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Matches 4,201 to 4,250 of 4,853

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4201 Sparkie is 14 - 2014 Nov
Heidi is new cat from humane society spring 2011


Discovered from Ken's official death certificate (discovered 2/17/2015) that Dorothy's middle name, as given by her on that certificate was Elizabeth. Dorothy had originally told me her middle name was Elizabeth. But, one time while speaking with Cousin Edie, Dorothy's sister, she told me that Dorothy's middle name was June and couldn't figure out how she managed to say that her name was Elizabeth. I have changed it back from June to Elizabeth based on Ken's death certificate and the fact that obviously Dorothy gave the information and signed the certificate. This will be resolved as soon as Dorothy's official Birth Certificate becomes available through the Archives of Ontario. 
OWLETT, Dorothy Elizabeth (I77)
 
4202 Spelling of bride's surname is a little in doubt as the page on which this entry appeared was partially obscured by water damage and mildew. RAYNES, Elizabeth (I10315)
 
4203 Spinks Sale. Distinguished Service Medal, G.VI.R. (A/Temp.C.Mech. V.G.G. Westlake. D/KX.82666), nearly extremely fine Estimate £ 600-700 D.S.M. London Gazette 1.1.1945 Acting Temporary Chief Mechanician Victor Grenville George Westlake, D/KX.82666 (Plymouth). Chief Mechaninian Victor Grenville George Westlake, D.S.M. served in H.M.S. Duke of York (Battleship) during the Second World War; she was involved in the sinking of the Scharnhorst, 26.12.1943, during the Battle of North Cape, and after repairs proceeded the following year to serve as the flagship of the British Pacific Fleet, and was serving in that capacity when Japan surrendered. Westlake was invested with his D.S.M. 27.3.1945.

Sold for £700

--------------------------------------
possible other children

Births Sep 1944 (>99%)
Westlake Gail I Edwards Tavistock 5b 522

Births Dec 1952 (>99%)
WESTLAKE Max J EDWARDS Plymouth 7a 625 
WESTLAKE, Victor Grenville George (I13366)
 
4204 Sponsors on baptism: Henry Long and Matilda Metters
father a labourer

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comparing my kit PV4445865 (Susan Young) [FTDNA] and M238738 (Sherry McAllister)
1 7,905,274 10,209,557 3.5 230
1 97,747,589 101,378,647 3.3 382
1 184,422,553 189,022,610 3.3 312
1 200,161,148 201,761,301 3.3 260
4 114,020,087 121,114,622 4.9 497
5 176,110,659 178,614,693 4.4 282
7 19,547,969 21,313,936 3.1 292
9 92,876,060 95,609,564 3.0 289
13 38,348,306 40,149,810 3.1 208
19 39,575,750 42,747,229 4.2 287
20 19,058,170 20,814,132 4.5 261
Largest segment = 4.9 cM
Total Half-Match segments (HIR) = 40.3 cM (1.124 Pct)
11 shared segments found for this comparison.


Comparing Kit QN2542127 (Susan Young for Lillian Penny) [FTDNA] and M238738 (Sherry McAllister)
3 19,595,902 21,629,318 3.4 231
3 172,301,933 174,418,538 3.8 234
4 40,958,368 43,165,259 3.6 248
5 79,666,031 81,989,527 3.7 246
5 135,543,677 141,103,117 3.9 400
6 1,246,178 1,417,600 4.2 232
7 121,246,641 125,543,863 3.1 317
10 55,577,022 59,887,998 3.0 387
12 55,014,542 58,536,675 3.3 254
17 64,534,900 66,222,084 3.1 220
18 51,681,244 55,368,747 3.2 351
20 45,431,465 46,823,806 4.0 228
Largest segment = 4.2 cM
Total Half-Match segments (HIR) = 42.1 cM (1.173 Pct)
12 shared segments found for this comparison. 
METTERS, Albert Alfred George (I17244)
 
4205 Sponsors on baptism: Henry Wm. Meadows [sic: Metters], Ann Ellis
father a Gunner, Royal Artillery

At Nelson, Lancashire 1901, first three born children are not present on the census.

