Macklin Family Tree

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Macklin Family Tree Drury family tree prepared by Bertrand L. Halward John Lowe m. Sir Drue Drury of Denby of Derbyshire Stephen m. Catherine Pilkington Elizabeth Osburn additional information from 1616 - 1659 Edmund Triggs m. Maberly daughter of Sir Arthur Ambrose Cuningham University of Nottingham Roderick Mackenzie 1664 Mary Carter 1675 Pilkington, Baronet of Mayor of Okehampton 1682 b. 1659 Descendant of Kenneth Mackenzie "of the b. 1650 Stanley, Yorkshire Landowner of Broadmoor and Upcott Battle" and his second wife Agnes, d. 1731 in Okehampton d. 1747 daughter of Lord Lovat d. 1731 d. 1695 Bridgman, Drury, Dumergue, Losier, Macklin, MacKenzie, Moore, Morphew, Perry, Tait , Wortley Family Tree m. Thomas Cuningham Kenneth Mackenzie Mary Triggs b.1667 Okehampton 4 sisters 4 brothers 2nd son of Roderick Mackenzie b. North Tawton John m. Mayor of Okehampton 1698 Mary Little John Lowe m. Sir Robert Drury d. 1718 Maberly 3 brothers 3 sisters Mary Stead 1702 of Denby of Derbyshire Diana Drury d. 1710 b. 1676 b. 1678 1642-1722 d. 1712 Tomb in Okehapton Chrch land owner; coal mines d. ? d. 1763 Locko Park Estate,Derbyshire m. Rorie "of the Park" Mackenzie John Mackenzie Christopher Cuningham Rebecca Goodman of Okehampton 1721 5th son of Kenneth Mackenzie of Meddat Rev. Neil McKinnes 4 brothers 4 sisters m. Vincent Lowe Charles Lowe m.1717 Minister of Crathie died in infancy John Amelia Dixon Mary Lowe Dorothy Lowe Anne Lowe William Drury Esq d. 6th Sept 1775 Theodosia Marriott Priscilla Lowe 1745 d. 13 May 1751 Maberly m. of Derby Alderman of Nottingham Oldest son b. ? d. 1722 b. 1712 9th Feb 1743 d. 1772 d. 1747 m. m. m. m. John Lowe Richard Lowe Not Stead Lowe William Drury Mary Hunt m m 1745 Stephen John Sydney Marriott Colonel Vincent Lowe Eleanor Leyton Captain George Mackenzie Jane Mackenzie Rebecca Rev. John Vicary Sarah Joyce of 1716 - 1785 married MD, Anerica of Nottingham Colonel Neil McKinnes Thomas Bridgman Maberly Maberly owned plantations in MD, USA Cuningham Vicar of Okehamprton Denby and Locko Inherited Locko in 1771 owned plantations in Factor to Lord Hantly of Exeter Susanna Cuningham with his brother Stead 3rd son of Rorie "of the Park" Mackenzie b. 5th Sept 1726 b. 1745 b. 1736 1704-1771 from John his older brother. MD, USA with his purchased Locko Park Clothier and Banker brother Vincent from the Gilbert family bought additional land and coal Drury Family Crest d. 1831 d. 1829 in 1747. fields and expanded the estates d. 1766 I shine but do not burn Occupation: Coach Occupation: Currier (leather manufacturer Drury-Lowe Coat of Arms m. Joseph Henry Standen ( I70) Birth 1781 m. m. m. James Peter Andre m. m. John Drury Thomas Drury 26 22 ‐‐ East Wantley Farm, Sullington, Charles Henry Macklin John Charles de Joly Dumergue 18th Nov 1802 Ann Steer William Drury Mary Oates Mary Drury Roderick Mackenzie Mar 31st 1799 1775 b.1774 24th July Elizabeth Hansley Beatrice Thwaites Charlotte Lowe of Derbyshire Sussex Sarah Beecham (I71) 'The Rip' b. 24 July 1776 London Anne Lowe of Burton Latimer 1753-1827 of AbbeyLands b. 1772 Barbara McKinnes Cuningham Bridgman b 1785 Death 8 September 1834 ( Age 53) Birth 9 November1781 -- Dover, Maberly 1795 Ville Jesu, Angouleme, was offered Locko d. 1848 assumed the name Isle of Man JaneVicary b. 1775 d.1857 lived in Port Iron, Isle of Man Kent, England Charente, France Estate if she married William Drury-Lowe Death 9 June 1859 (Age 77) -- d. 1854 (this ancestor made up) b. 1771 a Drury. and inherited (this ancestor made up) d. 1862 smuggled to England in a She refused and after the Lowe Estate Locko Park, Middlesex d. 1844 laundry basket litigation the estate Nottinghamshire in 1790 London passed to William d. 22nd