Dr. a NT) ER SO N%

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Dr. a NT) ER SO N% % yohofhaH make fucb Discoveries as are abov*-nt entioftd,'t ab'j^he i# Day jpf this Termj requiring him -to appear to aVid * to be paid upon the Convidion of the faid Offenders, antwer the fame; but the Defendant hath not So done, as by rhe Six Clerks Certificate appeared ; and that upon Inquiry t0r hrh oni or niore of them, bj" Jamei Fel(, of Ten at the. laid Defendant's usual Place of Abode, he ia not, to be tburcbfrsst, London, Hpbezd&Jber, found so as to served with such Procesi, and that he is -gone out James Fell, \ of riœ Realm, and doth abscond to avoid being served therewith, as by Affidavit ajso appeared ; and that the said Certificates and Affidavits being now read, this Court doth order, thac the said Mine-Office, Oftober 30, 1745. Defendant do appear on or before the lost Day of thia Term, This is to give Nofce, that a Qeneral Court of tbe Wl HEREAS a Letter has been transmitted to thc Earl of Governor and Company of the Mine Adventurers of •VV Shastsbury, Lord Lieutenant of the County "of Dorset, sjid to be found on the Highway near Poole, dated Sept* 2Z, England, -witlbt held at'this Office; on Thursday the 1745^ and figned J. W. with the Words £fqj Weld ist iqjb Day of November nixi* at Twelve at Noont for Purbeck superscribed, insinuating some Promises of Assistance hi tbe Elt&ion of ar Governor, Deputy Governor, and \ Cafe of a Descent in the West! I Edward Weld do tal^e Twelve X>ireclors for the Itear enffiingx pursuant to the th's publipk Opportunity to testify my Innocence, and my .De­ Charter and Att os parliaments concerning (he Affairs sire to bring the Author or Authors of so base, scandalous ani malicious a Libel, to condign Punishment; and in ordeV thereto, of tbe said Company* And that the-Tr an ser Books do hereby promise a Reward of F< rty Pounds to arty Person who will j?e Jhtit from a> d after 'Thursday the Jib, anU sliall discover the Author or Authors of the said Letter J tb Be optntd again on Thursday the Zist Day os the said paid immediately on his or their Conviction, by me, month of November next* Lulworth Castle* Oct. Edward Well. 14, 1745. t * HeTeas WiUiam Smith, otherwise -Eggs, five l;eet fix Advertisements. w Inches, well set, wears a dijk Wigg ; Thomas Rayner, * five Feet seven Inches, Pockbroken, Jockeys f and Juhn New­ On Tuesday next will publistfd, ( Price 6 d. ) born, five Feet six Inches high, *of slender Stature, wears a Wigg, did on Thursday the ioth of this Instant October, break H| HE BISHOP of L O N D 0 ff's out of the House of Correction, at Halsted, Essex, with tbeir i Pastoral Letter to the People of his Diocese ; Irons on. If any Person ihall apprehend the iaid Persons, or either of them, and give Notice to Edward Newman, Governor Particularly, to tnose of the two great Cities of of the said House, sliall receive Five -Guineas for each Person sLondon anrl Westminster. so secured, from Edward Newman, Governor. OccaSon'd by our present Dangers ; and exciting Ursuant to a Decree of the High C urt of Chancery, the sTo a serious Reformation of Life and Manners. P Creditors of John Killinghall, late of Eltham in theCoun­ With a Pofhcript ; setting forth the Danger and ty of Kent, Gendeman, deceased, are forthwith to come before Mischiefs of Popery.* "William Kinaston, Eiq; one of the Masters of the said Court, at his Chambers in Lincoln's Inn, and prove their several De­ Printed by E. Owen in Amen Corner. mands orin Default thereofth^y will be excluded the Benefit of the said Decree. O he peremptorily fold, (together or in Parcels) pursuant Dr. A NT) ER SO N% or, to a Decree of ^he High Ccurt of Chancery, on Friday Tthe 22d of November initant, between the Hours of Four The Famous SCOTS PILLS; and Six ofthe Clock in the Afternoon, before William Kinaston, RE siithfully prepared only hy D. IN&LISH, atthe Esq; one of the Masters of the iaid Court, A Freehold Mes­ Unicorn, over-against the New Church in tlie Strand, suage with the Appurtenances, together