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2851 series Scrapbooks
sub-series Letters
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-ChChLet/III/30
PreviousNumbers Portfolio A/10
Title Letter
Date 1661
Description Writer: Smith, Thomas, of Godmersham, Kent Addressee: Canterbury, cathedral, chapter. Despite illness, he hopes to remain in town for the resolution of his business. Contemporary endorsements: address and description. 31 Dec.
PhysicalDescription Paper, 1p


series Bonds
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-Bond/461
Title Bond
Date 1662
Description Bonder: Smith, Thomas, gent, of Godmersham, Kent Bondee: Canterbury, cathedral, Dean and Chapter 18 Jan. In £100. Witnesses. Condition: fulfillment of terms of indenture bearing same date.
Language Latin & English
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 1m, flaking, fragment of 1 seal
RelatedMaterial Related bond, DCc/BB 44/6
Extent Parchment, 1m, flaking, fragment of 1 seal


sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Terriers and correspondence, "Godmersham Manor"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/44/6
Title Bond
Date 1662
Description Bondor: Dean and Chapter Bondee: Smith, Thomas, gent, of Godmersham Binding Smith for £5000 to indemnify the Dean and Chapter against the purchasors of the manor of Godmersham, now leased to Smith.
Made 18 Jan 1662.
Language Latin
Language English
PhysicalDescription Paper, 1p
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule, Vol III, p179
Extent Paper, 1p

sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Terriers and correspondence, "Godmersham Manor"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/44/7
Title Terrier
Date 1663
Description A description of the lands of Godmersham manor, leased to Thomas Smith.
PhysicalDescription Parchment roll, 2mm, sewn end to end
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule, Vol III, p179
Extent Parchment roll, 2mm, sewn end to end

sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Terriers and correspondence, "Godmersham Manor"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/44/9
Title Grant
Date 1666
Description Donor: Smith, Thomas, gent, of Godmersham Donee: Dean and Chapter. Smith gives all the crops from his leasehold property of Godmersham manor to the Dean and Chapter to pay off his debt to them of £140. Made 30 Nov 1666.
PhysicalDescription Paper, 1p, seal
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule, Vol III, p179
Extent Paper, 1p, seal

sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Terriers and correspondence, "Godmersham Manor"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/44/10
Title Grant
Date 1668
Description Donor: Smith, Thomas, gent, of Godmersham Donee: Dean and Chapter. Smith gives all the crops from his leasehold property of Godmersham manor to the Dean and Chapter to pay off his debt to them of £259 13s. Made 8 Aug 1668.
PhysicalDescription Paper, 1p
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule, Vol III, p179
Extent Paper, 1p

sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Terriers and correspondence, "Godmersham Manor"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/44/11
Title Assignment of lease
Date 1669
Description Donor: Smith, Thomas, gent, of Godmersham Donee: Gilles, John, gent, of Challock. Smith assigns the lease of Godmersham manor to Gilles for £80. Made 20 Jan 1669.
PhysicalDescription Parchment, 2mm
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule, Vol III, p179
Extent Parchment, 2mm

sub-fonds BOXES IN THE BASEMENT
series Terriers and correspondence, "Godmersham Manor"
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Level file
RefNo CCA-DCc-BB/44/12
Title Grant
Date 1669
Description Donor: Smith, Thomas, gent, of Godmersham Donee: Dean and Chapter Smith gives all the crops from his leasehold property of Godmersham manor to the Dean and Chapter to pay off his debt to them of £373 16s 4 1/2d. Made 10 Jun 1669. On the dorse are notes of receipts of money from Smith in Dec 1669 and Jan 1670 made by William Belke, receiver of the Dean and Chapter.
PhysicalDescription Paper, 1p, torn near the base
PublnNote Catalogue entry Bunce, C R, Schedule, Vol III, p179
Extent Paper, 1p, torn near the base



