Sir John Scott's Accounts of His Receipts and Expenditure During
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Sir John Fogge of Ashford. SARAH BOLTON Sm JOHN Focce, well known for his refusal to be reconciled to Richard III in 1483, is worthy of closer study. Not only does his career illustrate the extent to which the fortunes of the gentry could be affected by the political changes of the fifteenth century, but also the increasing use made of their services in royal government, and the réle they could play in local affairs. The Fogge family originated in Lancashire, but one Otho moved to Kent in the reign of Edward 1. Through judicious marriages his descendants acquired sizeable properties in East Kent. Sir Francis Fogge, grandson of Otho, married the co-heiress of Waretius de Valoyns and thereby acquired Cheriton, Repton Manor in Ashford, which became the family’s principal residence, Beechborough, and Sene Farm. Sir Francis’ great-grandson, Sir William, in his turn, married as his second wife the only daughter and heiress of Sir William Septvans, through whom he acquired the manor of Milton.1 Our Sir John was born, according to Wedgwood, in 1425, but there seems some debate over his immediate antecedents. In a lawsuit in 1460 he called himself son and heir of John; this John was, according to Wedgwood, a younger brother of William, or, according to another source, an older brother. Sir John’s mother was Jane Catton, and through this marriage the family gained the manor of Crixall.2 Debate over the Fogge pedigree does not stop here. Sir John himself married 'twice: unfortunately to two ladies named Alice. One was Alice Kiriell, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Thomas Kiriell, who died in the second battle of St Albans fighting for the cause of York. -
Btmried Treasures
Btmried Treasures Volume XXIL No . 1 January 1990 CENTRAL FLORIDA GENEALOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SOCIETY , INC. TABLE OF CONTENTS President's Message . ii The Church of Saint Mary, Brabourne, Kent, England . 1 More about the Bradshaw Family -- Or, How City Directories Can Help 5 Call for Articles -- Special "School Days Issue" • 6 Poetry for Genealogists . 7 Line of Descent: Alexander and Martha Ogle to Clarice Winifred Mitchell Harris 8 Book Reviews . 10 1801 Deed of Sale Between John Clark and Isaac Cole in Essex County, New Jersey 12 How Social Security Numbers Are Assigned • . 14 Recent Acquisitions of the Orlando Public Library . 15 Queries . 20 Geographical Index . 21 Surname Index 22 WINTER CONTRIBUTORS Col. Richard A. Connell Christine W. Dudding Winifred Harris Alma H. Holt George Littrell Claire Miller Tanya C. Miller Ruby Price Charlotte Rand Mary Louise B. Todd Buried Treasures - i - Vol. XXII, No. 1 I January 1990 Dear Members and Friends, A new. decade is before us! The 1990's. Ah, microfilm! Remember the census of 1790 thru 1840? The insufficient information of those early census records raised more questions in the queried minds of the avid genealogist than were answers. The 1850 census was definitely a breakthrough, listing names of all the occupants of a household. However, we're constantly faced with illegible handwriting for whathisname from whatchamacallit town, who may hav e fabricated a date or two and possibly left some unanswered questions. Unable to either locate the proper census record or read same, genealogists are often resigned to confusion regarding their ancestors' origins . Let's give our decendants something to remember us by. -
D'elboux Manuscripts