with eight Acres and LondoA n ; and to prevent Counterfeits from Scotland, as well an half of Arable Land, three Acres of Meadow, fiv-e Acres as in and about London, you are deiired to tafce Nodce, and half of Land called Moor Furlong, and one Acre ant) a That the true Pills have their Boxes sealed on the Top (in Yard of Meadow Ground called Miliham Meadow ; dil lying and black War) with a Lyon Rampant, and Three Mullets Ar- being in the Parish of Stadham in the County of Oxford. Par- gent, Dr. Anderson's Head betwixt I. I. with his Name round I culars whereof may be liad at the said Master's Chambers itt it, and Isabella Inglifh underneath the Shield in a Scroll. They ' Lincoln's Inn. are of excellent Use in all Cases wh-tre Purging is necessary, J. Htf-O be St)ld, pursuant td k Decree of the High Cwirt df ino may be taken with Epsom, Tunbridge, or other Medicinal I Chancery, before Anthony Allen, Esq; one of the Ma­ Waters.' sters of the laid Court, -at his House in Breames-$uildmgs» Michaelmas Term, in the 19th- Year Chancrry-Lane, A Freehold Estate at Calverton ib Bucking­ King's Remembran­ of the Reign of King Geoige the hamshire, consisting of a Farmh use with an Orchard, and fe. cer's Qffice. Second, Saturday the 26th of Oc­ veral Pieces of Arable and Meaduw Ground ; lett to Mathev tober 1745.' between George Ward, Jenkinson and James Rand, at 9I. 6 s. 8 d. per Annum. Par­ Gentleman, Plaintiff"} and William ticulars may be had a^ the sii d Master's House, . , Trigg. and John Newton, Defen-t HE Assignees of the tf state of ffaac Helbut} Tate df Mag­ dants. By Bill of Hevivor. pye Alley Fenchurch-street, Lqndon, Merchant* desire Middlesex, T "TPON the Motion of Mr. Starkie, of Counsel thTe Creditors of the said Isaac Helbut "tc meet them at the \^J with the. Plaintiff, it was prayed, that the Or- Crown *jTaverii in Threadneedle-street, near the Royal Ex­ -der made in this Cauie on the 13th Day of July last, whereby change- London, on the 14th of November Instant, at Five ist the Defendant John Newton was ordered to appear in a limited the Afernoon, to aslent to or dissent from the Assignees sub­ Time to the Plaintiffs Bill exhibited agamst the said Defendants mitting some Disputes to Arbitration, thrir compounding with in his Majesty's Court of Exchequer at Westminster, might b$ some Persons Debtors to the faid Estate, their commencing a renewed 5 and oiv reading the said Order, it is by the Court or­ Suit or Suits in Equity -j and on other special Affairs. ** dered accordingly) and further ordered, that the said Defendant Ursuant'to an Order made by tbe Righf Hon. tsib Lbrft John N«w ton/Jo appear to the said Bill before the last Day of P High Chancellor of Great Britain, for enlarging the Time this Term* By Order. Qf the-Deputy Remembrancer. for Nicolas Wiei, late of Topfham in the County of Devon, Merchant, a Bankrupt, to pftke a Disclosure and Diseovery of Friday the 25th of October 1745, and in I ^ Effese ahd Effectsr for 49 Day*, to be computed from tho the Nineteenth Year of the Reign of his , **af November instant; This is to give Notice, that the Com- Majesty King George the Second, between I missioners in the said Commission named, or the majot Part of Lord on the Chancellor. EliaEl»>s BirdRirrf_, PlaintiffPkintHF;- ThomaThnma*s WapleWaoles and *«n, w^ ^ **& °f December next, at Three in thte ** Ceorge Waples, Defendants. Afternoon, at Atkey'* Coffee-house in EJton 5 when and whete Orafmuch as this Court was this present Day Informed by the laid Bankrupt is required to surrender himself, and make a Mr. Capper, being of the Plaintiff's CounCounsell , that the; full Disclosure and Discovery of his Estate and Effects, and finisti FPlaintiff the 29th Day of July last filed his Bill in this Court his Examination ; and the Creditors Jre then and there to prove against the Defendant Thomas Waples, as by the Six Clerks their Debts, and assent to cr disseat from the Allowance of hi? Certisicate appeared, and took out Process of Subjxwu return- | «rtlsica*e. Wherca9 .
