hackney, Adelaide District, 3 December 1886, aged 59 years, and was buried at Walkerville Wesleyan Cemetery.</div><div>He was married at Crickhowell, Breconshire, September quarter 1852, to Annie WILLIAMS; she died in Adelaide, 24 January 1899, aged 67 years.</div><div>They had issue:</div><div>1. Delilah Mary WARBURTON, born at Crickhowell, about 1852; aged 5 on arrival in South Australia, 1857 (but her name was not in the passeneger list published in the S.A. Register, 18 March); she was married at the residence of the groom, in Adelaide, 24 May 1877, to Charles John COLE, aged 23, Bachelor, son of Charles COLE; they had issue:</div><div><i> a. Charles Stanley COLE, born Adelaide, 2 March 1878.</i></div><div><i> b. Blanche Emily COLE, born at Bowden, Hindmarsh District, 10 March 1880.</i></div><div><i> c. Olive Myrtle COLE, born at Bowden, 10 June 1882.</i></div><div><i> d. Unia Ivy COLE, born at Hindmarsh, 23 November 1888.</i></div><div>2. Emma Alma WARBURTON, born at Crickhowel, 18 March 1855; aged 1 on arrival in South Australia, 17 March 1857; she died at Mount Hawthorne, Western Australia, 20 June 1944; she was married in Adelaide, 19 October 1874, to John Leonard MATTERS; they were living in W.A. by 1904; they had issue:</div><div><i> a. Mary Ethel Ann MATTERS, born at Adelaide, 28 November 1875; died in 1876, infant.</i></div><div><i> b. Elsie Emily Lily May MATTERS, born at Adelaide, 1 October 1876; married in Adelaide, 1902, to Walter William Charles CROSS; with issue.</i></div><div><i> c. Muriel Lilah MATTERS, born at Bowden, Adelaide, 12 November 1877</i><i>; University of Adelaide, Musician</i><i>; went to England in 1905, did some recital works, and worked for the Women's Freedom League; unsuccessful candidate, on a socialist platform, for the Constituency of Hastings, 1924; she died in Hastings, 17 November 1969; she was married in 1913 to an American divorcé, William Arnold PORTER, of Boston, a Dentist; they had no issue.</i></div><div><i> d. Harold Dutton MATTERS, born Adelaide, 23 July 1879.</i></div><div><i> e. John Athelson MATTERS, born Adelaide, about 1881; married in Perth, W.A., 1908, to Lilly HAWKS.</i></div><div><i> f. Leonard Warburton MATTERS, born Port Adelaide, 26 June 1881; Boer War, 1901, as Trooper, 5th South Australian Imperial Bushmen; Journalist, W.A. and abroad; settled in England; said to have assisted his sister Muriel in her campaign for he Constituency of Hastings in 1924; he was elected Labor M.P. for Lambeth, Kennington, 1929; died in Much Hadham, Hertfordshire, November 1951; he was married firstly, to Mary DOMELA; and secondly, to Romana KRYSZEK.</i></div><div><i> g. Charles Adams MATTERS, born Port Adelaide, 28 October 1885; enlisted in the A.I.F., in W.A., 4 September 1914; Colour Sergeant, 5th Reinforcements, 6th Battalion; he sailed on the "Hororata", 17 April 1915, from Melbourne for the Mediterranean; he was killed-in-action, at Gallipoli, 7 August 1915 [Lone Pine Memorial].</i></div><div><i> h. Mary Geraldine MATTERS, born Adelaide, 8 July 1887; died in W.A., 7 December 1911.</i></div><div><i> j. Isabel Emma MATTERS, born Adelaide, 4 September 1893; she married Jacques Charles Clement MONTY de KERLOY.</i></div><div><i> k. Keith Wylie MATTERS, born Adelaide, 16 February 1895; married Elsie Catherine KREITTLING; issue in W.A.</i></div><div>3. Elizabeth Ann WARBURTON, born at Stepney, Adelaide, 21 June 1857; she was probably aged 28, Spinster, a daughter of Charles WARBURTON, who was married at Norwood, 7 November 1885, to John Bailey HALLETT, aged 29, Bachelor, son of Henry HALLETT.</div><div>4. Cecilia WARBURTON, born at Golden Grove, Highercombe, 30 August 1859; she died at Maribyrnong, 1936 #1201, aged 76, (parents named in Vic index); she was married in Victoria, 1885, to Robert CLARKE; they had issue:</div><div><i> a. Edith Alice CLARKE, born at Melbourne, 1886 #13897.</i></div><div><i> b. Robert Norman CLARKE, born at Hawthorn, 1889 #31792.</i></div><div><i> c. Lydia Dorothy CLARKE, born at Hawthorn, 1890 #23888.</i></div><div><i> d. Frank Gordon CLARKE, born at Malvern, 1892 #34353.</i></div><div><i> e. Cecilia Dudley CLARKE, born at Malvern, 1894 #13600.</i></div><div><i> f. John Nelson CLARKE, born at Malvern, 1897 #12572.</i></div><div><i> g. William Iven Lovell CLARKE, born at Elsternwick, 1901 #2941.</i></div><div>5. Lydia WARBURTON, born at North Adelaide, 7 April 1862; she died at Semaphore, 21 January 1882, and was buried at Walkerville Wesleyan Cemetery.</div><div>6. Priscilla WARBURTON, born at North Adelaide, 27 June 1864; she died in 1910; she was married at the residence of Henry Downes SMITH, at Brompton, Hindmarsh District, 4 July 1885, to Albert John HAYDEN, aged 25, son of Thomas HAYDEN; they had issue:</div><div><i> a. Leslie Albert HAYDEN, born at Port Adelaide, 1886.</i></div><div>7. William Albert WARBURTON, born at North Rd, Adelaide, 27 November 1866; he died in Glenelg, 25 December 1929; he was married at Trinity Church, Adelaide, 16 June 1890, to Albia HOLT, aged 24, daughter of William Greenwood HOLT; they had issue:</div><div><i> a. Clifford WARBURTON, born at Hilton, Adelaide, 10 September 1890; he died in Adelaide, 17 September 1968, and was buried at Centennial Park Cemetery; he was married at a Parochial Residence in Adelaide, 24 February 1916, to Ruby Elizabeth FITZSIMONS, aged 26, daughter of James Joseph FITZSIMONS; she was born in Adelaide, 23 September 1886; she died 26 January 1960; they had issue:</i></div><div><i> i. Peter Dudley WARBURTON, born 1916; died 2011.</i></div><div><i> ii. William Ballinger WARBURTON, born in Adelaide, 1918; he died in 1973; he was married in Adelaide, 3 August 1940, to Marjorie RAYMOND.</i></div><div><i> iii. John Clifford WARBURTON, born in Adelaide, 1924; he died in 2014.</i></div><div>8. Frederick Charles WARBURTON, born at Nailsworth, 18 July 1869; he died there, 15 March 1870, aged 8 months, and was buried at Walkerville Wesleyan Cemetery.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Another Charles WARBURTON lived in South Australia, but whether the two were related is unknown, and probably unlikely; he was of Watervale, Farmer, 1864; he died at Magill, Adelaide, 3 October 1892, aged 75 years, and was buried at Magill Cemetery; he was married to Amelia STOKES; she died at the residence of her daughter, Mrs MUIRHEAD, at Magill, 22 September 1921, aged 90, and was buried with her husband Charles; her death notice appeared in the Express and Daily Telegraph (Adelaide), 4 October 1921:</div><div><i>"Mrs Amelia WARBURTON, who died at the residence of her daughter (Mrs MUIRHEAD), at Magill, was the widow of Mr Charles WARBURTON, a resident of the Clare District for many years. She was 90 years of age. She had five sons and eleven dauhghters, of whom one son and nine daughters survive. They are Mr Charles WARBURTON of Western Australia; Mesdames LANE, WEBB, PINNOCK (W.A.), HARDING (Silverton), HARDING (Croydon), DOLAN (Fullarton), NELSON (Glenelg) and TOBIN (Exeter). There are 44 grandchildren and 27 great-grandchildren."</i></div><div>They had issue (although some of them may been fathered by a George LEE - unless this was an alias used by Charles WARBURTON, or vice-versa?):</div><div>1. Charles WARBURTON; he was living in Western Australia, 1921.</div><div>2. Isabella WARBURTON; she was married in 1885, to William Henry TOBIN.</div><div>3. Mary Alice WARBURTON, born about 1868; she was a spinster, aged 23, when she was married at the Wesleyan Methodist Church, Payneham, Norwood District, 23 March 1892, to William Fowler DOLAN, aged 28, Bachelor, a son of Thomas DOLAN.</div><div>4. Annie WARBURTON; she was married to John HARDING.</div><div>5. Sarah WARBURTON, born about 1873; she was 30, Spinster, when she was married at the residence of Rev J.W. BAMBER, Semaphore, Port Adelaide District, 24 February 1904, to George WEBB, aged 28, Bachelor, son of George WEBB; they also went to live in Western Australia.</div><div>6. Catherine WARBURTON, born at Penwortham, Clare District, 15 August 1874; she was probably the Kathleen, aged 25, Spinster, who was married at a house in Payneham, Norwood, 17 March 1899, to William David LANE; they also went to live in Western Australia.</div><div>7. Emily WARBURTON, born at Head of Clare, Clare District, 27 May 1876.</div><div>8. Ruth WARBURTON, born at Seven Hills, Clare District, 1 October 1877; she died in 1962; she was married at the residence of Mrs WARBURTON, Payneham, Norwood District, 19 April 1898, to Albert HARDING, aged 23, Bachelor, son of J.A.P. HARDING.</div><div>9. Susan WARBURTON, born at ditto, Clare, 1 March 1879; she died 22 March 1880, aged 1 year.</div><div>10. Rosetta June WARBURTON, born at Clare, 1880; she died in 1962; she was married at St Bede's Church, Semaphore, Port Adelaide District, 18 November 1908, to William Henry NELSON, aged 27, Bachelor son of Thomas NELSON.</div><div><br /></div><div>For much more detail on the above family, and the next, see Ray WARBURTON's One-name Study, under the title of "The Button Files."</div><div><br /></div><div>Bessie WARBURTON, Spinster, aged 21, a daughter of Charles WARBURTON, was married at New Church, Adelaide, 19 March 1898, to James Douglas PINNOCK, Bachelor, aged 25, son of James PINNOCK; they had issue:</div><div><i> a. Keith Malcolm PINNOCK, born at Payneham, Norwood District, 11 November 1898.</i></div><div>________________________________________</div><div>
<br />
<br />
<b><i><u><span style="font-size: large;">CAPTAIN ROBERT WARBURTON, R.N.</span></u></i></b><br />
<br />
Robert WARBURTON; recorded in Ray WARBURTON's one-name web-site as a son of Rev Richard WARBURTON and Anne ELLIOTT; Royal Navy; Commander of the H.M.S. <i>Childers</i>, May 1794, in the room of Commander Joshua MULLOCK, and was succeeded in March 1795 by Commander Richard DACRES; as Captain, he was transferred, about 1795, to the Port of Limerick; Regulating Officer for the port of Limerick, October 1807, when he received orders from Vice Admiral WHITESHEAD <i>"... for the removal of eight prisoners-of-war who are to be conveyed on board H.M.'s tender Perseverance (to)... in England"</i> [Limerick General Advertiser, 6 October]; he died at his house in Georges Street, Limerick, 17 November 1807, <i>"... for 12 years regulating officer of this port, which trust he has executed with honour and humanity... a few days ago appointed by the Admiralty to the port of Dublin, where he intended to remove this week... yesterday his remains were interred in St John's churchyard"</i> [Limerick General Advertiser, 20 November]; he was married at Milhooke, Queen's County, Anne (or Elizabeth) CROKER [The National Archives (Kew), ADM/6/345/6]; she died at Kingstown, 17 May 1854, widow of Captain Robert WARBURTON, R.N., and daughter of John CROKER, Grange Hill, County Limerick [Limerick.ie/Library/Local_Studies]; they had issue:<br />1. William White WARBURTON, born at William Street, Limerick, 13 July 1799; of 8 Buckingham Street, Dublin, 1868 [THOM's Irish Almanac and City Directory]; he died at 8 Lower Buckingham Street, Dublin, 4 October 1878, his will proved 1 February 1879, by William Adamson SCOTT, of Banagher, King's County, Agent of the Bank of Ieland, as the executor.<br />2. Cosby WARBURTON, born 9 December 1800 [FFOLLIOTT Abstracts]; Captain, Ceylon Rifles; he died at sea, 4 March 1846, off Aden, on a voyage from Colombo to England, and was buried at sea.<br />3. Catherine Susan WARBURTON, eldest daughter; she was married in Dublin, June 1828, to Captain Richard Charles ELLIOT.<br />4. Abraham WARBURTON, born in July 1805; at 8 Charleville Mall, North Strand, Dublin, 1843 [P.O. and Annual Directory]; Vestry Clerk, St Thomas's Church, Dublin, of 23 Summer Street North, 1858 [P.O. Dublin Directory]; imprisoned for Debt, Kilmainham Prison, 3 November 1860, on the complaint of Mary A. GAVAN; he died at 74 Lower Gardiner Street, Dublin, 11 July 1862, aged 63 years [Warder and Dublin Weekly Mail, 19 July]; he was married to Lucinda; she died at Charleville Mall, 4 July 1846, <i>"... wife of Abraham WARBURTON, Esq"</i> [Warder & Dublin Weekly Mail, 10 January].<br />5. Frances WARBURTON, youngest daughter; she was married at Holyhead, North Wales, July 1834, to George Perrin WALLACE, of Rochestown, County Dublin [Limerick Chronicle, 19 July].</div><div><br /></div><div>I am wondering whether there may have been some conflation amongst the families of the two brothers, Robert and Thomas WARBURTON, who were married to Anne CROKER and Sarah KNIGHT respectively?<br />
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<br />
<br />
<b><i><u><span style="font-size: large;">REV THOMAS WARBURTON.</span></u></i></b><br /><br />
Thomas WARBURTON, born in Lancashire, about 1679; entered Trinity College, Dublin, Pensioner (Tutor Mr John SHELMERDINE), 16 May 1699, aged 19, son of John, born Lancashire; B.A. Aest 1703; Curate to Rev Jonathan SWIFT at Laracor, 1710, until 1716; he also kept <i>"... but a thin"</i> school in Trim, 1713 [F. Elrington BALL, "Correspondence of Jonathan SWIFT," page 54, footnote 5]; he was collated as Rector of Magherafelt, Diocese of Armagh, 23 January 1716-17; he died in 1736 (his successor there was collated on 4 August 1736); his will, dated 4 July 1727, proved P.C.I., 17 November 1736, with <i>"... all his property to his wife Phillis, believing she will do right with heir children"</i> [James B. LESLIE, "Armagh Clergy, etc", page 364]; he was married, 16 April 1718 (?), to Phillis ASHE (daughter of Stephen ASH, Tanner in Derry, and his wife Mary EDWARDS) [Craig SMITH, www.smith-/history.blogspot.com]; she was living in Magherafelt in 1752, a widow, with rentals from <i>"... three shingled houses of one storey and a half, and three low cottages of one storey"</i>[W.H. MAITLAND, "History of Magherafelt," Cookstown, 1916, page 39 and another]; they had issue:<br />
A1. Thomas WARBURTON, born in County Derry, about 1725; entered Trinity College, Dublin, Pensioner (Tutor Mr TOWERS), 26 September 1742, aged 17, son of Thomas, Clericus; B.A. Vern 1747; he was named in the will of his father-in-law, Rev Elias De BUTTS, Rector of Ballinderry (proved 21 July 1752), as one of the executors.<br />
A2. Elizabeth WARBURTON; she was married by License dated 1 June 1754 to Meredith WOOLSEY of Portadown.<br />
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<br />
<br />
<i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>THE MONGAN WARBURTON FAMILY.</u></span></b></i><br /><br />
Terence MONGAN was born about 1754, third son of Dominic MONGAN (or MANGON), a blind and noted Irish harpist from County Tyrone; Terence early trained for the Catholic Priesthood in France; he recanted, and became a Protestant, adopting the given name Charles, as Chaplain, 62nd Regiment of Foot; he embarked at Monkstown, April 1776, as deputy Chaplain (in the room of Henry ST GEORGE), for service in America he served with that Regiment in America, during the Revolutionary War of Independence; he was captured in the fall of Saratoga, October 1777; Chaplain, 3rd Battalion, New Jersey Loyalists, 1781; he lived in New York for a time, and returned to Ireland about 1785, with his second wife and (at least) three young children; Rector of Tullah and Creagh, Diocese of Ross, 1789, and Prebendary of St Finian's Cathedral, Killaloe; Dean of Ardagh, 1790; in 1792, by Royal Warrant, as <i>"Rev Charles </i>(MORGAN corrected in next issue to) <i>MONGAN, Master of Arts, Rector of Loughgilly in the County of Armagh, and Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Ardagh,"</i> he adopted the surname of <i>"... his maternal cousin-german </i>(as in germain, and not from Germany)<i>, Miss Alicia WARBURTON, Spinster, sister of the late William WARBURTON of the City of London, Esq, deceased"</i> [London Gazette, 19 May 1792, page 334]; D.D. (speciali gratia), T.C.D., Vern 1795 [Alumni Dublinenses]; Dean of Clonmacnoise, 1800, and Precentor of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin; Chaplain to the Lord Lieutenant, the Duke of Bedford, 1806; consecrated at St Patrick's Cathedral, as Bishop of Limerick, 13 July 1806; Bishop of Cloyne, 1820.<br />
<br />
Charles (Terence MONGAN) WARBURTON died at Cloyne, 9 August 1826, aged 72, and was buried in the the family vault in the Cathedral, Western wall of the South Transept, where there is a monument, above a flag in the pavement covering the entrance to the vault, in memory of his daughter Selina (see below):<br />
<i>"To the memory of the Right Rev Charles WARBURTON, D.D., Lord Bishop of Cloyne, Deceased 9th August A.D. 1826, aged 72 years. </i><br />
<i>"This memorial of affectionate Regret is erected by his disconsolate widow, Frances WARBURTON, and Children. He was consecrated Bishop of Limerick, 13th July 1805, and translated to this See, 20th September 1820..."</i><br />
<br />
Charles was married, evidently secondly, in New York, 18 February 1779, to Frances MARSTON, daughter of Nathaniel MARSTON and his wife Anna Van CORTLAND; she died at Limerick, shortly before 24 November 1835 [Freeman's Journal], and was buried in her late husband's vault in Cloyne Cathedral [Limerick Chronicle, 5 December].<br />
<br />
Charles and Frances had issue:<br />
<br />
1. Charles WARBURTON, born in New York, 1780; he entered Trinity College, Dublin, 1 November 1799, aged 17 and a half years [Alumni Dublinenses]; B.A. Aest 1803; M.A. Aest 1807; LL.B. and LL.D., 1826; Rector of Rathkeale, County Limerick; Archdeacon of Tuam, 1806, until his death; Chancellor of Limerick Cathedral, 1813 [COTTON, page 402]; he was at Caroline HURST's Lodging House, Wellington Crescent, Ramsgate, 1841 Census, aged 54, born Ireland (sic), with his wife and four children; he was at 8 Bentinck Street, Marylebone, London, 1851 Census, aged 69, Archdeacon of Tuam, born Ireland, with his wife and a niece and nephew; he died at the Glebe House, Rathkeale, 12 December 1855, aged 75 [Limerick.ie/Library/Local_Studies], and was buried at Rathkeale Cemetery [Findagrave]; he was married, by his father, 3 June 1824, to Alicia BUNBURY-ISAAC, youngest daughter of the late Thomas BUNBURY-ISAAC, of Holywood House, County Down [Dublin Evening Post, 4 June]; aged 34, born Ireland, with her husband, 1841 Census; she was with her husband, 1851 Census, aged 49, born Ireland; she was at Stanbroke Villa, Pittville Circus, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, 1861 Census, Head, Widow, 58, Landed Proprietor, born Ireland, with her son Augustus and his family; they had issue:<br />
a. Isaac WARBURTON.<br />
b. Charles WARBURTON, born about 1825; he was aged 15, with his parents, 1841 Census; recorded as late Captain, 85th Regiment, in his son Charles Peel's baptismal entry, June 1852; he died at the Isle of Wight, 24 August 1859, aged 34; he was married in 1851 to Matilda Caroline PEEL; she was at Woodhouse, Shrawley, Warwickshire, 1861 Census, aged 34, Widow, Head of Household, Fundholder, born Oxford, with her widowed mother Eliza PEEL, a Visitor, aged 72, also born Oxford, her four children, and five domestic servants; they had issue:</div><div> i. Charles Peel WARBURTON, baptised at Lamberhurst St Mary, Kent, 2 June 1852; aged 8, with his mother, 1861 Census.</div><div> ii. Garnett Hamilton WARBURTON, born at Avening, Gloucestershire, about 1853; aged 7, with his mother, 1861 Census; he died in the Transvaal, South Africa, 13 January 1877, <i>"... dearly beloved son of Matilda and the late Captain Charles WARBURTON, 85th Regiment, aged 23 years"</i> [Freeman's Journal (Dublin), 7 March].</div><div> iii. Eliza WARBURTON, born Rathkeale, Ireland, about 1854; aged 6, with her mother, 1861 Census.</div><div> iv. Henry WARBURTON, born at Bellongham, Herefordshire, about 1856; aged 4, with his mother, 1861 Census.<br />
c. Augustus Frederick WARBURTON, baptised at Rathkeale, County Limerick, 21 February 1827; he was with his mother, 1861 Census, aged 34, late Captain 15th Foot, born Ireland, and his wife and four children; he was at 2 Wellesley Terrace, Dover, Kent, 1881 Census, aged 54, late Captain, 15th Regiment, with his wife and seven children; he was married at St James's, Piccadilly, 1 June 1854, to Mary Anne Campbell HAILES; she was with her husband, 1861, aged 32, born France; they had issue:</div><div> i. Charles C. WARBURTON, born at 7 Donegall Square, Belfast, 10 March 1855 [Newry Examiner, 14 March]; a visitor with his grandmother, 1861 Census, aged 6, Scholar.</div><div> ii. Alice J. WARBURTON, born Ireland, about 1857; ditto, 1861, aged 4; probably, as Isabel, with her parents, 1881 Census, Unmarried, aged 24, born Belfast.</div> iii. Leila C. WARBURTON, born about 1858; ditto, 1861, aged 3; with her parents, 1881, Unmarried, aged 23, born Dublin.<div> iv. Amelia WARBURTON, born at 20 Herbert Street, Dublin, 11 July 1859 [Morning Post, 14 July]; she died there, 23 July 1859, an infant [Saunders's News-Letter, 25 July].</div><div> v. Florence M. WARBURTON, born Ireland, about July 1860; ditto, 1861, aged 8 months; with her parents, 1881 Census, Unmarried, aged 20, born Dublin.</div><div> vi. Augustus Gough WARBURTON, born at 59 Rue due Prance, Brussels, 19 August 1862 [Morning Post, 28 August].</div><div> vii. Eleanor Louisa WARBURTON, born at 58 Lansdown Place, Brighton, 11 October 1864 [Newcastle Journal, 15 October]; with her parents, 1881, aged 17, born Brighton.</div><div> viii. a still-born daughter, at Ryde, 11 November 1865 [Cork Constitution, 16 November]</div><div> ix. Marion Flora WARBURTON; with her parents, 1881, aged 14, born Brighton; she died in 1957.</div><div> x. a still-born son, born prematurely at Widford House, Ryde, 22 August 1866 [Chichester Express, 4 September].</div><div> xi. Harris Grant WARBURTON, born at Somerset House, Ryde, Isle of Wight, 1 November 1867 [Morning Advertiser, 5 November].</div><div> xii. Philip Bunbury WARBURTON, born at 94 Belgrave Road, S.W., 15 November 1868 [John Bull, 21 November]; with his parents, 1881, aged 13, born Ryde, Isle of Wight.</div><div> xiii. Frances Caroline WARBURTON, born 1870; with her parents, 1881, aged 11, birth place obscure ("Bown a/R").</div><div> xiii. Violet WARBURTON, born at 8 Guilford Lawn, Dover, Kent, 26 February 1875 [Hour, 2 March]; with her parents, 1881, aged 6, born Dover.<br />
d. Maria WARBURTON, born in Ireland, about 1828; she was aged 13, with her parents, 1841 Census; ; she was married, by her father, at Rathkeale Parish Church, 8 April 1850, to Major John BLACKBURN, 85th Regiment, of Waterford, witnessed by John WARBURTON and Robert B. BLACKBURN.</div><div> e. Frances WARBURTON, born in Ireland, about 1829; as Fanny, she was aged 11, with her parents, 1841 Census; she was married at Rathkeale Parish Church, 24 May 1854, to Philip Payne GALLWEY, Gent, of Belgrave Street, London, son of the late Sir William Payne GALLWEY, Baronet<br />
<br />
2. George WARBURTON, born in New York, about 1782; he was married in 1806 to Ann ACTON (I query this as being perhaps instead a Garryhinch marriage).<br />
<br />
3. Augustus WARBURTON, born at Loughelly, County Armagh, 27 November 1783 [W.O. 76/254, British Army Service Record]; Ensign, 4th Regiment, 22 August 1799, without purchase; Lieutenant, 4th Regiment, 27 February 1800; Captain, 60th Regiment, 12 December 1801, by purchase; Captan, 57th Regiment, 25 May 1803, without purchase; Major, 91st Regiment, 18 October 1806, by purchase; Lieutenant Colonel, in Canada, 16 August 1811; Lieutenant Colonel, 41st Regiment, 29 October (?) 1814; Lieutenent-Colonel, 85th Regment, May 1815; Colonel, 85th Regiment, 22 May 1825; he died at Cheltenham, 22 May 1836, <i>"... Colonel, 85th Light Infantry, son of the late Dr WARBURTON, Bishop of Cloyne"</i> [Mayo Constitutution, Friday 3 June; Kerry Evening Post, 4 June].<div><br /></div>
4. John WARBURTON, born at Monaghan, County Monaghan, 14 July 1786, the fourth son; he entered Trinity College, Dublin, Socio Comitatus (Tutor Mr CARPENDALE), 3 October 1803, aged 17, son of Charles MONGAN, Decanus Ardensis [Alumni Dublinenses]; B.A. Aest 1807; M.A. Aest 1817; LL.B. and LL.D. Vern 1826 [Alumni Dublinenses]; in June 1814 he was <i>"... presented to the valuable livng of Kill, in the Diocese of Kildare, vacant by the decease of the Rev Chancellor HERBERT"</i> [Limerick Gazette, Friday 10 June]; Precentor of Ardfert; Precentor of Limerick, 24 June 1818 [Henry COTTON, "Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae," Volume 1, 1851, page 400]; Vicar Choral of Cloyne, 26 July 1825; Vicar Choral of Cork, 13 July 1826 [COTTON, page 285]; he died at Kill Glebe, near Naas, County Kildare, 6 July 1878, aged 95, Widower, the death informed by his daughter Alice WARBURTON, of Kill, present at the death; he was married at Midleton, County Cork, 20 March 1822, to Henrietta Ann Sandford PALMER, daughter of R. Sandford PALMER, of Ballynockan Castle, King's County [Clare Morning Post, 4 April]; she died at Kill Glebe, 23 July 1872 [Belfast Newsletter, 26 July]; they had issue (on-line family tree, not yet corroborated):<br />
a. Charles WARBURTON, born in Dublin, 17 February 1823; he entered Trinity College, Dublin, S.C. (Private Tutor), 2 December 1842, aged 19 [Alumni Dublinenses]; B.A. Aest 1847; he died in 1896.<br />
b. John WARBURTON, born 30 January 1824; 60th Rifles; he died in 1921; he was married to Martha MITALL, daughter of Captain MITALL, 60th Rifles.<br />
c. Garnett WARBURTON, born 21 January 1825; Captain, 3rd "Buffs" Regiment; Captain, 2nd Warwickshire Militia, 1855; he died at Leamington, 15 December 1860, aged 31, and buried at All Saints, Leamington Priors; he was married at Leamington Parish Church, Warwickshire, 23 August 1855, to Georgina Henrietta HAMPDEN, daughter of John HAMPDEN, Esq, of Leamington [Derby Mercury, 5 September].<br />
d. Robert Sandford WARBURTON, born 6 February 1827; 3rd "Buffs"; he was married to Hellen BAKER.<br />
e. Augustus WARBURTON, born 13 July 1831; he informed his sister Mary Anne's death in 1878.<br />
f. Frank WARBURTON, born after 1833; Ensign, 19th Regiment; he died on 11 July 1858.<br />
g. Marianne WARBURTON, born at Kill Glebe, 22 September 1833 [Dublin Evening Mail, 27 September]; she died at Kill Glebe, 20 September 1878, aged 45, Spinster, Clergyman's daughter, informed by Augustus WARBURTON.<br />
h. Alice WARBURTON, born after 1833; she was living at Kill Glebe, 1878, when she informed her father's death.<br />
j. Anna Maria WARBURTON, born in 1842.<br />
k. Elizabeth WARBURTON, born 13 March 1844.<br />
<br />
5. Charlotte Anne WARBURTON, born in 1789; she was married, by Settlements dated 25 March 1815 [Memorial 472748, Book 688, Page 12], to Rev William Wray MAUNSELL, Archdeacon of Limerick, the second son of Rev William MAUNSELL, Archdeacon of Kildare, the trustees being Rev Charles COOTE, Rector of Doone, and Rev Charles WARBURTON, Rector of Rathkeale (both of the 3rd party), and Thomas WILSON, of Wilson's Castle, Limerick, Esq, and Rev John WARBURTON, Rector of Castlebar (both of the 4th party).<br />
<br />
6. Selina WARBURTON, said to have been born on 26 June 1791; she died in Cloyne, 12 March 1826, shortly before her father, and was buried near him in Cloyne Cathedral [M.I. on paving stone over the entry to the family vault, South Transept, at the foot of her father's monument, on the West Wall of that transept].</div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>CAPTAIN PETER WARBURTON, OF CHELSEA HOSPITAL.</u></span></b></i></div><div><br /></div><div>Peter WARBURTON; <i>"... Capt. in his Majesty's Chelsea Hospital. Died there on 6 June 1730, in the 94th year of his Age</i>" [Monumental Inscription, "Survey of London,", Edited by Montagu COX and Philip NORMAN, 1900, London City Council - Volume XI - The Parish of Chelsea - Part IV, at page 85, in an appendix, headed "The burial ground of the Royal Hospital"]; his wife Martha was buried with him, on 21 July 1737, <i>"... in ye 59th year of her Age"</i> [M.I., ditto].</div><div>The entry was headed:</div><div><i>"Headstone with achievement of arms.</i></div><div><i>"Arms: WARBURTON quartering EGERTON (the latter obliterated).</i></div><div><i>Crest: A Saracen's Head cut off at the Shoulders."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>Curiously, the Kentish Weekly Post, Wednesday 13 June 1739, carried this death notice:</div><div><i>"On Wednesday last, died at his Apartment in Chelsea College, Capt Peter WARBURTON, aged upwards of 90 years."</i></div><div>This does compute to a death on 6 June, unless this item had been copied from an earlier newspaper.</div><div>But the 9 year difference in the year poses a serious problem - unless one of the readings of the inscription mistook the last digit as a 9 instead of a 0 - which, in worn inscriptions, is an easy enough error to make.</div><div><br /></div><div><div>He may have been the Peter WARBURTON who was married at St Martin-in-the Fields, in 1716, to Martha MILLER, both of Chelsea.</div></div><div>______________________________________________</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>WARBURTON MENTIONS IN INDIA OFFICE REGISTERS.</u></b></i></span></div><div><br /></div><div>Images of Church and Chapel Register pages in India, are viewable in India Office resources on the Findmypast.co.uk subscription web-site.</div><div>These include 73 marriage entries, 76 baptisms and 85 burials, although it appears from the index that there are some duplications.</div><div>I hope to complete a full abstraction of these records soon.</div><div><br /></div><div>Use of (X) indicates that they used an X mark to sign the register.</div><div><br /></div><div>Thomas WARBURTON was married at Bombay, 4 June 1755, to Mary CURRY.</div><div><br /></div><div>William WARBURTON was married at Vepery Garrison, 28 September 1768, to Catherine SOMERS.</div><div><br /></div><div>Elizabeth (X) WARBURTON, Widow, was married, with permission of Colonel MARRIOTT, 26 February 1813, to Henry WEBB, Private, H.M.'s 24th Regiment, by John YOUNG, Chaplain, witnessed by John DAVIS and Eliza (X) SMITH.</div><div><br /></div>William WARBURTON, Conductor of Ordnance, was married by Banns, at Bombay, 7 November 1813, to Mary Ann HOOK.</div><div><br /></div><div>Thomas (X) WARBURTON, bachelor, Sergeant Instructor in the Ord. Car. Art'y, was married by banns, at St Mary's Church, Madras, 13 July 1830, to Harriet (X) BARBAR, Spinster, Indo-Briton, by F. SPRING, Chaplain, witnessed by David (X) DALTON and Eliza SWEENY.</div><div><br /></div><div>Harriet WARBURTON was married by Banns, at Cawnpore, Archdeaconry and Diocese of Calcutta, 14 November 1831, to William CHADWICK, aged 25, H.M.'s 11th Dragoons, by Ed. WHITE, District Chaplain, Parents/Next Friends Wm FLETCHER, Sergt 11th Dra's, and Matilda (?)UCES, witnessed by N. JONES and G. BOYD.</div><div><br /></div><div>Maria Ann WARBURTON was married at Bombay, 23 April 1832, to Joseph Anthony BUCKALL.</div><div><br /></div><div>Marian WARBURTON, Spinster, was married at Bangalor, 19 March 1833, to Charles TAYLOR, Lieut, 48th Regiment N.I., Bachelor, by Jos WRIGHT, Senior Chaplain, witnessed by W. INGLIS, Major, 48th Regt, Catherine INGLIS, and P. LEWIS, Lieut, 48th Regiment.</div><div><br /></div><div>Thomas (X) WARBURTON, Private, Madras European Regiment, Widower, by Banns, at Nagpore, Madras Presidency, 15 June 1835, to Sarah (X) TULLEY, Spinster, Indo-Briton, by C. JEAFFRESON, Chaplain, witnessed by E. HACKETT and Thomas FAHIE.</div><div><br /></div><div>W. WARBURTON, Jeweller, of Meerut, was married at by Banns, Chaplaincy Station, Allahabad, Archdeaconry of Calcutta, 21 August 1835, to A.E. WORTHERS, of Allahabad, by George WARD, Garrison Chaplain, witnessed by S. and D.E. REBELLO.</div><div>William WARBURTON was buried at Meerut, 20 August 1836, aged 45, Jeweller at Meerut, by P.C. ROBY, Chaplain. </div><div>His will was proved 5 September 1836, in which he appointed Mr John FROST, of 21 Denmark Street, in the Liberties of Westminster City, Middlesex, for his estate <i>"... to be reserved by him for the use and benefit of my son William Frances WABURTON, and in the event if his demise, to my sister Mrs Marian FANKLIN, the wife of Mr Robert FRANKLIN, Shoemaker. I leave to my wife Catherine WARURON /late WARBURTON, 1 Rupee."</i></div><div><br /></div><div>C. (X) WARBURTON, Widow, was married by Banns, at Dinapore, Archdeaconry of Calcutta, 27 March 1837, to John (X) YORK, Widower, Taylor, of Dinapore, by John VAUGHAN, Chaplain, witnessed by P.P. CRUMP and W. SHEPHARD, Muzafferpore.</div><div><br /></div><div>Peter Egerton WARBURTON, Esq, Bachelor, Lieutenant, (13)th Regiment, N.I., Bombay, was married by License, at St Stephen's church, Ootacamund, Madras Presidency, 8 October 1838, to Miss Alicia MAUT, Spinster, by Henry W. STUART, Chaplain, witnessed by Mary E. and Geo I. MAUT, W.J. PARKINSON and W.J. BODDAM.</div><div><br /><div>George Arthur WARBURTON, Indian Medical Department, of Shillong, Assam, was married at Rawal Pindi, 8 October 1881, to Augusta Maud COMBER, also of Shillong. See above.</div><div style="text-align: center;">_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _</div><div><br /></div><div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;">There is a full transcript of the will of Robert WARBURTON, who</span><span style="font-family: times;"> died at Peshawar, in the Punjab, on 10 November 1863.</span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"This is the last Will and Testament of me, Robert WARBURTON, Lieutenant-Colonel in H.M.'s Regiment of Bengal Artillery.</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"First. I desire that all my just debts and testamentary expenses be paid, and satisfied, by my Executors, hereinafter named, as soon as conveniently may be after my decease.</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"Secondly. I devise and bequeath all my pay, arrears of pay, and any other sum of money due to me on account of pay and other allowances, by Government, also all and every my household furniture, linen and wearing apparel, plate, china, Horses, (Cows?), Carriages, Buggies, etc, unto Shah Jahan BEGUM, whom I consider my Wife, and to have been so since 1840, as a small mark of my regard for her, as a brave and affectionate woman, and a true and faithful one, in times when these qualities were not very common - also as a slight compensation to a woman of high family and connexion, becoming an outcast from her Country, her family and relatives for me, when there was no absolute necessity for her doing so.</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"Thirdly. I bequeath unto Shah Jahan BEGUM above named during her lifetime for her own use and benefit, the Rents of my house at Scalkole and of all my houses in Amritsar - also the Rent, or Rents, of any house, or houses, I may become possessed of elsewhere in India.</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"Fourthly. I give, devise and bequeath to Robert WARBURTON, commonly called my son, all sums of money which may be due to me other than those above mentioned, at the time of my decease, and also all other my Stocks, Funds, Bank Shares, money on Bonds and Bills, Notes, or other Securities, and all and every other of my estate and effects whatsoever, both real and personal, remainder or expectancy, also any houses or lands I may be possessed of - save and except any sums which I may otherwise dispose of by this will. I hereby constitute the above named Robert WARBURTON, who is at the time of writing a Cadet in the Military CoCollegellege of Woolwich, my heir.</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"Fifthly. In case the Rents of houses named in third paragraph do not amount to Rs 150 per month, I wish this latter sum to be made up as a monthly income of Shah Jahan BEGUM, from the interest of money in deposit in the Agra and United Services Bank, or from Dividends on the Stock of that Bank.</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"Sixthly. in the event of the death of the above named Robert WARBURTON, I hereby appoint my brother Arthur my heir, with this proviso - that Shah Jahan BEGUM above named may receive a monthly income of not less than Rs 200, and that all bequests in this will be duly paid by, or through him.</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>Seventhly. To J.P. WARBURTON, I bequeath Rs 5,000, J.P. WARBURTON being my adopted son. To my brother Arthur I bequeath Rs 10,000. In the event of his death to his children. To Mussido (?) KHAN, who is an old servant and who was faithful and true in difficult times, I bequeath 500 rupees. To my brother James, now in Prince Edward Island, I bequeath </i></span><span style="background-color: transparent;"><i>£</i></span><i style="font-family: times;">500 sterling clear of any duty or tax - in the event of his death the amount to be divided among his children, his daughter Mary Elizabeth to have </i><span style="background-color: transparent;"><i>£</i></span><i style="font-family: times;">100 as her portion.</i></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"Eighthly. I sincerely hope that my son Robert will recollect his mother and be kind to her, as hitherto he has always been the (?) she watched him in danger and in trouble that when he went under (?) were hunted like a jackal by the hounds of that monster Mohamad Akbar JHAN, she by her ability and influence was enabled to preserve him - and that had it not been for her he (?) would probably not now be what and where he is, and that she (?) would at any time have risked her life for him.</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"Ninthly. I hereby appoint the above named Robert WARBURTON, and my brother Arthur, executors to this my last Will and Testament.</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><i>"Tenthly. I declare this to be my last Will and Testament, revoking all and any others which may have previously been made. In witness whereof I the said Robert WARBURTON, Lieutenant Colonel in H.M.'s Regiment of Bengal Artillery, have to this my last Will and Testament set my hand, the 8th day of May in the year of our Lord 1861, at Amritsar, Punjaub. (signed) and witnessed by W.K. FOOKS and John FULTON, both Captains, H.M.'s Bengal Artillery."</i></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><br /></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;">Probate was granted in the High Court of Judicature, at Fort William in Bengal, 5 March 1864.</span></div></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"><br /></span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;">J.P. has been identified as John Paul WARBURTON; he had issue:</span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"> a. Lizzie Selina WARBURTON, born about 1874; she was aged 21, Spinster, of Lahore, when she was married at Lahore, Bengal presidency, 7 March 1895, to Alfred Edward MARTINEAU, 26, Bachelor, Indian Civil Service, of Lahore, son of Alfred MARTINEAU, by Rev J.C.R. EWING, American Presbyterian Missionary, and witnessed by J.P. WARBURTN and Helen K. NEWTON.</span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;"> b. Muriel Pauline WARBURTON, born about 1878; she was aged 27, Spinster, when she was married, by Banns, at Ambala, Bengal Presidency, 14 March 1906, to Kenelm Hill STENNING, 28, Bachelor, Lieutenant, R.F.A., of Mian Mir, son of Charles Horace STENNING, by C. Philip NUGWENT, Chaplain, and witnessed by A.P. WARBURTON, M.D. WARBURTON and W. WARBURTON.</span></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">______________________________________________</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><br /></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><br /></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white;"><i><b><span style="font-size: large;"><u>MISCELLANEOUS WARBURTONS IN NEW ZEALAND.</u></span></b></i></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><br /></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">George WARBURTON; he arrived in New Zealand on the ship "Claramount," from London, April 1863. Perhaps he went back to fetch his family? If so, see next.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><br /></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">George Edward WARBURTON, born in Lymm, Cheshire, 1828; he arrived in Auckland, on the clipper ship "Andrew Jackson," 24 August 1865, with his wife Margaret, and their children Sarah E., Harriet and Ambrose WARBURTON; he died in Auckland, 22 March 1904; he was married at Ailton, Cheshire, 16 May 1853, to Margaret JOHNSON; they had issue:</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">1. Sarah Elizabeth WARBURTON, bon Lymm, Cheshire, 8 November 1853; she died in Auckland, 27 July 1933.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">2. Harriet WARBURTON, born Gartley, Cheshire, 27 July 1856; she died in N.Z., 1932; she was married in 1882 #2496, to John Henry STUBBS.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">3. Ambrose WARBURTON, born Gartley, 14 June 1858; he was married in N.Z., to Elizabeth Letitia HUDDART.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">4. George Edward WARBURTON, born Wilmslow, Cheshire, 17 August 1862; he died in Wellington, 27 September 1896; he was married to Mary Alice BALDWIN</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">5. Richard Laurence WARBURTON, born in Khyber Pass Road, Auckland, 2 July 1868 #25920; an actor who went under the stage-name of Laurence DUNBAR.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">6. Ambrosina WARBURTON, born Auckland, 25 August 1869 #19625; she was married in N.Z., 1894 #77, to Herbert Henry EVANS.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">7. Rebecca WARBURTON, born Beresford, N.Z., 28 December 1872 (Registered 1873 #14218); she was married in N.Z., 1902 #4023, to Walter EVANS.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">_____________________________________________</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><br /></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><br /></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white;"><b><span style="font-size: large;"><i>ANOTHER AUSTRALIAN FAMILY</i></span></b>.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><br /></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">William WARBURTON; married Elizabeth, with issue:</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">1. Edwin WARBURTON, born [IG] 1858; possibly Edward, living 1924</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">2. Robert WARBURTON, born at Orange, 1860; possibly died at Parramatta, 1936.</div><span style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">3. Anne Adelaide WARBURTON, born at Orange, 1862; she died at Blayney, 1941.<br /></span><span style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">4. James WARBURTON, born at Orange, 1864; living 1924.</span><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">6. Joseph WARBURTON, born and died at Orange, 1868.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">7. Joseph WARBURTON, born at Orange, 1869; living 1924.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">8. daur; living 1924, as Mrs CHAPMAN, of Longueville.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">6. Nellie WARBURTON; living 1924.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><br /></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"><br /></div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">William WARBURTON married Elizabeth WARBURTON; perhaps the above, but theabsence of a birth for Thomas suggests otherwise: they had issue:</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;">1. Thomas WARBURTON; of Millthorpe, near Blayney; he died there, 2 April 1924, aged 70 (or 76?); he was married at West Macquarie, 1888, to Isabella MOCKETT; they had issue:</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"> a. Wallace A. WARBURTON, born at Orange, 1890.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"> b. Carl William WARBURTON, born at Millthorpe, 27 November 1893; 1st and 2nd A.I.F.; Author; he died at Marrickville, 1963 #31987.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"> c. Thomas E. WARBURTON, born at Blayney, 1895.</div><div data-setdir="false" dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px;"> d. Aileen A. WARBURTON, born at Millthorpe, 1901; she was married at St Philip's Church, Sydney, 15 March [?], to Dr George MASON, of Townsville, Qld.</div>
</div>
</div></div></div></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-47697933680552271292020-02-26T22:50:00.002-08:002020-10-27T16:05:55.960-07:00YATES, YEATS and YEATES Families in Dublin.<blockquote class="tr_bq">
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<span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><b>THIS IS A WORK IN PROGRESS.</b></span></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><b><i>ALTERATIONS AND ADDITIONS WILL CONTINUE TO BE MADE WHILE THIS NOTICE REMAINS.</i></b></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em><b><u>A YEATES FAMILY IN DUBLIN</u></b>.</em></span><br />
<br /><br /><div>
In 1921, William Jackson PIGOTT (he was a first cousin of my great-grandfather, the Dublin born Rev Henry Robert PIGOTT), in a Post Scriptum to his introductory notes to the DIXON Papers [MS 8222 (2), Genealogical Office, Dublin], wrote:<br />
<em>"I used to hear my father speak of a 'Nosey' YATES, whom I fancy was a Cutler in South Georges Street, and wonder if they were related, through the Joseph VICKERS connection, i.e., could Joseph's wife Elizabeth have been a YATES?</em><br />
<em>"In the Dublin Directory for 1835 I find a Richard YATES, Cutler-in-general, Georges Street, Kingstown. Directory of 1821, Richard YEATES, Knife and Sword Cutler, 9 Parliament Street."</em><br />
<br />
<div style="text-align: left;">
<b>Joseph VICKERS</b> was born in 1734; Silk Weaver, of Golden Lane, of the Coombe (1780), and of Chambre Street (1792); his death details have not yet found; he was married, probably about 1757, to <b>Elizabeth</b> (maiden surname unknown, perhaps YATES or YEATES?); she probably died on 14 May 1797, <em>"... relict of the late Mr VICKERS of Dublin"</em>; their first child Mary was born in 1759.<br />
<br />
However, no information appears to have survived as to the birth identity of<b> </b><b>Joseph VICKERS</b><i>'</i> wife <strong>Elizabeth</strong>.<br />
And significantly, William Jackson PIGOTT, who died in the same year, 1921, had spent some number of years researching his family history, with access to a significant number of original documents which were lost in the Four Courts building fires of the following year, 1922. If he could not find his father's maternal grandmother's maiden surname, it is unlikely that anyone will.<br />
<br />
Although several near "coincidences" in residential addresses might be of some interest here:<br />
a. John YEATES, of Elbow Lane, was buried at St Catherine's parish church, Dublin, 6 February 1836, aged 72. I do not know whether he was a Cutler, but the <strong>VICKERS</strong> family of Weavers also resided for a time in Elbow Lane a generation or so earlier, during the 1790s.<br />
b. George YEATES, Optician, had three children born at 70 Charlemont Street, Dublin, in 1832, 1834 and 1836. My great-grandfather, Henry Robert PIGOTT, was born at No 16 Charlemont Street several years later, in 1838. And it appears, from research summarised below, that the family of Opticians was almost certainly related, and perhaps quite closely, to the family of Cutlers.<br />
<br />
Perhaps "Nosey" YEATES, Cutler or not, was merely a nearish neighbor who came to William PIGOTT's attention when his son William Jackson PIGOTT was in his childhood?<br />
But William Jackson PIGOTT, an only child, was only 14 when his father died. I doubt that he had developed too deep an interest in his family history at such a young age. But, I may be wrong.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><u><em>A SHORT TUTORIAL FOR SEARCHING DUBLIN DEEDS</em></u></strong></span>.<br />
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The following research includes reference to the holdings of the Deeds Registry, in Henrietta Street, Dublin North. The Registry commenced registering property deeds in 1708, as required by Acts of the Irish Parliament. All property transactions were affected, including leaseholds. <br />
The Registry, in Henrietta Street, Dublin, is a dour and forbidding place, and navigating the records there takes some time, as well as stamina. The volumes into which they were copied are wieldy, and some almost precariously out of reach; and the language of Deeds making recorded in them is very dry legalese - designed to minimize the risk of conflicts ending up in the Irish Courts.<br />
<br />
Each property deed was prepared in duplicate, both copies being signed and sealed, one going to the Grantee as proof of his/her "holding" the property deed, the other being lodged in the basement of the Registry for a very secure safe keeping - these were given a Memorial Number, and a transcript of the contents of each was written up by Registry Clerks into Memorial Books, which were lodged upstairs, in publicly accessible reading rooms, as were the two sets of Index books, one an alphabetical list of Grantors (all Grantors have a separate entry, but for each of these entries, the name of the principal Grantee is listed), the other of Place names.<br />
<br />
The memorials are not full transcripts (phrases like "as therein mentioned" indicate that wording has been omitted by the Copying Clerk), and not entirely free of errors (occasionally a complete line of text has been accidentally overlooked - which is easy to see why, when the repetitive style of "belt-and-braces" language written on wide paper, filled in in "landscape" orientation, makes it a chore to keep up with the lineation. <br />
The last time I visited the Registry, over ten years ago, it was possible, for a fee, to view originals from the basement - but I had to show cause, and then make my notes, wearing white cotton gloves, and with a staff member watching over me to ensure the security of the original. And for the fee, I also got a photocopy of the document. <br />
The most useful aspect of viewing original copies lies in the actual signatures - several knotty problems with my Irish PIGOTT ancestors has only been resolved by comparison of signatures.<br />
<br />
At any rate, the upstairs viewing rooms are where you would spend your time researching the volumes of Indexes and then Memorials, if you visited the Registry.<br />
<br />
In 1951, the Registry licensed The Church of J.C. of Latter Day Saints to microfilm all of the Memorial books and the Index books. Copies of these films also went to PRONI in Belfast, and to Salt Lake City.<br />
<br />
Fortunately, and quite recently, the L.D.S. digitalized these microfilm images, and these are now viewable on the <a href="http://www.familysearch.org/">www.familysearch.org</a> web-site.<br />
But they are only readable, and are not yet in a format that would enable the images to be scanned digitally for a particular name or term. What that means is this - you have to search through the index books, just like we had to do, in the past in Dublin - but which can now do without leaving home!<br />
<br />
They are not easy to navigate.<br />
<br />
You will need to register on the web-site, with a P.I.N. access, to use the resource.<br />
To get into that, you will need to select "catalogue" from the drop-down search menu.<br />
Then you will need to enter "Ireland" into the search box for place name, then open the key-words box, and insert the word "Conveyances."<br />
This will provide four options - just select the one with "property" in the title, and a hyperlink will appear, entitled "Deeds, Conveyances and Wills, 1708-1929" or such-like.<br />
This is the one you want.<br />
It is a huge resource, and takes time to down-load. Watch the scroll bar on the right side of the screen, and when the darker bit retracts back up to the top, you are ready to start.<br />
Good luck!<br />
<br />
The following details of Irish YEATES families contain references to a number of Deeds accessed by this method. The references are made in the following fashion - [Memorial number, Book number, Page number].<br />
<br />
Three types of deeds are considerably more useful for family historians than most - Wills (infrequent), Marriage Settlements, and Leases for terms of Lives (as opposed to the more common fixed term). Occasionally we even find Articles of Marriage Separation!<br />
Many of these details are now unlikely to be available from any other archived source.<br />
<br />
Other sources are as cited below:<br />
i. BETHAM's Abstracts are viewable on Findmypast.co.uk - they are scanned and searchable digital images of his original notebooks from the late 1820's, shortly before he was appointed to the Office of Chief Herald in Ireland, made from Prerogative Court of Ireland records then held in the Public Records Office, which was housed in the Four Courts Building in Dublin, most of which originals were destroyed in the 1922 fires.<br />
ii. FOLLIOTT's and CROSSLE's Abstracts are also on Findmypast.co.uk.<br />
iii. Irish Newspaper notices are largely from the British Newspaper Archives, accessed through the subscription of the Society of Australian Genealogists at their Library in Kent Street, Sydney.<br />
<br />
I have used the abbreviation P.C.I. to stand for the Prerogative Court of Ireland. This was the Archdiocesan Court in Dublin, which handled the granting of Marriage Licenses, Probates and Administrations in that Administrative area.<br />
<br />
There is a longer tutorial, navigating through the images that we see, which is, altogether, another story. Ask, and it will be delivered.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong><u>THE FAMILY OF CUTLERS IN DUBLIN NAMED YEATES</u>.</strong></em></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
John YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Cutler, and Jane DUDLEY, of the parish of St Michan's, Spinster, Prerogative Court Marriage License dated 17 August 1781 [BETHAM's Abstract].<br />
Messrs John and Jonathan YEATES, Cutlers, of No 5 Essex Gate, Dublin, May 1776 [Saunder's News-Letter, 24 May], when they inserted a notice concerning a yellow heifer calf which had been found at Fieldstown, and sold at the Fair at Lusk on the same day.<br />
A John YEATES was buried at St Paul's, Dublin, 30 April 1787 [FOLLIOTT Abstracts].<br />
<br />
Jonathan YEATS, Cutler, of the City of Dublin, was joint third party, with Seacombe Mason, Optician, of the City of Dublin, in the Deed of marriage Settlements, dated 20 January 1787 [Memorial 256811, Book 390, Page 337], whereby John DOOLEY, of the City of Dublin, Shoemaker, was married to Mary YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Spinster, the deed witnessed by Robert YEATES, of the City of Dublin, gent.<br />
Jonathan YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Cutler; his Indented Deed, dated 31 August 1793 [Memorial 310257], by which he demised Lands in Coolestown otherwise Trescott, of 77 acres, to John YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Gent, witnessed by Robert YEATES, of Dublin, Gent.<br />
Jonathan YEATES, Cutler, 20 Old Church Street, Dublin, 1801 [Wilson's Dublin Trade Directory].<br />
<br />
Richard YEATES, probably born before 1783; he was admitted to the Freedom of Dublin, Michaelmas 1804, in the Cutler's Guild, by Grace Especial; of Church Street, Cutler, August 1804, when he signed, with other Merchants, a notice that they had <em>"... agreed to take Spanish Dollars at 5 shillings 5 pence, finding their actual value to be nearly that sum, and knowing the great convenience it must be to ourselves and the public to have them in circulation as change"</em> [Saunders News-Letter, 35 August 1804] ; he was elected a Warden of the Guild of St Luke, otherwise the Corporation of Cutlers, Painters and Stationers, 18 October 1805, for the ensuing year [Saunders News-Letter, 21 October].<br />
Richard YEATES, Cutler, 4 Arran Quay, Dublin, 1812 [Treble Almanac] and 1814 [STEWART's "Gentleman's and Citizen's Almanack"].<br />
Richard YEATES, Cutler, was named in an edict published on 21 December 1815 [Saunders News-Letter] concerning the matter of John HAWKSLEY, Bankrupt, and advertising the sale by auction on 21 December of the dwelling house or tenement at No 9 Parliament Street, Dublin, then in the tenancy of Mr Richard YEATES, Cutler, being the residue of a term of 70 years commencing 13 February 1792.<br />
Richard YEATES, Cutler, 9 Parliament Street, September 1819 [Dublin Evening Post, 28 September], informing the public that he intended offering for sale, at the ensuing Fair at Ballinasloe, opposite Mt LOCHLIN's Inn, <em>"... an extensive Assortment of elegantly finished Transparent Ivory hafted Table Knives and Forks, which will retain their colour; Green Ivory ditto; Green Bone ditto; Horn hafted ditto; Razors, Scissors, Penknives, Snuffers, Bottle Screws, Spurs of the newest pattern, with every Article in the Cutlery Business.."</em><br />
Richard YEATES, Knife and Sword Cutler, 9 Parliament Street, Dublin, 1818 [Treble Almanac]; YEATES, Cutler, No 9 Parliament Street, Dublin, November 1821 [Saunders News-Letter, 9 November], as the venue for a sale of Elegant Pedal Harps and a Round End Pianoforte by Mr William TOWNEND, Harp Maker of London; Richard YEATES, Knife and Sword Cutler to His Majesty, 9 Parliament Street, Dublin, 1822 [Treble Almanac].<br />
Mr YEATES, Cutler, of Sackville Street, stood as a candidate for the Mastership of the Corporation of Cutlers, Painter Stainers and Stationers, at their Triennial Council, 24 August 1830 [Saunders News-Letter, 25 August], but was defeated by rival Mr William NORTH, of Pill Lane, Hardware Merchant, which resulted <em>"... was received with tremendous cheering."</em><br />
In March 1835, Mr Richard YEATES, Cutler, of 18 Grafton Street, complained to the Magistrates at College Street, <em>"... against the conduct of a man named CAWFIELD, who had contracted to remain in his employment for three years at 11s. 6d. per week, and had lately absented himself for a fortnight under pretense of being ill. Mr YEATES, on going to his home on Sunday following, with a view to give him money, found that he was not there, and looking into an out-house, perceived a complete set of cutlers tools, which he afterwards ascertained he was daily using in making castle-top spikes. Mr YEATES stated that he was endeavouring to revive a trade which had not been known in Ireland for the last 35 years, viz - the making and finishing of steel forks. His father used to supply himself with that article from Sheffield, and at very great expense; he was getting it manufactured in Dublin. With that view he entered into a contract with several working cutlers similar to that existing between him and CAWFIELD..."</em> [Dublin Morning Register, 12 March 1835] - this Richard YEATES does indeed appear to have been a bit "nosey" when admitted looking for the missing CAWFIELD in his out-house!<br />
Richard YEATES, Cutler in General, George's Street, Dublin, 1835 [PETTIGREW and OULTON's Dublin Almanac and General register of Ireland].<br />
He was probably the Mr YEATES, Cutler, who died at Ballinasloe, 29 October 1842 [Weekly Freeman's Journal, 29 October].<br />
YEATES and Coy, Old established cutlery establishment, 165 Capel Street, Dublin, 1843 [P.O. Annual Directory].<br />
<br />
James Archer YEATES, born 15 November 1816 and baptised at St Mary's, Dublin, 5 November, son of Richard YEATES, of Parliament Street, and his wife Sarah.<br />
<br />
James Arthur YEATES, of Stafford Avenue, Dublin North, Cutler, son of Richard YEATES, Cutler, was married at St Mary's Parish Church, Dublin North, 6 February 1848, to Mary DONOHOE, of full age, spinster, also of Stafford Ave, daughter of Florance DONOHOE, Musician.<br />
<br />
Sarah YEATES, Cutler, 165 Capel Street, 1842 [Directory]; Kenneth COOKE [his Rootsweb post "YEATES Family from Dublin,", 27 February 2010] has suggested she was Sarah WILKINSON, the wife of Mason YEATES (1807-1889).<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><b><i><u>THE OPTICIANS, OF DESCENT FROM THE CUTLERS.</u></i></b></span><br />
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Andrew YEATES; of Whitestown, County Dublin; he died suddenly, in 1796, of apoplexy, when his daughter Maria was 12 years old; his Administration was granted 7 April 1796 to his widow Mary; however, it appears that he had issue by a wife named Hannah [birth years, approximated, are from Kenneth COOKE's 2010 Rootsweb post]:<br />
1. Samuel YEATES, born about 1762; a celebrated Optician and Mathematical Instrument Maker, of Capel Street, then of Grafton Street, Dublin, who is said to have departed from the rules of primogenture by having his father's estate divided equally up among himself and his five surviving younger siblings [Journal of his niece, Martha SPENCE - www.ourheywoodfamily.blogspot.com web-site].<br />
See [A] below.<br />
2. Ellen YEATES, born about 1764; she was married to Christopher CROOKS, of the City of Dublin, Printer and Book Seller.<br />
3. William YEATES, born about 1768; he got possession of the old Whitestown homestead by "purchasing" his younger brother Joshua's share [Journal of Martha SPENCE].<br />
See [B] below.<br />
4. Joshua YEATES, born about 1775.<br />
5. Kendrick YEATES, born about 1776; he <i>"... learned the manufacture of all kinds of ornamental brass works and kept a brass foundry in Stafford Street for years and was celebrated in that line of business... he was also an Optician and Instrument maker.. but more especially followed the ornamental brass work"</i> [Journal of Maria SPENCE].<br />
See [C] below.<br />
6. Maria YEATES, born about 1779; she was married in September 1806 to Neal SPENCE; with issue [See her daughter Martha's Journal]:<br />
a. Mary SPENCE, born August 1809; maimed in childhood; she died at Lusk, County Dublin, in 1830, unmarried.<br />
b. son, died in infancy, about 1810, named either Godfrey or Neal; buried at Drumcondra.<br />
c. Robert YEATES, born 25 February 1811.<br />
d. Martha SPENCE, born 8 March 1812.<br />
e. son, died in infancy, about 1813, named either Neal or Godfrey; buried at Drumcondra.<br />
f. son, died in infancy, about 1814, named either Godfrey of Neal; buried at Drumcondra.<br />
e. Anna Maria SPENCE, August 1815.<br />
h. Hannah SPENCE, born in January 1817, and named after her YEATES grandmother.<br />
j. son; died in infancy, about 1818, named either Neal of Godfrey, buried at Drumcondra.<br />
k. Andrew SPENCE, born 19 January 1819, and named for his YEATES grandfather.<br />
l. Ellen Hester SPENCE, born July 1820, and named for her aunt Ellen CROOKS.<br />
m. Elizabeth SPENCE, born 27 September 1822.<br />
<br />
Journal of his niece, Martha SPENCE, published on the www.ourheywoodfamily.blogspot.com web-site, contains the following relevant details<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">:</span><br />
<div class="yiv8887940655ydpb387e76cMsoNormal" style="color: #333333; font-family: Arial, Tahoma, Helvetica, FreeSans, sans-serif; font-size: 14.85px; text-align: left; text-indent: 30pt;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>"My mother was one of six children whose father Andrew YEATES owned a freehold property, named Whitestown about 20 miles north of Dublin. He died suddenly of apoplexy when my mother was 12 years old. And by right of primogeniture Samuel the oldest son would have inherited the freehold estate property saving that, that allowed to the widow, but he nobly waived his right and it was equally divided among the children. There were four sons, Samuel, William, Kendrick and Joshua two daughters, Ellen, and Maria.</em></span></div>
<div class="yiv8887940655ydpb387e76cMsoNormal" style="color: #333333; font-family: Arial, Tahoma, Helvetica, FreeSans, sans-serif; font-size: 14.85px; text-align: left; text-indent: 30pt;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>"Ellen was married to a printer and bookseller of the name of Christopher CROOKS, resided in the city of Dublin carrying on that line of business for over 40 years. He lived many years before his death in a house where he carried on the above business 85 Capel Street where his son of the same name succeeded him.</em></span></div>
<div class="yiv8887940655ydpb387e76cMsoNormal" style="color: #333333; font-family: Arial, Tahoma, Helvetica, FreeSans, sans-serif; font-size: 14.85px; text-align: left; text-indent: 30pt;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>"Samuel YEATES was a celebrated Optician and Mathematical Instrument Maker, resided for many years 81 Capel Street opposite Lower Castle Yard but some years before he died he changed his residence to the corner of Nassau and Grafton Street where his son George succeeded him in the same business. </em></span></div>
<div class="yiv8887940655ydpb387e76cMsoNormal" style="color: #333333; font-family: Arial, Tahoma, Helvetica, FreeSans, sans-serif; font-size: 14.85px; text-align: left; text-indent: 30pt;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>"William got possession of the old homestead by allowing some right to the youngest son Joshua.</em></span></div>
<div class="yiv8887940655ydpb387e76cMsoNormal" style="color: #333333; font-family: Arial, Tahoma, Helvetica, FreeSans, sans-serif; font-size: 14.85px; text-align: left; text-indent: 30pt;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>"Kendrick YEATES the next youngest learned the manufacture of all kinds of ornamental brass works and kept a brass foundry in Stafford Street for years and was celebrated in that line of business. He was also in the optician and instrument maker but more especially followed the ornamental brass works.</em></span></div>
<div class="yiv8887940655ydpb387e76cMsoNormal" style="color: #333333; font-family: Arial, Tahoma, Helvetica, FreeSans, sans-serif; font-size: 14.85px; text-align: left; text-indent: 30pt;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>"My mother (Maria) lived to the homestead for a few years with her mother. She then placed herself in a boarding school in the city to improve herself in education and while in Dublin she formed acquaintance with an old lady of the name of Stephens who kept a toy and fancy store, and induced my mother to buy her out which she did & instead of returning to the old homestead to live with her mother she commenced business in the mercantile line in a small way, & made it her home to her brother Kendrick who was married and in the Brass and Optician business In this way she lived fives years enjoying life to her hearts content and one of her intimate acquaintances was the above named Elizabeth or Mrs. Buckton, where she met my father who was then in the Army and before my mother consented to become his wife she hade him promise that he would give up the profession and turn his attention to mercantile business, which was done at a great expense being time of war it was difficult to find a substitute and that at a high premium. They married September 1806 and the house on the corner of Nassau and Frederick street trinity Colledge and its grounds forming one side of Madison Street which gave a splendid view of the park grounds from the upper windows of the house My father had to give two thousand pounds for the lease or priviledge of renting the house at the rate of eighty pounds a year."</em></span></div>
<br />
[A] Samuel YEATES is said to have been born in 1762, and to have died in 1834 [Kenneth COOKE, his 2010 Rootsweb post], and to have been apprenticed to Seacombe MASON, Instrument Maker; he set himself up in business as an Optician at 4 Upper Ormond Quay in 1790 [Thomas H. MASON, "Dublin Opticians and Instrument Makers," Dublin Historical Record, Volume 6, Number 4, September-November 1944, at pages 133-149]; he was named in the will of Thomas YEATES of Scalestown, County Meath, February 1772, as the son of Andrew YEATES of Jamestown.; he was trustee to his brother William's marriage settlements, 1797.<br />
Samuel YEATES, Optician, 29 Capel Street, 1801 [Wilson's Dublin Trade Directory].<br />
Samuel YEATES, Optician, Astronomical, Mathematical Instrument Maker, 29 Capel Street, October 1805, when he advertised New British Globes for sale [Hibernian Journal, 7 October 1805]; still there in August 1808, when he advertised for sale <em>"... the New Portable Pyropneumatic Apparatus for instantly setting fire to combustible substances by mere compression of Common Air"</em> [Saunders News-Letter, 12 August].<br />
Samuel YEATES, Optician, 89 Dame Street, Dublin, 1823 [Directory].<br />
Samuel YEATES, Optician, Mathematical and Philosophical Instrument Maker, late of 89 Dame Street, notified his removal, in July 1826, to No 2 Grafton Street, corner of Nassau Street, <em>"... where he offers for sale his present extensive stock of Instruments and Apparatus, on terms considerably reduced, and hopes for a continuance of that favour which he has experienced so many years"</em> [Saunders News-Letter, 26 July].<br />
Samuel YEATES, Optician, 2 Grafton Street, 1829 [Treble Almanac].<br />
Kenneth COOKE [his 2010 Rootsweb post] records these details of his family, by a wife named Mary, with some corroboration from www.irishgenealogy.ie data:<br />
1. George Mitchell YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, Dublin, 15 November 1796; he died in 1882.<br />
2. Mary Ann YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, 22 December 1798.<br />
3. Andrew YEATES, born about 1800; moved to London before 1833; he was at Brighton Place, Lambeth St Mary, Newington, 1841 Census, aged 40+, Instrument Maker, with M. YEATES, aged 40+, both born Ireland, and Horatio YEATES, aged 8, Apprentice (born Middlesex); Andrew was at 12 Brighton Place, Newington St Mary, Lambeth, 1851 Census, aged 51, Mathematical Instrument Maker, with his first wife Mary Ann, aged 51, both born in Ireland, and E. BUTLER, aged 20, Apprentice, and G. YEATES, a Visitor, aged 55, born in Ireland (possibly his older brother George); he was at the same address, 1861, aged 61, with his second wife Elizabeth, aged 39 (born St Pancras, London); they were at Ern Villa, New Road, Buckhurst Hill, Chigwell, Essex, 1871; Andrew died at Erin Villa, Buckhurst Hill, 29 March 1876, aged 75, and was buried at the City of London and Tower Hamlets Cemetery; he was married firstly, at St George's Hanover Square, London, 15 August 1825, to Mary Anne SPARKS; he was married secondly, at St Pancras, London, 3 June 1856, to Elizabeth Caroline VARLEY.<br />
4. Francis YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, 22 August 1801.<br />
5. Thomas YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, Dublin, 23 October 1802; he was of age, bachelor, of Booterstown, Optician, son of Samuel YEATES, Optician, when he was married at the Parish Church of St Mary's, Dublin North, 8 November 1846, to Martha TAYLOR, of age, spinster, of 193 Britain Street, Dress Maker, daughter of Robert TAYLOR, Merchant.<br />
6. Rebecca YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, 30 January 1804.<br />
7. Horatio YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, 14 March 1806; as Horace, he was admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, as a Pensioner, 1 November 1824, aged 18, son of Samuel, Opticus, born Dublin.<br />
<br />
[B] William YEATES, Optician, Mathematical and Philosophical Instrument Manufacturer, 18 Capel Street, Dublin, April 1828, when he advertised his business, returning his <em>"... sincere thanks to his Friends and Customers for their patronage,"</em> and asking for a respectable lad to become his Apprentice [Saunders News-Letter, 29 April].<br />
William YEATES; of Whitestown, County Dublin, Gent; he was married at St Michan's, Dublin, by License and by Rev Thomas GAMBLE, 18 October 1797, to Martha MASON, of Arran Quay, Spinster, and by Marriage Settlements dated 18 October 1797 [Memorial 334303, Book 506, Page 557], made between William YEATES of Whitestown, County Dublin, Gent, of the one part, Seacome MASON of Arran Quay, City of Dublin, Optician and Martha MASON of the same, his eldest daughter of the second part, and John YEATES of the City of Dublin, Gent, and Samuel YERATES, of the said City, Optician, (as Trustees) of the third part, and witnessed by Robert YEATES of the said City, Gent and his wife Sarah; he was named as "Kinsman" in the 1799 will of Robert YEATES (see below). It is not yet established what kinship, if any, may have existed between Martha and Seacome MASON.<br />
<div>
<br />
[C] Kendrick YEATES, Mathematical Instrument Maker, 26 Stafford Street, Dublin, 1820 [Pigot's Commercial Directory]; Optician and General Brass Manufacturer, 26 Stafford Street, 1823; Brass Founder, General Brass Manufacturer, 26 Stafford Street, Dublin, 1829 [Treble Almanac]; Optician and General Brass Manufacturer, 26 Stafford Street, 1832 [Directory]; General Brass Manufacturer, 33 Stafford Street, 1842 [Directory].<br />
Kendrick YEATES was married at St Andrew's, Dublin, 28 April 1802, to Margaret FAULKNER; they had issue;<br />
1. Mary YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, Dublin, 9 August 1804,<br />
2. Martha YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, Dublin, 8 June 1806.<br />
2. Elizabeth YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, 19 July 1807.<br />
3. Andrew YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, 23 June 1809.<br />
4. Matilda YEATES, baptised at St Mary's, 9 April 1815; of Stafford Street, when she was married at St Mary's parish church, Dublin, August 1835, to John Paget SWENY, of Camden Street, Esq [Limerick Chronicle, 15 August].<br />
5. Sarah Ann YEATES, baptised at St Mary's parish Dublin, 16 September 1818.<br />
6. William YEATES, baptised at St Mary's parish, Dublin, 5 October 1821, born 2 October.<br />
7. Kendrick and Margaret YEATES, baptised ditto, 9 February 1823.<br />
8. Augusta YEATES, born 10 August 1824, and baptised at St Mary's, 20 August.<br />
<br />
George YEATES, Optician, 70 Charlemont Street, Dublin, 1829 [Treble Almanac].<br />
George YEATES, Optician, 2 Grafton Street, Dublin, 1843 [P.O. Directory].<br />
Mr George YEATES, Optician, Grafton Street, August 1847, when he was awarded a small silver medal, among a List of Premiums at the Shew of Manufactures, Royal Dublin Society, <em>"... for glass cases, containing beam, compasses, levels, sundials, &c, &c</em>" [Clare Journal, 2 August].<br />
George YEATES, Optician, 2 Grafton Lane and 10 Wellington Road, 1850 [Directory].<br />
George YEATES and his wife Jane had issue:<br />
1. Stephen Mitchell YEATES, born at 70 Charlemont Street, Dublin, 24 June 1832, and was baptized at St Peter's parish church, 27 May; Stephen YEATES, Optician, was proposed and seconded for membership of the Royal Dublin Society, 4 June 1863 [Dublin Daily Express, 5 June]; he died at View Road, Dalkey, 28 December 1902, aged 69, the death informed by A.M. YEATES, of Grafton Street, the son, present at the death; Stephen was of 2 Grafton Street, Optician, when he was married at St Anne's parish church, Dublin, 27 March 1856, to Mary Ann PARKS, of 3 Eildon Terrace, South Circular Road, daughter of William PARKS, Esq; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. George William YEATES, born at Belgram Terrace, Rathmines, 8 May 1857.</i><br />
<i> b. Helen Mary YEATES, born at Vicar's Lodge, South Circular Road, 11 November 1864 (mother PARKER).</i><br />
2. Horatio YEATES, born at 70 Charlemont Street, 10 March 1834, and was baptized at St Peter's parish church, 20 April; he may have been apprenticed to Andrew YEATES, Instrument Maker, in Lambeth, London, and residing with him and his wife Mary Anne in the 1841 Census, aged 8, but recorded as born in the County (Middlesex), and if so, he returned to Dublin after completing that Apprenticeship; Horatio YEATES, Optician, advertised his removal, 25 February 1863, from 23 Dawson Street to 13 Leinster Street, Dublin [Saunders News-Letter, 26 February]; the whole of the household goods and the entire stock in trade of Horatio YEATES, Optician, was advertised for sale by auction, at the late residence (already sold) at 13 Leinster Street, Dublin, on Monday 20 March 1865 [Dublin Daily Express, 16 March]; he went to England; at 39 King Square, St Luke, Finsbury, London, 1871 Census, aged 37, Optician and Philosophical Instrument Maker,, born Dublin, with wife Kate, aged 37, and children Jessie J., aged 6 (born Dublin), Horatio A., aged 5 (born London) and George F., aged 6 months (born London); at 97 Chadwick Road, Camberwell, 1881 Census, aged 47, Scientific Mechanician (sic), with wife Kate aged 47, and four children Horatio (15), Susan M. (14), George F. (10) and Charles S. (9); the family emigrated to Victoria in November 1881; some years in Adelaide, then in Melbourne and Hobart; at 7 Austin Street, Hawthorn, Optician, 1903 [Kooyong Division, Yarra Ward], with his wife Kate and daughter Suan; Horatio died suddenly at his residence, Davey Street, Hobart, 23 August 1907, and was buried at Queensborough Cemetery, Sandy Bay; Optician, of Rossanna Place, Dublin, son of George YEATES, Optician, when he was married at St Peter's parish Church, Dublin South, 2 January 1863, to Kate BARRETT, of Castlewood Avenue, Rathmines, daughter of Samuel BARRETT, Merchant; she died in Hobart, 5 August 1921, late of Clifton House, Antill Street, Hobart, aged 89 years, and was buried with her husband; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. Jessie Sparks YEATES, born in Dublin, about 1864; aged 6, with her parents, 1871 Census; she died at John Street, North Adelaide, 15 November 1895, and was buried at West Terrace Cemetery [M.I.]; as the eldest daughter, she was married at All Saints Church, Hobart, 13 March 1894, to William Parmenter DOLLMAN, Chemist, of Adelaide.</i><br />
<i> b. Horatio Andrew YEATES, born in St Pancras, London, 1865; aged 5, with his parents, 1871; aged 15, with his parents, 1881; died at Willunga, South Australia, 12 April 1884, as the result of a shot-gun injury, while possuming; buried at West Terrace Cemetery, Adelaide.</i><br />
<i> c. Susan Mary YEATES, born at London St Luke, about 1866; aged 14, with her parents, 1881; residing wither parents at 7 Austin Street, Hawthorn, 1903 [Kooyong Division, Yarra Ward].</i><br />
<i> d. George Frederick YEATES, born in London St Luke, about 1870; aged 6 months, with his parents, 1871; aged 10, with his parents, 1881; he was married firstly, at Stanmore, N.S.W., 10 October 1899, to Elizabeth F.M. CRAWSHAW, only daughter of George Frederick CRAWSHAW of Hawthorn, Stanmore; he was married secondly, at Mt Lawley, W.A., 23 February 1929, to Kathleen DAVIDSON, youngest daughter of the late William and Helen DAVIDSON [Argus, Melbourne, 27 April].</i><br />
<i> e. Charles Samuel Sparks YEATES, born at London St Luke, about 1871; aged 9, with his parents, 1881; he was at Rokeby Road, Subiaco, 1903 [Perth Division], Civil Servant, with his wife Catherine Janet; they were at 441 Rokeby Road, Subuaci, 1925he died at Canning, W.A., 1961, aged 89 years; he was married at St Alban's, Highgate Hill, 6 January 1898, to Catherine HINCKLEY.</i><br />
3. Rebecca YEATES, born at 70 Charlemont Street, 7 January 1836, and was baptized at St Peter's parish church, 7 February; aged 19, Spinster, of Grafton Street, Dublin, daughter of George YEATES, Optician, when she was married at the Parish church of St Anne's, Dublin South, 27 July 1854, to George DIXON, Soap-boiler, of Erne Street, son of Robert DIXON, Soap-boiler.<br />
Stephen Mitchell YEATES, Optician, of 2 Grafton Street, son of George YEATES, optician, was married at the Parish Church of St Anne's, Dublin South, 27 March 1856, to Mary Ann PARKES, of 3 Eildon Terrace, South Circular Road, daughter of William PARKS, Esq, witnessed by John RIGBY and George DIXON.<br />
4. George YEATES; a Clerk in Holy Orders, of 2 Grafton Street and Loughbrickland, County Down, the son of George YEATES, Optician, was married at the licensed Schoolroom, Kildare Place, Dublin City, 8 December 1859, to Annie MORRIS, of Lurgan, county Armagh, daughter of Robert MORRIS, Gent, witnessed by George YEATES and Robert MORRIS.<br />
____________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>POSSIBLE ORIGINS IN COUNTY MEATH</u>.</em></strong></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
William YEATES; of Moorechurch, County Meath; he obtained the Lease of part of the Town and Lands of Moorechurch by deed dated 16 June 1670, from Edward RICHARDSON, as cited in his son's later deeds dated May 1711 [see next below]; deceased before May 1711; he was married with issue:<br />
1. eldest son. Not yet identified.<br />
2. William YEATES, second son; named as the third term for life in his father William's deed, June 1670.<br />
3. Richard YEATES, third son; named as the third term for life in his father William's deed, June 1670; of Moorechurch, County Meath; his Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 1 and 2 May 1711 [Memorial 2056, Book 6, Page 242], as the son and sole executor of William YEATES, late of the same place, Gent, deceased; his Indenture of assignment, dated 26 March 1713 [Memorial 3815, Book 10, Page 352], which, inter alia, mentions his marriage to Ann FRAWD, a Widow.<br />
4. Abraham YEATES, fourth son; named as the third term for life in his father William's deed, June 1670.<br />
<br />
Thomas YEATES; perhaps another son of William YEATES of Moorechurch (above); father of:<br />
1. Andrew YEATES; named as a substitute life for the term of William YEATES's lease dated May 1670, after the death of Abraham YEATES, as recorded in May 1711 [see above].<br />
<br />
Amy YEATES, of the Parish of Moorechurch, County Meath, Spinster, was married by P.C.I. License dated 11 February 1695, to William YEATES, of Mornington, parish of Colpe, County Meath [BETHAM's Abstract].<br />
<br />
Thomas YEATES, of Milltown, County Meath, Gent; he was grantee of an Indented Deed of Lease dated 18 January 1726 [Memorial 33728, Book 52, Page 96], by which the Rev Dr Patrick DELANEY, Chaplain of the Chapel of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the parish of St Nicholas within the walls of the City of Dublin, and William SHAW and Henry OWENS, Gents, Church Wardens of the same parish, did demise and sett unto the said Thomas YEATES of Milltown, all that Town, Village, Hamlet and Lands of Little Calestown, Barony of Duleek and County of Meath, of 34 acres, for the term of 61 years from 1 May then next ensuing, at the yearly rent of 10 pounds sterling.<br />
This Lease was cited in an Indented Deed dated 6 July 1776 [Memorial 210359], made by William YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Silk Weaver (see William YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Silk Weaver, below).<br />
<br />
Richard YEATES, of Moorechurch, County Meath; he died in 1748, with Administration, dated 5 September 1748, to Rebecca YEATES, the widow [BETHAM]; he was married to Rebecca MOORE, a daughter of Howard MOORE of Julianstown, County Meath, Gent (Howard's will, dated 27 January 1720, and proved P.C.I. 15 February 1720, naming his sons William, George and Francis MOORE, his son's grandmother BAKER, and his daughter Rebecca the wife of Richard YEATES) [BETHAM].<br />
<br />
Thomas YEATES, of Scalestown, County Meath; his will dated 1 February 1772, was proved P.C.I. 21 February 1776, naming his brother William YEATES of Dublin, Merchant, Richard DEMPSEY the son of James DEMPSEY of Kilmoon, County Meath, Samuel YEATES the son of Andrew YEATES of Whitestown (relationship not stated), and his brother Jonathan YEATES of Jamestown and his son Thomas [BETHAM].<br />
Possibly the son of Jonathan YEATES of Broghane, County Dublin, whose will, dated 22 March 1772, was proved P.C.I. 8 April 1778 (see below).<br />
<br />
James DEMPSEY, of Moorepark County Meath, Yeoman, was married by P.C.I. License dated 9 March 1754, to Elinor HOLMES, of the parish of Garristown, Widow.<br />
__________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>SEVERAL YEATES FAMILIES EARLY IN DUBLIN</u></em></strong></span>.<br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
Samuel YEATES and Catherine DILL were married at St John's parish church, Dublin, 12 January 1656.<br />
<br />
William YEATES and Elizabeth ROBINSON were married at St John's parish church, Dublin, 30 June 1657.<br />
<br />
Thomas YEATES, of the City of Dublin; he was married by P.C.I. License dated 15 June 1671, to Jane HASSALL (?) of Rathfarnahm, County Dublin, Spinster [BETHAM]; she was probably Jane YEATES otherwise HALSY, Widow, who was married by P.C.I. License dated 26 September 1691, to James KIRK, of the City of Dublin, Merchant [BETHAM].<br />
<br />
Sarah YEATES, of the parish of St Werburgh's, Dublin, Spinster; she was married by P.C.I. License dated 29 June 1675, to George WALL, of the same parish, Gent [BETHAM].<br />
<br />
Letitia YEATES, of the parish of St John's, City of Dublin, Spinster; she was married by P.C.I. License dated 3 July 1676, to Henry HESIENGTON of the parish of St Nicholas Without, Woollen Draper [BETHAM].<br />
<br />
Isaiah YATES and Mary COOPER were married at St Audoen's parish church, 15 September 1681.<br />
<br />
Daniel YEATES, Carpenter, and his wife Ann, buried their daughter Jane YEATES, at St Michan's parish church, 23 July 1682.<br />
<br />
Robert YEATES; of Dublin, Vintner; his will dated 28 February 1661, named his wife Mary, son Thomas, daughter Mary, brother Thomas, and sister Alice YEATES [BETHAM], with a Coat of Arms illustrated.<br />
Robert and Mary had issue:<br />
1. Robert YEATES, of Dublin, Gent; named in his mother's will, 1683; his will, dated 3 November 1699, named his brother Thomas YEATES and his brother-in-law Peter PARTINGTON [BETHAM]; he was buried at St Michan's parish church, 29 November 1699, <em>"... Gent and Bachelor, in the first Vault on the left hand, in the first Entrance, under the body of this church"</em> [Transcript of Church Register, <a href="http://www.irishgenealogy.ie/">www.irishgenealogy.ie</a> web-site].<br />
2. Thomas YEATES; named in his mother's will, 1683; possibly Thomas YATES, of the City of Dublin, who was married by P.C.I. License dated 15 June 1671, to Jane HALSALL, of Rathfarnham, County Dublin, Spinster; if so, as Thomas YATES, of Dublin, Tailor, Administration granted 17 January 1690 to Jane, his widow, and Jane, his daughter, a minor; as Jane YEATES alias HALSY, she was married secondly by License dated 26 September 1691, to James KIRK, of the City of Dublin, Merchant.<br />
3. Mary YEATES; named as Mary PARTINGTON in her mother's will, 1683; as Maria YATES, of the City of Dublin, Spinster, she was married firstly, by P.C.I. License dated 15 February 1672, to Thomas STERNE, of Dublin [BETHAM]; he was a Goldsmith, of St Werburgh's parish, and the marriage was solemnized at St Michan's parish church, 18 February, she as <em>"... Mary YEATES, the daughter of Mary now the wife of David SOLLOM, of the parish of St Michan's, Esq, by Symon DIGBY, pursuant to a license out of the Prerogative Court to him directed"</em> [Image of published register entry on the <a href="http://www.irishgenealogy.ie/">www.irishgenealogy.ie</a> web-site]. Thomas STERNE's will, dated 9 February 1678, named his wife Mary, sons Robert and John, brother Josias, brother-in-law Peter, and sister CREAMER (?) [BETHAM]; Mary STERNE, of the parish of St Werburgh, Dublin, Widow, was married secondly, by P.C.I. License dated 25 February 1681, to Peter PARTINGTON, of the same parish, Milliner [BETHAM]; Mary had issue:<br />
<em> a. Robert STERNE; named in his father's will, 1678.</em><br />
<em> b. John STERNE; named in his father's will, 1678; named in his mother's will, 1683.</em><br />
<em> c. Mary PARTINGTON; named in her grandmother's will, 1683.</em><br />
Robert's widow Mary remarried; her will, as Mary SOLLAM of Dublin, Widow, dated 3 November 1683, named her sons Robert and Thomas YEATES, her daughter Mary PARTINGTON (and her husband Peter PARTINGTON, and their daughter Mary P.), her daughter Katherine NIXON, and her grandson John STERNE [BETHAM]; Mary had further issue:<br />
4. Catherine SOLOM; named as Katherine NIXON in her mother's will, 1683; of the City of Dublin, Spinster, she was married by P.C.I. license date 19 July 1682, to Anthony NIXON, of the City of Dublin, Gent [BETHAM]; his will, dated 13 July 1713, proved P.C.I. 19 November 1713, named his wife Katherine, son David, daughters Mary CROFTON and Katherine NIXON, and his son-in-law Edward CROFTON, Esq.<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _</div>
<br />
Francis YEATES; he was married before 1671 to Mary FLETCHER, a sister of John FLETCHER of Kilmainham, Skinner (BETHAM's Abstract - his Administration, dated 22 January 1761, was granted to his brother-in-law Francis YEATES, during the minority of his daughters Mary and Abigail FLETCHER).<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _</div>
<br />
Michael YEATES, of Jamestown, parish of Kilgobbin, County Dublin, Farmer; his Deed of Articles of Assignment, dated 28 May 1719 [Memorial 13873, Book 23, Page 411 or 441], naming Richard BLACKHAM, of Beggars Bush, County Dublin, Farmer as the second party, being the Marriage Articles for Isaiah YEATES, son of the said Michael, and Elizabeth BLACKHAM, daughter of the said Richard; of the same address, Carpenter, when his deeds of Lease and Release, dated 31 May and 1 June 1722 [Memorial 20884, Book 33, Page 455], with his son Isaiah, the other party being Anthony WILLS of the City of Dublin, Merchant, and mentioning his earlier Deed of Lease dated 18 April 1699, for a part of Jamestown, from Thomas CANE, of Dublin, Brewer.<br />
<br />
Frances YEATES and Richard BLACKHAM were married by License at St Mark's parish church, Dublin, 17 September 1748.<br />
<br />
Thomas YEATES; of Phrapper Lane, City of Dublin, Gent; living in 1752; he was married, with issue:<br />
1. son; he was married with issue:<br />
<i> a. Mary YEATES, probably born in or before 1724; she was married at St Michan's parish church, 5 August 1742, to William YEATES, Comb-maker, who may have been her relation.</i><br />
<i> b. Sarah YEATES; by 1776, the wife of Peter MATTHEWS, of the City of Dublin, Silk Weaver.</i><br />
<br />
Thomas YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Comb-maker; he was grantee of an Indenture of Lease dated 27 August 1752 [Memorial 106868, Book 159, Page 258], by which he was demised, by Thomas MARTEN of the City of Dublin, Gent, all his part and proportion of the Lands of Greenanstown then in possession of Nicholas LANGAN, of 60 acres, Barony of Duleek, County Meath, to hold unto the said Thomas YEATES from 25 March past, during the remainder of the term of 31 years then unexpired of said LANGAN's lease.<br />
<br />
William YEATES, Comb Maker, was married at St Michan's parish church, 5 August 1742, to Mary YEATES, Spinster [Church Register].<br />
William YEATES, of Phrapper Lane, County of Dublin, Comb-maker; his Deed of Lease, dated 24 September 1754 [Memorial 114700, Book 172, Page 14], with his son William, same address and occupation, and making a demise of lands in Calstown, Barony of Dulkeek, County Meath, to Patrick DIVIN of Calstown.<br />
William YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Silk Weaver; his Indented Deed dated 6 July 1776 [Memorial 210359, Book 314, Page 89], jointly with his wife Mary YEATES otherwise YEATES, one of the two grand-daughters and also one of the co-heiresses and Administrators of Thomas YEATES, late of Phrapper Lane, City of Dublin, Gent, as the one part, and John WILKINSON, of the City of Dublin, Carpenter, of the other part, concerning two tenements on the east side of Proper Lane commonly known as Phrapper Lane, City of Dublin, and also part of the Lands of Grenanstown, Barony of Duleek, County Meath, and which were demised to the said Thomas YEATES by James MARTIN, by Lease dated 23 August 1752, for 99 years at a rent of 60s sterling, and mentioning two moeties thereof - one for the use of the said William YEATES, etc, and the other in trust for Sarah MATTHEWS otherwise YEATES, the wife of Peter MATTHEWS, of the City of Dublin, Silk Weaver, in case she shall survive the said Mary YEATES (see Thomas YEATES, of Milltown, County Meath, above).<br />
<br />
Robert YEATES, late of the City of Dublin, Skinner, 1722, deceased; probably married, with probable issue (but if not, almost certainly related):<br />
1. Ruth YEATES; she married Timothy McCARTHY; she was named in an Indented Deed of Conveyance dated 1 November 1722 [Memorial 22036, Book 35, Page 210], as one of the administrators of the goods and chattels, rights, debts and credits, of Robert YEATES, the Skinner, deceased.<br />
2. Mary YEATES; she married POLLARD; she was named in 1722 all ditto.<br />
<br />
Jonathan YEATES; of Broughane (?), County Dublin, Gent - his will, dated 22 March 1772, proved P.C.I. 8 April 1778 [BETHAM's Abstract], named his sons William, John, Jonathan, Thomas and Robert, his eldest daughter Elizabeth YEATES, his daughter Ann YEATES otherwise MASON, daughters Susanna and Mary YEATES, and son-in-law Seacombe MASON; he was married with issue:<br />
1. William YEATES; named in his father's will, 1772; he was married, with issue:<br />
<em> a. Susannah YEATES; she was married to ENGLISH, and named thus in the 1799 will of her uncle </em><em>Robert YEATES</em><i>; she was probably married to James ENGLISH, and had issue:</i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Eleanor ENGLISH, baptised at St Paul's, Dublin, 22 May 1806.</span></i><br />
<em> b. Ellen YEATES; she was married to NELSON, all ditto.</em><br />
2. John YEATES; named in his father's will, 1772.<br />
3. Jonathan YEATES; named in his father's will, 1772.<br />
4. Thomas YEATES; named in his father's will, 1772. Possible Thomas YEATES of Scalestown County Meath, his will dated 1 February 1772, and prove P.C.I., 21 February 1776 (see above).<br />
5. Robert YEATES; named in his father's will, 1772; late of Finglass, County Dublin, Gent - his will, dated 23 February 1799, proved P.C.I. 12 April 1799 [BETHAM's Abstract], named his wife Sarah otherwise SMITH, his brothers John, Jonathan and Thomas, his brother-in-law Seacombe MASON, of Dublin, Optician, niece Susannah ENGLISH (daughter of his brother William), niece Ellen NELSON (ditto), brother-in-law John DOOLEY of Georges Street (and his sons Jonathan and Thomas), and his sister Elizabeth SHEPPARD; of the City of Dublin, Gent, when he was married by Prerogative License dated 28 February 1793m to Sarah SMITH, of the parish of Clonnethan (?), D. Dublin, Spinster [BETHAM].<br />
I. Elizabeth YEATES; named in her father's will, 1772; named in her brother Robert's will, 1799; of the parish of St John, Dublin, Spinster, when she was married by Prerogative License dated 21 July 1778, to Samuel SHEPPARD, of Winetavern Street, Dublin, Brass Founder [BETHAM's Abstract].<br />
II. Ann YEATES; named in her father's will, 1772; of the Parish of Finglas, Spinster, when she was married, by Prerogative License dated 22 July 1775, to Seacome MASON, of Arran Quay, City of Dublin, Optician; he was named in his father-in-law's will, 1772.<br />
III. Susanna YEATES; named in her father's will, 1772<i>.</i><br />
IV. Mary YEATES; named in her father's will, 1772; of St Michan's parish, Spinster, when she was married at St Michan's, by License by Rev Thomas GAMBLE, on 19 January 1787, to John DOOLEY of the City of Dublin, Shoemaker; of Georges Street, Dublin, 1799, when named in the 1799 will of his brother-in-law Robert YEATES; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Jonathan DOOLEY; named in his uncle's will, 1799.</em><br />
<em> b. Thomas DOOLEY; ditto.</em><br />
<em></em><br />
William YEATES, of Reynoldstown, County Dublin; he prosecuted the firm of Messrs LABERTOUCHE and STAFFORD, Stock Brokers of Dublin, in 1845, for wilful and fraudulently embezzling him of 500 pounds; William was married to Martha; she died at Kensington Terrace, Rathmines, 30 September 1849, relict of William YEATES, Esq, aged 72 years [Dublin Evening Mail, 4 October 1849]; they had issue:<br />
A1. Charlotte A. YEATES; she was married at Naul Church, 28 June 1842, to Seacome MASON, Esq [Weekly Freeman's Journal, 9 July].<br />
A2. daughter; wife of Dr CRAWFORD, of Demerara; they had issue an only child:<br />
<em> a. Martha CRAWFORD; she was married in Naul Church, 24 February 1847, to Robert DUGGAN, Esq, of the City of Dublin [The Pilot, 24 February].</em><br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u><br /></u></em></strong></span>
<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>SAMUEL YEATES OF MOON, COUNTY KILDARE</u></em></strong></span>.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><strong><em>* * * THIS FAMILY IS PROVING DIFFICULT TO UNTANGLE * * *</em></strong></span></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><strong><em>* * * I NOW CONJECTURE THAT THERE MAY HAVE BEEN THREE MEN NAMED SAMUEL YEATES, PERHAPS IN SUCCESSIVE GENERATIONS * * *</em></strong></span></div>
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Samuel YEATES, the elder, born about 1680; of Colganstown, County Dublin, Gent; he was the second party to a Deed Poll dated 22 December 1722, which was recited in a later Indented Deed of Mortgage of his son Thomas YEATES of Constanstown otherwise Colganstown, County Dublin, dated 7 June 1780 [Memorial 225690, Book 337, Page 83], the 1722 deed naming James HARRISON of the City of Dublin, Gent, as the first party, who demised the lands of Colganstown unto Samuel YEATES, of the County of Dublin, Gent, and who is mentioned in the 1780 Deed as <i>".. dead, but before his death duly made his last will and testament, and thereby gave and devised to the said Thomas YEATES his Interest in said Articles, and all his right, title and Interest to the said Lands of Colganstown, whereupon the same became vested in the said Thomas YEATES, subject to the yearly rent payable thereout"</i>; Samuel's Deed Poll or Assignment, dated 10 February 1723 [Memorial 25491], by which he demised to James WILDE, of the City of Dublin, Gent, five Fields or Parks of the Lands of Gammage, containing 40 acres, which he had acquired by Lease, dated 26 March 1715, from Thomas BURGH of the City of Dublin, Esq.<br />
Samuel YEATES, of Colganstown, County Dublin, Gent; he was second party to an Indenture of Lease dated 24 February 1748 [Memorial 93295, Book 138, Page 307], by which Mary ASHE, of the City of Dublin, Spinster, Alderman Thomas COOKE of the said City and Debrah COOKE otherwise ASH his wife, and Henry ASTON of said City, Esq, and Martha ASTON aotherwise ASHE his wife, the sais Mary, Debra and Martha being sisters and heirs of Thomas ASHE, late of Moone, County Kildare, Esq, deceased, as the first party, did demise unto the said Samuel YEATES all that part of the lands of Moone aforedsaid, the estate of the said Thomas ASHE, of 832 acres profitable land plantation measure, being bounded on the east by the Lands of Timolin, on the west by Lands of Grange Nolin, on the north by other parts of the Lands of Moone the estate of Ald. Thomas TAYLOR, and on the south by the Lands of Belan, together with all Mills, Mill Streams, Ways, Waters, Water Courses, Commons, Commons of Pasture, and all and singular the appurtenances thereto belonging, excepting the Mount of Burial Place in the Mountfield... Mines, Minerals, Hawking and Hunting..., to hold from 1 May then next ensuing, for 999 years, at the yearly rent of 330 pounds 1s sterling.</div>
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Samuel YEATES, of Colganstown, County Dublin, Gent (born in or before 1720, and perhaps well before); second party to a Deed of Memorandum or Contract dated 10 March 1741 [Memorial 77421, Book 113, Page 59], by which the Right Honorable Charles Lord Tullamore covenanted and agree to demise and sett unto Samuel YEATES the Domain Lands of Croghan, King's County, with a number of exclusions (including mining and minerals, timber both standing and growing, fishing, hunting and fowling, etc), for the lives of Samuel and Thomas YEATES the sons of the said Samuel, and Patrick LOCK of Colganstown, Labourer, at a yearly rent of 11s 6d per acre; his Deed of Assignment, dated 4 March 1747 [Memorial 87915, Book 128, Page 536], which was endorsed on the back of the 1741 Memorandum above (sealed and executed by the Hon. Charles Lord Tullamore), and by which Deed of Assignment Samuel YEATES demised the said Domain Lands to Joseph DAMES of Croghan, Gent.</div>
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Samuel YEATES, of Colganstown, Esq, 1765 [Index to Prerogative Wills of Ireland, Sir Arthur VICARS]. Not abstracted by Sir William BETHAM.<br />
From a record of memorials, at St Finian's Churchyard, Newcastle-juxta-Lyons, County Dublin, a Table Tomb:<br />
<em>"Here lyeth the Body of Samuel YATES, Esq'r, Departed this life 20 February 1765, aged 84 years; also the body of his wife Alice, Departed this life Feb 10 1768, aged 70 years; And also the remains of their second son Thomas YATES, Esq, of Colganstown in this parish, who Departed this life suddenly on the 8th day of Jan 1815, in the 89th year of his age, and without having suffered from sickness during his entire life." </em>[Journal of the Association for the Preservation of the Memorials of the Dead in Ireland, Volume VI, Dublin, 1906, page 280.]</div>
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Samuel YEATES the elder was married, and clearly before about 1740, to a wife only known to us as Alice; she died 10 February 1768, aged 70 years; they appear to have had issue:</div>
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1. Samuel YEATES the younger, born in or before 1740, and perhaps well before; named as first life for the term of his father's deed, 1741. See [M] below.</div>
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2. Thomas YEATES, born about 1726, the second son; named as second life for the term of his father's deed, 1741; he inherited his father's Lands in Colganstown; he died on 8 January 1815, aged 88 years.<br />
? Rachel YEATS, baptized at St Werburgh's, 4 June 1723, daughter of Samuel and Alice, from Castle Street, Dublin.<br />
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[M] Samuel YEATES, of Moone, County Kildare, Esq (born in or before 1738, and perhaps well before); his Indented Deed dated 6 September 1759 [Memorial 133353, Book 199, Page 568], by which he and his wife Margaret YEATES otherwise ARTHURE, acknowledge that they had received from Henry ASTON and Thomas COOKE, both of the City of Dublin, Esqrs, executors of the last will and testament of Daniel COOKE, late of the City of Dublin, Alderman, deceased, by the hands of Margaret ARTHURE, of the City of Dublin, Widow, the sum of 1056 pounds 6s 3d, due to them as the annuity Margaret YEATES had from the estate of her late father Benedict ARTHUR, of Seafield County Dublin, by his alleged will dated 10 July 1752 [Memorial 105565, Book 155, Page 495], in which he names his wife Margaret, and his children Daniel, Margaret and Elinor Christian ARTHUR, none yet then married (not to be confused with Benedict ARTHUR of New Church Street, St Michan's parish, Peruke Maker, who made his will on 21 March 1753, reciting that he had been advised that by a Deed dated 10 May 1693, made between John ARTHUR of Cabrah, County Dublin, Esq, with Michael CHAMBERLAIN, that he was thereby the<em> "... next heir at law to the estate of the said John ARTHUR after the death of his son Benedict ARTHUR, who died in October last</em> (evidently 1752), <em>without leaving any lawful issue"</em> and further mentioning the late Benedict ARTHUR had devised his estates to <em>"... his dearly beloved wife Margaret, and after her death shall devolve to his dearly beloved kinsman the eldest son of Thomas ARTHUR</em>"- which all appears to be in conflict with the earlier will (assuming that there were not two of the same name, which there may have been).</div>
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Samuel YEATES; of Moone, County Kildare, Esq; he was married by P.C.I. License dated 15 July 1752, to Margaret ARTHUR, of St Thomas's parish, Dublin, Spinster [BETHAM]; she was probably a daughter of Benedict ARTHUR. It is unclear whether this was the elder, or the younger.</div>
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Samuel and Margaret probably had issue:</div>
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1. Samuel YEATES, born in County Kildare, about 1753; admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, as a Pensioner (Mr DARBY), 10 July 1769, aged 16, son of Samuel, Armiger, born County Kildare [Alumni Dublinenses]. He does not appear to have prospered.<br />
2. Benedict Arthur YEATES, a co-defendant of litigation in 1801 over his late father's estate.<br />
3. Possible other issue, perhaps including John YEATES, baptized at St Mary's C.of I., Dublin, 22 September 1761, so of Samuel and Margaret?</div>
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Samuel YEATES, of Moon, County Kildare, Esq; his wife died at Drogheda Street, Dublin, November 1762 [Dublin Courier, 29 November]. This was Samuel was the younger, and his first wife Margaret YEATES otherwise ARTHURE.</div>
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Samuel YEATES, the younger, of Moone in County Kildare, Esq (born in or before 1743); his Indented Deed dated 8 February 1764 [Memorial in Book 222, Page 382], naming Richard JOHNSTON of Gilford, County Down, and Thomas YEATES of Colganstown, County Dublin, Esq, as the joint second party, and Katherine JOHNSTON of the City of Dublin, Spinster, as the third party, and reciting that by a Deed of Lease dated May 1746, his father, Samuel YEATES the elder (probably the above 1752 spouse), had acquired from Henry ASHTON and others, the Town and Lands of Moone, in the Barony of Kilhee (?), County Kildare, for 999 years at a rent of 303 pounds 10s sterling a year.</div>
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Samuel YEATES, Esq, of Moon, County Kildare; he resided at Sackville Street, Dublin, 1784, 1785; his Indented Deed of Lease dated 5 April 1790 [Memorial 274438], by which he demised to Robert BELL, also of Dublin, a house and ground in Sackville Street, for the term of the natural lives of John Bowes BENSON, the surviving life of an earlier lease, Catherine BAYLY otherwise YEATES, wife of Robert BAYLEY of Ballintore, County Kildare, a daughter of the said Samuel YEATES, aged about 21 years, and Richard YEATES, the fourth son of the said Samuel, aged about 8 years; he died at his residence, New Sackville Street, Dublin, in January 1799, "... after a few days illness" [Saunders News-Letter, 9 January]; he bequeathed the house at Moone to his widow, and the land to his son by his first wife [Mary LEADBEATER, MSS and Correspondence, Volume 1, London, 1862, page 409]; litigation over his estate was brought before the High Court of Chancery in Ireland, by Norcott Henry D'ESTERRE and his wife Myrtilla D'ESTERRE otherwise YEATES, as Plaintiffs, v. Benedict Arthur YEATES, Esq, Catherine YEATES, John Douglas JOHNSTON, Esq, and others, as Defendants, which action resulted in an order, dated 30 November 1801, by which creditors were invited to restate their claims, in a notice published in December 1802 [Dublin Evening Post, 27 December].</div>
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Samuel YEATES was married, evidently secondly [see BURKE's "Landed Gentry of Ireland," 1899 - pedigree of JOHNSTONE of Snow Hill, Fermanagh], in February 1764, to Catherine JOHNSTON, of Henry Street, daughter of the late Richard JOHNSTON of Gilford in the County Down, Esq [Dublin Courier, 13 February]; they probably had issue:</div>
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1. a son.</div>
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2. Catherine YEATES, born about 1768; a life for the term of her father's lease, dated April 1790, then aged about 21; <em>"... the agreeable Miss Kitty YEATES"</em> was married in November 1784 to Robert BAYLEY, of Ballitore, County Kildare, Esq [Hibernian Journal, or Chronicle of Liberty, 15 November].</div>
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3. a second son.</div>
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4. a son, probably the third, was born at Sackville Street, Dublin, 23 March 1779 [Gentleman's and London Magazine, 1779].</div>
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5. Richard YEATES, born about 1781; named as third life in his father's deed, April 1790, aged 8, the fourth son; probably the Yeomanry Militia soldier killed in 1798.</div>
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6. a daughter, born at Sackville Street, August 1782 [Saunders News-Letter, 6 August]. </div>
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7. a daughter, born at Sackville Street, September 1783 [Saunders News-Letter, 20 September].<br />
8. a daughter; born at Sackville Street, July 1785 [Saunders News-Letter, 11 July].<br />
<br />
Matilda YEATES, of Timolin, Diocese of Dublin, Spinster, was married by P.C.I. License dated 10 October 1789, to Norcott Henry D'ESTERRE [BETHAM]; Norcott was identified by Mary LEADBEATER [her MSS and Correspondence], as a brother-in-law of Richard YEATES of Moon who was killed by rebel soldiers in 1798; as Myrtilla D'ESTERRE otherwise YEATES, she and her husband Norcott were Plaintiffs in a case they brought before the High Court of Chancery, in which the defendants were Benedict Arthur YEATES, Esq, Catherine YEATES and John Douglas JOHNSTON, and others, and which resulted in an Order of that Court dated 30 November 1801 [Dublin Evening Post, 27 December 1802].<br />
<br />
Samina Maria YEATES, probably born in or before 1780, youngest daughter of Samuel YEATES of Moon Abbey, County Kildare, when she was married, in 1798, to John Douglas JOHNSTONE of Snow Hill, Lisbellaw, County Fermanagh [BURKE's L.G.I., 1899 - pedigree of JOHNSTONE of Snow Hill].</div>
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<b><span style="font-size: large;"><i><u>YEATES OF BUTLERSTOWN, COUNTY DUBLIN.</u></i></span></b><br />
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Isaiah YEATES; of Butlerstown, County Dublin, Gent; his Deed of Lease, dated 12 October 1734, was recited in his later Deed of Mortgage, dated 22 May 1753 [Memorial 108203, Book 160, Page 442], by which lease he was demised, by Arthur Frances MEREDYTH of Dollarstown, County Meath, Esq, the Lands of Dardistown (62 acres) and Balfstown (20 acres) in the Barony of Dunboyne and County of Meath, for the term of lives of the said Isaiah YEATES, Elizabeth YEATES his wife, and Richard YEATES their son, and recited yet another Deed of Lease dated 14 January 1747, whereby he was demised an additional 140 acres of the Lands of Balfstown, also by Arthur Francis MEREDITH, for the term of lives of his children James, Isaiah and Mary YEATES, the whole being demised by Isaiah in his 1753 Mortgage to Richard BREWER of the City of Dublin, Gent.<br />
Isaiah YEATS was married to Elizabeth; they had issue:<br />
1. Richard YEATES; named as the third life for the term of his father's lease, October 1734.<br />
2. James YEATES; named as the first life for the term of his father's lease, January 1747.<br />
3. Isaiah YEATES; named as the second life for the term of his father's lease, January 1747.<br />
4. Mary YEATES; named as the third life for the term of her father's lease, January 1747.<br />
<br />
Isaiah YEATES, of Booterstown, County Dublin, Gent; his Indented Deed, dated 23 July 1742 [Memorial 75247, Book 109, Page 131], citing an earlier Lease dated 14 February 1740, by which Isaiah YEATS had demised part of the Lands of Jamestown in County Dublin to Edward WEBB of Kilgobbin in County Dublin, Gent, and by his 1742 Deed did grant a assign unto Richard YEATES, of Booterstown, Gent, the yearly rent of 16 pounds sterling payable from the earlier Lease, and citing a then intended marriage between Hannah YEATES, the daughter of the said Isaiah YEATES, and the said Edward WEBB.<br />
<br />
Richard YEATES, of the County of Dublin, Gent; his Indented Deed of Sale, dated 19 November 1756 [Memorial 122740, Book 183, Page 253], by which he demised Lands of Little Newtown, County Dublin, to Thomas EYRE, of the said County, Esq, for the term of the lives of his brothers William and Isaiah YEATES, and Jane LEE the daughter of Dorcas LEE of Maidenswell in County Dublin, Widow<br />
______________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>ANCESTORS OF THE IRISH POET, W.B. YEATS.</u></em></strong></span><br />
<br /><br />
At first glance, it would appear to me to be highly improbable that any kinship connection might exist linking these above YEATES to the ancestral family of the famous Irish Poet, William Butler YEATS (1865-1939), as follows.<br />
<br />
Ezechia YATES; of Firbeck, Yorkshire (West Riding); he was married with issue:<br />
1. Robert YATES, baptized at Firbeck, 29 July 1600.<br />
2. Gervis YATES, baptized at Firbeck, 19 December 1601.<br />
<br />
James YATES or YEATES; of Firbeck; Probate, 1661, Will and Bond, York Peculiars (Court of Chancellor of York, with Loughton).<br />
Katherine YEATS or YEATES, ditto, 1679, all ditto.<br />
<br />
Gervis YATES was buried at Firbeck, 28 June 1666. Perhaps an intermediary?<br />
<br />
Gerves YATES; of Firbeck; possibly, and even probably, related to one or all of the above; he was married (no particulars in surviving Firbeck Registers), with issue:<br />
1. Gerves YATES, baptized at Firbeck, 27 September 1666. Very possibly, and even likely, the next.<br />
<br />
Jervis YEATS; widely believed to have had origins in Yorkshire (as appears in numerous biographies of his descendant, the Poet W.B. YEATS); it is said that he arrived in Ireland with the Williamite Army, and if that is so, probably about 1689; after the Battle of the Boyne (1690), he appears to have settled in Dublin, but perhaps not immediately; he was dwelling in St Michan's parish, City of Dublin, in 1699 (a Soldier), and again, same parish, in 1700 (a Pedlar); he prospered, to become an eminent Linen Draper, whose trading area is said to have included Spain, and he was favoured by an Act of Parliament by which he (perhaps with other Merchants) was exempt from certain Taxes; he was admitted to the Merchant's Guild, in Midsummer 1706, by an Act of Parliament.<br />
Gervas YEATS, <i>".. of Dublin in Ireland,"</i> was buried in the Collegiate Church of SS Peter and Paul, Sheffield (now Sheffield Cathedral), 8 March 1712-13 [Register image, and Bishop's Transcripts of Burials, Yorkshire, Findmypast.co.uk] - confirmed as Julian Calendar dating (so this burial took place on that 8th day of March which fell between 31 December 1712 and 25 March 1713); Jervis YEATES, of New Row, Dublin, Merchant, 1713, Will, page 125 [Appendix to the 26th Report of the Deputy Keeper of Public Records in Ireland, page 940]; sadly, no mention of his will appears in Sir William BETHAM's Abstracts; in this will, Jervis is said to have left money to two aunts, Sarah BARNES of Yorkshire and Dorothy WESTNAGE of Turbeck near Sheffield [a copy of this will, not yet sighted by me, was in the possession of his descendant Sarah Ann (Lily) YEATS, about 1900 - if Turbeck happens to be a mis-spelling of Firbeck, which I believe is probably the case (Turbeck does not register as a place in England), and that would appear to make the 1664 Firbeck baptism highly significant]; a Sarah BARNES was buried in the same Cathedral Church of SS Peter and Paul on 21 October 1729, a Widow (possibly the aunt - and if so, Jervis/Gervase may have been visiting her at the time of his death, perhaps having made his will before he left Ireland); until this will is sighted, it cannot be presumed with any confidence that Jervis only made bequests to his two aunts (that information would, I presume, have probably have been singled out in relation to his presumed origins in Yorkshire).<br />
Jervis was married, probably in Dublin, but evidently not by License, to Martha (-?-); her maiden surname has not yet been established; she appears to have survived her husband by many years, and to have continued his business - she was named as the Master in apprenticeship of her son Benjamin at his Admission to the Merchant's Guild, 1738; she was probably [A] below, and if so, her will was dated September 1751, but she was still living in 1754.<br />
Jervis and Martha had issue:<br />
1. Mary YEATES, baptised at St Michan's, Dublin, 13 November 1699, her father a Soldier.<br />
2. John YEATES, baptised at St Michan's, 15 December 1700, his father (Jeuis) a Pedlar.<br />
3. Benjamin YEATES. See [B] below.<br />
4. Eliz YEATES, baptised at St Catherine's, Dublin, 16 April 1710.<br />
<br />
[A] Martha YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Widow, 1722; she was named as second party to Deeds of Lease and release, dated 1 and 8 January 1722, by which she was demised, by William HUMBLE of Cork Street in the Liberty of Thomas Court and Donore, County Dublin, a house and parcell of ground on the south side of the road from Crooked Staff to Dolphin's Barn, which he had inherited from his father John HUMBLE (who had a lease of it, dated 10 September 1695, from the Earl of Meath).<br />
Martha YEATS, of the City of Dublin, Widow; her Indenture of Lease, dated 26 May 1744 [Memorial 79221, Book 114, Page 355], by which she demised a parcel of ground with house on the south side of Cork Street, Dublin, to George KING, of Dublin, Currier, the deed witnessed by John ANNESLEY, an apprentice to Benjamin YEATS (her son - see next below).<br />
Martha YEATS, of the City of Dublin, Widow; her Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 2 and 3 September 1751 [Memorial 100029, Book 149, Page 358], citing the Lease of Edward late Earl of Meath dated 10 December 1695 to John HUMBLE, and the Release by which she demised the house and ground on the south side of the road from Crooked Staff to Dolphins Barn, to Thomas GARNER, of the City of Dublin, Merchant, for a term of lives, the third being Thomas YEATES, son of Benjamin YEATES late of New Row, Dublin, Merchant, deceased (her grandson and son - see next below).<br />
The last will and testament of Martha YEATS of the City of Dublin, Widow, dated 27 September 1751, was not formally registered with the Deeds Registry in Dublin until 28 September 1788; by it she appointed her daughter-in-law Hannah YEATS, Widow, as her sole executrix, to have the residue of her personal estate, including ready money, plate, rings and jewels, not otherwise demised in her Deeds of Lease and Release dated 2 and 3 September 1751 [Memorial 100029]. Benjamin YEATS was mentioned in the will, and the contents of it was sworn by Robert TEGART, Robert MOORE and Thomas HARTLEY; the 1788 Registration of it was sworn by Robert TEGART of the City of Waterford, Merchant, and Jonathan HOYLE, of the City of Dublin, Attorney, with the latter delivering the final draft to John MOORE, Esq, Deputy Registrar of Deeds, at or near 12.30 p.m. on 28 February 1788. It is curious that she made no mention of her grandchildren.<br />
Martha Yeates, of the City of Dublin, Widow; her Indented Deed of Lease, dated 25 March 1754 [Memorial 112460], by which she demised the Lease of a Dwelling House, with back side and garden, in Dolphins Barn Lane, between Cork and Brown Streets, City of Dublin, to Thomas WREN, of the City of Dublin, Merchant, formerly enjoyed by Elizabeth MEADE alias - - -, Widow, for a term of lives, at a yearly rent of 28 pounds sterling, the Deed witnessed by her daughter-in-law Hannah BREWER otherwise YEATES, wife of Thomas BREWER, of the City of Dublin, Gent.<br />
Martha YEATES, of the City of Dublin, Widow; her Deed of Assignment, dated 17 May 1754 [Memorial 113074, Book 165, Page 548], citing an earlier Lease dated 7 May 1728 by which she was demised a house in New Row, Dublin, then in her possession, from Hon. Joshua Lord Viscount ALLEN, for 99 years at 30 pounds per annum rental, and which she demised in her 1754 Deed to Thomas BREWER of the City of Dublin, Gent (probably her widowed daughter-in-law's second husband - see next below).<br />
<br />
Thomas BREWER, of the parish of Duleek, County Meath, Gent, was married by P.C.I. License dated 23 November 1722, to Rebecca TAYLOR, of the parish of Julianstown Bridge, same County, Spinster; these place names do resonate with other branches of the YEATES family (see above).<br />
<div>
<br />
A Sarah YEATES was buried at St Catherine's, 20 February 1717, but probably not a daughter of Jervis.<br />
<br />
[B] Benjamin YEATES; admitted to membership of the Merchant's Guild, Dublin, and therefor as a Freeman of the City, Midsummer 1738, by birth, and as an apprentice to his mother Martha YEATES, Widow of Jervis; of the City of Dublin, Merchant, and for a time of New Row, City of Dublin; his will, dated 1 July 1750, was proved P.C.I., 8 July 1750, and named his wife Hannah, his sister-in-law Mary WARREN, and his children Thomas, Benjamin and Martha.<br />
Benjamin was of the parish of St Catherine's, Dublin, when he was married by P.C.I. License dated 12 June 1742, to Hanna WARREN, of the parish of St Nicholas Without, Dublin, Spinster [BETHAM's Abstract]; she was married secondly, as Hannah YEATES, of the parish of St Catherine's, Widow, by P.C.I. License dated 2 October 1751, to Thomas BREWER, of the City of Dublin, Brewer [BETHAM]; their Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 26 and 27 January 1770 [Memorial 184576, Book 286, Page 63], as Thomas BREWER of the City of Dublin, Gent, and Hannah BREWER otherwise YEATS otherwise WARREN, of the one part, and naming Hugh WARREN of the City of Dublin, Goldsmith, of the other part.<br />
Benjamin and Hannah had issue:<br />
1. Thomas YEATES; named in his father's will, 1750; named as the third life for the term of the Deed of Release of his grandmother Martha YEATS, 1751 (her de-facto will).<br />
2. Mary YEATES; named in her father's will, 1750.<br />
3. Benjamin YEATES, said to have been born in 1750; named in his father's will, July 1750; Linen Draper in Dublin; he died in 1795; of the City of Dublin, Merchant, when he was married, by P.C.I. License dated 13 August 1773, to Mary BUTLER, of the parish of St Peter's, Dublin, Spinster, the daughter of John BUTLER, of County Kildare, and of the War Office in Dublin (she inherited his estates in Thomastown, County Kildare); Mary YEATS, of William Street, Dublin, Widow and relict of Benjamin YEATS late of the same address, deceased, made a Deed of Indented Articles, dated 11 January 1796 [Memorial 319462], with Nathaniel Edward BUTLER, of the City of Dublin, Linen Draper, and Gerald GEOGHAN also of the City of Dublin, Linen Draper, by which they ".. concluded and agreed together to be and continue co-partners for the improvement of their trade... and mystery of a Linen Draper," each contributing 1,000 pounds sterling, and to which one witness was Theo Butler, of the City of Dublin, Gent; she died in 1834; they had a son:<br />
<em> a. John Butler YEATS, born in Dublin, about 1775; he was admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, as a Pensioner (Mr BARRY), 4 June 1792, aged 16, son of Benjamin, Mercator, born Dublin; B.A. Verne 1797; M.A., he took Holy Orders, and was Rector of Drumcliff, County Sligo, until his death on 2 November 1846; he married Jane TAYLOR, with issue:</em><br />
<em> i. William YEATS, born at Dublin Castle, 1806. See [C] below.</em><br />
<em> ii. John YEATS, born in 1808; Surveyor, in County Louth (1834-36) and County Kildare (1836-65); he died on 29 July 1865; he was married in 1842 to his first cousin, Ellen Sophia TERRY.</em><br />
<em> iii. Thomas YEATES, born at Sligo, about 1810; admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, as a Pensioner (Tutored by his father), 20 October 1831, aged 20; B.A. Vern 1833; M.A. Vern 1840.</em><br />
<em> iv. Henry YEATS; he died at Newry, 27 November 1861.</em><br />
<em> v. Ellen YEATS, the eldest daughter; she was married 15 September 11836 to Rev Edward L. ELWOOD</em><br />
<br />
It is possible that this was not his first marriage - a Benjamin YEATES and his wife Sarah had issue:<br />
1. Jeremiah YEATES, baptised at St Catherine's, Dublin, 3 May 1735.<br />
2. Thomas YEATES, baptised ditto, 27 January 1737.<br />
3. Martha YEATES, baptised ditto, 7 November 1739.<br />
<br />
Although a Benjamin YEATES had, by his wife Martha, a daughter Martha YEATES, baptised at St Catherine's, 3 October 1769 - so perhaps there were two different Benjamins here?<br />
<br />
John Butler Benjamin YEATS was baptised at Irishtown, 18 May 1823, son of George and Sarah YEATS. It is not yet clear who this George YEATS was, or whether he may have been a descendant of Jervis and Martha YEATS.<br />
<br />
[C] William Butler YEATS, born in Dublin, 1806; admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, as a Pensioner (Tutored by his father), 20 October 1828, aged 20; B.A. Vern 1833; M.A. Vern 1840; Rector of Tullyish, near Lawrencetown, County Down; he died at the home of his brother-in-law Robert CORBET, Sandymount Castle, Dublin, 26 November 1862; he was married at St Mary's, Donnybrook, Dublin, in November 1835, to Jane Grace CORBET (daughter of William CORBET, of Dublin, Solicitor, and Grace ARMSTRONG); they had issue:<br />
1. John Butler YEATS, born at Tullyish, County Down, 16 March 1839; Law Student, of George Villa, 1865; Barrister, 1866; Portrait Artist; he died in New York, 3 February 1922; of Union Place, Esq, when he was married at the parish church of St John, Sligo, on 10 September 1863, to Susan Mary POLLEXFEN, also of Union Place, daughter of William POLLEXFEN, Merchant, witnessed by W'm MIDDLETON and Tho's YEATS; there is a memorial window in St John's Church Sligo, for William POLLEXFEN, died 12 November 1892, and his wife Elizabeth, who died 2 October 1892; Susan Mary died in London, 3 January 1900, aged 58 - she is commemorated in another window in St John's Church, Sligo, erected by her four children (it records her birth on 13 July 1841); they had issue:<br />
<i> a. William Butler YEATS, born at 1 George Villa, Sandymount Strand, Dublin South, 13 June 1865. The noted Irish Poet.</i><br />
<i> b. Susan Mary (Lily) YEATS, born County Sligo, 20 August 1866; Artist; she died at Gurteen Dhas, Dundrum (Churchtown, County Dublin), 5 January 1949, Spinster, aged 82, Independent.</i><br />
<i> c. Elizabeth Corbet (Lolly) YEATS, born 1868; she died at 16 Herbert Street, Dublin, 16 January 1940, late of Gurteen Dhas, Dundrum, Spinster, aged 71, Artist.</i><br />
<i> d. Robert Corbet YEATS, born 27 March 1870; died 3 May 1873.</i><br />
<i> e. John Butler (Jack) YEATS, born 1871; he informed the death of his uncle Isaac YEATS, 1930; he died at Portobello House, Rathmines, 28 March 1957, Widower, aged 85, Artist.</i><br />
2. William YEATS.<br />
3. Robert YEATS.<br />
4. Isaac YEATS; he died at 52 Morehampton Road, Donnybrook, Dublin, 20 August 1930, Bachelor, aged 82, Retired Secretary, the death informed by his nephew, Jack B. YEATS, of 18 Fitzwilliam Square.<br />
5. Mary YEATS.<br />
6. Grace Jane YEATS.<br />
7. Jane Grace YEATS.<br />
8. Ellen YEATS.<br />
9. Fanny YEATS.<br />
__________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>DUBLIN DIOCESE MARRIAGES.</u></em></strong></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
The following is a list of Diocese of Dublin Marriages, derived from several sources - Indexes to P.C.I. Marriage License Bonds [I], BETHAM's Abstracts of those [B] (evidently BETHAM did not abstract all of them), and from those Church Registers which have survived [C], either as original registers, or as published transcripts thereof.<br />
It is my intention to systematically transfer relevant entries into the family information recorded above, leaving the remainder as those which cannot yet be "attributed."<br />
<br />
1656 - St John's parish, Dublin, 12 January; Samuel YEATES and Catherine DILL [C].<br />
1657 - St John's parish, 30 June; William YEATES and Elizabeth ROBINSON [C].<br />
1672 - St Michan's parish, 18 February; Mary YEATES and Thomas STERNE [C].<br />
1681 - St Audoen's parish, 15 September; Isaiah YATES and Mary COOPER [C].<br />
1691 - (Diocese of Cork and Ross) Jonathan YEATES and Jane HARRIS [I].<br />
1699 - St Michan's parish, 8 June; Josiah YEATES, Cordwinder, and Margaret WALKER, Widow of George WALKER, after publication of Banns [C].<br />
1724 - Mr YEATES, and Miss or Mrs KINGLEY, at St Nicholas Without parish, 22 August [C].<br />
1742 - St Michan's parish, 5 August; William YEATES, Comb Maker, and Mary YEATES, Spinster [C].<br />
1747 - Hannah YEATES and Harrap HALPEN [I]; Harrap HALPEN, City of Dublin, Chandler, and Hannah YEATES, parish of Newcastle, Spinster, 17 October [B].<br />
1748 - Frances YEATES and Richard BLACKHAM [I]; by License, at St Mark's parish, 17 September [C].<br />
1752 - Samuel YEATES and Margaret ARTHURE [I].<br />
1758 - James YEATES and Ann WADE [I].<br />
1759 - Caroline Catherine YEATES and Edward VERNON [I]. BURKE [L.G.I., 1899], pedigree VERNON of Clontarf, County Dublin, records them as cousins, and has Caroline Catherine as being the daughter of Catherine VERNON (sister of Edward's father, John VERNON), by her husband YEATES (given name not recorded), and with seven sons born 1760-1775.<br />
1760 - John YEATES and Ann YOUNG [I].<br />
1762 - John YEATES and Mary HOLMES [I].<br />
1764 - Samuel YEATES and Catherine JOHNSTON [I]<br />
1768 - Mary YEATES and John DEAN [I].<br />
1769 - Ann YEATES and George IRWIN [I].<br />
1770 - Mary YATES and Anthony McDANIEL [I].<br />
1775 - Ann YEATES and Secome MASON [I]; Seacome MASON, Arran Quay, City of Dublin, Optician, and Ann YEATES, parish of Finglass, Spinster , 22 July [B].<br />
1776 - Jonathan YEATES and Margaret DALTON [I].<br />
1781 - John YEATES and Jane DUDLEY [I].<br />
1781 - Susanna YEATES and George KINDER [I]; George KINDER, Stephen Street, Dublin, Cutler, and Susannah YEATES, St Michan's parish, Spinster, 15 January [B].<br />
1787 - Mary YEATES and John DOOLEY [I].<br />
1787 - Mary YEATES and Thomas SPENCE [I].<br />
1788 - Emilia YEATES and Samuel SHEPHERD [I].<br />
1789 - Matilda YEATS and Norcott Henry D'ESTERRE [I].<br />
1792 - Hannah YEATES and George TOWSON [I]; George TOWSON, City of Dublin, Farmer, and Hannah YEATES, parish of Rathfarnham, Spinster, 2 February [B].<br />
1793 - Robert YEATES and Sarah SMITH [I].<br />
1797 - William YEATES and Martha MASON [I].<br />
1798 - Sammina YEATES and John Douglas JOHNSTON [I].<br />
1798 - Ellinor YEATES and Christopher CROOKS [I].<br />
1802 - St Andrew's parish, 28 April; Kendrick YEATES and Margaret FAULKNER [C].<br />
1819 - St Peter's parish, 11 April; George YEATES, of the parish, and Jane SPARKS, of St Perry's, witnessed by M.A. SPENCE and Eliza TUOMY.<br />
____________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br /><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>ANCIENT FREEMEN OF THE CITY OF DUBLIN</u></em></strong></span>.<br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
1638 - At Michaelmas; Joh'es YETES, Bucklemaker, admitted by Fine and Grace Especiale (G.E.).<br />
1650 - Jacobus YEATES, Tailor, by Fine and G.E.<br />
1654 - Easter; Francis YATES, Tanner, by Fine and G.E.<br />
1656 - Henry YATES, Smith, by G.E.<br />
1658 - William YEATES, Glover, by Service.<br />
1673 - Michaelmas; Rob'tus YEATS, Glover, by Service.<br />
1674 - Christmas; William YEATES, Shoemaker, by Fine and G.E.<br />
1687 - 22 March; Thomas YEATES, Tailor, by Fine.<br />
1695 - Midsummer; Hester YATES, Spinster, by Fine and G.E.<br />
1735 - Christmas; William YEATES, apprentice of John WALKER, Weaver, by Service.<br />
1756 - Midsummer; John YEATES, son of William, Weaver, by Birth.<br />
1762 - Midsummer; James YEATES, service with John BEASLEY, by Birth.<br />
1768 - Midsummer; John YATES, service with William YEATS, Weaver, by Service.<br />
1768 - Christmas: Benjamin YEAES, son of Benjamin, by Birth.<br />
1770 - Thomas YEATES, son of Samuel Gervais YEATES, Merchant, by Birth.<br />
1815 - Arthur YEATES, of Dominick Street, Merchant, son of Thomas, by Fine and G.E.<br />
__________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>QUAKER RECORDS.</u></em></strong></span><br />
<br />
Note - Quaker Calendar month dating is not standard - for example, 12mo is their abbreviation for the 12th month, which is measured from March, and is therefor February, and not December.<br />
<br />
1680 - Judith YEATS, first marriage (by a Priest).<br />
1684 - Judith YEATS, Widow, second marriage (also by a Priest).<br />
1692 - 10d 12mo; Margaret YEATS, Dublin, to Thomas SIMPSON, Dublin<br />
1691 - County Caterlough (Carlow); George RUSSELL and Joseph LEBURN, of Rainstown, had taken from him (sic) for tithes, by four named (including Morgan CARTY and Francis YEATS) for the use of Benjamin BUNBERY, tithe monger under Ellinor, Impropriator, goods worth 2 pounds 5 shillings.<br />
1705 - Dublin, 12d 4mo; Judith YEATS, Dublin, Widow, to William SMITH, Cappah, King's County.<br />
1709 - Edenderry, 8d 12mo; Judith YEATS, late of Watercastle, Qieen's COunty, daughter of William and Judith YEATS, of Abbeyleix, Queen's County, to Joshua SMITH, Drighet, County KILDARE.</div>
</div>
</div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-69627822570364937382019-12-18T15:55:00.000-08:002020-07-28T21:23:36.131-07:00A GORRIE Family in Liverpool.<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong>DANIEL GORRIE, GENTLEMAN SERVANT.</strong></em></span><br />
<br />
Daniel GORRIE, Gentleman Servant, of Saint Andrew's Parish, was married at Edinburgh Parish, 27 June 1809, to Mary HERRIOT, of the same parish, daughter of the deceased John HERRIOT, Labourer, Parish of Liberton (he may have been the John HERRIOT who died at Liberton, 31 January 1798).<br />
Daniel and Mary had issue baptized at Pencaitland, East Lothian (their only two children with details recorded on the <a href="http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/">www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk</a> web-site): <br />
<em>a. Mary GORRIE, born 25 March 1813.</em><br />
<em>b. Daniel GORIE, born 23 December 1815, and baptized in 1816, before 4 March.</em><br />
Mary has not yet been traced.<br />
Daniel Junior may have been the Plumber of Edinburgh and Liverpool. See [A] below.<br />
___________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong>DAVID MEARNS OF MONTROSE.</strong></em></span><br />
<br />
The were two David MEARNS born in or near Montrose, county Angus (formerly Forfarshire) in 1782:<br />
1. Baptised at Montrose, 11 August 1782, son of Alexander MEARNS and Katherine SCOTT.<br />
2. Baptised at Craig by Montrose, 7 May 1782, son of Alexander MEARNS and Janet STEPHEN or STEPHENS; a family tree on Ancestry records that he was married at Craig by Montrose in 1802, to Margaret FINDLAY, and that they probably continued to reside in Craig by Montrose.<br />
One of these may have been the next - but probably the first - although if he was, one might have expected to see him name a son Alexander.<br />
<br />
David MEARNS was born in or near Montrose, Angus, in 1782 [Chelsea Pensioners Discharge Documents]; Cordwainer [ditto]; he enlisted in the 30th Regiment of Foot, 1803, and served in India; he was described as being 5 feet 6 and-a-quarter inches high, of a swarthy complexion, dark brown hair, hazel eyes, and a long visage [ditto]; he was "discharged" from this Regiment, as unfit for service, at Fort St George, 18 October 1807, after serving for 4 years and 7 months; it appears from another entry, in The National Archives index [WO 121/117/128], that he continued in the service with the 9th Royal Veteran Battalion, and was actually discharged in late 1811, aged 30 years, and after 8 years 10 months service (the date 6 February 1812 appears on the earlier Fort St George "discharge" in 1807); David was at 13 Carrubbers Close, Edinburgh, 1841 Census, aged Army Pensioner, with (probable second) wife Jessie, aged 50, both born in Scotland but not in Midlothian; he died suddenly at Carrubbers Close, 19 May 1844, aged 62, a Brassfounder.<br />
David was married firstly to Mary ERSKINE, perhaps about 1800 (when Mary was aged about 16 - this would suggest that there were probably no other children with earlier baptisms); she died at 24 Salisbury Street, Canongate, Edinburgh, 11 September 1838, aged 54, of decline (burial register recorded her as Mary ERSKINE the wife of David MEARNS, Brassfounder); they had issue (from a family tree on Ancestry):<br />
<em> a. William MEARNS, born at Gorbals, Glasgow, 1802; he is said to have died in 1851.</em><br />
<em> b. Isobel MEARNS, baptised at Kirkwood and St Ola, Orkney, 19 July 1809.</em><br />
<em> c. Margaret MEARNS, baptized at Edinburgh Parish kirk, 1812.</em><br />
<em> d. Christian MEARNS, born at Canongate, Edinburgh, and baptized 12 June 1815.</em><br />
<em> e. John MEARNS, born at Canongate, Edinburgh, and baptized 20 October 1817; he is said to have died in 1865.</em><br />
<em> f. But no mention of a daughter Mary, or a son Alexander (there are no appropriate MEARNS or MAIRNS baptisms in India Office Registers between 1803 and his return to England in early 1808).</em><br />
David MEARNS, Brassfounder, residing at 24 Salisbury Street, Parish of St Cuthbert's, Edinburgh, was married, probably secondly, at Edinburgh St Cuthbert, 24 February 1840, to Jessie HUME, of 6 Beaumont Place, Edinburgh St Cuthbert, a daughter of the late Robert HUME, Butler at Alva House in the parish of Alva, after regular proclamation of Banns; she was with her husband, 1841 Census, aged 50 (+ ?), born in Scotland but not in Midlothian.<br />
<br />
Although the Scottish Naming Tradition might suggest otherwise, David may have been the father of Mary MEARNS, the wife of Daniel GORRIE the Plumber. See [A] next.<br />
______________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong>DANIEL GORRIE, PLUMBER.</strong></em></span><br />
<br />
[A] Daniel GORRIE was born in Edinburgh, about 1816 +/- 1 year (from his ages in six Census enumerations, four of which actually match the above December 1815 birth date); he was at Queen Ann Street, Dunfermline, Fife, 1841 Census, aged 25+, J. (Journeyman) Plumber, with his wife and son, all residing in the household of the Widow HYND and her family; it is not yet clear why he was here, nor whether the Widow HYND may have been related to him, or perhaps to his wife?<br />
However, later Censuses record the Widow as Margaret HYND, and a close relationship appears unlikely as her maiden surname appears to have been MATHEW (her son Allan HYND was born in Dunfermline in 1814, son of John HYND, and was baptized at Queen Ann Street Burgher Associate Church).<br />
<br />
Daniel took his family to Liverpool in about 1847 (the birth of his son William was registered there in December quarter of 1847 - see below); he was at 22 Standish Street, Liverpool, 1851 Census, aged 35, Plumber, with his wife and four children; he was at 58 Trueman Street, Liverpool, 1861 Census, aged 43, Plumber and Gas-fitter, with his wife and seven children; ditto, 1871 Census, aged 54, with his wife and six younger children; he was at Molyneux Avenue, West Derby, 1881 Census, aged 65, Plumber, with his wife, two sons and two grand-daughters Mary GORRIE (aged 15 months) and Mary DYKE (aged 8); he was living with his married daughter and son-in-law at 126 Towson Street, Everton, 1891 Census, aged 75, Retired Plumber, born Edinburgh, with wife Mary and son William.<br />
Daniel GORRIE died at West Derby, June quarter 1893, aged 73 [Volume 8b, Page 251].<br />
<br />
Daniel was married at Edinburgh St Cuthbert, 22 March 1839, to Mary MEARNS, daughter of David MEARNS (she was born in Edinburgh about 1822; she was aged 20+ in 1841, 28 in 1851, 39 in 1861, and 49 in 1871; she was at 132 Towson Street, Everton, 1901 Census, aged 81, Widow, born Edinburgh, and living with her grand-daughter May HEAPS (aged 21), her husband James, and their three young children; Mary probably died at West Derby, December quarter 1904, aged 80 [Volume 8b, Page 338].<br />
___________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong>FAMILY OF DANIEL GORRIE AND MARY MEARNS</strong></em></span>.<br />
<br />
Daniel and Mary had issue (the eldest three were born in Scotland, but leave no trace in baptismal records on the <a href="http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/">www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk</a> web-site):<br />
<br />
1. David Fergus(on) C. GORRIE; eldest son, born in Scotland, about 1839-40; he was aged 16 months, with his parents, 1841 Census; aged 11, Scholar, with his parents, 1851; aged 21, Plumber, with his parents, 1861; he was at 11 Tudor Street, Kennington, October 1868, Plumber, when his daughter Kate was baptised; he was at 78 Stitt Street, Everton, 1871 Census, aged 32, Gas Fitter, with wife and three children.<br />
David GORRIE died at West Derby, September quarter 1873 [Volume 8b, Page 320], aged 33, and was buried at Toxteth Park Cemetery, 18 September 1873, aged 34 years [Section 4; Plot 891].<br />
David was aged 22, Bachelor, of Upper Beau Street, Everton, when he was married by Banns (1, 8 and 15 June), at Holy Trinity Church, Walton-on-the-Hill, 18 June 1862, to Ann Elizabeth HAMLET, aged 22, Spinster, Milliner, of 5 Prince Edwin Street, Everton, daughter of Thomas HAMLET, Pilot, deceased [West Derby, 1862, Volume 8b, Page 702].<br />
David and Ann Elizabeth had issue, including:<br />
<em> a. Thomas Hamlet GORRIE, born at Everton, 27 March 1863, and baptised at Liverpool St Peter, 10 January 1864; aged 8, Scholar, with his parents, 1871 Census.</em><br />
<em> b. Annie Isabella GORRIE, born at Dryden Street, 9 August 1865, and baptised at All Saints Liverpool, 21 August; aged 5, Scholar, with her parents, 1871.</em><br />
<em> c. Kate GORRIE, born 29 March 1868, and baptized at Christ Church, Kennington, 3 October; aged 3, with her parents, 1871.</em><br />
<br />
2. Daniel GORRIE, born in Scotland, about 1841-42; he was aged 9, Scholar, with his parents, 1851; he died in Liverpool, 19 February 1860 [March quarter, Volume 8b, Page 91], aged 18 years, <em>"... son of Mr Daniel GORRIE, Plumber, Trueman Street"</em> [Liverpool Daily Post, 22 February], and was buried at Toxteth Park Cemetery, 22 February 1860, aged 18 years [Section R, Plot 108].<br />
<br />
3. Another possible birth - perhaps Mary GORRIE (born between 22 December 1843 and 21 January 1844 if her age at burial was accurately recorded); she died at Dunfermline, 21 April 1845, aged 15 months, and was buried at Dunfermline Old Ground, 23 April.<br />
If this Mary was NOT the daughter of Daniel the Plumber, then it would appear that his mother may not have been Mary HERRIOT.<br />
<br />
4. Harriet GORRIE, born in Scotland about 1845-46; she was aged 5, Scholar, with her parents, 1851; aged 14, House Servant, with her parents, 1861; she died at West Derby, 1898; aged 23, Spinster, of 24 Great Nelson Street, when she was married at All Saints, Liverpool, 19 September 1870, to Samuel DYKE, aged 24, Fitter and Turner, of same address, the marriage witnessed by Douglas GORRIE and Mary Bertha DAVIDSON; he was at 25 Page Street, 1871 Census, aged 25, Engine Fitter, born Wigan, with his wife Harriet, aged 24, born Scotland; at 361 West Derby Road, 1881, aged 35, Fitter and Turner, with wife, three daughters and sister-in-law Isabella M. GORRIE; he was at 439 West Derby Road, 1891, aged 45, Iron Turner, with wife and three daughters.he died at West Derby Road, 23 May 1898, engineer, with Administration in Liverpool, 13 June, to Harriet DYKE, the widow, effects 83 pounds; they had issue, including:<br />