At Nelson Lancashire 1911, married 25 years, 10 children born, 7 children living, 3 children deceased. 
WILDMAN, Henry John Metters (I17257)
 
4206 Sponsors on baptism: William Enright, Martha Chapman
father a labourer 
METTERS, Ellen Margaret (I17255)
 
4207 Sponsors on baptism: William Thomas Davey, Mary Emma Davey
father a mariner 
METTERS, Jane Ellen (I17247)
 
4208 Sponsors on this baptism: David Drake, Eliza Metters
father a labourer 
METTERS, Ellen Margaret (I17256)
 
4209 Spouse
Annie Young
1885–

Spouse & Children
Agnes McIntosh
1897–1967

Josephine Hazel Robertson
1917–2010

Andrew Robertson
1924–1987 
ROBERTSON, Andrew (I254)
 
4210 sPOUSE
Bernice Irene (Bubs) Cawley (b. 24 Feb 1924, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, d. 13 Sep 2002, Calgary, Alberta, Canada) 
RAYNER, Charles Arthur Frederick (I7851)
 
4211 Spouse & Children

Margaret Doonan
1876–


David Duff
1899–


Rose Ann Duff
1900–
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


NameDavid DuffAge29Estimated Birth Yearabt 1872RelationshipHeadSpouse's NameMargaret DuffGenderMaleWhere bornEdinr, MidlothianRegistration Number685/5Registration districtNewingtonCivil parishEdinburgh St CuthbertsTownEdinburghCountyMidlothianAddress23 Cowans Close CrosscausewayOccupationLetterpress PrinterED35Household schedule number45Line14RollCSSCT1901_386Household Members
NameAge
Name
David Duff
Age
29
Name
Margaret Duff
Age
25
Name
David Duff
Age
2
Name
Rose Ann Duff
Age
8 Mths
Name
James Mcmillan
Age
11
Name
William Mcmillan
Age
DUFF, David (I17136)
 
4212 Spouse & Children

William BROOKS
1816–1890

Sarah Ann Brooks
1845–1899

William Brooks
1848–1925

Eliza Brooks
1850–


Stephen BROOKS
1853–1938

John Brooks
1858–1864

Edwin Brooks
1863–1950

George Brooks
1865–1955 
EATON, Ann (I15305)
 
4213 Spouse & Children
Alice Mary Bridge
1856–1926

Albert Edward Benjamin Royall
1875–1902

William Frederick E Royall
1878–1936

Emily Ethel Royall
1880–

Charles Walter J Royall
1884–

Frank Royall
1885–1916

George Royall
1889–1955

Arthur Alec Royall
1891–1973

Clara Caroline Royall
1894– 
ROYALL, Albert James (I19444)
 
4214 Spouse & Children
Arthur Bolingbroke
1885–1979

Doris Bessie Bolingbroke
1909–

Arthur Harold Bolingbroke
1911–

Edith Bollingbroke
1918– 
ATTREE, Bessie Ada (I18348)
 
4215 Spouse & Children
George Roy Elsey
1891–1973
Elisabeth Ann Moore
1915–1960

John Roy Elsey
1919–1999
Robert W Elsey
1922–2014
Thomas Henry Elsey
1925–2002
Clara Alice Guffey
1929–2014
Private
Spouse & Children
Edwin Jackson Moore
1898–1973
Elisabeth Ann Moore
1915–1960 
SMITH, Ada Charlotte (I17227)
 
4216 Spouse & Children
George Thomas Attree
1846–1925

Letitia (Lettie) Elizabeth Attree
1875–

John Augustus Attree
1876–1959

Harold Benjamin Attree
1878–1936

George Thomas Attree
1879–1881

Edwin Charles Attree
1883–1927


Bessie Ada Attree
1887–1959

Arthur Ernest Attree
1889–1958 
WYLES, Elizabeth Eaton (I18341)
 
4217 Spouse & Children
Henry Turner
1820–1882

Jane Turner
1843–1904

Sarah Ann Turner
1845–1881

Emma Turner
1847–1902

Maria Binding Turner
1850–1874

Samuel Turner
1853–

Eliza Turner
1856–1890

Edward John Turner
1858–1935

Mary Turner
1861–1877 
BODGER, Mary (I18457)
 
4218 Spouse & Children
Henry Woodberry
1815–1907

Emma / Sarah ??? Woodberry
BIRTH ABT 1853 • Bishops Lydeard, Somerset, England
DEATH 1877 • Fingal, Tasmania, Australia

Elizabeth Woodberry
IRTH 1856 • Heathfield Somerset England
DEATH 2 AUGUST 1893 • Tasmania, Australia
married William John Gough

Sarah Ann Woodberry
BIRTH 6TH FEBRUARY 1861 • Fingal, Tasmania, Australia
DEATH Unknown



Adeliza Woodberry
1866–1946
BIRTH 30 MARCH 1866 • Fingal, Tasmania, Australia
DEATH 11TH AUGUST 1946 • Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Her Spouse & Children
William George Homan
1864–1922