D’Elboux Manuscripts Indexed Abstracts Scope The four volumes of monumental inscriptions and heraldic material, copied and supplemented by Mr R. H. D'Elboux in the 20th century, and published by the Kent FHS on microfiche sets 1756, 1757, 1758 & 1759. Much of the original material was collected in the 18th century by Filmer Southouse, John Thorpe, William Warren and Bryan Faussett. Arrangement Entries are arranged alphabetically, by heading ~ usually the name of a Kent parish, but if this is unknown or not applicable, two general puposes headings are used ('heraldry' & 'miscellaneous'). Each entry provides a detailed abstract of one page or loose-leaf sheet ~ some entries may include details from the first few lines of the following page. Each entry's heading includes a reference to the original page on microfiche, using the format noted below. Entries provide details of personal names (abbreviated forenames are expanded), relationships, dates and places ~ they do not include ranks (except for people only identified by rank), royalty, occupations, biographical details, verse, heraldic descriptions, sources or the names of authors. Entries are numbered, and these are used in the Surname Index starting on page 129. Abbreviations & Notations 56-3-r4c07 sample microfiche reference : fiche 3 of set 1756, at the intersection of row 4 & col 7 (widow) wife died a widow ~ only shown if the husband's death is not specified {L} memorial inscription in Latin = married =(2) married secondly ~ and so on 2d&c. second daughter & coheir of ~ and so on 2d. second daughter of ~ and so on 2s. second son of ~ and so on aka also known as arms. -
Genealogical Memoirs of the Family of Sir Walter Scott, Bart. of Abbotsford
GENEALOGICAL MEMOIRS OF THE FAMILY OF SIR WALTER SCOTT, Bart, ETC., ETC. '«* BURIAL AISLE ANCESTORS, THE HALIBURT0N3 iR WALTER SCOTT AND OF HIS IN THE ABBEY OT DRYBURGH. GENEALOGICAL MEMOIRS OF THE FAMILY OF Sm WALTER SCOTT, Bart. OF ABBOTSrORD WITH A REPllINT OF HIS MEMOEIALS OF THE HALIBUETONS Rev. CHARLES ROGERS, LL.D. HISTORIOGEAPHER TO THE ROYAL HISTORICAL SOCIETY, FELLOW OF THE SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES OF SCOTLAND, MEMBER OF THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF QUEBEC, MEMBER OF THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF PENNSYLVANIA, AND CORRESPONDING MEMBER OF THE HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY OF NEW ENGLAND LONDON HOULSTON & SONS, PATERNOSTER SQUARE 1877 EDINBURGH: PRINTED BY M'FARLANE AND ERSKINE, ST JAMES SQUARE. PREFACE. Sm Walter Scott was ambitious of establishing a family which might perpetuate his name, in connection with that interesting spot on the banks of the Tweed which he had reclaimed and adorned. To be " founder of a distinct branch of the House of Scott," was, according to Mr Lockhart, " his first and last worldly ambition." "He desired," continues his biographer, " to plant a lasting root, and dreamt not of present fame, but of long distant generations rejoicing in the name of Scott of Abbotsford. By this idea, all his reveries, all his aspirations, all his plans and efforts, were shadowed and controlled. The great object and end only rose into clearer daylight, and swelled into more substantial dimensions, as public applause strengthened his confidence in his own powers and faculties ; and when he had reached the summit of universal and unrivalled honour, he clung to his first love with the faith of a Paladin." More clearly to appreciate why Sir Walter Scott was so powerfully influenced by the desire of founding a family, it is necessary to be acquainted with his relations to those who preceded him. -
CHILHAM Conservation Area Management Plan Adopted July 2020
CHILHAM Conservation Area Management Plan Adopted July 2020 1 THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 2 CHILHAM Conservation Area Management Plan April 2020 Contents Page Contents Page 7.0 Plan for Further Action and Generic Guidance 37 How to Use this Document 5 8.0 Management of Change in Chilham Conservation Area 38 1.0 Introduction 7 2.0 Planning Policy Context 9 8.1 Planning Context and Policies Table 38 3.0 Summary of Special Interest 10 8.2 Criteria for the Conservation Area 40 8.3 Management Policies 42 3.1 Setting 10 8.4 Design Guidance 45 Impact of Historical Development 11 3.2 8.5 Regeneration Strategy 48 3.3 Living in the Conservation Area 11 3.4 Architectural Quality and Open Spaces 12 9.0 Bibliography 50 3.5 Local Distinctiveness 12 3.6 Boundaries of the Conservation Area 14 Conclusions from Questionnaire 52 Pressures and Potential for Development 16 Appendix A 3.7 Appendix