===========================================================================
all at Godmersam PR
m 21 Feb 1609 Elvin Peter Smith Joan Godmersham PR
m 15 Oct 1611 Legat John Downe Anne Godmersham PR
m 6 Nov 1615 Hall Richard Humphrey Elizabeth Godmersham PR
m 20 Jan 1639 Batcheler William Wells Elizabeth Godmersham PR
dbl 25 Apr 1608 Smith Edward
dbl 22 Dec 1612 Smith Robert
dbl 30 Jan 1614 Hall John
dbl 1 May 1614 Smith ..... widow
dbl 12 Aug 1614 Hall Beatrice
dbl 17 Nov 1617 Smith William
dbl 29 Jun 1618 Smith William
dbl 15 Apr 1624 Smith Margaret
dbl 30 Oct 1624 Smith Mary d/o William
dbl 17 Nov 1624 Smith Rainold
dbl 4 Jul 1627 Hall Elizabeth wife of Richard
dbl 6 Feb 1628 Smith Mary wife of William
dbl 27 Jun 1629 Smith Sara d/o William
dbl 15 Jan 1635 Lent Alice
dbl 12 May 1635 Smith Anna wife of John
dbl 31 Dec 1635 Lent ..... widow
dbl Smith Elizabeth d/o Thomas, a way goer
dbl 15 Nov 1638`Smith Henry bachelor
dbl 5 Feb 1643 Batcheler Thomas son of William
dbl 18 Jan 1653 Smith Judith widow
dbl 1 Sep 1653 Leggat Elizabeth wife of John
dbl 27 Jan 1654 Smith Elizabeth d/o John
dbl 28 Sep 1654 Legat George son of Laurence 
SMITH, Thomas (I5240)
 
2852 Served in the Matabele and South African Wars. BRIDGES, John Thomas (I8426)
 
2853 she 38, spinster, father John Hill of Beaworthy, butcher
he 33, bachelor, brickburner, otp, father John Hunkin, mason
banns
Robert Harry and mark of Noah Braund 
Family (F5165)
 
2854 She a spinster, he a bachelor a rope maker. Witnesses Thomas John Ruck, Catherine Ruck. Family (F6251)
 
2855 She a widow in 1911 living 10 Millhill, Tavistock. No children born during marriage of 40 years. WILLIAMS, Margaret (I329)
 
2856 She a widow on her burial.


Will Lyon Christopher Elham 1544 1545 PRC/17/23/256b 1545
Will Lyon, Lyan Henry Elham 1551 1551 PRC/17/27/254a PRC/16/11 L/5 1551
Will Lyon John Elham 1646 1647 PRC/16/253 L/5 1647
Will Lyon Henry Lyminge 1591 1591 PRC/32/37/20 PRC/31/35 L/2 1591 
LYON, Margery (I19359)
 
2857 She a widow. Family (F5886)
 
2858 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I10193)
 
2859 She and her siblings were legitimized by Royal Charter, 20 Richard II, with an express reservation of their ever possessing any right to the Crown. PLANTAGENET ALS BEAUFORT, Lady Joan (I1661)
 
2860 She d/o of William Courthorp of Stodmarsh and sister of Thomas Harflet of Molland, Knight COURTHORP, Margaret (I17750)
 
2861 She died d.s.p. CARTER, Martha (I7267)
 
2862 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I15611)
 
2863 she had the Wenderton estates DENNE, Dorothy (I13632)
 
2864 She has a cousin by the name of John Spencer who is mentioned in her Will. BAYLY, Elizabeth (I3643)
 
2865 she inherited the Tarmested estate which was sold by her husband to Thomas Harris, of Canterbury. DENNE, Honeywood (I13634)
 
2866 She is described in the Will of Robert Austin of Wickhambreaux in 1453 as being the "sister" of him. Unfortunately, it is impossible to determine on only the strength of that Will whether she was the married biological sister of Robert Austin or the sister-in-law of Robert Austin and being a married or spinster sister of his wife, Isabelle. AUSTEN, Beatrice (I17734)
 