William Thomas Homan
1889–1957

Leslie George Homan
1891–1891

Alice Edith May Homan
1892–1977

Amy Jane Homan
1894–

Daisy Myrtle Ruby Homan
1895–

Arthur Henry Homan
1897–1974

Percy Claud Homan
1899–

Holly Gadys Homan
1899–

Claude Douglas Homan
1901–1978

Lionel Edgar Homan
1902–

Stanley Mervin Homan
1904–1942 
BODGER, Sarah (I18461)
 
4219 Spouse & Children
Marie Pendreich
1878–

David Duff
1897–

Maria Duff
1900–

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1901
NameWilliam DuffAge26Estimated Birth Yearabt 1875RelationshipHeadSpouse's NameMaria DuffGenderMaleWhere bornEdinburgh, mid LRegistration Number685/3Registration districtCanongateCivil parishEdinburgh Trinity CollegeTownEdinburghCountyMidlothianAddress3 High StreetOccupationIron MoulderED87Household schedule number73Line18RollCSSCT1901_381Household Members
NameAge
Name
William Duff
Age
26
Name
Maria Duff
Age
23
Name
David Duff
Age
3
Name
Maria Duff
Age
7 Mo
Name
Hanna Pendrigh
Age
24
Name
Mary Pendrigh
Age
12 
DUFF, William Borland (I17137)
 
4220 Spouse's surname on marriage was Haigh Family (F791)
 
4221 Spouse:
Edmund Thomas Stephens
1840–1906

Children:
William George John Stephens
1869–

Lillian Alice Stephens
1871–1922


Tom Morris Stephens
1873–1916
Tom Morris Stephens
1873–1916
BIRTH 13 OCT 1873 • Pontypool, Monmouthshire, Wales
DEATH 10 DEC 1916 • Medway, Kent, England

Percy Frederick Stephens
1875–1933

Stanley Edmond Stephens
1878–1932

Ida Eliza Stephens
1880–1963

Clara Winifred Stephens
1882–1952

Edmund Ivor Stephens
1887–1940

Daisy Edith May Stephens
1890–1921

--------------------------------------------------------
Tom Morris Stephens
Spouse & Children

Fannie Maria Steere
1875–

Lilian Alice Stephens
1895–

Fanny Winifred Stephens
1898–1918


Edward Thomas Stephens
1899–1970

Leslie Stephens
1901–

Emily Nellie (Eileen/Ellen?) Stephens
1902–1980

Stanley Walter Stephens
1904–1987

William George Stephens
1906–1978

Mildred Clara Stephens
1908–1936

Florence May Stephens
1910–1914

Sidney Morris Stephens
1911–1973

Private
-------------------------------------------------
Edward Thomas Stephens
1899–1970
BIRTH 22 OCT 1899 • Aldershot, Hampshire, England
DEATH 4 JULY 1970 • New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut

Spouse & Children

Ethel Lucy Jane Edwards
1900–1977


Reginald W T Stephens
1923–2011

Wilbur Stephens
1927–2007

Private
Private
Private
Private
---------------------------------------------
Emily Nellie (Eileen/Ellen?) Stephens
1902–1980
BIRTH JULY 1902 • Aldershot, Hampshire, England
DEATH 8 SEPT 1980

Spouse & Children
John Joseph Cowie
1896–

Harold Cowie
1920–1995

George Cowie
1926–1978

Private
Private
Private
------------------------------------------------------------------
William George Stephens
1906–1978
BIRTH 2 SEP 1906 • Aldershot, Hampshire, England
DEATH 22 JAN 1978 • Guildford, Surrey, England

Spouse & Children
Winifred Rhoda Stephens
1908–1995

Private
Private
---------------------------------------------------------------
Mildred Clara Stephens
1908–1936
BIRTH MAR 1908 • Aldershot, Hampshire, England
DEATH JUN 1936 • Surrey South Western, Surrey, England

Spouse
Barton Thomas Vince
1909–

Spouse
Private
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sidney Morris Stephens
1911–1973
BIRTH 14 NOV 1911
DEATH 3 DEC 1973 • Surrey South Western, Surrey, England

Spouse & Children

Eveline May Bennett
1915–1999

Private
Private
Private
Private
Private
Private
Private
Private
Private
Private
Private
Private
Private
all male children
-----------------------------------------------------------
tree by Linda Crowl
Houston, Harris, Texas, USA
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/30188905/person/13944214927/facts
----------------------------------------------------------- 
HYLAND, Clara (I10767)
 
4222 Sprota is " frilla "of "Duke of Normandy" William Longsword in fact Earl of Normandy and Count of Rouen . From obscure origins, it is said Breton and born about 911 . From this union was born, to 933 , the future Duke Richard Fearless . According to the Duchy of Normandy by JJC history of Goube -it would be the daughter of Hébert Count of Senlis. (2) It is not called "frilla" but they speak of their marriage, which took place before all Lords of the Duchy and in the presence of Count of Paris Hugh the Great and many young lords of France.

