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John died unmarried and left a Will.
This is the Ruck fellow who owned Shepherd's Fostal in Sheldwich - see his Will whereby he bequeaths it to Nicholas Oliver.
"SHEPHERDS FORSTAL is an estate in the north-east part of this parish, which takes its name from the green or fostal of that name near which it is situated, and was for many descents in the possession of the family of Ruck, one of whom lies buried at Rye, and was a person of some note in the reign of Henry VIII. being bow-bearer to that prince, and bore for his coat armour, as appears by his grave-stone, Sable, a plain cross, argent, between four fleurs de lis, or. The last of this name, who possessed this estate, was Nicholas Ruck, who about the latter end of queen Elizabeth's reign dying s. p. gave it to his nephew Mr. Nicholas Oliver, who soon after the death of Charles I. passed it away, with other estates in the adjoining parishes of Selling, to the president and fellows of Corpus Christi college, in Oxford, in whom it still continues vested." [Source: Citation:
Hasted, Edward. 'Parishes: Sheldwich.' The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent: Volume 6. Canterbury: W Bristow, 1798. 481-498. British History Online. Web. 16 March 2016. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-kent/vol6/pp481-498.] | RUCK, John ^ (I5822)
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| 2002 |
John Dodd assessed 25 Mar 1664 at Sevington Borough for 3 hearths (Hearth Tax Returns) along with Stephen Dodd in the same place for 2 hearths.
fonds NEW ROMNEY BOROUGH
series Court files
Repository East Kent Archives Centre
Level file
RefNo EK-NR/JBf/26
Title Court file
Date 1665-1666
Removal order for John Dodd, wife and six children to the parish of Brooke from New Romney Borough. 6 Jan. 1665/6 | DODD, John (I3858)
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| 2003 |
John Edward Gregory died d.s.p.. During the last meeting that I had with Roy Lumb before his death in 1997, Roy let me read the diary that John Edward had kept. He, John Edward, had quite a fantastic life and a loving and wonderful wife. Unfortunately, John Edward was prone to long bouts of depression and eventually hung himself from a tree in the outback of Australia. Apparently a brush fire had ripped through the area sometime after his death as when his body was discovered it was charred beyond recognition. Only a few of his personal belongings had survived such as a watch and ring by which his widow was able to identify the remains. The diary of John Edward was given to Roy Lumb through his mother. Had I known, at the time that that was the last time I was to see Roy Lumb I would have taken the time to transcribe or copy the diary. At this point, if the diary still exists it would be with either Sheila, Roy's widow, or with one of Roy's children. | GREGORY, John Edward Savin ^ (I2386)
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| 2004 |
John Epps left Kent early in life after obtaining his teaching degree. He eventually made his way to the Lyceum in St. Petersburg, Russia which was a high school for young nobles who were preparing for diplomatic life. During 1904 John was selected from the Lyceum to take the post of English tutor to the four Grand Duchesses, the children of Czar Nicholas II and Alexandria. That is a post he held until shortly before the tragic events of 1918. After John's death, a ring that had been presented to him by Czar Nicholas, was given as a bequest to Florence Dorothy Nutt, his grand-niece.
Gilberts Books - the publishing division of Royal Russia - is pleased to present its latest title - The Forgotten Tutor: John Epps and the Romanovs is the first book written about the virtually unknown tutor to the Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia, between the years 1905-1914.
In December 1914 the eldest daughter of the last Tsar sent her former tutor a photographic portrait of herself. The soulful picture, signed ‘Olga 1914’, was the last communication the devoted tutor received from any of his former pupils. In July 1918 the family of Nicholas II were brutally murdered by a Bolshevik firing squad in the basement of the Ipatiev House in Ekaterinburg.
After his return to England in 1914, John Epps took particular pains to preserve his Imperial mementoes. Over nine years - between 1905 and 1914 - he collected every letter, card and drawing he received from the ill-fated children. About 30 of his papers were discovered more than a decade ago at Maggs Bros. Ltd., an antiquarian book dealer in London, England. They had lain untouched at the bottom of a tin document drawer for nearly 70 years.
Janet Epps - an Australian descendant of the tutor - and Dr. Gabriella Lang tell the story of John Epps, who arrived in Russia in 1880 to take up a post in an English school. From 1900, he was employed as a teacher at the Imperial Lyceum in Tsarskoye Selo.
It was not until 1905, however, that he was offered the position of tutor to the four daughters of Russia's last tsar. On Monday April 25th, 1905, John Epps arrived at the Alexander Palace where he was met by Princess Sonia Orbeliani - the Tsarina’s lady-in-waiting who took him to schoolroom, where he encountered “a tall, slender woman.” He describes this meeting: “Have I the honour of speaking to the Tsarina?” he asked hesitantly. “Yes, you do,” she replied. His new August employer smiled and did her best to make him at ease.
Many of John Epps’ observations of the grand duchesses are now preserved in the pages of this charming book. To John Epps, they had not been historical figures but real people with whom he had a relationship and these historical documents were tangible proof of that.
The highlight of the book are the reproductions of the letters, cards and drawings created by the grand duchesses for their beloved tutor, and published for the first time in The Forgotten Tutor. These childish drawings and sketches - so lovingly prepared and just as lovingly collected and carefully preserved - coupled with Epps' impressions of life in the Alexander Palace, tell of a different age, a magical world that ended so brutally. The stage is now set for John Epps' story to be told, for acknowledgement of his contribution to the rich tapestry of the Romanov saga and - most importantly - to finally bring these poignant personal mementoes of the last tsar and his family into the public arena.
The Forgotten Tutor: John Epps and the Romanovs is the 25th title published by Gilbert's Books - the publishing division of Royal Russia - since 1994. | EPPS, John (I3012)
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| 2005 |
John Harris (1689–1767) of Hayne, younger brother, Master of the Household to King George II and to his son King George III of the House of Hanover, thus known as Hanover Jack.[3] He married Margaret Tuckfield (1686–1754), a daughter of Roger Tuckfield of Raddon, Devon, and widow of the wealthy Samuel Rolle (died 1717) of Heanton Satchville, Petrockstowe, Devon, MP, elected to Parliament 18 times. Rolle's daughter and sole heiress by Margaret Tuckfield was Margaret Rolle, 15th Baroness Clinton (1709–1781). | HARRIS, John (I17433)
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| 2006 |
John Harris (c. 1586 – 1657), son and heir, of Hayne and of St. Michael's Mount in Cornwall,[9] was a Member of Parliament. His elaborate monument with three kneeling effigies is in Lifton Church. He married twice:
Firstly to Florence Wyndham (1595-1630/1), a daughter of Sir John Wyndham (1558–1645) of Orchard Wyndham in the parish of Watchet, Somerset. She died childless, aged 35.
Secondly to Cordelia Mohun, a daughter of John Mohun, 1st Baron Mohun of Okehampton, by whom he had children:
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https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1604-1629/member/harris-john-ii-1586-1657
HARRIS, John II (c.1586-1657), of St. Michael's Mount, Cornw. and Hayne, Stowford, Devon
Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1604-1629, ed. Andrew Thrush and John P. Ferris, 2010
Available from Cambridge University Press
Biography Detail
Constituency
Family & Education
Offices Held
Biography
End Notes
Related Resources
1604-1629 Members
1604-1629 Constituencies
1604-1629 Parliaments
1604-1629 Surveys
PREVIOUS
BIOGRAPHY
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BIOGRAPHY
ConstituencyDates
LAUNCESTON (DUNHEVED)
1621
BERE ALSTON
28 Apr. 1640
LAUNCESTON (DUNHEVED)1
c. Nov. 1641
Family and Education
b. c.1586, 1st s. of Arthur Harris of Hayne and Kenegie, Gulval, Cornw. and Margaret, da. and h. of John Davells of S. Marland, Petrockstow, Devon.2 educ. Exeter Coll. Oxf. 1603; L. Inn 1607;3 travelled abroad (France), 1608-?1611.4 m. (1) post-nuptial settlement 1 Dec. 1625 (with £2,000),5 Florence (d. 1 Jan. 1631), da. of Sir John Wyndham of Orchard Wyndham, St. Decumans, Som., s.p.; (2) lic. 4 Nov. 1631 (with £3,000), Cordelia, da. of John Mohun*, 1st Bar. Mohun of Okehampton, 1s. suc. fa. 1628. d. 6 Mar. 1657.6 sig. John Harris.
Offices Held
Commr. piracy, Devon 1619-20, 1624, Cornw. 1624, 1626,7 impressment 1623,8 sewers, Devon 1627, swans, W. Country 1629,9 assessment, Devon 1641-2, 1644, 1647-8;10 j.p. Devon 1641-2, 1643-at least 1647, Cornw. from 1647;11 commr. execution of parl. ordinances, W. Country 1644, militia, Devon 1648.12
Biography
Of the several strands of the Harris family resident in Devon and Cornwall in the early seventeenth century, the branch seated at Hayne was by far the most prosperous. At the time of his death in 1628, Harris’ father Arthur owned nearly 4,200 acres, including ten manors, a total far in excess of the estates amassed by his distant cousin John Harris I*. Much of this property was located near Hayne, in north-west Devon, but Arthur’s captainship of St. Michael’s Mount in Cornwall had also encouraged him to acquire lands in that vicinity. In addition, he possessed several houses in London, close to St. Paul’s Cathedral.13 A magistrate in both Devon and Cornwall, Arthur was also related through his mother to the government ministers Sir Fulke Greville* and Sir Edward Conway I*, and in the 1624 parliamentary elections he nearly secured a seat for the latter at St. Ives.14
Harris enjoyed an extended education, culminating in 1608 with a three-year licence for foreign travel. Greville reportedly sent him advice in November 1609 on how best to profit from his sojourn in France.15 Harris entered Parliament for the first time in 1621, sitting for Launceston, a borough situated just a few miles from Hayne. Whatever he learnt from the experience, he left no mark on the Commons’ records. Although named to assorted West Country commissions during the 1620s, he apparently lacked the appetite for an active career. Writing to his kinsman Secretary Conway in 1625 to recommend a friend for a military command in the Cadiz expedition, he confessed his own lack of judgment in martial affairs, and pleaded a general inability to do Conway good service.16 Nevertheless, he required the secretary of state’s assistance in 1628. The death of Arthur Harris in that year terminated his family’s interest in St. Michael’s Mount, which passed into the hands of the 2nd earl of Salisbury (William Cecil*). However, Harris refused to surrender the castle’s ordnance stores until a Privy Council warrant of discharge was obtained through Conway. Salisbury subsequently sued Harris for retaining documents concerning property linked to the Mount.17
Harris inherited the bulk of his father’s lands, with the possible exception of one manor, and he benefited further by the death in 1634 of his mother, who was herself heiress to six Devon manors. Ten years later the annual value of his estate was estimated at £1,000.18 He was elected to the Short Parliament in a contest at Bere Alston, and entered the Long Parliament in late 1641 as a Launceston burgess once again, following the expulsion from the Commons of William Coryton*. Despite the aggressive royalism of his brother-in-law, Warwick, Lord Mohun, Harris sided with Parliament during the Civil War. However, he was secluded during Pride’s Purge in 1648, and seems to have rapidly fallen out with the Commonwealth regime. Around June 1649 he had several swords confiscated while visiting a staunch Cornish royalist, Sir Richard Vyvyan†. In February 1651 it was rumoured that ‘one Harris ... of the west of Devonshire or Cornwall, formerly in the Parliament’s service’, was abetting plans for a royalist landing in the region.19 Harris drew up his will on 5 Feb. 1657, expressing his ‘assured hope of salvation’, and laying down detailed provisions to cover the minority of his infant son Arthur. He died a month later, and was buried at Lifton, near Hayne. Arthur in his turn entered the Commons in 1671.20
Ref Volumes: 1604-1629
Author: Paul Hunneyball
Notes
1.Secluded at Pride’s Purge, 6 Dec. 1648.