B Listing Descriptions 54 4.0 Assessment of Special Interest 18 Appendix C Historic Development 61 Appendix D Transport Development 80 4.1 Location and Setting 18 4.2 Assessment of Condition 21 5.0 Architectural Quality and Built Form 23 5.1 The Square 24 5.2 Taylors Hill 24 5.3 Church Hill 25 5.4 The Street 25 5.5 School Hill 28 5.6 Hambrook Lane 29 5.7 Branch Road, Bagham Cross and Dane Street 30 6.0 Open Spaces, Parks, Gardens and Trees 32 6.1 The Square 32 6.2 Churchyard 33 6.3 Hambrook 34 6.4 Bagham Lane 35 6.5 Taylors Hill 35 6.6 More Generally 35 3 THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 4 How to use this document We know from the public consultation exercises we have carried out in recent years that growth and development are a major concern to people in Chilham, Old Wives Lees and Shottenden. -
Knights of the Shire of Kent from A.D. 1275 to A.D. 1831
Archaeologia Cantiana Vol. 21 1895 ( 198 ) KNIGHTS OE THE SHIRE EOR KENT EROM A.D. 1275 TO A.D. 1831.* BY REV. J. CAVE-BROWNE, M.A., VICAE ov DETLING, MAIDSTONE. THE Parliament of England was in Saxon times of the most simple form, as its name, the WITANA-GEHOT, " the assembly of the wise men," indicated. It consisted of the bishops and principal abbots, sitting with the thanes or barons and ealder- men, thus comprising the " Lords Spiritual and Temporal;" the former at first by prescriptive right as bishops, and after the Conquest as holding their baronies under the Crown ; the latter as under their military tenure, vassals of the Crown, to which stipulated " service " was due. To these the Conqueror added a third class, elected repre- sentatives from the several counties, known by the name of "Knights of the Shire." It was not till the days of the later Plantagenets that cities and boroughs were pri- vileged to send representatives under the name of "bur- gesses." The earliest record now extant of the component mem- bers of such a Parliament is of that held in the third year of the reign of Edward I. (1275). With it commences the list of " Knights of the Shire " for Kent, as given in the following pages. The number of members to be sent from each county seems at first to have varied. In the fifth year of King John's reign a Parliament had been held at which four knights were to be summoned; in the 10th year of Henry III. -
Download a PDF Version of the Guide to African American Manuscripts
Guide to African American Manuscripts In the Collection of the Virginia Historical Society A [Abner, C?], letter, 1859. 1 p. Mss2Ab722a1. Written at Charleston, S.C., to E. Kingsland, this letter of 18 November 1859 describes a visit to the slave pens in Richmond. The traveler had stopped there on the way to Charleston from Washington, D.C. He describes in particular the treatment of young African American girls at the slave pen. Accomack County, commissioner of revenue, personal property tax book, ca. 1840. 42 pp. Mss4AC2753a1. Contains a list of residents’ taxable property, including slaves by age groups, horses, cattle, clocks, watches, carriages, buggies, and gigs. Free African Americans are listed separately, and notes about age and occupation sometimes accompany the names. Adams family papers, 1698–1792. 222 items. Mss1Ad198a. Microfilm reels C001 and C321. Primarily the papers of Thomas Adams (1730–1788), merchant of Richmond, Va., and London, Eng. Section 15 contains a letter dated 14 January 1768 from John Mercer to his son James. The writer wanted to send several slaves to James but was delayed because of poor weather conditions. Adams family papers, 1792–1862. 41 items. Mss1Ad198b. Concerns Adams and related Withers family members of the Petersburg area. Section 4 includes an account dated 23 February 1860 of John Thomas, a free African American, with Ursila Ruffin for boarding and nursing services in 1859. Also, contains an 1801 inventory and appraisal of the estate of Baldwin Pearce, including a listing of 14 male and female slaves. Albemarle Parish, Sussex County, register, 1721–1787. 1 vol. -
Edward Hasted the History and Topographical Survey of the County