<em> a. Jane DYKE, born at Page Street, Liverpool, 5 August 1871, and baptized at St Peter's, 27 August; aged 9, Scholar, with her parents, 1881.</em><br />
<em> b. Mary DYKE, born at Trueman Street, Liverpool, 8 December 1872, and baptized at St Peter's, 22 December; aged 8, with her maternal grandparents, 1881.</em><br />
<em> c. Harriet DYKE, born 1874; aged 6, with her parents, 1881; aged 16, Dressmaker, with her parents, 1891.</em><br />
<em> d. Margaret Ellen DYKE, baptized at St Peter's, Liverpool, 26 March 1877.</em><br />
<em> e. Ethel Gorrie DYKE, baptized at St Peter's, Liverpool, 28 March 1881; aged 1 month, with her parents, 1881; aged 10, Scholar, with her parents, 1891.</em><br />
<br />
5. William GORRIE, born at Liverpool, December quarter 1847; he was aged 3, with his parents, 1851; aged 12, Scholar, with his parents, 1861; aged 22, Carter's Labourer, with his parents, 1871; aged 32, General Labourer, with his parents, 1881; probably visiting his married sister in 1891 Census, aged 44 , General Labourer; he probably died at West Derby, September quarter 1899, aged 52 [Volume 8b, Page 435].<br />
<br />
6. Douglas GORRIE, born at Liverpool, March quarter 1850 [Registered as GORIE, March quarter, Volume XX, Page 155]; he was aged 1, with his parents, 1851; aged 10, Scholar, with his parents, 1861; aged 21, Plumber, with his parents, 1871; he was at 20 Ossory Road, North Dock, Dublin, 1901 Census, aged 50, Plumber, with his second wife, and her mother Ellen SMITH, aged 81, Widow, born at Liverpool; he was at the "Rest for the Dying Hospital," Camden Row, South side, Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin, 1911 Census, aged 60, Married, born at Liverpool.<br />
Douglas GORRIE died at the Rest for the Dying Hospital, 18 May 1911, aged 60 years, a Widower, late of 118 Great Georges Street, Kingstown, Plumber.<br />
Douglas was married firstly, at All Saints Liverpool, 28 April 1873, to Ellen PARK, aged 25, Widower, and daughter of George OSBORNE [June quarter, Volume 8b, Page 16]; as Helen, she died at 46 Clonliffe Road, North Dublin, 5 December 1887, aged 45 years, wife of a Plumber, of Debility, the death informed by Douglas GORRIE, the husband, of the same address, present at the death.<br />
Douglas was of 8 Stony Road, North Strand, Widower, Plumber, when he was married secondly, at North Strand Church, Parish of St Thomas, City of Dublin, 21 June 1893, to Mary Ellen SMITH, of North Strand Church School House, daughter of John SMITH, Watch Maker; Mary Ellen was aged 45 in 1901, born at Liverpool.<br />
Douglas does not appear to have had issue, or at least none surviving him.<br />
<br />
7. Norval GORRIE, born at Liverpool, June quarter 1853 [Volume 8b, Page 101]; aged 7, Scholar, with his parents, 1861; aged 18, Plumber, with his parents, 1871; he was at 25 Glasgow Street, Barrow-in-Furness, 1881 Census, aged 27, Plumber, with his wife and son; he was at 27 Derry Street, Barrow-in-Furness, 1891 Census, aged 37, House Plumber, with his wife and five children; he was at 51 Rawlinson Street, Barrow-in-Furness, 1901 Census, Married aged 43, Plumber, boarding in the household of John TAYLOR and his family; Norval died at Barrow-in-Furness, 28 May 1906 [June quarter, Volume 8c, Page 534], aged 53 years [Soulby's Ulverston Advertiser, etc, 7 June].<br />
Norval was married at St Mary's, Bootle, Lancashire, 22 April 1875, to Theresa Marion LACY, daughter of the late William Thomas LACY, by Rev George REED, both of the town [Liverpool Mercury, 29 April], witnessed by Edwin G. LACY and Mary KEHOE [Registered West Derby, June quarter, Volume 8b, Page 840]; Theresa was aged 24 in 1881, 35 in 1891; she was at 15 Cheadle Avenue, West Derby, Lancashire, 1911 Census, aged 54, Widow, no occupation, with her three daughters, and with visitors Mr Ernest and Mrs TIDSWELL and their infant daughter; Theresa died at West Derby, in 1919.<br />
Norval and Theresa had issue, including:<br />
<em> a. Ada Gertrude GORRIE, born 2 March 1877, and was baptized North Shore, 27 November 1878, with her younger brother Alexander; she was buried at St Walton-on-the-Hill, Bootle, 2 September 1880, aged 3 years, from 4 Sheridan Place, Bootle.</em><br />
<em> b. Alexander Daniel GORRIE, born at 4 Sheridan Place, Bootle, October 1878, and baptized at North Shore Parish, 27 November; he was aged 10, Scholar, with his parents, 1891; he was aged 28, Meat Salesman, of 28 Empress Road, when he was married at Christ Church, Kennigton, 26 December 1903, to Florence Mary TAYLOR, aged 23, Spinster, of the same address, daughter of John TAYLOR, Fruit Salesman, witnessed by Robert (indecipherable signature ending in ...INSON) and Florence GORRIE; they had issue including:</em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Stanley GORRIE, born 19 September 1904, and was baptized at Christ Church, Kensington, Liverpool, 27 November, of 23 Ennismore Road, Stanley, his father a Shop Manager.</span></em><br />
<em> c. Florence Gertrude GORRIE, born at Barrow-in-Furness, June quarter 1881 [Volume 8e, Page 815]; aged 9, Scholar, with her parents, 1891; aged 26, Waitress, with her widowed mother, 1911; she was married at St John's Church, Tuebrook, 30 July 1916, to Thomas HANSON, 1st Cheshire Regiment [Liverpool Echo, 31 July].</em><br />
<em> d. Elizabeth Marion GORRIE, born at Barrow, June quarter 1885 [Volume 8e, Page 350]; aged 6, Scholar, with her parents, 1891; she was married at All Saints, Old Swan, Stoneycroft, Lancashire, 28 December 1908, to Arthur Ernest TIDSWELL, Cabinet Maker, of 18 Farren Street; they were visiting her mother, 1911 Census, with their infant child; they had issue:</em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Edna May TIDSWELL, born at Liverpool, about 1909; aged 1, with her parents, visiting her grandmother, 1911.</span></em><br />
<em> e. Edith Emily GORRIE, born at Barrow about 1887; aged 3, with her parents, 1891; aged 2, no occupation, with her widowed mother, 1911.</em><br />
<em> f. Norval GORRIE, born at Barrow, 24 May 1889 [Volume 8c, Page 901 - full date recorded in the index to his Death Registration]; aged 1, with his parents, 1891; Plumber; at 1 Ash Avenue, Derby C.B., Derbyshire, 1939 Register, Retired Steel Erector, with Eliza GORRIE (born 12 January 1887); Norval died at Derby, Derbyshire, December quarter 1979 [Volume 6, Page 546]; </em><em>he was married at West Derby, March quarter 1911 [Volume 8b, Page 649], to Alice Ann NORRIS;</em><em> they had issue, including:</em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Florence GORRIE, born 16 April 1911, and was baptized at All Saints, Stoneycroft, 7 May 1913, with her younger brother Alexander.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> ii. Alexander GORRIE, born 30 May 1913, and was baptized at All Saints, Stoneycroft, 7 May 1913;he died in 1991; he was married to Mary SEDDON, with issue two sons - David Alexander and Rowan.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iii. Claud Stanley GORRIE, born at 58 Etna Street, 15 July 1915, and baptized at All Saints, Stoneycroft, 18 August, his father a Soldier.</span></em><br />
<em> g. Millicent Maude L. GORRIE, born at Barrow, March quarter 1892 [Volume 8e, Page 830]</em><br />
<em> h. Claud Stanley GORRIE, born at Barrow, 5 June 1894 (Death registration Index), and Registered September quarter 1894 [Volume 8e, Page 793]; he died at Birkenhead, Cheshire, June quarter 1984 [Volume 37, Page 598]; he was married with issue.</em><br />
<em> j. Ernest Constantine GORRIE, born at Dorothy Street, and was baptized at St Peters, Liverpool, 1 August 1898.</em><br />
<br />
8. Catherine GORRIE, born at Liverpool, June quarter 1855; aged 5, with her parents, 1861; she may have died at Liverpool, December quarter 1867, aged 12.<br />
<br />
9. Alexander Campbell GORRIE, born at Liverpool, 14 March 1859; aged 2, with his parents, 1861; aged 12, Scholar, with his parents, 1871; he was baptized into the Catholic Faith, at All Souls, Liverpool, 4 May 1900 <em>("... filius Danieli et Mariae GORRIE olim MEARNS, conjugum")</em>; he was married at All Souls Catholic Church, Liverpool, 17 June 1900, to Catherine McGOVERN, daughter of Martin McGOVERN [Registered June quarter, Volume 8b, Page 308].<br />
<br />
10. Daniel McGregor GORRIE, born at Liverpool, June quarter 1861 [Volume 8b, Page 101]; aged 9, Scholar, with his parents, 1871; aged 19, Plumber, with his parents, 1881; he probably died at West Derby, September quarter 1910, aged 50 [Volume 8b, Page 198].<br />
Daniel may have been the father of:<br />
<em> a. May GORRIE, born at West Derby, March quarter 1880 [Volume 8b, Page 399]; she was at 132 Towson Street, Everton, 1901 Census, aged 21, born Everton, with her husband, three young children, and her GORRIE grandmother; she was recorded as born in 1877, daughter of Daniel GORIE, when she was married at Kirkdale, Lancashire, 24 May 1896, to James HEAPS, aged 21, son of James HEAPS, Brass Finisher [Registered at West Derby, June quarter, volume 8b, Page 740]; they had issue.</em><br />
Although John Campbell SHARP's Family Tree on Ancestry records her parents as David GORRIE and Annie Elizabeth HAMLET.<br />
However, it would appear more likely that May was instead the daughter of Daniel's sister Isabella Margaret GORRIE (see next).<br />
<br />
11. Margaret GORRIE, born at Liverpool, March quarter 1864 [Volume 8b, Page 559]; aged 7, Scholar, with her parents, 1871; aged 17, Domestic Servant, 1881 Census, residing with her married sister Harriet DYKE and her family; she died at West Derby, 1892, aged 24 [Volume 8b, Page 339]; as Isabella Margaret, of 101 Molyneux Road, Kennington, she was married at Christ Church, Kennington, 15 July 1883, to John Charles HATTON, 20, Labourer, of the same address, son of William HATTON, Ship's Steward [Registered at West Derby, September quarter, Volume 8b, Page 720]; as Isabella M. HALTON, wife of John L. HALTON, residing at 126 Towson Street, Everton, 1891 Census, both aged 26, with their five children and her parents; he was at 29 Hartnup Street, Everton, 1901 Census, aged 36, Railway Carter, with his second wife Maggie Dawkes (maiden surname RIST), his two children older and their two younger children (John William, aged 5, and Amy Naomi, aged 4); John Charles died at West Derby, June quarter 1922, aged 58 [Volume 8b, Page 496].<br />
Isabella Margaret GORRIE had issue:<br />
<em> a. May GORRIE, born at Everton, March quarter 1880, and was baptized at St Peter's, Liverpool, 26 May 1880, of Everton, the father not named; aged 15 months with her GORRIE grandparents, 1881; aged 11, with her "parents," 1891. Possibly, even probably (?), the wife of James HEAPS - see above.</em><br />
John and Isabella had further issue:<br />
<em> b. Minnie G. HATTON, born at Kennington, June quarter 1884 [Volume 8b, Page 627]; aged 6, with her parents, 1891.</em><br />
<em> c. Mary Gorrie HATTON, born at Everton, December quarter 1886 [Volume 8b, Page 280]; aged 4, with her parents, 1891.</em><br />
<em> d. Maggie HATTON, born at West Derby, March quarter 1887 [Volume 8b, Page 620]; aged 3, with her parents, 1891; aged 13, with her father, 1901.</em><br />
<em> e. Daniel Gorrie HATTON, born at Everton, June quarter 1890 [Volume 8b, Page 913]; aged 1 month, with his parents, 1891; aged 10, with his father, 1901.</em>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-41490997151667305932019-12-18T15:54:00.009-08:002022-08-28T21:07:26.559-07:00RUMMEL in America.<br />
<em><span style="font-size: large;"><strong>CHRISTIAN RUMMEL OF WALDECK AND WISCONSIN.</strong></span></em><br />
<br />
<strong>Christian RUMMEL, born in Walbeck (Waldeck?), Hesse, Germany, 5 November 1802 [date inscribed on his gravestone]; he emigrated to America on the ship "Iffland," from Bremen, arriving in New York on 29 August 1855, aged 52, heading for Wisconsin, with his second wife and five children [United States Germans to America Index, 1850-1897, Familysearch.org]; he settled south of Milwaukee, Wisconsin; evidently a Blacksmith and Wagon Builder in Germany; he was at Polk, Washington County, Wisconsin, 1870 Census, aged 68, Farmer, born Waldeck, with his wife and six children; ditto, 1880 Census, aged 77, Farmer, born Walbech, parents both born Walbech, with his wife and three children; he died at Milwaukee, 3 April 1882, and was buried at Forest Home Cemetery, Milwaukee [Section 9; Lot 45 - image of gravestone on Findagrave]; he had issue by a first wife Anna (who evidently died in Germany before 1855 - she was named in Ludwig RUMMEL's marriage registration, 1863, as his mother) - or her name may instead have been Elisabeth VÖPEL, and whom he is said to have married on 2 January 1829 [information from Joe DINGMAN of Dallas - see his message at the foot of this post]:</strong><br />
<br />
1. Friedrich RUMMEL, born in Germany, about 1830; aged 25, Blacksmith, on arrival in the U.S. with his father in 1855.<br />
Jane RUMMEL's Family Tree on Ancestry.com records his birth on 6 January 1831; his death at Sherman, Calhoun County, Iowa, on 3 November 1909; his marriage in 1856 to Catherine RECK (1840-1912); and with four sons and four daughters born 1860 to 1875.<br />
<br />
2. Caroline RUMMEL, born in Germany, about 1837; aged 17, Servant, on arrival in the U.S. with her father in 1855.<br />
<br />
3. Ludwig RUMMEL, born at Waldeck (Frankenberg-Hesse), on 16 April 1840 [History of Hardin County, Iowa, 1883; 1900 Census; and Jane RUMMEL's Family Tree]; aged 15 on arrival in the U.S. with his father, 1855; he learnt his trade as Wagon Maker at Richmond Station, Wisconsin, and carried on in that business in Fond du Lac; he moved to Alden, Hardin County, Iowa, September 1865, and opened a business as a Blacksmith and Wagon Builder; he was a School Director in Alden, and was a member of the Town Council; he was at Alden, Hardin County, Iowa, 190 Census, aged 60 (born April 1840), Blacksmith, with his wife of 37 years, their daughter, and his mother-in-law Frederica SCHULTZ (born in Germany, January 1813, arrived U.S. 1852, a widow with four surviving of ten children); he died at Alden, 10 March 1917, and was buried at Alden Cemetery [his memorial on Findagrave]; he was married at Theresa, Dodge County, Wisconsin, 2 August 1863 to Auguste SCHULZ (his memorial on Findagrave - his parents recorded as Christian and <b>Anna</b>); she died in 1926, aged about 81; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. Albert John RUMMEL, born at Theresa, Dodge County, Wisconsin, 4 May 1864; he died on 5 June 1946, and was buried at Alden Cemetery; he was married at Alden, 27 September 1886, to Ann SHERRARD.</i><br />
<i> b. Lewis RUMMEL, born about 1866.</i><br />
<i> c. Louisa Wilhelmina RUMMEL, born at Alden, 17 October 1868; she died at Iowa Falls, Hardin County, Iowa, 26 June 1931, and was buried at Alden Cemetery; she was married to August Carl BUTTS (1869-1940); they had issue - a daughter Nora BUTTS (1894-1980).</i><br />
<i> d. Udo C. RUMMEL, born about 1872.</i><br />
<i> e. Carl H. RUMMEL, born 8 July 1873; he died in 1910, and was buried at Oakwood Cemetery, independence, Buchanan County, Iowa; he was married to Mabel E. BUELL (formerly GILLET).</i><br />
<i> f. Clementine RUMMEL, born Iowa, 28 August 1876; aged 23, with her parents, 190 Census; she died at Sioux City, Woodbury County, Iowa, 12 January 1977, and was buried at Alden Cemetery; she was married to George F. HEATHER (1861-1936).</i><br />
<em> g. Louise RUMMEL.</em><br />
<br />
4. Carl RUMMEL, born in Germany, about 1843; aged 11 on arrival in the U.S. with his father, 1855; probably died young.<br />
<br />
5. Friedrich RUMMEL was aged 6 months, and recorded in the family group of Christian and Mary - but this appears to be impossible if his older brother of the same name, and aged 25, was of the same family? An Ernst RUMMEL, aged 43, and also a Blacksmith, arrived from Germany on the same ship, also heading for Wisconsin, with his wife Christiane VOLKER (aged 33), and their four children aged 13 to 9 months. Perhaps some of the family groups got mixed up? Or was Freidrich perhaps instead a grandson?<br />
<br />
<strong>Christian was married secondly to Mary (or Marie?) TOPPEL; she was born at Walbeck, Germany, 15 August 1819 [date on her gravestone]; she was aged 34 on arrival in the U.S. in 1855, using her maiden surname, with her husband and his five children; she was aged 50, Keeping House, with her husband, 1870 Census; ditto, 1880, aged 61; she died at Milwaukee, 12 October 1890 [her memorial on Findagrave]; by her, Christian had further issue:</strong><br />
<br />
6. Charles Anton RUMMEL, born at Walbeck, near Hanover, 21 January 1854; aged 18 months when his family emigrated to America, 1855; a younger half-brother of Ludwig RUMMEL - Charles joined him in Alden, Iowa, 1870, in business as a Blacksmith and Wagon Builder; he did well, and opened his own shop in Alden with his brother Ben; he was at Ellsworth, Hamilton County, Iowa, 1880 Census, aged 26, Blacksmith, with his wife Eva, a female servant Annie THOMPSON (aged 19), his brother younger Bernard and a nephew Francis RUMMEL (aged 16); Charles was living in Chicago, June 1930, when his short visit to his brother Ben was noted in The (Hawarden) Independent [26 June]; he was at Alden, Hardin County, Iowa, 1900 Census, aged 46 (born January 1854), Blacksmith, with his wife of 20 years; Charles died at his son's residence in Wilmette, Illinois, 7 October 1946, and was buried at Alden Cemetery.<br />
Charles was aged 25 when he was married at Hardin County, Iowa, 10 September 1879, to Eva Clarissa KEMP, aged 24 (daughter of Sumner KEMP); they had issue an only child:<br />
<i> a. William Bernard RUMMEL, born in 1880; he died in 1976; he was married to Dora O. GARMAN, with issue:</i><br />
<i> i. Charles Gorman RUMMEL.</i><br />
<i> ii. William Kemp RUMMEL.</i><br />
<br />
7. Jacob RUMMEL, born in Wisconsin, 1857; aged 12, with his parents, 1870 Census, works on farm; he died in 1928, and was buried at Forest Home Cemetery, Milwaukee [Section 62]; he was married firstly, in 1881, to Clara Frances SCHMIDT (born in Wisconsin, 8 June 1859, daughter of Bernhard and Henrietta SCHMIDT); she died on 20 March 1904, and was buried in Forest Home Cemetery [Section 45]; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. Herbert Gustav RUMMEL, born in Milwaukee, 30 January 1891; he died there on 6 February 1951, and was buried at Forest Home Cemetery [Section 62]; he was married to Meta M. PUHL (1890-1983).</i><br />
Jacob was married secondly to Augusta KRINGER; she died at Milwaukee, in 1958, and was buried with her husband.<br />
<br />
4. Bernard Benjamin RUMMEL, born in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, 21 May 1858; married three times with issue. See [A] below.<br />
<i></i><br />
5. Conrad RUMMEL, born in Richfield, Wisconsin, November 1860; aged 9, with his parents, 1870 Census; aged 19, with his parents, 1880 Census, as Conrath, works on farm; he died at St Paul, Minnesota, 24 October 1939 [Findagrave memorial].<br />
<br />
<div>
<br />
6. Elizabeth RUMMEL, born in Wisconsin, about 1862; aged 7, with her parents, 1870 Census; aged 17, with her parents, 1880 Census, keeping house; she was married at Polk, Washington County, Wisconsin, 21 May 1892, to Peter FRIESS, of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin (son of Jacob and Mary FRIES); she survived her brother Charles.<br />
<br />
7. Anna RUMMEL, born in Washington County, Wisconsin, 30 March 1869; aged 1, with her parents, 1880 Census; aged 11, with her parents, 1880 Census, at school; she was aged 31, with her husband and two sons, 1900 Census; she died on 14 August 1907; she was married about 1893 to Arthur R. LEVERENZ; he was at Coldspring Avenue, Milwaukee, 1900 Census aged 36 (born Germany, October 1863, arrived U.S. 1866), Clerk in Hotel, with his wife and two sons; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Clarence LEVERENZ, born in Wisconsin, June 1896; aged 3, with his parents, 1900.</em><br />
<em> b. Elmer LEVERENZ, born in Wisconsin, November 1898; aged 1, with his parents, 1900.</em><br />
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong><br /></strong></em></span>
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong>BERNARD BENJAMIN RUMMEL OF HAWARDEN.</strong></em></span><br />
<br />
[A] <strong>Bernard Benjamin RUMMEL, born in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, 21 May 1858; aged 11, with his parents, 1870 Census, as Bernhard, works on farm; of Hawarden, Iowa; he survived his brother Charles; he was aged 22, Blacksmith, 1880 Census, residing with his brother Charles and his wife and their nephew; he was at Hawarden, 1905 Iowa State Census, with evident wife Elizabeth and six apparent children; he was at Hawarden, Iowa, 1910 Census, aged 52, married three times, Blacksmith, with wife Lizzie and four daughters and son; Ben was at Jonas Street, Logan Township, Sioux County, Iowa, 1920 Census, aged 63, Blacksmith, Own shop, with his wife Lizzie and son Harry; at Hawarden, 1930 Census, aged 71, Blacksmith, with wife Lizzie, son Harry, daughter-in-law Lizzie and three grandchildren; Ben died at Hawarden, 25 November 1946.</strong><br />
<br />
<strong>Benjamin, aged 23 (parents named in full) was married firstly, at Callinan, Hamilton County, Iowa, 11 January 1881, to Mary Jane HOY (born at Benner, Centre County, Pennsylvania, about 1854, daughter of Henry HOY and Catharine HARDMAN); Mary was aged 26, with her parents, at North Callinan, Iowa, in the 1880 Census, along with 5 younger siblings (perhaps some of them half-siblings) aged 22 years to 10 months; her death details have not been found.</strong><br />
<br />
<strong>Benjamin and Mary may have had issue (although it appears that one or more of these were instead his step-children by one of his later two wives by former husbands or their illegitimate daughters?):</strong><br />
<br />
1. Bertha (Bertina) D. HARTMAN, born at Calliope, Sioux County, Iowa, 19 August 1886; she died at Minnehaha County, South Dakota, 5 April 1945; she was married in 1905 to George Frank BELKEY (born in 1882, son of William BELKEY and Augusta E. BARTZ) of Alcester; he died at Alcester, 1 June 1971; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Melvin BELKEY, born in 1912; died in 1999.</em><br />
<br />
2. Margaret, said to have been born at Alden, Iowa, 28 May 1886 [AMB's Family Tree on Ancestry.com]; she was evidently with her "parents" in 1905 State Census, as the eldest child; she was recorded in the 1910 Census as born in South Dakota, her father's birth place unknown, her mother born in Wisconsin - but by 1920, she and both of her parents were recorded as born in Iowa (the reason for this discrepancy is unexplained); she was married about 1907 to William Henry MILLER; they were at Lansing, Brown County, South Dakota, 1910 Federal Census, aged 24 (a Farmer) and 23 respectively, with their infant son Robert; they were at Virginia, Union County, South Dakota, aged 34 and 33, with three sons Robert, Thomas and Bruce; same place, 1930, aged 44 and 43, with five children aged 21 to 4 years 9 months.<br />
<br />
3. Cora Pauline HURLBUT, born in South Dakota, 11 April 1889; with her evident parent and/or step-parent, 1905 State Census, the second child; she was aged 21, with her "parents," 1910 Census; she died on 2 February 1970, and was buried at Grace Hill Cemetery, Milwaukee.<br />
As Cora Pauline (aged 24, daughter of Harry HURLBURT and Elizabeth HARTMAN), she was married at Hawarden, 22 October 1913, to Guy Frederick BURKET of Hawarden (aged 27, son of Clinton St Clair BURKET and Orpha Della STAFFORD); he was at Hawarden, 1930 Census, aged 44, Pharmacist, with his wife Cora, living next door to her step-father and mother Benjamin and Lizzie RUMMEL; Guy died in 1943.<br />
<br />
<strong>Bernard RUMMEL, aged 30, of Alden, Blacksmith (both parents named in full), was married secondly, at Westchester City, Iowa, 29 April 1889, to Emma MILLER formerly BARNES (born in Iowa, 1860, daughter of Thomas James BARNES and Charlotte Caroline TOMMES); Emma died in 1890; they had issue:</strong><br />
<br />
4. Emma Mae RUMMEL, born in Iowa, 14 February 1890; with her father, 1905 State Census, as the third child; she was aged 20, with her father, 1910 Census, Rural School (the only child of Benjamin who had an American born mother); she died in Hawarden, 3 December 1973, and was buried at Grace Hill Cemetery; she was aged 21 (parents named) when she was married at Hawarden, 24 May 1911, to Fred IV VERNON (aged 22, born Parker, South Dakota, son of W.N. VERNON and Helen BERRY) of Hawarden, Merchant, the marriage witnessed by Bob VERNON and Lottie RUMMEL.<br />
<br />
<strong>Ben was married thirdly, 19 August 1891, to Elizabeth Dorothy HARTMAN (born Germany, 8 July 1862, daughter of Henry HARTMAN and Dora SASSMAN, and was aged 7 years when she arrived in America with her parents); she died at the Community Hospital, Hawarden, 3 January 1937, aged 74, and was buried at Grace Hill Cemetery, Hawarden; she appears to have already had up to another three daughters, at least one of them fathered by Harry HURLBUT (1857-1890) - see above.</strong><br />
<strong>Ben and Lizzie had further issue:</strong><br />
<br />
5. Lottie Belle RUMMEL, born at Hawarden, Iowa, 18 May 1892; with her parents, 1905 State Census, the fourth child; aged 17, with her parents, 1910 Census; as Lottie Belle, aged 20 (parents named in full), she was married at Hawarden, 16 October 1912, to Seal Van SICKLE of Hawarden (aged 25, born Calliope, his first marriage, son of Seal Van SICKLE and Alice SMITH), the marriage witnessed by Mrs F.F. VERNON and Fred F. VERNON.<br />
<br />
6. Ella Dora RUMMEL, born at Hawarden, 11 September 1894; with her parents, 1905 Sate Census, the fifth child; aged 15, with her parents, 1910 Census; she died at Hawarden, 19 January 1946, and was buried at Grace Hill Cemetery; she was married at Hawarden, 22 January 1914, to Herbert Emanuel ANDERSON (aged 22, born Sweden, son of Adolph ANDERSON and Marie LARSON) of Alcester, South Dakota, Brakeman; he died in 1965; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. Herbert E. ANDERSON (1920-1985).</i><br />
<br />
7. Harry Wayne RUMMEL, born at Hawarden, 9 November 1896; with his parents, 1905 State Census, the sixth child; aged 13, with his parents, 1910 Census; aged 23, Clerk, with his parents, 1920; with his parents at Hawarden, 1930 Census, aged 33, Postal Clerk, Post Office, with his wife and three children; he died at a Veterans Hospital in Tucson, Arizona, 24 May 1933; he was married at St Mary's (R.C.) Church, Hawarden, 15 October 1920, to Kathleen Bernice (Kay) McMANAMAN (born at Hawarden, 22 September 1900, daughter of John L. McMANAMAN and Margaret J. LYNN - they were married at Hawarden on 18 October 1899 by W. DONOHUE, Pastor of the Catholic Church), the marriage witnessed by La Verne and Beryl McMANAMAN; she died at Hawarden, 27 December 1985, and was buried at Grace Hill Cemetery; they had issue:<br />
<div>
<i> a. Harry RUMMEL, born about 1921; aged 8, with his parents and grandparents, 1930 Census.</i></div>
<div>
<i> b. Ramon Lynn RUMMEL, born about 1923; aged 6, with her parents and grandparents, 1930 Census.</i></div>
<div>
<i> c. Donna Teresa RUMMEL, born in 1929; aged 6 months, with her parents and grandparents, 1930.</i></div>
</div>
Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-74618740882991966832019-04-21T21:19:00.004-07:002020-10-27T16:09:07.228-07:00SIBTHORPE and HENEY Families in Dublin<blockquote class="tr_bq">
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<br /></div>
</blockquote>
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>MY INTEREST IN THESE FAMILIES</u>.</b></i></span><br />
<br /><br /><div>
In 1836, William MAGUIRE, Solicitor in Dublin, married Hannah HENEY, a daughter of Henry HENRY and Hannah SIBTHORPE.<br />
William was the son of <b>William MAGUIRE</b>, Senior, and <b>Mary VICKERS</b>, and was a younger brother of <b>Elizabeth MAGUIRE</b>, who married <b>John PIGOTT </b>of Dublin (he was her mother's first cousin) - <b>John </b>and <b>Elizabeth</b> were my great-great-grandparents.<br />
<br />
The following is the result of a survey of the surviving archived documents relating to these two Dublin families. When I have taken this survey as far as I am able, then, and only then, will I be tempted to refer to published on-line pedigrees, to see if I can fill some gaps, and refine any "speculative best-fit" presumptions that these archived records have tempted me to make, in the grand Irish family history tradition.<br />
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<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><b><u>SOME VERY EARLY SIBTHORPE FAMILIES IN DUBLIN</u>.</b></em></span><br />
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Sir Christoper SIBTHORPE, third son of John SIBTHORP of Much Bardfield, Essex; matriculated into Queen's College, Cambridge, 1580, but took no degree; admitted into the Middle Temple, London, 1584; he went to Ireland, and was appointed Third Justice of the King's Bench in Ireland, 11 May 1607; he was created a Knight on 3 May 1618; Second Justice of His Majesty's Court of Exchequer, October 1623, when he sat on a Commission of Inquisition at Downpatrick, County Down; his will, dated 1 November 1633, named his cousin Christopher HAUGHTON, his cousin Mary the wife of Lancelot CARR, his son-in-law Thomas PINE (?), and his cousin William SIBTHORPE [BETHAM's Abstract].<br />
<br />
Robert SIBTHORP; of Essex; D.D., Lincoln College, Oxon, 1624; he went to Ireland; Treasurer of Killaloe; Prebendary for Maynouth, St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin; appointed Bishop of Kilfenora, 91 June 1638; translated to Limerick, 7 April 1642, <i>"... but by reason of the Wars, never made any profit of it" </i>[The Antiquities an History of Ireland," by Sir James WARE, Page 20]; he died in Dublin in April 1649, and was buried at St Werburgh's Parish Church.<br />
<br />
Robert SIBTHORPE, of Dublin, Merchant; Administration granted on 13 March 1660, to his widow Christian.<br />
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<br />
<b><br /></b>
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><b><u>AND ONE IN COUNTY LOUTH</u>.</b></em></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
William SIBTHORPE; of Dunany, County Louth; he was married, with issue:<br />
1. Lucy SIBTHORPE; she was married to Henry BELLINGHAM; with issue:<br />
a. Thomas BELLINGHAM; born about 1646; a Colonel in the Army; he died on 15 September 1721; his diary was published by Anthony HEWITSON in Preston, 1908 ["Diary of Thomas BELLINGHAM, an Officer under William III"], and under an entry dated 25 July 1690, HEWITSON inserted an explanatory note which named Robert SIBTHORPE, of Dunany House as being <i>"... the diarists cousin on his mother's side."</i><br />
<br />
Stephen SIBTHORPE; of Louth, Armiger; married with issue:<br />
1. Anthony SIBTHORPE, born at Louth, about 1713; admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, 28 January 1739-40, a Pensioner (Mr BOOTH, Dublin); B.A., Vern 1744; Irish Bar, 1750; M.P. for Granard, 1761, and Dunleer [Alumni Dublinenses - these last details, enclosed in square parentheses, may have been mis-attributed in error for Robert SIBTHORPE below].<br />
<br />
Mrs SIBTHORPE, the wife of Stephen SIBTHORPE of Dunany, County Lowth, died at Drogheda, 28 September 1771 [Monthly Chronologer for Ireland].<br />
<br />
Robert SIBTHORPE, of Dunany, County Louth, 30 April 1715, when he proved the will (dated 31 August 1714) of John WHITE, of Castle Bellingham, jointly with his widow Lucy WHITE alias SYBTHORPE [CROSSLÉ's Abstracts]; Lucy and John had issue, named in John's will as Thomas (eldest son), John (second son), Henry (third son), daughters Anne and Jane, daughter Abigail, daughters Mary and Margaret, and eldest daughter Lucy HUGUS (wife of John HUGUS) [BETHAM's Abstract].<br />
<br />
Stephen SIBTHORPE; of Brownstown, County Louth; second party to a deed of lease, dated 28 March 1734 [Memorial 53358, Book 78, Page 72], by which John BALL, of Lisrenny, County Louth, demised him a lease of lands in Johnsontown and Constan, for the term of three lives, being himself, , his eldest son Robert SIBTHORPE, and his eldest daughter Elizabeth SIBTHORPE; Stephen's will was proved 24 February 1776; he was married to Margaret FOSTER, daughter of John FOSTER, M.P. for Dunleer, and his wife Elizabeth FORTESCUE [www.bomford.net web-site], with issue:<br />
1. Robert SIBTHORPE, born about 1724, the only son; he was named as the second life for the term of his father's 1734 lease, as his eldest son; Robert was of Dunany, County Louth, Esquire; Irish Bar, 1750; M.P. for Granard, 1761; M.P. for Dunleer (see Anthony above); his will, dated 29 December 1791, proved 28 June 1792, named his sister Margaret the wife of Ephraim STANNUS, his daughters Georgina the wife of Miles O'REILLY, Esq, and Mary Anne the wife of Richard JONES Junior, Esq, and his natural children Robert and Jane SIBTHORPE [BETHAM's Abstract]<br />
2. Elizabeth SIBTHORPE; she was named as the third life for the term of her father's 1734 lease, as the eldest daughter; she died in 1807; a memorial for her burial at St Peter's Church, Laracoor, County Meath records her age as 82 [Findagrave]; she married, by Settlements dated 18 April 1745, to Stephen BOMFORD the younger, of Rahinstown, by which Deed of Settlements the Trustees for the children of the marriage were named as William FOSTER of Dublin (identified elsewhere as the uncle of the bride) and Robert SIBTHORPE, only son of Stephen SIBTHORPE of Dunany (ditto, brother of the bride); he died on 24 May 1806, aged 84, and was buried at St Peter's Church, Laracor [Findagrave]; they had issue eight sons and three daughters.<br />
3. Margaret SIBTHORPE; she was married to Ephraim STANNUS, of Carlingford, County Louth.<br />
4. Frances SIBTHORPE; married Mr BALL?<br />
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<br />
<u><b><br /></b>
</u><i><span style="font-size: large;"><b><u>EARLY SIBTHORPS IN DUBLIN</u>.</b></span></i><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
Thomas SIBTHORP; of Plunkett Street, Parish of St Nicholas Without, Dublin; probably also of Patrick Street (ditto); he was married to Elennor (-?-); with issue:<br />
1. Anne SIBTHORP, born at Plunkett Street, and baptised at St Nicholas Without, 15 September 1734.<br />
2. Jane SIBTHORP, born at Pat: Street, and baptised at St Nicholas Without, 3 October 1736.<br />
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<b><br /></b>
<b><br /></b>
<span style="font-size: large;"><b>HENRY SIBTHORPE, SENIOR, OF DUBLIN, GLAZIER<i>.</i></b></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
Henry SIBTHORPE was admitted as a Freeman of the City of Dublin, 1759, by Service to Richard EATON, Glazier; Glazier, Copper Alley, 1775; he was at Copper Alley, Glazier, 1779 [Dublin Amanack]; he died in Copper Alley, Dublin, May 1780, Glazier [Saunders Newsletter, Friday 12 May 1780].<br />
Henry SIBTHROP was married to Barbara (-?-); some on-line family trees suggest that she was a DAVIS; Mrs SIBTHROP died in Copper Alley, February 1786 [Saunders Newsletter, Wednesday 22 February]; they had issue:<br />
1. Mary SIBTHROP, born at Bull Alley, Dublin, and baptised at St Nicholas Without Parish Church, 12 October 1754.<br />
2. un-named SIBTHROP; buried at St Nicholas Without, 11 August 1755, from Bull Alley. Perhaps the above Mary, aged about 9 months?<br />
3. Luke SIBTHROP, born at Bull Alley, and baptised at St Nicholas Without, 23 September 1756. See [A] below.<br />
4. Ellionor SIBTHORP, born at Bull Alley, and baptised at St Nicholas Without, 8 March 1759.<br />
5. Lucy SIBTHROP, born at Copper Alley, Dublin, and baptised at St Werburgh's, 8 January 1764.<br />
<br />
Richard SIBTHORP; admitted Freeman of the City of Dublin, Smiths Guild, Michaelmas 1780.<br />
<br />
Henry probably had another son named Henry (see next below).<br />
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<br />
<b><br /></b>
<i><span style="font-size: large;"><b><u>HENRY SIBTHORPE, JUNIOR, GLAZIER</u>.</b></span></i><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
Henry SIBTHORPE, admitted as Freeman of the City of Dublin, Smith's Guild, Michaelmas, 1786, by virtue of his Birth; speculated to have been a son of Henry Senior, on the grounds that there was no other earlier Freedoms from which his right by birth was established - and on the same grounds, presumed to be a brother of Luke.<br />
Henry SIPTHORP, Glazier, 12 Copper Alley, Dublin, 1783 [WATSON's Almanac]; as <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">Henry SIBTROP, a Member of the Methodist Society in June 1788 (source needed), as </span>Henry SIBTHORPE, Glazier, 18 Exchange Street, Dublin, 1801 [WILSON's Dublin Directory], 1804 [Treble Almanac], and 1815 [The Gentleman's and Citizen's Almanac].<br />
Henry was the grantee of a Lease dated 23 January 1805, by the Earl of Milltown, of premises at 18 Exchange Street, City of Dublin, for the term of three lives renewable for ever, being of Henry himself, his wife Hannah, and their son John SIBTHORPE [Landed Estates Court Rentals, January - March 1856, Lot No 114]; he was the grantee of a second Lease dated 1 March 1806, also by the Earl of Milltown, of premises on the north side of Copper Alley, for the term of the same three lives renewable for ever [Ditto, Lot No 116]. <br />
Henry SIBTHORPE, of Exchange street, Dublin, 29 March 1815, when he was party to the Marriage Settlements for his eldest daughter Hannah and Henry HEANY, in which his son John SIBTHORPE was also named as a party (and therefore evidently of age).<br />
Henry SIBTHORP, of Cork Hill, City of Dublin, 1819 [Index to Prerogative wills, Ireland].<br />
<br />
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">The following unidentified burials at St Nicholas Without, Dublin, who appear, from their addresses, to have been related:</span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. SIBTHROP, buried 20 February, 1786, from Copper Alley.</span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. SIBTHROP, buried 5 August 1798, from Exchange Street.</span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. SIBTHROP, buried 9 September 1799, from Palace Street. [See Luke SIBTHORPE below]</span></div>
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<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>THE WIDOW HANNAH SIBTHORPE, GLAZIER</u>.</b></i></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
Hannah SIBTHORPE was the grantee of a lease dated 9 December 1806, by the Earl of Milltown, of premises on the north side of Copper Alley, for the term of three lives renewable for ever, being Hannah herself, her daughter Hanna SIBTHORPE, and William SIBTHORPE.<br />
Hannah SIBTHORP, (window glass), 12 Cork Hill, 1824, under Glass Cutters and Sellers [Pigot & Co Directory].<br />
Hannah SIBTHOPRE, of Cork Hill, Widow, was joint second party to the Settlements, dated 1 August 1826, for the marriage of her daughter Eliza to Henry POOLEY Junior.<br />
Hannah SIBTHORBE, of Cork Hill, Dublin, Widow, was first party to a Deed of Co-partnership, dated 24 May 1830, with her son John SIBTHORPE, of the same address, House Painter and Glazier, of the second part, under a lease from the Rt Hon the Earl of Milltown, and which Deed was witnessed by Samuel FITZPATRICK, Attorney at Law, and Charles SIBTHORPE, of Cork Hill, Gent [Memorial 578931, Book 870, Page 431].<br />
H. SIBTHORPE and Son, painters, glaziers and importers of window and plate glass, 12 Cork Hill, 1837 [The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac].<br />
Hannah SIBTHORPE, Painter [H. SIBTHORPE and Son], house Parker Hill, Rathmines Road, 1846 [Slater's National Commercial Directory]; Hannah SIBTHORPE and Son, painters, glaziers and agents to the Thomas Plate Glass Company, 12 Cork Hill, 1846 [Slater's ditto], and 1849 [Dublin Almanac and General Register].<br />
Mrs Hannah SIBTHORPE died at Parker Hill, Rathmines, 13 February 1845, widow of the late Henry SIBTHORPE, Cork Hill, aged 76 [Dublin Evening Mail, 14 February].<br />
Hannah SIBTHORPE, 1846 [Index to Prerogative Wills, Ireland].<br />
<br />
Henry and Hannah appear to have had issue, including:<br />
1. John SIBTHORPE, born in or before 1794 (he was of age in March 1815). See [B] below.<br />
2. Eliza SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin, about 1796; she was married, by settlements dated 1 August 1826, to Henry POOLEY Junior, of Liverpool, England, in which she was joint second party with her mother, Hannah, with the third party being named as Henry HEANY of Abbey Street, Dublin Merchant, and John SIBTHORPE, of Cork Hill, Gent [Memorial 549550, Book 816, Page 15].<br />
3. Hannah SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin, about 1798; second life for the term of her mother's lease, 1806; she was married in March 1815 to Henry HEANY or HENEY. See below.<br />
4. William SIBTHORPE; he was the third life for the term of his mother's lease, 1806.<br />
5. Rebecca SIBTHORE, born in Dublin, 1803.<br />
6. Sarah SIBTHORPE; she was married, by a Deed of Marriage Settlement dated 27 May 1834, to Robert CONNOLLY, Primitive Wesleyan Methodist Preacher, in which the third party was her mother Hannah SIBTHORPE, Widow, and her brothers (Hannah's sons) John and Charles SIBTHORPE, all of Cork Hill, City of Dublin, with a marriage portion of £500, the deed witnessed by Henry POOLY, of Liverpool, and Henry James SIBTHORPE of Dublin [1834, Volume 13, Number 119].<br />
7. Charles SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin about 1809; he witnessed the Deed of Co-partnership between his mother and older brother John, 24 May 1830; he died at 36 Upper Leeson Street, Dublin, 15 June 1888, aged 78 years; Probate was granted in Dublin, 1 November 1888, to Thomas SIBTHORPE, of 29 Upper Leeson Street, and to Maria and Emma SIBTHORPE, both of 36 Upper Leeson Street, the executors, Effects of £3,820 5s 1d.<br />
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<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>LUKE SIBTHORPE, GLAZIER</u>.</b></i></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
[A] Luke SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin in 1756; he was admitted as Freeman of the City of Dublin, Smith's Guild, Michaelmas, 1786, by virtue of his Birth.<br />
Luke SIBTHORPE, Glazier, 1 Palace Street, Dublin, 1800 [Gentleman's and Citizen's Almanack], 1801 [WILSON's Dublin Directory], 1804 [Treble Almanac], and 1814 [Gentleman's and Citizen's Almanack]; Painter and Glazier, 1 Palace Street, Dublin, 1815 [The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac].<br />
Luke SIBTHORPE, Glazier and Painter, of Pallace Street, Dublin, was first party to an Indented Deed of Settlement, dated 15 October 1804, in which he named his wife Christiana and his son Christopher SIBTHORPE [Memorial 378814, Book 563, Page 423].<br />
Luke SIBTHORPE, Glazier, was paid £26 for cleaning the Post Office windows, for one year from 5 October 1816 [Public accounts, Sixth Report of the Commissioners for Auditing Public Accounts, page 198]; of Palace Street, Voters List, 1820 Dublin Election, Smiths Guild [Freeman's Journal, 25 June], as a supporter of Candidate Thomas ELLIS.<br />
His house in Palace Street was the scene of a "Tea Party" in December 1822, at which statements were alleged to have been made by Charles THORPE, of Blessington Street, High Sheriff of Dublin, concerning<i> "... on Orange Jury, or a Jury that would acquit all persons charged with a riot in the Theatre on the 14th day of December last"</i> [Debates, Evidence and Documents connected with the Investigation of the House of Commons], which was the subject of later report in the press [London Evening Standard, 22 June 1846].<br />
Luke SIBTHORP, of Pallace Street, was buried at St Nicholas Without, 2 March 1824, aged 67 years.<br />
<br />
Luke was married firstly, to Christiana (perhaps GOING); with issue:<br />
1. Christopher SIBTHORPE; named in his father's deed, 15 March 1804.<br />
2. Henry SIBTHORPE, born in or before 1806; he was first party to a Deed of Lease, dated 21 May 1827, of Palace Street, Dublin, by which he demised land at Sweetman's Avenue, Blackrock, to John LATOUCHE of Mecklenburgh Street, Dublin, which deed was witnessed by Thomas SIBTHORPE and Joseph POND [Memorial 554586, Volume 824, Page 251]<br />
3. Sarah Going SIBTHORP; at her parents house, Palace Street, 1823, aged 16 and upwards, the only daughter, with her father Luke and step-mother Emily, and brother Thomas, and gave evidence before the Parliamentary enquiry; only daughter when she was married, by License, in St Andrew's Parish Church, Dublin, 13 March 1827, to Thomas Beckwith WILLIAMS, only son of Edward WILLIAMS of Clonliffe Parade, Esq [Dublin Morning Register, 14 March], and by Settlements dated 12 March 1827, to which Sarah SIBTHORPE, of Pallace Street, Dublin, Spinster, was the second party, and Thomas SIBTHORPE of Dublin, Esquire, was a joint third part, and which deed cited an earlier deed, dated 20 November 1810, between Luke SIBTHORPE of Palace Street, Dublin, Glazier, and William DUCKETT, of Dublin, and an even earlier deed dated 1804, in which the parties were Frances BIBLE, Widow, Christiana SIBTHORPE, the wife of Luke SIBTHORPE, and George PAYNE of Dublin, Glazier [Memorial 533362, Volume 822, Page 226]; Belfast Commercial Chronicle, 17 March].<br />
4. Thomas SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin, about 1798; admitted Pensioner (Mr WHITE), to Trinity College, Dublin, 2 October 1815, aged 17, son of Luke; B.A., Verne 1821; of Palace Street, Dublin Voter's List, 1820 Election, Smiths Guild [Freemans Journal, 25 June]; examined by the House of Commons, London, April 1823 concerning the allegations that Sheriff Charles THORPE had made at a Tea Party in his father's house, and stating that his father was too ill to attend; M.A. and M.B., Verne 1826 [Alumni Dublinenses]; probably grantor of a Deed of Conveyance, dated 22 August 1827, of Dublin, Gent, and demising premises on the west side of Palace Street, Dublin, to Thomas B. WILLIAMS (his brother-in-law), which he had acquired from William EDWARDS [Memorial 556479, Book 827, Page 344]; Thomas (son of Luke) was married at St George's, Dublin, 1 February 1851, to Julie Anne D'ANVERS (daughter of Andrew THOMPSON).<br />
5. George Going SIBTHORPE, born about 1802-03. <br />
6. William Going SIBTHORPE. See [C] below.<br />
<br />
Luke was evidently married secondly, in 1812, to Emily HOMAN; with further issue:<br />
6. Luke Homan SIBTHORPE, born about 1814, and recorded in the Dictionary of Irish Architects as the fourth son; he was probably named in his father's deed, dated 6 February 1819 [Memorial 504734, Book 741, Page 199], but as the corner of the page was torn off, there are gaps in the transcript:<br />
<em>"... Upon trust, to permit the said Luke SIBTHORPE to ...[gap of about 21 or 22 letter spaces]...</em><br />
<em>"during his life and after his death in trust for Luke ...[gap of about 22 letter spaces, and in the last line on page 198 of the Memorial Book]...</em><br />
<em>"[Page] 199.</em><br />
<em>"the youngest son of the said Luke SIBTHORPE, and to his Ex'ors Adm'rs and Assigns, upon the several other trusts therein ment'd. "</em><br />
See [E] below.<br />
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<br />
<b><br /></b>
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>JOHN SIBTHORPE, PAINTER</u>.</b></i></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
[B] John SIBTHORPE, indicated to have been born in or before 1794 (he was named as a party to the Settlements, dated 29 May 1815, for the marriage of his sister Hannah to Henry HEANY - as a party, he should have been of age) - but his age at death indicates a birth about 1799; and a memorial on Findagrave.com to John SIBTHORPE, who died on 28 April 1878, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery, records his birth on 27 December 1799 [source unstated].<br />
John was of Cork Hill, Gent, when named as a joint third party in the Settlements, dated 1 August 1826, for the marriage of his sister Eliza to Henry POOLEY Junior; his account, for glazing work done in the City Marshalsea, between July 1822 and November 1824, amounting to £12 9s 4d was recorded on 18 October 1826.<br />
John SIBTHORPE, of the City of Dublin, Oil and Colour Merchant, and the assignee of the estate and effects of Robert GOING, of the City of Cork, Insolvent, was first party to an Indented Deed, dated 19 November 1838, of which the said Robert GOING, Insolvent, was second party, and Thomas GOING of Cahir, County Tipperary, William GOING and Henry NOBLETT were the third party, and recited several earlier deeds, concerning premises in the parish of St Anne, Shandon, County Cork, in July 1835 (all three GOINGs to NOBLETT), May 1837 (Robert GOING to William BLAIN), mentioned the appointment of SIBTHORPE as assignee on 24 March 1838, and noted that Thomas GOING had subsequently purchased the estate at auction [1838, Volume 21, Page 140].<br />
John SIBTHORPE, Painter [H. SIBTHORPE and Son], house 4 Epworth Terrace, Upper Leeson Street, 1846 [Slater's National Commercial Directory]; esq, Epworth Terrace, 29 Leeson Street, Upper, 1849 [Dublin Almanac and General Register].<br />
John SIBTHORPE died at 29 Upper Leeson Street, 21 April 1878, aged 78, Merchant and J.P., the death informed by Elizabeth SIBTHORPE, of the same address, present at the death - although an abstract from the Irish Builder, Dublin, 1 may 1878, recorded that he died <i>"... suddenly while proceeding to church on Sunday 21 April 1878, and was buried the following Wednesday"</i> [Findagrave Memorial]; probate was granted in Dublin, 5 February 1879, by the oaths of Thomas Smallman SIBTHORPE, of Cork Hill, Merchant, Charles SIBTHORPE of 36 Upper Leeson Street, Esq, and Henry POOLEY Junior, of Manchester Street, Liverpool, Engineer, the executors, Effects under £35,000.<br />
<br />
John SIBTHORPE, of Cork Hill, Gent, was married, by Settlements dated 24 May 1830, to Mary SMALLMAN, daughter of Thomas SMALLMAN of Roscrea, County Tipperary, Esq [Memorial 580132, Volume 873, Page 132], with a condition that this settlement did not impinge upon the earlier Deed of Co-partnership between John and his mother Hannah (dated 14 May 1830).<br />
Mary SIBTHORPE, the beloved wife of John SIBTHORPE of Epworth Terrace, Upper Leeson Street, died on 23 February 1865 [Sydney Morning Herald, 22 May 1865 - presumable having been requested to copy an Irish death notice not yet sighted].<br />
John and Mary had issue:<br />
1. Thomas Smallman SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin about 1840; Glass Merchant; J.P.; he died at 25 [Registration] or 75 [Probate] Lower Baggot Street, 29 October 1898, Widower, J.P., the death informed by Henry WILLIAMS, who caused the body to be buried [Registration], and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery, aged 58 [M.I., Findagrave]; Probate granted to Elizabeth E. GOOD, Married Woman, of 1 Carleton Villa, Dublin, and James L. WRIGHT, of John's Hill, Waterford, Effects £6,158 6s 8d; Thomas was married to Frances Matilda SKUSE alias McFANN; she died on 19 February 1894, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery [M.I.]they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Mary SIBTHORPE; she was married at St Werburgh's, Dublin, 27 August 1884, to James Latrobe WRIGHT, Merchant, of John's Hill, Waterford (son of William Latrobe WRIGHT, Governor of Waterford), witnessed by Thomas S., Chas and W.G. SIBTHORPE.</em><br />
<em> b. Janet Frances SIBTHORPE; she died on 3 May 1889, aged 25 years, and was buried in the family plot at Mount Jerome Cemetery [M.I.]; she was married at St Werburgh's, Dublin, 22 February 1887, to Marcus John EUSTACE, M.B., of Alesford, Hampshire (son of Marcus EUSTACE, M.D.), witnessed by Thomas S. SIBTHORPE and John EUSTACE.</em><br />
<em> c. Harry SIBTHORPE, born at 56 Upper Leeson Street, 19 August 1866.</em><br />
<em> d. Elizabeth Emma SIBTHORPE, born at Melville, Donnybrook, 31 July 1868; she was married at St Werburgh's, Dublin, 22 September 1897, to John GOOD, Building Contractor, son of Matthew GOOD, Ship Builder.</em><br />
<em> e. Thomas Waldo SIBTHORPE, born at 5 Seaview Terrace, Donnybrook, 22 December 1871; he died on 25 February 1872, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery [M.I.].</em><br />
2. Hannah SIBTHORPE; she was married at St Werburgh's, 10 September 1857, to Philip JOHNSTON (son of John Henry JOHNSTON); he died at Gleneavye, County Antrim, 22 May 1859, late of Belfast; probate was gatned at Belfast, 14 September 1859, to John SIBTHORPE, of Cork Hill, and William John JOHNSTON, of Belfast, the executors; she was married secondly, as Hannah JOHNSTON, full age, widow, of 29 Upper Leeson Street, at York Street Chapel, parish of St Peter, Dublin, 8 April 1868, to John WOOD, full age, bachelor, of the same address, Independent Minister, don of Thomas WOOD, Farmer, witnessed by John SIBTHORPE and George AMSDEN.<br />
3. Mary Smallman SIBTHORPE; she was married at Dublin South, 15 January 1862 [Volume 5, Page 362], to William GORMAN, son of Timothy GORMAN.<br />
However, Mary Ellen SIBTHORPE, of full age, spinster, of 29 Upper Leeson Street, a daughter of John SIBTHORPE, Merchant, was married at St Werburgh's Parish Church, Dublin City, 9 September 1873, to John Lamb SMALLMAN, full age, bachelor, of 11 Cork Hill, Commercial Clerk, son of William SMALLMAN, witnessed by John SIBTHORPE, and both Henry POOLY Senior and Junior.<br />
4. Henry SIBTHORPE; as Harry, he died at Epworth Terrace, Upper Leeson Street, 10 February 1845, eldest son of John SIBTHORPE [Statesman and Dublin Christian Record, 14 February].<br />
5. John SIBTHORPE, born at Upper Leeson Street, 29 April 1851, and baptised at St Werburgh's, 11 June; he was at Pembroke Road, Pembroke West, Dublin, 1901 Census, aged 49, Merchant, with wife Mary Ellen (aged 46, born County Tipperary), and their five children; he was at Leeson Park, Rathmines and Rathgar East, 1911 Census, aged 59, Merchant, with his wife and four children; he died on 14 September 1940, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery [M.I., Findagrave]; a Widower when he was married secondly at Grangegorman Church, 3 December 1878, to Mary Ellen DAVIN or D'AVIN (daughter of John DAVIN, Brewer); she died on 21 May 1939, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery [M.I.] they had issue:<br />
<em> a. John Albert SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin, about 1879; aged 21, Student of Medicine, with his parents, 1901; he probably died on 14 September 1906, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery, M.B. [M.I., Findagrave].</em><br />
<em> b. Arthur Claude SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin, about 1881; aged 19, Merchant, with his parents, 1901; aged 28, Merchant, with his parents, 1911; he died at 6 Rostrevor Road, Rathgar, 23 November 1965, aged 84, Master Decorator, the death informed by his sister Marjory WYNNE, of Midhurst Avenue Gardens, Cliftonville, Kent, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery with his parents [M.I.].</em><br />
<em> c. Ellie Gertude SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin, about 1885; aged 15, School with her parents, 1901; aged 24, with her parents, 1911; she died on 21 April 1971, and was buried in the family plot at Mount Jerome Cemetery [M.I.].</em><br />
<em> d. Kathleen SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin, about 1887; aged 13, School with her parents, 1901; aged 22, with her parents, 1911.</em><br />
<em> e. Marjorie Frances SIBTHORPE, born at 13 Royal Terrace East, Kingstown (Rathdown), 16 October 1894; aged 6, School, with her parents, 1901; aged 16, with her parents, 1911; she was married at Holy Trinity Church, Killiney, 23 July 1925, to Wilfred Edward Carleton WYNNE, Medical Doctor, of 41 Cornwall Gardens, Cliftonville, Margate, Kent.</em><br />
John Senior was married secondly to Elizabeth; she died at 43 Upper Leeson Street, 4 November 1892, aged 64, Widower of a Gentleman; Probate was granted in London, 20 March 1893, and resealed in Dublin, Effects £382 8s 6d.<br />
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<br />
<u><br /></u>
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>CHARLES SIBTHORPE</u>.</b></i></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
Charles SIBTHORPE, esq, Epworth Terrace, 32 Leeson Street Upper, 1849 [Dublin Almanac and General Register].<br />
Charles SIBTHORPE, of Dublin, Esq, was married at Killymon Church, County Antrim, 28 May 1839, to Dorothea GOODLATTE, daughter of D.R. GOODLATTE, of Derrygally, Esq [Belfast Newsletter, 31 May]; they had issue:<br />
1. Charles SIBTHORPE, born at 4 Epworth Terrace, 13 February 1847, and was baptised at St Werburgh's Parish Church, 16 April, son of Charles and Dorothea SIBTHORPE [ www.irishgenealogy.ie ].<br />
2. David Alfred SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin, 20 November 1848, and was baptised at St Werburgh's, 13 April 1849.<br />
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<br />
<b><br /></b>
<i><span style="font-size: large;"><b><u>THOMAS SIBTHORPE, M.D.</u></b></span></i><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
Thomas SIBTHORPE; Doctor of Medecine; he was granted Letters of Administration for Harriett Elizabeth MARSHALL, late of Rathfarnham, County Dublin, Spinster, "an illegitimate person," who died at Rathfarnham, 26 June 1862, "on the renunciation and consent of Her Majesty's Attorney-General"; Thoma died at Mountpleasant Square, Dublin, 11 December 1863; Probate was granted at Dublin, 12 March 1864, to John SIBTHORPE and Charles SIBTHORPE, both of Upper Leeson Street, Esqrs, the executors, Effects under £300.<br />
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<br />
<u><b><br /></b></u>
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><u><b>WILLIAM GOING SIBTHORPE, OF LIMERICK.</b></u></em></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div>
[C] William Going SIBTHORPE, born in Dublin, about 1802-03; of Dublin, Builder, 1 August 1826, when he witnessed the Deed of Marriage Settlements for Eliza SIBTHORPE (daughter of Hannah, widow) and Henry POOLEY; a Member of the Methodist Society, Limerick Circuit, 1836; Agent for the City of Dublin Steam Packet Company, house Clare Street, City of Limerick, 1846 [Slater's Directory]; he died at 59 Catherine Street, Limerick, 1 June 1892, aged 89, Widower, Agent, Steam Ship Company, the death informed by his daughter Hannah SIBTHORPE, of the same address, present at the death; William was married to Frances Louisa COGHLAN; she died at Epworth Terrace, Upper Leeson Street, Dublin, 29 November 1872, aged 70 years, the beloved wife of William Going SIBTHORPE, Esq, of Limerick" [The Argus, Melbourne, 19 February 1873]; they had issue:<br />
1. Hannah Lucy SIBTHORPE, born about 1829; she informed her father's death, 1892; she was at Leinster Road, Rathmine, 1901 Census, aged 69, unmarried, born in Dublin, boarding in the household of George Carr LETT, aged 66, Solicitor, and his two sons; she died at 5 Leinster Road, Rathmines, 4 or 9 April 1904, aged 74, a Lady, Unmarried; Adminitration was granted 29 May 1905 to John SIBTHORPE, Decorator, Effects £80 18s 5d (Limited).<br />
2. John Coghlan SIBTHORPE, born about 1834. See [D] below.<br />
3. Frances Louisa (Fanny) SIBTHORPE, born about 1828; as <em>"... Miss SIBTHORPE, eldest daughter of W.G. SIBTHORPE, Esq, still of that City,"</em> she was married at St Michael's, City of Limerick, 29 April 1851, to Dr Richard Thomas TRACY (son of Thomas TRACY and Elizabeth COGHLAN, of Limerick); they emigrated to Australia in May 1851 on the ship <em>Ballangeidh</em>; after settling initially in Adelaide, they went to the Loddon Gold-fields (Castlemaine), before retiring back to Adelaide, finally settling in Melbourne, in September 1852, when he set up in practice in Brunswick Fitzroy; later of 109 Collins Street, Melbourne; he died in Melbourne in November 1874, aged 48 [see his Obituary, The Australasian, 14 November 1874]; she died at Longridge Road, Earl's Court, London, 22 January 1907, aged 78 [Daily Telegraph, Sydney, 26 February]; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Fanny Louisa Nester TRACY; she was married in Melbourne to Charles Cecil GRIFFITHS.</em><br />
4. Elizabeth SIBTHORPE; she was married at St Mary's, City of Limerick, 16 October 1862, to Edwin WELLS, son of Thomas WELLS.<br />
5. Mary SIBTHORPE, baptized at St Mary's, Limerick, 30 April 1837 [R.C. Register]; <br />
<br />
Mary Smallman SIBTHORPE, daughter of George Going SIBTHORPE, was married Dublin South, 15 January 1862, to William GORMAN (son of Timothy GORMAN).<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em><b><u>JOHN COGHLAN SIBTHORPE</u>.</b></em></span><br />
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[D] John Coghlan SIBTHORPE, born in Ireland, about 1834, son of William Going SIBTHORPE and Fanny Louisa COGHLAN (notice of her death, at Epworth Terrace, Upper Leeson Street, Dublin, was copied in the Melbourne Argus, 19 February 1873); of Listowel, 1864, Accountant, National Bank; John emigrated to Victoria on the ship <em>John O'Gaunt</em>, from Liverpool, arriving in Melbourne, 26 January 1872, after a voyage of 140 days, aged 34, Farmer, with his wife Kate and three children; he died at his residence, "Barrington," Castlemaine, 12 December 1907, aged 72 years [parents named in Index to Victoria Death Registers]; he was married at Kilfarboy, County Clare, 31 July 1860, to Catherine Rebecca BARRINGTON, daughter of Benjamin BARRINGTON; she was aged 30 on arrival in Melbourne in 1872; she died at Kew, 1923, aged 85 years (father named in Victoria Death Indexes); they had issue:<br />
1. Benjamin Barrington Banks SIBTHORPE, born in Ireland, about 1862-63; as Barrington, aged 8 on arrival in Melbourne, January 1872; he died at Alphington, 1940, aged 77 [parents named in Victoria Death Index]; he was married in Victoria, 1891 #6874, to Elizabeth M. DEAGUE; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Ernest Barrington SIBTHORPE, born at Fitzroy, 1893.</em><br />
2. Catherine Alicia SIBTHORPE, born at Listowell, 6 April 1864, the birth informed by her father.<br />
3. John Croker Fitzmaurice SIBTHORPE, born at Woodford Cottage, parish of Finuge, District of Listowel, 31 May 1866; aged 6 on arrival in Melbourne, January 1872; he was married in Victoria, 1897, to Annie Louisa SALLERY; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Ethel Adeline SIBTHORPE, born at Clifton Hill, 1899.</em><br />
<em> b. Norman SIBTHORPE, born at Fairfield, Victoria, 1900; he died at Fairfield, 21 November 1900, aged 10 days [Argus, Saturday 24 November].</em><br />
<em> c. Kathleen Alicia SIBTHORPE, born at Fairfield, 1902; she was married in Victoria, 1932, to Basil Beattie Bennecke HART.</em><br />
<em> d. Fitzmaurice John SIBTHORPE, born at Fairfield, 1910.</em><br />
<em> e. Rex SIBTHORPE, born at Fairfield, 1911.</em><br />
3. Agnes Jessie Crawford SIBTHORPE, born at Paale, parish of Dromtariff, County Cork, 14 November 1870; aged 10 months on arrival in Melbourne, January 1872; she died at Berry Street, Clifton Hill, 15 September 1873, aged two years and ten months, the only surviving daughter [Argus, 17 September] - Dublin papers were asked to copy this notice.<br />
4. Eleanor Georgina SIBTHORPE, born in North Fitzroy, 1874; she died in Victoria, 1877, aged 2.<br />
5. Kate Violet SIBTHORPE, born at Carlton, 1881.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>LUKE HOMAN SIBTHORPE, IN NEW SOUTH WALES</u>.</b></i></span><br />
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[E] Mr Luke SIBTHORPE arrived in Sydney in July 1835 on the barque <i>John Dennison</i>, from Liverpool, via Hobart [The Colonist, 23 July 1835]; mentioned in July 1840 in a list of Unclaimed Letters, as SIBTHORPE, Esq, Luke [Sydney Monitor, 13 July]; he was appointed Clerk of Petty Sessions, Surat (then in N.S.W., but now in Queensland), 7 January 1851, by the Governor, at a salary of £100 per annum [Returns of the Colony of N.S.W., 1851]; Clerk of Petty Sessions, Merton and Muswellbrook, 7 April 1853, by the Governor, at a salary of £200 per annum [Returns of the Colony]; appointed by the Governor, with the advice of the Executive Council, as a Commission for Crown Lands, 1 March 1859, at a salary of £450 per annum [Civil Establishment, N.S.W. Government, Secretary for Lands]; he died at Stoney Creek, 28 December 1865 [Registered at Wellington, #6312, aged 51 years, mother Emily], <em>"... Esq, gold commissioner, aged 52, leaving a widow and six young children to lament their loss"</em> [S.M.H., Tuesday 2 January 1866]; he was married on 8 February 1855 [N.S.W., Volume 82, #447], by the Rev J.S. WHITE, to Miss Jane HUDSON [Maitland Mercury, Wednesday 14 February]; she died at her residence 154 Bourke Street, Sydney, July 1897, <em>"... relict of the late L.H. SIBTHORPE (formerly Commissioner for Crown Lands, Molong),in her 63rd year"</em> [Daily Telegraph, 26 July], and was buried at Waverley Cemetery, by her sons Waldo, Robert and Gerald, 27 July [S.M.H., Monday 26 July]; they had issue:<br />
1. Waldo Homan SIBTHORPE; born at Muswellbrook, 25 April 1856 [Maitland Mercury, 29 April]; he died at a private hospital in Sydney, 6 October 1924, <em>"... eldest son of Jane and Luke H. SIBTHORPE, beloved father of Waldo, Edward and Richard, dearly beloved brother of Robert, Gerald, Emily and Louise SIBTHORPE</em>" [S.M.H., 7 October], and was buried at Tumblong; as Walter Homan, he was married at Gundagai, in 1882, to Annie STREETER; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Gerald SIBTHORPE, born at Gundagai, 1883 (father Walter).</em><br />
<em> b. Waldo SIBTHORPE, born at Gundagai, 1884 (father Waldo H.); of Abercrombie Street, Redfern, 1918.</em><br />
<em> c. Richard SIBTHORPE, born at Gundagai, 1886 (father Waldo H.).</em><br />
<em> d. George Henry SIBTHORPE, born at Gundagai, 1888 (father Walter H.); Lance Corporal, 1st A.I.F.; he was killed in action, 10 April 1918, "... nephew of Emily and Louie, and brother of Jack SIBTHORPE, of 96 Palmer Street, City" [Daily Telegraph, 1 May].</em><br />
<em> e. Edward SIBTHORE, born at Gundagai, 1891 (father Waldo H.).</em><br />
<em> f. daughter, born at Gundagai, 1893 #16176, a twin.</em><br />
<em> g. daughter, born at Gundagai, 1893 #16177, the other twin.</em><br />
<em> h. Jack SITHORPE, born about 1895, the youngest son; of Palmer Street, Sydney, 1918; he died at his parents' residence, Tumblong, 29 May 1919, aged 24 [S.M.H., 2 June].</em><br />
2. Robert H. SIBTHORPE, born at Muswellbrook, 5 December 1857 [Reg'd #9003 or 9007; and Northern Times, Wednesday 9 December]; he died at North Sydney, 1927 #2007; he was married at Christ Church, St Leonards, 6 February 1883, to Mary BAILEY, eldest daughter of the late William BAILEY, Sydney [S.M.H., Saturday 10 March]; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Frederick Leonard SIBTHORPE, born at St Leonards, 1884 #11579.</em><br />
<em> b. George SIBTHORPE, born at St Leonards, 1886 #12355.</em><br />
<em> c. Robert J. SIBTHORPE, born at St Leonards, 1888 #13154.</em><br />
<em> d. Emily G. SIBTHORPE, born at St Leaonards, 1890 #32219.</em><br />
<em> e. John B. SIBTHORPE, born at St Leonards, 1892 #33209.</em><br />
3. Gerald K. SIBTHORPE, born at Molong, 27 September 1859 [Reg'd #9546; and S.M.H., Tuesday 18 October]; he was married at Gundagai, 1900, to Mary TUBBERTY; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Winifred a. SIBTHORPE, born at Cootamundra, 1901.</em><br />
<em> b. Dulcie M. SIBTHORPE, born at Cootamundra, 1911.</em><br />
<em> c. John H. SIBTHORPE, born at Temorah, 1914.</em><br />
4. Richard Lionel SIBTHORPE, born at Molong, 30 June 1861 [Reg'd #9540; and Empire, Tuesday 16 July]; Brother and past Master, Lodge Hiram, United Grand Lodge of N.S.W. [Funeral Notice]; he died at Sydney Hospital, 24 April 1898 [Reg'd #4131], <em>"... fourth son of L.H. and J. SIBTHORPE, aged 36</em>" [S.M.H., 25 April], late of 154 Bourke Street, and was buried on the 26th at Waverley Cemetery, by his brothers Waldo, Robert and Gerald [Daily Telegraph, 25 April].<br />
5. Emily Jane SIBTHORPE, born at Stoney Creek, Western Goldfields, 30 September 1863 [Registered at Wellington, #14574; and Empire, Monday 5 October]; she died at Sydney, 1943 #15576, unmarried.<br />
6. Letitia B. SIBTHORPE, born at the Commissioner's Camp. Stoney Creek, 8 August 1865[Registered at Wellington, #16471; and Empire, Monday 14 August]; as Lydia Blanche, she died at Sydney, 13 December 1866, youngest daughter of the late Mr L.H. SIBTHORPE, aged 16 months [Empire, Saturday 15 December].<br />
7. Louise (Louie) SIBTHORPE; named in her nephew George's In Memoriam Notice, 1918<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>THE METHODIST CONNECTION</u>.</b></i></span></div>
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Lack of vital details in Irish records means that definitive family lineages for the HENEY and SIBTHORPE families will have gaps - which gaps will probably only ever be able to be "stopped up" using a degree of speculation.</div>
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Both families appear to have been Members of the Methodist Society in Dublin, and also appear to have followed the Primitive Wesleyan connexion after the Schism of 1818. This means that some refined "best-fit" speculative genealogy may be possible, if, as was not unknown, these families intermarried within the relatively tight-knit Methodist community.</div>
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Henry CROOKSHANK, in his authoritative "History of Methodism in Ireland" [Volume III, at page 21], noted that:</div>
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<i>"Meanwhile, another and still larger chapel was erected. This was in Abbey Street, Dublin...</i></div>
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<i>"One Sunday, a young man, named William DEAKER, attracted by the appearance of the new building, entered, heard Mr MAYNE preach, and at the close of the service, observing several persons retire into side rooms, followed some of them into one, which proved to be the place in which Arthur WILLIAMS met a class, of which William and James CARSON, William and Henry HENEY, and others, were members..."</i></div>
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In light of this excerpt, and developing the themes of kinship and potential intermarriages, it will come as no surprise to me if we were to eventually find that:<br />
a. William CARSON was related to, and perhaps the father of, Margaret CARSON, the wife of Henry Parnell HENEY (see below).<br />
b. William HENEY may have been Henry's older brother (see below).<br />
c. Arthur WILLIAMS, the Class Leader, as a witness (with Henry HENEY) to the marriage in 1826 of Margaret WILLIAMS to William HENEY, was perhaps her father; and he may even have been related to Thomas Beckwith WILLIAMS, the husband of Sarah Going SIBTHORPE (see above).<br />
<br />
Indeed, the "Minutes of Methodist Conferences in Ireland," 1865, provide some further clues:<br />
1825 Conference (page 161):<br />
<i>"Q. Who are the Liquidating Committee?</i><br />
<i>"A. The Dublin Preachers, together with Messrs... Henry HENEY</i> (second of seven),<i>... James CARSON</i> (sixth of seven)..."<br />
1827 Conference (page 210):<br />
<i>"Q. Who are the Missionary Committee to review the concerns of the Missions at the ensuing Conference?</i><br />
<i>"A.</i> (a list of thirteen names, and) <i>the Secretary of the Conference, with an additional thirteen gentlemen</i> (including)<i>... Henry HENEY, William CARSON,..."</i><br />
1829 Conference (page 264):<br />
Ditto the above.<br />
1829 Conference (page 265):<br />
<i>"Q. Who are the Chapel Building Committee, without whose previous consent obtained in writing no Chapel... whether large or small is to be erected, purchased, or enlarged, during the ensuing year?</i><br />
<i>"A. The Preachers of the Dublin Circuit, with Messrs Arthur WILLIAMS and Henry HENEY. Charles MAYNE is Secretary to the Committee."</i><br />
1830 Conference (page 296):<br />
All ditto in 1829, but omitting Henry HENEY, and adding in his stead William KENT, James DEALE and Arthur JONES.<br />
Significantly, Henry HENEY's name does not appear again after this 1829 entry.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>HENRY HENEY OF DUBLIN</u>.</b></i></span><br />
<br /><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Henry HENEY was baptised at St Mary's parish Church, Dublin, 25 January 1728, aged 6 days, the son of James and Mary HENEY [irishgenealogy.ie]; he was a sibling of John (born 1725), Jane (1727), Alice (1732), Charles (1734) .<br />
<br />
I. Henry HENEY; of Mountpleasant, City of Dublin, Esq, when he was grantor of a Deed of Assignment, dated 22 April 1818, by which he demised premises at No 12 Mountpleasant to John Barclay ALLOWAY, of the City of Dublin, [Memorial 196213, Book 727, Page 78].<br />
Possibly the same as Henry of Upper Dominick Street? See II next below.<br />
<br />
II. Henry HENEY; of Upper Dominick Street, City of Dublin, Gentleman, when he was grantee of an Indented Deed of Conveyance, dated 6 August 1819, by which Edward MORAN, of Thomas Street, City of Dublin, Merchant, for the sum of £375 paid by HENEY, demised to him premises in Drogheda Street, Balbriggan, County Dublin, the assets of the bankrupt James MATTHEWS [Memorial 506182, Book 768, Page 134].<br />
Possibly the same as Henry HENEY of Abbey Street? See IV below.<br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">III. Henry HENEY, born in Dublin, about 1777; he was buried at St Peter's Parish Churchyard, Dublin, 21 April 1847, aged 69, of Bride Street [irishgenealogy.ie<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">]. Clearly too young to have been father of IV next.</span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">___________________________________________________________________________</span></span></span></span></span><br />
<u><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></span></span></span></span>
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"></span></span></span></span></span></u><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><em><b><u>HENRY HENEY OF ABBEY STREET, DUBLIN, MERCHANT</u>.</b></em></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"></span><br /><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">IV. Henry HENEY, born about 1791 (from his age at death), and probably in Dublin; of Pitt Street, Dublin, 1815 (marriage settlements); of 62 Abbey Street, Dublin City, March 1822, one of the receivers of benefactions for the Aged Female Charity [Saunders Newsletter, 9 March]; of Abbey Street, City of Dublin, Merchant, when he was the grantor of an Indented Deed of Lease, dated 12 April 1823, by which he demised to Peter MARTIN of St Michael's Hill, Carpenter and Undertaker, a newly built dwelling house on the corner of Cook Street and St Michael's Hill [Memorial 528156, Book 780, Page 221]; ditto, when he was grantor of a Deed of Mortgage, dated 30 December 1823, by which he demised a block of land on St Michael's Hill to Christopher HODGENS of Church Street, Dublin, Rope Manufacturer [Memorial 532549, Book 787, Page 459]; <span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";">probably named as Defendant in a High Court of Chancery Decree, dated 5 August 1824, as Assignee of Hopeton Butler COX (an Insolvent), and in which cause the plaintiff was Isaac SMALLMAN [Dublin Mercantile Advertiser, 18 October]; of 62 Abbey Street, 13 March 1825, when he advertised the sale by auction of a range of imported goods, including clover, carroway and onion seeds, fruit, wines and liquors, cod oil, prepared mustard, seltzer water, corkwood, etc [Dublin Mercantile Advertiser, 14 March]; as </span></span></span></span><span style="font-family: "times new roman"; font-size: 16px;">Henry HEANY, of Abbey Street, Dublin, Merchant, 1 August 1826, when he was named as a joint third party (with John SIBTHORPE, of Cork Hill, Gent) to the Deed of Marriage Settlements for Eliza SIBTHORPE and Henry POOLEY [Memorial 549550, Book 816, Page 15]; Henry was </span><span style="font-family: "times";">of 62 Abbey Street, Dublin, May 1827, when he was recorded as one of the receivers of subscriptions to a fund for sufferers in the late destructive fire [Dublin Morning Register, 3 May]; ditto, July 1827, as one of the receivers of benefactions for the Wesleyan Chapel in Lower Abbey Street [Saunders Newsletter, 4 July]; his letter to the editor of the Dublin Morning Register was published on 18 May 1829 concerning an earlier report incorrectly naming him as a party to proceedings in the Court of King's Bench which involved the St Patrick's Insurance Company; of 62 Abbey Street when he inserted a notice, dated 10 December 1829, concerning the affairs of John O'MEARA, an Insolvent for whom Henry was the appointed Assignee [Saunders Newsletter, 12 December].</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";">Henry died at his house in Abbey Street, Dublin, on 31 December 1829, aged 38 years, after an illness during which he <i>"... suffered much,"</i> and taking his <i>"... affectionate leave of his dear companion, earnestly praying for her and their six beloved children..."</i> [Recent Deaths, Wesleyan Methodist Magazine, 1830, page 286 - from a copy held in Edgehill College Library, Belfast, and kindly provided by the Archivist, Robin RODDIE]; Henry was buried at St Patrick's Cathedral Churchyard, Dublin, on 3 January 1830 [Cathedral Register, R.C.B. Library], late of Abbey Street, Dublin City [Prerogative Wills Index, 1830]</span></span></span></span><span style="font-family: "times";"> - at that time, fellow Methodist William MAGUIRE Senior was the Sexton of the Patrick's Cathedral, and managed the burial ground (it was his son William Junior who, six years later, would marry Henry's daughter Hannah HENEY).</span><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"></span></span></span></span> </span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Henry HENEY was listed in 1830 [Wilson's Directory], at 62 Abbey Street Merchant; he was still listed in 1832 [Treble Almanac], all ditto; and in 1835 [Dublin Almanac and General Register], same address, as a general merchant. The 1830 Directory would have been prepared for publication before the end of 1829, and so before Henry's death - the later two listings appear to have been the result of his widow carrying on his business without notifying any changes. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"></span>
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Henry HENEY was of Pitt Street, Dublin, when </span></span>he was married, by Consistorial License, at St Werburgh's Parish Church, Dublin, 26 March 1815, to Hannah SIBTHORPE; this marriage was the subject of Settlements dated 29 March 1815, made between John SIBTHORPE, his father Henry SIBTHORPE, of Exchange Street, Dublin, Glass Merchant, Henry's eldest daughter Hannah (the bride) and Henry HEANY, of Pitt Street (the groom), with the third party (of two Trustees) including Henry PARNELL of the City of Dublin, Esq [Memorial 472225, Volume 687, Page 67].</span></span></span></span><br />
<br />
Hannah HENEY applied for the <i>"Relief of those Merchants whose Goods were consumed by Fire at the Custom House in Dublin"</i> in 1835 - her claim, dated 3 October, was for loss of Eau de Cologne (24 dozen - £18) and Liqueurs (60 bottles containing 9 44/64 gallons - £9 10s), totalling £27 10s [Parliamentary Papers, Session 1837, Volume XXXIX, Page 213]; she was at Parker Hill, 13 Rathmines Mall, 1845 [Pettigrew and Oulton's Dublin Directory], the residence of her widowed mother.<br />
Mrs Hannah HENEY was recorded at Donnybrook Road, Parish of St Peter, Dublin, in 1850 [Griffith's Primary Valuation], residing in a house with small garden, valued at £29 14s, her principal lessor being named as John SIBTHORPE, Esq (he was at Epworth Terrace, same Valuation record).<br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times new roman";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">Hannah was at Rathgar Road, in May 1873, when she wrote a letter to her grand-daughter in New South Wales (in the possession of her descendant, Dr Kingsley TUGWELL, who was, by remarkable co-incidence, my late father's G.P. in Pennant Hills, in the late 1970s).</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times new roman";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">Theodore CRONHELM, in his "Reminiscence of Dublin" [from the Christian Advocate, 1889-90], wrote from Sandymount, 27 May 1889:</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times new roman";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;"><i>"My references to the personnel of the [Methodist] Society at that period are necessarily very incomplete... One honoured name, however, must be mentioned as connected with my earliest recollections of the Abbey Street congregation - I refer to Mrs HENEY (mother of my esteemed friend Henry Parnell HENEY), who, in a beautiful old age, still lives amongst us, and counts her descendants even to the fourth generation."</i></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">Hannah died at 132 Upper Rathmines, at the residence of her grandson, 29 December 1889, aged 91, widow of the late Henry HENEY [Cork Constitution, 31 December]; the death was informed by Mary HENEY, of 7 Church Avenue, present at death (relationship not stated).</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">Henry and Hannah had issue, six of whom were living in January 1830, including:</span></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">1. </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">Hannah HENEY, probably born about 1816-19; she was married at St Mary's Parish Church, Dublin, by George KELLY, Curate, 21 June 1836, to William MAGUIRE of Dublin, Solicitor, the witnesses being Charles SIBTHORPE, W. HENEY and W. J. (? perhaps instead Y. or T.) SIBTHORPE.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";">See <a href="https://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com/2010/09/william-maguire-of-dublin.html">https://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com/2010/09/william-maguire-of-dublin.html</a> for details of their emigration to Australia, and their issue.</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">2. (another child, living 1830, no particulars found).</span><br />
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</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">3. Maria Louisa HENEY was baptised at St Mary's Parish Church, Dublin, 7 February 1820 [irishgenealogy.ie]; she probably died in Manchester, 28 December 1866.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. Henry Parnell HENEY, born in Dublin, 31 March 1822 [birth information, "uncorroborated," from several family trees on Ancestry] - he was probably named for Henry PARNELL, of the City of Dublin, Esq, who was a joint third party (as a Trustee) to the 1815 Marriage Settlements for his parents (rather than for the Irish M.P. Sir Henry PARNELL); Henry Parnell HENEY was an Official with the Bank of Ireland; he was also a Methodist; he was at Church Avenue, Rathmines, 1901 Census, aged 79, Retired Bank Officer, with wife and son; he died at 7 Church Avenue, 19 February 1909, aged 87, Widower, Gentleman, the death informed by Kate WOODS, same address; probate was granted on 4 May 1909 to Frederick A. HENEY, V.S., effects <span style="font-family: "times new roman";">£</span>577 5s.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Henry was of 47 Upper Leeson Street, Gentleman (and son of Henry HENEY, Merchant), when he was married at St Mark's C.of I., Dublin, 5 January 1853, to Mary CARSON, of 27 Sir John's Quay, daughter of William CARSON, Merchant [irishgeneaology.ie]<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; she informed the death of Hannah HENEY otherwise SIBTHORPE in 1889</span>; she was aged 72, with her husband, 1901; she died at 7 Church Avenue, 7 May 1908, aged 79, wife of a Gentleman, the death informed by her son Frederick A., of the same address, present at the death;<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> they had issue [from family trees on Ancestry]:</span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> a. Henry HENEY, born at 27 St John's Quay, Dublin, 20 October 1853, and baptized at St Mary's Parish Church, 26 December [irishgenealogy.ie]; he died in 1871.</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> b. William Carson HENEY, born in 1855; at Upper Rathmines, 1901 Census, aged 45, Methodist, Agent for Building Materials, with his wife and four children; same address, 1911 Census, aged 56, Widower, with his four unmarried children; he died at 16 Fortfield Terrace, 27 September 1934, aged 78, Widower, Merchant; of 7 Church Avenue, Building Contractor, when he was married at the Methodist Church, Dublin South, 1 October 1885, to Elizabeth LITTLE of 93 Rathmines Road (curiously, her father was recorded in the Registration as Mary HENEY!); she was aged 46, born County Dublin, 1901 Census; she died at 192 Upper Rathmines, 8 December 1906, aged 53, wife of Traveler, the death informed by her brother-in-law Fred A. HENEY, of 7 Church Avenue, present at the death; they had issue:</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> i. Henry Parnell HENEY, born at 7 Church Avenue, Dublin South, 4 October 1886; aged 14, Scholar, with his parents, 1901; aged 24, Pharmaceutical Chemist, with his father, 1911.</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> ii. John William HENEY, born at Pembroke Villas, Dublin South, 18 March 1888; aged 13, Scholar, with his parents, 1901; aged 23, Clerk to Corn Merchant, with his father, 1911; of 132 Upper Rathmines, Accountant, of full age, bachelor, when he was married at Holy Trinity Church, Rathmines, 30 April 1919, to Frances Maria BUTLER, of Westfield Road, Harold's Cross, daughter of Thomas BUTLER, Government Official.</em></span></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> iii. Mary Carson HENEY, born at 132 Upper Rathmines, Dublin South, 16 May 1891; she was aged 9, Scholar, with her parents, 1901; aged 19, with her father, 1911.</span></em></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> iv. Charles Frederick HENEY, born at 132 Rathmines, Dublin South, 27 May 1894; aged 6, Scholar, with his parents, 1901; aged 16, Clerk to Ship Owner, with his father, 1911; he died at 16 Fortfield Terrace, 18 September 1937, aged 42, Clerk, the death informed by his widow G. HENEY.</span></em></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> c. Charles Sibthorpe HENEY, born in Dublin, 15 March 1864; he probably emigrated to New York, May 1872, and was there married to Elizabeth EATON, with issue.</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> d. Susan Frances HENEY, born and died in 1865.</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> e. Frederick Arthur HENRY, born 1870; Veterinary Surgeon; he died in 1946; of Dartmouth Square, Dublin, Veterinary Surgeon, when he was married at St Peter's Parish Church, Dublin South, 12 June 1911, to Isabella WATSON, of New Court, Harold's Cross, daughter of James WATSON, Merchant.</em></span></div>
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</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: small;">. Elizabeth Mary Anne HENEY, born about July 1824; buried at St Mary's Parish Church, Dublin, 29 October 1825, aged 15 months, from Abbey Street.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. Charles Sibthorpe HENEY was born in Dublin, 16 November 1828, but was not baptised until 17 August 1832, at St Werburgh's Parish Church; he emigrated to Australia, and settled in Melbourne; he sailed from Melbourne, 13 March 1849, on the brig Swan, bound for Launceston, in the Cabin [Melbourne Daily News, 14 March]; firm of McCOMAS and HENEY, Wine Merchants, 34 Swanston Street, Melbourne, January 1853, when they advertised the sale of 100 Dozen E. DUBOIS Superior Claret, same quantity of ditto Burcundy, all ex L'Aimable, Bordeaux, and some fine old Irish Whiskey [Age, 24 January]; firm of McCOMAS and HENEY, same address, February 1853, when they advertised the sale of <i>"... a Corrugated Iron Store, 20 feet by 10 feet, lately erected, and well suited for a merchant's or ship broker's office"</i> [Argus, 18 February]; ditto, Queen Street, Melbourne, 1854; he into a Limited Liability Partnership with John Robert McCOMAS and George WHARTON, as <i>"HENEY, McCOMAS and Another,"</i> 1 July 1854, in <i>"... the business of Candle Manufacturers and other business of a similar nature... at the Salt Water River, near Melbourne, on premises lately belonging to Messrs BENN and Coy"</i> [Argus, 5 July]; Charles drowned when he </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">went early in the morning of 19 February 1855, <i>".. from his residence at Kensington,</i></span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i> to bathe in the Salt Water River, near the punt,"</i> his body not being recovered until the following afternoon [Argus, Wednesday 21 February; and Freemans Dublin Journal, 2 June]; he was buried at Melbourne Cemetery, Methodist Section 4, which has a stone inscribed:</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>"Erected in Memory of Charles Sibthorpe HENEY, formerly of Dublin, and late Merchant of this City, accidentally drowned Saltwater River, 17 February 1855, aged 26 years. Also John Robert McCOMAS, partner business above, died 15 October 1859, aged 28 years."</em></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. Elizabeth Anne HENEY; she died at "Kent," Auburn Road, Hawthorne (Victoria), 16 September 1918, aged 92 years [Spectator and Methodist Chronicle, 25 September]; youngest daughter, of 47 Upper Leeson Street, when she was married at St Peter's Parish Church, Dublin, 30 November 1854, to Edward Leslie GAULT, of Trillick, County Tyrone [Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent, Saturday 2 December], by License and by Archibald GAULT, witnessed by Hen. P. HENEY and R. GAULT [irishgenealogy.ie]; they emigrated to Manchester; of 3 Charlotte Street, Manchester, Calico Printer, April 1860, Grand Jury List [Manchester Courier, 7 April], and then to Australia; they were at 164 Upper Brook Street, Manchester, 1861 Census, Edward aged 33, Yarn and Cloth Commission Agent, Elizabeth aged 32, both born Ireland, their two children and his sister Elizabeth A. GAULT (aged 23, born Ireland); he died at Lennox Street, Hawthorn, Melbourne, 3 December 1871, <i>"... aged 43, late of Manchester, fourth son of Robert GAULT of Trillick, County Tyrone, Ireland"</i> [Argus, Tuesday 5 December].</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Elizabeth and Edward had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> a. Robert Charles GAULT, born in Ireland, about 1855; aged 5, with his parents, 1861; .</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> b. Henry Heney GAULT, born at 164 Upper Brook Street, Manchester, 29 July 1858, and was baptized by Rev A. GAULT, at St Saviour's, Chorlton-upon-Medlock, 24 February; he was married in Victoria to Mabel WOODALL; they had issue:</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> i. Gladys Lillian GAULT, born at Malvern, 1889 #14064, a twin.</em></span></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> ii. Winifred Doris GAULT, born at Malvern, 1889 #14065, the other twin.</span></em></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> iii. Hilda GAULT, born at Malvern, 1891; she died at Mont. Park, 1951, aged 60 years.</span></em></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> iv. Marjory GAULT, born at Malvern, 1892.</em></span></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> v. Henry Woodall GAULT, born at Malvern, 1897; he died in Melbourne, 1988, aged 91.</span></em></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> c. Hannah Sibthorpe GAULT, born in Ireland, about 1859-61; aged 1, with her parents, 1861; she died in New Zealand, 1953, aged 94 years; she was married in Victoria, 1893, to Alfred Ernest BARROWCLOUGH; they had issue:</em></span></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> i. Harold Eric BARROWCLOUGH, born in N.Z., 1894; he was married in N.Z., 1921, to Mary Ogilvie DUTHIE.</span></em></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> ii. Myles Edward BARROWCLOUGH. born in N.Z., 19 May 1895; he was married in N.Z., 1921, to Jessie Simpson DUNNE.</span></em></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> iii. Frederick Gault BARROWCLOUGH, born in N.Z., 27 November 1898; he was married firstly, in N.Z., 1927, to Mary Adair HUMPHRIES; he was married secondly, also in N.Z., 1935, to Hilda Mayborn JAMIESON.</span></em></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> iv. Charles Byers BARROWCLOUGH, born in N.Z., 29 November 1900; he was married in N.Z., 1930, to Lillian Wilhelmina Mayborn SMITH.</span></em></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> v. Elizabeth Anne BARROWCLOUGH, born in N.Z., 1905.</span></em></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> d. Elizabeth Frances GAULT, born at 164 Upper Brook Street, 10 May 1861, and baptized by Rev A. GAULT, at St Saviour's, Chortlon-upon-Medlock, 4 January 1862; she died at the residence of her brother, 7 March 1878, "... second daughter of Mr E.L. GAULT, formerly of Manchester, late of this city, aged 16" [Argus, 8 March], and was buried at Melbourne General Cemetery.</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> e. Edward Leslie GAULT, born at 164 Upper Brook Street, 1 April 1863, and baptized by Rev A. GAULT, St Saviour's, Chotlton-upon-Medlock, 10 May; he died at Warrandyte, December 1954, aged 92, "... one of Melbourne's pioneer eye specialists" [Obituary, Melbourne Herald, 20 December]; as the third son, he was married at the Wesleyan Church, Malvern, 15 October 1898, to Gertrude WOODALL, third daughter of Rev W. and Ellen GOODALL [Australasian, 5 November]; they had issue:</em></span></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> i. Adelaide Gertrude GAULT, born in Melbourne, about 1899; she died at Box Hill, 1977, aged 77.</span></em></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> ii. Edward Woodall GAULT, born at Carlton, 1903.</span></em></div>
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<em><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"> iii. Kathleen Elizabeth GAULT, born at Malvern, 1905.</span></em></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> f. James Archibald GAULT, born about 1866; he died at Mentone, 1 February 1938, aged 72, "... beloved husband of Edith, and loving father of Margaret Jean (Mrs KIDD) and Hugh" [Argus, 2 February].</em><br />
<em><span style="font-family: "times";"> g. Frederick Samuel GAULT, born about 1868; he died in Victoria in 1870, aged 2 years.</span></em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> h. Mary Louisa Beggs GAULT, born in Victoria, 1870; youngest daughter; she was married at the Wesleyan Church, Armadale, 5 December 1896, to Atherton Henry BATH, the eldest son of Rev Henry BATH of Launceston.</em></span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><em><br /></em></span></div>
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<b><u><span style="font-family: "times";"><em><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"></span></span></span></em></span><br /></u></b></div>
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><i><b><u>A POSSIBLE BROTHER - WILLIAM HENEY</u>.</b></i></span></span></span></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></span></span></span>
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></span></span></span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">William HENEY; he was of St George's Parish when he was married at the Parish Church, Dublin, 4 February 1826, to Margaret WILLIAMS, of St Thomas Parish, the marriage witnessed by Arthur WILLIAMS, Hen. HENEY and James EDMISTON [irishgeneaolgy.ie]; they had issue:</span></span></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">1. Arthur Frederick HENEY, baptized at St George's Parish Church, 7 January 1827, from 15 Synnott Place [irishgenealogy.ie]. Possibly the next?</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">William HENEY, born about 1795; he was buried at St George's Parish Church, 8 February 1855, aged 59 years, of Oak Lodge, Booterstown [irishgenealogy.ie].</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"></span><br /></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">Ann HENEY, born about 1776; she was buried at St George's Parish Church, 23 October 1846, aged 70 years, of Johnson's Court [irishgenealogy.ie], marital status not recorded. If married or a widow, perhaps the mother of William above, and perhaps even of Henry???</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">_________________________________________________________________________</span></span></span></em></span></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><b>* * * THE FOLLOWING WILL EVENTUALLY BE INCORPORATED INTO THE ABOVE * * *</b></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">From</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> notes I have recently despatched to a descendant:<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br clear="none" /><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> </span></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. Miss Lucinda SIBTHORPE was buried in the Churchyard of St Patrick's Cathedral, 18 August 1834 (likewise very likely to be related, as Henry above in 1830).</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">8. John SIBTHORPE was a Representative of the Dublin Circuit at the Methodist Conference of 1835 [Methodist Conference Minutes].<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br clear="none" /></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">9. John SIBTHORPE and Henry James SIBTHORPE were two of five members of a Committee of Dublin Methodists who formed a joint party to a Deed of Mortgage, dated 31 August 1840 [Volume 20, Page 190, Dublin Deeds Registry], which was granted by William MAGUIRE (Senior), concerning lands and dwelling houses in St Patrick's Street, Dublin, the deed witnessed by William MAGUIRE Junior, Solicitor, of Abbey Street, Dublin (Hannah HENEY's husband of four years) .</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">10. Dr Henry James SIBTHORPE, M.D., L.K.Q.G.P., Esq, died on 6 September 1876, aged 71 [Obituary notice, Primitive Wesleyan Methodist Magazine, January-February 1877, page 55], <em>"...suddenly, at Hume Street, Dublin"</em> [Belfast Newsletter, 8 September].</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">I also find, from a revised search of church records on the <a href="http://www.irishgenealogy.ie/" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="color: #196ad4;" target="_blank">http://www.irishgenealogy.ie</a> website, some additional details for Dublin SIBTHROPs:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">And two others who may have been related:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. SIBTHROP, buried 23 August 1778, from Walkers Alley.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. Mr SIBTHROP, buried 1778, from Walchers Alley.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">There were even earlier Dublin families of SIBTHORPs:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Joseph and Jane SIBTHORP had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Ann SIBTHORP, baptised at St Audoen's Parish Church, 18 March 1716.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Edward SIBTHORP, baptised there on 26 January 1718.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. SIBTHORP, buried there, 23 May 1719 (perhaps one of the above two children, or one of the parents?).</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Thomas an Ellenor SIBTHORP had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Anne SIBTHORP, baptised at St Nicholas Without, 15 September 1734.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Jane SIBTHORP, baptised at St Nicholas Without, 3 October 1736.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Robert SIBTHORP; he was married by Consistorial License, at St Anne's Parish Church, Dublin, 9 April 1743, to Anne FOSTER; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Elizabeth SIBTHORP, born at Spring G... Lane, and baptised at St Mark's Parish Church, 15 August 1751.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Stephen SIBTHORP, baptised at St Mary's Parish Church, 15 October 1756 (father Robert, but mother Mary Anne).</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">There were three burials in the Church Records which were not burials, but instead Confirmations:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"At a confirmation held by his Grace William, Lord Arch-Bishop of Dublin, in St Werburgh;s Church, on 13th April 1824, the following young persons were presented and confirmed: </i><i>...</i></span></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"35. Sarah SIBTHORPE....12 Cork Hill.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> Eliza SIBTHORPE......12 Cork Hill.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> Henry SIBTHORPE....12 Cork Hill..."</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">__________________________________________________________________________</span></i><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><em><b>BIOGRAPHICAL ENTRIES FROM THE DICTIONARY OF IRISH ARCHITECTS, 1720-1916.</b></em></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: medium;"><em>HENRY SIBTHORPE AND SON.</em></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Decorators, glass merchants, ironmongers, plumbers, marble and stone merchants, of Dublin. According to their advertisement in </span><i style="font-family: Times, "Times New Roman", serif;">The Industries of Dublin</i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> of 1888,</span><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">(1)</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> the firm was founded 'at the remote date of 1747'. In 1759 a Henry Sibthorpe was admitted a freeman of Dublin by virtue of service to a glazier named Richard Eaton; he was presumably the Henry Sibthorpe who had a glazier's business at</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> </span><a href="https://maps.google.com/?q=12+Copper+Alley&entry=gmail&source=g" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="color: #196ad4; font-family: Times, "Times New Roman", serif;" target="_blank">12 Copper Alley</a><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">in 1775.</span><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">(2)</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> He was also very probably the father of another Henry Sibthorpe who was admitted a Freeman of the City of Dublin by virtue of birth as a member of the Smith's Guild at Michaelmas 1786.</span><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">(3)</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> The younger Henry had a glazier's business at 18 Exchange Street. He remained at this address until 1814, but by the following year he had changed the description of his trade to 'painter and glazier' and had moved to</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> </span><a href="https://maps.google.com/?q=12+Cork+Hill&entry=gmail&source=g" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="color: #196ad4; font-family: Times, "Times New Roman", serif;" target="_blank">12 Cork Hill</a><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">. He died in 1824.</span><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">(4)</span></div>
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<span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">The directories indicate that before his death Henry Sibthorpe had taken a son into partnership. The firm of 'Henry Sibthorpe & Son' continued to trade under this name for about a century and a half until it eventually closed in the 1970s. It remained in Cork Hill until at least 1883, first expanding into Castle Street, then acquiring a marble yard in Great Brunswick Street and building a store in Upper Exchange Street on the site where Henry Sibthorpe had had his original premises. Later in the 1880s it moved to a new showroom and offices at <a href="https://maps.google.com/?q=33+Molesworth+Street&entry=gmail&source=g" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="color: #196ad4;" target="_blank">33 Molesworth Street</a>. By this time, according to <i>The Industries of Dublin</i>, the firm was employing 'a constant staff of about three to four hundred men' and enjoying a trade 'of colossal dimensions'. This probably represents the peak of the firm's activities, for the Great Brunswick Street marble yard was given up within ten years, making way for St Andrew's Boys' School. The store was moved from Exchange Street to Fishamble Street during the same period.</span></div>
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<span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">As the firm did not change its name for well over a century, it is difficult to identify the individual members of the family who were successively in charge of it. If LUKE SIBTHORPE <a class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490searchlink" href="https://www.dia.ie/architects/search/LUKE%20SIBTHORPE" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="border-bottom-color: rgb(110, 117, 143); border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(110, 117, 143); color: #192a5d; font-weight: bold;" target="_blank" title="LUKE SIBTHORPE"> </a> was Henry Sibthorpe's brother, as seems possible, his family could also have been involved in it. The son who was taken into partnership by Henry Sibthorpe circa 1826 may have been the John Sibthorpe who appears fleetingly at <a href="https://maps.google.com/?q=12+Cork+Hill&entry=gmail&source=g" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="color: #196ad4;" target="_blank">12 Cork Hill</a> in <i>Wilson's Dublin Directory </i>for 1826 or the William Sibthorpe of Cork Hill who was a subscriber to William Stitt's <i>The Practical Architect's Ready Assistant; or Builder's Complete Companion </i>(Dublin, 1819). Thomas S. Sibthorpe, later a JP, was probably head of the firm in the 1860s; his addresses were given as Cork Hill, Great Brunswick Street and Leeson Park when he was elected a non-professional associate of the RIAI on 21 January 1869, having been proposed by JAMES HIGGINS OWEN <a class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490searchlink" href="https://www.dia.ie/architects/search/JAMES%20HIGGINS%20OWEN" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="border-bottom-color: rgb(110, 117, 143); border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(110, 117, 143); color: #192a5d; font-weight: bold;" target="_blank" title="JAMES HIGGINS OWEN"> </a> and JAMES BELL<a class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490searchlink" href="https://www.dia.ie/architects/search/JAMES%20BELL" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="border-bottom-color: rgb(110, 117, 143); border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(110, 117, 143); color: #192a5d; font-weight: bold;" target="_blank" title="JAMES BELL"> </a> , seconded by EDWARD HENRY CARSON <a class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490searchlink" href="https://www.dia.ie/architects/search/EDWARD%20HENRY%20CARSON" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="border-bottom-color: rgb(110, 117, 143); border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(110, 117, 143); color: #192a5d; font-weight: bold;" target="_blank" title="EDWARD HENRY CARSON"> </a> and CHARLES GEOGHEGAN.<a class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490searchlink" href="https://www.dia.ie/architects/search/CHARLES%20GEOGHEGAN." rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="border-bottom-color: rgb(110, 117, 143); border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(110, 117, 143); color: #192a5d; font-weight: bold;" target="_blank" title="CHARLES GEOGHEGAN."> </a> <span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(5)</span> In the 1870s the firm was headed by John Sibthorpe, who died suddenly on 21 April 1878 and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery.<span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(6)</span> Later the firm was headed by another John Sibthorpe, also a JP, who became president of the Master Painter's Association of Ireland in 1902, delivering his inaugural address on 'The Connection in the Middle Ages between Architects, Painters, and Decorators'.<span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(7)</span> This is probably the same person as the octogenarian John Sibthorpe who was consulted by C.P. Curran when he was preparing his book on Dublin plasterwork.<span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(8)</span> Draughtsmen employed by the firm included H.S. Rogerson, active in the first two decades of the 20th century, and Con O'Sullivan, active in the 1930s.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">After the firm closed in the 1970s, the contents of the office were thrown out. Much of this material was rescued from a skip and subsequently dispersed. Some of the drawings which were retrieved are in the Irish Architectural Archive, Acc. 78/22, Acc. 96/145, Acc. 2001/142, Acc. 2002/33; there are also some photographs of the firm's work in the Reading Room Box Files and a number of 35mm. slides of churches, Acc. 2000/46. Written material from the same source - correspondence, letter books, ledgers, receipts and other documents - dating from 1823 to 1963 is in the National Archives, Acc. 1046 (photocopy of handlist in IAA, RP.B.22.6).</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">See WORKS, for works of which the Irish Architectural Archive has drawings and photographs only.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-weight: 700;">References</span> </span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">All information not otherwise accounted for is from Wilson's, Post Office, Pettigrew and Oulton's and Thom's Dublin directories. <br clear="none" /><br clear="none" /><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(1)</span> <em>The Industries of Dublin</em> (Spencer Blackett, London, n.d.), 138. <br clear="none" /><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(2)</span> <em>Wilson's Dublin Directory</em> (1775) (information from Dr Nessa Roche. <br clear="none" /><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(3)</span> 'An alphabetical list of the Freemen of the City of Dublin, 1774-1824', <em>The Irish Ancestor</em> XV (1983), Nos. 1 & 2, 110; a child of a Henry Sibthorpe of Werburgh Street was baptised at St Werburgh's church in 1761 (Rev. S.C. Hughes, <i>The Church of S. Werburgh, Dublin</i> (1889), 104). <br clear="none" /><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(4)</span> Register of St Werburgh's church,<a href="http://www.irishgenealogy.ie/" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="color: #196ad4;" target="_blank">www.irishgenealogy.ie</a> (last visited Jun 2010). The burials of Eliza and Sarah Sibthorpe, also of <a href="https://maps.google.com/?q=12+Cork+Hill&entry=gmail&source=g" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="color: #196ad4;" target="_blank">12 Cork Hill</a>, are recorded on the same page. He was described as 'the late Henry Sibthorpe' in 1830 when his former apprentice Henry Martin was refused admission to the franchise because he had converted to Catholicism (information from Dr Nessa Roche). <br clear="none" /><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(5)</span> <a class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490abbrev_help" href="https://www.blogger.com/null" shape="rect" style="border-bottom-color: rgb(110, 117, 143); border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(110, 117, 143); color: #192a5d; font-weight: bold;" title="Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland">RIAI</a> general meeting minutes, 17 Dec 1868, 226; council meeting minutes, , 7 Nov 1868, 116; general meeting minutes, 21 Jan,20 May 1869, 227,231. <br clear="none" /><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(6)</span> <i>Ireland Calendar of Wills and Administrations, 1858-1920</i>, database with images, <i>FamilySearch</i> (<a href="https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KZ54-QM4" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" style="color: #196ad4;" target="_blank">https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KZ54-QM4</a> : accessed 3 Dec 2015); <i>Irish Ecclesiastical Gazette</i> 20, no. 230, 1 May 1878, 137, which describes him as having 'a kind heart, discrimination in the exercise of his benevolence' and 'in all concerns where judgment and charity could be brought in requisition,,,the sense of half-a-dozen men'. <br clear="none" /><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(7)</span> <i>Irish Times</i>, 7, 8 Jan 1902. The <a class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490abbrev_help" href="https://www.blogger.com/null" shape="rect" style="border-bottom-color: rgb(110, 117, 143); border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(110, 117, 143); color: #192a5d; font-weight: bold;" title="Irish Architectural Archive">IAA</a> has a photograph of a salver presented to Mr and Mrs John Sibthorpe by the Association in Feb 1935. <br clear="none" /><span class="ydp2b990fa5yiv1841548109ydp2d918798yiv4422960310m_-7038614695485324648m_-9195956242216102117ydpe505d490footnote">(8)</span> Se</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">e C.P. Curran, </span><em style="font-family: Times, "Times New Roman", serif;">Dublin Decorative Plasterwork of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries</em><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> (1967), 14,37,74,76.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><em><b><span style="font-size: x-small;">LUKE SIBTHORP</span>.</b></em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Painter and glazier, of Dublin. Luke Sibthorpe was admitted a Freeman of the City of Dublin by virtue of Birth as a member of the Smith's Guild at Michaelmas 1786;<span class="ydp77c340acfootnote">(1)</span> it seems possible that the Henry Sibthorpe who was admitted to the franchise at the same time was his brother (see HENRY SIBTHORPE &<a class="ydp77c340acsearchlink" href="https://www.dia.ie/architects/search/HENRY%20SIBTHORPE%20&" rel="nofollow" style="background-color: transparent; border-bottom-color: rgb(110, 117, 143); border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(110, 117, 143); color: #192a5d; font-weight: bold;" target="_blank" title="HENRY SIBTHORPE &"> </a> amp; SON). He was subsequently in business as a glazier at 1 Palace St. He is recorded as carrying out some work for the Corporation and represented his guild on the Common Council of Dublin between 1808 and 1819.<span class="ydp77c340acfootnote">(2)</span> He died on 14 March 1827. Three of his sons, Thomas, Charles and Henry J. Sibthorpe were admitted to the Dublin franchise. A fourth, Luke Homan Sibthorpe, emigrated to New South Wales. Luke Sibthorpe was a subscriber to Humphrey's <i>Irish Builder's Guide</i> (1813) and to William Stitt's <i>The Practical Architect's Ready Assistant; or Builder's Complete Companion</i> (Dublin, 1819).</span></div>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;"><span style="background-color: white; font-weight: 700;">References</span><span style="background-color: white;"> </span></span><br />
<div style="background-color: white; font-size: 16px; margin-bottom: 10px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">All information in this entry not otherwise attributed was supplied by Dr Nessa Roche and Luke Sibthorpe's great-great-great-grandson, Graham Sibthorpe, Newcastle, New South Wales, Jul 2010 and Jul 2011.<br /><span class="ydp77c340acfootnote">(1)</span> 'An alphabetical list of the Freemen of the City of Dublin, 1774-1824', <em>The Irish Ancestor</em> XV (1983), Nos. 1 & 2, 110.<br /><span class="ydp77c340acfootnote">(2)</span> <em>CARD</em> XVI, 514,515,517.</span></div>
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</div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-73812393790725247232019-04-11T20:16:00.001-07:002022-09-02T20:48:00.454-07:00The Wesleyan (or Old Methodist) Portion of Rookwood Cemetery.<br />
Haslem's Creek Cemetery (or the Rookwood Necropolis) was opened for burials in January 1867. Initially comprising 200 acres, it was substantially extended, both to the east and to the south, in the 1880s, with an additional 550 acres.<br />
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<i>[The original cast-iron Marker Post, facing Necropolis Circuit.]</i></div>
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The original Methodist (or Wesleyan) portion occupied the middle part of the western half, sandwiched between the Old Catholic and the Old Presbyterian portions, and extending from the western boundary to the ring road around the original Mortuary Receiving Station.<br />
Indeed, the road into the cemetery from the western entry (Necropolis Drive) proceeds in a serpentine fashion to the mortuary circle, and forms the actual boundary with the Catholic portion to the north; and the exit road from the mortuary circle back to the western exit (Cohen Avenue) proceeds in reverse serpentine fashion, and forms the boundary with the Presbyterian portion to the south.<br />
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All the original roads were laid out in a non-linear fashion - with the single exception of the boundary between the Old Catholic and Old Anglican portions, which ran in a straight line for over half it's length, due north from the centre of the mortuary circle towards the main western Railway line - it is now known as Williams Drive.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhHMy7VcTPoF8tl8z_pM_SeuM-fP0RxtSei72lJ7MIOJZSaSUxFv24joBLsV_sTtj1zbCRSKtch-mfAz6MD13n5Mi0BZb-uHkp4zkmY-2r0mmlfRvycrlbFLzo3MqMs2PxbVyEbkc3hw6Ue/s1600/IMG_5177.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1075" data-original-width="1600" height="428" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhHMy7VcTPoF8tl8z_pM_SeuM-fP0RxtSei72lJ7MIOJZSaSUxFv24joBLsV_sTtj1zbCRSKtch-mfAz6MD13n5Mi0BZb-uHkp4zkmY-2r0mmlfRvycrlbFLzo3MqMs2PxbVyEbkc3hw6Ue/s640/IMG_5177.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<i>[Plan of proposed section layouts, Haslem's Creek Cemetery, August 1868 - courtesy of State Records N.S.W., Ref CGS 8210, and reproduced by the Society of Australian Genealogists, Sydney in their guide to the Transcriptions they made of all visible gravestones during the 1980s.]</i></div>
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The hour-glass shape of the Old Methodist portion either led to, or had been the result of, an internal Section plan that comprised a number of circles. These appear, numbered from east to west, as:</div>
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i. two adjacent circles near the mortuary circle, numbered 1A (north side) and 1D (south side), with a single row of inward facing "perimeter" plots between both of these two circles and the boundary roads, numbered 1B (north) and 1C (south).</div>
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ii. a larger single circle containing Sections 2A (north-eastern quadrant) and 2B (south-western quadrant), separated by a serpentine "infill" run of Section 2C which numbers on from lower 2C plot numbers in the outer triangle to the north between 1A and 2A, with Section 2D being the northern triangle between 1D and 2B/C.</div>
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iii. then another large circle to the west containing sections 3A and part of 3B, with Section 3B continuing into the outer triangles and perimeter rows on both sides.</div>
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iv. finally ending in two smaller circles numbered 4A and 4B, balancing 1A and 1D, on the western edge of the portion.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgxXNTk3DmQB41cygAhoyjYGu1bHpM40RcztIxYKnRmHV7nP2fZvOEXjfpTcvJ27c8YXAs1Ak7j4gDZftylx_I9sDt656oK6PZLIP0PxKIuNT5-2gC9dnufNy1eS-hgm9EMd3s0Fk0-vbh3/s1600/Capture.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="507" data-original-width="252" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgxXNTk3DmQB41cygAhoyjYGu1bHpM40RcztIxYKnRmHV7nP2fZvOEXjfpTcvJ27c8YXAs1Ak7j4gDZftylx_I9sDt656oK6PZLIP0PxKIuNT5-2gC9dnufNy1eS-hgm9EMd3s0Fk0-vbh3/s640/Capture.JPG" width="318" /></a></div>
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<em>[An enlargement of the Old Methodist Portion of the 1868 State Records Plan, adapted by Graham LEWIS for the Society of Australian Genealogists (S.A.G.), and subject of their copyright, Sydney, 2002. Image downloaded from the Society's C.D.-Rom version of their 1980's transcription of all standing headstones, and used here with their permission.]</em></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhIwRMBzrJj6liNXuXNemdPEAau1qipQ_RG2ha_t2oIl2Kl2yErwHIh2pjcRt1n6Kk3ChIAWSF6IetxZDGP6wwYOE_l7xPeub0jo_U0MvlpVa3BQQGXcQZ8gJJQc5QWkWlsZEgWqvAw6utX/s1600/IMG_5138.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="1125" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhIwRMBzrJj6liNXuXNemdPEAau1qipQ_RG2ha_t2oIl2Kl2yErwHIh2pjcRt1n6Kk3ChIAWSF6IetxZDGP6wwYOE_l7xPeub0jo_U0MvlpVa3BQQGXcQZ8gJJQc5QWkWlsZEgWqvAw6utX/s640/IMG_5138.JPG" width="450" /></a></div>
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<i> [I have made some additional annotations, with colour coding for my convenience.]</i></div>
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The current cemetery "plan" issued by the Cemetery Office (see below) is quite vague about the exact locations of section boundaries within each of the larger circles.</div>
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Indeed, over the last two years or so, I have tried to locate plots in Sections 2A, 2B and 2C, for the purpose of fulfilling gravestone requests, and also empty plots, for memorials on the www.findagrave.com web-site - and failed.</div>
The result of this failure is that I have now photographed most of the standing and fallen stones with readable inscriptions, and created a map of the large circle comprising Sections 2A, 2B and 2C.<br />
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It rather looks like when it was originally laid out, it contained only 2A and 2B, and that these were separated by a serpentine pathway that ran west from the south east quarter point, curved to the north through the centre, and then curved back to the west to the north-west quarter point.<br />
And that some time shortly after, or perhaps when the whole section was filling up, that the management decided to infill the pathway with extra plots.<br />
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The arrangement, as shown in the attached plan, reveals why it had been so hard to find individual plot locations:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhGW1ThNsl34dx-inUCwTxCLbrJEek9-NM3tLysBi7Ft2Y-CNPuOpdS-ulMq_Rs9tjImuwAfOV1AMFrlumt9odprYbtZXBNzyVMDibfpOKvDG39BYJKTit5astt4AcKfxg68qMbGALEIUdV/s1600/Capture.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="443" data-original-width="678" height="260" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhGW1ThNsl34dx-inUCwTxCLbrJEek9-NM3tLysBi7Ft2Y-CNPuOpdS-ulMq_Rs9tjImuwAfOV1AMFrlumt9odprYbtZXBNzyVMDibfpOKvDG39BYJKTit5astt4AcKfxg68qMbGALEIUdV/s400/Capture.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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<i>[The Old Methodist Section plan in current use on the Rookwood Cemetery web-site, </i><br />
<i>showing less than clear Section layouts, particularly in the Section 2 Circle.]</i><br />
<i>____________________________________________________________________________</i></div>
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><br /></i></span>
<span style="font-size: large;"><i>CLERGY SECTION.</i></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_lY696gsbT9KcePZkr6uvPBVeMHABR17FK3hMZlSFye_35m19VGyXhJTyVJbSEaMYqhGPvOyxWQmbQH9VgKzePPAPIq8yaDHHmMisENnnOMJ-ulv-75SOITj6RKJ1_aA2gZTr-D9iEywE/s1600/IMG_5166.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_lY696gsbT9KcePZkr6uvPBVeMHABR17FK3hMZlSFye_35m19VGyXhJTyVJbSEaMYqhGPvOyxWQmbQH9VgKzePPAPIq8yaDHHmMisENnnOMJ-ulv-75SOITj6RKJ1_aA2gZTr-D9iEywE/s640/IMG_5166.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<em>[Photo taken facing west-south-west. Clergy Section in the foreground. Section 1D Circle is in the distance to the left behind the trees.]</em></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: large;">SECTION 1A.</span></i><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKkNrwSMckBGdc57tFS2VDU7tCrVOuvavswEkLqGGsFwTNoJ5Lb2d4CYYDK5drJo0I1E5Opk38f53cYGcDyYOwOvqN3XSs3Z1e77MwasKn40XkgAI0uYVB8IYC4IJHaWZzb3HD48wopGzU/s1600/IMG_5163.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKkNrwSMckBGdc57tFS2VDU7tCrVOuvavswEkLqGGsFwTNoJ5Lb2d4CYYDK5drJo0I1E5Opk38f53cYGcDyYOwOvqN3XSs3Z1e77MwasKn40XkgAI0uYVB8IYC4IJHaWZzb3HD48wopGzU/s640/IMG_5163.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<em>[Photo taken facing west-north west. Start of Section 1B Perimeter on the far right.]</em></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 1B.</i></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHavnU-lMu82Au7LgqG7-5MZO8BHWITrCqya4HK0alevSqmqffJA_A4AC04kizwuRYAK1s3i5Ny2maHEg78evrIly5lH9gJv__dM073O9mdGFahevnbkgDLP03TFnwDMiyfFOsJkgKxKuc/s1600/IMG_5167.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHavnU-lMu82Au7LgqG7-5MZO8BHWITrCqya4HK0alevSqmqffJA_A4AC04kizwuRYAK1s3i5Ny2maHEg78evrIly5lH9gJv__dM073O9mdGFahevnbkgDLP03TFnwDMiyfFOsJkgKxKuc/s640/IMG_5167.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<em>[Photo taken facing north-north-west, with the top of Section 1A Circle on the left behind the foliage.]</em></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 1C.</i></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgmnGq89IRjPuq95pSr4upmclWtAqe_dKtG_5OB4RNqJtxYKeQw3ot9J9TcW1-E-mf6hrTFomcoeknDA4bJT_HhxG0aytr3RqwWm3txtF7rNikc82wn5nelTWFd_bas7YOpJP0mDZ2XKpAN/s1600/IMG_5164.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="683" data-original-width="1024" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgmnGq89IRjPuq95pSr4upmclWtAqe_dKtG_5OB4RNqJtxYKeQw3ot9J9TcW1-E-mf6hrTFomcoeknDA4bJT_HhxG0aytr3RqwWm3txtF7rNikc82wn5nelTWFd_bas7YOpJP0mDZ2XKpAN/s640/IMG_5164.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<em>[Photo taken facing almost due south, with the Section 1D Circle on the right, behind the foliage.]</em></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 1D.</i></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgf_h3bd2yj3vyu7w0cvzS16T_qQnJ6fI_UnzW9phrjanuea_GzV0ffK1BN-x8aVO2LKRiW2lWJnVdo0XWnNjfqFoG6rFHw-v1gQfykhkVxXlTwhyBJuX7gbWUVd9m9pEJ2DMu1ypoqtBFB/s1600/IMG_5165.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="683" data-original-width="1024" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgf_h3bd2yj3vyu7w0cvzS16T_qQnJ6fI_UnzW9phrjanuea_GzV0ffK1BN-x8aVO2LKRiW2lWJnVdo0XWnNjfqFoG6rFHw-v1gQfykhkVxXlTwhyBJuX7gbWUVd9m9pEJ2DMu1ypoqtBFB/s640/IMG_5165.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<em>[Photo taken facing almost due west, over the edge of Section 1C Perimeter in the foreground.]</em><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2OZUuFAymbMFETDx8AZ9mjbIYK5jJbHJblsZlrWdWZeIzRhn-1QRrZBt3WhOV0PyL5Z6sAdWFmetIdnjWYHT3Ujkg0KSlopQyEaI5WTkRc1zUBWuOCmrmK4_KXj_yoRmdzV3GBF8kjApp/s1600/IMG_8625.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2OZUuFAymbMFETDx8AZ9mjbIYK5jJbHJblsZlrWdWZeIzRhn-1QRrZBt3WhOV0PyL5Z6sAdWFmetIdnjWYHT3Ujkg0KSlopQyEaI5WTkRc1zUBWuOCmrmK4_KXj_yoRmdzV3GBF8kjApp/s640/IMG_8625.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<em>[Same location, facing north-west, and a little closer than above.]</em></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTIONS 2A AND 2B.</i></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgEIqkSvqEpmcRN0Xq4KbQEotvQytKNftRYxfqLAFyHpdCXFaIDpefb_Mnb1-VEwnpBJUqqNl4QuK6w9ELUWXY_I8KENevNEobxEty3mDrtg91_HRhcqzW1Px2Y5tXSOIkzcqCfkKuPd9Ci/s1600/IMG_5168.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgEIqkSvqEpmcRN0Xq4KbQEotvQytKNftRYxfqLAFyHpdCXFaIDpefb_Mnb1-VEwnpBJUqqNl4QuK6w9ELUWXY_I8KENevNEobxEty3mDrtg91_HRhcqzW1Px2Y5tXSOIkzcqCfkKuPd9Ci/s640/IMG_5168.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<em>[The "Friends of Rookwood" Memorial Rose Garden. The large Section 2A and 2B Circle is in the distance, across the intervening grassed pathway.]</em></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiQiwsi0VCX-epIZKgOxTxHVnrwMb7fjWuC__s5Aq1OtrDVjWN6uGUA2VnPmKadmQSpyE7wgkpUxhOMVUWyH7Qs5zxvNHHwgnV9MVFXGg4at6zgnzEZb5ME0fDUSfUjzH0If9AhGSoQmCaP/s1600/IMG_7619.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiQiwsi0VCX-epIZKgOxTxHVnrwMb7fjWuC__s5Aq1OtrDVjWN6uGUA2VnPmKadmQSpyE7wgkpUxhOMVUWyH7Qs5zxvNHHwgnV9MVFXGg4at6zgnzEZb5ME0fDUSfUjzH0If9AhGSoQmCaP/s640/IMG_7619.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<i>Above - Southern end of Row 1 (east) of the large 2 circle, showing about six plots comprising Section 2C in-fill, with one of the first older plots in Section 2A on the far right.</i></div>
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<i>Below - Detail of the drainage sump in the centre of the above photo, showing the corner of the southern-most infill plot, with the drainage sump, at the start of the continuing original brick gutter heading off to the left down-hill. This part may be original, and probably very close to where the pointy end of the original section 2B commenced.</i></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgA6ITEdCdpgRaiak1yUBJQtdC2gmLnRiOdciKAsgcZGJ2PqXE1qms_73y58aprx_aNvBVO87GnnFDvU6p65yzvTmqSXlnQZXFYgMEHZZynJ9zzgpEFF99qPBQfpaUwyfP3YPhyphenhyphenUREQtJBY/s1600/IMG_7620.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgA6ITEdCdpgRaiak1yUBJQtdC2gmLnRiOdciKAsgcZGJ2PqXE1qms_73y58aprx_aNvBVO87GnnFDvU6p65yzvTmqSXlnQZXFYgMEHZZynJ9zzgpEFF99qPBQfpaUwyfP3YPhyphenhyphenUREQtJBY/s640/IMG_7620.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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However, it would seem that this sump may not have been part of the original layout - as both parts of the pointy end would have led downhill., away from that point, rendering a sump as being superfluous.</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh5T-sfpteoK3CxbhM8nl02Rm9tp576sF3JCf5l-05yy45F_xs0VPimfvIj3tZ4RHZTEFB6bycucSnhgcl0S7xlWo1TCrs-0a-zxQswjNeWgiil-8FxYAKGVIg4Gbx5yFlVP65mSYms1k8L/s1600/IMG_8622.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh5T-sfpteoK3CxbhM8nl02Rm9tp576sF3JCf5l-05yy45F_xs0VPimfvIj3tZ4RHZTEFB6bycucSnhgcl0S7xlWo1TCrs-0a-zxQswjNeWgiil-8FxYAKGVIg4Gbx5yFlVP65mSYms1k8L/s640/IMG_8622.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<i>[Aftermath of storm damage in early February 2020 - a fallen large conifer tree in the Section 2 Circle 2C infill, partially removed. </i></div>
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<i>Photo taken facing south-west with Section 2D Triangle in the middle distance]</i></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj3FBqJQRoLtOfMIXSKL6ApeCe5wIJKW2pJerNpWh8Ocy-ay7u7gUmFQGgAaOJMhucQb3TU2_EYDqGyQAYgd5K0w5-em09SeGIo07qDNiDJohtSYwZPrk0TtRJuTPCcV_PR9a0VUxMtNSBg/s1600/IMG_8624.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj3FBqJQRoLtOfMIXSKL6ApeCe5wIJKW2pJerNpWh8Ocy-ay7u7gUmFQGgAaOJMhucQb3TU2_EYDqGyQAYgd5K0w5-em09SeGIo07qDNiDJohtSYwZPrk0TtRJuTPCcV_PR9a0VUxMtNSBg/s640/IMG_8624.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<i>[Another tree felled in the storm in Section 2 Circle, 2B, south side, with most of the debris cleaned up, and the tilted stump remaining stood back up to near vertical. Photo taken facing north east.]</i></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhXaUDdnKmz_V5z1PYjF9bKyoo6oEHfJnr5LfBQw17YeKmZdLlCZ9NQRT5eksQdjd5NUdJ_1QytrYlvbMg0UNMC9D3VykigG-yAZBD5-cn2w1ifFi0HuxOFqS3KxqHzFzM148wl5IRmwT54/s1600/IMG_7622.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhXaUDdnKmz_V5z1PYjF9bKyoo6oEHfJnr5LfBQw17YeKmZdLlCZ9NQRT5eksQdjd5NUdJ_1QytrYlvbMg0UNMC9D3VykigG-yAZBD5-cn2w1ifFi0HuxOFqS3KxqHzFzM148wl5IRmwT54/s640/IMG_7622.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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Above - The diametrically opposite part of the big 2 Circle, on the north western side, showing the rear of one of the Section 2C in-fill plots in the second last row (west), looking towards the north east along the exit point of the original serpentine pathway that separated sections 2A and 2B. The brick gutter to the lower right marks the former boundary of Section 2B.</div>
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Below - Detail of the vertical drain (with silt trap), connecting the circular section 2A brick gutter to the underground pipework, on the left side of the above photo, marking the pointy western end of the original Section 2A tear-drop. Clear evidence, in the form of the single remaining brick, of the other tail heading off to the right of the outer 2A circle gutter (heading to the top of the photo):</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgNOOHHNI7nbxDA9icReiYLdvgQruzfYvDtLyvosfEeQMtEXZ5WYYyV_KizBWjirh3g-iRTmazjMJb5TaJfrztayRphLGNtr0TicJP1w55s6ltJothnbMsDjQZ_vRAf7ofO1oqsgVNq6kmB/s1600/IMG_7623.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgNOOHHNI7nbxDA9icReiYLdvgQruzfYvDtLyvosfEeQMtEXZ5WYYyV_KizBWjirh3g-iRTmazjMJb5TaJfrztayRphLGNtr0TicJP1w55s6ltJothnbMsDjQZ_vRAf7ofO1oqsgVNq6kmB/s640/IMG_7623.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: large;">SECTION 2C.</span></i><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgJ_TY0fyLAbUlCAAOU2jhS68U6WsM_W7P3hYD_NPwym9EbPWJM6CU-xOXmaS2xWmdbbfKOjfFqyDD5-iwS1DUuDAyfOQFZ1WR4mRYXRBhiaojSFIxapcdg5XMylFGkIBckSd9fdASA8n7G/s1600/IMG_5169.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgJ_TY0fyLAbUlCAAOU2jhS68U6WsM_W7P3hYD_NPwym9EbPWJM6CU-xOXmaS2xWmdbbfKOjfFqyDD5-iwS1DUuDAyfOQFZ1WR4mRYXRBhiaojSFIxapcdg5XMylFGkIBckSd9fdASA8n7G/s640/IMG_5169.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<em>[Section 2C Triangle. Photo taken pointing due north.]</em></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 2D, South Perimeter.</i></span><br />
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<div style="text-align: center;">
[Pics to come]</div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 2D Triangle.</i></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipwWuq0qYi5_Y9JGrnbyYwcCt6RQ1Pz_qJlX1460GyrYXi8dntb_QW8A8ShNVyY0N9iSJE9SGZ61M62iw8MH3i8SgH5NletX47cfGHi53C9qsP7BMGqZj26Hyyr_Myls4f5Nhfl3MTTAc3/s1600/IMG_8626.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipwWuq0qYi5_Y9JGrnbyYwcCt6RQ1Pz_qJlX1460GyrYXi8dntb_QW8A8ShNVyY0N9iSJE9SGZ61M62iw8MH3i8SgH5NletX47cfGHi53C9qsP7BMGqZj26Hyyr_Myls4f5Nhfl3MTTAc3/s640/IMG_8626.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>[Section 2D Triangle, Eastern point. Photo taken pointing almost due west.]</i></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhRIN2ERW7lcH_7NKwBDJTjapEseuOXm8YM7fTWdibWd0aRnzrqx28B3xx_UED5EFAcjRMgCQhku_pqBqd0U_KvBd-uk1anBI_aasJ33nsZH50X0XdqdZIX8eov47a4J1uVf6VG2Qc75QNn/s1600/IMG_8627.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhRIN2ERW7lcH_7NKwBDJTjapEseuOXm8YM7fTWdibWd0aRnzrqx28B3xx_UED5EFAcjRMgCQhku_pqBqd0U_KvBd-uk1anBI_aasJ33nsZH50X0XdqdZIX8eov47a4J1uVf6VG2Qc75QNn/s640/IMG_8627.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>[Ditto, Western point - photo taken pointing due east.]</i></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 2E.</i></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhF-r6uewyqMKDVcvjzCAcH7P7TLluySVwwfySGC0ss6OGvGQALzO_pCpNoMcu_KoY2g1cfeC6_5sZY_ce3CQFYA5taqWBs63ySvfbVPh86OsN2_tYm01vKJxupBOTPx7VhB6P5TPL9GwEv/s1600/IMG_5171.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhF-r6uewyqMKDVcvjzCAcH7P7TLluySVwwfySGC0ss6OGvGQALzO_pCpNoMcu_KoY2g1cfeC6_5sZY_ce3CQFYA5taqWBs63ySvfbVPh86OsN2_tYm01vKJxupBOTPx7VhB6P5TPL9GwEv/s640/IMG_5171.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<em>[Photo taken facing due south, towards the Old Presbyterian Portion, across the bitumen road.]</em><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifhNnl0z7txZpTr5qn_cJGM9wjxMgknUT6ep0JnsiZ29og398b32HCDkXCdcmQ1TyW09_qOQUwLYTcNjoNdXe7E9SBj83fBCNUBiyI6_lqYx24e59ifI041qazAAI0lINCANnshk-TOWKB/s1600/IMG_8628.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifhNnl0z7txZpTr5qn_cJGM9wjxMgknUT6ep0JnsiZ29og398b32HCDkXCdcmQ1TyW09_qOQUwLYTcNjoNdXe7E9SBj83fBCNUBiyI6_lqYx24e59ifI041qazAAI0lINCANnshk-TOWKB/s640/IMG_8628.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
<em><br /></em>
<em>[Western most point. Photo taken facing due east, after cleaning of gutters.]</em></div>
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Section 2E Triangle, south between the 2A/2B and the 3A Circles, comprising 42 Plots in 4 Rows, numbered Odds (facing north) and Evens (facing south) from west to east, commencing from the south:<br />
Row 1 - Plots 2-30.<br />
Row 2 - Plots 3- 27.<br />
Row 3 - Plots 32-42.<br />
Row 4 - Plots 33-41.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 3A.</i></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgoesS_d2M9WeMGjhuC08A4L9k8tyCTpg0vhBv97AQqDAxs_XHXI6zrFn4WbCXN1zWtr22BMYO_QjajFcCyFdNAv_bQ_dX4uXHSShIyxAHoO4rWX5f_KTQQtxAOYcodH2-XFMyA-hcReQOc/s1600/IMG_5170.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgoesS_d2M9WeMGjhuC08A4L9k8tyCTpg0vhBv97AQqDAxs_XHXI6zrFn4WbCXN1zWtr22BMYO_QjajFcCyFdNAv_bQ_dX4uXHSShIyxAHoO4rWX5f_KTQQtxAOYcodH2-XFMyA-hcReQOc/s640/IMG_5170.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<em style="text-align: center;">[Photo taken facing west-south-west, with the elongated most easterly part of the "tail" in the centre, and part of the Section 3B North Perimeter to the right.]</em><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh6zLnuXSr3z4diMC2AZqYn8HI_jw19F9afuaOqL3P8uacr1q90ZamFUNLB9hw442WPhSuJbZif1EzDpQ1YTF4Mmh2Kz2N2eK8InFqaJozKAdZyrwlCB7nJicxwRKeZCvpdOauW7PnpiEgK/s1600/IMG_8621.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh6zLnuXSr3z4diMC2AZqYn8HI_jw19F9afuaOqL3P8uacr1q90ZamFUNLB9hw442WPhSuJbZif1EzDpQ1YTF4Mmh2Kz2N2eK8InFqaJozKAdZyrwlCB7nJicxwRKeZCvpdOauW7PnpiEgK/s640/IMG_8621.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<em>[Photo closer to the same point as above, after cleaning of gutters.]</em></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiRhG0VIg2of7jYIsBgLWxYNEPdT1VtlV_EZE1vL32jLpIN2aUKd3NWhETbLPSqvliADLtIg_Vh_-XbjSEiDsjjzypsMOgUhwUYnmsoP13T2WUzU7sWVHC6b97qrmM45lva4hVPL2rkrH7n/s1600/IMG_5172.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiRhG0VIg2of7jYIsBgLWxYNEPdT1VtlV_EZE1vL32jLpIN2aUKd3NWhETbLPSqvliADLtIg_Vh_-XbjSEiDsjjzypsMOgUhwUYnmsoP13T2WUzU7sWVHC6b97qrmM45lva4hVPL2rkrH7n/s640/IMG_5172.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<em>[Photo taken from near Section 2E, and pointing west-north-west.]</em></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 3B.</i></span><br />
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Section 3B on the south side of the 3A Circle. Plots 1-64 at the south end of Rows 1 through to 19 (but numbering from the west, and Odds and Evens):<br />
...<br />
Row 16 - Plots 41 to 45 (BURROWS).<br />
Row 17 - Plots 40 to 44 (ADAMS).<br />
Row 18 - Plots 309 (RAINY) to 311 (CLAYTON).<br />
Row 20 - Plots 45 to 54, including 50 (COOPER) and 52 (PEARCE).<br />
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Section 3B North Perimeter. Commencing opposite the last Row of the 2A/2B Circle, and numbered linearly, at Plot 78 (PARKER), through to Plot 163 (CHURCHILL).<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiJtjX9Tv9OPF7NjAkFub0X0UFJxIgRFAnXS1hou2m-r13XEUykdcHF9a25xxgozcB_KG2K_fJTtoBDH4nhedOMD-Qprktt54er5ql_fg1CD_hACh4YK-Ti_FWTFNUL6BptFCPEs8HbZGdw/s1600/IMG_8631.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiJtjX9Tv9OPF7NjAkFub0X0UFJxIgRFAnXS1hou2m-r13XEUykdcHF9a25xxgozcB_KG2K_fJTtoBDH4nhedOMD-Qprktt54er5ql_fg1CD_hACh4YK-Ti_FWTFNUL6BptFCPEs8HbZGdw/s640/IMG_8631.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>[South Perimeter, western most point, looking due east.]</i></div>
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Section 3B South Perimeter. Commencing two unmarked plots east of Section 4C South Perimeter BARNETT - see below), and heading east up the hill, numbered linearly but in disordered blocks. Commencing at Plot 164 (RUSSELL) through to Plot 189 (no gravestone); jumping forward to Plot 273 (WEBSTER) through to Plot 285 (GROVES); jumping back to Plot 235 (WHITE) through to 247 (ORR); jumping further back to Plot 190 (RITCHIE) through to Plot 234 (ORR).<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiUENvbCrJfwo7yWlLMVtlMubyj7nCOt7yuVEWKySzJRBwkKVwcZfpsvuHRhLcbYeNkvry56Le5IH4F6V1eeTOBesMUXA3fBHgyPe3zOdEC2qr36DaKDtxIaYolSu_GPeuYidEg4T-J6slq/s1600/IMG_8629.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiUENvbCrJfwo7yWlLMVtlMubyj7nCOt7yuVEWKySzJRBwkKVwcZfpsvuHRhLcbYeNkvry56Le5IH4F6V1eeTOBesMUXA3fBHgyPe3zOdEC2qr36DaKDtxIaYolSu_GPeuYidEg4T-J6slq/s640/IMG_8629.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>[The 3B Triangle, eastern most point. Photo taken facing west by north-west.]</i></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhjlnUPWqroGrZi7pNhLfUO9s5KUmOIu75owtBTK7-RKP1AAGo4BrptwQ7HaPsDOodoCTN4Dlk4mwyZ1Hn-lq0_El1H_x-luu9QPV1vJVfFOq-TADWaT32W5qvdlI4EnEhFuSMNJR2siFfW/s1600/IMG_5173.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhjlnUPWqroGrZi7pNhLfUO9s5KUmOIu75owtBTK7-RKP1AAGo4BrptwQ7HaPsDOodoCTN4Dlk4mwyZ1Hn-lq0_El1H_x-luu9QPV1vJVfFOq-TADWaT32W5qvdlI4EnEhFuSMNJR2siFfW/s640/IMG_5173.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<em>[Ditto. Photo taken facing east-north-east, towards the 3 Circle in the distance, with several rows of 3B Circle plots immediately across the intervening pathway.]</em></div>
<br />
Section 3B Triangle, with 20 Plots in 3 Rows, numbered Odds and Evens, commencing in the south, from west to east:<br />
Row 1 - Plots 252 (BOWTELL - nearest plot in photo above) to 268 (ROBINSON) .<br />
Row 2 - Plots 259 (BOXSELL) to 265 (BROWN).<br />
Roe 3 - Plots 269 (GUINERY plot on the left in photo) to 272 (no gravestone).<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 3C.</i></span><br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
[Pic to come]</div>