2.Vivian, Vis. Devon, 449.
3.Al. Ox; LI Admiss.
4.SO3/4; HMC Cowper, i. 483-4.
5.Devon RO, 2527 M/TS14.
6.Vivian, 449; Devon RO, 2527 M/TS16.
7.C181/2, f. 348; 181/3, ff. 2, 113v, 130v, 196.
8.APC, 1621-3, p. 437.
9.C181/3, f. 217v; 181/4, f. 3.
10.SR, v. 61, 83, 150; A. and O. i. 545, 963, 1080.
11.C231/5, pp. 457, 507; 231/6, p. 78; Devon RO, QS 28/1-4.
12.A. and O. i. 460, 1236.
13.C142/440/85; Vivian, 447, 449; T. Taylor, St. Michael’s Mount, 158-60.
14.T. Rymer, Foedera, viii. pt. 2, pp. 5-6; Vis. Warws. (Harl. Soc. xii), 25, 27, 29; SP14/158/47.
15.He matriculated at Oxf. in 1603 aged 17 as ‘John Harris of Devon’, and most likely also entered L. Inn in 1607 using the same name and suffix. HMC Cowper, i. 483-4; F. Greville, Certain Learned and Elegant Works (1633), pp. 295-8.
16.SP16/521/79.
17.CSP Dom. 1628-9, pp. 218, 220; APC, 1628-9, p. 52; C2/Chas.I/S41/14.
18.C142/440/85; 142/750/97; PROB 11/154, f. 32; Vivian, 449; Diary of Richard Symonds ed. C.E. Long (Cam. Soc. lxxiv), 44.
19.M.F. Keeler, Long Parl. 204; FSL, X.d.483 (41); HMC Portland, i. 559.
20.PROB 11/265, ff. 220v-1v; Vivian, 449. | HARRIS, John (I16966)
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| 2007 |
John Holland, 1st Duke of Exeter, 1st Earl of Huntingdon (c. 1352 – 16 January 1400), KG, of Dartington Hall in Devon,[1] was a half-brother of King Richard II (1377–1399), to whom he remained strongly loyal. He is primarily remembered for being suspected of assisting in the downfall of King Richard's uncle Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester (1355–1397) (youngest son of King Edward III) and then for conspiring against King Richard's first cousin and eventual deposer, Henry Bolingbroke, later King Henry IV (1399–1413).
Origins
He was the third son of Thomas Holland by his wife Joan of Kent, "The Fair Maid of Kent". Joan was daughter of Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent, a son of King Edward I (1272–1307), and Thomas would be made Earl of Kent, in what is considered a new creation, as husband of Joan, in whom the former Earldom was vested as eventual heiress of Edmund of Woodstock. Joan later married Edward, the Black Prince, the eldest son and heir apparent of her first cousin King Edward III, by whom she had a son King Richard II, who was thus a half-brother of John Holland.
Political career
The great hall at Dartington, built by the 1st Duke of Exeter
Interior of the great hall at Dartington (restored 20th.c)
Early in King Richard's reign, Holland was made a Knight of the Garter (1381). He was also part of the escort that accompanied the queen-to-be, Anne of Bohemia, on her trip to England.
Holland had a violent temper, which got him in trouble several times. The most famous incident occurred during Richard II's 1385 expedition to Scotland. An archer in the service of Ralph Stafford, eldest son of Hugh Stafford, 2nd Earl of Stafford, killed one of Holland's esquires. Stafford went to find Holland to apologize, but Holland killed him as soon as he identified himself.[2] King Richard thereupon ordered the forfeiture of Holland's lands. The mother of both Holland and Richard II, Joan of Kent, died shortly afterwards, it was said of grief at the quarrel between her sons.
Early in 1386 Holland reconciled with the Staffords, and had his property restored. Later in 1386 he married Elizabeth of Lancaster, a daughter of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster (younger brother of the Black Prince), by his wife Blanche of Lancaster. He and Elizabeth then went on Gaunt's expedition to Spain, where Holland was appointed constable of the English army. After his return to England, on 2 June 1388 Holland was created Earl of Huntingdon, by Act of Parliament.[3] In 1389 he was appointed Lord Great Chamberlain for life, Admiral of the Fleet in the Western Seas,[4] and constable of Tintagel Castle in Cornwall. During this time he also received large grants of land from King Richard.
Over the next few years he held a number of additional offices: Constable of Conway Castle (1394); Governor of Carlisle Castle (1395); Warden (1398) later Constable-General, of the West Marches towards Scotland. His military service was interrupted by a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1394.
In 1397 Holland had marched with King Richard to arrest the latter's uncle Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester, and Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Arundel, and later seized and held Arundel Castle at the king's request.[5] As a reward, on 29 September 1397 he was created Duke of Exeter.[6]
In 1399 he accompanied King Richard on his expedition to Ireland. Following their return the king sent him to try to negotiate with his own first cousin and Holland's brother-in-law Henry Bolingbroke, son of John of Gaunt. After Bolingbroke deposed Richard in 1399 and took the throne as King Henry IV (1399–1413), he called to account those who had been involved in the arrest and downfall of his uncle Thomas of Woodstock, and confiscated all rewards and titles received by them from King Richard. Thus Holland was stripped of his dukedom, becoming again merely Earl of Huntingdon.
Early in 1400 Holland entered into a conspiracy, known as the Epiphany Rising, with his nephew Thomas Holland, Earl of Kent, and with Thomas le Despencer, 1st Earl of Gloucester, and others. Their aim was to assassinate King Henry and his sons, and to return Richard, then in prison, to the throne. The plot failed and Holland fled, but was caught, near Pleshey Castle in Essex, and executed on 16 January 1400. Among those who witnessed the execution was Arundel's son, Thomas Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel.
Holland's lands and titles were forfeited, but eventually they were restored to his second son John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter.[7]
Marriage and children
In 1386 he married Elizabeth of Lancaster, a daughter of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster (younger brother of the Black Prince) by his wife Blanche of Lancaster, by whom he had children including:
Sons
Richard Holland (died 3 September 1400), eldest son and heir, who survived his father only 7 months
John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon (1395–1447), second son, to whom in 1416 (after the death of his elder brother) was restored his father's dukedom.
Sir Edward Holland (c. 1399 – after 1413)
Daughters
Constance Holland (1387–1437), married first Thomas Mowbray, 4th Earl of Norfolk, married second Sir John Grey, KG
Elizabeth Holland (c. 1389 – 1449)
Alice Holland (c. 1392 – c. 1406), married Richard de Vere, 11th Earl of Oxford
Death
He was executed on 16 January 1400, following the failure of the Epiphany Rising conspiracy against King Henry IV.
His body was buried at the collegiate church in Pleshey. His tomb remained until the late 16th century, when, along with many other tombs in the church, it was broken up for use as building material. Only a fragment remained within the church by the start of the 17th century. [8]
Ancestry
Ancestors of John Holland, 1st Duke of Exeter
References
Hoskins, W.G., A New Survey of England: Devon, London, 1959 (first published 1954), p.382
Goodman 1971, p. 48.
Goodman 1971, p. 47.
Goodman 1971, p. 53.
Goodman 1971, p. 66.
Goodman 1971, p. 71.
Allmand 1992, p. 372.
Ancient Fvnerall Monvments with in the Vnited Monarchie of Great Britaine, 1632, John Weever, pp 637
Bibliography
Allmand, Christopher (1992). Henry V. University of California Press.
"Sir John Holland kills Lord Ralph Stafford". Froissart's Chronicles.
Goodman, Anthony (1971). The Loyal Conspiracy:The Lords Appellant under Richard II. University of Miami Press.
Hardy, W. H. (1891). "John Holand, duke of Exeter and earl of Huntingdon (1352?-1400)". Dictionary of National Biography. 27: 147–148.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Holland,_1st_Duke_of_Exeter | HOLLAND, John 1st Duke of Exeter (I9346)
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| 2008 |
John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon KG (29 March 1395 – 5 August 1447) was an English nobleman and military commander during the Hundred Years' War. His father, the 1st Duke of Exeter, was a maternal half-brother to Richard II of England, and was executed after King Richard's deposition. The Holland family estates and titles were forfeited, but John was able to recover them by dedicating his career to royal service. Holland rendered great assistance to his cousin Henry V in his conquest of France, fighting both on land and on the sea. He was marshal and admiral of England and governor of Aquitaine under Henry VI.[4]
Origins
He was the second son of John Holland, 1st Duke of Exeter, by his wife Elizabeth of Lancaster. His paternal grandparents were Thomas Holland, 1st Earl of Kent, and Joan of Kent (a grand-daughter of King Edward I), who after Holland's death had married Edward, the Black Prince. His father was a half-brother of King Richard II of England, and through his mother he was nephew of Henry IV of England, a first cousin of Henry V of England, and a first cousin once removed of Henry VI of England.
Career
Holland was just a boy when his father conspired against Henry IV and was attainted and executed. Nevertheless, he was given a chance to serve Henry V in the 1415 campaign in France, where he distinguished himself at Agincourt. The next year Holland was restored in blood and to his father's earldom of Huntingdon, and was made a Knight of the Garter. (His older brother Richard had died in 1400). Over the next five years he held various important commands with the English forces in France and in 1420 was made Constable of the Tower of London. He was captured by the French in 1421 at the Battle of Baugé and spent four years in captivity, not being released until 1425.
Marriages and issue
He married three times:
Firstly on 6 March 1427 to Lady Anne Stafford (d. 20 or 24 September 1432), widow of Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March, and daughter of Edmund Stafford, 5th Earl of Stafford.[5] By Anne he had two children:
Henry Holland, 3rd Duke of Exeter (1430–1475).
Lady Anne Holland (d. 26 December 1486), who married firstly, Sir John Neville (d. before 16 March 1450), son of her second cousin Ralph Neville, 2nd Earl of Westmorland. The marriage is said to have been unconsummated. She was married secondly to her second cousin, John Neville, Baron Neville (uncle of her first husband), slain at the Battle of Towton on 29 March 1461. She married thirdly, James Douglas, 9th Earl of Douglas.
Secondly on 20 January 1433 he married Beatrice of Portugal;
Thirdly he married Lady Anne Montagu (d. 28 November 1457), a daughter of John Montacute, 3rd Earl of Salisbury.
Mistresses
By an unnamed mistress or mistresses he also had several illegitimate children, two of whom he named in his will.[citation needed] William, Thomas and Robert, the so-called "Bastards of Exeter", were active in the Lancastrian struggles, and Stow reported that two of them were among the notable dead at the Battle of Towton.[6]
Appointments
In July 1416 he was appointed Lieutenant General to High Admiral of England Thomas Beaufort, Duke of Exeter (the post later became known as Lieutenant of the Admiralty) until 1435.[7] In November 1432 he was made Deputy Marshall of England until September 1436.[8] In 1435 he was appointed High Admiral of England, Ireland and Aquitaine. In March 1438 Holand was appointed Commander of the Army for relieving the castle of Guînes.[9] In 1439 he was made the king's lieutenant in Aquitaine. He was made count of Ivry in France by John, Duke of Bedford. Holland recovered his father's dukedom of Exeter on 6 January 1443/1444,[10] and was given precedence just below the Duke of York. He was succeeded as duke by his son Henry.
Death and burial
There is an effigy of this John Holland in the Chapel of St. Peter ad Vincula in the Tower of London.
References
Griffiths 2004.
Cokayne, Gibbs & Doubleday 1926, p. 205.
Richardson 2011, p. 23.