April 1852 Drury-Lowe for $50,000 Source of Mackenzie tree is Humphrey Hinton a descendent of Charles Mitchell Charles Horatio Nelson Macklin m. m. Christopher Vicary Bridgman m. m. Eliza Losier m. m. m. Rev. William Drury David Morphew m. b. 1811 1841 Anna Isabella 1824 John Moore b. 1795 Mary A.? William Andre James Tait George Captain Edward Dumergue 1852 m. Jane Metcalfe Wortley Thomas Drury John Lowe Drury Sarah Standen August Bithiah Blades Elizabeth Anne Perry Robert Holden 1840 b. June 4th 1808 Port Erin b. 3rd Nov 1805, Dover 9th May b. 1820 9 children Mackenzie b. 1808 1806-1870 Mary Lowsey b.1812 'The Righteous' 13 Children b. 1811, Hanover Sq London St George's 1800 Mary Ann Drury-Lowe Mary Anne b.1806 30th 1830 Palmer b. 1830 (1769-1844), Vicar of Braddan 1847-188 1828 b. Sept 4th 1800 Tavistock, Devon d. 1881 Maberly Madras Army Hanover Sq. Heiress to Locko Park of Riddlington, 7 Drury Dover Kent St. Martin in the Field, Middlesex St James 2nd cousin to Dartmouth, Devon of Darley Abbey St George's Middlesex St James, Sophia Dumergue b. 1818 London 1871-1881 lived at 1783-1840 Rutlandshire d. Sept 19 1887 Lived in Bishop's Waltham, General Foreign Merchant Westminster Mackenzie of Meddat Solicitor and Nuthall Temple d. Dec 19th 1858 m. b. 17th September, Westminste b. 1804 m. Lived on Isle of Man 4 Windsor Terrace, The Rev. William Drury, the first "Open-air Services Vicar", Hampshire Worked as an accountant. Merchant of lived at r Onchan Inherited Denby and Locko was a Manx Gaelic scholar and preached regularly in the Gaelic Parkwood House Jane? London1797 Rev Philip Gilbert 1817-1887 Elizabeth Drury Moved to Hastings to live with St John's Wood Parkwood House d. 1876 Douglas, Isle of Man estates in 1827 Chemist in 1851 b.1813 "well remembered for his versatile m her daughter Margaret. d.1888 in 1851 talents, extensive reading, and Caroline Drury Whittingham, Co-owned a coach T.F. Hutchinson d. Calcutta India d. d. Northumberland building business - remarkable memory." d.1909 d. 1890 Hastings Thrupp & Maberly d. 1887 Axbridge, Somerset The Locko Group; The Nuttale Group: The Keddleston Group m. m. Horace Samuel Macklin Alfred C. Macklin Francis H. Macklin m. Arthur P. Macklin m. m.1. m. 2 Christopher Vicary William G. Bridgman Marianne MABERLY Isle of Man Rev. William F. Drur Margaret Andre m.2 George Martin Tait m.1. Arthur F Edith Frazer Francis I. Henrietta G. y Edwin Standen Morphew 1864 b. 1842 b. 1847 b.1848 b.1856 9 other children Charles Mitchell 1854 Bridgman b. 1831 Cuningham Vicary Alice H. Maberly Catherine Beatrice Margaret Morphew Sarah Susan Morphew Catherine A. Morphew Jane Standen Morphew Helen Elizabeth Morphew Blanche Henle Louisa M. b.1843 1879 b.1838 1869 Dumergue Dumergue Dumergue Dumergue Rev. Thomas Wortley Drury D.D. Vicar of Burton on Trent b. 1842 Wandsworth/ St Martin Parish, Lambeth, London St Martin Parish, Lambeth, St Martin Parish, Lambeth Tea Merchant Mary H. ? Charles Helen Barbara Moore b. 1841 Tavistock, Devon Bridgman b. 1841 Dumergue b. 1833 b. 1840 b. 1848 b. 1843 b. 1849 Bridgman Islington Whittingham, Mary-le-bone b1857 b. 1859 b. 1853 b. 1853 b. 1848 oldest son b. 1836 Bishop's Waltham, Lambeth, Tobacco Manufacture Bank Clerk (1881 census) b. 1834 Tavistock, Devon Tavistock, Devon b. 1855 Bishp's Waltham Bishop's Waltham, Hants Bishop's Waltham, Hants Actress b. 1837 Northumberland London +Ellen Bethiah MABERLY Isle of Man Isle of Man Pupil, Master & Board of Governers, King Williams College Bower, Dover, Kent Bishp's Waltham Calcutta, India died in childbirth Isle of Man Hampshire Tavistock Devon m. Henry Jephson Principal of Ridley Hall 1899 Pupil, King Williams College Hampshire London Lived in Holmesdale, Upper Tooting Surrey /Brewery Manager Actor (1891 census) Bexley