Recommended publications
  • Newsletter 298 AMDG F E B R U a R Y 2 0 0 9
    stonyhurst association NEWSLETTER NEWSLETTER 298 AMDG FEBRU A R Y 2 0 0 9 1 stonyhurst association NEWSLETTER NEWSLETTER 298 AMDG FEBRUA RY 2009 lourdes 150th anniversary edition CONTENTS FROM THE CH A IR man F CHRist came TO TURN THE Pedro Arrupe arrived in Lourdes as a Diary of Events 4 world upside down, Berna dette, medical student but left to become a Congratulations 5 that stalwart by whom Lourdes Jesuit. His life was transformed, and Iis now known throughout the world, he challenged us also, as Jesuit alumni, Correspondence is another example of his amazing to transform our lives. To him, a Jesuit & Miscellany 6 aptitude to choose the right people to education that was not an education be vehicles of his grace. Bernadette for justice was deficient. By justice, Reunions & Convivia 8 was the antithesis of worldly power; Arrupe meant first a basic respect for small, frail, illiterate, living in all which forbids the use of others 1983 Reunion 9 absolute poverty in the Cachot (the as instruments for our own profit; Eagle Aid 10 town gaol). The transformational second, a firm resolve not to profit force of the messages that she passed passively from the active oppression Charities’ News 11 to us reflects the power of the gospel. of others and which refuses to be a Lourdes is an upside down place, silent beneficiary of injustice; third, a Lourdes 13 where the ‘malades’ are carried or decision to work with others towards Headmaster’s Report 21 pushed at the front of all the liturgies dismantling unjust social structures, and processions, where so called so as to set free those who are weak Committee Report 23 “broken humanity” is promoted to and marginalised.
    [Show full text]
  • '“Upon Your Entry Into the World”: Masculine Values and The
    ORE Open Research Exeter TITLE "Upon your entry into the world": masculine values and the threshold of adulthood among landed elites in England, 1680-1800 AUTHORS French, Henry; Rothery, Mark JOURNAL Social History DEPOSITED IN ORE 02 December 2008 This version available at http://hdl.handle.net/10036/41684 COPYRIGHT AND REUSE Open Research Exeter makes this work available in accordance with publisher policies. A NOTE ON VERSIONS The version presented here may differ from the published version. If citing, you are advised to consult the published version for pagination, volume/issue and date of publication ‘“Upon your entry into the world”: Masculine Values and the Threshold of Adulthood among Landed Elites in England 1680-1800’.* ‘Though you may have stored your mind with variety of laudable accomplishments, you are yet to learn the last and most important of all lessons – the art of using them’.1 In August 1692, Humphrey Prideaux, dean of Norwich, responded to his sister Anne Coffin’s request for advice about her eldest son, John, who was nearing the end of his time at school.2 As befitted a former Oxford don, Prideaux suggested sending John to either of the English universities, despite having serious misgivings about their intellectual and moral standards, which were eventually rehearsed in print.3 His characteristically bluff advice to his anxious sister was clear: whatever you doe keep him not at home, noe way can be soe ready to ruin a yong man as that. Reather teach him to know the world & when fortified with good education & good instruction & of an age to be ventured abroad you have don your part, and permit the rest to God’s gracious providence.