Chisholm 1911, p. 65.
"The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13530.
Richardson 2011, p. 138.
Walker, J. A. (January 1979). "John Holand, A Fifteenth-Century Admiral". The Mariner's Mirror. 65 (3): 235–242. doi:10.1080/00253359.1979.10659150.
Walker
Walker
Richardson 2011, p. 135.
Sources
Wikisource-logo.svg Chisholm, H., ed. (1911). "Exeter, Earl, Marquess and Duke of". Encyclopædia Britannica 11th ed. 10. Cambridge University Press.
Cokayne, G.; Gibbs, V.; Doubleday, H.A., eds. (1926). The Complete Peerage. 5 (2nd ed.). London: St. Catherine Press. pp. 205–11.
Griffiths, R.A. (2004). "Holland, John, first duke of Exeter (1395–1447)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online). doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13530. Missing or empty |url= (help) First edition available at Wikisource: Hardy, W. (1891), "Holland, John, Duke of Exeter and Earl of Huntingdon (1395–1447)" , in Lee, Sidney (ed.), Dictionary of National Biography, 27, London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Richardson, D. (2011). Kimball G. Everingham (ed.). Magna Carta Ancestry. 2 (2nd ed.). ISBN 978-1-4499-6638-6.
External links
John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter at Find a Grave
Stansfield, M. (13 January 1987). The Hollands, Dukes of Exeter, Earls of Kent and Huntingdon, 1352–1475 (PDF) (PhD). Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 September 2018.
Walker, J. (1979). "John Holand, a fifteenth-century admiral". Mariner's Mirror. 65 (3): 235–242. doi:10.1080/00253359.1979.10659150.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Holland,_2nd_Duke_of_Exeter | HOLLAND, John 2nd Duke of Exeter (I14891)
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| 2009 |
John is the son of William Judge, alabourer, John is a blacksmith aged 27 and Eliza - 20,is the daughter of George Kennett son of GilbertWilliam Kennett, the station master at Adisham Kent. The couple married in the church at Adisham thewedding was witnessed by Charlotte Judge and Georgeand Thomas Mackie Kennett, George is of course Eliza'sfather and Thomas her brother. | Family (F1157)
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| 2010 |
John Knightsmith bur 9 March 1600/01 a baker Canterbury, St Mary Breadman, Kent, England
Will of John Knightsmith
IN THE NAME OF GOD AMEN, the sixth day of March in the 43re year of the reigne of our Sovereign Lady Elizabeth by the grace of God of England, France and Ireland Queen, defender of the faith, etc., I, JOHN KNIGHTSMITHE of the parish of St. Mary Bredman in the City of Canterbury, baker, being sick in body but of good and perfect remembrance God be praised therefore do make and ordain this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following, viz.,
First, I commend my soul unto Almighty God hoping to be saved by the merits, death and passion of Christ Jesus my only saviour and redeemer and myt body to be buried in the church of St. Mary Bredman in the City of Canterbury aforesaid,
And touching all such moveable goods and chattells, whatsoever the which I have and enjoy and of right do belong and appertain unto me (my debts being first paid) I will, give and bequeath them to MARGERY my wife and RICHARD KNIGHTSMITH my son equally between them to be divided,
Also I make and ordain RICHARD SNIGHTSMITH my son my sole Executor of this my last Will and Testament, PROVIDED always and my will and mind is that MARGERY my wife shall within one month next after my decease by writing under her hand and seal or by such other sufficient conveyance in the law as the learned counsel of William Watmer of the City of Canterbury, Gentleman shall devie, release unto him the said WILLIAM WATMER and to MARIAN WATMER the now wife of the said WILLIAM WATMER and to their heirs and assigns all such right, title, interest, dower or widowright as she hath or hereafter may have of and in the house and tenements wherein I now dwell with all and singular edifices, buildings, and appurtenances whatsoever to the same belonging in such ample manner as he the said WILLIAM WATMER and MARIAN his now wife and their heirs and assigns may have and enjoy the said house with appurtenances acquited, released, and discharged of all right, interest, and widowright or dower as she the said MARGERY hath or may have in the same or in any part thereof,
And if the said MARGERY shall neglect or refuse to make such releases or conveyance as is above mentioned and the same as her act and deed deliver according to law in that behalf provided, and according to the true meaning of this my Will, then I will and my mind is that she the said MARGERIE shall have no benefit by this my Will nor have nor enjoy any gift or legacy by this my Will to her given and bequeathed but this my Will touching her benefit shall be void and of none effect to all intents and purposes anything herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding, And then I will and my mind is that RICHARD my son shall have all my moveable goods and chattells of what nature or condition they be of by him to be enjoyed to his own use paying my debts.
IN WITNESS that this is my last Will and Testament I have hereunto set my hand and seal dated the day and yere first above written.
John Knightsmith, his mark
WITNESSES present at the acknoledgeing of the premises by the
said JOHN KNIGHTSMITHE for his last Will and Testament
Robert Wynne
William Brown his mark
Thomas Pleasington
Thomas Strimshie
Leonard Ashenden
Leonard Sweting
Concordat cum originali
PROABTUM fuit testamentum prescriptum JOHANNIS KNIGHTSMITHE nuper de Civitate Cantular def coram magistro Jacobi Byssell clerico substituto veneralis viri magistri Georgii Newman legum doctoris redi viri du Archin Cant ltime deptati quarto Maii 1601 Ac inde per authoritem dui officialis pred approbatum et insumatum. Omisque executiois eiusdem comissum est executori etc. pruis mra etc. dat etc. | KNIGHTSMITH?, Mary (I18899)
|
| 2011 |
John Leveson if heir and son of Richard Leveson as appeareth by a Deed. | LEVESON, John (I10268)
|
| 2012 |
John married his cousin, Eliza Jane Kennett, at Adisham. Adrienne Roshier has obtained the marriage certificate which provides the name of Eliza's father as being George Kennet, station master at Adisham.
The couple married in the church at Adisham and the marriage was witnessed by Charlotte Judge and George and Thomas Mackie Kennett - George being Eliza's father and Thomas, her brother.
Eliza was 20 years old at the time of the marriage and John was described as being a blacksmith aged 27, the son of William Judge, a labourer. | JUDGES, John (I2797)
|
| 2013 |
John married twice and had 6 children but only his daughter Elizabeth, who was christened 16 Apr 1693 married, a Mr. Booth and had Charles who died during 1795. | JENKIN, John (I6550)
|
| 2014 |
John may have two brothers also at Horsmonden - Richard and Stephen. His parents may be m. 18 Nov 1611 Richard Hodge Elizabeth Perrins.
But see c 15 Jan 1608/09 John Hodge son of William at Horsmonden where no baptism of a John in right time frame to Richard Hodge(s).
Possible marriages of William Hodge
First name(s) William
Last name Hodge
Marriage year 1592
Spouse's first name(s) Martha
Spouse's last name Watte
County Kent
Country England
Place Tonbridge, Ss Peter & Paul
Marriage date 17 Sep 1592
First name(s) William
Last name Hodge
Marriage year 1599
Marriage year 1599
Marriage date 03 Jun 1599
Marriage place Hadlow, St Mary
Spouse's first name(s) An
Spouse's last name Chambers
First name(s) William
Last name Hodge
Marriage year 1608
Spouse's first name(s) Elizabeth
Spouse's last name Upton
County Kent
Country England
Place Maidstone, All Saints
Marriage date 25 Apr 1608
Testamentii Richardi Hodge de Horsemonden in Con Canty dioc Roffensis,
As Touchinge the disposition of my landes and tenement
First my will and mind is that THOMAS HODGE my sonne whome I doe make my sole Executor of this my last Will and testament shall put out and let out to the moste profit and advantage my tent and lande comittinge neither stript nor wast and take himselfe fortie poundes of the proffit and then to paie to SYMON HODGE my other sonne or his assignes fortie pounds more of the proffit yeerlie also to my sonne RICHARDE HODGE or his assignes other fortie poundes yeerlie to be paide also out of the same landes to be paide them in order as they are of age that is to saie the saide THOMAS HODGE or his assignes to be paid firste as soone as so much rent or proffit shall arise yeerlie then to paie SYMON HODGE or his assignes his saide fortie poundes yeerelie so soone as so much rent or proffit is due next to paie RICHARDE HODGE or his assignes his fortie poundes yerly so soone as so much rent is due.
Further I give and bequeath when theise legacies be paide to my other children out of it all my lande and tenement to WILLIAM HODGE my sonne and his heires in fee simple.
WITNES hereunto
Richard Daie
Thomas Hodge
PROBATUM FUIT Testamentum suprascriptum apud London coram venerabili viro Magistro Willimo Lewyn legum doctore curie Prerogative Cant Magro Custode suie comissario legitime constituto quarto die mensis Februarii Anno Domini iuxta cursum et computationem ecclie Anglicane millesimo quingentesimo nonagesimo sexto juramento THOMIE HODGE filii dicti defuncti et Executoris in huismodi testamento nominato cui comissa fuit administratio etc de bene etc ad sancta dei evangelia jurat. Exh.
Session at Maidstone, 3rd May, 1603
This record is held by Kent History and Library Centre
See contact details
Reference: Q/SR/4/m.2
Title: Session at Maidstone, 3rd May, 1603
Description:
Recognizances Discharged.
29 Richard Hodge of Horsmonden, weaver, for good behaviour, in £20. [Note] defaulted; sureties, Alexander Collyer and Thomas Hodge of Cranbrook, husbandman, in £10 each.
Session at Maidstone, 25th September, 1604
This record is held by Kent History and Library Centre
See contact details
Reference: Q/SR/5/m.3
Title: Session at Maidstone, 25th September, 1604
2 Anthony Jerrett of Horsmonden, founder, in £10, to do and receive. Sureties, Richard Marriner of Horsmonden, yeoman, and William Hodge of the same, weaver, in £5 each. | HODGE, John (I11416)
|
| 2015 |
John Milsted, III, was born during 1798 at Ospringe. He was the first child of John Milsted and Mary Nutt, yet very little is known of this individual. Although the evidence would suggest that this is the individual who married Sarah Barrus at Luddenham during 1820 I have my doubts. Rather, based on the 1841 census, which unfortunately does not record relationships of the inhabitants of a house to the head of the house, I tend to think that the John here may in fact have been the John who had married Mary Nutt, this being the second marriage for him. John and Sarah settled at Luddenham long enough to have three children: Mary Ann in 1821; John Samuel in 1823 and Susannah in 1826. All traces of Milsteads disappear from Luddenham after 1826. | MILSTED, John (I2591)
|
| 2016 |
John Milsted, Jr. was the first born and only surviving male child of the two sons that had been born to John Milsted, Sr. and Mary (nee Sherlock). Where his father's family had an over-abundance of female children, John, Jr's. own family consisted mostly of boys - 7 of his 12 children, in fact, were boys.
According to the 1841 census, John, Jr. was living at the Faversham Arms with his second wife, Sarah, and their daughter, Mary. He was then employed as a shipwright. By 1842 he appears on the Burgess Rolls for Faversham as owning a house on Ospringe Road and appears on those rolls every year thereafter until 1847. John died during 1848. His second wife died sometime between 1841 and 1851.