Chapel Royal Chorister 1851 d.1909 d. 1891 Hastings H.M. Civil Service (Evelyn) +George Henry Lord Bishop of Sodor and Man d. 1898 Hastings d. 1904 Tewksbury, Highbury buried in Highgate MABERLY JP Bishop of Ripon m. Francisco Fernandez Wharehouseman Accountant & secretary Gloucs d. 1901 Solicitor Cemetery Master of St Catherine's College, Cambs d. ? d.1921 Greenwhich d.1903 Richmond, Surrey d. ? Anderton, Plymouth d. d.1902 Islington Ellen Mary +Agnes MABERLY Olivia Adeline d 28th August Edward Perry Violet Dumergue Dumergue Dumergue Dumergue b. 1874 b. 1871 Margaret H. Cleland Bridgman b. 1864 Barbara G. Frederick O. Bridgman b. 1858 Isle of Man Isle of Man Macklin b. 1844 Isle of Man Bridgman b. Tavistock, Devon Tavistock Devon Amy Mackenzie Mitchell b. 1824 d. 1896 Charles Tavistock Devon Opotiki, NZ Edith Mitchell Charles m. m. m. m. Canon Arthur James Tait D.D. 26th July 1898 Alice M. Fernandez Rev. Herbert Walter Macklin m. Jane Dumergue Isabel Wortley May Catherine (Cattie) Cecil George Martin Tait b. Nov 8th 1872 St Stephen's Mr R.A. Veale Irene Douglas Braddan Drury b. 1861 Hong Kong b. Aug 4th 1866 Jan 2nd 1894 William Orlando Bridgman Christopher Henry Charles John (Jack) Moore Bridgman Evelyn Tait M.Charles Lilse Carr Frances Adelaide Edward Dumergue Drury Helen Eliza (Elsa) Marian Moore Fanny Hannah Ernest James Hamilton Delicia (Daisy) Gertrude Alice Tait Londsdale Sq. London Canonbury Drury Drury Drury Drury Lambeth, London Lensdon Church b. 1865 Ellen b.1871 b. 1880 listed as Sarah (Sr) Macklin Bridgman Hamilton Bridgman Bridgman Bridgman b.1872 died at birth 1877 b. 1871 Merchant Taylor's School b. 1874 b. m. Lowe Drury Bridgman Bridgman died 1st August 1876 m. Morphew's b. 1865 Rector of Houghton Conquest Parish Newton Abbey? b. 1869 b. 1870 Tea Planter, India Isle of Man Bishop of Coventry Isle of Man Edward (Ebbie) b.1889 d. 1952 b. Dec 1863 b. 1864 b.1871 aged 5 and a half months St. John's College Cambs 1891 d.1954 garnddaughter living 1897 - 1914 Devon d.
Recommended publications
  • The Elizabethan Diplomatic Service
    Quidditas Volume 9 Article 9 1988 The Elizabethan Diplomatic Service F. Jeffrey Platt Northern Arizona University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/rmmra Part of the Comparative Literature Commons, History Commons, Philosophy Commons, and the Renaissance Studies Commons Recommended Citation Platt, F. Jeffrey (1988) "The Elizabethan Diplomatic Service," Quidditas: Vol. 9 , Article 9. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/rmmra/vol9/iss1/9 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Quidditas by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. JRMMRA 9 (1988) The Elizabethan Diplomatic Service by F. Jeffrey Platt Northern Arizona University The critical early years of Elizabeth's reign witnessed a watershed in European history. The 1559 Treaty of Cateau-Cambresis, which ended the long Hapsburg-Valois conflict, resulted in a sudden shift in the focus of international politics from Italy to the uncomfortable proximity of the Low Countries. The arrival there, 30 miles from England's coast, in 1567, of thousands of seasoned Spanish troops presented a military and commer­ cial threat the English queen could not ignore. Moreover, French control of Calais and their growing interest in supplanting the Spanish presence in the Netherlands represented an even greater menace to England's security. Combined with these ominous developments, the Queen's excommunica­ tion in May 1570 further strengthened the growing anti-English and anti­ Protestant sentiment of Counter-Reformation Europe. These circumstances, plus the significantly greater resources of France and Spain, defined England, at best, as a middleweight in a world dominated by two heavyweights.