<span style="text-align: center;"><br />North Perimeter section, commencing opposite the path between Rows 3 and 4 in Section 4 Circle. Plots number linearly from Plot 1 (OLDS family double) west towards the entrance gate, curving around to the Western Perimeter, and ending at Plot 133 (HARMER Plot), about the middle of the Western Perimeter (which backs onto the hedge and curved wall at the roadway entrance from East Street), two vacant plots north of the commencement of Section 4C Western Perimeter (see below).</span><br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 3D.</i></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjL4oox_STCZf44ByRnGtXsEfemNLevFCY347lWLYVPiakGetNs6VF02aJM0pEaZRpPhLGjFI7BAHLK71rAphXqfkt7KPxdVUhuIt3kIGVCKUltarpv6hQjKJoPrM_DYrucq4-YBqnR0KM0/s1600/IMG_5198.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em; text-align: center;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="425" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjL4oox_STCZf44ByRnGtXsEfemNLevFCY347lWLYVPiakGetNs6VF02aJM0pEaZRpPhLGjFI7BAHLK71rAphXqfkt7KPxdVUhuIt3kIGVCKUltarpv6hQjKJoPrM_DYrucq4-YBqnR0KM0/s640/IMG_5198.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<em>[Photo taken looking north, showing the westernmost and last row in the foreground.]</em></div>
<br />
Section 3D Triangle, north west of the 4A Circle, containing 132 Plots in 9 Rows, numbered odds and evens, commencing at the most eastern point:<br />
Row 1 - Plots 1 to 5 facing east, including Plot 3 (McANULTY).<br />
Row 2 - Plots 2 (JONES) to 10 (HANSELL) facing west.<br />
Row 3 - Plots 11 (BANNING) to 29 (EDWARDS).<br />
Row 4 - Plots 12 to 32, including Plots 14-16 (CANNING) and 26-30 (STANTON and MATTERS).<br />
Row 5 - Plots 33 to 63 (MASON), including Plot 35 (GARLAND).<br />
Row 6 - Plots 34 (WASSALL) to 64 (BOWD).<br />
Row 7 - Plots 67 (TOOTING) to 109 (no gravestone), including Plots 103-105 (KNIGHT).<br />
Row 8 - Plots 62A (MORRIS) to 107 (no gravestone), including Plot 98 (COLLINS).<br />
Row 9 - Plots 110 (D.A.W.) to 132 (SWANSON).<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 4A</i></span>.<br />
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<em><br /></em>
<em>[Photo taken facing north-west, showing the south-eastern edge.]</em><br />
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Section 4A, inside the 4 Circle in two halves, numbered linearly (higher numbers) and Odds and Evens (lower numbers), in successive rows from east to west, the plots numbering from south to north in each row (mostly - and certainly for the odds and evens):</div>
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Row 1 - Plots 2260-2262 and 2268-2271, facing east, numbering linearly.</div>
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Row 2 - Plots 2272-2273 (linear); Plots 1237-1291 (odds); all also facing east, and north of the Section 4C Plots.</div>
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Row 3 - Plots 2274-2276 (linear); Plots 1238-1286 (evens) facing west; all north of the Section 4C Plots.</div>
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Row 4 - Plots 1701-1715 (odds) facing east; [Section 4C Plots intervene here]; Plot 2277 (*); Plots 1293-1375 (odds); Plots 2253, 2254 (linear, at north end of row).</div>
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Row 5 - Plots 2322-2323 (linear); Plots 1708-1716 all evens [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 2278,2279 (*); Plots 1294-1374 all evens; Plots 2250-2252 (linear, at north end of row).</div>
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Row 6 - Plot 2324; Plots 1717-1733 (odds); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 2280-2281(*); Plots 1375-1465 (odds); Plots 2248-2249 at north end of row).</div>
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Row 7 - Plots 2325-2326; Plots 1718-1734 (evens); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 2282,2283 (*); Plots 1376-1466 (evens); Plots 2246, 2247 and 2301 (linear, north end of row).</div>
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Row 8 - Plot 2327; Plots 1735-1759 (odds); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 2284, 2285 (*); Plots 1469-1557 (odds); Plots 2244, 2245 (linear, north end of row).</div>
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Row 9 - Plots 2328, 2329; Plots 1736-1760 (evens); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 2321, 2286; Plots 1468-1558 (evens); Plots 2241-2243 (linear, north end of row).</div>
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Row 10 - Plot 2330; Plots 1763-1799 (odds); Plots 2287-2290 (linear - possibly instead north of 4C Plots?); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 2189-2200 (linear) (*); Plots 1559-1613 (odds); Plots 2339, 2340 (linear, north end of row).</div>
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Row 11 - Plot 2331; Plots 1762-1798 (evens); Plots 2319, 2320 (linear); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 2391-2393 (linear) (*); Plots 1560-1614 (evens); Plots 2237, 2238 (linear, north end of row).</div>
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Row 12 - Plot 2331; Plots 1799-1853 (odds); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 2294, 2295 (*); Plots 1615-1651; Plots 2235, 2336 (linear , north end of row).</div>
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Row 13 - Plot 2333; Plots 1800-1854 (evens); Plots 2177-2187 (linear north to south); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 2316-2318 (linear) (*); Plots 1616-1654 (evens); Plots 2333A and 2334 (north end of row).</div>
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Row 14 - Plot 2335; Plots 1855-1945 (odds); Plot 2315; [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plot 2396 (*); Plots 1653-1677; Plots 2232, 2330, 2331 (north end of row).</div>
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Row 15 - Plot 2336; Plots 1856-1946 (evens); Plots 2312-2314 (linear); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 1654-1678 (evens); Plots 2228, 2229 (north end of row).</div>
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Row 16 - Plots 2337, 2338; Plots 1947-2037 (odds); Plots 2309, 2310, 2311; [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 1679-1695 (odds); Plots 2226, 2227 (north end of row).</div>
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Row 17 - Plot 2239; Plots 1948-2038 (evens); Plots 2306, 2307, 2308; [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 1680-1696 (evens); Plots 2244, 2245 (north end of row).</div>
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Row 18 - Plots 2340, 2341; Plots 2039-2119 (odds); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 1697-1705 (odds); Plot 2228 (north end of row).</div>
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Row 19 - Plots 2040-2120 (evens); Plots 2302, 2303; [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plots 1698-1706.</div>
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Row 20 - Plots 2342-2345 (linear, north to south); Plots 2121-2175 (odds); Plots 2298, 2299, 2300 (north to south); [Section 4C Plots conclude].</div>
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Row 21- Plots 2122-2176 (evens); [Section 4C Plots intervene]; Plot 2297.</div>
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Row 22 - Plots 2201-2203 (odds); Plots 2204-2222 (linear).</div>
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Plots above marked (*) - it is impossible to now determine on the ground, and not entirely clear from the S.A.G. Transcription, whether these "additional" plots are north or south of the intervening 4C Plots - I have made the tentative judgment that they are all north, but I may be wrong.</div>
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It looks to me like the original serpentine pathway was "infilled" with 4C plots, even before the new cemetery extension was occupied after the 1880s, and that more additional spaces were filled and given the higher 4A linear numbers later again.</div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SECTION 4B.</i></span><br />
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<em>[Photo taken looking due west, with the curve of the south boundary of the Section 4A Circle on the right.]</em></div>
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Section 4B Triangle (south west corner, between Perimeter 4C and the 4 Circle):</div>
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185 Plots in 11 Rows, numbered odds and evens, commencing at the eastern corner, and concluding on the north west corner.</div>
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<i><span style="font-size: large;">SECTION 4C.</span></i><br />
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Section 4C comprises two parts - a part of the outer perimeter row, and then the "infill" double "S" pathway that meanders through the middle of section 4A.<br />
<br />
The plots are numbered linearly throughout (as opposed to the Odds-and-Evens method used in Section 4A). They begin numbering from about the middle of the western-most perimeter row which backs onto the vehicular entrance from East Street, Lidcombe. Plot 1 is the grave of Catherine Nicholson LONG. The graves initially face east, and number southwards, then curving around into the perimeter row on Cohen Street where they face north. The last plot in that perimeter is plot 131 (which has no gravestone), ten grassy plots up the hill and east of plot 121 (Henry WALTON).<br />
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The next five plots face east, in the southern end of Row 2 of the Section 4A circle - plots 132-133 (FRIPP family members); one grassy plot north of them is plot 135 (Charles PURKISS); then plot 136 (Emma BIRD and Emma FOULKES). The rest of that row are Section 4A plots.<br />
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Section 4C West and South Perimeters; commencing in the middle of the West Perimeter, numbered linearly to the south; Plots 1-51, all facing due east; continuing around the south-west corner with plots 52-60; and up the South Perimeter to the east, Plots 61-130 facing approximately north (ending opposite the path between Rows 3 and 4 in the 4 Circle).<br />
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Section 4C serpentine inside the 4 Circle, numbered linearly and alternately back and forward - Plots 132-136 in Row 2 (from south-to north, including FRIPP, PURKISS, BIRD and FOULKES); Plots 137-144 in Row 3 (north-south, including BROWN, AUSTIN, PINKERTON and AULD); Plots 145-149 in Row 4 (s-n, including Skinner and CROOK); Plots 150-153 in Row 5 (n-s, including MUMBY and HALL); Plots 154-157 in Row 6 (etc, including JOHNSON and CAMPBELL); Plots 158-161 in Row 7 (all grass); Plots 161-167 in Row 8 (including KEY); Plots 168-172 in Row 9 (including ARGALL); Plots 174-181 in Row 10 (including PHILPOTT, WILLIAMS and FRESHWATER); Plots 182-201 in Row 11 (including WALKER, ALESSIO, BURNS, PARSONS, ALLEN and MASLIN); Plots 202-223 in Row 12 (including BANNING, BRAY and WRIGHT); Plots 224-233 in Row 13 (including ROGERS and OUGHTON); Plots 234-239 in Row 14 (including BYGRAVE); Plots 240-244 in Row 15 (n-s, including HARDGREAVES); Plots 245-247 in Row 16 (including MAINWARING); Plots 248-250 in Row 17 (including SYMONS); Plots 251-254 in Row 18 (including HELLYER); Plots 255-258 in Row 19 (including ROBSON); Plots 259-266 in Row 20 (including SPARKS, JONES and WRIGHT); and Plots 267-271 in Row 21 (including COOKE, ELDRIDGE, GOLDEN, and HELLMERS).</div>
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<br />
<i><span style="font-size: large;">SECTION 4D.</span></i><br />
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Section 4D Triangle (north, between the 3 and 4 Circles):<br />
29 Plots in 3 Rows numbered linearly from the north-east corner: Plots 1-14 facing north; Plots 15-23 facing south-west; and Plots 24-29 facing south-east.<br />
________________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<u><br /></u>
<span style="font-size: large;"><b><u>A PERSONAL CONNECTION</u><i>.</i></b></span><br />
<br />
The Illustrated Sydney News, published on Monday 20 April 1868, reported the following:<br />
<br />
<i>"THE NECROPOLIS.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>"The New South Wales Government Gazette thus defines the boundaries and extent of the land set apart for the use of the various denominations, and gives the names of the various trustees:-</i><br />
<i>"Church of England: 53 Acres 3 Roods; Trustees Messrs M.E. MURNIN, J. DAWSON, W. DAY, G.E. CRANE, and S.H. PEARCE.</i><br />
<i>"Roman Catholic: 39 Acres; Trustees the most Reverend J.B. POLDING, Rev S.J.A. SHEEHY, and Messrs T. Makinson, G. PHILLIPS, and M. McMAHON.</i><br />
<i>"Presbyterian: 11 Acres 1 Rood; Trustees the Hon S.D. GORDON, Messrs BROWN, FRAZER, GOODLET and MOODIE.</i><br />
<i>"Wesleyan: 6 Acres 1 Rood; Trustees Messrs CALDWELL, COWLISHAW, WEARNE, VICKERY, BAILEY and GOLLEDGE.</i><br />
<i>"Independent: 5 Acres; Trustees Messrs S. THOMPSON, FAIRFAX; JONES, MULLEN, ROLIN and ILLIDGE.</i><br />
<i>"Jews: 2 Acres 1 Rood; Trustees Messrs COHEN, JOSEPH, SAMUELS, ALEXANDER and PHILLIPS.</i><br />
<i>"The General Cemetery: 58 Acre; Trustess Messrs G. THORNTON, <b>T. SPENCE</b>, J. SUTHERLAND, J. MURPHY and J. WOODS."</i><br />
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It would appear highly likely that <b>T. SPENCE</b>, the second listed Trustee of the General Cemetery, was my great-great-grandfather <b>Thomas SPENCE</b>, Builder, of Wooloomooloo.<br />
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<b><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i>* * * THIS IS A WORK IN PROGRESS * * *</i></span></b></div>
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<b><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><br /></i></span></b></div>
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<b><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i>UNTIL THIS NOTICE IS REMOVED, ADDITIONS AND ALTERATIONS WILL CONTINUE TO BE MADE.</i></span></b></div>
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Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-47399722423812331212019-03-07T19:40:00.035-08:002022-10-28T04:45:56.581-07:00TACKABERRY Family in Ireland.<div style="text-align: center;"><b><i><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></i></b></div>
This is an attempt to collate TACKABERRY (alias THACKABERRY) families in Ireland from information contained in archived documentary sources. When this is as complete as I am able to make it, then I will start looking at published family trees, to see how "well" I have done, and only then to use information in those trees that has otherwise eluded me, despite my instinctive inclination to want to know the source for all of those extra details those family trees may contain. It is not that I suspect on-line family trees are inaccurate - some, inevitably, are, at least, in part. Family trees that do interest me more than others are those which cite as source a family bible - they may well contain what I call de-facto primary source material now unavailable from any other source.<br />
<br />
I have been using institutional subscriptions to access usual digital resources found on Findmypast.co.uk, Ancestry.com, familysearch.org, British Newspaper Archive, GALE Group News Vault, and google book searches via Internet Archive. I have also made good use of the Irish Government's "official" www.irishgenealogy.ie web-site in their Civil and Church Records.<br />
______________________________________________<br />
<u><br /></u>
<u><br /></u>
<i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>MY PARTICULAR INTEREST IN THE TACKABERRY FAMILY</u>.</span></i><br />
<br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white;">Thomas MAGUIRE and his wife Letitia PHAIR, of Castleterra Parish, County Cavan, and later of the City of Dublin, were my great-great-great grandparents; they were married in Ballyhaise Parish Church in 1763; their youngest son, William MAGUIRE, who was born in Dublin in 1782, was my great-great grandfather.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white;"><br /></span></span> <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white;">Their eldest child, Mary Ann MAGUIRE,</span><span style="background-color: white;"> was born at Mullalougher, County Cavan, on 19 April 1764; she was aged 13 when she went to Dublin with her family in 1777; she was interred in the Vicar's Bawn, St Patrick's Cathedral, almost certainly in the PHAYRE family plot, on 5 August 1802; </span></span>as Mary MAGUIRE, Spinster, of the Deanery of St Patrick's, she was married by Consistorial License (Diocese of Dublin) dated 12 August 1875, to Thomas PHAIR, Private in the 8th Regiment of Light Dragoons [BETHAM's Abstract]<span style="background-color: white; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; his Army Record (Chelsea Pensioner) records that he was born in Ballyhaise, County Cavan, about 1745; he was buried with his wife on 5 December 1802.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">It appears quite likely that Thomas PHAYRE was related to Letitia PHAIR - his birthplace suggests that - and several additional PHAYRE burials took place in one of a number Mr Thomas MAGUIRE's plots in the churchyard of St Patrick's Cathedral (he was the Sexton there), including two Rebecca PHAYRE's, one of whom may have been the widow of William PHAIR of Brickhill, Kilmore Parish.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br style="background-color: white;" /><span style="background-color: white;">Thomas and </span><span style="background-color: white;">Mary Ann</span><span style="background-color: white;"> PHAYRE left issue, including an elder son:</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white;"><br /></span></span>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white;">Robert PHAYRE, recorded in William MAGUIRE's diary as the elder son, and if so, then he was born about 1786-88, and almost certainly in Dublin; he is said to have settled in England with his wife Margaret TACKABURY - William MAGUIRE [his Memoir, 1823] mentioned this as being in Tees-side (but no census evidence has yet been found to corroborate this assertion); there is little doubt that Robert probably had issue, as follows, but evidently by a wife, probably a TACKABERRY, instead named Jane:</span><br style="background-color: white;" /><em><span style="background-color: white;"> a. A child of Robert PHAIR was buried in the Vicar's Bawn, 1 June 1815,"... in Mr MAGUIRE's burial place."</span><br style="background-color: white;" /><span style="background-color: white;"> b. Mary Anne PHAIR, baptised at St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, 12 December 1808; probably the child buried in the Thomas MAGUIRE family plot in the Cathedral Churchyard, 1815 - as in (a) above - or perhaps the next?</span><br style="background-color: white;" /><span style="background-color: white;"> c. Thomas PHAYRE, baptised at St Mary's (C.of I.), Dublin, 21 November 1813.</span><br style="background-color: white;" /><span style="background-color: white;"> d. Nathaniel PHAYRE, baptised at St Mary's (C.of I.), 6 August 1815; died young, and probably the June 1815 burial in Mr MAGUIRE's burial place.</span><br style="background-color: white;" /><span style="background-color: white;"> e. Nath'l PHARE, baptised at St Mary's (C.of I.), Dublin, 21 July 1816.</span><br style="background-color: white;" /><span style="background-color: white;"> f. Robert PHAYRE, baptised at St Mary's (C.of I.), 18 January 1818.</span></em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br style="background-color: white; color: #333333;" /><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">There was a Nathaniel TACKABURY in Dublin, a Cabinet Maker, who was at one time resident in the Coombe, Dublin. He may have been a member of the Methodist Society, and he had issue by his wife, the widow Jane BENNETT (she may have been his second wife - they were married by Consistorial License at St Bride's, Dublin, 27 July 1784) - including Elizabeth TACKABURY, baptised in St Patrick's Cathedral on 24 March 1795.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br style="background-color: white; color: #333333;" /><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">This is all very much in the territory of the MAGUIRE-PHAYRE family, and it seems inconceivable that the two families would not have been acquainted, if not actually related to each-other.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br style="background-color: white; color: #333333;" /><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">Further, it appears that a Nathaniel TACKABURY, Cabinet Maker, and his wife Jane, also had issue baptised in the Collegiate Church of Christ, Manchester, in 1787 and 1791 (a son Robert) - of particular interest is the 1787 event, which took place on 21 January, of a daughter Jane TACKABURY, who is of the right age to have been the Robert PHAYRE or PHAIR spouse.</span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">Perhaps there was only the one Robert PHAIR or PHAYRE spouse - Jane Margaret TACKABURY?</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><br /></span></span>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">See further below<br />
______________________________________________</span></span><div><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><br /><i style="font-size: x-large;"><u>NATHANIEL TACKABERRY OF THE CITY OF DUBLIN</u>.</i><br />
<br />
Nathaniel TACKABERRY, born in or before 1762; Freedom of the City of Dublin, Michaelmas Assembly, 1783, Joiner's Guild, by Service; Joiner, Golden Lane, 1783-86, and elected Warden of the Joiner's Guild, 1784-85 ["Irish Furnture: Woodwork and Carving in Ireland," by Desmond Fitzgerald GLIN and others, Appendix 1, page 288]; Cabinet Maker, of the Coombe, Dublin; he was married by M.L.B. (Diocese of Dublin) dated 27 July 1784, to Jane BENNETT, of the parish of St Bridget's, Dublin, Spinster [BETHAM's Abstract], at St Bridget's, by Consistorial Licence, but Jane BENNETT was recorded as a Widow [Church Register]; they appear to have had issue, including:</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">1. Jane TACKABERRY, baptized at the Collegiate Church of Christ, Manchester, 21 January 1787.</span></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";">2. Robert TACKABERRY, baptized ditto, 20 March 1791. Probably [A] next below.</span><br />
<span style="background-color: white; color: #333333; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. Elizabeth TACKABERRY, baptized at St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, 24 March 1795.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><br /></span></span>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">[A] Robert TACKABERRY, probably born about 1791-92; of Bride Street, Dublin; Freedom of the City of Dublin, 1813, Joiner's Guild, by Birth; Robert TACKABERRY, late of Phibsborough, County Dublin, Cabinet Maker, his petition as an Insolvent Debtor <i>"... to be heard at No 3 Lower Ormond Quay, Dublin, on Wednesday 17th October</i>" 1827 [Cork Constitution, 29 September]; Cabinet Maker, 32 Jervis Street, Dublin, 1835 Directory [Pettigrew and Oulton]; ditto, 2 November 1837 [Fictitious Votes, 1837-38].</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">Robert possibly/probably died Dublin South, 2nd quarter 1868 [Volume 7, Page 467], and was buried at St James's, (C.of I.). Dublin, 22 April 1868, aged 75 years.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">Robert was married to Mary (-?-); with issue:</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">1. Nathaniel TACKABERRY, baptized at St Mary's Parish Church of Ireland, Dublin, 29 March 1818; Cabinet Maker; he was at 31 Wellington Street, St Mary's Parish, City of Dublin, 1847 and 1849 [Dublin Almanac]; he died at Simpson's Hospital, Dublin North, 20 April 1899, late of 16 Armstrong Street, Widower, aged 79, Cabinet Maker, the death informed by Georgina SEVERS, Simpsons Hospital; he was married by Banns at St Mary's Parish Church, Dublin, 1 July 1844, to Mary Ann WHEATLEY, of St James's Parish, with consent of parents and guardians, witnessed by Robert WHEATLEY and James MURPHEY; she died at 23 Armstrong Street, Dublin South, 19 March 1888, aged 64, wife of Cabinet Maker, the death informed by N. TACKABERRY, husband, present at the death, of same address; they had issue, including:</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><em> a. Charles TACKABERRY, born at 31 Wellington Street, Dublin, 16 September 1845, and baptized at St Mary's, 5 October.</em></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><em> b. Mary Jane TACKABERRY, born at 31 Wellington Street, 6 October 1847, and baptized at St George's (C. of I.), 1 December.</em></span></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";"><em> c. Anna TACKABERRY, born at 43 Wellington Street, 29 December 1849, and baptized at St George's, 21 April 1850; she was admitted to the Workhouse of the Stewart Institute for a short spell in late 1900, at the request of Grace F. MAGUIRE of Hazlewood, County Sligo [information from a great-grand-daughter of Victoria MILLER otherwise TACKABERRY]; she died at the Stewart Institute, Dublin, 31 January 1933, aged 82, Spinster, late of 6 Richmond Row, Portobello.</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";"><em> d. William Wheatley TACKABERRY, born at North Frederick Street, Dublin, 6 October 1851, and baptized at St George's, 26 November; Organ Builder; he died at 9 Garden View, Rathmines, Dublin South, 12 October 1910, Married, 57, Organ Tuner, the death informed by E. CLEMENTS, same address, present at the death; he was married at Lisburn, 25 December 1880, to Frances Charlotte McKENZIE, daughter of Alexander McKENZIE, of Lisburn, Plumber; she died at 6a Richmond Row, 13 September 1903, aged 39, wife of Organ Builder, the death informed by her husband; they had issue:</em></span><br />
<em style="color: #333333; font-family: times; font-size: small;"> i. William THACKABERRY, born at 6 Richmond Row, 11 August 1884; he emigrated to Canada in 1912; he was married in Montreal to Anna Mildred ARMSTRONG.</em><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> ii. Mary Jane TACKABERRY, born at Richmond Row, South Dublin, 9 June 1886; she is said to have emigrated to the U.S., and living in Detroit, Michigan, 1951.</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> iii. Robert Richard TACKABERRY, born at 6 Richmond Row, Dublin, 13 April 1890; he emigrated to Canada, 1912; moved to the U.S., 1918; living in Pensacola, Florida, 1951; he was married in Montreal, 1913, to Mabel Agnes (-?-), with issue three sons.</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";"><em> e. Emma TACKABERRY, born at 11 Middle Mountjoy Street, Dublin, 17 March 1854, and baptized at St Mary's; she died at Cork Street Hospital, 5 May 1928, aged 74, Spinster, late of 5 Lower Mount Street, House maid.</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";"><em> f. Harriett Elizabeth, born at 11 Middle Mountjoy Street, Dublin, 15 December 1855, and baptized at St Mary's, 9 April 1856.</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";"><em> g. Victoria TACKABERRY, born at 9 Wentworth Place, Dublin, 24 May 1860, and baptized at St Mark's (C. of I.), 5 October; she was of Love Lane, and named her father as Nathaniel TACKABERRY, Upholsterer, when she was married in a Methodist Chapel, City of Dublin, 4 February 1894, to John Hop(eton ?) MILLER, of 123 St James's Street, Labourer, son of John MILLER, Boot Maker.</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";"><em> h. Nathaniel TACKABERRY, born at 36 Denzille Street, Dublin, 24 August 1866, and baptized at St Mark's, 24 August (the birth not registered under that surname)<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;">; he died at 16 Cross Kevin Street, Dublin, 27 March 1902, aged 31, married, Organ Builder, the death informed by his wife Ellen; he was of full age, bachelor, Organ Builder's Assistant, of 7 Pleasant Street, Dublin, son of Nathaniel TACKABERRY, Cabinet Maker, when he was married at the Dublin Registry Office, 16 November 1896, to Ellen BRERETON, full age, spinster, of 17 Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin, daughter of James BRERETON, Farmer; she was married secondly, at St Kevin's Parish Church, Dublin, 9 February 1904, to William WALLER, a Widower, of 208 New Bride Street, Compositor; she died at 28 New Bride Street, 7 March 1964, aged 84, widower, the death informed by her brother, J.M. BRERETON, of 25 New Bride Street.</span></span></em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";"><em> j. Robert TACKABERRY, born in Dublin, about 1860; at Kingsland Parade, Fitzwilliam Ward, City of Dublin, 1901 Census, aged 39, Organ Builder, with his wife and three children; same address, 1911 Census, aged 52, with wife and three children; he died at the Incurables Hospital, Dublin, 25 March 1923, aged 64, Widower, late of 2 Kingsland Parade, Organ Builder; of 49 Greenville Avenue, Organ Maker, son of Nathaniel TACKABERRY, Cabinet Maker, when he was married at St Matthias's Church, Dublin, 26 December 1884, to Margaret FLETCHER, of 14 Charlotte Street, daughter of Henry FLETCHER, Cabinet Maker, witnessed by James and Lucy THOMPSON; she was aged 31 in 1901, and 48 in 1911; she died at 12 Kingsland Parade, 24 July 1915, aged 50, wife of Organ Builder, informed by her son, F. TACKABERRY, same address, present at the death; they had issue:</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> i. Lucy Maria TACKABERRY, born at 4 Upper Cross Road, Dublin South, 2 October 1885.</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> ii. Margaret TACKABERRY, born at Uppercross Road, Dublin South, Dublin, 29 December 1886; aged 14, Scholar, with her parents, 1901; aged 22, ditto, 1911.</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> iii. Annie THACKABERRY, born at 33 St Kevins Road, 21 February 1889; she died there, 12 July 1889, aged 3 months.</em></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><i> iv. George TACKABERRY, born at 33 St Kevins Road, Dublin South, 13 September 1893.</i></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><i> v. Ethel TACKABERRY, born at 33 St Kevins Road, 12 March 1895; she died there, 21 July 1895, aged 4 and-a-half months</i></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><i> vi. Frederick TACKABERRY, born at 12 Kingsland Parade, Dublin, 13 April 1898; aged 3, with his parents, 1901 aged 13, ditto, 1911.</i></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><i> vii. Harriett TACKABERRY, born at 12 Kingsland Parade, 8 July 1900; aged 9 months, with her parents, 1901; aged 10, ditto, 1911.</i></span><br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i><u>TACKABERRY OF DUBLIN</u>.</i></span><br />
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Mrs TACKABERRY died at Bride's Alley, April 1784 [Saunders Newsletter, Monday 19 April].<br />
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Lydia TACKABERRY, of the parish of St Matthew, Dublin, was married by M.L.B. dated 17 July 1805, to George FEARMON of Ballyash, County Wicklow, Farmer [BETHAM].</span> </span></span><br />
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<i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>AN AMERICAN HISTORICAL PERCEPTION</u>.</span></i><br />
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John HOLLINGSWORTH, of Ballinakill, County Wexford, was evidently an ancestor of Henry Albert HOLLINGSWORTH, of Ingleswood, California; Henry Albert published a detailed account of his ancestral connections in the Hollingsworth Register, Volume 4, Number 3, in September 1968, at pages 93-98; it does appear, to my "jaundiced" eye, that the information he supplied was probably well researched.<br />
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HOLLINSWORTH stated that there was a Lease, dated 23 February 1710 (but not registered immediately), by which John, Lord Viscount ALLEN, demised, by leasehold, the Town and Lands of Ballinabanogue, parish of Wicklow, to Nathaniel TACKABERRY [Memorial 65346].<br />
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Dublin Deeds Registry - Memorial 65345, Book (or Liber) 94, Page 47:<br />
<em>"An indented deed, bearing date the 1st of May 1734, made between Elizabeth TACKABERRY of Ballymanogue in the County of Wicklow of the one part, and Nathaniel TACKABERRY of the said Town and County, Farmer, of the other part.</em><br />
<em>Reciting that the Right Honourable John late Lord Viscount ALLEN, having by his Indenture of Lease dated 23 February 1710 demised unto Nathaniel TACKABERRY, of Ballymanogue aforesaid, lately deceased, all that the Town and Lands of Ballymanogue in the Manor of Arklow and County of Wicklow, <span style="color: blue;">FOR THE THREE LIVES THEREIN MENTIONED</span>, containing 119 acres, at a yearly rent of 24 pounds sterling, besides Receiver's Fees and Dutys as therein also mentioned. And further reciting that the whole interest and title in the said lease becoming invested by the detah of the said Nathaniel in Elizbeth TACKABERRY his widow and relict, and that in consideration of the marriage of Elizabeth STRINGER, daughter of the said Nathaniel TACKABERRY deceased, it was agreed that William STRINGER her husband should have 40 acres of the said Farm and 10 pounds per annum Rent.</em><br />
<em>Now ye said Elizabeth the widow and relict of the said Nathaniel TACKABERRY deceased, for the considerations in the aforesaid deed mentioned, did thereby grant, bargain, sell and assign unto the said Nathaniel TACKABERRY, son to the said Nathaniel TACKABERRY deceased, all her right, title and interest to all and singular the before recited lease and Lands of Ballymanogue, for the term of lives then undetermined of the said lease, at the rent therein mentioned; and on indemnifying (sic) the said Elizabeth the widow of and from the same, as by the said deed the said Nathaniel TACKABERRY hath covenanted to doe, and the said Elizabeth during her natural life and no longer, should hold and enjoy that part and holding of land aforesaid as she then enjoyed the same at the yearly rent of 16 pounds sterling with the moiety (sic) of Receiver's Fees and Duties as therein mentioned.</em><br />
<em>And which Deed is witnessed by Charles DICKENSON of Ballyduff in the County of Wicklow, Farmer, Henry ERRATT of Askeenteeney in the said County, Farmer, and Samuel DICKENSON of Ballyduff, aforesaid, son to the said Charles DICKENSON..."</em><br />
The deed was not registered until 9 January 1738.<br />
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Of possible interest, an Eliza STRINGER, of the Parish of Bray, Widow, was married by M.L.B., Diocese of Dublin, dated 23 November 1737, to James DICKISON, of County Dublin, Farmer [BETHAM's Abstract].<br />
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I have highlighted in CAPITALS the phrase<em> "<span style="color: blue;">for the three lives therein mentioned</span>"</em> because I cannot find any indexed reference to the 1710 Lease under the surname ALLEN as Grantor. Despite that "missing" deed, it is possible to speculate that those three lives probably included at least two, and possibly three, of the four members of the TACKABERRY family mentioned above - Nathaniel Senior, his wife Elizabeth, his son Nathaniel, and his daughter Elizabeth.<br />
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[The Index and Memorial Books in the Deeds Registry in Henrietta Street, Dublin, were microfilmed by The Church of L.D.S., Utah, in 1951; these film images have now been digitalized, and are viewable on-line on the www.familysearch.org web-site, but the alphabetical Indexes are only for Grantors of Deeds (although the name of the principal Grantee is recorded there, but not indexed separately, which means that one needs to know who the Grantor was first) - although there is a separate index by Location, and these can fill the gaps, given time.]<br />
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Henry believed that the progenitor of the original Irish TACKABERRY family was John TACKABERRY, who was married at St Michael's, Dublin, 29 August 1656, to Margaret BOYLE ( I have not yet been able to corroborate this "claim").<br />
It appears likely that this was probably the same John TACABRAY who was listed in the Hearth Money Tax Rolls, 1669, of Ballygriffin, parish of Arklow, County Wicklow, for one hearth, and paying 2 shillings tax for the same.<br />
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HOLLINGSWORTH recorded that <i>"... another branch"</i> appeared at Tomagaddy, in County Wexford, early in the 18th century; citing that John TACKABERRY (1738 - Tackabury) acquired a lease of 168 acres of Tomagaddy <i>"... in as large and ample manner as the said John then held and enjoyed the same" </i>and noted that this lease was not registered until 1771 [Memorial 18549]; he also observed that this was nearly twenty year after John TACKABERRY's death<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i><u>TACKABERRY OF ARKLOW, COUNTY WICKLOW</u>.</i></span><br />
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Nathaniel TACKABERRY; of Ballynabogue, parish of Arklow, Farmer; his will was the subject of a Deed dated 23 April 1724 [Memorial 65493, Book 90, Page 447], conveying his whole estate to his wife Elizabeth TACKABERRY and his son Nathaniel TACKABERRY; Nathaniel TACKBERRY, Residence Ballynabruogue, County Wicklow, Farmer, Date 1725 [P.R.O. of Ireland, Indexes to Testamentary Records, Sub-class of Bonds]; Nathaniel TACKBARY, Co Wicklow, Farmer, 1725, Intestacy [Deputy Keeper of Public Records, Index to Act and Grant Books].<br />
Elizabeth TACKABERRY was first party to a deed of lease dated 1 May 1734, concerning the estate of her late husband Nathaniel (see above); her will was the subject of Deed dated 12 September 1735 [Memorial 65494, Book 90, Page 447], late of Ballynaboge, Widow, conveying her whole estate to her beloved son Nathaniel TACKABERRY.<br />
Nathaniel and Elizabeth had issue:<br />
1. Nathaniel TACKABERRY; second party to his widowed mother's deed, May 1734.<br />
2. Elizabeth TACKABERRY; she was married, before May 1734, to William STRINGER.<br />
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Perhaps of Killowen, see next below.<br />
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Elizabeth TACKABERRY, of the parish of Arklow, Spinster, was married by M.L.B. dated 20 February 1772, to Richard JOHNSON, of Arklow, County Wicklow, Carpenter [BETHAM]. See next below.</div><div><br /></div><div>John TACKABERRY, born about 1696-97; he died 19 June 1742, aged 45, and was buried at the Old Town Cemetery, Arklow, County Wicklow; his wife Sarah died 24 June 1773, aged 80, and was buried with him; they had issue:</div><div>1. William TACKABERRY, born about 1719-20; he died 16 June 1750, aged 30, and was buried with his father. </div><div>See their memorials on Findagrave.</div><div><br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i><u>TACKABERRY OF KILLOWEN, COUNTY WEXFORD</u>.</i></span><br />
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Thomas TACKABERRY, son of Edward TACKABERRY of Kilnew, County Wexford, was named as the third life for term of an Indented Deed dated 1761, by which John LYNDON of Tornduffe, County Wexford, demised unto John HOLLINSWORTH, of Ballynekill, Farmer, <em>"... all that and those the Town and Lands of Tomduff commonly known by the name of the Coppice, and all that part of the said Lands called the Seven Acres..."</em> [Memorial 142770, Book 217, Page 80, Dublin Deeds Registry].<br />
The other two lives for the term of the above Deed were Thomas and William, the sons of John HOLLINSWORTH (the second party to the Deed). The deed was registered in Dublin on 27 May 1762.<br />
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Nathaniel TACKABERRY, of Killowen, County Wexford; his will, dated 28 September 1778, proved P.C.I., 11 May 1781, naming his wife Anne, five sons Robert, William, John, James and Nathaniel, and six daughters Alice, Jane, Elizabeth, Mary (all married), Anne and Margaret [BETHAM's Abstract]; he appears to have been buried in the Old Town burial ground in Arklow, aged 74 years (with a small standing stone, image viewable on Findagrave.com), although the transcript offers the date of death as 4 March 1768, aged 74 years; he was married to Anne, who survived him (perhaps not his first wife, and possibly not mother of some or perhaps all of his children?); issue:<br />
1. Nathaniel TACKABERRY.<br />
2. Robert TACKABERRY.<br />
3. William TACKABERRY.<br />
4. John TACKABERRY.<br />
5. James TACKABERRY. He may have emigrated to America. See [B] below.<br />
6. Alice TACKABERRY; she was married before 1781 to William DARLINGTON of Boggland, County Wicklow, Farmer.<br />
7. Jane TACKABERRY; she was married in 1771 to Thomas ROBINSON [Diocese of Ossoray M.L.B. Index].<br />
8. Elizabeth TACKABERRY; of the Parish of Arklow, County Wicklow, spinster, when she was married by License (P.C.I.), dated 20 February 1772, to Richard JOHNSON, of Arklow, Carpenter.<br />
9. Mary TACKABERRY; married before 1781, BYRNE.<br />
10. Anne TACKABERRY; unmarried in 1781.<br />
11. Margaret TACKABERRY; unmarried in 1781.<br />
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Mr TACKABERRY; he was married to Margaret - perhaps William TACKABERRY and Margaret BAINTON, 1805 [Diocese of Ossary M.L.B. Index]; she was born about 1788; she died on 29 August 1878, aged 90 years, and was buried with her son John at Castletown Graveyard; they had issue:<br />
1. Anne TACKABERY, born about 1813; she died 5 April 1855, aged 42 years, and was buried with her brother.<br />
2. Nathaniel TACKABERRY, born about 1822; of Killowen, County Wexford, Farmer; he died 20 August 1872, aged 49 years (Registered at Gorey, Volume 12, page 567), and was buried at Castletown Graveyard; he was married in 1844 to Margaret FANNEL [Diocese of Ossory M.L.B. Index]; she was at Killowen Lower, Ballynacew, 1901 Census, aged 65, Widow, Farmer, with three sons, daughter-in-law and four grandchildren; she died 30 May 1909, aged 74 years, and was buried with her husband; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. John TACKABERRY, born about 1863; Farmer; aged 37, with his mother, wife and four children, 1901 Census; he died at Killowen, Arklow Parish, 1 June 1912, aged 48, </i><i>and was buried with his father; Administration granted at Dublin, August 1912, to Mary A. TACKABERRY, the widow; he was married to Mary (aged 28 in 1901 Census), with two sons and two daughters, 1901, aged 6 to 1</i><i>.</i></div><div>
<i> b. Margaret TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, Gorey, County Wexford, 11 June 1865.</i><br />
<i> c. William TACKABERRY, born about 1866; died 1 December 1882, aged 16, and buried ditto.</i><br />
<i> d. Robert TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, 5 November 1868; aged 32, with his mother, 1901 Census, unmarried.</i></div><div><i> e. Richard TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, 18 March 1870.<br /></i>
<i> f. James TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, 19 April 1871; aged 29, with his mother, 1901 Census, unmarried; he died 29 June 1902, aged 31, and buried with his father.</i><br />
<i> g. three children died young.</i><br />
3. John TACKABERRY, born about 1832; died 16 March 1847, aged 14, and was buried with his brother John.<br />
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John TACKABERRY, born County Wexford, about 1863; Farmer at Killowen Lower, 1911 Census, aged 47, Farmer, with wife, nine children, and brother Robert; of full age, bachelor, Farmer, son of Nathaniel TACKABERRY, Farmer (deceased), when he was married at Arklow R.C., 17 April 1893, to Mary DOYLE, full age, spinster, Housekeeper, daughter of William DOYLE, Farmer (living); she was aged 39, with her husband, 1911, married 17 years, nine children all living; they had issue:<br />
1. Nathaniel TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, 7 July 1894; aged 16, with parents, 1911; he probably died at Killowen, 20 July 1961, aged 68, Farmer, unmarried, the death informed by the Coroner.</div><div>2. William TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, 9 January 1896; aged 15, ditto, with parents, 1911.</div><div>3. Margaret TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, 17 January 1898; aged 13, ditto.</div><div>4. Mary Anne TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, 17 February 1900; aged 11, ditto.</div><div>5. Elizabeth TACKABERRY, born about 1902; aged 9, ditto.</div><div>6. Mary Kate TACKABERRY, born 27 May 1904, parents of Killowen; as Catherine, aged 7, ditto.</div><div>7. James TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, 8 November 1906; aged 4, ditto.</div><div>8. Michael TACKABERRY, born 1910; aged 10 months, ditto.</div><div>9. . Sarah Patricia TACKABERRY, born at Killowen, 14 November 1912.</div><div><br /></div><div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i><u>TACKABERRY IN NEWTOWNBARRY PARISH</u>.</i></span><br />
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Alice TACKABERRY, born about 1785; buried at Newtownbarry, 10 May 1825, aged 80.<br />
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Nathaniel THACKABERRY, born about 1798; buried at Newtownbarry, 4 December 1849, aged 51, of Clonegal.<br />
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Mary THACKABERRY, born about 1804; buried at Newtownbarry, 4 August 1847, aged 43, of Abbeydown (a wife ? or a widow).<br />
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Martha THACKABERRY, born about 1840; buried at Newtownbarry, 6 February 1893, aged 52 (a wife ? or widow of Benjamin ? next).<br />
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Benjamin TACKABERRY, born about 1841 (perhaps born at Garryhasten, 16 March 1843, son of Nathaniel TACKABERRY and Ann PIPER); buried at Newtownbarry, 25 May 1879, aged 37; Shoemaker; he was probably married at Kilnahure, 18 October 1865, to Martha GREEN; she died 25 November 1889, aged 53, daughter of John GREENE (1802-1889) and his wife Ann (PASLEY); with issue:<br />
1. Anne TACKABERRY, born 7 January 1867, and baptised at Newtownbarry, 6 March (but mother named Ann).<br />
2. Nathaniel TACKABERRY, born 30 October 1868, and baptised there 23 December; he died at Mill House, Bunclody, Enniscorthy, 18 December 1951, aged 83, Widower, Shop Keeper; aged 42, Shopkeeper, at Newtownbarry, 1911 Census, with wife and four children; he was married about 1887,to Margaret Hunter; she was aged 39, with her husband, 1911 Census, born Scotland; they had issue:</div><div> a. Edith Martha TACKABERRY, born County We3xford, about 1898; aged 12, with her parents, 1911.</div><div> b. Samuel Hollywood TACKABERRY, born ditto, about 1899; aged 11, ditto.</div><div> c. Florence Margaret TACKABERRY, born ditto, about 1903; aged 7, ditto.</div><div> d. Hilda Mary TACKABERRY, born ditto, about 1907; aged 3, ditto.<br />
3. Eliza Jane TACKABERRY, born 1 March 1871 and baptised there 10 December.<br />
4. Margaret THACKABERRY, born 25 September 1873, and baptised there 9 November.<br />
5. Emma TACKABERRY, born 12 September 1875, and baptised there 14 November.<br />
6. Martha TACKABERRY, born 12 June 1877, and baptised there 8 September.<br />
8. Benjamin TACKABERRY, born 3 July 1879, and baptised there 10 August.<br />
<br />
Margaret THACKABERRY, born about 1847; buried at Newtownbarry, 20 May 1849, aged 2, of Kilbranish.</div><div><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><u>TACKABERRY OF CRAAN, COUNTY WICKLOW</u>.</i></span><br />
<br />
Nathaniel TACKABERRY, born about 1833; of Craan, Gorey District, County Wexford, Farmer; at Craan Upper, 1901 Census, aged 66 (born County Wicklow), Widower, with daughter Frances (aged 23, born Co Wexford) and niece Maggie (aged 6, born County Dublin); he died at Gorey Infirmary, 1 April 1913, aged 79, a Widower, the death informed by Jane EVANS, Occupier; married with issue:<br />
1. Frances TACKABERRY, born County Wexford, about 1877; aged 23, unmarried, with her father, 1901 Census.<br />
<br />
Nathaniel TACKABERRY; of Craane, labourer; probably the above; a son of Nathaniel TACKABERRY, he was married at Kilnahue, Gorey District, County Wexford, 27 December 1858, to Jane COOMBS, daughter of Samuel COOMBS; they had issue:<br />
1. Benjamin TACKABERRY, born at Caane, 12 June 1866.<br />
2. Catherine TACKABERRY, born at Craan, 23 April 1868.</div><div><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><u>TACKABERRY OF CLASHEEN</u>.</i></span><br />
<br />
Fosse TACKABERRY, born about 1808; he died at Clasheen, 6 November 1884, Widower, aged 76, Farmer, the death informed by Thomas (X) BRIEN, present at death, of Curratubbin.</div><div><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><u>THACKABERRY OF TOMAGADDY</u>.</i></span><br />
<br />
John TACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy, County Wexford, 1752, Will [PHILLIMORE and THRIFT, Index to Ferns Wills, 1601-1800].<br />
<br />
From details found in the CROSSLÉ Genealogical Abstracts on Findmypast:<br />
Dublin Deeds Registry, Book 274, Page 613, Memorial 182846.<br />
<em>"Indented Deed of Lease, dated 27th December 1766, made between George BRADDELL of Ballingate, Esqr, of the one part, and Benjamin TACKABERRY, of the Town of Tomagaddy and parish of Monomoling in the county of Wexford, Farmer, and Richard STERNE, of Ballytogue in the parish of Ballycarnew in the said county of Wexford, Farmer, of the other part. Whereby the said George BRADDELL did demise grant stand to farm let to the said Benjamin TACKABERRY and Richard STERNE, the Town and Lands of Abbydown and part of Corra, situate lying and being in the Barony of Scarwalch in the said county of Wexford, together with the Tyth thereon, containing in the whole 300 acres and 34 perches, with all and singular the Right Members and Appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining. To hold from the date thereof for the lives of Wm STERNE son of Richard of Ballintogue, John TACKABERRY son of Benjamin TACKABERRY of Abbydown, and James JONES son of Edward JONES of Ballycarnew in the said county of Wexford, and the survivor of them, or for thirty one years, to be computed from the 25th day of March 1767, whichever should last longest, at the yearly rent of ten shillings stg for each and every acre on said lands, payable half yearly by two even and equal Gales for the first 15 years and 11 shillings stg per acre after during the said term, at the days and times therein particularly mentioned..."</em><br />
The Deed was witnessed by Richard STERNE of Abbydown and Thomas BRADELL of Bollingate; and the Memorial of it by the said Richard STERNE and James BYRNE of Clonegaul, in the county of Clare, Farmer. The Deed was registered in Dublin on 5 September 1770.<br />
<br />
Benjamin TACKABERRY, born about 1771; he died 1 January 1833, aged 61, and was buried at Ballcanew [M.I.]; he was married to Elizabeth (possibly HAYES, and if so, married in 1817, Diocese of Ossory); she died 29 June 1855, aged 86 years, and was buried at Ballcanew [M.I.].</div><div><br /></div><div>Robert TACKABERRY, born about 1799; he died at Tomegaddy, 27 May 1871, Married, aged 72, Farmer, the death informed by Benjamin TACKABERRY, of Tomegaddy, relationship not recorded.</div><div><br />
Thomas TACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy; Farmer; he died before 1880; he was married in 1838 to Martha RUDD, daughter of Richard BUDD, Clone, Ferns (RUDD in Index to Diocese of Ossory Marriage License Bonds); she died 3 August 1880, aged 73 years, and was buried at Ballycanew [CANTWELL's M.I.]; they had issue:<br />
1. Samuel TACKABERRY, born about 1839; he died 18 August 1902, aged 63 years, eldest son, and was buried at Ballycanew [M.I.]; of full age, bachelor, Yurnkey in Gaol, of Wexford, when he was married at St Selkars, Wexford, 17 June 1868, to Mary EARL, full age, spinster, of Wexford, daughter of Edward EARL, Carpenter, witnessed by Edward EARL, Samuel BAILEY and Martha TACKABERRY; she died 24 May 1909, aged 70 years [M.I.].<br />
? Thomas TACKABERRY. Possibly went to County Tyrone. See [C] below.<br />
2. Martha TACKABERRY, born about 1847; she died 13 March 1943, aged 95, and was buried at Ballycanew, unmarried [M.I.].<br />
3. Benjamin THACKERBERRY, died aged 15 years.<br />
4. Margaret THACKABERRY; died aged 5 years.<br />
5. Elizabeth THACKABERRY, born about 1856; she died 4 July 1892, aged 33 years, and was buried at Ballycanew [M.I.].<br />
<br />
Thomas THACKABERRY, born about 1801; of Tomagaddy; he died 29 April 1882, aged 80, a Farmer, Married, the death informed by Fosey (X) THACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy (relationship not stated), present at the death. These marital statuses do not correspond with the above husband of Martha; however, family trees on Ancestry suggest that Martha died in 1890.<br />
<br />
George THACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy, County Wexford, died suddenly, April 1842 [Dublin Morning Register, 7 April].<br />
<br />
Fossey THACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy, died 6 November 1884, aged 76, and was buried at Ballycanew [Freeman's Journal, 13 November; CANTWELL's M.I.]; Farmer; married, possibly in 1841 to Anne SWITZER [Diocese of Ossory M.L.B. index]; with issue:<br />
1. Loftus THACKABERRY, born about 1845; died 20 June 1860, aged 14, and was buried at Ballycanew [M.I.].<br />
2. Anna Susan THACKABERRY, born about 1856; she was aged 17, spinster, of Tomagaddy, Ballycanew parish, when she was married at Ballycanew Parish Church, 8 September 1873, to Donald McRAE, full age, bachelor, of the U.S., but now of Tomagaddy, Merchant, son of John McRAE, Merchant, witnessed by W.J. JOHNSON and Same HOLLINGSWORTH.</div><div><br />John Benjamin TACKABERRY, born about 1833, son of Fossey TACKABERRY [Marriage Registration]; died 25 February 1892, aged 58 years, and was buried at Ballycanew [M.I.]; of Tomagaddy, Farmer, full age, bachelor, when he was married at Monamolin, Gorey, 6 October 1874, to Martha LEE, Widow, daughter of William BOLTON, of Classheen, Farmer]; married Martha BOLTON; with issue:</div><div>1. Loftus Henry TACKABERRY, born Clasheen, Gorey, 25 February 1876.</div><div>2. Fossey Joseph TACKABERRY, born Clasheen, 12 October 1877; died 25 November 1935, aged 58 years, and was buried at Ballycanew [M.I.].</div><div>
<br />
Thomas THACKABERRY; of Tomagaddy, Farmer; married with issue:<br />
1. Fosse THACKABERRY; Farmer, of Tomagaddy; at Tomagaddy, 1901 Census, aged 43, Farmer, with wife and daughter; ditto, 1911, aged 53; of full age, bachelor, when he was married at Monamolin Church of Ireland, by License, 13 February 1886, to Charlotte EARL, full age, spinster, of Cullenton, daughter of Edward EARL, Farmer; she was aged 46, with her husband, 1901 Census; ditto, 1911, aged 55, married 24 years, with two children, one surviving; they had issue:</div><div> a. Thomas TACKABERRY, born at Tommagaddy, 24 July 1886; died before 1911.</div><div> b. Martha Violet TACKABERRY, born Tommagaddy, 27 September 1888; aged 13, with her parents, 1901 Census.<br />
<br />
Mrs Margaret THACKABERRY, born about 1817; she died at Tommagaddy, 3 August 1890, widow, aged 73, Farmer, the death informed by her son Fosse (X) THACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy.</div><div><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><u>THACKABERRY OF CAMOLIN</u>.</i></span><br />
<br />
John THACKABERRY; of Kilcleran, Camolin, County Wexford, Farmer; he was married to Jane; she died at Kilclaran, 6 December 1896, Widow of a Farmer, aged 78, the death informed by her daughter Mary J. JEFFERS, of Dublin, present at the death; they had issue:<br />
1. Mary Jane THACKABERRY; she informed her mother's death in 1896; she was of full age, spinster, of 147 James Street, Dublin and of Camolin, when she was married at St James's Parish Church, Dublin, 27 July 1895, to Thomas JEFFERS, full age, bachelor, Commercial Clerk,of 147 James's Street, Dublin, son of Michael JEFFERS, Farmer.</div><div><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><u>THACKABERRY OF CLONEGAL</u>.<span style="font-size: large;"></span></em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;">John TACKABERRY; of Abbydown, Clonegal; he was married to Ann; with issue (details of Registers for St Fiacc's Church of Ireland, Clonegal, from the <a href="http://www.ireand.anglican.org/">www.ireland.anglican.org</a> web-site):</span></span><br />
1. Benjamin TACKABERRY, baptized at St Fiacc's, Clonegal, 31 March 1792.<br />
2. Benjamin TACKABERRY, born at Abbydown, and baptized at St Fiacc's, 22 February 1793.<br />
3. un-named TACKABERRY, born at Abbeydown, and baptized at St Fiacc's, January-February 1797 (date obscured or unreadable). Perhaps Nathaniel?<br />
4. Mary TACKABERRY, born at Abby..., and baptized at St Fiacc's, 23 February 1800.<br />
<br />
Benjamin TACKABERRY; of Abbydown; married Martha; with issue:<br />
1. Margaret TACKABERRY, born at Abbeydown, and baptized at St Fiacc's, 4 December 1803.<br />
<br />
Margaret TACKABERRY, of Abbey..., was married at St Fiacc's, Clonegal, 23 September 1819, to William WATKINS of Templeshannon.<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;">Nathaniel THACKABERRY; Labourer, in Garryhasten and Abbey Down; he was married at St Fiacc's, Clonegal, 4 May 1826, to Ann PIPER of Prospect; they had issue:</span></span><br />
1. Elizabeth TACKABERRY, born at Prospect, and baptized at St Fiacc's, 1 April 1827.<br />
2. John TACKABERRY, born at Garryhastin, and baptized at St Fiacc's, 21 March 1830.<br />
3. Nathaniel THACKABERRY, born Garryhasten, 12 February 1833, and baptized at St Fiacc's, 24 February.<br />
4. George TAKABERRY, born 24 March 1836, and baptized at St Fiacc's, 9 August.<br />
5. Anne THACKABERRY, born Garehasten, 16 February 1840, and baptized at St Fiacc's, 18 June.<br />
6. Benjamin THACKABERRY, born Garheaston, 16 March 1843, and baptized St Fiacc's, 18 June.<br />
7. Margaret THACKABERRY, born Abbey Down, and baptized at St Fiacc's, 30 April 1848.<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;">Benjamin THACKABERRY; of Derry View; he was married at Kildavin Church, March 1841, to Jane, eldest daughter of William PIERCE, of Kilgraney, Esq [Dublin Morning Register, 31 March]; they had issue:</span></span><br />
1. (son), born at Derryview, Clonegal, 25 March 1842 [Warder and Dublin Weekly Mail, 2 April].<br />
<br />
Benjamin THACKABERRY, Farmer, and his wife Maria had issue:<br />
1. Benjamin Thomas THACKABERRY, born at Derry View, Carnew, 23 March 1842, and baptized at St Fiacc's, Clonegal, 22 January 1843.<br />
<br />
Benjamin THACKABERRY; married Peggy; with issue:<br />
1. Elizabeth THACKABERRY, born at Garryhastin, and baptized at St Fiacc's, 1 December 1844.<br />
______________________________________________</div><div><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><u>THE WEXFORD REBELLION OF 1798</u>.</em></span><br />
<br />
The following are details of Claims and Surrenders, which resulted from Rebel activity in County Wexford in 1798:<br />
<br />
1. Alice TACKABERRY, of Coolator, Widow, for losses of Horse, Car, Tackling, Furniture and Provisions, claim of £18 14s 9d.<br />
2. Benjamin TACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy, Farmer - Profit of Cows, Cloaths, Potatoes, Timber. House burned - £97 11s 4d, paid £96 15s.<br />
3. Edward TACKABERRY, of Balliadam, Farmer - Corn, Cattle, Furniture, Linen, Potatoes - £124 16s 1d.<br />
4. Fossey TACKABERRY, of Tomagady - House burned, Cloaths, Furniture, Profit of Cows - £254 16s 9d, paid £241 3s 9d.<br />
5. James TACKABERRY, of Beawn, Arklow - Provisions, Cloaths, Repair - £11 11s 4d.<br />
6. John TACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy, Farmer - House burned, Cloaths, Furniture, Timber - £200 7s 4d, paid £192 10s 1d.<br />
7. Nicholas TACKABERRY, of Garane, Wexford - Profit of Cows, Barley, Oats, Meadow - £16 9s 11d.<br />
8. Nicholas TACKABERRY, of Ballylough, Farmer - Sheep, Saddle, Bridle, Profit of Cows - £11 14s 6d.<br />
9. Robert TACKABERRY, of Garidaniel, Dealer - Pigs, Potatoes, Shop Goods, Cloaths - £15 7s 6d.<br />
10. Robert TACKABERRY, of Arrygurtin, Dealer - Furniture, House burned, Maze, Wheat ... - claimed £67 8s 11d, paid £65 3s 6d.<br />
11. Samuel TACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy, Farmer - House burned, Crop, Horse, Farming Utensils - £98 7s 9d.<br />
12. Thomas TACKABERRY, of Cluggard, Arklow - Bed and gun - £4 11s.<br />
13. William TACKABERRY, of Ballicanew (sic), Miller - Oatmeal, Furniture, Cloaths, Pigs - claimed £73 1s 8d, paid £71 16s 9d.<br />
14. William TACKABERRY, of Tomagaddy, Farmer - Houses burned, Profits of Cows, Crop, Horse - £131 3s.<br />
______________________________________________</div><div><br />
<br />
<em><span style="font-size: large;"><u>DIOCESE OF OSSORY MARRIAGE LICENSE BONDS</u>.</span></em><br />
<br />
These are "applications" for marriage by License, as opposed to Marriages by the Banns process. The jurisdiction which held power over the issue of these Licenses was the Consistorial Court, over which the Bishop presided, within his Diocesan domain. Not all Licenses led to actual marriage, but the vast majority probably did. They were, of course, all Protestants. Church of Ireland Ministers could not marry cousins without them having obtained a Special License.<br />
<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1771</span></i></b> - Jane TACKABERRY and Thomas ROBINSON.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1778</span></i></b> - Anthony TACKABERRY and Margaret SHAW.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1782</span></i></b> - Margaret TACKABERY (sic) and John STERNE.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1787</span></i></b> - Mary TACKABERRY and James KERSEY.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1790</span></i></b> - Edward TACKABERRY and Anne SMITH.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1790</span></i></b> - Richard TACKABERRY and Mary WILLIAMS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1790</span></i></b> - Sarah TACKABERRY and John GODKIN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1792</span></i></b> - Sarah THACKABERRY (sic) and Edward WEBSTER.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1793</span></i></b> - Elizabeth TACKABERRY and George WILLIAMS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1793</span></i></b> - Benjamin TACKABERRY and Elizabeth RATH.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1793</span></i></b> - Martha TACKABERRY and Robert HUGHES.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1793</span></i></b> - Mary TACKABERRY and Henry BOLTON.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1793</span></i></b> - Samuel THACKABERRY (sic) and Hester FITZSIMONS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1794</span></i></b> - Elizabeth TACKABERRY and Thomas GODKIN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1798</span></i></b> - Alice TACKABERRY and James GODKIN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1799</span></i></b> - Benjamin TACKABERRY and Martha SHERLOCK.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1799</span></i></b> - George TACKABERRY and Frances MARKS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1799</span></i></b> - Nathaniel TACKABERRY and Mary TACKABERRY.</div>
<div>
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1800</span></i></b> - Mary Ann TACKABERY (sic) and Robert HUGHES.<br />
<b><span style="color: red;"><i>1803</i></span></b> - Alice TACKABERRY and Edward DAVIS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1804</span></i></b> - Sarah TACKABERRY and John FRANCIS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1805</span></i></b> - Jane TACKABERRY and William JOHNSTON.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1805</span></i></b> - Martha TACKABERRY and Edmond BAYLY.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1805</span></i></b> - Margaret TACKABERRY and George WILSON.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1805</span></i></b> - William TACKABERRY and Margaret BAINTON.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1806</span></i></b> - Mary TACKABERRY and John AGAR.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1807</span></i></b> - George TACKABERRY and Susannah WHEELOCK.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1807</span></i></b> - Robert TACKABERRY and Jane COOKE.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1807</span></i></b> - Sarah TACKABERRY and William KARLEY.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1807</span></i></b> - William TACKABERRY and Letitia DEACON.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1808</span></i></b> - William TACKABERRY and Elizabeth CHRISTIAN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1812</span></i></b> - Mary TACKABERRY and James LECTOR.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1813</span></i></b> - Martha TACKABERRY and Abraham STRAHAN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1813</span></i></b> - Mary TACKABERRY and Thomas BAILEY.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1814</span></i></b> - Richard TACKABERRY and Jane MINION.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1817</span></i></b> - Benjamin TACKABERRY and Elizabeth HAYES.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1818</span></i></b> - Edward TACKABERRY and Elizabeth DUFFIELD.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1819</span></i></b> - Ann TACKABERRY and Thomas SHEILL.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1819</span></i></b> - Anthony TACKABERRY and Elizabeth PEPPERD.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1819</span></i></b> - Benjamin TACKABERRY and Rachel CODD.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1819</span></i></b> - Catherine TACKABERRY and John ROWSON.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1819</span></i></b> - Margaret TACKABERRY and William WATKINS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1819</span></i></b> - Richard TACKABERRY and Judith PARKER.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1824</span></i></b> - Eliza TACKABERY (sic) and Samuel COCHRAN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1824</span></i></b> - Margaret TACKABERY (sic) and William SCOTT.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1824</span></i></b> - Richard TACKABERY (sic) and Sarah CHAPMAN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1826</span></i></b> - Alice TACKABERRY and William BAILEY.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1826</span></i></b> - Nathaniel THACKABERY (sic) and Anne PIPER [4 May 1826, at Clonegal].<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1826</span></i></b> - Robert THACKABERY (sic) and Sarah SANDERS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1827</span></i></b> - John TACKABERRY and Margaret DOWZER.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1827</span></i></b> - Robert TACKABERRY and Jane WARREN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1828</span></i></b> - Fossay TACKABERRY and Eliza JOHNSTON.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1828</span></i></b> - Mary THACKABERRY (sic) and William FRANCIS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1829</span></i></b> - Elizabeth TACKABERRY and Edward DUFFIELD.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1830</span></i></b> - Esther TACKABERRY and William EMMITT.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1831</span></i></b> - Alice TACKABERRY and Fossey GODKIN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1831</span></i></b> - Margaret TACKABERRY and Henry MORRIS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1832</span></i></b> - Elizabeth THACKABERRY (sic) and Patrick CLEARY.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1832</span></i></b> - Frances THACKABERRY (sic) and John NEWLAND.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1833</span></i></b> - George TACKABERRY and Amelia STEPHENS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1833</span></i></b> - Sarah TACKABERRY and Joseph WARREN.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1834</span></i></b> - Elenor TACKABERRY and John WEBSTER.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1834</span></i></b> - Sarah THACKABERRY (sic) and Frederick SPARKES.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1835</span></i></b> - Elizabeth TACKABERRY and Peter SPENCER.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1836</span></i></b> - Thomas TACKABERRY and Mary EDWARDS.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1837</span></i></b> - Richard TACKABERRY and Mary WARD.</div>
<div>
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1837</span></i></b> - Sarah TACKABERRY and Samuel LONGSTAFF.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1838</span></i></b> - Eliza TACKABERRY and John POOLE.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1838</span></i></b> - Mary TACKABERRY and James JACKSON.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1838</span></i></b> - Thomas TACKABERRY and Martha RUDD.<br />
<b><i><span style="color: red;">1839</span></i></b> - Benjamin TACKABERRY and Anne EDWARDS.<br />
<i><span style="color: red;"><b>1839</b></span></i> - Eliza TACKABERRY and James HANLON.<br />
<i><span style="color: red;"><b>1839</b></span></i> - Mary Anne TACKABERRY and George DEACON.<br />
<i><span style="color: red;"><b>1841</b></span></i> - Benjamin TACKABERRY and Maria PIERCE.<br />
<i><span style="color: red;"><b>1841</b></span></i> - Fossey TACKABERRY and Anne SWITZER.<br />
<i><span style="color: red;"><b>1842</b></span></i> - Elizabeth TACKABERRY and George LEECH.<br />
<i><span style="color: red;"><b>1843</b></span></i> - Rhoda TACKABERRY and John BOLTON.<br />
<i><span style="color: red;"><b>1843</b></span></i> - Susan TACKABERRY and John CAHILL.<br />
<i><span style="color: red;"><b>1843</b></span></i> - William TACKABERRY and Mary RANSFORD.<br />
<i><span style="color: red;"><b>1844</b></span></i> - Nathaniel TACKABERRY and Margaret FENNEL.<br />
______________________________________________<br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><u>PRE-REGISTRATION PROTESTANT MARRIAGES, 1845-1863</u>.</em></span><br />
<br />
The following details have been obtained from the official Irish Government web-site <a href="http://www.irishgenealogy.ie/">www.irishgenealogy.ie</a> under the category of Civil Records. I believe that the actual images of these marriages, which identify the paternity of both parties (except for the very earliest), will eventually be up-loaded to the web-site, over the next year or three. Additional details have been obtained from transcriptions on the Findmypast.co.uk web-site [Ireland Marriages, 1619-1898].<br />
<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1845</b></i></span> - John TACKABERRY, married at Templeshando, Enniscorthy, 18 December, Eliza DOUGLAS [V.5, p.497].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1846</b></i></span> - Esther TACKABERRY, married at Arklow, Rathdrum, 3 November, Richard DOLAN [V.9, p.679].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1846</b></i></span> - Mary TACKABERRY, married at Camolin, Gorey, 5 November, Martin HINDS [V.6, p.111].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1846</b></i></span> - Robert TACKABERRY, married at Camolin, Gorey, 5 December, Eliza KEMMITH [V.6, p.111].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1847</b></i></span> - Mark TACKABERRY, son of William TACKABERRY, married at Donnybrook, Dublin South, 9 February, Mary GREGG, daughter of John GREGG [V.5, p.189].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1848</b></i></span> - George TACKABERRY, son of Nathaniel TACKABERRY, married at Gorey, 10 November, Alice FITZSIMONS [V.6, p.89].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1850</b></i></span> - William TACKABERRY, son of Richard TACKABERRY, married at St Mary's, New Ross, 5 December 1850, Charlotte SAVAGE, Widow, daughter of William LITTLE [V.8, p.444].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1851</b></i></span> - John TACKABERRY, son of George TACKABERRY, married at Balleycanew, Gorey, 7 October, Eliza TACKABERRY, daughter of Robert TACKABERRY [V.6, p.81].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1852</b></i></span> - Anne Jane TACKABERRY, daughter of Robert TACKABERRY, married at Enniscorthy, 23 September 1852, Charles GREENE, son of Richard GREENE [V.5, p.702].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1853</b></i></span> - Margaret TACKABERRY, daughter of Robert TACKABERRY, married at Ballycanew, Gorey, 31 March, James TYNDALL, son of John TYNDALL [V.6, p.81].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1854</b></i></span> - Margaret TACKABERRY, daughter of George TACKABERRY, married at St Audoen's, Dublin South, 22 March, George MATTHEWS, son of Landon MATTHEWS [V.5, p.211].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1854</b></span></i> - Robert TACKABERRY,Watchmaker of New Ross, Count Wexford, son of William, Farmer, married at St James's, Dublin South, 23 April, Hannah CHADWICK, daughter of Hannah CHADWICK, Auctioneer [V.5, p.238].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1854</b></i></span> - William TACKABERRY, son of Richard TACKABERRY, married at Athy, County Kildare, 4 October, Eliza O'NEILL, daughter of James O'NEILL [V.1, p.490].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1855</b></span></i> -Mary Ann TACKABERRY, Athy, V.1, p.494.<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1855</b></span></i> - Maria TACKABERRY, Sligo, V.10, p.202.<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1857</b></span></i> - John TACKABERRY, son of Nat., married at Shillelagh, County Wicklow, 13 June, Anne GREGAN, daughter of Martin GREGAN [Volume and page number not found].<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><i><b>1858</b></i></span> - Nathaniel THACKABERRY, son of Nathaniel, married at Kilnahue, Gorey, 27 December, Jane COOMBS, daughter of Samuel COOMBS [V.6, p.100].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1859</b></span></i> - Hannah TACKABURY, daughter of Henry TACKABERRY, married at St Mary's, Dublin North, 20 March, Henry TAYLOR, Widower, son of William TAYLOR [V.5, p.85].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1860</b></span></i> - Hannah TACKABERRY, Widow, daughter of George CHADWICK, married at Templeludigan, New Ross, 22 February, Hugh COCKRAN, son of Hugh H. COCKRAN [V.8, p.454].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1860</b></span></i> - John William TACKABERRY, son of Fossey, married at St Peter's, Dublin South, 27 December, Kate MALONE, daughter of Edward MALONE [V.5, p.352].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1861</b></span></i> - Alice TACKABERRY, of Sweet Farm, Enniscorthy, Servant, daughter of Robert TACKABERRY, Farmer, married at Enniscorthy, 8 August, William KENDRICK, Labourer, of Town View Farm, son of Joseph KENDRICK, Farmer, witnessed by Robert and Edward TACKABERRY [V.5, p.698].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1862</b></span></i> - Sarah THACKABERRY, daughter of Robert THACKABERRY, married at St Audoen's, Dublin South, 18 February, Joseph TYNDALL, son of John TYNDALL [V.5, p.213].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1863</b></span></i> - Elizabeth Jane PUTZ, daughter of Fossey TACKABERRY, married at St Peter's, Dublin South, 15 October 1863, Richard Hand WOOD, Widower, son of George WOOD [V.5, p.371].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1863</b></span></i> - George TACKBERRY, son of Nathaniel, married at St Peter's, Dublin South, 16 December, Eliza JEFFERS, daughter of Matthew JEFFERS [V.5, p.325].<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1863</b></span></i> - Elizabeth Jane TACKABERRY, of 32 Grafton Street, daughter of George TACKABERRY, Draper, married at Wesleyan Centenary Chapel, parish of St Peter's, Dublin South, 19 December, Charles Hamilton PEARSON, Bank Clerk, son of Charles C. PEARSON, Bank Clerk, witnessed by William Leonard TACKA</div><div><br /></div><div>BERRY and Sarah BENNETT [V.5, p.363].<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>Statutory Registration commenced for all of Ireland</i>.</div>
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1864</b></span></i> - Elizabeth TACKABERRY, of full age, spinster, of Knocknalogue, County Wexford, daughter of George TACKABERRY, Farmer, was married at Kilmuckridge Parish Church, County Wexford, 6 October 1864, to William WHITMORE, full age, bachelor, Farmer, of Moneycross, son of William WHITMORE, Farmer, witnessed by George TACKABERRY and Jane FITZSIMONS.<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1865</b></span></i> - Benjamin THACKABERRY, son of Benjamin, married at Newtownbarry, County Wexford, 18 October, Martha GREENE, daughter of John GREENE.<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1866</b></span></i> - Sarah LANGSTAFF (or LONGSTAFF), of full age, Widow, of Brackanagh, County Wexford, daughter of Nathaniel THACKABERRY, married at St Mary's parish Church, Dublin, 21 March 1866, to Benjamin TYNDALL, full age, bachelor, Farmer, of 64 Capel Street, son of Anthony TYNDALL, Farmer.<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1867</b></span></i> - Abigail TACKABERRY, of full age, spinster, of Milebrook, parish of Castledermott, daughter of Henry TACKABERRY, was married at Athy Parish Church, County Kildare, 14 February 1867, to George ALCOCK, full age, bachelor, Labourer, of Rosetown, parsh of athy, son of George ALCOCK, Farmer, witnessed by John COBBE and Ellen TACKABERRY.<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1867</b></span></i> - Anne THACKABERRY, daughter of William THACKABERRY, Farmer, married at Rathdown, County Dublin, 6 September, Thomas Noble CLARK, son of John N. CLARK.<br />
<i><span style="color: blue;"><b>1868</b></span></i> - Samuel TACKABERRY, son of Thomas, married at Wexford, County Wexford, 17 June, Mary EARL, daughter of Edward EARL.<br />
______________________________________________<br />
<br /><br />
<em><span style="font-size: large;"><u>TACKABERRY OF DUNGANNON, COUNTY TYRONE</u>.</span></em><br />
<br />
[C] Thomas TACKABERRY, born in County Wexford, about 1845; of Tomagaddy, County Wexford (as recorded in his son Thomas's marriage notice, 1903); Royal Irish Constabulary, Donaghmore, County Tyrone, May 1867, when he gave evidence, as a Sub-constable, before an enquiry into the Dungannon Magistrates [Dublin Evening Mail, 17 May]; Master of the Dungannon Workhouse, May 1869; Chief Resident Officer, Workhouse, Dungannon, 1874; Master of the Dungannon Workhouse, 1883; he was at the Workhouse, 1901 Census, aged 55, with his wife Margaret (aged 58) and son John B. (18, Scholar); ditto, 1911, aged 65, Widower, with Charlotte E. THORNBERRY, 41, unmarried, Workhouse Matron (born at Castle Caulfield, County Tyrone, 8 September 1869, daughter of Henry THORNBERRY, Boot Maker, and his wife Charlotte LAYLEE, and a possible relation of Thomas's late wife); Thomas was a chief mourner at the funeral, May 1907, of his brother-in-law Mr Neason ROBERTS (aged 74), at the Borough Cemetery, Dungannon [Tyrone Courier, 23 May], who was married at Dungannon, in 1863, to Eliza THORNBERRY ; Thomas died at the Workhouse, Dungannon, 15 February 1912, aged 66, Widower, the death informed by his son Thomas Benjamin TACKABERRY, of the Masonic Orphan Boys School, Dublin, present at the death.<br />
Thomas was of full age, bachelor, of Benburb, Master of Dungannon Workhosue, son of Thomas TACKABERRY, Farmer, when he was married at St Patrick's Church of Ireland, Parish of Donaghmore, 3 May 1869, to Margaret THORNBERRY, of full age, spinster, of Donaghmore, Matron of Dungannon Workkhouse, daughter of John THORNBERRY, Shoemaker, <em>"... youngest daughter of the late Mr John THORNBERRY, Donaghmore"</em> [Armagh Guardian, Friday 7 May], and Registered at Dungannon [Volume 6, Page 645]; she was born in County Tyrone, about 1843; Matron, Poor Law Union, Dungannon, 1870 [Slater's Directory]; superannuated as Matron before 1901, and replaced by her probable relation, Charlotte E. THORNBERRY; Margaret was aged 58, with her husband, 1901 Census; she died at the Workhouse, Dungannon, 21 May 1901, aged 58, wife of the Master of the Workhouse, the death informed by her husband, Thomas TACKABERRY, present at the death.<br />
They had issue:<br />
1. a daughter, born at Dungannon, 29 April 1870, to <em>"... the wife of Mr Thomas TACKABERRY (late R.I.C.), Master of the Union Workhouse</em>" [Newry Reporter, 5 May]; she possibly died at Dungannon, 1870 [Volume 6, Page 443], aged 5 (months?).<br />
2. Thomas Benjamin TACKABERRY, born at the Workhouse, Dungannon, 26 February 1874; T.C.D., 1892-95 [Junior Exhibition, 1892; 1st Honours in Classics, 1893; First Rank in Classics, Hilary Term, 1894; Sizar (Junior Sophister)]; he was a Schoolmaster at Dungannon, Portora (Ennislkillen), Coleraine and Tipperary Grammar Schools, and was notorious for his failure to maintain discipline in class; while at Portora Royal School (for boarders), about 1921-22, he was supervising an evening prep, when a young pupil organised a disruption by issuing song-sheets to the boys and giving the signal for them to burst into song - TACKABERRY, seeing the pupil give the signal, then laid into him with both fists, to which the boy said quietly - <i>"why don't you pick on someone your own size?</i>" - at which TACKABERRY returned to his desk, and broke down in tears - that boy was Samuel BECKETT, who became a celebrated playwright; Thomas was a Classics and Mathematics tutor at Milford, 1943-44, by which time his wife and children had <i>"... been taken from me by death"</i>; he was of Linton House School, London, <em>"... eldest son of Thomas TACKABERRY, Dungannon, and Tomagaddy, county Wexford"</em> when he was married at Dungannon, 26 August 1903, to Dorothea Isabel BURNS, of Creenagh, Coalisland, County Tyrone, eldest daughter of David BURNS, Manufacturer [Tyrone Courier, 30 September]; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. George Richard Fossey TACKABERRY, born at Creenagh, Dungannon, 8 September 1904, informed by Sarah M. BURNES, present at the death, of Creenagh.</i><br />
3. Fossey Rudd TACKABERRY, born at the Workhouse, Dungannon, 28 November 1876, the birth informed by his father; he died there, 9 May 1878, aged 17 months, the death also informed by his father.<br />
4. un-named daughter; she was born and died at the Dungannon Workhouse, 2 July 1879, aged 6 hours, due to premature birth (7 months).<br />
5. John Bailey TACKABERRY, born at the Workhouse, Drumcor, 7 February 1883; educated at Dungannon Royal School (April 1900, Honours List, Mathematics and Chemistry), and Trinity College Dublin; London Matric., January 1903, Registered as a Medical Student, 16 October 1903, Middlesex Hospital, London; Casualty Medical Officer and House Physician, Middlesex Hospital, and Assistant Demonstrator in Anatomy, Middlesex Hospital Medical School; M.B., England, Registered 2 February 1909, Lic. Med. Surg. Soc. Apoth. Lond., 1909 [Medical Register, 1913]; entered the Army, Indian Medical Service, 30 July 1910, after sitting for a competitive examination for commissions, 25-30 July, in which he gained second highest marks among 29 candidates for 115 vacancies [The Scotsman, 1 August]; Lieutenant, <em>"... officiating in medical charge of the 36th Sikhs,"</em> 1911 [Army and Navy Gazette, 8 July]; Lieutenant, Indian Medical Service, Fyzabad, 1912 [birth of son]; promoted Captain, 30 July 1913; serving with the 25th Punjabis, China, 1915 [Harts Army List]; he went to Mesopotamia at the end of 1915, with the Indian Expeditionary Force; Captain, Indian Medical Service, 2nd (Rawalpindi) District, 1917; he died in Mesopotamia, 25 March 1917, of cerebro-spinal fever [Belfast News Letter, 3 May 1917], and was buried at the Basra War Cemetery, Iraq; an obituary published in the British Medical Journal [1917, Volume 1, page 629 - 12 May] records further that he died <i>"... on service in a stationary hospital,"</i> and that he was serving as medical officer to the 31st Punjabis when war broke out; of the Parish of Christ Church, Turnham Green, bachelor, when he was married in London, by Banns dated 15, 22 and 29 January 1911, to Alice Jane HARRHY, Spinster, of the Parish of Holy Trinity, Marylebone Road, Westminster; she was at 6 Grafton Mansions, Brighton, England, 1917, and was <em>"... now engaged in voluntary nursing work in St John's Hospital, Sevenoaks"</em> [Belfast Newsletter, 3 May 1917].<br />
They had issue an only child:<br />
<em> a. Fossey John TACKABERRY, born at Fyzabad, India, 17 January 1912, and was baptized there 31 March.</em><br />
______________________________________________<br />
<br /><br />
<em><span style="font-size: large;"><u>SEVERAL TACKABERRYS IN INDIA</u>.</span></em><br />
<br />
Richard TACKABERRY; Private, 45th Regiment of Foot, Bachelor, when he was married by Banns, at St John's Church, Secunderabad, India, 18 October 1836, to Sophia COTTER, Widow (probably the Sarah MARCHALL who had married Edward COTTER, another Private in the 45th Regiment, 19 February 1833 - he was buried at Secunderabad, 23 August 1836, aged 28 years); Richard and Sophia had issue:<br />
1. Elizabeth TAKABURY, born in 1836; she died on 2 June 1837, and was buried next day at Secundarabad, aged 9 months, her father of the 55th Regiment.<br />
2. Edward TACKEBERRY, born 21 February 1838, and baptized at Secundarabad, 10 April, his father a Private in the 55th Regiment.<br />
3. Martha Matilda TACKABERRY, born 23 April 1840, and baptized 8 July at St Mary's Church by the Garrison Chaplain, Madras.<br />
<br />
Sophia TACKABERRY died in Madras, 1860, and was buried at St Mary's Church, Madras, 2 February 1860, aged 38, the widow of William TACKABERRY, Overseer, Post Office Department.<br />
______________________________________________<br />
<span style="color: #333333; font-family: "times";"></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><br /></span></span> <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><i><u>A TACKABERRY FAMILY IN PENNSYLVANIA</u>.</i></span></span><br /><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333;"><br /></span></span> [B] James TACKABERRY, said to have been born at Arklow, County Wicklow, 21 September 1732 [Findagrave Memorial, and a family tree on Ancestry]; believed by descendants in America to have emigrated there in 1806-07, and to have died in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on 28 July 1810, aged 77, and buried at Allegheny Cemetery, Pittsburg [M.I., Findagrave], leaving a wife Elizabeth (formerly MIDDLETON), who died in Pittsburg, 15 February 1830 [M.I., Findagrave]; at least one family tree on Ancestry.com records him as the son of Nathaniel TACKABERRY, but by different wife, identified as Lydia FOSSE of FOSSEY.<br />
<br />
<br />
<i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>SOME OTHER AMERICAN TACKABERRYS</u>.</span></i><br />
<br />
Nathaniel TACKABERRY, born in Ireland, about 1867; at Eaton, Madison County, 1850 Census, aged 82; he died at Pratt's Hollow, Madison County, 25 March 1851, and was buried at Fairview Cemetery [M.I., Findagrave Memorial]; he married Sarah NEUSOM; with issue, including:<br />
1. James TACKABERRY, born in County Wicklow, 4 February 1795 [Findagrave Memorial]; he was at Eaton, Madison County, 1860 Federal Census, Farmer, with wife Alma (sic), aged 63; he was at Eaton, 1870 Census, aged 75, Farmer, with his wife Anne, Keeps House, aged 73, born Ireland; she was probably the Ann TACKABERRY (born Ireland, about 1776), at Mifflim, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, 1850 Census, with Henry and Margaret PEPPERMAN (Margaret may have been her daughter?); he died at Pratt's Hollow, Madison County, New York, 6 June 1884, and was buried at Fairview Cemetery; he was married in 1818 to Ann BELTON.<br />
2. Elizabeth TACKABERRY, born in Ireland, 30 April 1797; she died at Bristol, Kendall County, Illinois, and was buried at Jericho Cemetery, Sugar Grove, Kane County, Illinois, with her husband William KERN [M.I.'s on Findagrave]; with issue.<br />
3. Sarah TACKABERRY, born 20 June 1799; she died 13 July 1871, and was buried at Fairview Cemetery, Pratt's Hollow, with her husband, Rev Michael TOOKE, Methodist Episcopal Minister [M.I.s on Findagrave]; with issue.<br />
4. John W. TACKABERRY, born at Arklow, 22 August 1804; died on 18 January 1877, and was buried at Grove Cemetery, London, Middlesex County, Ontario [M.I., Findagrave].<br />
5. Middleton TACKABERRY, born at Wicklow, 12 February 1807 [M.I., Findagrave]; at Eaton, Madison County, 1855 State Census, aged 47, with wife and seven children; he died at Eaton, Madison County, 8 August 1877, and was buried at Fairview Cemetery; he was married to Clarissa CLARK; she died at Pecksport, Madison County, 16 May 1893, and was buried with her husband (she was born at Halifax, Wyndham County, Vermont, 6 August 1806) [M.I., Findagrave]; with issue:<br />
a. Almeda C. TACKABERRY, born NewYork, about 1830; aged 19, with her parents, 1850; aged 21, with her parents, 1855.<br />
b. Sarah D. TACKABERRY, born New York, about 1835; aged 15 and 19, ditto.<br />
c. Annie S. TACKABERRY, born New York, about 1838; aged 12 and 16, ditto.<br />
d. Middleton A. TACKABERRY, born New York, about 1840; aged 10 and 14, ditto.<br />
e. Lucy A. TACKABERRY, born New York, about 1845; aged 5 and 10, ditto.<br />
f. Samuel TACKABERRY, born New York, <br />
5. Ann TACKABERRY, born in New York State, 1815; died 15 May 1839, and was buried at Fairview Cemetery, Pratt's Hollow [M.I. on Findagrave].<br />
<br />
Nathaniel TACKABURY, born in Ireland, about 1767; he was at Eaton, Madison County, New York, 1850 Census, aged 82, Farmer, with Sarah TACK(ABERY), aged 51, born Ireland, and nine TACKABURY "children" aged 23 to 9 years - kinship relationships not stated, but they appear likely to have been his grandchildren; they were, perhaps, the children of Sarah, who may have been Nathaniel's daughter-in-law?:<br />
1. Michael TACKABURY, born about 1824; aged 25, Farmer, at Eaton, with Nathaniel and Sarah, 1850 Census.<br />
2. Nathaniel TACKABURY, born New York, about 1826; aged 21, Farmer, ditto.<br />
3. Francis TACKABURY, born New York, about 1828; aged 21, Farmer, ditto.<br />
4. Sarah TACKABURY, born New York, about 1831; aged 18, at Eaton, ditto.<br />
5. Wesley TACKABURY, born New York, about 1833; aged 16, ditto.<br />
6. John D. TACKABURY, born New York, about 1835; aged 14, ditto.<br />
7. James TACKABURY, born New York, about 1837; aged 12, ditto.<br />
8. Mary TACKABURY, born New York, about 1838; aged 11, ditto.<br />
9. Summerfield TACKABURY, born New York, about 1840; aged 9, ditto.<br />
<br />
Middleton TACKABERRY, born 15 March 1808 [M.I., Findagrave]; he was at Pekin, Tazewell County, Illinois, 1850 Census, aged 42, Saddler, born PA, with his wife Olive (aged 35, born NY) and two children; he died on 25 June 1863, and was buried at Lakeside Cemetery, Tazewell County, Illinois [M.I. with photo], Section OG-1; he was married to Olive L.; she died on 31 January 1887, aged 76 years, 5 months 16 days [M.I.]; they had issue, including:<br />
1. John C. TACKABERRY, born 24 February 1830; he died on 25 February 1880, aged 50 years 1 day, and was buried with his parents [M.I., Findagrave]; he was married to Margaret J. WILLEY; she died on 10 March 1860, and was buried with her husband's family [M.I.]; with issue:<br />
a. Valerius L. TACKABERRY, born 4 August 1857; he died 17 March 1860, and was buried with his grandparents [M.I.].<br />
3. Samuel B. TACKABERRY, born Ohio, about 1834; aged 15, with his parents, 1850.<br />
2. Sarah E. TACKABERRY, born Illinois, about 1837; aged 12, with her parents, 1850; she died on 12 January 1879, aged 40 years 5 months 8 days, and was buried with her parents [M.I., Findagrave]; she was married to FOSTER.<br />
<br />
Eliza A. TACKABERRY, born about 30 January 1816; she died on 30 September 1839, and was buried in Middleton TACKABERRY's plot in Lakeside Cemetery, Section OG-1 [M.I.]. Probably his sister?<br />
______________________________________________<br />
<br /><br />
<i><span style="font-size: large;">TACKABERRY IN ONTARIO.</span></i><br />
<br />
Benjamin TACKABERRY, born at Tomagaddy, County Wexford, 1776; he emigrated to Canada in about 1811; he died at Elizabethtown, Leeds County, 17 August 1832 [TACKABERRY Family Bible]; he was married to Martha Ann SHERLOCK; she died at Elizabethtown, 11 August 1858; they had issue:<br />
1. Martha TACKABERRY, born at Tomagaddy, Monamolin Parish, 28 February 1798; she died at Elizabethtown, 30 August 1880.<br />
2. Benjamin John TACKABERRY, born at Tomagaddy, 11 November 1803; he died at Oxford Township, Leeds and Grenville County, 20 April 1867.<br />
3. Margaret TACKABERRY, born in Wexford, 31 January 1807; she died in Elizabethtown, 13 March 1902; she was married at Brockville Parish Church, by banns, 20 January 1823, to William McCONKEY, both of Elizabethtown; they had issue.<br />
4. Samuel TACKABERRY, born County Wexford, 22 February 1810; he died at Victoria, Leeds and Grenville County, 21 December 1885.<br />
5. Susannah TACKABERRY, born in Elizabethtown, 31 May 1812; she died there on 24 January 1879.<br />
6. Francis James TACKABERRY, born at Elizabethtown, 25 February 1823, and baptised 4 May [Brockville Parish Register].<br />
<br />
Benjamin TACKABERRY, born Ireland, about 1784; he emigrated to Canada; he was at Elizabethtown, Leeds County, 1851 Census, aged 65, with wife Rachel and five children; he was at Elizabethtown, 1861 Census, aged 76, Farmer, with wife Rachel and son; they had issue:<br />
1. John TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1827; aged 23, with his parents, 1851.<br />
2. Benjamin TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1829; he was aged 21, with is parents, 1851.<br />
3. Martha TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1831; aged 19, with her parents, 1851.<br />
4. Rachel TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1833; aged 17, with her parents, 1851.<br />
5. Fosse (?) TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1835; aged 15, with his parents, 1851; as Joseph, aged 24, with his parents, 1861.<br />
<br />
Nathaniel TACKABERRY, born in Ireland, about 1790; Farmer, Elizabethtown, 1851 Census, aged 60, with wife Sarah and six children; ditto, 1861 Census, aged 70, with wife and four children; he died 31 March 1863, aged 72 years, and was buried at New Dublin Cemetery, Leeds and Grenville County [M.I., Findagrave]; he was married to Sarah CONNERS; she was aged 45, with her husband, 1851, and 64 in 1861; she died 2 June 1877, and was buried with her husband; they had issue:<br />
1. Alice TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1826; aged 24, with her parents, 1851; aged 32, ditto, 1861.<br />
2. Richard TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1828; Farmer, aged 22, with his parents, 1851; aged 30, ditto, 1861.<br />
3. Mary A. TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1831; aged 19 (at Brockville), with her parents, 1851.<br />
4. Elizabeth TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1834; aged 16, with her parents, 1851.<br />
5. William TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1838; aged 12, with his parents, 1851; as William D., aged 20, ditto, 1861.<br />
6. Nathaniel TACKABERYY, born Canada West, about 1842; aged 8, with his parents, 1851.<br />
7. Willoughby TACKABERRY, born Canada West, about 1845; aged 5, with his parents, 1851; aged 14, ditto, 1861.<br />
<br />
Benjamin TACKABERRY, born Ireland, about 1794; he was at Ashfield, Huron County, Ontario, 1861 Census, aged 66, with his wife, probable son, daughter-in-law and three grandchildren; he was married in 1820, to Elizabeth (-?-); she was aged 70, with her husband, 1861; she died at Ashfield, Huron County, 19 November 1878, aged 88, born County Wexford, C.of E., the death informed by Joseph TACKABERRY, of Ashfield; they appear to have had issue:<br />
1. John TACKABERRY, born Ireland, about 1821; he was aged 39, Farmer, with his parents, and his probable wife Sarah (aged 22, born Upper Canada; married 1855); probable issue:<br />
a. Susan TACKABERRY, born Upper Canada, about 1855; aged 6, with her parents, 1861.<br />
b. William TACKABERRY, born Upper Canada, about 1857; aged 3, with her parents, 1861.<br />
c. Sarah TACKABERRY, born Upper Canada, about 1859; aged 1, with her parents, 1861.<br />
<br />
Mrs Martha TACKABERRY, born in County Wexford, about 1798; she died in Leeds County, Ontario, 30 August 1880, aged 82, a Methodist, wife of Benjamin TACKABERY, the death informed by Samuel TACKABERRY, Farmer, Elizabethtown.<br />
<br />
Henry TACKABERRY, born County Wexford, 1797-98; at Yonge, Leeds County, 1861 Census, aged 62, with wife Anne and five children; Farmer; he died 27 September 1872, aged 75, informed by Joshua TACKABERRY, Blacksmith, Yonge; he was buried at Athens Village Cemetery, Athens, Leeds and Grenville County, Ontario [M.I., Findagrave]; he was married to Ann RUDD; she died 30 August 1886, and was buried with her husband [M.I.]; they had issue:<br />
1. Mary Ann TACKABERRY, born Upper Canada, about 1830; aged 30, with her parents, 1861.<br />
2. Robert TACKABERRY, born 1 January 1832; aged 25, Labourer, with his parents, 1861; he died 21 October 1914, and was buried at Athens Village Cemetery [M.I.].<br />
2. Sarah TACKABERRY, born about 1844; she was aged 16, with her parents, 1861; she died 2 July 1866, and was buried at Athens Village Cemetery [M.I.].<br />
3. William Henry TACKABERRY, born about 1845; he was aged 14, Labourer, with his parents, 1861; he died in 1895, and was buried at Newboro' Cemetery, Leeds and Grenville County [M.I.].<br />
4. Joshua TACKABERRY, born 21 July 1851; he was aged 10, Labourer, with his parents, 1861; he probably informed his father's death, 1872, of Yonge, Blacksmith; he died 19 April 1877, and was buried at Athens Village Cemetery [M.I.].<br />
<br />
Mrs Mary TACKABERRY, born in Ireland, about 1790; she died in Leeds County, Ontario, 12 April 1879, aged 88, Widow, Methodist Episcopal, the death informed by her son (-in-law) Benjamin CULVERT, of the Township of Yonge Rear.<br />
______________________________________________<br />
<br /><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em>A TACKABERRY FAMILY IN GIPPSLAND, AUSTRALIA.</em></span><span style="font-size: large;"><br />
</span><span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><br /></span></span></div><div><span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;">Edward TACKABERRY; Farmer; he possibly died at Enniscorthy District, 1870, aged 80 [Volume 4, Page 564]; he was married in 1829 (by M.L.B., Diocese of Ossory), to Elizabeth DUFFIELD; she possibly died at Enniscorthy District, 13 December 1876, aged 78, a Widow; they had issue:</span></span><br />
1. Nicholas TACKABERRY. See [X] below.<br />
2. Martha TACKABERRY. See [Y[ below.<br />
3. William TACKABERRY; Farmer, of Garrane, Balleycanew Parish, County Wexford, of full age, a bachelor, Farmer, when he was married, 22 May 1865, to Jane TACKABERRY, full age, spinester, of Tomagaddy, Ballycanew, daughter of Robert TACKABERRY, Farmer, witnessed by Nicholas TACKABERRY and Hannah WARREN.<br />
4. Mary TACKABERRY; of full age, spinster, of Garrane, when she was married at Kilmuckridge Parish Church, County Wexford, 12 December 1872, to William GRAHAM, full age, bachelor, of Kileenup, Farmer, son of William GRAHAM, Farmer, withnessed by Nathaniel WILLIAMs and Nicholas TACKABERRY.<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;">[X] Nicholas TACKABERRY; born in Wexford, about 1829 (from his age at death), son of Edward TACKABERRY and Elizabeth DUFFIELL (as recorded in his death registration - they were married in 1829, by M.L.B., Diocese of Ossory); Farmer, at Gurrawn, Enniscorthy Registration District, 1878, 1879; he was witness to the marriage in Kilmuckridge Parish Church, District of Enniscorthy, 12 December 1872, of Mary TACKABERRY, of Garrane, daughter of Edward TACKABERRY, Farmer (and so probably Nicholas's sister), to William GRAHAM, of Kileenip, Farmer; Nicholas emigrated to Victoria on the ship Liguria, arriving in Melbourne 30 November 1883, with his wife, four children and Martha THACKABERRY (perhaps his sister); he first went to Echuca, on the Murray River, and eventually settled at Darnum, in Gippsland; he died there on 24 December 1895, aged 67; Nicholas was of full age, bachelor, Farmer, of County Wexford, son of Ed. TACKABERRY, when he was married by License (Rites of the Church of Ireland), at the Parish Church, Monkstown, County Dublin, 30 August 1877, to Sarah Jane WHITE, of full age, spinster, of Ringstown, daughter of Ed. WHITE, Farmer, witnessed by G.A. HOLDWAY and John WHITE [image viewable on Civil Records, </span><a href="http://www.irishgenealogy.ie/"><span style="font-size: small;">www.irishgenealogy.ie</span></a><span style="font-size: small;"> web-site]; she was at Trafalgar, Alambee Polling Place, Flinders Division, 1903, Home Duties, with her two sons Edward and William (both farmers); she died at Yarragon, December 1938, aged 80 years; they had issue:</span></span><br />
1. Edward TACKABERRY, born at Gurrawn, Enniscorthy District, 9 August 1878, the birth informed by his father; he emigrated to Victoria; he was at Trafalgar, Allambee, Flinders Division, 1903, Farmer, with his mother and brother William; he settled on a Soldier block at Mirboo North after the Great War; he died at Mirboo North, 17 August 1944, aged 66 , loving husband of Clara, and brother of William, Martha, Ernest, Susan, Mark and Sarah [The Argus, 18 August]; he was married at St James's Church, Darnum, 12 June 1907, to Clara Isabel NOTT, youngest daughter of A.L. NOTT of Darnum [Australasian, 13 August].<br />
2. William Thomas TACKABERRY, born at Gurrawn, 17 September 1879, the birth informed by his father; he emigrated to Victoria; a Private with the Gippsland Rangers, when he volunteered to serve in the Transvaal, with the Victorian Contingent, due to sail for South Africa on 28 October 1899 [Warragul Guardian, etc, 17 October]; he was invalided back to Melbourne, invalided due to enteritis, July 1900; he was at Trafalgar, Allambee, Flinders Division, 1903, Farmer, with his mother and brother Edward; he joined the Australian Army in 1906, and served in the Great War; Major, Staff Corps, Defense Department, Melbourne, 1937 [Birthdays Today Column, The Argus, 17 September]; he died at Heidleberg Military Hospital, 7 July 1948 [Burnie Advocate, 9 July]; he was married at St James's Church, Darnum, 29 August 1906, to Linda Kate NOTT, third daughter of A.L. NOTT of Darnum [Australasia, 13 October].<br />
3. Eliza Anne TACKABERRY, born at Gurrawn, 9 March 1881, the birth informed by her father; she is died to have died at Buln Buln, 24 December 1895.<br />
4. Martha Jane TACKABERRY, born at Gurrawn, 4 August 1882, the birth informed by her father, she emigrated to Victoria; she was married in 1921 to William Allan WALLACE.<br />
5. Dora THACKERBERRY, born at Echuca, Victoria, 1884 #2229; she died at Carlton, Victoria, 1889 #6058.<br />
6. Nicholas Tackaberry, born at Warragul, Victoria, 1885 #29579.<br />
7. Samuel John TACKABERRY, born at Buln Buln, Victoria, 1886 #24284; he died at Buln Buln, 1889 #8373.<br />
8. Susanna Charlotte TACKABERRY, born at Buln Buln, 1888 #9227; she was married in 1920 #889, to Ernest Waldgrave NUNSTON.<br />
9. Alfred Ernest TACKABERRY, said to have been born in Victoria, 1889; he was married in 1917 to Clara Adeline WALLACE (unless this was Edward?).<br />
10. Sarah Jane TACKABERRY, born at Buln Buln, 1891 #1245; she died 28 September 1987, aged 96 years, and was buried/cremated at Yarragon Lawn Cemetery and Niche Wall [M.I.].<br />
11. John TACKABERRY; said to have been born in Victoria, about 1892; aged 23 on enlistment in the 1st A.I.F., 17 November 1914; he was Returned to Australi, 17 July 1919; he died at Mildura, 1925 #2641.<br />
12. Mark TACKABERRY; born at Warragul, 1894 #7684; he died at Warragul, 9 October 1965 #22794, aged 71, and was buried/cremated at Yaragon Lawn Cemetery and Niche Wall [M.I.].<br />
<br />
[Y] Martha TACKABERRY; she died at Warragul, 1900 #15107, aged 75 years, her parents named as Edward TACKABERRY and Elizabeth DUFFIELD in the registration - and evidently an unmarried sister of Nicholas TACKABERRY.<br />
Miss THACKABERRY, of 49 Stanley Street, Richmond, June 1883, when she inserted a Situations Wanted notice, for work as Housekeeper or Lady Help, with <em>"... excellent testimonials"</em> [The Age, 25 June].<br />
Was this Martha? If not, then who was she?<br />
<br />
TACKABERRY Bros, with others, (Milkers and Springers), from 5 pounds 5s to 6 pounds 2s 6d, Local Markets, September 1886 [Warragul Guardian and Buln Buln and Narracon Shire Advocate, 2 September]. Could this be the brothers Nicholas and William A.? Were they brothers?<br />
<br />
[Z] William Aaron THACKABERRY; probably W.A. TACKABERRY, employe of the Echuca Division of the Echuca and Moama Sawmill, October 1884, when he donated 2s 6d to the Echuca District Hospital [Riverine Herald, 2 October]; ditto, September 1885, 2s.; Allotment 73, of 277 acres, in the Parish of Leongatha, William A. TACKABERRY, was scheduled to be considered at a meeting of the local Land Board, due to be held at Cranbourne on 30 December 1887 [South Bourke and Mornington Journal, 21 December]; one of a number of shareholders in the Removal of the South Warragul Butter Factory into new premises in Warrugal, November 1890, with 50 shares [Great Southern Advocate, 28 November]; W.A. TACKABERRY was joint winner of 1st prize of 10s 6d for 28lb Early Potatoes, Horticulture Awards, December 1891 [Warragul Guardian, etc, 22 December]; William A. TACKABERRY, allot 39, 120 acres, Drouin K., £200, November 1892 [Shire Advertisements, Warragul Guardian, etc, 29 November]; of Trafalgar South, January 1904, when he wrote to the Narracan Shire Council concerning <em>"... the dangerous state of a culvert which spanned the Narracan Creek on the road which passes through his land"</em> [Correspondence, West Gippsland Gazette, 26 January]; he was at Trafalgar South, Flinders Division, 1905 Electoral Roll, a Farmer, with Elizabeth Roberta THACKABERRY, Home Duties.<br />
<br />
And a probable cousin:<br />
<br />
Christopher TACKABERRY, born in County Wexford in 1861 (said to have been the son of Thomas TACKABERRY of Tomagaddy, County Wexford, and his wife Martha RUDD - and probably thereby a first cousin of the above Nicholas); he emigrated to Victoria, evidently in 1888; he was enrolled at Warragul, Flinders Division, 1903, a Farmer, with his wife Alice, Home Duties; he was at Ellin Park, Warragul Polling Place, Gippsland Division, 1915, Farmer, with Alice; they were at Ellin Park, Walhalla Polling Place, Gippsland Division, 1922, with Alice and adult children - Thomas Benjamin, Christopher, Elizabeth, and William Charles (the three sons Farmers); Christopher (Senior) died at Warragul, 1935 (his parents names not recorded); he was married in London [Obit, Age, 2 October 1935] in 1888, to Alice SUNDERLAND; she died in Victoria, 1936; ; he was married, with issue:<br />
1. Martha Alice THACKABERRY, born at Warragul in 1888; she was at 68 Hawksburn Road, South Yarra, 1909, Toorak Polling Place, Fawkner Division; she died at Warragul, 16 November 1891, aged 3 years, of a snake bite.<br />
2. Thomas Benjamin THACKABERRY, born at Warragul, 1890 #28435.<br />
3. Christopher TACKABERRY, born at Warragul, 1891.<br />
4. Elizabeth THACKABERRY, born at Warragul, 1893.<br />
5. William Charles THACKABERRY, born at Warragul, 1895.<br />
2. George Samuel TACKABERRY, born at Warragul, 1899.<br />
7. John Richard THACKABERRY, born at Warragul, 1901.<br />
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<br /><br />
<em><span style="font-size: large;">TACKABERRY IN NEW ZEALAND.</span></em><br />
<br />
John Bartholomew THACKABERRY; arrived in New Zealand before August 1872; the <em>"... irrepressible barber of Mount Eden</em>"; last heard of in July 1890, having faced his umpteenth day in Court on charges of drunkenness.<br />
<br />
Fossie TACKABERRY, probably born about 1824 (from age at death); he arrived in Dunedin, 1 October 1878, by the Steamer Wanganui, in the Second Cabin, with Miss Florence TACKABERRY, perhaps his sister (or ? daughter) [Western Star, 7 December]; as Fossey James, he died in N.Z., 1951 #27116, aged 86 years, and was buried at Papakura Cemetery, Auckland, in July [P. ANG-J-052]; Fossey James was married in N.Z., 1889 #3018, to Sarah Jane FERGUS; she died at her residence, 10 Ward Terrace, Dominion Road, 16 November 1918 (#8914), aged 50 years [Auckland Star, 19 November]; they had issue:<br />
1. Fossey Henry TACKABERRY, born N.Z., 1891 #14685; as Fossey Harry, he died in N.Z., 1966 #24807, aged 74; he was married firstly, in N.Z., 1913 #7187, to Phyllis ROBERTS; they had issue:<br />
a. Fossey TACKABERRY, born in N.Z., 1914 #9487.<br />
Fossey Harry was probably married secondly, in N.Z., 1931 #533, to Nina Louisa WAINWRIGHT.<br />
2. Florence Pearl TACKABERRY, born N.Z., 1894 #9824 (father Foster James); as the eldest daughter, she was married in her father's residence, Devonport, 14 April 1913 (#2849), to Leslie CRAIG, second son of Samuel CRAIG of Paeroa [Auckland Star, 6 June].<br />
3. Frances Muriel TACKABERY, born N.Z., 1896 #17264 (father Foster James); as the second daughter, of Auckland, she was married at Auckland, 13 August 1917 (#4702), to Charles Leslie WELLS, son of the late Charles Arthur WELLS, of Leicester, England [Auckland Star, 15 September].<br />
Fossey James married secondly, in 1920, Florence Eliza RINGROSE, born 2 July 1878 [Death Index]; she died in N.Z., 1972 #46679, and was buried with her husband at Papakura Cemetery in December.<br />
<br />
Florence TACKABERRY; she arrived in Dunedin in 1878 with Fossie.<br />
<br />
Frances Charlotte TACKABERRY, born about 1856 (from age at death), eldest daughter of the late William TACKABERRY, Esq, of New Ross, County Wexford (from her marriage notice); she died in N.Z., 1912 #3212, aged 55 years; she was married at Holy Trinity, Lawrence, 19 June 1877 (#1445), to Henry Hope HOLMDEN, Bank of New Zealand [Otago Daily Times, 23 June]; they had issue:<br />
1. Mrs R. HERBERT, Wellington (1932).<br />
2. Miss E. HOLMDEN (1932).<br />
3. Dr HOLMDEN (1932).<br />
4. Mt T. N. HOLMDEN, of Auckland (1932).<br />
<br />
Florence Elizabeth TACKABERRY, born about 1866 (from age at death), youngest daughter of the late William TACKABERRY of County Wexford, Ireland (from her marriage notice); she died in N.Z., 1921 #893, aged 54 years; she was married at Holy Trinity, Devonport, 19 September 1888 (#2059), to Edward Perry DUMERGUE, eldest son of the ate Captain Charles Edward DUMERGUE, HEICS, of Douglas, Isle of Man, and of Weston-super-Mare, Somerset [Auckland Star, 21 September].<br />
<br /></div>
</div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-82416305993125217902019-02-11T19:16:00.044-08:002022-07-25T20:12:25.029-07:00A family of PIGOTT, Stone Masons, in the Counties of Meath and Westmeath.<br />
The following baptismal and vestry meeting details are recorded in a pdf document, posted on the <br />
<a href="http://www.ireland.anglican.org/">www.ireland.anglican.org</a> web-site, under the title of:<br />
"Representative Church Body Library, Parish of Killucan (Diocese of Meath), Combined Register and Vestry Minutes, 1696-1786, transcribed and edited by Andrew WHITESIDE."<br />
<br />
George PIGOTT, probably born before 1685, and perhaps well before; godfather at the baptism at Killucan Parish Church, County Meath, 14 September 1706, of Robert HARRISON, son of Michael HARRISON of Kinnegad, County Meath, and his wife Ann, the godmother being Mrs Isabella SMYTH.<br />
<br />
Thomas PIGOTT, probably born before 1697; of Kinnegad, Mason; by his wife Elizabeth he had issue:<br />
1. Mary PIGGOT, baptized at Killucan, 20 January 1717-18.<br />
2. Johanna PIGGOTT, baptized at Killucan, 26 January 1719-20.<br />
3. Elizabeth PIGOTT, baptized at Killucan, 29 May 1722.<br />
<br />
Thomas PIGGOTT or PICKETT; of Kinnegad, Butcher; by his wife, also Elizabeth, he had issue:<br />
1. Bridget PICKETT, baptized 6 January 1723-24.<br />
2. Elizabeth PIGOTT, baptized at Killucan, 10 May 1726.<br />
<br />
Philip PIGGOT, probably born before 1707; of Kinnegad, Mason; by his wife Sarah he had issue:<br />
1. George PIGGOT, baptized at Killucan, 23 December 1728. A George PIGOTT attended a Vestry Meeting on 23 March 1761.<br />
? possible other issue (but if so, not baptized at Killucan).<br />
2. Lydia PIGGOT, baptized at Killucan, 14 February 1739-40.<br />
3. Ann PIGGOT, baptized at Killucan, 1 February 1741[page torn - probably 1741-42].<br />
4. Richard PIGGOTT, baptized at Killucan, 6 April 1744.<br />
5. Ann PIGGOT, baptized at Killucan, 10 January 1748-49.<br />
6. Charles PIGGOT, baptised at Killucan, 15 October 1750.<br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. Mary PIGGOT, baptized 30 October 1752.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">Phillip PIGGOTT attended Vestry Meetings on 9 April 1760, 23 March 1761, 23 March 1762, 4 April 1763, 23 April 1764, 28 March and 16 May 1769, 2 April 1771, 20 April 1778, and 5 April and 28 June 1779.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Oliver PIGGOT, of Kinnegad, Mason (meason), and his wife Ann had issue baptized there:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Thomas PIGGOT, baptized 28 January 1738-39.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. George PIGGOT, baptized 27 November 1741.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Oliver PIGGOT, of Kinnegad, Mason, and his wife Mary had issue baptised there:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. William PIGGOTT, baptized 21 April 1744.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Lydda PIGGOT, baptized 8 April 1754.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Oliver and Ann PIGGOT had issue baptized there:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Lydia PIGGOTT, baptized 16 May 1755.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Rich'd PIGGOT, baptized 19 September 1759.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">George and Sarah PIGGOTE of Kinnegade had issue baptized there:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Sarah PIGGOTE, baptized 4 November 1753.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times";">The Killucan Register also contains details of a family which may well have PIGOTT connections.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">George PURDON, probably baptized at Killucan, 20 August 1710, eighth of ten children of Peter PURDON of Rathwire, Gent, by his wife Mary (said to have been an ADAIR); of Curristown, Gent, was buried at Killucan, 30 October 1756; his wife Elizabeth was recorded in several Family Trees of Ancestry as being a PIGOTT of Capard, Queen's County, and was probably buried there in May 1789; they had issue, all baptized at Killucan:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">1. Henry PURDON, baptized 21 October 1739; he is said to have died in 1804, and to have married Elizabeth WHITEWAY, with issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><em> a. George PURDON, born at Curristown, and baptized at Killucan, 4 December 1773.</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. John PURDON, ditto all ditto 19 January 1775</span></em>.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">2. Elizabeth PURDON, baptized 15 February 1742-43.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">3. Mary PURDON, baptized 21 October 1745.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">4. Edward PURDON, baptized 1 November 1748.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">5. Margaret PURDON, baptized 31 May 1752.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">6. Thomas PURDON, baptized 7 October 1753.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";">_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _<span style="font-family: "times";"><br /></span></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "helvetica neue", helvetica, arial, "lucida grande", sans-serif; font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><br /></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">William PIGOTT; born about 1740; he died on 27 February 1821, aged 81, and was buried at Kinnegad Parish Churchyard [see his memorial on <a href="http://www.findagrave.com/">www.findagrave.com</a>]; he was evidently married with issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">1. Anne PIGOTT, born about 1785; she married in 1803 to Thomas BAILY [Index to M.L.B.s, Diocese of Meath]; she died 2 May 1809, aged 24, and was buried with her father as Anne BAILEY.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">2. Elizabeth PIGOTT, born about 1786; she died 7 May 1793, aged 7, and was buried with her father.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">3. William PIGOTT; he erected a monument to his father and two sisters at Kinnegad Churchyard, after 1821.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">William PIGOTT attended Vestry Meetings at Killculan Church, Kinnegad, 27 March and 15 May 1780, 16 April and 4 June 1781, and 1 April 1782.</span></div>
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<br />
Accounts presented to the House of Commons by Grand Juries of Ireland, County of Meath, Lent assizes, 1807, included [Page 269] the following:<br />
To Benjamin PARKER, William and Charles PIGOTT, to build an arch of a bridge on Lands of Tieroghan, road from Kinegad to Edenderry, wages included, £8 0s 6d.<br />
To (ditto) Lands of Knockalroo, road from Philipstown to Trim (ditto), £2 3s 10d.<br />
To (ditto) Lands of Ballyboy, (ditto), £2 1s 5d.<br />
To (ditto) over a mill-race on Lands of Ballyboggin (ditto), £1 2s 3d.<br />
To (ditto) to repair a gullet on Lands of Park, road from Kinegad to Edenderry (ditto) £4 0s 3d.<br />
To (ditto) arch of a bridge on lands of Ballyboggin (ditto), £1 18s 1d.<br />
<br />
Jane Isabella, the Dowager Countess of Lanesborough, made an Indented Deed of Release, dated 1 February 1822 [Memorial 522246, Book 770, Page 311], by which she demised land to Rev Robert NOBLE, Minister of the Parish of Kinnegad, for the purposes of establishing a Parish School; the land, of 1 acre, was <i>"... bounded on the north by the Quarry field, on the east by the road leading from Dublin to Mullingar, on the south by the lane leading from the road to the quarry, and on the west by the Stone Quarry of Kinnegad, together with that site in the Town for the Schoolhouse to be built on, situate on the south side of the Street of Kinnegad and adjoining the house now occupied by Mrs MAGUIRE.</i>"<br />
Whilst this deed makes no mentions of the PIGOTTs, it does reveal that there was an established stone quarry in or very near the town of Kinnegad, with which the PIGOTT Masons would probably have been very familiar.<div><br /></div><div>Mary PIGOTT, Kinnegad, 1816 [Index to Testamentary Records, Diocese of Meath, P.R.O.].<br />
______________________________________________<br />
<br /><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div>
<i><u><span style="font-size: large;">FAMILY OF CHARLES PIGOTT OF KINNEGAD</span></u>.</i><br />
<br />
Charles PIGOTT, born about 1770's; of Kinnegad, Killucan Parish, County Westmeath, 1825 [Tithe Applotment Books]; possibly the Mason in Kinnegad who witnessed the July 1825 Deed of John PIGOTT (see above), or perhaps instead of Bundarry, whose younger son Charles PIGOTT was named as second life for the term of the same Deed; Charles was evidently married, with issue, probably including (the speculation that these two might have been brothers has not yet been proven):<br />
1. George PIGOTT, born about 1810. See [A] below.<br />
2. Charles PIGOTT, born about 1814. See [B] below.<br />
<br />
[A] George PIGOTT, born about 1810, possibly at Kinnegad, and stated by descendants to have been a son of Charles PIGOTT; Mason; he probably died at Rathmolyon, Trim, County Meath, 4 May 1892, aged 75, Married, a Stone Mason, the death informed by his daughter Catherine KERR of Isaacstown, present at the death; he was married at Athboy, 22 January 1834 to Catherine HANNA [Index to Marriage License Bonds, Diocese of Meath; several family trees on Ancestry.com]; she died at Rathmolyon, 17 February 1899, aged 86, Widow of a Mason, the death informed by her daughter Catherine KERR, Rathmolyon, present at the death; they had issue [Family Tree on Ancestry - not all details have yet been verified back to original source]:<br />
<em> a. Matilda PIGOTT, born at Athboy, 30 April 1835; she emigrated to South Australia; she died in Gumeracha, South Australia, 23 July 1867, aged 33 [Book 28, Page 470]; she named her father George PIGOTT when she was married at Gumeracha Court House, 18 March 1860, to Samuel Robert DONNELLY, son of Robert DONNELLY [Book 41, Page 295]; he died in Adelaide, 27 March 1865; they had issue.</em><br />
<em> b. William PIGOTT, born at Athboy, 12 October 1836.</em><br />
<em> c. Thomas PIGOTT, born at Athboy, 21 February 1840; he is said to have died in 1902 at Sleaford, Lincolnshire (but the only Thomas PIGOTT living there in 1901 was a Primitive Wesleyan Methodist Minister, of the same age, but a native of Lincolnshire with a wife named Harriet); married Mary LALLEY; she is said to have died in 1888, aged about 24.</em><br />
<em> d. Charles PIGOTT, born in County Meath, 26 January 1843; Mason in Palmerstown, County Kildare, 1877, 1879; Mason in Johnstown, County Kildare, 1881, 1886; at Carnew Street, Arran Quay, Dublin, 1901 Census, aged 55, Mason, with his wife and two children; he died at 56 Carnew Street, Dublin, 21 September 1909, aged 65, Widower, Bricklayer, the death informed by his son William J. PIGOTT, of 9 Enniskerry Road, present at the death; of Johnstown, Straffen, County Kildare, bachelor, Mason, when he was married by License at St Mark's Parish Church, Dublin, 20 February 1877, to Margaret RICHARDSON, of 16 Clarence Place, Dublin, full age, spinster, daughter of John RICHARDSON, Labourer; she was with her husband and two children, 1901 Census, aged 48, born in County Kildare; she died at 50 Carnew Street, Dublin, 19 April 1909, Married, aged 63, Brick Layer's wife, the death informed by her son William J. PIGOTT, of 9 Enniskerry Road, present at the death; they had issue:</em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Elizabeth PIGOTT, born at Palmerstown, Naas, 5 October 1877, the birth informed by Ellen (X) RICHARDSON, of Palmerstown, present at the birth; as Eliza, she died at Johnstown, 1 July 1895, aged 17, Servant, of Phthisis (T.B.), the death informed by John PIGOTT of Johnstown, present at death (relationship, if any, not stated).</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> ii. William John PIGOTT, born at Palmerstown, Naas, 14 May 1879, the birth, as John PIGOTT, informed by Eleanor (X) RICHARDSON, of Palmerstown, present at the birth;</span></em><em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> aged 20, Mason, with his parents, 1901 Census;</span></em><em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> he was at Enniskerry Road, Dublin North, 1911 Census, aged 30, Mason, with his wife and son; he died at Baggot Road Hospital, late of 9 Enniskerry Road, Dublin, 22 May 1964, aged 85, Widower, Pensioner, the death informed by his son B.C. PIGOTT, of 66 Arron Quay, present at the death; he was of Carnew Street, Dublin, Builder, when he was married by License at St George'<em><span style="font-size: x-small;">s Parish Church, Dublin, 17 April 1906, to Catherine LEITCH, full age, spinster, of 9 Enniskerry Road, Dublin, daughter of Thomas LEITCH, Soldier, witnessed by Mary PIGOTT and Thomas LEITCH; she was aged 33, with her husband, 1911 Census, married 5 years with one child surviving from one, and born in South Africa; she may have died at 70 Pigeon House Road, Dublin, 14 October 1946, aged 69, Married, Housewife, informed by William J. PIGOTT, the Widower, of the same address; they had issue born at 9 Enniskerry Road, Dublin North - a son Benjamin Charles (born 9 May 1907; died in Dublin, 21 November 1983; married Elizabeth Dunlop WILSON) and Margaret Elizabeth (born 3 May 1916; died 25 December 2006; married in 1942 to Alfred Edward BRYAN).</span></em></span></em></div><div>
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iii. George Henry PIGOTT, born at Johnstown, Naas, 10 April 1881, the birth informed by Ellen (X) RICHARDSON, of Johnstown, present at the birth. See [Z] below; he died in 1918 (but not Registered in Ireland); he married Irene Christina FORREST, with issue</span></em><em><span style="font-size: x-small;">.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iv. Mary Jane PIGOTT, born at Johnstown, Naas, 28 June 1884, the birth informed by her mother; aged 15, with her parents, 1901 Census; she was Aughrim Street, Arran Quay, 1911 Census, aged 24, Typist, residing in the house of a Cycle Mechanic; she died at Jane Cottage, Newtown Park Road, Blackrock, 27 or 28 July 1954, Spinster, aged 70, Retired Insurance Official, the death informed by the Coroner for County Dublin.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> v. Charles PIGOTT, born at Johnstown, Naas, 18 July 1886, the birth informed by his aunt Katie PIGOTT, of Rathmolyon, County Meath, present at the birth; he died at Johnstown, 14 December 1891, aged 5, of Tubercular Meningitis, informed by his father, Charles PIGOT, Gardner, of Johnstown, present at the death.</span></em><br />
<em> e. Mary Jane PIGOTT, born in 1846; died in 1888; she was aged 21, Spinster (father George, a Mason), when she was married at Rathmolyon Parish Church, by License (C. of I.), 13 June 1870, to David CUMMINS, aged 22, bachelor, Farmer, son of Robert CUMMINS, Labouring Man.</em><br />
<em> f. Catherine PIGOTT, born at Rathmolyon, 17 October 1849 [ROWDEN Tree on Ancestry.com]; she was aged 50, with her husband, at Rathmolyon, 1901 Census; she died at Rathmolyon, 23 October 1936; she was of full age, spinster, of Rathmolyon (but recorded her father as Chas PIGOTT, Mason), when she was married at Rathmolyon Parish Church, 2 December 1886, to Samuel Alexander KERR, full age, bachelor, Labourer, of Isaacstown, son of A. KERR (no family witnesses); he was at Rathmolyon, 1901 Census, aged 55, Farmer, born County Meath, with his wife, daughter and ASHTON nephew; they were at Rathmolyon in 1911, aged 67 and 62, married 24 years, with only born child; they had issue:</em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Annie PIGOTT, born at Rathmolyon, 13 October1887; aged 13, Scholar, with her parents, 1901; aged 23 in 1911, only child; she died in Dublin on 6 October 1974; married Henry HUGHES.</span></em><br />
<em> g. Elizabeth PIGOTT, born 1845; died 1895; of Belford, Blackrock, full age, spinster, and a daughter of George PIGOTT, Mason, when she was married at St Paul's Parish Church, Dublin, 12 January 1881, to Joseph ASHTON, Coppersmith, of 13 Kirwin Street, Stoneybatter, a Widower, and son of John ASHTON, Blacksmith; they had issue:</em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Arthur Irvine ASHTON, born at 18 Bow Street, Dublin North, 21 February 1896; he was aged 5, Scholar, with his KERR aunt and uncle, 1901 Census.</span></em><br />
<br />
[B] Charles PIGOTT, said to have been born at Kinnegad [his Memorial on <a href="http://www.findagrave.com/">www.findagrave.com</a>], about 1814, and perhaps a brother to George; Mason and Farmer<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_2805"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; he died at Allenstown, 27 November 1889, a Widower, aged 75, Mason, the death informed by his son George PIGOTT, of Back Street, Kells, present at the death; he was buried at Athboy Old Graveyard [M.I.]; <span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_4701">Charles was married at Ardbraccan, County Meath, 19 June 1855, to Margaret USHER or USSHER [F.H.L., Film Number 101369], son of Charles PIGOTT [All Ireland, Select Marriages, 1619-1898, on Ancestry.com]; she died at Allenstown, 24 January 1895, aged 63, the widow of Charles PIGOTT, Farmer, the death informed by her son Charles PIGOTT of Allenstown, and was buried with her husband at Athboy Old Graveyard [M.I.] - but as he was a widower in 1889, so perhaps one of the informants just made a mistake?; they had issue</span>:</span></span><br />
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549494099219_4820"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> a. William PIGOTT, born about 1856; he died at Raheny, County Dublin, 31 October 1883, aged 27, unmarried, Bricklayer, of Typhoid Fever, the death informed by his brother George PIGOTT, of Allenstown, County Meath; he was buried with his parents at Athboy Old Graveyard [M.I.].</em></span></span></div>
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<div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3022" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, "Lucida Grande", sans-serif; font-size: 16px;">
<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3046"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> b. George Arthur PIGOTT, born about 1858; he was at Emmaville Avenue, Wood Quay, Dublin, 1901 Census, aged 42, Clerk of Works, born England (sic), with his sister-in-law Elizabeth and two nieces; he was at Hollybank Road, Drumcondra, County Dublin, 1911 Census, aged 52, born County Meath, Civil Engineer, R.C., Married, with wife Henrietta Caroline (aged 39, born King's County) and her daughter Blanche Mabel COGGER; he was married firstly, in 1883, to Mary or May DRUMMOND; she was at Glasson Upper, Glassan, County Westmeath, 1901 Census, Head of Household, aged 42, Professional Nurse, Married, born Invernesshire, with her two daughters Carrie and Annie.</em></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3022" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, "Lucida Grande", sans-serif; font-size: 16px;"><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>George and May had issue:</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3059"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> i. Charles Stewart PIGOTT, born at Rodstown, 15 September 1883, informed by the father, a Mason; a </em><em>Merchant Seaman:</em></span></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWWrsqiqdYrkflwSdXZmBZzMgVtTt-PzyVwaDq4OFt9fCau8gPJ7jMe_Eshqjku2NqO3s5w9KP7pD7ouHMG1JCDRsGO7su8G16XKiavk_xN9ly8yUNwYI8bUYNoSb5uvMPLLztdAreUyXD/s1600/C.S.PIGOTT.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="313" data-original-width="219" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWWrsqiqdYrkflwSdXZmBZzMgVtTt-PzyVwaDq4OFt9fCau8gPJ7jMe_Eshqjku2NqO3s5w9KP7pD7ouHMG1JCDRsGO7su8G16XKiavk_xN9ly8yUNwYI8bUYNoSb5uvMPLLztdAreUyXD/s1600/C.S.PIGOTT.JPG" /></a></div>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em></em></span></em></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em>[Image from Britain, Merchant Seamen, 1918-1941, Findmypast.co.uk]</em></span></em></span></div>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em>He was serving on the Navarino, August 1919 to February 1921; he arrived in New York, 15 September 1922, 2nd Engineer, SS Dunstuffnage (?), from Glasgow; he died at sea on 5 March 1943, when his ship, SS Fidra, was sunk, while part of a convoy from Gibraltar to England [Tower Hill Memorial, Panel 49], aged 59, Chief Engineer Officer; he was married to Margaret HENDERSON, of Eastfield, Joppa, Portobello, Edinburgh.</em></span></em></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3120"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> ii. William Gregory PIGOTT, born at New Market Street, Kells, 3 March 1885, informed by the father, a Mason; aged 16, Farm Servant, with his uncle Charles PIGOTT, at Rodstown, County Meath, 1901 Census; R.I.C.; 15th Battalion, Royal Irish Rifles, W.W.1; electrocuted escaping from a German Prisoner-of-War Camp in France, 18 September 1918; he was married at Clongan parish church, Kells, County Meath, 14 February 1913, to Maria Alice DAUNT</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3140"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> iii. John Drummond PIGOTT, born at Back Street, Kells, 10 December 1886, informed by the father, of Back Street, Mason; Mason; he joined the Royal Tank Corps, at Grottenerton, Germany, 24 August 1914, aged 31 years 7 months, Bricklayer, born Kells, Meath, married to Harriet Elizabeth DANIELS, parish Church of Balrathboyne, 17 September 1921, B.E.F. 17 October 1915 to 15 September 1918, 1914-15 Star, British War Medal, Victory Medal, discharged at Canterbury, 4 July 1922; he sailed on S.S. Duchess of Richmond, from Belfast, 13 April 1929, arriving St John's, N.B., 21 April, aged 42, to visit his cousin Charles PIGOTT of 5982 Dampries Street, Vancouver, his next-of-kin in Ireland Mrs Elizabeth PIGOTT, Rodstown, Kells, and evidently accompanying some Students of the Ministry going to Canada for short spells with different churches as part of their studies; he sailed on the S.S. San Francisco, from Vancouver, 2 November 1938, aged 52, Plasterer, born Kells, Ireland, a Citizen of Canada, last permanent residence Vancouver; he evidently returned to his family in Ireland; John died at Rodstown, 5 November 1946, aged 59, Mason, the death informed by his widow Harriet; he was buried at St James's Churchyard, Athboy, County Meath [M.I.]; he was of Richmond Barracks, Dublin, Soldier, he was married by License at Balrathboyne Church of Ireland, 17 September 1921, to Harriet Elizabeth DANIELS, of full age, spinster, Teacher, of Allenstown (daughter of Clement DANIELS, Farmer), witnessed by Charles PIGOTT, C. PIGOT and another; they had issue.</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3242"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> iv. Kate Swan McAra PIGOTT, born at Back Street, Kells, 7 June 1889, informed by the father; as Carrie, she was aged 12, Scholar, with her mother, 1901 Census; as Carrie, she was aged 21, Dress Maker, with her aunt Annie Katherine SPARKES, 1911 Census.</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3256"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> v. Annie Isabella PIGOTT, born at Back Street, Kells, 13 June 1891, informed by the father, of Back Street, Builder; she was aged 10, Scholar, with her mother, 1901 Census.</em></span></span></div>
<div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5112" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, "Lucida Grande", sans-serif; font-size: 16px;">
<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5113"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>George appears to have had further issue by Elizabeth McGRATH:</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5115"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> vi. Violet Elizabeth PIGOTT, born 29 June 1895 (not recorded on the irishgenealogy.ie web-site).</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5134"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> vii. Aileen Gertrude PIGOTT, born in Dublin South, 24 January 1898, mother's surname McGRATH (no image available on the irishgenealogy.ie web-site).</em></span></span></div>
<div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3075" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, "Lucida Grande", sans-serif; font-size: 16px;">
<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3076"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>George Arthur, Civil Engineer, describing himself as a Bachelor, of 21 Emorville Avenue, South Winton Road, son of Charles Arthur PIGOTT, Civil Engineer, was married secondly, at Drumcondra C. of I. Church, 21 May 1901, to Henrietta COGGER, full age, spinster, of 61 Millmount Avenue, daughter of John Joseph McNamara, Horse Dealer, witnessed by Frederick G. VARCOE and Frances Patricia VARCOE.</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549494099219_4938"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> c. Elizabeth PIGOTT; died 1900 (F.A.G. Memorial - evidently in error; she died 28 June 1905, and was buried with her parents at Athboy Old Graveyard [M.I.].</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3096"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> d. Mary Jane PIGOTT, born in or before 1875</em></span></span><em style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;">; she died 21 June 1930, and was buried with her parents, Athboy Old Graveyard [M.I.]</em><em style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;">; she was of Rodstown, Spinster, full age, when she was married firstly, by license, at Rathboyne church, Kells, 24 June 1896, to William RICHARDSON, full age, Widower, Engineer, son of Mark RICHARDSON, Farmer, the marriage witnessed by Annie SPARKS and Charles PIGOTT, her siblings; he probably died at Farrell Sreet, Kells, 24 January 1913, aged 73, Married, Agricultural Implement and Cycle Manufacturer, the death informed by W.B. WAKELY, of Farrell Street, present at the death; as Mary Jane RICHARDSON, Widow, of Farrell Street, Kells, daughter of Charles PIGOTT, Contractor, she was married secondly, at Kells church, 20 January 1918, to Abraham SYNNOTT, full age, Bachelor, Motor Cycle Mechanic, of Farrell Street, Kells, son of William SYNNOTT, Tailor; he is said to have been born in Dublin, 1 December 1866, and to have died at Rathdown, September 1948.</em></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_4755"><span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_4754"><span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3315"><span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_2824"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> e. Charles PIGOTT, born County Meath, about 1861; he was at Rodstown, County Meath, 1901 Census, aged 39, Farmer, with his wife Elizabeth (aged 20), nephew William PIGOTT (aged 16), sister-in-law Martha PIGOTT (29, born Fermanagh), nieces Ellinor PIGOTT (3, born Wexford), Mary Jane PIGOTT (aged 1, born Wexford) and Emily PIGOTT (1, born Meath); he was at Rodstown, 1911 Census, aged 49, Building Contractor, Married, with nephew John D. PIGOTT, aged 24, Mason; </em></span></span></span></span></span><span><span><span><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>he died at Rodstown, Kells, 22 February 1943, aged 80, Married, Farmer, informed by his niece Annie E. SPARKES, of Kells, present at the death, and was buried 23 February, at St Ultan, Ardbraccan, County Meath [F.A.G. Memorial]; he was of Ardbraccan, County Meath, Farmer, full age, bachelor (his father a Farmer), when he was married at Ardbraccan Parish Church, 22 December 1897, to Elizabeth RENNICKS, aged 17, spinster, of Ardbraccan, daughter of Samuel RENNICKS, Stone Cutter, witnessed by William RICHARDSON and Florence RENNICKS</em></span></span></span></span></span><em style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;">, with issue:</em></div><div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549416953437_2956" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, "Lucida Grande", sans-serif; font-size: 16px;">
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3178"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> i. Samuel PIGOTT, born at Rodstown, 12 August 1903, informed by the father, of Rodstown, Farmer.</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3381"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> f. John PIGOTT, born at Allenstown, 30 June 1864, the birth informed by the father, of Allenstown, Mason;</em></span></span><i style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;"> at Adbraccan, 1901 Census, aged 36, Builder, with wife and four children; at Ardbraccan, 1911 Census, but not recorded on the Household page, which did record his three children and a household servant; a Bricklayer, of Navan, County Meath, full age, bachelor (son of Charles PIGOTT, Bricklayer), when he was married by License at Powerscourt Church of Ireland, Rathdown, County Wicklow, 31 December 1890, to Eleanor Margaret MUSTARD, full age, spinster, of Dargle, Enniskerry, daughter of Thomas MUSTARD, ex Sergeant R.I.C.; Elenor died at Ardbraccan, Navan, 14 March 1910, Married, aged 44, wife of a Contractor, the death informed by her husband John PIGOTT, of Ardbraccan, present at the death; they had issue:</i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><i> i. William John PIGOTT, born at Canon Row, Navan, 21 April 1895, father a Builder, informed by Margaret McGOVERN, nurse; he was aged 5, with his parents, 1901 Census; he was at Townsend Street, Athboy, County Meath, 1929, when named in his brother Theodore's Canadian Immigration indent; he died on 24 February 1955, and was buried with his wife at Athboy; he was of Athboy, Cycle Mechanic, of full age, bachelor, when he was married at St James's Church of Ireland, Athboy, Trim, 21 November 1922, to Ellen Mary NICHOLSON, aged 21, spinster, of Athboy, daughter of Richard NICHOLSON, Pensioner, witnessed by Frederick T. PIGOTT and Adelaide Constance NICHOLSON; she died at Athboy, 5 january 1943, and was buried at St James's Church f Ireland Churchyard (walled section).</i></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><i> ii. Dorothy Margaret PIGOTT, born at Ardbraccan, 1 June 1896, father a Contractor, informed by Margaret McGOVERN, nurse.</i></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><i> iii. Charles PIGOTT, born at Ardbraccan, Navan, 25 December 1897, father a Contractor, informed by Margaret McGOVERN, nurse; aged 3, with his parents, 1901; aged 13, Scholar, with his father, 1911; he emigrated to Canada on the SS Canada, from Belfast, 4 April 1925, arriving Halifax, N.S. on 12 April, aged 27, Farmer, born Kells, Co Meath, intending to Farm in Canada, going to his uncle, Mr WEBSTER, North Star Stone, Calgary, Alberta, his n.o.k. in Ireland being Mr J. PIGOTT, Rodsown, Kells, Co Meath; he was of 5982 Damories Street, Vancouver, B.C., 1929; he died in Vancouver, 23 November 1967, aged 69 [Reg'n No 1967-09-015104].</i></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><i> iv. Frederick Thomas PIGOTT, born at Grange, Navan, 16 July 1900, father a Contractor, informed by Margaret McGOVERN nurse; aged 8 months, with his parents, 1901; he witnessed his brother William's marriage, 1922.</i></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><i> v. Theodore PIGOTT, born at Grange, Ardbraccan, 20 August 1891, informed by the father, a Builder; he was at Wilson's Hospital School, Heathland, Ballinack, County Westmeath, 1911 Census, aged 9, born Meath; he emigrated to Canada on the SS Duchess of Richmond, departing Belfast 13 April 1929, arriving St John's, N.B., 21 April, aged 28, born Navan, Motor Engineer, going to his brother Mr Charles PIGOTT, of 1892 Dampries Street, Vancouver, and recording his n.o.k. in Ireland as his brother Mr W.J. PIGOTT, Townsend Street, Athboy, Co Meath; he was a Truck Drive, Commercial Drive, Vancouver-Kingsway, British Columbia Voters Lists, 1962 and 1965; her died at Vancouver, 12 December 1972, aged 70..</i></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><i> vi. Lena PIGOTT, born at Grange, Ardbraccan, 3 January 1905, informed by the mother; aged 6, with her father, 1911.</i></span></span></div>