A John Milsted was licensee of the Faversham Arms in Faversham from 1845 or earlier until 1847 or later. In light of the residence given on the 1841 census, I believe that John, Jr. is the fellow in question as the only other logical candidate would be his son, John. However, that younger John never did appear to move into Faversham at any time and in fact also disappears from Luddenham after the birth of Susannah. (See the notes for John Milsted, III.) | MILSTED, John (I2589)
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| 2017 |
John Neville was born about 1410,[1] the second son of Sir John Neville (d.1420), eldest son of Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland from his first marriage to Margaret de Stafford, and Elizabeth Holland (c.1388 –3 or 4 January 1423), fifth daughter of Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent and Alice FitzAlan (d.17 March 1416).[2]
He had two brothers, Ralph Neville, 2nd Earl of Westmorland, and Sir Thomas Neville (died c. 1461) of Brancepeth, Durham, and one sister, Margaret, who married Sir William Lucy of Woodcroft, Bedfordshire.[3]
Sometime before 5 February 1442 Neville married Anne Holland, widow of his nephew, Sir John Neville (d. shortly before 16 March 1450), the son of Ralph Neville, 2nd Earl of Westmorland and his first wife, Lady Elizabeth Percy. Anne Holland was the daughter of John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter by his first wife, Anne Stafford, the daughter of Edmund Stafford, 5th Earl of Stafford and the widow of Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March .[4] John Neville and Anne Holland had one son, Ralph Neville, 3rd Earl of Westmorland.[5]
According to Cokayne, John Neville was summoned to Parliament 20 November 1459 and 30 July 1460 by special writs directed to Iohanni Nevill, Domino de Nevill, whereby he is held to have become Lord Neville. In another writ of 20 January 1461, attested only by the Council, he is referred to as 'Sir John Neville of Neville'. He was absent from the Parliament at which Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York, proclaimed himself King.[6]
Originally a supporter of the Duke of York, Neville went over to the Lancastrian side just before the Battle of Wakefield. York gave battle, thinking Neville would arrive to reinforce him, but being attacked instead was defeated and slain.[7] Neville's half-uncle, Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, was killed shortly after the battle, and by his testament[citation needed] Neville became Constable of Middleham Castle and Sheriff Hutton Castle.
He was one of the Lancastrian commanders at the Battle of Ferrybridge,[citation needed] and was slain shortly thereafter at the Battle of Towton. The barony was forfeited by attainder on 4 November 1461, and Neville's lands escheated to the crown, leaving his widow, according to Cokayne, 'sadly unprovided for'.[8] Neville's son and heir, Ralph Neville, obtained a reversal of the attainder on 6 October 1472.[9]
After Neville's death his widow, Anne, married James Douglas, 9th Earl of Douglas (d. shortly after 22 May 1491), but had no issue by him. She died 26 December 1486, and was buried at St. Anne's in the Blackfriars, London.[10]
Notes[edit]
Jump up ^ Cokayne 1936, p. 504.
Jump up ^ Stansfield 2004; Richardson II 2011, pp. 496–7.
Jump up ^ Cokayne 1936, p. 504; Richardson III 2011, pp. 246–51; Pollard 2004.
Jump up ^ Richardson II 2011, pp. 134–7.
Jump up ^ Richardson III 2011, pp. 250–1.
Jump up ^ Cokayne 1936, p. 504.
Jump up ^ http://www.towton.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/the_battle_of_wakefield.pdf
Jump up ^ Cokayne 1936, p. 504; Richardson III 2011, p. 251.
Jump up ^ Richardson III 2011, pp. 252–3.
Jump up ^ Richardson III 2011, pp. 251–2.
References[edit]
Cokayne, George Edward (1936). The Complete Peerage, edited by H.A. Doubleday and Lord Howard de Walden. IX. London: St. Catherine Press.
Pollard, A.J. (2004). "Neville, Ralph, second earl of Westmorland (b. in or before 1407, d. 1484)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19952. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G., ed. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. II (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. ISBN 1449966381.
Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G., ed. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. III (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. ISBN 144996639X.
Stansfield, M.M.N. (2004). "Holland, Thomas, fifth earl of Kent (1350-1397)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13544. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) | NEVILLE, John , Baron Neville (I14889)
|
| 2018 |
John Rigden was churchwarden 1588/89-1589/90 for Brooke
===================================================================
Potential Wills of father of John:
Will Rigden William Ash 1559 1559 PRC/32/28/9b PRC/31/1 R/3 1559
Will Rigden William Chartham 1560 1561 PRC/17/35/165 PRC/16/34 R/5 1561
Will Rygdon Nicholas Stelling (Minnis) 1564 1564 PRC/17/38/73a PRC/16/40 R/10 1564
Will Rigdun Laurence Deal 1573 1573 PRC/32/32/26b PRC/31/15 R/3 1573
Will Rigden William St. John in Thanet 1578 1580 PRC/32/34/77 PRC/31/23 R/1 1580
Will Rigden Jone, Johan Bridge 1587 1588 PRC/17/47/256 PRC/16/91 R/1 1588
Will Rigden Roger Barham 1591 1591 PRC/17/48/298 PRC/16/97 R/2 1591
Will Rygdon Lawrence Stourmouth 1592 1592 PRC/17/49/288 PRC/16/100 R/51592
***Will Rigden John Brook 1595 1595 PRC/17/50/275 PRC/16/106 R/9 1595
Will Rigden William Littlebourne 1597 1597 PRC/17/51/63 PRC/16/111 R/101597
Will Rigden Paul St. John Thanet16001600 PRC/17/52/2a PRC/16/117 R/71600
Will Rigden Edmund Littlebourne 1602 1602 PRC/17/52/322 PRC/16/121 R/51602
Will Rygden John Littlebourne1611 1612 PRC/17/60/211a PRC/16/145 R/11612
Will Rigden Edward Chilham 1612 1616 PRC/17/56/68 PRC/16/157 R/7 1616
***Will Rigden Henry Lower Hardres 1612 1613 PRC/17/60/221 PRC/16/148 R/2 1613
Will Rigden John St. John Thanet 1614 1614 PRC/17/59/325 PRC/16/150 R/1 1614
Will Rigden Edmund Eythorne 1616 1616 PRC/17/55/321a PRC/16/157 R/4 1616
Will Rigden Edmund Littlebourne 1619 1619 PRC/17/60/128a PRC/16/166 R/1 1619
Inv Rigden Edmund Nonington 1623 1623 PRC/28/11/525 Yeoman 1623
Will Rigden Edmund Nonington 1623 1623 PRC/32/46/17b PRC/31/85 R/6 OWF in 1624
Will Rigden Henry Lyminge 1628 1628 PRC/32/47/129 PRC/31/93 R/4 1628
Inv Rigden Henry Lyminge 1628 1628 PRC/28/15/397 1628
Will Rigden Thomas Lyminge 1629 1630 PRC/32/48/171b PRC/16/196 R/10 See also PRC/32/49/122 1630
Will Rigden Joane Lyminge 1630 1630 PRC/32/49/145 PRC/16/196 R/13 1630
Inv Rigden Joane Lyminge 1630 1631 PRC/28/17/328 Widow 1631
Will Rigden Katherine Lower Hardres 1630 1632 PRC/17/68/277 PRC/16/202 R/10 1632
Inv Rigden Thomas Lyminge 1630 1630 PRC/28/16/333 1630
Will Rigden Henry St. Peter Thanet 1635 1635 PRC/17/69/68 PRC/16/210 R/4 1635
Will Rigden Nicholas Elmsted 1638 1639 PRC/16/224 R/4 1639
Will Rigden Henry Headcorn 1643 1643 PRC/16/241 R/10 1643
Will Rigden Thomas Lower Hardres 1643 1643 PRC/16/241 R/3 Nether Hardres 1643
Will Rigden Thomas Elham 1643 1662 PRC/17/71/344 PRC/16/269 R/1 1662
Will Rigden Henry Stelling 1646 1662 PRC/17/71/343 PRC/16/269 R/9 1662 | RIGDEN, John (I14008)
|
| 2019 |
John Tusler of Maidstone, bachelor (bapt. at Lenham 12 June 1796 the son of Thomas and Jane Tusler) and Mary HODGES of the same place (born 15 December 1792, christened 16 January 1793 daughter of Edward and Mary Hodges), licence dated 8 October 1822. Affidavit by George Hodges and Edward Hodges, both of Maidstone. | HODGES, Mary (I6185)
|
| 2020 |
John Ward Milsted is the first born and oldest surviving son of Emmery and Rebecca. He first makes his appearance on the census of 1861 married to Harriet, hiw wife of 7 years, with his four children: Emily R., who had been born at Milton during 1860; Emery, Charlotte and Alice. Working as a waterman at that time, John and family lived at the Pump Yard in Faversham.
At the time of the 1871 census, John was away at sea. His wife and children had moved to Oyster Court, a popular area of the town for the Milsteds. By 1881 both John and Harriet had died, leaving the youngest three children orphaned. This was a life-altering terrible blow to the children. Although Emery, at age 16, was working as a sailor he was unable to support himself and his two sisters, a problem which would continue throughout the next 18 years. As of 1881 the three children had made their home at the workhouse at Oare. Alice and Emery continued to live at the workhouse at least until 1899, being admitted and discharged many times over the years. | MILSTED, John Ward (I2684)
|
| 2021 |
John was a baker by trade. | WEBB, John (I10984)
|
| 2022 |
John was aged 22 and upwards in 7 Hen. VI. 1428-9. | IDELEGH, John (I13378)
|
| 2023 |
John William Nutt does not appear in Faversham until the time of the 1861 census so it is highly likely that he had run off to sea in his teenage years. Certainly during his early married life, John William maintained a roving spirit. John William's first child, John William Junior, was born at Flushing, Cornwall followed 1 year later with the birth of the second child at Southampton in 1858. John's third and last child was born back at Faversham during 1860 - Alfred James Lemon Nutt.
As of the time of the 1861 census John and family were living on Wool Quay in the town. Unfortunately, he met an untimely death drowning in the Swale in early August of 1861. His wife remarried a man from Chatham by the name of Richard Martin. All three children were still living at home, then being 15 Fielding Street. John, Jr. was working as a mariner.
Most of the family does not appear on the 1881 census and had likely moved out of Kent. Alfred appears boarding with a John Cooper at 96 Lynton Road, Bermondsey. At that time he was working as a warehouseman. | NUTT, John William (I2932)
|
| 2024 |
Joseph's burial records him as an infant | COPPEN, Joseph ^ (I4593)
|
| 2025 |
Joshua died of water on the lungs at age 10. | KENNETT, Joshua (I2752)
|
| 2026 |
Joy L Fisher has a mirror tree on Ancestry tracing her ancestors back to Thomas Smithers and Frances Harman. There would appear to be some validity to her being a relation through this line. The matched segments are small but enough are either hir or fir matches on Genesis.gedmatch.com.
When I compare her to my kit there are still matches but in much smaller amounts than with my mother. See results below my mothers. The one match on Chromosome 2 is almost in the identical region yet the other matches I have with her my mother doesn't have. Does this indicate the areas where I inherited DNA that my mother did not?
Her contact details from Genesis.gedmatch
Kit Number: A144681
Name: Joy
Email: nlfandjlf@xtra.co.nz
Comparing Kit QN2542127 (Susan Young for Lillian Penny) [FTDNA] and A144681 (Joy) [Migration - F2 - A]
Segment threshold size will be adjusted dynamically between 200 and 400 SNPs
Minimum segment cM to be included in total = 3.0 cM
Mismatch-bunching Limit will be adjusted dynamically to 60 percent of the segment threshold size for any given segment.
Chr B37 Start Pos'n B37 End Pos'n Centimorgans (cM) SNPs
2 14,692,761 16,443,492 3.6 282
2 134,666,625 138,846,608 3.3 554
4 163,230,830 165,440,926 3.5 289
11 22,793,906 24,839,058 3.1 336
11 33,406,776 35,055,259 3.4 344
15 46,587,447 50,007,348 3.9 431
16 78,803,121 79,379,727 4.5 303
Largest segment = 4.5 cM
Total Half-Match segments (HIR) = 25.3 cM (0.704 Pct)
Comparing Kit PV4445865 (Susan Young) [FTDNA V1] and A144681 (Joy) [Migration - F2 - A]
Segment threshold size will be adjusted dynamically between 200 and 400 SNPs
Minimum segment cM to be included in total = 3.0 cM
Mismatch-bunching Limit will be adjusted dynamically to 60 percent of the segment threshold size for any given segment.