    [Show full text]
  • Mary Queen of Scots a Narravtive and Defence
    MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS THE ABERDEEN UNIVERSITY PRESS : JOHN THOMSOtf AND J. F. THOMSON, M.A. M a\ V e.>r , r\ I QUEEN OF SCOTS A NARRATIVE AND DEFENCE WITH PORTRAIT AND EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS SPECIALLY DRAWN FOR THE WORK ABERDEEN THE UNIVERSITY PRESS I 889r 3,' TO THE MEMORY OF MARY MARTYR QUEEN OF SCOTS THE FOLLOWING PAGES ARE ebtcdfeb A PURE WOMAN, A FAITHFUL WIFE, A SOVEREIGN ENLIGHTENED BEYOND THE TUTORS OF HER AGE FOREWORD. effort is made in the few following AN pages to condense the reading of many years, and the conclusion drawn from almost all that has been written in defence and in defame of Mary Stuart. Long ago the world was at one as to the character of the Casket Letters. To these forgeries the writer thinks there must now be added that document discovered in the Charter Room of Dunrobin Castle by Dr. John Stuart. In that most important and deeply interesting find, recently made in a loft above the princely stables of Belvoir Castle, in a letter from Randolph to Rutland, of loth June, 1563, these words occur in writing about our Queen : "She is the fynneste she that ever was ". This deliberately expressed opinion of Thomas Randolph will, I hope, be the opinion of my readers. viii Foreword. The Author has neither loaded his page with long footnote extracts, nor enlarged his volume with ponderous glossarial or other appendices. To the pencil of Mr. J. G. Murray of Aber- deen, and the etching needle of M. Vaucanu of Paris, the little book is much beholden.
    [Show full text]
  • CHURCH: Dates of Confirmation/Consecration
    Court: Women at Court; Royal Household. p.1: Women at Court. Royal Household: p.56: Gentlemen and Grooms of the Privy Chamber; p.59: Gentlemen Ushers. p.60: Cofferer and Controller of the Household. p.61: Privy Purse and Privy Seal: selected payments. p.62: Treasurer of the Chamber: selected payments; p.63: payments, 1582. p.64: Allusions to the Queen’s family: King Henry VIII; Queen Anne Boleyn; King Edward VI; Queen Mary Tudor; Elizabeth prior to her Accession. Royal Household Orders. p.66: 1576 July (I): Remembrance of charges. p.67: 1576 July (II): Reformations to be had for diminishing expenses. p.68: 1577 April: Articles for diminishing expenses. p.69: 1583 Dec 7: Remembrances concerning household causes. p.70: 1598: Orders for the Queen’s Almoners. 1598: Orders for the Queen’s Porters. p.71: 1599: Orders for supplying French wines to the Royal Household. p.72: 1600: Thomas Wilson: ‘The Queen’s Expenses’. p.74: Marriages: indexes; miscellaneous references. p.81: Godchildren: indexes; miscellaneous references. p.92: Deaths: chronological list. p.100: Funerals. Women at Court. Ladies and Gentlewomen of the Bedchamber and the Privy Chamber. Maids of Honour, Mothers of the Maids; also relatives and friends of the Queen not otherwise included, and other women prominent in the reign. Close friends of the Queen: Katherine Astley; Dorothy Broadbelt; Lady Cobham; Anne, Lady Hunsdon; Countess of Huntingdon; Countess of Kildare; Lady Knollys; Lady Leighton; Countess of Lincoln; Lady Norris; Elizabeth and Helena, Marchionesses of Northampton; Countess of Nottingham; Blanche Parry; Katherine, Countess of Pembroke; Mary Radcliffe; Lady Scudamore; Lady Mary Sidney; Lady Stafford; Countess of Sussex; Countess of Warwick.
