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Sir William Sandys
BIRTH 1438
DEATH 26 Oct 1496 (aged 57–58)
BURIAL
South View Cemetery
Basingstoke, Basingtoke and Deane Borough, Hampshire, England
MEMORIAL ID 120282812 · View Source
MEMORIAL
PHOTOS 0
FLOWERS 9
A resident for most of his life at the manor house of East Cholderton, about a mile and a half from Andover, he recovered, after the death in 1488 of his first cousin Sir Bernard Brocas, the residence called The Vyne which their mutual grandfather, Sir Walter Sandys, had alienated to Bernard's mother, Joan Sandys Brocas, on her marriage as her dowry.
Sir William Sandys, the elder, died testate with a will dated Oct. 17, 1493 which was proved Apr. 8, 1497 [Testamenta Vetusta, pp. 432-433], which mentioned his goods at Andover and at The Vyne, his wife Margaret, and sons William and Richard.
He and Margaret were buried in a recess in the south wall of the chancel of the Chapel of the Holy Ghost. When the Chapel of the Holy Trinity was built circa 1524 adjoining this same wall, an arched opening was made between the two structures, and their monument was placed there.
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Birth: 1438
Death: Oct. 26, 1496
A resident for most of his life at the manor house of East Cholderton, about a mile and a half from Andover, he recovered, after the death in 1488 of his first cousin Sir Bernard Brocas, the residence called The Vyne which their mutual grandfather, Sir Walter Sandys, had alienated to Bernard's mother, Joan Sandys Brocas, on her marriage as her dowry.
Sir William Sandys, the elder, died testate with a will dated Oct. 17, 1493 which was proved Apr. 8, 1497 [Testamenta Vetusta, pp. 432-433], which mentioned his goods at Andover and at The Vyne, his wife Margaret, and sons William and Richard.
He and Margaret were buried in a recess in the south wall of the chancel of the Chapel of the Holy Ghost. When the Chapel of the Holy Trinity was built circa 1524 adjoining this same wall, an arched opening was made between the two structures, and their monument was placed there.
Family links:
Spouse:
Margaret Cheney Sandys*
Children:
Edith Sandys Darcy (____ - 1529)*
William Sandys (1470 - 1540)*
*Calculated relationship
Burial:
South View Cemetery
Basingstoke
Basingtoke and Deane Borough
Hampshire, England
Created by: Todd Whitesides
Record added: Nov 13, 2013
Find A Grave Memorial# 120282812
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William Sandys, 1st Baron Sandys of the Vyne KG (1470 – 4 December 1540) was an English Tudor diplomat, Lord Chamberlain and favourite of King Henry VIII.
Contents
1 Biography
2 William Sandys and Anne Boleyn
3 Cultural references
4 Notes
5 References
Biography
William was a younger son of Sir William Sandys (1440-1496) of The Vyne, a Tudor mansion in Sherborne St. John, near Basingstoke, Hampshire. In the 1520s William Sandys, (later Baron Sandys), built a very large Tudor mansion over the site previously occupied by the far smaller original house. The mansion now belongs to the National Trust. His mother was his father's second wife, Margaret Cheyne, the daughter of Sir John Cheyne of Shurland on the Isle of Sheppey. His sister was Edith Sandys, who married firstly, Ralph Neville, Lord Neville (d. 1498),[1] the son and heir of Ralph Neville, 3rd Earl of Westmorland. As a young man, he gained preferment at Court and was soon associated with the future King Henry VIII, assisting at his knighthood and the reception of his future wife, Catherine of Aragon.
As Knight of the Body to Henry VIII he would have been a close companion to the King in the early years of the reign. In 1517 he was appointed Treasurer of Calais. He was made a Knight of the Garter, the following year (1518), and was apparently instrumental in organising the Royal meeting at the Field of the Cloth of Gold. He was created Baron Sandys of The Vyne, soon afterwards. In 1530 he was made Henry's Lord Chamberlain. Later that same year he was appointed Captain of Guisnes, a position he held until his death in 1540. Guines, to give it its modern spelling, is some 7 miles south of Calais. At the time of his appointment it was the main outpost of English authority in the Pale of Calais. Its strategic importance was considerable and this appointment was no sinecure.His responsibility for the castle and county of Guisnes took him out of England frequently, especially in the years 1526 to 1529 and again between 1538 and 1540.
It was almost certainly at Guisnes that he first contracted the sweating sickness which, in later life sometimes kept him from Court. In January 1529 he was so ill that he could not walk[2]; in October 1533 the sweating sickness returned, and by March 1534 he was so ill that he almost died[3]. This was almost certainly malaria which was rife in marshy areas of Europe at that time[4]. Guines is a low lying area, once marshy and subject to frequent flooding from the sea and land.
King Henry VIII visited him three times at the Vyne, once with his queen, Anne Boleyn, whom Sandys was later to escort to her imprisonment in the Tower. Although his sister Edith had married, secondly, Thomas Darcy, 1st Baron Darcy of Darcy,[5] one of the leaders of the Pilgrimage of Grace (1536), Sandys certainly played no part in the uprising. Indeed, in October 1536 he was summoned to "attend upon the King's own person" with 400 men[6], and, on 10 October, was ordered to muster at Ampthill, Bedfordshire, and to "prepare victuals and lodging for the King and his train"[7], a task for which he would have been well qualified as Henry's Lord Chamberlain. Later he accompanied the Duke of Norfolk as far as Cambridge but took no further action in the suppression of the rebellion.
In his later years Sandys seems to have taken no great part in court life but his responsibilities at Guisnes kept him very busy in the early years of his appointment and between 1538 and 1540. Most of his work at Guisnes involved the refortification of the castle and town. Nevertheless, despite his frequent attention to these tasks, the castle in particular was reported as being practically indefensible for much of that period. In 1540 Lord Lisle, the Lord Deputy of Calais was accused of having let the defences of Calais and Guisnes to be so reduced that they could easily have been taken by an enemy. Under suspicion, he was imprisoned in the Tower of London. Remarkably, Sandys does not appear to have been implicated.
He returned to The Vyne from Calais in October 1540. On 7 December lord Matravers, the Lord Deputy of Calais, received a message from England announcing that Sandys had died at The Vyne. On that same day Henry VIII wrote to the Council of Calais advising them that "the Lord Chamberlain, who was captain of Guisnes is dead.". On 10 October the French ambassador in London reported back to France that "lord Sens (sic) died four days ago, who was much esteemed here and was one of the few ancient captains left."[8] Sandys was the founder of the Guild of the Holy Ghost in Basingstoke and was buried in its chapel, amongst the ruins of which parts of his tomb may still be seen. He had married Margaret, the daughter of his cousin, John Bray, half-brother to Sir Reginald Bray (d.1503), one of Henry VII's powerful counsellors. They had at least three sons and four daughters, including Thomas, 2nd Baron Sandys of the Vyne, and Mary, who married Sir William Pelham, and was the mother of Sir William Pelham and Sir Edmund Pelham, Lord Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer.
William Sandys and Anne Boleyn
Henry VIII fell for Anne Boleyn in 1526, the same year in which Sandys was appointed Lord Chamberlain and Captain of Guisnes. By 1529 Anne Boleyn was accompanying Henry as frequently as if she were the Queen. During those years Sandys spent some 18 months in Guisnes but, otherwise, his responsibilities at Court as Lord Chamberlain would have meant that he had frequent occasion to make provision for Anne Boleyn and her household, and that he would have known her well.
In 1532 he attended the ceremony at which she was raised to the peerage as the Marquess of Pembroke[9]. In 1533 he was one of the several lords who accompanied her from Greenwich to Westminster for her coronation[10]. In October 1535 he hosted her and Henry's visit to The Vyne, when she was Queen[11]. On the following 9 May Sandys was summoned to a meeting of the Privy Council to consider "matters relating to the surety of [the King's] person, his honor, and the tranquillity of the realm"[12]; on 12 May he attended the trial of the four men accused of committing adultery with the Queen and on 15 May, after escorting her from Greenwich to the Tower of London, he was one of the jury which found her guilty of adultery, incest and treason[13].
Cultural references
He is a minor character in the historical novel The Man on a Donkey by H.F.M. Prescott.
He appears in William Shakespeare's Henry VIII as Lord Sands, who flirts with Anne Boleyn when she arrives at Court and comments unfavourably upon the new fashions brought over from France.
Notes
G.E. Cokayne; with other editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959), volume XII/2, page 552. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII 23 January 1529
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII 28 March 1534
Reiter, Paul, From Shakespeare to Defoe. Malaria in England in the Little Ice Age EID Journal Vol. 6 No.1 - February 2000
Cokayne 1959, pp. 552–3; Richardson III 2011, p. 253.
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII 7 October 1536
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII 10 October 1536
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII, 7 & 10 December 1540
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII, 1 Sept. 1532
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII, 31 May 1533,
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII, 19 & 22 October 1535
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII, 9 May 1536
Letters and State Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII, 12 & 15 May 1536
References
Archbold, William Arthur Jobson (1897). "Sandys, William (d.1540)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 50. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 295–296. | SANDYS, Sir William (I14886)
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Spouse & Children
Margaret Pierce
1723–1796
Margaret Andrews
1755–
John Andrews
1756–1837
Thomas Andrews
1759–
Samuel Andrews
1761–1824
William Andrews
1766–
Archley Andrews
1768–1810 | ANDREWS, Samuel (I18277)
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Surname First Name(s) Place County/Country Occupation/Status Year Type Form Prob. Court Source Reference Note
Wooldridge Benjamin Black Torrington DEV 1850 W co IRW W 1235
Wooldridge Emanuel North Lew DEV 1857 W co IRW W 1236
Wooldridge John North Lew DEV 1850 W co IRW W 1237
Wooldridge William Beaworthy DEV 1849 W co IRW W 1240 | WOOLDRIDGE, Benjamin (I14396)
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Tanfield of HarpooIe.
Arms : Quarterly — I and 4, Argent, two chevrons between three martlets Sable ;
2 and 3, Argent, a chevron Sable between three wolves' heads erased Gules (Lovell).
Another Coat: Quarterly — 1 and 4, Argent, two chevrons Sable each charged
with five nails Or (Clovile) ; 2 and 3, Azure, a fess Ermine between three
lioncels rampant in chief and a gimmel-ring in base Or.
Crest : A woman's head couped at the shoulders proper, crined Or, wreathed about
the temples Argent and Sable.
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Person Info
Name: William Tanfield
Sex: M
Birth: (C 1520) in Harpole (Northamptonshire) England
Death:
Person Id: I158791
Tree Id: 128228
235 Possible Record Matches on Ancestry
Parents
Father:
William Tanfield: Birth: 1488 in Gayton (Northamptonshire) England. Death: 06 APR 1529
Mother:
Isabell Staveley: Birth: (C 1490) in Bignell (Oxfordshire) England. Death: (C 1545)
Family
Marriage:
Married: Elizabeth Clovile.