Chr B37 Start Pos'n B37 End Pos'n Centimorgans (cM) SNPs
2 134,666,625 138,557,374 3.1 515
3 184,203,031 185,953,613 3.3 238
10 15,507,240 17,250,900 3.7 361
12 341,156 1,755,960 3.5 236
Largest segment = 3.7 cM
Total Half-Match segments (HIR) = 13.6 cM (0.379 Pct)
4 shared segments found for this comparison.
394332 SNPs used for this comparison.
52.046 Pct SNPs are full identical
Descent of Joy L Fisher:
James Smithers = Frances Harman
had Matthew A. Smithers who married Elizabet Ann Challis 1836-1907
had Rev. f. r. Smithers 1867-1930 = Elizabeth M Whittall 1889-1965
had Gwenydd Rosalie Smithers bn Jan 1893, Cardiff, Glamorganshire -d 13 Dec 1970 Canberra, Aust. Capital Terrty = William F. S. Thompson 1895-1978
had Alan Maxwell Thompson 1928-2012 bn 19 Sep 1928 Cnberra, Australia Capital Territory
d 18 Sep 2012 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Joy L. bc 1955\
Joy L. THOMPSON and Susan Dara YOUNG are 6th cousins 1 time removed. Their common ancestors are Matthew HERMAN and Elizabeth IVYSON.
=======================================================================================
People who match both kits, or 1 of 2 kits
Kit 1: QN2542127 (Susan Young for Lillian Penny)
Kit 2: A144681 (Joy)
Matches both kits
Match Name QN2542127 A144681 Generations
Difference Email
Shared Largest Gen Shared Largest Gen
KA2958395 Jessica 23.4 13.4 4.6 17.8 17.8 4.8 0.2 67jessica@gmail.com
QH1762656 Caitlind Hos 23.2 11.6 4.6 10.0 10.0 5.2 0.6 chosford@lion.lmu.edu
SP8807816 Jennifer Bruce 17.8 10.6 4.8 10.7 10.7 5.2 0.4 J.lynne0130@hotmail.com
A063759 *Angeline01 14.6 14.6 5.0 12.7 12.7 5.1 0.1 pj10orion@gmail.com
LH7652139 Jordyn Schwersky 12.8 12.8 5.1 10.5 10.5 5.2 0.1 jmschwersky@gmail.com
A747571 *Morgan Schneider 12.5 12.5 5.1 12.8 12.8 5.1 0.0 mebrowneyes84@yahoo.com
XR5939797 Landon Ruutikainen 12.4 12.4 5.1 11.5 11.5 5.1 0.1 sruutikainen@aim.com
TP2159390 *Madeleine B 11.3 11.3 5.2 10.8 10.8 5.2 0.0 anabowden@live.co.uk
A484318 *JaynieG 11.2 11.2 5.2 16.0 10.9 4.9 0.3 bananapopsicle@yahoo.com
HX7794470 *60PAR19 10.8 10.8 5.2 10.7 10.7 5.2 0.0 dphillipscrna@yahoo.com
CY8700039 kyle matthews 10.7 10.7 5.2 11.5 11.5 5.1 0.1 thewindnrain@gmail.com
FQ7335188 Amber Sylvester 10.7 10.7 5.2 16.5 16.5 4.9 0.3 tihisbd@gmail.com
XM3748005 SUZANNE T KENNEY 10.6 10.6 5.2 11.1 11.1 5.2 0.0 georgejk@earthlink.net
A235380 Sarah Paterson 10.6 10.6 5.2 10.2 10.2 5.2 0.0 mrs.ashley@ntlworld.com
A040800 Charles Poole 10.6 10.6 5.2 18.3 11.0 4.8 0.4 c.poole@roadrunner.com
AB7164707 Bradley Shea 10.5 10.5 5.2 13.8 13.8 5.0 0.2 bradleybshea@gmail.com
CY1661722 Christina Darling 10.5 10.5 5.2 11.7 11.7 5.1 0.1 Misfit.KissyDarling@gmail.com
T262390 *Maggie 10.4 10.4 5.2 13.7 13.7 5.0 0.2 gibboz@hotmail.com
SY5418740 Brenna Meyer 10.2 10.2 5.2 11.7 11.7 5.1 0.1 brennaw90@yahoo.com
T812072 *DavidGOz 10.1 10.1 5.2 15.8 15.8 4.9 0.3 dgibbins02@gmail.com
AA5236055 Carla Haines 10.1 10.1 5.2 11.7 11.7 5.1 0.1 julia8240@yahoo.com
FM9286343 Jesse Christopherson 10.1 10.1 5.2 11.7 11.7 5.1 0.1 jessesamuel@hotmail.com
======================================================================================
People who match both kits, or 1 of 2 kits
Kit 1: PV4445865 (Susan Young)
Kit 2: A144681 (Joy)
Matches both kits
Match Name PV4445865 A144681 Generations
Difference Email
Shared Largest Gen Shared Largest Gen
TA1259831 Sharon Tiede 18.8 10.2 4.8 11.8 11.8 5.1 0.3 Justpraymoremom@gmail.com
RV7900622 doryan meyer 16.6 16.6 4.9 12.2 12.2 5.1 0.2 volliberty@gmail.com
YN8973803 *BrianH 16.5 16.5 4.9 11.7 11.7 5.1 0.3 bkhart55@yahoo.com
M409625 Marian Hullman 16.5 16.5 4.9 10.9 10.9 5.2 0.3 marianhullman@gmail.com
A621611 *Marian Hullman 16.5 16.5 4.9 10.9 10.9 5.2 0.3 marianhullman@gmail.com
A698293 Brian Hullman 16.4 16.4 4.9 14.5 14.5 5.0 0.1 brianhullman@gmail.com
T350728 Doris Jenkin 15.6 15.6 4.9 14.6 14.6 5.0 0.0 kathrynh@trust1.com.au
TG1362614 Mark Turner 14.7 14.7 5.0 10.7 10.7 5.2 0.2 mark.turner84@gmail.com
AV8167189 Rhoda Donkin 13.9 13.9 5.0 12.5 12.5 5.1 0.1 ljwNS@hampshire.edu
BZ8829531 Kris Peterson 13.9 13.9 5.0 12.5 12.5 5.1 0.1 gitsgeek@gmail.com
WM5038980 John Payne Sr 12.6 12.6 5.1 10.2 10.2 5.2 0.2 jk070205@yahoo.com
KA2573133 *LG LZ 12.0 12.0 5.1 12.5 12.5 5.1 0.0 ljwNS@hampshire.edu
XA1209250 *V23 11.9 11.9 5.1 12.4 12.4 5.1 0.0 Vanessa.philman@yahoo.com
PR4729816 Craig Fredlund 11.9 11.9 5.1 11.6 11.6 5.1 0.0 kregfred@yahoo.com
A747571 *Morgan Schneider 11.6 11.6 5.1 12.8 12.8 5.1 0.1 mebrowneyes84@yahoo.com
SS9985535 Robert Stranathan 11.3 11.3 5.2 11.7 11.7 5.1 0.0 bobstran@gmail.com
A040800 Charles Poole 11.3 11.3 5.2 18.3 11.0 4.8 0.4 c.poole@roadrunner.com
TQ9520462 Toni Lanou 11.2 11.2 5.2 21.8 11.4 4.7 0.5 tking15178@yahoo.com
TR3669301 Ronda Wynn 10.9 10.9 5.2 12.7 12.7 5.1 0.1 rondamwynn@yahoo.com
T707939 Peter Bolton 10.5 10.5 5.2 10.8 10.8 5.2 0.0 peter@haeremai.co.uk
H670958 *clara m. steele 10.3 10.3 5.2 12.3 12.3 5.1 0.1 countygirl890@yahoo.com
A115274 *clara m. steele 10.3 10.3 5.2 10.2 10.2 5.2 0.0 countygirl890@yahoo.com
HE3735159 Paula 10.3 10.3 5.2 12.2 12.2 5.1 0.1 paula.steen6@gmail.com
ZP1427294 Christopher Frail 10.3 10.3 5.2 10.4 10.4 5.2 0.0 frail.chris@gmail.com
KU5809393 Robert Beckius 10.3 10.3 5.2 12.0 12.0 5.1 0.1 riwl@hotmail.se
GM1754461 Rebecca Bond 10.2 10.2 5.2 10.5 10.5 5.2 0.0 Rbond001@gmail.com
NE2265318 Michele 10.1 10.1 5.2 21.6 13.6 4.7 0.5 micheleyangello9012@gmail.com
FA5493905 *T22 10.1 10.1 5.2 11.0 11.0 5.2 0.1 ejfsoccer@gmail.com
T812072 *DavidGOz 10.1 10.1 5.2 15.8 15.8 4.9 0.3 dgibbins02@gmail.com
KD1461516 Brooke Miller 10.1 10.1 5.2 10.9 10.9 5.2 0.1 brookeamiller@twc.com
CZ4587935 *Maryna 10.0 10.0 5.2 11.1 11.1 5.2 0.1 maryna.sirotsina@gmail.com
===============================================================================
Possible marriage
Name Frances Harman
Gender Female
Marriage Date 28 Dec 1825
Marriage Place St. Lawrence, Kent, England
Spouse James Smithers
FHL Film Number1850281
Reference ID p238 #714
This Frances Herman is the only one on FindmyPast that fits the profile of birth year circa 1797 under any spelling of the surname including Harman versions.
Spouse James Smithers
James Smithers
1794–1846
BIRTH 1794 • Ash Kent, England
DEATH 28 JUN 1846 • Ramsgate Kent, England
Spouse
Frances Harman
1797–1837
Children:
Emma Smithers
1824–1891
James Harman Smithers
1827–1881
Charles Matthew Smithers
1828–
Ellen Smithers
1829–
Henry Smithers
1830–
Matthew Smithers
1831–1867
Rosa Smithers
1833–1903
Fanny Smithers
1834–
Edward Smithers
1835–
2nd Spouse:
Sarah Alldridge
1801– | HERMAN, Frances (I3223)
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| 2027 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I17385)
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| 2028 |
Juan Manuel, Duke of Penafiel (1282-1349), was a member of the junior branch of the Castilian royal house. | MANUEL, Duke of Penafiel Juan (I12613)
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| 2029 |
Juana Manuel of Castile became Queen consort of Castile through her married with the illegitimate Henry II of Castile. | MANUEL OF CASTILE, Juana (I12614)
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| 2030 |
Judith was buried as "wife of Mr. Laurence Ruck of Wye". Referred to in Will and Codicil of Margaret Bargrave of St. Mildred's parish, Canterbury - see extract below.