Edward Hasted The history and topographical survey of the county of Kent, second edition, volume 8 Canterbury 1799 <i> THE HISTORY AND TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. CONTAINING THE ANTIENT AND PRESENT STATE OF IT, CIVIL AND ECCLESIASTICAL; COLLECTED FROM PUBLIC RECORDS, AND OTHER AUTHORITIES: ILLUSTRATED WITH MAPS, VIEWS, ANTIQUITIES, &c. THE SECOND EDITION, IMPROVED, CORRECTED, AND CONTINUED TO THE PRESENT TIME. By EDWARD HASTED, Esq F. R. S. and S. A. LATE OF CANTERBURY. Ex his omnibus, longe sunt humanissimi qui Cantium incolunt. Fortes creantur fortibus et bonis, Nec imbellem feroces progenerant. VOLUME VIII. CANTERBURY PRINTED BY W. BRISTOW, ON THE PARADE. M.DCC.XCIX. <ii> <blank> <iii> TO WILLIAM BOYS, ESQ. F. S. A. OF WALMER. SIR, IT is with much pleasure that I seize this oppor= tunity of acknowledging your kind and liberal friend= ship to me, upon every occasion, especially in the continued assistance you have afforded me towards my publication of the HISTORY OF KENT, from the earliest period of it. Such assistance, from a iv gentleman of your established literary character, cannot but stamp additional credit on the History, and contribute both pleasure and satisfaction to the Readers of it. Please, Sir, to accept my most grateful thanks for these constant marks of your favor and regard, and believe me to be, with the greatest esteem and respect, Your much obliged and faithful humble servant, EDWARD HASTED. LONDON, JUNE 24, 1799. <v> INDEX. The letter A refers to the Appendix of additions and corrections to the seventh and eighth volumes, added at the end of this volume. -
The Gentry Community
THE LANDED ELITE, 1300-1500 Peter Fleming The Ranks of the Landowning Elite County society, administration and politics were dominated by the landowning elite. Whilst the tenure of land in freehold – the nearest medieval equivalent of the modern concept of ‘ownership’ - was not confined to these ranks, it was overwhelmingly the nobility and the gentry who were the greatest private landowners. At the beginning of the fourteenth century there were few titular distinctions within this elite: earls and barons, whose titles passed down by inheritance, constituted the nobility, and below them were the knights.1 In 1293 twelve Kentish knights answered the summons to the marriage of Edward I’s daughter Eleanor.2 Nineteen Kentish landowners answered Edward II’s summons to do service against the Scots in 1322, but only three of these were knights (Sir Walter de Shorne, Sir John de Malmayns and Sir Henry de Elham); the sixteen others were not given titles, but many of them came from families which in succeeding generations would form Kent’s ‘squirearchy’.3 During the fourteenth century there was a growth in titles and distinctions within the ranks of the gentle classes. By the early fifteenth century, it was generally accepted that the nobility were identical with the lay parliamentary peerage, receiving a personal summons to sit as lords in parliament. The gentry were now composed of three ranks: in descending order of precedence, knights, esquires and gentlemen. In later medieval England £40 in annual landed income was deemed sufficient to maintain the costs and life style of knighthood, and periodically those landowners who were not knights but were thought to financially qualified were forced by the king either to take up knighthood or to pay a fine.4 This process – ‘distraint of knighthood’ – continued into the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. -
I Am a Member of the Scott Clan Through My Mother's Side of the Family