Elizabeth Clovile: Birth: (C 1534) in Coptfold Hall (Essex) England.
Children:
Bridget Tanfield: Birth: (C 1545) in Gaytor (Northamptonshire) England. | TANFIELD, William (I19680)
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Testamenta Cantiana
Denton, p. 95
Buried in the churchyard of Blessed Mary Magdalene, Nicholas Fitell, 1484 (A. 4, 2)
to the light of Holy Cross in the Rood, Nicholas Fitell ibid | VITTLE OR FITTELL, William (I17343)
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The ruins of Thurnham Castle
High up on the North Downs with superb views to the south as can be seen at LinkExternal link Thurnham Castle consists now of just a few walls up to ten feet high.
The history of Thurnham Castle is partly conjecture. It was first mentioned in a document of 1225 but the castle may be much older than this, maybe dating to the late 11th century. The first owner is thought to have been Ralph de Courbepine (or Curbespine), a tenant of Bishop Odo of Bayeux, the half brother of William the Conqueror. Stephen de Thurnham, great grandson of Ralph de Courbepine held the manor in the 12th century during the reign of Henry II. By the 14th century the manor had passed to the Northwood family and then to Robert Corbie.
The castle was abandoned by the 15th century for Corbier Hall, south-west of Thurnham village. In 1540 the antiquarian John Leland noted that the castle was "now all clene ruine". In later centuries chalk quarrying damaged the site. Kent County Council acquired the site in 1999 to preserve it and make it accessible and the castle is now part of the White Horse Wood Country Park.
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Turnham. Gilbert, Lord of Garlande, in Brie, [France] time of William I., had issue Ansel de Garlande, Seneschal of France 1108, and Gilbert de Garlande, Butler of France; the latter of whom had issue Guy, who purchased Turnham, and went to Palestine in 1147 (Des Bois). He had issue Robert de Turnham, of Kent, 1156, 1165, and Michael de Turnham, of Surrey, 1165. Stephen de Turnham was a baron time of Henry II. and Richard I., and he is mentioned in Normandy 1180-95 (MRS). Stephen de Turnham held in Salop 13th cent. (Testa de Neville).
[Source: https://archive.org/stream/normanpeopleand00unkngoog#page/n443/mode/2up, pp. 425-426]
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[Source: Gatton Pedigree. See KAS journal http://www.kentarchaeology.org.uk/Research/Pub/ArchCant/005-1863/005-09.pdf]
He was a British justice and administrator. In 1190 he accompanied Richard on the Third Crusade, visiting Jerusalem in 1192, and in 1193 he escorted Queen Berengaria and Joan of England on their journey from Palestine to Rome.
After this his work was limited to England, managing royal Demesnes and Escheats, as well as vacant Bishoprics. Although these jobs made the holder unpopular, he apparently had a good reputation, with Adam of Eynsham describing him as 'a faithful and godly man and devoted to our holy bishop'. From 1197 until 1200 he served as High Sheriff of Berkshire and Wiltshire, and in 1198 as High Sheriff of Lancashire. His royal favour faltered after 1200, but he was still a favorite of John, serving at various times as warden to Eleanor, Fair Maid of Brittany, Isabella of Angoulême and the future Henry III. He died on 6 March 1214 with no sons, leaving his possessions to his five daughters and their husbands.
Charter dated between 1174 and 1184.
Richard, Archbishop, on petition of Stephen de Thurnham, gives to the Abbey of Cumbwell the advowson of the Church of Thurnham, after the death of Robert its existing chaplain, and settles a dispute between Stephen and the chaplain, by providing that Stephen should grant to the Church of Thurnham six acres and three virgates eastward, in exchange for land westward in his park, and should confirm to it three acres next Dun Street, which his father had given [Michael de Thurnham?]. Robert agreeing to perform service in Stephen's chapelin his court at Thurnham, when Stephen and his family are there, on Sundays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays (feast-days excepted), and once a week in their absence to offer prayers there for the departed faithful.
On even date Stephen de Thurnham grants the Church of St. Mary at Thurnham and a garden and messuage next the church on the ast, for the better sustenance of the Vicar, to the intent that the Vicar for the time being may the better daily remember himself and his ancestors.
Charter dated May, 1194.
Stephen de Thurnham, in Chinon Castle [Touraine, France], grants to the Abbey of Cumbwell, for the sould of King Henry, the body and soul of King Richard, the souls of his father and mother and all his ancestors, and for himself and all his friends alive or dead, the Dea called LECHINCHESE, without prejudice to the right therein of the Prior of the Holy Trinity at Canterbury.
Footnote notation in source: "This interesting Charter was granted by Stephen de Thurnham about a month after the coronation of Richard I., on his return from captivity. It is remarkable for the mention of the safety of Richard's body as well as soul for one of the objects of the gift, - no unreasonable addition when we remember the state of rebellion in which he found his kingdom on his arrival at home. The spot from which it is dated, Chinon castle in Touraine, shews it to have been executed in the course of the grantor's [Stephen de Thurnham] owner safer but little less tedious journey home from the Crusade. He had not been in the King's train, but was honoured by being entrusted with the escort of Queen Berengaria, her sister, and companions, as we learn from the Chronicle of Roger Hoveden, who thus particularizes their route: -
"Eodem anno (1193) Berengera regina Angliae, et Johanna quondam regina Siciliae, et filia Imperatoris Cypri, venerunt Romam sub custodia Stephani de Thurnham...et moram fecerunt ibi fere per dimidium anni spatium propter metum Imperatoris...Et perrexerunt usque Pisam, deinde usque Genoam, deinde usque Marsiliam. Apud Marsiliam suscepit cas rex Arragoniae...et conduxit eas usque ad fines regni sui. Et comes de Sancto Aegidio conduxit eas per terram suam. Et sic pervenerunt Pictaviam." (Savile's 'Scriptores post Bedam,' p. 417.)"
"The Castle of Chinon was, no doubt, the very point of safety for which Stephen had been making with his anxious charge through the whole of their long and perilous journey. It was situated on the borders of Touraine and Poitou, so that it is sometimes said by the Chroniclers to be in one, sometimes in the other. It was one of the strongest of the English fortresses in France, and much used as a royal residence for those provinces: - a castle, as Gulielmus Armonicus tells us, "non solum munitione, verum et edificiis, et habitatoribus, et situ amoenissimo, praeclarum." (Recucil des Hist. xvii. 80d.) Hither Henry II. had retired to died, in the middle of a campaign with Philip. (Chroniques de S. Denis, an. 1190.) Here Richard kept his reasure, which, on his death, Robert de Thurnham, then custodian, handed over to John. And hither, two years later, came Berengaria again, to receive her dower from John, who was holding his Court here. (Roger Hoveden, Savile's 'Scriptores', pp. 451, 466.) Four years later it was lost to England, Philip having taken it from John.
"The party then, safe at last on English territory, and in one of Richard's strongest castles, and fearing no more immediate danger for themselves, from either King of France or Emperor, might well take the first opportunity of doing all that in them lay for the safety of the King in the dangers which still awaited him at home, - an opportunity which, in the interest of the Church, the two monks who figure as witnesses to this Charter (their attendants and confessors probably) would certainly not let slip. Stephen's thoughts on such an occasion would naturally turn to his own Abbey at home, but we may well suppose a word to have been at the same time put in by the ecclesiastics, and probably with success, for the claims of their own respective foundations.
"I cannot help conjecturing the motto of Stephen de Thurnham, which we find on his two counterseals (Charters IX and XI) to have been assumed on the occasion of this honourable service and translating DEVS SALVET CVI MITTOR "God save her to whom I am escort." It is unfortunate that we have no specimen of his seal prior to this date which might either refute this idea by an earlier use of the motto, or strengthen the probability by its absence.
"I have placed this deed, and those following, late in Stephen's life, partly for the names of Adam d Bending and Roger de Leybourne, his sons-in-law, which occur in them. The Robert de Gatton who is witness to this may perhaps be his son-in-law's uncle, as conjectured in the Pedigree."
Charter circa 1210
Stephen de Thurnham grants to the Abbey of Cumbwell his land of Herindenn.
Charter circa 1210
Edeline de Thurnham grants to the Abbey of Cumbwell the tenement which she holds of the King at Hamwold, to be held "cum corpore suo". The grant is confirmed in a second deed of evidently even date, by Stephen de Thurnham, her husband.
Source: Archaeologia Cant., Vol. V, p. 201-210
Gatton Pedigree in ibid,
Stephen de Thurnham
Seneschal of Anjou 1186; escort of Queen Berengaria 1193-4. Charters V. -XI., XIII. Alive 1209 (Rot. Pip. 10 Jo.) Dead before 1214 (Rot. Fin. 16 Jo.)
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There is another reputed daughter Alicnore, wife of Bel h FitzBernard, who, it is conjectured in Archaeologia Cant. Vol. V was either the step-daughter of Stephen de Thurnham, or was one and the same as Alianora who married de Say.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | DE THURNHAM, Sir Stephen (I13551)
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There is the Wil of Thomas Rigden at Wye 1658 as follows:
Prerogative Court of Canterbury Will at London
IN THE NAME OF GOD, AMEN, I THOMAS RIGDEN, of Wye in the County of Kent, yeoman, this tenth day of January one thousand six hundred fifty two being of perfect memory, though weak in body, do make and ordain this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following:
First and principally I will and bequeath my soul into the hands of Almighty God in whom I hope by the death and passion of Jesus Christ to be saved.
And my body to be decently buried in Christian burial according to the discretion of my Executor.
Item, I give and bequeath unto THOMAS RIGDEN, my son, the sum of one hundred pounds being in the hands of John Bull of Brabourne, in the County of Kent, Gentleman, when he shall accomplish the age of twenty-two years.
Item, I give unto SUSANNA RIGDEN, my daughter, the sum of thirty pounds of lawful money of England to be paid unto her within twelve months next after my decease.
Item, I give unto MARY RIGDEN, my daughter, the sum of thirty pounds of like lawful money of England when she shall accomplish the age of twenty-one years.
All the residue of all my goods, chattels and cattle before not bequeathed, my debts and legacies first paid and funeral expenses discharged, I give wholly unto KATHARINE, my well beloved wife, whom I make and ordain my whole and sole Executrix of this my last Will and Testament dated the day and year first above written.