    [Show full text]
  • THE SKYDMORES/ SCUDAMORES of ROWLESTONE, HEREFORDSHIRE, Including Their Descendants at KENTCHURCH, LLANCILLO, MAGOR & EWYAS HAROLD
    Rowlestone and Kentchurch Skidmore/ Scudamore One-Name Study THE SKYDMORES/ SCUDAMORES OF ROWLESTONE, HEREFORDSHIRE, including their descendants at KENTCHURCH, LLANCILLO, MAGOR & EWYAS HAROLD. edited by Linda Moffatt 2016© from the original work of Warren Skidmore CITATION Please respect the author's contribution and state where you found this information if you quote it. Suggested citation The Skydmores/ Scudamores of Rowlestone, Herefordshire, including their Descendants at Kentchurch, Llancillo, Magor & Ewyas Harold, ed. Linda Moffatt 2016, at the website of the Skidmore/ Scudamore One-Name Study www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com'. DATES • Prior to 1752 the year began on 25 March (Lady Day). In order to avoid confusion, a date which in the modern calendar would be written 2 February 1714 is written 2 February 1713/4 - i.e. the baptism, marriage or burial occurred in the 3 months (January, February and the first 3 weeks of March) of 1713 which 'rolled over' into what in a modern calendar would be 1714. • Civil registration was introduced in England and Wales in 1837 and records were archived quarterly; hence, for example, 'born in 1840Q1' the author here uses to mean that the birth took place in January, February or March of 1840. Where only a baptism date is given for an individual born after 1837, assume the birth was registered in the same quarter. BIRTHS, MARRIAGES AND DEATHS Databases of all known Skidmore and Scudamore bmds can be found at www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com PROBATE A list of all known Skidmore and Scudamore wills - many with full transcription or an abstract of its contents - can be found at www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com in the file Skidmore/Scudamore One-Name Study Probate.
    [Show full text]
  • The Registers of the Parish of Howden, Co. York
    THE LT'^RSKY BRIGHAM YOUKG L^JIVERSITV PROVO. UTAH Do Hot Circulate Zbc publications OF THE l^otkebire jpaiieb IReoietet Society. IDoL 48. 306ueb to tbe Subscribcre for tbe l!?eat 1913. THE YORKSHIRE PRINTING CO., LTD., HULL ROAD, YORK. C5 THE PARISH REGISTERS HOWDEN. 1 725-1 770. Transcribed and Edited by G. E. WEDDALL PRINTED PRIVATELY FOR THE YORKSHIRE PARISH REGISTER SOCIETY, 1913. THE LTBRARY BitlGHAM Y01Jl^.G L'l^JlVBRSrnB PROVO, UTAH PREFACE. Herein are printed the contents of the 4th, 5th, and 6th Book of the Howden Registers. The 4th Book contains 42 paper leaves, 16J inches by 6 inches, in a brown paper covering. Some of the leaves are much frayed. It records Baptisms, Burials, and Marriages to 1746. Book No. 5 measures 15f inches by 8| inches, is bound in cloth, and contains 102 parchment leaves, of which 39 are blank. The Binding is torn in several places. The Book contains the Baptisms and Burials at Howden from 1746 to 1775, and the Baptisms and Burials at Barmby on the Marsh and Laxton from 1763 to 1778; also the Marriages at Howden from 1746 to June, 1754. Book No. 6 contains printed forms for Banns and Marriages, and 48 leaves, \6h inches by lOf inches, were utihzed. The binding was in a parchment cover, which is now quite loose, so that some of the Registers may have been lost. They embrace the period from 1754 to June, 1770. The thanks of the Society were due to the Reverend G. M. L. Rees, the late Vicar of Howden, for permission to copy these Registers.