2867 She is separated from her husband by ecclesiastical decree and resides at Massa in a house belonging to one of her brothers, she seldom or never goes out, and receives every evening a society which forms one of the conversations of which you have so often heard. Countessa del Medico Elizabetha Maria Eleanora (I10914)
 
2868 She lives near Molash, Kent and is a DNA match on my Ancestry DNA match list. We are 4th cousins, once removed. ULLMAN, Patricia (I20184)
 
2869 She married as Mary Jane Duncan, yet 1861 census records her as being Elizabeth. Family (F1783)
 
2870 She married twice more after Thomas Mowbray died, had four husbands in total. FITZALAN, Elizabeth (I8545)
 
2871 She of Hunton. Family (F6089)
 
2872 She resided at time of marriage licence in 1754 at St Mildred's, Canterbury. WOOLF, Margaret (I10863)
 
2873 She survived her sisters, who had no children; by modern law, this would mean that she would have become Lady Willoughby de Broke (and Lady Latimer), and he would in turn have inherited from her as 4th Baron Willoughby de Broke and 12th Baron Latimer. But the law was established by his great-grandson, the 11th Lord Willoughby, in 1696.

Inheritance of the Barony of Latimer
Baron Willoughby de Broke is a title in the Peerage of England. It was created by writ in 1491 for Sir Robert Willoughby, of the manor of Broke, part of Westbury, Wiltshire, who according to modern doctrine was de jure 9th Baron Latimer. On the death of his son, the two baronies (the recognised barony of Willoughby de Broke and the de jure barony of Latimer) fell into abeyance. Around 1535, the abeyance was naturally terminated when the second Baron's granddaughter Elizabeth, who had married Sir Fulke Greville, became the only surviving co-heir, passing her claim to her son Sir Fulke Greville, father of the poet of the same name. The title stayed in the Greville family until after the death of the 5th Baron, when it passed to his sister, Margaret Greville, the wife of a Verney. Thereafter it remained in the Verney family. The Barons Willoughby de Broke remain heirs to the ancient Barony of Latimer (a title which predates their recognised Barony by almost two hundred years).
[Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baron_Willoughby_de_Broke. Retrieved 23 Jul 2017.] 
WILLOUGHBY, Elizabeth (I14878)
 
2874 She the daughter and heir of Simon Bunce, Armiger BUNCE, Ann (I19237)
 
2875 She was a coheir of John Perry, who held property also in Selling. PERRY, Daughter (I13382)
 
2876 She was a distant cousin of her husband. NEVILLE, Lady Anne (I14876)
 
2877 She was a first cousin to the wife of either Christopher Packe or G.Gray who were involved in treating her husband. Her surname might have been Irons.

On her burial, Sarah was described as being the "wife of Stephen Moore". 
Sarah (I10560)
 
2878 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I17555)
 
2879 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I17556)
 
2880 She was a twin of Thomas Winder. WINDER, Elizabeth Ann (I8059)
 
2881 She was a widow at time of marriage to Thomas Collard ESSEX, Thomasine (I8028)
 
2882 She was an English noblewoman, the granddaughter of Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence, and great-granddaughter of King Edward III. Her first husband was Sir Henry Percy, known to history as 'Hotspur'. She married secondly Thomas Camoys, 1st Baron Camoys. She is represented as 'Kate, Lady Percy,' in Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1, and briefly again as 'Widow Percy' in Henry IV, Part 2.