Thomas Rigden his mark
READ, SEALED, PUBLISHED AND DECLARED in the
presence of William Pantrye January one thousand
six hundred fifty two,
John Carter
THIS WILL was proved at London the twenty-ninth day of June in the year of our Lord God one thousand six hundred fifty and nine before the Judges for the probate of Wills and granting Administrations lawfully authorized by the oath of KATHARINE RIGDEN the relict and sole and only Executrix named in the above written last Will and Testament of the deceased, to whom administration was granted and committed she being first legally sworn by virtue of a Commission truly and faithfully to administer. | RIGDEN, Mary (I3883)
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This John Thornton is not the same one that is at Marden. The proof of this lies in the baptism of an Andrew Thornton to John Thornton on 5 May 1622 at Marden, which conflicts with the baptism of Willmer Thornton at Horsmonden during September 1622.
Will of Abraham Thorneton, father of this John make mentioned that John was deceased at the time his Will was made in 1648. | THORNTON, John (I11980)
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This Thomas Thomson was residing at Chartham at the time of his marriage to Phoebe Hammond. | THOMSON, Thomas (I1525)
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Walter Thomas Ruck - Canterbury Kent UK/ Kent Rucks
Kevin Ruck (View posts) Posted: 24 Dec 2004 12:46PM GMT
Classification: Query
Surnames: Ruck
Just started trying to trace my grandfather's family. He is Walter Thomas Ruck born in the Bridge area near Canterbury Kent UK in Dec 1893. There is no Walter Thomas Ruck that I can see on the UK 1901 census or the 1901 Scottish census. I believe he lived in the Smeeth area of Kent near Ashford as a young boy, and then moved to Canterbury. He married in 1915 in Canterbury and was in the first world war. He then lived in the Military Road area of Canterbury for the rest of his life. Would like to know if he had brothers and sisters and who his ancestors are.
Also looking for a HAA. Ruck who was a postman in the Craig and Knockban Highlands area of Scotland from 1902-1931. He could be Walter Thomas' father or uncle.
Kevin Ruck
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Re: James Ruck/Sarah Roberts of Kent, England
Kevin Ruck (View posts) Posted: 2 May 2006 7:13PM GMT
Classification: Query
Surnames:
Hello Keith,
Great to hear from someone who is researching the same line, though I think we are both stuck at the same point!
My great great grandfather was Thomas Ruck, son of Joseph and Elizabeth also.
I have found all the records back to Joseph and Elizabeth, but then could find no trace of William's birth. I have really only looked in the archives in Canterbury Cathedral, and only searched parish records for Molash. So I'm guessing that William was born in a neighbouring parish.
Would be interested in anything that you have found on Margaret and her marriage to William, and perhaps to share some ideas on how to get William's baptism record.
Have you managed to find where the Rucks lived in Molash?
Thanks for getting in touch.
Regards
Kevin | RUCK, Joseph (I15679)
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Will of Thomas Baker, jurat of Folkestone, 1593
son Thomas Baker gets messuage at Eastbrooke 16 acres called Mordifeilde
son Robert Baker gets land called Brodewaye and Hunters Meede and one lodge by the sea side
son Henry gets one close lying at Ford of 5 acres
son Richard Baker shares 7 acres at Hye, plus other lands
daughters Alice, Joane and Hester both under 21
sister Badle
wife Elizabeth
father-in-law Thomas Palmer, father of wife Elizabeth
son-in-law Thomas Jenkin
son-in-law Thomas Tydeman
Thomas Baker, jurat of Folkestone, 1629
wife Annes
son Thomas - mansion house at Northy field
son Edmund Baker
daughters Elizabeth Nicolls, Jane, Anne and Martha
brother Robert Baker
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BREDMER, usually called Broadmead, is another manor, near the western bounds of this parish, adjoining to Cheriton, in which it is partly situated. It was most probably, in early times, in the possession of a family of its own name; for in the antient deeds and courtrolls of Valoigns, who were owners of Cheriton in king Edward II. and III.'s reign, there is frequent mention of several of this name, who held lands of the Valoigns family; but before the latter end of king Edward III.'s reign, it was come into the possession of William de Brockhull, of Saltwood, whose second son Thomas Brockhull leaving an only daughter and heir Elizabeth, she carried it in marriage to Richard Selling, in whose descendants it remained till Henry VIII.'s reign, when it was passed away to Edmund Inmith, a retainer to Thomas, lord Clinton, and he gave it to his second son Edmund Inmith, who leaving two daughters and coheirs, one of whom married Rayner, and the other Baker, the latter of them, in right of his wife, shared this manor as part of her inheritance, and in king James I.'s reign alienated it to Beane, in which name it continued some length of time, and till it was sold to Worger, and thence again to Bayley, in which name it remained till Mrs. Elizabeth Bailey and other conveyed it to William Bouverie, earl of Radnor, whose son the right hon. Jacob, earl of Radnor, is the present owner of it. A court baron is held for this manor.
A descriptive and historical account of Folkestone
By Samuel Joseph Mackie, pp 142-143
On the road between Capel and Folkestone is the manor of Coldham, anciently the patrimony of the Coldhams. At the time of Richard II it had passed into the possession of the Bakers, a family of good account in this part of the county. John Baker, of Coldham, was gentleman porter of Calais in the reigns of Henry V and VI. Under the diredction of the Court of Chancery it was conveyed, AD 1691 to William Young, who pulled down the ancient Manor House and Built the present Court Lodge
ibid p. 101
We have historical evidence of extensive works in the fifteenth century, in the Will of John Baker, of Folkestone, proved AD 1464, which after providing for his wife Alicia's maintenance in St. Bartholomew's Hospital at Sandwich, directs the remainder of his lands and tenements within the town and liberty of Folkestone to be sold, and the proceeds appropriated to the erection of a "new work called an aisle, with a window in it, with the parishioners' advice; which work should be built between the vestry there and the great window, and to be built of stone, with lead, glass, and wood, as was seemly and meet for such a work." Philipott mentions also a peculiar chancel belonging to the Bakers of Coldham, "near the vestry, over the charnel house."
MOREHALL is a small manor near Cheriton, which was antiently held of the barony of Folkestone by knight's service, by William de Valentia, who in the 27th year of king Henry III. obtained a charter of privileges for it. William de Detling held it in king Edward II.'s reign; after which it passed into the possession of a family who took their name from it. When this family was extinct here, which was about king Henry IV.'s reign, the Bakers, of Coldham, became possessed of it. At length John Baker, of Coldham, dying anno 17 Henry VI. Joane, one of his daughters and coheirs, entitled her husband Robert Brandred to it; and their son Robert, about the latter end of that reign, passed is away to Sir Tho. Browne, of Beechworth-castle, whose descendant Sir Matthew Browne, at the very latter end of queen Elizabeth's reign, alienated it to Thomas Godman, of London; (fn. 9) from which name it was sold, anno 3 Charles I. to John Eldred, esq. one of whose descendants, anno 34 Charles II. passed it away to John Michel, esq. and from him, anno 5 queen Anne, it was alienated to Jacob Desbouverie, esq. in whose family it has continued in the same manner as the rest of his estates in this parish, to the right hon. Jacob, earl of Radnor, the present possessor of it. A court baron is regularly held for this
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Caldham, usually named Coldham, from its exposed situation, is a manor in the south-east part of this parish [Capel-le-Ferne], which was anciently the patrimony of a family bearing the same name. Prior to the time of Richard II it passed away to the Bakers, in which it continued to John Baker, of Caldham, porter of Calais under Henry V and VI, who, dying without male issue, and leaving five daughters, this estate went with Joane to Robert Brandred, whose son, of that name, at the close of the reign of Henry VI, passed the property to Sir Thomas Browne, of Beechworth Castle.
[Source: Englands Topographer: Or a New and Complete History of the County ..., Volume 2, 1829.
By William H. Ireland, p 159.]
CALDHAM, now usually called Coldham, from its cold and exposed situation, is a manor in the south-east part of this parish, which appears by records to have been antiently the patrimony of owners of the same name, who bore for their arms, Gules, a fess, ermine, between three martlets, argent; but before the reign of king Richard II. they had passed it away to Baker, a family of good account in this part of the county, having a peculiar chancel belonging to them in Folkestone church, who resided at it; and in this name it continued down to John Baker, of Caldham, who was gentleman porter of Calais in the reigns of Henry V. and VI. and bore for his arms, Argent, on a fess, nebulee, sable, a tower, triple-towered, of the first, between three keys of the second; perhaps in allusion to his office. He died without male issue in the 17th year of the latter reign, holding this manor in capite, and leaving five daughters his coheirs; and upon the division of their inheritance, Robert Brandred, in right of Joan his wife, the fourth daughter, became entitled to it; and their son Robert, about the latter end of king Henry VI. passed it away to Sir Thomas Browne, of Beechworth castle, whose descendant, Sir Anthony Browne, in the 33d year of king Henry VIII. exchanged it for other premises with that prince, who in his 36th year, granted it to William Wilsford, and others, citizens of London, to hold in capite; and they, in the 37th year of it, alienated it to John Tuston, esq. of Hothfield, whose grandson Sir Nicholas Tuston, knight and baronet, was by king Charles I. created Baron of Tuston and Earl of Thanet, in whose descendants it has continued down to the right hon. Sackville, earl of Thanet, the present owner of it.
[Source: Edward Hasted, 'Parishes: Capell', in The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent: Volume 8 (Canterbury, 1799), pp. 142-147. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-kent/vol8/pp142-147 [accessed 10 April 2017].]
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Kentish archæology, Volume 1, p. 10, "Folkestone Church"
By William Archibald Scott Robertson
In the latter year, 1464, John Baker directed his executors to "make one work called 'an yle' with a certain window in the same, acting upon the best advice they can obtain from such parishioners as are most worthy of being consulted upon the matter; this work shall be built and constructed between the vestry of the church, and the great window, with such materials as shall be bet and most suitable for it, in stone, glass, iron, lead, wood, and all things needful." We are enabled to fix the position of this aisle by means of the tetiony of Philipot, the herald and historian, who was himself born at Folkestone, about 100 years after John Baker made his will In his account of the parish of Capel ['Villare Cantianum,' p. 96.] Philipot says that the family of Baker, of Caldham in Capel, and of Morehall in Folkestone, had a peculiar chancel belonging to them in this church; he adds that it was near the vestry door, and over the charnel house His mention of the vestry door identifies the Baker Chancel with the aisle built or rebuilt by John Baker's executors, and his allusion to the charnel house shews that the Baker Chancel was upon the south side of this church. The charnel house is a vault beneath the south chancel, in which vault tradition says were interred the bones of men killed in a great battle fought near Folkestone, the bones of their opponents, far greater in number, being deposited in a charnel house beneath the south chancel of Hythe Church. The battle theory is questionable; but there is great likelihood that bones from the desecrated cemetery of the old Priory and Church may have been deposited together in one vault here.