    [Show full text]
  • H. T. Weld Family History
    HENRY THOMAS WELD FAMILY HISTORY Including the Research of Guy Sinclair in Great Britain Written by William Bauman C & O Canal Association Volunteer Revised SEPTEMBER 2016 1 2 PREFACE This family history was written starting with the Last Will and Testament of Henry Thomas Weld, then the disposition of his estate, then the Last Will and Testament of his wife, Harriet Emily Weld, and what could be found about the disposition of her estate. Then census data was found and, with the help of Guy Sinclair of Great Britain, the table of family statistics was built. From there newspapers and other sources were culled to fill in the life and time of this couple. They had no children and so this branch of the family tree stops with their deaths. There is a lot of information provided as attachments which the casual reader is not expected to read. It is included for completeness; many of the references are obscure and thus, rather than tax the family devotees to reconstruct them, I have included them here. Mr. & Mrs. Weld wintered in Baltimore and had a summer residence in Mount Savage; he had coal mining interests as well as a canal boat building yard to run. Presumably he commuted to Cumberland. The inventory of Mr. Weld's estate shows they lived comfortably. The General Index to Deeds, Etc., Allegany County, Md. lists 79 deeds, starting from 1844 through 1894, under the family name Weld. Most of the deeds were in Henry’s name, a few in Harriet’s name and the balance in both their names.
    [Show full text]
  • Male Anxiety Among Younger Sons of the English Landed Gentry, 1700-1900
    The Historical Journal Male anxiety among younger sons of the English landed gentry, 1700-1900 Journal: The Historical Journal Manuscript ID HJ-2016-158.R2 Manuscript Type: Article Period: 1700-99, 1800-99 Thematic: General, Social Geographic: Britain Cambridge University Press Page 1 of 39 The Historical Journal Male Anxiety and Younger Sons of the Gentry MALE ANXIETY AMONG YOUNGER SONS OF THE ENGLISH LANDED GENTRY, 1700-1900 HENRY FRENCH & MARK ROTHERY* University of Exeter & University of Northampton Younger sons of the gentry occupied a precarious and unstable position in society. They were born into wealthy and privileged families yet, within the system of primogeniture, were required to make their own way in the world. As elite men their status rested on independence and patriarchal authority, attaining anything less could be deemed a failure. This article explores the way that these pressures on younger sons emerged, at a crucial point in the process of early adulthood, as anxiety on their part and on the part of their families. Using the correspondence of 11 English gentry families across this period we explore the emotion of anxiety in this context: the way that it revealed ‘anxious masculinities’; the way anxiety was traded within an emotional economy; the uses to which anxiety was put. We argue that anxiety was an important and formative emotion within the gentry community and that the expression of anxiety persisted among younger sons and their guardians across this period. We therefore argue for continuity in the anxieties experienced within this emotional community. On 23 February 1711 Thomas Huddlestone, a merchant’s apprentice in Livorno, Italy, penned a letter home to Cambridge, addressed to his mother but intended for the attention of both of his parents.1 In it he explained his predicament concerning his relationship with his employer, Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Impotence Trials and the Trans-Historical Right to Marital Privacy
    BEHIND CLOSED DOORS: IMPOTENCE TRIALS AND THE TRANS-HISTORICAL RIGHT TO MARITAL PRIVACY * Stephanie B. Hoffman INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................. 1725 I. SEPARATION BASED ON IMPOTENCE ................................................. 1728 A. Impotence as a Cause for Nullification ..................................... 1728 B. Procedure in Consistory Courts ................................................ 1730 C. Building a Case for Impotence .................................................. 1731 1. The Inquisitorial System and Evidence in Consistory Courts………. ....................................................................... 1731 2. The Wife’s Allegations ........................................................ 1732 D. Litigants ..................................................................................... 1735 II. POPULARIZING IMPOTENCE TRIALS ................................................... 1738 A. Publication ................................................................................ 1739 1. Edmund Curll and the Rise of Published Courtroom Drama.………. ....................................................................... 1740 2. Lady Elizabeth Weld: An Impotence Trial Case Study ....... 1743 3. Non-Book Publications ....................................................... 1745 B. Factors in Society ...................................................................... 1746 III. IMPOTENCE TRIALS: THE MARITAL PRIVACY COUNTEREXAMPLE ... 1749 CONCLUSION