Family, marriages, and issue
Elizabeth Mortimer was born at Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales on 12 or 13 February 1371, the eldest daughter of Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March, and his wife, Philippa, the only child of Lionel, 1st Duke of Clarence, and Elizabeth de Burgh, Countess of Ulster. Elizabeth Mortimer had two brothers, Sir Roger (1374–1398) and Sir Edmund (1376–1409), and a younger sister, Philippa (1375–1401), who married firstly John Hastings, 3rd Earl of Pembroke (d.1389), secondly Richard de Arundel, 11th Earl of Arundel (1346–1397), and thirdly, Sir Thomas Poynings.[1]


A romanticised painting of Elizabeth Mortimer and her first husband Henry "Hotspur" Percy
It is unknown when Elizabeth was married to her first husband, Henry Percy, nicknamed 'Hotspur' (1364–1403), eldest son of Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland, who was already acquiring a reputation as a great soldier and warrior and responsible administrator. They had two children:

Henry Percy, 2nd Earl of Northumberland (3 February 1393 – 22 May 1455), who married Eleanor Neville, by whom he had issue. He was slain at the First Battle of St Albans.[2]
Lady Elizabeth Percy (c.1395-26 October 1436), who married firstly John Clifford, 7th Baron de Clifford, slain at the Siege of Meaux on 13 March 1422, by whom she had issue, and secondly Ralph Neville, 2nd Earl of Westmorland (d. 3 November 1484), by whom she had a son, Sir John Neville.[3]
On 21 July 1403, Elizabeth's husband was slain at the Battle of Shrewsbury[4] while commanding a rebel army that fought against the superior forces of King Henry IV. He was buried in Whitchurch, Shropshire; however, when rumours circulated that he was still alive, 'Henry IV had the corpse exhumed and displayed it, propped upright between two millstones, in the market place at Shrewsbury'.[5] This done, the king dispatched Percy's head to York, where it was impaled on one of the city's gates; his four-quarters were first sent to London, Newcastle upon Tyne, Bristol, and Chester before they were finally delivered to Elizabeth. She had him buried in York Minster in November of that year.[6] In January 1404, Percy was posthumously declared a traitor and his lands were forfeited to the Crown.[citation needed] The king ordered Elizabeth herself arrested on 8 October 1403.[4]

Sometime after 3 June 1406, Elizabeth Mortimer was married to her second husband, Thomas de Camoys, 1st Baron Camoys. Although Camoys was in his mid-sixties, she may have had a son by him, Sir Roger Camoys.[7] Like her first husband, Camoys was a renowned soldier who commanded the left wing of the English army at the Battle of Agincourt on 25 October 1415.[8]

Death
Elizabeth died on 20 April 1417 at the age of 46 years. She was buried in St. George's Church at Trotton, Sussex. Her second husband was buried beside her.[9] Their table-tomb with its fine monumental brass depicting the couple slightly less than life size and holding hands can be viewed in the middle of the chancel inside the church.

King Henry VIII's Queen consort Jane Seymour was one of Elizabeth Mortimer's many descendants through her daughter Elizabeth Percy.

In fiction
Lady Elizabeth is represented as Kate, Lady Percy, in William Shakespeare's plays Henry IV, Part 1[10] and Henry IV, Part 2. She is also the main character in Anne O’Brien’s novel Queen of the North published in 2018.

Ancestry
Ancestors of Elizabeth Mortimer
Notes
Cokayne 1932, p. 448; Richardson II 2011, pp. 190–1; Richardson III 2011, pp. 193–5, 307, 335, 341; Holmes 2004; Tout 2004.
Richardson III 2011, pp. 343–4.
Richardson I 2011, p. 507; Richardson III 2011, p. 250.
Richardson III 2011, p. 341.
Walker 2004.
Cokayne 1936, p. 714.
Cokayne 1912, p. 508; Richardson I 2011, pp. 398–9.
Leland 2004.
Richardson III 2011, p. 342.
"Lady Kate Percy character analysis". Shmoop.
References
Cokayne, George Edward (1912). The Complete Peerage, edited by H.A. Doubleday. II. London: St. Catherine Press. pp. 506–10.
Cokayne, George Edward (1932). The Complete Peerage, edited by H.A. Doubleday. VIII. London: St. Catherine Press. pp. 445–53.
Cokayne, George Edward (1936). The Complete Peerage, edited by H.A. Doubleday. IX. London: St. Catherine Press. pp. 713–14.
Davies, R.R. (2004). "Mortimer, Roger (VII), fourth earl of March and sixth earl of Ulster (1374–1398)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19356. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Holmes, George (2004). "Mortimer, Edmund (III), third earl of March and earl of Ulster (1352–1381)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19342. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Leland, John L. (2004). "Camoys, Thomas, Baron Camoys (c.1350-1420/21)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4461. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G. (ed.). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. I (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. ISBN 1449966373.
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.
Tout, T.F., rev. R.R. Davies (2004). "Mortimer, Sir Edmund (IV) (1376-1408/9)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19343. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Walker, Simon (2004). "Percy, Sir Henry (1364–1403)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/21931. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
External links
Cawley, Charles, Medieval Lands, Earls of March [1]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Mortimer 
MORTIMER, Elizabeth Baroness Camoys (I18654)
 