In connection with Baker's south chancel, we may mention as bequest made by Thos. Newsole in 1465 for a window in the south part of this church, opposite the altar of St George. To the light of St. George, John Baker left a bequest of 4d. Newsole's bequest may have referred to the south wall of the old nave, if not, it must have been an addition in or near to John Baker's Chancel, and this idea is supported by Baker's bequest to St. George's Light. What was the dedication of Baker's south chancel we cannot clearly ascertain. He left bequests to the Light of the Little Cross of which he was a brother, and to the Light of St Mary of Pity. From other wills we learn that there was a chancel dedicated to St Mary of Pity, and that there was a "Light of Holy Cross in the chancel of St Mary de Pity," [John Cole's will, 1472.] so that we may perhaps have ground for supposing that Baker's chancel was dedicated to St. Mary of Pity. It is probable, but not certain.
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Testamenta Vetusta: Being Illustrations from Wills, of Manners, Customs, etc. as well as of the descents and possessions of many distinguished families, Volume 1, p. 306, "John Baker." [London: Nichols and Son, Parliament Street, 1826.] By Nicholas Harris Nicolas
John Baker.
John Baker, of Folkstone [apparently of the family from which Sir Richard Baker, the celebrated Chronicler, was descended.] on the Wednesday [26th September] next before the Feast of St Michael, 1464. Alicia, my wife. I will that, immediately after my decease, my executors, out of my goods and chattels, shall place my aforesaid wife in the House or Hospital of St Bartholomew, Sandwich; and I will that all my lands and tenements, within the ville and liberty of Folkstone (except three roods of land at Dullingburgh, and my lands at Merefeld, which I bequeath to my second sister, Granriger), be sold, and with the money arising therefrom that my said executors make a new work called an Isle [aisle], with a window in it, with the advice of the parishioners, which said work shall be built between the Vestry there and the great window, and to be built of stone, with lead, glass and wood, as is seemly and meet for such a work. [Query, Ann, daughter and coheir of John Baker, of Coldham, near Folkestone, in Kent?]
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51 - Kent History and Library Centre
EK-U270 - RADNOR MANUSCRIPTS
DEEDS
Folkestone estate
Capel-le-Ferne
EK-U270/T184 - Manor of Caldham
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | BAKER, Edmond (I14784)
|
112 |
Wm Brown of Thurnham lab bach (25) & Mary Busbridge of Newington by Sittingbourne sp (24), at N. 02 Jan 1765. Adam Ruck of Hartlip farmer bond.
Book: Volume 30
Collection: Kent, Surrey, London: - Canterbury Marriage Licences, 1751-1780 (Marriage)
==============================================================================
1. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Rentals, correspondence and leases, "Cranbrook Rectory Old Surveys etc"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/13/187
PreviousNumbers 46 (red ink, late 19c)
Title Lease
Date 1717
Description Lessor: Dean and Chapter Lessee: Ruck, Adam, gentleman, of Ospringe Copton Woods in Preston next Faversham. Made 24 Jun 1717. Endorsed 'Reg 33 Fol 236' (late 19C).
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule vol III, p122
Extent Parchment, 1m
2. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Leases, "Preston, Sheldwich and Throwley Rectories, Charing and Egerton, Chislet"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/76/103
PreviousNumbers 64538 (Church Commissioners' number)
Title Lease
Date 1717
Description Lessor: Dean and Chapter Lessee: Ruck, Adam, gent, of Ospringe Preston next Faversham rectory. 24 Jun.
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m, seal
Extent Parchment, 1m, seal
3. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Leases, "Preston, Sheldwich and Throwley Rectories, Charing and Egerton, Chislet"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/76/104
Title Bond
Date 1717
Description Bondor: Dean and Chapter Bondee: Ruck, Adam, gent, of Ospringe & Ruck, Martha, of Canterbury For £100. 24 Jun.
Language English
Language Latin
PhysicalDescription Paper, 1p, 3 seals
Extent Paper, 1p, 3 seals
4. fonds CHURCH COMMISSIONERS 1966 DEPOSIT
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-U63/64482
Title Counterpart lease
Date 24 Jun 1717
Description To Adam Ruck. Land in the parishes of Preston next Faversham and Faversham; Copton Manor and Selgrave Manor and Woods
Extent 1 doc | RUCKE, Adam (I3413)
|
113 |
great grandfather to the first earl of Thanet | TUFTON, Nicholas Esq. (I13108)
|
114 |
Henry I the Fowler (German: Heinrich der Finkler or Heinrich der Vogler; Latin: Henricius Auceps) (876 – 2 July 936) was the Duke of Saxony from 912 and German king from 919 until his death. First of the Ottonian Dynasty of German kings and emperors, he is generally considered to be the founder and first king of the medieval German state, known until then as East Francia. An avid hunter, he obtained the epithet "the Fowler"[1] because he was allegedly fixing his birding nets when messengers arrived to inform him that he was to be king.
Born in Memleben, in what is now Saxony-Anhalt, Henry was the son of Otto the Illustrious, Duke of Saxony, and his wife Hedwiga, daughter of Henry of Franconia and Ingeltrude and a great-great-granddaughter of Charlemagne. In 906 he married Hatheburg, daughter of the Saxon count Erwin, but divorced her in 909, after she had given birth to his son Thankmar. Later that year he married St Matilda of Ringelheim, daughter of Dietrich, Count of Westphalia. Matilda bore him three sons, one called Otto, and two daughters, Hedwig and Gerberga and founded many religious institutions, including the abbey of Quedlinburg where Henry is buried, and was later canonized.
Henry became Duke of Saxony upon his father's death in 912. An able ruler, he continued to strengthen the position of his duchy within the developing Kingdom of Germany, frequently in conflict with his neighbors to the South, the dukes of Franconia.
Legend of the German crown offered to Henry, Hermann Vogel (1854-1921). On 23 December 918 Conrad I, King of East Francia and Franconian duke, died. Although they had been at odds with each other from 912–15 over the title to lands in Thuringia, before he died Conrad recommended Henry as his successor. Conrad's choice was conveyed by Duke Eberhard of Franconia, Conrad's brother and heir, at the Reichstag of Fritzlar in 919. The assembled Franconian and Saxon nobles duly elected Henry to be king. Archbishop Heriger of Mainz offered to anoint Henry according to the usual ceremony, but he refused to be anointed by a high church official — the only King of his time not to undergo that rite — allegedly because he wished to be king not by the church's but by the people's acclaim. Duke Burchard II of Swabia soon swore fealty to the new King, but Duke Arnulf of Bavaria did not submit until Henry defeated him in two campaigns in 921. Last, Henry besieged his residence at Ratisbon (Regensburg) and forced Arnulf into submission.
In 920, the West Frankish king Charles the Simple invaded Germany and marched as far as Pfeddersheim near Worms, but retired on hearing that Henry was arming against him.[2]
On 7 November 921 Henry and Charles met each other and concluded a treaty of friendship between them. However, with the beginning of civil war in France upon the coronation of King Robert I, Henry sought to wrest the Duchy of Lorraine from the Western Kingdom. In the year of 923 Henry crossed the Rhine twice. Later in the year he entered Lorraine with an army, capturing a large part of the country. Until October of 924 the eastern part of Lorraine was left in Henry's possession.[citation needed]
Henry regarded the German kingdom as a confederation of stem duchies rather than as a feudal monarchy and saw himself as primus inter pares. Instead of seeking to administer the empire through counts, as Charlemagne had done and as his successors had attempted, Henry allowed the dukes of Franconia, Swabia and Bavaria to maintain complete internal control of their holdings. In 925, Duke Gilbert of Lorraine again rebelled. Henry invaded the duchy and besieged Gilbert at Zülpich (Tolbiac), captured the town, and became master of a large portion of his lands. Thus he brought that realm, which had been lost in 910, back into the German kingdom as the fifth stem duchy. Allowing Gilbert to remain in power as duke, Henry arranged the marriage of his daughter Gerberga to his new vassal in 928.
Henry was an able military leader. In 921 Hungarians (Magyars) invaded Germany and Italy. Although a sizable force was routed near Bleiburg in the Bavarian March of Carinthia by Eberhard and the Count of Meran[3] and another group was routed by Liutfried, count of Elsace, the Magyars repeatedly raided Germany. Nevertheless Henry, having captured a Hungarian prince, managed to arrange a ten-year-truce in 926, though he was forced to pay tributes. By doing so he and the German dukes gained time to fortify towns and train a new elite cavalry force.[citation needed]
During the truce with the Magyars, Henry subdued the Polabian Slavs, settling on the eastern border of his realm. In the winter of 928, he marched against the Slavic Hevelli tribes and seized their capital, Brandenburg. He then invaded the Glomacze lands on the middle Elbe river, conquered Gana (Jahna), the capital after a siege, and had a fortress (the later Albrechtsburg) built at Meissen. In 929, with the help of Arnulf of Bavaria, Henry entered Bohemia. Duke Wenceslaus I surrendered his lands, but received them back as a fief of the German crown, agreeing to pay a yearly tribute to the king. Meanwhile, the Slavic Redarii had driven away their chief, captured the town of Walsleben and massacred the inhabitants. Counts Bernard and Thietmar marched against the fortress of Lenzen beyond the Elbe, and, after fierce fighting, completely routed the enemy on 4 September 929. The Lusatians and the Ukrani on the lower Oder were subdued and made tributary in 932 and 934, respectively.[4] However, Henry left no consistent march administration, which was implemented by his successor Otto I.
In 932 Henry finally refused to pay the regular tribute to the Magyars. When they began raiding again, he led a unified army of all German tribes to victory at the Battle of Riade in 933 near the river Unstrut, thus stopping the Magyar advance into Germany. He also pacified territories to the north, where the Danes had been harrying the Frisians by sea. The monk and chronicler Widukind of Corvey in his Res gestae Saxonicae reports that the Danes were subjects of Henry the Fowler. Henry incorporated into his kingdom territories held by the Wends, who together with the Danes had attacked Germany, and also conquered Schleswig in 934.[citation needed]
Henry died of a cerebral stroke on 2 July 936 in his palatium in Memleben, one of his favourite places. By then all German tribes were united in a single kingdom. He was buried at Quedlinburg Abbey, established by his wife Matilda in his honor.