series Chartae Antiquae
sub-series Chartae Antiquae W
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-ChAnt/W/217
PreviousNumbers B 191 (Norris); W 215 (late 19th c)
Title Probate with will and codicil annexed
Date 2 May 1655
Date 12 Mar 1653
Description Will, testament and codicil of Margaret Bargrave of St Mildred's parish, Canterbury, widow, dated 20 Fen and 12 Mar 1653. She wishes to be buried in St Mildred's church, in the grave of her first husband. Bequests to: Margaret Wilkins, daughter of George Wilkins, gent, deceased; Edward Alexander and Jane Alexander, son and daughter of Edward Alexander deceased, the testarix's cousin; Mr Lee, minister of St Mildred's church; Katherine and Elizabeth Smith, the testatrix's kinswomen and William Smith, their brother; John Polhill and Thomas Polhill, sons of John Polhill, esq, the testatrix's cousins; Mr William Somner, the testatrix's 'very loving friend'; Thomas Courthop, the testatrix's friend; William Courthop, son of Thomas Courthop; Margaret Bossell, wife of - Bossell [blank in document] of St Dunstan's, Canterbury; John Nutt and Thomas Stonestreet, the testatrix's cousins; Judith Rucke, wife of Laurence Rucke. Bequests are of money, rings and lands in Wye and Brook in the names of Thomas Courthop, William Somner and Edward Pyard, gent. Provision for distribution of money to the poor. She appoints William Somner her executor. The codicil revokes the legacies to Edward and Jane Alexander and leaves a bequest to Jane Alexander, their mother. Proved before the judges for the probate of wills and granting of administrations on 2 May 1655. Signatures of Mark Cottle, B Sankey and W Longmore. Witnesses to the will: Edward Pyard; Elizabeth Richardson Witnesses to the codicil: Elizabeth Richardson; Martha Richardson
Language English
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 2mm, attached by seal tag, slightly dirty
PubNote Calendared in C E Woodruff (ed), Sede vacante wills (Kent Archaeological Society, Canterbury, 1914), p4 Noted in Historical Manuscripts Commission Fifth Report (London, 1876), Appendix, p460
Extent 2 documents | SMITH, Judith (I3581)
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| 2031 |
Juliana FitzMaurice, Lady of Thomond (c. 1263 - 29 September 1300) was a Norman-Irish noblewoman, the daughter of Maurice FitzGerald, 3rd Lord of Offaly, and the wife of Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond, a powerful Anglo-Norman baron in Ireland, who was a younger brother of Gilbert de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford. Juliana was married three times; Thomas being her first. She is sometimes referred to as Juliane FitzMaurice.
Contents
1 Early life and family
2 Marriages and issue
3 Death and legacy
4 Ancestry
5 Notes
6 References
Early life and family
Juliana FitzMaurice was born on 12 April 1266 in Dublin, Ireland, the eldest daughter of Maurice FitzGerald II, 3rd Lord of Offaly, Justiciar of Ireland and Maud de Prendergast. She had a sister Amabel who married but was childless. Her first cousin was John FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Kildare. Her paternal grandparents were Maurice FitzGerald I, 2nd Lord of Offaly and Juliana, and her maternal grandparents were Sir Gerald de Prendergast of Beauvoir and Matilda de Burgh, daughter of Richard Mor de Burgh, Lord of Connacht and Egidia de Lacy. Juliana's maternal ancestors included Niall of the Nine Hostages, Brian Boru, Dermot McMurrough, and Maud de Braose.
Juliana's father, Maurice FitzGerald, was married twice, first to Maud de Prendergast and secondly to Emmeline Longespee. It has been some source of contention as to which of his two wives had issue Juliana. However, at her death, Emmeline de Longespée did not mention Juliana as her daughter and heir; rather, Emmeline's heir was her niece, Maud la Zouche, wife of Robert la Zouche, 1st Lord Holland. It has been concluded by several reputable researchers that Juliana's mother was Maurice FitzGerald's first wife, Maud de Prendergast. Supporters for Emmeline de Longespée being the mother have yet to produce any counter-evidence beyond hearsay.
Marriages and issue
In 1275, at the age of 12, Juliana married her first husband, Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond, Lord of Inchiquin and Youghal. He was the second eldest son of Richard de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford, 2nd Earl of Gloucester and Maud de Lacy. Thomas was a friend of King Edward I of England, with whom he went on a Crusade. He held many important posts including the Office of Governor of Colchester Castle (1266), Governor of the City of London (1273). He was also the commander of the English forces in Munster, Ireland, and on 26 January 1276, he was granted the lordship of Thomond. He was born in 1245, which made him about eighteen years older than Juliana. Throughout their marriage, the couple lived in both Ireland and England. It is recorded that on 5 May 1284, King Edward notified his lieges and bailiffs in Ireland of the attorneys who were to act on behalf of Thomas and Juliana as they were in England at the time. This arrangement continued for another three years except while they were residing in Ireland.[1]
Thomas and Juliana had four children:[2]
Maud de Clare (c. 1276–1326/27), married firstly on 3 November 1295 Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford, by whom she had issue; she married secondly after 1314 Robert de Welle.
Gilbert de Clare, Lord of Thomond (3 February 1281–1308)
Richard de Clare, Steward of Forest of Essex, 1st Lord Clare, Lord of Thomond (after 1281 – 10 May 1318 at the Battle of Dysert O'Dea), married a woman by the name of Joan by whom he fathered one son, Thomas.
Margaret de Clare (1279 – 22 October 1333), married firstly before 1303 Gilbert de Umfreville; she married secondly before 30 June 1308 Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Lord Badlesmere, by whom she had four daughters and one son.
The era was marked by unrest and strife as civil war was waged between rival factions of the powerful O'Brien clan. In 1277, Juliana's husband had his former ally Brian Ruad, the deposed King of Thomond, hanged for treason at Bunratty.[3]
Thomas died on 29 August 1287, leaving Juliana a widow at the age of twenty-four with four small children. On an unknown date she married her second husband, Nicholas Avenel. He presumably died before 11 December 1291/16 February 1292, as this is when she married her third husband, Adam de Cretynges.[4][5]
Death and legacy
Juliana died on 24 September 1300. Her numerous descendants included Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland who married Lady Joan Beaufort and thus their descendant, the English king Edward IV. By Edward IV's daughter, Elizabeth of York, consort of Henry VII, she was an ancestress to all subsequent monarchs of England and the current British Royal Family. Henry VIII's queens consort Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Catherine Howard, and Catherine Parr also descended from her.
Ancestry
Ancestors of Juliana FitzMaurice
Notes
Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland 1252-1284, No. 2210.
Cawley, Charles (August 2012), Earls of Gloucester (Clare), Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy,[self-published source][better source needed]
Joe Power, The Normans in Thomond, retrieved on 28 May 2009
Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1281–1292, pp. 463, 476.
"Adam de Cretinge et Juliana uxor ejus (filia Mauritii filii Mauritii defuncti) quondam uxor Thomæ de Clare defuncti." Calendarium Genealogicum Henry III and Edward I, ed. Charles Roberts, 1:431, 448.
References
The Complete Peerage, Vol. VII, p. 200
Cawley, Charles (August 2012), Medieval Lands, Ireland, Earls of Kildare, Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy,[self-published source][better source needed]
Cawley, Charles (August 2012), Medieval Lands, Earls of Gloucester (Clare), Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy,[self-published source][better source needed]
Power, Joe. "The Normans in Thomond". Retrieved 28 May 2009.
"Juliana FitzMaurice de Clare". Find a Grave. Retrieved 2 February 2020. | FITZMAURICE, Juliana Lady of Thomond (I10407)
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| 2032 |
July 19 1840 marriage:
John Ruck, no age, labourer, no rank, resides Challock, father James Ruck, labourer
Mary Ann Cox no info except residence Boughton Aluph, no father, no father's occupation
both signed with their mark,
Wit: William Ditcher, Sarah Ruck, both signed with their marks | Family (F4778)
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| 2033 |
Jun Qtr 1886
Faversham District, Kent, England (vol. 2a, p.1293) | Family (F999)
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| 2034 |
June 4 1842 marriage:
Richard Warden, full age, batchelor, labourer, residence Challock, father William Warden, labourer
Sarah Ruck, full age, spinster, no occupation, residence Challock, father James Ruck, labourer
he signed with x,
Witnesses George Warden, Sarah Tamsitt | Family (F4779)
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| 2035 |
June Qtr. 1955 | Family (F2205)
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| 2036 |
Junior Sheriff of Kent, 17 Edw. II. 1323-4 d. s.p. | FRENINGHAM, Ralph de (I14382)
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| 2037 |
Justice of Assize, Sheriff of Kent 19 Edw. II. 1325-6, 1. Edw. III. 1327-8, 6 Edw. III. 1332-3. | LAWRENCE, Ralph de St. (I14379)
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| 2038 |
Justiciary of England.
Hugh le Despenser, 1st Baron le Despenser (1223 – 4 August 1265) was an important ally of Simon de Montfort during the reign of Henry III. He served briefly as Justiciar of England in 1260 and as Constable of the Tower of London.
Despenser first played an important part in 1258, when he was prominent on the baronial side in the Mad Parliament of Oxford. In 1260 the barons chose him to succeed Hugh Bigod as Justiciar, and in 1263 the king was further compelled to put the Tower of London in his hands.
He was the son of Hugh le Despenser and was summoned to Parliament by Simon de Montfort. Hugh was summoned as Baron le Despenser on 14 December 1264 and was Chief Justiciar of England and a leader of the baronial party, and so might be deemed a baron, though the legality of that assembly is doubtful. He remained allied with Montfort to the end, and was present at the Battle of Lewes. He was killed fighting on de Montfort's side at the Battle of Evesham in August 1265. He was slain by Roger Mortimer, 1st Baron Wigmore; this caused a feud to begin between the Despencer and Mortimer families.
By his wife, Aline Basset, he was father of Hugh Despenser 'the elder', who became an advisor to Edward II and was made Earl of Winchester. Aline was the daughter of Philip Basset, who had also served as Justiciar. They also had a daughter named Eleanor le Despenser, who married Sir Hugh de Courtenay, feudal baron of Okehampton.
References
Susan Higginbotham. "The Last Justiciar: Hugh le Despenser in the Thirteenth Century". Archived from the original on 29 June 2008. Retrieved 15 February 2008.
External links
Inquisition Post Mortem of Aline wife of Hugh Despencer #389, dated 1280.
============================================================================
Inquisitions Post Mortem
C. Edw. I. File 27. (7.)
389. Aline la Despensere, daughter and heir of Philip Basset, alias Aveline countess of Norfolk, alias Aline countess Marescall.
Northampton. Extent, Wednesday the morrow of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist, 9 Edw. I.
Bernewelle. The manor (extent given), whence are paid to the king by the hands of the bailiff of the hundred of Hokeslowe, 3s. 8d. yearly. Sir Philip Bassett gave the manor in free marriage to Hugh le Despenser, with Aline his daughter, and it is held of the fee of the earl [of] Ferrar', service unknown.
Hugh, son of Hugh le Despenser, age unknown, is next heir.
[Buckingham.] Extent, Monday the feast of Translation of St. Thomas the Martyr, 9 Edw. I.
Wycumbe. A capital messuage, 255⅓a. arable, 7a. meadow, 28a. pasture, 60a. wood, rent of assize of the borough of Wycumbe 30l. 13s. 4d., in the suburb 63s. 4d., of foreign free tenants 4l. 19s. 9d., and of customers 10l. 3s. 10d., works &c. of customers worth 37s. ½d., two water-mills with a virgate of land demised to farm to Thomas de la Lude for life for 65s. 8d., three other water-mills worth 10l. yearly, and pleas of court &c. worth 20s., from which are due yearly at the king's exchequer for the said borough 20l., and to the Knights of the Temple for the land of Okrugge, which is held of them in socage, 16s. And she held a foreign messuage with a carucate of land of the king by service of 1 knight's fee; 45a. arable of John de Assewell for 1/16 knight's fee; and 48a. land with 10a. wood in socage of the Knights of the Temple by the aforesaid service of 16s.
Hugh le Despenser, aged 20 in the first week of March last, is her next heir.