<div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3181" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "helvetica neue", helvetica, arial, "lucida grande", sans-serif;">
<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3180"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em>John, a Building Contractor and a Widower, was married secondly, at Kells Church of Ireland, 28 February 1911, to Margaret Elizabeth KELLETT, full age, spinster, of Kells, daughter of James KELLETT, Watchmaker.</em></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3181" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "helvetica neue", helvetica, arial, "lucida grande", sans-serif;"><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> g. un-named daughter, born at Rodstown, 23 December 1867, informed by the father.</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_2847"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> h. Samuel Richard PIGOTT, born at Rodstown, 2 January 1871, informed by the father, of Rodstown, Farmer; he was at Kilmur, Killyon, County Meath, 1910 Census, aged 30, Steward to Allen MORTIMER, Major retired list, J.P. and landowner, with his wife, two daughters and six other servants; Samuel was at Kilmur, Killyon, 1911 Census, aged 40, Farm Steward, with wife Martha and six children; he was married at Rathboyne Church of Ireland, County Meath, 21 January 1897 (having been previously married at the Dublin Registry Office on 15 December 1896), to Martha Jane BOARDMAN, of full age, spinster, of Allenstown, daughter of John BOARDMAN, Labourer, the marriage witnessed by Julia E. PIGOTT; she was residing with her brother-in-law Charles PIGOTT, 1901 Census, aged 29, Married, born County Fermanagh; aged 39, with her husband, 1911; they had issue:</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_3214"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> i. Eleanor Margaret Deborah PIGOTT, born at Ballyanne, County Wexford, 24 April 1898, informed by the father, Land Steward; aged 3, with her uncle Charles PIGOTT's residence, 1901; aged 12, Scholar, with her parents, 1911.</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5319"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> ii. Mary Jane PIGOTT, born at Ballyanne, 2 July 1899, informed by the father, of New Ross, Land Steward; aged 1, with her mother at her uncle Charles PIGOTT's residence, 1901; aged 11, Scholar, with her parents, 1911.</em></span></span></div>
<div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5261" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "helvetica neue", helvetica, arial, "lucida grande", sans-serif;">
<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5260"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> iii. Emily Sarah PIGOTT, born at Rodstown, 23 February 1901, the birth informed by her aunt Lizzie PIGOTT, of Rodstown, present at the birth; aged under 1, with her mother at her uncle Charles PIGOTT's residence, 1901; aged 10, Scholar, with her parents, 1911.</em></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5261" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "helvetica neue", helvetica, arial, "lucida grande", sans-serif;"><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> iv. Charles PIGOTT, born County Meath, about 1903; aged 8, Scholar, with his parents, 1911.</em></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5261" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "helvetica neue", helvetica, arial, "lucida grande", sans-serif;"><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> v. John PIGOTT, born ditto, about 1907; aged 4, Scholar, with his parents, 1911.</em></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5261" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "helvetica neue", helvetica, arial, "lucida grande", sans-serif;"><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> vi. Martha PIGOTT, born ditto, about 1909; aged 2, with her parents, 1911.</em></span></span></div>
<div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_2848" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, "Lucida Grande", sans-serif; font-size: 16px;">
<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_2861"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> j. Annie Katherine (Kate) PIGOTT, born at Rodstown, 29 November 1873, informed by the father, of Rodstown, Mason; she was at Martry, County Meath, 1911 Census, aged 36, with her husband, two sons, and niece Carrie PIGOTT; she died at Bective Street, Kells, 8 June 1937, aged 60, Housekeeper, Married, the death informed by her son R.C. SPARKES, same address, present at the death; Annie a spinster, Dairy-maid, when she was married by License, at Dainstown, County Carlow, 17 September 1901, to Frederick SPARKES, Bachelor, Gardener, of Oak Park, Carlow, son of Robert SPARKES, Lodge-man; he was at Martry, 1911 Census, aged 38, Gardener, born Wexford, with his wife, and two sons; they had issue:</em></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_2848" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, "Lucida Grande", sans-serif;"><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> i. Robert Charles SPARKES, born at Dunleckney, County Carlow, 7 June 1903, the birth informed by the father; he was aged 7, with his parents, 1911; he informed his mother's death, 1937..</em></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_2848" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, "Lucida Grande", sans-serif;"><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> ii. Frederick Usher SPARKES, born at Dunleckney, 25 March 1906, informed by the father; aged 5, with his parents, 1911; he witnessed his sister's marriage in 1944.</em></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_2848" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, "Lucida Grande", sans-serif;"><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: x-small;"><em> iii. Annie Elizabeth SPARKES, born at Martry, County Meath, 10 May 1915, informed by the father, Gardener; she of full age, spinster, Book-keeper, of Rodstown, when she was married at Balrathboyne, County Meath, 25 October 1944, to Edward SNOW, of Rockfield, Kells, Mechanic, the marriage witnessed by Frederick Usher SPARKES.</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549413583656_2881"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> k. Julia Elizabeth PIGOT, born at Allenstown, 29 March 1876, informed by the mother, of Allenstown, her father George a Mason; she witnessed her brother Samuel's church marriage in 1897.</em></span></span></div>
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549420951806_5552"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> l. Margaret PIGOTT, born in or before 1857; of full age, spinster, of Rodstown, when she was married at Rathboyne Church of Ireland, County Meath, 27 November 1878, to Edward SMYTH, full age, bachelor, Blacksmith, of Athboy (son of Richard SMYTH, Blacksmith), witness by Charles PIGOTT and another.</em></span></span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em><br /></em></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><i><u>A BRANCH OF THE FAMILY IN AMERICA AND CANADA.</u></i></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">[Z] George Henry PIGOTT, born at Johnstown, Naas, County Kildare, 10 April 1881 (see above); he served in the 74th (Dublin) Company of Imperial Yeomanry in the South Africa (or Boer) War, and was reported (when he enlisted for W.W.1) as having been awarded the King's South Africa Medal (with clasps of South Africa, the Transvaal, Orange Free State, Cape Colony and Natal); he went to America; he was at Watson Township, Cass County, North Dakota, 1910 Federal Census, aged 26, Farmer, born Ireland, with his wife Irene (aged 22, born North Dakota); he enlisted in the Canadian Army; he was at a Service Camp in Winnipeg, 1916 Canada Census of Manitoba, aged 35, Soldier, with his wife Irene and three children (they were at 300 Bushell); he served with the 8th Battalion, Canadian Infantry Regiment, in France, and reached the rank of Sergeant; he was killed-in-action at or near Caix, 9 August 1918, and was buried at the Manitoba British Cemetery, Moreuil, France.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">George was married at Fargo, Cass County, North Dakota, 23 April 1906, to Irene Christina FORREST, daughter of William FORREST of Wheatlands, North Dakota; Irene was married secondly, at Winnipeg, 24 November 1921, to George William Henry JOHNSON (by whom she had two daughters - Joyce married BOCK, and Patricia married SMYTH); she was at 33 Rosedale Street, Winnipeg, 1933; she died at Princess Elizabeth Hospital, Winnipeg, 5 May 1963, aged 76, of 115 Hague Avenue, and formerly of 514 Oxford Street; her remains were forwarded to North Dakota for burial at Wheatland Cemetery, near her parents.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">George and Irene had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Eileen PIGOTT, born at Leonard, North Dakota, about 1911; aged 4, with her parents, 1916; she was at Niagara, Ontario, 1936; she was married at Winnipeg, 28 March 1933(?), to Robert Rex MILLS.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. George (Algy) PIGOTT, born U.S., about 1913; aged 2, with his parents, 1916; he was in Minnesota, 1936; he was married twice, with issue.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Charles Ralph PIGOTT, born at Leonard, North Dakota, 17 January 1916; went to Winnipeg on 17 March 1916; aged 5 months, with his parents, 1916; he was a Liston, North Dakota, 1936; he died Pequot Lakes, Minnesota, 14 October 1990; he was married with issue including:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i> a. Delores H. (Dee) PIGOTT, born 8 May 1945; she died at Wichita, Kansas, 30 October 1991; her married name was BUCHOLZ, and she had two sons.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><i><u>JOHN PIGOTT OF KINNEGAD, DEED OF 1825</u>.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">John PIGOTT, possibly a son of the above; of Kinnegad, County Westmeath, Farmer; first party to a Deed of Assignment dated 9 July 1825, concerning a house and lands in Kinnegad, of which he had an earlier lease from the Countess of Landsborough (am unable to find this earlier deed), under which his mother Isabella PIGOTT enjoyed benefits, and mentioning the late Philip PIGOTT of Curacon - the 1825 Lease being granted by John PIGOTT to Patrick HEVEY, for a term of <em id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549506793480_3596">"... the natural lives and life of the said John PIGGOT, party hereto, Charles PIGGOTT the younger son of Chas PIGGOTT of Bundarry, and George PIGGOTT of Bundarry"</em> - the deed witnessed by Charles PIGGOTT of Kinnegard, Mason, and another.<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br clear="none" /></span></span></span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Tithe Applotment Books, 1825, County of Westmeath, Parish of Killucan, Townland of Kinnegad - George PIGOT, Rich'd PIGOT, and Charles PIGOT.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">William PIGOTT, born at Kinnegad, about 1824; Carpenter; he attested at Lisburn, County Antrim, 26 April 1844, aged 19, 60th Royal Irish Rifles, as a Private, S.N. 2012; he was discharged after 17 years 298 days service, on medical grounds (chronic rheumatism), having spent 8 years 5 months on service Abroad (Cape of Good Hope, 7 years 6 months; East Indies, 1 year 4 months; Kaffir War, 1851).</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><br /></span></span> </div>
<span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: large;"><u><i>FAMILY OF PHILIP PIGOTT OF RATHMOLYON.</i></u></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times";">Phillip PIGOTT; House, Townland of Rathmoline (sic), County Meath, rated at £3 11s, 1 February 1839 [Ireland, Valuation Office Books]; House and Office, Townland of Glebe, County Meath, rated at £4, 2 February 1839 [Ditto]; he died at Rathmolyon, 1 May 1850, and was buried at Carbury Church of Ireland churchyard, Carbury Hill [JACKSONs of Ballygibbon Family Tree on Ancestry.com]; he was married firstly, 9 August 1818, to Ann HOLT (born 4 April 1797, daughter of John HOLT of Carbury, County Kildare); she died at Rathmolyon, 23 March 1830, aged 33 [correspondence from Ber HOLT; "The Farm Journal of the HOLT Family of Coolavacoose, Carbury, County Kildare," transcribed by Leslie WHITESIDE]; </span><span style="font-family: "times";">they </span><span style="font-family: times;">had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">1. William PIGOTT, born about 1819; he died at Rathmolyon, 1 March 1826, aged 7, and was buried at Carbury Hill Cemetery.</span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";">2. Mary PIGOTT, born about 1821; Mary WEILY, aged 79, Farmer's daughter, was at Dalystown, Ballyconnell, 1901 Census, residing with her brother-in-law Garret GILL; she died at Dalystown House, Trim, 4 December 1903, a Farmer's Widow, aged 82, the death informed by her brother-in-law Garrett GILL, of Daleystown, present at the death; she was married at Rathmolyon, 2 June 1851, to John WIELY or WEILY or WILEY, son of William WIELY; a John WEILY died at Trim, 1876, aged 86, 2nd quarter [Volume 7, Page 851], but perhaps too old?</span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";">3. Jane PIGOTT, born about 1824; of Adamstown, County Meath, she was granted probate of her late husband's will, August 1869, as the sole executrix [Will Calendars, National Archives of Ireland]; possibly the Jane DEMPSEY, late of Rathfeigh, County Meath, Widow, who died there, 6 September 1886, with probate grant to Clement DEMPSEY, of Dungannon, Tyrone, Clerk in Holy Orders [Will Calenders, N.A.I.] - but not recorded with those details in the Statutory Registers; she was married at Rathmolyon, 23 September 1856, to Hugh DEMPSEY, son of Hugh DEMPSEY, witnessed by John HOLT and William John PIGOTT; Hugh DEMPSEY died at Adamstown, Trim, 24 February 1869, aged 60 [Volume 2, Page 874, image not yet digitalised; Will Calendars, N.A.I.].</span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";">4. William John (Willie) PIGOTT, born about 1827; Farmer; he died at Rathmolyon, 28 August 1859, and was buried in his parents' plot, Carbury Hill churchyard, County Kildare, where the uppermost inscription was <i>"Beneath are the remains of William John PIGOTT, youngest son of Philip and Ann PIGOTT, who died Aug 28th 1859, aged 32 years"</i> [M.I., raised tabular gravestone - J</span><span style="font-family: "Times New Roman";">ACKSONS of Ballygibbon Family Tree on Ancestry.com</span><span style="font-family: times;">]; another record has him buried at Rathmolyon Church of Ireland Graveyard, plot AF 10 (shown as just inside the main gate on Summerfield Road, on the west side of the path leading to the church), with the inscription - </span><i style="font-family: times;">"To the Memory of / Wm John PIGOTT / of Rathmolyon / who in the prime of his life was called / to his eternal rest in Jesus / on the 28th of August 1859 / aged 32 years"</i><span style="font-family: times;"> [Bruce CHANDLER's transcription] - so perhaps the inscription at Carbury was simply an additional or "cenotaph" memorial.</span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: times;">After his death:</span></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; font-family: "Times New Roman"; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkyemo8i_jxLTDOCeBoehOOwxDFAmmu4bFOIq6FLY_FcPyqms1eCG0IsSyLC0rgqzk4IJeyTtry7EBIBbq2eowA-e8cU8Yny9U6exND9CFJByho40J3EslFwvo4L38NU2GB_5L7oqiO6-i/s1600/WJP+sale.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="585" data-original-width="654" height="571" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkyemo8i_jxLTDOCeBoehOOwxDFAmmu4bFOIq6FLY_FcPyqms1eCG0IsSyLC0rgqzk4IJeyTtry7EBIBbq2eowA-e8cU8Yny9U6exND9CFJByho40J3EslFwvo4L38NU2GB_5L7oqiO6-i/s640/WJP+sale.JPG" width="640" /></a></div><br style="font-family: "Times New Roman";" /><div style="font-family: "Times New Roman"; text-align: center;"><div style="text-align: left;">It looks very much like this William John PIGOTT had no sons to pass his goods and chattels on to - or none that were interested in carrying on his farm. Assuming that he did not die heavily in debt to his creditors? A Willie John PIGOTT is said to have sold land in Rathmolyon in 1862 to Garret GILL - but this date is three years after William John's death, so perhaps another?</div></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";">5. Martha PIGOTT, born in 1829; she died in 1829, aged 2 months, and was buried at Carbury Hill.</span></div><div style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"><span style="font-family: "times";">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";">Philip was married secondly, in 1833, to Mary Ann GOODWIN [M.L.B., Diocese of Meath]; she died at Rathmolyon, 30 December 1855, aged 69,<i> "... relict of the late Mr Philip PIGOTT, deeply and deservedly regretted by a numerous circle of relatives and friends"</i> [Saunders's Newsletter, 11 January 1856]; by her he had further issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">6. Ann PIGOTT, born about February 1834; she was at Daleystown, Ballyconnell, 1901 Census, aged 67, born County Meath, with her husband, sister and two children; she died at Dalystown, Trim, 23 November 1906, aged 74, Married, wife of a Farmer, the death informed by her daughter Susan J. GILL, of Dalystown, present at the death; she was married at Laracor, County Meath, 11 February 1861, to Garrett GILL, of Castlejordan, Farmer, son of Garrett GILL, Farmer, witnessed by Hugh DEMPSEY and Richard WILKINSON [Registered at Trim, Volume 10, Page 476]; he was a Farmer at Rathmolyon, 1864, 1869, and at Killballyporter, 1871, 1874; he was at Dalystown, Ballyconnell, 1901 Census, aged 71, Farmer, born County Meath, with his wife, two children, and others; in 1862, Garrett purchased land in Rathmloyon from Willie John PIGOTT, and there he built his house named Ashmount; he died at Dalystown, Trim, 23 March 1908, aged 78, Widower, Farmer, the death informed by his son Paul F. GILL, of Dalystown, present at the death; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><i> a</i></span><i style="font-family: times;">. Susan Jane GILL, born County Meath, 14 February 1862; died at Longsport, Somerset, England, 25 June 1929 [information from Cherie KROPP of Texas], unmaried.</i></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><i> b. William (Willie) John GILL, born at Rathmolyon, 12 June 1863; died at Oswestry, 3 June 1951, and was buried at St James the Great churchyard, West Hanney, Oxfordshire [ditto; and memorial 144471388 on Findagrave]; his wife, Emily Emma, was buried with him, July 1944, aged 72.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><i> c. Mary Anne GILL, born at Rathmolyon, Trim, 5 October 1864, informed by the father; she emigrated to America, about 1890; she was found dead at Maza, Towner County, North Dakota, 22 September 1924, the death informed by S.L. HUGHES, her father named as Garrett GILL; she was married at Grand Forks, North Dakota, 25 February 1891, to Frederick Alexander HUGHES, he was born in County Meath, Ireland, 14 June 1858, son of Samuel HUGHES and Elizabeth KERR; they were in Towner County, N.D., 1900 Census, with four children (all born in North Dakota, and his cousin Alfred GILL (born Ireland, April 1884, arrived U.S. 1900); they had issue, as recorded in the 1900 Census:</i></span></div><div><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><i> i. Samuel HUGHES, born North Dakota, December 1891.</i></span></div><div><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><i> ii. Hazel HUGHES, born ditto, August 1893.</i></span></div><div><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><i> iii. Garret G. HUGHES, born ditto, August 1896.</i></span></div><div><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: x-small;"><i> iv. Annie HUGHES, born ditto, May 1900.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><i> d. Garret GILL, born at Rathmolyon, 19 July 1866, informed by the father; he was at Grosvenor Square, Rathmines, 1901 Census, aged 34, Second Class Clerk, Taxing Office, with his wife and daughter, visiting his widowed O'HARA mother-in-law; said to have died in March 1951; he was married at the Baptist Chapel, Parish of St Peter's, Dublin, 15 July 1898, to Elizabeth O'HARA, of 49 Grosvenor Square, Rathmines, daughter of Edward O'HARA, Tea Merchant.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><i> e. Sarah Christina GILL, born at Rathmolyon, 25 December 1867, informed by the father.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><i> f. Phillip Henry GILL, born at Rathmolyon, 14 October 1869, informed by the father; said to have died in London, 22 November 1961.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><i> g. Emily (Emily) GILL, born at Kilballyporter, Trim, 9 October 1871, informed by the father; siad to have been buried at West Hannay, Oxfordshire, July 1944.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><i> h. Paul Fawcett GILL, born at Kilballyporter, 23 April 1874, informed by the father; aged 26, Farmer's son, with his parents, 1901 Census; he informed his father's death, 1908.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><i> j. Janet Goodwin GILL, born at Kill, 24 February 1876, informed by the father; she was aged 25, Farmer's daughter, with her parents, 1901 Census; said to have died at Bletchly, near Milton Keynes, 28 December 1939.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><i><u>ANOTHER PIGOTT FAMILY IN KILBEGGAN, WESTMEATH</u>.</i></span></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">George PIGOTT; of Kilbeggan, County Westmeath; his wife Mary died shortly before 1 September 1785; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> Mary PIGOTT; she died shortly before 27 June 1782, the only child.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">George married secondly, September 1787, to Isabella DOWNES, of Clara, King's County [Dublin Hibernian Journal, 26 September].</span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Sarah PIGOTT, Kilbeggan, 1785 [Diocese of Meath, Testamentary Records Index, P.R.O.].</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">Michael PIGOTT, born about 1827; of Kilbeggan; he died there on 7 March 1898, aged 70, Married, Labourer, the death informed by his daughter Winnie PIGOTT, present at the death, of Kilbeggan; he was married to Mary BRENNAN; she was at Mill Lane, Kilbeggan, 1901 Census, aged 62, Widow, Housekeeper, born County Westmeath, with her six children; she died at Kilbeggan, 5 January 1903 aged 64, informed by her son John PIGOTT, present at the death, of Kilbeggan; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">1. Edward PIGOTT, born about 1862; he was of Kilbeggan, of middle age, bachelor, Labourer, when he was married at Kilbeggan R.C. Chapel, 7 June 1894, to Margaret HANNIGAN, also of middle age, spinster, daughter of Robert HANNIGAN, Labourer; he was at Mill lane, Kilbeggan, 1901 Census, aged 38, Labourer, with his wife and two sons; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><em> a. William PIGOTT; aged 4, with his parents, 1901.</em></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><em> b. Michael PIGOTT; aged 1 and-a-half, with his parents, 1901.</em></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">2. Mary PIGOTT, born at Mill Lane, Kilbeggan, 1 April 1865; she probably died at Kilbeggan, aged 13, Labourer's child, the death informed by Mary (X) PIGOTT, of Kilbeggan, present at the death.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">3. Catherine PIGOTT, born at Kilbeggan, 25 May 1867, informed by the mother.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">4. William PIGOTT, born at Kilbeggan, 29 June 1870; aged 29, with his mother, 1901; he emigrated to Illinois in 1905; he died in Chicago, 27 November 1937.<span style="font-family: "helvetica";"> </span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";">5. Bridget PIGOTT, born about 1871; aged 30, with her mother, 1901.</span></span><span style="font-family: "times";">6. John PIGOTT, born at Kilbeggan, 1 August 1872; aged 27, with his mother, 1901; he informed his mother's death, 1903.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">7. Michael PIGOTT, born at Kilbeggan, 5 September 1874; aged 25, with his mother, 1901.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">8. Winifred PIGOTT, born at Kilbeggan, 7 May 1877; she informed her father's death, 1898; she was aged 23, with her mother, 1901.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times";">9. James PIGOTT, born at Kilbeggan, 20 April 1879; aged 21, with his mother, 1901.</span></div><div style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><br /></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: large;"><i><u>ANOTHER MASON/BRICKLAYER, IN DUBLIN</u>.</i></span><br />
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<span id="yiv1720871922ydp331f7728yiv8558919707yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1549506793480_3927"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Charles PIGOTT, born in Dublin, about 1836-38; of Glasnevin, Bricklayer, 1867; he was at Blessington Street, Dublin, 1901 Census, aged 58, Bricklayer, with his wife Sarah (aged 54, born Longford); at Hardwicke Place, Rotunda, 1911 Census, aged 74, Bricklayer, Married, with his wife, son John, daughter-in-law and grandson; he died at 12 Hardwick Street, Dublin, 23 June 1911, aged 72, Married, Mason, the death informed by his son John PIGOTT, of the same address; he married Sarah ELLIOTT, with issue:</span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. John PIGOTT, born at Glasnevin, Dublin City, 7 April 1867, and baptized at Glasnevin C. of I., 27 May (father a Mason); aged 43, Bricklayer, with his parents, 1911; married Elizabeth McKEOWN, with issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i> a. Robert PIGOTT, born Dublin City, about 1901; aged 9, Scholar, with his parents and grandparents, 1911.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";">2. Mary Jane PIGOTT, born at Glasnevin, 4 August 1868 (father a Mason).</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";">3. Sarah Matilda PIGOTT, born at Glasnevin, 10 January 1872 (father a Bricklayer), and baptized at Glasnevin C.of I., 24th March (father a Mason); she was buried at Glasnevin, 24 December 1872, aged 11 months [Church Record]. </span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";">4. Eliza PIGOTT, born at Glasnevin, 13 November 1873, and baptized Glasnevin C.of I., 1 March 1874 (father a Mason); o<span style="font-family: "times";">f Church Hill, Glasnevin, full age, spinster, father a Mason, when she was married at Glasnevin C.of I., 30 July 1895, to Robert McKEOWN, full age, bachelor, Gardener, of Glasnevin, son of James McKEOWN, witnessed Charles PIGOTT.</span></span></div><div dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "helvetica neue", helvetica, arial, "lucida grande", sans-serif; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";"><br /></span></span></div><div dir="ltr" style="background-color: white; color: black; font-family: "helvetica neue", helvetica, arial, "lucida grande", sans-serif; font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times";">Sarah PIGGOTT, born before 1826, daughter of Charles PIGGOTT, Mason; as Sarah AUGHEY, of full age, Widow, Servant, of Dolphin's Barn, County Dublin, she was married, by Banns, at St James's parish church, County Dublin, 8 June 1847, to William KILLEEN, full age, bachelor, Servant, also of dolphin's Barn, son of John KILLEEN, Labourer, witnessed by Richard FAUGHT and Joseph MOOR.</span></span></div>
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</div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-46578577944177752032018-12-07T20:23:00.003-08:002022-09-23T20:23:36.228-07:00John SHYING and John SHEEN - were they one and the same as MAI Sai Ying?<div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div>
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<b>MAK Sai Ying</b> arrived in N.S.W. from Canton (his birthplace) in 1818 as a free man, and settled, originally at least, and for two periods either side of a five year return visit to China, in the Town of Parramatta.<br />
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<span style="color: #222222; font-family: "simsun"; font-size: x-large;"><i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: small;"></span></i></span> </div>
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The following are samples of the sign he made on archived documents in N.S.W.:<br />
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<strong><span style="font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-size: x-large;"><span lang="ZH-CN" style="color: #222222; font-family: "simsun"; font-size: 36pt;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEijKVKsdx9j_ZzfqHek5fSYUZccWqcF2iAMPLd1_reUUVH94zLqpXl5vjrsgMzG3JHTp7RkqjaULp_GiU3dVUTJtSoa2erSt6WpIllNhBitdY-uxUhCN2BXSQQT8qj3HEuxwrW0lACGCFjx/s1600/M+S+Y+2.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="82" data-original-width="177" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEijKVKsdx9j_ZzfqHek5fSYUZccWqcF2iAMPLd1_reUUVH94zLqpXl5vjrsgMzG3JHTp7RkqjaULp_GiU3dVUTJtSoa2erSt6WpIllNhBitdY-uxUhCN2BXSQQT8qj3HEuxwrW0lACGCFjx/s1600/M+S+Y+2.JPG" /></a></span></span></span></strong></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdNNuuaq-UGYrDptu4jVJyIpb_q1Q484kRg_6AmG7AjplKrF-QRMvYQitX4QNlqnZ9KMQbGf-KoeJl0w7lvgx3jKHxFcHz_tkJfiOAxW3unrsyf3yevqzZicwp-Jy6X79Hy1vijqq06_th/s1600/MAK+SAI+YING.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="107" data-original-width="186" height="115" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdNNuuaq-UGYrDptu4jVJyIpb_q1Q484kRg_6AmG7AjplKrF-QRMvYQitX4QNlqnZ9KMQbGf-KoeJl0w7lvgx3jKHxFcHz_tkJfiOAxW3unrsyf3yevqzZicwp-Jy6X79Hy1vijqq06_th/s200/MAK+SAI+YING.JPG" width="200" /></a></div>
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<strong><span style="color: #222222; font-family: Simsun; font-size: x-large;"></span></strong> </div>
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The following is very similar to the characters <strong>MAK Sai Peng</strong> used to sign his Power of Attorney in 1831, the third being "peng" - a translation of the English word "friend":</div>
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<span style="color: #222222; font-size: 36pt; line-height: 107%;"><span style="font-family: "calibri";"><strong><span style="font-family: Simsun; font-size: x-large;">麥</span></strong><strong> <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span> </strong></span></span><strong><span style="font-size: x-large;"><span lang="EN-US" style="color: #222222; font-family: "yu mincho demibold" , serif; line-height: 107%;">世</span><span style="color: #222222; line-height: 107%;"><span style="font-family: "calibri";">
<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span></span></span><span lang="EN-US" style="font-family: "yu mincho demibold" , serif; line-height: 107%;">朋友</span></span></strong></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ1pGSAaMgGOC5RTvHuWiGuWM114XSLeN7cZTcMortJ3fv9YUoiuHsc1i0WCh2LsxCVxOZH_qRnwrkdCy8hTZM1U_bB16hHSlkp3aHRHf9KYtn2J_VWoSskhS-riCnPZNW4PTAI_a8URpW/s1600/IMG_6263.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="562" data-original-width="1600" height="70" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ1pGSAaMgGOC5RTvHuWiGuWM114XSLeN7cZTcMortJ3fv9YUoiuHsc1i0WCh2LsxCVxOZH_qRnwrkdCy8hTZM1U_bB16hHSlkp3aHRHf9KYtn2J_VWoSskhS-riCnPZNW4PTAI_a8URpW/s200/IMG_6263.JPG" width="200" /></a></div>
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Once again, the current representation of the third or "peng" character does not exactly match MAK's "signature" in the third segment of it.<br />
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In China, the family surname is traditionally recorded first, before the "given" names.<br />
And once again, it is likely that neither MAK, nor his English neighbours in Parramatta, fully comprehended this significant cultural difference, at least not initially. MAK himself probably learnt the lesson when his 30 acre grant went missing because of his own use of the additional character "peng" instead of "ying."<br />
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<span face=""arial" , sans-serif" lang="EN" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;"><span style="font-family: "times new roman"; font-size: small;">An accurate version of the first character has emerged (with thanks to Leon LYELL):</span></span></div>
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<span face=""arial" , sans-serif" lang="EN" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;"><br /></span>
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<span lang="JA" style="font-family: "ms mincho"; font-size: 48pt;">麥世英</span><span style="font-size: 48pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
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Leon added:</div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span lang="EN" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;">"The characters in Shying marriage certificate name are </span><span style="font-size: large;">麥世英</span><span lang="EN" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;">. The first one -the 'surname' is different from what’s on your webpage but you have correctly noted that it looks different from the written character. Your Cantonese restaurateur should confirm the new character as ‘Mak’. </span></i></span></div>
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<i><span lang="EN" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> "</span></span><span style="color: black; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 11pt;">In ‘Mandarin’ (Pinyin) the pronunciation is Mài shìyīng ‘Mai’ rhymes with ‘tie’, ‘shi’ rhymes with ‘the’ (ie not thee but a very short sound) and ‘Ying’ rhymes with ‘sing’. The marks above the syllables show the tone, ie whether the vocalization should become lower or stay flat in this case. A wee problem for the study of Chinese ancestry is that because Pinyin is ubiquitous (thanks to the great helmsman) it has become very difficult to trace people who spoke different languages/dialects (the word may vary depending on one’s prejudices).</span></i></div>
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<i><span lang="EN" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> "T</span></span><span style="color: black; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 11pt;">he man himself claimed to be a native of Canton and the usual Cantonese pronunciation today would be ‘Mak Sai Ying’ (I don’t know the tones) which is where that vocalization came from. In the Elizabeth Farm daybook, his name was written as ‘Matchiping’ which we can guarantee is somewhat mangled but confirms he probably used the ‘Peng’ (or Pong) character at that early stage which matches the use of Mark O’Pong in his 1820 land grant. I’m trying to find out where this daybook is now (it was at Elizabeth Farm in 1992) and whether we can get a copy of those pages in case they have any more clues about him apart from him being a carpenter.</span></i></div>
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<i><span lang="EN" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> "</span></span><span lang="EN" style="color: black; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 11pt;">If he was Hakka, Dr Siu-Leung LEE, who was a biochemist but regarded as an authority on Hakka culture, tells me that the pronunciation of </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-size: large;">麥世英</span></span><span style="color: black; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-size: large;"> </span><span lang="EN" style="font-size: 11pt;">would be 'Mak Sie Ying [or] Mark Sie Ing. Spelling is not a definitive answer'."</span></span></i></div>
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<span face=""arial" , sans-serif" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;"><span lang="EN"><br /></span></span></div>
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<span style="color: black; font-family: "times new roman"; font-size: small;">Leon has also provided me with a better rendition of the third segment of the alternate peng/pong character:</span></div>
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<span lang="JA" style="color: black; font-family: "ms gothic"; font-size: 48pt;">朋友</span></div>
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<span lang="EN"><span face=""arial" , sans-serif" style="color: black;"><span style="font-size: 14.66px;"><span style="color: black; font-family: "times new roman"; font-size: small;">Leon added further:</span></span></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 11pt;">"</span><span style="font-size: large;">朋友<span lang="EN" style="color: black;"> </span></span><span lang="EN" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;">is indeed friend ('pung yow' in Mandarin and very similar in Cantonese), however, it would not be used in a name. The word in the name is certainly 'pung' and it signifies 'friends'. The problem is what looks like the 4th character. It could be intended to be a part of the 3rd character but is too stretched out for that (to my non-expert eye). If the two bits were one character it would look more like </span><span lang="EN" style="color: black;"><span style="font-size: large;">鹏.</span></span><span lang="EN" style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;"> But to me, it looks like a separate character </span><span style="font-size: large;">号 </span><span style="font-size: 11pt;">(not </span><span style="color: black;"><span style="font-size: large;">友</span></span><span style="color: black; font-size: 12pt;">) </span><span style="color: black; font-size: 11pt;">which usually means 'number' or 'date' and to me seems out of place. My Cantonese friend sort of agrees it looks like a fourth character except that is doesn't make sense to do that. This is apparently something done now at the end of the name of a ship. Maybe he was thinking about the ships he was about to board?"</span></i></span></div>
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Either which-way, his descendants have been unable to locate details of his death and burial under the name of <b>John SHEYING</b> (by which name he was married in 1823 to Sarah THOMPSON) alias <b>SHYING</b> (by which surname several of their four sons were baptized).<br />
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<b><span style="color: magenta;">John SHEEN</span></b> was buried at Rookwood in 1880, with his wife Margaret (maiden surname McGOVERN, who died in 1875); he was of a similar age to <b>John SHYING</b>, and had arrived in the Colony about the same time; he was also a native of China.<br />
Several of his descendants believe, and perhaps not without good reason, that they were one and the same man.</div>
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The following is an attempt to locate as many documented mentions of both of these men, separated by the year 1845 - concerning <b>John SHYING</b> up to his last known activity in Parramatta in 1844 - and followed by <span style="color: magenta;"><b>John SHEEN</b></span>, from the time of his marriage in Sydney in 1846.</div>
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Many of the original documents have been microfilmed, and the images digitalized in various capacities, but none of which are free to publish on-line without permission of the copyright holders. As I have yet to seek that permission, I will, in the meantime, have to settle for transcriptions of them.</div>
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These records have been accessed in the State Library of New South Wales in Macquarie Street, Sydney, the Library of the Society of Australian Genealogists (S.A.G.) in Kent Street, Sydney, and at State Records (formerly N.S.W. Archives) at Kingswood. Further information has been included from the National Library of Australia's holding of newspapers through it's trove web-site.</div>
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Several other people have already carried out research into <b>John SHYING</b>, some of which has been published by the Parramatta District Historical Society Inc in their Journals. I have yet to visit the Society at Hambledon Cottage, and will attempt to do so after Christmas (2018). </div>
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Further private research notes have been deposited in the Mitchell Library by Winsome DOYLE and Valerie BLOMER [MSS 5857]. I have yet to sight all of the original documentary references in these sterling efforts, but it is interesting to note that none of them canvass any possibility of him being buried as <span style="color: magenta;"><b>John SHEEN</b></span>.</div>
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However, Valerie BLOMER has more recently published an on-line account of her ancestor John SHYING's life story, and it appears that she had done considerably more research since her papers in Mitchell indicate - including a serious consideration of the two men being the same.</div>
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It is an extra-ordinary account of <strong>John SHYING</strong>'s life, and I commend it to anyone who seeks the truth of it. Entitled "An Alien in the Antipodes" and dated 28 July 1999, a copy may be read online at on near www.archive.li/9LNG4 (or it will get you close).</div>
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I have no intention to replicate her research results here, as they are impeccable.</div>
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But my current desire, even as someone who has no family connections to him, is to sight the original documents attached to his Colonial existence, first hand, if I can.</div>
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I have also begun to insert additional information, some observations, with the inevitable questions which arise from it all, and <span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>[in this format]</i></b></span>.</div>
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Any correspondence will be most welcome.</div>
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Chris PIGOTT, Potts Point, N.S.W. - cgpigott@yahoo.com.au</div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em>MAK SAI YING alias JOHN (PONG) SHYING.</em></strong></span></div>
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18 June 1815 - Arrival in Port Jackson of the ship 'Northampton,' with convicts and other passengers, including a Sarah Jane THOMPSON (whom I had thought may have possibly become <strong>John SHYING</strong>'s future first wife), then aged about 11, her mother Sarah O'NEAL, a convict, and her son John O'NEAL (Sarah Jane's younger half-brother), aged about 6 years - however, her ship was later recorded (in the 1823-25 Muster and 1828 Census - see below) as the 'Morley,' arriving in 1820, as a free settler - so evidently there were two Sarah Jane THOMPSONs. The 'Morley' left London on 22 May 1820, sailed direct to Hobart (29 August), <i>"...bringing 120 female convicts and several free women whom passages had been allowed, to join their husbands</i>" [Hobart Town Gazette, 2 September], and completed her voyage to Sydney on 12 September, having landed 50 female prisoners in Hobart, <i>"... and brings 21 to Port Jackson, the whole of whom are in good health... and four free women, with eleven children</i>" [Sydney Gazette, 16 September].</div>
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24 February 1818 - Arrival in Port Jackson of the ship 'Laurel,' Captain GREEN, with <em><b>MAI Sai Ying</b></em> (the later <strong>John SHYING</strong>) on board.</div>
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The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser, 25 April, under Ship News:</div>
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<em>"Yesterday arrived the ship Laurel, Captain GREEN, from Bengal, with a cargo consisting mostly of teas. She left Bengal the 1st of August for China, and called at Malacca, which was still under command of the British Governor FARQUHAR, the Dutch Government not yet having been established there."</em></div>
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Ditto, under another heading of Sydney:</div>
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<em>"From Captain GREEN, we learn that a commotion had taken place at Saparosa, in which the whole of the Dutch garrison had been cut off by the native inhabitants, which melancholy information had been forwarded to Canton by a Company's cruiser...</em></div>
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<em>"The Laurel reached Canton the 5th of October, and left 20th November for this port, experiencing a fair passage, with the exception of a dangerous becalming for several days close into one of the shoally islands of the Anambers. She called also at Port Dalrymple, on her way, and remained for some days, during which period, we are sorry to learn, several rash and thoughtless people under sentence of the law had taken to the woods, and were not apprehended when she came away."</em></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><b>Valerie BLOMER, in her "An Alien in the Antipodes," noted that the 3rd Officer on the voyage of the 'Laurel' from Canton in 1818 was George BLAXLAND, a son of John BLAXLAND of Parramatta. She rightly speculated upon the likelihood that this is how SHYING came to work for his father. Indeed, it may well be asked if that is how he came to be on that ship in the first place - had George been on the lookout for a suitable and perhaps oriental artisan to go to N.S.W. and become "recruited" as one of his father's employes?</b></i></span></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>The Anambers were probably the Anambas Islands, part of the Riau Archipelago, about 250 km east of the coast of Malaysia, on about the same latitude as Kuala Lumpur. So it appears that the 'Laurel' came to Australia via the Dempu and Sunda Straits, and down past Western Australia, en route to Port Dalrymple (on the north Tasmanian coast, not far from Launceston).</i></b></span></blockquote>
November 1819 - [Card Catalogue, Mitchell Library]:</div>
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<em>"<strong>OPONG</strong>, Nov 1819, employed by J. BLAXLAND as a Carpenter (BIGGS, J.T. - Report , Appendix, page 5731, B.T. Box 26)."</em></div>
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10 or 14 June 1820 - Petition made by <em>"John BLAXLAND, John HARRIS and another gentleman whose signature is illegible</em>"[John WATSON, "<b>John SHYING</b>, Oriental Gentleman," Journal of the Parramatta District Historical Society, Volume 6, 199, at page 55 et seq.], on behalf of <strong>Mark O'PONG</strong> to Governor MACQUARIE for a grant of land in Parramatta.</div>
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WATSON transcribed the petition [citing Colonial Secretary's Correspondence, Fiche 3027, 4/1825 A, No 581, pages 2165-6 -I have not yet sighted this original record] as follows:</div>
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<em>"That memorialist came to this Colony by the ship Laurel, GREEN, Master; is a native of Canton in China; has been in the Colony for two and one half years, during which time he had been in the service of John BLAXLAND, Esq, as a carpenter, supporting a honest, industrious character.</em></div>
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<em>"That memorialist being anxious to become an agriculturalist of this Colony humbly implores your Excellency to take his case into your favorable consideration and grant him such portion of land for a farm as to your Excellency's wisdom and goodness shall deem meet and for such mark of favor, memorialist as in duty bound will pray."</em></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>It appears that this "petition" was made by BLAXLAND, HARRIS and another "on behalf of" our Chinaman, who was recorded here with his second preferred given name Peng or Pong - once again presumed, by its position, to be the family name. I deduce from this that MAI Sai Ying or Peng probably had no literacy in the English language - although I suspect that he may probably have already acquired some basic verbal English language skills before he left Canton.</i></b></span> </blockquote></div><div style="text-align: left;">
12 May 1821 - The above petition was eventually "successful", and notification of a grant, for 30 acres, was published in the Sydney Gazette on 12 May 1821:</div>
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<i>"Surveyor General's Office, 28th April 1821.</i></div>
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<i>"The following LIST of NAMES of NEW SETTLERS who are to receive Grants of LAND, and of OLD SETTLERS who are to have additional LANDS located for them in the Year 1821, is published for general Information:-</i></div>
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<i>"... <b>Mark OPONG</b>...</i></div>
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<i>"John OXLEY, Surveyor General."</i></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><b>This list, covering surnames beginning with H through to Y, comprised a total of about 400 names, more-or-less.</b></i></span></div>
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3 February 1823 - First marriage of <strong>John SHYING</strong> to Sarah Jane THOMPSON at St John's, Church of England, Parramatta [Mitchell Library, S.A.G. Reel 55, page 44], entry number 409:</div>
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<i>"<b>John SHEYING</b> of the parish of Parramatta and Sarah Jane THOMPSON, of the same parish, were married in this church by banns this Third day of February (1823) By me, Thomas HASSALL, Off'g Min'r.</i></div>
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<i>"The marriage was solemnised between {<b>John</b> (his-X-mark) <b>SHEYING</b></i></div>
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<i> {Sarah Jane (her-X-mark) THOMPSON</i></div>
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<i>"in the presence of {Matthew TODD</i></div>
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<i> {Alice (her-X-mark) WILLIAMS."</i></div>
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<i><b><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;">I do not know why John SHYING made his-X-mark in the register here, but made the sign of his three Chinese characters in his second marriage, in the same register, in 1843. Perhaps Rev HASSALL was less welcoming of SHYING's ethnic origins than Rev ROBART was 20 years later?</span></b></i></blockquote>
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8 November 1823 - Birth in Parramatta of their first son, John, and his baptism at St John's Church of England [Mitchell Library, S.A.G. Reel 55, page 140]:</div>
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<i>"<span style="color: blue;">John James SHYING, son</span> of <span style="color: blue;"><b>John</b> and Sarah <b>SHYING</b>, Parramatta</span>, was born <span style="color: blue;">Nov'r 8th</span> and Christened <span style="color: blue;">December 7th 1823</span>. Registered <span style="color: blue;">same day</span> by me <span style="color: blue;">Tho's HASSALL, Off'ing Min'r</span>.</i>"</div>
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[Note - pro-forma register, printed, with spaces for insertion of <i>hand-written details</i>, here <span style="color: blue;"><i>highlighted in blue</i></span>.]</div>
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Late 1823 or early 1824 - Petition of <strong>John SHYING</strong> to Governor BRISBANE, transcribed by John WATSON ["<strong>John SHYING</strong>, Oriental Gentleman, "citing Colonial Secretary's Correspondence, Fiche 3058, 4/1833, No 49, pp 173-6]:</div>
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<em>"That your petitioner came to this Colony about six years ago in the 'Laurel' Captain GREEN, and has continued ever since that period, having been usefully employed as a mechanic in the Colony. That about twelve months ago he married a young woman who came free to the Colony, by whom he has one infant son. That your petitioner humbly craves of your Excellency the indulgence of continuing in the Colony, and further humbly solicits permission to erect a small habitation in this Town (Parramatta) to enable him to carry on his business and thereby comfortably provide for his increasing family. Petitioner would further beg leave to request the indulgence of an allotment of ground in Church Street, near where he now lives, for the aforesaid purpose as being most eligible for his business."</em></div>
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14 February 1824 - The Colonial Secretary's reply to the above petition [John WATSON, citing Col. Sec's Correspondence, Reel 6012, page 336]:</div>
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<em>"The survey of Parramatta being complete, there exists no objection to your obtaining on lease any vacant allotment you choose."</em></div>
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1823-25 - General Muster of N.S.W. [N.S.W. and Tasmania, Settlers and Convicts, 1787-1859, on Findmypast and Ancestry.com, Ref H.R.O. 10/20, at folios 171 and 172]:</div>
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<em>"<strong>SHEANG</strong>, <strong>John</strong>, age n.r., came free, vessel Laurel, 1819, ---, Carpenter, Parramatta.</em></div>
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<em>"SHEANG, John, aged 2, born in colony, ---, Son of John SHEANG.</em></div>
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<em>...</em></div>
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<em>"SHEANG, Sarah, age n.r., came free, vessel Morley, 1820, ---, Wife of <strong>John SHEANG</strong>, Parramatta."</em></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><b>These details have also been abstracted in the book "General Muster List of New South Wales, 1823, 1824, 1825," edited by Carol J. BAXTER, and published by AGBR, Sydney, 1999, at pages 519 and 520. The Muster information for Parramatta was gathered in the Court House there, and for surnames commencing with "S" this was collected on three dates - 12 September 1823, 24 September 1824 and 7 October 1825. It should be noted that on both of the family history web-sites, Ancestry.com and Findmypast.co.uk, the transcriptions of the page images appear to have wrongly interpreted the use of double commas - which nowadays is used to denote "ditto" - and thereby incorrectly indicating that all three SHEANGs were convicts - which they most definitely were not (although for Sarah, it was evidently a close call).</b></i></span></div>
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18 May 1826 - Birth in Parramatta of their second son, George, and his baptism at St John's Church of England [M.L., SAG Reel 55, page 2, entry number 29] on:</div>
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<i>"June 11th 1826, born 18 May, George Hugh, son of <b>John</b> and Sarah <b>SHIYING</b>, Parramatta, Shop Keeper, Samuel MARSDEN, Officiating Minister."</i></div>
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10 October 1827 - Letter of Charles COWPER, Clerk of the Corporation, to Rev WILSON, of the Female Orphan Institute, concerning payment of unauthorized expenditure, including the third in a list of seven claims:</div>
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<em>"<strong>John SHYONG</strong>, Sundries, </em><i>£</i><em>8 0s 9d."</em></div>
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Another list, recorded in an extract from a meeting of the Committee of Trustees of Clergy and School Lands, dated 4 July 1828, concerning further payments claimed by the Female Orphan School, amounting to a total of £158 13s 5d, including the first of eight claims, for:</div>
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<em>"John SHYONG, </em><i>£</i><em>42 14s 8d."</em></div>
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7 January 1828 - Birth in Parramatta of their third son, Henry James SHYING, and baptism at St John's (C.of E.), 11 27 January, by Rev John VINCENT, <em>"... son of <strong>John</strong> and Sarah <strong>SHIYONG</strong>, Parramatta, Shop Keeper."</em></div>
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1828 Census - Householder's Return, District of Parramatta, No 91:</div>
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<i>"<b>John SHYING</b>, aged 32, came free, ship Lawler (sic), 1817 (sic), Parramatta, Shop Keeper, Protestant.</i></div>
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<i>"Sarah Jane SHYING, 26, came free, ship Morley, 1820, wife of above, Parramatta, Protestant.</i></div>
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<i>"John James SHYING, 5, born colony, son of above, Parramatta, Protestant.</i></div>
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<i>"George Hugh SHYING, 2, born colony, son of above, Parramatta, Protestant.</i></div>
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<i>"Henry James SHYING, 9 month, born colony, son of above, Parramatta, Protestant.</i></div>
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<i>"Wm H. BROTHERTON, 28, F.S. (free by service), ship Ocean (3), 1818, (sentence of) 7 years, Clerk to above, Parramatta, Protestant.</i></div>
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<i>"William CLARE, 44, F.S., ship Lord Castlereagh, 1815, 7 years, Servant of above, Parramatta, Protestant.</i></div>
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<i>"Hartley DRURY, 26, F.S., ship Martha, 1817, 7 years, Servant of above, Parramatta, Roman Catholic.</i></div>
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<i>"Owning 5 horses 4 cattle</i>.</div>
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<i>"Signed by <b>John SHYING</b>. Witnessed by John BROWN, Constable."</i></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>This is the only age for John SHYING that I have been able to find and recorded on his own information. </i></b></span></div>
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10 March 1829 - The Australian, Tuesday:</div>
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<em>"Licensed Publicans in Parramatta.</em></div>
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<em>"... <b>John SHYING</b>, The Lion; ..."</em></div>
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27 May 1830 - Birth in Parramatta of their fourth son, Thomas Jones SHYING, and baptism at St John's (C.of E.), 18 April,<em> "... son of <strong>John</strong> and Sarah <strong>SHYING</strong>, Parramatta, Publican."</em></div>
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28 June 1830 - Publican's Licenses [NRS 14401 (4-61), Reel 5049, Mitchell Library]:</div>
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<em>"<strong>John SHYING</strong>, Golden Lion, Church Street, Parramatta."</em></div>
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2 September 1830 - The Sydney Gazette:</div>
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<em>"SALES BY AUCTION.</em></div>
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<em>"BY MR PRITCHETT.</em></div>
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<em>"At Parramatta, on Friday 8 October 1830, at 11 for 12 o'clock, positively without Reserve (unless disposed of by Private Contract).</em></div>
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<em>"The following valuable PREMISES, situated in the Town of Parramatta, known by the name of the Golden Lion, Church Street, Windsor Road, &c, the property of Mr <strong>John SHYING</strong>.</em></div>
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<em>"Lot 1 - A beautiful, well-built brick house, measuring 60 feet in front by 28, with a Chinese veranda not to be equaled by any in the colony, containing 7 rooms well fitted up, with a good cellar 25 feet by 12 feet; likewise a good store-room the length of the house; the yard containing a brick house, with kitchen and 3 rooms, likewise a 4 stall stable, and a fine well of water; will be let immediately at </em><i>£</i><em>2 per week.</em></div>
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<em>"Lot 2 - A good weatherboard house with 2 rooms, adjoining Lot 1, and good water; let at 3 shillings per week.</em></div>
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<em>"Lot 3 - A good weatherboard house, in Church Street, Windsor Road, containing 6 rooms, with kitchen and good water; let at 14 shillings per week.</em></div>
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<em>"Lot 4 - A good brick house of 4 rooms, with a Smith's forge, in full trade, adjoining Lot 3, and good water; let at 6 shillings per week.</em></div>
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<em>"Lot 5 - A good weatherboard house, containing 3 rooms, opposite Lot 4; let at 3s 6d per week.</em></div>
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<em>"Lot 6 - A beautiful well-built and finished stone house, situated in Fenton Street, Orphan School Road, containing 3 rooms, with granary and a 2 stall stable; let at 2s per week.</em></div>
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<em>"Lot 7 - A weatherboard cottage, beautifully situated, adjoin the Government Domain, containing 4 rooms, a good garden with young trees, and good water, opposite the new wind mill; let at 3s per week.</em></div>
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<em>"Terms of sale - One half of purchase money to be paid down, and the other half by approved bills at 6 months. The purchaser of Lot No 1 may have the license transferred, on paying for the unexpired term, and fixtures at a valuation."</em></div>
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23 November 1830 - The Sydney Gazette, Tuesday:</div>
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<em>"TO BE LET OR SOLD, for the term of 3 years, with the license, in the Town of Parramatta, a beautiful well-built Brick House, Sign of the Golden Lion, George Street, Windsor Road, measuring 60n feet in front by 28 feet, with a chinese veranda... (as above)...</em></div>
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<em>"Application to be made to <strong>John SHYING</strong> on the premises."</em></div>
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18 October 1831 - A Power of Attorney [Number 675, Book D, as cited in documents found in the Mitchell Library, in MSS 5857]:</div>
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<i>"<b>John Pong SHYING</b> to Joseph Hickey GROSE and John Foreman STAFF"</i> to act generally in regards to <i>"... all his messuages or dwelling houses, lands, tenements and hereditaments situate and being in the Colony of N.S.W. ... in consideration of the said <b>John Pong SHYING</b> leaving the Colony."</i></div>
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1832 - The New South Wales Calendar and General Post Office Directory (data probably collected in 1831 for publication in early 1832):</div>
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<i>"Alphabetical Directory...</i></div>
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<i>"<b>SHYONG</b>, <b>John</b>, Publican, Parramatta."</i></div>
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21 November 1831 - Letter from the Attorney General's Office to The Honorable Alexander McLEAY, Colonial Secretary:</div>
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<em>"Sir, I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the 17th instant, transmitting to me a letter addressed to you by Sarah SHYONG, requesting that the Title Deeds of certain Town Allotments in Parramatta claimed by her Husband <strong>John SHYONG</strong>, who is a native of China, and not naturalized, may be executed in her name, and requesting direction of His Excellency the Acting Governor that the same may be returned with my legal Report, whether there is any legal objection to its being done. In reply I have the honor to state, that as the husband of Sarah SHYING cannot receive a grant of land, I see no legal objection to the Grant being made if His Excellency shall be pleased to do so to Trustees, to the use of the Wife, and her children, but as a married woman the Grant cannot be made directly to herself. The Trusts may be for her sole use only, or to her for life with such power to dispose of the property to her children, as shall be arranged before the Grant shall be finally made."</em></div>
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The signature of the writer of this letter is hard to read - John (possibly) KINSELLA?<br />
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<b>John SHYING</b> evidently returned to China, and perhaps for 5 to 6 years. Details of his voyage are unknown, but two possible voyages with Canton as their destination are canvassed next.</div>
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<span style="font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i><span style="color: red;">The reason for </span><span style="color: red;">John SHYING</span><span style="color: red;"> re-visiting his homeland is unclear. The reason for him not seeking to become naturalized is also unclear. I wonder whether the two may have been connected. Did </span><span style="color: red;">John</span><span style="color: red;"> have financial interests in his native country? An inheritance, perhaps? Might his becoming a naturalized British Subject have jeopardised any financial interests he may have in China? Or did </span><span style="color: red;">John</span><span style="color: red;"> not do so because he thought that he may not have been successful in the first place?</span></i></b></span></blockquote>
5 December 1831 - The ship "Larkins," 700 tons, CAMPBELL, Master, sailed from Sydney, bound for Canton, with a cargo of 6 bales of possum skins and stores [Sydney Monitor, Wednesday 7 December], with one passenger, Mr EDWARDS [Sydney Gazette, Thursday 8 December].<br />
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30 January 1832 - The bark "Elizabeth," Captain PHILLIPS, sailed from Hobart Town to Canton, in ballast [The Australian, Friday 2 March].<br />
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27 March 1836 - Death of his wife Sarah SHYING.</div>
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She was buried at St John's (C.of E.) Cemetery, Parramatta, [Mitchell Library, SAG Reel 55, third batch, page 18, entry 245]:</div>
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<em>"<span style="color: blue;">Sarah SHYING</span>, abode <span style="color: blue;">Parramatta</span>, buried <span style="color: blue;">29th March</span>, aged </em><i><span style="color: blue;">34 years</span></i><em>, <span style="color: blue;">Free Dealer</span></em><em><span style="color: blue;">'s wif</span></em><em><span style="color: blue;">e</span>, <span style="color: blue;">R. FORREST, Off'g Min'r</span>."</em></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgbtvvOF5MoBejYmoNA0Z5B66RN1HToFq-2IG6bCOGmR5IKzmdaMlolbN8PA33hMtniznL08tcOiGwddZJTANmI2itHd8QtWyJlH0xbmoyM1IGQGv00AjJLcHC_Cy_eS4Uh-4XcLl0Z-i1g/s1600/188737317_3a8bf168-5f0d-4051-a3ea-6a12ce1655aa.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="689" data-original-width="1024" height="428" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgbtvvOF5MoBejYmoNA0Z5B66RN1HToFq-2IG6bCOGmR5IKzmdaMlolbN8PA33hMtniznL08tcOiGwddZJTANmI2itHd8QtWyJlH0xbmoyM1IGQGv00AjJLcHC_Cy_eS4Uh-4XcLl0Z-i1g/s640/188737317_3a8bf168-5f0d-4051-a3ea-6a12ce1655aa.jpeg" width="640" /></a></div>
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<i>[Photograph taken in December 2018 by the author of this article. </i><br />
<i>This image, and those following, have been posted by me on memorials created for them on the www.findagrave.com web-site.]</i></div>
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The gravestone bears the inscription:</div>
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<em>"Sacred</em></div>
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<em>"TO THE MEMORY OF</em></div>
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<em>"SARAH SHYING</em></div>
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<em><em>"WHO DEPARTED THIS LIFE</em></em></div>
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<em>"MARCH 27th 1836.</em><br />
<em>"AGED 35 YEARS</em></div>
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<em>"Leaving a Husband and four</em></div>
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<em>"Children to deplore her loss of</em></div>
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<em>"a tender Wife and kind Mother"<i><em><br /></em></i></em><br />
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<em><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhIFj8b92o6By0AypL-nH0hkaKxWypRHMG0u3HxS1R0Wh-KeUepBoPCFpN4WGQAFhxVr4bHKt6qh6F1yhG4xh0Cgt_TELE7VYVNyFeOWCih-cs-28hmiJOZGpD4QzKCya7AaN-I2iNWV9-O/s1600/188737317_6978f8f2-3624-4ecb-b5af-c34f637d1a06.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1024" data-original-width="683" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhIFj8b92o6By0AypL-nH0hkaKxWypRHMG0u3HxS1R0Wh-KeUepBoPCFpN4WGQAFhxVr4bHKt6qh6F1yhG4xh0Cgt_TELE7VYVNyFeOWCih-cs-28hmiJOZGpD4QzKCya7AaN-I2iNWV9-O/s640/188737317_6978f8f2-3624-4ecb-b5af-c34f637d1a06.jpeg" width="425" /></a></em></div>
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<i>[Photograph taken in December 2018 by the author of this article. </i><br />
<i>The graves face towards the east, and are in Section 1, Block C (see illustrations under the Lych Gate at the entrance), about 20 rows in from the entrance on O'Connell Street, and directly uphill from the monument to the "flogging parson," the Reverend Samuel MARSDEN.]</i></div>
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1836 - John SHYING returned to New South wales. Details of his return voyage to Sydney are unknown, but several voyages commencing in Canton are canvassed next.<br />
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12 May 1836 - The barque "Macclesfield," Captain WRIGHT, arrived in Sydney from Canton (departed 22 February), with a cargo of tea [Sydney Gazette, Saturday 14 May].<br />
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21 May 1836 - The Cornwall Chronicle (Launceston), Saturday, Hobart town Ship News:<br />
<i>"The Lady of the Lake, arrived at Sydney with 3,000 chests of tea, from Canton.</i><br />
<i>"The Canton, Macclesfield, Orwell, Lord Amherst and Mary Ann were all loading at Canton, for one or other of these colonies."</i><br />
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27 July 1836 - The bark "Orwell," LEWING, Master, arrived in Sydney, from Canton (date not recorded) via Hobart Town (13th July), with a cargo of tea, and one passenger, Mr KEMP [Sydney Gazette, 30 July].<br />
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14 November 1836 - The Sydney Herald:</div>
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<em>"TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION.</em></div>
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<em>"On Saturday, 17 December, in Church Street, Parramatta.</em></div>
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<em>"All those Capital SIX MERCANTILE RESIDENCES, in the heart of Parramatta, situate between the Bridge and Court House, newly finished, and adapted to any business, and which, in another year or two, will be a property of considerable value, and renting at double the present rents.</em></div>
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<em>"LOT 1 - House and shop let to <strong>SHYING</strong> the Chinaman, at </em><i>£</i><em>40 per annum, all with a separate entrance up the gateway.</em></div>
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<em>"LOT 2 - House and shop let to Mr JOSEPH at </em><i>£</i><em>40 per annum.</em></div>
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<em>"LOTs 3 and 4 [ditto] ..."</em></div>
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10 April 1837 - The <i>"Respectful Petition of <strong>John SHYING</strong>, native of Canton,"</i> to His Excellency, Major-General Sir R. BOURKE, K.C.B., Governor of the colony BOURKE [Colonial Secretary's Correspondence Index, Item 2/7970, Reel 1182, State Records, Kingswood Reading Room]:<br />
<em>"Your petitioner has been a Colonist now upwards of Twenty Years during a portion of which period he was under the administration of the late Governor MACQUARIE, which Governor was pleased to confer an order on Petitioner in 1821 in March on the date of the 31st of that month, a Grant of Land of Thirty acres (30) as per (</em>hard to decipher word - looking like<em> grant) from Governor MACQUARIE's Order book.</em><br />
<em>"That your Petitioner relied upon one Mr O'BRIEN, a Surveyor, surveying and marking off the same in favor of Petitioner, which your Petitioner cannot find he has done, or of Petitioner's name appearing on the face of any chart, only on the records of the order Book as already alluded to by Petitioner, and which was the cause of your respectful Petitioner resting so easy.</em><br />
<em>"And for the past five years he, petitioner, has been in his native country of 'China' and left his children, natives of the Colony, under two Trustees, Messrs GROSE of Sydney, Merchant, and John FOREMAN STAFF of Parramatta, with whom Petitioner forgot to leave a memorandum.</em><br />
<em>"As Your Excellency's Petitioner has brought Capital with him from China, prays upon your Excellency to be pleased to confirm the said order, having four children, and under the supplication of my being deceived by Mr O'BRIEN.</em><br />
<em>"Your Petitioner, upon Your Excellency's being pleased to grant the </em><em>boon craved, Petitioner will improve thereon for the benefit of his family.</em><br />
<em>"And Petitioner, as in duty bound, will ever pray. </em><br />
<em>"<strong>John SHYING</strong>, Church Street, Parramatta."</em><br />
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4 May 1837 - Annotation on the above letter, as 37/96:<br />
<i>".. Surveyor-General is requested to ... report</i><br />
<i>"... for Col Sec'y, T.B.H."</i><br />
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15 June 1837 - John SHYING's letter to S.A. PERRY, Esq, the Surveyor-General [Item 2/7970, Reel 1182, State Records, Kingswood Reading Room]:<br />
<i>"Sir, I have the honor to acknowledge your letter of yesterday respecting thirty acres of land.</i><br />
<i>"In reply, the late Mr OXLEY told me it would be selected at Brush Farm.</i><br />
<i>"With regard to my name in reference to the Office Book, you will find my name <b>Mark O Pong</b>. This is my country way, but after my marriage my name is <b>John SHYING</b>, and my children are christened in that name.</i><br />
<i>"I hope you will do me the honor of a reply to this, and </i><i>You will much serve - Sir - Your very humble and obedient servant,</i><br />
<i>"<b>John SHYING</b>."</i><br />
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30 June 1837 - The report by the Surveyor-General to the Colonial Secretary [Item 2/7970, Reel 1182, State Records, Kingswood Reading Room]:<br />
<i>"There is no record of an order in favor of '<u><b>John SHYING</b></u>' but there is one by Gov'r MACQUARIE in favor of '<u><b>Mark O PONG</b></u>' for 30 acres dated 31st March 1821 in which name it appears by the accompanying letter addressed to me by SHYING; he received the order. How far therefore it may be considered as affected by the orders of October 1826 and 1827 will be for the decision of His excellency the Governor. </i><br />
<i>"S.A. PERRY.</i>"<br />
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12 July 1837 - Final annotation on the above letter exchanges on the Colonial Secretary's file:<br />
<i>"There is nothing apparently in this case to except it from the operation of the regulations of October 1826 and 1827.</i><br />
<i>"SHYING to be informed of the meaning and effect of the regulation of October 1826 and 1827, and of my inability to relieve him from their operation. (Initials), July 9."</i><br />
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8 July 1837 - Publican's Licenses [NRS 14401 (4-68), Reel 5053, Mitchell Library]:</div>
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<em>"<strong>John SHYING</strong>, The Lamb Inn, Pennant Street, Parramatta."</em></div>
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4 July 1838 - Sydney Monitor, Wednesday:</div>
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<em>"PARRAMATTA - POLICE OFFICE.</em></div>
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<em>"<strong>John SHYING</strong>, late a publican, appeared to answer an information laid against him for a breach of the Licensing Act, when Dr FORSTER rose, and was going to leave the Court, the Police Magistrate stated, that if he went away, the case must be dismissed, as it was one on which a single magistrate could not adjudicate, that it Dr FORSTER would say when he would return, he Mr P would wait for him. The Court was kept open for half an hour, when no Second Magistrate appearing, the case was dismissed."</em></div>
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20 May 1839 - Death of <strong>John SHYING</strong>'s mother-in-law, Sarah O'NEIL (widow of Daniel O'NEIL, and before him of James THOMPSON, maiden surname McLEAN), at the Benevolent Asylum, aged 77 years; she was buried at St Lawrence Church, Sydney, 21 May.</div>
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25 November 1840 - The Sydney Monitor and Commercial Advertiser, Wednesday:</div>
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<em>"Case No 827 - Henry HARVEY, of Parramatta.</em></div>
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<em>"Thirty seven perches, county of Cumberland, parish of the Field of Mars, Town of Parramatta, allotment No 19 on the Windsor Road in Section No 26; bounded on the west by John WARD's allotment, north 134 links; on the east by the Windsor Road, south ten degrees, east 134 links; and on the south by <strong>John SHYING</strong>'s allotment (formerly FLINTOFF's), west 163 links.</em></div>
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<em>"This allotment was leased by Sir Thomas BRISBANE for 21 years from 30 June 1823 to Thomas POTTER, deceased, whose widow, it is alleged, sold it to Joseph Hickey GROSS, who sold it to <strong>John SHYONG</strong>, the Chinaman, who sold it to Complainant. The deed is required on proposing to pay a fine equal to 21 years quit rent."</em></div>
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1841 - Census of N.S.W. Parramatta [State Records of N.S.W., Reel 2222, Return No 213]:</div>
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<b>John SHYING</b>, Landed Proprietor, aged 45 but not yet 60 years, and married; with a married woman aged 21 but not yet 45 years, both recorded, as I see it, as Jews; in a wooden house, finished and inhabited.</div>
<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="text-align: center;">
<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><b>There appear to be no indications of the four sons living with them.</b></i></span></blockquote>
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26 December 1841 - Arrival in Sydney of <strong>John</strong>'s future second wife, Bridget GILLOOLY, on the ship 'Lady Clarke,' for the bounty fare of £19, aged 28, a native of Roscommon, Ireland, Servant.</div>
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19 April 1842 - Burial of Daniel O'NEIL, step-father of <strong>John SHYING</strong>'s late first wife Sarah, in St Patrick's R.C. Cemetery, North Parramatta, by N.J. COFFEY, <em>"... Abode Parramatta, Aged 66 years, Servant."</em></div>
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<strong>John</strong>'s future second wife (see next below) would shortly after be buried in the same grave.</div>
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10 October 1842 - Second marriage of <strong>John SHYING</strong> at St John's Church of England, Parramatta [Mitchell Library, SAG Reel 56, page 58, entry number 238]:</div>
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<i>"<b><span style="color: blue;">John SHYING</span></b> of th<span style="color: blue;">is</span> Parish, <span style="color: blue;">Widower</span>, and <span style="color: blue;">Bridget GILLORLEY</span>, of th<span style="color: blue;">is</span> Parish, <span style="color: blue;">Widow</span>, were married in this<span style="color: blue;"> church</span> by <span style="color: blue;">Banns</span> with consent of (<span style="color: blue;">blank</span>) this<span style="color: blue;"> tenth</span> day of <span style="color: blue;">October</span> in the year 18<span style="color: blue;">42</span></i></div>
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<i>"By me, <span style="color: blue;">H.H. ROBART</span></i></div>
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<i>"This marriage was {(the three Chinese character signature of) <b>Mai Sai YING</b>)</i></div>
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<i>"solemnised between {<span style="color: blue;">t</span><span style="color: blue;">he-X-mark of Bridget GILLORLEY</span></i></div>
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<i>"in the presence of {James TURNER</i></div>
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<i> {J. T. STAFF."</i></div>
<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="text-align: center;">
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>Some researchers have suggested that Bridget may not have been a widow, and that she had emigrated as an unmarried woman named GILLOOLY, as indicated in the 1841 Immigration indent.</i></b></span></div>
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29 January 1843 - Death of his second wife Bridget [Mitchell Library, Reel SAG 11, folio page 320, image number 933, entry number 107]:</div>
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<i>"Bridget San (?) CHIN, abode Parramatta, buried St Patrick's R.C., Parramatta, 30 January 1843, aged 33 years, (ship's name) Free, by Rev N.J. COFFEY."</i></div>
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<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="text-align: left;">
<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>The spelling of the name in the Register is of some interest. The middle name did look like San, but there was a stray line in the image which crossed over the 3rd letter, which may have been an "h"? But the "reversion" to a format resembling three Chinese characters but in English translation is puzzling - was this an attempt by the Catholic Rev COFFEY to try his hand at Anglicizing what he was hearing? If so, then it probably indicates that John SHYING did bury her, even though he did not bury her with his first wife. Although that may well be down to their different religious affiliations anyway.</i></b></span></blockquote>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhp2fO0wwocAtlU-6jvglMuyp_gJgQnYl-DUzjBCznZvKEGKepiFZL6dRkY9goFWtShHz4aU2zQXkp-aHSb1aTgbTM0dR0_ROa85pUaJ09BAJHpRDW71G9CKhqUqIXqkazLjkpvDuFpskwI/s1600/195065792_cad12d71-619d-4695-ab60-49c1bba2fd37.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="677" data-original-width="1024" height="422" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhp2fO0wwocAtlU-6jvglMuyp_gJgQnYl-DUzjBCznZvKEGKepiFZL6dRkY9goFWtShHz4aU2zQXkp-aHSb1aTgbTM0dR0_ROa85pUaJ09BAJHpRDW71G9CKhqUqIXqkazLjkpvDuFpskwI/s640/195065792_cad12d71-619d-4695-ab60-49c1bba2fd37.jpeg" width="640" /></a></div>
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She was buried in the grave of Daniel O'NEIL, Step-father of <b>John SHYING</b>'s first wife Sarah.</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBdBWA5uI-XJ1dmWjHREcyMQzruaSNg3Vedp1uXvJ0rnL3bmMHzhi0B2gCMlPpfl930OJjZHsVzYNb1-T5h4W-XAO22sSOuZ07MV62vcVjhgzRq2OJY0dCT8dbDGnavmsguodvbqThzYTu/s1600/195065792_77bc9b34-fbbc-4cbb-bf73-7748029f437b.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1024" data-original-width="683" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBdBWA5uI-XJ1dmWjHREcyMQzruaSNg3Vedp1uXvJ0rnL3bmMHzhi0B2gCMlPpfl930OJjZHsVzYNb1-T5h4W-XAO22sSOuZ07MV62vcVjhgzRq2OJY0dCT8dbDGnavmsguodvbqThzYTu/s640/195065792_77bc9b34-fbbc-4cbb-bf73-7748029f437b.jpeg" width="426" /></a></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyuVQEsPDHPx9uPsVt2qd9dz70nXUQZM0OHAxH2CFanaANbd7wFFA2ryTItIHJZ9u43FW_aaRUSCjfDeIg1KTqIpz2J804ZpzMzdtkES3Yv6Gt37higpvd1LNQ6hZRPNnBeEZuIUSxlYoY/s1600/195065792_2d2afde0-624e-4d45-80f7-2e330c448699.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="683" data-original-width="1024" height="426" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyuVQEsPDHPx9uPsVt2qd9dz70nXUQZM0OHAxH2CFanaANbd7wFFA2ryTItIHJZ9u43FW_aaRUSCjfDeIg1KTqIpz2J804ZpzMzdtkES3Yv6Gt37higpvd1LNQ6hZRPNnBeEZuIUSxlYoY/s640/195065792_2d2afde0-624e-4d45-80f7-2e330c448699.jpeg" width="640" /></a></div>
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<i>[The above three photographs taken in December 2018 by the author of this article. </i><br />
<i>The grave is not far (perhaps about 30 metres) from the entrance gate on the corner of Church Street and Pennant Hills Road; it faces east-north-east, towards Pennant Hills Road. </i><br />
<i>The road in the background of the third photo is the extension of Church Street north of the Pennant Hills Road intersection.]</i></div>
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<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>Some of the dates and ages on this stone have been mis-read by other researchers. The burial register confirms the year of Bridget's burial as 1843, but the age, which the register records as 33 years, appears on the stone as 35. The numeral 3 has a long horizontal stroke at the top, to the left of the diagonal stroke beneath it; the numeral 5 has a much shorter top stroke to the right of the diagonal stroke beneath it.</i></b></span></blockquote>
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25 February 1843 - Town Grant, Town of Parramatta, Series 53, Page 56 [digital index to Lands Office records, accessed at State Records, Kingswood]:</div>
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Concerning 37 perches of land on the Windsor Road, being Allotment 19 of Section 20, Parish of the Field of Mars, County of Cumberland:</div>
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<em>"... being the allotment leased to William Potter by His Excellency Sir Thomas BRISBANE on 30 June 1823, and now granted in consideration of the sum of </em><i>£</i><em>19 8 shillings and 6d sterling having been duly paid by <strong>John Pong SHYHONG</strong> to the Colonial Treasurer of our said territory before these presents are issue, being a fine equal to payment of 21 years Quit-rent on the said allotment in terms of the regulation of 25th August 1834 under the recommendation of the Commissioner of Claims No 827, but he being an Alien the deed is now prepared at his request in favour of his four sons, the said John SHYHONG the younger, George SHYHONG, Henry SHYHONG and Thomas SHYHONG, under the advice of the Attorney General."</em></div>
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16 March 1844 - The Parramatta Chronicle, Saturday:<br />
<i>"SALE OF TOWN PROPERTY. - </i><i>On Wednesday last the premises occupied by Mr STOW, situate in Church Street, and known as the Peacock Inn, the property of <b>Mr SHIYING</b>, was brought to hammer by Mr PHILLIPS, and knocked down to Mr GOODING for </i>£<i>585. The weatherboard house in which <b>Mr SHYING</b> resides was also put up for sale, but in consequence of Mr Nicholas CAVILLION stating at the sale that he had a disputed claim upon the premises, pending in the Court of Claims, and having previously cautioned intending purchasers by public advertisement, a bid could not be obtained for the property."</i><br />
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20 April 1844 - A tripartite Indented Deed, Number 845, Book 6, made between Henry HARVEY of Parramatta, Landholder, as the first part; <b>John SHYONG</b> the Elder and John SHYONG the Younger of Parramatta, Dealers, of the second part; and John STOW of Parramatta, Licensed Victualler, of the third part; concerning the sale of the following property to John STOW [a photocopy of the original deed, with a typed transcript, in the boxed MSS 5857, Mitchell Library]:<br />
<i>"...One rood and six perches situated in the Town of Parramatta, Parish of the Field of Mars, County Cumberland, Allotment 17 on the west side of the Windsor Road, in Section 20, and bounded on the south by Fennell Street..."</i><br />
<i>"...</i><br />
<i>"Signed sealed and delivered (<b>MAI Sai Ying</b> in chinese characters) [S.S].</i><br />
<i>"in the presence of Henry HARVEY [S.S.]</i><br />
<i>"(indecipherable signature, poss) Chas H. SYMS. John SHYONG [S.S.]</i><br />
<i>"...</i><br />
<i>"Received of and from the within-named John STOW the sum of five hundred and ninety pounds sterling, being the full amount of consideration money within-mentioned to be paid by him to me,</i><br />
<i>"Witnessed <b>MAI Sai Ying</b> (in chinese characters)</i><br />
<i>"(ditto) J. STOW (signature)."</i><br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>John SHYONG Junior had actually not yet come of age.</i></b></span></blockquote>
22 April 1844 - Deed of sale of 1 rood 6 perches, allotment 17, on the west side of the Windsor Road, Parramatta, to John STOW, for 590 pounds [transcribed by Winsome DOYLE, her notes, MSS 5857, Mitchell Library]:<br />
<i>"The land had been granted by Governor GIPPS to Henry HARVEY on 30 March 1840, nominally, on behalf of John SHYONG, who being an Alien, a native of the Chinese Empire, was incapable of holding lands in British territories..."</i><br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<b><i><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;">This looks very much like the previous deed dated 20 April, for the same Allotment.</span></i></b></blockquote>
20 October 1844 - <b>John SHYING</b> evidently made a will.</div>
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The will has not been sighted, and it does appear that it was NOT the subject of a probate grant in N.S.W. (at least under that surname, or variations of it) - but it is mentioned in a later Indented Deed, and in which we find the following statement:</div>
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<i>"Whereas the last will and testament of <b>John SHYONG</b> the Elder, late of Parramatta aforesaid, dated the 20th day of October 1844, the said <b>John SHYONG</b> the Elder gave and devised the lands, hereditaments and premises hereinafter described are hereby released and conveyed, the same being described in the said will as All that Messuage or Dwelling House and premises situate in Church Street in Parramatta aforesaid, and granted to Joseph Hickey GROSE Esquire of Sydney in the colony aforesaid, until his Trustees thereinafter named in Trust to receive the rents and profits until his son Thomas SHYONG (one of the said parties hereunto of the second part) should attain the age of 21 years, and the rents so to be received to divide in manner therein mentioned, and when and so soon as his said son Thomas should attain the age of 21 years, he thereby ordered and directed his said Trustees to sell and dispose of the said Messuage or dwelling house and premises either by Public Auction or private contract, and he thereby appointed the said James URQUHART, John MORRIS (since deceased) and his son the said John SHYONG Trustees and Executors of the his said will."</i></div>
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This 1854 Deed named two witnesses, John Morton GOULD of Parramatta, Solicitor, and his Clerk F.C. QUAIFE, who both appear to have signed their names; and it listed the names of five of the first and second parties to the deed (all written in the one hand), evidently not signatures, but with the annotation of Sign and Seal against them, as follows:</div>
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<i>"James URQUHART (S.S.)</i></div>
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<i>"John SHYONG (S.S.)</i></div>
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<i>"John SHYONG (S.S)</i></div>
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<i>"Henry SHYONG (S.S.)</i></div>
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<i>"Thomas SHYONG (S.S.)"</i></div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><b>The fact that John SHYONG is recorded as having made two separate Signs and Seals here does appear to ask the question - were these two different John SHYONGs? Or, in other words, might this constitute evidence that John SHYONG the Elder may have still been living in 1854? The actual signatures may only have been made on original documents that were not archived (those that went to the grantee as evidence of holding title) and may have not survived. The absence of George SHYING from the signatories to this deed is of interest - he appears to have been in California from the end of 1849 until early-mid 1854.</b></i></span></div>
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8 November 1844 - <b>John SHYING</b>'s eldest son, John James SHYING (the younger), came of age.</div>
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<strong><em><span style="font-size: large;">JOHN SHYING'S FOUR SONS BY SARAH THOMPSON.</span></em></strong></div>
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1. John James SHYING; born at Parramatta, 1823; Foreman to the late Mr Richard HANSLOW (he died in 1861), Undertaker, of George Street South; in May 1865, after having carried on the Undertaking business for HANSLOW's widow, he commenced in business with his brother George, as Undertakers, at 709 George Street South, opposite Christ Church [The Empire, 1 May]; of Kent Street, Sydney, 1848-49 Electoral Register for Brisbane Ward; Undertaker, South Head Road, 1864 [Sand's Directory]; of 22 Abercrombie Street, 1867-70; of Abercrombie Place, 1871; of 3 Adelaide Terrace, Cooper Street, Abercrombie Place, 1873; of 119 Little Abercrombie Street, 1879; of 26 Abercrombie Street, 1883; he died on 19 November 1885, aged 62 years, and was buried on 21 November, at Rookwood Necropolis, Anglican, Section CC, Plot 440.</div>
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<i>[Photograph taken in December 2018 by the author of this article.]</i></div>
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John SHYING, of Balmain, was married firstly, at St Mary's (R.C.), Sydney, on 21 November 1843, to Mary RYAN, also of Balmain, and a Communicant Catholic; she died at Margaret Place, Sydney, on 5 February 1854, was buried at St James's (C.of E.), Sydney, 7 February, aged 25 years; they had issue:<br />
a. John Joseph SHYING, born on 22 December 1844; died on 21 August 1900; as the <i>"... only son of Mr John SHYING of Sydney,"</i> he was married by the Rev Dr FULLARTON in Sydney, 8 April 1867, to Sarah Annie DUNN, <i>"... second daughter of Mr John DUNN, late of Waterloo, Sydney" </i>[S.M.H., Tuesday 16 April]; they had issue.<br />
b. Sarah Louise SHYING, born on 19 September 1846, and baptised on 4 October at St James's (R.C.), Sydney; she was buried at St James's (R.C.), Sydney, 20 March 1853, late of Margaret Street, aged 6 and a half years.<br />
c. Mary Ann SHYING, born at York Street, on 30 August 1850, and baptised at St James's (R.C.), Sydney.<br />
John James SHYING, Widower, a Communicant Presbyterian, was married secondly, by Special license, at St Andrew's (C.of E.), Sydney, 28 December 1854, to Eliza Jane HALL; she died on 8 May 1897, aged 58 years, and was buried with him at Rookwood.<br />
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2. George Hugh SHYING, born at Parramatta, 18 May 1826; Undertaker; went to the US on the ship <i>"Duke of Roxburgh,"</i> departing Sydney 12 October 1849, bound for San Francisco [Shipping Gazette, Saturday 13 April]; he returned to Sydney on the ship <i>"John Williams"</i> from Upalu (Samoa), on 23 May 1854, with Mrs SHYING and two children [N.S.W. Immigration Records, Ancestry.com]; probably the Butcher, of Sussex Street, Sydney, June 1856, when the subject of Insolvency Proceedings [Maitland Mercury, Tuesday 19 June]; Undertaker, 778 George Street, 1865 [Sand's Directory]; of 16/18 Botany Road, 1868-69 [Sand's]; of 120 South Head Road, 1870-76; Undertaker, of Ross Street, Glebe, 1879; of Short Street, Glebe, 1883; he died on 6 June 1893, at his residence, 8 George Street West, and was buried at Rookwood Necropolis on 8 June, late of 8 George Street West - Funeral Notices were inserted in the S.M.H. on 7 June by his wife Mrs SHYING, his children George, John and Martie SHYING, and his brother Thomas J. SHYING.<br />
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<i>[There is no gravestone on his grave, in Old Anglican, Section R, Plot 1321.]</i><br />
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George was married at St Mary's (R.C.), Sydney, by Rev Robert McCORMACK, C.C., on 12 October 1846, to Mary SHEEN, of Sydney (witnesses were Samuel PROSSER and Margaret SHEEN).</div>
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>Family trees on Ancestry.com record that a Mary SHEEN was born in Ireland in 1829, the daughter of David SHEAHAN (or SHEEN) and Julia MAHER (this was the maiden surname attributed to Mary in the baptismal entry for her son Joseph SHYING in 1847), and that is indicated in the on-line index to N.S.W. Statutory death Registers (where her parents are recorded as David and Julia). The pedigrees also record that she had a sister named Margaret SHEEN (born in 1832, also Ireland), who married Jacob GOODRIDGE in Sydney in 1850. Indeed, that marriage took place at St Mary's (R.C.), Sydney, on 27 May 1850, and the second witness to that marriage was Mary SHYING (George's wife). It follows that that was inevitably her sister Margaret who had witnessed Mary's own marriage in 1846.</i></b></span></blockquote>
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Mary went to join her husband in America, sailing from Sydney on 20 May 1851, on the American Brig <i>"Fortunio,"</i> bound for Honolulu, aged 20, with her son Joseph SHYING, aged 4, both recorded as British subjects; she died at the residence of her sister, Mrs J. GOODBRIDGE, Pyrmont, on 17 June 1882, <i>"... the beloved wife of Mr George SHYING Senior, aged 52 years"</i> [Freeman's Journal (Sydney), Saturday 24 June]; they had issue:</div>
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a. Joseph SHYING, born Pitt Street, Sydney, 15 March 1847, and baptized at St James's R.C. Sydney, 28 March, by Rev Mr FYANS (mother recorded as Mary MAHER?); age 4, when he sailed to America with his mother, May 1851 (see above); Carpenter, of George Street, Sydney; Joseph died at his residence, 719 George Street South, on 21 July 1876, <i>".. aged 29 years, leaving a wife and two children to mourn their loss, (the) eldest son of George and Mary SHYING of Oxford Street"</i> [S.M.H., Monday 24 July]; he was married at St Andrew's (C.of E.), Sydney, 26 May 1870, to Rebecca Jane SOLOMON, aged 17, of Ultimo; she died at her sister's residence in Pyrmont, on 28 May 1884, aged 31 years, <i>"... widow of late Joseph SHYING, Undertaker"</i> [In Memoriam, S.M.H., 28 May 1885]; with issue.<br />
b. Sarah SHYING, born at Union Street, Sydney, 2 February 1849, and baptized at St James's (R.C.), Sydney, 18 March, by Rev John McCLENNAN (mother Mary SHEEN). Query whether she died an infant, which would explain why she did not go to America in 1851?</div>
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c. Julia Martha SHYING, born in San Francisco (so recorded in her marriage registration), about 1852-53; she died in Sydney on 6 December 1885; she was married at St Peter's (C.of E.), Woolloomooloo, 16 November 1884, of full age, Spinster, of Sydney (parents named in full), to Gavin HOUSTON, of full age, a Widower, of Sydney, Grocer (born in Maitland, parents Gavin and Agnes HOUSTON, the father deceased).<br />
d. Mary Eliza SHYING, born about 1854; she was married at St Andrew's (C.of E.) Cathedral, on 9 June 1875, to John Charles BURTON, of Paddington, Boot-maker.</div>
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e. George R. SHYING, born at 185 Sussex Street, Sydney, in May 1856 [Empire, Thursday 8 May]; died in 1893; probably George Robert SHYING, who married in Sydney, 1878 [#196], Alice M. SAMUELS; with issue.</div>
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f. James Edwin SHYING, born 1858; died 14 November 1874, aged 16 years, late of Sydney [Empire, 16 November].</div>
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g. Letitia E. SHYING, born 1861; died on 3 August 1874, aged 13, late of Oxford Street [S.M.H., 5 August].</div>
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h. Emily E. SHYING, born 1863; died 1864.</div>
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j. William SHYING, born 1865; died 1948.</div>
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k. Alice M. SHYING, born 1866; died at Wallsend, 1924 [#704]; married at East Maitland, 1889 [#5464], Arthur W. STUART or STEWART.</div>
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l. Margaret SHYING, born 1870; she died at Balmain North, 1901 [#4460], aged 31 years, and was buried at Rookwood [R.C. Mortuary 1, Section K, Plot 1876]:<br />
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She was married at Sydney, 1888 [#1435], to Robert H. BUTCHER.</div>
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m. John R. SHYING, born 1873.</div>
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George appears to have married secondly, in Sydney, 1884 [#251], to Ellen CARNEY (or CORNEY), and in his marriage registration he recorded his mother as Sarah O'NEIL; Ellen survived him as sole executor; and by her had further issue:</div>
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n. still born child, buried at Rookwood, 7 February 1885 [Anglican, Section R, Plot 1321]<br />
o. Martin SHYING, born Sydney, 1886 [#2074].</div>
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p. Mary SHYING, born Sydney, 1889 [#674]; she died in 1889, and was buried in her father's plot at Rookwood (Anglican, Section R, Plot 1321]..</div>
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q. Kate SHING, born at 8 George Street, Sydney, 27 May 1890 [#1774], and baptised at St Benedict's (R.C.), 8 June, by Rev Francis TIMONEY.</div>
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3. Henry James SHYING, born at Parramatta, 7 January 1828; Cabinet Maker, 477 Pitt Street, Sydney, 1863-1879 [Sand's Dircctories]; he died at his residence, 28 High Holborn Street, Surry Hills, on 9 December 1891, <i>"... after a long and painful illness, in his 68th year, leaving a wife and seven children to mourn their loss" </i>[Australian Star, Monday 21 December], and was buried on 10 December at St John's Cemetery, Parramatta, next to his mother.<br />
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<i>[Photograph taken in December 2018 by the author of this article.]</i><br />
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Henry was married at St James's (C.of E.), Sydney, by Rev Richard HOWELL, on 8 March 1853, to Sarah McDONALD, of the Parish of St Philip's, Spinster, with the permission of Jane McDONALD, witnesses being John SHYING of St Philip's parish and Ann McDONALD of St Lawrence parish; Sarah was buried at Rookwood on 16 September 1907; they had issue:<br />
a. George Edward SHYING, born 13 February 1854, and was baptised at St Lawrence (C.of E.), Sydney, 9 April; he was buried at St Mary's (R.C.), Sydney, 2 April 1857, aged 3 years.<br />
b. Henry J. SHYING, born 1859; died 1897; probably married at Newtown, 1884 [#2718], Blanche E. BRADFORD (unless he was instead the cousin?).<br />
c. Thomas McDonald SHYING, born 1861; died on 28 August 1871, aged 10 years, late of Sydney.<br />
d. John L. SHYING, born 1863; died 1935; probably married at Woollahra, 1887 [#3111], Minnie C. IRVING.<br />
e. Sarah L. SHYING, born 1865.<br />
f. Blanche A.M. SHYING, born 1868.<br />
g. Alice A. SHYING, born 1870.<br />
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4. Thomas Jones SHYING, born at Parramatta, 24 March 1830; of 9 Goulburn Street, Sydney, Butcher, 1866 [Sand's Directory]; of St John's Road, Butcher, 1871 [Sand's]; of Crown Street, Pyrmont, Butcher, 1873 [Sand's]; of 684 Elizabeth Street, Carcass Butcher, 1876 [Sand's]; of Parramatta Road, Glebe, Butcher, 1879 [Sand's]; of 400 Harris Street, Butcher, 1883 [Sand's]; he died on 1 August 1894, aged 64 - In Memoriam Notices, published in the Evening News, 1 August 1895, were inserted by his second wife Elizabeth SHYING and niece E. KENNAGH; his daughter and son-in-law Annie and L. MILHAM; and his sister-in-law and nephew Ellen and J.C. KENNAGH; he was buried at Rookwood [Anglican, Section CCC, Plot 380].<br />
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<i>[Photograph taken in December 2018 by the author of this article.]</i><br />
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Thomas SHYING, a Communicant Presbyterian, was married at St Andrew's, Parramatta, by Rev James COUTTS, on 23 June 1851, to Sarah FOSTER, Spinster, of Parramatta; she died at North Willoughby, on 1 May 1893, aged 62 years, and was buried at Rookwood [Anglican, Section CCC, Plots 85, 86] (no gravestone); they had issue:<br />
a. Henry John SHYING, born 2 August 1852 [Volume 38A, number 1277]; died on 11 May 1854, aged 2 years, and was buried with his grandmother at St John's Cemetery, Parramatta.<br />
b. George SHYING, born 1854 [Volume 40, number 280]; as the <i>"... eldest son of Mr Thomas SHYING"</i> he was married at Short Street, Forest Lodge, on 27 March 1875, to Catherine FORD, <i>"... only daughter of Mr Henry FORD"</i> [Sydney Mail, Saturday 15 May].<br />
c. Henry John SHYING (II), born 15 May 1854.<br />
d. Annie Eliza SHYING, born 25 February 1856, and baptised at St John's, Parramatta, 23 March; she died at 121 George Street, Camperdown, October 1899, aged 43 years, and was buried on 19 October at Rookwood [Anglican, Section EE, Plot 761]; she was married in Sydney, 1876 [#1167], to Levy MILHAM; he was buried with his wife on 10 February 1936, aged 80 years.<br />
e. Albert Thomas SHYING, born 15 January 1858, and was baptised at St John's, Parramatta, 7 February; he died on 26 January 1894, aged 36, and was buried at Rookwood [Anglican, Section CCC, Plots 85, 86], with his mother (no gravestone).<br />
f. Emily Seline SHYING, born 9 January 1860, and baptised at St John's, Parramatta, 19 February; she was married at st Stephen's (C.of E.), Newtown, on 8 November 1881 to Thomas Henry Robert MARSHALL, a Drayman from Newcastle-on-Tyne.<br />
Thomas evidently married secondly, Elizabeth KENNAGH, who survived him.</div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em>JOHN SHEEN alias SHIN</em></strong></span>.</div>
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13 February 1841 - Margaret McGOVERN, aged 22, arrived in Sydney on the ship "Jane Gifford" with her sisters Alice (25) and Catherine (20), all from Tipperary, and daughters of Norah McGOVERN, Widow, father deceased.<br />
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30 April 1846 - Marriage by Rev John Dunmore LANG, at Scot's Church, Sydney [Archives Office, Marriage Register, 5-4113, R.G. Volume 73, 2, No 1081], of:</div>
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<em>"... <b><span style="color: magenta;">John SHIN</span></b>, a native of Chinese India, of Twofold Bay, aged 36, bachelor, and Margaret McGOVERN. of Sydney, Spinster, aged 21..."</em></div>
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Neither party signed the declaration of Communicant Membership of the church, and the first witness was J. BRADY (second witness signature illegible - possibly L. NIMO?).</div>
<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="text-align: center;">
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><b>John Dunmore LANG was under an obligation to ensure that when he married two people, they were both clear to do so. If John SHIN was the same man as John SHYING, then LANG should rightfully have established whether John was previously married - that he records him as a bachelor suggests he either did not know, or ask, or even care? That both of John SHYING's wives were already deceased meant, of course, that there would be do impediment - barring any unlikely breach of consanguinity limitations under Canon Law. Perhaps the more interesting reference LANG makes is to John SHIN's place of nativity - could he have perceived that John was not 100% Chinese? Or might this have been a "before-his-time" allusion to what we now refer to as Indo-China?</b></i></span></div>
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2 February 1847 - Birth in Sydney of John and Margaret's first daughter Margaret Mary SHEEN - she was not baptized until 14 November 1872, then at Sofala, and about 6 months after her marriage.</div>
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12 August 1850 - Birth at Concord of a second daughter Sarah SHEEN [Pre-Registration Church Records, Volume 145, Number 1582 - Microfilm Reel 011 (S.A.G. Library), Number 1635; and her baptism at St Patrick's R.C. Church, Parramatta:</div>
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<em>"Baptised 22 September 1850; born 12 August; Sarah, daughter of <span style="color: magenta;">John SHEEN</span> and Margaret McGOVERN, of Concord; Sponsor Margaret DICKEN (? or DICKSON); Michael BRENNAN Off'g Min'r."</em></div>
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18 July 1853 - Baptism in N.S.W. of Eliza Ann SHEEHAN, daughter of John SHEEHAN and Margaret McGOVERN.</div>
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24 July 1856 - Birth at Chippendale of a son John SHEEN [Registered Number 1938].<br />
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1864 - Sand's Directory:<br />
"<b>John SHEEN</b>,Gardener, Holt Street."</div>
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24 December 1867 - Marriage at Elizabeth Street Presbyterian Church, Sydney, of his elder daughter Sarah SHEEN to John MOY MOW. He was a native of China - and was naturalized in N.S.W., 16 August 1872 [State Records, Register 3, No 129].</div>
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11 May 1872 - Marriage at Sofala of his daughter Margaret Mary SHEEN to Ah CHONG alias Joseph LAW, a native of China.</div>
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13 December 1875 - Death of Margaret SHEEN [Statutory Registrations of Births, Deaths and Marriages - pro-forma <span style="color: black;">printed</span>, with <em><span style="color: blue;">handwritten entries in Italics</span></em>]:</div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"<span style="color: black;">Date and place of death</span> - <span style="color: blue;"><i>December 13th 1875; 4 Little Essex Street</i>.</span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"<span style="color: black;">Name and Occupation</span> - <em><span style="color: blue;">Margaret SHEEN</span>.</em></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"Sex and age<em> - <span style="color: blue;">Female; aged 52 years.</span></em></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"<span style="color: black;">Cause of Death, Duration of last illness; medical attendant; when he last saw deceased</span> - <span style="color: blue;"><i>Choleric Diarrhoea, Debility from Chronic Rheumatism; three weeks; Andrew HOWISON</i> <span style="color: black;">(? my best guess)</span>;<i> 6th December.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"<span style="color: black;">Name and occupation of father. Name and maiden surname of mother</span> - <i><span style="color: blue;">--- McGOVERN</span></i>.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: black;">Informant</span> - <i><span style="color: blue;">John SHEEN; Son, 4 Little Essex Street</span>.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Particulars of Registration - </span></span></span><i><span style="color: blue;">E.L. MARCH, 13 December 1875, Sydney</span>.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">When and where buried; name of Undertaker - </span></span></span></span><span style="color: blue;"><i>15th December 1875; Roman Catholic, Necropolis; J. and G. SHYING and Co.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="color: black; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Name and religion of Minister and names of witnesses -</span></span></span> <i> <span style="color: blue;"> --- --- ; Henry MEARNS</span></i> (? my best guess)<i>, <span style="color: blue;">George SHYING</span></i>.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;">Where born and how long in Australasian Colonies or States</span></span><span style="color: black;"> -</span> <i><span style="color: blue;">Tipperary, Ireland; Thirty years in N.S.W.</span></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Place of marriage, age, and to whom</span></span> -</span><span style="background-color: white;"><i> <span style="color: blue;">At Scots Church, Sydney, by the Rev Dr LANG; aged 21 years; John SHEEN.</span></i></span></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;">Children of marriage</span></span><span style="color: black;"> -</span> <i><span style="color: blue;">Margaret, 29; Eliza, 25; Sarah, 27; John, 19; "alive."</span></i></span></div>
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14 December 1875 - Margaret SHEEN was buried at Rookwood Necropolis, R.C. Mortuary 1, Section 5, Plot 252, aged 52 years (on-line index to Roman Catholic Burials).</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgINU0R3itD4FONCOmXXDhYNU-PbQw28W31YwsGLERrZJuuuIPc2ppIL1w1zx61zbPecRT-5gI-7X9glZKXaulXj643sTc_1LBJ3H-LTH1gEKmKxwdXfauDlfNHiybFylaco7njr_TQzWOI/s1600/150522415_2e5277ec-d390-4faa-b2bb-421594c24a77.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1024" data-original-width="676" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgINU0R3itD4FONCOmXXDhYNU-PbQw28W31YwsGLERrZJuuuIPc2ppIL1w1zx61zbPecRT-5gI-7X9glZKXaulXj643sTc_1LBJ3H-LTH1gEKmKxwdXfauDlfNHiybFylaco7njr_TQzWOI/s640/150522415_2e5277ec-d390-4faa-b2bb-421594c24a77.jpeg" width="422" /></a></div>
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<i>[Photograph taken in December 2018 by the author of this article. The grave faces south-south-west over Necropolis Drive into the Old Methodist Section, on the western edge of the first (and most eastern) block of graves in Section 5.]</i></div>
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The gravestone on the plot records the following (image posted on <a href="http://www.findagrave.com/">www.findagrave.com</a>):</div>
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<em>"In Memory of</em></div>
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<em>"MARGARET SHEEN</em></div>
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<em>"WHO DIED 13 DECEMBER 1875</em></div>
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<em>"AGED 49 YEARS</em></div>
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<em>"NATIVE OF TIPPERARY, IRELAND."</em></div>
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22 December 1875 - Evening News (Sydney), Wednesday, Death Notice:</div>
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<em>"December 13, at the residence of her son-in-law, John MOY MOW, No 4, Little Essex-street, Lower George-street, Margaret SHEEHAN, wife of <b><span style="color: magenta;">John SHEEHAN</span></b> of Sofala, aged 47 years."</em></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfi3Y1KyYfcMu4w_ghugA9honQOKy90XRn3q2w41GwnO8sXQZ-6rlorQ22rv-faDsT5BMfaRVajQTVsS0RwlgtRrNq_lue53e31FcIp_0P1_1bM1Fk_oF_kfh3QhKW0_6_-nfJg-UEwQTF/s1600/150522415_1ece8025-1c8f-4231-8bef-c9df85c41b3a.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1024" data-original-width="683" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfi3Y1KyYfcMu4w_ghugA9honQOKy90XRn3q2w41GwnO8sXQZ-6rlorQ22rv-faDsT5BMfaRVajQTVsS0RwlgtRrNq_lue53e31FcIp_0P1_1bM1Fk_oF_kfh3QhKW0_6_-nfJg-UEwQTF/s640/150522415_1ece8025-1c8f-4231-8bef-c9df85c41b3a.jpeg" width="426" /></a></div>
<em></em><br />
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<em>[Photograph taken in December 2018 by the author of this article. </em><br />
<em>The front of the Chapel of St Michael Archangel is visible in the top left corner.]</em></div>
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1878 - Marriage at Waterloo of his only surviving son, John SHEIN, to Ellen LEWIS [Registered Number 1923].</div>
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18 June 1880 - Death of <b><span style="color: magenta;">John SHEEN</span></b> [Statutory Registrations of Births, Deaths and Marriages]:</div>
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<span style="color: black; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Date and place of death - </span></span></span><i><span style="color: blue;">18th June 1880; 17 Harrington Street</span></i>.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Name and Occupation - </span></span></span><i><span style="color: blue;">John SHEEN; Gardiner</span>.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Sex and age - </span></span></span><i><span style="color: blue;">Male; aged 91 years</span>.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Cause of death; duration of last illness; medical attendant; when he last saw deceased - </span></span></span></span><span style="color: blue;"><i>Apoplexy; 6 days; Dr WRIGHT; same day.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;">Name and occupation of father. Name and maiden surname of mother</span> - <em> <span style="color: blue;"> --- --- ---.</span></em></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Informant - </span></span></span></span><span style="color: blue;"><i>John SHEEN; Son, 66 Beaumont St, Pyrmont.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Particulars of Registration - </span></span></span><i><span style="color: blue;">E.L. MARCH, 19th June 1880, Sydney</span>.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">When and where buried; name of Undertaker - </span></span></span></span><span style="color: blue;"><i>20th June 1880; R. C. Cemetery, Necropolis; J. and G. SHYING & Co.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="color: black; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Name and religion of Minister and names of witnesses -</span></span></span> <span style="color: blue;"><i> --- --- ; William SLAYFORD, John HANSLOW</i>.</span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;">Where born and how long in Australasian Colonies or States</span> - <i><span style="color: blue;">China; 61 years in the Colony</span>.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;"><span style="color: blue;"><span style="color: black;">Place of marriage, age, and to whom - </span></span></span><i><span style="color: blue;">Dr LANG, Clk; ---; Margaret McGOVERN</span>.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="color: black;">"<span style="color: black;">Children of marriage</span></span><span style="color: black;"> -</span><span style="color: blue;"> <i>Eliza, 27; Sarah, 29; Margaret, 30; John, 24; boy deceased.</i></span></span></div>
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<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="text-align: center;">
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<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>This is the only age I have yet found for John SHEEN, but it was clearly not recorded here by him. The birthplace and time in the Colony are uncannily similar to information recorded earlier for John SHYING. Their ages do differ, by 5 years or so, but I have only been able to find one age given by John SHYING himself (in 1828) Census, and one for John SHEEN (but that was recorded after his death on the information of his son). I have become used to seeing some degree of variation in the ages of individuals recorded on their own information and over their lifetime. So, one verified record of age is a very small sample - too small to be making a final call as to its accuracy, in my view.</i></b></span></div>
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19 June 1880 - Evening News (Sydney), Saturday, Funeral Notices:</div>
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<em>"The Friends of Mr John MOY MOY are respectfully requested to attend the Funeral of his deceased FATHER-IN-LAW, <b><span style="color: magenta;">John SHEON</span></b>; to move from his residence, 17 Harrington-street, at 1.15 p.m. sharp, TOMMOROW (Sunday) AFTERNOON. SHYING, Undertaker."</em></div>
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<em>"The Friends of Mr Ah CHONG are respectfully requested to attend the Funeral of his deceased FATHER-IN-LAW <b><span style="color: magenta;">John SHEON</span></b>; to move from 17, Harrington-street, at 1.15 p.m. sharp, TOMORROW (Sunday) AFTERNOON. SHYING, Undertaker."</em></div>
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<em>"The friends of Mr <b><span style="color: magenta;">JOHN SHEEN</span></b> are respectfully invited to attend his funeral; to move from his late residence, No 17, Harrington-street, TO-MORROW (Sunday) AFTERNOON, at a quarter past 1 o'clock, for the Necropolis. <em>J. and G. SHYING and Co, 747, George-street, and 118, Oxford-street."</em></em></div>
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20 June 1880 - <b><span style="color: magenta;">John SHEEN</span></b> was buried at Rookwood Necropolis, R.C. Mortuary 1, Section 5, Plot 252, aged 91 years (on-line index to Roman Catholic Burials).</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-QrPARN7kb4hvZO-qKU-oq9QYfJ8pHY0lq0Y2eWPNqXi7zYeW8r84HrkALHyd-DCuOxrdRPKlaXf4MUkquoX20sDI37DyCeOUHSgQ2gKueXTr92eBR-QT6ZI1_6WwvsddEClLVSpLheP-/s1600/150522415_2e5277ec-d390-4faa-b2bb-421594c24a77.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1024" data-original-width="676" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-QrPARN7kb4hvZO-qKU-oq9QYfJ8pHY0lq0Y2eWPNqXi7zYeW8r84HrkALHyd-DCuOxrdRPKlaXf4MUkquoX20sDI37DyCeOUHSgQ2gKueXTr92eBR-QT6ZI1_6WwvsddEClLVSpLheP-/s640/150522415_2e5277ec-d390-4faa-b2bb-421594c24a77.jpeg" width="422" /></a></div>
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<i>[Photograph taken in December 2018 by the author of this article.]</i></div>
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The gravestone on the plot records the following (images posted on <a href="http://www.findagrave.com/">www.findagrave.com</a>):</div>
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<em>"Also Of</em></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<em>"<b><span style="color: magenta;">JOHN SHEEN</span></b></em></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<em>"WHO DIED 19 JUNE 1880.</em></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<em>"AGED 92 YEARS</em></div>
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<em>"BELOVED HUSBAND OF</em></div>
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<em>"THE ABOVE <em>AND NATIVE</em></em></div>
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<em>"OF CHINA."</em></div>
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<em>"May their souls rest</em></div>
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<em>"in peace."</em></div>
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<span style="color: black; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;">----------------------------------------------------</span><br />
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<em><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i></i></b></span></em><br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<em><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i>I am at a loss as to how a 91 year-old Chinaman, who had been living in New South Wales for 61 years, could have been buried without the hint of recognition of these details in the Sydney press - he had to have acquired, by then, a celebrity status in the wider Chinese community. If he was John SHYING by another name, then the Undertakers who arranged his funeral (who were SHYING's sons John and George), could hardly have failed to notice who they were burying, and that it was their father. But, still not a peep from them, or the press. However, I find it also very odd that two Chinamen arrived in Sydney in the same year, 1818, but only one has left a trail in the archival records. So, the case of a double identity is probably, as they say in Scottish Courts, "not proven."</i></b></span></em></blockquote>
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<em><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i><em><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i></i></b></span></em> </i></b></span></em></div>
<em><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><i><em></em></i></b></span></em><br />
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Indeed, there is an interesting report in the Maitland Mercury and Hunter River Advertiser, of Thursday 12 June 1862, which illustrates one of these points:</div>
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<em>"FUNERAL OF THE OLDEST CHINESE COLONIST.</em></div>
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<em>"Yesterday afternoon, a funeral took place in Sydney of a man of the name of Mum Shou Pua, a native of China, who was not only considered the oldest member of the Chinese race, having been 72 years of age, but was also the oldest Chinese resident here, having arrived in Sydney 42 years ago..."</em> </div>
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Notwithstanding that in June 1862, John SHIN/SHEEN was then aged about 74, and had been living in N.S.W. for 43 years (if both his age at death and years in Colony details were recorded correctly in his death registration).</div>
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A narrow win in both counts - but not a peep out of the man himself, or his family! Perhaps they did not read the Maitland Mercury.</div>
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<strong><em><span style="font-size: large;">JOHN SHEEN'S CHILDREN BY MARGARET McGOVERN.</span></em></strong><br />
<br />
From details of issue in John and Margaret's death registrations:</div>
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<em><span style="color: blue; font-family: "times";">[In 1875 - Margaret, 29; Eliza, 25; Sarah, 27; John, 19; "alive."]</span></em></div>
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<em><span style="color: blue; font-family: "times";">[In 1880 - Eliza, 27; Sarah, 29; Margaret, 30; John, 24; boy deceased.]</span></em><br />
<em><span style="color: blue; font-family: "times";"></span></em> </div>
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1. Margaret Mary SHEEN, born in Sydney, 2 February 1847, but was not baptized until six months after her marriage; she died on 7 October 1909, and was buried at Rookwood, Old Catholic, Section M, Plot 834:<br />
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She was married (with surname mis-recorded as GIHEEN) in Sofala on 11 May 1872 to Ah CHONG alias Joseph LAW; as Ah CHONG, a native of Hong Kong, he arrived in Sydney <em>"... by the ship Albion in 1858, and commenced business as a Chinese merchant. Later he disposed of his business and removed to the goldfields of Lambing Flat and Turon, where he remained for some twelve years, then returning to Sydney, where he has since resided. During the many years he acted as Government Interpreter </em>(in the Police and District Courts)<em>, he gave every satisfaction, and on no occasion was his rendering challenged. The deceased leaves six sons, six daughters and nineteen grandchildren" </em>[Obituary, Daily Telegraph, 21 March 1902], and was said to have been <em>"... one of the oldest Chinese residents of Sydney"</em> [The Richmond River and Northern District Advertiser, 26 March]; he died at his residence, 113 Gloucester Street, Sydney, on 22 March 1902 [Obituary]; he was buried at Rookwood (see above photo).</div>
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They had issue (with <span style="color: blue;">additional details</span> kindly supplied in March 2019 by Victor MOYMOW):<br />
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a. Mary Ann LAW CHONG (no entry yet found in on-line Indexes to Statutory Birth Registers); the <em>"... eldest daughter of Joseph LAW CHONG of 18 Cambridge Street, and niece of Mr and Mrs MOY MOW of 113 Gloucester Street"</em> when she was married, at Bethel House, Sydney, 12 July 1883, to Charles CHIN KITT of Goulburn [Australian Town and Country Journal, Saturday 21 July]; he probably died at George Street, St Peters, 12 April 1922, aged 80 [Goulburn Evening Penny Post, 18 April]; they had issue:<br />
i. Rosetta KITT, born Argyle, 1890 #4220.<br />
ii. Clara MITT, born Argyle, 1893 #3998.<br />
iii. William A. KITT, born at Goulburn, 1899 #30561.<br />
? Edward Charles KITT; died at Sydney, 1957 #8459, (parents Charles and Mary Ann).<br />
A Mary Ann KITT died at Paddington in 1956 #3596, but her parents were identified as William Lan and Mary Ann, which is not Joseph, or Ah CHONG, or Margaret, so probably another?<br />
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b. <span style="color: blue;">William Henry LAW, born at</span> <span style="color: blue;">George Street, Sydney, 1862</span> (no entry yet found in Indexes to Statutory Birth Registers); as William LAW, of 113 Gloucester Street, Sydney, Clerk, November 1891, when he was granted Voluntary Sequestration, Bankruptcy Court [Australian Star, 10 November]; a Chinese interpreter in several Brisbane Court cases; he died at <span style="color: blue;">Toowong, Brisbane, 11 June 1930</span> #B11171 (parents Joseph LAW CHONG and Margaret SHEEN); he was married at Canterbury, 15 October 1883 #2308, to Henrietta CATTEREL; she sued for divorce, citing her husband's adultery, the decree nisi granted in November 1893 [Australian Star, 3 November]; decree absolute, July 1911 [S.M.H., 5 July]; no evidence found of any issue.</div>
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c. Sarah LAW, born at Sofala, <span style="color: blue;">17 August</span> 1863, Register #13703, as (female) AHCHONG, parents Ah Chong and Margaret, and as (female) SHEEHAN, parent Margaret; as Sarah SORENSON, she died 13 August 1951, aged 88, and was buried in her parents plot at Rookwood; she was married in Sydney, 1884, to John SORENSEN.<br />
d. Frank Ah LAW, born at Sofala, 28 September 1864 #14960, as Frank AHCHONG, parents Ah Chong and Margaret, also as Frank Ah CHONG, parents AH Chong and Margaret, and as Frank SHEEHAN, mother Margaret; he probably died at Sofala, 8 October 1864 #5883, as un-named AHCHONG, parents Ah Chong and Margaret.</div>
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e. Thomas James LAW, born at Sofala, <span style="color: blue;">15 October</span> 1865 #15324, as Thomas J. AHCHONG, parents Ah Chong and Margaret, also as Thomas James CHONG, parents Ah and Margaret, and as Thomas J. SHEEN, mother Margaret; probably Thomas Joseph LAW, who died at Kingsford, 1942 #18762, parents Joseph and Margaret.</div>
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f. Alfred <span style="color: blue;">George</span> LAW, born at Sofala, <span style="color: blue;">3 February</span> 1868 #16551, as Alfred G. AHCHONG, parents Ah Chong and Margaret, and as Alfred G. CHONG, parents AH Chong and Margaret; Private, 9th Battalion, 1st A.I.F.; he died at <span style="color: blue;">Fortitude Valley, Brisbane, 27 February 1952</span> #B36779 (parents Joseph LAW and Margaret SHEEHAN), late of 56 Amelia Street, (Fortitude) Valley, and was cremated at Mount Thompson Crematorium, leaving a wife and family; he was married firstly, at Sydney, 1890 #68, to Agnes Ross FRASER; she sued for divorce, the decree nisi granted in March 1893 [Daily Telegraph, 8 March]; they had issue:<br />
<em> i. Ruby C. LAW, born at Sydney, 1890 #2394.</em><br />
Alfred was probably married secondly, at Brisbane, 1901 #B921, to Annie SPOONER; with further issue:<br />
<em> ii. Alexander George LAW, born Brisbane, 1902 #B4860.</em><br />
<em> iii. Leslie Alfred LAW, born at Brisbane, 1904 #B8890.</em><br />
<em> iv. Walter Leslie LAW, born at Brisbane, 1907 #B15910.</em><br />
<em> v. Frederick LAW, born at Brisbane, 1910 #B23880.</em></div>
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<em> g. <span style="color: blue;">Emily</span> <span style="color: blue;">Minna</span> Ah LAW, born at Sofala, 27 September</em> 1869 #18270, as Emily M. AHCHONG, parents AH Chong and Margaret, and as Emily M. Ah CHONG, same parents.<br />
h. un-named AHCHONG, born at Sofala, 3 July 1871 #17722, parents Ah Chong and Margaret.<br />
j. John R. AHCHONG, born at Sofala, 8 April 1873 #18661, parents Joseph and Margaret; as Robert AHCHONG, he died at Sofala, 1 June 1874 #7843, parents Joseph and Margaret.</div>
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k. Agatha Adalina M. AHCHONG, born at Sofala, <span style="color: blue;">21 February</span> 1875 #19655, parents Joseph and Margaret; <span style="color: blue;">she died on 8 September 1930</span>.<br />
l. Alice <span style="color: blue;">Maud</span> AHCHONG, born at Sydney, 17 February 1877 #654, parents Ah Chong and Margaret; she died at Sydney, 1878 #542, parents Joseph and Margaret.<br />
m. Ada LAW; she died at Chatswood, 1957; she was married in Sydney, 1902 #2736, to Axel Olaf OHLSON, a native of Sweden; 58th Battalion, First A.I.F.; believed to have been killed in the Battle of Fromelles, 1916, but his body was never recovered.<br />
n. Esther <span style="color: blue;">May</span> AHCHONG, born at <span style="color: blue;">The Rocks</span>, Sydney, <span style="color: blue;">20 November</span> 1878 #3353, parents Joseph and Margaret.<br />
o. Margaret <span style="color: blue;">Theresa</span> AHCHONG, born at Sydney, <span style="color: blue;">31 September</span> 1880 #2904, parents Ah Chong and Margaret; <span style="color: blue;">she died at Newcastle, 2 July 1959</span>.<br />
p. a daughter, still-born at her parents' residence, 18 Cambridge Street, Sydney, 19 July 1882 [S.M.H., Tuesday 15 August].<br />
q. a daughter, still-born at her parents' residence, 18 Cambridge Street, 26 May 1883 [S.M.H., 29 May]<br />
r. Amy C. (or <span style="color: blue;">Mary Constance</span>) AHCHONG, born at Sydney, 10 May 1884 #1897, parents Joseph and Margaret; Amy Constance LAW CHONG died at her parents' residence, 113 Gloucester Street, Sydney, 2 September 1887, aged 3 years, <em>"... the seventh daughter of Joseph and Margaret LAW CHONG"</em> [S.M.H., Saturday 3 September].<br />
s. Ashley V.L. AHCHONG, born Sydney, 26 November 1886, and Registered 1887 #8, parents Joseph and Margaret.<br />
t. Arthur Ernest CHONG, born Sydney, <span style="color: blue;">5 January</span> 1889 #507, parents Law and Margaret; he died at North Sydney, 1948 #3160, as Arthur Ernest LAW, parents Joseph and Margaret.<br />
<br />
Henry Edwah CHONG was born at Mudgee, 1873 #14129, parents Ah and Margaret.<br />
Perhaps Edward Ah CHONG who, in April 1879, <em>"... better known as FEEMAN, left his house on the 12th instant, aged 15. Any information respecting him, or his whereabouts, shall be rewarded by his father, Ah CHONG, Chinese interpreter, 16 Cambridge Street"</em> [Sydney Morning Herald, Tuesday 15 April]; in August 1883, Edward Ah CHONG, <em>"... a Chinaman, was charged with inflicting grievous bodily harm upon an infant child of one Kate MAHER... on Saturday night"</em> after she had <em>"... met the prisoner in Cambridge Street"</em> [Daily Telegraph, 18 August], but due to a <em>"... disinclination on the part of the principal witness to give evidence,"</em> she being <em>"... a woman named MAHER with whom he was said to be living</em>" [Daily Telegraph, 26 September].<br />
Unless this was the un-named 1871 Sofala birth?<br />
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2. Sarah SHEEN, born at Concord on 12 August 1859, and baptized at St Patrick's (R.C.), Parramatta, 22 September by Rev Michael BRENNAN, and sponsored by Margaret DICKEN (or DICKSON); <br />
Sarah died on 31 January 1936, aged 85 years, and was buried in the MOY MOW family plot, Rookwood [Anglican, Section 4, Plot 4615].<br />
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<i>[Photo taken by the author in December 2018.]</i><br />
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She was married at Elizabeth Street Presbyterian Church, Sydney, 24 December 1867, to John MOY MOW; he was a native of China, and was naturalized in the Colony of N.S.W. on 16 August 1872; he died on 28 January 1886, aged 47 years, and was buried on 29 January at Rookwood [Anglican, Section J, Plot 215 - his inscription is recorded on MOY MOW plot in Anglican, Section 4, plot 4615]:<br />
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<i>[Photo taken by the author in December 2018.]</i></div>
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They had issue:</div>
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a. John A. MOY MOW, born in Paddington, <span style="color: blue;">14 April</span> 1868; <span style="color: blue;">died 16 May 1905</span>.</div>
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b. Chong Chu MOY MOW, born in Paddington, <span style="color: blue;">12 April</span> 1870.</div>
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c. <span style="background-color: white; color: blue;">Ada Emaline MOY MOW, born 23 May 1873; died 20 January 1953; she was married, 20 April 1892, to Samuel SARSIN</span>.<br />
d. Albert Cecil MOY MOW, born in Sydney, <span style="color: blue;">30 May</span> 1875; <span style="color: blue;">died 10 July 1947</span>.</div>
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d. Maud Eliza MOY MOW, born in Sydney, 1877.</div>
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e. Bertha <span style="color: blue;">Jane</span> MOY MOW, born in Sydney, 1879; died in Sydney, 1880.</div>
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f. Rosetta MOW MOY, born in Sydney, <span style="color: blue;">23 September 1880</span>; <span style="color: blue;">she had the Shanghai Café in Campbell Street; she died 18 September 1960; she was married on 9 April 1927 to AH Toy</span>.</div>
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g. Arthur <span style="color: blue;">Victor</span> MOY MOW, born in Sydney, <span style="color: blue;">22 April</span> 1884.</div>
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h. Rupert H. MOY MOW, born in Sydney, <span style="color: blue;">1 July</span> 1886; died at Newtown, 1922; <span style="color: blue;">he was married on 3 April 1912 to Mary Elizabeth ANDREWS</span>. <span style="color: blue;">Grandfather of Victor MOYMOW</span>.<br />
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3. Eliza Ann SHEEN, <span style="color: blue;">born 2 July 1853</span>, and baptized on 18 July.<br />
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4. John SHEEN, born at Chippendale, 24 July 1856; he died at Bathurst Hospital, of Bright's Disease, April 1899, aged 48 years, and was buried in the Catholic Portion of Bathurst Cemetery (there is no gravestone); John SHEIN was married firstly, at Waterloo, 1878 [#1923], to Ellen LEWIS; he was married secondly, at St Michael's (C.of E.), Flinders Street, Surry Hills, 23 December 1882, to Ada Annie PARKER (the register did not record the occupation of John's father, nor name of John's mother); in February 1889, a warrant was issued by the Water Police for the arrest of John SHEEN, charged that he did marry one Ada PARKER, his former wife Ellen LEWIS being then alive [Police Gazette, Wednesday 20 February].<br />
I am under an impression that he may have had issue, but have been unable to locate evidence for same.</div>
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Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-54889941562327066822018-07-02T19:34:00.167-07:002022-10-11T19:49:12.934-07:00A Branch of the VICKERS Family in Dublin<br />By Chris PIGOTT.<div>cgpigott@yahoo.com.au<div>- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div><div><br /></div></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i><u><b>CAPTAIN JAMES VICKERS OF DUBLIN</b></u>.</i></span><br /></div>
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<strong>James VICKERS</strong>, who resided in Dublin from about 1676 until his death in 1705 (with an absence, perhaps, of several years in England during the supremacy in a great part of Ireland of the Jacobites in 1689-90), was, I believe, my ancestor.<br />
And this <b>James VICKERS</b> was, at the same time, both my great-times-six AND my great-times-seven grandfather! This curiosity came about by virtue of a marriage in Dublin in June 1824 between once-removed cousins, my great-great-grand-parents John PIGOTT and Elizabeth MAGUIRE (their mothers were both born Mary VICKERS, and they were aunt and niece respectively, and whereby John PIGOTT married the daughter of his first cousin).<br />
So, it would appear, I double-dip into the VICKERS gene pool.<br />
<b>James</b>'s details appear later in this article. See [D] below.<br />
<br />
William Jackson PIGOTT (1842-1921), of Dundrum, County Down, was a keen family historian (he was a first cousin of my great-grandfather Rev Henry Robert PIGOTT), and in a cover note to the DIXON Papers [MS 8522, Genealogical Office, Kildare Street, Dublin], dated May 1911, W.J.P. had this to say about our VICKERS ancestry:<br />
<em>"I was under the impression that our VICKERS were a different clan from the VICARS of Levally, Queen's County, but I now believe they are all of the same descent - i.e. from Don Vicaro, the Spanish Cavalier who came over with Queen Catherine of Aragon, as nearly all the branches bore a cross on their shields."</em><br />
Despite attempts by some family historians (including W.J.P.) to connect him to the descent of this Spaniard Don VICARO, our <strong>James</strong> probably instead came from a long line of English stock.<br />
<br />