His son Otto succeeded him as Emperor. His second son, Henry, became Duke of Bavaria. A third son, Brun (or Bruno), became archbishop of Cologne. His son from his first marriage, Thankmar, rebelled against his half-brother Otto and was killed in battle in 936. After the death of her husband Duke Giselbert of Lotharingia, Henry's daughter Gerberga of Saxony married King Louis IV of France. His youngest daughter, Hedwige of Saxony, married Duke Hugh the Great of France and was the mother of Hugh Capet, the first Capetian king of France.[citation needed]
Henry returned to public attention as a character in Richard Wagner's opera, Lohengrin (1850), trying to gain the support of the Brabantian nobles against the Magyars. After the attempts to achieve German national unity failed with the Revolutions of 1848, Wagner strongly relied on the picture of Henry as a the actual ruler of all German tribes as advocated by pan-Germanist activists like Friedrich Ludwig Jahn.
Himmler at Henry's grave, 1938There are indications that Heinrich Himmler saw himself as the reincarnation of the first king of Germany.[5] The Nazism ideology referred to Henry as a founding father of the German nation, fighting both the Latin Western Franks and the Slavic tribes of the East, thereby a precursor of the German Drang nach Osten.
Subsequently to his life, Henry the Fowler became attached to the fairy tale motif of an incestous father, as in Allerleirauh or The King Who Wished to Marry His Daughter: after the death of her mother, he wished to marry his own daughter for her beauty, but she succeeds in escaping by performing an impossible task, and he died of chagrin.[6]
He was related to every other king of Germany.
Notes:
1. A fowler is one who hunts wildfowl.
2. Gwatkin ,The Cambridge Medieval History: Volume III. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1926.p 180
3. Menzel, W. Germany from the Earliest Period
4. Gwatkin ,The Cambridge Medieval History: Volume III.
5. Frischauer, Willi. Himmler, the Evil Genius of the Third Reich. London: Odhams, 1953, pages 85-88; Kersten, Felix. The Kersten Memoirs: 1940-1945. New York: Macmillan, 1957, page 238.
6. Margaret Schlauch, Chaucer's Constance and Accused Queens, New York: Gordian Press 1969 p 64
References:
1.Gwatkin, H. M., Whitney, J. P. (ed) et al. The Cambridge Medieval History: Volume III. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1926.
2.Menzel, W. Germany from the Earliest Period . Vol I | Henry I, the Fowler (I11739)
|
115 |
Lady Diana's 14-Great Grandfather. HRH Charles's 13-Great Grandfather
===========================================================
See the will of Sir Edward Greville (d. 22 June 1528), TNA PROB 11/23/20,
============================================================================
also the Greville pedigree in Fetherston, John,
ed., The Visitation of the County of Warwick in the Year 1619, (London: Harleian
Society, 1877), Vol. XII, pp. 28-9 at:
https://archive.org/stream/visitationcount01britgoog#page/n52/mode/2up
===============================================================================
See also the Greville pedigree in Lipscomb, George, The History and Antiquities of the
County of Buckingham, (London: J. & W. Robins, 1847), Vol. I, p. 268 at:
https://books.google.ca/books?id=taAgAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA268
==============================================================================
Sir Edward Greville
BIRTH 1474
Milcote, Stratford-on-Avon District, Warwickshire, England
DEATH 22 Jun 1528 (aged 53–54)
Weston-on-Avon, Stratford-on-Avon District, Warwickshire, England
BURIAL
All Saints Churchyard
Weston-on-Avon, Stratford-on-Avon District, Warwickshire, England
MEMORIAL ID 110320812 · View Source
MEMORIAL
PHOTOS 0
FLOWERS 7
Knight of Milcote-on-Avon, Milcote-on-Stour, Weston Mauduit, Warwickshire, Of Drayton, Oxfordshire, of Alderminster, Worcestershire. Justice of the Peace for Warwickshire.
Son and heir to John Greville of Dayton and Jane Forster. Grandson of Ralph Greville and Margaret Poyntz, and Sir Humphrey Forster.
Husband of Anne Denton, daughter of John Denton and Isabel Brome, daughter of John. They had four sons; John, Sir Fulk, Thomas and Edward.
Edward was knighted for his valiant behaviour at the Sieges of Therouanne and Tournai, and at the Battle of Spurs. He died 22 June 1528 testate, his will requesting burial at St Anne's Chapel, Weston upon Avon.
Source: Richardson's Magna Carta pg 376, and Richardson's Plantagenet pg 599 | GREVILL, Sir Edward (I15106)
|
116 |
Merisa (Brent), Karin (Nick), | CORLEY, Merisa or Karin (I11046)
|
117 |
niece of Pope Callixtus II. | Gisela of Burgundy (I19105)
|
118 |
No issue. | MOYLE, William (I12673)
|
119 |
The accounts of Bethersden in Kent for 1524 charged 'the sexton to give all the parish a warning that the whole parish should appear together the 8th day of January [1525] that they might have a communication of how many kene [=cattle] belonged to the church of Betrysden and also to have a perfect knowledge under what manner or form they were given to the church Footnote: 63 Churchwardens' Accounts at Betrysden, pp. 60-61.
=============================================================================
Lead on a possible father or uncle for Edward is
MYLKSTEDE, STEED John of Great Chart, will proved 1529, Will type AD 3 AB, vol. 7, fol. 89, LDS #0189266
A direct descendant of this fellow has tested Y-chromosone DNA and found to be of haplogroup
I2b1 (M223, P219/S24, P220/S119, P221/S120, P222/U250/S118, P223/S117) (formerly I1b2a - old I1c).
The distribution of Haplogroup I2b1 is closely correlated to that of Haplogroup I1 except in Fennoscandia, which suggests that it was probably harbored by at least one of the Paleolithic refuge populations that also harbored Haplogroup I1; the lack of correlation between the distributions of I1 and I2b1 in Fennoscandia may be a result of Haplogroup I2b1's being more strongly affected in the earliest settlement of this region by founder effects and genetic drift due to its rarity, as Haplogroup I2b1 comprises less than 10% of the total Y-chromosome diversity of all populations outside of Lower Saxony.
The distributions of Haplogroup I1 and Haplogroup I2b1 seem to correlate fairly well with the extent of historical influence of Germanic peoples. Haplogroup I2b1 has been found in over 4% of the population only in Germany , the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, England (not including Wales or Cornwall), Scotland, and the southern tips of Sweden and Norway in Northwest Europe; the provinces of Normandy, Maine, Anjou, and Perche in northwestern France; the province of Provence in southeastern France; the regions of Tuscany, Umbria, and Latium in Italy; and Moldavia and the area around Russia's Ryazan Oblast and Republic of Mordovia in Eastern Europe.
The subclade divergence for M223 occurred 14.6±3.8 kya (Rootsi 2004). One subclade of Haplogroup I2b1, namely I2b1a (M284), has been found almost exclusively among the population of Great Britain, suggesting that the clade may have a very long history in that island.
Of historical note, both haplogroups I1 and I2b appear at a low frequency in the historical regions of Bithynia and Galatia in Turkey, possibly descendants of the ancient Gauls of Thrace, several tribes of which are recorded to have immigrated to those parts of Anatolia at the invitation of Nicomedes I of Bithynia. Haplogroup I2b1 also occurs among approximately 1% of the Sardinians.
Haplogroup I2b1 can be further subdivided in 5 subgroups. Haplogroup I2b1* with no further known polymorphisms, Haplogroup I2b1a with M284 polymorphism with an undergroup Haplogroup I2b1a1 with the L126/S165, L137/S166 polymorphisms, Haplogroup I2b1b with M379 polymorphism, Haplogroup I2b1c with P78 polymorphism, and Haplogroup I2b1d with P95 polymorphism. The age of YSTR variation for the M223 subclade is 13.2±2.7 kya (Rootsi 2004) and 12.3±3.1 kya (Underhill 2007). | MYLSTED, Edward (I4918)
|
120 |
was a medieval marcher lord, residing at Wigmore Castle in the English county of Herefordshire. He was the son of Hugh de Mortimer (d. 26 February 1181) and Matilda Le Meschin. | MORTIMER, Roger DE (I15166)
|
121 |
!Jibba on Rootschat.com descends through this fellow who are her 8th great-grandparents. | AUSTEN, John (I12116)
|
122 |
!Place of residence at time of death was 49 Parkwood Drive, Wasaga Beach, Ontario - this must be Aunt Edie's home.
1968
Dorothy and Ken were living on 81 Kingsview Boulevard, Mississauga, he a machine operator and she a factory worker. I think this is the house in Malton that I remember visiting.
Death of Father Frank Hardman(1892–1961)
9 Dec 1961 • Grand Valley, Ontario, Canada
1961
42
Death of Brother John "Jack" Richard Hardman(1927–1967)
15 Nov 1967 • Orangeville, Ontario, Canada
1967
47
Death of Brother Donald Frank "Gordon" Hardman(1915–1981)
4 Oct 1981 • Grand Valley, Ontario, Canada
1981
61
Death of Mother Margaret Jane McInnes(1893–1983)
15 Nov 1983 • Orangeville, Ontario, Canada | HARDMAN, Kenneth Clifford (I79)
|
123 |
!Ruth and her family emigrated to New Zealand 36 years ago (circa 1966) and live in a very rural area: Ruth, Tony, her husband and their 3 children: Mark born Nov.1956, Clive born July 1960 and Simon born April 1966. 1969 Electoral rolls show them residing at Umukuri, Buller, West Coast, New Zealand. In 1981 the were living at State Highway 60, Upper Takaka, Tasman, New Zealand. Mark Busbridge is listed in the 1981 rolls as a mechanic.
Ruth's birthday was 23 August 1927. She has apparently passed away before 23 Aug 2019 as her son, Clive has posted on his Facebook page that he was taking his father out for lunch as it was her birthday. https://www.facebook.com/clive.busbridge.7 | BODEKER, Ruth Nellie (I6312)
|
124 |
"Clerk of this parish". I believe this to be parish clerk rather than curate or vicar. | CLEVELAND, John (I14657)
|
125 |
"Widow" | DALLIE, Sarah (I5235)
|
126 |
(148). Westminster. Two weeks from St Michael, 4 Henry [IV] [13 October 1402].
Q: Thomas Poldre, by William Emery, put in his place.
D: John Cherche of Canterbury and Christian, his wife.
1 messuage in Canterbury. Plea of covenant. John and Christian have
acknowledged the messuage to be the right of Thomas, as that which he has of
their gift, and have remised and quitclaimed it from themselves and the heirs of
Christian to him and his heirs for ever. Warranty. Thomas has given them 100
shillings of silver.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(175). Westminster. The day after the Purification of the Blessed Mary, 4 Henry
[IV] [3 February 1403]. And afterwards two weeks from Easter in the same year
[29 April 1403].
Q: James atte Cherche and Richard Stud'.
175
D: William Bolynge and Alice, his wife.