2883 She was daughter of Mr. Holworthy, Esq. of Ellesworth-hall, Cambridge. She died S.P. HOLWORTHY, Sophia (I7281)
 
2884 She was described as a widow on the marriage entry. Family (F5945)
 
2885 She was the daughter of John Wake, 1st Baron Wake of Liddell, (son of Baldwin Wake and Hawise de Quincy) and Joan de Fiennes. By her father, she was descended from Llywelyn the Great, Prince of Gwynedd and Joan, Lady of Wales, the illegitimate daughter of John I of England. Her mother, Joan de Fiennes, was a daughter of William de Fiennes and Blanche (Lady of Loupeland) de Brienne. She was a sister of Margaret de Fiennes, making Wake a cousin of Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March. Joan de Fiennes also descended from Emperor Jean de Brienne and Berengaria of León, herself the granddaughter of Eleanor of England, Queen of Castile.

Marriages[edit]
Margaret married John Comyn (c. 1294-1314) around 1312, son of the John Comyn who was murdered by Robert the Bruce in 1306. Her husband John died at the Battle of Bannockburn, and their only child, Aymer Comyn (1314–1316) died as a toddler. She married for a second time, to Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent. They received a dispensation in October 1325, and the wedding probably took place at Christmas.

Through her marriage to Edmund of Woodstock (who was executed for treason in 1330), she was the mother of two short-lived Earls of Kent, of Margaret and Joan of Kent (wife of Edward, the Black Prince). The pregnant Margaret and her children were confined to Salisbury Castle, and her brother Thomas Wake, 2nd Baron Wake of Liddell was accused of treason but later pardoned. When King Edward III of England reached his majority and overthrew the regents, he took in Margaret and her children and treated them as his own family. She succeeded briefly as Baroness Wake of Liddell in 1349, but died during an outbreak of the plague that autumn.

Margaret and Edmund's descendants include King Henry VII and queen consorts Anne Neville, Elizabeth of York, and Catherine Parr.

Ancestry[edit]
[show]Ancestors of Margaret Wake, 3rd Baroness Wake of Liddell
Depictions in fiction[edit]
Margaret is a supporting character in the Karen Harper historical fiction novel The First Princess of Wales, which gives a fictional depiction of her daughter Joan of Kent's life at the English court.

Margaret is a character in the 2014 novel "A Triple Knot" by Emma Campion which primarily focuses on her daughter Joan of Kent's struggle to validate her secret marriage to Thomas Holland after her family forces her into a marriage with William Montacute, and her close, often uncomfortable relationship with her cousin and future husband Edward, Prince of Wales. 
WAKE, Margaret 3rd Baroness Wake of Liddell (I14903)
 
2886 She was the daughter of Juan Núñez de Lara “el Mayor” and Teresa Álvarez de Azagra. NÚÑEZ DE LARA, Lady of Lara & Herrera, Juana (I12611)
 
2887 She was the only child of A W Young, Commissary-general of the Isle De France (Mauritius). YOUNG, Harriott Louisa (I10530)
 
2888 She was the second wife of Henry I, King of England. BARBATUS, Adela Queen of England (I1914)
 
2889 she was the sister of Seinfroy, Bishop of Le Mans. Godeheut (I14069)
 