    [Show full text]
  • Irish and Scots
    Irish and Scots. p.1-3: Irish in England. p.3: Scottish Regents and Rulers. p.4: Mary Queen of Scots. p.9: King James VI. p.11: Scots in England. p.14: Ambassadors to Scotland. p.18-23: Ambassadors from Scotland. Irish in England. Including some English officials visiting from Ireland. See ‘Prominent Elizabethans’ for Lord Deputies, Lord Lientenants, Earls of Desmond, Kildare, Ormond, Thomond, Tyrone, Lord Bourke. 1559 Bishop of Leighlin: June 23,24: at court. 1561 Shane O’Neill, leader of rebels: Aug 20: to be drawn to come to England. 1562 Shane O’Neill: New Year: arrived, escorted by Earl of Kildare; Jan 6: at court to make submission; Jan 7: described; received £1000; Feb 14: ran at the ring; March 14: asks Queen to choose him a wife; April 2: Queen’s gift of apparel; April 30: to give three pledges or hostages; May 5: Proclamation in his favour; May 26: returned to Ireland; Nov 15: insulted by the gift of apparel; has taken up arms. 1562 end: Christopher Nugent, 3rd Lord Delvin: Irish Primer for the Queen. 1563 Sir Thomas Cusack, former Lord Chancellor of Ireland: Oct 15. 1564 Sir Thomas Wroth: Dec 6: recalled by Queen. 1565 Donald McCarty More: Feb 8: summoned to England; June 24: created Earl of Clancare, and son Teig made Baron Valentia. 1565 Owen O’Sullivan: Feb 8: summoned to England: June 24: knighted. 1565 Dean of Armagh: Aug 23: sent by Shane O’Neill to the Queen. 1567 Francis Agard: July 1: at court with news of Shane O’Neill’s death.
    [Show full text]
  • At Water's Edge: Britain, Napoleon, and the World, 1793-1815
    AT WATER’S EDGE: BRITAIN, NAPOLEON, AND THE WORLD, 1793-1815 ______________________________________________________________________________ A Dissertation Submitted to the Temple University Graduate Board ______________________________________________________________________________ In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY ______________________________________________________________________________ by Christopher T. Golding May 2017 Examining Committee Members: Dr. Gregory J. W. Urwin, Advisory Chair, Department of History Dr. Travis Glasson, Department of History Dr. Rita Krueger, Department of History Dr. Jeremy Black, External Member, University of Exeter (UK) © Copyright 2017 by Christopher T. Golding All Rights Reserved ii ABSTRACT This dissertation explores the influence of late eighteenth-century British imperial and global paradigms of thought on the formation of British policy and strategy during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. It argues that British imperial interests exerted a consistent influence on British strategic decision making through the personal advocacy of political leaders, institutional memory within the British government, and in the form of a traditional strain of a widely-embraced British imperial-maritime ideology that became more vehement as the conflict progressed. The work can be broken into two basic sections. The first section focuses on the formation of strategy within the British government of William Pitt the Younger during the French Revolutionary Wars from the declaration of war in February 1793 until early 1801. During this phase of the Anglo-French conflict, British ministers struggled to come to terms with the nature of the threat posed by revolutionary ideology in France, and lacked strategic consistency due to acute cabinet-level debates over continental versus imperial strategies. The latter half of the work assesses Britain’s response to the challenges presented by Napoleonic France.
    [Show full text]
  • 1/Aa0 Unmarked Plot Burial Register Full 1/Aa1 Unmarked Plot Burial Register Full 1/Aa2 Unmarked Plot Burial Register 1/Aa3 Unmarked Plot Burial Register Gill
    1/AA0 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER FULL 1/AA1 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER FULL 1/AA2 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER 1/AA3 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER GILL. ELIZABETH GILL. EDWARD. 1/AA4 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER HARLAND. 1/AA5 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER TAYLOR. MARY A. TAYLOR. MRS. 1/AA6 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER HARDCASTLE, HORNES. CLARA. HARDCASTLE. GEORGE. 1/AA7 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER HEMINGWAY GEORGE. 1/AA8 IN LOVING MEMORY OF A DEAR MOTHER EMMA CROWTHER DIED AUG. 23rd 1935 AGED 59 YEARS. ALSO A DEAR FATHER BEN CROWTHER DIED AUG.6th 1937 AGED 65 YEARS. 1/AA9 IN MEMORY OF EMILY THE BELOVED DAUGHTER OF JAMES & HANNAH WHITAKER OF QUEEN'S ROAD, HALIFAX, WHO DIED WHO DIED JUNE 2nd 1881 IN HER 15th YEAR. FAREWELL SWEET CHILD, TO ALL OUR HEARTS STILL DEAR, OFT SHALL WE BATHE THY MEMORY WITH A TEAR; SHORT WAS THY LIFE BUT LONG WILL BE THY REST, GOD CALLED THEE HOME BECAUSE HE SAW IT BEST. ALSO HANNAH WHITAKER, THE BELOVED WIFE OF JAMES WHITAKER, WHO DIED JANUARY 21st 1891 IN HER 67th YEAR. ALSO THE ABOVENAMED JAMES WHITAKER WHO DIED AUGUST 5th 1892 IN HIS 73rd YEAR. ALSO ELIZABETH ANN THE BELOVED WIFE OF THOMAS FAIRCLOUGH, AND DAUGHTER OF THE ABOVE WHO DIED MARCH 14th 1893 IN HER 36th YEAR. 1/AA10 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER . 1/AA10* UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER BRADBURY. 1/AA11 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER . 1/AA12 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER FOSTER, EMILY. INFANT. FOSTER, DAN. FOSTER, WILLIAM. 1/AA13 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER CLEDHILL. ARTHUR 1/AA14 UNMARKED PLOT BURIAL REGISTER .