1 messuage, 8 acres of land and 1 acre of wood in Hierne and Reyculuere. Plea of
covenant. William and Alice have acknowledged the tenements to be the right of
Richard, as those which Richard and James have of their gift, and have remised
and quitclaimed them from themselves and the heirs of Alice to James and Richard
and the heirs of Richard for ever. Warranty. James and Richard have given them 10
marks of silver.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(171). Westminster. Three weeks from Easter, 4 Henry [IV] [6 May 1403].
Q: Stephen atte Cherche and Thomas Tenham, by John Driland', put in the place
of Thomas.
D: Walter Palmer and Alice, his wife.
1 messuage, 11 acres of land, common of pasture for 60 sheep, 1 gander and 1
goose and a rent of 8 pence in Preston' by Feuersham. Plea of covenant. Walter
27 Buckland by Dover.
174
and Alice have acknowledged the tenements, common and rent to be the right of
Stephen, as those which Stephen and Thomas have of their gift, and have remised
and quitclaimed them from themselves and the heirs of Alice to Stephen and
Thomas and the heirs of Stephen for ever. Warranty. Stephen and Thomas have
given them 10 marks of silver.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1406/7
(348) Westminster: Easter in 3 weeks 8 Henry IV
Q. John Lake
D. John Cromppe and wife Beatrice and John atte Cherche and wife Joan
6 acres land and 1/3 of ½ of a messuage and of 40 acres land in Langle, Sutton
Vallence and Otham. Quitclaim from John Cromppe and Beatrice, John atte
Cherche and Joan and the heirs of Beatrice and Joan to John Lake and his heirs.
John Lake gave 10 marks
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1408/9
(411) Westminster: Michaelmas in one month 10 Henry IV
Q. John Berghere and William Beneyt of Seyntemarycherche in Romene Marsh
D. Thomas atte Cherche and wife Isabel and John Payn and wife Margaret
A messuage and 6 acres land in Seyntemarycherche in Romene Marsh. Quitclaim
from Thomas and Isabel, John Payn and Margaret and the heirs of Isabel and
Margaret to John Berghere and William and the heirs of John. Warrant against the
heirs of Isabel and margaret. John Berghere and William gave 20 marks.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1409/10
(508) Westminster: Morrow of St John Baptist 11 Henry IV
Q. Stephen atte Cherche, Reginald Dreylond, Henry Baksnoth and Stephen
Dreylond
D. Thomas Tenham and wife Joan
A messuage, 32 acres land and 6 acres wood in Sellyng next Chylham. Quitclaim
from Thomas and Joan and the heirs of Joan to Stephen, Reginald, Henry and
Stephen and the heirs of Stephen atte Cherche. Warrant against the heirs of Joan.
Stephen, Reginald, Henry and Stephen gave 20 marks.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aug. 31. 1409
Cranbrook. John Cherche of Stapilherst to John Homersham of Hedecrone the elder. Recognisance for 100l., to be levied etc. in Kent.
Condition, that John Cherche shall abide the award of Richard Norton, Roger Horton, William Cheyne and John Martyn, arbitrators chosen by the parties, touching all plaints and demands which John Homersham and Joan his wife will [lay] before him, in case it be made before Martinmas next, or otherwise the award of William Gascoigne the chief justice or another of the justices of either bench to be by the arbitrators chosen, in case that be made before the quinzaine of St. Hilary next.
John Homersham of Hedecrone the elder to John Cherche of Stapilherst. (Like) recognisance.
(Like) condition in respect of plaints and demands by John Cherche against John Homersham and Joan his wife.
Thomas Horden of Goutherst to the master of Allhallows college Maydeston and John Wotton clerk.
(Like) recognisance.
(Like) condition in respect of the detinue of a writing of acknowledgment touching all plaints and demands against the said Thomas made by John Cherche before the said arbitrators.
[Source: 'Close Rolls, Henry IV: August 1409', in Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry IV: Volume 3, 1405-1409, ed. A E Stamp (London, 1931), pp. 523-529. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-close-rolls/hen4/vol3/pp523-529 [accessed 17 June 2020].]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Henry V, 1418: CP40no629
doc. # 25 Kent debt Boxle, abbot of the Monastery of the BM, in atte Cherch, John, of Staplehurst(?), gent
[http://aalt.law.uh.edu/Indices/CP40Indices/CP40no629/CP40no629Act.htm]
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1424
William Bonnington 1 ? 1424 marriage
Christina,
daughter of
John Cherche
[Source: Politics, Corporation and Commonwealth: The Early
Reformation in Canterbury, c.1450 – 1559. https://kar.kent.ac.uk/60522/1/92FinalCorrectedMaster.pdf]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1456
Elizabeth his wife and to the heirs and assigns of the said Elizabeth. Quitclaim with warranty of the manor of Thrulegh, 40s. of rent in Frithinden and Thrulegh of the tenure of the court of 'Shortwode' in the town of Thrulegh, and a moiety of the advowson of Boucton Maleherbe church co. Kent. Witnesses: James Drylond esquire, William Norton, John Cherche, Thomas Amys, Nicholas Dane. Dated the feast of the Conception of the Virgin Mary, 20 Henry VI.
Memorandum of acknowledgment in chancery at Westminster, 8 February this year.
[Source: 'Close Rolls, Henry VI: April 1456', in Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry VI: Volume 6, 1454-1461, ed. C T Flower (London, 1947), pp. 130-137. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-close-rolls/hen6/vol6/pp130-137 [accessed 17 June 2020].]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1406-7
Jan. 28.
Westminster. To the sheriff of Kent. Like writ, mutatis mutandis, by mainprise of John Cherche, Thomas Adam, John Sherte and Nicholas Stoket of Kent, in favour of John Sharp of Hedecrone the younger, Richard de Elueston and William Broke of Hedecrone in regard to John Parys of Hedecrone.
[Source: 'Close Rolls, Henry IV: Miscellaneous 1406-7', in Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry IV: Volume 3, 1405-1409, ed. A E Stamp (London, 1931), pp. 242-249. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-close-rolls/hen4/vol3/pp242-249 [accessed 17 June 2020].] | CHERCHE, John (I16349)
|
127 |
* This Ella, who inherited by will from her father Buckhurst and other estates in Sussex, in her widowhood endowed Bayham Abbey. See charter in the British Museum, by which she gives permission to the abbot and community to remove their establishment from their convent at Otteham, founded by her father Ralph Dene, to Bayham.
This Ralph de Dene, who possessed large estates in Kent and Sussex, founded Otteham Abbey, for monks of the Premonstratensian order. His son and successor, | DE DENE, Ella (I13148)
|
128 |
* “This ancient family,” says Philpot, “descended from Henry de Apuldrefield, of Apuldrefield, in Coudham, who was in the catalogue of those eminent Kentish gentlemen who were engaged with Richard I. at the siege of Acre, in Palestine.” | DE APULDREFIELD, John (I13130)
|
129 |
***Dence John Terrell Mary m 29 Aug 1608 he widower of Brooke, she widow of Mersham, married at City of Canterbury St. Margaret by licence from the office
Dence John Terrall Mary ml 27 Aug 1608 he of Brook, she widow of Mersham. At St. Margaret's Canterbury. John Logg of Mersham, yeoman, bondsman. | Family (F4205)
|
130 |
-------------------------------------------
IN THE NAME OF GOD, AMEN, the third day of March in the year of our Lord God 1581 and in the 34th year of the reign of our sovereign lady Elizabeth by the grace of God of England, France and Ireland, Queen, defender of the faither, etc., I, MARGARET CLOKE, widow of the parish of Elmsted, in the County of Kent being in good and perfect remembrance God by praised do ordain and make this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following,
First, I will and bequeath my soul unto Almighty God and my body to be buried in the church of Elmsted beside my late husband, JOHN CLOKE.
Item, I bequeath to the poor poeple of the said parish of Elmsted 6 shillings 8 pence to be paid to them within one whole year after my decease by mine Executors.
item, I will to four ment o bear me to the church 16 denarius equally to be delivered.
Item, I bequeath to my daughter BET my best ...sell.
Item, I bequeath to my daughter BULLFINCH my best gown.
Item, I bequeath to my son SAMPSON CLOKE'S wife a bed haser with a cut face.
Item, I bequeath to all my children's chilren two s hillings a piece to be paid within one whole year after my decease.
Item, I bequeath to DANIEL CLOKE my son 30 pounds that is to say 24 pounds in good and lawful money of England and 6 pounds in hansoll scose to be paid to him when he shall accomplish the age of 21 years upon conditions following that is to say that he the said DANIEL shall seal a release to THOMAS CLOKE his brother of all those lands that were JOHN CLOKE's his father provided always that if the said DANIEL CLOKE do refuse to seal a release for the lands and agaytamie for the monavegca? that then he shall lose the benefit of this my said Will and further I will the said 30 pounds to him given shall remain to THOMAS CLOKE 20 pounds thereof and the other ten pounds to remain to EDMAND CLOCK, his brother.
Item, I give and bequeath to ANNES CLOKE my daughter 20 pounds whom I make and ordain my full and sole Executrix of this my last Will and Testament.
Item, I bequeath to JOHN CLOKE my son my wedding ring.
All the residue of my moveable goods, my debts and legacies first contented and paid shall remain to ANNES CLOKE my Executrix.
I make and ordain overseers of this my last Will and Testament HAMAN BET and THOMAS CLOKE to whom I give for their labour 10 shillings a piece.
Item, I bequeath to JOSIAS CLOKE my son the bed in the chamber of the flower alias hustandete.
Item, I bequeath to COMAN CLOKE, my son, his safatvasgaunce one pair of sheets and a boulster.
Item, I bequeath to CATHRYNE my daughter my little gold ring.
Item, I bequeath to my son EDMOND'S wife my best neckercher.
Item, I bequeath to my son THOMAS' wife my mockado kyrchefe.
Item, I bequeath to SAMSON my son avelre? [another?] and alame?
Item, I bequeath to DANIEL my son anethr alaune.
Witness to this my present Will
Thomas Cloke, Samson Cloke, Josias Cloke
and John Mount and 7 others
Probatum fuit huismodi testamentus coram duo officilis 16 May Ao 1582 iurate THOMAS CLOAK, SAMPSON CLOAK, JOHN CLOK and HAMONIS BETT, testim etc
================================================================================
IN THE NAME OF GOD, AMEN, the 23 day of December one thousand five hundred and 26, I, NICOLLAS CLOKE of the parish of Kingsnorth in the County of Kent of my being sick of body but in perfect and good remembrance do ordain and make my last Will and Testament,
First, I bequeath and give my soul unto God Almighty and my body to be buried in the churchyard of the said Kingsnorth.