    [Show full text]
  • Salters (Deer Leaps) in Historical Deer Parks: Leagram Park in 1608
    Salters (deer-leaps) in Leagram deer-park, 1608 SaltersSalters (deer (Deer--leaps)Leaps) in in historicalHistorical deerDeer park-Park boundariesBoundaries: A case studyA C aseemploying Study Using a 1 a608 1608 dispute Dispute map Map ofof Leagram Park in Bowland Leagram park in Bowland, Lancashire Image goes here Crop to 19cm wide by 9.36cm deep Click format picture then under layout click advanced and place 1cm to the right of page and 5.65cm below page. DELETE THIS BOX Dr Graham Cooper September 2014 Dr Graham Cooper Salters (deer-leaps) in Leagram deer-park, 1608 Salters (deer-leaps) in Leagram deer-park, 1608 Salters (Deer-Leaps) in Historical Deer-Park Boundaries: A Case Study Using a 1608 Dispute Map of Leagram Park in Bowland Ver. 1 Dr Graham Cooper [email protected] Salters (deer-leaps) in Leagram deer-park, 1608 Contents Summary ....................................................................................................................................................................... 6 Foreword ...................................................................................................................................................................... 7 Introduction ................................................................................................................................................................. 8 Report structure .................................................................................................................................................... 9 Part 1: Deer-parks,
    [Show full text]
  • British Aristocratic Women and Their Role in Politics, 1760-1860
    Portland State University PDXScholar Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 11-1-1994 British Aristocratic Women and Their Role in Politics, 1760-1860 Nancy Ann Henderson Portland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds Part of the History Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Henderson, Nancy Ann, "British Aristocratic Women and Their Role in Politics, 1760-1860" (1994). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 4799. https://doi.org/10.15760/etd.6682 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. THESIS APPROVAL The abstract and thesis of Nancy Ann Henderson for the Master of Arts in History were presented November 1, 1994, and accepted by the thesis committee and the department. COMMITTEE APPROVALS: Ann/~ikel, Chair David Joe_,~on susan Karant- unn .. r Christine Thompson Representative of the Office of Graduate Studies DEPARTMENT APPROVAL: David John,s6nJ Chair Departmen~ off History ******************************************************** ACCEPTED FOR PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY BY THE LIBRARY b on/Z..&&e~42¢.- /9'9<f ABSTRACT An abstract of the thesis of Nancy Ann Henderson for the Master of Arts in History presented November, 1, 1994. Title: British Aristocratic Women and Their Role in Politics, 1760-1860. British aristocratic women exerted political influence and power during the century beginning with the accession of George III. They expressed their political power through the four roles of social patron, patronage distributor, political advisor, and political patron/electioneer.
    [Show full text]
  • Male Anxiety Among Younger Sons of the English Landed Gentry, – *
    The Historical Journal, , (), pp. – © Cambridge University Press This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/./), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. doi:./SX MALE ANXIETY AMONG YOUNGER SONS OF THE ENGLISH LANDED GENTRY, – * HENRY FRENCH University of Exeter AND MARK ROTHERY University of Northampton ABSTRACT. Younger sons of the gentry occupied a precarious and unstable position in society. They were born into wealthy and privileged families yet, within the system of primogeniture, were required to make their own way in the world. As elite men, their status rested on independence and patriarchal authority, attaining anything less could be deemed a failure. This article explores the way that these pressures on younger sons emerged, at a crucial point in the process of early adulthood, as anxiety on their part and on the part of their families. Using the correspondence of eleven English gentry families across this period, we explore the emotion of anxiety in this context: the way that it revealed ‘anxious masculinities’; the way anxiety was traded within an emotional economy; the uses to which anxiety was put. We argue that anxiety was an important and formative emotion within the gentry community and that the expression of anxiety persisted among younger sons and their guardians across this period. We therefore argue for continuity in the anxieties experienced within this emotional community. On February , Thomas Huddlestone, a merchant’s apprentice in Livorno, Italy, penned a letter home to Cambridge, addressed to his mother but intended for the attention of both of his parents.