========================================================================== | LE DESPENCER, Hugh 1st Lord DeSpencer (I1763)
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| 2039 |
K.C.B. | BUNBURY, Sir Henry Noel (I8411)
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| 2040 |
K.I.A., Second World War | LOW, Col. Stuart (I3560)
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| 2041 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I18624)
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| 2042 |
Kate and her husband were witnesses on the marriage of her sister, Mary Wilmot to William Alefounder during September of 1861. | WILMOT, Kate (I2516)
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| 2043 |
Kent Feet of Fines Richard II [1377-1399] Nos. 1-1170
by Duncan Harrington. 45
TNA: CP 25/1/108/ 208 nos. 1-25
(1) Westminster46 Trinity in 15 days 51 Edw. III; Morrow of St Martin
1 Richard II
Q: John [?Dane or Denne]47 Robert his brother Edmund Godwynston
clerk, Richard Tonge chaplain and Henry Hemyng.
D: Thomas Holbem and Maud his wife.
Moiety of 220 acres land 3 acres wood, 13s 4d rent and rent of [?
one cock]48 and 18 hens in Eghethorne Wymelyngwelde Kyngeston
Berham, Nonynton Asshe Staple, Berfreston, Wodnisbergh
Godwynston and Adesham and quarter part of the manor of
Eghethorne and moiety advowson of Eghethorne church.
To hold (as to the moiety of tenements and advowson) to John,
Robert, Edmund, Richard and the heirs of John. (As to the quarter
manor held by William Halden for life with reversion to Thomas &
Maud and the heirs of Maud) to John, Robert, Edmund, Richard and
the heirs of John after the death of William. Warrant against the
heirs of Maud.
John, Robert, Edmund and Richard gave 100 marks.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
14 Jul 1400, p. 197, membrane 10d.
To the sheriff of Kent. Writ of supersedeas in favour of Thomas Danyel of Waltham, and order by mainprise of John Brode of Mersham, John Hammyngherst, William Arderne clerk and Thomas Dene of Elham of Kent to set him free, if taken at suit of John Pope of Waltham for trespass.
[Found: https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?from=fhd&dps_pid=IE59560 Source: "Close Rolls, Henry IV: July 1400." Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry IV: Volume 1, 1399-1402. Ed. A E Stamp. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1927. 195-198. British History Online. Web. 20 November 2018. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-close-rolls/hen4/vol1/pp195-198.]
24 May 1402, p. 529, membrane 15. Westminster.
To the sheriffs of London Order by mainprise of William atte Dene of Camberwelle, Roger Carter, William Cooke, both of Southlambhythe of Surrey, and Henry Assheburne of Derbyshire to set free Thomas Smyth, by them taken and imprisoned in Neugate prison; as lately the king ordered the sheriffs to have the said Thomas in chancery at a day now past with the cause of his imprisonment and they certified that he was taken at Smythfelde in the suburb of London by John Wedonn the king's bailiff there upon suspicion of stealing three horses, or one of which he made a suspicious sale in Smythfelde to William Sporyer, hakeneyman; and William atte Dene and the others have mainperned in chancery body for body etc. to have him before the king in the quinzaine of Trinity in order to answer touching the premises.
[Source: "Close Rolls, Henry IV: May 1402." Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry IV: Volume 1, 1399-1402. Ed. A E Stamp. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1927. 524-529. British History Online. Web. 20 November 2018. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-close-rolls/hen4/vol1/pp524-529.] | A’DENNE, Richard or Robert (I16375)
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| 2044 |
Kent, East Kent Marriage Index 1538-1754
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Alice Scrase
Record: Parish Burials Record
Location: Sussex, England
Year of death: 1624
First name(s) Alice
Last name Broadbridge
Residence Chilham
Marital status Widow
Marriage year 1614
Marriage date 02 Feb 1614
Marriage place Chilham
Spouse's first name(s) Richard
Spouse's last name Scrase
Spouse's residence Chilham | Family (F5052)
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| 2045 |
Killed c.1070 by Hereward the Wake | Frederick (I13018)
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| 2046 |
Killowen is a parish containing the following Townlands:
Ballycairn
Castletoodry
Churchland
Drumaquill
Killcranny
The Parish of Killowen is one of the smallest in the geographical area in the Diocese of Derry, yet on of the largest in population. Its church which is dedicated to St.John, is situated on the west bank of the River Bann in Coleraine, Co. Derry. The diocesan boundary with Connor Diocese is formed by the river, and the other side of which is the parish of St. Patrick's, Coleraine.
For more information and photos of the church go to:
http://fredrickhervey4thearlofbristol.blogspot.ca/2012/08/killowen-coleraine-st-john.html | Family (F69)
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| 2047 |
King of England from 979 to 1016. As his name literally meant "noble counsel", the epithet "Unready" must have been given to him as a play on words. During his reign, when a crisis demanded a concentration of the national energy, this king could neither give direction to his people nor hold his greater subjects to their allegiance. When he needed money on short notice, he would write to the shire courts to have them raise the needed funds. These informal communications, called King's Writ, were written in English and were authenticated by the impression of his seal hanging from one corner. | Ethelred II the Unready (I2010)
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| 2048 |
KINGSDOWN
LIES next eastward from Milsted, and is usually called Kingsdown, next Sittingborne, to distinguish it from a parish of the same name near Farningham.
It is situated obscurely among the hills, on high ground. The parish is very small, containing only six hundred acres of land, of which one half are wood. The lands in it are very poor, chalky, and much covered with flints; the church stands nearly in the centre of the parish, the woods are very thick throughout it, especially on the east and west sides; near the former is a hamlet called Dungate-green, and not far from it a good modern house, built by Mr. Stephen Allsworth, whose son John leaving an only daughter Anne, she carried it in marriage to Mr. Thomas Howe. Mr. Lushington Taylor now resides in it.
THE MANOR OF KINGSDOWN, in the beginning of the reign of king Henry III. was part of the possessions of Hubert de Burgo, earl of Kent, who, on his foundation of the hospital of St. Mary, otherwise called the Maison Dieu, in Dover, gave this manor to it. After which, anno 14 Edward I. the master of the Maison Dieu obtained a grant of free-warren for his lands here, among others.
In which situation this manor remained till the dissolution of the hospital, in the reign of Henry VIII. when it was surrendered up, with all its possessions, into the king's hands. After which, the manor of Kingsdown seems to have remained in the hands of the crown, till king Edward VI. in the last year of his reign, granted it, among other premises, to Sir Thomas Cheney, to hold in capite by knight's service, who in the 1st year of queen Mary, sold it to Thomas Finch, gent. who seems to have resided at Kingsdown at that time, as tenant of the manor under the master and brethren of the Maison Dieu. He was descended from John Finch, the second son of Vincent Herbert, alias Finch, of Netherfield, in Sussex, whose eldest son William was ancestor of the several branches of this family, of the name of Finch, enobled by peerages at different times, whose arms he likewise bore. John, the second son, above-mentioned, married Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Richard Seward, of Sewards, in Linsted, of which seat he became possessed in her right, and afterwards resided there. He died in 1442, and was buried at Sevington. His grandson John Finch, of Linsted, left two sons; Herbert, who was of Linsted, from whom descended those of Linsted, Norton, Faversham, Wye, and other places, and Thomas Finch, who purchased this manor of Kingsdown as above-mentioned. (fn. 1) He died anno 3 and 4 Philip and Mary, 1555 After which it continued in his descendants who resided here, down to Thomas Finch, esq. who dying s. p. by his will bequeathed the manor itself, and part of the demesnes belonging to it to his brother's daughter Judith Finch, who carried it in marriage to John Umsrey, esq. of Darent, who bore for his arms, Gules, across botony, argent, charged with five pellets; from who it descended down to Finch Umfrey, gent. of Dartford, who married Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. John Jarvis, of Dartford. He died without issue, and at his death gave this manor, with the part of the demesnes before mentioned, to his widow, who died in 1781, and by her will, which had been made near twenty years before her death, devised it to her next heirs, which at the time of her death were two persons named Brook, uncle and nephew, as coheirs in gavelkind, and they joined in the sale of it in 1782, to Mr. Thomas Smith, gent. of Dartford, upon whose death in 1787, it came by his will to his nephews, Thomas, William, and George Smith, since which it is become vested in Mr. Thomas Williams, gent. of South Darent, the present possessor of this manor and estate. A court leet and court baron is held for this manor.
BUT THE REST OF THE DEMESNES of this manor, which comprehended by far the greatest part of them, were sold by one of the Finch's to the family of Bartholomerw, of Oxenhoath, in which name this estate remained till one of them sold it to Cockin Sole, esq. of Bobbing, who died in 1750, and was succeeded in it by his son John Cockin Sole, esq. afterwards of Norton-court, who some years afterwards passed it away by sale to Mr. Evans, who is the present possessor of it.
There are no parochial charities.
The poor constantly relieved are about ten, and casually twenty-five.
KINGSDOWN is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of Sittingborne.
The church, which is dedicated to St. Catherine, is a very small mean building, consisting of one isle and one chancel; there is a tomb of Bethersden marble in the chancel, with a brass plate against the east wall, erected to the memory of Thomas Finch, gent. though buried at Chichester, anno 1555, and to that of his son Ralph Finch, esq. who lies buried near it, a great benefactor to this church, obt. 1591. At the west end there is a small turret, with one bell. This church has always been an appendage to the manor, and continued as such, till after the death of Mrs. Elizabeth Umfrey, when her two heirs at law, and devisees under her will, of the name of Brook, sold it in 1782 to Thomas Pennington, D. D. late rector of this church, who is the present possessor of it.
In 1640 this rectory was valued at fifty pounds per annum. Communicants thirty six. It is now of the clear yearly value of sixty pounds.
It is a discharged living in the king's books, of the clear yearly certified value of forty five pounds, the yearly tenths of it being ten shillings and elevenpence.
Church of Kingsdown.
PATRONS, RECTORS.
Or by whom presented.
Ralph Fynche, esq. Laurence Collinson, Sept. 20, 1581, obt. 1623.
The King. Christopher Batcheler, A. M. October 30, 1623. (fn. 2)
Nathaniel Godden, resigned.
Thomas Finch, esq. Richard Tylden, clerk, March 10, 1661.
Thomas Allen, obt. 1668.
William Slaughter, A. M. Feb. 16, 1668, obt. 1699. (fn. 3)
Edmund Barrel, A. M. May 31, 1700, resigned 1712. (fn. 4)
Thomas Allen, A. M. 1717, ob. Dec. 17, 1732. (fn. 5)
Finch Umfrey, esq. Tobias Swinden, May 31, 1733, obt. March 1754. (fn. 6)
Elizabeth Umfrey. William Gardiner, B. D. presented April 1754, obt. May 1754.
Thomas Pennington, D. D. July 27, 1754, resigned 1786. (fn. 7)
Thomas Pennington, D. D. Thomas Pennington, A. M. 1786, the present rector. (fn. 8)
Footnotes
1. Vistn. co. Kent, 1619, pedigree of Finch.
2. In 1627, by dispensation, vicar of Tong.
3. He lies buried in Frinsted church.
4. Afterwards vicar of Sutton at Hone and Boxley, and prebendary of Rochester.
5. Also rector of Murston.
6. And vicar of Lamberhurst.
7. And rector of Tunstall by dispensation.
8. Son of the patron.
Kingsdown is a small hamlet surrounded by the villages of Frinsted, Milstead, Doddington and Lynsted in Kent, England.
The hamlet is within the civil parish of Milstead and Kingsdown. The area around the hamlet includes the Torry Hill estate.