    [Show full text]
  • The Will of Sir William Drury
    THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES PROB 11/40/205 1 ________________________________________________________________________ SUMMARY: The document below is the Prerogative Court of Canterbury copy of the will, dated 26 December 1557 and proved 29 April 1558 of Sir William Drury (c.1500 – 11 January 1558), whose father was chief steward and executor to John de Vere (1442- 1513), 13th Earl of Oxford, and whose name appears in the Ellesmere manuscript of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales (Huntington Library EL 26 C 09), at one time owned by the Earls of Oxford. FAMILY BACKGROUND The testator was the eldest son and heir of Sir Robert Drury (b. before 1456, d. 1535) and his first wife, Anne Calthorpe. The testator’s father, Sir Robert Drury (b. before 1456, d. 1535), lawyer and speaker of the House of Commons, was chief steward and executor to John de Vere (1442-1513), 13th Earl of Oxford. The names of both the testator and his father appear in the Ellesmere manuscript of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales (Huntington Library EL 26 C 09) which was at one time owned by the Earls of Oxford. It is said that the testator’s father received the manuscript as a legacy from the 13th Earl. For a description of the Ellesmere manuscript and the names of members of the Drury family found in it, see Digital Scriptorium at: http://www.digital-scriptorium.org/ MARRIAGE AND ISSUE The testator married, as his second wife, Elizabeth Sothill (c.1505 - 19 May 1575), one of the twin daughters and heiresses of Henry Sothill (d.1506), esquire, of Stoke Faston, Leicestershire, attorney-general to King Henry VII, and Joan Empson, daughter of Sir Richard Empson (c.1450-1510), Speaker of the House of Commons.
    [Show full text]
  • WILLIAM CLOPTON of YORK COUNTY, VIRGINIA
    The Ancestry of WILLIAM CLOPTON of YORK COUNTY, VIRGINIA with records of ·,ome of his descendants to which are added ROYAL LINES; MAGNA CARTA SURETIES; CHARTERS; WILLS; DEEDS, ETC. Also notes on certain Englishfamilies, viz: Acworth D'Arcy Jenny Playters Basset Despenser Jolye Stapleton Belhous Drury Knevet Sutcliffe Calthorpe Echyngha.m Lunesford Waldegrave Chastelyn Howard Maydstone Wentworth Compiled by LUCY LANE ERWIN (Mrs. Wi~liam Whitehead Erwin) Pri'Oately Printed - J;,imited Edition Cop;righl I9.J9 By LUCY LANE ERWIN THE TUTTLE PuBUSHING Co., INc. Rutland, Vermont The .Ancejtry of WILLIAM CLOPTON of YORK COUNTY, VIRGINIA TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction VII Ack..lowledgments IX List of illustrations XI List of Documents and Wills XIII PART I (ENGLISH) CHAPTER I Cloptunne of Wickham.brook, County Suffolk 1 Cloptonne of Kentwell Hall, Long Melford, County Suffolk 5 Clopton of Groton, County Suffolk, and Boxted, County Essex 12 Legal Papers connecting the Clopton family of America with that of England · 17 CHAPTER II Kentwell Hall, Long Melford, County Suffolk 19 The Holy Trinity Church, Long Melford, County Suffolk 21 Castelyn Hall, Groton, County Suffolk 23 Clopton Pedigree registered at the College of Arms, London 25 CRAPTERill Royal descents with references . 27 Magna Carta Sureties with references . 37 CRAPTERIV Allied families, viz: Acworth; Basset; Belhous; Calthorpe; D'Arcy; 44 Despenser; Drury; Echyngham; Howard; Jenny; Knevet; 51 Lunesford; Maidstone; Playters; Stapleton; Waldegrave . 66 Trial and conviction of Thomas Culpepper and Francis Dereham 77 Wentworth Notes 79 CHAPTER V Documents, Wills, etc., of the Cloptons and allied families 81 [,.. 1 PART II (AMERICAN) CRAFTER VI Clopton of Virginia and other States .