The DIXON Papers appear to be an important source for Dublin VICKERS family baptisms and burials (especially those of the Church of Ireland parish of St Andrew's in Dublin), probably abstracted by family historians before the 1922 fires in The Four Courts building destroyed the original registers. The "manuscript" - a collection of loose leaf typed pages, stored in a box - does not appear to have been digitalized as yet. Unfortunately, when I last visited Dublin in 2010, the Genealogical Office was closed to public access.<br />
<br />
In 1970, the Honourable Guy STRUTT, reporting on the extensive research that had been conducted by Sir Arthur VICARS (born 1862), Ulster King of Arms, into his own VICARS family origins [Irish Ancestor, Number 2, 1970, at pages 90-102], noted that:<br />
<em>"... outside Leix and Carlow, two families of the name are found in Ireland, one in County Wicklow, the other Merchants in Dublin. Both these nearly always spelt the name VICKERS; they appear to be unrelated to one another, or to the family of the present article, and descended from seventeenth century settlers."</em><br />
STRUTT also made mention of:<br />
<em>"James VICKERS of Paris, France, married Margaret, and had a son Laurence baptized there 9 August 1703. He may be identical with James VICKERS, a merchant factor in Dublin, mentioned in a Chancery Bill, CLAPHAM v. VICKERS, 19 May 1683."</em><br />
Whilst I believe these two were not one and the same person, the second does put his hand up to be "our" <b>James</b>.<br />
<br />
STRUTT further noted that the name VICKERS appears in several parts of England at Tudor times and earlier, including London; that it was most common in County Cumberland, especially at Eskdale; and concluded that the Irish family <em>"... probably emigrated from this region, but a brief search has shown no precise origin."</em><br />
But, of the supposed Spanish descent, he observed that:<br />
<em>"... Sir Arthur attempted to check this very implausible story in Spain, without result."</em><br />
<br />
But before we head for Dublin, we might canvas some possible (perhaps even likely) origins for <strong>James VICKERS</strong> in England, beginning not in Eskdale (where I also can find no direct links), but in the City of London, and about the 1530's, during the reign of Henry VIII (and when Catherine of Aragon's Spanish retinue may indeed have included one Don Vicaro, who is said to have had a son named Henry, who in turn is said to have had a son named William).<br />
____________________<b>__________________________</b><br />
<b><br /></b>
<b><br /></b>
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><u><b>WILLIAM VICKERS, GIRDLER, OF NEWGATE, LONDON</b></u>.</em></span><br />
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<br />
Mr VICKERS (could he have been Henry? - probably unlikely, as that name does not appear in this family); he was married with issue:<br />
1. <strong><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William VICKERS</span></strong>. See next below.<br />
2. Edward VICKERS; he was married with issue:<br />
a. Jane VICKERS; she was named in her uncle <strong><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William</span></strong>'s will, 1586.<br />
3. Ellen VICKERS; she was married to a Mr TURNER; she was named in her brother <strong><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William</span></strong>'s will, 1586.<br />
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<strong><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William VICKERS</span></strong>, probably born in the 1530's, or earlier (and before the existence of parish registers, which were introduced after Henry VIII made himself head of the Church in England).<br />
<strong><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William</span></strong> was a Citizen and Girdler of London (although his name does not appear on the <a href="http://www.londonroll.org/">www.londonroll.org</a> website, which does now include the Girdlers Company records); he was buried at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate Street, 4 April 1586; his will, dated 7 March Eliz xxviii, was proved P.C.C., 23 July 1586, requesting that he be buried near his three wives, naming his son <strong><span style="color: red;">John VICARES</span></strong> as his executor (and an afterthought bequest of £40), and with bequests to his younger children Rebecca, Ellen, Marryan, William, Samuel and Mary (all under age, with £20 each), to Jane VICKERS (a daughter of his brother Edward VICKERS), to Joan WILSON his daughter-in-law (or probably his step-daughter), and to his sister Ellen TURNER.<br />
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<strong><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William VICKERS</span></strong> was married firstly, in or before 1559 (details of this first marriage have not yet been established, and probably will never be, as not all parish registers were copied out onto vellum as had been decreed early in Queen Elizabeth's reign); there was issue of it:<br />
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1. Frauncis VICARS, baptized at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 4 October 1559; as VICKERS, he was buried there, 11 January 1575.<br />
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2. Anne VICARS, baptized at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 7 April 1562; as VICKERS, she was buried there, 2 August 1564.<br />
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2. <strong><span style="color: red;">John VICKERS</span></strong>, baptized at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 3 September 1564. See [A] below.<br />
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3. Emme VICKERS, baptized at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 22 November 1566.<br />
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4. Elyzabeth VICKERS, baptized at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 4 June 1568; buried there, 1 May 1571.<br />
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<strong><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William</span></strong> was married secondly, at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 6 October 1573, to Joane WILSON, evidently a widow; she was buried at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 2 August 1754, having had earlier WILSON issue, but evidently without further issue by <b><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William VICKERS</span></b>.<br />
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<b><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William</span></b> was married thirdly, at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 27 May 1575, to Elizabeth [<em>blank</em>] (as recorded in the published Register transcript); she was probably buried at Christ Church, Newgate, 20 February 1584-85; by her he had further issue:<br />
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5. Rebecca VICKERS, baptized at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 5 August 1575, father a Girdeler; she was named in her father's will, 1586, under age; named as Rebecca WALFORD, Widow, in her older half-brother <strong><span style="color: red;">John VICKERS</span></strong>' will, 1633.<br />
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6. Ellyn VICKERS, baptized at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 14 October 1576.<br />
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7. William VICKERS, baptized at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate,16 April 1581; named in his older half-brother <strong><span style="color: red;">John VICKERS</span></strong>' will, 1633; he was possibly the William VICKERS who was the factor in Russia for the Muscovy Company, 1635-36, when he was robbed of 818 rubles in Moscow; however, a William VICKERS, Girdler of London, made his will in December 1636, of the parish of St Michael Queenhithe, London, naming his wife Rebecca and his son William (sole executor) [P.C.C. Probates].<br />
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8. Danyell VICKERS, baptized at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 2 December 1582.</div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em><b><u>REV JOHN VICKERS</u>.</b></em></span></div>
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[A] <span style="color: red;"><strong>John VICKERS</strong></span> was born in London in 1564 (see above); BOYD's Index [London Families] did query whether he was the <span style="color: red;"><b>John</b></span> baptised at Christ Church (Greyfriars), Newgate, 3 September 1564, son of <strong><span style="color: #6aa84f;">William VICKERS</span></strong>, Citizen and Girdler of London (I now do believe that he was).<br />
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<strong><span style="color: red;">John</span></strong> was aged 17 when he was admitted as a Plebeian to Broadgates Hall, Oxford University, 24 November 1581, but neither his birthplace nor his father's name were recorded in the admission register [Alumni Oxonienses]; he was awarded his B.A., 20 February 1583-84, and his M.A., 5 July 1587; he was named in his father's will, 1586; he was the Rector of St Augustine's-at-the-gate, near St Paul's, London, from late 1600 [Alumni Oxonienses], and his very neat hand-writing adorned the parish register from very early 1601; he was still the Rector of St Augustine's, Watling Street, London, in 1621, when he baptized his grandson <strong><span style="color: blue;">John VICKERS </span></strong>(see below); the last baptism in his hand-writing in the St Augustine's register was dated 17 March 1632-33, and within a fortnight, he was superseded by the new Rector, Ephraim UDALL, by 31 March 1633.<br />
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The mediaeval church of St Augustine's parish stood just east of St Paul's Cathedral churchyard, on the north-eastern corner of Watling Street and The Old Exchange. First recorded in the 12th century, it was destroyed in the Great Fire in 1666; rebuilt by Sir Christopher WREN, it was destroyed by enemy bombing during World War 2.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjq0QZfXToZ1vlAg5be_tTzn9-8Q7nKImM0kI8iiQwbcwJHCX4DSXEjg0WHu41Orr_JTAaYniY8FH7Q-cewCjtZeEOUYo7f8zSy7pf5sruwq09Fn179AXKQ4QoKEgKF3R2XXg1v3atSjpYQ/s1600/36.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="378" data-original-width="347" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjq0QZfXToZ1vlAg5be_tTzn9-8Q7nKImM0kI8iiQwbcwJHCX4DSXEjg0WHu41Orr_JTAaYniY8FH7Q-cewCjtZeEOUYo7f8zSy7pf5sruwq09Fn179AXKQ4QoKEgKF3R2XXg1v3atSjpYQ/s320/36.jpg" width="293" /></a></div>
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<i>[The parish of St Augustine's is numbered 36. The site of the church would appear to be immediately to the left of the figure 36. Image courtesy of the Genuki web-site.]</i></div>
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<strong><span style="color: red;">John VICKERS</span></strong> died in 1633, and was recorded as having been buried at St Augustine's on 19 September, as <em>"... parson of St Augustine's,</em>" and evidently inside the church at the upper end of the chancel (according to the will of his son <strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong> - see below). His entry in the Burial Register, made by Ephraim UDALL, Rector, appeared between that for Charles OSBORNE (buried on 10 September) and Henry ADAMS (brought from Clerkenwell and buried on 9 December). Given the conflict with his will, codicil and probate dates (see next), it appears likely that UDALL made an error in the register, and that <strong><span style="color: red;">VICKERS</span></strong> was probably instead buried on 19 November.<br />
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The will of <em>"<span style="color: red;"><b>John VICKERS</b></span> of London, Clerke, Parson of the parish of St Augustine neare St Paul's gate,</em>" was dated 8 November 1633, with a codicil dated Monday 11 November, and was proved P.C.C., 23 November 1633 [TNA PROB 11/164/650] - this precise sequence of dates suggests that the St Augustine's Burial Register entry was in error.<br />
In the will, <strong><span style="color: red;">John</span></strong> named his close relations - his son <strong><span style="color: blue;">James VICKERS</span></strong>, his two married daughters Eleanor DAVIS and Damaris TICKNOR (and mentioned un-named grandchildren), his brother William VICKERS (he may have been the factor in Russia for the Muscovy Company who was robbed of 818 rubles in Moscow in 1635-36), his (? two) sisters Rebecca WALFORD, Widow, and Marie WALFORD, and his cousin John GREENE of Bilton, Warwickshire (and his daughter Marie GREENE).</div>
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<strong><span style="color: red;">John VICKERS</span></strong>, a Clerk, was licensed on 2 February 1589-90 to be married to <strong><span style="color: red;">Agnes FESSE</span></strong> [Alumni Oxonienses], the ceremony taking place at St Botolph's, Aldgate, London, on 10 February 1589-90 [Parish Register entry], her surname being rendered as <b><span style="color: red;">FESSEY</span></b>; this may not have been his first marriage.</div>
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<strong><span style="color: red;">John</span></strong> and <strong><span style="color: red;">Agnes</span></strong> had issue, perhaps with older children born before 1600:</div>
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1. <strong><span style="color: blue;">James VICKERS</span></strong>; named in his father's will, 1633. See [B] below.</div>
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? Possible other issue born 1591-99 (although none appear to have survived).</div>
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2. Ellenore VICKERS, baptised at St Augustine's, 3 February 1604; she was named in her father's will, 1633, as the wife of Marke DAVIS, with £250 over and above what she already had at her marriage.</div>
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3. Damaris VICKERS, baptised at St Augustine's, 11 May 1606; she was named in her father's will, 1633, as the wife of Thomas TICKNOR, with £250 over and above what she already had at her marriage; she was married at St Thomas the Apostle, London, by license of the Bishop of London, dated 25 February 1624-25, to Thomas TICKNOR, Grocer.</div>
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4. Lucye VICKERS, baptised at St Augustine's, 30 August 1607; buried 7 September 1607; infant.</div>
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The dates are almost too tight, but the Rev <strong><span style="color: red;">John VICKERS</span></strong> did have a son <strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong>, and he appears to have been born about the time of the 1590 marriage, or perhaps shortly before and perhaps therefore by an earlier marriage.<br />
The evidence which I find compelling is the mention by <strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong> in his 1657 will that his (un-named) father had been buried at St Augustine's before him (along with three of <strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong>'s children), and <strong><span style="color: red;">John</span></strong>'s 1633 burial appears to be the only other VICKERS burial there which falls within the relevant time frame, and all of this is effectively confirmed by Rev <strong><span style="color: red;">John</span></strong>'s will anyway.</div>
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<i><span style="font-size: large;"><b><u>JAMES VICKERS OF FULHAM, COUNTY MIDDLESEX</u>.</b></span></i></div>
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[B] <span style="color: blue;"><b>James VICKERS</b></span> (alias VICARS or VICCARS) was born between October 1588 and October 1589 [according to the age he recorded in his own will]; a Merchant Taylor in London; he spent some time in his younger days with the Muscovy Company of English Merchant Adventurers in Russia, probably under the watchful eye of his uncle William VICKERS (who was in Moscow in 1635-36, as factor for the said Muscovy Company); <strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong> was residing in the parish of St Augustine's, Watling Street, London, in 1620 [marriage registration]; he removed to the parish of St Lawrence Jewry, London, sometime after 1624 and prior to 1631 [from children's baptismal details]; on 29 April 1629, one HOPKINS <i>"... and <b><span style="color: blue;">James VICKER</span></b>S, Muscovia Merchant,"</i> sought permission to ship <i>"... a hundred broadcloths dressed and dyed"</i> for Muscovia (known to us as Moscow), which permission was granted subject to <i>"... all the Customs and Duties formerly accustomed to be paid"</i> [Acts of the Privy Council, July 1628 - April 1629, page 417]; probably the defendant in a Bill brought before the Court of Chancery, 1629, by Luke NIGHTINGALE, on the subject of money, in Berkshire [TNA - C 8/61/53 - Bill and Answer]; <strong><span style="color: blue;">James VICKERS</span></strong>, Merchant Taylor of London, was named in a Final Concord and Counterpart concerning a number of members of the HARTE family, dated 1636, with a Bond to him from Sir Henry HARTE for the payment of £51 [TNA Index - Norfolk Record Office, WLS/VIII/3/408x5]; <b><span style="color: blue;">James</span></b> took up residence in a tenement known as Goodriche's alias Symond's, in Bear Street, Fulham, in 1640, previously the residence of Dr Richard HART [see "Fulham, Old and New," by Charles James FÈRET, Volume II, London, 1900, page 89]; of Fulham, County Middlesex, Citizen and Merchant Taylor, 29 August 1645, when he apprenticed his son Edward to Symon MIDLETON, Master, Goldsmith's Company [www.londonroll.org]; <strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong> was an Alderman of the City of London, sworn 5 June 1649, for the Castle Baynard Ward, having been nominated by Aldermen ANDREWES (the Lord Mayor), Sir J. WOLLASTON and Robert SMITH.<br />
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<strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span><span style="color: blue;"> VICKERS</span></strong> was buried at St Augustine's, Watling Street, London, 6 November 1657; he made his will, dated 8 October 1657, then aged 68, naming his wife <b><span style="color: blue;">Mary</span></b> and son-in-law Nicholas THURMAN as joint executors, made bequests to sons Edward (then in Lisbon) and William (then under age, apprenticed in Cheapside), and his daughters THERMAN and Anne (wife of <em>"... that wicked and ungodly John HACKETT of London, Dyer"</em>), and then proceeded to rail against his profligate eldest son <b><span style="color: blue;">John VICKERS</span></b>, who had been sent down from Cambridge University, and had then been set up by his father in business in Russia in about 1638-39, where he had spent the money and married against his father's wishes, to one <b><span style="color: blue;">Margerie OSBORNE</span></b>, the daughter of a factor there, and by whom he had several sons, before bringing them all back to England in about 1642-43, and had then been set up again with a house in Fulham (see the will transcript below); <strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong> requested to be buried in the upper end of the chancel in the church of St Austin's (sic), Watling Street, London, <em>"... near the bodies of my father and three children"</em> [Fulham, Old and New, by C. J. FÈRET, Op. Cit.].</div>
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<strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong>'s will is, in my view, quite extra-ordinary, and warrants my republishing here the full FÈRET transcription, given the wealth of genealogical detail it contains, some of which (the vital events in Russia, for example) are unlikely to be verifiable now from any other source:</div>
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<em> "I, <b><span style="color: blue;">James VICKERS</span></b>, late Alderman of London, now living in Fulham in the county of Middlesex, being 68 years, this 8th of October 1657. To <b><span style="color: blue;">Mary</span></b> my wife £3,000 and my house and furniture for life. Remainder to my sons Edward and William VICKERS. To my son Edward, now in Lisbon, £700 besides £700 which he has already. To my younger son William, now apprentice in Cheapside with Master BIDAUGHT and Master BERKNITTE (sic), £1,800 to be paid to him at his coming out of his tyme, provided that he hath the report of his Masters as a good Husband and noe waster. But if it shall happen that he shall prove prodigall and a spendthrift, then I order him but £1,300. To my daughter THERMAN besides what she has already for her wedding portion, £800.</em></div>
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<em> "Whereas I did some eight years past bestow my daughter Ann unto a wicked and ungodly wretch John HACKETT of London, Dyer, son and heir of Richard HACKETT of Dytton in county Surrey, Esq, in marriage, giving her for a portion £1,500 in ready money and £200 laid out for cloaths and other expenses, upon agreement and covenants that the said Richard HACKETT should settle upon his son John HACKET and upon my daughter Ann HACKETT and their heirs, £300 per annum and £150 per annum jointure, which was perfected, the money paid, and the marriage solemnized. Now, so it hap'ned that after he had three boys living by her, and he, through his Lewd Courses became ingaged for divers great summes for her father and his father for him, and had wasted all, and came to me and complained he was worth nothing (which I admired at); and suddenly after, his father and he wickedly joynes and cut offe the entailment of £300 a year settled on my grandchildren and paid the debts with it soe far as it would goe, and afterwards sent my daughter and her four children home to me with a Bed scarce to lye on, and his father denying to allow more than 2 pence maintenance, whoe had gone beyond them for their whole estate. And for his sonne my daughter's husband, he is gone away from her for Ireland, and there, for aught I know, means to reside. Now for my poor daughter whoe hath nothing to help her except my Bountie towards her may starve, she and hers I do order and bequeath that my loving wife will continue her with her.</em></div>
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<em> "Whereas it pleased God to give me my eldest son <b><span style="color: blue;">John VICKERS</span></b>, whom I bredd att Cambridge Bac. in Arts, whoe himself very prodigally stubborne and profuse soe high that the University could not endure it; and coming home to me, upon his submission which he promised should be faithful and fervent, I bound him apprentice unto me in trade a Merchant into Rushia, which was my former life. And upon his faithful promise I sent him over sea with a stock to the value of between £2,000 and </em><em>£</em><em>3,000, hoping he would have proved a great match; but it so happened, being not long settled in Russia, with my estate to the value of</em> <em>£1,300, he, contrary to his protestations and duty to God and his father, entered into a marriage without my privitie unto a factor's daughter there, one <b><span style="color: blue;">Margery OSBORNE</span></b>, though I earnestly writt and sent unto him to the contrary, yet he disobediently went on, married and begot boyes; and afterward with weeping teares came over to England with his wife and children (the third tyme) and submitted himself unto me, whoe had spent me there in Russia the summe of fifteen hundred pounds at least, in the space of 3 or 4 yeres; since his coming over, being reconciled with him upon his great protestations, I tooke a house and warehouse for him, with a stock of one thousand pounds to trade in Russia, where he had been bredd, which he quickly through his great ill husbandry and laziness wasted all, and fell to worse courses, being disobedient to me, and not seeing my face in three yeres space, but shifting and gitting into his hands what he could of mine, it being my owne estate, which I hear he challenges as his owne, and hath compounded for a quantitie the partys that it was none of mine, and soe hath taken less than half the debt discharging the parties and hath sent me in word that he will doe with a debt of £5,000 which is owing to me of a nobleman; being formerly taken in name as my eldest sonne, and God forgive me for his great disobedience. Now this I sett down largely in my will to let the world take notice that upon my reputation, and in the presence of God, I speak it. That since he came down from the University of Cambridge he hath laid out of my purse one time or another above £4,000 besides what he intend to have out of my £5.000 debt, which shall not trouble me, in regard he is my sonne, hopeing he will prove better after my decease. Soe now to my will, what I give him, viz, first, I require of him a general release from the beginning of the world to 1 October 1656, and if he refuse I give him £100, and soe farewell, praying God to give him better grace; but if he doe consent, then I give hin 2 leases of certain lodgings in Bridewell Lane..." </em>[FÈRET ended this part of his transcript with <em>"etc."</em>]</div>
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<em> "My wife sole executrix, and my son-in-law Nicholas THURMAN shall be my executor. I give unto the writer of this my last will and testament, John GEE, parish clerk, of Fulham, 40 shillings. My corps to be buried at St Austins (sic) Watling Street, London, at the upper end of the chancel, near the bodies of <b><span style="color: red;">my</span><span style="color: red;"> father</span></b> and three children. I order and will that Master Matthew FOWLER, now preacher of Hammersmith, doe preach my funeral sermon, and doe bury my body after a Christian-like and decent burial, and give Christianly Exhortation to the Auditorie."</em></div>
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<strong><span style="color: blue;">James VICARS</span></strong>, then of the parish St Augustine's, London, Merchant Taylor, was married at St Martin-in-the-Fields, by License of the Bishop of London dated 19 September 1620, to <span style="color: blue;"><b>Mary TIRRELL</b></span>, of the parish of St Dunstan's in the West, London, Spinster; she was probably baptised at St Dunstan's in the West, 28 March 1602, a daughter of <b><span style="color: blue;">Edward TYRRELL</span></b> of London, Baker, who was deceased before 1620, by his wife <strong><span style="color: blue;">Katherine SMYTHIE</span></strong>.<br />
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<strong><span style="color: blue;">Mary</span></strong> survived <strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong>, and continued to dwell in the family residence in Church Row, Fulham; she died in mid-late August or early September 1673; the will of <b><span style="color: blue;">Mary VICKERS</span></b>, Widow, of Fulham, dated 6 April 1671, codicil dated 13 August 1673, was proved P.C.C., 6 September 1673, naming her late husband <strong><span style="color: blue;">James VICKERS</span></strong>, daughters Ann HACKETT and Elizabeth THURMAN, sister Margaret STRANGE, cousin Katherine WILSON, sons <strong><span style="color: blue;">John</span></strong>, Edward and William, daughters-in-law <b><span style="color: blue;">Margery</span></b>, Abigail and Letitia, and her nineteen grandchildren.</div>
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<strong><span style="color: blue;">James</span></strong> and <strong><span style="color: blue;">Mary</span></strong> had issue:</div>
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1. <b><span style="color: blue;">John VICKERS</span></b>, baptized at St Augustine's, Watling Street, London, 5 or 10 July 1621 (mother <b><span style="color: blue;">Marye</span></b>), by <span style="color: red;"><b>John VICKERS</b></span>, Rector. See [C] below.</div>
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2. James VICKERS, baptized at St Augustine's, Watling Street, 8 January 1622 (mother <strong><span style="color: blue;">Marye</span></strong>), by <span style="color: red;"><b>John VICKERS</b></span>, Rector; buried there 12 September 1633 (the third of three such child burials mentioned in his father's will), by Ephraim UDALL, Rector, as <em>"... the son of <strong><span style="color: blue;">James VICKERS</span></strong> and <strong><span style="color: blue;">Marye</span></strong> his wife."</em></div>
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3. Annah VICKERS, baptized at St Augustine's, 30 January 1624-25 (mother <strong><span style="color: blue;">Marie</span></strong>), by <strong><span style="color: red;">John VICKERS</span></strong>, Rector; she died at St Lawrence Jewry, and was buried at St Augustine's, 20 February 1630-31, by <span style="color: red;"><b>John VICKERS</b></span>, Rector (the first of three such child burials mentioned in her father's will).</div>
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4. Edward VICKERS; probably admitted to the Merchant Taylor's School, London, 11 September 1642; of Fulham, 29 August 1645, when he was apprenticed for 8 years to Symon MIDLETON, Master, Goldmsith's Company; Edward was named in his father's will, 1657, then residing in Lisbon; one of the twenty four assistants who governed the Muscovy Company of Merchant Adventurers, 1672; he was named in his mother's will, 1671; of Colchester, County Essex, 1684, Merchant, when he surrendered his late father's property in Fulham to Walter THOMAS, Clerk; his will, proved P.C.C., 22 August 1688; he was married to Abigail (-?-); she was named in her mother-in-law's will, 1671; she evidently died before Edward; they had issue:</div>
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<em> a. Rebecca VICKERS; named in her grandmother's will, 1671; named in her father's will, 1688.</em></div>
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<em> b. Abigail VICKERS; ditto 1671 and 1688.</em></div>
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<em> c. Elizabeth VICKERS; ditto 1671 and 1688.</em></div>
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5. Anne VICKERS, baptized at St Augustine, Watling Street, 30 January 1624 (mother Marie); she was named in his mother's will, 1671; she was married about 1648, to John HACKETT, of London, Dyer, the son an heir of Richard HACKETT of Dytton, County Surrey, Esq; they had issue:</div>
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<em> a. Richard HACKETT; named in his grandmother's will, 1671.</em></div>
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<em> b. James HACKETT; ditto.</em></div>
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<em> c. John HACKETT; ditto.</em></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em> d. Edward HACKETT; ditto.</em></div>
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<em> e. Thomas HACKETT; ditto.</em></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em> f. William HACKETT; ditto.</em></div>
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<em> g. Benjamin HACKETT; ditto.</em></div>
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<br /></div>
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6. Marie VICKERS, baptized at St Lawrence Old Jewry, 1 April 1630, as VIKARS; she died at St Lawrence Jewry, and was buried at St Augustine's, 17 January 1631-32, by <span style="color: red;"><b>John VICKERS</b></span>, Rector (the second of three such child burials mentioned in her father's will).</div>
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<em></em><br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
7. Elizabeth VICKERS; she was named in his mother's will, 1671; she was married before 1657 to Nicholas THURMAN; he was named as an executor of his father-in-law's will, 1657; they had issue:</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em> a. Mary THURMAN, born in London, 10 June 1659, and baptized at St Mary Woolnoth, London, 21 June; she was named in her grandmother's will, 1671.</em></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em> b. Elizabeth THURMAN; </em><em>she was named in her grandmother's will, 1671</em><em>.</em></div>
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<em></em><br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
8. William VICKERS, baptized at St Lawrence Old Jewry, 20 March 1635-36, as VICKARS; he was apprenticed in 1651, <em>"... son of <strong><span style="color: red;">James VICARS</span></strong> of Fulham, Esq,"</em> for 8 years from last midsummer, to Peter BERKENHEAD, Master, Mercer's Company [www.londonroll.org]; he was named in his father's will, 1657, then under age; he was named in his mother's will, 1671; he was married to Letitia (-?-); she was mentioned in her mother-in-law's will, 1671; they had issue:</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em> a. James VICKERS; named in his grandmother's will, 1671.</em></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em> b. Elizabeth VICKERS; ditto.</em></div>
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<em> c. Mary VICKERS; ditto.</em></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em> d. Peter VICKERS; ditto.</em></div>
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<em></em><br /></div>
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<br /></div>
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An older James VICCARS was married at St Botolph's, Aldgate, London, 23 February 1607(-08?), to Mary BARBOUR; they probably had issue:</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
1. John VICCARS, baptized at St Augustine's, Watling Street, London, 23 October 1608.</div>
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2. Edward VICCARS, baptized at St Augustine's, 10 September 1609.</div>
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3. John VICCARS, baptized at St Augustine's, 23 December 1610.</div>
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4. Mary VICCARS, baptized at St Augustine's, 17 November 1611.</div>
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5. Ellenore VICCARS, baptized at St Augustine's, 15 November 1612</div>
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6. James VICCARS, baptized at St Augustine's, 5 June 1614; buried 9 December 1615.</div>
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<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
Given that the Rector of St Augustine's was <span style="color: red;"><b>John VICKERS</b></span> (see above), it is evident that he had a full comprehension of the very consistent spellings he used in his register, indicating that, despite some common given names, the VICKERS and the VICCARS families were probably unrelated.</div>
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______________________________________________<br />
<b><br /></b> </div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<b><i><span style="font-size: large;"><u>THE SON, JOHN VICKERS OF FULHAM</u></span></i>.</b></div>
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<br />
</div>
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[C] <b><span style="color: blue;">John VICKERS</span></b>, born in London in 1621; said to have been educated at Mercer's School (but his name does not appear in their Student Register); he was admitted as a Pensioner, Christ's College, Cambridge, 24 June 1638, aged 17, but was evidently sent down for his <em>"... prodigal, stubborn and profuse"</em> behavior; his father set him up in business in Russia, probably under the auspices of the Muscovy Company of Merchant Adventurers, where, not yet of age, and against his father's wishes, he was married and had several children, before returning to England, about 1643; he was after of Fulham, County Middlesex, and resided at his father's former house, Goodriche's, in Church Row [FÈRET, Op. Cit., page 138]; he was bequeathed, on condition, two leases of certain houses in Bridewell Lane, Fulham, in his father's will, 1657; of London, Merchant, 12 February 1659, when he was complainant in a court action, for himself and his three children (John, <b><span style="color: blue;">James</span></b> and Mary VICCARS) versus Nicholas THURMAN and Mary VICCARS, concerning legacies payable from personal estate of <b><span style="color: blue;">James VICCARS</span></b>, late Alderman of London, deceased [TNA - Ref C 78/702 number 15]; he was named in his mother's will, 1671.<br />
<br />
<span style="color: blue;"><strong>John</strong></span> <b><span style="color: blue;">VICKERS</span></b> died in 1672, according to an item concerning his son, then on service in Bengal with the Honourable East India Company [Notes and Queries, 27 January 1917, page 81], but no details have yet been uncovered.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<span style="color: blue;"><b>John</b></span> was married in Russia, about 1639, evidently under the age 21 and without his father's blessing, to <span style="color: magenta;"><b>Margerie OSBORNE</b></span> (the daughter of an English factor there, probably <b><span style="color: magenta;">John OSBORNE</span></b>, a servant of the Muscovy Company - see below); <span style="color: magenta;"><b>Margerie</b></span> survived her husband, but her death details have likewise not yet been uncovered.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<span style="color: blue;"><b>John</b></span> and <span style="color: magenta;"><b><span style="color: blue;">Margerie</span></b> </span>had issue:</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
1. John VICKERS, born about 1641, and evidently in Russia; appointed Writer in the service of the Honourable East India Company, 18 October 1667, at a salary of £5 per annum for five years; he sailed to India as Factor (at a salary of £20 per annum) on the ship <em>Blackamore</em> (Captain PRICE) in January 1668, arriving at Madras, 8 September 1668, together with Richard EDWARDS [see his Correspondence, published in Notes and Queries, 12th Series, Volume III, on and after 6 January 1917] and John SMITH; on arrival at Fort St George, he was ordered to proceed to Bengal, where he was employed at Balasor; in 1672 he was sent to Dacca to collect evidence against John SMITH, Chief of that factory, who was then under suspicion of cheating the Company; VICKERS officiated there for a few months as Second, then, for want of his health, he obtained permission to return to England; he died on the homeward voyage; by his will, made on board ship and dated 19 April 1673, he bequeathed his property to his mother <b><span style="color: blue;">Margerie</span></b>, his brother <b><span style="color: blue;">James</span></b> (or Jacob), and his sister Mary; administration was granted to <b><span style="color: blue;">Jacob VICKERS</span></b> on 19 September 1673 [Notes and Queries, 27 January 1917, page 81]; his will, proved P.C.C. 19 September 1673, with bequests of £200 to <em>"... my mother <strong><span style="color: magenta;"><span style="color: blue;">Margerie</span><span style="color: blue;"> </span></span><span style="color: blue;">VICKERS</span></strong>,"</em> £300 to <em>"... my brother <strong><span style="color: blue;">James VICKERS</span></strong>,"</em> with minor bequests to named friends, and the residue to <em>"... my sister Mary VICKERS."</em></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em></em><br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
2. <b><span style="color: blue;">James</span></b> (or Jacob) <span style="color: blue;"><b>VICKERS</b></span>, born about 1643, and probably in Russia; he was aged 13 in 1657, when he and his grandmother <em>"... were admitted to the house in Church Row"</em> in Fulham, which had been his late grandfather's residence [FÈRET, Op. Cit, page 138]; he was named in his brother John's ship-board will, 1672, and was granted administration of it in 1673; in 1674, he disposed of his father's two leases in Fulham; also in 1674, <em>".. of London, Merchant,"</em> when he <em>"... surrendered his messuage in Fulham to John HALL, citizen of London"</em> [FÈRET, Ibidem] - perhaps the one part of his two leases.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
James VICKERS (not assuredly, but quite possibly this <b><span style="color: blue;">James</span></b>) was married at Holy Trinity, Knightsbridge, London, 1 September 1674, to Mary SWAN; they probably had issue:</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<i> a. Mary VICKERS, baptised at St Margaret's, Westminster, 7 April 1675.</i></div>
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<b><span style="color: blue;">James</span></b> does not appear to have left any further trace in London.</div>
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This is possibly the (Captain) <b>James VICKERS</b> who went to Dublin about 1676 (and, of particular interest, with an elder Irish-born daughter named Margaret alias Margery). See [D] next below.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
3. Mary VICKERS; she was named in her grandmother's will, 1671; she was also named in her brother John's will, 1673, with the residue of his estate.<br />
______________________________________________<br />
<br />
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<span style="font-size: large;"><i><b><u>JOHN OSBORNE, A MERCHANT ADVENTURER</u>.</b></i></span><br />
<br />
<b><span style="color: magenta;">John OSBORNE</span></b>; an Englisman who was an East Indies Adventurer, and "<i>... an important tobacco merchant..."</i> who supplied the Honorable East Indies Company <i>"... with 'some excellent good cordage' in 1624, and was settled in Russia by 1627, at the latest, when his wife <b><span style="color: magenta;">Katherine</span></b> and <b><span style="color: magenta;">their daughter</span> </b>secured passes to join him there"</i> [Maria Salomon ARIEL, "English Trade and Adventure to Russia in the Early Modern Era; The Muscovy Company, 1603-1649," page 77]; he had several factors in Russia, including Thomas MORE, and he <i>"... also employed his son John OSBORNE and his nephew Thomas OSBORNE"</i> [ARIEL, Op. Cit., page 77]; <b><span style="color: magenta;">OSBORNE</span></b> was <i>"... also active in the Mediterranean re-export branch of the Russia Trade, taking over a lucrative caviar farm from a Dutch partnership in 1637, for a five year term"</i> [ARIEL, page 78]; James KOTILAINE and Marshall POE [Editors of "Modernising Muscovy; Reform and Social Change in Seventeenth Century Russia] noted that <i>"... in 1630, the Dutch took over the farm from the English, but in 1637, it was back in English hands for a term of five years. This time, the monopoly, which gave the English exclusive right to sell caviar within Russia and to other foreigners at Arkangel'sk as well as Pska and Novgarod, went to Henry GARAWAY and some others of the Muscovy Company, represented in Russia by their factor John OSBORNE, who dominated English merchant activities in Russia in the 1630's and 40's"</i>; as a caviar farmer, he <i>"... acted in the name of Henry GARAWAY and some others of the Muscovy Company" </i>and <i>"... plied a substantial caviar trade in the first half of the 1630's through their monopoly control of the commodity, trading some 540,000 lbs annually"</i> [ARIEL, page 78]; <b><span style="color: magenta;">OSBORNE</span></b> <i>"... contracted to deal even larger quantities a few years later, when he took the farm for a second term in 1649. According to this agreement with the Russian Treasury, he committed to trading in some 811,000 lbs of caviar between 1649-54. GARAWAY had died earlier, so <b>OSBORNE</b> and his son John associated with 'others' in this second enterprise, this time men connected with the BLADWELL-RUSSELL-FOYER group - in Russia, William VICKERS and Thomas HEBDON (guarantor), and in London, John DICKENS and Job THROCKMORTON"</i> [ARIEL, page 78].<br />
<br />
<b><span style="color: magenta;">John OSBORNE</span></b> was married to <b><span style="color: magenta;">Katherine</span> </b>(-?-); they had issue:<br />
1. John OSBORNE Junior; worked for his father in Russia.<br />
2. <b><span style="color: magenta;">Margerie OSBORNE</span></b>; she joined her father in Russia in 1627, probably aged about 8 or 9 years; she was married in about 1740, to <b><span style="color: blue;">John VICKERS</span></b> (see above).<br />
___________________________________________________________________________</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<em><strong><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;">Any connection between the foregoing <span style="color: blue;">James VICKERS</span> and the <span style="color: red;">following</span><span style="color: black;"><span style="color: red;"> </span>Captain James VICKERS</span> is entirely speculative. The dates fit; the names fit; but neither of these coincidences constitute conclusive evidence.</span></strong></em></blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<em><strong><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;">I do not yet claim this connection to be proven; I will not until some conclusive evidence is found.</span></strong></em></blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<em><strong><span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;">But, in the likelihood that none will be found, and after the fashion of Irish best-fit speculation, I do happen to think that the connection is more than just a mere possibility.</span></strong></em></blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<span style="color: red; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em><strong>In plod-speak, the VICKERS of Fulham do remain "... persons of interest."</strong> </em></span></blockquote>
___________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<br />
<i><span style="font-size: large;"><strong><u>"CAPTAIN" JAMES VICKERS OF DUBLIN</u>.</strong></span></i><br />
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<br />
</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
[D] <b>James VICKERS</b> of Dublin; he was born about the 1640's, probably in England, or perhaps instead in Russia (see above).<br />
<br />
He was in Dublin, probably from as early as 1676; he was probably the "... <em><b>James VICKERS</b>, a merchant factor in Dublin, mentioned in a Chancery Bill, CLAPHAM v. VICKERS, 19 May 1683" </em>[Hon Guy STRUTT, Irish Ancestor, Number 2, 1970, at pages 90-102] - THRIFT abstracted this as <em>"... Sir Christopher CHAPHAM v. <strong>James VICCARS</strong>, Bill 19 May 1683, Demurrer 30 May 1683."</em><br />
<br />
He is mentioned in the DIXON Papers [MS 8522, Genealogical Office, Kildare Street, Dublin] as:<br />
<em>"<strong>James VICKERS</strong>, son of ____ , of Dublin, Merchant; buried St Andrew's as 'Captain' 8 May 1705; first Adm'on 16 May 1705, second Adm'on 23 January 1710; marr <strong>Mary</strong> _____."</em><br />
<em></em><br />
<strong>James</strong> was also recorded in the DIXON Papers as having had issue eighteen children, nine of whom were recorded as being baptised at St Andrew's parish church, Dublin, between May 1677 and December 1695, and five of whom were buried there between August 1679 and December 1695. See further below.<br />
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<br /></div>
</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
There can be no doubt that he was the <strong>James VICKERS</strong> who was engaged to manage the packet boats employed between England and Ireland for delivery of the Royal Mails, under a contract signed in 1689 by the Postmaster General, for maintaining three vessels, at £450 per annum salary (see details further below).<br />
<br />
These were tricky times, as the Irish Parliament was then of Jacobite persuasion, until after the Battle of the Boyne (1690) saw the deposed King James going into his final exile into France; although his supporters would continued to harass English maritime interests, and in the Irish Sea.<br />
<br />
A brief chronology of events might prove informative as to the factors then in play:<br />
<br />
November 1688 - <em>The Protestant</em> <em>Prince William of Orange, by invitation, landed in England.</em><br />
18 December 1688 - <em>The Catholic</em> <em>King James II fled to France.</em><br />
12 March 1689 - <em>James landed in Kinsale, County Cork, with an Army gathered in France.</em><br />
7 May 1689 - <em>Opening of the only session of the Jacobite Parliament in Dublin; they declared their independence from English jurisdiction, a number of Protestant landholders who had taken up arms against King James were attainted of treason, and a large proportion of the Cromwellian land confiscations were annulled.</em><br />
12 April 1689 - <em>Major John WILDMAN was appointed Postmaster General in England</em>.<br />
11 June 1689 - <em>A Williamite Fleet arrived at the besieged city of Derry, and raised the siege on 28 July.</em><br />
20 July 1689 - <em>End of the only session of the Jacobite Parliament in Dublin</em>.<br />
29 September 1689 - <em><strong>James VICKERS</strong> was contracted by Major John WILDMAN, Postmaster-General, to carry the mails to those parts of Ireland under Williamite control.</em><br />
26 November 1689 - <em>John SHALES, Commissary-General of Provisions, was ordered by the Parliament in London to be arrested; he was succeeded by William ROBINSON</em><br />
11 February 1690 - <em><span style="color: magenta;"><strong>James VICKERS</strong></span> was first named as a Deputy Commissary of Provisions in Chester, under Commissary-General ROBINSON (see below).</em><br />
1 July 1690 - <em>The Battle of the Boyne, a major defeat of the Jacobite army; James returned into exile in France for the last time.</em><br />
July 1690 - <em>Dublin was "reduced to obedience" to their Majesties (William III and Mary II)</em>.<br />
5 May 1691 - <em><span style="color: magenta;"><strong>James VICKERS</strong></span>, Deputy Commissary for the Army, named as being in Whitehall</em>.<br />
12 July 1691 - <em>Battle of Aughrim, the penultimate defeat of the remaining Jacobite forces.</em><br />
October 1691 - <em>The Williamite campaigns in Ireland were concluded.</em><br />
End of 1691 - <em>John WILDMAN was dismissed as Postmaster-General; he was succeeded by Sir Robert COTTON, Knt, and Thomas FRANKLAND, Esq</em>.<br />
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<u><br /></u></div>
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong><u>JAMES VICKERS IN CHESTER, DEPUTY COMMISSARY</u>.</strong></em></span><br />
<br />
<strong>James</strong> may also have been the <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>James VICKERS</strong></span>, mentioned as one of two Deputy Commissaries in Chester (along with Francis CUFFE, as the two Deputies to William ROBINSON, the Commissary General of the Provisions at Chester), between February 1690 and May 1691, in connection with the purchase and sending of supplies to the Williamite Army in Ireland.<br />
<br />
From the Calendar of Treasury Papers:<br />
<i>"18 February 1689-90.</i><br />
<i>"William JEPHSON to the Excise Commissioners, to write by this night's post to the Officers of Excise and Hearth-money at Chester and the adjacent places, to pay forthwith £1,000 to William ROBINSON, the Commissary-General of the Provisions at Chester, or in his absence to Francis CUFFE or<span style="color: purple;"> </span><span style="color: magenta;"><strong>James VICKERS</strong></span>, his deputies there; and to draw bills on Mr HARBORD for their re-imbursement."</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
Ditto, Volume VIII, April 1690, page 113:<br />
<em>"Order of the Committee for the Affairs of Ireland, for forwarding the annexed extract of a letter from Mr CUFF, deputy to the Commissary General of Provisions, for their Lordships' direction. Dated 25 April 1690.</em><br />
<em>"The said extract, in which he hoped Mr HARBORD would comply with the bill of £250 without much more delay. If there were not a supply in hand at Chester, or in Mr MOOR's hands in London, it would be impossible to carry on their Majesties' service, &c.</em><br />
<em>"Also a letter from Mr Richard COLINGE to Will. JEPHSON, Esq, stating that the Lords of the Committee for the Affairs of Ireland thought it absolutely necessary that Mr CUFF and <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>Mr VICKERS</strong></span> should be forthwith supplied with £500. Dated 26 April 1690."</em><br />
<em><br /></em>
And at page 117, in May 1690:<br />
<em>"Letter of William BLATHWAYT to Mr JEPHSON, stating that he had just received a letter from the Deputy Commissaries at Chester, of which he enclosed an extract relating to the re-packing of beef at Liverpool, &c, for the Army in Ireland; further, that the King had seen the enclosed letter from Mons. ROSENHEIM, Commissary General of the Danish forces, and had ordered it to be laid before him at the Treasury. Dated 21 May 1690.</em><br />
<em>"The extract above named; but the letter mentioned is not now with it.</em><br />
<em>"Minuted - 'Enquire what summe is requisite for CUFF and <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>VICKERS</strong></span> [Deputy Commissaries]. Mr BLATHWAYTE says about £1,000'."</em><br />
<em><br /></em>
And in February 1691:<br />
<i>"February 16. William JEPHSON to the Auditor of Receipts to issue to Mr [Charles] FOX. The Committee for the Affairs of Ireland have desired the Treasury Lords to imprest </i><em>£1,000 to Mr HENLEY and </em><em>£1,000 to <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>Mr VICKERS</strong></span> to buy oats to be sent to Ireland. You are to write to said HENLEY and <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>VICKERS</strong></span> to draw bills on you for said sums, whither my Lords will take care shall be immediately answered."</em><br />
<em><br /></em>
And in Volume 9, in March 1691 [Out Letters, General, XIII, page 11]:<br />
<i>"March 10. William JEPHSON to Charles FOX endorsing an order [missing] from the Committee for the Affairs of Ireland about impresting money to <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>Mr VICKERS</strong></span> and Mr HENLEY for buying cheese for the Army there. You are to write by this night's post to <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>VICKARS</strong></span> and HENLY that they proceed in furnishing the quantities of cheese at the rates mentioned in said order, and to draw bills on you for the whole or any part thereof."</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
And in April 1691 [Disposition Book IX, page 104]:<br />
<i>"April 11. William JEPHSON to [Charles] FOX. The Committee for the Affairs of Ireland desire to imprest £350 to <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>Mr VICKERS</strong></span> at Chester for buying oats and oat-sacks for Ireland. Please write to <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>Mr VICKERS</strong></span> to draw bills on you for that sum. The Treasury Lords will [put you on funds to] enable you to comply with the said bills."</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
And in May 1691, among the Letters of William BLATHWAYT, we find:<br />
<i>"May 5. L (copy) to <span style="color: magenta;"><strong>James VICKERS</strong></span>, Whitehall (a Deputy Commissary for the Army) about the supply of oats and other provisions for the Army in Ireland."</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
An additional mention of James VICKERS, probably the same, in April 1689 [TNA - Cheshire Archives, Ref ZA/B/3/29v-31]:<br />
<em>"It was ordered that all Aldermen should meet the Mayor at Pentice at a time appointed by him, and that Mr <strong><span style="color: magenta;">James VICKERS</span></strong> and Mr William FERNIHAUGH should be sent for to give their reasons for refusing to pay toll on corn brought into the city."</em><br />
It is not difficult to imagine their answer - in the service of the Crown, for provisioning the Army in Ireland, no less!<br />
<br />
While the interests of the Deputy Commissary in Chester are entirely consistent with the activities of our <b>James VICKERS</b>, the mail Contractor (see below), both involving movement of goods across the Irish Sea between England and Ireland, that does not necessarily mean they are one and the same person. And <b>James</b> having packets in regular service between England and Ireland provided a perfect opportunity to deliver other goods along with the mails.<br />
However, there does not appear to be any attempt by the Lords of the Treasury to recognise the possibility that the Mail Contractor and the Deputy Commissary may have been one and the same person.<br />
<br />
But, it may be of some considerable interest to this part of our story to note that a James VICKERS did have two sons baptized at St Bridget's, Chester - Michael (23 October 1690) and Thomas (29 February 1691) - and these are the names of two of the sons of our <strong>James VICKERS</strong> of Dublin, both of whom were mentioned in his 1710 administration, and who are not mentioned in St Andrew's Dublin Registers (although there was an earlier Thomas with a baptism, but a burial shortly after).<br />
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>JAMES VICKERS, THE MAIL CONTRACTOR</u>.</em></strong></span><br />
<br />
<br />
Some detail of <strong>James VICKERS</strong>'s original mail contract was later recorded in his petition to the Postmasters General on 5 July 1693 [Calendar of Treasury Papers, 1660-69, Volume 10, Part 1, at paged 271], as follows:<br />
<em>"</em><a href="https://www.blogger.com/null" name="mt1-53"></a><em>Same to same [Treasury to Postmaster General] of the petition of <strong>James VICKERS</strong>, shewing that he contracted with Major WILDMAN [late Postmaster General] for £450 per an. to maintain three pacquet boats at his own cost and charges from 1689, Sept. 29, between England and that part of Ireland under their Majesties' obedience until Dublin should be reduced, and then £50 more per an. during his contract; that Dublin was reduced in July, 1690, and yet he has received only £450 per an.; that he did, by order of said WILDMAN, send a person to Portpatrick in Scotland to hire and set forth two extraordinary pacquet boats to pass from that place to Donaghadee in Ireland and back again with expresses, mails etc. which were maintained at his [petitioner's] charge for 11 months and cost him £47 7s. 5d.; therefore praying payment."</em><br />
<br />
However, it appears he was already in their service by November 1688 - from later accounts [Calendar of Treasury Papers, 5 August 1697], we find a:<br />
<em>"Treasury warrant...</em><br />
<em><em>"... on which petition the said Postmasters General have reported stating as below the particulars of the said account as charged in the books of the Post Office for both the English and the Irish Postage... </em></em><br />
<em><em>"... item (7) is the sum due 1689 May 10 to <strong>Mr. VICARS</strong> a manager of the Irish packet boats, being half a year's salary paid, which petitioner usually paid...</em></em><br />
<em>"... Discharge... (7) </em><em>£</em><em>56 5s. 0d. for money [paid to] Mr. <strong><span class="highlight">James</span> <span class="highlight">VICCARS</span></strong> for half a year's salary for the Irish packet boats to 10 May 1689.</em><br />
<br />Francis AUNGIER was created Earl of Longford (1st creation) in 1677; on 28 January 1689, he wrote from Dublin to the Duke of ORMOND ["Letters of Lord Longford, and others, on Irish Affairs, 1689-1702," presented by Patrick MELVIN, and published on JStor]:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"I must conclude with a small request to your Grace, viz., that your grace should procure an order to release the 'James,' yacht, which is now detained at Chester by the contrivance of Captain WRIGHT upon the score of general embargo. My Lady POWERCOURT went over thither in her, and at her return she was engaged to carry over several persons of quality, and indeed is the only vessel belonging to this place that can afford reasonable convenience for our transportation. And now that she is detained there, and little or no shipping left here, should matters grow to extremity here and the country grow too hot for us to abide here with safety, there is not any other of your Grace's servants (who have hitherto outrid all storms and common rules of self preservation will allow us to abide here) to escape out of danger when it is at hand. Therefore I hope for our sakes your Grace will in charity take some pains to get this vessel released that thereby we may have ready help in time of need, whereby your Grace will highly oblige several of your servants here...</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><i>"This vessel was built by Captain WRIGHT, who sold it to Mr <b>James VICARS</b>, who has the management of the Packet Boats, and is a very honest gentleman and a true friend to the Protestants."</i></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">
An e-book, entitled "Holyhead Services, 1561-2011," but with no recorded authorship, made these observations about the origins of the Irish mail service, with a listing of <strong>James VICKERS</strong>' predecessors:<br />
<em>"In 1635, a regular weekly post was established between London and Dublin - a letter cost 6d - but the service was interrupted by the disorders of 1641. In that year, Nicholas Lord HOWTH made arrangements with some fishermen to carry essential mails across the Irish Sea. In 1644, the French traveler M. BOULLAYE-Le-GOUTE noted the newly built quay at Ringsend. </em><br />
<em>"By 1646, the Parliament's forces controlled both Dublin and Holyhead. Stephen RICH had already earned their gratitude by, among other things, taking the captured garrison of Conway Castle to sea in his ship and 'setting them swimming towards Ireland.' From 1 November 1646, he was to supply two ships, one based in Holyhead and one at Dublin. The subsidy was £11 per ship per month.</em><br />
<em>"However, in a few years, the contract passed to Thomas SWIFT, described as Governor of Holyhead, and a 'Commissioner [under the Act for the Propagation] of the Gospel' for Wales. St Cybi's Church in Holyhead had been closed for worship by the Parliamentarians. SWIFT had the tower raised by 17 feet for use as a look-out. Regular posts were re-established in 1653.</em><br />
<em>"At the Restoration of the Monarchy, the contract went to Captain John BARTLETT, but he was forced to charter ships from SWIFT, who continued to dominate the service. A subsidy of £400 per annum was now paid for three boats, and proportionately for a fourth...</em><br />
<em>"In 1670, a Major DEANE was providing three packets, one of which was wrecked in December with the loss of 122 lives. This and another wrecking led to the requisition of a "Holland" built boat. The most common route from Conway to Holyhead was along the strand to the Menai Straits opposite Beaumauris, and by ferry to that town. Holy Island, on which Holyhead stands, had been linked to Anglesey.</em><br />
<em>"In 1686, Lord CLARENDON, the viceroy, spent some days on this journey, mainly trying to get around the mountain at Penmaenmawr. The packet, incidentally, landed him at Dunleary.</em><br />
<em>"In 1689, <strong>James VICKERS</strong> agreed to provide three ships at £450 per annum..."</em><br />
<br />
On 25 July 1692, one of <b>VICKERS</b>' boats, the <em>Grace</em>, Dogger, 70 tons, <em>"... in Dublin Bay waiting until the tide would take him over the bar, was seized by a French Privateer, the captain of which stripped the Grace Dogger of her rigging, sails, spars and yards, and of all the furniture wherewith she had been provide for the due accommodation of passengers, leaving not so much as a spoon or a nail-hook to hang anything on, and finally ransomed her to the aforesaid <strong>VICKERS</strong> for fifty guineas"</em> [The Life of Sir Rowland HILL, and History of the Penny Postage, by HILL and his nephew, Volume II, London, 1880, page 312].</div>
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In his report for the Post Masters General, a Mr SCUDAMORE wrote of these trials and tribulations - <em>"The packets in those times, when war raged for so many years, and when every sea was covered with French privateers, gave our Post Masters General very great and constant anxiety. Their orders to the captains of such vessels are urgent, that they shall run while they can, fight when they can no longer run, and throw the mails overboard when fighting will no longer avail..."</em> [HILL, Ibidem].<br />
<br />
<div style="text-align: left;">
J.C. HEMMEON, in his "The History of the British Post Office" [Harvard University, Cambridge, 1912, Chapter VII, at page 109 et seq.], noted that:</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<i>"In 1653, the Council of State gave orders for the revival of the old packet service between Milford and Waterford. At the same time, Chester was substituted for Portinllain (in Carnarvon) as the point of departure on the English side, and mails were carried weekly between the Milford and Chester packets..."</i><br />
<em></em><br />
In the early days, the "bridle track" from Chester to Holyhead necessitated post riders using some beach strands at low tide - and they often had to wait indeterminate times for ferry operators to notice their calls - all of which had contributed to Chester being the preferred landing point for passengers to and from Ireland, despite the longer sea voyage involved.<br />
By 1693, improvements along the track had improved sufficiently for it become useable by coach traffic, whereby it became the preferred departure point on the English side.<br />
In that year, <strong>James VICKERS</strong> signed a new contract with the Postmasters General, as HEMMEON [Ibidem] further noted:<br />
<em>"The situation of Holyhead, however, was so much in its favour that in 1693, a contract was signed for the conveyance of mails between Holyhead and Dublin. <b>Mr VICKERS</b>, the contractor, agreed to maintain three packets for this purpose for £450 a year.</em><br />
<em>"He also undertook to provide two boats for the mail service between Portpatrick and Donaghdee. When the Scotch was separated from the English Post Office in 1695, three packet boats came under the control of Scotland."<em><br /></em></em></div>
</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
However, as these were the terms of the 1689 contract, HEMMEON may have misconstrued this later mention as being a "new" contract.<br />
<br />
<strong>VICKERS</strong> 's petition to the Postmasters General of 5 July 1693, concerning his augmentation (see above), elicited the following response:<br />
<em>"Report of Sir Robert COTTON, Knt, and Thomas FRANKLAND, Esq, their Majesties' Postmasters, upon the petition of Mr <strong>James VICKERS</strong>, Manager of the packet-boats employed between England and Ireland, stating that Sir John WILDMAN, then Postmaster General, in 1689 contracted with Mr <strong>VICKERS</strong> to maintain three packet boats for those mails at £450 per ann. salary; but there was no mention of the augmentation of his salary when Dublin was reduced; a promise was however made that it should be increased £50 per ann.</em><br />
<em>"On the second part of the petition they were satisfied that the charges of the hire of two boats between Port Patrick in Scotland and Donnaghadie in Ireland amounted to £47 17s 5d. Sir John WILDMAN having been removed before <strong>Mr VICKERS</strong> could settle his accounts he had had no allowance, but it was reasonable he should be reimbursed. They left the matter of the £50 to their Lordships, but thought the petitioner could not maintain the boats for less than £500 a year. Dated 26 July 1693.</em><br />
<em>"Minuted - '18 Aug '93. A warr't to be prepared accordingly'."</em></div>
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A more detailed account, dated 18 September 1693, was recorded in Treasury's Money Book XII, page 122:<br />
<i>"Treasury Warrant to the Postmasters General to pay <b>James VICKERS</b> the salary of £50 per ann. from the time that Dublin was reduced to their Majesties' obedience to Michaelmas last; and a further £47 7s 5d by him expended on two extraordinary boats which he hired to go between Portpatrick and Donaghadee. It appears that in 1689 Sir John WILDMAN, then Postmaster General, contracted with said <b>VICKERS</b> to keep and maintain at his own cost three pacquet boats to be employed for carrying their Majesties' mails between England and Ireland at £450 per ann. salary; but in the contract there is no mention made of any augmentation of salary when Dublin should be reduced, though by a certificate of said WILDMAN, it appears that he did promise an augmentation of 50 per ann. on such reduction, as soon as the Post Office there should be any ways capable of maintaining itself. And further, <b>VICKERS</b> had orders from the said WILDMAN for the said two extraordinary boats and did spend £47 7s 5d. The present Postmasters General thinking that he cannot maintain said three pacquet boats well under 500 per ann."</i></div>
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<br />
In June 1696, <strong>James VICKERS</strong> wrote to the Navy Board, with his account of:<br />
<em>"... stores and furniture belonging to the Talbot pink (sic) wreck, sent by boats from Arklow and Killbridge to Wexford, and brought thence in the Mary, April 1695, to Dublin, and received by the Lords Justices"</em> [TNA - ADM 106/496/47, enclosed in folio 46].<br />
And on 26 July 1696, <strong>James</strong> wrote to the same, advising that:<br />
<em>"... he took custody at Dublin stores from the Talbot pink, wrecked on that coast, requests directions as to their disposal, and that he be reimbursed for salvage"</em> [TNA, Kew - ADM 106/496/46].<br />
<br /></div>
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A further communication by <strong>VICKERS</strong> to the Postmasters General, in August 1696, was mentioned the Calendar of Treasury Papers [Volume XXXIX], at page 534:<br />
<em>"A report of R. COTTON and Tho. FRANKLAND [Post Masters] General to the Lords of the Treasury, on the complaint of Mr <strong>James VICKERS</strong>, manager of the boats employed in carrying the mails between England and Ireland, who represented that he was a great sufferer by the yachts which were ordered to attend the King's Service between Dublin, Holyhead and Chester, which conveyed passengers who used to be carried in the packet boats, advising that if the petitioner had not some relief, he would expect an additional allowance. Dated 1 August 1696.</em><br />
<em>"Minuted - 'To desire L'ds of Ad'lty to give like injunction to all capt'ns of ye yachts as His Ma'ty gave Capt WRIGHT.'</em><br />
<em>"Accompanied by the petition; with copies of instructions issued to commanders of yachts in 1687 and 1688."</em><br />
<br />
G.W. PLACE, M.A., in his "Parkgate and the Royal Yachts: Passenger Traffic between the North-west and Dublin in the Eighteenth Century" [an on-line publication, date not recorded, at page 73], made further mention of these Royal yachts:<br />
<em>"At this period the voyages were usually between Dublin and Parkgate, because in 1689, <strong>James VICKERS</strong> became contractor for the Post Office packets at Holyhead, and as we shall see, he insisted that Captain WRIGHT should not interfere with <strong>VICKERS</strong>' passenger traffic. The fact that WRIGHT therefore sailed to Parkgate, except when his orders or the weather required him to visit Holyhead, must have been a major factor in the development of Parkgate as a port for passengers...</em><br />
<em>"In 1696, <strong>James VICKERS</strong> of Holyhead complained once more that 'the yachts which are ordered to attend His Majesty's service between Dublin, Holyhead and Chester do convey passengers which were used to be carried by the pacquet boats, whereby he is a great sufferer.' The response of the Treasury Lords was to desire 'that like injunctions may be given to all the Captains of His Majesty's Yachts as hath been formerly given to Captain WRIGHT.'</em><br />
<em>"Yet it is difficult to see what <strong>VICKERS</strong> had to complain about, as in 1695, 'Soesdyke' (one of H.M.'s Yachts) visited Holyhead only once; and in 1696 she visited Holyhead three times and 'Beaumaris' (another) once up to September, the date of <strong>VICKERS</strong>' petition. Of course, <strong>VICKERS</strong>' contract to carry mail gave him no monopoly of passengers, and his touchiness merely reinforced the tendency of the yachts, and therefore of the quality traffic, to visit Parkgate."</em><br />
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
On 29 March 1698, <b>James VICKERS</b> of Dublin again wrote to the Navy Board, concerning the ships <i>Penzance</i> and <i>Talbot</i>, naming Captain ASHTON and Samuel HUNTER, for the locations London and Highlake [TNA, Kew - ADM 106/524/9, folio 9].<br />
<br />
<strong>James VICKERS</strong> evidently acquired, about 1700, the farmstead known as Tyddyn y Feiler; this was part of the Llanfawr estate, which had belonged to Harry PARRI, who is said to have held the previous Royal Mail contract (but this name is not recorded in the e-book, "Holyhead Services, 1561-2011"); by 1848, this estate was owned by Eleanor VICKERS (the widow of <b>James</b>'s great-grandson), and had been leased out to Eliza and John ROBERTS.<br />
[See the Castlering Archaeology Report, Number 236, May 2006, H.E.R. Copy, concerning a development application for land at Tyddynn Bach, South Stack Road, on the western outskirts of Holyhead, on the <a href="http://www.walesher1974.org/">www.walesher1974.org</a> website].<br />
<br /></div>
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Edward WATSON, in his "The Royal Mail to Ireland," London, 1917 [at page 70], noted that:</div>
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<em>"John VICKERS, who was a packet contractor, died, and his children petitioned the Post Office for compensation on account of damage to the James, packet, in a storm in 1706, and for the loss of the Anne, packet on 24 October the same year."</em></div>
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But this date appears to correspond with our <strong>James</strong>, rather than with his son John - although it seems likely that his elder sons may well have continued to provide the service under the terms of their father's 1689 contract.<br />
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<em>[Frontispiece to "The Royal Mail in Ireland," by Edward WATSON, London, 1917.]</em></div>
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The Calendar of Treasury Books, October 1706 to December 1707 [Warrant Books for June 1707], clarify the picture:</div>
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<i>"June 26. Allowance by Treasurer GODOLPHIN...</i></div>
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<i>"Warrant by same to the Postmasters General to pay £400 to Clement MILWARD in trust for the children of <b>Mr VICKERS</b>, late manager of the pacquet boats between England and Ireland, as in consideration of his losses by storm, etc.</i></div>
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<i>"Prefixing: report by said Postmasters General:</i></div>
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<i>"<b>Mr</b> <b>VICKERS</b> contracted with us to furnish 3 packet boats to carry mails and expresses between Holyhead and Dublin for £600 per annum. His packet boat 'James' was damaged by a great storm on 17 September last, in which several Chester, Liverpool and Whitehaven ships were lost; his packet boat 'Ann' [suffered] similarly by a violent tempest on October 24 last, and on the following day [his packet boat] 'Expedition' was surprised by a terrible storm coming from Dublin to the Head, and thereby driven upon the coasts of south Wales where she was destroyed among the rocks, as were many merchant ships at the same time. The Irish correspondence has nevertheless for some years been very punctually and regularly carried on. He has left eleven children wholly unprovided for and without father or mother. <i>Money Book, XIX, page 23."</i></i><br />
<br />
From where I am looking, it would appear that only <b>James VICKERS</b>, who died in 1705, could be the <b>Mr VICKERS</b> mentioned here. Further, the mention of Clement MILWARD as trustee does explain his role in the 1705 Administration. And it all suggests that the eleven children <i>"... wholly unprovided for"</i> were inevitably those named in the subsequent 1710 Administration, and that both Administrations WERE for the same <b>James VICKERS</b>.</div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: left;">
Indeed, it would appear that the second Administration may have been facilitated, or otherwise made necessary, by the death of the trustee Clement MILWARD in 1709 (his will, dated December 1707, was proved on 21 October 1709). MILWARD was also a Master of the Company or Guild of Merchants of Holy Trinity, Dublin.<br />
<br />
The e-book "Holyhead Services, 1561-2011" (see above), wraps up the aftermath of the <strong>VICKERS</strong> contract, as follows:<br />
<em>"In 1715, J. MACKEY, a director of the Dover to Calais packets, was authorized to operate ships on the same conditions as <strong>James VICKERS</strong>. We find <strong>VICKERS</strong>' heirs seeking compensation for the loss of the packet Ann in 1706, and for damage to another ship as late as 1720.</em><br />
<em>"In 1723, Thomas WILSON, a Dublin Merchant, was granted the contract for 7 years, subsequently extended by another seven. He supplied three ships for 300 per annum..."</em><br />
<br />
I have yet to sight documentary verification of this 1720 date mentioned above.<br />
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>JAMES VICKERS BACK IN DUBLIN</u>.</em></strong></span></div>
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<b><br />James VICKERS</b> may have been back in Dublin as early as 1692, and were evidently back in St Andrew's Parish by July 1694.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">Capt <b>James VICCARS</b> was named as Co-Defendant to a cause brought before the High Court of Chancery, Dublin, 19 January 1693[-94], by William WATT, Plaintiff, the other Defendants being Henry GREENHILL, Jane DISMYNSEN (?) and Honora PONSONBY - the subject matter was not mentioned, and <b>VICCARS</b> did not reply [Chancery Court Bill Books, Findmypast.co.uk].<br />
<br />
James was named in a Deed of Assignment dated 21 July 1731 [Memorial 46483, Book 65, Page 476], which recited several earlier deeds, including a Deed of Lease dated 31 October 1700, by which Joseph ROGERS of the City of Dublin had demised unto Christopher SMITH, Gent, <i>"... all that piece of ground in Hawkin's Key, Dublin, between Mr <b>VICKERS</b>' house on the east, and Mrs BRETHRIDGE's ground on the west..."</i><br />
It is unclear how long <strong>James</strong> had been residing here prior to 1700.<br />
<br />
Hawkins Quay (or Key) does not show up on old or contemporary maps of Dublin.<br />
However, several other establishments in or near Hawkins Quay, in the Parish of St Andrews, and mentioned in early Dublin Property Deeds, including a House of ye Sign of ye Swan, and A House of ye Sign of ye King of Denmark's Head; also a piece of ground between Hawkins Key and Fleet Street; and yet another at the corner of the east end of Hawkins Key and Hawkins Street.<br />
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<i><br /></i>
<i>[The 1708 PRATT Map of Dublin. Image courtesy of the <a href="http://www.irishtimes.com/">www.irishtimes.com</a> web-site.]</i></div>
<br />
PRATT's 1708 Map of Dublin does show that what was (or would become) Hawkins Street was then the eastern limit of built-up Dublin immediately south of the Liffy. Indeed, this map shows the Liffy dividing, delta-like, into two streams about 150 yards to the east, the southern branch under where present day Poolbeg Street stands, inevitably on ground reclaimed between 1708 and 1756.<br />
From this map, it would appear likely that the <strong>VICKERS</strong> residence was probably on the western side of what would become Hawkins Street.<br />
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<i>[Part of ROCQUE's 1756 Map of Dublin. Image courtesy of the iiif.lib.harvard.edu web-site<i>.]</i></i></div>
<br />
In John ROCQUE's 1756 Map of Dublin, there is a part of the south bank of the River Liffey between Aston's Quay to the west and George's Key to the east, which was developed, but not as a publicly accessible riverside quay.<br />
<br />
Captain <b>James VICKERS</b> was named in a Deed of Mortgage dated 25 June 1709 [Memorial 775, Volume 3, Page 148], which cited an earlier Indenture of Lease dated 23 February 1705, by which Thomas and Samuel HAWKINS had demised unto Joshua CROWTHER, of the City of Dublin, Brewer (Grantee of the 1709 Mortgage), <i>"... all that House and Tenement then lately in possession of Captain <b>James VICKERS</b>, deceased, situate on Hawkins Quay, Dublin, with the Backside, Garden, Warehouse, Stables and all other appurtenances thereto belonging, in as large and ample manner as the said <b>James VICKERS</b> held and enjoyed the same, for the term of 61 years from the 25th March next ensuing, at £40 per annum..."</i><br />
I presume that this was probably the same residence as indicated above in 1700.<br />
<i><br /></i>
<b>James VICKERS</b> was buried at Saint Andrew's, Dublin, on 8 May 1705.<br />
<br />
He died intestate, and his property was the subject of two different Administration Grants.<br />
The first, dated 16 May 1705, named Clement MILWARD (evidently as Trustee for James's surviving under-age children), and four of his adult sons (James, George, Edward and William - as "the children"):<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiBNtieqgNja8e-yQ24r0WtchC7DjXg2DXYhjadTqCwPRRl0QMeqBneH_pVjhNuoEZttKNd_LHH-AatYjE95D7ewK1Ddt7rtbJsx7ulR6F-9SPBtnAhgN9pCbnuSEZ8WajcLtmUq_R0jq_4/s1600/VICKERS1.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><span style="font-size: large;"><img border="0" data-original-height="457" data-original-width="582" height="312" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiBNtieqgNja8e-yQ24r0WtchC7DjXg2DXYhjadTqCwPRRl0QMeqBneH_pVjhNuoEZttKNd_LHH-AatYjE95D7ewK1Ddt7rtbJsx7ulR6F-9SPBtnAhgN9pCbnuSEZ8WajcLtmUq_R0jq_4/s400/VICKERS1.JPG" width="400" /></span></a></div>
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<em>[Sir William BETHAM's Abstract. Image copyright of the National Archives of Ireland, courtesy of Findmypast.co.uk.]</em></div>
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The second, dated 23 January 1710, which named those four sons (James now a Merchant in Dublin), another son (<strong>John</strong>, interposed between James and George, and who may have been on service abroad in 1705), four more sons (including Michael, Thomas, Samuel, Allen) and two daughters (Jane and Letitia) as the children:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhNUl8wssrhMCvsmdICHPgrp8Noi22szYumYubBYCZx8aTDZX-FPe-q-MkpBjxGdurko6EMfa7_i-2OWuHNz6BLYw0RsHqjYEb_CY91401-e43ZPUS4ymn4JDotE05usOxgBzgD3_F892L5/s1600/VICKERS2.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="470" data-original-width="576" height="325" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhNUl8wssrhMCvsmdICHPgrp8Noi22szYumYubBYCZx8aTDZX-FPe-q-MkpBjxGdurko6EMfa7_i-2OWuHNz6BLYw0RsHqjYEb_CY91401-e43ZPUS4ymn4JDotE05usOxgBzgD3_F892L5/s400/VICKERS2.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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<em>[BETHAM's Abstract. Image copyright of the National Archives of Ireland, courtesy of Findmypast.co.uk.]</em></div>
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This second Administration clearly took place as a result of the death, in late 1709, of Clement MILWARD (the 1705 Trustee), and was probably necessitated by the continued servicing of the Mail Contract by surviving members of Captain <b>James</b>'s family.<br />
Clement MILWARD was a Dublin Merchant, and a Master of the Holy Trinity Guild of Merchants in Dublin.<br />
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A burial took place at St Andrew's parish church on 27 March 1705 for a Mary VICKERS. The abstracts of this register in the Dixon Papers [MS 8522 (2), Genealogical Office, Dublin] record this Mary VICKERS as the wife of John VICKERS.<br />
However, it was also recorded in these papers that Sir Arthur VICARS had identified her instead as the wife of James VICKERS. If VICARS was right, then this could well have been <b>Mary</b>, wife of our Captain <b>James VICKERS</b>, and dying just a few months before him.<br />
But if she was our <b>Mary</b>, it is unclear as to whether she was born Mary ANDREWS, or instead Mary SWAN?</div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>FAMILY OF JAMES AND MARY VICKERS</u>.</em></strong></span><br />
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A cover note to the DIXON Papers MS resource (it was actually mostly typescript) dated 8 May 1911 was made by my forebear, William Jackson PIGOTT. I am of the opinion that the information was probably collected by him from his personal research efforts among manuscript sources in Dublin, many of which did not survive the Four Courts fires of 1922 (WJP died in 1921, without knowing that a lot of his research would thereby have achieved de-facto "primary source" status).<br />
<br />
The marriage register of St Andrew's parish, Dublin, was published in 1913 by D.A. CHART, together with the marriage registers for St Anne's, St Audoen's and St Bride's parishes. These marriages are viewable on the <a href="http://www.irelandgenealogy.ie/">www.irelandgenealogy.ie</a> web-site.<br />
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These are the two principal sources I have used for constructing the following family pedigree. I cannot now verify any of it from any other original source.<br />
<br />
<b>James</b> <strong>VICKERS</strong> and his wife <b>Mary</b> (possibly SWAN? - see above) appear to have had issue:<br />
<br />
1. Mary VICKERS was married at St Andrew's, Dublin, 12 December 1699, to Josias THOMPSON (she may have been born in Westminster in 1675 - see above). Presumed to be a daughter. No further particulars yet discovered.<br />
<br />
2. Margaret (or Margery) VICKERS, baptized at St Andrew's, Dublin, 4 May 1677 [DIXON]; a Marjory HENRICK (sic) was buried at St Luke's, Dublin, 14 December 1746 (however, her entry in the published Dublin Wills Index, 1746, a Widow, recorded her as <em>"alias CRIPPS"</em> - therefore probably another); as Margaret, she was married at St Andrew's, Dublin, 23 October 1701, to Robert HENDRICK [DIXON, and Marriage Register]; her marriage before 1705 may account for her not being mentioned in the Administrations; Robert may have been admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, 17 January 1695-96, as a Pensioner (Mr YOUNG, Dublin), aged 16, born Dublin, son of Thomas HENDRICK, "Pistor"; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Jon HENDRICK, baptized at St Nicholas's Without, 10 October 1703 (mother Margery); probably buried at St Nicholas's Without, May 1705, from New Row.</em><br />
<em> b. Chas HENDRICK, born at Francis Street, and baptized at St Nicholas's Without, October 1704.</em><br />
<em> c. Robert HENDRICK, born at Francis Street, and baptized at St Nicholas's Without, 5 May 1708.</em><br />
<em></em>The appearance here of the name Margery does incline me to the view that this family probably was connected to the VICKERS of Fulham, and perhaps directly.<br />
<br />
3. Alice VICKERS, baptized at St Andrew's, Dublin, 1 June 1678 [DIXON]; she was buried there, 26 August 1679, infant [DIXON].<br />
<br />
4. James VICKERS, baptized at St Andrew's, Dublin, 30 October 1679 [DIXON]; evidently admitted a Freeman of Dublin, about 1698-99, of the Merchant's Guild; he was named in the 1705 Administration, and in the 1710 Administration as <em>"... of Dublin, Merchant, the son</em>" [BETHAM's Abstract]; a Merchant and Freeman of Dublin in July 1729, when he petitioned the Lord Mayor for financial relief, 18 July [Dublin Assembly Roll, XX, m.58b, 1729]:<br />
<em>"James VICKERS, merchant, setting forth that he is a freeman of this honourable city near thirty years, and by the assistance of some friends hath got a small employment in Great Britain, where he and his family design in a short time to go; but, being a considerable time out of business, is reduced in his circumstances, and therefor prayed to have some relief in order to enable him and his family to provide necessaries for setting him up in his new employment; it was ordered that the treasurer, on the Lord Mayor's warrant, do pay the petitioner 15 sterling, the same to be allowed on his accounts.</em><em>"</em><br />
[Calendar of Ancient Records of Dublin, by Sir John GILBERT, Dublin, 1898, Volume VII, page 462].<br />
He may have gone to Llanfawr, near Holyhead, where a James VICKERS died on 7 April 1735.<br />
<br />
<strong>James VICKERS</strong> Senior appears to have been married secondly, by Banns, at St Bride's, Dublin, 30 December 1680, to <b>Mary ANDREWS</b> (although no burial appears to have been recorded for the earlier Mary - so perhaps this James was another?).<br />
<br />
<b>James</b> had further issue (but whether by Mary SWAN, or by Mary ANDREWS, or perhaps even by another, is not yet entirely clear, and may never become so):<br />
<br />
5. Elizabeth VICKERS, baptized at St Andrew's, Dublin, 11 February 1680-81 [DIXON] (the proximity of this date to the Mary ANDREWS marriage may present an evidentiary difficulty); she died in 1756 [DIXON, and see pedigree, <a href="http://www.otway.com/">www.otway.com</a> web-site]; she was married at St Andrew's, Dublin, 1 August 1703, to James OTWAY, of Kilnaccor, County Tipperary (son of John OTWAY, of Clonohan Castle, County Tipperary, and Phoebe LOFTUS of Fethard, County Wexford) [DIXON, and Marriage Register]; her marriage before 1705 may account for her not being mentioned in the Administrations; BURKE [L.G. of G.B. & I.] recorded his death in 1733; he may have died at Knockalton, County Tipperary, 1735 [Will Index], wife Elizabeth; they had issue [from the otway.com web-site]:<br />
<em> a. James OTWAY, born in 1704; Major in the Army, and was present at Dettingen and Fontenoy; he died at Rapla, County Tipperary, in February 1763; he was married to Jane WOODWARD (BURKE records her as Sarah, daughter of William WOODWARD of Cloughprior, County Tipperary); they had issue:</em><br />
<em> i. James OTWAY, born in 1751; he was named in his</em><em> </em><em>uncle Loftus OTWAY's will, 1760; </em><em>he built Prior Park House on his mother's land at Clogh Prior, County Tipperary, and lived in it from 1786; he died in 1839, unmarried [BURKE].</em><br />
<em> ii. William OTWAY; died young [BURKE].</em><br />
<em> iii. [BURKE records a daughter Phoebe (Mrs FREEMAN) - ? perhaps in error for her aunt].</em><br />
<em> b. John OTWAY, born in 1705; he died near Nenagh, County Tipperary, in 1740, "... shot by a robber" [BURKE].</em><br />
<em> c. Loftus OTWAY, born in 1706; of Lissenhall, County Tipperary; he died on 14 February 1777; his will, dated 14 February 1760, was proved P.C.I., 15 October 1777, naming his sister Phoebe FREEMAN, of Nenagh, widow, her daughters Mary and Elizabeth and only son Lieutenant James FREEMAN, his nephews John LOFTUS and Lieutenant George CUPPAIDGE, his niece Jane CUPPAUIDGE, his brothers Edward and Caesar OTWAY, his nephew Loftus the son of Caesar OTWAY, and his late brother Major James OTWAY and his son James [BETHAM's Abstract]; Loftus was married to Ann LLOYD, of Lloydsborough, County Tipperary; without issue [BURKE].</em><br />
<em> d. Mary OTWAY, born in 1707; she was married to John CUPPAIDGE; they had issue:</em><br />
<em> i. George CUPPAIDGE; named as Lieutenant in his </em><em>uncle Loftus OTWAY's will, 1760.</em><br />
<em> ii. Mary CUPPAIDGE; named in her</em><em> </em><em>uncle Loftus OTWAY's will, 1760.</em><br />
<em> e. Caesar OTWAY, born at Kilnacarr, County Tipperary, 1709; Army Officer; Merchant in Cork; he died at Nenagh, 15 September 1782; he was married firstly, to Sarah CLARKE; they had issue:</em><br />
<em> i. William OTWAY.</em><br />
<em> ii. Loftus OTWAY, born 11 April 1755;</em><em> he was named in his </em><em>uncle Loftus OTWAY's will, 1760;</em><em> he died at Nenagh, 18 February 1789; he was married in 1776 to Sarah WOODWARD, daughter of William WOODWARD of Cloughprior [BURKE]; with issue.</em><br />
<em> iii. James OTWAY.</em><br />
<em> iv. Sarah OTWAY.</em><br />
<em> v. Phoebe OTWAY.</em><br />
<em> vi. [BURKE records that there were twelve children, all of whom died young except Loftus]</em><br />
<em>Caesar was married secondly, in 1762, to Grace SHORT, daughter of William SHORT of Cashelrone, King's County [BURKE].</em><br />
<em> f. Phoebe OTWAY, born in 1712; she was a widow when named in her brother Loftus OTWAY's will, dated 1760; she died on 1 April 1786; she was married to Daniel FREEMAN; he died before February 1760; they had issue:</em><br />
<em> i. James FREEMAN, born in 1743; Army Officer; named as Lieutenant in his uncle Loftus OTWAY's will, 1760; he died in 1809.</em><br />
<em> ii. Mary FREEMAN; named in her uncle Loftus OTWAY's will, 1760; she died in 1802.</em><br />
<em> iii. Elizabeth FREEMAN</em><em>; named in her uncle Loftus OTWAY's will, 1760</em><em>; she died at Prior Park, 1785.</em><br />
<em> g. Thomas OTWAY, born on 1 April 1715; an Army Officer; he died during the Battle of Fontenoy, 1745.</em><br />
<em> h. George OTWAY, born in 1716; in the Army; he also died during the Battle of Fontenoy, 1745.</em><br />
<em> j. Edward OTWAY, born in 1718; he was married to Sarah McCLURE; they had issue:</em><br />
<em> i. Robert OTWAY; 44th Regiment; he died at Cork, 11 March 1836; he was married at Grenada, West Indies, in 1786, to Harriett BRIDGEWATER.</em><br />
<em> ii. Caesar OTWAY.</em><br />
<em> iii. George OTWAY.</em><br />
<em> iv. Thomas OTWAY (?)</em><br />
<em> v. Elizabeth OTWAY.</em><br />
<em> vi. Phoebe OTWAY.</em><br />
<em> k. Henry OTWAY, born in 1720; an Army Officer.</em><br />
<em> l. Richard OTWAY, born in 1722; in the Army.</em><br />
<em> m. Elizabeth OTWAY; she died at Prior Park, County Tipperary, in 1785.</em><br />
<em> n. William OTWAY.</em><br />
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6. <b>John VICKERS</b>, baptized at St Andrew's, Dublin, 4 July 1682 [DIXON]; he was not named in BETHAM's Abstract of the 1705 Administration (there is no reason I have yet discovered for this omission, other than he may have been on Army service abroad - but in and of itself, this omission may present another evidentiary difficulty); he was named in the 1710 Administration, his name inserted between James and William, which point of insertion is supported by the baptismal evidence. See [E] below.<br />
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7. William VICKERS, baptized at St Andrew's, Dublin, 23 July 1683 [DIXON]; he was named in both Administrations [BETHAM]; he probably went to Holyhead, Anglesey; if so, he died in Anglesey, 17 May 1761, and was buried at Llanfaethlu, 19 May; this William VICKERS married Susan OWEN, who died at Llanfaethlu, 26 April 1710; and by him had issue (recorded in the HAYNES Family Tree on Ancestry.com):<br />
<em> a. M. (perhaps Michael?) VICKERS, born 1700; he was married with issue:</em><br />
<em> i. Jane VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, Anglesey, 1723; she died in 1805; she was married to Michael JACOB, Surgeon; he died in 1798; they had issue, including sons William JACOB (1751-1828) of Dublin, and John JACOB (1754-1827), Surgeon to the Queen's County Infirmary.</em><br />
<em> ii. Martha VICKERS, born Holyhead, 1730, a half sister of Jane; named in her cousin William VICKERS will, 1818.</em><br />
<em> b. William VICKERS, born in July 1706; of Holyhead, 22 September 1764, when elected to the Society of the Garrison of Fort Williamsburg; Post master in Holyhead, September 1779, when his letter arrived in Dublin "... on the last Packet" mentioning that he "... had received a letter from his son, who is a Lieutenant on board his Majesty's frigate Stag, of 32 guns, Captain COOPER" [Saunder's News-Letter, 23 September], giving an account of his son Lewis's encounter with a French Privateer in the Irish Sea, and his being thereby severely wounded (see below); William was Sheriff of Anglesey, 1782 (unless instead the son); he died at Llanfawr, 7 February 1792; he was married to Mary JONES (born 1712, daughter of Lewis JONES of Holyhead); she died at Llanfawr, 3 January 1771, and was buried at Llanfaethlu, 9 January; they had issue:</em><br />
<em> i. Judith VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, 30 July 1730; she was named in the will of Phebe DEW, of Dean Street, parish of St Anne, County Middlesex, Spinster, dated 23 September 1773, with the bequest of her "... white Tabby sack and petticoat"</em><em>; she died at Llanfawr, 7 October 1787, and was buried at Holyhead [M.I.].</em><br />
<em> ii. Jane VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, 26 March 1734; she died there, 12 April 1814</em><em>, and was buried at Holyhead [M.I.]</em><em>.</em><br />
<em> iii. Susannah VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, 8 April 1735; she died there, 8 September 1804</em><em>, and was buried at Holyhead [M.I.]</em><em>.</em><br />
<em> iv. Elizabeth VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, and baptised at Caergybi (Holyhead), 25 July 1737.</em><br />
<em> v. William VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, and baptised at Caergybi, 11 September 1738; he died there on 26 December 1738, an infant.</em><br />
<em> vi. James VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, and baptised at Caerbygi, 15 November 1739; died 16 April 1814.</em><br />
<em> vii. Eleanor VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, March 1740-41, and baptized at Caergybi, 12 March 1740-41; she died there, 6 November 1831.</em><br />
<em> viii. William VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, 10 May 1742; he may have established a coaching inn in Waterside, Holyhead, in about 1770, known as the Hibernian Inn, or Moran's Hotel; perhaps the High Sheriff of Anglesey, 1782 (unless instead the father); he died at Llanfawr, 23 February 1823, aged 82 [M.I.]; his will, dated 1 April 1818, was proved P.C.C., 19 November 1823, naming his wife Eleanor, his "... cousin Mary the daughter of my late uncle Richard JONES by Joane his wife," his nephew Robert Lewis VICKERS, "... natural son of my late brother Lewis VICKERS," his cousin Mary the wife of Owen KNIGHTS (?), his cousin Martha VICKERS and her sister (unidentified), and Vickers Hamilton JACOB, the son of William JACOB, late of the General Post Office, Dublin; he was married firstly to Jane ACKERLEY; she died on 12 April 1814; her will dated 1814, of Llanfur, Anglesey, North Wales [Index to Act of Grant Books, Diocese of Dublin]; he was married secondly to Eleanor ATCHERLEY (born 1769); she died 5 February 1853, aged 84 [M.I.]; her will, dated 22 June 1852, was proved P.C.C. 30 June 1853, mentioning her nieces Isabella and Elizabeth A. HOLT, and nephew William James HOLT, children of her late sister Isabella HOLT.</em><br />
<em> ix. Lewis VICKERS, born at Llanfawr, and baptized at Caergybi, 29 January 1744-45; Lieutenant, Royal Navy; serving under Captain COOPER, of H.M.'s ship Stag, of 22 guns, in August 1781, of Dublin, who got news of a French Privateer having captured an English prize off Waterford, and despatched the ship Hope, Cutter, of 12 guns and 55 men under command of his second Lieutenant, Mr Lewis VICKERS, her own commander (Lieutenant ROCHFORD being in Dublin on duty) - the Hope encountered another Privateer, the Chardon, of 20 guns and 150 men, who took the Hope after a severe engagement of 1 hour and 10 minutes, during which VICKERS received a deep musket shot wound in his thigh - COOPER went in pursuit of the Chardon, but instead fell in with the Viper, Cutter, on which he found the wounded Lieutenant VICKERS, and transported him to Plymouth - news of this encounter was received in Dublin in September 1781, and published in the Dublin Evening Post (Saturday 8 September) - and a further letter was published in the Saunders News-Letter of 23 September, received from Hollyhead by the last Packet, which recorded that Mr VICKERS, post-master ay Hollyhead, had received a letter from his son, Lieutenant VICKERS, of his Majesty's frigate Stag, of 32 guns Captain CoOOPEr, giving an account of that encounter; he died before 1818, and had an illegitimate son, Robert Lewis VICKERS, who was buried at Holyhead, 6 December 1826, aged 50, and who was named in his uncle William VICKERS will, 1818.</em><br />
<em> c. James VICKERS; died in 1711. There was a James VICKERS who died at Llanfawr, 7 April 1735 - perhaps instead the uncle?</em><br />
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8. Edward VICKERS; he was named in both Administrations [BETHAM].<br />
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9. George VICKERS; he was named in both Administrations [BETHAM]; a Lieutenant in OTWAY's Regiment; his Administration was granted on 31 December 1724 to his brother James VICKERS of Dublin, Merchant [DIXON].<br />
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10. Michael VICKERS; he was named in the 1710 Administration [BETHAM, and DIXON].<br />
A Michael VICKERS was baptized at St Bridget's, Chester, 23 October 1690, son of James VICKERS - and a James VICKERS was one of the Deputy Commissaries in Chester in 1690-92.<br />
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11. Thomas VICKERS, probably baptized at St Andrew's, Dublin, 8 December 1689; he was probably buried there on 15 February 1689-90 [DIXON].<br />
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12 Thomas VICKERS; he was named in the 1710 Administration, a minor [DIXON].<br />
A Thomas VICKERS was baptized at St Bridget's, Chester, 29 February 1691, son of James VICKERS (possibly the Deputy Commissary for the Army in Chester)<br />
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13. Samuel VICKERS; he was named in the 1710 Administration, a minor [DIXON].<br />
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14. Jane VICKERS; she was named in the 1710 Administration, a minor [DIXON], as the elder daughter.<br />
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15. Letitia VICKERS, probably baptized at St Andrew's, Dublin, 25 July 1694 [DIXON]; she was named in the 1710 Administration, as the younger daughter.<br />
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16. Allyn VICKERS, baptized at St Andrew's, Dublin, 22 November 1697 [DIXON]; he was named in the 1710 Administration.<br />
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There were another baptism and two burials at St Andrew's, Dublin, for children of <b>James VICKER</b>S, but whose names do not appear in either of the 1705 or 1710 Administrations; it is not yet established that they were of the above family, but it seems likely - unless there were two different families here:<br />
i. Samuel VICKERS; buried there, 16 November 1684 [DIXON].<br />
ii. Bartholomew VICKERS, baptized there, 19 December 1695 [DIXON]; buried there, 29 December 1695, infant [DIXON].<br />
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I am tempted to make the observation that a Church of Ireland Rector or Vicar would probably have been "obliged" to distinguish between two families in his parish if they had the same names - either by occupation, or by street address, or as the elder and the younger. As the original registers are now lost, it will not be possible to verify whether this was or wasn't done in the case of James VICKERS and his wife Mary in the Dublin parish St Andrew. But it would surprise me if that sort of detail had been "overlooked" or "left out" by those following (likely to have been "eagle-eyed" family historians) who made transcripts before the originals were destroyed.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><strong><em><u>"ANOTHER" VICKERS FAMILY IN ST ANDREW'S</u>.</em></strong></span><br />
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There were other VICKERS vital events recorded in the parish Register of St Andrew's, Dublin [Dixon Papers]:<br />
a. Margery VICKERS, buried there, 3 November 1727; possibly the widow of <b>John VICKERS</b> of Fulham (the OSBORNE spouse - see above), but if so, at a very advanced age; perhaps more likely to have been the wife of Thomas VICKERS (next).<br />
b. Thomas VICKERS, probably baptised at St Peter's, Dublin, 7 May 1675, son of John VICKERS of Kevin Street and his wife Elizabeth; he married Margery (-?-) and had issue:<br />
<i> i. James VICKERS, baptised there 10 December 1714.</i><br />
<i> ii. Mary VICKERS, baptised there 30 March 1724.</i><br />
c. Michael VICKERS, probably baptised at St Peter's, April 1681, also a son of John and Elizabeth, a Barber; buried there, 21 April 1731; he appears to have had issue by his wife Phyllis, the following children:<br />
<i> iii. Elizabeth VICKERS, baptised there 28 May 1706; buried there 11 June 1728.</i><br />
<i> iv. Hester VICKERS, baptised there 7 April 1707.</i><br />
<i> v. John VICKERS, baptised there, 21 October 1708.</i><br />
<i> vi Robert VICKERS, baptised there 11 March 1710-11.</i><br />
<i> vii. Phillis VICKERS, baptised there 27 March 1712.</i><br />
<i> viii. Michael VICKERS, baptised there, 7 May 1713; buried there, 25 January 1717, aged 3.</i><br />
<i> ix. George VICKERS; buried there 25 September 1717?</i><br />
<i> x. James VICKERS; buried there 12 July 1716.</i><br />
<i> xi. James VICKERS; buried there 9 August 1717?</i><br />
<i> xii. Mary VICKERS, baptised there 12 September 1718; buried there 14 May 1719.</i><br />
<i> xiii. Anne VICKERS, baptised there 5 August 1720; buried there 19 February 1722.</i><br />
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The Fulham VICKERS pedigree (see above) does not identify a John VICKERS among the grand-children named by <strong><span style="color: blue;">Mary VICKERS</span></strong> in her 1671-73 will - so probably therefore not a first cousin of our <strong>James</strong> (although our <strong>James</strong> may not have been a Fulham VICKERS).</div>
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<strong><em><span style="font-size: large;"><u>JOHN VICKERS AND MARY EMERSON</u></span></em>.</strong></div>
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[E] <b>John VICKERS</b>, baptised at Saint Andrew's, Dublin, on 4 July 1682, second son of <b>James VICKERS</b> by his wife <b>Mary</b> (probably <b>Mary ANDREWES</b>, who married <b>James VICKERS</b> at Saint Bride's, Dublin, on 30 December 1680 - unless it was an earlier wife named Mary SWAN?).<br />
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<b>John</b> may have served abroad in the Army (which may account for the omission of his name for his father's 1705 Administration); there was a John VICKERS, a Lieutenant in Captain Thomas ST CLAIR's Company in Major-General HAMILTON's Regiment of Foot, which served in Cadiz in 1702, and proceeded from there, and briefly, to the West Indies, returning to Ireland in November 1703 (but perhaps our <strong>John,</strong> at only 20, was too young to have been a Lieutenant in 1702?); there was a John VICKERS who served as Captain-Lieutenant in the 20th (Devonshire)Regiment of Foot in 1715, perhaps the same?<br />
<br />
<b>John</b> was later a Brewer in Aledrape, or an Aledraper, Dublin.<br />
<br />
<b>John VICKERS</b> died in Dublin in 1739; he died intestate, with a grant of Administration, dated 20 June 1739, to his widow <b>Mary</b>.<br />
In 1890, one of his descendants, William Jackson PIGOTT of Dundrum, County Down, posted the following item in "Notes and Queries" [7th Series, Volume IX, 21 June 1890, page 499]:<br />
<i>"According to a note supplied by Mr Arthur VICARS, F.S.A., to the Irish Builder of April 1, 1888, and in connexion with the parish registries of St Audoen's, Dublin, <b>John VICKERS</b>, Alderman of Dublin, who died intestate 1739, left by <b>Mary</b> his wife, (1) George, (2) <b>Joseph</b>, and (3) Ann <b>VICKERS</b>."</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<b>John</b> was married by Banns at Saint Catherine's (Church of Ireland), 30 March 1719, to <b>Mary EMERSON</b> (she was probably baptised at Saints Peter and Kevin, Dublin, 14 April 1686, daughter of <b>John</b> and <b>Elizabeth EMERSON</b> of Whitefriars Lane); <b>Mary</b> was buried at Crumlin Church, Dublin, 4 September 1753 [DIXON] (although a transcript in the Society of Genealogists in London records the year as 1759).<br />
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<b>John</b> and <b>Mary VICKERS</b> had issue:<br />
<br />
1. Elizabeth VICKERS, baptized at St Catherine's, Dublin, 20 July 1720; named in her father's Administration, 1739.<br />
<br />
2. Thomas VICKERS, baptized at St Catherine's, Dublin, 14 July 1723.<br />
<br />
3. George VICKERS; named in her father's Administration, 1739; probably the mariner on H.M.'s Ship <em>Ipswich</em>, his will proved P.C.C, 18 August 1757, bequeathing his property to his brother <strong>Joseph VICKERS</strong> of Dublin, Velvet Weaver.<br />
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4. Mary VICKERS, baptized at St Catherine's, Dublin, 8 May 1726.<br />
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5. Ann VICKERS; named in her father's Administration, 1739.<br />
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6. <b>Joseph VICKERS</b>, baptized at St Catherine's, Dublin, 17 June 1734. See [F] below:</div>
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<i style="color: #783f04;"><span style="font-size: x-small;">[John MALTON's view of Saint Catherine's Church of Ireland, Thomas Street, Dublin, about 1790's.]</span></i></div>
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______________________________________________<br />
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<em><span style="font-size: large;"><b><u>JOSEPH VICKERS OF DUBLIN, SILK WEAVER</u></b>.</span></em><br />
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[F] <b>Joseph VICKERS</b>, born in 1734; named in his father's administration, 1739; Silk Weaver, New Row, Saint Catherine's Parish, Dublin, October 1766; Silk Weaver, of Golden Lane, of the Coombe (1780), and of Chambre Street (1792); his death details have not yet been found.<br />
<br />
<b>Joseph</b> was married to <b>Elizabeth</b> (maiden surname unknown, possibly YATES or YEATES?); she probably died on 14 May 1797, <em>"...relict of the late Mr VICKERS of Dublin."</em><br />
<em><br /></em></div>
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<span style="color: red;"><b>Joseph</b></span> and <b>Elizabeth</b> had issue:<br />
<br />
1. Mary VICKERS, baptized at St Catherine's, Dublin, 4 August 1759; buried at Crumlin, County Dublin, 6 July 1767.<br />
<br />
2. Esther VICKERS, baptized at St Catherine's, Dublin, 12 May 1761; buried at Crumlin, 21 June 1763.<br />
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3. <b>John VICKERS</b>, born at New Row, Parish of Saint Catherine's, 20 March 1763, and baptized at St Catherine's; he married <b>Elizabeth STINSON</b>. See [E] below.<br />
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4. George VICKERS, baptized at St Catherine's, Dublin, 5 October 1766, of New Row, Dublin.<br />
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5. Alice (or Alicia) VICKERS; buried at Crumlin, 5 March 1768, daughter of <strong>Joseph</strong>. <br />
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6. <b>Mary VICKERS</b>, born in Dublin, 7 July 1769; probably of the Coombe, June 1788, when she was admitted to Membership of the Dublin Methodist Society in the Class of Amelia SINGLETON; she was married in December 1793 to John PIGOTT Senior.<br />
See further details of this family at this link:<br />
<a href="http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com/2012/12/john-pigott-of-dublin-tax-collectors.html">http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com/2012/12/john-pigott-of-dublin-tax-collectors.html</a><br />
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7. Elizabeth VICKERS, born at St Bride's, Dublin, in 1772; she was married to Edward HALE, Vintner, of Island Bridge, Dublin; he was a Vintner, Dublin, 1824 [Pigot's Directory, City of Dublin]; Vintner, Island Bridge, 1835 [Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland]; he died at Island Bridge, 17 October 1842, aged 70 [Dublin Evening Packet, 20 October]; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. James HALE; died on 16 June 1844, unmarried.</em><br />
<em> b. Frances HALE, born at Hanover Street, Dublin, and baptized at St Nicholas Without, 13 October 1811; she died on 3 September 1843; she was married at St James's (R.C. Register, but by License of the Diocese of Dublin), 30 July 1839, to Isaac McGUINNESS (Register) or McGENNIS (M.L.B.); he died on 2 March 1842.</em><br />
<em> c. Susannah HALE; she was married at St James's church, Dublin, November 1844, to her cousin William Henry VICKERS</em>.<br />
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8. Susannah VICKERS, baptized at St Luke's, Dublin, 1 August 1780.<br />
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<i style="color: #274e13;"><span style="font-size: x-small;">[Ruins of Saint Luke's Church (built 1709, closed 1975) on Saint Luke's Avenue, near the Coombe, Dublin.]</span></i></div>
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______________________________________________<br />
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<u><br /></u>
<em><span style="font-size: large;"><b><u>JOHN VICKERS AND ELIZABETH STINSON</u>.</b></span></em></div>
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[E] <b>John VICKERS</b>, born in 1763; he was a Weaver, of Phordham's Alley, Dublin, in June 1784; at Elbow Lane, 1786; of 5 Elbow Lane, Dublin, January 1788, when he was admitted to the Methodist Society of Dublin, as a member of Samuel DAN's First Class; of the Coombe, Dublin, March 1789, when he was Listed in the Bands of the Methodist Society; Weaver, Phordham's Alley, Dublin, in February and May 1788; he was back at Elbow Lane, 1790-99; he was admitted Freeman of the Dublin Corporation, Weaver's Guild, at Easter 1790; a Warden of the Weaver's Guild, 1794; he subscribed to the publication of WHISTON's "Josephus," 1796, of Elbow Lane.<br />
<br />
<b>John</b> died 22 April 1806, aged 43 (as recorded in William MAGUIRE's "Memoir" of 1823).<br />
<br />
<b>John</b> was married at Saint Catherine's (Church of Ireland), Dublin, 22 August 1783, to <b>Elizabeth STINSON</b> (she was baptised at Saint Catherine's, 15 September 1765, daughter of <b>Robert STINSON</b>, Twister and Throwster, by his wife <b>Elizabeth</b>); <b>Elizabeth</b> was at 2 Elbow Lane, June 1787, when admitted as member of the Second Class of the Methodist Society of Dublin (unless that was instead <b>John</b>'s mother, perhaps already a widow?); <b>Elizabeth</b> died on 27 July 1799, aged 33; she was buried at Saint Luke's, Dublin, 29 July, as Mrs VICKERS, Elbow Lane, eight days after the burial of her child, the entry preceding hers in the register [Register page image on the www.irishgenealogy.ie website].<br />
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<b>John</b> and <b>Elizabeth VICKERS</b> had issue:<br />
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<div style="text-align: left;">
1. <span style="color: #663300;">Susanna VICKERS</span>, born at Phordham's Alley, 10 June 1784, and baptized at St Luke's, Dublin, 13 June [as daughter of John and Eliz'th VIKERS, of Phor's Alley, Weaver]; she died young.<br />
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2. <b>Mary VICKERS</b>, born at Elbow Lane, Dublin, 25 January 1786, and baptized at St Catherine's, 29 January; she was of the parish of St Nicholas Without when she was married, by Consistorial License dated 17 January, in St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin and by the Rev James NEVINS (Curate of Saint Andrew's), on 23 January 1804, to William MAGUIRE, of Back Close (St Patrick's), Dublin, Gent [Cathedral Register, William MAGUIRE's Memoir, and BETHAM's Abstracts].<br />
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See their separate blog-post at this link:<br />
<br />
http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com/2010;09/william-maguire-of-dublin.html<br />
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3. <span style="color: #663333;">Esther </span>or<span style="color: #663333;"> Hester VICKERS</span>, born at Phordham's Alley, and baptized at St Luke's, 2 February 1788, father a Weaver; she died on 18 May 1810.<br />
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4. <span style="color: #663300;">John VICKERS</span>, born on 21 February 1790, and baptized at St Catherine's, 11 March; Treasury Department, Dublin; he died at Charlotte Mall, Dublin, 30 November 1824; he was married in Dublin, 20 November 1815, to Hannah LEESON; with issue:</div>
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<span style="font-size: 85%;"><i> a. <span style="color: #009900;">George VICKERS</span>, born in Dublin, 30 August 1816; Organist in Limerick, 1853; Professor of Music, Ventnor Villas, Hove, Sussex, 1871; went to Canada; died at his brother's residence in Toronto, Ontario, 11 October 1883, the childless widower of Miss FORT of Limerick.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 85%;"><i> b. <span style="color: #009900;">John Joseph VICKERS</span>, born in Dublin 5 May 1818. See [G] below.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 85%;"><em> c. </em><em><span style="color: #009900;">William Henry VICKERS</span></em><em>, born in Dublin, 30 January 1820 [DIXON]; he was the subject of proceedings as an Insolvent Debtor, January 1847, of Island Bridge, Tailor, previously of Dawson's Lane [Dublin Weekly Register, 9 January]; he was married at St James's, Dublin, 5 November 1844, to his cousin, Susannah HALE, "... daughter of the late Edward HALE, Esq, of Island Bridge" [Limerick Chronicle, 20 November] .</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 85%;"><em> d. </em><em><span style="color: #009900;">Elizabeth VICKERS</span></em><em>, born in Dublin, 25 December 1821 [DIXON]; she was residing in Hove, Sussex, 1871 Census, with her widowered brother George; she was a Lodger at Castlewood Avenue, Rathmines and Rathgar East, 1901 Census, aged 77, Annuitant, Unmarried; she died in Dublin, 12 December 1908, and was buried in her MAGUIRE cousin's plot in Mount Jerome Cemetery.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 85%;"><em> e. </em><em><span style="color: #009900;">Frederick Thomas VICKERS</span></em><em> ; born in Dublin, 27 June 1825; he died in Dublin, 28 February 1827.</em></span><span style="font-size: 85%;"><em> </em></span><br />
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5. <span style="color: #663300;">Joseph VICKERS</span>, born in Dublin, 13 November 1792, and baptized at St Luke's, 21 November; Constable, St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin; he was married in 1818 to Mary Ann SPRATT.<br />
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6. <span style="color: #663333;">George VICKERS</span>, born at Elbow Lane, Dublin, 7 February 1794, and baptized at St Catherine's, 9 February; he died on 27 July 1828, and was buried in St Patrick's Cathedral churchyard; he was married on 21 August 1817 to Margaret CONNELL; she died in 1847, and was buried with her husband.<br />
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7. <span style="color: #663333;">Elizabeth VICKERS</span>, born at Elbow Lane, 17 October 1795, and baptized at St Catherine's, 26 October; died an infant.<br />
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8. <span style="color: #663300;">Elizabeth VICKERS</span>, born at Elbow Lane, 3 October 1796, and baptized at St Luke's, 5 October; died young.<br />
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9. <span style="color: #663300;">Robert VICKERS</span>, born at Elbow Lane, 13 September 1798, and baptized at St Luke's, 16 October; died young.<br />
<br />
10. A child; died at Elbow Lane, and buried at St Luke's, 21 July 1799; perhaps instead one of the foregoing Robert or Elizabeth.</div>
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<u><br /></u></div>
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<b><em><span style="font-size: large;"><u>JOHN JOSEPH VICKERS IN ONTARIO</u></span></em>.</b></div>
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[G] John Joseph VICKERS, born in Dublin 5 May 1818; from his entry in "A Cyclopaedia of Canadian Biography," edited by Geo. Maclean Rose Toronto, 1886, at pages 222-223, we find that:</div>
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<em>"... his early education was acquired in Dublin, and when a young man, he entered the service of the City of Dublin Steam Packet Company, and remained in their service for several years.</em></div>
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<em>"In 1849, he left Dublin, and arrived in New York, bearing introductory letters from Mr James McHENRY, of Liverpool. He entered the service of the Howard Steamship Company, and continued in the employ of this company for about two years. In the meantime, having heard of the splendid agricultural prospects of Canada, young VICKERS, who had lots of energy and ambition, determined to try his hand at farming, and putting his resolution into effect, he left New York and moved to the Bay of Quinté district, and settled upon a farm in Prince Edward County. Two years practice as an amateur farmer convinced Mr VICKERS that rolling logs and growing buckwheat was very different to what he had imagined it, he abandoned agriculture, and left for Toronto.</em></div>
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<em>"In 1852, he engaged with the American Express Company, and continued in their service for two years; when, on the completion of the Northern Railroad, he embarked in the express business on his own account, and by strict attention and great exertions he has developed his present extensive connection.</em></div>
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<em>"In 1858, in conjunction with others, Mr VICKERS visited the Lake Superior district in the first Steamer (The Rescue), to Thunder Bay. He then noticed that the Kaministiquia river would in the future be a great harbor, and acting on his own prophetic instincts, he purchased, after its survey by the government, land in that region, and owns nearly half of the navigable portion of the river frontage on the north side. The Canadian Pacific Railway now runs through the greater portion of his property.</em></div>
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<em>"Since his settlement in Toronto, he has taken an active interest in all that concerns the city's welfare, and in 1864 was elected alderman to represent St George's Ward, and he remained in the council until 1870. During the time he was a member of the council, he proposed the resolution to construct the new water works, which was carried in October, 10th, 1870.</em></div>
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<em>"He is captain in the Sedentary Militia, having held a commission for many years. Mr VICKERS' political opinions are strongly Conservative."</em><em> </em><br />
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<div style="text-align: center;"><em><br /></em></div><div style="text-align: center;">
<em>[A photo portrait, published in "The Canadian Album: Men of Canada,' Edited by Rev Wm COCHRANE, D.D, Brantford, Ontario, 1891, at page 237.]</em></div><div style="text-align: center;"><em><br /></em></div>
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A businessman and local Tory politician in Toronto, from 1852; he was founder and sole proprietor of Vickers Express Company, 1854-1888; he was admitted as an Affiliate, St Andrew's Lodge, Toronto, 13 December 1859; his business was at 55 Yonge Street, Toronto, 1868, house at 171 Richmond W.; he was at St Patrick's Ward, Toronto West, 1871 Census, aged 52, Express Proprietor, with his wife Catherine, eight children and five domestic servants; business at 55 Yonge, 1874, house 152 Adelaide W.; business 10 Wellington W., 1877, house 152 Adelaide W.; residing at St Andrew's Ward, Toronto City, 1891 Census, aged 72, Gentleman, with wife and five children; he died at Toronto, 11 March 1896.</div>
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John Joseph was married in Belleville, Ontario, in 1851, to Catherine Mary MOODIE (born at Southwold, Suffolk, England, 14 February 1832, eldest daughter of John Wedderburn Dunbar MOODIE by Susanna STRICKLAND); she was at Ward 3, Toronto City, 1901 Census, with three children; she died on 14 December 1904.</div>
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They had issue:</div>
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1. Georgina Eliza VICKERS, born at 140 Adelaide Street, Toronto, 28 May 1856; aged 14, at school, with her parents, 1871; she died at Toronto, 6 October 1893; married at St James's Cathedral, Toronto, 6 August 1881, Edward Philip LEACOCK, of St Boniface and The Hill, Birtle, Manitoba, J.P.; he was at St Boniface, Provencher, Manitoba, 1891 Census, aged 38, with wife and three children; they had issue:</div>
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<em> a. Thomas Murdoch LEACOCK, born at Kildonan, Manitoba, 6 August 1882; aged 9, with his parents, 1891; he died in 1957.</em></div>
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<em> b. Ela Moodie LEACOCK, born at Kildonan, Manitoba, 20 March 1884; aged 7, with her parents, 1891; she died at Los Angeles, 17 October 1959.</em></div>
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<em> c. Agnes Mary Vickers LEACOCK, born at Birtle, Manitoba, 7 June 1886; aged 5, with her parents, 1891.</em></div>
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2. John Alexander Dunbar VICKERS, born at Toronto, 22 May 1858; Upper Canada College, 1866-73; aged 12, at school, with his parents, 1871; went to Illinois in 1892; at Maddison Ave, Chicago, 1900 Census, aged 40, Superintendent Express Company, with wife and two children; at Washington Avenue, Chicago, 1910 Census, aged 51, Manager Express Coy, with wife, three children and his mother-in-law (Ellen TENCH, aged 82, Widow); of 29 Munro Street, Chicago, 1917, Vice President and General Manager, Western Lines, American Express Company; he died at Chicago, 17 February 1918; his will, dated 7 November 1907, was proved at Chicago, 12 June 1918, naming his wife Ellen Florence as a joint executor and trustee, and his three children; he was married at Chippawa, Welland County, 27 March 1889, to Ellen Florence TENCH (daughter of William E. and Ellen TENCH); with issue:</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em> a. John Harold VICKERS, born in Canada, September 1899; named in his father's will, 1907.</em></div>
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<em> b. Margaret Dunbar VICKERS, born in Illinois, April 1899; unmarried when named in her father's will, 1907.</em></div>
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<em> c. Murray Alexander VICKERS, born in Illinois, about 1901; named in his father's will, 1907; died at Montreal, 12 June 1985.</em></div>
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3. Katie Moodie VICKERS, born Toronto, 28 January 1860; as Catherine, aged 10, at school, with her parents, 1871; she died 1932; married at Toronto, 20 September 1882, to James Playford McMURRICH, aged 22, Professor, of Guelph, Wallington County, Ontario; with issue.</div>
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4. William Wallbridge VICKERS, born at Toronto, 6 August 1862; aged 8, at school, with his parents, 1871; Upper Canada College, 1872-81; B.A., University of Toronto, 1885; Ontario Bar, 1888; he witnessed his brother John's marriage in 1889; aged 28, Lawyer, with his parents, 1891; Barrister-at-Law; visited London in 1905, returning on the S.S. Cedric, from Liverpool, arriving at New York on 16 April, with his wife, and going to 77 York Street, Toronto; at 77 York Street, Toronto, 1917, Barrister and Solicitor; he died at Toronto, 28 June 1927, and buried at St James's Cemetery, Toronto; he was married at Toronto, 13 December 1897, to Mary HOWLAND; with issue:</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<i> a. (son).</i></div>
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5. Isabella Josephine VICKERS, born at Toronto, 7 August 1864; aged 6, at school, with her parents, 1871; she died at Denver, May 1943; married on 21 September 1887, Henry SEWALL, M.D. (1855-1936), Professor of Physiology, Universities of Michigan (1881-89) and Denver (from 1889), Denver Health Commissioner, and Secretary of the Colorado Board of Health; no issue.</div>
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<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
6. Victor Gilmore Ridgeway VICKERS, born at 140 Adelaide Street, Toronto, 1 June 1866; aged 4, at school, with his parents, 1871; at Ahunstic, Laval, Quebec, 1911 Census, aged 45, with wife Marcella, daughter Catherine, living with his father-in-law William SMITH (aged 82, born Scotland), along with his wife's three sons by her former ROUTH husband; Victor died at Montreal, 1944; married in 1905, Marcella Hay ROUTH (formerly SMITH); issue included a daughter:</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<em> a. Catherine VICKERS, born in February 1907.</em></div>
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7. Ethel Rosina VICKERS, born at Toronto, 4 March 1868; as Esther, aged 2, with her parents, 1871; she witnessed her brother John's marriage, 1889; as Ethel, aged 23, with her parents, 1891; she died on 17 June 1962, and was buried at Cimitiére Mont-Royal, Outremont, Montreal; she was married on 11 November 1891, to Samuel William (or Wellington) EWING, of Montreal; with issue a daughter:</div>
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<em> a. Katherine Hamilton EWING, born Montreal, 1 December 1893; also known as Doria MARCH, silent film actress; twice married with issue.</em></div>
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8. Henrietta Moodie VICKERS, born at Toronto, 2 March 1870; aged 1, with her parents, 1871; aged 21, with her parents, 1891; aged 31, with her widowed mother, 1901; she died in 1938; unmarried.</div>
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9. Arthur Algoma VICKERS, born at Toronto, 26 March 1872; Upper Canada College, 1881-88; University of Toronto, 1890-93; aged 19, Law Student, with his parents, 1891; aged 29, with his widowed mother, 1901; partner of WALSH and VICKERS, Real Estate business, Fort William, Ontario; he died at Fort William, 6 April 1914; he was married to Marcella Gertrude FINN.</div>
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10. Agnes Strickland VICKERS, born at Toronto, 6 November 1874; aged 16, with her parents, 1891; aged 26, with her widowed mother, 1901; she died in 1950; she was married at Toronto, 24 September 1902, to Philip Edward McKENZIE, of Port Portage, Ontario.<br />
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<i><span style="font-size: large;"><b><u>ANOTHER VICKERS FAMILY IN DUBLIN</u>.</b></span></i><br /><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><b>* * * * *</b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><b><br /></b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><b>PLEASE TAKE NOTE: </b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><b><br /></b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><b>THIS SECTION IS NOW IN THE PROCESS OF BEING COMPREHENSIVELY RE-DRAFTED AS A NEW POSTING.</b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><b><br /></b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><b>WHEN COMPLETE, AND POSTED, THIS SECTION WILL BE DELETED.</b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><b><br /></b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: red; font-size: large;"><i><b>* * * * *</b></i></span></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br />This section has now been removed to a new post, at the following link:</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com/2022/07/jeremiah-vickers-of-dublin-and-dundalk.html</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;">It contains details of Jeremiah VICKERS (1682-1757), of Dublin, Tanner, and his two marriages, to Joyce JACKSON, and to Ann EMERSON.</div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"><br /></div><div><div><div><div style="text-align: left;">
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em><strong><u>AN EMERSON FAMILY OF DUBLIN</u>.</strong></em></span><br />
<br />John EMERSON; he was married at St Catherine's, Dublin, 24 June 1666, to Mary PRICE.<br />
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John EMERSON, baptized at St Catherine's, Dublin, 11 May 1708, son of Luke EMERSON and his wife Joan. Luke also had a daughter Rose baptized there on 1 July 1699.<br />
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Robert EMERSON; of Dublin, Chandler; he died in 1729; Administration granted 20 June 1729, to Anne EMERSON, the widow and relict [BETHAM]; she was of Dublin, Widow, when she was married secondly, by License dated 15 April 1732, to Jeremiah VICKERS, of St Catherine's, Dublin (his second wife - see above).<br />
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Maria EMERSON, of Dublin, Spinster, was granted Administration, on 20 January 1728, of her father John EMERSON, of COLES's Dragoons, and of her two uncles Thomas EMERSON, of SADLER's Regiment, and William EMERSON, of COLES's Regiment [BETHAM].<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em><u><strong>A POSSIBLE YATES CONNECTION IN DUBLIN</strong>.</u></em></span><br />
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In 1921, William Jackson PIGOTT (a first cousin of my great-grandfather, the Rev Henry Robert PIGOTT), in a Post Scriptum to his introductory notes to the DIXON Papers [MS 8222 (2), Genealogical Office, Dublin], wrote:<br />
<em>"I used to hear my father speak of a 'Nosey' YATES, whom I fancy was a Cutler in South Georges Street, and wonder if they were related, through the Joseph VICKERS connection, i.e., could Joseph's wife Elizabeth have been a YATES?</em><br />
<em>"In the Dublin Directory for 1835 I find a Richard YATES, Cutler-in-general, Georges Street, Kingstown. Directory of 1821, Richard YEATES, Knife and Sword Cutler, 9 Parliament Street."</em><br />
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<b>Joseph VICKERS</b> was born in 1734; Silk Weaver, of Golden Lane, of the Coombe (1780), and of Chambre Street (1792); his death details have not yet found; he was married, probably about 1757, to <b>Elizabeth</b> (maiden surname unknowunknownn, perhaps YATES or YEATES?); she probably died on 14 May 1797, <em>"... relict of the late Mr VICKERS of Dublin"</em>; their first child Mary was born in 1759.<br />
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However, no information appears to have survived as to the birth identity of<b> </b><b>Joseph VICKERS</b><i>'</i> wife <strong>Elizabeth</strong>.</div>
Details of some of the YATES/YEATES/YEATS families in Ireland may be found at this link:<br />
<a href="https://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com/2020/02/yeates-yeats-and-yates-families-in.html">https://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com/2020/02/yeates-yeats-and-yates-families-in.html</a><br />
<br />
Likewise, no evidence has yet been found among these families of a likely connection to the <strong>VICKERS</strong> family in Dublin.</div>
</div></div></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-40986554832975271832018-06-11T22:10:00.003-07:002021-12-23T01:25:33.572-08:00An Irish PIGOTT family in the Drapery Business in Queensland, from 1885<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaJLyoIj-9Z7cIonXwz_6ReZGYAq-NEo-wfI8H87xjXdXKXaFUL_7zApVM40bRPjK6h6OZHunyVtBYlY0q9Xo4FzDO8mm5oXipwkPHgOBMHrxghRdOtu4sdG79DQ5wfe3RjUD6s1o-74kh/s1600/Michael-Daniel-Pigott.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1000" data-original-width="740" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaJLyoIj-9Z7cIonXwz_6ReZGYAq-NEo-wfI8H87xjXdXKXaFUL_7zApVM40bRPjK6h6OZHunyVtBYlY0q9Xo4FzDO8mm5oXipwkPHgOBMHrxghRdOtu4sdG79DQ5wfe3RjUD6s1o-74kh/s400/Michael-Daniel-Pigott.jpg" width="295" /></a></div>
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<b>Michael Daniel PIGOTT</b> was born in Ireland (his grave inscription records his birth in Tuam, County Galway) about 1850, son of Patrick PIGOTT, Farmer.<br />
Michael was a shop keeper in Shop Street, Tuam, County Galway, for the births of his first three children between 1881 and 1883; he emigrated to N.S.W. in 1884. See below.<br />
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<b>Michael PIGOTT</b> was a Shopkeeper in Castlebar, County Mayo, aged 29, a Bachelor, when he was married at the Roman Catholic Chapel at Carrick-on-Shannon, County Leitrim, on 22 April 1880, to Mary Josephine WATTERS (or WATERS), also aged 29, a Spinster, and a daughter of Patrick WATTERS, Shopkeeper - the ceremony was witnessed by John WATTERS and Eliza A. WATTERS [Civil Records on the <a href="http://www.irishgenealogy.ie/">www.irishgenealogy.ie</a> website].</div>
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<b>Michael Daniel PIGOTT</b> was a Draper; he arrived in Australia in 1884, and immediately headed north to Brisbane, where he set up a business in Drapery.<br />
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His first venture was in Ipswich Road, Woolloongabba; in October 1885, Mrs PIGOTT, Draper, Ipswich Road, Woolloongabba, advertised for a General Servant <em>"... wanted; must be respectable" </em>[Telegraph, Tuesday 27 October]; in December 1885, M.D. PIGOTT, Draper, Ipswich Road, Woolloongabba, advertised for a Dressmaker <em>"... wanted; best opening in the city for good hands"</em> [Telegraph, Saturday 5 December].<br />
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<b>Michael</b> had employed a young draper in his Tuam shop named Thomas Charles BEIRNE (1860-1949), who emigrated to Melbourne in early 1884; in 1885, his former employer wrote to him from Brisbane, offering him a partnership in his drapery business up north, which he took up; after a delay caused by them failing to get the first premises they had their eyes on, in February 1886, the firm of PIGOTT and BEIRNE opened its doors in a shop on Stanley Street, opposite Boggo Road, South Brisbane; in March 1887, Mrs PIGOTT, corner Stanley Street and Wellington Road, advertised for a <em>"... Smart Girl, 14 to 16 years of age, to mind children and assist in housework</em>" [Telegraph, Tuesday 8 March]; in July 1889, PIGOTT and BEIRNE, Federal Drapery Hall (opposite the Clarence Hotel - which stood on the western corner of Stanley Street and Boggo Road), South Brisbane, advertised a clearing sale commencing 13 July [Telegraph, Monday 15 July]; in September 1889, <b>M.D. PIGOTT</b>, Federal Drapery Hall, Stanley Street, advertised a <em>"... seven roomed house to let in Baines Street, Kangaroo Point; rent low"</em> [Telegraph, Saturday 21 September]; in November 1889, a position for a <em>"... good general servant"</em> was advertised, to apply to <em>"... lady Federal Drapery Hall, opposite Clarence Hotel, Stanley Street"</em> [Tuesday 23 November]; in March 1890, PIGOTT and BIERNE, Federal Drapery Hall, Stanley Street, advertised for a <em>"... Boy for parcels wanted"</em> [Telegraph, Thursday 13 March]; in June 1890, PIGOTT and BEIRNE, Federal Drapery Hall, Stanley Street, advertised for a <em>"... Milliner wanted"</em> [Telegraph, Wednesday 14 June]; in June 1891, PIGOTT and BIERNE, of the Federal Drapery Hall, Stanley Street, South Brisbane, announced that <em>"... they have mutually agreed to Dissolve Partnership, Mr T.C. BIERNE retiring from the firm"</em> [Telegraph, Thursday 18 June].<br />
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In March 1892, the firm expanded - <em>"... Messieurs PIGOTT and Company, of the Federal Drapery Hall, Woolloongabba, ... have opened a branch of their business in two shops at the bridge end of Mr D.B. McCullough's new block of brick buildings in Melbourne Street, between Stanley and Grey Streets"</em> [Telegraph, Thursday 10 March]; in August 1892, PIGOTT and Company, Stanley Street, South Brisbane, opposite Boggo Road, advertised a Millinery Sale [Telegraph, Thursday 30 August].<br />
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By mid 1895, he had extended his business interests into Ipswich; in May 1895, PIGOTT and Company, Cash Drapers, next North Star Hotel, Brisbane Street, Ipswich, advertised a bargain sale [Queensland Times, Ipswich Herald, etc, 30 May]; in July 1895, tickets to hear Michael DAVITT at Centennial Hall on the Progress of Home Rule were available from, among other outlets, <em>"... M.D. PIGOTT's, Stanley Street..."</em> [Brisbane Courier, Friday 19 July]; in November 1895, PIGOTT and Company, of Brisbane Street, Ipswich, and of South Brisbane and Boonah, advertised new offerings at their Ipswich branch [Queensland Times, Ipswich Herald, etc, Saturday 2 November]; in May 1896, PIGOTT and Company advertised their removal into Foote's Buildings, Brisbane Street, Ipswich, and starting an Opening Sale, having<em> "... lately leased these premises lately occupied by James De CONLAY"</em> [Queensland Times, Ipswich Herald, etc, Saturday 23 May].<br />
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In July 1896, PIGOTT and Company advertised a Monster Sale in premises in Russell Street, Toowoomba, to commence on 6 July [Darling Downs Gazette, Saturday 4 July]; in October 1896, PIGOTT and Company, Cash Drapers and Direct Importers, of Russell Street, Toowoomba, and at Brisbane and Ipswich, advertised their Big Sale of stock recently purchased from the trustees of the Assigned Estate of F.C. WARREN, Ruthven Street, consisting of <em>"... Men's Clothing, Shirts, Hats and Mercery"</em> [Toowoomba Chronicle, Saturday 24 October]; by October 1898, he had ceased operating in Brisbane; in October 1898, PIGOTT and Company, Direct Importers, Ruthven Street, Toowoomba, and at Pittsworth and Clifton, advertised the commencement of a sale of goods recently purchased by <em>"... our Mr <b>M.D. PIGOTT</b></em>" who had <em>"... just returned from the southern capitals where he has made extraordinary big spot cash purchases"</em> [Toowoomba Chronicle and Darling Downs Gazette, Saturday 8 October].<br />
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<b>Michael</b> died during a visit to one of his married daughters at Forbes, N.S.W., on 11 May 1929, and his body was returned to Toowoomba for burial at Drayton Cemetery (R.C., Block 1; Allotment 22).<br />