    [Show full text]
  • The​ ​Observer​ ​Priests:​ ​Stonyhurst Observatory,​ ​1846
    Peter Barker - 4103211 HPS - Master Thesis 30/07/2017 ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ The Observer Priests: Stonyhurst Observatory, 1846-1919 ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Universiteit Utrecht - HPS - Master Thesis ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ The Observer Priests: Stonyhurst ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Observatory, 1846-1919 ​ ​ Student: Peter Barker (PDB) ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Student Number: 4103211 ​ ​ ​ ​ Supervisor: Dr. David Baneke ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Second Reader: Dr. Daan Wegener ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Word Count: 29,087 ​ ​ ​ ​ Page Count: 87 ​ ​ ​ ​ 1 Peter Barker - 4103211 HPS - Master Thesis 30/07/2017 ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ The Observer Priests: Stonyhurst Observatory, 1846-1919 ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Contents Title Page………………………………………………………………………………………..1 ​ ​ Contents Page………………………………………………………………………………….2 ​ ​ Keywords……………………………………...……………………………………...………..2 Abstract..……………………………………...……………………………………...………..2 Introduction.…………………………………………………………………………………..3 Fathers Weld, Perry and Sidgreaves…………………………………………………..7 ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ The Jesuit Tradition, 1540-1773……………………………………………………...23 ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ A Changing Context: Science in 19th Century Britain………………………..40 ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ In Their Own Words: Histories, Accounts and Other Materials by the Observatory’s Directors…………………………………………………………………..56 ​ ​ Final Conclusions…………………………………………………..……………………...76 ​ ​ Bibliography…………………………………………………..……………………………..83 UU Archival Keywords: ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Jesuit; Astronomy; Magnetism; Meteorology; Stonyhurst; Priests; Perry; Sidgreaves; Weld; Religion. ​ ​ Abstract: ​ This thesis presents and combines
    [Show full text]
  • English Heritage Properties 1600-1830 and Slavery Connections
    English Heritage Properties 1600-1830 and Slavery Connections A Report Undertaken to Mark the Bicentenary of the Abolition of the British Atlantic Slave Trade Volume One: Report and Appendix 1 Miranda Kaufmann 2007 Report prepared by: Miranda Kaufmann Christ Church Oxford 2007 Commissioned by: Dr Susie West English Heritage Documented in registry file 200199/21 We are grateful for the advice and encouragement of Madge Dresser, University of West of England, and Jim Walvin, University of York Nick Draper generously made his parliamentary compensation database available 2 Contents List of properties and their codes Properties with no discovered links to the slave trade 1 Introduction 2 Property Family Histories 3 Family History Bibliography 4 Tables showing Property links to slavery 5 Links to Slavery Bibliography Appendices 1 List of persons mentioned in Family Histories with entries in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 2 NRA Listings (separate volume) 3 Photocopies and printouts of relevant material (separate volume) 3 List of properties and their codes Appuldurcombe House, Isle of Wight [APD] Apsley House, London [APS] Audley End House and Gardens [AE] Battle Abbey House [BA] Bayham Old Abbey House, Kent [BOA] Belsay Hall, Castle and Gardens [BH] Bessie Surtees House, Newcastle [BSH] Bolsover Castle, Derbyshire [BC] Brodsworth Hall and Gardens [BRD] Burton Agnes Manor House [BAMH] Chiswick House, London [CH] De Grey Mausoleum, Flitton, Bedfordshire [DGM] Derwentcote Steel Furnace [DSF] Great Yarmouth Row Houses [GYRH] Hardwick