Item, I give and bequeath to the reparations of the church of the said parish 6 shillings 8 pence to be delivered and paid within one quarter of a year after my decease.
Item, I give to the poor of the said parish 6 shillings 8 pence to be distributed and paid within one quarter of a year after my decease.
Item, I give all my moveable goods unto MARGARET my wife for to pay my debts and legacies and I make and ordain my said wife my sole and only Executor And THOMAS BAYLY her father to be overseer of this my Will. I also I ordain and appoint THOMAS ALLAN clerke and THOMAS ALLEN to be keepers and guardians of ALICE and MARY CLOKE my brother ROBERT CLOKE'S daughters.
This is the last Will and Testament of me the abovesaid NICOLLAS CLOKE for my houses, lands and tenements,
First, I do give and bequeath my house, lands and tenements unto MARGARET my wife for the term of her natural life and after her decease I do give and beqeuath my said houses, lands and tenements unto ALICE CLOKE the daughter of my brother ROBERT CLOKE deceased forever by that condition that the said ALICE CLOKE shall release unto MARY CLOKE her sister her part of the house, lands and tenements that did pertain to their father ROBERT CLOKE called Shepley Hatch. And if the said ALICE CLOKE will not do and make such release unto the said MARY CLOKE her sister of all the lands and tenements that did pertain to their father that then the said MARY shall shift and have part and part like with the said ALICE in my said lands and tenements nothingwithstanding it.
Witnesses at the make of the said Will
Thomas Allen, Clerk
Edward Asherst
Henry Isond with many others | CLOOKE OR CLOKE, Henry (I14171)
|
131 |
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Thurnham, for Turnham, a branch of the house of De Garlande, France. Robert de Turnham paid a fine to the Crown in Kent 1156 (Rot. Pip.), and Robert de Turnham held three fees in Kent 1165, and Michael de Thurnham in Surrey (Lib. Niger). This Robert de Turnham (or his son of the same name) accompanied Richard I. to Palestine, and was in command of the fleet at Cyprus. Stephen de Turnham, his brother, was Viscount of Wilts and Seneschal fo Anjou.
[Source: https://archive.org/details/normanpeopleand00unkngoog. "The Norman people and their existing descendants in the British dominions and the United States of America ..". (London, H.S. King & co., 1874.) p. 418.]
Turnham. Gilbert, Lord of Garlande, in Brie, time of William I., had issue Ansel de Garlande, Seneschal of France 1108, and Gilbert de Garlande, Butler of France; the latter of whom had issue Guy, who purchased Turnham, and went to Palestine in 1147 (Des Bois). He had issue Robert de Turnham, of Kent, 1156, 1165, and Michael de Turnham, of Surrey, 1165. Stephen de Turnham was a baron time of Henry II. and Richard I., and he is mentioned in Normandy 1180-95 (MRS). Stephen de Turnham held in Salop 13th cent. (Testa de Neville).
[Source: "The Norman people and their existing descendants in the British dominions and the United States of America ..". (London, H.S. King & co., 1874.) pp. 425-426]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | DE GARLANDE, Gilbert (I14094)
|
132 |
. . 4 Charles Arthur Frederick Rayner (b. 27 Nov 1923, Lancer, Saskatchewan, Canada, d. 11 Apr 2000, Calgary, Alberta, Canada)
. . . . . . . + Bernice Irene (Bubs) Cawley (b. 24 Feb 1924, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, d. 13 Sep 2002, Calgary, Alberta, Canada)
. . . . . . . . 5 (YB1056053)HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . 5 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN) | RAYNER, Gedmatch Kit YB1056053 (I17616)
|
133 |
.......................................................................................................................................
NB: During the 1841 census the practice of wives retaining their birth surname is common throughout the whole of Scotland but more so in the highlands. This practice stems from the times of heavy interaction between Scotland and France. Even after the time when it became accepted for the woman to take and be known by her husband's surname, once the husband died, the widow then reverted back to using her maiden surname. Consequently, most early to mid-19th century burials of widows are under their maiden surname.
....................................................................................................................................... | Source (S27)
|
134 |
1 (F) Harriet LUTTRELL
Born: c1783
2 (M) Walter Hungerford LUTTRELL
Born: c1784
3 (M) Edward LUTTRELL
Born: c1786
4 (F) Emma LUTTRELL
Born: c1788
5 (M) Robert LUTTRELL
Born: c1789
6 (M) John LUTTRELL
Born: c1789
7 (M) Alfred LUTTRELL
Born: c1792
Died: 10 February 1865, Black Brush, Brighton, Tasmania, Australia
8 (M) Robert Burgess LUTTRELL
Born: c1792
9 (F) Bertha Sarah LUTTRELL
Born: c1794
Died: 17 August 1872, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
10 (F) Malvina LUTTRELL
Born: c1799
Died: 1866, Victoria, Australia
11 (M) Oscar LUTTRELL
Born: c1799
12 (M) Edgar LUTTRELL
Born : c1800
Died: 20 May 1865, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia | WALTER, Martha Maria (I14609)
|
135 |
1. Aged 42 on death registration. | OWLETT, Harriet (I7831)
|
136 |
1. Aged 70 years at time of death.
2. A Baker by the time of the 1841 census, following in his father's footsteeps. | OWLETT, William Webb (I6497)
|
137 |
1. Benjamin was a fisherman.
2. In a message posted on Voy.com on 01:28:26 12/12/06 Hazel Jones says: Hi. I'm trying to trace the ancestors of Eliza Ann Shrubsole, b ~1842. She married Benjamin Jemmett on Aug. 8th 1861 at St Mary of Charity, Faversham and quoted her father's name as George Shrubsole. They had 12 children. Can anyone help? | JEMMETT, Benjamin (I10110)
|
138 |
1. Birth registered 1st Qtr., 1871, vol. 2a, pg 766
2. Peitermaritzburg Archives
DEPOT NAB SOURCE MSCE TYPE LEER VOLUME_NO 0 SYSTEM 01 REFERENCE 2422/1954 PART 1 DESCRIPTION BODEKER, CHARLOTTE. KNOWN AS CHARLOTTE E BODEKER. BORN IN TRAVERSHAM, ENGLAND. PR/SP BODEKER, ALFRED HEINREC STARTING 19540000 ENDING 19550000 | HOUSDEN, Charlotte Eliza (I54)
|
139 |
1. Birth registration: March Qtr. 1889
St. Saviour District, Southwark, Greater London, England (vol 1d, pg 111)
2. In 1911 Ferguson Epps was aged 22, single and boarding in the home of Cyril Upson a Baker of Sheering Street, Sheering, Essex, England. Ferguson claims birth at Southwark.
3. Ferguson W. Epps, 23, single, never been to Canada, emigrating on board the Carthaginian entering harbour at Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada July 1912, final destination Halifax, Nova Scotia to pursue work as a carpenter and joiner.
4. Attestation Paper
Canadian Over-seas Expeditionary Force
Questions to be put before Attestation.
Surname: Epps
Christian names: William Ferguson (#2699764)
Present address: #40 Copp Ave., Amherst, Nova Scotia
Born where: London, England
Next-of-kin: Mrs. Lucy Epps
Address of next-of-kin: #40 Copp Ave. Amherst, Nova Scotia
Relationship: Wife
Date of your birth: Feb 10th 1889
Trade or Calling: Cabinet Maker
Married: Yes
Willing to be vaccinated: Yes
Do you now belong to the Active Militia: Yes
Ever Served in any Military or Naval Force: No
Do you understand the nature and terms of your engagement: Yes
Willing to serve in Canadian Over-seas Expeditionary Force: Yes
Apparent Age - 29 years 5 months
Height- 5 ft 7 ins.
Girth when fully expanded- 38 ins
Range of expansion- 2 ins
Complexion- Fair
Eyes -Blue
Hair- Med. Brown
Church of England religious adherence
No distinguishing marks or tattooes
5. In 1935 Ferguson W. Epps and his wife, simply recorded as Mrs. Ferguson W. Epps, are found on the 1935 electoral rolls for Amherst, Nova Scotia, living at 3 Clifford Street. He is shown as being a cabinet maker. | EPPS, Ferguson William (I3071)
|
140 |
1. On first marriage John was described as being of Canterbury and a Gent. Katharine was described as being a widow from Smeeth.
2. From Freemen of the City of Canterbury 1300 to 1800
Collard, John, brewer. 1598.
3. Canterbury Cathedral Archives: Diocese of Canterbury [DCb/J/J/10 - DCb/J/J/25]
Judicial (Church Courts)
Church Courts: Papers in Ecclesiastical Suits - ref. DCb/J/J
1607
FILE - Ecclesiastical cause papers - ref. DCb/J/J/13/106 - date: 16 Feb 1607
[from Scope and Content] Plaintiff: Magd CHILTON; Defendant: John COLLARD; Documents: Inhib from Arches; Case: D
1612
FILE - Ecclesiastical cause papers - ref. DCb/J/J/17/99 - date: 12 Jan 1612
[from Scope and Content] Plaintiff: Schedule excom (instance); Defendant: John COLLARD St Mart cant
FILE - Ecclesiastical cause papers - ref. DCb/J/J/17/116 - date: 1 Dec 1612
[from Scope and Content] Plaintiff: Matt MARRYNER rect St Mart Cant; Defendant: John COLLARD; Documents: Exs
sub-fonds Judicial (Church Courts)
series Church Courts: Papers in Ecclesiastical Suits
sub-series Ecclesiastical cause papers
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCb-J/J/17/99
Title Ecclesiastical cause papers
Date 12 Jan 1612
Description Pl: Schedule excom (instance); Def.: John COLLARD St Mart cant
PublnNote For abbreviations, see introduction to CCA-DCb-PRC/18
sub-fonds Judicial (Church Courts)
series Church Courts: Papers in Ecclesiastical Suits
sub-series Ecclesiastical cause papers
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCb-J/J/43/50
Title Ecclesiastical cause papers
Date 26 Jun 1623
Description Pl: Eliz COLLARD rel exix; Def.: Cath & Lucy C daus; Documents: Alleg; Case: Test 26 Jun John COLLARD St Mart Cant
PublnNote For abbreviations, see introduction to CCA-DCb-PRC/18 | COLLARD, John (I6233)
|
141 |
1. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Rentals, correspondence and leases, "Cranbrook Rectory Old Surveys etc"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/13/188
PreviousNumbers 47 (red ink, late 19c)
Title Lease
Date 1721
Description Lessor: Dean and Chapter Lessee: Ruck, Lawrence, gentleman, of Ospringe Copton Woods in Preston next Faversham. Made 7 Dec 1721. Endorsed 'Reg 34 Fol 62' (late 19C).