2890 SHEAFE at Ashford:
1682 Sep 25 c . . . . . John, son of John & Mary
1685 Apl 24 c . . . . . Edmund, son of Edmund & Anne
1689 Jan 5 c . . . . . William, son of -do-.
1692 Apl 7 c . . . . . Thomas, son of -do-.
1693 Dec 17 b . . . . . Anne, wife of Edmund
1697 Apl 14 c . . . . . Jane, dau. of Edmund & Catherine
1698 Sep 25 c . . . . . Catherine, dau. of -do-.
1700 Jul 22 c . . . . . John, son of -do-.
1701 Nov 17 c . . . . . Magdalen, dau. of -do-., & 1701 Nov 23 b
1702 Sep 21 c . . . . . Joshua, son of -do-., & 1702 Oct 16 b . . . . .
1703 Mar 12 c . . . . . Mary Magdalen, dau. of -do-.
1705 Feb 7 c . . . . . Bridget, dau. of -do-.
1706 Mar 16 c . . . . . Joshua, son of -do-.
1707 Sep 28 b . . . . . Bridget, dau. of -do-.
1707 Nov 19 b . . . . . Joshua, son of -do-.
1708 Sep 13 c . . . . . Margaret, dau. of -do-.
1708 Sep 19 b . . . . . Catherine, wife of Edmund
1710 Jan 9 c . . . . . Jane, dau. of Edmund & Margaret & 1710 Jan 12 b
1712 Dec 30 l . . . . . Grace, wid., & James Sutton, tobaconess, wid., of Holborn, London
1713 May 12 b . . . . . William, son of Edmund
1713 May 20 b . . . . . Edmund
1713 Aug 30 c . . . . . Thomas, son of Edmund & Margaret
1716 Oct 14 c . . . . . Edmund, son of -do-.
1720 Dec 4 b . . . . . Edmund
1721 Jan 31 b . . . . . Margaret, dau. of Margaret, wid.
1723 Mar 4 b . . . . . Margaret
1724 Nov 12 b . . . . . Edward
1729 Jan 21 b . . . . . Margaret
1743 Aug 26 b . . . . . Margaret, wid.
1757 Jun 11 b . . . . . Thomas
1776 Jun 12 c . . . . . Edward, son of Elizabeth, illeg.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________

First name(s) Edmonde
Last name Sheafe
Gender Male
Birth year -
Birth place -
Baptism year 1595
Baptism date 14 Mar 1595
Residence Marden, Kent, England
Place Marden
County Kent
Country England
Father's first name(s) Edmonde
Father's last name Sheafe
Also at Marden:
1587 Thomas Edmund SHEAFE
1590 Marie Edmond SHEAFE
1592 Elizabeth Edmond SHEAFE
1593 Elizabeth Edmond SHEAFE



First name(s) Edmund
Last name Sheafe
Birth year -
Licence year 1599
Licence date 15 Aug 1599
Residence Woodchurch
Occupation Yeom
Spouse's first name(s) Jane
Spouse's last name Downe
Spouse's marital status Widow
Spouse's residence Challock
Place -

First name(s) Edmond
Last name Sheefe
Baptism year 1597
Baptism date 04 Dec 1597
Relationship Son Of
Father's first name(s) John
Father's last name -
Mother's first name(s) -
Mother's last name -
Place Goudhurst



-----------------------------------------------------
England Births & Baptisms 1538-1975
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Edmund Sheaffe

Record: Parish Marriages Record

Location: Kent, England

Year of marriage: 1586

Edward Sheaffe

Record: Parish Burials Record

Location: Sussex, England

Year of death: 1639

First name(s) Edward
Last name Sheaffe
Gender Male
Birth year -
Birth place -
Baptism year 1614
Baptism date 17 Apr 1614
Place Hayes
County Kent
Country England
Father's first name(s) Thomas
Father's last name Sheaffe

possible marriage
Role Groom
Record set Kent Marriages And Banns
First name(s) Edmond
Last name Sheafe
Marriage year 1639
Occupation Mr
Spouse's first name(s) Jane
Spouse's last name Harty
County Kent
Country England
Place Beckenham, St George
Marriage date 22 Sep 1639
Spouse's occupation Mrs
Supplier Kent Family History Society
Record source West Kent Marriage Index, Beckenham marriages 1538-1812 
SHEAFE, Edmond (I11521)
 