THE SCOTTS IN ZEELAND I am a member of the Scott Clan through my mother's side of the family. The Chief of the Clan is The Duke of Buccleuch, who also holds the title of the Marquis of Queens berry. As is not unusual, the search for family background commenced with an interrogation of my own family and along with the aid of the I.G.I., it was possible to trace the family tree back to its origin in the Orkney Islands. On impulse in 1985, I wrote a Jetter to the Bishop of Orkney asking if any Scotts were still in Orkney. To my delight, a letter was received from Nan Scott, who is Chairperson of the Orkney Family History Society. 1 Indeed my forebears were known and closely related to her. Subsequently, when visiting the Orkneys, a still more distant cousin, Eoin Flett Scott, told of his experience in 1968. His farm on Mainland (the main island of the Orkneys) was in early times, a Viking farm. The farm of Redland was covered in title by odal Jaw: that is, an original title granted from the Norse times. While cleaning out a farm drain, lined in a common Orkney fashion with stone, he had come across a dressed and squared stone, which carried the outline of a crest. This was graphite rubbed, and sent to the Lord Lyon's Office in Edinburgh with the hope of identification of the crest. Alas, this did not occur for a long period, until by romantic chance, one of the office staff while powdering her nose, saw the rubbing reflected in her mirror and recognised it to be a reversed crest. -
Reginald Scott
Reginald Scott Pg 1 No Picture Available Born: 1520 Scott’s Hall, England Married: Mary Tuke Died: 16 Dec 1554 Scott’s Hall, England Parents: John Scott & Anne Pympe Sir Reginald Scott, of Scott's Hall, will dated 4 Sep 1554, pr. 13 Feb 1554/5, sheriff of Kent 1542; m. (1) Emelyn, daughter of Sir William Kempe of Ollantigh, Kent and Eleanor, widow of Thomas Fogge and daughter of Sir Robert Browne, and aunt of Sir Thomas Kempe and of Anne Kempe, wife of Sir Thomas Shirley; m. (2) Mary, living 1555, daughter of Sir Bryan Tuke, Knt., of Layer Marney, Essex, secretary to Cardinal Wolsey. [Magna Charta Sureties] Note2: Sir John Scott's second son, Sir Reginald Scott (1512-1554), sheriff of Kent in 1541 and surveyor of works at Sandgate, died on 15 Dec. 1554, and was buried at Brabourne, having married, first, Emeline, daughter of Sir William Kempe; and, secondly, Mary, daughter of Sir Brian Tuke [q.v.] He had issue six sons and four daughters. [Life Sketch of Sir William Scott & Selected Descendants, www.burgoyne.com] Note3: Sir Reginald Scott b. Scott's Hall, Brabourne, Kent, England, occupation High Sheriff of Kent 1542, m. (1) 1528, Mary Tuke, b. of Layer Marney, Essex, England, d. living 1555, only daughter and Heiress, m. (2) Emelyn Kempe. Sir died 16 Dec 1554/5, will dated 4 Sep 1554, prob. 13 Feb 1555, Capt. of Calais & Sangatte 1542. Visitations of Kent 1663-1668 p. 145; Visitations of Essex, Vol. 1 p. 137, Vol. II p. 610; F. H. -
William Scott Pg 1/3
William Scott Pg 1/3 No Picture Available Born: 1459 Brabourne, England Married: Sybilla Lewknor Died: 24 Aug 1524 Brabourne, England Parents: John Scott & Agnes Beaufit Sir William Scott of Scott's Hall, Brabourne (died August 24, 1524) was Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports. During his lifetime he was to become a High Sheriff of Kent in 1491, and again in 1502, a position he was to return to in 1515 and 1517. He was also to become Constable of Dover Castle and Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports Dover Castle Pg 2/3 Information from online research at: Ancestry.com Bodiam Castle is a quadrangular castle near Robertsbridge in East Sussex, England (grid reference TQ785256). It was built in 1385 by Sir Edward Dalyngrigge, a former knight of Edward III, with the permission of Richard II, ostensibly to defend the area against French invasion during the Hundred Years' War. Situated in a moat and an artificial watery landscape, display was an important aspect of the castle as well as defence. It was the home of the Dalyngrigge family and the centre of the manor of Bodiam. Possession of Bodiam Castle passed through several generations of Dalyngrigges, until their line became extinct, when the castle passed by marriage to the Lewknor family. During the Wars of the Roses, Sir Thomas Lewknor supported the House of Lancaster, and when Richard III of the House of York became king in 1483, a force was despatched to besiege Bodiam Castle; it is unrecorded whether the siege went ahead, but it is thought that Bodiam was surrendered without much resistance.