    [Show full text]
  • A Bowron Scrapbook
    A Bowron Scrapbook compiled in 2018 by Mary Skipworth [email protected] George Bowron 1805-1891 and his wife Mary Ann Bowron (nee Martin) 1802-1883 Images: My Heritage.com [Lawler family website] Introduction Sally Bowron, my son’s partner, has been encouraged to delve a little deeper into her Whakapapa / Genealogy in the course of her study of Maori language and culture. She turned to me for assistance since genealogy has been my passion for many years. As I started to explore the Bowron history I found they were an interesting family which I felt deserved to have their stories recorded. I have been happy to put my research skills to work in gathering the raw material from many sources into this quite informal electronic scrapbook. I invite members of the family to draw freely from this compendium should they wish to further develop their history. I also welcome contributions of additional material or suggestions for corrections to the address above. The Family Name The online Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland, 2016, indicates that Bowron is derived from a place named Boldron in the North Riding of Yorkshire, now in County Durham. Bowran is another variant. Durham is still the main location of the name in Britain. 244 Bowrons were listed in the 1881 census. Sources There is no list of sources appended to this document, but for each item consulted I have tried to indicate within the entry where it may be found. I have always endeavoured to utilise original documents rather than transcriptions and indexes, because there is often additional information available which was not extracted to an index or transcription.
    [Show full text]
  • Weld-Simeonweld
    Humphrey WELD Ann WHELER Died: 29 Nov 1610 Sheriff, then Lord Mayor of London John WELD Frances WHITMORE Died: 1622 Died: 1656 Humphrey WELD Clara ARUNDELL John WELD Mary STOURTON George WELD Bridget THIMBLETHORP Died: 11 Jul 1674 Died: 1650 Died: 1696 Nicholas TAAFFE Mary WELD William WELD Elizabeth SHERBURNE Daniel O'MAHONEY Cecilia WELD Elizabeth WELD Title: 2nd Earl of Carlingford Died: 1698 Marr: 1672 Title: Count of Castile Died: 2 Feb 1690 Cause: Killed at Battle of the Byne; d.s.p. Humphrey WELD Margaret SIMEON Died: 1722 Marr: 1701 Catherine Elizabeth ASTON Edward WELD Mary Theresa VAUGHAN Humphrey WELD Died: 25 Oct 1739 Born: 1705 Died: 1754 Died: 8 Dec 1761 Juliana PETRE Edward WELD Mary Anne SMYTHE Thomas WELD Mary MASSEY STANLEY MARY EUPHRASIA WELD Thomas WELD MARY FITZHERBERT Marr: 1763 Born: 1741 Marr: 1775 Born: 24 Aug 1750 Marr: 1772 UID: AP139 Died: 1764 UID: BF089 Died: 1775 Died: 29 Mar 1837 Died: 1810 Died: 1823 He and his wife were great Died: 1766 D.s.p. Several other children. Friend and Order: Poor Clare in Aire benefactors of the Bruges Order: O.S.F. in Bruges benefactor of the Bruges Franciscans. Franciscans. Thomas WELD Lucy Bridget CLIFFORD Joseph WELD Charlotte Mary STOURTON Humphrey WELD Christina Maria CLIFFORD James WELD John WELD Juliana FRANCIS SALES WELD Clara WELD Mary Teresa WELD MARY GERTRUDE SIMEON Born: 22 Jan 1773 Died: 1 Jun 1815 Born: 27 Jan 1777 Born: 7 Mar 1782 Born: 21 Sep 1783 Born: 30 Apr 1785 Born: 15 Jun 1780 UID: BF263 Order: St Francis de Sales Order: St Francis de Sales WELD Died: 10 Apr 1837 Died: 19 Oct 1863 Died: 16 Jan 1864 Died: 9 Jan 1852 Died: 1800 UID: BF221 Order: O.S.F.
    [Show full text]