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His wife Mary Josephine was a devout Catholic who was an unostentatious benefactor of the Holy Name Catholic Church in Toowoomba; she died at Toowoomba on 29 April 1924, aged 73, and was buried at Drayton (ditto, Allotment 23).<br />
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<b>Michae</b>l and Mary had issue:<br />
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1. Theresa Agnes PIGOTT, born at Tuam, 19 April 1882; in July 1912, she passed <em>".. the A.T.N.A examination at the Prince Alfred Hospital"</em> in Sydney [Darling Downs Gazette, Saturday 20 July];<br />
Theresa was married at St Patrick's Church, Toowoomba, on 22 February 1915, to <em>"... Mr John CRITCHLEY, Royal Naval Reserve, eldest son of Mr and Mrs Richard CRITCHLEY, Blundellsands,</em> <em>Liverpool... Their wedding tour will be spent in Sydney and the Blue Monutains, after which they will travel by the Orsova for their future home in England"</em> [Darling Downs Gazette, Tuesday 23 February]; he was born in Skelmersdale, Lancashire, about 1886, son of Richard CRITCHLEY, Grocer, and Mary MOLYNEUX his wife, and he obtained from the Board of Trade his Certificate of Competency as Second Mate for Foreign-going Steamships in the Merchant Service, 24 October 1907; no record of his death has yet been found.</div>
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Theresa went to live with John in Lancashire; she sailed on the S.S. <em>Tunisian</em> (Canadian Pacific Ocean Services, Ltd) from Liverpool on 5 July 1919, bound for Quebec and Montreal, aged 30, Housewife, with her son Peter, aged 3, and Mr Frank J. PIGOTT, Merchant, aged 33; she was residing in British Columbia (c/- C.P.G.S., Vancouver - unless in error for C.P.O.S., Ltd?), June 1920, when her sister Angela paid her a visit; Theresa was back in Queensland in February 1923, when she renewed her Passport, 20 February, of Glendalough, Toowoomba [Qld Passport Index, Volume 2, Page 188]; she arrived in Liverpool, 2 June 1923, form Montreal, with her son Peter, going to 60 Bunhill Road, London, E.C., her last permanent residence Canada; she made a short return voyage to Gibraltar, April 1928, with her son Peter, address 41 Selby Road, Ealing, W.5 (arrived on the S.S. <em>Narkunda</em>, 5 April, and returned to London on the S.S. <em>Ranchi</em>, 26 April); she made a return visit to Australia in late 1929, and stayed with her sister Angela at Glendalough, intending to leave <i>"... on her return to England via the East at the end of March"</i> (1930), with Miss PIGOTT due to accompany her [Queensland Country Life, 26 February 1930]; they travelled from Yokohama, Japan, 27 May 1930, on the S.S. <em>President Jackson</em>, bound for the U.S., she aged 47, Domestic Duties, born Galoway (sic), Ireland, on a visa issued in Brisbane that month; she sailed on the S.S. <em>Otranto</em>, departing London, 24 October 1936, bound for Brisbane, aged 40, Home Duties, formerly of 41 Selby Road, Ealing, W.5. with her son (F.M. CRITCHLEY) and her sister (Mrs A.M. NORTHIE); she returned to live in Toowoomba; in 1937, she moved into a new home at 16 Campbell Street, East Toowoomba, evidently designed for her by Brisbane Architect Arthur W.F. BLIGH, and which she named "Ellenglaze"; in November 1937, the Brisbane Courier Mail of Tuesday 16 November reported under Toowoomba News, that <em>"... Mrs NORTHIE has arrived from Brisbane and will spend a week's holiday at Ellenglaze, Campbell Street</em>" (this was Theresa's sister); she was residing there in 1943, 1949, 1954 and 1958 [Electoral Rolls, Darling Downs Division]; in April 1945, her son and daughter-in-law spent a few days with her at Toowoomba, before going to Surfers Paradise for a week, and it was further reported that <em>"... when hostilities cease, Mrs T. A. CRITCHLEY intends to give her well known home, Ellenglaze, Toowoomba, to the couple, and will travel extensively</em>" [Telegraph, 17 August]; in 1949, she was visiting England - the Brisbane Telegraph of 5 November reported that <em>"... Mrs T.A. CRITCHLEY, who has been on holidays in Britain for some time, leaves on December 16, on her return to Australia. She well stay with Mr and Mrs Peter CRITCHLEY, her son and daughter-in-law, at their home, Ellenglaze, Toowoomba, when she arrives"</em>; she departed from London, 22 July 1955, on the S.S. <em>Gothic</em>, bound for New Zealand; she arrived in Fremantle, 6 February 1958, on the S.S. Arcadia, from the U.K., heading for Bray Cottage, 12 Dawnie Street, Toowoomba; she was still there in 1963.</div>
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Therese died at Toowoomba in 1966; they had issue one son:</div>
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<em> a. Francis Molyneux (Peter) CRITCHLEY, born in Great Crosby, Lancashire, 16 January 1916 [R.A.A.F. enlistment papers], and registered at West Derby in March quarter, 1916 [Volume 8b, Page 396]; as Peter CRITCHLEY, aged 7, School, when he arrived in Liverpool from Canada, with his mother, 2 June 1923; aged 12, Scholar, when he visited Gibraltar, from London, with his mother, April 1928 (address 41 Selby Road, Ealing, W.8); as Miss (sic) F.M. CRITCHELY, aged 20, Student, when he left London, 24 October 1936, on the S.S. Otranto, bound for Brisbane, with his mother and aunt (Mrs A.M. NORTHIE); in 1937, he was at Cowden Knowes, Margaret Street, Toowoomba, Shop assistant [Darling Downs Division]; in 1943, he was enrolled at 16 Campbell Street, Toowoomba, Shop assistant, with his mother (this may have been a residual enrollment from before he went on overseas service); Flying Officer, R.A.A.F., World War 2, S.N. 404574; awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, in June 1942, ".. for gallant raids on the Renault factory near Paris, and over German industrial cities, including Essen, Bremen, Kiel, Polesy and Hamburg, in extreme adverse weather" [Courier Mail, 27 June]; he returned to Queensland towards the end of the War, and in July 1945, was "... stationed in the north" while his new wife went to Sydney University to study Arts [Telegraph, 17 July]; in 1949, he was enrolled at 4 Arthur Street, Toowoomba, Business executive, with his wife Mary; the Brisbane Telegraph of 5 November 1949 reported that "... Mr and Mrs Peter CRITCHLEY, of Toowoomba, hope to leave Australia for England in April... He and his wife came to Australia more than 4 years ago"; they returned to Australia by the S.S. Orontes, departing London, 3 August 1950, "...after touring abroad for the past five months" [Brisbane Telegraph, 17 August]; in 1954 and 1958, he was back at 16 Campbell Street with his wife and mother; by 1963 he and his wife had moved to Wooldridge Street, Toowoomba North, a Company Director; he died at St Vincent's Hospital, Toowoomba, 26 March 1998 [Courier Mail, 31 March].</em><br />
<em>Peter was married at Brentford, Middlesex, 5 January 1942 [Queensland Country Life, 18 December 1941], to Mary HOSEGOOD, and registered March quarter 1942, [Volume 3a, Page 821]; she was staying with her mother-in-law in Toowoomba in April 1945 when she and her husband went to Surfer's Paradise for a week, having been "... among the English brides who recently arrived in Australia" [Telegraph, 12 April]; she died at Toowoomba, 1 September 2002, aged 85 years [The Chronicle, 6 September].</em></div>
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2. John Patrick PIGOTT, born at Tuam, 10 May 1882; worked with his father as a Draper; went to Warwick in 1911 to work in a branch store there; he was probably enrolled to vote in the Electoral Division of East Toowoomba, 30 July 1913, as Patrick James PIGOTT, Draper; he died in Sydney in 1957, and was buried at the Eastern Suburbs Cemetery, Matraville; as Pax PIGOTT, his engagement to Miss Irene SCOTT, <em>"...daughter of Mr and Mrs William SCOTT of Airlie Hall, Tenterfield, N.S.W."</em>, was announced [Queenslander, 3 July 1915]; they were married at Tenterfield, N.S.W., in 1915; they had issue a daughter:<br />
<em> a. Joan PIGOTT, born in Queensland, 4 May 1917; of Neutral Bay, Sydney, April 1940, when she visited her aunt Theresa (Mrs T.A. CRITCHLEY) in Toowoomba, and then went to visit another aunt (Mrs C. SCOTT) in Tenterfield, N.S.W. [Sunday Mail, 14 April]; probably at 16 Roslyn Street, Darlinghurst, Nurse, East Sydney Division, 1943; she died at Woollahra, 30 August 1991 [Ryerson Index]; she was married at Paddington, Sydney, 1948, to Colin James SEFTON (born in Port Moresby, 1 June 1920); he was at 63 Bay Street, Mosman, Insurance Consultant, with Joan, Warringah Division, 1968; at 42 Vista Street, Mosman, Executive, with Joan, 1972; he died on 12 July 1997, aged 77, late of Woollahra and formerly of Koitaki, New Guinea [Ryerson Index].</em></div>
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3. Vincent George PIGOTT, born at Tuam, 6 September 1883; also a Draper in Toowoomba; of Sydney, 1929; he was enrolled to vote in the Electoral Division of East Toowoomba, 27 October 1909, of Margaret Street, Draper; he died in Sydney on 23 March 1948, late of Bayview House, The entrance, via Wyong [Will details], <i>"... at a private hospital</i>" and formerly <i>"... of Toowoomba, aged 61 years"</i> [S.M.H., 27 March]; his will dated 17 May 1939, mentioned his brother Patrick John PIGOTT of Melbourne, and sister (Mrs) Gertrude McSTAY of Sydney, and a codicil also mention sister (Mrs) Mary Josephine KELLY of Gympie - his estate, valued at £1555 7s 3d was to be invested, and interest paid equally to Patrick and Gertrude (will), with Gertrude share her half with her sister Mary (codicil), with it to continue after their deaths to his nieces and nephews (with the exception of those of his brother Patrick and brother F.J. PIGOTT of Toowoomba, who were already well provided for) [Will Books, N.S.W. Archives].</div>
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4. Francis Joseph PIGOTT, born in Brisbane, 25 July 1885; Apprenticed to a Draper in Brisbane, and then went to work with his father in Toowoomba; he was enrolled to vote in the Electoral Division of East Toowoomba, 31 August 1906; he made a world trip from May 1913 to January 1914, visiting South Africa, London (attending the firm's business), then Paris, New York (he arrived on the S.S. <em>Lusitania</em> from Liverpool, on 25 October 1913, aged 28, Draper, having recently stayed with his friend James ADAIR at 60 Bunhill Road, London, E.C.), Chicago and San Francisco, and sailing from Vancouver on the S.S. <em>Niagara</em>, having marvelled at the complete motorisation of Traffic in London and New York, the Woolworth building in New York (at 55 stories, the then tallest building on earth, with 40 acres of floor space and 28 elevators, 2 of which travelled the 55 floors in 55 seconds), and the luxurious train travel in America [Warwick Examiner, 10 January 1914]; he enlisted in the 1st A.I.F., and served with 1st A.G.H. Reinforcements in France; he returned to Toowoomba after the war, arriving "in transit" at Quebec in July 1919 on the S.S. <em>Tunisian</em>, with his sister Mrs Theresa CRITCHLEY and her 3 year-old son; he and his wife visited London in 1939, and after touring the British Isles and the Continent, planned to sail on 14 July to New York, on the S.S. Queen Mary, to meet up with his sister Mrs NORTHIE [Courier Mail, 18 April]; he died there on 10 June 1957, and was buried at Drayton; he was married in Brisbane in 1920 to Marie Elizabeth TRACKSON, she died at Toowomba on 30 August 1989; with issue:<br />
<em> a. James Francis PIGOTT, born at Toowoomba, 16 May 1921; R.A.A.F., New Guinea, WW2; he was at 23 West Street, Toowoomba, in 1949, his occupation Company Director; he retired as joint Managing Director PIGOTT and Company in 1983; he died on 30 August 2014; he married Marlene (Merle) Margaret ROESSLER; they had issue.</em><br />
<em> b. John Michael PIGOTT, born at Toowoomba, 13 September 1924; Pilot Officer, 1 Squadron, R.A.A.F.; he was killed in a training flight accident at Kingaroy, 7 May 1945, and was buried at Taabinga Cemetery.</em><br />
<em> c. Louis Joseph PIGOTT, born about 1927; M.B., B.S., Queensland University, 1950; Mater Hospital, South Brisbane, 1954; he went to England in 1954, arriving at Tilbury on the S.S. Stratheden, 21 February, from Sydney, aged 26; he was back in Brisbane in 1963, at 38 Bonney Avenue, Clayfield, a medical practitioner, with Kathleen PIGOTT, Home Duties.</em><br />
<em> d. Mary PIGOTT; married Leo Patrick ROESSLER; he died at Toowoomba, 19 March 2013.</em></div>
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5. Louis Michael PIGOTT, born in South Brisbane, 11 July 1887; Christian Brothers College, Toowoomba; Nudgee College, 1904; St John's College, Sydney University, 1907-13; M.B., Sydney; he completed his residency at Brisbane General Hospital, and then went to Western Australia; a Medical Practitioner; he served Lieutenant, R.A.M.C. (Royal Army Medical Corps) from March 1915 until March 1916, when he returned to Australia; he then volunteered in the 1st A.I.F., December 1916, and embarked (Medical Officers) in Melbourne on 10 May 1917 on H.M.A.T. <em>Clan McGillivray</em>, bound for Plymouth; he was initially attached to A.A.M.C. (Australian Army Medical Corps) Training Centre at Parkhouse, then with their 5th Training Battalion at Rollestone; he was sent to France in December 1917, and was posted to 1 A.G.H. (Australian General Hospital) at Rouen; he was transferred to 7 Field Ambulance in January 1918, and was routinely detached into 27 and 23 Battalions; he was detached into 17 Battalion, March 1918, and while serving with them at Villers-Bretoneux, in August 1918, he suffered multiple wounds to face, head and legs, and burns to the eyes from a phosphorus shell; he was invalided back to England, and discharged into 5 A.A.H. (Australian Auxilliary Hospital), and then 2 A.A.H. in Southall for duty; in June 1919, he took leave to undertake post-graduate studies in Edinburgh before returning to Australia, on H.M.T. Pakeha, from Southampton, 6 October 1919; he was discharged after arrival back in Brisbane, 3 January 1920; he was enrolled at Dr PAGE's, Brunswick Street, Fortitude Valley, Medical Practitioner, 1921 [Brisbane Division]; he went to Launceston in 1923; in 1924 he went to Western Australia, and set up in practice at Menzies; he died at St John Hospital, Kalgoorlie, 9 November 1924, and was buried at Kalgoorlie R.C. Cemetery.</div>
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6. Mary Josephine PIGOTT, born in Brisbane, 7 April 1889; she was married at Toowoomba, 15 February 1916, to Dr Arthur Francis KELLY of Stanhope; with issue two sons killed in action over Germany during W.W.2, including:<br />
<em> a. Margaret (Peggy) KELLY, born in Gympie, early January 1917.</em><br />
<em> b. Charles Dermot KELLY, born at Stanthorpe, 2 May 1918; enlisted in the R.A.A.F., S.N. 404685; Pilot Officer, 105 Squadron; killed in action over Germany, 19 August 1942, and was buried at Becklingen War Cemetery, Saltau, Lower Saxony; he was married in Canada, in 1941, to Anne Helen WAITE (daughter of Carl WAITE of Toronto and the late Mrs WAITE) [Sunday Mail, 19 October 1941]; his widow arrived in Brisbane on 22 October 1945, on the S.S Matsonia from San Francisco, "... accompanied by a child" and c/- Mrs A. NORTHIE, New Farm [Courier Mail, 20 October].</em><br />
<em> c. Brian Arthur KELLY, born at Gympie, 6 October 1922; Draper's Assistant; enlisted in the R.A.A.F., S.N. 425314; Flight Sergeant/Air Gunner, 158 Squadron; killed in action over Germany, 1 September 1943, and was buried at Hanover War Cemetery.</em></div>
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7. Monica Evangeline (Angela) PIGOTT, born in Brisbane, 20 July 1891; as Angela Monica, she was enrolled to vote in the Electoral Division of East Toowoomba on 26 July 1913; in June 1920, as Angela PIGOTT, 26, born Australia, when she visited her sister, Mrs CRITCHLEY, c/- C.P.G.S., Vancouver (possibly in error for C.P.O.S?); as Miss Angela PIGOTT, living at Glendalough, Campbell Street, Toowoomba, February 1930, when her sister, Mrs T.A. CRITCHLEY visited, and planned returning to England via the East at the end of March, accompanied by Angela [Brisbane Courier, 26 February]; they sailed on the S.S. <em>President Jackson</em>, 27 May 1930, from Yokohama, Japan, bound for the U.S., and she was listed as Angela Monica PIGOTT, aged 34, Domestic Duties, born Galoway (sic), Ireland, the visa issued in Brisbane; she was at Aloha Court, Julius Street, New Farm, Brisbane Division, 1943, 1954 and 1963; she was at 193 Moray Street, New Farm, 1968; she died in Qld in 1980.<br />
Angela was married in Toowoomba, on 14 April 1931, to Vivian Richard NORTHIE; he died in Brisbane on 4 February 1934, aged 40, the <em>"... best known and most popular travelers in Queensland... for more than ten years respresenting the Aspro interests</em>"and was buried at Toowong Cemetery; evidently no issue.</div>
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8. Gertrude Mary PIGOTT, born in Brisbane, 10 June 1896; she was married in Brisbane in 1921 to Lionel Leslie McSTAY, a Medical Practitioner; they had issue two sons - Robert James Lionel and John Michael McSTAY.</div>
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<br />Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-42991858829455784192018-05-19T20:53:00.001-07:002018-06-17T21:04:13.855-07:00STRATFORD, CANNING, POULTER and LEARY ancestry in Ireland.<div aria-label="Message view" class="iz_A em_0 Z_0" data-test-id="message-group-view-scroller" role="main">
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em>STRATFORD FAMILY IN WICKLOW.</em></span><br />
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Robert STRATFORD, born in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, about 1635 (son of Edward STRATFORD, of Hareston Grange, Nuneaton, by his wife Grace PARGITER); Robert settled in Ireland in 1660; one of the original burgesses named in the charter by which Baltinglas, County Wicklow, was incorporated as a Borough town; Sheriff of County Wicklow, 8 January 1677; Deputy Governor of Counties Dublin and Wicklow, 1690; M.P. for County Wicklow, 1692-93.<br />
Robert is said to have died in October 1699 [CANTWELL's Memorials of the Dead], but the monument in Baltinglas Abbey Graveyard was hard to read, and the date conflicts with his probate grant; his will, dated 8 November 1698, was proved P.C.I. on 29 June 1699 [BETHAM's Abstract], naming his sons Edward and Francis, daughter Catherine, daughter Anne the wife of Samuel EYRE, Esq, brothers John, Edward, William and Francis, sisters Abigail TROTMAN and Grace RUSHTON, Benjamin BARTON, Esq, and cousin John PARGETER.<br />
Robert was of Clough, County Wicklow, Esq, when he was married by P.C.I. License dated 13 February 1662[-63?], to Mary WALSH of the City of Dublin, Spinster [BETHAM's Abstract], a daughter of Oliver WALSH of Ballykilcavan, Queen's County [See BURKE's "Landed Gentry"; and "History of the Irish Parliament," Volume VI, page 367]; they had issue:<br />
1. Edward STRATFORD, born on 28 January 1664, eldest son and heir; of Belan, County Kildare; he is said to have entertained King James at Belan, and then a week later his vanquisher King William, who slept in the same bed; Edward was married to Elizabeth BAISLEY, with issue:<br />
<i> a. Robert STRATFORD; settled in the Queen's County.</i><br />
<i> b. Eusebius STRATFORD; ditto.</i><br />
<i> c. John STRATFORD; M.P. for Baltinglass, during the reigns of George I, II and III; created Baron of Baltinglass, May 1763; Viscount Aldborough of Belan, 1776; Earl of Aldborough, 1777.</i><br />
2. Francis STRATFORD; a school-friend of Jonathan SWIFT of Kilkenny (later Dean of St Patrick's, Dublin); English Consul at Bordeaux, and at Madrid; "allied" to the Duke of Chandos, who was in partnership with his uncle Francis STRATFORD of Merevale Hall, a Merchant on Hamburg; Francis Junior died without issue.<br />
3. Grace STRATFORD; married to Samuel (or ? Benjamin) BURTON, of Burton Hall, County Carlow, Esq.<br />
4. Mary STRATFORD; married to Robert HICKMAN of County Clare, Esq.<br />
5. Elizabeth STRATFORD; married to Thomas (or ? Samuel) EYRE of Eyreville, County Galway.<br />
6. Abigail STRATFORD; married to George CANNING, of Garvagh, County Londonderry. See [A] below.<br />
7. Jane STRATFORD; married to John CARLETON of Darlingvale, County Tipperary, Esq.<br />
8. Anne STRATFORD; married to Robert PERSSE, of Roxborough, County Galway, Esq.<br />
9. Catherine STRATFORD; named in her sister Abigail's will, January 1738; she was married to John SPENCER of the City of Dublin, Esq.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em>CANNING FAMILY IN LONDONDERRY.</em></span><br />
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George CANNING, born about 1630; of Garvagh, County Londonderry, Esq; he was married to Mary STEPNEY; with issue:<br />
1. George CANNING. See [A] below.<br />
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[A] George CANNING, born in County Londonderry, about 1668, son and heir; admitted to the Middle Temple, London, 8 October 1689; of Coleraine, Co Derry; he died in 1711, of Garvagh, Londonderry, Junior; his will, dated 17 May 1710, was proved P.C.I. 19 February 1710[-11?], naming his sons Stratford and George, and daughter Mary; he was of Garvey (sic) in the parish of Prigal (?) in the county of Londonderry, Gent, when he was married at Baltinglass, County Wicklow, by P.C.I. License dated 19 April 1697, to Abigail STRATFORD of Baltinglas [BETHAM's Abstract]; she was married secondly to Major Thomas CUDMORE; he died in Dublin in 1731, intestate [Diocesan and Prerogative Wills and Administrations Index], and Administration of his Effects was granted on 20 January 1734 to his widow and relict Abigail, and again, on 2 May 1738 to his son Henry and his widow and relict Abigail (perhaps when his son Henry had come of age?) ; as Abigail CUDMORE, of the City of Dublin, Widow, she made an Indented Deed, dated 26 June 1734, by which she regularized a payment of £50 and an annuity of £150 (out of the jointure settled upon her by her late husband George CANNING) to his son Stratford CANNING, and issuing out of the lands of Ballymore, Bracknaboy, Coolcoskeran, Cah Farviemore and Garvagh, with the tythes of the Grange of Agivey, in County Londonderry; Abigail died in Dublin in 1738; her will, dated 27 January 1737-38, was proved P.C.I., 2 February 1737-38, naming her daughter Mary wife of George CANNING, her son-in-law Rev George TISDALL and her daughter Frances TISDALL his wife, her daughters Grace PHI[LI]PPS and Abigail the wife of Hugh DOHERTY, her grand-daughter Fanny DOHERTY, her sons Stratford CANNING and George CANNING, her daughter Letitia POULTER, her son Henry CUDMORE, and her sister Catherine SPENCER; they had issue:<br />
1. Stratford CANNING, born in 1703; admitted to the Middle Temple, London, 1 June 1722; his will dated 8 October 1773, proved P.C.I. 20 October 1775, naming his daughters Frances and Elizabeth, his second son Paul, his late son George, his grandsons George and Thomas the sons of George CANNING, his daughter Mary the wife of BARNARD, his grandson William BARNARD, his nephew John DOHERTY, and his son Stratford CANNING; Stratford Senior was married by License of the Diocese of Dublin, at St Mary's, Dublin, 26 June 1734, to Letitia NEWBURGH of Ballyhaise, County Cavan (daughter of Obadiah NEWBURGH and his wife Mary); she died in 1786; they had issue.<br />
2. George CANNING, born in 1705.<br />
3. Mary CANNING, born in 1707; her will or probate was dated 9 November 1775, a Spinster, of Dublin, naming her nephew Paul CANNING, her brother Stratford's three children Stratford, Frances and Elizabeth, her nephew George CANNING, Rev Joseph POULTER, her niece Abigail the wife of BRADISH, her sister Frances the wife of TISDALL, her nephew Rev Michael TISDALL, her niece Letitia the wife of BAYLEY, her sister Abigail the wife of Hugh DOHERTY and their children John, Frances KELL and Rose SMITH, and her half-brother Henry CUDMORE.<br />
4. Abigail CANNING, born in 1709.<br />
5. Frances CANNING; married in 1729, George TISDALL.<br />
6. Grace CANNING; married in 1726, Charles PHILLIPS.<br />
7. Letitia CANNING; of the parish of St John's, Dublin, when she was married, by License of the Prerogative Court of Ireland dated 8 August 1733, to Andrew POULTER. See below.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em>POULTER FAMILY IN KILKENNY.</em></span><span style="font-size: large;"><em> </em></span><br />
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William POULTER, of Dunkitt, County Kilkenny; Probate, 1672, Diocese of Ossory Wills Index; his will, dated 20 April 1672, named his eldest son William, his son John POULTER; his younger son Joseph POULTER, the three children of his son John (all aged under 16 years), Michael and Joseph BURROUGHS (poor children related to his <em>"... former wife"</em>), and his wife Sarah; he was married to Sarah, who survived him; issue:<br />
1. William POULTER, eldest son.<br />
2. John POULTER; married, with issue:<br />
<em> a. Elizabeth POULTER, born in or after 1657; aged under 16 in 1672, eldest daughter.</em><br />
<em> b. Luke POULTER.</em><br />
<em> c. William POULTER.</em><br />
3. Joseph POULTER.<br />
4. Sarah POULTER, born in or after 1657; aged under 16 in 1672.<br />
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William POULTER, of Dunkitt; Probate, 1703, Diocese of Ossory Wills Index, the will naming his wife Mary, his brother John POULTER, hs son-in-law James WILLIAMS, his cousin James BURROUGHS.<br />
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John POULTER, Senior, of Dunkitt, Gent; possibly the John POULTER of Dunkitt (unless instead the son) who made a Deed of Lease dated 13 September 1710, by which he demised his part of Dernamonsagh and Ballihomock in County Kilkenny, containing 260 acres, to Roger DEYOS of Melleville, in the parish of Dunkitt, for 51 years at an annual rent of <em>£</em>30 stg. [Memorial 29998, Book 47, Page 165]; Probate, 1711, Diocese of Ossory Wills Index, his will, dated 9 September 1710, naming his elder son William, his son John, his grandson William POULTER the eldest son of his son John, his younger grandson John POULTER the second son of his son John, his daughter Elizabeth the wife of Thomas ANNALY, his daughter Mary the wife of John HOSKINS, his daughter Anne the wife of Samuel TAYLOR ; he was the father of:<br />
1. William POULTER; eldest son; died before 1743; married with issue:<br />
<em> a. William POULTER, eldest son; Cabinet Maker, of Carlow, County Carlow, 1743, when he made Deeds of Lease and Release, dated respectively 3 and 4 February 1743 together with his wife Catherine, concerning his late grandfather's lands in Dunkitt, County Kilkenny [Memorial 78369, Book 114, Page 143].</em><br />
2. John POULTER; second son; living at Dunkitt, 1743; issue:<br />
<em> a. William POULTER.</em><br />
<em> b. John POULTER.</em><br />
3. Elizabeth POULTER; married before 1710 to Thomas ANNALY; both named in her father's will, 1710; as Elizabeth ANNERLY, Widow, September 1719, when named in a Deed made by Mary GREEN otherwise POULTER, and a potential bequest of <em>£</em>5 within four years after Mary's death.<br />
4. Mary POULTER; married before 1710 to John HOSKINS; both named in her father's will, 1710.<br />
5. Anne POULTER; married before 1710 to Samuel TAYLOR; both named in her father's will, 1710; as Mrs Ann TAYLOR, September 1719, when named in a Deed made by Mary GREEN otherwise POULTER, and a potential bequest of £5 within four years after Mary's death.<br />
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There were several others who may have been of the above family, but as they were neither named in John Senior's will, it appears more likely that they were either nephews or cousins:<br />
a. Joseph POULTER; living in September 1719, of Dunkitt, when named in a Deed made by Mary GREEN otherwise POULTER, and a potential bequest of £10 within four years after Mary's death. Unless instead the uncle.<br />
b. Andrew POULTER; living in September 1719, when named in a Deed made by Mary GREEN otherwise POULTER, and a potential bequest of £5 within four years after Mary's death. Inevitably the Andrew POULTER who married Letitia CANNING. See below.<br />
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Mary POULTER, probably born in or before 1700; she was married to John GREEN, of Dunkitt, County Kilkenny; they made Deeds of Lease and Release dated respectively 10 and 11 September 1719, by which John GREEN of Dunkitt and his wife Mary GREEN otherwise POULTER, demised unto John BISHOP of Gailekill, County Kilkenny, Esq, and William DOBBIN of Balleynekill, County Waterford, Esq, of the second part, and to Roger DEYOS of Mellvill, County Killkenny, Esq, of the third part, <em>"... all that and those the Mills and Millraces of Dunkitt, and that part and parcel of Dunkitt aforesaid containing by common estimation 70 acres of land, to the use and behoof of... the said John GREEN and Mary his wife during their natural lives, and after the decease of the said Mary to the use and behoof of John GREEN during his natural life, the remainder to the use of the heirs male of the said John GREEN and the body of the said Mary lawfully begotten, and in default of such issue and behoof of the said John GREEN his heirs and assigns for ever, In which said deed of release the said premises are limited to the said Roger DEYOS his ex'ors adm'rs for the term of 21 years after the death of the said Mary's interest, to raise out of the Issues and Profits thereof the several sums hereafter named to be paid to the Persons hereafter named in four years after the death of the said Mary, that is to say - £10 to Joseph POULTER of Dunkitt; £10 to Elizab'th RIPPENHAM; £10 to Susana LIST (?); £5 to Richard FRANCIS and £5 to his sister Lydia FRANCIS; </em><em>£</em><em>5 to the widow Elizabeth ANNERLY; £5 to Mrs Ann TAYLOR; £30 to Mrs Mary FRANCIS daughter of Mr James FRANCIS; 30s to Joan KELLY; and £5 to Mr Andrew POULTER. Which said Deeds were perfected at the City of Waterford by said John GREEN and Mary his wife, in the presence of Lydia BLAINE the wife of John BLAINE of the said City, Mariner, Joseph COOKE, and Dan'l TAYLOR of the said City, Gent..."</em> [Memorial 18258, Book 29, pages 449-450 (film image 27)].<br />
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John POULTER, of Dunkitt, in the county of Kilkenny, Gent, made Deeds of Lease and Release dated respectively 17 and 18 February 1725, by which <em>"... for and in consideration of the sum of £80 ster'g, did grant, release, enfeoff and confirm unto the said Roger DEYOS (of Mellevill, county Kilkenny, Esq) his heirs and assigns, all that and those the Town and lands of Dunkitt containing by common estimation about 63 acres Plantation Measure be the same more or less, situate lying and being in the Barony of Idia and county of Kilkenny</em>" [Memorial 32749, Book 51, Page 48].<br />
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William POULTER, of Botesdale, County Suffolk in Great Britain, made an Irish Deed of Conveyance by way of Lease and Release dated respectively 29 and 30 November 1725, by which he did <em>"... give, grant and conform unto the said Alexander BOYD (of the City of Waterford), all that and those the Town and Lands of Derrynemonsagh and Bullyhomack, containing 260 acres Plantation Measure be the same more or less, all as enjoyed by Roger DEYES, Esqr, and also all that and those the Town and Lands of Dunkitt then possessed by John POULTER, containing 63 acres Plantation Measure be the same more or less, situate lying and being in the Barony of Ida, parish of Dunkitt and county of Kilkenny, together with the Houses, Tenements..."</em> [Memorial 30392, Book 44, Page 539].<br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">There was a POULTER family associated with the parish church of St Mary in Redgrave-cum-Botesdale, County Suffolk, about that time, the head of which may well have been the above William</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> POULTER; he was married at Redgrave, Suffolk, 20 April 1793, to Hannah LINCOLNE; they had issue, including:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Mary POULTER; buried at St Mary's, Redgrave cum Botesdale, 11 January 1713.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Ann POULTER, baptized at Redgrave, 28 December 1712; probably died young.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Mary POULTER, baptized at Redgrave, 11 April 1714; probably died young.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. William POULTER, baptized at Redgrave, 13 November 1715. Possibly buried at St Mary's, Redgrave cum Botesdale, 3 January 1729 (unless instead the father?).</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. John POULTER, baptized at Redgrave, 1 July 1721, perhaps a twin.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. Sarah POULTER, baptized at Redgrave, 1 July 1721, perhaps the other twin.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. Mary POULTER, baptized at Redgrave, 21 June 1724.</span><br />
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Mrs Jane POULTER, Widow, of Dunkitt; Probate 1758, Diocese of Ossory Wills Index; her will, dated 26 May 1758, named her daughter Jane DENN otherwise POULTER and her son-in-law Warren DENN (the sole executor). I have not yet found any information which identifies her husband.</div>
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Andrew POULTER, probably born in or before 1722, and perhaps the Mr Andrew POULTER named in John and Mary GREEN's 1719 Deed (but if so, probably then quite young); described as "Jurisperitus" in his son Joseph's T.C.D. Admission Registration; of Dunkitt, County Kilkenny, Esq, when he made a Deed of Lease and Release, dated 20 and 21 May 1745, citing the marriage portion of £700 he received when he married his late wife Letitia POULTER otherwise CANNING, and wishing to make a provision and settle his estate upon the children he had by her, he made a grant to his brother-in-law Stratford CANNING of <em>"... all that and every the Towns, Villages, Hamlets, place and parcels of Lands, Tenements, Hereditaments hereinafter mentioned, that is to say the Town and parcel of Land commonly known by the name of Annaburrow, the parcel of land commonly known by the name of Park Reilly, and Bibby's Land, and the Lands of Dunkitt, with their appurtenances"</em> [Memorial 81285, Book 116, Page 428]; Andrew is said to have died at Dunkitt, 14 May 1762, and was buried in Dunkitt Churchyard, County Kilkenny, where tombstone No. 4 recorded -<i>"Beneath this stone lies what was mortal of Andrew POULTER of Dunkit, Esq., and of Letitia his wife, of Stratford son of the above Andrew and Letitia"</i> [Journal of the Association for the Preservation of the Memorials of the Dead in Ireland, Volume 4, 1898-1900, pages 82-84]; however, The Gentleman's and London Magazine recorded the <i>"List of Deaths for the year 1761... At Dunkit, in the co. Kilkenny, Andrew POULTER, Esq,"</i> and Administration was <i>"... granted the 9th day of January 1762 to the Reverend Joseph POULTER of Deanborough in the County of Kilkenny, Clerk, Son and Heir of Andrew POULTER late of Dunkitt in the same county Esq're of the Goods (and chattels) of said Andrew. Inventory to be returned the tenth Day of June next and an Account when required."</i><br />
Andrew was of the parish of St John's, Dublin, Gent, when married, by License of the Prerogative Court of Ireland dated 8 August 1733, to Letitia CANNING of the same parish, Spinster (daughter of George CANNING and Abigail STRATFORD); with probable issue:</div>
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1. Stratford POULTER.<br />
2. Joseph POULTER, born in County Kilkenny, about 1738; admitted Pensioner, Trinity College Dublin, 21 April 1757, aged 18 (Rev Mr JESSOP, Waterford), Scholar, 1759, B.A. Aestimus 1761; Clerk in Holy Orders, Ordained Deacon 16 August 1761, and Priest 4 October 1761 at Cork; Curate of St Anne, Shandon, 1761-62 (Diocese of Cork and Ross); Curate of Aghamacourt, 1762 (Diocese of Ossory); of Deanborough in the County of Kilkenny, Clerk, January 1762, when he obtained Administration of his late father's effects; Curate of Inchicologhan (or Castleinch), 1766 (Diocese of Ossory); of Dunkitt, 1775; he died in January 1789; <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">"Joseph POULTER, Rev'd, of Dunkitt, County Kilkenny, Clerk, will dated 28 May 1788, proved 3 April 1789 - s</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">on Joseph; eldest daughter Elizabeth married to William ROBERTS of Cork, Esq; daughters Abigail, Letitia and Sarah; wife Margaret</span><span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "helvetica" , "arial" , sans-serif; font-size: 16px;">" </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">[BETHAM's Abstract];</span><br />
Will of Rev Joseph POULTER:<br />
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<i>"In the name of God Amen I the Rev'd Joseph POULTER of Dunkitt in the County of Kilkenny, Clerk, being in perfect health but sensible of the uncertainty of human life do make this my last Will and Testament. Imprimis - I leave and bequeath to my son Joseph all my free simple estate of Dunkitt particularly Bibbys land as also my freehold estate of Dunkitt and Farnoge, purchased from ACHESON, subject to all such debts as affect the same, and subject also to the fortunes of younger children, in manner following. Whereas by a deed bearing date the 25th day of July 1775 or thereabouts, the sum of three thousand pounds, and settled on the issue of my first marriage, and whereas Wm ROBERTS of the City of Cork Esq'r did receive the sum of £1000 as and for the marriage portion of Elizabeth his wife my eldest daughter. Now the rest and residue of the about 3000 L I leave and bequeath in manner following, to my daughter Abigail I leave and bequeath the sum of £800, to my daughter Letitia I leave and bequeath the sum of £700, and to my daughter Sarah I leave and bequeath the sum of £500, together with interest at the rate of five p.cent until the above respective sums are paid off, and whereas by the above mentioned deed of settlement I have a power of leaving an additional sum of £1000 either to the issue of my first or second marriage, Now I leave and bequeath that additional sum of £1000 to the female issue of my second marriage provided my son Joseph arrives to the age of twenty one years. I likewise leave and bequeath to the female issue of my second marriage the like sum of £1000 chargeable on my estate making in the whole the sum of £2000 in such shares as their guardian shall think proper; and if my son Joseph shall not arrive to the age of 21 years my will is that the above sum of £1000 which I have a discretionary power over shall revert and go to the issue of my first marriage (or their heirs) share and share alike. Item - I leave and bequeath to my dearly beloved wife Margaret an interest in the town and lands of Ballinangary during her natural life, and after her decease to my oldest daughter Elisabeth and her heirs for ever.</i></div>
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<i>Item - I leave and bequeath to the Rev Archdeacon HENRY an interest in the Rectorial Tythes of Kilcullshen until such time as the sum of £50 is discharged, which he was so good to be my security for. Item - I leave and bequeath to my wife Margaret all my other leasehold interests and personal fortunate (after paying my just debts and defraying funeral expenses) to be disposed of in whatever manner she shall think proper. I likewise appoint her sole guardian to her children. Lastly, I nominate and appoint Wm ROBERTS of the City of Cork, Wm DENIS of Salsborough, and Humphry JONES of Mullinsbro, Esqr's, Executors of this my last Will and Testament, hereby revoking and annulling all other wills heretofore at any time made by me. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 28th day of May in the year of our Lord God one thousand seven hundred and eighty eight.</i></div>
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<i><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">" </span>Joseph POULTER (seal)</i></div>
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<i>"Signed sealed published and declared as and for the last Will and Testament of the Revd Joseph POULTER in presence of us who in his presence of each other have hereunto subscribed our names James BARRON, Walter BARRON." </i>[John Joseph GREENE's notes, familysearch.org]<br />
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Joseph was married firstly, by License dated 28 May 1763, to Elizabeth GEALE of Ballycallan, Spinster (only known daughter of John GEALE and Elizabeth EVANS, who had other issue, including sons Joseph GEALE who married Ann LOWCAY of Rosetown, Henry GEALE who married Jane EVANS, Benjamin GEALE who married Ann FALKINER, and Ebenezer GEALE who married Elizabeth PLEASANT); she was named in the will of her brother Ebenezer GEALE, late of the City of Dublin, Merchant, dated 24 December 1794, and proved P.C.I. on 9 September 1795, as the mother of his nieces Elizabeth ROBERTS, Abby POULTER and Letitia POULTER; Elizabeth died in 1773, and was buried at Dunkitt Churchyard; they had issue:</div>
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<i> a. Elizabeth POULTER; named in her father's will, 1788; named in her uncle Ebenezer GEALE's will, 1794; she died on 29 January 1811; she was married on 26 January 1789 to William ROBERTS (born in 1760, son of Michael ROBERTS and Mary SPIERS); he died on 26 December 1826, and was buried at Tracton Abbey, County Cork.</i></div>
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<i> b. Abigail POULTER; named in her father's will, 1788; named in her uncle Ebenezer GEALE's will, 1794; she was married at St Nicholas church, in July 1806, to Joseph WHITE.</i></div>
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<i> c. Letitia POULTER, baptized at Dunkitt, 30 October 1767; named in her father's will, 1788; named in her uncle Ebenezer GEALE's will, 1794; she died 17 December 1833, and was buried at Tracton Abbey.</i></div>
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<i> d. Sarah POULTER; named in her father's will, 1788; she was married to Thomas LEARY. See below.</i></div>
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<i> e. Ann POULTER, baptized at Dunkitt, September 1772.</i><br />
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Joseph was married secondly, by License dated 14 July 1775, to Margaret DENNIS of Mullinaborough in the Union of Dunkitt (born about 1752, daughter of Rev William DENNIS, D.D.); she died on 1 April 1825, and was buried at Dunkitt churchyard; the will of Margaret POULTER, 1825, Prerogative Court [John Joseph GREENE's notes, familysearch]:<br />
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">"Wishing to settle all worldly matters while able and trusting in my gracious redeemer that I may act right to enable me in my last hours to die in peace thro' his atoning blood I leave and bequeath to Letitia POULTER my step daughter five hundred pounds sterl for her natural life and after her death to Mich'l ROBERTS Esq'r three hundred pounds of the above sum the other two hundred pounds sterling to his four sisters Mrs CROKER, Mrs FRIEND, Mary ROBERTS and Mrs. WILLIAMSON fifty pounds each for a remembrance, making in all the sum of the above five hundred pounds sterling. I leave to Mary Ann BUDD my grandchild seven hundred pounds sterl, to Letitia BUDD seven hundred pounds sterling, to Ellen six hundred pounds sterling, to Eliza and POULTER five hundred pounds sterling divided between them two hundred and fifty each making a [ ], to be left at interest till they come of age or married by the consent of my trustees. I leave Doc'r MACKESY three hundred pounds for his conduct to me, and have every certainty of his conduct to my dear Mary['s?] children by educated them and putting them to what business they are most fit for, as idleness is the root of all evil in youth. I leave Sally LEARY['s] three sons fifty pounds each, and ten pounds to Sally herself; in case any of the boys die, to go to the surviving; also [if] any of the BUDDs should die, to go share and share alike to the surviving.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">" </span>Marg't POULTER. June 10th 1824</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">"I leave twenty guineas to Willm LUMBLEY should he be living with me at my decease and mourning to all my servants and year wages. I wish to have the vault at Dunkitt walled in and secured as no other person is to be interred after me, and leave some poor women two guineas yearly to keep it clean. I leave ten pounds to the poor people immediately about Mr POULTER's property.<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"> </span></span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">" </span>Margaret POULTER</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">"I leave Doc'r Lewis MACKESY and Mich'l ROBERTS Esqr Cork, son to Miss POULTER, trustees to this my will as I have their consent.<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"> </span></span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">" </span>Marg't POULTER.<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"> </span>June 1824</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">"</span>I leave fifty pounds sterl to the Revd Mr. PRICE to distribute in charity as he ???</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">" </span>Marg't POULTER.<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"> </span>June 26 1824</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">"Seeing the uncertainty of human life, make this my last will and testament, trusting in my savior for a happy change thru his merits out of this state of darkness and distress. I request this poor body of clay to be kept as long here as safety to the living, and to be interred at the Dunkitt vault, and it will be full and none of the family to enter. As Miss POULTER wishes to be interred in Cork, my wish will be to have a wall built round it for security year, to keep it safe and clear. From the conduct of Godfrey GREENE Esqr to his unfortunate children, not allowing me his two elder children who I have solicited better now than six years to take and educate, and having received so unkind and shocking a letter on Sunday last, that I now do declare most absolutely to cut them off and dispossess them of any thing I shall die worth. The very name of GREENE I renounce, and was it the Almighty's will to take every one of them before they knew so much vice. It would make me completely happy, but the Lords ways are past finding out and must be right. Godfrey GREENE and his wife I leave one shilling, never anymore.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">" by Mrs Margaret POULTER</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">"The first part of this will is my decided wish and melancholy to think that parents should injure their children who they ought to protect and thankful to God and left them with one who was anxious to educate them</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">" </span>Marg't POULTER.<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"> </span>June 1824</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">"In case my unfortunate grand son Joseph Poulter GREENE never joined his father Godfrey GREENE in any deed when he came of age and then was his own Master, I leave in trust with them provided he leaves his father's home my bridge debentures to put him into any situation they may approve for him to earn his bread just and honestly </span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">" </span>Marg't POULTER.<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"> </span>July 1824</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">"Should there be any assists over after paying my funeral expense building either wall or iron railing to my vault at Dunkitt and giving my servants what I left them I leave to my trustees to distribute as they think proper should Sally Leary want any matter they could spare I dare say the would consider her.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">" </span>Marg't POULTER. This February 1825 I have written this.</span></i>"</div>
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Joseph had further issue by Margaret:</div>
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<i> f. Mary POULTER, born 11 June 1776; she died on 18 October 1818, and was buried at Dunkitt churchyard, with the following M.I. - "Sacred to the Memory of Mary wife of Thomas Lewis MACKESY, M.D., and daughter of the Rev Joseph POULTER, who died 18 October, 1818. Her remains lie in the adjacent vault"</i><i> [Journal of the Association for the Preservation of the Memorials of the Dead in Ireland, Volume 4, 1898-1900, pages 82-84];</i><i> she was married on 1 May 1813, to Thomas Lewis MACKESY (born in 1790, son of William MACKESY and Charlotte LEWIS); M.D.; he died on 8 April 1869, and was buried at Dunkitt churchyard; he married secondly, on 2 March 1822, to Charlotte VINCENT, and thirdly, on 3 May 1844, to Helena MADDEN (born about 1800; died in August 1870).</i></div>
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<i> g. Margaret POULTER, born on 9 January 1778; she died on 13 February 1848, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery; she was married at St Olave's, Waterford, 13 February 1806, to Godfrey GREENE (born 1776); he died on 4 May 1859.</i></div>
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<i> h. Ann POULTER, born on 12 November 1781; she died on 6 October 1817, </i><i>and was buried at Dunkitt</i><i> </i><i>with the following M.I. "Here lieth the remains of Mary Anne BUDD, wife of Tobias BUDD of Dunkitt, Esq. who departed this life October 6th 1817 aged 35 years" [Journal of the Association for the Preservation of the Memorials of the Dead in Ireland, Volume 4, 1898-1900, pages 82-84]</i><i>; she was married at Waterford, 11 December 1802, by settlements dated 17 December, to Tobias BUDD</i><i>, of Blossom Hill, Kilkenny</i><i> (born about 1775, son of Benjamin and Hannah BUDD); he died in 1825</i><i>.</i></div>
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<i> j. Joseph POULTER, born about 1783; he died on 8 December 1800, and was buried at Dunkitt.</i></div>
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<i> k. Joseph (?) Stratford POULTER, born in 1785; he died on 7 April 1786, buried ditto. Query whether these last two may have had their burial details reversed?</i></div>
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3. Mary POULTER; married at Shandon Church, 18 or 19 June 1763, James CARPENTER, Hardware Merchant [<span style="font-family: "times";">Cork Evening Post, Monday 20 June 1763].</span></div>
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4. Abigail POULTER; she die<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">d in 1786; she was <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">married on 25 May 1765, as his first wife, to <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">William BRADISH (born 19 Sep 1733); he died on 5 Aug 1811, having made his will on 27 May 1807, leaving his property to his present wife Rebecca and their two daughters, with a bequest to his eldest daughter Letitia<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; Abigail and William had issue:</span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><em> a. Joseph BRADISH, born in Kilkenny, 1767, the eldest son; living in 1814 (a Plaintiff); he may have died in Liverpool in July 1832; his will was probably proved in 1834, Diocese of Ossory; he was married, by M.L.B. of the Diocese of Cashel dated 21 November 1791, to Anne CHADWICK; with issue.</em></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> b. Wheaton BRADISH, second son; an adult; died v.p., unmarried and s.p.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> c. James BRADISH, born about 1773, the third son; died v.p., married, leaving issue; said to have died in the U.S. in 1799.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> d. Stratford BRADISH, fourth son; an adult; died v.p., unmarried and s.p.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> e. Andrew BRADISH, fifth son; living in 1814 (a Plaintiff); said to have died in Canada in 1817.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"> <em> f. Letitia BRADISH; married before 1811, Samuel SMITH; he was living in 1814 (a Plaintiff).</em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";">William married secondly, in<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> 1791, Rebecca CARTWRIGHT (she was living in 1814, when named as a joint Defendant in a Chancery Court Action brought on by her three surviving step-children); he </span>had further issue by Rebecca:</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> g. Elizabeth BRADISH; living in 1814 (a Defendant).</em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times";"><em> h. Mary BRADISH; living in 1814 (a Defendant)</em>.</span></div>
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5. William POULTER.<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><em>LEARY FAMILY IN WATERFORD AND WEXFORD.</em></span><span style="font-size: large;"><em> </em></span><br />
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Thomas LEARY; of Waterford, Ireland; Merchant's Clerk, 1805; he died<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> <i>"Yesterday morning, in King-street, after a short illness, Mr. Thomas Leary, for many years a merchant in this city"</i> [Waterford Mail, 28 April 1838].</span></span></span></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Thomas was married at St Patrick's, Waterford, 29 September 1805, by License of the Diocese of Waterford and Lismore dated 21 September, to Sarah POULTER, Spinster, of St Peter’s Parish in the City of Waterford; <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #222222; display: inline; float: none; font-family: "arial" , sans-serif; font-style: normal; font-weight: 400; letter-spacing: normal; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; word-spacing: 0px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">she was named Sarah in her father's will, 1789 will; she was named in the 1824 will of her step-mother Margaret (DENNIS) POULTER - <em>"... I leave Sally LEARY's three sons fifty pounds each and ten pounds to Sally herself, in case any of the boys die to go to the surviving"</em></span></span><span style="font-family: "times";">; Sarah died <em>"On the morning of the 6th ult., in King-street, Sarah, wife of Mr. Thomas Leary, and daughter of the late Rev. Joseph Poulter, of Dunkit, Clerke. She was an affectionate wife, a tender mother, and a friend to the poor. She departed this life on the dependence of the mercy of God, through Jesus Christ, for salvation</em>" [Waterford Mail, Wednesday, February 7, 1838].</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></div>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
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<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";">Thomas and Sarah had issue, including:</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";">1. Isaac LEARY. See [D] below.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";">2. Joseph Poulter LEARY; died in 1842.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";">____________________________________________________________________________</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><br /></span></span></span></span></span></span></span>
<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><br /></span></span></span></span></span></span></span>
<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times"; font-size: large;"><i>ISAAC LEARY OF WEXFORD, N.S.W. AND NEW ZEALAND.</i></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></div>
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<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"></span><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">[D] Isaac LEARY, born in the City of Waterford, 24 August 1811; in December 1832, under the heading "CHEAP," he opened a <i>"Printing <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">and Book-binding Establishment, Nearly opposite Mr HUGHES, Wine Merchant, Main Street, Wexford"</span></i> [<span style="font-family: "times";">Wexford Constitution, 15 December]; in July 1839, as <em>"... Bookseller, Stationer, Printer and Bookbinder, opposite Mr WICKHAM's Brewery, Main Street,"</em> he announced that he had <em>"... this day opened a new Circulating Library..."</em> [Wexford Independent, 6 July].</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><br /></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Isaac and his wife PHOEBE, with the young family, and his PIDGEON in-laws, sailed from Liverpool on the ship Orestes, bound for N.S.W.; they arrived in Sydney on 14 May 1841, <em>"... late yesterday evening, with 280 emigrants, under the superintendence of Mr. J. B. PETER, surgeon. 16 deaths and 5 births have occurred during the voyage"</em> [Sydney Gazette, Saturday, May 15, 1841]; the passenger indent recorded Isaac as aged 30, Printer, a Protestant, born Wexford Town, County Wexford (his parents Thomas and Sarah LEARY), with Phoebe aged 30, Milliner, born Wexford (her mother's name recorded as Elizabeth PIDGEON), daughter Sarah, aged 4, born Wexford, and son Joseph, infant, born on the voyage out.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
Isaac settled originally in Sydney; <i style="font-family: Times, "Times New Roman", serif; font-size: 16px;">"General Book-binding and Account Book Manufactory, Brougham Place, next door but one to Mr GREEN's. ISAAC LEARY takes leave to announce to the Gentry and the Public that he will commence the above business, in its various branches, of Plain and Ornamental Binding, in Morocco, Calf, Roan, Vellum and Sheep, etc, etc, at his present residence, on Wednesday 1st of September next; Where he shall be happy to receive any orders he may be favoured with; and for durability, elegance of finish, and moderation in charge, he trusts to be surpassed by none. Orders from the Country punctually attended to. Sydney, 23 August 1841</i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">" [Temperance Advocate (Sydney), 20 October 1841]; h</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">e was named in a "List of Unclaimed Letters for the month of October 1841" as </span><i style="font-family: Times, "Times New Roman", serif; font-size: 16px;">"... Isaac LEARY, ... newspaper office"</i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;"> [Australasian Chronicle (Sydney), 11 November 1841]; h</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 16px;">e was named in a long list of members of Mr SMIDMORE's [election] Committee, for Brisbane Ward [The Guardian (Sydney), 5 October 1844].</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"WOLLOMBI</i></span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>... Our Post Office. - The management of this department has just changed hands, Mr M. BYRNE, our townsman, having succeeded as postmaster Mr Isaac LEARY, who had held that situation for years past, during which time his uniform civility and rectitude of conduct, both in office and as a neighbor, gained him the esteem of our community, who regret his departure form hence to Sydney, where we believe he intends to fix his residence."</i> [</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Maitland Mercury and Hunter River General Advertiser, Wednesday 3 July 1850].</span></div>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><br /></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Isaac first arrived in Auckland about 1863; he did not remain for the duration, but he did settle in Palmerston North about 1873; he was appointed to Western Rangeitiki, by Wellington Education Board, January 1875 [Wanganui Chronicle, 12 January].</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><br /></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span>Isaac died at his residence, Palmerston North, N.Z., 5 December 1879, aged 68 years [Manawatu Times, 10 December]; <span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-size: 16px;">the Manawatu Times of 10 December 1879 carried this obituary:</span></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"IN MEMORIAM.</i></span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"On Friday night there died at his residence in this town, Mr Isaac LEARY, at the ripe old age of 69 years, one who had well played his part in the past as a colonist, a husband and a father, and whose death is well worthy of more than a passing notice.</i></span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"Mr LEARY was born in the City of Waterford on 24 August 1811 - four years before that decisive victory which gave peace to Europe and a life long captivity to Napoleon (sic).</i></span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"His grandfather on his mother's side was the Rev Joseph POULTER, Rector of Dunkit (sic) in the County of Kilkenny, and as his father, who was a flour merchant in Waterford, belonged to the Society of Friends, the marriage was a cause of a rupture between the rector and his daughter.</i></span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"While quite a young man, Mr LEARY settled in Wexford, where he opened a book seller's shop, and married the wife who survived him. In the year 1841, just 38 years ago, with his young family, he sailed from Liverpool on the Orestes, and after a most perilous voyage of five months, arrived in Sydney in May of the same year.</i></span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"On his arrival he entered into business as a book seller, but not being successful, he took to teaching, keeping a school at Camden, and in the country north of Maitland, after which he purchased a farm within a few miles of Sydney, and settled down to agricultural life, but was induced to relinquish it to take charge of the British and Foreign Bible Society's Depot.</i></span></div>
<div style="font-size: 16px;">
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"While resident in that city, Mr LEARY in conjunction with his brother-in-law, the Rev Mr PIDGEON, City Missionary, was a most earnest worker in the service of religion, preaching regularly, for years, and ably assisting in the good work of reclaiming the fallen and strengthening the wavering.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"After he had severed his connection with that institution, he was appointed to the management of a branch establishment in Geelong of the publishing house of Moorauld (?) Creighan, of Sydney, where he was at the outbreak of the Mount Alexander diggings...[I skipped a few bits here]... tried his fortune... moderately successful... not suited to his retired habits... turned his back on the diggings.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i>"Fifteen years ago he arrived in Auckland, and although he had not been all that time in this colony, for the past five years he has been resident in Palmerston..."</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Isaac LEARY, Bookseller, was married in June 1835, <em>"... At Rathaspeck Church, County Wexford... to Miss PIDGEON</em>" [Waterford Mail, 1 July 1835], otherwise Pheobe PIDGEON, she was born in Wexford about 1811, daughter of Richard PIDGEON and Elizabeth FOLEY, and sister of Rev Nathaniel PIDGEON (1803-1879), Elizabeth PIDGEON (1809-1861) the wife of Thomas MULLEN, and Ann PIDGEON (1815-1856) the wife of William BRADLEY; Phoebe died at her residence, Church Street, Palmerston North, N.Z., 1 December 1883, aged 72 years.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><br /></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Isaac and Phoebe had issue:</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">1. Sarah LEARY; born at Main Street, Wexford, 2 July 1836; aged 4 on arrival in N.S.W., 1841; she died at Pitt Street, Sydney, 19 January 1864.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">2. Thomas LEARY, born at Main Street, Wexford, 28 April 1838; died at sea, February 1841, on the voyage out to N.S.W.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">3. Richard LEARY, born at Main Street, Wexford, 3 November 1839; died at sea, February 1841, on the voyage to N.S.W.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">4. Joseph Poulter LEARY, born on the Indian Ocean, 2 May 1841, during the voyage to N.S.W., and baptised in Sydney, 1841 #90; he learnt the printing trade in Sydney, and went to Auckland in 1863 where he worked for the New Zealand Herald; he joined the Government Printing Office in 1864; he was co-founder of the Rangitikei Advocate in 1874, and later also the Manawatu Times, which he took over when the partnership was dissolved, and sold that newspaper in 1880; he died in N.Z., 27 October 1921, aged 82 years; he was married at Ohariu Valley, near Wellington, 6 October 1868, to Mary AUSTIN, youngest daughter of Charles AUSTIN, Esq, by his wife Margaret Boucher MOODY (Margaret died at Johnsonville, 12 Aug 1881, aged 73); Mary died at her residence, the Square, Palmerston North, 1 June 1884, aged 35 years; they had issue:</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><i> a. Phoebe LEARY, born in N.Z., 1869 #19642; died on 14 April 1893.</i></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Joseph was married secondly, in N.Z., 1886 #421, to Mary Elizabeth CARTY.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">5. Isaac LEARY, born in Sydney, 7 August 1843, and was baptised in N.S.W., 1843 #869; died an infant.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">6. Isaac Thomas LEARY, born at Hill End, near Bathurst, 28 October 1844, and was baptised in N.S.W., 1844 #247; he died at his parents residence, Botany Road, Redfern, 22 October 1873.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">7. Richard LEARY, born at Wollombi, Maitland parish, 13 December 1846, and was baptised in N.S.W., 1846 #1146; he went to New Zealand; Chemist, with premises in the Square, Palmerston North; he died at Palmerston North, 27 December 1901; he was married in N.Z., 1887 #1999, to Florence Lucy GEISEN (born in 1869, daughter of Edward GIESEN and Margaret AUSTIN) - Florence was a niece of Mary AUSTIN (the wife of Richard's older brother Joseph Poulter LEARY); Richard and Florence had issue:</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><i> a. Richard Frank LEARY, born in N.Z., 1888; died 27 December 1891, aged 3 years.</i></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><i> b. Leonard Poulter LEARY, born in Palmerston North, 24 March, 1891; 5th Wellington Regiment, N.Z.E.F., August 1914, and served in Samoa; he transferred to the Royal Field artillery, 1915, and served in England, Egypt and France; M.C.; twice wounded, the second time in November 1917, and was "invalided" to the Instructional Staff of No 2 Cadet School, R.F.A., at Topsham Barracks, Exeter; he returned to N.Z. in 1919; called to Bar, 1920; LL.B., 1939; he ceased practice in 1940 to re-enlist, but was deemed too old for overseas service; he joined the Territorial Force, and was O.C. of the 1st Field Regiment, N.Z. Artillery, from October 1943; he died at Lake Rotoiti, 11 April 1990; he was married firstly, in Exeter Cathedral, Devon, 2 April 1918, to Margaret Mason ROBERTSON, younger daughter of George ROBERTSON of Emberton, Northumberland; she returned to England, and they were divorced in 1933; they had issue a daughter; Leonard was married secondly in Auckland, 1934, to Dorothy Lovelace MILNE; by her he had further issue three sons and one daughter.</i></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><i> c. Ernest Richard LEARY, born in N.Z., 1895; died in N.Z., 1918.</i></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><i> d. Eric Sydney LEARY, born in 1898; died on 13 February 1902, aged 3 years.</i></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; white-space: pre-wrap;"><i>Florence was married secondly, in Dunedin, 3 March 1910, to Dominic Horewood Lascelles CORRIGAN; she was at Sea View, Remuera, 1918; she went to Kenya in August 1941 to visit her daughter; she was murdered at Taita Hills, Kenya, in early August 1941, by her son-in-law, Vladimir Vasil VERBI; Florence had further issue - a daughter Lascelles Leary CORRIGAN, born N.Z., 1911, who married VERBI in 1939, and died in 2009, leaving issue.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">8. Eliza Ann LEARY, born at Wollembi, 29 August 1848, and baptised in N.S.W., 1848 #1148; she died at York Street, Sydney, 6 November 1850.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;">9. (unknown) LEARY, born and died at Glebe, about September 1850.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times";"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><br /></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span>
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A biography published on wikipedia.org:<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span></div>
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<i>"Leonard Poulter LEARY was born at Palmerston North on 24 March 1891 into a comfortable, middle-class, Methodist family. He was the second of four sons of Florence Lucy GIESEN and her husband, Richard LEARY, a chemist with a shop on The Square. The family lived behind and above the shop. From an early age his parents were ambitious for Leonard; his mother saw that he was taught to play the piano and his father encouraged a love of books. His happy childhood was suddenly interrupted by Richard LEARY’s death when he was 10, and the death of his youngest brother two months later.</i></div>
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<i><span style="white-space: pre;">"</span>Leonard attended College Street and Terrace End schools in Palmerston North, Prince Albert College as a boarder in Auckland, and Palmerston North High School. When his mother was advised that her sons should go to Wellington College, where they ‘would meet many of the boys who would be prominent later on’, they were dispatched to Wellington. Leary later studied law and discovered drama at Victoria College. He had a vigorous, outgoing personality and an ‘irrepressible wit’, and he formed enduring friendships during his university years.</i></div>
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<i><span style="white-space: pre;">"</span>His legal studies were cut short by the First World War, which he thoroughly enjoyed. He led a procession of Victoria students to the recruiting office as soon as war was declared. He served from August 1914 in the 5th (Wellington) Regiment in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force (Samoa), and from 1915 with the Royal Field Artillery, British Army, in England, Egypt and France. He was awarded the Military Cross, wrote a ‘Boys’ Own’-style memoir of the Samoa campaign called New Zealanders in Samoa (1918), and returned to New Zealand in 1919.</i></div>
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<i><span style="white-space: pre;">"</span>LEARY resumed his legal studies at Auckland University College, where he was admitted to the Bar in 1920 (he graduated LLB in 1939). A wartime marriage on 2 April 1918 at Exeter to an English nurse, Margaret Mason ROBERTSON, ended when she returned to England. They were divorced in August 1933; there was one daughter of the marriage. On 25 January 1934, at Auckland, Leonard LEARY married Dorothy Lovelace MILNE, with whom he had three sons and a daughter.</i></div>
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<i><span style="white-space: pre;">"</span>Between the wars Leary was a member of the National Defence League of New Zealand. Although he volunteered to fight in the Second World War, his age disqualified him for overseas service. Nevertheless, he gave up his practice and served full time in the Territorial Force (1940–45), from October 1943 as officer commanding the 1st Field Regiment, New Zealand Artillery. He was also a formidable force at recruiting rallies.</i></div>
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<i><span style="white-space: pre;">"</span>After the war Leary delighted in the family life his increasing success at the Bar allowed him to enjoy. In 1948 he purchased a farm in Don Buck Road, Massey, and aimed at spending three days a week there. A second home at Otaramarae on Lake Rotoiti, Rotorua, brought new experiences when he became a friend and valued adviser to his Ngati Pikiao neighbours. He served on several trust committees for them.</i></div>
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<i><span style="white-space: pre;">"LEARY</span> is best remembered for his advocacy and his passion for the law. He was an Auckland barrister for over 50 years, and became a Queen’s counsel in 1952. A member of the council and the disciplinary committee of the Auckland District Law Society for many years and its president (1946–48), he was the mover of the resolution at the New Zealand Law Society’s conference in Napier in 1954 to set up a separate and permanent Court of Appeal of New Zealand. Leary acted as counsel in many cases, but two that he himself singled out were the case of William BAYLY, who was convicted of murdering his neighbours at Ruawaro, in which Leary acted as junior to E. H. NORTHCROFT; and Thomas HAYR’s case in 1952, where Leary mounted a successful defence of automatism for the first time in New Zealand, or in any common law jurisdiction. BAYLY and Edward Te WHIU, who brutally murdered an elderly woman in her home, were the only two people defended by LEARY who were hanged.</i></div>
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<i>LEARY’s autobiography, published in 1977, does scant justice to his reputation as a great raconteur, but some of the advice it contains is still fresh. The secret of advocacy, he wrote, lies in carrying an audience ‘from the known to the unknown, from the acceptable to the less acceptable’. The jury must be converted in small, simple steps to the point of view a lawyer desires them to adopt.</i></div>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><i><span style="white-space: pre-wrap;"></span></i></span></span></span><br />
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<i><span style="white-space: pre;">LEARY</span> was socially and politically conservative and active in politics throughout his life. He was chairman of the Parnell electorate committee of the New Zealand National Party and later chairman of the Massey branch of the Party. The Auckland profession assembled to honour him after his 80th birthday, when he told them that he believed that the secret of happiness in a career at the Bar was hard work and preparation, and ‘showing no elation at success or feeling no rancour at failure’. In 1973 LEARY was made a C.M.G. for services to law. In 1989 he published a New Zealand historical novel, Where rivers meet. He died at Lake Rotoiti on 11 April 1990. His funeral service was conducted in St Faith’s Church at Ohinemutu, after which he was carried to the Houmaitawhiti marae for his tangihanga, and he was the first Pakeha buried in the Rawahirua cemetery. Leary was survived by his wife, Lovelace, and his five children.</i>"</div>
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<span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">The following but as yet "unprocessed" notes, including a number of Deeds Registered in Dublin, were kindly provided by Gar WATSON:</span></span><br />
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Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the High Court of Chancery in Ireland, During the Time of Lord Chancellor Manners, 1807-1814 (1839)</div>
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<a href="https://books.google.com/books?id=bB9HAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA247" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" target="_blank"><span style="color: #196ad4;">https://books.google.com/books?id=bB9HAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA247</span></a></div>
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In Ireland</div>
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[BRADISH v. BRADISH.]<br />
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By a codicil which he afterwards made, he bequeathed her a sum of 1000l. belonging to him, which was a charge on the estate of Joseph POULTER.</div>
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Reg’d 21st Apr 1788</div>
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Book 396, Page 445, Mem No 262148</div>
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Mortgage dated 11th April 1788. Rev’d Joseph POULTER of Dunkitt County Kilkenny, first part; John JONES of Mullenabro, second part; William ROBERTS, City Cork, Merchant, and Elizabeth ROBERTS otherwise POULTER his wife, third part; and Rev’d Hans Tho’s YELL, City Waterford L.L.D., fourth part. Reciting Lease of Release of 25th July 1775 made between Rev’d J. POULTER, first part; Benjamin GALE, City Dublin, and William DENIS, City Waterford, Esq, second part; and James EVANS, of Balleen, Co Kilkenny, and said John JONES, third part; Sarah DENNIS, City Waterford, Widow, and Margaret DENIS, Spinster, her daughter, fourth part. Joseph POULTER in conse'n of a marriage with Margaret DENIS gave to said B. GEALE and Rev’d W. DENNIS Annesborough, Parker Reilly, Bibbys Land and Dunkitt held in fee, and part of Dunkitt and Farnoge, held for lives, to raise £1000 of which was for ???? of Elizabeth POULTER, the Elizabeth ROBERTS party to this mortgage - Abigail POULTER, Letitia and Sarah POULTER daughters of Joseph POULTER by Elizabeth GEALE his late wife - said sum of £3000 to be paid to said three daughters as Marriage portions in such manner and proportion as said Joseph POULTER might will. Said Hans Tho’s YELL agreed to advance the sum of £1000 by Mortgage for portion of Elizabeth ROBERTS.</div>
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["Journal of the Association for the Preservation of the Memorials of the Dead in Ireland," Volume 4 (1898-1900) pages 82-84]</div>
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<a href="https://archive.org/details/journalforyear04asso" rel="nofollow" shape="rect" target="_blank"><span style="color: #196ad4;">https://archive.org/details/journalforyear04asso</span></a></div>
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Dunkitt Old Churchyard, Diocese of Ossory</div>
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[From Surgeon Lt.-Colonel Greene, 23 Herbert-place, Dublin]</div>
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Inscriptions on tombs:</div>
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Enclosed by an iron railing is a monument in the form of an obelisk and on either side two flat tombstones. The centre monument bears the following inscriptions:</div>
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* On one side: — </div>
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<i>“In the vault opposite this inscription lyeth the remains of the Rev Joseph POULTER, of Dunkitt, and of his son Joseph to whose memory this monument is erected by Mrs Margaret POULTER, the faithful relict of the first mentioned, and tender mother of the latter.”</i></div>
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* On the other side: — </div>
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“Sacred to the memory of Margaret, widow of the Rev Joseph POULTER, of Dunkitt, daughter of the Rev Doctor DENIS D.D., of Waterford, who died April 1st, 1825, aged 73 years.”</div>
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On tombstone No. 4 : — </div>
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“Beneath this stone lies what was mortal of Andrew POULTER of Dunkit, Esq., and of Letitia his wife, of Stratford son of the above Andrew and Letitia.<br />
"Of Elizabeth first wife of the Rev Joseph POULTER and of Joseph Stratford, son of the above Joseph, and his second wife Margaret.<br />
"He exchanged this life for a better the 7th day of April, 1786 aged one year.<br />
"Also the body of the Rev Joseph POULTER, Rector of Kilculliheen, who departed this life — January, 1789, in the 44 year of his age.<br />
"Also his son Joseph POULTER who departed this life 8th December, 1800, aged 17 years." </div>
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On tombstone No. 5: — </div>
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“In the vault lieth the mortal remains of Frances Josephine aged 8, and Mary aged 3 who died 29th and 30th March, 1860, children of Joseph Poulter MACKESY, M.B.<br />
"Joseph Poulter MACKESY, M.B., F.R.C.S.L, died 3 April 1866 aged 50.<br />
"Thomas Lewis MACKESY, M.D., F.R.C.S.I., died 8 April 1869 aged 79 years.<br />
"Helen MACKESY died Augt. 9th 1870. Frances Rosetta, wife of Josh. Poulter MACKESY, M.B., F.R.C.S.I., died December 22 1891 aged 74 years:" </div>
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On a tomb inside of the old church :— </div>
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“Here lieth the Body of the Rev William DENIS, late Rector of Killcullifaheen, who died April 11th, 1815, aged 59 years. Also his beloved wife Ellen, who died February 4th, 1837, aged 82 years.<br />
"Also Mrs Maria Anne KING, she died June 4th, 1815, aged 35 years. Also Mrs Margaret SHEPPARD who died — July, 1831, aged 44 years. Also William Denis KING who died — October, 1827, aged 20 years.'* </div>
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'The POULTER family is now extinct. They appear to have come from the Co. Suffolk. Under the Act of Settlement, 18 Charles II., part 2, William POULTER was granted 86 acres 2 roods 27 perches of Farnoge, which belonged to William GANLE, Irish Papist ; 260 acres of Derrenemonsy, former proprietor Thomas DENN; and 260 acres of Dunkitt, former owner, Peter Stronge. All these lands are in the Co. Kilkenny, parish of Dunkitt.<br />
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New Zealand Botanical Society Newsletter Number 126 December 2016</div>
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Biographical Sketch – Dominic Harewood Lascelles CORRIGAN (1874 – 1962)</div>
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Val SMITH, 80 Mill Road, New Plymouth 4310.</div>
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"The forenames of Dominic Harewood Lascelles CORRIGAN suggest a fascinating family ancestry. In 1832 his paternal great-grandfather James CORRIGAN of the 74th Highland Regiment left County Carlow, Ireland, with his wife Alice and their seven children, for Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania). There, in 1848, their eldest son Samuel Bradley CORRIGAN (1820-1903) married Louisa LASCELLES (1829-1901), daughter of Thomas Allen LASCELLES, private secretary to Lieutenant-Governor Thomas DAVY, and later police magistrate. Louisa's grandmother Ellen (Ann) WAINWRIGHT had the "honour" of arriving with the first fleet in 1788, transported for seven years from Lancashire, England, at the age of 17 years for stealing items of clothing. Her daughter Mary (Ann) was born on Norfolk Island in 1795, and after the accidental death of her husband Dennis McCarty in 1820, she married Lascelles. </div>
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Dominic's father was Cornelius Fookes CORRIGAN (1852-1902), the second child and elder son of Louisa and Samuel Bradley CORRIGAN. Cornelius was born in Richmond, Tasmania, grew up in Geelong, Victoria, and by 1868 was working in Dunedin as a bank teller under William LARNACH (also from Geelong). On 17 January 1874 in the Otepoto parish, Cornelius married Deborah BLAKE, daughter of hotel-keeper Robert BLAKE (1816-1882) and his wife Julie MINDEN (1819-1885), who moved from Tasmania to Dunedin around 1864 and later to Thames. In April 1874, in one of his many brushes with the law, Cornelius was sentenced to three years "penal servitude" for cheque forgery. Dominic was born on 17 June 1874 and named after Sir Dominic CORRIGAN (1802-1880), a first cousin of his grandfather; his sister Beatrice was born in Thames on 10 September 1875. Apparently Deborah lived with her parents there for several years – the children attended school in Thames until at least 1886. By 1887 Deborah and the children were in Nelson. In December 1889 Dominic was recommended as a probationer at the Bridge Street School and at the end of his first year received special commendation, but resigned in May 1891 to work at the Colonial Bank of New Zealand in Nelson. When the Colonial Bank amalgamated with the Bank of New Zealand in 1895 he was one of the officers transferred. On the certificate of his mother's death in 1894 Dominic was the named informant, although his father was listed as living – Cornelius died in the Australian outback near Broken Hill in 1902. </div>
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<span style="white-space: pre;">"</span>In February 1910 at St Matthew's Church, Dunedin, Dominic CORRIGAN married Florence Lucy Leary (née GIESEN), widow of Palmerston North chemist Richard Frank Leary and mother of two teenage sons. Florence's parents farmed at Feilding and her mother Margaret, sister-in-law Mary (Polly) LEARY and Florence were prominent in the women's suffragette movement in Palmerston North. Dominic and Florence lived at Sea View Road, Remuera, Auckland, and their daughter Lascelles was born in 1911, when her mother was 47. World War 1 took its toll: 21 year-old Ernest LEARY died in July 1916 during the Battle of the Somme, and in December that year Florence, with Lascelles, arrived in England. The five-year old went to school at Lewes, they had summer together on the Isle of Wight, and Florence spent time with her twice-wounded elder son Leonard convalescing at Woolwich; she attended his Military Cross investiture and probably his short-lived marriage in Exeter Cathedral. After two years in England mother and daughter left for New Zealand in December 1918.</div>
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<span style="white-space: pre;">"</span>Moving to Tauranga in November 1918, Dominic CORRIGAN managed the local branch of the Bank of New Zealand until his retirement in 1929, after 38 years of service at Nelson, Timaru, Lawrence, Gore, Christchurch, Auckland, New Plymouth, Kohukohu (Hokianga) and Tauranga. From their home on Second Avenue the family continued their long-time interests in music, drama, sport and horticulture. In 1930 school inspector and naturalist Harry CARSE described Hebe corriganii ("McLaren's Falls, near Tauranga (Bay of Plenty). D. CORRIGAN! B. SLADDEN!"), also mentioning seedlings, cuttings and notes provided by SLADDEN. Tragically, on 7 June 1941, Florence CORRIGAN died while visiting their daughter and grandchild in Kenya – shot (accidentally?) by their son-in-law, retired missionary Vladimir VERBI. Dominic lived on until 1962 and the age of 88, and was survived by his daughter Lascelles VERBI, who died in 2007 at the age of 96, and granddaughters Mary and Florence. Mary BROZ (née VERBI) is known to have traveled from London in 1957 to stay with Leonard LEARY, and completed a Diploma of Agriculture (Dairying) at Massey University in 1961."<br />
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More About Vladimir VERBI by Christine NICHOLLS | Oct 19, 2015 </div>
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I’d like to return to the subject of Vladimir VERBI (see my blogs of February and December 2013), the missionary who shot his mother-in-law in the Taita Hills in 1941. To recap, VERBI was having trouble with his second wife, Lascelles, and forbade her going to a party in Voi. When she disobeyed, he angrily took his gun into the garden, because he was trying to deter crows from eating his strawberries. There is no doubt that VERBI was very proud of the non-indigenous crops he had introduced in his terraced garden at Ngerenyi – he pioneered strawberries, oranges and other fruit – and it was vital to keep birds off them. Verbi had retired as a missionary, having been in the Taita Hills since 1894. He had originally been at Wusi where he built a house (inhabited by Peter BOSTOCK and his family in 1941, the year of the killing) and began a church, and later he constructed a road up the hill to Ngerenyi, where he built a house to live in when he retired in 1929. He had instructed the African labour he employed in the techniques of erecting houses in stone – indeed, he had started a Vocational School in Wusi. He lived in his retirement home for a couple of years (his first wife had died in 1928), and then again in 1933-4. He subsequently travelled and visited his native Bulgaria, but as war clouds gathered he returned again to Ngerenyi in 1939 with his new wife.</div>
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While VERBI was in the garden, he shot dead his mother-in-law, sitting on the veranda. She was on a visit from New Zealand to see her newborn grandchild, and was due to return home in a few days. After the shooting, which VERBI said was an accident, he was accused of murder and incarcerated in prison in Mombasa. There he was visited by Peter BOSTOCK, who had been called by the District Commissioner to sit with VERBI and support him immediately after the shooting. Upon appeal, VERBI was freed on a technicality – apparently his wife’s comments when she initially thought her husband had killed her mother were erroneously used in the original trial. VERBI went back to Ngerenyi where he lived until his death in Mombasa hospital in 1956.</div>
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Building the house at Ngerenyi, and VERBI in 1927</div>
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VERBI’s second wife, Lascelles Leary CORRIGAN, had been born in New Zealand in 1911 and was taken to Lewes in England when she was five, arriving in London in December 1916. We know that she was taken from Liverpool to Canada in December 1918 on the ship Grampian, possibly on the way back to New Zealand, with her mother, who had been visiting her son Leonard, wounded in World War 1. Mother and daughter had spent the summer of 1917 on the Isle of Wight (Evening Post, 16 January 1918). Lascelles was a feisty person, with spirited views, not always easy to get along with. She sailed from Wellington, NZ, to London in April 1937 and it was on this voyage that she met VERBI. The missionary’s good looks, bushy eyebrows and jolly manner must have impressed her, and they married in Farnham on 3 June 1937 when VERBI was 63 and she 36. The age gap of 27 years could have posed a problem.</div>
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<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Lascelles did not abandon VERBI after the trial, for by then she must have believed that the shooting had been an accident. The pair had one small daughter, Mary, born in 1938, and they subsequently had another daughter, Florence, named for the deceased mother-in-law. From his first marriage Verbi already had three sons, now grown up. Who was Lascelles’ mother, whom VERBI shot? She was Florence Lucy, née GIESEN, born in New Zealand in 1869, one of the eleven children of Edward GIESEN (1842-1906) and his wife Margaret AUSTIN. Edward was a hosier and draper in Wellington, and not an entirely successful one because he was bankrupt in 1868. Florence married Richard LEARY, a chemist with a shop in The Square, Palmerston North, in 1887. He had been born of an Irish family in Australia in 1846 and went to New Zealand in 1863. Richard LEARY and Florence, who lived above the shop, had four sons, two of whom died at the age of three. One of the sons, Ernest, was killed in World War 1, leaving only Leonard, born in 1891. Another blow to Florence was the death of her husband Richard in 1901. She struggled on for nine years raising her two remaining sons, and then she married again, in 1910, in Dunedin. Her new husband was Dominic Hareward Lascelles CORRIGAN (1874-1962). They lived at Sea View, Remuera, Auckland, NZ, and later at Tauranga, Bay of Plenty. Their daughter Lascelles was born a year after the marriage, when her mother was 47.</div>
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<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>I have tried to tell the story of the woman who died in this unfortunate affair, lest she be forgotten. She had two successful marriages, six children, two of whom survived, and a pleasant home in New Zealand. Her sudden death must have been a shock to her husband Dominic and her son Leonard. Her son, Leonard Poulter LEARY, C.M.G. (1891-1990) became a well-known lawyer in New Zealand, and wrote three books, one of them the story of his life – L.P. LEARY, Not Entirely Legal, 1977. He was a QC and great raconteur. The jury, he said, ‘must be converted in small, simple steps to the point of view a lawyer desires them to adopt.’ Florence’s daughter Lascelles remained in Kenya after Vladimir VERBI died, farming at Thomson’s Falls. She died in 2007, at the age of ninety-six.<br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">There is another of BETHAM's Abstracts which mentions the POULTER family, but not Sarah:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"Ebenezer GEALE, of the City of Dublin, Merchant. Will dated 24 December 1794, proved 9 September 1795.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">"Wife Elizabeth Pleasant G...; sister Elizabeth POULTER; niece Elizabeth ROBERTS; niece Abby POULTER, niece Letitia POULTER; (last three) the daughters of Elizabeth POULTER.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Twenty seventh day of Ap'l One thous'd seven hund'd and forty eight, and made between Benjamin GALE of the City of Dublin Gent of the one part; and John GEALE of Mt Geale in the co of Kilkenny gent of the other p't; ...from the twenty fifth day of March then last past for and during the nat'l life and lives of Jop'h GEALE Benj'n GEALE and Ebinezar GEALE sons of the above named John GEALE<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;"><br clear="none" /></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8094777 page 224<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 142 Page 424 Memorial 94164</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Twenty first day of Oct in the year of our Lord one thous'd seven hund'd and thirty eight made, between John GEALE of Bouncetown in the county of Kilkenny Gent of the one p't and Joseph EVANS of Ballypark in the s'd Co Gent of the other part <span style="white-space: pre;"> </span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Rich'd BALDWIN.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 7906143 page 452<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 144 page 283 memorial 87503</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Bearing date respectively the twenty sixth and twenty seventh days of Sep'r one thousand seven hundred and fifty, both made between Frederick FALKINER of Abbottstown in the County of Dublin Esq'r of the one part; and Daniel FALKINER of the city of Dublin Esq'r and Robert SNOW of the City of Waterford Esq'r of the other part; whereby the s'd Frederick FALKINER, after reciting as therein is recited, did grant and release unto the s'd Daniel FALKINER and Rob't SNOW all that and those the eight acres and one rood of land plantation measure in Blancherstown be the same more or less containing accord'g to a survey lately taken thereof.........made upon a writ of partition to Mrs. Elizth Fitz PATRICK dece'd.....William ROWLEY of the City of Dublin Esq'r formerly Captain and Commander of his mag'ties ship the Barfleur now Admiral ROWLEY, and John MAPAS Esq'r and Christopher MAPAS his eldest son....the estate of Edward SWEETMAN dece'd....a lease from Tho's WARREN of Corrduffe in the county of Dublin Esq'r to Robert CLEMENTS Esq'r deceased.....</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">witnessed by Anthony BLUNT of the city of Kilkenny Esq'r and Henry HAMILTON of the city of Dublin, Gent.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8088386 page 92-3<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 145 page 171 memorial 97502</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Bearing date respectively the twenty sixth and twenty seventh days of September one thousand seven hundred and fifty, the release made between John GEALE of Mount Geale in the County of Kilkenny Gent, and Joseph EVANS of Bell Evans in the said County Esq of the first part; Frederick FALKINER of Abbottstown in the County of Dublin Esq'r of ye second part; Daniel ALKINER of the City of Dublin Esq'r and Robert SNOW of the City of Waterford Esq'r of the third part; Benjamin GEALE of the City of Dublin Gent, third son of the said John GEALE, of the fourth part; and Ann FALKINER spinster, eldest daughter of the said Frederick FALKINER, of the fifth part; and the lease between the said John GEALE and Joseph EVANS of the one part; and the said Daniel FALKINER and Robert SNOW of the other part; whereby the said John EALE and Joseph EVANS, after reciting as therein is recited, did for the considerations in the said deed of release more particularly mentioned, grant and related unto the said Daniel FALKINER and Robert SNOW, all that and those the several parts and parcels of lands of Drillingstown and Bouncetown...; witnessed by Anthony BLUNT of the City of Kilkenny Alderman, and Ann HAMILTON spinster, and Henry HAMILTON Gent both of the City of Dublin </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 7905906 page 351<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 151 page 46 memorial 100330</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Bearing date the twenty fourth day of April in the year of our Lord one thous'd seven hund and fifty one, made between John GEALE of Mount Geale in the co of Kilkenny Gent, of the first part; Fred'k FALKINER of Abbottstown in the co. of Dublin Esq'r of the sec'd part; Benj'n GEALE third son of ye s'd Jno GEALE, of the third part; and Dan'l FALKINER of the City of Dublin and Robert SNOW of the city of Waterford Esq'r, of ye fourth p't; reciting by ind're of rel bearing date ye twenty seventh day of Sepe one tho's'd seven hund and fifty and between ye s'd Jno GEALE and Jop'h EVANS of Bell Evans in ye s'd co of Kilkenny of the first part; and s'd Fred'k FALKINER of Abbotstown aforesd of ye sec'd p't; and s'd Dan'l FALKINER and Robert SNOW of the third part; ye s'd Benj'n GEALE of the fourth part; and Ann FALKINER the eldest dau'r of ye s'd Fred'k then the wife of the s'd Benjamin GEALE of the fifth part. It was agreed ye sum of one thos'd p'ds ster' be paid or secured to ye s'd Dan'l FALKINER and Robert SNOW by ye s'd Fredk FAULKINER as the marriage portion of the said Ann, and y't in pursuance thereof ye s,d Fredk FALKINER did execute a deed bearing equal date... that the said Benj'n GEALE shall happen to die during the joint lives of him the said Jno GEALE and Ann GEALE wife of the s'd Benjn GEALE that then the said Jno GEALE...well and truly pay content and sales ... unto the said Anne GALE and her... of the s'd three hun'd pounds ster' at the rate of five p'ds by the hun'd by the year so long and during the time he shall survive the said Benj'n GEALE wch said deed as to the ... thereof by the said Jno GEALE is wit'd by Sarah GEALE and Eliz'th GEALE both of Mt Geale in the s'd co of Kilkenny spinster...</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film7905906 page 499<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 151 page 320 memorial 101593</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date the twenty secd day of Jany in the year of our Lord one thousd seven hund and fifty two made between Frances NORTON of the city of Dublin wid'w of the first part Mary BUCKLEY of the same city wid'w surviving ext'x of the last will and testamt of Henry BUCKLEY late of ye s'd city gent dec'ed of the sec'd part, Ann FAVIER of the same wid'w adm'x of Jno FAVIER late of ye city of Dublin Esq'r dec'ed wth his will annexed of the third p't, Dan'l FALKINER of ye city of Dublin Esq'r and Rob't SNOW of the city of Waterford Esq'r of the fourth part, and Benjamin GALE of the city of Dublin Gent of the fifth part...</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8088391 p487-8<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 157 page 294 memorial 104819</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">dated the twenty third day of January one thousand seven hundred and fifty two endorsed on a deed of mortgage dated the twenty seventh day of Septem'r one thousand seven hundred and fifty made by Frederick FALKINER of Abbotstown in the county of Dublin Esq'r to Daniel FALKINER of the city of Dublin Esq'r and Robert SNOW of the city of Waterford Esq'r of all those eight acres and one rood of land plantation measure in Blancherstown......partition to Mrs Elizabeth FitzPATRICK deced.....the estate of Edw'd SWEETMAN dec'ed....a lease from Thomas WARREN....by lease from John and Christopher MAPAS all situate in the county of Dublin.....mentioned in a settlement made on the intermarriage of Benjamin GEALE with Ann FALKINER the daughter of said Frederick FALKINER a memorial of which said mortgage was entered in the register office in the city of Dublin the thirty first day of January one thousand seven hundred and fifty at eleven a clock in the forenoon in book 144 page 283 and numbered 87503 by which said memorandum or instrument the said Daniel FALKINER and Robert SNOW did acknowledge to have received from the said Frederick FALKINER by the consent of the said Benjn GEALE...</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8088396 page 128<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 168 page 238 Memorial 112650</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">fourth day of February one thousand and seven hundred and fifty four made between Joseph GEALE of Mt Geale in the county of Kilkenny Gent of the one part and Mary THETFORD of the city of Kilkenny widow of the other part witnesseth ye the said Joseph GEALE for consideration of the sum of two hundred pounds </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8072055 page 196-7<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 188 page 353 memorial 125972</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">eleventh day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and fifty seven made between John GEALE of Mount Geale in the county of Kilkenny Esq of the first part, Henry GEALE second son of said John GEALE of the City of Kilkenny Merchant and Jane EVANS of said City of Kilkenny spinster of the second part, the Reverend George EVANS of the City of Dublin Cl'ke and Benjamin GEALE of said City Merchant of the third; part whereby the said John GEALE did grant and assign unto the said George EVANS and Benjamin GEALE their Heirs and assigns all that and those the moiety of the Town and Lands of Bootstown containing by common estimation one hundred and twenty acres situate lying and being in the Barony of Cranagh and County of Kilkenny to hold unto the said George EVANS and Benjamin GEALE and their Heirs to such uses upon.......articles of agreement are witnessed by Christopher HOWETSON of the City of Kilkenny apothecary and Joseph GEALE of Mount Geale in the County of Kilkenny Esq'r and this memorial is also witnessed by the said Christopher HOWETSON and James SCOTT of the City of Kilkenny Gents John GEALE (Seal)........said John and Henry GEALE and the said Jane EVANS </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 7905841 page 401<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 198 page 131 memorial 131449</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">dated the twentieth day of Janry one thousand seven hundred and fifty nine where by Benjamin GALE and James TAYLOR Edr Sherriffs of the county of the city of Dublin by virtue of a writ of furifacis and of their office and in consideration of thirty pounds ster to them paid by Nicholas WISDOM of the city of Dublin carpenter did grant assign transfer and make over unto said Nichl WISDOM all that house or tenem't... Robert WISDOM... Denis GEORGE of the city of Dublin... witnessed by Thomas TAYLOR of Dublin Gent and by Edw'd DOYLE of Dublin aforesd Gent<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 7905841 page 444<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 198 page 217 memorial 131854</span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date ye twentieth day of April one thousd seven hund and fifty nine between Benjamin GEALE and Ja's TAYLOR Esqrs Sherriffs of the s'd county of and city of Dublin of ye one p't, and Davd BRADY of ye same city Gent of ye other part...</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8088415 page 314-5<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 220 page 574 memorial 147094</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date respectively the twenty third and twenty fourth days of March in the year of our Lord on thousand seven hundred and sixty three and respectively made between John GEALE of Mountgeale in the county of Kilkenny Esqr and Joseph GEALE eldest son of the said John GEALE of the first part, Benjamin GEALE of the city of Dublin Alderman of the second part, and Frederick FALKINER of Abbottstown in the County of Dublin Esqr and Joseph EVANS of Bell Evans in the county of Kilkenny Esq'r of the third part; by which said deed of release after reciting as therein recited the said John GEALE and Joseph GEALE for the considerations therein ment'd did grant bargain sell alien release and confirm unto the said Frederick FALKINER and Joseph EVANS all that and those the eleven acres and one half of an acre of the twon and lands of Adamstown situate in the Barony of Crannagh and county of Kilkenny and also sixty eight acres of the town and lands of Rahely situate in the Barony and county aforesaid and also all thence houses gardens and tenements situate in the northward in the city of Kilkenny in Leighs Lane to hold the said towns lands houses and income with the appurtenances to the said Frederick Falkiner and Joseph Evans their heirs and assigns forever to the sevll uses trusts intents and purposes and subject to the provisoes limitations and agreements in said deed of release mentioned declared... witnessed by Thomas GODDARD of the City of Kilkenny Esq and Andrew FRON of the city of Dublin Gent </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8088415 p 485<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 221 page 279 memorial 147848</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">A memorial of indented deeds of Bargain and sale and release bearing date respectively the twenty ninth and thirtieth days of May on tho's'd seven hun'd and sixty three, the s'd Release being made Between the Rev. Joseph POULTER of Dunkitt in the co. of Kilkenny cl'k of the first p't, and Jno GEAL of Mount Geale and Joseph EVANS of Bellevan both in the s'd Co. of Kilkenny Esq'rs of the sec'd p't and Elizth GEALE only dau'r of the s'd Jno GEALE of the third p't, and the s'd deed of Bargain and sale being made between sd' Jo'ph POULTER of the one part and s'd Jno GEALE and Jo'ph EVANS of the other part, w'ch s'd Reb Recites y't a marr' was intended to be shortly solemnized between s'd Jo'ph POULTER and Eliz'th GEALE ??? [one line of lost text] of Mt Geale and Joseph EVANS of Bell Evans both of the co. of Kilkenny Esq'rs and Henry GEALE of the City of Kilky mercht subscribe and witness to s'd deed </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8088416 page 245-6 <span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 224 page 444 memorial 146796</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date respectively the twenty first and twenty second days of March one thousd seven hun'd and sixty three and respectively made between John GEALE of Mount Geale in the co of Kilkenny Esqr and Joseph GEALE Esqr eldest son of the sad Jno Geale of the one p't, and Benjn GEALE of the city of Dublin Alderman of the other p't, by which s'd deed of release......</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8088416 page 648<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 225 page 610 memorial 149466</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">dated the sixth day of Decemr one thousand seven hundred and sixty three whereby Alderman Benjamin GEALE of the city of Dublin demised unto Margaret BORROWS of Dromcandra widow and James MORAN of sd city taylor all the dwelling wherein said Mary BORROWS lived......</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 7905850 page 139-40<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 243 page 250 memorial 159441</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date the nineteenth day of February one thousand and seven hundred sixty six endorsed on a deed bearing date the thirteenth day of March one thousand seven hundred and sixty one made between Jane GRIERSON widow and relict of George GRIERSON printer of the one part and Benjamin GEALE of the said city Dublin Alderman of the other part which said last deed did... Michael WALSH to said George GRIERSON... Mary Coghill spinster demised unto said George GRIERSON... received by Frederick Falkiner Esquire....made on the intermarriage of Benjamin GEALE Esquire hereinbefore named with his late wife Ann GEALE otherwise FALKINER daughter of the said Frederick FALKINER... made in the names of Daniel FALKINER and Robert SNOW Esquire who are both since deceased and recites the said Robert SNOW survived the said Daniel FALKINIER and Henry SNOW Esquire one of the sons of the said Robert SNOW is the Ex'r of the last will and testament of the said Rob't SNOW decease by which first mentioned deed the said Benjamin GEALE for the consideration.....</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">witnessed by Henry Walter FRENCH and James MADDOCK clerks to Robert WALLIS of the City of Dublin publick notary </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 7905850<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 243 page 627 memorial 161679</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date the twenty seventh day of July one thousand and seven hundred and sixty six made between Henry GEALE of the city of Kilkenny merch't and Jane GEALE otherwise EVANS his wife of the first part, and Pierce BUTLER of Bellerew in the co of Kilkenny Esq and Edward BUTLER of the city of Kilkenny Doctor of Phyzik of the other part... witnessed by Bibby HARTFORDof the city of Kilkenny Gent and James LEEJONS of the said city schoolmaster </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 7905853 p 271-2 <span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 250 page 263 memorial 162841</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">first and second days of August in the year of our Lord one thousd seven hund'd and sixty six the release of three parts and made between James CARPENTER of the city of Corke Mercht of the first part Henry GEALE of the City of Kilkenny Merch't and Eliz'th GEALE daughter of said Henry GEALE of the second part Joseph EVANS of Belevin in the County of Kilkenny Esqr and Benj'n GEALE of the City of Dublinn Alderman of the third part; reciting that a marriage was intended shortly to be had and solemnized between the s'd Ja's CARPENTER and Eliz'th GEALE and that the s'd James CARPENTER is seized and poss'ed of all that and those the front house formerly in the possn of Roger ASHE and late in the poss'n of Henry MARTIN situate in the Great or Main street of the s'd city of Corke and in the North East Quarter thereof ....Samuel HOAR of the city of Corke Merch't.....R't Hon'ble Thos Lord Knapton....s'd Henry up the death of him and Jane his wife did grant bargain and sell to the s'd Joseph EVANS and Benj'n GEALE ...witnessed by W;m BRADISH of the City of Kilkenny Gent and Darby MURRAY of s'd city </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8093181 page 209<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 262 page 391 memorial 172739</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">dated the third day of September one thousand seven hundred and sixty eight made between Joseph GEALE of Mount Geale in the county of Kilkenny Esq'r eldest son of John GEALE of Mount Geale aforesaid Esquire deceased of the first part<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">, Ann LOWCAY of Rosetown in the county of Wexford spinster of the second part, and Anthony LOWCAY Jun'r of Rosetown and Thomas TENISON of Rock Hall in the county of Kilkenny aforesaid Esquires of the third part; whereby after reciting the said Joseph GEALE's title and interest of and in the several lands and premises in the said deed and therein after mentioned he the said Joseph GEALE in consid'n of a marriage to be had between him and the said Ann LOWCAY and in consid'n of five hundred pounds to him paid or securities to be paid as a marriage portion did grand confirm and assign to the said Antho LOWCAY and Thomas DENISON and the survivor of them and the heirs male of such survivor... </span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8093182<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>p 119<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 263 page 208 memorial 167315</span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date the first day of July one thousd seven hund & sixty seven made between Wm Purson of ???? in ye oco Dubn Esqr of ye one pt & Benjn Geale of ye city of Dublin Aldn of the other pt </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">witnd by Ebenezer Geale of ye city of Dublin Mercht and Wm Hickie of ye city of Dublin Gent</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 7905680 page 107-8<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 273 page 200 memorial 176025</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date the thirtieth day of May one thousand seven hund'd and sixty nine made between Jo'ph EVANS of Bell Evans in the county of Kilkenny Esq'r of the one part and Benj'n GEALE Esquire of the city of Dublin Alderman of the other part reciting that the late Rev'd Richard BALDWIN by lease therein mentd did demise unto John GEALE therein named and to the said Joseph EVANS the town and lands of Drillingstown and Bouncetown and also the town and lands of Corstown as mentd therein all which are situate in the Barony of Crannagh and county of Kilkenny........said lands of Corstown should be equally enjoyed and the rents thereof equally had and rec'd by and between the said John GEALE and Joseph EVANS their heirs and assigns and should pay equally the yearly rent of eighty six pounds seven shillings and one penny with a further rent as in s'd deeds ment'd and reciting that s'd John GEALE died but before his death to wit on or about the twenty seventh day of Septemb'r one thousand seven hundred fifty he made a settlement on the marriage of his son the before mcht Benjamin GEALE and thereby said Benjamin was then fortitled to occupie and enjoy such part or parts of the prem'es as was or were appointed specifically for the share of the said John GEALE his heir ans assigns by said deed of partition and was entitled to one half of the clear rents and profits... by which s'd first ment'd deed the s'd Joseph EVANS and Benjamin GEALE did make a full and absolute partition and div'n of the said part of the said lands of Corstown which was held and enjoyed as aforesaid by the said John GEALE and Joseph EVANS and their undertenants containing two hund'd and twelve acres and eighteen perches between then the said Joseph EVANS and Benjamin GEALE in mannier following that the said Joseph EVANS his heirs and assigns should have hold and enjoy to him his heirs and assigns that part of the said last mentd part of the said lands of Corstown called and known by the name of .....</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8093365 page 76 <span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 283 page 137 memorial 183230</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing the date the ninth day of Novem'r one thousand seven hundred sixty seven whereby John GEALE of Ballygog in the Queens County farmer did demise unto Robert EVASTON Patrick McDANIEL Michl MEGHER James RYAN John HENRY Jams CASH and Martin EVASTON all of Grange in the county of Kilkenny farmers all that part of the lands of Grange.....</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8093367 p 44<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 286 page 738 memorial 184897</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date the fourteenth day of Feb'y one thousand seven hundd and seventy one made between Rich'd POPE of the city of Dublin Merch't Thos FINLAY Arthur Jones NEVILE Benj'n GEALE and John HUNT Esq'r of the ciry of Dublin bankers of the one part and Biggs FALKINER Cha's LESLIE and Rich'd KELLETT Esq'r of the city of Corke bankers of the other part</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8093367 p 164-5<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 286 page 307 memorial 187370</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date the thirtyeth day of March in the year one thousand seven hundred and thirty eight made and executed by and between Joseph GEALE of Mountgeale in the co Kilkenny gent'n of the one p't and Wm TZOD of Chappell Izod in the county of Kilkenny Esq of the other part whereby ....Joseph GEALE did demise grant....19 Jul 1771</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8093371 page 272<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 292 page 518 Memorial 192982</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">bearing date resp'ly the second and third day of October one thousand seven hundred and seventy two made between Ebenezar GEALE and Thomas HARTLEY of the City of Dubl Merchants of the first part John Anderson of the second part and Robert NORTON of the city of Dublin Esqr of the third part </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8093372 page 233-234<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 297 page 439 memorial 195707</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">thirteenth day of January one thousand seven hun'd and seventy three made between James CARPENTER of the city of Cork Merch't and Elizabeth CARPENTER otherwise GEALE his wife of the one part and Ebenezer PIKE of the City of Corke Merchant of the other part; reciting that Samuel HOARE Merchant did by lease bearing date the fourth day of June one thousand seven hundred and forty seven demise unto John ???? Tallow Chandler the front house formerly in the poss'n of Roger ASHE and then in possion of Henry MARTIN situate in the Great or Main Street .......John KEOGH Mary KEOGH and Elizabeth KEOGH </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 08093377 page 23<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 303 page 30 memorial 199776</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">dated the sixth day of Dec'r one thousand seven hundred and seventy three whereby Joseph GEALE Esq'r of Mountgeale in the county of Kilkenny demised to Michael BYRNE of the City of Kilkenny farmer </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">witnessed by Mathias DUNNE and Thos DELANEY both of Mountgeale in the county of Kilkenny farmer</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">Film 8093381 page 40<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>Book 308 page 63 memorial 203669</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 13px;">dated the fifteenth day of Febr'y one thousd seven hundred and seventy five between Ebenezer GEALE of the City of Merch't of the one part and John DAVIS of Thomastown in the coy of Kilkenny of the other part reciting and therein is recited whereby the s'd Thomas DAVIS.....witnessed by Edward HUNT of Terpoint in the co'y of Kilkenny Esqr and Frederick GEALE of the City of Dublin Merchant</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: white; color: #26282a;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">John GEALE</span></span><span style="background-color: white; color: #26282a; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre;"> </span> Jane Evans</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Ebenezer Geale</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>will dated 24 December 1794, proved 9 September 1795.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre;"> </span> Elizabeth Pleasant</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Elizabeth Geale (- 1773)<span style="white-space: pre;"> </span>only daughter</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre;"> </span> m 28 May 1763</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre;"> </span> Joseph Poulter (c1738 - Jan 1789)</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="white-space: pre;"> </span> son of Andrew Poulter and Letitia Canning</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Henry Geale</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; white-space: pre;"> </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">second son.</span><br />
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Joseph GEALE; of Goldenfield, County Kilkenny; his deed dated 13 October 1720, as joint first party with his son and heir John, with Henry EVANS of Dunmore, City of Kilkenny, and his daughter Elizabeth, as the second party, and by which Joseph <i>"... did assign and set over to ye said Joseph GEALE and Elizabeth EVANS all that and those the Towns and lands of Curraghkehoe and Ballynekocke"</i> [Memorial 23690, Book 36, Page 473], which are very likely to have been the marriage settlements; Joseph was married, with issue:.</div>
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1. John GEALE<span style="background-color: white; color: #26282a;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">, son of Joseph GEALE</span></span><span style="background-color: white; color: #26282a; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; John died before 1769; he was married, probably in 1722, to </span><span style="background-color: white; color: #26282a; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Elizabeth EVANS (born about 1697, daughter of Henry EVANS); she died at Mount Geale in August 1772, aged 7, <i>"... relict of the late John GEALE, Esq"</i> [Finn's Leinster Journal, 29 August]; </span><span style="background-color: white; color: #26282a; font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Joseph GEALE, eldest son; of Mount Geale</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; named as party to a deed of his father, 1748, and mentioned as one of three lives for the term of a lease</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; he died on 18 March 1776 [Gentleman's Magazine]; he was married, about </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1768, to </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Ann LOWCAY.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Henry GEALE; second son; married Jane EVANS.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Benjamin GEALE, </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">third son; of Mount Geale, and of Dublin</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; mentioned in a deed of his father and eldest brother, 1748, as one of three lives for the term of a lease</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; Sheriff of Dublin, 1758, and Lord Mayor in 1764; City of Dublin Treasurer, 1772; a co-founder and Director of the Grand Canal Company (1772); he was </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">married, about 1750,</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> to Anne FALKINER, </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">daughter of Frederick FALKINER, of Abbotstown, County Dublin [see </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society, 1895, page 38]</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> i. John GEALE; B.A. (T.C.D.) 1772; Director and Treasurer of the Dublin Fire Insurance Association, 1808; he was married with issue an only child -</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> Anne GEALE, who she died on 28 February 1825, and was married in April 1815 or 1818 to Aaron Crossley SEYMOUR .</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> ii. son.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> iii. Daniel GEALE; of Dublin, Attorney; he was married with issue - a son</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> Piers GEALE, who was married, with two daughters.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> d. Ebenezer GEALE; mentioned in a deed of his father and eldest brother, 1748, as one of three lives for the term of a lease; will dated 24 December 1794, proved P.C.I. 9 September 1795 [BETHAM's Abstract].</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> e. </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Elizabeth GEALE, </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">only daughter; died in 1773; she was married,</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> 28 May 1763, to </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Joseph POULTER (born about 1738, </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">son of Andrew POULTER and Letitia CANNING);</span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> he died in January 1789.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Elizabeth GEALE, eldest daughter; mentioned in her father's lease dated 4 January 1698 which was cited in his deed of 1720, mentional also Theobald MOLLOY, a son of Robert MOLLOY of Ballen, Kilenny (Theobald may have married Elizabeth).</span></div>
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Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-67140083932889126012018-05-17T21:16:00.073-07:002022-09-05T21:06:19.377-07:00The PEMBERTON-PIGOTT family of Slevoy, County Wexford.<br />
The origins of the PIGOTT family from which the PEMBERTON-PIGOTTs of Slevoy descend remain somewhat obscure.<br />
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The earliest for whom we have recorded information was John PIGOTT, of County Antrim, Gent, whose son Harfinch PIGOTT was admitted to Trinity College in 1706, aged 17, citing his father's details, and that he, Harfinch, was born in County Antrim.<br />
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Harfinch's own son Thomas PIGOTT, was likewise admitted to Trinity College, in April 1733, and his entry details record that his matriculation Tutor was Dr PIGGOT, of Ross, County Wexford.<br />
A Dr PIGGOT was also Tutor for a Felix PIGOTT, born in Dublin, the son of John PIGOTT, Gent, and who was admitted three months later, in June 1733.<br />
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I do not know what Dr PIGGOT's given name was, but I imagine that there were few Dr PIGGOT's tutoring Matriculation students in that year, and speculate on the possibility that there may only have been one, and that he may well have been related to one or other or even both of his pupils.<br />
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Felix PIGOTT's origins appear likely to connect with the branch of PIGOTT's who were associated with Aston Rowant in England (with the Armorial bearings of "Sable, Three Pickaxes Argent") - rather than the family of my own ancestry, the PIGOTTs of Dysart in the Queen's County (of the "Ermine, Three Fusils conjoined in Fess, Sable" Heraldic variety).<br />
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My limited knowledge of the forebears of the PEMBERTON-PIGOTTs appears further below.<br />
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But first:<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>EARLY IRISH PIGOTTS NOT CONNECTED TO DYSART.</i></span><br />
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There were a number of members of the PIGOTT family who had settled in Ireland before the end of the Tudor Dynasty, and who were not related to the PIGOTTs of Dysart in the Queen's County (these were my ancestors, and descend from the original 1562 grantee, John PIGOTT, probably from Chetwynd in Shropshire, and who died in 1570).<br />
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Nicholas PIGOTT; appointed Sergeant or Soldier, Dublin Castle, 8 December 1544; warrant of the Council to the Lord Chancellor, dated 30 January 1561, <i>"... to grant Nicholas PIGOTT the Queen's writ of allocation for allowance of his fee, as Richard MEDCALF obtained it; to be continued from the death of MEDCALF"</i> [Patent and Close Rolls, Chancery, Ireland].<br />
I am presuming, without evidence, that these two Nicholas PIGOTT's are probably one and the same person.<br />
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George PIGOTT; possibly of Aston Rowant, Oxfordshire (see below); among the <i>"... names of Captains recommended by the Lord Deputy to be employed... PIGGOT</i>...," 6 March 1594-95 [Calendar of State Papers, Ireland, 1592 Oct - 1596 Jun, P.R.O., London, 1890, paged 302]; he was mentioned by Sir Geoffrey FENTON in his letter to BURGHLEY, dated in Dublin, 14 August 1595 - <i>"...Galway and Thomond stand firm. Two thousand rebels in Connaught. Captains NOWELL, PIGOTT and PARKINS sent, with 300 men, to Sir Richard BINGHAM"</i> [C.S.P., Op. Cit, page 368]; mentioned by the Lord Deputy, in a letter to BURGHLEY, dated 7 November 1595, as having <i>"...cashiered two companies upon the decease of Capt NOWELL and Capt PIGOTT. Will set forward on Monday next towards Connaught, accompanied by the Lord Chancellor and FENTON</i>" [C.S.P., Op. Cit., page 427]; this appears to ask questions about the actual date of his death, as illustrated by the following item; mentioned, under <i>"Note of the foot companies in Mayo</i>," 31 March 1596, among <i>"... The Front, Capt Hugh MOSTYN, Capt Joshua MYNCE, Capt Thomas HEIGHAM, Capt Geo. PIGOT, Capt George NOWELL, Capt John PARSONS, Capt Tutcher PARKINS, Capt William MOSTYN</i>", and with numbers <i>- "Forward... Capt George PIGGOTT, Pikes 18, Shot 28"</i> [C.S.P., Op. Cit., page 505] - perhaps a report from an earlier date; mentioned by Sir J. NORREYS, in his letter to BURGHLEY, dated 7 April 1596, <i>"... in favour of the bearer, whose husband, Capt PIGGOT, was lately slain in Connaught. His well deservings for 20 years"</i> [C.S.P., Op. Cit., page 507]; he evidently died sometime between 14 August and 7 November 1595.<br />
George married Elizabeth KING, who survived him, and with seven children; as a widow, she was mentioned by the Lord Chancellor, in his letter to Lord BURGHLEY dated 3 May 1596, <i>"... in behalf of the widow and seven children of Capt Geo. PIGGOTT, who was slain in Connaught"</i> [C.S.P., Op. Cit., page 516], and by Sir Henry WALLOP, in his letter to BURGHLEY dated 7 May 1596, <i>"... in favour of the bearer, Captain G. PIGOTT's widow</i>" [C.S.P, Op. Cit., page 517].<br />
George and Elizabeth had issue, probably including:<br />
1. Elizabeth PIGOTT; a daughter of Captain PIGOTT [*] of Sherborne and Aston Rowant, County Oxfordshire, who married Edward BASSETT, late of Fletbourne, Nottinghamshire; he died in Dublin on 15 January 1635, and was buried at St Michan's; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. Richard BASSETT; aged 16 in 1615.</i><br />
<i> b. Alexander BASSETT; aged 7 in 1632.</i><br />
<i> c. Catherine BASSETT; she was married to Robert LEYSLE, one of the Servants of the King's Privy Chamber.</i><br />
<i> d. Anne BASSETT.</i><br />
<i> e. Mary BASSETT.</i><br />
<i> f. Elizabeth BASSETT.</i><br />
[*] The given name of this Captain PIGOTT is unknown - the details appear to fit George, and it probably was him, but it should be noted that that name does not appear among Elizabeth BASSETT's issue.<br />
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And some later events:<br />
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John PIGOTT, son and heir of Nicholas PIGOTT of Aston Rowant (by his first wife Elizabeth BECKINGTON), and named in his father's will, 1615; John was of Belturbet, County Cavan, in 1619, when he was involved, as heir to his late father, in the grant of the Manor of Milksoppe, Oxfordshire, to Robert DOBSON, of Medhenham, Gent.<br />
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Felix PIGOTT; of Fishamble Street Ward, Dublin, Easter 1687; father of:<br />
1. Thomas PIGOTT, baptised at St John's, Dublin, 24 April 1686.<br />
2. George PIGOTT, baptised at St John's, Dublin, 22 December 1687.<br />
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John PIGOTT; married with issue:<br />
1. Felix PIGOTT, born in Dublin about 1714; admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, 1733.<br />
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<span style="font-size: large;"><i>THE PIGOTT'S OF ASTON ROWANT.</i></span><br />
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Some of the above Irish PIGOTT's appear likely to connect with a family of PIGOTTs who lived at Aston Rowant in Buckinghamshire.<br />
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Richard (some records have him as Robert) PIGOTT, the second son of Robert PIGOTT (ca 1464 - 1491) of Little Horwood, Cambridgeshire, by his wife Isabel DOGGET (daughter of Henry DOGGET of Aston Rowant); Richard inherited Aston Rowant from his mother [Visitation of Oxfordshire, 1566]; he married Ellin or Eleanor PUTTENHAM, of Penn, Buckinghamshire, and had issue:<br />
1. Bartholomew PIGOTT, born about 1500; of Aston Rowant; granted the Manor of Ickford, with Edgecroft, and lands late of the Godstowe Nunnery, 1538, in capite to him and his heirs; he was licensed on 23 April 1548 to grant lands in Aston Rowant to John WILLIAMS Knight; Bartholomew was named in a license dated 15 August 1555, with William LENTHAL, Esq, Christopher CRISP and Ralph PALMER, Gents, granting Peter DORMER rights over property in Charlton and Newbottle, Northamptonshire, formerly belonging to the Monastery of Dunstable.<br />
Bartholomew died in 1558; he was married to Julyan LENTHAL (daughter of Thomas LENTHAL of Latchford, Oxfordshire); they had issue [Visitation of Oxon, 1566]:<br />
<i> a. Bartholomew PIGOTT; of Aston Rowant; probably his will proved P.C.C., 1573, of Whitfield, Gent; married Elizabeth STRETELEY (daughter of John STRETELEY of Whyfield, Oxfordshire); with issue:</i><br />
<i> i. Eleanor PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 3 June 1562.</i><br />
<i> ii. probable other issue among five other PIGOTT baptisms [*], but with the father not identified. </i><br />
<i> iii. Richard PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 15 May 1570.</i><br />
<i> b. Nicholas PIGOTT. See [A] below.</i><br />
<i> c. Richard PIGOTT.</i><br />
<i> d. George PIGOTT; recorded in a message published in Notes and Queries, 8 June 1895 [8th Series, Volume VII], posted by William Jackson PIGOTT of Dundrum, Coutnty Down (he was my great-grandfather's first cousin, and a competent family historian who died in 1921), as follows:</i><br />
<i>"Bartholomew PIGOTT, of Aston Rowant and Ickford, Oxfordshire, ob. 1558, had, by his wife Juliana, daughter of Thomas LENTHALL of Latchford, Oxon, a younger son, 'George PIGOTT, who died in the Irish service, leaving by an Irish woman'; and... who appears in the Irish Record Office, whose wife Elizabeth KING is served his heir, or takes out administration to him, 1595..." - I am unsure of W.J.P.'s sources here, but it would appear likely he had seen the 1566 Visitations pedigree, and imagine that by Irish Record Office he probably meant the Public Records Office in the Four Courts Building in Dublin, where so many original documents were destroyed in 1922 - but am not sure how certain he was about the family connection.</i><br />
<i> e. Thomas PIGOTT.</i><br />
<i> f. Bridget PIGOTT; married William LYSTER of Craven, Yorkshire.</i><br />
<i> g. Ann PIGOTT; married Robert TEMPEST of Yorkshire.</i><br />
<i> [*] These baptisms were as follows - some may have been children of Nicholas:</i><br />
<i> i. Isabella PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 1 June 1562.</i><br />
<i> ii. Margaretta PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 24 November 1564.</i><br />
<i> iii. Augustinus</i><i> PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 25 October 1565.</i><br />
<i> iv. Henry</i><i> PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 9 November 1565.</i><br />
<i> v. William</i><i> PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 20 April 1569.</i><br />
<i> vi. Richard</i><i> PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 15 May 1570.</i><br />
<i> vii Anna</i><i> PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 10 April 1572.</i><br />
2. Leonard PIGOTT, born about 1504; died s.p.<br />
3. Andrew PIGOTT, born about 1506; died s.p.<br />
4. Edward PIGOTT; died s.p.<br />
5. Sybell PIGOTT; she was married to Robert HALSIE of Farnborough, Warwickshire.<br />
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[A] Nicholas PIGOTT; he died in 1615, his will proved P.C.C., naming Margaret <i>"... my now wife,"</i> brother Richard, his sons John, Bartholomew and Felix, and his daughters Ellinor, Mary, Dorothy and Elizabeth; he was married to firstly to Elizabeth BECKINGTON; with issue:<br />
1. John PIGOTT; son and heir; of Belturbet, County Cavan, 1619, when he was involved, as heir to his late father, in the grant of the Manor of Milksoppe, Oxfordshire, to Robert DOBSON, of Medhenham, Gent.<br />
2. Bartholomew PIGOTT; named in his father's will, 1615, as one of <i>"... my two other sons... by my last wife"</i>; possibly admitted to Gray's Inn, London, 14 February 1618-19, of Chichester, Sussex, Gent; married with probable issue:<br />
<i> a. Nicholas PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 22 November 1618.</i><br />
<i> b. Theophilus PIGOTT, baptised at Aston Rowant, 15 July 1625.</i><br />
<i> c. Bartholomew PIGOTT; Patten-maker of London (he was married with issue, including Frances PIGOTT, the noted Organist in London).</i><br />
<i> d. Francis PIGOTT, born about 1630; apprenticed to Robert JENNINGS, London, Clothworker; married Dulcibella YEALDING, with issue.</i><br />
3. Felix PIGOTT; named in his father's will, 1615, as one of <i>"... my two other sons... by my last wife"</i>; possibly the Marine Factor to the Levant Company, who died in 1655 at Scanderoon (otherwise Alexandretta - now Iskenderun, in Hatay, the south-eastern most Province in modern Turkey), as advised in a Company Letter, dated 21 May 1655, to Henry RILEY, in nearby Aleppo - <i>"You note the death of Felix PIGOT at Scanderoon; Mr BODINGTON is gone there as Marine Factor... We think the house at Scanderoon should be repaired at less yearly charge; the marine factor must be advised to more frugality..."</i> [Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, 1655, London, 1881] - unless this was instead his son?; a Felix PIGGOT was buried at St Bride's, Fleet Street, London, in 1655 (perhaps his body was returned from Scanderoon?); Felix was married, with issue:<br />
<i> a. Felix PIGOTT Junior, probably baptised at Wotton Underwood, Buckinghamshire, 22 November 1622; perhaps the above death at Scanderoon, 1655; probably married, with issue:</i><br />
<i> i. Felix PIGOTT, born about 1645; apprenticed by his father, 12 December 1662, for eight years, to Thomas ELDRIDGE, Master, Goldsmith's Company.</i><br />
4. Mary PIGOTT; named in her father's will, as daughter <i>"... by my last wife"</i>; married CRANE.<br />
5. Elinor PIGOTT; named in her father's will, 1615, as Ellinor PIGOTT; she married at Aston Rowant, 1609, Robert DOBSON, with issue.<br />
Nicholas married secondly, Margaret (-?-), who was named in his will as <i>"... my now wife</i>"; she died in 1628; with further issue:<br />
6. Dorothy PIGOTT; named in her father's will, 1615.<br />
7. Elizabeth PIGOTT; named in her father's will, 1615.<br />
8. Joanne PIGOTT; married LACON, with issue:<br />
<i> a. Anthony LACON.</i><br />
<i> b. Mary LACON.</i><br />
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i>A HAREFINCH FAMILY IN CHESHIRE.</i></span><br />
<br />
There was a family in Cheshire which may have played a part of the PEMBERTON-PIGOTT story.<br />
<br />
John HAREFINCH; of Weaverham, Cheshire; he was probably a Bondsman at the marriage of Joan HAREFINCH of Weaverham, at St Bridget's church, Chester, 17 November 1612, to Henry RABORN of Tarvin, Cheshire; John was of Weaverham when he was married at St Peter's, Chester, 21 May 1614, to Anne JEYNISON of the parish of Tarvin, Cheshire ["Marriage Licenses Granted within the Archdeaconry of Chester, Volume LIII, 1907].<br />
John and Anne had issue:<br />
1. John HAREFINCH, baptized at Weaverham, 30 April 1615; his will, dated 30 October 1651, of Cheshire, was proved P.C.C., 27 July 1653 by Robert WARBURTON, John HAREFINCH his father, and Richard his brother [Commonwealth Probate Index, 1652-53]; probably John HAREFINCH of Weaverham who was married at Sandbach, Cheshire, 4 August 1645, to Mary GARNETT of Great Budworth, Cheshire.<br />
2. Richard HAREFINCH, baptized at Weaverham, 14 July 1621; he was probably buried at Weaverham, 1 August 1669; although there was another who was buried there in December 1698.<br />
<br />
Ann LEADBETER was married at Weaverham, 28 February 1658(-59), to Richard HARFORT - but it appears likely that this may have been in error for Richard HAREFYNCH, who was named in the 11 November 1667 will of John LEADBEATER of The Hermitage, Church Hulme, County Chester, as the husband of his daughter Ann LEADBEATER.<br />
<br />
Elizabeth HAREFINCH, of Weaverham, was married at Weaverham or Witton, by license dated 25 November 1685, to Richard WOODS of Northwich, Gent.<br />
<br />
There was another, and perhaps related, HAREFINCH family in Great Budworth, Cheshire.<br />
<br />
But there do not appear, at first glance, to be any PIGOTT=HAREFINCH marriages in Cheshire, or anywhere in the British Isles.<br />
However, of interest here is the name LEADBE(A)TER - the Quaker School in Ballitore where Handy PEMBERTON was enrolled in 1757, established in 1726 by Abraham SHACKELTON, was taken over by son Richard in 1756, and Richard's daughter Mary SHACKLETON was married to a LEADBEATER.<br />
Could this perhaps have been a tortuous connection which might explain Handy's marriage to a descendant of a Harfinch PIGOTT?<br />
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i>PIGOTT OF COUNTY ANTRIM.</i></span><br />
<br />
John PIGGOT; of County Antrim, about 1688-89, Gentleman; no further particulars, other than a note in BURKE's Landed Gentry (Ireland), that he resided in County Antrim during the reigns of Charles II and James II.<br />