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule vol III, p122
Extent Parchment, 1m
2. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Rentals, correspondence and leases, "Cranbrook Rectory Old Surveys etc"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/13/189
PreviousNumbers 48 (red ink, late 19c)
Title Lease
Date 1728
Description Lessor: Dean and Chapter Lessee: Ruck, Lawrence, gentleman, of Ospringe Copton Woods in Preston next Faversham. Made 25 Nov 1728. Endorsed 'Reg 35 Fol 87' (late 19C).
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule vol III, p122
Extent Parchment, 1m
3. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Rentals, correspondence and leases, "Cranbrook Rectory Old Surveys etc"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/13/190
PreviousNumbers 49 (red ink, late 19c)
Title Lease
Date 1736
Description Lessor: Dean and Chapter Lessee: Ruck, Lawrence, gentleman, of Ospringe Copton Woods in Preston next Faversham. Made 30 Nov 1736. Endorsed 'Reg 36 Fol 87' (late 19C).
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule vol III, p122
Extent Parchment, 1m
4. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Leases, "Preston, Sheldwich and Throwley Rectories, Charing and Egerton, Chislet"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/76/105
PreviousNumbers 64539 (Church Commissioners' number)
Title Lease
Date 1721
Description Lessor: Dean and Chapter Lessee: Ruck, Lawrence, gent, of Ospringe Preston next Faversham rectory. 30 Nov.
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m, seal
Extent Parchment, 1m, seal
5. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Leases, "Preston, Sheldwich and Throwley Rectories, Charing and Egerton, Chislet"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/76/106
PreviousNumbers 64540 (Church Commissioners' number)
Title Lease
Date 1728
Description Lessor: Dean and Chapter Lessee: Ruck, Lawrence, gent, of Ospringe Preston next Faversham rectory. 7 Dec.
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m, seal
Extent Parchment, 1m, seal
6. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Leases, "Preston, Sheldwich and Throwley Rectories, Charing and Egerton, Chislet"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/76/107
PreviousNumbers 64541 (Church Commissioners' number)
Title Lease
Date 1736
Description Lessor: Dean and Chapter Lessee: Ruck, Lawrence, gent, of Ospringe Preston next Faversham rectory. 30 Nov.
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m, seal
Extent Parchment, 1m, seal
7. sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Leases, "Preston, Sheldwich and Throwley Rectories, Charing and Egerton, Chislet"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/76/108
PreviousNumbers 64542 (Church Commissioners' number)
Title Lease
Date 1744
Description Lessor: Dean and Chapter Lessee: Ruck, Lawrence, gent, of Ospringe Preston next Faversham rectory. 29 Jun.
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m, seal
Extent Parchment, 1m, seal
8. fonds CHURCH COMMISSIONERS 1966 DEPOSIT
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-U63/64483
Title Counterpart lease
Date 7 Dec 1721
Description To Lawrence Ruck. Land in the parishes of Preston next Faversham and Faversham; Copton Manor and Selgrave Manor and Woods
Extent 1 doc
9. fonds CHURCH COMMISSIONERS 1966 DEPOSIT
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-U63/64484
Title Counterpart lease
Date 25 Nov 1728
Description To Lawrence Ruck. Land in the parishes of Preston next Faversham and Faversham; Copton Manor and Selgrave Manor and Woods
Extent 1 doc
10. fonds CHURCH COMMISSIONERS 1966 DEPOSIT
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-U63/64485
Title Counterpart lease
Date 30 Nov 1736
Description To Lawrence Ruck. Land in the parishes of Preston next Faversham and Faversham; Copton Manor and Selgrave Manor and Woods
Extent 1 doc
11. fonds CHURCH COMMISSIONERS 1966 DEPOSIT
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-U63/64486
Title Counterpart lease
Date 29 Jun 1744
Description To Lawrence Ruck. Land in the parishes of Preston next Faversham and Faversham; Copton Manor and Selgrave Manor and Woods
Extent 1 doc | RUCK, Lawrence (I1527)
|
142 |
1. Age on death registration 43, which indicates that she died unmarried. | HOLLIDAY, Winnifred Mabel (I10393)
|
143 |
1. Church of England, Canterbury Cathedral Archives, Archdeacon's Transcript (U.S.A., Salt Lake City: Genealogical Society of Utah), Brook, Kent, England, 27 Sep 1625, Family History Library, 35 North West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150, USA.
"she "eius matertera ----?" [his mother's sister i.e. his maternal aunt, or his or a kind of "goddess" ----?]."
2. Joseph Meadows Cowper and Arthur J. Willis, Marriage Licences, Archdeaconry of Canterbury (England, Canterbury: Cross and Jackman, 1892-1898, c1967-1971), vol. 2, 1619-1660, col. 37, 24 Sep 1625, Family History Library, 35 North West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150, USA.
"Valentine Austen, of Brook, yeoman, bachelor, about 30, and Jane Terrell, of the same, virgin, about 22, daughter of Mary Terrell, alias Dence of the same place, widow, who consents. At the same."
Dence, John of Hinxhill, husbandman, bachelor, about 26 and Joan Terrall, of the same place, virgin, about 22, daughter of John Terrall, of the same place, husbandman, who consents, as is testified by his son, John Terrall, of the same place, husbandman. At. St. Margaret's Canterbury. Cornelius Houslock of Canterbury, tapster, bondsman. April 6, 1637. | TERRALL, Jane (I4697)
|
144 |
1. Name Thomas STACEY died 26 Jul 1892 aged 71 born – – – Memorial type Flat Stone notes Husband of Maria. See also COX Reference 13004 Parish Westbury-sub-Mendip (CofE)
1. Name Tom H. STACEY Relationship Head Condition M Gender M Age 48 Occupation Gardener N D Birthplace Castle Cary, Somerset, England Address Small Way, Castle Cary, Somerset, England PRO ref RG11/2395 Folio 84 Page 21 FHL film no. 1341576
Amount paid £0.00
2. Name Louisa M. STACEY Relationship Wife Condition M Gender F Age 45 Occupation ((Gardener His Wife)) Birthplace Faversham, Kent, England Address Small Way, Castle Cary, Somerset, England PRO ref RG11/2395 Folio 84 Page 21 FHL film no. 1341576
Amount paid £0.00
3. Name John N. STACEY Relationship Son Condition – Gender M Age 13 Occupation Errand Boy Work In ((Builders Yard)) Birthplace Castle Cary, Somerset, England Address Small Way, Castle Cary, Somerset, England PRO ref RG11/2395 Folio 84 Page 21 FHL film no. 1341576
Amount paid £0.00
4. Name Richard H. STACEY Relationship Son Condition – Gender M Age 12 Occupation Scholar Birthplace Castle Cary, Somerset, England Address Small Way, Castle Cary, Somerset, England PRO ref RG11/2395 Folio 84 Page 21 FHL film no. 1341576
Amount paid £0.00
5. Name William J. STACEY Relationship Son Condition – Gender M Age 10 Occupation Scholar Birthplace Castle Cary, Somerset, England Address Small Way, Castle Cary, Somerset, England PRO ref RG11/2395 Folio 84 Page 21 FHL film no. 1341576
Amount paid £0.00
6. Name Louisa M. STACEY Relationship Daug Condition – Gender F Age 8 Occupation Scholar Birthplace Castle Cary, Somerset, England Address Small Way, Castle Cary, Somerset, England PRO ref RG11/2395 Folio 84 Page 21 FHL film no. 1341576
Amount paid £0.00
7. Name Effie E. STACEY Relationship Daug Condition – Gender F Age 5 Occupation Scholar Birthplace Castle Cary, Somerset, England Address Small Way, Castle Cary, Somerset, England PRO ref RG11/2395 Folio 84 Page 21 FHL film no. 1341576
Amount paid £0.00 | NUTT, Louisa Marie (I2998)
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1. On a Mural Monument on ye S, Side of ye Chancell. [Barry of 6 gu. & arg. a chief erm THOMSON imp. MOULT Sa. 3 bars wavy or, in chief 3 fl.de lis or]. Memoriae Sacrum. Henrici Thomson de Chartham, in Agro Cantiano; sed, Hospitij Interioris Templi, Alumni. Qui cum ad Quinquagesimum Septimum Aetatis suae Annum, Vitam, honestè, et pie; (sic) transegisset, Vicesimo Nono Die Septembris Anno Salutis reparatae, Millesimo, Septingentisimo, (sic) Tricesimo Secundo, in certâ Resurrectionis Spe, Animan Deo, Ossa Terrae, commisit. E Luciâ Filiâ Georgij Moult, de London, Armigeri, Filium habuit Unicum, Qui hoc Monumentum Patri optimo, Maerens, posuit.2. Underneath, within ye Rails, is ye following Inscription, in Engh. for ye same Henry Thomson on a Flat Stone. Here lies interr’d Henry Thomson, late of ye Inner Temple, London Esq. Son of Thomas Thomson, of Chartham, in ye County of Kent, by Phoebe, Daughter of Anthony HAMMOND, of St Albans, in ye Parish of Nonnington Esq. He married Lucy, Daughter of Mr. George MOULT, of London, by whom He left one Son. He died September ye 29th 1732. Aged 57. | THOMSON, Henry (I6573)
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10/21 1747
Stephen Sutton of Chilham in Kent, barber and Thomas son of John Worger - apprenticeship | WORGER, John (I10552)
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11 Mar 1815 James (x) RUCK B Molash & Ann (x) MEPSTED S Wye Banns William Terry, John (x) Mepsted with consent of parents | Family (F4775)
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11 Nov 1917 • St John the Evangelist, Wembley, London, Middlesex. England | Family (F5609)
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11. Another. In Hopes of a Joyfull Resurrection, Here lies buried The Body of Thomas LEFFROY, of ye Parish of All Saints, in the City of Canterbury, descended from ye Leffroys of ye City of Cambray in France. He married Phoebe Second Daughr. of Thomas, Second Son of Henry Thomson of Kentfield In this Parish Esq. by Phoebe Daughter of Anthony HAMMOND of St. Albans in ye Parish of Nunnington, Esq. Who had Issue 4 Sons nd 5 Daughters. Only 2 survive. viz: Anthony and Lucy. He died ye 3d. of Nov. 1723. Aged 43 Years. | LEFROY, Thomas (I8558)
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12. Another. In Hopes of a Joyfull Resurrection. Here lies buried The Body of Mary THOMSON, Eldest Daughter of Thomas Thomson, 2d. Son of Henry Thomson of Kentfield in this Parish Esq. by Phoebe Daughter of Anthony HAMMOND, of St Albans in The Parish of Nunnington Esq. She departed this Life Nov. 27 1740. Aged 63 Years. | THOMSON, Mary (I6577)
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