2891 Sheila Castro, who is researching the family of Cornelius Burton Epps and Frances Ann Weatherell kindly provided the information concerning the marriage date and place of Alice Jemmett and George Epps. It is her belief that none of the three daughters of Alice and George ever married. In 1901 the five members of this family were living on Solly's Alley in Faversham. George was working as a builder's general labourer. He was 43 and Alice was 44. Grace was a dressmaker's apprentice and the two younger girls were not yet working.

!Sheila Castro's email address during September 2002 was sheila.castro@btopenworld.com.

!Searching this girl is: James S Holt, Storrington, Sussex, England 
JEMMETT, Alice (I3283)
 
2892 Sheriff 1575 SCOTT, Sir Thomas (I8831)
 
2893 Sheriff of Kent 51 Edw. III. 1377 DE APULDREFIELD, Henry (I13369)
 
2894 Sheriff of Kent 51 Edw. III. 1377.

OTTERPLEY is a manor in Challock, Kent, the mansion of which has been for many years pulled down, and the scite and demesnes of it, which lay near Eastwell, included in the upper park there, which was formerly from it called Aperfields garden. This was one of the seats, of which there were several in this county, belonging to the antient family of Appulderfield, called by contraction, Apperfield, whose original arms, Ermine, a fess vaire, or, and gules, as well as their augmentation, granted by king Richard I. to Henry de Apulderfield, Sable, a cross, or, voided of the field, are in several places on the roof of Canterbury cloisters, and in the windows of several churches in that city. Henry de Apulderfield, who resided at Apulderfield, in Cowdham, was possessed of it in the reign of Henry III. and is said to have had a grant anno 38 of that reign, of a market and fair at his manor of Otterpley, but if ever they were held, they have been long since disused. His descendant Henry de Apulderfield held his shrievalty at Otterpley, in the 50th year of king Edward III. being the last of that prince's reign. From him it passed to Richard, lord Poynings, who died possessed of it in the 11th year of king Richard II.
[Source: Hasted, Edward. "Parishes: Challock." The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent: Volume 7. Canterbury: W Bristow, 1798. 332-340. British History Online. Web. 18 March 2016. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-kent/vol7/pp332-340.] 
APULDERFIELD, Henry de (I12576)
 
2895 Sheriff of Kent from 1613 to 1614 AUCHER, Sir Anthony (I9743)
 
2896 Sheriff of Kent, 22 Edw. III. 1348-9. Esc. 23 Edw. III. n. 145. FRENINGHAM, John de (I14381)
 
2897 Sheriff of Kent, 27 Edw. III, 1353-4
Sheriff of Kent, 28 Edw. III, 1354-5
Sheriff of Kent, 31 Edw. III, 1357-8,
M.P. and Sheriff 34 Edw. III, 1360-1,
Sheriff of Kent, 35 Edw. III 1361-2,
Sheriff of Kent, 36 Edw. III 1362-3,
Sheriff of Kent, 38 Edw. III 1364-5
Sheriff of Kent, 44 Edw. III, 1370-1
Esc. 47 Edw. III.n.1. 
DE APULDREFIELD, William (I13383)
 
2898 Sheriff of the County of Hertfordshire, 37 Eliz I. SADLER, Sir Thomas (I10711)
 
2899 Sherrif of London 1409 CHICHELE, William (I8570)
 
2900 SHILLCOCK, AMY RUCK
GRO Reference: 1854 S Quarter in BROMLEY Volume 02A Page 182 
SHILLCOCK, Amy ^ (I20062)
 

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