There was an entry in the Ross Corporation Books, dated August 1700, which recorded that <i>"John PIGOTT signed as one of the grand-jury of the Queen's County relative to wool exportation</i>" ["History of the Island of Antigua," by Vere Langford OLIVER, Volume III, page 28] - whilst this heads another eight items in the Books, all relating to the Wexford PIGOTTs and Pemberton PIGOTTs, it is my opinion that this John PIGOTT was another (and connected with the family associated with Dysart in the Queen's County, whose wool produce would have been sent down the Barrow to New Ross to markets - then banned by England to protect their domestic trade), who had returned to Kilcromin in the Queen's County from Antigua in about 1698 with his wife and young family.<br />
John of County Antrim was evidently married (perhaps to a Miss HARFINCH, or to a daughter of another) and with issue, including a son:<br />
<br />
Harfinch PIGGOT, born in County Antrim, about 1688-89; Irish naming traditions suggest that his mother, or one of his grandmothers, may have been named HARFINCH (or HAREFINCH); he was admitted to Trinity College, as a Pensioner (Tutor Dr JONES, Dublin), 2 April 1706, aged 17 (son of John, Generosus; born Antrim); Scholar, 1708; B.A., Vern 1709; at New Ross, Gentleman, February 1713, when, by a deed of John IVORY dated 19 February, Harfinch was nominated and appointed first Master of a new Classical School in New Ross, and in which post he was succeeded, after his death, by his former pupil Rev Bartholomew LLOYD [Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquarians, Ireland, July 1950, page 257-258]; Harfinch was appointed Curate of New Ross, Diocese of Ferns, by License dated 6 February 1724-25 ["Ferns Clergy and Parishes," by Rev James B. LESLIE, Dublin, 1936, page 223]; Vicar of Killurin, Diocese of Ferns, until 1737, with Kilbrydeglin, Chappecurranglyn and Whitechurchglyn [LESLIE, Op. Cit., page 189]; admitted Free Burgess of Ross, County Wexford, 6 November 1725, Ross Corporation Books [OLIVER, Op. Cit.]; appointed Overseer of Trinity Hospital, 7 September 1727, Ross Corporation Books [OLIVER, Op.Cit.]; Harfinch PIGOTT, Clerk, was grantee of a Deed of Lease, dated 3 February 1728, made by <i>"...</i> <i>John WINKWORTH of Maudlins in the Liberties of New Ross, County Wexford, Esq, and George WARBURTON, Esq. one of the Masters in His Majesty's High Court of Chancery, concerning the house and outhouses and lands of Tannhouse as formerly held by William MARTINGALE except that part thereof now held by Mr Henry ALLEN, and also a Tuck Mill next adjoining the said lands of Tannhouse then in the possession of the said Harfinch PIGGOT and formerly held by Hugh BRENNAN and his undertenants, all of which said lands and premises are situate near Maudlins aforesaid... To have and hold the said premises with all their Rights from the 25th day of March preceding, during the term of natural... lives of Thomas PIGGOT, William PIGGOT and Hester PIGGOT, sons and daughter of the said Harfinch PIGGOT, and the life of the longest liver of them, at and under the yearly rent of £30 above all taxes, quit rent excepted, the said rent to be paid half yearly on 29 September and 25 March during the said term, with clauses of Distress and Reply, as also a clause of renewal for ever upon payment of one pottleg of good French wine for every life to be so renewed... duly perfected in the presence of William WELMAN of New Ross, County Wexford, Esq, and Harvey WELMAN of the same, Gent..."</i> [Memorial 41112, Book 61, Page 204, Dublin Deeds Registry]; Rev Orange (sic) Harfinch PIGOTT was grantee of a Deed of Lease, dated 4 March 1733 [Memorial 10512], made by Charles TOTTENHAM of Tottenham Green, County Wexford, Esq, concerning <i>"...that parcel of the Town and Lands of Slevy then in the actual possession of the said Orange Harfinch, containing 152 acres, as also that other part and Parcel of the Town and Lands of Slevy aforesaid then in possession of William POWER, containing 72 acres, in all 224 acres... in the Barony of Shimaleer (sic) and county of Wexford, to have and to hold... from 25 March then next ensuing, during the natural life and lives of the said Charles TOTTENHAM, Edward TOTTENHAM and Charles TOTTENHAM Junior the sons of the said Charles... (at) the rent of £55 sterling every year..."</i> which deed was perfected in the presence by William SUTTON of Horetown, Esq, Joshua TENCH of Co Wexford, Gent, and William BENNETT late of Cullenstown, Gent, and witnessed by James GIFFORD and William PIGOTT; Harfinch was last mentioned in Ross Corporation Books on 12 August 1738 [OLIVER, Op. Cit.]; of Slevoy, Clerke, when named in Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 26 and 27 December 1740 [Memorial 70585], concerning the Town and Lands of Great Coolcoll, otherwise Malmoystown, Parish of Taghmon and Barony of Shilmalire, County Wexford, together with Maurice Howlin DARCY of Great Coolcoll, Gent, Charles TOTTENHAM the elder of Tottenham Green, County Wexford, and William SUTTON of Long Graige, County Wexford (also Rev Edward TOTTENHAM of Ballyregan and Charles TOTTENHAM the younger of New Ross); Harfinch was "... late of Slevoy" when he made a Deed of Sale, dated 25 March 1744, by which he granted to William PIGOTT the Lands of Tanyard Tuckmill and Larkans Lands otherwise Rabrack, previously leased to Harfinch PIGOTT on 3 February 1728 (see above), by John WINKWORTH (who was deceased by 1744), the Deed witnessed by William SUTTON of Horetown, Esq, Thomas MURPHY of Maudlin, Yeoman, and Sarah SUTTON of Longraigue [Memorial 105209, ditto]; Harfinch PIGGOTT, M.A., was appointed Prebend of Taghmon, 1742, to succeed Roger VIGORS, and held that post until his death, when he was succeeded by Andrew HAMILTON, M.A., who was collated on 19 April 1746, and installed on 24 April ["Fasti Eccelsiae Hibernicae," by Henry COTTON, Volume II, Dublin, 1848, page 372].<div><br />
Harfinch died some time (and perhaps shortly) before 19 April 1746 [COTTON, Op. Cit.].<div><br />
Harfinch was married, with issue:<br />
<br />
1. Thomas PIGOTT, born in Ross, County Wexford, about 1712-13; named as one of three lives for the term of his father's lease, dated 3 February 1728 [Memorial 41112]; admitted to Trinity College, as a Pensioner (Dr PIGGOT, Ross), 19 April 1733, aged 20; B.A., Vern 1737; M.A., Aest 1740; of Old Castle, Meath, Clerk, when he sold, by a Deed dated 25 March 1746, to his brother William PIGOTT of Slevoy, for £100 <i>"... to him in hand paid... all of his Title and Interest, Profits and Property, Claim and Demand, of in and unto that part of the lands of Slevy called Castle quarter and Brenan's quarter,"</i> which had been demised to his father by Charles TOTTENHAM in a lease dated 4 March 1733 (see above) [Memorial 110655]; Rector of St James's, Dublin.<br />
Thomas died in 1775; his will, dated 16 August 1775, was proved P.C.I., Dublin, on 4 June 1776.<br />
Thomas married Ann (-?-), with possible issue:<br />
? Jane PIGOTT, baptized at St Patrick's Cathedral, 31 August 1749. BURKE (Landed Gentry, Ireland) incorrectly identified her as the wife of William SUTTON (see below).<br />
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2. William PIGOTT<span style="font-family: "times new roman";">; named as one of three lives for the term of his father's lease, dated 3 February 1728 [Memorial 41112]</span>; Brethren of the Poor, 1734, Ross Corporation Books ["History of the Island of Antigua," by Vere L. OLIVER, Volume III, page 28]; admitted Freeman of Wexford, 12 August 1741, Ross Corporation Books, page 45 [OLIVER, Op. Cit.]; had the Slevoy lease from his brother Thomas in 1746 - this was probably the one recorded in Ross Corporation Books on 11 October 1746, as certain lands <i>"...for lives renewable forever, at 4s 2d per acre, next adjoining the 'Maudlin'..."</i>; he was named as a joint trustee of the will of the late Urban VIGORS, late of New ROSS, Esq, in a deed dated 29 August 1767, by which some of VIGORS' lands at Ballyconick were sold to Charles TOTTENHAM of New Ross, Esq [Memorial 168116]; High Sheriff of Wexford, 1771; William was party to a deed dated 16 October 1771, by which he demised unto Joseph MEADOWS, of the Town of Wexford, Merchant, of residential premises in the parish of St Kerins in Wexford Town, then in the occupancy of John LEARED, Inn-holder [Memorial 189930]; he obtained a renewal of the lease of part of the commons, 6 October 1781, in the place of Johanna PIGOTT, Ross Corporation Books page 151 [OLIVER, Op. Cit.]; he advertised, in February 1783, <i>"... to be Let, the Lands of Ballymadde, containing 80 acres of meadow, in the Barony of Bargy, County Wexford, on the banks of the sea, with a good cottage</i>" [Dublin Evening Post, 22 February]; he was grantee of a Deed of Lease, dated 29 January 1785concerning lands of Hawsmaid commonly called Old Town, in the parish of Horetown, County Wexford, to Richard and John DEVEREUX, both of Ballyruane, County Wexford [Memorial 279383].</div>
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William died in October 1788, <i>"... a few days ago in the County of Wexford"</i> [Waterford News, 24 Octber; Clonmel Gazette, 27 October], his will, dated 25 July 1788, was proved P.C.I., Dublin, on 30 October 1788.</div>
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William appears to have married twice; his first wife died in or before early December 1778 [Saunders Newsletter, 5 December]; he was married secondly, a few days before 18 April 1782, to Hannah CLIBBORN, widow of Joseph CLIBBORN of Moate Castle, County Wexford, and a daughter of Jacob GOFF of Horetown by his wife Mary FADE (Hannah was a sister of Fade GOFF the husband of Elizabeth PEMBERTON, and of Elizabeth GOFF the wife of Caesar SUTTON); she witnessed her husband William's deed of 29 January 1785; she died in 1789 [Prerogative Wills Index]; without issue.</div>
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3. Hester PIGOTT<span style="font-family: "times new roman";">; named as one of three lives for the term of his father's lease, dated 3 February 1728 [Dublin Deeds Registry, Memorial 41112</span>]; she was married to William SUTTON, of Horetown, County Wexford; he was probably the son of William SUTTON of Long Graige, County Wexford, by Eleanor Mary COLCLOUGH (a daughter of Caesar COLCLOUGH of Rosegarland by Mary IVORY); they had issue, including:</div>
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a. Jane SUTTON, born in 1751 [Private Members Tree on Ancestry.com]; perhaps the only surviving child (given that she inherited the PIGOTT property interests in Slevoy); she was married at Mountlevy, County Wexford, a few days before 28 January 1772, to Handy PEMBERTON [WALKER's Hibernian Magazine], with issue. See [C] below.</div>
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? Caesar SUTTON; of Long Graige, and deceased before 17 April 1787, when he was named in the Deed of Marriage Settlements for William Pemberton PIGOTT and Eleanor HOUGHTON (see below), and which also names Rev William SUTTON of Long Graige and George POWELL of Dublin. This death date does not correspond with other documents (see SUTTON section below).</div>
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i>HANDY OF ESSEX, WEXFORD AND DUBLIN.</i></span><br />
<br />
NOTE - The old Quaker dating system differs from the conventional; their year commenced in March, which was written up as the 1st month (abbreviated to 1mo as used here), through to the following February which was the 12th month (or 12mo).<br />
<br />
Thomas HANDY; a Member of the Society of Friends (Quaker); of Chadwell, Essex, 1651, 1654; went to Ireland; of Waterford, 1657; of Ballyhubbock, County Wexford, 1661; he died in 1688; he was possibly married firstly, at Evesham, Worcestershire, in 1640, to Margaret CLEMENTS; with issue:<br />
1. Mary HANDY, born at Evesham, 1641; she died in 1668; she married Daniel HANNING.<br />
<br />
Thomas HANDY was married, probably before 1651, to Elizabeth SAIM, daughter of Robert and Mary SAIM, of Mousin, County Essex - the Quaker Marriage entry did not record a date, but it was between 1649 and 1666; they had issue:<br />
1. Sarah HANDY, born at Chadwell, Essex, 22 1mo (March) 1651 (a second entry has the year as 1645, probably in error).<br />
2. Thomas HANDY, born at Chadwell, 25 2mo (April) 1654; he probably married Sarah (-?-), with issue born at Newcastle, County Wexford:<br />
<i> a. Elizabeth HANDY, born in 1680.</i><br />
<i> b. Thomas HANDY, born 20th 7mo (September) 1683. Perhaps the Merchant of Meath Street, Dublin? See below.</i><br />
<i> c. John HANDY, born on 12th 10mo (December) 1685; died in 4mo (June) 1686, aged 6 months.</i><br />
<i> d. John HANDY, born on 2nd 6mo (August) 1688.</i><br />
<i> e. Mary HANDY, born on 16th 2mo (April) 1692.</i><br />
<i> f. Jonathan HANDY, born on 16th 7mo (September) 1694.</i><br />
3. John HANDY, born at Waterford, 12th 1mo (March) 1657.<br />
4. Mary HANDY, born Ballyhubbock, County Wexford, 16th 1mo (March) 1661.<br />
This Thomas would hardly have named a second daughter Mary while the first was still living, which suggests this was probably not a second marriage for the widower of Margaret.<br />
<br />
Thomas HANDY, son of Thomas and Joan HANDY, was married at Lambstown, Ireland, in 1666, to Elizabeth DEAVES, widow of John DEAVES, and a daughter of Thomas and Ellen SISSIMORE of Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire; they had issue:<br />
1. Sissemore HANDY, born at Ballyhubbock, Wexford, 18th 6mo (August) 1668.<br />
The address for this birth indicates this Thomas was probably the widower of Elizabeth SAIM.<br />
<br />
Thomas HANDY, possibly born in 1654 (see above); named in his son Thomas's marriage entry, July 1714; of Newcastle, Tillikin Parish, Barony of Shilmaleer, County Wexford, March 1733, when he made an Indented Deed, dated 11 March, was the first party, with his eldest son Thomas HANDY the younger, of the City of Dublin, Merchant, and second son John HANDY of Newcastle, Farmer, as the joint second party, and concerning the Towns and Lands of Newcastle, Kilkun, Ballymo', Shoneen and Ballywater, of 500 acres, lying in the barony of Shilmaleer, which possessed on a lease from Richard SAUNDERS [Memorial 53057]; named in his son Thomas's will, 1752.<br />
Thomas was married with issue:<br />
1. Thomas HANDY, possibly born in 1683 (see also above); of Meath Street, Dublin, Merchant; probably first party to a Deed of Mortgage dated 18 May 1724 [Memorial 27009], by which he sold to Joseph FADE of the City of Dublin, for £1,100, the lands of Davidstown otherwise known as the three Balgans, in the Barony of Bantry and County of Wexford; his will, dated 20 September 1752, was proved P.C.I., 10 July 1754, naming his father Thomas, brother John, brother-in-law Samuel HILLARY, daughter Catherine the wife of John PIM, daughter Sarah the wife of John PEMBERTON, daughter Mary, grand-daughters Sarah, Mary, Elizabeth and Anna PIM and Mary PEMBERTON, grand-son Handy PEMBERTON, and cousins Samuel HANDY, Mary WYLY (daughter of Bridget JESSOP otherwise WYLY), Sarah WILLIAMS otherwise WRIGHT and William WRIGHT [BETHAM's Abstract].<br />
Thomas was married in Dublin, 2 July 1714, to Mary HILLARY (daughter of Henry HILLARY of the Town of Wexford); she was mentioned in the marriage Settlements for Catherine HANDY and John PIM as Thomas's <i>"... then present wife"</i> [Memorial 54772] they had issue:<br />
<i> a. Catherine HANDY, eldest daughter; her Settlements, being Deeds of Lease and Release dated 3 and 4 December 1734 [Memorial 54772], for her marriage to John PIM, son of John PIM of Edenderry, King's County, Gent; issue:</i><br />
<i> i. Sarah PIM; named in her grandfather's will, 1752.</i><br />
<i> ii. Mary PIM; named in her grandfather's will, 1752.</i><br />
<i> iii. Elizabeth PIM; named in her grandfather's will, 1752.</i><br />
<i> iv. Anna PIM; named in her grandfather's will, 1752.</i><br />
<i> b. Sarah HANDY; married to John PEMBERTON. See [B] below.</i><br />
<i> c. Mary HANDY; probably her will dated 13 May 1765, of Dublin, as "... daughter of Thomas HANDY late of Dublin, Merchant, deceased" - and naming her cousin Samuel HANDY of Coolylough, County Westmeath (and his daughter Margaret Ann HANDY), and her niece Jane PEMBERTON [BETHAM's Abstract].</i><br />
2. John HANDY; named in his brother Thomas's will, 1752; married at Ballynarrick, County Westmeath, 25th 7mo (September) 1717, to Sarah RANDALL, daughter of Dorothy RANDAL of the Deeps (Family witnesses including - Thomas and Sarah HANDY, Thomas HANDY Junior, Benjamin and Susannah RANDALL, Henry and Jacob DEAVES, William GOFF, Beatrice, John, Frances and Samuel WHEELER, John, Nathaniel, Joseph Benjamin and Elizabeth RUBIE, Nicholas LOCK, Susannah CHAMNEY and Ruth BANCROFT).<br />
<br />
But there may have been another connection, which could cast some doubt about some of the above speculations:<br />
<br />
Jonathan HANDY; married with issue:<br />
1. Thomas HANDY, born about 1665; of Coolelough, County Westmeath; named in his brother John's will, 1712; died about 1731.<br />
2. John HANDY, born about 1670; died before 28 January 1731; he was married to Catherine (ORMSBY?)<br />
3. Samuel HANDY, born about 1672; of Brackareagh, County Westmeath, Gent, 1726-27 and 1739-40; married Jane LOWE; with issue:<br />
<i> a. Samuel HANDY, born about 1713, youngest son; probably (unless instead the father) of Killbegg, County Westmeath, Gent, April 1744, when he was named as second party to Deeds of Lease and Release dated respectively 12 and 13 April, along with Henry PEMBERTON of the City of Dublin, Merchant, his wife Elizabeth and their son John PEMBERTON, and Thomas HANDY, his wife Mary and their daughter Sarah HANDY, and also John PIM of Dublin, Merchant, and John CLIBBORN of Moat, Westmeath; probably (unless instead the father) named in his cousin Thomas HANDY's will, 1752.</i><br />
<i> b. John HANDY, second son; named in 1726-27.</i><br />
4. Mary HANDY; married WHALLEY.<br />
5. daughter; married Thomas COOKE.<br />
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i>SUTTON OF COUNTY WEXFORD.</i></span><br />
<br />
William SUTTON; of Longraigue, County Wexford; he was married to Eleanor Maria COLCLOUGH (joint Administrator to her brother Anthony COLCLOUGH of Rosegarland, County Wexford, 10 January 1733); they had issue:<br />
1. Caesar SUTTON, born 1715 or 1727; of Longraigue, County Wexford, Esq; his will, dated 13 June 1793, was proved Dublin (P.C.I.), 19 August 1783, naming his wife Elizabeth, sister-in-law Mary GOFF, daughter Mary COOKE and son-in-law John COOKE, sons Jacob, Joshua and John, eldest son Rev William SUTTON, and niece Maria BRENNAN [BETHAM's Abstract]; he was married in 1759, by License of the Prerogative Court of Ireland, to Elizabeth GOFF (daughter of Jacob GOFF of Horetown and Mary FADE); they had issue:<br />
<i> a. William SUTTON, born in Co Wexford, 1760; possibly admitted to Trinity College, Pensioner (Dr STOKES), 22 December 1771, aged 17 (but he was entered as a son of William, Generosus ?); B.A., Vern, 1782; Clerk in Holy Orders; named in his father Caesar's will, 1793, as Rev William SUTTON; he died at Longraigue, 31 October 1827, aged 67, and was buried at Horetown [CANTWELL's "Memorials of the Dead"]; married Ann BAMBRICK (daughter of John BAMBRICK by his wife Alice); with issue:</i><br />
<i> i. Caesar SUTTON, born at Longraigue, about 1800; admitted Trinity College Dublin, P.T., 2 November 1818, aged 18, son of William, Gent; Caesar died on 24 April 1839, aged 37, and was buried at Horetown [CANTWELL, Op. Cit.]; he was married at Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, 31 March 1833, to Emma Louise GIBSON, only child of the late Major GIBSON, Hon East India Company's Service [The Asiatic Journal, Volume 10, 1833, page 127]; with issue.</i><br />
<i> ii. Charles William SUTTON, born County Wexford, about 1815; admitted Trinity College, 3 November 1834, aged 19, son of William (Clericus, defunctus).</i><br />
<i> b. Mary SUTTON, born 1762; married John COOKE; both named in her father's will, 1793.</i><br />
<i> c. Caesar SUTTON, born 1763.</i><br />
<i> d. Jacob SUTTON, born 1764; named in his father's will, 1793.</i><br />
<i> e. Joshua SUTTON, born 1766; named in his father's will, 1793.</i><br />
<i> f. John SUTTON, born 1772; named in his father's will, 1793.</i><br />
2. William SUTTON; married about 1750, Hester PIGOTT.<br />
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i>PEMBERTON OF LANCASHIRE AND DUBLIN.</i></span><br />
<br />
John PEMBERTON; a Member of the Society of Friends (a Quaker); of Ormskirk, Lancashire, 1682; later of Dublin; married Jane (-?-); she was living in 1717; they had issue:<br />
1. John PEMBERTON.<br />
2. Jane PEMBERTON; married in Dublin, 4th 8mo (October) 1715, to Jehoshabeath (Joshua) MADDOCK, of Meath Street, Dublin, Linen-draper (Family witnesses included Amy, Jacob, Eliza, Ann Jr, Hannah, Joseph and Abraham MADDOCK, Jane, Henry and Elizabeth PEMBERTON, Elizabeth VICKERS, Elizabeth BUDDEN, Henry DENT, Mary and John FALKINER, Joseph FADE, Abell STRETTLE, Edward and Abigail FAWCETT, and Benjamin and Joseph FULLER); his will dated 10 September 1717 [Quaker Will records], naming his wife Jane, parents Joseph (deceased) and Amy MADDOCKS, numerous nephews and cousins, his mother-in-law Jane PEMBERTON, brother-in-law John PEMBERTON, and sister Elizabeth wife of David VICKERS.<br />
3. Henry PEMBERTON, born at Ormskirk, Lancashire, 9mo (November) 1682; he went to Ireland. See [A] below.<br />
4. Elizabeth PEMBERTON; married David VICKERS.<br />
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[A] Henry PEMBERTON; Groom; of Dublin, Merchant; party to Deeds of Lease and Release, dated 12 and 13 April 1744, as first party to the Lease and joint first party (with his wife Elizabeth) to the Release, in which Samuel HANDY of Kilbegg in County Westmeath, Gent, was joint second party (with Thomas STRANGMAN of Dublin) to the Lease and fourth party (ditto) to the Release, and in which Thomas HANDY and Mary his wife and Sarah HANDY their daughter were the second party to the Release, and John PEMBERTON the eldest son of Henry and Elizabeth was the third party ditto [John's marriage settlements - see below].<br />
Henry died in Dublin, and was buried on 24th 2mo (April) 1747, aged 65 years [Quaker Burial Records]; his will, dated 16 February 1746, was proved P.C.I., 8th 8mo (October) 1747 [Quaker Will records], naming his wife Elizabeth, daughter Elizabeth (£600 on day of marriage, and an executor), son John (residue, and an executor), nephew Robert LECKY (son of Henry's sister Jane), nephew Henry (sic - perhaps in error for Handy?) PEMBERTON, and sister Elizabeth VICKERS (£80 yearly from holding in Dolphins Barn).<br />
Henry was married at Killconnor, County Carlow, 26th 4mo (June) 1707, to Elizabeth LECKY, daughter of Robert and Mary LECKY of Ballikealy, County Carlow (Family witnesses included Robert and Mary LECKEY, Elizabeth VICKERS, James, John, Thomas, Jane and Rebecca LECKEY, Joshua CLIBBORN, and Anne LECKEY).; she was buried in Dublin, 19th 12mo (February) 1755; they had issue:<br />
1. a son, born in Dublin, 6th 3mo (May) 1708; he died aged 2 days.<br />
2. Joseph PEMBERTON, born in Dublin, 7th 7mo (September) 1709; died in 1710, aged 1 and-a-half years.<br />
3. Joseph PEMBERTON, born in Dublin, 3rd 10mo (December) 1710; died on 13 5mo (July) 1713.<br />
4. Sarah PEMBERTON, born in Dublin, 21st 9mo (November) 1711; died 4th 2mo (April) 1713.<br />
5. Mary PEMBERTON; daughter of Henry PEMBERTON of the City of Dublin when she was married at the Meeting House in Meath Street, Dublin, 12th 8mo (October) 1731, to Samuel PIKE, son of Joseph PIK of the City of Cork, deceased (with family witnesses including Henry and Elizabeth PEMBERTON, John and Thomas LECKY, Mary and John FALKINER, and others).<br />
6. Robert PEMBERTON, born in Dublin, 4th 11mo (January) 1713(-14); admitted to the Quaker School at Ballitore, 2nd 4mo (June) 1726 ["Annals of Ballitore, by Mary LEADBEATER].<br />
7. John PEMBERTON, born in Dublin, 2nd 11mo (January) 1714(-15), eldest surviving son. See [B] below.<br />
8. Henry PEMBERTON, born in Dublin, 19th 4 mo (June) 1716; died in 1716, aged 5 months.<br />
9. Thomas PEMBERTON; died in Dublin, 26 11mo (January) 1718(-19).<br />
10. Henry PEMBERTON; died in Dublin, 1721.<br />
11. Henry PEMBERTON; admitted to the Quaker School at Ballitore, 2nd 4mo (June) 1726 ["Annals of Ballitore, by Mary LEADBEATER]; buried in Dublin, 6th 8mo (October) 1746.<br />
12. Elizabeth PEMBERTON, named in her father's will, 1746, not then married; she was married in Dublin, 4th 12mo (February) 1749, to Fade GOFF, son of Jacob GOFF (with family witnesses including Jacob and Mary GOFF, Elizabeth, John and Sarah PEMBERTON, Elizabeth and Benjamin DAWSON, Joseph Fade GOFF).<br />
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[B] John PEMBERTON; of Dublin, Merchant; admitted to the Quaker School at Ballitore, 2nd 4mo (June) 1726 ["Annals of Ballitore, by Mary LEADBEATER]; named in BURKE's Landed Gentry of Ireland, as Esquire, the father of Handy PEMBERTON, and grandfather of Colonel PEMBERTON PIGOTT; he was identified by his son Handy in 1782 as having <i>"...to a considerable degree promoted the Manufactures of Dublin"</i> [see below]; undoubtedly the Mr John PEMBERTON, who was awarded a Premium by the Linen Board for the year ending August 1748, the fourth in a list of sixteen so awarded, of £100, for manufacturing 44,647 yards <i>"... of Course Linen in imitation of Osnaburghs"</i> [Pue's Occurrences, 7 February 1749]; he was buried in Dublin, 11th 12mo (February) 1760-61, aged 46 years, <i>"... husband of Sarah"</i> [Quaker Burial records].<br />
John was married at the Meeting House in Meath Street, Dublin, 15th 2mo (April) 1744, to Sarah HANDY (with Family witnesses including Henry and Elizabeth PEMBERTON, Thomas and Mary HANDY, Elizabeth and Henry PEMBERTON, Mary HANDY, Sarah HILLARY, Thomas, Robert, George and Sarah LECKEY, John BARCLAY, Jane DEAVES, Anne, Experience and Abraham CLIBBORN, and Edward WILSON; and other witnesses including Hannah GOFF, Deborah and Tobias HILLARY, Joshua, Joshua Jr, Henry, Robert Jr and Sarah CLIBBORN, and Jane LECKEY) [Quaker Marriage Records], and by settlements dated 13 April 1744; she was buried in Dublin, 11th 12mo (February) 1555-56; her will, dated 18 November 1755, was proved P.C.I., Dublin, 2 April 1756, naming her husband, her father Thomas HARDY, her eldest son Handy PEMBERTON, her other children Mary, Jane and Henry, and her kinsmen Fade GOFF and Abraham CLIBBORN, both of Dublin, Merchants.<br />
John and Jane had issue:<br />
1. Handy PEMBERTON. See [C] below.<br />
2. Mary PEMBERTON; named in her grandfather HANDY's will, 1752.<br />
3. Jane PEMBERTON; named in her aunt Mary HANDY's will, 1765.<br />
4. Henry PEMBERTON.<br />
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[C] Handy PEMBERTON was born in 1748 [Private Members Tree on Ancestry.com]; named in his HANDY grandfather's will, 1752; admitted as a boarder to the Quaker School at Ballitore, County Kildare, 11th 9mo (November) 1757 ["Annals of Ballitore," by Mary LEADBEATER, Volume 1, London, 1862, page 439]; apprenticed in early 1766 to Thomas GREER, of Dungannon, Linen-draper, who observed in June 1767 that Handy <i>"... has not behaved well,"</i> and in August that<i> "... his genius"</i> does not <i>"... answer to business"</i> and that his <i>"... cousin Molly PEMBERTON has consulted John PIM about Handy,"</i> with the final result that in September 1767, the apprenticeship was terminated [see Linley and Jim HOOPER's family history blog at <a href="http://www.linleyfh.com/">www.linleyfh.com</a> for details - probably sourced either from<em> "The Market Book of Thomas GREER, Dungannon, 1758-59,"</em> by W.H. CRAWFORD, 1907 (National Library of Ireland), or more likely from GREER Family Papers, Belfast P.R.O., Ref D.1044, including <em>"...documents... mainly letters to and from Thomas GREER, (1724-1823)... linen trade...Quaker movement"</em> and probably now at PRONI]; this inevitably lead to a Testimony of Disunity being brought against his disorderly conduct at a Men's Meeting in Dublin, 25th 9mo (November) 1767 [Quaker Congregational records]; he was admitted to Trinity College, as Socio Comitatus (Mr BUCK), 23 January 1768 (no further particulars appear in his entry in "Alumni Dublinenses"); he was admitted to the Middle Temple, London, 18 April 1772, <i>"... son and heir of John PEMBERTON, late of the City of Dublin, Esq, dec'd" </i>[Admission Register, page 347]; Handy petitioned the Lord Lieutenant, November 1774, for a grant of four yearly fairs (every 19 March, 15 May, 14 August and 28 November) and a weekly market (every Tuesday), to be held on the lands of Balnabarna, Barony of Moycashel and County of Westmeath, for which his majesty's writ of Ad Quod Damnum was ordered [Saunders Newsletter, 11 November]; called to the Irish Bar, 1775; Freeman of the City of Dublin, Chritsmas 1776, in the Merchant's Corporation (probably by paternity?); by letter dated 17 January 1782, Handy presented himself as a candidate for election to the Irish Parliament, for the constituency of the City of Dublin left vacant by Dr CLEMENT [Saunders Newsletter, 19 January], and in which letter he noted that his father, though dead many years, <i>"... was a merchant in this city</i>" and had to <i>"...a considerable degree promoted the Manufactures of Dublin</i>"; Handy published a series of letters in the Dublin Press during the latter part of 1782 and early 1783, condemning Henry GRATTAN for his stand on proposed Repeal, indicating that he himself was opposed to the power that England had been exercising <i>"...to nip our infant manufactures in the bud</i>" [Dublin Evening Post, 22 February 1783], and even advocating that the members of the Independent Dublin Volunteers (he was a member of its Lawyer's Corps) should perhaps consider <i>"... choosing their officers,"</i> and from <i>"... out of your enemy's army</i>" [Dublin Evening Post, 26 December 1782], ending this letter by assuring that Mr GRATTAN <i>"... shall, with my consent, never be Colonel, till he changes his opinion about simple repeal</i>"; Hardy appeared before the Court of King's Bench, 26 June 1784, <i>"... to shew cause against the information which was moved for by the crown lawyers against him, for his letter in the Volunteers Journal of Monday 21st instant"</i> [Saunders Newsletter, 29 June] - but he appeared before the Court <i>"... in his Volunteer's uniform, which, he was told by the court, was an improper garb for one of the profession to plead in. He thereupon left the court, and returned, in a lawyer's gown and wig; but during his absence the rule was made absolute"</i>; he may have been mentioned in the Dublin Freemans Journal of 9-11 June 1785 in a "tirade" concerning <i>"... that unfortunate madman Handy P------N...</i> (who)<i> took up a large paving stone in Essex Street and threw it into one of the widows of Mrs MOORE's shop, whereby one of her children narrowly escaped having her brains knocked out</i>... (was) <i>lodged in Newgate..." </i>(but upon her being told an idle tale of Handy's having a wife and four children, he was liberated from prison - evidently his views on Reform were being pilloried by his strident Anglophile fellow protestants; Handy evidently visited America, and was recorded in February 1786 as having <i>"... returned to this city, but from a declaration he made last Thursday in the Royal Exchange Coffee House, on seeing that there was no one person in a military uniform in the room, there is great reason to suppose that Dublin will not long be the place of his residence"</i> [Saunders Newsletter, Friday 17 February] - and indeed, he would be dead within four months.<br />
Handy died in or before June 1786, when his creditors and debtors were requested to pay their debts or state their claims upon his estate to his Law Agent Benjamin THOMAS, of Aungier Street [Saunders Newsletter, Wednesday 21 June].<br />
Hardy was married at Mountlevey, County Wexford, a few days before 28 January 1772, to Jane SUTTON [WALKER's Hibernian Magazine], by Settlements dated 17 January [Memorial 190099], where Jane was recorded as a Spinster, and daughter of Hester SUTTON, of Horestown, the widow of William SUTTON, Esq, deceased, and to which Settlements Jacob GOFF, of Horestoen, Gent, and William PIGOTT, of Slevoy, Esq, were parties.<br />
They had issue:<br />
1. William PEMBERTON, born in Dublin, 3 January 1773. See [D] below.<br />
2-4. Three additional children, evidently living in 1785.<br />
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<span style="font-size: 16px;"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">?</span><span face=""arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif"> </span><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Hardy PEMBERTON, of Slevoy, County Wexford, Esq, with his son and heir William, were jointly named as third party to a Deed, dated 9 Feb 1805 [Memorial 367399], concerning the Town and lands of Drumin, Deningown and Ardnadrum, all in the Parish of Rosenallis.</span></span><br />
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<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><i>PEMBERTON-PIGOTT OF SLEVOY.</i></span><br />
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[D] William PEMBERTON later PEMBERTON-PIGOTT was born in London, January 1773, and baptized at St Mary's, Lambeth, 28 January:<br />
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">[Image from Ancestry.com - "London, England, Church of England Baptisms, etc, 1538-1812." </span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">Courtesy of London Metropolitan Archives.]</span></i></div>
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William assumed the additional surname of PIGOTT as a condition of his inheritance of the PIGOTT lands at Slevoy, in 1788, on the death of his great-uncle William PIGOTT; he was admitted to Trinity College, as Socio Comitatus (Mr DRAFFIN), on 3 March 1790 (aged 17, son of Handy, Gent), and recorded under the surname of PIGOTT; he was Sheriff of Wexford, 11 February 1794; Free Burgess of Ross, 29 June 1818; last mentioned in Ross Corporation Books, 29 June 1831; Lieutenant-Colonel, Waterford and Wexford Militias.<br />
William died at Slevoy castle, County Wexford, on 9 March 1854, <i>"... at the advanced age of 84"</i> [Cork Examiner, Wednesday 14 March].</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGyckJtXI6ABxgXC-NfQZezFbLD8sU3Gk2ktXy5X8Hzk8mest9TlVpgtVjTlsE9a873zp5JSkfRXLe7DFfqylelYXJv5YedMF6Ve7w9NPluO99-Ggv-7NtreOLQSTu5E9pqqc_5R5eUUmc/s1044/thumbnail.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="612" data-original-width="1044" height="376" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGyckJtXI6ABxgXC-NfQZezFbLD8sU3Gk2ktXy5X8Hzk8mest9TlVpgtVjTlsE9a873zp5JSkfRXLe7DFfqylelYXJv5YedMF6Ve7w9NPluO99-Ggv-7NtreOLQSTu5E9pqqc_5R5eUUmc/w640-h376/thumbnail.jpg" width="640" /></a></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Slevoy Castle. An early photograph taken by Strangman DAVIS-GOFF. </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Copyright property of Sir Robert DAVIS-GOFF, and used here with his permission. </i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>Image courtesy of Claire BRADLEY of Dublin.]</i></div><div><br />
William was married on 19 December 1794, to Ellen Margaret HOUGHTON; the marriage settlements were dated 20 December, and named Ellen as the eldest daughter of Henry Thomas HAUGHTON, and named Rev William SUTTON of Longraige and George POWELL of Dublin, Esq, as trustees [Memorial 311027]; she died at Slevoy Castle, 1 June 1862.<br />
They had issue:<br />
1. William Henry Pemberton PIGOTT, born 1796; died in 1815, without issue.<br />
2. George Powell Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Wexford, 2 December 1802. See [E] below.<br />
3. Thomas Pemberton PIGOTT, born Wexford, about 1806; admitted Trinity College, Dublin, 6 November 1826, aged 19; B.A. 1831; he married Caroline FLETCHER.<br />
4. Charles Caesar Pemberton PIGOTT. See [F] below.<br />
5. Maria Fraser Pemberton PIGOTT; died in 1826.<br />
6. Jane Pemberton PIGOTT; married by License of the Diocese of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin, 1820, as his first wife, Rev Maxwell PHAIRE.<br />
7. Ellen Margaret Pemberton PIGOTT; she was married in May 1826, as his second wife, to her sister Jane's widower Rev Maxwell PHAIRE [Evening Mail, 12 May].<br />
8. Ann Eliza Pemberton PIGOTT; the third daughter when she was married at Taghmon Church, 19 April 1828, to Jacob GOFF, Esq, only son of William GOFF or Horetown, County Wexford [Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier, 19 April] - Ann was recorded as the grand-niece to George POWELL of Clifton, Gloucestershire, and of Rockshire House, Waterford.<br />
9. Charlotte Pemberton PIGOTT.<br />
10. Martha Pemberton PIGOTT.<br />
11. Mary Ann Pemberton PIGOTT.<br />
12. Emily Pemberton PIGOTT; she was married in 1839 to Robert POLWHELE.</div><div><br />
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[E] George Powell Pemberton PIGOTT; admitted to Trinity College, 18 October 1819 (aged 18); B.A., 1823; of Slevoy, County Wexford; J.P.; Captain, Wexford Militia; he died at Glashar, County Kilkenny, 12 January 1863 [Freemans Dublin Journal]; he was married at Killurin Church, on 5 July 1834 to Mary BEATTY, eldest daughter of Edward BEATTY of Heathfield, Esq [Dublin Observer, 12 July 1834]; she had a bequest of £1,000 in the will of her uncle, Thomas BEATTY, of Sion, County Wexford, 1850; she probably died at Barnstown, Wexford, 25 March 1895, aged 79, and was buried at Killurin, the funeral attended by her sons Colonel PEMBERTON-PIGOTT, Captain George P. PIGOTT of Ballyneskar Lodge, Richard P. PIGOTT of Barnstown, Dr John P. PIGOTT of Taghmon, Dr Fred K. PIGOTT of Shrewsbury, Henry P. PIGOTT, and daughters Mrs Loftus STEELE and Mrs W.H. WILLIAMSON [Wexford People, 30 March]; they had issue:</div><div><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div>
1. Edward Charles Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Killurin, County Wexford, 8 July 1836, eldest son; Ensign, by purchase, 44th Regiment, 16 January 1855 [Globe, 17 January]; Lieutenant, 44th Regiment of Foot; at Madras, November 1859, Lieutenant Adjutant, H.M.'s 44th Regiment (his marriage); Captain, without purchase, 1869, vice Brevet Lieutenant Colonel FAUSSETT [Morning Post, 10 November]; he was at Wellington, Vizagapatnum, Madras Presidency, July 1875, Captain, 44th Regiment (birth of daughter); he was at Pinkney Green, Furzecote, Cookham, Berkshire, 1901 Census, aged 64, with second wife Madeline and daughter Eileen; he died in London, October 1921, and was buried at Yorktown, Surrey, 28 October, aged 85 years, late of Belgaum, Camberley; ditto, 1911 Census, aged 74, with wife Madeline; he was married firstly, at St George's Cathedral, Madras, 24 November 1859, to Eliza Ann UNDERWOOD (third daughter of William Elphinstone UNDERWOOD, Madras Civil Service); he was married secondly, in 1891, to Madeleine Louise GRANT, daughter of Rev Edward Pierce GRANT, Vicar of Portsmouth; by his first wife, he had issue:<br />
<i> a. George Hamilton Pemberton PIGOTT, born on 18 March 1863.</i><br /><i> b. Edith Jessie Pemberton PIGOTT, said to have been born in London, 1865; she was married firstly, at Ootacamund, Madras Presidency, 14 July 1883, to George Albert Stanley THOMPSON, aged 29, Bachelor, of Ootacamund, Madras Police; she was married secondly to TODHUNTER.</i><br />
<i> c. Robert Edward Pemberton PIGOTT, born on 6 October 1866; he died at 28 Holbein House, Sloane Square, 20 November 1943, aged 77, late Indian Railways, and served in W.W.1 with the 12th Battalion, Essex Regiment; he was aged 26, bachelor, of Arkonam, Telegraph Engineer, when he was married at Palghat, Madras Presidency, 26 August 1893, to Maude Alice WILKINSON, aged 21, Spinster, of Gooty, daughter of Alfred Thomas WILKINSON.</i><br />
<i> d. Madeline Florence Pemberton PIGOTT, second daughter, possibly born at Londonderry, 24 April 1870 [Cork Examiner, 2 May]; she was married at St Bartholomew Hyde, Winchester, 1 November 1894, to George Henry HUNT (eldest son of Colonel W.S. HUNT, late Madras Staff Corps) [Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette, 8 November].</i><br />
<i> e. Ethel Christine Pemberton PIGOTT, probably the un-named daughter born at Kamptee, India, 4 May 1872 [Broad Arrow, 8 June]; she was married at St Mary Abbots, Kensington, 25 January 1899, to Benjamin Edward TODHUNTER (third son of Charles Franklin TODHUNTER of Christchurch, N.Z.) [Oxford Journal, 28 January].</i><br />
<i> f. Eileen Ella Pemberton PIGOTT, born in Madras, 2 July 1875, and baptised at St Matthias, Vizagapatnum, 7 July; aged 25, with her father, 1901 Census.</i><br /><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
2. George Powell Pemberton PIGOTT, probably born at Heathfield, County Wexford, 18 July 1838 [Kilkenny Moderator, 28 July]; he was married at St Stephen's, Dublin, 13 November 1869, to Jemima Mabel KNOX, daughter of Maurice Wilson KNOW, the marrige witnessed by F.F. PIGOTT; as Mabel PIGOTT, she died at Lower George Street, Wexford, 17 December 1894, aged 48, formerly of Barnstown Castle, the wife of George Pemberton PIGOTT, Gentleman; they had issue, including:<br />
<i> a. un-named son, born at Cullenstown, 14 September 1870.</i></div><div><i> b. Bessie PIGOTT, born at Old Ross, Wexford, 22 December 1871. Possibly Elizabeth Mabel, below?</i></div><div><i> b. George Frederick Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Cullenstown, Wexford, 7 August 1874.</i><br />
<i> c. Elizabeth Mabel Pemberton PIGOTT; she was possibly married at St Selskar, Wexford, 30 April 1900, to John William Henry IRVINE, Widower, of Rosslane.</i><br />
<i> d. Mary Frances Pemberton PIGOTT.</i><br /><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
3. Elizabeth Eleanor Pemberton PIGOTT.<br /><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
4. William Henry Samuel Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Heathfield, 2 September 1839 [Carlow Sentinel, 14 September; M.I.]; named in the will of his great-uncle, Thomas BEATTY, 1850, third son; Lieutenant, 73rd Regiment of Foot, 1858; Esq, 73rd Regiment, Devonport, 1862; Captain, 73rd Regiment, Kilburn, 1864, and Limerick, 1866; he was at Spawell Road, Wexford Urban, 1901 Census, aged 61, Secretary, Wexford County Council, with his wife and four unmarried children; he died on 25 January 1906 [M.I., on findagrave.com]; of full age, bachelor, of Dinapore, Lieutenant H.M. 73rd Regiment, when he was married by license at Patna, Bengal Presidency, 7 March 1861, to Mary Palmer TAYLER, full age, spinster, of Patna, daughter of William TAYLER, witnessed by William TAYLER and Charlotte TAYLER [India Office Marriages, Findmypast]; her parents, William TAYLER (1808-1892), Hon (East India) Coy Civil Service, and Charlotte Brydges PALMER, were married at Fort William, Calcutta, 17 July 1830; she was a sister of Skipwith Henry Churchill TAYLER (he was married at Calcutta, 19 December 1861, to Matilda Gertrude COCKBURN), and of Lilia Blencowe Hall TAYLER (she was married at Patna, 17 March 1859, to Edward Dowdeswell LOCKWOOD); Mary was with her husband, 1901 census, aged 61, born in India; she died at Willoughby Place, Enniskillen, 20 November 1908, aged 69, Widow of a Military Officer, the death informed by her son-in-law, George H. SCOTT, present at the death, and of the same address; they had issue (dates of birth as recorded by BURKE in his Landed Gentry of Ireland, 1899, at page 367):</div><div>
<i> a. a son who died in infancy.</i><br />
<i> b. Jessie Elizabeth Pemberton PIGOTT; born 4 April 1862; she died at Clover Valley, Wexford, 28 October 1890, aged 28, Spinster, gentleman's daughter, the death informed by her brother, W.J.H. PIGOTT, of the same address, present at the death.</i><br />
<i> c. Mary Charlotte Pemberton PIGOTT, born 12 August 1863; she died at Kyle, Crossabeg, Wexford, 16 August 1893, aged 30, spinster, daughter of Military Captain, of Consumption, informed by her brother Ernest Richard PIGOTT, also of Kyle, present at the death.</i><br />
<i> d. Skipworth Lockwood Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Kilburn, London, 1 November 1864, and baptised at Willesden (temporary?) Church of St John, 5 December; he was at Whitehall, Harbledown, Kent, 1911 Census, aged 46, Smallholder (farmer), with wife Mabel Louise (aged 38, born Llanduff, Glamorgan), and two daughters Violet Loftus (aged 18) and Eileen Blanche (aged 13, both born in Birmingham); he died at Bastrop, Texas, 26 March 1943, a Widower, late Secretary to the Chamber of Commerce; he was married in 1892, to Mabel Louise JAMES, of Llandaff, Glamorganshire.</i><br />
<i> e. Vicars Langley Boyse Pemberton PIGOTT, born at 5 Upper Glenbarrett, Limerick St Michael, 3 April 1866.</i><br />
<i> f. Arthur Frederick Pemberton PIGOTT, born 10 August 1867.</i></div><div><i> g. Geraldine Elinor Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Clover Valley, Taghmon, 9 March 1869; she died on 1 April 1870.<br /></i>
<i> g. Violet Ruthven Palmer Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Clover Valley, 1 November 1870 (BURKE has 10 August).</i><br />
<i> h. William John Hobhouse Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Clover Valley, 19 December 1871; aged 29, in the Army, with his parents, 1901 Census; he died on 19 December 1919; he wasmarried on 17 September 1907 to Anna Georgina MOORE.</i><br />
<i> j. Villiers Graham Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Taghmon, 12 December 1873; he died in India, 12 February 1952, the fifth son.</i><br />
<i> k. Ernest Richard Pemberton PIGOTT, born 9 August 1875; he informed his sister Mary's death, August 1893.</i><br />
<i> l. Florence Letitia Pemberton PIGOTT, born County Wexford, 9 February 1877; aged 23, with her parents, 1901 Census; she witnessed the marriage of her sister Henrietta, September 1905; she was of full age, spinster, she was married at Rathaspeck, parish of Wexford, 8 July 1908, to George Henry SCOTT, Banker, of the Provincial Bank, Wexford, son or S.B. SCOTT, Clerk.</i></div><div><i> m. Lilian Lockwood Pemberton PIGOTT, born in County Wexford, about 1879; aged 21, with her parents, 1901 Census; aged 31, with her husband, 1911 Census; she was married at St Iberius, Wexford, 11 June 1907, to Richard Waddy ELGEE, Junior, Solicitor; he was at 25 Wigram Place, Wexford Urban, 1911 Census, aged 43, with his wife and daughter; they had issue:</i></div><div><i> i. Violet Maud ELGEE, born Wexford, about 1909; aged 1, with her parents, 1911 Census.</i></div><div><i> n. Henrietta Maud Pemberton PIGOTT, born in Wexford, about 1884; aged 16, with her parents, 1901 Census; she witnessed her aunt Letitia's second marriage, April 1915; she was married in the R.C. Chapel, Wexford, 2 September 1905, to Henry Joseph CHAMBERS, of Anne Street, Wexford, Manager of the Provincial Bank of Wexford; she was married secondly, at Monkstown Catholic Church, 30 April 1920, to Arthur William NOLAN, witnessed by Joseph Chamny RIDGWAY and her sister Lilian Lockwood ELGEE.<br /></i><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
5. Olivia Goodall Pemberton PIGOTT, probably born at Heathfield, the seat of Edward BEATTY, Esq, 8 December 1841, second daughter; she was married firstly, by special license, at St Anne's, Dublin, 24 September 1872, to Adam Loftus STEELE, Lieutenant-Colonel, Madras Staff Corps [Belfast Newsletter, 27 September]; she was married secondly to John BARRY.<br /><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
6. Richard Pemberton PIGOTT, born about 1843; named in the will of his great-uncle, Thomas BEATTY, 1850, fourth son; of Taghmon, he informed his mother's death, 1895; he died at Scollar Street, Wexford, 19 February 1914, aged 70, Bachelor, Gentleman.<br /><br /></div><div>
7. John Charles Pemberton PIGOTT, born in Wexford about 1846; Surgeon and Physician; he was at Taghmon Town, 1901 census, aged 55, Surgeon, with his wife Mary Margaret (aged 56) and unmarried son Arthur (aged 26); he died at Taghmon, Wexford, 19 June1904, aged 58, the death informed by his son Arthur; he was married at Kilkevan parish, Balloughton, Wexford, 16 October 1872, to Mary Margaret Longfield BEATTY (daughter of David Vandeleur BEATTY and Mary Elisabeth LONGFIELD); she died in 1912; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. John George Glynn Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Taghmon, 14 September 1873; Physician and Surgeon, Shrewsbury; he died in 1952; he was married at St Oberius, Wexford, 16 October 1912, to Elizabeth Mary KANE otherwise BRADISH, widow, daughter of James BRADISH, Gent; she died on 31 December 1935, and was buried at Shrewsbury.</i><br />
<i> b. Arthur Robert Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Taghmon, 1 December 1874; he informed his father's death, 1904.</i></div><div><i> c. an un-named son, born at Taghmon, 23 February 1876.<br /></i>
<i> c. Evelyn Maud Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Taghmon, 12 April 1877.</i><br />
<i> d. Frederick Wilton Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Taghmon, 31 July 1878.</i><br />
<i> e. Godfrey William Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Taghmon, 26 December 1879. </i><br />
<i> f. Robert Vandeleur Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Taghmon, 4 September 1881; he died in 1937.</i><br />
<i> g. Edward David Pemberton PIGOTT; born at Taghmon, 13 January 1884; he died in 1936.</i><br /><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
8. Frederick Knolleys Pemberton PIGOTT, born about 1848; he was at Belmont House, Shrewsbury St Chad, 1911 Census, aged 62, Medical Practitioner, with wife Amy (aged 54) and sons Alan (aged 18) and Eric (aged 16), both born at Shrewsbury; Frederick died at Belmont House, Shrewsbury, 10 October 1919, Administration to his widow Amy Richarda Margaret PIGOTT, effects under 3684 pounds 13s 3d [National Probate Calendar]; of Shrewsbury, M.D., of full age, bachelor, when he was married in County Wexford, 12 July 1884, to Amy ROBINSON, of Rose Park, Wexford, daughter of John Keefe ROBINSON, Clerk; they had issue:</div><div> <i>a. Alan John Pemberton PIGOTT, baptised at St Mary's, Shrewsbury, 5 August 1892; aged 18, with his parents, 1911 Census.</i></div><div><i> b. Eric John Keefe PIGOTT; aged 16, with his parents, 1911 Census.<br /></i><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
9. Henry Loftus Pemberton PIGOTT, born about 1863; he died in 1898, and was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery, Dublin.<br /><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
10. David William Pemberton PIGOTT, born about 1872; he died at Rosslare Strand, Wexford, 2 September 1934, aged 62, Married, Retired, the death informed by his wife Stella.<br /><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
11. Mary Pemberton PIGOTT; she was married, 8 July 1877, to William George WILLIAMSON, Inspector, Royal Irish Constabulary.<br /><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>
12. Emily Maude Pemberton PIGOTT - possibly the daughter born at Slevoy Castle, on 13 July 1854 [Cork Examiner, 19 July] - unless this was for one of her sisters? An Emily Martha PIGOTT died at Rosslane, County Wexford, 22 September 1899, aged 45, Spinster, formerly of Barnstown Castle, the death informed by the Coroner for South Wexford.<br /><div style="text-align: center;">- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -</div></div><div>13. Letitia Julia Pemberton PIGOTT; of 17 Lower Leeson Street, when she was married at St Peter's, Dublin, 15 August 1896, to Albert George RICHARDS, of Macroom, County Wexford; of Greystones, Wicklow, a Widow, when she was married secondly, at the R.C. Church, Wexford, 29 April 1915, to Charles Michael BARRY, of Rocklands, near Wexford, Clerk, witnessed by her niece Henrietta Maude CHAMBERS and her nephew-in-law R.W. ELGEE.</div><div><br /></div><div>
<br />
[F] Charles Caesar Pemberton PIGOTT, baptised at Taghmon, 14 June 1809 [recorded on his enlistment petition, Bengal Infantry, 1826]; named in a renewal of a lease for life, dated 29 September 1818, 29 June 1824, and 28 August 1841 [Ross Corporation Books];petitioned to be enlisted as a Cadet, Bengal Infantry, 13 September 1826; Ensign, 2nd Regiment of Native Infantry, Keitah, 2 June 1827, and transferred to the 18th Native Infantry, 19 June same year [Asiatic Journal]; Lieutenant, 18th Native Infantry, September 1838, when he was appointed adjutant to the recruit depot at Meerut; he was at Calcutta, 28 September 1839, when he was ordered to take charge of the 5th division of public works, until further orders, after Lieutenant P.W. WILLIS was granted furlough on a medical certificate; Lieutenant, 18th Native Infantry, appointed Adjutant, March 1840, vice NORGATE (promoted); granted Furlough, to Europe, for health reasons, 6 January 1841; he died at sea on 12 April 1841, on his passage home on the ship "Plantagenet" from Bengal (22 January), via Cape (21 March), and off Penzance (28 May), with his wife and two children [Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register, June 1841]; his will was proved in Dublin, 22 January 1861, by his widow, Mary Fraser PIGOTT, of 13 De Grey Terrace, Dublin, the sole executrix, effects under 900 pounds.<br />
Charles was of Baitool, Lieutenant, 18th Regiment, N.I., of age, when he was married at Allyghur, Bengal, 12 February 1834, to Mary Madeline Fraser HANNAY, of Allyghur, also of age, the third daughter of the late Henry HANNAY, Esq, of Elgin [India Office Marriage Register; Calcutta Christian Observer, April 1834]; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. Mary Phayre Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Meerut, India, 22 November 1836, and baptised at Benares, 3 June 1837; she was at Oswaldkirk Rectory, 1861 Census, aged 24, Officer's wife, with her husband, at the home of her father-in-law; she was at 11 Kenilworth Road, Ealing, 1911 Census, aged 74, Widow, Private Means, with her daughter and grand-daughter; she died at Ealing, Middlesex, 8 çMay 1817; she was married at Dibrougarh, Assam, 10 January 1859, to Augustus Kirkwood COMBER (1828 - 1895); he was born in France, 31 July 1828; he was Deputy Commissioner of Assam, 1861 [birth notice for his daughter]; he died at Penhryn Lodge, Twickenham, 22 June 1895, General, "... Bengal Staff Corps, for many years Deputy Commisiioner in Assam, in the 67th year of his age" [Morning Post, 25 June]; his will was proved jintly by his widow Mary Phayre COMBER and his brother Bryan Eyre Coote COMBER; Augustus and Mary had issue, including:</i></div><div><i> i. Hester Mary COMBER, born at Fezpur, Assam, 13 November 1858, and baptised there, 25 February 1859.</i></div><div><i> ii. Augusta Maud COMBER, born at Scarborough, Yorkshire, 8 September 1861 [Perthshire Advertiser, 19 September]; aged 20, of Shillong, Rawalpindi, when she was married by License, at All Saints, Rawal Pindi, 8 October 1881, to George Arthur WARBURTON, Indian Medical Department, Shillong.</i></div><div><i> iii. Augustus Bryan Cantley COMBER, born at Dibrooghur, Upper Assam, 16 June 1864, and baptised there, 19 June; District Superintendent of Police, Baughulpore, Bengal, when he died there, 3 May 1901, aged 36.</i></div><div><i> iv. Isabella Amy COMBER, born at Dibrooghur, 15 October 1865, and baptised there 20 October; she died aged 5 days, and was buried at Dibrooghur.</i></div><div><i> v. Norah Houghton COMBER, born at Dibrooghur, 13 January 1867, and baptised there 26 February; she was aged 44, with her mother, 1911 Census, a Widow, with her daughter Victoria Mary HAYNE; she was married to Mr HAYNE, who died before 1911.</i><br />
<i> b. Charles Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Benares, 8 March 1838; he died at Calcutta, 21 July 1856 [Freeman's Journal, 14 November], aged 17 years, "... eldest son of the late Charles Caesar PIGOTT, Esq, Bengal Native Infantry, and grandson of the late Colonel PIGOTT of Slevoy Castle" [Morning Chronicle, 10 November 1856; Wexford People, 15 November], and was buried at Dibrooghur, Upper Assam, Bengal Presidency, 22 July, aged 18 years 4 months, then residing with his uncle Lieutenant Colonel HANNAY.</i><br />
<i> c. Catherine (Kate) Fraser Pemberton PIGOTT, born 16 March 1839 and baptised at Meerut, 14 December, youngest daughter; she was married at St Paul's Church, Cheltenham, 4 March 1862, to William Henry THOMAS, Esq (eldest son of Rev Lewis Frederick THOMAS, B.D., incumbent of St James's, Liverpool).</i><br />
<i> d. Arthur Purves Pemberton PIGOTT, born at Barrackpore, 5 December 1840 [Asiatic Journal].</i><br />
_______________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<br />
<i><span style="font-size: large;">IRISH QUAKER FAMILIES WITH PEMBERTON LINKS.</span></i><br />
<br />
Society of Friends Archival records on Findmypast, digitalized under license of the Historical Committee of the Religious Society of Friends in Ireland Archives, are making it very much easier to link up Quaker families in Ireland.<br />
<br />
<i><span style="font-size: large;">CLIBBORN.</span></i><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">William CLIBBORN; of Cowley, County Durham; married Margaret; it appears that she died at Moate, County Westmeath, <em>"... mother of John,"</em> but no date was recorded on the Quaker Register (but appearing between burials in March 1661 and December 1670); with issue:</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">1. John CLIBBORN, born at Cowley, County Durham, 1623, son of William and Margaret CLIBBORN; he died at Moate, 23rd 5mo (July) 1705, <em>"... son of William"</em>; he was married firstly, at Newry, in 1653, to Margaret CROW, of Newry; she died at Moate, 23 1mo (March), 1661, <em>"... wife of John</em>"; they had issue:</span><br />
<em><span style="font-size: small;"> a. Jane CLIBBORN, daughter of John CLIBBORN of Moate, when she was married, at the house of John GEE, Ballyboughton, 22nd 6mo (August) 1677, to Isaac FULLER.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: small;"> b. William CLIBBORN, born at Lagan, County Meath, in or shortly after 6mo (August) 1660; he died at Moate, 7mo (September) 1660, "... son of John," no age recorded.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: small;"> c. George CLIBBORN, born at Lagan, County Meath, 6mo (August 1660; of Moate; he died at Moate, 4th 22mo (January) 1693-94, aged 33, "...son of John"; he was married at Lambstown, County Wexford, 6th 10mo (December) 1688, to Sarah FULLER; she died at Moate, 25th 5mo (July) 1690, aged 28, "... wife of George"; they had issue:</span></em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em><span style="font-size: small;"> i. Elizabeth CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 14th 5mo (July) 1690; she died at Moate, 14th 8mo (October) 1690.</span></em><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">John was of Moate, County Wexford, and a Widower, when he has married secondly, at Tober, King's County, 3rd 2mo (April) 1664, to Dinah ENGLISH, of Turphilon, County Westmeath; she died at Moate, 26th 10mo (December) 1711, <em>"... wife of John"</em>; by her he had further issue:</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><em> d. Joshua CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 16th 6mo (August) 1665; named as son of John and Dinah at his marriage; of the Moate of Greenoge, County Westmeath, Gent; died at Moate, 23rd 12mo (February) 1727-28, aged 62 years, "... son of John and Dinah"; his will, dated 21 February 1712, was proved 13 August 1728, naming his wife Sarah, eldest son John, other sons Robert, George, Jonas, Abraham and Joshua, and appointed brother-in-law Henry PEMBERTON of Dublin, Merchant, and Robert LECKEY of Kilnock, County Carlow, as Executors, with Trustees including John LECKEY of Killmoney, County Carlow, and John LECKEY junior; he was married at Mountmellick Meeting, 9th 4mo (June) 1694, to Sarah LACKY, witnessed by John and Dinah CLIBBORN, Robert LACKY, Anne CLIBBORN, James and John LACKEY, Thomas and Eliza CUPPAGE and others; she was a daughter of Robert and Mary LACKEY of Ballykelly, County Carlow; she died at Moate, 6th 7mo (September) 1729, "... widow of Joshua"; they had issue:</em></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em> i. John CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 14th 1mo (March) 1694-95; he died at Moate, 16th 2mo (April) 1697, aged 3 years.</em></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em> ii. John CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 16th 6mo (August) 1697</em><em>; named in his father's will; he died at Moate, 1st 7mo (September) 1754; he married Sarah HOOPE. See [G] below.</em></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em> iii. Dinah CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 23rd 11mo (January) 16999-1700?).</em></span></span><br />
<em> iv. Robert CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 3rd 6mo (August) 1701; of Whelan Grove, County Kildare; he married Anne MARTIN; with issue two sons (Joshua and Henry) and one daughter (Sarah, wife of Edward COOPER).</em><br />
<em> v. George CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 11th 9mo (November) 1702.</em><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em> vii. Anne CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 21st 12mo (February) 1703(-04?); she died at Moate, 14th 2mo (April) 1706, aged 2 and-a-quarter years.</em></span></span><br />
<em> viii. Sara CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 2nd 9mo (November) 1705.</em><br />
<em> ix. Joshua CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 5th 1mo (March) 1706-07</em><em>; he died at Moate, 13th 9mo (November) 1712</em><em>.</em><br />
<em> x. Abraham CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 9th 8mo (October) 1708; of Dublin, Merchant; he died at Clara, King's County, 23rd 2mo (April) 1762, aged 54; he married Anne COPPECK, daughter of John COPPECK; with issue three daughters Sarah, Jane and Elizabeth.</em><br />
<em> xi. James CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 9th 1mo (March) 1709-10; of Moate; he died at Moate, 21st 10mo (December) 1782; he married Experience BARCLAY; with issue a son Barclay CLIBBORN. See [H] below.</em><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em> xii. Thomas CLIBBORN</em><em>, born at Moate, 10th 3mo (May) 1711</em><em>; he died at Moate, 9th 10mo (December) 1711, aged 1 and-a-half years.</em><span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em><br />
xiii. Elizabeth CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 22nd 4mo (June) 1712; she died at Moate, 29th 5mo (July) 1713, aged 1 year.<br />
xiv. Jane CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 27th 7mo (September) 1713.</em></span></span></span></span><br />
<em> xv. Joshua CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 22nd 7mo (September) 1715.</em><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em><span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"> xvi. Ruth CLIBBORN, born 1722; died at Moate, 15th 12mo (February) 1726-27, aged 4 and-a-half years.<br />
<em> e. John CLIBBORN, born at Moyally, King's County, 3rd 5mo (July) 1667.</em></span></span></em></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em><span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em> f. Abraham CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 5th 8mo (October) 1669; of Moate, County Westmeath; he died at Ballnagarby, 4th 4mo (June) 1749, "... son of John and Dinah"; he was married at Moate, 22 4mo (June) 1698, to Sarah GEE; she died at Ballynagarby, 4th 4mo (June) 1746, "... wife of Abraham"; they had issue:</em></span></span></em></span></span><br />
<em> i. Jane CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 7th 2mo (April) 1699.</em><br />
<em> ii. Elizabeth CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 29th 9mo (November) 1702.</em><br />
<em> iii. Joshua CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 12th 7mo (September) 1712.</em><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em><span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"> g. Anne CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 12th 6mo (August) 1671.</span></span></em></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em><span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"> h. Margaret CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 18th 8mo (October) 1673.</span></span></em></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"><em><span style="font-size: large;"><span style="font-size: small;"> j. Thomas CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 21st 2mo (April) 1676.<br />
2. Anne CLIBBORN, of Cornalcowley, County Durham; she was married at Moate, County Westmeath, in 1659, to John MILLER of Yorkshire.<br />
3. Bathsheba CLIBBORN, born at Cowley, County Durham, daughter of William; she was married at Athlone, in 1658, to Phillip ENGLAND.<br />
? Alice CLIBBORN; married in Ireland, 1665, to Thomas TUART of Yorkshire.</span></span></em></span></span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhE1Bjrdwmk7YIa3s83QxxLDhwSte17KOtaWX9qj5AIbANccwhwy27rxBGq0ftmNxvC871vFbIrEbLvut93r8iUd1AQhzqE_lMnwbggGlgGAiEbdFQcOPeVcVKIQv9Lew8ZMdjkTi4u-l8W/s1600/CLIBBORN.JPG" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="615" data-original-width="399" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhE1Bjrdwmk7YIa3s83QxxLDhwSte17KOtaWX9qj5AIbANccwhwy27rxBGq0ftmNxvC871vFbIrEbLvut93r8iUd1AQhzqE_lMnwbggGlgGAiEbdFQcOPeVcVKIQv9Lew8ZMdjkTi4u-l8W/s640/CLIBBORN.JPG" width="411" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em>[From BURKE's Colonial Gentry.]</em></span></div>
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<br />
[G] John CLIBBORN; married Sarah HOOPE, daughter of John HOOPE of Lurgan, Couny Armagh, Merchant; they were both named in her father's will, 1739; they had issue:<br />
1. Joshua CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 21st 2mo (April) 1721.<br />
2. Ruth CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 28th 5mo (July) 1722.<br />
3. John CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 3rd 8mo (October) 1723.<br />
4. Sarah CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 28th 7mo (September) 1724.<br />
5. Robert CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 7th 8mo (October) 1726.<br />
6. Jane CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 17th 6mo (August) 1728.<br />
7. Anne CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 20th 6mo (August) 1730.<br />
8. Ruth CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 16th 7mo (September) 1732.<br />
9. Abigail CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 21st 8mo (October) 1734.<br />
10. George CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 25th 10mo (December) 1736.<br />
11. Abraham CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 8th 7mo (September) 1740.<br />
12. William CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 31st 3mo (May) 1745/<br />
<br />
[H] James CLIBBORN, son of Joshua and Mary, and brother of Robert; of Moate, County Westmeath; he died at Moate, 21st 10mo (December) 1782; he was married in Dublin, 9th 4 mo (June) 1738, to Experience BARCLAY (daughter of John BARCLAY and his second wife Anne STRETTLE); they had issue:<br />
1. Barclay CLIBBORN, born in Dublin, 21st 2mo (April) 1739; he died at Moate, 3rd 1mo (March) 1789(-90?), <em>"... husband of Sarah"</em>; he married Sarah COOPER (daughter of William COOPER, of Cooper-hill, Queens County, by his wife Experience STRETTEL); she died at Moate, 19th 6mo (August) 1817, aged 78, "... wife of Barclay"; they had issue:<br />
<i> a. Anne CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 7th 9mo (November) 1762; she died at Dublin, 2nd 1mo (March) 1776(-77?), aged 3 (sic) and-one-quarter years.</i><br />
<i> b. Lydia CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 21st 12mo (February) 1763.</i><br />
<i> c. James CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 24th 12mo (February) 1764.</i><br />
<i> d. Sarah CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 4th 3mo (May) 1767; died at Moate, 28th 9mo (November) 1769, aged 2 and-a-half years.</i><br />
<i> e. William Cooper CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 8th 5mo (July) 1768; died at Moate, 8th 4mo (June) 1847, aged 79.</i><br />
<i> f. Joshua CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 18th 5mo (July) 1769.</i><br />
<i> g. John Barclay CLIBBORN, born at Moate,</i><br />
<i> h. Edward</i><br />
<i> j. Thomas CLIBBORN; died at Moate, 13th 2mo (April) 1799, aged 27.</i><br />
<i> k. Sarah CLIBBORN, born at Hall, Moate, 14th 2mo (April) 1775</i><br />
<i> l. Anne CLIBBORN, born at Hall, Moate,, born about 1776; died at Moate, 25th 10mo (December) 1832, aged 56.</i><br />
<i> m. Robert CLIBBORN, born at Hall, Moate, 16th 9mo (November) 1778; he died at Dublin, 1mo (March) 1847, aged 69.</i><br />
<i> n. Abraham CLIBBORN, born at Hall, Moate, 15th 1mo (March) 1780; he died at Moate, between 1789 and 1792.</i><br />
<i> o. Elizabeth CLIBBORN, born at Hall, Moate, 23rd 2mo (April) 1781.</i><br />
<i> p. Sophia CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 19th 8mo (October) 1783.</i><br />
2. James CLIBBORN, born in Dublin, 21st 5mo (July) 1741; unmarried in 1780, of County Down.<br />
3. Joshua CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 21st 7mo (September) 1746; died in 1751.<br />
4. Anne CLIBBORN, born at Moate, 20th 7mo (September) 1749; married John OGLE of County Down.<br />
5. Sarah CLIBBORN, born in Dublin, 2nd 4mo (June) 1752; she was married to John COURTENEY of County Waterford.<br />
6. John Barclay CLIBBORN, born in Dublin, 7th 5mo (July) 1753; died at Moate, 5th 7mo (September) 1756, aged 3.<br />
7. Joshua CLIBBORN, born in Dublin, 23rd 4mo (June) 1755; died 1767.<br />
<br />
<i><span style="font-size: large;">STRETTLE</span></i>.<br />
<br />
Hugh STRETTLE (or STRETTEL); of Cheshire; he died 5th 7mo (September) 1671; he married Mary; she was buried at Mabberley, Cheshire, on 11th 7mo (September) 1662; they had issue:<br />
1. Amos STRETTLE, born in Saltersley, Mabberley, Cheshire, 24 February 1657-58; went to Ireland in 1678; Linen-draper in Dublin; died in Dublin, 5 November 1729; he was married secondly, at her father's residence in Lambstown, County Wexford, 23 March 1692, to Experience CUPPAGE (daughter of Robert CUPPAGE or CUPPAIGE, who was born in Cumberland, 1619, and his wife Elizabeth WARREN); they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Robert STRETTLE; he emigrated to Pennsylvania in 1736, and died at Philadelphia in 1761; he was married to Philotesia OWEN (daughter of Nathaniel OWEN).</em><br />
<em> b. Anne STRETTLE; she married BARCLAY.</em><br />
<em> c. Amos STRETTLE.</em><br />
<em> d. Elizabeth STRETTLE.</em><br />
<em> e. Thomas STRETTLE. He may have married Abigail HOOPE, daughter of John HOOPE of Lurgan, County Armagh.</em><br />
<em> f. Ebenezer STRETTLE.</em><br />
<em> g. Jacob STRETTLE.</em><br />
<em> h. Experience STRETTLE.</em><br />
<em> j. Lydia STRETTLE.</em><br />
<em> k. Benjamin STRETTLE.</em><br />
2. Abel STRETTLE; Linen-draper in Dublin; died in 1708.<br />
<br />
<i><span style="font-size: large;">GOFF.</span></i><br />
<br />Laurence GOFFE; Citizen and Draper of London; apprenticed, 1553, under Thomas GOFFE, Master, Coy Draper; new Freeman, Coy Draper, 1556, by servitude, under Thomas GOFFE, Master; his will was proved P.C.C., 1605, naming his (third) wife Frances, his son Samuel (and his son Laurence), son Laurence (executor), son Michael JENNINGS (wife Elizabeth, and Laurence, Thomas and Robert, presumably sons), "son-in-law" (or step-son) John BRIDLEY (wife Elizabeth and son John), daughter Catherine, daughter Margaret (wife of Percival CROFT), daughter Frances (wife of Robert BULWARD), brother Philip (and his son Laurence), brother Thomas (and his sons John and daughter Catherine), brother Richard , deceased (and his son Edward), and brother-in-law (or step sibling?) William PILBOROW.</div><div>Laurence was married firstly, St Peter Upon Cornhill, 26 November 1558, to Anne LECROFT; she died before 1585; they had issue [BOYD's Inhabitants of London]:</div><div> i. Edward GOFFE, born 1564; died 1578.</div><div> ii. Elizabeth GOFFE, born 1567; she was married in 1583 to Michael JENNINGS.</div><div> iii. Jane GOFFE, born 1568.</div><div> iv. Catherine GOFE, born 1569.</div><div> v. Samuel GOFFE, born 1571; Citizen and Draper of London; his will, dated 18 October 607, proved P.C.C. married in 1595 to Catherine ASHTON.</div><div> vi. Margaret GOFFE, born 1572; married Percival CROFT.</div><div> vii. Frances GOFFE;, born 1574; married in 1598 to Robert BULWARD.</div><div> viii. Laurence GOFFE, born 1576; Freeman, Coy Draper, by patrimony, 26 September 1597; he was executor of his father's will, 1605.</div><div>Lawrence was married secondly, by General License of the Bishop of London dated 9 July 1585, to Margaret MILLEN, Widow of John MYLLIN, of St Giles, Cripplegate; her will proved P.C.C., 1593. He was married thirdly, in 1594, to Frances HALL, daughter of Edward HALL of St Botolph's, Billingsgate, Citizen and Haberdasher of London; she survived him.</div><div><br /></div><div>Robert GOUGH, born at Lewes, Sussex, about 1564; matriculated Sizar, from St John's, Cambridge, Michaelmas 1584; B.A. 1588-89; Ordained Deacon, Diocese of Chichester, 3 October 1589; Priest, ditto, 13 february 1589-90; M.A. (Cantab.) 1592; Rector of East Blachington, 1605-28; buried at East Blachington, 10 November 1628, aged 64; his will, dated 15 October 1628, proved P.C.C., naming his sons Michael, Robert and Richard GOFFE, daughters Elizabeth and Deborah GOFFE, and sole executor John GOFFE (his "natural" son?).</div><div>Robert was married firstly, with issue:</div><div> i. Robert GOFFE, baptised at East Blatchington, 1 June 1608.</div><div> ii. Michael GOFFE, baptised ditto 5 October 1609.</div><div> iii. Richard were probably baptised ditto, 6 October 1611.</div><div> iv. Elizabeth GOFFE.</div><div> v. Deborah GOFFE (it is possible that she may have been named for a relation - see Stephen GOFFE below - he was married in Sussex in 1604 to Deborah WEST).</div><div>Robert was married, evidently secondly, at St Mary Woolnoth, 22 October 1618, to Martha BARBER of Camberwell; and thirdly, on 19 March 1626-27, to Joan BURTON, of Friston, Maiden [Sussex Marriages, Archdeaconry of Lewes].</div><div><br /></div><div>
John GOUGH; of Hampshire; probably died in London, February 1630, aged 85; of St Bride, Fleet Street, London, Taylor, when he was married by general license, 3 February 1590-91, to Alice BELFEILL, daughter of the late Mr BELLFILL, late of the City of Winchester, Gent, deceased; with probable issue, said to have included the following (as recorded in error in some on-line pedigrees), but which is clearly impossible.</div><div><br /></div><div><i><span style="font-size: large;">STEPHEN GOFFE SENIOR, A PURITAN PREACHER.</span></i><br /><br /></div><div>Stephen GOFFE was born about 1576 (from his age at matriculation), but his parentage has not yet been established (as kindly verified by Claire BRADLEY of Dublin), and he was clearly NOT a son of the above John GOFFE and Alice BEILFILL.</div><div>Stephen matriculated into Magdalen Hall, Oxford, 22 October 1592, aged 16, of Hants - one interpretation suggests that his father was a plebeian, and that his age was "aetatis', and if so in his 15th year (born between October 1576 and October 1577); <i>"... demy"</i> Magdalen College 1592-98, B.A. 3 November 1595, fellow 1598-1603, M.A. 11 December 1599 [Alumni Oxonienses, 1500-1714, page 578]; said to have been <i>"... sometime Bachelor of Arts, of Magdalen College, a good logician and disputant, but a very severe Puritan, eminent in his training up, while a tutor, several that proved afterwards very noted scholars, among whom must not be forgotten, Robert HARRIS, D.D., sometime president of Trinity College, Oxford"</i> [Fasti Oxonienses, anno 1636. In another place, Vol. II, 261, second edition, as recorded in a footnote on page 218 of "The History and Antiquities of Lewes and its Vicinity," by Thomas Walker HORSFIELD, Sussex, 1827, and cited in "Six Generations of Friends in Ireland (1655-1890)"]; mentioned, in the context of Hebraists, where <i>"... this atmosphere of both dedication and seclusion is confirmed by TWYNE's contemporary at Oxford, Robert HARRIS (BA 1600) who was said by his biographer to have studied Hebrew with his tutor Stephen GOFFE of Magdalen College 'in which studies some other of the fellows joined with them'..."</i> ["Seventeenth Century Oxford," edited by Nicholas TYACKE, page 468, under chapter heading Mordechai FEINGOLD (probably the contributor)].</div><div>Stephen was made a Deacon and priested on 25 April 1600, by Bishop Henry COTTON, Salisbury [see the clergydatabase.org.uk web-site].</div><div>Stephen is said to have been a signatory to the Millenary Petition (so named for the 1,000 puritan Ministers who are said to have signed it), presented to the newly arrived King James I in 1603, making a "moderate" request for some changes in certain practices of the Church of England, mostly ceremonial, which resulted in the King calling the Hampton Court Conference of 1604, where the suggestions were rejected - save one request, for a new translation of the Bible, which ultimately led to the Authorised King James Version of 1611; Stephen is also recorded as puritan Rector of Bramber, 1603, with Vicar of St Botolph's, Sussex, 1605, and deprived in 1607; also said to have been Rector of Stanmer, 1603, and was living there in 1626, but is not included in lists of Rectors there; it is perhaps more likely that he served as a preaching curate, rather than being the ordained incumbent, depending on the views held by the Bishop on puritanism.</div><div>Stephen went to Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, Wales; he may have been there as early as the end of 1614 - mention is made of a sudden upsurge in numbers of baptisms recorded in the Register of St Mary's, the parish church there, including 37 and 39 in 1615 and 1616, following the 12 in the last eleven weeks of 1614, and it has been speculated that<i> "... the zeal of Stephen GOFFE, the newly appointed 'Preacher' </i><i>had helped the young vicar to ferret out parents who had been negligent of that which both Puritans and Anglicans regarded as a sacred duty"</i> ["The Oldest Parish Registers in Pembrokeshire," by Rev J. PHILLIPS, Archaeologica Cambrensis, Volume III, 6th Series, London, 1903, at page 310]; Stephen was evidently living there, 10 April 1616, when he witnessed (with three others) the will of William WALTER, of Roch Castle, Gent, by which WALTER demised two messuages or tenements in Bridge Street, Haverfordwest, to the Corporation of that town [Pembroke Archives, ref D-DT/HAM/347]; he was also named, in a further grant of the same properties in Bridge Street, 20 May 1616, as <i>"... Stephen GOFFE, Clerk, preacher of God's word,"</i> together with William ORMOND, Clerk, with <i>"... Letters of Attorney (in the body of the grant)... to deliver seisin thereof"</i> [Pembroke Archives - Ref HBORO/1283]; Stefyen GOFFE's name appears in the Register of St Mary's church, Haverfordwest, in an entry dated 3 May 1618, which, despite being considerably difficult to read, is believed to have been the baptism of his son William [Register images on Findmypast]; Stephen was recorded in "The History of Pembrokeshire," by Rev James PHILLIPS, London, 1909, under chapter heading "From Elizabeth to the Civil War," at page 481, as having been a Lecturer/Preacher at Haverfordwest in 1620, and again briefly in 1626.</div><div>Stephen appears to have returned to Sussex, scene of his earlier preaching appointments, and it is possible that may have come about due to the elevation in 1621 of a new Bishop to the See of St David's, of which Haverfordwest was a parish - that was William LAUD, who was translated to the See of Bath and Wells in 1626, and ultimately elevated by Charles I to the Primacy as the Archbishop of Canterbury (1633), and who was no friend of the puritans (despite later ordaining GOFFE's eldest son and namesake and appointing him as his Chaplain) - it is recorded that on his appointment to St David's, <i>"... the presence of his iron hand was soon felt in Pembrokeshire, as everywhere else"</i> [A.J. GRIEVE's "Puritanism in Little England beyond Wales," page 407, on the biblicalstudies.org.uk website].</div><div>However, it appears that Stephanus GOFF was appointed Curate of Southwicke, 4 April 1622, by Lancelot ANDREWS (Bishop of Winchester 1618-1626) [HRO, 21M65, B1/31 (Liber Cleri): 1622 - clergydatabas.org.uk]; further, he is recorded as having been licensed to Preach throughout the Dioceses of Canterbury, Chichester and Winchester on 16 June 1627 (by Richard MONTAGUE, Bishop of Chichester, 1626-1638; and by George ABBOT, Canterbury, 1611-1633), and as Rector of Warminghurst, Sussex, on 27 July 1627 (until 1628) [see also the clergydatabase.org.uk web-site] - Warminghurst lies about 500 metres from Thakeham (about 15 km north of the coastal town of Worthing); he was probably still living in July 1634, when he was recorded as being of Thakeham, Sussex, Clerk, on his son William's Apprenticeship record; this is further confirmed in the record of his youngest son Nathaniel's matriculation into Magdalen Hall, 31 March 1642, then being of Thakeham, sacerdot (priest).</div><div>The National Archives index records the issue of a Certificate of Residence, dated 1624, <i>"... showing Stephen GOFFE to be liable for taxation in Sussex, and not in the Hundred of Alton, Hampshire, the previous area of tax liability"</i> [Exchequer, Ref E 115/166/16] - it is not clear whether this was the Clerk, although the residence and previous county of residence do match the Clerk's matriculation birthplace details.</div><div>No details have yet been found of Stephen's death or burial.</div><div>As the Minister of St Botolph's, Stephen was married at Kingston-by-Sea, Sussex, 7 May 1604, to Deborah WEST [Transcript of parish record, The Genealogist web-site]; Deborah died at Stanmer, 8 November 1626, aged 38 [Memorial Plaque in Stanmer church], and was buried there on 10 November, 5 days after the baptism of her last child [Stanmer Parish Register images, familysearch.org]:</div><div><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgYXCNoUqyYIRqDFfsBbBvTX6Lm6EmnHGyV-p-dv1EUwfquKGdj23X_x9YTjTrLYwpddrfDuwTXBkWpqol3BEBsrRO5yZtmIrsXTSjCOLP4pdUagIw5A-ZjSga1JkdgYCvYhM6-5swV8WXh/s178/download+%25282%2529.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="90" data-original-width="178" height="202" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgYXCNoUqyYIRqDFfsBbBvTX6Lm6EmnHGyV-p-dv1EUwfquKGdj23X_x9YTjTrLYwpddrfDuwTXBkWpqol3BEBsrRO5yZtmIrsXTSjCOLP4pdUagIw5A-ZjSga1JkdgYCvYhM6-5swV8WXh/w400-h202/download+%25282%2529.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div><br /></div><div style="text-align: center;"><i>[Plaque in Stanmer parish church. Image courtesy of "Goffe Family History," wordpress.com.]</i></div><div><br /></div><div>They had issue (the sole baptismal entry for this family in the Stanmer Parish Register was for the youngest son Timothy):</div><div>
<i> a. Stephen GOFFE, born about 1605, probably at Stanmer; he matriculated into Merton College, Oxford, 10 November 1621, aged 16 years; B.A., 15 December 1624; migrated to St Albans Hall (then contigous with Merton Hall); M.A. 2 June 1627; chaplain to the Regiment of Sir Horace VERE, in the Netherlands, 1632; he entered Leyden University, 20 February 1633, to study for the degree of Doctor of Divinity; an agent of William LAUD (now Archbishop of Canterbury) and Sir William BOSWELL (the English Ambassador to The Hague) in attempting to limit the influence of English Puritans in the Low Countries</i><i>, and instrumental in enforcing English chaplains there to conform with a Privy Council edict ordering the use of forms of the Book of Common Prayer</i><i>; Stephen returned to England in 1636, when he was appointed one of the chaplains to King Charles; D.D. (Oxford), 1636; Rector of Herstmonceux, Sussex, 1639; Procurator's Clerk, Chapter of Chichester Cathedral, 1640; Canon and Prebendary (Hova Ecclesia) of Chichester, 20 January 1641; a Royalist Agent in France, Flanders and Holland; in Le Havre, 1648; said to have become a Roman Catholic in 1649, accompanying the queen on her visit to Paris in 1649 to rally support there for the royalist cause in England; he was re-engaged by Charles I during his imprisonment in Carisbrook to re-negotiate with the Scots</i><i>; he returned to France after the execution of king Charles; in 1654, he was re-ordained as a Priest, and served in the Seminary of Notre-Dame des Vertus, near Paris</i><i>; first tutor of James SCOTT (alias FITZROY alias CROFTS), the natural son of King Charles II, by Lucy WALTER (a daughter of Richard WALTER of Haverfordwest) [D.N.B.]; he died at Rue St Honore, near Paris, 13 December 1681 (Christmas Day in the Old Calendar); unmarried.</i></div>
<div>
<i> b. Samuel GOFFE, baptised at Bramber, 10 May 1607.</i></div>
<div>
<i> c. John GOFFE, born in Sussex, about 1609; Merton College, Oxon, 1624; Demy, St Mary Magdalen Hall, 1627, aged 17; B.A., 1628; Perpetual Fellow, 29 July 1630; M.A., 1631; Rector of Ripe, Sussex, 1629-45; on 26 August 1634, John was accused of the killing of Joseph BOYSE (another Demy of Magdalen Hall), appeared before Sir Uston CROOKE, the Deputy Steward of the University, and was acquitted; mentioned as a teacher in France of Charles GERARD (died 1694; entered Leyden University in March 1633, a month after John's eldest brotherStephen, and later Viscount Brandon and Earl of Macclesfield) [D.N.B.]; John was inducted into the vicarage of Hackington, alias St Stephen's, near the City of Canterbury, 1642, in the room of James HURST, deceased; John was ejected in 1642 for refusing to take the Covenant and was imprisoned at Haddington, near Canterbury, until 1644; by the endeavours of his brother William, John was appointed to the living of Norton, near Sittingbourne, Kent, on 13 March 1652; and was restored to the Vicarage of St Stephen's in 1660; D.D., 1660; he died on 20 November 1661 [Peerage.com], and was buried in the Chancel of St Alphage's, Canterbury.</i></div>
<div>
<i> d. Edward GOFFE; married Joyce CUTLER?</i></div>
<div>
<i> e. James GOFFE, born about 1611; a Citizen and Leatherseller, of Clement East Cheap, London [BOYD's Inhabitants of London], and died there on 23 January 1656</i><i>; he held residential property in Prittiwell, Essex, and in Dereham, Surrey, as well as a farm property</i><i> in New Alresford, County Southampton,</i><i>; his will, dated 17 January 1656, with codicil 18 January, was proved P.C.C. [RUTHEN, 63] 4 February 1656, naming his loving brother Major General William GOFFE as one of his executors, together with two other brothers Nicholas ADY (brother of his second wife) and Edward BOVERY (probably brother of his first wife)</i><i>; he was married firstly, at St Dionis Backchurch, 12 January 1640, to Elizabeth Des BOUVERIE (daughter of Edward des BOUVERIE and Mary FORMESTRANX [BOYD]; she died at St Clement East Cheap, 3 June 1654; James was married secondly, by Banns, at St Mary Colechurch, London, 31 December 1654; she survived him; by his first wife, he had issue:</i></div><div><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Elizabeth GOFFE, baptised at St Clement, East Cheap, 20 March 1641[-42?].</span></i></div><div><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> ii. James GOFFE, baptised ditto, 23 November 1643, and buried there,25 November 1643.</span></i></div><div><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iii. James GOFFE, baptised ditto, 10 November 1644.</span></i></div><div><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iv. Mary GOFFE, baptised ditto, 1 February 1646.</span></i></div><div><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> v. Deborah GOFFE, baptised ditto, 14 March 1648[-49?], and buried there 13 February 1649[-50].</span></i></div><div><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> vi. Deborah GOFFE, baptised ditto, 19 March 1650[-51?].</span></i></div><div>
<i> f. William GOFFE, said to have been a native of Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, and possibly baptised there, at St Mary's church, on 3 May 1618. See next below.</i><br />
<i> g. Timothie GOFFE, baptised at Stanmer, 5 November 1626, three days before his mother's death.</i></div><div><i> h. Nathaniel GOFFE, born about 1625-26 (perhaps Timothy?); matriculated Magdalen Hall, Oxford, 31 March 1642, aged 16, son of Stephen of Thackham, Sussex, sacerd. [Alumni Oxonienses, FOSTER, 1891, page 578].<br /></i>
<br /><i><span style="font-size: large;">WILLIAM GOFFE, THE REGICIDE.</span></i></div><div><br /></div><div>William GOFFE, probably born in Haverfordwest in 1618; as the son of Stephen GOFFE, of Thakeham, Sussex, Clerk, but born in Sussex, William was apprenticed on 15 July 1634, Grocers Company, to William VAUGHAN, a Salter in London (who was a brother of Colonel VAUGHAN) [London Apprentices Abstracts, 1442-1850, Findmypast]; but he left for a career in the Army, commencing as a Quarter Master; Captain in Colonel HARLEY's Regiment, April 1645; he visited Haverfordwest in 1648, where, on 1 June, he was given <i>"... an enthusiastic welcome... Though he had left Pembrokeshire in early childhood, he was very much attached to his native town, and afterwards rendered good service in times of distress"</i> ["The History of Pembrokeshire," by Rev James PHILLIPS, London, 1909, page 507] - however, this conflicts with other evidence of his birth in Sussex [his London Apprenticeship record]; he visited Oxford in May 1649, by invitation and with other principal Parliamentary Officers, and was awarded an M.A.; shortly after, he followed CROMWELL into Ireland, where he fought at the Sieges of Drogheda (September 1649) and Wexford (October 1649), receiving large grants of land there for his services; he also accompanied CROMWELL into Scotland, and served as a Captain in CROMWELL's Regiment at Dunbar, September 1650; a Regicide; assisted Colonel WHITE in turning out the recalcitrant remnant of the Barebones Parliament, December 1653 made a Major-General in 1655, with command of Sussex, Hampshire and Berkshire; Member of Parliament for Great Yarmouth, 1654, and for the County of Southampton, 1656, and was later elevated by CROMWELL to the House of Lords; named as an executor of the will of his brother James GOFFE, of Clements, East Cheap, January-February 1656; last public mention in England on 25 May 1659, when he urged Richard CROMWELL to arms to maintain the cause; he fled to America in 1660, with his father-in-law, leaving his wife and children in Ireland - one report had them in Lausanne before going to America, while another states that they sailed from on the ship <i>Prudent Mary</i> (Captain PIERCE) on 14 May 1660, arriving in Boston on 27 July, under the guise of William STEPHENSON ["Memoranda respecting Edward WHALLEY and William GOFFE," by Franklin B. DEXTER, New Haven Historical Society, 1876]; he evaded arrest in Boston, and then in Hartford, Connecticut, in 1679; his last known letter was dated May 1679; he is believed to have died in or near Newhaven in 1680; he was married to Frances WHALLEY (daughter of Edward WHALLEY, a relation of CROMWELL, a General in the New Model Army, and another Regicide) - BOYD's Index records the marriage at St Mary-le-Strand, City of Westminster, in 1649; they had issue:<br />
1. Richard GOFFE. BURKE ["Landed Gentry, Ireland"] records him as the next below.<br />
2. Francis GOFFE; married with issue.<br />
3. Judith GOFFE.<br />
<br />
Richard GOFF; of Ballyloskeran, 1682-93; of Horetown, 1695-98; he is said to have built Horetown House in 1692; recorded in an on-line family tree as born in Waterford in 1645, but this conflicts with the BOYD's Index marriage date for his parents; recorded in several on-line pedigrees as having died in Place, Mayenne, in France, in 1723; named in his son Jonas's will, 1726, but not indicated as being deceased [BETHAM]; Richard was married at Ballybarney, County Wexford, 17th 2mo (April) 1681, Hannah CHAMBERLAIN, daughter of J. CHAMBERLAIN of Pontmarle, County Wexford; she was named in her son Jonas's will, 1726; they had issue:<br />
1. Mary GOFF, born at Ballyloskeran, 3rd 7mo (September) 1682; buried at the Friends Burial ground at Corlecan, about 28th 9mo (November) 1683.<br />
2. Hannah GOFF, born at Ballyloskeran, 28th 4mo (June) 1684; buried at Corlecan in the 1680s.<br />
3. Elizabeth GOFF, born at Ballyloskeran, 13th 4mo (June 1686; named in her brother Jonas's will, 1726; died at Horetown, 24th 4mo (June) 1767, and buried at Corlecan, 26 June.<br />
4. William GOFF, born at Ballyloskeran, 29th 8mo (October) 1688; named in his brother Jonas's will, 1726; died unmarried.<br />
5. Richard GOFF, born at Ballyloskeran, 2nd 11mo (January) 1691[-92?]; named in his brother Jonas's will, 1726; of Horetown, Gent, when he made an Indented Deed of Lease, dated 23 November 1756 [Memorial 124259], by which he demise unto William PIGOTT of Slevoy, County Wexford, the Town and Lands of Ballyhire and part of Rowstown then in PIGOTT's possession, consisting of 71 acres Plantation Measure, situated in the Barony of Shilmaleer and County of Wexford, for the term of the lives on Richard GOFF, Jacob GOFF his son, and William WARINER the son of John WARINER of Johnstown, Farmer, at a rental of 34 pounds 12s 3d; he died at Horetown, 15th 3mo (May) 1767, unmarried, and buried at Corlecan, 18 May.<br />
6. Jonas GOFF, born at Ballyloskeran in 1693; of Waterford, Chandler, will dated 26 September 1726, proved P.C.I., 29 September, naming his wife Debora, son Richard, daughter Hannah, father Richard, mother Hannah, brothers William, Richard and Jacob, sister Elizabeth, parents-in-law Joshua and Mary FENNELL, and siblings-in-law Hannah and William FENNELL [BETHAM]; he was married to Deborah FENNELL; with issue:<br />
<em> a. Hannah FENNELL; named in her brother-in-law Jonas GOFFE's will, 1726.</em><br />
<em> b. William FENNELL; named in his brother-in-law Jonas GOFFE's will, 1726.</em><br />
7. Jacob GOFF, born at Horetown, County Wexford, 16th 2mo (April) 1695; named in his brother Jonas's will, 1726; Linen Draper in Dublin, 1748, when he was party to his daughter Hannah's marriage Settlements he died in Dublin, 1752; he was married to Mary FADE (born 1700, daughter of John FADE, Esq, Captain of Foot in DUBOURGAY's Regiment, 1728); she was named in her father's will, 1728 [BETHAM]; she was named in her uncle Joseph FADE's will, February 1747, together with her six children [BETHAM]; she died in Dublin, 1753; of Drumcondra, Widow, her will, dated 16 August 1743, proved P.C.I. 4 September 1753, naming her husband Jacob, daughter Hannah CLIBBORN, daughters Mary and Elizabeth GOFF, sons Joseph, Fade and Jacob, son-in-law Joshua CLIBBORN, and nephews John DAWSON an Richard GOFF [BETHAM]; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Joseph Fade GOFF; named in his great-uncle Joseph FADE's will, 1747; he was married, by Settlements dated 15 May 1746 [Memorial 84034], to Elizabeth UNTHANK, eldet daughter of Robert UNTHANK of the City of Dublin, Merchant; she married secondly, FLETCHER of Dublin; Joseph and Elizabeth had issue:</em><br />
<em> i. Joseph Fade GOFF; married a daughter of George CLIBBORN, with issue..</em><br />
<em> ii. Robert GOFF; he died in 1833, without issue.</em><br />
<em> b. Hannah GOFF</em><em>; named in her great-uncle Joseph FADE's will, 1747</em><em>; she died in 1789 [BETHAM]; she married firstly, by Settlements dated 22-23 April 1748 [Memorial 88997], to Joshua CLIBBORN, of Moate Castle, eldest son and heir of John CLIBBORN of Moate; she married secondly, William PIGOTT of Slevoy.</em><br />
<em> c. Fade GOFF, born 1727; named in his great-uncle Joseph FADE's will, 1747; died in 1757; he was married on Dublin, 4 February 1749-50, to Elizabeth PEMBERTON. See above.</em><br />
<em> d. Mary GOFF; named in her great-uncle Joseph FADE's will, 1747.</em><br />
<em> e. Elizabeth GOFF</em><em>; named in his great-uncle Joseph FADE's will, 1747</em><em>; married Caesar SUTTON of Long Graigue, County Wexford.</em><br />
<em> f. Jacob GOFF, born at Horetown, 1736</em><em>; named in his great-uncle Joseph FADE's will, 1747</em><em>; inherited the estate from his uncle William GOFF; ancestor of the GOFFs of Horetown House; Jacob died at Horetown, 1798; he was married to Elizabeth WILSON; she died in 1817, aged 77; with issue:</em><br />
<em> i. Joseph Fade GOFF, born 1756; died 1833.</em><br />
<em> ii. Anne GOFF, born 1758.</em><br />
<em> iii. Elizabeth GOFF, born 1762; died 1841.</em><br />
<em> iv. William GOFF, born 1762; died 1840.</em><br />
<em> v. Benjamin GOFF, born 1763; died 1765.</em><br />
<em> vi. Hannah GOFF, born 1768.</em><br />
<em> vii. Jane GOFF, born 1768; died 1836.</em><br />
<em> viii. Arabella GOFF, born 1776; died 1846.</em><br />
<em> ix. Dinah Wilson GOFF, born 1784; died 1858.</em><br />
<em> g. Richard GOFF; of Tottenham Green, County Wexford.</em><br />
<em> h. Sarah GOFF.</em><br />
8. Joseph GOFF, born at Horetown, 7th 11mo (January) 1697[-98?].<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><em>LACKEY.</em></span><br />
<br />
Thomas LACKEY (alias LECKY); married Dorothy; with issue:<br />
1. Robert LACKEY, born in County Donegal, 7th 11mo (January) 1649[-50?]; of Staplestown, County Carlow, 1688, when he left the Established Church and joined the Society of Friends; later of Ballykealey, County Carlow; he died at Ballykealey, 12th 8mo (October) 1707, son of Thomas and Dorothy, and buried 15th 8mo (age not recorded); his will, dated 28th 4 mo (June) 1707, named his wife Mary and son James (executors), sons John and Thomas, daughters Jean, Dorothy and Rebecca LACKEY (with £600 between them provided they married with the consent of his executors and trustees), daughters Mary HUNT, Sarah CLIBBORN (£5, and £2 to each of her six children) and Elizabeth PEMBERTON (£5), and cousin Alexander LACKEY, with the annotation <em>"...before signing this will I married my daughter Dorothy to William MORRIS and have paid him her £200 portion</em>"; Robert was married on 6th 8mo (October) 1670, to Mary WATSON; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Mary LACKEY, born at Shanekyl, County Kilkenny, 25th 6mo (August) 1671.</em><br />
<em> b. Sarah LACKEY, born at Shanekyl, 1st 6mo (August) 1673; named in her father's will, 1707, with six children; she was married to Joshua CLIBBORN of Moate.</em><br />
<em> c. James LACKEY, born at Staplestown, County Carlow, 20th 8mo (October) 1676; named in his father's will, 1707, of Ballykealey, when he was married firstly, at Kilconnor, 20th 2mo (February) 1699-1700, Mary WATSON of Kilconnor; he was evidently married secondly, at Moate, 5th 4mo (June) 1706, to Anne CLIBBORN of Moate.</em><br />
<em> d. John LACKEY, born at Staplestown, 24th 8mo (October) 1678.</em><br />
<em> e. Thomas LACKEY, born at Staplestown, 20th 9mo (November) 1681; died young.</em><br />
<em> f. Elizabeth LACKEY, born at Staplestown, 20th 10mo (December) 1683; she was married to Henry PEMBERTON (see above).</em><br />
<em> g. Thomas LACKEY, born at Staplestown, 10th 8mo (October) 1685; named in his father's will, 1707, with £500 providing he married with the consent of the executors and trustees.</em><br />
<em> h. Jane LACKEY, born at Staplestown, 12th 2mo (February) 1687[-88?].</em><br />
<em> j. Dorothy LACKEY, born at Staplestown, 14th 2mo (February) 1689[-90?].</em><br />
<em> k. Robert LACKEY, born at Staplestown, 1st 9mo (November) 1691; died young.</em><br />
<em> l. Robert LACKEY, born at Ballykealey, County Carlow, 16th 7mo (September) 1694; he died at Ballykealey, 17th 11mo (January 1699-1700, aged 5 and one quarter years.</em><br />
<br />
John LECKY; late of Killmaney, County Carlow; dead before 1736; he was married to Joyce; she was a widow when she made her will, 17 April 1736, mentioning her late husband, her son William LECKY (£1 3s and no more), daughter Jane ROBINSON otherwise LECKY (£40 at interest), daughter Sarah LECKY (£40 at interest) and grand-daughters Joyce ROBINSON (£20) and Mary ROBINSON (£10 at interest), and naming Robert LECKEY of Killnock, County Carlow, and Henry PPEMBERTON of Dublin as executors, which was witnessed by John CLIBBORN, John ROBINSON and John DOYLE.<br />
<br />
<em><span style="font-size: large;">CUPPAGE.</span></em><br />
<br />
Edward CUPPAGE; of Brankin, County Cumberland; married Bridget (-?-); she went to Ireland; she died at Lambstown, County Wexford, and was buried at Whitechurch, County Wexford, 24th 10mo (December) 1665; they had issue:<br />
1. Robert CUPPAGE, born in County Cumberland, about 1619; he went to Ireland in 1649 or 1650; Major in the New Model Army under the Commonwealth; he was buried at Corlican, 15th 7mo (September) 1683; he was married firstly, at Hadham Magna, Hertfordshire, 8th 4mo (June) 1649, to Anna NOBBS, daughter of Stephen NOBBS of Hadham Magna; she died at Bantry, County Cork, 17th 7mo (September) 1653, <em>"... wife of Robert"</em>; they had issue:<br />
<em> a. Anna CUPPAGE, born at Hadham Magna, 10th 1mo (March) 1650; she was buried at Bantry, 18th 5mo (July) 1655, aged 5 years.</em><br />
<em> b. Mary CUPPAGE, born at Youghal, County Cork, 11th 10mo (December) 1651.</em><br />
<em> c. Sarah CUPPAGE, born at Bantry, 6th 7mo 1653; she died at Lambstown, County Wexford, and was buried at Whitechurch, 3rd 10mo (December) 1661, ".. aged near 8 years."</em><br />
Robert married secondly, at Limerick, 20th 11mo (January) 1654[-55?], Catherine PEARCE, daughter of Thomas PEARCE of Idstone, Berkshire; she was buried at Whitechurch, 4th 10mo (December) 1665; by her he had further issue:<br />
<em> d. Robert CUPPAGE, born at Idstone, Berksire, 4th 12mo (February) 1656[-57?]; he died at Lambstown, 1658, and was buried at Whitechurch, 21st 3mo (May), aged 1 and-one-quarter years.</em><br />
<em> e. Catherine CUPPAGE, born at Lambstown, 19th 11mo (January) 1657[-58?]; married Henry HILLARY.</em><br />
<em> f. Stephen CUPPAGE, born at Lambstown, 8th 12mo (February) 1658[-59?]; buried at Whitechurch, 7th 12mo (February) 1661[-62?], aged 3 years.</em><br />
<em> g. Robert CUPPAGE, born at Lambstown, 29th 2mo (April) 1660; buried at Whitechurch, 29th 11mo (January) 1661, aged 1 and-one-quarter years.</em><br />
<em> h. Samuel CUPPAGE, born at Lambstown, 6th 6mo (August) 1662; buried at Whitechurch, 4th 9mo (November) 1666, aged 4 and-one-quarter years.</em><br />
<em> j. Edward CUPPAGE, born at Lambstown, 10th 2mo (April) 1664.</em><br />
<em> k. Thomas CUPPAGE, born at Lambstown, 7th 9mo (November) 1665; died about 1708.</em><br />
Robert married thirdly, at Tober, King's County, 21st 5mo (July) 1667, to Elizabeth, the widow of Robert VALENTINE (died July 1651) and then Henry FULLER (died June 1665); she was born in March 1627, a daughter of Joshua and Sarah WARREN of Colchester, Essex; she died on 24th 2mo (April 1695, late of Ballincarrig, and was buried at Corlican, 26th; she was named in the will of her son John FULLER, of Philadelphia, Merchant, dated 25th 3mo (May) 1690; by her Robert had further issue:<br />
<em> l. Experience CUPPAGE, born at Lambstown, 2nd 2mo (April) 1668; she married Amos STRETTLE.</em><br />
<em> m. Robert CUPPAGE, born at Lambstown, 16th 3mo (May) 1670; buried at Corlican, 13th 8mo (October 1670, aged near 5 months.</em><br />
<br />
<em><span style="font-size: large;">HILLARY.</span></em><br />
<br />
Henry HILLARY; of Wexford; he was married at the house of Thomas HOLMES, at Brogortowne (?), 17th 7mo (September) 1676, Mary FULLER, of Lambstown; she died at Wexford, 2nd 9mo (November) 1679, and was buried at Corlican, <em>"... wife of Henry"</em>; they had issue:<br />
1. Samuel HILLARY, born at Wexford, 9th 4mo (June) 1678; buried at Corlican, 26th 4mo (June) 1678.<br />
2. Mary HILLARY, born at Wexford, 3rd 3mo (May) 1679; died at Wexford, 21st 10mo (December) 1679, age 6 months.<br />
Henry was married secondly, also at Lambstown, 23rd 4mo (June) 1681, to Catherine CUPPAGE, of Lambstown; she was buried at Coolican, 12th 4mo (June) 1701; by her he had further issue:<br />
1. Samuel HILLARY, born Wexford, 7th 10mo (December) 1682; evidently had "... a desire to go to sea," was left property by his uncle Thomas CUPPAGE, and "... had intentions to marry Jane WATERMAN" [Letter from Men's Meeting, Wexford, dated 10th 4mo (June) 1711, received at Philadelphia M.M. on 30th 9mo (November) same year - see "Immigration of the Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania, 1682-1730, with their early history in Ireland"].<br />
2. Hannah HILLARY, born Wexford, 8th 1mo (March) 1684.<br />
3. Robert HILLARY, born Wexford, 26th 8mo (October) 1685.<br />
4. Mary HILLARY, born Wexford, 15th 2mo (April) 1688.<br />
5. Cuppage HILLARY, born Wexford, 24th 8mo (October) 1690.<br />
6. Henry HILLARY, born Wexford, 18th 7mo (September) 1693.<br />
7. Elizabeth HILLARY, born Wexford, 24th 2mo (April) 1697<br />
8. Joshua HILLARY, born Wexford, 28th 12mo (February) 1700[-01?].<br />
<br />
<em><span style="font-size: large;">FULLER.</span></em><br />
<br />
Henry FULLER; son of Thomas FULLER; of Tober, King's County; he was buried at Moate, County Wexford, 22nd 4mo (June) 1665, late of Tober; he was married in London, in 1652, to Elizabeth VALENTINE, the widow of Robert VALENTINE, and daughter of Joshua and Sarah WARREN of Colchester; they had issue:<br />
1. Mary FULLER, born at Lurganmure, County Antrim, 9th 1mo (March) 1653; she married Henry HILLARY (see above).<br />
2. Henry FULLER, born at Drummorbrogo (?), County Down, 16th 10mo (December) 1655; buried at Moate, 13th 12mo (February) 1664[-65?].<br />
3. John FULLER, born at Mullen, County Armagh, 21st 9mo (November) 1657; he went to Pennsylvania; of Philadelphia, Merchant; by his will, dated 25th 3mo (May) 1690, dated 5th 10mo (December) 1692, he left <em>"... to Elizabeth CUPPAGE, of Lambstown, County Wexford, my mother, the sum of £130 to be paid to her in Ireland</em>" ["Immigration of the Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania, ..." Op. Cit.].<br />
4. Joshua FULLER, born at Tober, King's County, 8th 1mo (March) 1659.<br />
5. Sarah FULLER, born at Tober, 5th 1mo (March) 1662.<br />
6. Hannah FULER, born at Tober, 29th 4mo (June) 1665.<br />
<br />
<em><span style="font-size: large;">FADE.</span></em><br />
<br />
Robert FADE; of Aunderdell, Scotland (possibly in Dumfriesshire); married Margaret; with issue:<br />
<br />
James FADE, born about 1617; arrived in Ireland as a soldier in 1647; became a member of the Society of Friends (a Quaker) by about 1660, became influential in their affairs, and contributed greatly to the cause financially, but eventually fell out of favour with fellow Quaker Anthony SHARP; John was a prosperous Linen Draper in Dublin, and acquired substantial property holdings, but was deeply in debt shortly before his death; he died in 1701, aged 84, and was buried in the Quaker Burial Ground near St Stephen's Green, Dublin, 10th 7mo (September); he was married firstly, about 1648, to Sicely WHITE, a widow; she died in 1664, and was buried in Dublin, 15th 2mo (April) 1664; they had issue:<br />
1. Robert FADE, born in Dublin, about 1651.<br />
2. William FADE, born in Dublin, about 1653.<br />
3. Katherine FADE, born in Dublin, about 1655; married in Dublin, 1682 (by a Priest), to a Mr MATTHIAS.<br />
4. James FADE, born in Dublin, about 1657.<br />
5. Cicely FADE, born in Dublin, about 1659; married in Dublin, 1680 (by a Priest), George RICHARDSON.<br />
James was married secondly, in Dublin, 18th 8mo (October) 1667, to Elizabeth SMITH, a widow, and daughter of John WHEELWRIGHT by Susannah his wife, of Churrill, Yorkshire; she died at Bride's Alley, Dublin, and was buried in the Quaker Burial Ground near St Stephen's Green, 29th 10mo (December) 1700; by her he had further issue:<br />
6. Sarah FADE, born in Dublin, 2nd 7mo (September) 1668; died young.<br />
7. Sarah FADE, born in Dublin, 10th 9mo (November) 1670.<br />
8. James FADE, born in Dublin, 31st 11mo (January) 1672.<br />
9. John FADE, born at Parsons Lane, Dublin, 10th 2mo (April) 1675; a Captain of Foot in DUBOURGAY's Regiment, 1728; his will dated 2 December 1728, was proved P.C.I. 20 September 1729, naming his daughters Elizabeth (wife of Benjamin DAWSON) and Mary (wife of GOFFE), grandchildren John, Sarah Fade and Mary DAWSON and Fade GOFF, and four siblings, including Charlotte (sic) WILLCOCKS; married Sarah, with issue:<br />
<i> a. Elizabeth FADE; she was married in Dublin, 28th 3mo (May) 1717, to Benjamin DAWSON (her father John recorded as of Clapham, Surrey); with issue:</i><br />
<i> i. John DAWSON.</i><br />
<i> ii. Sarah Fade DAWSON.</i><br />
<i> iii. Mary DAWSON.</i><br />
<i> b. Mary FADE, born in Dublin, 10th 3mo (May) 1700; wife of Jacob GOFFE. See above.</i><br />
10. Elizabeth FADE, born in Dublin, 12th 9mo (November) 1677; married in Dublin, 1696 (by a Priest), Joshua WILCOCKS.<br />
11. Joseph FADE, born at Bride's Alley, Dublin, 30th 6mo (August) 1680; named in his brother's will, 1728; of Dublin, Merchant; his will, dated 13 February 1747, named his sister Elizabeth WILCOCKS, and his nieces Elizabeth wife of HUBBARD, Elizabeth wife of Benjamin DAWSON, and Mary GOFF.<br />
<br />
These siblings of James FADE Junior, and mentioned in his will, do not appear to fit into the above pedigree:<br />
1. Jane FADE; married John BERNARD.<br />
2. Susanna FADE; married Robert BERNARD.</div>
</div></div>Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-26983765739116920212018-03-26T18:19:00.000-07:002018-04-29T21:20:51.861-07:00ALEXANDER, FRASER, BAMFORD and KREITMAIR Family Histories<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_7468"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_7467">ALEXANDER FAMILY IN FORGUE, ABERDEENSHIRE</i></span>.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_6971">John ALEXANDER</b>, born at Forgue, Aberdeenshire, January 1784; died at Drumdollo, Forgue, between 1841 and 1851; he was married at Forgue, 8 March 1810, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_3776">Isabella IRVINE</b>; she was at Comistry, Forgue, 1841 Census, aged 65+, together with James and Isabel COCKBURN and their three children</span><span style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;"> (in the 1841 Census, ages for all people over 15 years were "rounded down" to the nearest five, so here, </span><b style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;">Isabella</b><span style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;"> had reached the age of 65, but was not yet 70), a lodger with James CRAN (aged 75+, Farmer)</span><span style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;">; </span><b style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;">Isabella</b><span style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;"> was at Frendraught, Forgue, 1851 Census, aged 77, living with her son-in-law James COCKBURN and his family; </span><b style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;">John</b><span style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;"> and</span><b style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;"> Isabella</b><span style="font-family: times, "times new roman", serif;"> had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Isabella ALEXANDER, baptised at Forgue, 24 July 1810; she married James COCKBURN; he was at Comistry, 1841 Census, aged 35+, Agricultural Labourer, with his wife, three children; he was at Frendraught, Forgue, 1851 Census, aged 47, Agricultural Labourer, born Tyrie, Aberdeenshire, with wife Isabella (aged 42, born Forgue), their son and his mother-in-law; they had issue:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520820153806_2730"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. James COCKBURN, born about 1828; aged 12, with his parents, 1841 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520820153806_2734"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Margaret COCKBURN, born about 1836; aged 4, with her parents, 1841 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520820153806_2735"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. William COCKBURN, born at Forgue, about 1840; aged 1, with his parents, 1841 Census; aged 10, with his parents, 1851 Census.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_3341">John ALEXANDER</b>, born at Ythan Wells, Forgue, 1 August 1812, and baptised 11 August; Blacksmith in Drumdollo; at Drumdollo, Forgue, 1841 Census, aged 25+, Blacksmith, with wife; at Drumdollo, Forgue, 1851 Census, aged 38, Master Blacksmith (employing 2 men), with wife and four children; at Moss-side, Drumdollo, 1871 Census, aged 58, Blacksmith, with wife, son and nephew Alexander ALEXANDER (aged 8, Scholar, born in Forgue); <b>John</b> was at Smithycroft, Forgue, 1881 Census, aged 68, Blacksmith, with his wife, daughter, grandson and visitor Isabella PIRIE (aged 14, Domestic Servant); he died there 30 June 1887, aged 74 years, and was buried at Drumblade Churchyard, Huntly; he was married at Forgue, 15 December 1838, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520647505438_3813">Margaret ROBERTSON</b> (born at Gartly, Aberdeenshire, 1819); she was at Forgue, aged 20+ [Ref 194/7/5]; she died at Ythan Wells, 2 December 1892, aged 70; they had issue:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4469"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Isabella ALEXANDER, baptized at Forgue, 11 February 1842; died at Hamilton, Ontario, 21 October 1921; she was married to Samuel PIRIE, with issue.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521169729422_4078"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. John Wilson ALEXANDER, baptized at Forgue, 12 November 1844.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521169729422_4075"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_7471">George ALEXANDER</b>, baptized at Forgue, 14 February 1847. See [A] below.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2399"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> d. Elspeth ALEXANDER, born in 1849; she died in July 1855, aged 6 years.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2400"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> e. Alexander ALEXANDER, baptized at Forgue, 22 July 1854.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Christian ALEXANDER, baptised at Forgue, 19 September 1814.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. James ALEXANDER, baptised at Forgue, 11 January 1817.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. George ALEXANDER, baptised at Forgue, 29 April 1819.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. Margaret ALEXANDER, baptised at Forgue, 15 June 1821.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. Helen ALEXANDER, baptised at Forgue, 13 February 1824; at Forgue, 1841 Census, aged 15+ [Ref 194/7/5]; she died in 1902.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">8. Colin ALEXANDER, baptised at Forgue, 27 February 1829; at Forgue, 1841 Census, aged 12 [Ref 194/7/5].</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">___________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<b><i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></i></b></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6142"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6141"><span style="font-size: large;">DUFTAN (DUFFTON) FAMILY IN ABERDEENSHIRE</span></i></span>.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_6972">Theodore </b><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_3306">DUFTAN</b>, baptised at Forgue, 23 February 1774, son of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520649400357_3459">Robert DUFTON</b>; Blacksmith in Monelley (or Moneller), Parish of Forgue; at Forgue, 1841 Census, aged 65+, with wife and two children Ref 194/7/1]; he was married to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_3583">Isabella ANDREW</b>; she was probaby at Forgue, 1851 Census, aged 76, with her son Robert [Ref 194/6/5]; they had issue, including:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6167">Alexander DUFTAN</b> (or <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465362847_3209">DUFFTON</b>), baptised at Forgue Aberdeenshire, 1 February 1799, son of Theodore DUFFTAN (and witnessed by George ALEXANDER); at Drumdollo, Forgue, 1841 Census, aged 40+, with wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_3271">Eslpeth</b> and four children; at Drumdollo, 1851 Census, aged 42, Farmer of 109 acres, with wife and seven children; he was at Cowie, Forgue, 1861 Census, aged 61 (sic), Late Farmer, with wife; he died at Cowie, District of Ythan Wells, 9 May 1870, aged 71 (parents named in registration); he was married at Forgue, 23 November 1830, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_5737">Elspet </b><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_3538">FORSYTH</b> (born at Forgue, about 1798, daughter of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_3537">Peter FORSYTH</b>, Farmer in Bogton, and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_3801">Isabel FORDYCE</b>); <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520647505438_4046">Alexander</b> and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520640924916_16880">Elspet</b> had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Alexander DUFTAN, baptised at Forgue, 30 December 1831; aged 10, with his parents, 1841 Census; aged 19, with his parents, 1851 Census; he informed his father's death, 1870.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Isobel DUFTAN, baptised at Forgue, 27 May 1834; aged 5, with her parents, 1841 Census; aged 16, with her parents, 1851 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. Robert DUFTAN, baptised at Forgue, 15 September 1837; aged 4, with his parents, 1841 Census; aged 13, with his parents, 1851 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> e. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_5699">Elspet DUFTAN</b>, baptised at Forgue, 18 November or 7 December 1840; aged 0, with her parents, 1841 Census; aged 10, with her parents, 1851 Census; she married <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_5707">George ALEXANDER</b>. See [A] below.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> f. Margaret Andrew DUFTAN, baptised at Forgue, 1 July 1843; aged 10, with his parents, 1841 Census; aged 7, with her parents, 1851 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> g. Jean DUFTAN, born at Forgue, about 1846; aged 4, with her parents, 1851 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> h. Eliza DUFTAN, born at Forgue, about 1848; aged 2, with her parents, 1851 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Theodore DUFTON, baptised at Forgue, 9 February 1803; probably married at Forgue, 30 October 1824, Margaret LEDDINGHAM, with issue..</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Christian DUFTON, baptised at Forgue, 6 July 1805; probably died young.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. James DUFTON, baptised at Forgue, 4 November 1808.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. Isobel DUFTON, baptised at Forgue, 30 April 1811.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. Margaret DUFTON, baptised at Forgue, 22 October 1813.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. Robert DUFFTON, baptised at Forgue, 10 July 1815; aged 25+, with his parents, 1841 Census; aged 36, with his mother, 1851 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">8. Christian DUFTON, baptised at Forgue, 6 July 1805; aged 15+, with her parents, 1841 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">__________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_5046"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_5045">FAMILY OF GEORGE ALEXANDER AND ELSPIT DUFTON</i></span>.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">[A] <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6332">George ALEXANDER</b>, born at Ythan Wells, Forgue, about 1847; aged 4, with his parents, 1851 Census; he was at Smithycroft, Forgue, 1881 Census, aged 34, Journeyman Blacksmith, with his wife, four children, and two boarders, Alexander ALEXANDER (aged 45, Journeyman Blacksmith) and Alexander ALEXANDER (aged 18, Apprentice Blacksmith); at Moss Side, Drumdollo, 1891 Census, aged 43, Blacksmith and Crofter, with his wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_3394">Elsie</b>, five children and his uncle Alexander ALEXANDER (aged 66, Blacksmith and Cattle Dealer); <b>George</b> was at Headitoon, Drumdollo, Forgue, 1901 Census, aged 52, Farmer and Blacksmith, with his wife Elsie, five children and his uncle Alexander ALEXANDER (aged 73, Blacksmith); he died at Drumdollo, Forgue, 11 August 1926; he was married to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_5768">Elspet DUFTON</b> (born 1849); she died at Drumdollo, 24 June 1936; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Jane Dufton ALEXANDER, born in 1874; aged 8, Scholar, with her parents, 1881 Census; aged 18, with her parents, 1891 Census; she died on 11 February 1959, unmarried.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. George ALEXANDER, born 1877; aged 4, Scholar, with his parents, 1881 Census; probably died young.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Margaret R. ALEXANDER, born 1879; aged 2, with her parents, 1881 Census; aged 12, with her parents, 1891 Census; aged 22, with her parents, 1901 Census; died 17 August 1942.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. James D. ALEXANDER, born 1880; aged 8 months, with his parents, 1881 Census; he died in 1912.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. Alexander ALEXANDER, born 1882; aged 9, with his parents, 1891 Census; aged 18, with his parents, 1901 Census; died at Huntly, Aberdeenshire, 26 August 1957, aged 75, late of Drumdollo; he married Robina SHAND; she died at Aberdeen, 10 November 1978, aged 89 years; they had issue:</span></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. WiIliam David ALEXANDER, born about 1920; he was killed in North Africa, 27 January 1943, aged 22 years.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. Theodore ALEXANDER, born 1885; aged 7, with his parents, 1891 Census; aged 16, with his parents, 1901 Census; he died at Huntly, 11 August 1960, aged 78, and buried at Drumblade Churchyard [Monumental Inscription]; married Maggie SIMPSON; she died at Huntley, 5 December 1957, aged 87.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_5916">William ALEXANDER</b>, born at Forgue, 24 March 1890. See [B] below.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">8. Colin ALEXANDER, born about 1895; aged 5, with his parents, 1901 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">_________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6425"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6426"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">FRASER FAMILY IN ABERDEENSHIRE.</span></span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_7997">Thomas FRASER</b>, born at Inverurie, Aberdeenshire, about 1810, son of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520647505438_4293">William FRASER</b> and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520820153806_3154">Ann FRASER</b> (parents recorded on his death registration on the information of his son Thomas); at Boroughmuir, Inverurie, 1851 Census, aged 40, Labourer, with his wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520820153806_3153">Agnes</b> and four children; Road Contractor (so described in his son <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520550451221_5184">Thomas</b>'s 1912 death registration); he died at Tavelty, Kintore, 6 January 1860, after the side of a pump well he was digging collapsed on him; he was married at Dariot, Aberdeenshire, 8 November 1840, to<b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_3936"> Agnes Innes CRAN</b> (baptised at Kiethnall and Kinkell, Aberdeenshire, 24 April 1821, daughter of <b>James CRAN</b> or <b>CRANE</b>, Farmer, and <b>Catharine SANGSTER</b>); <b>Agnes</b> died at West High Street, Inverurie, 23 June 1911, aged 91; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Isabella FRASER, baptised at Daviot, Aberdeenshire, 4 September 1840.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Agnes Innes FRASER, born at Inverurie, 8 September 1842; aged 8, with her parents, 1851 Census; she died at Aberdeen, 24 December 1898; she was married, 23 November 1861, to Robert Valder GREIG.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Ann FRASER, born in Aberdeenshire, about 1844; aged 6, with her parents, 1851 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_7996">Thomas FRASER</b>, born in Aberdeenshire, about 1846. See [B] below.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. John FRASER, born at Inverurie, Aberdeenshire, about 1848; aged 2, with his parents, 1851 Census</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. Catherine FRASER, born at Inverurie, Aberdeenshire, about 1852; aged 18, with her brother, 1871 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">_________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6444"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6445"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">FOWLER FAMILY IN ABERDEENSHIRE.</span></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4842">Alexander FOWLER</b>, possibly born at Inverurie, 6 November 1796, son of William FOWLER (1751-1802) and Agnes WALKER (1754-1833); however there was (and perhaps) another <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_3701">Alexander</b> who was born at Bellig, Morayshire, and was at Home Farm, Manar, Inverurie, 1851 Census, aged 53, Farm Overseer, with his wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_3850">Jane</b>; he was at Glenniston, Culsamond, 1861 Census, aged 38, Coachman and Gamekeeper, with his wife Mary and eight children; he was at Birken Cottage, Inverurie, 1871 Census, aged 74, Retired Farm Overseer, with his wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_3807">Jane</b>; he died at Birken Cottage, Manar, Invernesshire [Registration District of Inverurie], 5 October 1872, aged 75 years, the death informed by his son William FOWLER, of Middlemuir, Inverurie, who was present at the death (and an "inmate"), but who did not know the names of his father's parents; <b>Alexander</b> was married at Inverurie, 2 January 1820, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4632">Jean ANGUS</b> (born 1787); she died at Inverurie, 24 January 1876; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. William FOWLER, baptised at Inverurie, 30 April 1820; died there on 20 June 1896.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4633">Alexander FOWLER</b>, baptised at Inverurie, 15 December 1821; at Gleniston Cottage, Culsamond, 1851 Census, aged 28, Coachman, with wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521254591535_3027">Mary</b> and four children; at Stewton Farm, Culsamond, 1871 Census, aged 48, Manager, with wife and six children; he died at Mains of Loanhead, Rayne, Aberdeenshire, 8 June 1892, aged 69, Retired Farm Overseer; he was married at Culsamond, Aberdeenshire, 8 October 1843, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4982">Mary SIM</b> (born about 1823, daughter of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4849">William SIM</b> and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4655">Barbara SEY</b>); she died before <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2422">Alexander</b>, in 1892; they had issue:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4538"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Jane FOWLER, baptised at Culsamond, 11 March 1843; aged 7, with her parents, 1851 Census; she died in 1922.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520820153806_3233"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Barbara FOWLER, baptised at Culsamond, 28 March 1845; aged 5, with her parents, 1851 Census; aged 15, Pupil Teacher, with her parents, 1861 Census; she died in 1870.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520820153806_3257"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. Alexander FOWLER, baptised at Culsamond, 21 January 1847; aged 3, with his parents, 1851 Census; aged 13, Scholar, with his parents, 1861 Census.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2510"> d. William FOWLER, baptised at Culsamond, 10 December 1849; aged 1, with his parents, 1851 Census</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2511">; aged 11, Scholar, with his parents, 1861 Census</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2512">; he died in 1916.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2533"> e. Helen FOWLER, baptised at Culsamond, 10 July 1853</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2534">; aged 7, Scholar, with her parents, 1861 Census</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2535">; aged 17, with her parents, 1871 Census; she died in 1902.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2554"> g. James FOWLER, born at Culsamond, about 1855</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2555">; aged 5, Scholar, with his parents, 1861 Census</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2556">; aged 15, with his parents, 1871 Census; he died in 1892</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2580"> h. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_2733">Mary FOWLER</b>, baptized at Culsamond, Aberdeenshire, 27 April 1857; aged 3, with her parents, 1861 Census</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2581">; aged 13, Scholar, with her parents, 1871 Census</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2582">; she married <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_2473">Thomas FRASER</b>. See [B] below.</i></span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520821627692_3550"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> j. Duncan J. FOWLER, born at Culsamond, about 1859; aged 1, with his parents, 1861 Census; died young.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521256940127_2617"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> k. Samuel FOWLER, born at Culsamond, about 1861; aged 9, Scholar, with his parents, 1871 Census; informed his father's death, 1892.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520821627692_3513"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> k. Agnes FOWLER, born at Culsamond, about 1863; aged 7, Scholar, with her parents, 1871 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4540"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> l. Gordon FOWLER, born at Culsamond, about 1868; aged 2, with his parents, 1871 Census.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. George FOWLER, baptised at Inverurie, 9 October 1823; died in 1886.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. James FOWLER, baptised at Inverurie, 1 August 1828; died in 1903.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">_________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<b><i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4840" /></span></i></b></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><br /></span></i></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4960"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4959"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">FAMILY OF THOMAS FRASER AND MARY FOWLER.</span></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">[B] <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_2587">Thomas FRASER</b>; aged 4, with his parents, 1851 Census; he was at Colly Hill, Bourtie, Aberdeenshire, 1861 Census, aged 14, Farm Servant, residing on the farm of Alexander DUGUID and his family; he was at New Street, Kintore, 1871 Census, aged 24, Baker, Master employing two men, with his sister Catherine; at Howthorn Place, Aberdeen Road, Kintore, 1881 Census, aged 34, Municipal treasurer, Baker Master employing two men), with his wife Jane and five children; he was at Clyne, New Machar, 1891 Census, aged 44, Farmer, with second wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520640924916_17044">Mary</b>, his eight children, and a niece Helen G. Hay FRASER (aged 11, born Edinburgh St George); he was at 2 Elm Bank Terrace, Aberdeen St Machar, 1901 Census, aged 54, Widower, Commercial Traveller, with his seven children and his mother; he died at 47 Elmbank Terrace, Aberdeen, 24 June 1912, aged 65, widower of Jeannie MOIR and of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520301596811_2831">Mary FOWLER</b>, both parents named and deceased, informed by his son Thomas; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520301596811_2532">Thomas</b> Senior was married firstly to Jane MOIR, with issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Thomas FRASER, born at Kintore, about 1872; aged 8, Scholar, with his parents, 1881 Census; aged 18, Arts Student, with his father, 1891 Census; aged 28, Medical Practitioner, with his father, 1901 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Jane A. K. FRASER, born at Kintore, about 1873; aged 7, Scholar, with her parents, 1881 Census; aged 17, with her father, 1891 Census; aged 27, Housekeeper, with her father, 1901 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Agnes J. C. FRASER, born at Kintore, about 1875; aged 5, Scholar, with her parents, 1881 Census; aged 15, with her father, 1891 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. Alexander M. FRASER, born at Kintore, about 1876; aged 4, Scholar, with his parents, 1881 Census; aged 14, Farmer's son, with his father, 1891 Census; aged 24, Carpenter, with his father, 1901 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. Isabella FRASER, born at Kintore, about 1879; aged 1, with her parents, 1881 Census; aged 11, Scholar, with her father, 1891 Census, as Isobel, aged 21, Assists at Home, with her father, 1901 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_2594">Thomas</b> was married secondly, at Kintore, 13 October 1884, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_2998">Mary FOWLER</b>; she died at New Machar, 14 March 1893; with further issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. John H. FRASER, born at Kintore, about 1885; aged 5, Scholar, with his parents, 1891 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. Mary S. F. FRASER, born at Kintore, about 1886; aged 4, with her parents, 1891 Census; aged 14, Scholar, with her father, 1901 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">8. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_2597">Helen Fowler FRASER</b>, born at Kintore, 1888; as <b>Nellie F</b>., aged 2, with her parents, 1891 Census; as <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520301596811_2986">Helen F</b>., aged 12, Scholar, with her father, 1901 Census; she was married to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520301596811_2514">William</b> <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4492">ALEXANDER</b>. See [C] below.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">9. Angus F. FRASER, born at Kintore, about 1891; aged 9,Scholar, with his father, 1901 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">__________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6453" /></span></div>
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<b><i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><br /></span></i></b></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_4992"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_4991"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">FAMILY OF WILLIAM ALEXANDER AND HELEN FOWLER FRASER.</span></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">[C] <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_5920">William ALEXANDER</b>, born at Forgue, 24 March 1890 (the year 1889 was recorded in his death registration, on the information of his son <b>Angus</b>); aged 1, with his parents, 1891 Census; aged 11, with his parents, 1901 Census; M.A.; Minister of the United Free Church of Scotland, and a Missionary Teacher in Calcutta, 1916; Minister at Broxburn West, January 1933, when he was translated to Northfield Church, Liberton, Edinburgh [The Scotsman, 18 April]; he preached at the 6.30 p.m. service at Liberton, on Sunday 15 January 1933, as the <i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520305383273_2714">"... newly inducted Minister of the Congregation,"</i> and after the morning (11 a.m.) service had been conducted by <i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520305383273_2644">"... Rev David REID, D.D., late of Wellesley Square, Calcutta"</i> [The Scotsman, Saturday 14 January]; enrolled on the Edinburgh Voter's List, 1935-36, at Burnhead Manse, Lasswade Road, Liberton, with his wife Mrs Helen ALEXANDER; he preached at the Loughborough Road Church, in November 1941, as <i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520305383273_2713">".. a candidate in the vacancy"</i> [Fife Free Press and Kirkcaldy Guardian, Saturday 1 November]; he was at The Manse, Lasswade Road, Liberton, 1945 (son <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520305383273_2559">Angus</b>'s marriage notice); he appears to have been translated to Inverkeithny in 1949 [Scottish Records Society, 1989, page 284]; he died at the Royal Infirmary, Aberdeen, 6 April 1966, aged 77; he was married at Duff Church, Calcutta, 7 November 1916, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_6056">Helen Fowler FRASER</b> (born at Kintore, 7 December 1888); she was a Nurse, in Calcutta, 1916; she died at Aberdeen, 9 December 1968; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i> a. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4480">Angus Fraser ALEXANDER</b>, born in Calcutta, 23 November 1918; M.B. Edinburgh, and F.R.C.S.; he went to Grand Falls, Newfoundland, in 1951; he retired from his Medical Practice there in 1974.</i></span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhX1wqzKeaCtlFyQrL-pCYNRx6wFpe3QUWR-drKZewiK42sal1CIgFkUPl89TmWXJbEA46MqUrbgzxppfyKxFZZByeKia0xEIm2TCos3iqxG0tZEF4HxPqdlthud-dmrgHbmFfmDOAJ8bjg/s1600/DR+ALEXANDER.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="411" data-original-width="296" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhX1wqzKeaCtlFyQrL-pCYNRx6wFpe3QUWR-drKZewiK42sal1CIgFkUPl89TmWXJbEA46MqUrbgzxppfyKxFZZByeKia0xEIm2TCos3iqxG0tZEF4HxPqdlthud-dmrgHbmFfmDOAJ8bjg/s320/DR+ALEXANDER.jpg" width="230" /></a></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">[Dr <b>ALEXANDER</b>, attending a Legion Commemoration at Grand Falls-Windsor, </span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">Newfoundland, </span></i><i><span style="font-size: x-small;">sometime between 1973 and 1981. </span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">Image courtesy of the www.lanephotography.com web-site.]</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><b>Angus</b> later returned to Aberdeenshire, where he died in 2007; he was married to </i><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4003"><i>Helen Patricia BAMFORD</i></b><i>; with issue.</i></span></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Ian George ALEXANDER, born 20 September 1920; died at Aberdeen, 14 February 2005, aged 84 years; married with issue.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. Mary ALEXANDER; living in 2005.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">___________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">YERL FAMILY IN STAFFORDSHIRE<b>.</b></span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b><span style="font-size: 12pt;">John YERL</span></b><span style="font-size: 12pt;">, born about 1759; Farmer; he died at Penkridge, Staffordshire, in 1831,
and was buried at Hammerwich; he was married at Lichfield St Michael, 21
December 1793, to <b>Patience JONES</b>; she died at Bednal,
Staffordshire, in 1829; they had issue:<o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 12pt;">1. Sarah YERL, born in Staffordshire about 1794; she died in 1858;
she was married on 6 September 1814 to William MANN; he was at Doxey,
Staffordshire, 1851 Census, Widower, aged 60, Farmer, born Hammerwich, with his
son John, grand-daughter Sarah Ann HOWES (aged 3), and his cousin Maria MANN
(aged 48, Unmarried, Housekeeper); he died at Doxey on 4 April 1865; they had
issue:<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> a. John MANN, baptised at Farewell St Bartholomew,
Staffordshire, 14 April 1815; he was at Doxey, 1841 Census, aged 26, Farmer,
with his two siblings.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> b. Ann MANN, baptised at Farewell St Bartholomew, 26
June 1817; she was aged 20+, with her brother, 1841 Census.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> c. Charles MANN, baptised at Farewell St
Bartholomew, 3 January 1820.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> d. William Augustus MANN, born at Cannock, and
baptised at Farewell St Bartholomew, 31 December 1821; he was aged 15+, with
his brother, 1841 Census; he was at Ingleby, Derbyshire, 1861 Census, aged 39,
Unmarried, Farmer of 126 acres, with his aunt Elizabeth YERL (aged 65,
Housekeeper); he died on 9 July 1893.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 12pt;">2. Elizabeth YERL, born at Hammerwich, 1795; she was aged 65,
Housekeeper, 1861 Census, residing with her nephew William Augustus MANN; she
died in 1865.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 12pt;">3. Ann YERL, born in Staffordshire, about 1799; she was married at
Penkridge, 22 June 1826, to William TAYLOR.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 12pt;">4. Patience YERL, born in Staffordshire, about 1801; she died at
Bideford in 1838.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 12pt;">5. <b>John YERL</b>, born at Hammerwich, 1803; he was at Salop
Street, Wolverhampton, 1851 Census, aged 48, Provision Dealer, with his wife
Mary (aged 56) and daughter; he was aged 56, an Assistant Size Maker, 1861
Census, residing with his son-in-law and family; he was a Widower, aged 68,
Annuitant, 1871 Census, residing with his son William; he died in January 1877,
and was buried at St Mary's, Handsworth, 29 January; he was married in
Lichfield St Mary, 1824, to <b>Mary CLIFFORD</b>; they had issue:<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> a. John Clifford YERL, born at Butter Hill,
Penkridge, Staffordshire, in 1826; Hairdresser, of st John Street, Lichfield,
1961 Census; he died in 1883.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> b. <b>Hannah Clifford YERL</b>, born at Butter
Hill, Penkridge, 1828; she married <b>Charles BAMFORD</b>. See next below.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> c. Mary Ann YERL, born at Butter Hill, 1829; aged
30, with her husband, 1861 Census; she died at Birmingham in 1889; she was
married at Aston St Paul, 13 June 1848, to James GRETTON; he was at Lower
Trinity Street, Aston, Birmingham, 1861 Census, Size and Glue Maker, aged 34,
born in Birmingham, with his wife Mary A., three children, two servants, and
his father-in-law; James and Mary Ann had issue:</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> i. Clifford GRETTON, born in