The hamlet was described by John Marius Wilson in his 1872 Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales as a settlement of no more than 18 houses incorporating a population of 96.[1]
===============================================================================
It is possible that she had moved to Kingsdown with her family or to take work. Consider this entry at Godmersham:
BATCHELER Elizabeth C 22 Mar 1640 William/Elizabeth Godmersham BT
BATCHELER William WELLS Elizabeth M 20 Jan 1639 Godmersham BT
First name(s) Elizabeth
Last name Batcheler
Birth year -
Baptism year 1639
Baptism date 22 Mar 1639
Place Godmersham, St Lawrence
Father's first name(s) William
Mother's first name(s) Elizab
County Kent | BATCHELOR, Elizabeth (I5222)
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| 2049 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I15591)
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| 2050 |
Kit Number: A585720
Name: Beau Mosby
Email: beauakm@gmail.com
GEDCOM ID#: 6270070 Beau Adam Kyle MOSBY
Comparing Kit T487091 (Susan Young for Lillian Penny) [Migration - F2 - T] and Kit A585720 (Beau Mosby) [Migration - F2 - A]
Segment threshold size will be adjusted dynamically between 200 and 400 SNPs
Minimum segment cM to be included in total = 3.0 cM
Mismatch-bunching Limit will be adjusted dynamically to 60 percent of the segment threshold size for any given segment.
Chr B37 Start Pos'n B37 End Pos'n Centimorgans (cM) SNPs
6 70,987,242 74,589,109 3.2 478
6 104,276,001 106,776,081 3.4 376
8 139,403,283 140,428,805 3.3 253
12 106,319,548 108,613,151 3.4 302
15 27,663,696 29,544,656 5.8 245
16 77,890,685 78,963,768 3.3 353
18 7,270,601 8,413,996 5.1 252
Largest segment = 5.8 cM
Total Half-Match segments (HIR) 27.5cM (0.766 Pct)
7 shared segments found for this comparison.
397869 SNPs used for this comparison.
52.232 Pct SNPs are full identical
Descendants Outline Chart
1 Sarah Gregory (b. 10 Feb 1804, Faversham, Swale, Kent, England, d. Oct 1876, Milton, Kent, England)
. + Benjamin Spillett (b. 01 Sep 1800, Faversham, Kent, England, d. 8 Nov 1881, Faversham, Kent, England)
. . 2 Edward Spillett (b. 28 May 1823, Faversham, Kent, England, d. 10 Feb 1892, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah)
. . . + Ann Wise (b. Mar 1826, Faversham, Kent, England, d. 1871-1874, England)
. . . . 3 Harriet Spillett (b. 21 Sep 1847, Faversham, Kent, England, d. 20 Apr 1916, Crawford, Iowa, USA)
. . . . . + James E. Pearsall (b. 22 Oct 1842, Bradwell, Buckingham, England, d. 28 Dec 1919, Dow City, Crawford, Iowa)
. . . . . . 4 Anna Elizabeth Pearsall (b. 18 Feb 1871, Nockenut, Wilson, Texas, d. 28 Aug 1946, Independence, Jackson, Missouri)
. . . . . . . + Julius Franklin Gunsolley (b. 27 Aug 1864, Strawberry Point, Delaware, Iowa, d. 28 Feb 1947, Independence, Jackson, Missouri)
. . . . . . . . 5 Mabel Gunsolley (b. 28 Jul 1892, Union, Shelby, Iowa, d. 3 Dec 1965, Independence, Jackson, Missouri)
. . . . . . . . . + Harry George Leibold (b. 08 Dec 1888, Buffalo, Erie, New York, d. 31 Jul 1961, Swan Lake, Lake, Montana)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 Gordon Wallace Leibold (b. 25 Jan 1922, Jackson, Independence, Missouri, d. 28 Aug 1975, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, Uni)
. . . . . . . . . . . + Mildred Winona Resch (b. abt 1925, Jackson, Independence, Missouri, d. 11 March 2009, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Connie Sue Leibold (b. 1949, Jackson, Missouri, USA, d. 31 Dec 1949, Jackson, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Alan K Leibold (b. 10 Jul 1959, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, d. Feb 2003, Independence, Jackson, Missouri)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 Marabeth Rose Leibold (b. 9 Apr 1920, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, d. 18 Oct 1985, Blue Springs, Jackson, Missouri)
. . . . . . . . . . . + Donald Raymond Horne (b. 21 Aug 1916, Almora, Otter Trail, Minnesota, d. 8 Oct 1998, , Jackson, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Sharon Lee Horne (b. abt 1938, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA, d. 2016, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + Donald Nimmo (b. 1931, d. 1990)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 Harold Leibold (b. 22 Feb 1917, , , Montana, USA, d. 22 Feb 1917, , Cascade, Montana, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 Marion Aurora Leibold (b. 13 Dec 1922, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA, d. 23 May 1923, Independence, Jackson, Missouri)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 Forrest Harry Leibold (b. 4 Apr 1916, East Helena, Montana, USA, d. 14 Nov 1983, Independence, Jackson, Missouri)
. . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN (HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . *****. . . . . . . . . . . 8 (A585720)HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Charles Grant Heauer (b. 23 Aug 2015, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA, d. 23 Aug 2015, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . 5 Arthur Wise Gunsolley (b. 1 Dec 1893, Sheridan, Dallas, Missouri, d. 15 May 1911, El Dorado Springs, Cedar County, Mis)
. . . . . . . . 5 Ola Dorcas Gunsolley (b. 10 May 1895, Lamoni, Decatur, Iowa, USA, d. 22 Aug 1976, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, Uni)
. . . . . . . . . + Ralph George Savage (b. 18 May 1891, Lincoln County, Nebraska, USA, d. 14 Oct 1981, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 Verna Dee Savage (b. 17 Jun 1923, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA, d. 11 Sep 2004, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . . + William H Martin (b. 17 Apr 1922, d. Dec 1984, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 Harold Arthur Savage (b. 5 Sep 1926, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA, d. 16 Dec 1993, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . . + Helen Jean Hazelrigg (b. 1 Jul 1932, Crocker, Pulaski, Missouri, USA, d. 24 Aug 2012)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . 6 Kenneth Eugene Savage (b. 28 Sep 1924, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA, d. 21 Jan 2014, Independence, Jackson, Missouri, USA)
. . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . 4 Margaret Hoeffer Pearsall (b. 1889, Iowa)
. . . . . . 4 Ellen Nell Pearsall (b. 1887, Union, Crawford, IA, USA)
. . . . . . 4 Kathryn Matilda Pearsall (b. 1877, Texas, d. 11 Mar 1920, Los Angeles, California, USA)
. . . . . . . + Solomon F Gillum (b. abt 1878, Wisconsin)
. . . . . . . . 5 Floren V Gillium (b. abt 1904, Missouri)
. . . . . . 4 Sarah Ruth Pearsall (b. 1870, Stockdale, Wilson, TX, USA, d. 1885)
. . . . . . 4 George Ames Pearsall (b. 10 Mar 1883, Dunlap, Shelb, Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . 4 Blanche Pearsall (b. 1872, d. 1872)
. . . . . . 4 Joseph Henry Pearsall (b. 1881, Shelby, Iowa)
. . . . . . 4 Mark Albert Pearsall (b. 23 Mar 1885, Iowa)
. . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . 5 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . 4 James E. Pearsall (b. 1879, Texas, d. 1949)
. . . . . . . + Zoa (b. 13 March 1883, d. 21 December 1954)
. . . . . . . . 5 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . 4 Frederick William Pearsall (b. 14 May 1874, Nockenut, Wilson, Texas, USA, d. 1938)
. . . . . . . + Dora Marcena Justice (b. Jan 1878, Little Sioux, IA, d. 1942)
. . . . . . . . 5 Charles L. Pearsall (b. 15 Mar 1916, Crawford Cou, Iowa, d. 3 Sep 1990)
. . . . . . . . 5 Vernon F Pearsall (b. abt 1910, Iowa, d. Apr 1987, Logan, Harrison, Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . . . 5 Julian J Pearsall (b. 7 Oct 1906, Dow City, Crawford, Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . . . 5 Baby Pearsall (b. 30 Mar 1920, Iowa, d. 01 Apr 1920, Union Twp., Dow City, Crawford Co., )
. . . . . . . . 5 Vurnen Pearsall (b. abt 1910, Iowa)
. . . . . . 4 Susan Zeanette Pearsall (b. 21 Apr 1873, Stockdale, Wilson, TX, USA, d. 22 Jun 1957, Dow City, Crawford, Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . . + Don Alvin Smith (b. 17 May 1871, Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois, USA, d. 3 May 1960, , , Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . . . 5 Marion Don Smith (b. 28 Oct 1901, Lamoni, Decatur, Iowa, USA, d. 13 Nov 1983, Jefferson, Greene, Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . . . 5 Maxwell A Smith (b. 13 Apr 1903, Iowa, USA, d. 17 Feb 1961, , , Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . . . 5 Marion Don Smith (b. 28 Oct 1901, , , Iowa, USA, d. 13 Nov 1983, , , Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . . . 5 LaJune Harriet Smith (b. 1 Jul 1899, St Joseph, Buchanan, Missouri, USA, d. 9 Sep 1985, Woodbine, Harrison, Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . . . 5 Beatrice Adelle Smith (b. 19 Aug 1896, Iowa, USA, d. 5 Jul 1969, Atlantic, Cass, Iowa, USA)
. . . . . . . . 5 Carlos McAllister Smith (b. 22 May 1895, Lamoni, Decatur, Iowa, USA, d. 28 Nov 1981, Cincinnati, Clermont, Ohio, USA)
. . . . . . . . 5 Velora Belle Smith (b. 13 Dec 1893, Iowa, USA, d. 28 Dec 1993, , , Colorado, USA)
. . . . 3 Catherine Spillett (b. 08 Mar 1850, Faversham, Kent, England, d. 15 Mar 1925, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah)
. . . . . + George Edward Ames (b. 23 January 1847, Bethnal Green, London, United Kingdo, d. 20 November 1918, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co, Utah)
. . . . . . 4 Henry Alfred Ames (b. 19 Apr 1875, Shadwell, Middlesex, England, d. 24 Jul 1956, Salt Lake City Utah USA)
. . . . . . 4 Sarah Matilda Ames (b. April 1872, Shadwell, Middlesex, England, d. 1 Dec 1950, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, USA)
. . . . . . 4 George Edward Ames (b. 18 May 1870, Shadwell, Middlesex, England, d. 24 January 1917, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Ut)
. . . . . . 4 Stephen Robert Ames (b. 14 Sep 1876, Stepney, London, England, d. 26 Sep 1905, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, USA)
. . . . . . 4 Blanche Ames (b. Apr 1872, England)
. . . . 3 Alice Jane Spillett (b. 3 Dec 1854, Faversham, Kent, England, d. Oct 1855, Faversham, Kent, England)
. . . . 3 Eliza Snow Spillett (b. 27 Jul 1853, Faversham, Kent, England, d. Apr 1856, Faversham, Kent, England)
. . . . 3 William Brigham Spillett (b. abt 1859, Faversham, Kent, England, d. January 1860, Elham, Kent, United Kingdom)
. . . . 3 Matilda Spillett (b. abt 1857, Faversham, Kent, England)
. . . . 3 Edward Joseph Smith Spillett (b. Dec 1851, Faversham, Kent, England, d. 10 Feb 1892, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, USA)
. . . . 3 Robert Spillett (b. Sep 1861, Faversham, Kent, England)
. . . . . + Ellen Spillett (b. abt 1861, Milton, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Robert Spillett (b. abt 1900, Sittingbourne, Kent, England)
. . . . 3 Stephen James Spillett (b. abt 1863, Faversham, Kent, England, d. 3 Sep 1925, Kent & Canterbury Hospital, Cant)
. . 2 James Spillett (b. 30 Sep 1835, Faversham, Kent, England, d. 10 Sep 1915, Rockland, Power Rockland, Idaho, USA)
. . 2 Stephen Spillett (b. 09 Aug 1831,Baptized at age 13y 10m. | PEARSALL, Anna Elizabeth (I16376)
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