    [Show full text]
  • Journal of the Sydney Society for Scottish History
    Journal of the Sydney Society for Scottish History Volume 9 December 2001 JOURNAL OF THE SYDNEY SOCIETY FOR SCOTTISH HISTORY Volume no. 9, December 2001 Patron: Professor Michael Lynch, Sir William Fraser, Professor of Scottish History and Palaeography, University of Edinburgh COMMITTEE OF THE SOCIETY ELECTED FOR 2001 President: Malcolm D. Broun, OAM, QC, BA (Hons), LLB, FTIACyC Vice President: Elizabether Bonner, PhD James Thorburn Hon. Secretary: Katherine Thompson, BA (Hons) Hon. Treasurer: Matthew Glazier, BA (Hons), M .. Phil. Editorial and Sybil Jack, MA, B. Litt.,.Dip. Ed. General Committee: Gwynne F. T. Jones, MA, D. Phil. EthelMcKirdy-Walker,MA The Sydney Society for Scottish History Edmund Barton Chambers MLC Centre, Level 44 19-29 Martin Place Sydney NSW 2000 Australia Printed by University of Sydney Printing Services University of Sydney, Sydney NSW 2006 ISSN 1320-4246 ALL THINGS TO ALL MEN Mary Queen of Scots and the Scottish Civil Wars 1568-73 by Katherine Thompson TABLE OF CONTENTS Journal of the Sydney Society for Scottish History Vol. no 9, December 2001 ALL THINGS TO ALL MEN: Mary Queen of Scots and the Scottish Civil Wars1568-73 by Katherine Thompson page President's Introduction Malcolm D. Broun v Abbreviations and conventions vii Introduction 1 Chapter 1 Noble Power, Kinship and Factionalism: Case study of the House of Hamilton during the Civil Wars 1568-73 13 Chapter 2 Print and Propaganda War 1568-73: The War of Words 29 Chapter 3 'Regiment of the Realm': The War of Governance and Diplomacy 53 49 Conclusion 67 Appendices 73 • List of Allegiances, 1568: Hamilton Bond, Battle of Lang side, Dumbarton Bond • Affiliations of Scottish Nobility, 1571 President's Introduction Historians, amateur and professional, famous and infamous, fall into a number of categories.
    [Show full text]
  • Virginia County Records
    Ill nil:.:. JH P ABBE8ra8! fill iHHIII in IPill Jgli IB ml 11Bi I IP inni M 195v 7 10 96130 REYNOLDS HISTORICAL GENEALOGY COLLECTION l LEN COUNTY PUBLIC UBHAfw i 3 1833 02375 0398 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2013 http://archive.org/details/virginiacountyre07croz s *br rmttta CEotmig ftnatbi^5 PUBLISHED QUARTERLY EDITED BY William Armstrong Crozier, F R. s., F. G. s. A. Publiif-rd by Th« Genealogical Association H«tbrouck Hfi.-hU N«w Jersey VOLUME VII. 1910 • « - I i, »• 4 1596130 Snbtx to Vol 7 5 S " Snbcx - Abdell 1S5 At wood 82 Beavens 41 A bell 167 Auber 3s Beaver, Beavers 38. Abcrn it hv 1 39 Auldrldge 7'.) 128 Al>h.,tt 28, 144, 179 Austin 51, 158, 168 mont S3 Abrahall 177, 178 Avent 20, 136. 13s Ad i ms 8, 24, 27, 52 Avery 19. 21 I U ^ Adeock 63. 157 Aylett iu3 •.am 166 Addison SO Aylmer 181 ngfleld 78, 138 Adkins 53 Ayre, Ayres 25, 88, Bedworth J50 Acas 52 101 Bel< h< r Aken 12. 13 Baber 31 Beldeld 19S Alcock 4 7 Backsdale 49 Bell, 19, 80, 81, 10, Alderson 172 Badger 41 41. 4 7. 54. 16, 147, Aldin SI Bagnal 54 177. 179, 188, 198 Aldman 53 Bagwell 15 2. 152 Bellow "«» Alexander 139 Bailey 38, 76, 77, Belote 40, 41, 12. isr, Afford S7 100, 161. 189 Belvin 15 1 Allen 29, 45, 53, 64, Bain 41 II 20 75, 78. 82, 92. 97, Baker 8, 54, 92, 139, Bennett 54, 9R. 178 114, 153.
    [Show full text]