Birmingham, about 1851; aged 9, Scholar, with his parents, 1861 Census.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> ii. Agnes GRETTON, born in
Birmingham, about 1852; aged 8, Scholar, with his parents, 1861 Census; aged
18, with her uncle William,YERL, 1871 Census.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> iii. Clara GRETTON, born in
Birmingham, about 1854; aged 6, Scholar, with his parents, 1861 Census.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> d. William YERL, born in Staffordshire, about 1831;
he was at Ten Acres Lane, Newton, Lancashire, 1871 Census, aged 39, painter,
with his second wife Sarah (aged 32, born at Brierley Hill, Staffordshire), his
daughter, his widowered father, and his niece Agnes GRETTON; William died in
Chester in 1887; he was married firstly, at Burton-upon-Trent, 1854, to Ellen
KEMP, and had issue:</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> i. Mary Louisa YERL, born in 1855;
aged 15, Cotton Winder, with her father, 1871 Census.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> ii. John Clifford YERL, born in 1857</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"> iii. William Walter YERL, born in
1860.</span></i><span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i><span style="font-size: 12pt;">William was married secondly at Amblecote, 1862, to Sarah BYWATER.</span></i></span></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: 12pt;"> e. Elizabeth YERL, born in Staffordshire, about
1837; she was aged 13, Scholar, with her parents, 1851 Census; she married
James BURRIDGE.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><b><i><br /></i></b></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520215442086_7287" style="font-size: large; text-align: center;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4476" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4475">BAMFORD FAMILY IN STAFFORDSHIRE.</i></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_3425">James BAMFORD</b>, born in Staffordshire, about 1798; Brass Annealer, at Oakamon, Cheadle, Staffordshire, 1841 Census, aged 50+, with wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_3385">Ann</b> and three children; he was married at Cheadle, 4 Sep 1815, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_3422">Ann ROBINSON</b>; she was at Meeting Street, Wednesbury, Staffordshire, 1871 Census, aged 71, with her son-in-law William MOORE.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520305383273_2483">James</b> and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_3189">Ann</b> had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. <span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5510" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_6432">Charles</b><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_3186"> BAMFORD</b>, born at Wednesbury, Staffordshire, about 1818; he was aged 20+, Brass Mix Drawer, with his parents, 1841 Census; he went into business as a provision Merchant in Wolverhampton, about 1841, with his brother Edwin; they carried on this business in Birmingham (1858-1861); he was at 5 Jennens Row, Birmingham St Peter, 1861 Census, aged 42, Auctioneer, with his first wife, four children and his mother-in-law Ann BAMFORD (aged 60, born at Atherstone, Staffordshire)</span><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5512" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">; </span><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5513" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">Charles</b><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5514" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"> went to Liverpool in 1871</span><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5515" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">; he was at Brookhurst House, Bromborough, Cheshire, 1881 Census, aged 62, Provision Merchant, with his second wife </span><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5516" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">Hannah</b><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5517" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"> and four children; the firm of BAMFORD, NASH and BAMFORD, Provision Merchants, of 20-26 Cheapside, Liverpool, was dissolved by mutual consent on 2 April 1887, the firm to be carried on by </span><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5518" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">Charles BAMFORD</b><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5519" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"> </span><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5520" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">"... in partnership with Mr John NASH and Mr <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5521">Arthur J.J. BAMFORD</b> under the sign of BAMFORD, NASH and BAMFORD, at the same address</i><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5522" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">" [London Gazette, 8 April]; at Brookhurst, Bamborough, 1889-90, with counting house and warehouse at 24 Cheapside, Exchange Ward, Liverpool [Electoral Registers, Liverpool], together with his son <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_2801">Arthur</b> (same residential address) and John NASH (of 56 Park Road South, Birkenhead); </span><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5523" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">Charles</b><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5524" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"> died in January 1891; by his will, proved in Chester, his personal estate was valued at under </span><span style="color: #545454;">£</span><span style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">60,000, and he bequeathed to his son </span><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_2776" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">Arthur</b><span style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"> </span><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_2832" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">"... the residence at Bromborough for life; the Misterton Estate, Leicestershire; the property situate in West Street, New York; the silver, lead and zinc mines at Lancaster (Pennsylvania) and Galena (Illinois.), and the silver mines near Denver (Colorado); and also the residue of the estate,"</i><span style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"> and </span><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_2944" style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;">"... the Llanrhaiadr estate of 14,000 acres and a hall in trust for his two daughters, Mrs H.M. WILLIAMSON and Mrs S.J. WARING Junior"</i><span style="font-size: 16px; text-align: center;"> [Cheshire Observer, 14 February 1891]; by his first wife Elena, he had issue:</span></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_3135" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4276"> a. Charles S. BAMFORD, born at Wednesbury, about 1847; aged 3, with his parents, 1851 Census; aged 13, Scholar, with his father, 1861 Census.</i></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520550451221_6008" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3103"> b. Eleanor BAMFORD, born at King's Heath, about 1849; aged 1, with her parents, 1851 Census</i></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4277"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520550451221_6084" style="text-align: center;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520550451221_6229">Charles</b> married secondly,</span><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520550451221_6085" style="text-align: center;"> </span><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520550451221_6086" style="text-align: center;">Hannah Clifford YERL</b><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520550451221_6087" style="text-align: center;"> (born at Butterhill, Staffordshire, about 1830, daughter of <b>John YERL</b> and <b>Mary CLIFFORD</b>); by her he had further issue:</span></span></span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4278"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520550451221_6091" style="text-align: center;"> c. Samuel BAMFORD, born at King's Heath,</span><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520550451221_6004" style="text-align: center;"> Worcestershire, about 1853; aged 7, with his parents, 1861 Census.</span></span></i></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_6107" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4617"> d. Hannah Maria BAMFORD, born at King's Heath, about 1855; aged 5, with her parents, 1861 Census; aged 25, with her parents, 1881 Census, together with her husband and two young children; she married Thomas WILLIAMS, with issue.</i></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_6082" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4616"> e. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_6427">Arthur John Jones BAMFORD</b>, born at King's Heath, about 1857<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4279"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_3226">. See [D] below.</span></i></i></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2475" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2474"> f. Eleanor Caroline BAMFORD, born at 440 West 44th Street, Manhattan, New York, 19 March 1868, and baptised there on 29 March by the Pastor of the Shepherds Flock Chapel; aged 13, with her parents, 1881 census; she died on 28 April 1941; she was married to Hon. Samuel James WARING; with issue:</i></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3377" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3376"> i. Samuel Arthur Bamford WARING, born in 1892; died in 1911.</i></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3382" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3381"> ii. Eleanor Gladys WARING, born in 1894; died in 1987; later the Baroness CRITCHLEY-WARING.</i></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_3349" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;">2. Edwin BAMFORD, born in 1825; at Raby Hall, Raby, Cheshire, 1881 Census, aged 58, Provision Merchant, with his wife, two children and visitor Sarah Blanch MOORE (aged 19, born at Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucestershire); Edwin died in 1894; he was married at Wirral, March quarter 1853 [Volume 8a, Page 537] to Elizabeth EVASON, with issue:</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i> a. Edwin BAMFORD, born at Wolverhampton, about 1855; a Clerk in Holy Orders; he was at the Vicarage, Temple Guiting, Gloucester, 1881 Census, aged 26, Vicar of the parish, with wife and two daughters; he died at Cricklade House, Andover, Hampshire, 25 April 1897; he was married at Bourton-on-the-Water, 24 July 1877, to Frances Elizabeth MOORE (daughter of John MOORE, Surgeon); they had issue:</i></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i> i. Evelyn Nora BAMFORD, baptised at Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, 15 May 1878; aged 2, with her parents, 1881 Census; she died in 1949.</i></span><br />
<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span style="text-align: center;"> ii. Frances Mary BAMFORD, baptised at Bourton-on-the-Water, 3 October 1880</span><span style="text-align: center;">; aged 6 months, with her parents, 1881 Census</span><span style="text-align: center;">.</span></span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"> b. John Evason BAMFORD, born at Wolverhampton, March quarter 1856 [Volume 6b, Page 402].</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"> c. William Evason BAMFORD, born at Wolverhampton, December quarter 1857 [Volume 6b, page 333].</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"> d, Mary Elizabeth BAMFORD, born at Wolverhampton, March quarter 1859 [Volume 6b, Page 409].</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"> e. Elizabeth A. BAMFORD.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"> f. Alfred Charles BAMFORD, born at Penkridge, June quarter 1864 [Volume 6b, Page 399].</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"> g. Henry Samuel BAMFORD, born at Penkridge, June quarter 1865 [Volume 6b, Page 434]</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"> h. Emma Jane BAMFORD, born at Penkridge, september quarter 1867 [Volume 6b, Page 420].</span></i></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520296283199_3347" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;">3. Sophia BAMFORD, born in 1836; she was married to William MOORE, with issue.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">__________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><br /></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_2730"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_2729"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">KENT FAMILY OF DRAYTON, STAFFORDSHIRE.</span></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3318">Thomas KENT</b>, born in Staffordshire about 1786; he was at Drayton, near Penkridge, Staffordshire, 1841 Census, aged 50+, Farmer, with his four children; he died at Penkridge, June quarter 1846, aged 60 years [Volume 17, Page 99]; he was married with issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Anne KENT, eldest daughter; married at Penkridge, 21 March 1837, to Mr Thomas COPE, of Park Gate [Wolverhampton Chronicle, 29 March].</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Sarah KENT, born in Staffordshire, about 1819; she was aged 20+, with her father, 1841 Census; in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., 1850 Census, with her brother-in-law <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521083254128_2869">Thomas NASH</b>; she died in or before 1861; she was married at St Luke's, Cannock, Staffordshire, 6 August 1855, as his second wife, Edward COPE, Draper in Cannock, the widower of Sarah WILLIAMS.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Dorothy KENT, born about 1822; she died at Drayton, near Penkridge, 18 September 1839, aged 17 [Wolverhampton Chronicle, 2 October].</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521073516775_4172">Mary KENT</b>, born Staffordshire, about 1824; she was aged 15+, with her father, 1841 Census; she married <b>Thomas</b> <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_2717">NASH</b> of Baltimore. See next below.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. Fanny KENT, born Staffordshire, 19 May 1826; she was aged 14, with her father, 1841 Census; aged 23, at Baltimore, U.S., 1850 Census, with her brother-in-law <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_2751">Thomas NASH</b>; she died at Denver, Colorado, 5 May 1899, and was buried at Fairmount Cemetery, Denver; she was married to George NASH, a younger brother of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521083254128_2896">Thomas NASH</b>.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. Thomas KENT, born in Staffordshire about 1828; aged 12, with his father, 1841 Census; he was in partnership with his brother-in-law Thomas NASH, in Chicago City, 1863-64, as Pork Packing House, north side of 22nd Street between Michigan and Indiana Avenues, his house in Indiana Avenue, corner of 22nd Street; he was married, at the Methodist Episcopal Church, Mulberry Street, New York, 16 May 1855, to Virginia Josephine CARTER, daughter of Warren CARTER, Esq, of New York, U.S. [Staffordshire Advertiser, 2 June 1855].</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">__________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><br /></span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_2577"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_2576"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">THE NASH FAMILY OF WORCESTERSHIRE.</span></span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b>William NASH</b>, baptized at Stoke Prior, 17 February 1704, son of <b>Thomas NASH</b> (buried at Hanbury, Worcestershire, 9 November 1747) and his wife <b>Mary</b> (buried at Hanbury, 8 September 1744); of Causeway Meadows, Dodderhill parish, Worcestershire; he died on 8 August 1772, and was buried at Hanbury, aged 68 [Monumental Inscription]; his will, dated 7 October 1771, was proved at Worcester, 17 October 1772; he was married by License, at Dodderhill, 13 November 1737, to Diana HADON; she died at Stock and Bradley, 25 February 1789, and was buried at Hanbury, 4 March 1789, aged 71; her will, dated 26 October 1787, was proved at Worcester, 23 February 1790; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Mary NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 27 August 1738; buried at Hanbury, 1 May 1740.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Diana NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 23 March 1745; married Samuel SANDERS; with issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Diana SANDERS.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Betty NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 5 June 1748; buried at Hanbury, 23 September 1750.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. Molly NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 21 September 1750; married James WHITEHOUSE; with issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Diana WHITEHOUSE.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. William NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 5 February 1758.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. <b>Joseph NASH</b>, baptised at Dodderhill, 19 September 1762; of Causeway Meadows; died on 21 June 1808, and was buried at Hanbury, 24 June 1808, aged 47 [M.I.]; he was married to <b>Sarah TIMMINGS</b>; with issue:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521073516775_4260"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. William NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 4 August 1785.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Joseph NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 22 September 1787; went to Wexford, Ireland; married Ann BRADLY.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. Humphry NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 16 July 1789.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> d. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521073516775_4116">Samuel NASH</b>, baptised at Dodderhill, 5 April 1791. See next below.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> e. Sarah NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 11 June 1793; she married firstly, BRADLY; she married secondly, Thomas ASTON.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> f. Diana NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 18 October 1795; she married John PRITCHARD of Stourbridge; they had issue:</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> i. Sarah PRITCHARD.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521151391394_9384"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> ii. Diana PRITCHARD.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521151391394_9402"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> iii. Emma PRITCHARD.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521151391394_9403"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> iv. Annie PRITCHARD.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521151391394_9404"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> v. Helen PRITCHARD; she married her cousin Samuel NASH.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521073516775_4259"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> g. John Timmings NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 22 May 1798; he died on 5 August 1810, and was buried at Hanbury, 8 August, aged 22..</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> h. Richard NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 13 September 1800; he was buried at Hanbury, 27 June 1807.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521073516775_4261"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> j. Elizabeth NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 12 July 1803.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. John NASH; mentioned in his father's will, 1771.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">8. Humphry NASH; mentioned in his father's will, 1771.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">9. Thomas NASH; mentioned in his father's will, 1771.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4254">Samuel NASH</b>; of Causeway Meadows, parish of Dodderhill, Worcestershire; he died at Haselor, 6 March 1850, and was buried at Cropthorne, aged 58 [M.I.]; he was married by License at Inkberrow, Worcestershire, 16 October 1817, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_2578">Ann PRESTON</b> (daughter of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521073516775_2436">Richard</b> and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_3389">Ann PRESTON</b>, of Rush Farm, Inkberrow); she died at Marton-under-Hill, 10 December 1882, and was buried at Cropthorne, aged 83 [M.I.].</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b>Samuel</b> and <b>Ann</b> had issue, all born at Causeway Meadows, Droitwich:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Richard Preston NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 11 August 1818; at Rush Farm, Inkberrow, 1841 Census, aged 20+, with his PRESTON grandparents; at Rush Farm, 1851 Census, aged 32, Farmer, with his PRESTON grandmother; he died on 29 August 1892, and was buried at Oakwood Cemetery, Chicago; he married Prudence ARTHARS, daughter of Edward ARTHARS of Gaton, Staffordshire; she died in Chicago, 4 September 1885, and was buried at Oak Woods Cemetery; they had issue five children.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Joseph NASH, born 15 January 1820, and baptised at Dodderhill, 22 January; he died in Chicago on 24 April 1888, and was buried in Oak Woods Cemetery; he married Elizabeth Ellen SHERWOOD (born at Killenure, County Wicklow, 26 May 1831, daughter of William SHERWOOD of Ireland); she died in Chicago, 22 January 1909; with issue nine children, including:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521169729422_4065"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Annie Alice NASH, born at Evesham, Worcestershire, 30 November 1850; died at Evanston, Cook County, Illinois, 17 January 1931, and was buried at Alton Cemetery; she married James Magnus RYRIE (1852-1913).</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521169729422_4064"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Charlotte Abigail NASH, born in Missouri, U.S., 11 August 1863; died in Manhattan, New York, 26 July 1902, and was buried in Oak Woods Cemetery, Chicago; she married William Steel ARMOUR.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521169729422_4063"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. Samuel S. NASH, born on 10 March 1868; he died at Colma, Mexico, 29 January 1910 [M.I., Oak Woods Cemetery, Chicago].</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. Sarah NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 17 September 1821; she died on 17 October 1864, and was buried in the Church of England Cemetery, Birmingham; she married John ADAMS; he died in Birmingham, 11 January 1873; with issue two children.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. Samuel NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 6 September 1823; aged 27, 1840 U.S. Census, aged 27, Merchant, with his brother <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_2861">Thomas</b>; he was at Baltimore, U.S., 1860 Census, aged 37, Provision Dealer, with his wife Helen (aged 24, born England) and their son Samuel J. NASH (aged 9 months, born in Maryland); Samuel Senior died in 1876; he was married at Stourbridge, 7 August 1855, to his cousin Helen PRITCHARD (daughter of John PRITCHARD of Stourbridge - see above); they had issue five children.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3710">Thomas NASH</b>, born 5 May 1824, and baptised at Dodderhill, 13 May; at Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., 1850 Census, aged 26, Farmer, with his wife, brother Samuel, and sisters-in-law Sarah and Fanny KENT; Meat Packer, Chicago City, 1857, from Baltimore, and renting premises owned by Henry MILWARD; he had two packing houses and a slaughter house, occupying 2.5 acres, using them chiefly for singeing and curing pork meat for the English market; he cut up 11,200 hogs in 1861 (6.9% of all hogs killed that year in Chicago City), and 21,000 on 1862; he was residing at the Corner of Indiana Avenue and 22nd Street in 1863-64, his firm of Thomas NASH and Co, packing house on the north side of 22nd Street between Michigan and Indiana Avenues (in business with his brother-in-law Thomas KENT); <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521160814308_4272">Thomas</b> died at Bradley Green, Worcestershire, 30 May 1866; he was married at St Mary's, Penkridge, Staffordshire, 26 June 1849, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3922">Mary KENT</b> (daughter of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4247">Thomas KENT</b>, of Drayton, near Penkridge, Staffordshire, Farmer); she was at Chicago, 1880 Census, Keeping House, with three children; she died at Bradley, Worcestershire, 26 September 1886, and was buried at Llanrhaiadr, Denbighshire, Wales, aged 62; they had issue:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3679"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Charlotte NASH, born in Baltimore, 2 April 1850, and baptized at Christ Church, Chase and St Paul Streets, 4 June.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520997281253_2937"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Arthur NASH, born in Maryland, 24 March 1852; aged 28, with his mother, 1880 Census; he died in 1880.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4104"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3688">Anne NASH</b>, born in Baltimore, Maryland, 1854; she married <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3706">Arthur John Jones BAMFORD</b>. See [D] below.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4106"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> d. Walter NASH, born in Illinois, about 1858; aged 21, with his mother, 1880 Census; he died oat Ruthin, Denbighshire, Wales, 27 March 1910.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4022"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> e. Mary Kent NASH, born in Illinois, about 1860; aged 19, with her mother, 1880 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521073516775_3527"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> f. a sixth child - mentioned in the family pedigree published in The Pedigree Register, December 1909, at pages 308 et seq.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. Anne NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 27 July 1825; died at Feckenham, 21 April 1896, and buried at Inkberrow; she married Richard JACKSON, of Clackheaton, Yorkshire; with issue three children.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. Dianna NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 31 October 1826; she died on 7 August 1869, and was buried at Birmingham; she married John ELLS of Rowington, Warwickshire; he died on 21 August 1881, aged 57, and was buried at Oakwood Cemetery, Chicago; with issue three children.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">8. Edith NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 29 February 1828; she was at Rush Farm, Inkberrow, 1841 Census, aged 12, with her PRESTON grandparents; she died at Southsea, Hampshire, 22 April 1898, and was buried at Inkberrow; she married Thomas HOLT, of Holberrow Green; he died at Birkenhead, 12 January 1892, and was buried at Inkberrow, aged 54; with issue six children.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">9. Elizabeth NASH born 29 January 1830, and, baptised at Dodderhill, 4 February; she died at Denver, Colorado, on 16 October 1910, and was buried in her brother George's Family Mausoleum, Fairmount Cemetery; she was married at Inkberrow, 26 December 1861, as his third wife, to Edward COPE (son of Thomas COPE of Penkridge, Staffordshire - and widower of Sarah WILLIAMS and of Sarah KENT); Edward died in Melbourne, Victoria, 13 October 1871, late M.L.A. in the Victorian Parliament; without issue.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">10. George NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 29 May 1832; at Rush Farm, Inkberrow, 1841 Census, aged 9, with his PRESTON grandparents; of Denver, Colorado, U.S.; he died in Denver, 24 February 1910, and was buried in Fairmount Cemetery, [Private Family Mausoleum, Block 3, Lot 93]; he married Fanny KENT, daughter of Thomas KENT of Penkridge; she died in Denver on 5 May 1899, aged 72, and was buried at Fairmount Cemetery; with issue three children, probably including:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521169729422_3273"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Virginia NASH, born in 1861; died in Denver, December 1918, and was buried in the Private NASH Family Mausoleum in Fairmount Cemetery.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">11. Mary NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 21 February 1834; she died in 1911; she married David Hyde FORBES, of Chicago; he died on 28 April 1873, and was buried in Brighton, Sussex; with issue five children.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">12. Humphry NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 21 February 1835; he died in Victoria, Australia, in 1886.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">13. Charlotte NASH, baptised at Dodderhill, 20 June 1836; at Rush Farm, Inkberrow, 1841 Census, aged 5, with her PRESTON grandparents; at Rush Farm, 1851 Census, aged 14, Scholar, with her PRESTON grandmother; she died in Melbourne, Victoria, 3 November 1908; she married, at Bradley Green, 5 October 1864, Alfred COPE (son of Thomas COPE of Penkridge); Alfred was of Drayton, Victoria; with issue five children.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">14. John H. NASH, born at Dodderhill, 21 October 1837; he was at Hyde Park, Cook County, Illinois, 1870 Census, aged 33, Pork Packer, with his wife, three children and Mary NASH (aged 16, born in England); he was at Nash's Cottages, Salford Priors, Warwickshire, 1881 Census, aged 43, Farmer, with his wife and five children; in 1891, he was in partnership with <b>Charles BAMFORD </b>and his son <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521160814308_4674">Arthur</b>, as Provision Merchants in Liverpool (<b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521160814308_4773">Arthur</b> was married to John's niece <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521160814308_4824">Anne NASH</b>); at 56 Park Road South, Birkenhead, 1889-90, with counting house and warehouse at 24 Cheapside, Exchange Ward, Liverpool [Electoral Registers, Liverpool], together with <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3126">Charles</b> and <b>Arthur BAMFORD</b> (of Brookhurst, Bamborough); John was at 56 Park Road South, Birkenhead, Cheshire, 1891 Census, aged 53, Provision Dealer, with his wife and eight children; at Euclid Street, Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, 1900 Census, Vice President Provision Company, with his wife and nine children (of twelve); he was at Cleveland, Ohio, 1910 Census, aged 72, Packer Meats, with his wife and four children; he died in 1910; he was married at Bengeworth, 7 August 1862, to Winifred FOWLER (born at Evesham, 26 August 1841, daughter of Henry FOWLER of Evesham, Worcestershire); with issue, fifteen children, including:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3644"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Henry NASH, born in Illinois, about 1862; aged 7, with his parents, 1870 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3652"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Elizabeth A. NASH, born in Illinois, March 1865; aged 5, with her parents, 1870 Census; aged 16, with her parents, 1881 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3651"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. Winifred NASH, born at Illinois, August 1868; aged 1, with her parents, 1870 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3650"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> d. William NASH, born in Illinois, October 1870; with his parents, 1900; with his parents, 1900 Census, Assistant Superintendent, Provision Company.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3649"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> e. Samuel T. NASH, born at Salford Priors, April 1876, a twin; aged 5, with his parents, 1881 Census with his parents, 1900 Census, Assistant Superintendent, Provision Company; aged 34, with his parents, Superintendent, Meat Packing Company, 1910 Census.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4214"> f. Richard Preston NASH, born at Salford Priors, 9 April 1876, the other twin; aged 5, with his parents, 1881 Census; with his parents, 1900 Census, Foreman, Provision Company</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4215">; aged 34, with his parents, Superintendent, Meat Packing Company, 1910 Census; Major, 158th Field Artillery, U.S. Army, in France, 1918</i><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4216">.</i></span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3647"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> g. John NASH, born at Salford Priors, about 1878; aged 3, with his parents, 1881 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3836"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> h. Annie NASH, born in England, January 1880; aged 1, with her parents, 1881 Census; with her parents, 1900 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3646"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> j. Margaret NASH, born in England, September 1881; with her parents, 1900 Census; aged 29, with her parents, 1910 Census.,</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3645"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> k. Humphry L. NASH, born in England, March 1884; at School, with his parents, 1900 Census,</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_3643"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> l. Thomas H. NASH, born in England, December 1885; with his parents, 1900 Census; aged 25, Clerk Meat Company, with his parents, 1910 Census.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">15.Emma NASH, born in 1839; died in 1840.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">16. William NASH, born 1840; died 1840.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">17. William Preston NASH, baptized at Dodderhill, 10 October 1841 1841; at Rush Farm, 1851 Census, aged 9, with his PRESTON grandmother; he died in Chicago in 1898; he married Hattie Frances BONIFACE; she died on 6 September 1876, aged 33; with issue six children including:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521169729422_3944"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Hattie Florence NASH, baptised at Dalson St Philip, County Middlesex, 21 July 1869.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Evelyn Martha NASH, baptised at Dalson St Philip, County Middlesex, 21 July 1869.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> c. Lillian Anne NASH, baptised at Dalson St Philip, County Middlesex, 21 July 1869.</span></i></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> d. Gertrude Boniface NASH, baptised at Croydon St Luke, Surrey, 1 October 1872.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521169729422_3946"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> e. Mabel Elizabeth NASH, baptised at Croydon St Luke, Surrey, 6 September 1876.</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">__________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><br /></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4383"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4382"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">FAMILY OF ARTHUR JOHN J. NASH AND ANNE NASH.</span></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">[D] <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4313">Arthur John Jones BAMFORD</b>, born at King's Heath, 25 April 1857; he was aged 3, with his parents, 1861 Census; at Brookhurst House, Bromborough, Cheshire, 1881 Census, aged 23, with his wife and son, residing with his parents; Liverpool College; he was admitted Pensioner, Christ Church College, Cambridge, 2 April 1875, matriculated Michaelmas Term; initiated into Royal Denbigh Lodge, Freemason, on 23 April 1885; at Brookhurst, Bromborough, 1889-90, with counting house and warehouse at 24 Cheapside, Exchange Ward, Liverpool [Electoral Registers, Liverpool], together with his father <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3211">Charles</b> (same residential address) and John NASH (residing at 56 Park Road South, Birkenhead); a Director of The Cheshire Salt Corporation, Ltd, June 1890; of the Liverpool City Council, February 1891, when he inherited, under his father's will, <i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_2658">"... the residence at Bromborough for life; the Misterton Estate, Leicestershire; the property situate in West Street, New York; the silver, lead and zinc mines at Lancaster (Pennsylvania) and Galena (Illinois.), and the silver mines near Denver (Colorado); and also the residue of the estate... As Mr A.J.J. BAMFORD now becomes the lord of the manor of Misterton - 3,000 acres and a hall - and also patron of the living of Misterton, which according to the Clergy List is of the value of <span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_2644" style="color: #545454;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521250998884_2645" style="font-family: "verdana" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; font-size: small;">£</span></span>530 per annum, it is presumed that he will choose that place for his residence"</i> [Cheshire Observer, 14 February]; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3075">Arthur</b> died at Old Croft, Russell Road, Rhyl, Flintshire, 3 November 1894; his will, dated 1 August 1894, appointing his wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2956">Anne BAMFORD</b> as the sole executrix and beneficiary, was proved at St Asaph's, 25 February 1895, Estate valued at <span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2738" style="color: #545454;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2739" style="font-family: "verdana" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; font-size: small;">£</span></span>18,536 13s 2d, and was abstracted in Lancaster, Pennsylvania [Will Book Q, Volume 2], and endorsed on8 June by the Commissary Clerk Edinburgh.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2685">Arthur</b> was married in the parish church of Salford, Warwickshire, 15 October 1879, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4314">Anne NASH</b> (aged 25, eldest daughter of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4315">Thomas NASH</b>, Merchant, of Worcester); she was born in Baltimore, Maryland, US, a British Subject; she married secondly, at St Mary's, Bryanston Square, St Marylebone, 9 August 1906, to Harold Henry BROOKE (a younger son of the Rev Baron HAWKE of Towton); she died at Bathafarn Hall, Ruthin, Denbighshire, 6 August 1912</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4316">Arthur</b> and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4317">Anne</b> had issue:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4352"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4320" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"> a. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4321">Charles Arthur BAMFORD</b>, born at Bromborough, Cheshire, 27 July 1880, and baptized there, 5 September. See [E] below.</span></i></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4327" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3020"> b. Edwin Scott BAMFORD, born 23 April 1886, and baptised at Bromborough, 7 May.</i></span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3040" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; text-align: center;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3039"> c<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3023"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_3024">. Anne Nash BAMFORD, baptised at Bromborough, 29 July 1888.</i></span></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">__________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_4887"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_4886"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">GREGG FAMILY IN CHESTER.</span></span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521160814308_4396">Robert GREGG</b>, born about 1781; Labourer; he was buried at St Mary-on-the-Hill, Chester, 23 January 1839, aged 57; he was married at Chester, 13 December 1812, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520906335803_2750">Ann WILLIAMS</b>; she was at Handbridge, St Mary on the Hill, 1841 Census, aged 45+, with her five children; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. John GREGG, born about 1819; aged 20+, Plasterer, with his mother, 1841 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_5296">Robert GREGG</b>, born in Chester St Mary, about 1822 (and possibly baptised at St Mary's on the Hill, Chester, 2 April 1823, son of Robert and Ann GREGG, of Handbridge); General Dealer, Bridge Street, Chester, 1851, 1854; he was at Bridge Street, Chester, 1861 Census, aged 37, Smallware Dealer and Rope Maker, with his wife, two children, and step-son Matthew EATON (aged 18, born Manchester); returned as a member of the Chester Corporation, for St Mary's Ward, 1 November 1862 (and returned again in 1865, 1868, 1871 and 1874); Sheriff of Chester, 1869-70; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_4404">Robert</b> was at Chester St Oswald, 1871 Census, aged 48, General Dealer, with his wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_4620">Mary Ann</b> and his two children; Mayor of Chester, 1873; he was returned again for St Mary's Ward, Chester Corporation, 1 November 1880 (and chosen Alderman on 9 November); he was at Stanley Place, Chester, 1881 Census, aged 57, Gentleman, with second wife Sarah Ann (aged 55, born Chester); he died on 30 April 1889, aged 67, <i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520899830035_2779">"... at the residence of his son-in-law, 5 Kingsmead Road, Oxton"</i> [Cheshire Observer, 4 May]; his will was proved at Chester, 13 July 1889, effects valued at <span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2715" style="color: #545454;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2716" style="font-family: "verdana" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; font-size: small;">£</span></span>37,080 8s 5d.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520903354986_3328">Robert</b> was married firstly, at Chester St Peter, 6 October, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520899830035_2616">Mary Ann EATON</b>, Widow (daughter of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520899830035_2759">John CLAYTON</b>, Warehouseman) - registered at Great Boughton, Cheshire, December quarter 1850 [Volume 19, Paged 61]; she was recorded as born about 1817, either in Manchester (1861) or in Keightly, Yorkshire (1871); she had married firstly, at St George Chapel, Hulme, Manchester, 1 August 1841, to Henry EATON, Salesman (her father <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520903354986_3279">John CLAYTON</b>, Traveller, witnessed by Hannah -X- CLAYTON and Edmund EATON) - Henry EATON, Smallware Manufacturer, died at Bridge Street, Chester, 1 September 1849, late of Manchester [Manchester Courier, 1 September]; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520899830035_2773">Mary Ann GREGG</b> died at Chester, June quarter 1875, aged 56 [Volume 8a, Page.261]; <b>Robert</b> appears to have married secondly, Sarah Ann (born in Chester, about 1825).</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_4931">Robert</b> and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520899830035_2413">Mary Ann</b> had issue:</span></div>
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<i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. Alfred GREGG, baptised at Chester St Peter, 23 November 1851, of Bridge Street; aged 19, with his father, 1871 Census.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521169729422_4026"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_4642">Anne Eliza GREGG</b>, baptised at Chester St Peter, 29 October 1854, of Bridge Street; aged 16, with her father, 1871 Census; aged 26, with her parents, 1881 Census, and with her future husband <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_4251">Francis J.B. KREITMAIR</b> there as a visitor (see next below).</span></i></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. William GREGG, born about 1826; aged 14, Labourer, with his mother, 1841 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. Hannah GREGG, born about 1829; aged 11, with her mother, 1841 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. Thomas GREGG, born about 1831; aged 9, with his mother, 1841 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">__________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<b><i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_3348" /></span></i></b></div>
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<b><i><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;"><br /></span></i></b></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_3383"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_3382"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">KREITMAIR FAMILY OF BAVARIA AND LANCASHIRE.</span></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_6965">Charles Joseph Benedict KREITMAIR</b>, born in Bavaria, about 1819 (son of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_6640">Benedict KREITMAIR</b>, Lawyer); <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_5590">Charles</b> was in England by March 1844, when he attended a Grand Fancy Dress Ball in Aid of the Public Charities, dressed in <i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520474113245_3145">"... an elegant red hussar uniform with silver pouch; very commanding"</i> [Liverpool Mercury, 29 March]; in September 1844 he was the Head Clerk in Mr Von DADLEZER's firm in Liverpool [London Morning Post, 4 September]; in February 1852, an employe of Messrs Von DADELSZEN and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520474113245_3179">KREITMAIR</b>, Fruit Merchants, of Harrington Street, Liverpool, was charged with embezzlement causing financial difficulties for the firm [Liverpool Mercury, 17 February]; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_4928">Charles</b>'s partnership with Ed. V. DADELSZEN, as Commission Merchants in Liverpool, was dissolved on 24 June 1851 [Perry's Bankrupt and Insolvent Gazette, 24 July]; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520899830035_2615">Charles</b> was at Childer Thornton, Cheshire, 1861 Census, aged 41, General Merchant, with his wife <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_4300">Ellen</b>, three children, and his niece Wilhelmine HAMLEIN (aged 17, born Bavaria); Mr and Mrs <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520474113245_4063">KREITMAIR</b> arrived at the Royal Pier Hotel, Isle of Wight, May 1868 [Isle of Wight Observer, 30 May]; he made his will on 16 October 1869, citing a Marriage Settlement dated 14 March 1864, made between him and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520811352907_4768">Ellen Scott LAMB</b>, Spinster, and naming their two daughters (Louisa Caroline and Anne Ellin) and three sons (Frederick Augustus, Francis Joseph and Charles Albert), which is the will (without codicil) that was proved in December 1887; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_4872">Charles</b> was at Childer Thornton, 1871 Census, aged 57, Cotton Broker, with wife and three children; his partnership with Joseph MORRISON, as Cotton Merchants in Liverpool, was dissolved on 23 May 1871 [Huddersfield Chronicle, 27 May]; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520474113245_3149">Charles</b> was at Stockport Road, Altrincham, Cheshire, 1881 Census, aged 61, Merchant, with his wife and two children; he died at Altrincham on 23 May 1887, aged 67 [Volume 8a, Page 123], formerly of the City of Liverpool, but late of Altrincham, Cheshire [Probate Calendar], his effects valued at <span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14659" style="color: #545454;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14740" style="font-family: "verdana" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; font-size: small;">£</span></span>1,292 10s.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b>Charles</b> was married at Christ Church, St Pancras, London, 6 March 1864, to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14660">Ellen Scott LAMB</b> (who already had children by him, as her birth details in the 1861 Census match exactly those in 1871 and 1881 - she was born in Doncaster, Yorkshire, about 1826); she was at Clifton Crescent, Birkenhead, 1851 Census, as <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14661">Ellen Scott BENEDICT</b>, aged 24, Gentlewoman, with her son Charles Henry, both lodging with Diana FORNEC, Widow, Lodging House Keeper and her daughter, along with another lodger and a nursemaid; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14662">Ellen</b> died at Birkenhead, September quarter 1889, aged 62 [Volume 8a, Page 326].</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><b>Charles</b> and <b>Ellen</b> had issue (the five eldest surviving children were all baptised at Haughton-cum-Grange, Chester, 26 May 1873, all of Birkenhead):</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Charles Henry Benedict KREITMAIR, born about 1849; as Charles Henry BENEDICT, aged 10 months, with his mother, 1851 Census; he was buried at East Ham, Cheshire, 10 July 1854, aged 4 years.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_6831">2. Frederick Augustus Benedict KREITMAIR</span>, born at Birkenhead in 1851, and registered at Wirral, September quarter [Volume 8a, Page 389]; aged 19, Cotton Broker's Apprentice, with his parents, 1871 Census; named in his father's will (dated October 1869); he died at Birkenhead, December quarter 1876 [Volume 8a, Page 316], aged 24, and was buried at East Ham, 24 October, Cheshire, late of Oxton.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_5004">Francis Joseph Benedict KREITMAIR</b>, born at Birkenhead, about 1853; aged 17, Merchant's Apprentice, with his parents, 1871 Census; named in his father's will; aged 27, Cotton Salesman, 1881 Census, as a visitor to the household of his future father-in-law <b>Robert GREGG</b> (and his wife Sarah and two children, including <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520988073772_4425">Annie Eliza</b>, <b>Francis</b>'s future wife); at 95 Hartington Road, Walton-on-the-Hill, October 1883, a Cotton Salesman; at 5 Kingsmead Road, Oxton, Birkenhead, Apr 1889, when his wife acquired one third-part of her late father's shares in the Great Western Railway Company (valued at <span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14867" style="color: #545454; font-family: "verdana" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; font-size: small;">£</span>1,000); <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14868">Francis</b> was at Firdene Noctorum, Birkenhead, 1911 Census, aged 57, Cotton Broker and Merchant, with his wife and two daughters; he died on 16 February 1920, and probate was granted at Chester to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14869">Ann Eliza KREITMAIR</b>, the Widow, Effects valued at <span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2772" style="color: #545454;"><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1521247443246_2773" style="font-family: "verdana" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; font-size: small;">£</span></span>48,827 17s 11d; he was married at St Thomas's Church, Chester, 2 August 1882 [Volume 8a, Page 551] to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14870">Annie Eliza GREGG</b>; (only daughter of <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14871">Robert GREGG</b>, Esq, of Stanley Place, Chester - see above); she died at Dowstone Road, Helwall, Wirral, 6 March 1937; <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14872">Frederick</b> and <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14873">Annie</b> had issue:</span></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4653"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> a. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_6833">Dorothy Helen KREITMAIR</b>, baptised at Walton-on-the-Hill, District of st Bede's, Lncashire, 20 October 1883, registered at Toxteth Park [Volume 8b, Page 169]; aged 17, with her aunt Annie, 1901 Census; she married <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_6782">Charles Arthur BAMFORD</b>. See [E] below.</span></i></div>
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<i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4651"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"> b. Mary Freidley (or Freida) Louise KREITMAIR, born in Liverpool, September quarter 1884 [Toxteth Park, Volume 8b, Paged 287]; aged 26, with her parents, 1911 Census; she was married at Birkenhead, June quarter 1915, to Reginald W. WARD.</span></i></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4650" style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4659"> c. Ruth Annie KREITMAIR, born at Oxton, Cheshire, 7 December 1888; aged 12, with her aunt Annie, 1901 Census; aged 22, with her parents, 1911 Census; she was residing in The Cottage, Portnoo, County Donegal, when she sailed to Teneriffe, Canary Islands, by the M.S. </i><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520474113245_4020">Venus</span><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520816913197_4660">, in a First Class cabin, and on an Eire Passport; she died at High Pastures Nursing Home, Deganwy, Gwynedd, Wales, 9 May 1985, leaving an estate valued at </i><span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14876" style="color: #545454; font-size: small; font-style: italic;">£</span><i>54,708.</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. Louisa Caroline KREITMAIR, born at Eastham, Cheshire, March quarter 1855 [indexed as KREITMAN, Wirral, Volume 8a, Page 375]; aged 6, with her parents, 1861 Census; named in her father's will; she was buried at Christ Church, Timperley in Bowdon, Cheshire, 24 October 1876, aged 24 years, late of Altrincham.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">5. Annie Ellen Benedicta KREITMAIR, born at Childer Thornton, 7 October 1857 [1939 Register], and registered at Wirral [Volume 8a, Page 337], a twin; aged 3, with her parents, 1861 Census; aged 13, scholar, with her parents, 1871 Census; named in her father's will; aged 23, with her parents, 1881 Census; she was at 11 Barnard Road, Birkenhead, 1901 Census, aged 43, Unmarried, with her two nieces <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520465854811_6395">Dorothy</b> and Ruth; living in 1939.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">6. Charles Albert KREITMAIR, born at Childer Thornton, December quarter 1857 [Wirral, Volume 8a, Page 337], the other twin; aged 3, with his parents, 1861 Census; aged 23, Merchant's Clerk, with his parents, 1881 Census; named in his father's will.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">7. George Edward KREITMAIR, born at Wirral, December quarter 1865 [Volume 8a, Page 358]; he died at Thornton House, Hooton, 11 April 1866, an infant [Daily Post, 13 April].</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">___________________________________________________________________</span></div>
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<span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_3381"><i id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_3380"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">FAMILY OF CHARLES ARTHUR BAMFORD AND ANNIE ELIZA KREITMAIR.</span></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">[E] <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4031">Charles Arthur BAMFORD</b>; aged 7 months, with his parents and grandparents, 1881 Census; he was at Llanfair and Dyffryn Clwyd, Denbighshire, 1911 Census, aged 30, Lieutenant R. Pay, 3rd Leicestershire Regiment, with his wife and two children; he died suddenly at Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, 20 May 1944; he was married in 1908 to <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4033">Dorothy Helen KREITMAIR</b>; she was residing at 14 Laxford House, Ebury Street, London S.W., in January 1959; she died at Westminster, 12 February 1959; they had issue:</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">1. Dorothy Ann BAMFORD, born at Leicester, about 1908; aged 2, with her parents, 1911 Census.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">2. Charles Francis Kreitmair BAMFORD, born at Leicester, 19 February 1910; aged 1, with his parents, 1911 Census; he died at Bromsgrove, Worcesteshire, 19 October 1960, leaving an estate valued at <span id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520480092098_14948" style="color: #545454; font-family: "verdana" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; font-size: small;">£</span>48,820; he married Betty HOLLOWAY, with issue.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">3. <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4003">Helen Patricia BAMFORD</b>, born September 1920; she died in 2005; she was married to Dr <b id="ydpcd6ab6bcyiv5240329969yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1520218281691_4753">Angus Fraser ALEXANDER</b>, M.B., F.R.C.S. (Edin) - see above; with issue.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">4. Arthur Ingram BAMFORD, born about 1922; in January 1959, he was engaged to be married to Peta Margaret ANDERSON, of Bournemouth, only child of Dr Peter Thomas ANDERSON (killed on active service) and the late Mrs ANDERSON [The Times, 21 January].</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">________________________________________________________________________</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">By way of explanation, I did this this research recently, in my spare time, for a friend who is only now just finding out that he may be a descendant of the above family groups.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;"><br /></span>
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">Chris PIGOTT, Potts Point, N.S.W.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">cgpigott@yahoo.com.au</span></div>
Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-64265450729861171652018-01-10T20:32:00.001-08:002018-01-18T15:16:54.312-08:00Aegidiana, or Gleanings Among Gileses at Home and Abroad, By One of them.<br />
In 1897, Arthur Henry GILES (born in 1839), Commissioner of Police in Bengal, retired to his birthplace and ancestral home in Somerset, and set to work compiling a record of the GILES families in England, Scotland, Ireland and abroad.<br />
In 1910 he published his research, under the title of <i>"Aegidiana, or Gleanings Among Gileses at Home and Abroad, by One of them."</i><br />
It was a private publication, of limited number, and intended for relatives and friends, with at least one copy being deposited in the British Library. His details appear in it, commencing at page 106.<br />
<br />
It was that copy, in the British Library, which I found in 1983, when I began my first visit to England in pursuit of my ancestors, and which propelled me towards Tavistock, in south-west Devon, and the origins of Rev William GILES (1771-1846), my great-great-great grandfather. His details appear on page 23.<br />
<br />
Several years ago, the last of my PIGOTT aunts died, and among Patricia's possessions, including some of her late husband's effects (Dr Frank PIGOTT was the youngest brother of my late father, H. R. PIGOTT, also known by his Chemistry students as "Sodium Bob"), was a scroll with our GILES family pedigree, and this copy of the <i>"Aegidiana..."</i><br />
<br />
Recently, Drew GILES of Alberta, Canada, made contact, and alerted me to a rather gross error I had made by not including his branch in my published pedigrees of my Devon GILES family.<br />
Whilst in the Devon County Records Office in Exeter, I had browsed Bishop's Transcripts of a number of Parishes, including Buckland Monachorum, just south of Tavistock, but had missed one baptism, in 1739, for George GILES, the younger brother of my ancestor John GILES (born in 1736), Rev William GILES's father. John's details appear on page 40, where George is recorded, with the annotation - "not traced."<br />
<br />
Drew had heard of the <i>"Aegidiana..."</i> but had been unable to source a copy of it.<br />
So, I thought it might be a good idea to digitalise the whole book, for all the other descendants to read for themselves.<br />
<br />
It is not a professional job. I did what I could with a slightly rickety old tripod leaning against a makeshift desk in my bed-room, with variable quality daylight on an overcast day. There is a degree of lens distortion (camera too close to subject), an almost imperceptable shift in angles as the shutter action progressively moved the camera (not all of which I corrected during editing), and some variable exposure issues, some brought about by early stages of "yellowing" of the paper by ageing.<br />
But I think it is, by and large, quite readable.<br />
<br />
There are occasional hand-written additions. I suspect that those in black ink, in a tight script, may well be by the author's own hand. Later pencil additions, in a more flowery hand, are probably those of Edwin Barnett GILES, who signed his owner-ship of this volume on the first page - he was a younger half-brother of my great-grandmother Ellen PIGOTT otherwise GILES, a daughter of Rev John Eustace GILES, whose details appear on page 144.<br />
<br />
Chris PIGOTT.<br />
Potts Point, N.S.W.<br />
<a href="mailto:cgpigott@yahoo.com.au">cgpigott@yahoo.com.au</a><br />
<br />
P.S. My camera's auto focus meant that I had to put something in the middle of the first page that I imaged - hence the temporary placement of a handy penny Australian postage stamp!<br />
________________________________________________________________________________<br />
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Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-310092770482554053.post-60535599394977447722018-01-05T17:48:00.003-08:002021-11-20T02:44:28.347-08:00The GILES Family of Tavistock in Devon, and environs.<blockquote class="tr_bq" style="text-align: center;">
<br /></blockquote>
<b>George GILES</b> was married in Buckland Monachorum, a rural parish lying a few miles south of Tavistock, County Devon, in November 1702.<br />
Some family lore suggests that he had origins in or near Totnes, where an impressive "pile," known as Bowden House, was owned by an eminent GILES family, whose details are the subject of an earlier posting at this link:<br />
<a href="http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com.au/2012/06/giles-family-of-totnes-in-devon.html">http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com.au/2012/06/giles-family-of-totnes-in-devon.html</a><br />
<br />
It is currently believed that this <b>George</b>'s great-grandson was Rev <b>William GILES</b>, who was born at Horrabridge, just east of Buckland Monachorum and a little south of Tavistock, in 1771. He lived for a time after his marriage in 1793 at Tavistock, Sierra Leone, and Portsmouth, then for 12 years in Dartmouth between 1797 and 1809, after which he left Devon, moved east to Lymington, and then in 1817 to Chatham, in Kent, before moving north to Lancashire in the 1830s. His career and family details can be found at this link:<br />
<a href="http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com.au/2013/07/william-giles-senior-peripatetic.html">http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com.au/2013/07/william-giles-senior-peripatetic.html</a><br />
<br />
In April 1884, Rev <b>William</b>'s eldest daughter, Mrs Mary Eliza GODFREY, of Prince's Park, Liverpool, a widow then aged about 90, wrote the following reminiscence, entirely from memory and unassisted by any notes:<br />
<em>"My paternal grandfather died many years before my birth. He held an estate in Totnes, Devon, leaving his estate to his eldest son, my father's eldest brother. Their mother, therefore, with her young family, left Totnes and took them to Horrabridge, where her own family resided."</em><br />
[From the notes of Mary Eliza GODFREY, courtesy of her great-grand-daughter Mrs S. CLARKE of Sutton Coldfield.]<br />
<br />
Mary Eliza's paternal grandfather was <b>John GILES</b> (born in December 1735).<br />
<br />
The information she was recalling is very similar to that contained at the head of a family pedigree that came into my possession from my father (he was a grandson of <b>Ellen GILES</b> of Leeds, a grand-daughter of Rev <b>William GILES</b>), and it had been drawn up by <b>Ellen</b>'s cousin Bertram Sands GILES (who had emigrated to N.S.W. in 1911, and married, as his third wife, <b>Ellen</b>'s youngest daughter Nellie ADAMS formerly PIGOTT).<br />
<br />
This pedigree was headed by:<br />
<em>"George GILES of Totnes, buried Monachorum. [Father of:]</em><br />
<em>"George GILES (not traced); John GILES (born 1730); and William GILES (drowned on a voyage to Newfoundland)."</em><br />
<br />
Some of Bertram's information may well have been derived from the same family source, but for the most part it replicated details found in <em>"Aegidiana; or Gleanings Among GILES's at Home and Abroad, by One of Them,"</em> Arthur Henry GILES, published privately in 1910, and so unavailable to Mary Eliza GODFREY.<br />
A digitalised copy of the book may be found at this link:<br />
<a class="yiv9764925559" href="http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com.au/2018/01/aegidiana-or-gleanings-among-gileses-at.html" id="yiv9764925559yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1515710455491_3181" rel="noreferrer" shape="rect" style="background: rgb(255, 255, 255); color: purple; font-size: 16px; margin: 0px; padding: 0px;" target="_blank"><span style="font-family: "times" , "times new roman" , serif;">http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com.au/2018/01/aegidiana-or-gleanings-among-gileses-at.html</span></a><br />
<br />
And on page 40, A.H. GILES wrote:<br />
<em>"Pedigree II, Totnes and Tavistock.</em><br />
<em>"GEORGE GILES, of Totnes, b. cir. 1700; m. , and dying in was buried at Monachorum near Tavistock. He left issue:</em><br />
<em>" 1. JOHN, of Tavistock, b. cir. 1730, about whom presently.</em><br />
<em>" 2. George, not traced.</em><br />
<em>" 3. William, a mariner, drowned cir. 1790 on a voyage to Newfoundland.</em><br />
<em>"JOHN [GILES], of Tavistock, b cir. 1730, marr. cir. 1755, and had issue:</em><br />
<em>" 1. George, b. cir. 1760, who inherited the family estate at Totnes.</em><br />
<em>" 2. William, b. (at Tavistock) cir. 1762, and bap. at Whitechurch (Cheshire Ped. I).</em><br />
<em>" Also three daughters - viz.: Mrs PARFORD; Mrs GOSNEY, two of whose sons were killed at Waterloo; Mrs MORTIMER, who had a son Forester and a daughter Mary."</em><br />
<br />
Notwithstanding that A.H. GILES did not corroborate any of these details, and some are clearly in doubt - firstly, <b>William GILES</b> (Cheshire Ped. I) was actually born in 1771 - secondly, there is no available documentary evidence for the claim that George GILES inherited an estate at Totnes - and thirdly, it would appear, in the absence of any other available record, that the "daughter" named as Mrs PARFORD was probably instead Mary PIKE (a younger sister of <b>Elizabeth PIKE</b>, the wife of <b>William GILES</b> of the Whitchurch baptism), and therefore John's son William's sister-in-law. <br />
A.H.G. published the only image I have seen of Rev William GILES Junior, which suggests he had been in touch with a member of that branch of the family.<br />
But, as Rev William was a younger brother of Mary Eliza GODFREY, their family lore should have been identical.<br />
<br />
Clearly the family folk-lore had an awareness of a possible connection to a propertied family in or near Totnes, and even believed they may have had some entitlement to a claim upon what was left of that estate.<br />
Perhaps the family with property was instead the GRAY family of <b>John GILES</b>'s wife <b>Sarah</b>?<br />
<br />
But there do appear to be some difficulties in Mary Eliza GODFREY's particular information, and a detailed analysis of it can be found in Rev <strong>William</strong> <strong>GILES</strong>'s later blog - in short, it appears that the <b>George GILES</b> at the head of it was not himself from Totnes, but probably derived from several generations who had lived instead at Buckland Monachorum, as the <i>Aegidiana</i> records.<br />
<br />
The three generations between these two men are the subject of this article.<br />
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<span style="color: #0b5394; font-size: large;"><em><br /></em></span>
<span style="color: #0b5394; font-size: large;"><em><u>THE FAMILY OF GEORGE GILES AND PATIENCE KEENE</u>.</em></span><br />
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<strong>George GILES</strong>; no evidence has yet been found of his origins; he was of the parish of Buckland Monachorum in 1702, but whether a village dweller, or on a farm somewhere out in the parish is not yet known; he was first named in the Churchwardens Accounts for the parish for the year 1713, paid £2 (probably for wages), and 2 shillings for mending the Churchyard hedge; ditto for 1715, paid a year's wages of £2; ditto for 1716, paid 4 shillings <em>"... for a daies work repairing ye hedges next hams garden</em>"; ditto for 1722, paid £2; he made his mark on the 1723 Devon and Exeter Oath Rolls, then a resident of Buckland Monachorum; he was further named in the Churchwarden's Accounts for 1723, paid 10d <em>"... for fencing ye trees in ye church yard"</em>; ditto for 1725, paid 1 shilling <em>"... for mending ye churchyard hedge"</em> and £1 13s 4d <em>"... for a years wages"</em>; ditto for 1736, paid his salary, £1 13s 4d, and <em>"... for the paritor's fee</em>" of 1 shilling.<br />
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The Accounts are viewable on Findmypast, under "Devon, Plymouth and West Devon parish chest records, 1556-1950."<br />
An Apparitor was an ecclesiastical servant or attendant who, evidently in this case in the parish where he resided, served any writs of summons from his Bishop or Archdeacon to appear in their respective courts, on the Minister, the churchwardens or the parishioners; it has been said that the apparitor usually claimed a fee for <em>"... his unwelcome services,"</em> and was widely regarded as <em>"... a ubiquitous and unpopular official</em>" ["A History of the English Parish; The Culture of Religion from Augustine to Victoria," by N.J.G. POUNDS, 2000, Page 298].<br />
Buckland Monachorum was a parish in the Archdeaconry of Totnes, and in the Diocese of Exeter. The Archdeaconry of Totnes, established in 1083, was reconsigned as the Archdeaconry of Plymouth in 1918.<br />
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<b>George</b> may just have gained his "appointment" in his previous parish (if he had one), or the parish of his father, which may have been in or near Totnes, as the family lore appears to suggest. But no evidence for this has been found.<br />
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<b>George</b> was buried at Buckland Monachorum on 30 September 1752; the Overseer's Accounts for the parish for 1752 recorded expenditure of £2 10s for balance of salary (6 months and 1 week), 3 shillings for a shirt, 8 shillings for his coffin, and 9 shillings for other charges.<br />
<br />
He was probably the <strong>George GEELES</strong> who was married there, on 28 November 1702, to <strong>Patience KEENE </strong>(<strong>KEANE</strong>); she was buried there on 29 April 1740.<br />
<br />
<b>George</b> and <b>Patience</b> had issue:<br />
1. John GILES [GEELES], baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 28 July 1703 (mother not named in B.T.); he was buried there on 25 January 1722-23.<br />
2. <strong>George GILES</strong>, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 1 January 1705-06. See [A] below.<br />
3. Joseph GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 3 August 1707 (mother not named); probably buried there on 1 September 1710.<br />
4. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 9 August 1709; probably buried there on 26 May 1712.<br />
<br />
There were continuing mentions of <b>George GILES</b> in Churchwardens and Overseers Accounts for Buckland Monachorum parish, but whether they were <strong>George GILES</strong> Senior (who died in 1752), or instead his son <strong>George GILES</strong> Junior (who came of age in 1727) is not yet clear. Churchwardens Accounts were for moneys paid for goods (bread and wine for Communion, books, etc) and services (salaries and wages of employees), whereas the Accounts of the Overseers of the Poor were inevitably connected with poor relief for individual parishioners.<br />
The mentions were as follows:<br />
1745 - Churchwardens - <b>George GYLES</b> paid 1s <em>"... for cutting the Ivy round ye church."</em><br />
1745 - Overseers - <b>George GILES</b> paid 5s <em>"... for cleaning the gutters in Windsbere lane last year."</em><br />
1746 - ditto - all ditto.<br />
1747 - ditto - <b>George GILES</b> paid £2 18s for 7 months and 1 week at 8s per month; paid 3s for a shirt.<br />
1747 - ditto - paid, <i>"... a heriot for <b>George GILES</b>' house"</i>, 3s 4d.<br />
[A heriot was a tribute or service rendered to a feudal lord on the death of a tenant; in this post-feudal era, it may have been <b>George</b>'s landlord who had died, as <b>George</b> Senior himself did not die until 1752.]<br />
1747 - Churchwardens - <b>George GILES</b> paid 2s <em>"... for cutting ye Ivy and making 2 Mells."</em> <br />
1748 - ditto - <b>George GEILS </b>paid £1 13s 4d <em>"... for a years wages."</em><br />
1749 - ditto - <b>George GYLES</b> paid £1 13s 4d <em>"... for a yeares wages"</em>; 2s 6d <em>"... for making 2 Butes and Metes"</em>; 1s <em>"... for 2 days work about the hedge; and 6d for a pound of candles."</em><br />
1753 - Churchwardens - <b>George GILES</b> paid £1 13s 4d <em>"... for his salary."</em><br />
My guess is that most of these are probably <strong>George</strong> Senior, especially those for a year's wages; and that this last entry was probably a retrospective account for the previous year of 1752 - and given the time gap to the next (see below), probably <strong>George</strong> Senior.<br />
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The following may have been related to <strong>George GILES</strong>:<br />
<br />
Mary GEELES was married at Buckland Monachorum, 4 October 1663 to Silvester COLLIN.<br />
<br />
John GEELES was married at Buckland Monachorum, 3 December 1690, to Joane WILLES.<br />
<br />
Henry GILES was married at Buckland Monachorum, 7 July 1716, to Ann TUCKER; they had issue:<br />
1. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 17 December 1718.<br />
2. Henry GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 2 September 1721.<br />
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<span style="color: #274e13; font-size: large;"><em><br /></em></span>
<span style="color: #274e13; font-size: large;"><em><u>THE FAMILY OF GEORGE GILES AND ELIZABETH MILLER</u>.</em></span><br />
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<br />
[A] <strong>George GILES</strong>, Junior, born late 1705; of the parish of Buckland Monachorum.<br />
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Once again, there were numerous entries in Churchwardens and Overseers Accounts for the parish, most of which may turn out to be for this <strong>George</strong>, although his son George (the third) did come of age in 1760:<br />
1769 - Overseers - George GILES paid 8s <em>"... for Relief."</em><br />
1769 - ditto - George GILES<b> </b>paid 1s <em>"... for cuting the weed and clening the Church yard."</em><br />
1770 - ditto - George GILES paid 3s 7d <em>"... for a shirt"</em>; and 6s 5s <em>"... given him in need."</em><br />
1771 - ditto - George GILES given 9s 6s <em>"... in need at several times."</em><br />
1771 - Churchwardens - George GILES paid 2s <em>"... for cleaning the Church yard."</em><br />
1772 - ditto - all ditto.<br />
1772 - Overseers - George GILES given 13s <em>"... for need at several times."</em><br />
1773 - ditto - George GILES was given 3s 9d farthing for <em>"... a shirt and making"</em>; 6s 2d halfpenny "... for a pr breeches and making"; 1s 6d halfpenny <em>"... for an apron for his wife and making"</em>; and 6s 9d halfpenny <em>"... for a wastecoat and making."</em><br />
1774 - ditto - Poor peoples goods - George GILES for <i>"... one bed, performed."</i>; and he was paid £2 19s 6d <i>"... in need at several times, and his wife"</i>; 18s 1d halfpenny for <i>"...a coat and making"</i>; 6 10s halfpenny for <i>"...a shirt, shift and making"</i>; and 7s 1d <i>"... for cloth, thread and mending"</i>; total £4 11s 7d.<br />
1775 - ditto - for <i>"one bed, performed"</i>; and then a series of monthly payments between 7 May and 10 March next, for amounts of 12s (7 May, 4 June); 6s (30 July, 27 August, 24 September, 22 October); and 8s (17 November, 9 December, 10 January, 11 February, 10 March).<br />
The fact that these entries end here in 1775 does suggest that they were probably for <b>George GILES</b> the elder, who died in 1779, and not his son George born in 1739.<br />
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<strong>George</strong> was buried at Buckland Monachorum on 15 December 1779, aged 73 years; Mr GILES, probably our <strong>George</strong>, was married at Buckland Monachorum, on 30 June 1733, to <strong>Elizabeth MILLER</strong> (she was probably baptised at Buckland Monachorum on 3 October 1708, a daughter of <strong>Theodore MILLER</strong> and his wife <strong>Elizabeth WHITE</strong>); no firm evidence has yet been found of <b>Elizabeth</b>'s death and burial - perhaps she was the Pauper who was buried at Buckland Monachorum on 23 May 1787.<br />
<b>George</b> and <b>Elizabeth</b> had issue:<br />
1. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, on 30 July 1734; she witnessed her brother George's marriage in 1767; she died on 6 December 1812; she was married at Buckland Monachorum, on 12 June 1761, to Charles SPRY; he was buried at Buckland Monachorum on 28 August 1814, late of Pike Street; they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. Mary Ann SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 12 May 1762; died 1766.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. Elizabeth SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 7 October 1763.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Ann SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 1 April 1766. Possibly married there, 15 July 1789, to Solomon NORTHMORE?</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Mary SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 4 October 1767; died 1770.</span></i><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. John SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 16 April 1769. Possibly married there, 24 May 1816, Mary DAWE?</span></em><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> f. Charles SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 3 March 1771; Mason; he died at Tavistock, 23 May 1841; he married Ann HUTTON, who was living at Buckland Monachorum in 1841, aged 65+, with two of her sons; she died at Tavistock, 6 June 1852; they had issue:</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. John Spry, born 1801.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> ii. Mary Ann SPRY, born 1803; died 1882; married John Creber MOSES; with issue.</span></i><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> iii. James </em><em>SPRY, born 1804.</em></span><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iv. Charles SPRY, born 1811; aged 30+, with his mother 1841 Census; died 1848; married in 1845, Rosamund DAVY.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> v. Thomas SPRY, born and died 1812.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> vi. Sarah SPRY, born 1812; died 1863; married firstly, SMALLACOME; married secondly, HOOPER.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> vii. Thomas SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 4 April 1815; aged 24, with his mother, 1841, a Mason.</span></em><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> viii. Elizabeth SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 28 September 1817.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> g. Mary Ann SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 11 February 1774; died 1774.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> h. Susanna SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 3 September 1775.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> j. Sarah SPRY, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 5 November 1777.</span></i><br />
2. <strong>John GILES</strong>, baptised at Buckland Monachorum on 8 October 1736. See [B] below.<br />
3. George GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum on 2 May 1739; he died at Bickleigh, Devon, and was buried there on 1 January 1800; he was married at Buckland Monachorum, by Banns, on 12 June 1767, to Wilmot DAWE (a daughter of John and Joan DAWE); she died at Bickleigh in 1821 (no burial found there); they had issue (with thanks to Drew GILES of Alberta, Canada):<br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. John GILES, baptised at Whitchurch, 1 May 1768. See [C] below.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. George GILES, baptised at Whitchurch, 21 October 1770.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. William GILES, born at Tavistock in 1776.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Tavistock, 13 August 1776.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. Joan GILES, baptised at Tavistock, 25 May 1779.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> f. Ann GILES, baptised at Tavistock, 1 July 1784.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> g. Joseph GILES, baptised at Tavistock, 10 May 1787.</span></em><br />
4. William GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum on 2 March 1741-42.<br />
5. Joseph GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum on 9 February 1744; buried there, 31 July 1764.<br />
6. Ann GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum on 28 March 1748; buried there on 1 May 1762.<br />
7. Mary GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum on 2 April 1751; buried there 8 March 1754.<br />
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<span style="color: #b45f06; font-size: large;"><em><br /></em></span>
<span style="color: #b45f06; font-size: large;"><em><u>THE FAMILY OF JOHN GILES AND SARAH GRAY</u>.</em></span><br />
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[B] <strong>John GILES</strong>; Farmer; he was probably buried at Buckland Monachorum on 9 March 1774; he was married at Buckfastleigh, near Totnes, on 28 April 1760, to <strong>Sarah GRAY</strong>; she was probably baptised at Buckfastleigh on 3 September 1728, a daughter of <strong>William GRAY</strong> of Buckfastleigh (probably buried there on 11 December 1761) by his wife <strong>Sarah</strong> (she was probably buried there on 28 March 1738); no death for Mrs <b>Sarah</b> <b>GILES</b> has been confirmed - a Sarah GILES of the right age died <i>"... of a cancer"</i> and was buried at Walkhampton on 13 December 1795, aged 67, but her marital status was not recorded; if her husband was the one who died in 1774, she was left with a young family, and she may have re-married? There was a GILES family associated with Walkhampton (see the end of this post), and if this 1795 burial was Sarah GRAY, then it asks the question - why was she there, and was she or her late husband related to that family?<br />
Several other questions do arise - if <b>John</b> was of the Buckland Monachorum family, why was he in Buckfastleigh, near Totnes, in 1760? If he had expectations of a property inheritance in the area, as suggested in some of the family lore, was he there sorting that out? Could that have had anything to do with the impending death of <b>Sarah</b>'s father <b>William GRAY</b> in 1761?<br />
<b>John</b> and <b>Sarah</b> had issue:<br />
1. George GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 28 August 1763; buried there on 17 December 1675, a child.<br />
2. John GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 19 April 1766; buried there on 22 April 1767, an infant.<br />
3. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 8 March 1767; buried there on 17 March 1767, an infant.<br />
4. Sarah GILES, baptised at Buckland Monachorum, 20 April 1768; she was probably married at Plymouth St Andrew, on 13 July 1790, to Benjamin Harris GOSNEY (baptised at Plymouth, 15 January 1767, son of Benjamin and Agnes GOSNEY); they had issue:<br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. Mary Ann GOSNEY, baptised at Plymouth St Charles, 6 May 1791.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. Benjamin Harris GOSNEY, baptised at Plymouth St Andrew, 28 January 1793; of Broseley when he was married at Handsworth, Staffordshire, on 20 May 1814, to Lydia SMITH of Coalbrookdale.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. William Thoresby GOSNEY, baptised at Plymouth St Andrew, 23 November 1794.</span></em><br />
According to <em>Aedigiana</em>, Mrs GOSNEY had two sons killed at the Battle of Waterloo.<br />
5. <strong>William GILES</strong>, born at Horrabridge on 1 May 1771, and baptised at Whitchurch on 5 May. See his separate blog post at this link:<br />
<a href="http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com.au/2013/07/william-giles-senior-peripatetic.html">http://pigott-gorrie.blogspot.com.au/2013/07/william-giles-senior-peripatetic.html</a><br />
6. Mary GILES, baptised at Whitchurch, 25 September 1774; she was married, by Banns, at Plymouth St Andrew, 23 June 1802, to William MORTIMER (born in 1773, son of John MORTYMORE and Rose TERRY, and younger brother of John MORTIMER - see next below), witnessed by Thomas MORTIMER and Thomas RICHARDS; William is said to have died in 1823, and his family was <em>"... taken in and looked after"</em> by his brother John (he died two years later in 1825); there was a Mary MORTIMER at 52 Cambridge Street, Plymouth St Andrew, in 1851, aged 78, Widow, Annuitant, and born in South Molton - if she was Mary GILES, her birth place suggests she may have been another; they had issue:<br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> a. Mary MORTIMER; she was probably one of the two Mary MORTIMERs who witnessed her cousin John MORTIMER's marriage in 1823; in 1830, she wrote a letter to Mrs John MORTIMER at Mill Street, Plymouth (widow of her cousin John MORTIMER), mentioning her niece and nephew Rose and John Forester MORTIMER (see below).</em></span><br />
<br />
John MORTYMORE, born in 1733; of Kingsteignton, Devon; he died in 1797; he was married in 1764 to Rose TERRY of Stoke-in-Teignhead; with issue:<br />
1. John MORTIMER, baptised at Coombe-in-Teignhead, 9 September 1768; Dyer and Fuller in Plymouth; he was buried in Plymouth St Andrew, on 24 January 1825, aged 56; his business was taken over by his son John, and consolidated with that of his late brother William; he was married at Plymouth St Andrew, on 8 April 1790, to Patience HAMMICK; she was buried at Plymouth St Andrew on 4 October 1813, aged 44; they had issue:<br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> a. Elizabeth MORTIMER, born 21 June 1792.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> b. Rose MORTIMER, born 17 July 1794.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> c. John MORTIMER, born 23 August 1797; apprenticed to his father in 1812; Dyer and Fuller in Plymouth, with premises in Drake Street, Plymouth, and in Fore Street, Devonport, in 1830; he died in Mill Street, Plymouth, in 1834, of Cholera, and was buried by necessity in the closest cemetery, the Ebenezer Chapel (Wesleyan Methodist) burial ground across the street; he was married at Plymouth St Andrew, on 21 May 1823, to Rachel BRAMBLE, witnessed by his father, Mary MORTIMER, Wm and R. PEARSE, James BOULTER, and Mary MORTIMER; Rachel was at Mill Street, Plymouth St Andrew, 1851 Census, aged 54, Dyer employing 18 persons, born Dolton, with her two children, Elizabeth HORE (aged 50, Assistant Dyer) and Mary GILES (23, Assistant, born Stoke Damerel); Rachel witnessed her son's marriage, 1852; she died at Plymouth, 25 October 1860, and was buried at Ford Park Cemetery; they had issue:</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> i. Rose Bramble MORTIMER, baptised Plymouth, 20 March 1827; witnessed her brother's marriage, 1852; died at Plymouth, 23 August 1892, and buried at Ford Park Cemetery.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> ii. John Forester MORTIMER, baptised Plymouth, 20 March 1827; Dyer; died at Plymouth, 4 November 1900, and buried at Ford Park Cemetery; he was married at Holy Trinity, Exeter, 2 December 1852, to Louisa BURGOYNE, the witnesses including Rachael and Rose MORTIMER; they had issue daughters Louise (Aged 15 in 1871) and Kate (aged 11 in 1871) and son Forrester (born at Plymouth St Andrew on3 April 1863, aged 8 in 1871) .</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> d. Ann MORTIMER, born 23 August 1799.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> e. William MORTIMER, born 21 March 1801; died 13 January 1803.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> f. still-born daughter, 1803.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> g. William MORTIMER, born 20 July 1804; died 1807.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><em> h. Samuel MORTIMER, born 21 August 1806; died 1832.</em></span><br />
2. William MORTIMER, born 1773; Dyer and Fuller in Plymouth; said to have died in 1823, when his nephew took over business, and incorporated that with his brother John's business in 1825; he married Mary GILES, with issue. See above. There is a suggestion that this William may have instead married Jane PEARSE, with issue seven or more children?<br />
_______________________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />
<span style="color: #741b47; font-size: large;"><em><br /></em></span>
<span style="color: #741b47; font-size: large;"><em><u>THE FAMILY OF JOHN GILES AND ELIZABETH PIKE</u>.</em></span><br />
<br />
<br />
[C] John GILES, born at Whitchurch, 1768; he died at Bickleigh in 1832; he was married to Elizabeth PIKE (a daughter of John PIKE of Stoke Damerel and his wife Mary HOPKINS); she died at Bickleigh in 1832; they had issue:<br />
1. George GILES, baptised at Stoke Damerel, Devon, on 30 May 1790; buried at Bickleigh, 1 January 1794.<br />
2. John GILES, baptised at Bickleigh on 17 March 1793. See [D] below.<br />
3. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Bickleigh, 8 July 1798.<br />
4. Ann GILES, baptised at Bickleigh, 7 December 1798; buried there, 22 March 1799.<br />
5. Ann GILES, baptised at Bickleigh, 8 February 1801; buried there, 25 April 1802.<br />
<br />
[D] John GILES, baptised at Bickleigh on 17 March 1793; Labourer in Blacksmith's Shop, Peter Tavy, 1821; Husbandman, Coombe Park, 1821, 1823; Miner there, 1825; Miner, Peter Tavy Village, 1827, 1830, 1834; at Shovel Lane, Tavey St Peter, 1841 Census, aged 48, Agricultural Labourer, with wife and five children; at Peter Tavy Village, 1851, aged 60, Labourer receiving parish pay, and blind, with two children and widowed mother-in-law Elizabeth CREBER (aged 80, Blacksmith's widow, also on parish pay and blind); at House, Peter Tavy, 1861, aged 68, Farm Labourer, Blind, with wife and grandson James CROWELL (aged 3, born Whitchurch); at Village, Peter Tavy, 1871, with wife and grand-daughter Elizabeth Ann LEWIS (aged 11, born Peter Tavy); he died at Peter Tavy, Devon, on 29 November 1871; he was married at Tavy St Peter, on 7 November 1820, to Ann CREBER (daughter of Richard CREBER and Elizabeth WILLIAMS); in 1851, Ann was aged 49, Nurse, a visitor in the household Ann SARAH (aged 77, Mining Agent's Widow), her married daughter Elizabeth WILLIAMS (aged 34, wife of Mining Agent) and her two WILLIAMS grand-children; she died in Plymouth in 1886.<br />
John and Ann had issue:<br />
1. John GILES, baptised at Tavy St Peter on 17 January 1821; at Elbow Lane, Tavistock, 1841 Census, aged 21, Labourer, with his wife Maria (aged 21, Serge Weaver), residing with her mother Sophia TOOR (aged 55+, Independent), Sophia RODDA (aged 3) and Henry ALLEN (aged 35, Woodman); at West Bridge Cottages, Tavistock, 1851, 1861 and 1871 Census, Copper Miner and Mine Labourer, with wife and up to seven children; at 15 Ford Street, 1881, Tea Dealer, with wife; he died at Tavistock, 2 December 1884; he was married at Tavistock, on 2 May 1841, to Maria TORR; she died in Tavistock in 1882; they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. John GILES, born at Tavistock, March quarter 1840 [Volume 9, Page 447]; aged 9, Copper Miner, with parents, 1851; aged 19, Copper Miner, with parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. Elizabeth GILES, born at Tavistock, March quarter 1844 [Volume 9, Page 557]; aged 7, Scholar, with parents, 1851; evidently died young.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. William GILES, born at Tavistock, March quarter 1846 [Volume 9, Page 530]; aged 5, Scholar, with parents, 1851; evidently died young.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. James GILES, born at Tavistock, March quarter 1848 [Volume 9, Page 512]; aged 3, with parents, 1851; probably</span></i><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> as Samuel GILES, aged 13, Marking to Mine, with his parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. Eliza GILES, born at Tavistock, about 1849 (births were registered there for Margaret in 1849, and for Mary Jane, ann, and Emma, all in 1857); aged 1, with parents, 1851; probably as</span></i><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> Mary GILES, aged 11, Scholar, with her parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> f. William GILES, born at Tavistock, March quarter 1852 [Volume 5b, Page 330]; aged 8, Marking to Mine, with parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> g. Thomas GILES, born at Tavistock, September quarter 1854 [Volume 5b, Page 324]; aged 6, Scholar, with his parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> h. Ellen GILES, born at Tavistock, about 1856 (births were registered there for Mary and Elizabeth Jane in 1855, abd for Elizabeth in 1857); aged 4, with her parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> j. Ann GILES, born at Tavistock, December quarter 1858 [Volume 5b, Page 464]; aged 2, with her parents, 1861; aged 12, Scholar, ditto, 1871.</span></i><br />
2. William GILES, born in 1821 and baptised at Tavy St Peter (with his younger brother Richard) on 15 May 1823; at Quither Lane, Milton Abbot, 1851 Census, aged 30, Miner, with wife and two sons, residing with his wife's parents and brother; he went to Canada about 1855; at East Zorra, Oxford County, Ontario, 1861 and 1871, with wife and up to 8 children; at Caradoc, Middlesex West County, Ontario, 181, with wife and son; William died at Delaware, Caradoc Township, 30 July 1898; he married at Tavistock, 2 November 1846, Mary LANG (daughter of John LANG and Betsy HAWKINS); she died in Delaware, Ontario, on 16 September 1904; they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. John GILES, born England, about 1846; aged 3, with his parents and grandparents, 1851; aged 15, with his parents, 1861; aged 24, ditto, 1871.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. Henry GILES, born England, 1850, probably at Tavistock, December quarter, 1850 [Volume 9, Paged 467]; aged 7 months, with his parents and grandparents, 1851; aged 11, with his parents, 1861; aged 20, ditto, 1871.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Emma GILES, born England, about 1851; aged 9, with her parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Elizabeth GILES, born in England about 1853; aged 7, with her parents, 1861; aged 16, ditto, 1871.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. William GILES, born Canada, about 1856; aged 4, with his parents, 1861; aged 15, ditto, 1871.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> f. Mary Ann GILES, born Canada about 1858; aged 2, with her parents, 1861; aged 13, ditto, 1871.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> g. Sarah Jane GILES, born Canada, about 1861; aged 9, with her parents, 1871.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> h. Ellen GILES, born Canada, about 1863; aged 7, with her parents, 1871.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> j. James GILES, born Canada, about 1866; aged 4, with his parents, 1871.</span></i><br />
3. Richard GILES, baptised at Tavy St Peter on 15 May 1823; he died in Tavistock, 1850.<br />
4. Thomas GILES, baptised at Tavy St Peter on 11 December 1825; at Village, Peter Tavy, 1851 Census, aged 25, Miner, with wife and daughter; went to Canada; at Hillsborough, Albert County, New Brunswick, 1871, 1881, 1891 and 1901 Censuses, with several wives and up to three daughters, his birth date recorded in 1901 as 15 November 1823 (which does not correspond with family details), and arrival in Canada in 1850 (which does not fit his daughters birth details in 1871); he died at Albert County, New Brunswick, 12 February 1902; he married firstly, at Tavistock, in 1847, Jane GREENING; was aged 25, 1851 Census, born at Peter Tavy; she died at Hillsborough, Albert County, N.B., 19 January 1890; they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. Emma GILES, born at Peter Tavy in 1850; aged 5 months, with her parents, 1851.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. Mary GILES, probably born in Tavistock, March quarter 1850 [Volume 9, Page 516]; aged 19, with her parents, 1871.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Jane GILES, probably born in Tavistock, December quarter 1854 [Volume 5b, Page 296] 1854; aged 16, with her parents, 1871.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Elizabeth GILES, probably born in Tavistock, March quarter 1857 [Volume 5b, Page 328]; aged 14, with her parents, 1871.</span></i><br />
5. Mary GILES, baptised at Tavy St Peter on 25 November 1827, probably a twin; possibly died young (on the grounds that John and Ann GILES had a daughter Mary living with them in 1841 Census who was aged 7)? But perhaps the Mary GILES, at Mill Street, Plymouth St Andrew, 1851 Census, aged 23, Dyer's Assistant, born Stoke Damerel, assistant to Rachel MORTIMER (widow of John MORTIME, whose brother William was married to Mary GILES) ?<br />
There was a Mary GILES, of full age, of West Street, Tavistock, a daughter of John GILES of Tavistock, Labourer, who was married at Tavistock in 1854 to Henry LANG, Sawyer, of Exeter Street, Tavistock, son of John LANG, Labourer - some descendants have assumed this was the daughter of John and Ann, and state that she died in Plymouth on 28 March 1910, and that he had predeceased her in Plymouth in 1908.<br />
6. Joseph GILES, baptised at Tavy St Peter on 25 November 1827, probably the other twin; he died there in 1828.<br />
7. Henry GILES, baptised at Tavy St Peter on 18 April 1830; aged 11, with his parents, 1841 Census; aged 22, with his father, 1851; he went to America; at Stephens, Huron County, Canada West, 1861, aged 31, Farmer, with wife and 3 children; at Burlington, La Peer County, Michigan, 1870, aged 41, farmer with wife and 5 children; at Sedgwick, Harvey County, Kansas, 1889 Census, aged 57, with wife and 4 children; he died at Sedgwick, Kansas, 9 January 1908; he married at Peter Tavy, 30 January 1853, Mary FOSTER (daughter of Edward Langworthy FOSTER and Sarah SPARK); she died at Sedgwick, 29 August 1921;
they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. Charles H. GILES, born Upper Canada, about 1855; aged 5, with his parents, 1861; aged 14, ditto, 1870.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. John E. GILES, born Canada, about 1857; aged 3, with his parents, 1861; aged 12, ditto, 1870; aged 22, ditto, 1880.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Sarah A. GILES, born Canada, about 1859; aged 1, with her parents, 1861; aged 9, ditto, 1870.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Job GILES, born Canada, about 1862; aged 7, with his parents, 1870; aged 18, ditto, 1880.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. Ellen GILES, born Michigan, about 1868; aged 1, with her parents, 1870; aged 11, ditto, 1880.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> f. Arthur GILES, born Michigan, about 1871; aged 8, with his parents, 1880.</span></i><br />
8. Mary GILES, born Devonshire, about 1832; aged 7, with her parents, 1841. Could her age have been recorded incorrectly? Was she the wife of Henry LANG?<br />
9. George GILES, baptised at Tavy St Peter on 7 December 1834; aged 7, with his parents, 1841; at Hawson Cottage, Buckfastleigh, 1861 Census, aged 25, Copper Miner, with wife Harriet and three children; he went to America; died at Streator, La Salle County, Illinois, in 1908; married at Tavistock, 1855, Harriett HUGGINS (daughter of Roger and Mary HUGGINS of Lidford, Devon); she was aged 21 in the 1861 Census, born at Lidford; she died at Streator, in 1891;
they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. Mary GILES, born at Peter Tavy, about 1855; aged 5, with her parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. Harry GILES, born at Peter Tavy, about 1857; aged 3, with his parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Elizabeth GILES, born at Peter Tavy, about 1859; aged 1, with her parents, 1861.</span></i><br />
10. Elizabeth GILES, born at Peter Tavy, 1836; aged 5, with her parents, 1841; she went to Canada; she died at Delaware, Caradoc Township, Ontario, on 5 October 1920; of Peter Tavy when she was married firstly, at Tavistock, after publication of Bans on 23, 30 November and 7 December 1856, to James LEWIS of Exeter Street, Tavistock; he was at Coombe, Buckfastleigh, 1861, with his wife Elizabeth (aged 32) and their two children; she married secondly, Charles SMITH; issue included:<br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> a. Samuel LEWIS, born at Peter Tavy about 1858; aged 2, with his parents, 1861.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> b. Elizabeth Ann LEWIS, born at Peter Tavy about 1859; aged 1, with her parents, 1861; aged 11, Scholar, with her GILES grandparents, 1871.</i></span><br />
11. Jane Ann GILES, born at Peter Tavy, 1839; aged 1, with her parents, 1841; aged 11, with her father, 1851; she died at Horrabridge, 28 March 1910; she married at Whitchurch, 8 November 1857, William CROWL or CROWEL; he was at Cottage, Buckland Monachorum, 1861 Census, aged 27, Copper Miner (born St Blazey, Cornwall), with his wife and daughter; at Dosterbrook, Whitchurch, 1871, aged 37, Miner, with his wife and five children; at Sampford Spiny, Horrabridge, 1881, aged 47, Clay Miner, with wife and 6 children; he died at Tavistock in 1889; they had issue:<br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> a. James CROWELL, born Whitchurch, about 1857; aged 3, with his GILES grandparents, 1861; aged 13, with his parents, 1871; aged 23, Plate Layer, with his parents, 1881.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> b. Mary Ann CROWEL, born at Peter Tavy, about 1859; aged 1, with her parents, 1861; aged 11, ditto, 1871.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> c. Elizabeth CROWEL, born at Whitchurch, about 1861; aged 9, with her parents, 1871.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> d. Jane CROWEL, born at Sampford Spiny, about 1865; aged 5, with her parents, 1871.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> e. William CROWEL, born at Whitchurch, about 1867; aged 3, with his parents, 1871; aged 13, dumb from birth, with his parents, 1881.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> f. Edward Stan CROWEL, born at Horrabridge, about 1872; aged 8, with his parents, 1881.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> g. Laura CROWEL, born at Horrabridge, about 1875; aged 5, with her parents, 1881.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> h. Eva CROWEL, born at Horrabridge, about 1877; aged 3, with her parents, 1881.</i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> j. Emma CROWEL, born at Horrabridge, about 1879; aged 1, with her parents, 1881. </i></span><br />
<br />
I am very grateful to Drew GILES of Alberta, Canada for pointing out my failure to recognise George GILES of Buckland Monachorum (born 1739) as the one recorded in <i>Aegidiana</i> as "not traced"; and for much of the above detail on George's descendants in Devon, Canada and America.<br />
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<br />
<span style="color: blue; font-size: large;"><em><br /></em></span>
<span style="color: blue; font-size: large;"><em><u>AN UNATTACHED GILES FAMILY IN WALKHAMPTON</u>.</em></span><br />
<br />
<br />
Several potential links to Walkhampton, a parish north-east of adjoining Buckland Monochorum, appear:<br />
A. Sarah GILES was buried there on 13 December 1795, and at age 67 was of the right age to have been <strong>John GILES</strong>'s widow, <strong>Sarah GILES</strong> otherwise <strong>GRAY</strong>. She may instead have been the wife of George GILES of Walkhampton (they were married there in August 1766, with a William GRAY signing as one of the witnesses).<br />
B. John GILES of Walkhampton and Joan GRAY of Buckfastleigh were married at Walkhampton on 19 October 1764. It is possible that this Joan may have been related to <strong>Sarah GRAY</strong> of Buckfastleigh (<strong>John GILES</strong> 's wife); and if so, this might account for her being in Walkhampton at her death (if it was her).<br />
I thought it prudent to investigate the GILES families in Walkhampton, to see if either of the above factors might lead me to <strong>George GILES</strong> Senior's possible origins here. Nothing has yet appeared.<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
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John GIELLS, Junior, of Walkhampton, signed the Devon and Exeter Oath Rolls, in 1723 - John GILES of Walkhamton did not sign, and his name was struck through (perhaps John Senior, deceased?); and Abraham GIELLS and Abraham GILES, both of Walkhampton, both made their marks on the same Roll. These men were probably related to the following.<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
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George and Mary GILES had issue:<br />
1. Walter GYLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 28 May 1676.<br />
<br />
Agnes GILES, wife of Abraham GILES, buried at Walkhampton, 21 April 1680.<br />
Abraham GYLES, buried at Walkhampton, 13 June 1680.<br />
Johan GILES, wife of Richard GYLES, buried at Walkhampton, 14 September 1681.<br />
Margaret GYLES, daughter of Roger GYLES, buried at Walkhampton, 8 February 1681-82.<br />
George GYLES, buried at Walkhampton, 30 December 1683.<br />
<br />
Abraham and Susan(na) GYLES had issue:<br />
1. John JOOLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 3 February 1677-78 (mother Susanna).<br />
2. Johan GYLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 1 January 1681.<br />
3. Walter GYLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 8 December 1683; possibly buried at Walkhampton, 25 December 1733?<br />
4. Abraham GYLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 29 November 1687.<br />
5. Robert GEELES, baptised 8 April 1694 (mother Susanna).<br />
Susanna GILES, wife of Abraham GILES of Combshead, was buried at Walkhampton, 29 August 1715; Abraham GILES of Combshead was buried at Walkhampton, 8 January 1717-18.<br />
<br />
Roger GEELES; married at Walkhampton, 25 September 1686, Susan CUDLIP; they had issue:<br />
1. Margaret JEELES, baptised at Walkhampton, 31 May 1687 (mother named Susan).<br />
2. John GEELES, baptised at Walkhampton, 3 December 1689.<br />
3. Mary JEELS, baptised at Walkhampton, 5 June 1692; buried at Walkhampton, 10 January 1694-95.<br />
4. Mary GILES; buried at Walkhampton, 27 March 1701.<br />
<br />
Roger GYLES was buried at Walkhampton, 2 August 1705.<br />
<br />
Ellis GEELES; married at Walkhamton, November 1686, Margaret PEARSE; they had issue:<br />
1. Ellis GEELES, baptised at Walkhampton, 27 December 1687.<br />
2. Margaret GYLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 22 January 1688-89 (father only named).<br />
3. Joan GYLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 23 September 1693 (father only named); buried at Walkhampton, 8 February 1695-96.<br />
<br />
Ellis GEELES was buried at Walkhampton, 20 November 1706.<br />
<br />
Joan GEELES; married at Walkhampton, 8 February 1686-87, John CREBER.<br />
<br />
John GILES; married at Walkhampton, May 1691, Margaret SHELABERE; they had issue:<br />
1. John GEELES, baptised at Walkhampton, 15 October 1692.<br />
2. Margaret GYLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 13 February 1693-94.<br />
3. Joan GYLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 13 April 1696.<br />
4. Richard GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 2 September 1699.<br />
5. Ammey GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 2 August 1701.<br />
<br />
Abraham GILES; married at Walkhampton, 6 April 1697, Jane (or Joan) ATWELL; she was probably buried at Walkhampton, 2 March 1732-33; they had issue:<br />
? Robert GEELES, baptised at Walkhampton, 8 April 1694. This date conflicts with the marriage.<br />
1. Marye GILES, baptised at Walkhapton, 5 May 1698.<br />
2. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 1 August 1702. See [Z] below.<br />
3. Jane GALES, baptised at Walkhampton, 23 June 1705; possibly buried at Walkhampton, 30 September 1705, <em>"... daughter of Abraham.</em>"<br />
4. Elias GYLES, baptised at Walkhampton, 31 August 1706.<br />
<br />
Abraham GILES of Clasawell was buried at Walkhampton, 31 May 1751.<br />
Abraham GILES of Deancombe was buried at Walkhampton, 4 July 1751.<br />
John GILES of Dincombe was buried at Walkhampton, 4 December 1763.<br />
<br />
William and Jane GILES had issue:<br />
1. Mary GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, May 1698.<br />
<br />
Stephen GEELES; married at Walkhamton, 5 February 1701[-02?], Margaret DUNDERIG; she was buried at Walkhampton, 3 June 1729; they had issue:<br />
1. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 21 March 1702-03.<br />
<br />
Richard GEALES; married at Walkhampton, 6 December 1712, Mary PEARSE.<br />
<br />
John GILES Junior; married at Walkhamton, 26 October 1714, Joan HONEYWELL; they had issue:<br />
1. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 16 Aug 1715 (mother not named; father John Junior.<br />
2. George GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 13 April 1720; buried at Walkhampton, 29 April 1725.<br />
3. George GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 18 April 1727.<br />
<br />
John GILES; married at Walkhampton, 3 May 1716, Elizabeth WILLIAMS; she was probably buried at Walkhampton, 31 May 1737; they had possible issue:<br />
1. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 3 October 1724; probably buried at Walkhampton, 6 October 1724.<br />
2. John GILES; buried at Walkhampton, 23 November 1730?<br />
<br />
John GILES; married at Walkhampton, 13 November 1718, Margaret GILES; they had issue:<br />
1. Elias GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 5 September 1719; bequeathed the leasehold of Deanscombe by the will of his brother-in-law Roger ATWILL, dated 20 August 1796, for life, then to go to his son Elias GILES Junior; he was probably buried at Walkhampton, 11 December 1799, aged 80; he married at Walkhampton, 9 May 1746, Margaret ATWELL; she was probably buried at Walkhampton, 19 December 1793, aged 69, <em>"... wife of Elias"</em>; they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. Abraham GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 16 December 1746. See [X] below.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. Sue GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 29 October 1748.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Margaret GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 2 January 1753.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Elias GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 7 April 1754.</span></i><br />
2. Susannah GILES, baptise at Walkhampton, 1 April 1721.<br />
3. Joan GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 14 November 1724.<br />
4. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 6 March 1727-28.<br />
5. Robert GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 3 April 1731.<br />
<br />
Roger GEELS; married at Walkhampton, 1 July 1721, Elinor (surname indecipherable - "----N").<br />
<br />
Elizabeth GILES; married at Walkhampton, 2 October 1723, John WARING.<br />
Mary GILES; married at Walkhampton, 16 November 1723, John GRAY.<br />
<br />
[Z] John and Hannah GILES (several on-line trees identify her as Hannah ATWELL, born 1702, although there is no appropriate entry in the Walkhampton marriage register - they also identify John as born 1702, a son of Abraham GILES and Jane ATWELL, and buried in 1781, with additional children Bridget, born 1727, and Joseph, born 1734); they had issue:<br />
1. John Atwell GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 29 July 1726. See [Y] below.<br />
? Bridget GILES, born 1727; died 1808; married firstly, William SHILLIBER, with issue; married secondly, William GRAY? See 1754 below. No appropriate baptism recorded at Walkhampton.<br />
2. Richard GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 7 May 1729.<br />
? Joseph GILES; buried at Walkhampton, 8 September 1753, <em>"... son of John GILES of Peekhill."</em><br />
? possibly also parents of the next two:<br />
3. William GEELS, baptised at Walkhampton, 18 May 1735; probably buried at Walkhampton, 5 February 1823, aged 88.<br />
4. Abraham GEELS, baptised at Walkhampton, 15 February 1736-37.<br />
<br />
John GILES of Reddapit was buried at Walhampton, (day obscured) May 1763.<br />
The wife of John GILES of Reddipit was buried in 1750 (day and month lost, between Aug and September).<br />
<br />
John GILES of Peekhill was buried at Walkhampton, 6 November 1763.<br />
<br />
Robert GILES; married at Walkhampton, 10 November 1725, Martha CROSSMAN; they had issue:<br />
1. Martha GEELS, baptised at Walkhampton, 24 May 1728.<br />
<br />
John GILES; married at Walkhampton, 30 September 1728, Elizabeth SKIRRET.<br />
<br />
Amey GEELS; married at Walkhampton, 19 September 1730, Walter WRIGHT.<br />
<br />
Margaret GILES; married at Walkhampton, 12 August 1732, John RED[?]ACH.<br />
<br />
Elias GILES; married at Walkhampton, 4 August 1733, Mary TOOP; they had issue:<br />
1. Jane GEELS, baptised at Walkhampton, 18 October 1735.<br />
<br />
Martha GIELS; married at Walkhampton, 1 May 1737, Richard ANDREWS.<br />
<br />
There are a number of baptisms recorded in the Walkhampton register between February 1736-37 and December 1746 - but none of them are for members of the GILES family. I am not sure quite what this means - were there no births, or were they baptised somewhere else? And if so, why?<br />
Some later information does suggest that there probably were births for this family during this period, and possibly included issue of the next two marriages.<br />
<br />
Abraham GYELS; married at Walkhampton, 16 January 1737-8, Mary WARREN.<br />
<br />
John GILES; married at Walkhampton, 4 August 1742, Susanna GILES.<br />
<br />
Elias GILES;<i> "... of ye parish"</i> when married at Walkhampton, 15 April 1744, Ann FURSE of Sheepstor.<br />
<br />
Robert GILES; married at Walkhampton, 4 September 1749, Margaret WILLIAMS; they had issue:<br />
1. Mary GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 5 July 1750.<br />
2. Joan GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 6 October 1753.<br />
3. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 25 November 1758.<br />
<br />
[Y] John GILES (identified in several on-line trees as John Atwill GILES, born 1726, and buried 1789); married at Walkhampton, 20 April 1751, Martha GEELES (several on-line trees identify her as Martha GEELES, born 1728, died 1799 - and if so, a daughter of Richard and Martha GEELES); she may have been buried at Walkhampton, 3 September 1799, aged 71; they had issue:<br />
1. Jenny GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 10 June 1752 (father's middle name Atwill).<br />
2. Susanna GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 30 June 1755.<br />
3. Betty GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 8 or 28 June 1759; she was buried at Sheepstor, 21 January 1841, aged 81; she was married at Walkhampton, by License, 31 August 1785, to Walter NORTHMORE (witnessed by John Atwill GILES and William WORTH); he was buried at Sheepstor, 26 March 1843, aged 82.<br />
4. Abraham GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 20 March 1763 (father's middle name Atwell); at Leatherton, Walkhampton, 1841 Census, aged 78, Farmer, with wife Elizabeth (aged 68), daughter Jenny GILES (aged 35), grand-daughter Elizabeth GILES (aged 15), daughter Martha COWLING (aged 40) and grandson John COWLING (aged 10), together with John FREEKE (aged 50, Ag Lab), William SYMONS (aged 20, Apprentice), Richard GRAY (aged 10, Servant) and John ATWILL (aged 10, Servant); Abraham was buried at Walkhampton, 29 January 1846; as Abraham GILES Junior, Husbandman, he was married at Walkhampton, 10 May 1796, to Elizabeth EDMUNDS, Spinster; she was at Bursham, 1861, aged 87, Farmer's Widow, residing with her son-in-law; she was buried at Walkhampton, 25 September 1863, aged 90, of Bursham; Abraham and Elizabeth had issue:<br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. John Edmunds GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 7 April 1797 (god-fathers Joseph EDMUNDS Senior and Walter NORTHMORE; god-mothers Martha GILES and Anne EDMUNDS); John was at Axtown, Buckland Monachorum, 1851 Census, aged 54, Farmer of 108 acres, with wife and three children; he died in 1873; he was married at Widdecombe on the Moor, Devon, to Jane SHERWILL; they had issue:</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 25 October 1822; aged 15, with grandparents, 1841.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> ii. Thomas Sherwell GILES, baptised at Walkhampton,4 April 1824; aged 27, with his parents, 1851.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iii. John Edmunds GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 29 September 1826.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iv. William GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 26 October 1828.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iii. Mary GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 8 April 1832; aged 19, with her parents, 1851.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> iv. George GILES, born at Whitchurch about 1834; aged 16, with his parents, 1851.</span></em><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small; font-style: italic;"> b. Mary GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 13 March 1799 or 1800; at Bursham, Walkhampton, 1851 Census, aged 51; probably buried at Walkhampton, 1 January 1885, aged 84; married at Walkhampton, Feb 1839, Richard CREBER of Sheepstor; he died in 1869.</span><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Martha GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 8 January 1801; aged 40+, with her parents, 1841; at Bursham, 1851, aged 49, Widow, with her mother; at Bursham, 1861, aged 60, Farmer's widow; she was buried at Walkhampton, 15 December 1883, aged 82; she was married at Plymouth st Andrew, 9 October 1828, to Charles COWLING, Farmer; with issue:</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. John Warren COWLING, baptised at Walkhampton, 6 January 1828 (which conflicts with the marriage date?).</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Jenny GILES, born at Leatherton, and baptised at Walkhampton, 27 September 1805; aged 35, with her parents, 1841.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. Abraham GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 3 July 1809.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> f. Nancy GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 20 September 1810; she possibly married at Walkhampton, 26 May 1837, John PEARSE</span></em>.<br />
5. Mary GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 20 September 1766.<br />
6. Robert GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 14 May 1770.<br />
<br />
Richard GILES; he married at Walkhampton, by Banns, 26 August 1754, Mary ATWELL (witnessed by Elias GILES and Michael KNIGHT); they had issue:<br />
1. Betty GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 31 March 1755.<br />
2. Margaret GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 15 August 1757.<br />
3. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 11 March 1761.<br />
<br />
Bridget GILES, born about 1727 (several on-line trees identify her as the daughter of John GILES and Hannah ATWELL, although there is no appropriate baptism in the Walkhampton register); Bridget was married firstly, at Walkhampton, by Banns, 15 December 1754, to William SHILLIBEER (witnessed by John GILES and John GILES); he was buried at Walkhampton on 16 May 1764; they had issue:<br />
1. Abraham SHILLIBEER, baptised at Walkhampton on 18 January 1760.<br />
2. Michael SHILLIBEER, baptised at Walkhampton, 20 February 1762.<br />
3. Sarah SHILLIBEER, baptised at Walkhampton, 1 August 1764, <em>"... daughter of Bridget SHILLIBEER, Widow."</em><br />
Bridget was married secondly, at Walkhampton, 19 April 1768, to William GRAY (witnessed by Michael KNIGHT and John GRAY); with further issue:<br />
4. Joan GRAY, baptised at Walkhampton, 20 February 1769.<br />
5. Mary GRAY, baptised at Walkhampton, 13 November 1770, a twin.<br />
6. Sarah GRAY, baptised ditto, the other twin.<br />
Bridget GRAY was buried at Walkhampton on 3 April 1808, aged 81, a Widow. Probably the same.<br />
<br />
John GEELS; he married at Walkhampton, by Banns, 5 April 1758, Elizabeth CHUBB (witnessed by William WILCOCK and Michael KNIGHT).<br />
<br />
Richard GILES; he married at Walkhampton, by Banns, 24 June 1759, Hannah SEARLE (witnessed by John SEARLE and Michael KNIGHT).<br />
<br />
Susannah GILES; she married at Walkhampton, by Banns, 7 April 1761, James FOOT (witnessed by Richard ANDREWS Junior and Jane WILCOCKS).<br />
<br />
John and Sarah GILES had issue:<br />
1. Sarah GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 10 March 1761.<br />
2. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 18 November 1762; possibly at Walkhampton Village, 1841 Census, aged 75+, Independent, with Elizabeth BINNEY (55+) and her two sons, with others.<br />
3. Joan GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 25 March 1764.<br />
John may have been buried at Walkhampton on 2 February 1764; if so, it may have been his widow who married George GILES (see next below)?<br />
<br />
Indenture of apprenticeship, 19 April 1762 - John GIELLS of Nosworthy, a Churchwarden of Walkhampton (with one other), and John GIELLS of Coombehead, an Overser of the Poor in the same parish (with one other), placed Betsy GILES, a poor child of the parish, as apprentice to John WORTH of Walkhampton, Yeoman.<br />
<br />
George GILES; he married at Walkhampton, by Banns, 5 July 1763, Joan GILES, both of the parish (witnessed by John GILES and Sarah "X" GILES).<br />
<br />
John GILES; of the parish when he married at Walkhampton, by Banns, 19 October 1764, Joan GRAY of Buckfastleigh (witnessed by Michael KNIGHT and Mary "X" WORTH).<br />
<br />
Mary GILES; she married at Walkhampton, 30 April 1765, Thomas GREEP (witnessed by Michael KNIGHT and William GRAY).<br />
<br />
George GILES; married at Walkhampton, 1 August 1766, Sarah GILES (witnesses included William GRAY); they had issue:<br />
1. Joan GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 5 January 1767.<br />
<br />
William GILES, possibly baptised at Walkhampton, 18 May 1735, son of John GILES and Hannah (ATWILL?) - see above; married at Walkhampton, by Banns (7, 14, 21 December), 25 December 1766, Jane KIVIL (witnessed by Michael KNIGHT and John Atwill GILES); they had issue:<br />
1. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 13 February 1769; probably at Maristow Inn, Rowlands Barn, Walkhampton, 1841 Census, aged 72, Herdsman, with his brother William, and Elizabeth GILES (aged 77).<br />
2. William GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 20 August 1770 (mother Joan); probably at Maristow Inn, Rowlands Barn, Walhampton, 1841, aged 70, Independent, with his brother John, and Elizabeth GILES (aged 77).<br />
3. Abraham GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 20 June 1772; possibly buried at Walkhampton, 19 June 1838, aged 66, of Deancombe.<br />
4. Joan GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 4 April 1774.<br />
5. Mary GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 9 October 1775.<br />
<br />
Walter GILES; possibly buried at Walkhampton, 5 October 1831, aged 81; he was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (8, 15, 22 December 1771), on 1 January 1772, to Margaret ATWILL (witnessed by Michael "X" WORTH and Michael KNIGHT); they had issue:<br />
1. Ann GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 23 February 1773.<br />
2. James GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 4 October 1775.<br />
<br />
John GILES, possibly baptised at Stoke Damerel, Devon, 25 October 1747, son of Elias and Ann GILES; probably buried at Walkhampton, Devon, 6 June 1807, aged 59; married by Banns (5, 12, 19 June) at Walkhampton, 14 July 1774, Sue GILES (witnessed by Michael KNIGHT and Elias GILES); she was probably buried, as Susannah, at Walkhampton, 4 May 1816, aged 67; they had issue:<br />
1. Susannah GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 5 August 1775.<br />
2. Ann GILES, baptised at Meavy, Devon, 2 November 1777; aged 60+, with her brother, 1841 Census; aged 73, ditto, 1851, unmarried.<br />
3. Elias GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 15 December 1779.<br />
4. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 28 April 1782; possibly at Higher Peekhill, Walkhampton parish, 1851, aged 68, Carpenter, with wife Barbara (67) and Apprentice William CREBER (20, born Devonport); they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 9 April 1809.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. Alice GILE, baptised at Walkhampton, 30 September 1810.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Ann GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 11 October 1812.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Susannah GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 15 January 1815.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. George GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 29 December 1816.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> f. Barbara GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 21 March 1819.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> g. Margaret GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 18 March 1821.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> h. Abraham GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 2 March 1823.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> j. Joseph GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 25 February 1825.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> k. Elias GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 8 April 1827.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> m. Isaac GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 9 May 1829.</span></i><br />
5. George GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, Devon, 12 December 1784; of Jump, Bickleigh Parish; Conveyancer and Land Agent; for 50 years a Steward to the LOPES family estates at Maristowe, and at Buckland Abbey; a Clerk to the Commissioners of Taxation, 1837; buried at Bickleigh, 22 March 1859, aged 74 years, and unmarried; a memorial tablet was erected to his memory on the south wall of the church by Sir Massey LOPES, Bart, M.P.<br />
6. Abraham GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 10 April 1787; probably of Jump, when buried at Walkhampton 21 July 1829, aged 42.<br />
7. Jane GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, as Jenny, 1 March 1789; aged 50+, with her brother, 1841; aged 62, ditto, 1851.<br />
<br />
Susanna GILES; she was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (18, 25 April and 2 May), on 5 May 1779, William WORTH (witnessed by Richard Thos S... and John GRAY).<br />
<br />
Margaret GILES; she was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (9, 16, 23 May), on 30 May 1779, to John CREBER (witnessed by John Huggins CREBER and Edward PEARSE).<br />
<br />
Jenny GILES; she was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (16, 23, 30 April), on 19 May 1780, to Richard Northmore FUKE (witnessed by John Atwil GILES and Edward DEAN...).<br />
<br />
[X] Abraham GILES, born 1746; of Peekhill, Senior, 1795; bequeathed the freehold messuage called Willton in Walkhampton, and the freehold messuage known as Crebear in the Parish of Tavistock, in the will of his uncle Roger ATWILL, dated 20 August 1796; buried at Walkhampton, 26 October 1824, aged 77, late of Willtown; he may have married firstly, Mary WRIGHT?; he was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (7, 14, 28 April), on 6 May 1782, to Joan CREBER (witnessed by Henry CREBER and John CREBER); she died in 1820?; issue:<br />
1. Margaret GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 25 November 1783; probably buried there, 27 November 1783.<br />
2. Roger Atwill GILES, baptised at Wakhampton, 13 September 1784; buried there 16 September 1784, <em>"... infant."</em><br />
3. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 24 November 1786; probably buried there 26 November 1786, <em>"... infant."</em><br />
4. Joan GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 26 May 1788.<br />
5. Abraham GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 7 January 1791; died young.<br />
6. Margaret GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 15 May 1792.<br />
7. Abraham GILES, baptised privately, 14 April 1795, and received into Walkhampton parish church on 11 May (god-fathers Joseph STUTTAFORD and John PEARSE; god-mothers Margaret CREBER and Ann KING); at Willtown, 1841 Census, aged 45+, Farmer, with probably wife Peggy and six children; at Willtown, 1861 Census, aged 65, Widower, Farmer of 40 acres, with a family of HAMLYN visiting (Margaret HAMLYN, aged 30, may have been his relation?); married at Walkhampton, 9 July 1821, Peggy Hannaford SNELL; they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. William Snell GILES, born at Willtown, and baptised at Walkhampton, 19 July 1822; aged 19, with parents, 1841.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 28 June 1824; aged 15, with parents, 1841.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Abraham GILES, born at Willtown and baptised at Walkhampton, 19 December 1826; aged 15, with parents, 1841.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Margaret GILES, born at Wiltown and baptised at Walkhampton, 16 July 1829; aged 10, with her parents, 1841.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. Jane GILES, born about 1834; aged 6, with her parents, 1841.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> f. James GILES, born Walkhampton about 1836; aged 4, with parents, 1841; aged 24, Farm Labourer, at Willtown (the next family to Abraham GILES and his visitors), 1861, with his wife Elizabeth and son George (8 months).</span></i><br />
8. John GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 11 January 1798 (god-fathers Eward PEARSE and John COWLING; god-mothers Sarah and Margaret CREBER).<br />
<br />
Elizabeth GILES, born at Walkhampton about 1781-84; aged 55+, residing in Walkhampton Village, 1841, with John GILES, and her two sons; she was married at Walkhampton, by Banns, 6 March 1808, William BENNEY, Miner (a sojourner in the parish, from St Maurs, Cornwall); he was probably buried at Walkhampton, 1 June 1829, aged 49; they had issue:<br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. Elizabeth BINNEY, baptised at Walkhampton, 17 February 1811.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. William BINNEY, privately baptised at Walkhampton, 20 July 1811, and received into the parish church on 15 September 1811; aged 30+, Tin Miner, with his mother, 1841, living with John GILES.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Richard BINNEY, baptised at Walkhampton, 27 August 1813.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. Ann BINNEY, baptised at Walkhampton, February 1816; married at Stoke Damerel, 25 February 1837, Matthias SPRY; he was at Walkhampton Village, 1841, aged 25+, Agricultural Labourer, living with John GILES, along with his daughter; they had issue:</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Margaret Benney SPRY, baptised at Walkhampton, 25 December 1837; aged 3, with her father, 1841 Census, residing with John GILES in the Village of Walkhampton.</span></em><br />
<em><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. John BENNEY, baptised at Walkhampton, 2 May 1819; aged 20+, Tin Miner, 1841, with his mother, living with John GILES.</span></em><br />
<br />
Elias GILES; he was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (7, 14, 21 March), on 17 April 1784, to Joan ATWILL (witnessed by Peter HOLMES and Richard ...); they had issue:<br />
1. Margaret GILES, baprised at Walkhampton, 13 July 1788.<br />
2. John Atwill GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 9 April 1793; buried at Walkhampton, 23 September 1799, aged 6 years.<br />
3. Elias GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 8 March 1796.<br />
<br />
Indenture of Apprenticeship, 15 April 1789 - Abraham GILES, of Walkhampton (Churchwarden there), and James Baxter KING and Joseph EDMONDS, Oversees of the Poor of the said parish, placed Margaretta GILES, a poor child of the said parish, Apprentice in Housewifery to John PEEK, Yeoman, of Barstown.<br />
<br />
John GILES; Husbandman of (and sojourner in) Walkhampton, when Banns were published at Walkhampton, on 18 and 25 September and 2 October 1791, for marriage to Elizabeth WILLIAMS of Sheepstor - they were married at Sheepstor, 18 October 1791 (witnessed by Betty NORTHMORE and Peter REED). Possibly the next.<br />
<br />
John GILES; born about 1767; at Walkhampton Village, 1851 Census, aged 83, Widower, Annuitant, with Widowed daughter, two grandchildren, and one great-grandson; he was married with issue:<br />
1. Mary GILES, born about 1793; aged 57, Widow, pauper, with her father, 1851; probably buried at Walkhamton, 30 March 1852, aged 57, of the Village; she was married at Walkhampton, 16 December 1816, to Thomas GREGORY, a Miner; they had issue:<br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> a. Sophia GREGORY, baptised at Walkhampton, 24 January 1819.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> b. John GREGORY, baptised at Walkhampton, 21 April 1822; poss father of:</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> i. Frederick GREGORY, born at Meavy, about 1845; aged 5, with his great-grandfather, 1851.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> c. Mary GREGOR, baptised at Walkhampton, 26 October 1823.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> d. James GREGORY, baptised at Walkhampton, 31 May 1826; probably died young.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> e. Mahala GREGORY, baptised at Walkhampton, 26 November 1826 (a bit too close to James, who may have been baptised late, or in error for 1825).</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> f. Hannah GREGORY, baptised at Walkhampton, 24 February 1828.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> g. Ambrose GREGORY, baptised at Walkhampton, 11 April 1830.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> h. Jane GREGORY, baptised at Walkhampton, 30 September 1832; aged 19, Pauper, with her grandfather, 1851.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> j. Hampson GREGORY, baptised at Walkhampton, 23 Nov 1834.</span></i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;"> k. James GREGORY, born Sheepstor, about 1838; aged 12, with her grandfather, 1851.</span></i><br />
<br />
Robert GILES; he was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (1, 8, 15 February), on 13 April 1795, to Elizabeth CREBER (witnessed by William CREBER and Richard CREBER); they had issue:<br />
1. Mary King GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 26 April 1796 (god-fathers Abraham GILES Junior and Richard CREBER; god-mothers Martha GILES and Mararet CREBER)<br />
2. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 26 March 1800.<br />
3. James Creber GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 8 November 1805; at Compton, Marlden Parish, Devon, 1851 census, with wife Ann (48, born Marlden), their eight children, and his father Robert (80, widower, Annuitant, born Wakhampton).<br />
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Joan GILES; she was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (21, 28 February, 6 March), on 7 April 1796, to William LIGHT (witnessed by William GILES and William LIGHT Senior).<br />
<br />
William GILES; Husbandman, of the parish, when married at Walkhampton, 26 July 1796, Jenny CRISPEN of Sheepstor, Spinster (witnessed by William GILES Senior and Joseph CRISPEN; they had issue:<br />
1. William GILES, baptised at Walkampton, 5 December 1796 (god-fathers Abraham GILES and William CRISPEN; god-mothers Ann NICHOLLS and Mary GILES).<br />
2. Margaret GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 29 April 1798 (god-fathers William GILES and Joseph CRISPIN of Corkwood; god-mothers Jane GILES and Mary CRISPIN).<br />
3. Joseph GIES, baptised at Walkhampton, 1 June 1800.<br />
4. Jenny GILES, baptised at Walkhamton, 28 April 1805.<br />
<br />
Joan GILES; of Walkhampton, Widow, when she was married secondly, at Walkhampton by Banns (17, 24, 31 August), to John NORTHMORE of Sheepstor, Farmer, on 25 September 1800 (witnessed by Abraham GILES and James CREBER).<br />
<br />
Abraham GILES; he was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (18, 25 March, 1 April), on 12 April 1804, to Ann WILLIAMS (witnessed by William GILES and William GILES Junior); they had issue:<br />
1. John Creber GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 26 February 1805; at Jump, Tamerton Foliott, 1851Census, aged 46, Devonport Lake labourer, with wife Betsey (aged 43, born Buckland Monachorum).<br />
2. Abraham GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 20 March 1808.<br />
3. Robert GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 16 December 1810.<br />
Richard William GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 16 June 1816.<br />
4. Joseph GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 28 September 1821; a Joseph GILES was buried at Walkhampton, 23 September 1821, aged 3 weeks?<br />
5. Mary GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 30 September 1821; possibly buried at Walkhampton, 9 June 1822, aged 8 months?<br />
6. Jane GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 6 June 1824.<br />
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Margaret GILES; she was married at Walkhampton, by Banns (20, 27 August, 4 September), in 4 October 1809, to Richard ANDREW (witnessed by George SHILLIBEER and John N. "X" NORTHMORE).<br />
<br />
Joan GILES; Spinster, when she was married at Walkhampton by Banns (7, 14, 21 January), on 7 February 1810, to William CREBER, Yeoman, (witnessed by Abraham GILES and Richard CREBER).<br />
<br />
John GILES, born at Walkhampton, about 1800; at Somery Street, Walkhampton, 1851 Census, aged 50, Agricultural Labourer, with wife Nancy (aged 46, born Walkhampton) and four children; he was buried at Walkhampton, 23 May 1871, aged 70, of Lowery; he married at Walkhampton, 26 December 1822, Nancy LORY (or LOWRY); they had issue:<br />
1. John GILES, born at White Work and baptised at Walkhampton, 1 June 1823.<br />
2. William GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 27 February 1825.<br />
3. Samuel GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 1 April 1827.<br />
4. Elizabeth GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 10 May 1829.<br />
5. Emlin GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 23 June 1833.<br />
6. Selina GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 6 March 1836; aged 15, with her parents, 1851.<br />
7. George GILES, born Walkhampton, about 1836; aged 14, with his parents, 1851; buried at Walkhampton, 22 March 1857, aged 19, of Lowery Street.<br />
8. Richard Shaw GILES, born at Lowery and baptised at Walkhampton, 31 July 1842; buried at Walkhampton, 18 August 1842, aged 9 weeks, of Lowry Street.<br />
9. Nancy Lowry GILES, baptised at Walkhampton, 26 May 1844; aged 6, with her parents, 1851.<br />
10. Harriet GILES, born at Lowery, and baptised at Walkhampton, 21 February 1847; buried at Walkhampton, 8 June 1848, aged 1 year 8 months, of Lowry Street.<br />
11. Ann GILES, born Walkhampton, about 1849; aged 1, with her parents, 1851.Chris PIGOTThttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03844772114014337759noreply@blogger.com0