On the death of Duke William, murdered in December 942 , it is given as frilla force to a rich nobleman named Norman Esperleng . From this union was born Raoul d'Ivry , half-brother of Duke Richard Fearless, Raoul d'Ivry violently mate peasant revolt in Normandy in the years 996 / 97 during the minority of his nephew, the young Duke Richard II of Normandy . 
DE MEULAN, Harlette (I13580)
 
4223 St Margaret - Tragedy in the Scots Royal Family
On 13 November 1093 the Scots royal family experienced a cataclysm. Malcolm Canmore, King of Scots, and his eldest son, Edward, were killed at the battle of Alnwick in Northumberland. Queen Margaret, his wife, was stricken with grief. Born in Hungary and descended from the English Saxon royal family, Margaret married Malcolm of Scotland in 1069. She developed an interesting reputation. Margaret could be best described as a royal saint-in-the-making, famous for her devotions and good deeds to the poor. The Queen was also a very determined woman with strong views about religion. She encouraged changes to bring the Scottish church more into the mainstream of European practice. Contemporary chroniclers noted the disaster which befel her husband and eldest son. Her confessor, Turgot, recorded her death which followed soon after.
Mael-Coluim, son of Donnchadh, archking of Scotland and Edward, his son, were killed by the Franks (namely, in Inber-Alda, in Saxonland). His queen, moreover, Margaret, died of grief therefore before the end of a novena [nine-day period of prayer]. Annals of Ulster, ii, ed. B. MacCarthy, Dublin, 1893.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle 1093
And then the Scots chose Malcolm's brother Dufenal [Donald Ban] as king and drove out all the English who had been with King Malcolm. When Duncan, King Malcolm's son, heard all this had happened in this way (he was at King William's court as his father had given him as a hostage to our king's father and so he had remained here), he came to the king, and did such homage as the king wished to have from him, and so with his consent went to Scotland with such support as he could get from Englishmen and Frenchmen, and deprived his kinsman Dufenal [Donald Ban] of the kingdom and was accepted as king. But some of the Scots assembled again and killed nearly all his force, and he himself escaped with a few men. Afterwards they came to an agreement, to the effect that he would never again bring Englishmen nor Frenchmen into the country. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. A revised translation, eds D. Whitelock, D. C. Douglas, S. I. Tucker, London, 1961.
Symeon of Durham
And since none of his men remained to cover it with earth two of the natives placed the king's body in a cart, and buried it in Tynemouth. Scottish Annals from English Chroniclers, AD 500 to 1286, ed. A. O. Anderson, London, 1908.
The Life of St Margaret
On the fourth day preceding her death, while the king was absent on an expedition, and at so great a distance that it was impossible for any messenger, however swift, to bring her tidings of what was happening to him, she became sadder than usual. Then she said to me, for I was seated near her, 'Perhaps on this very day such a heavy calamity may befall the realm of Scotland as has not been for many ages past.' When I heard these words I paid no great attention to them, but a few days afterwards a messenger arrived who told us that the king was slain on the very day on which the queen had spoken the words narrated. As if foreseeing the future, she has been most urgent with him not to go with the army, but it came to pass - how I know not - that he failed to follow her advice . . .
Her face was already covered with a deadly pallor, when she directed that I, and the other ministers of the sacred Altar along with me, should stand near her and commend her soul to Christ by our psalms. Moreover, she asked that a cross, called the Black Cross, which she always held in the greatest veneration, should be brought to her. There was some delay in opening the chest in which it was kept, during which the queen, sighing deeply, exclaimed, 'O unhappy that we are! O guilty that we are! Shall we not be permitted once more to look upon the Holy Cross!' When at last it was got out of the chest and brought to her, she received it with reverence, and did her best to embrace it and kiss it, and several times she signed herself with it. Although every part of her body was now growing cold, still as long as the warmth of life throbbed at her heart she continued steadfast in prayer. She repeated the whole of the Fiftieth Psalm, and placing the cross before her eyes, she held it there with both her hands . . .
It was at this point that her son [Edgar], who now, after his father, holds in this realm the reins of government, having returned from the army, entered the queen's bedroom . . .
The queen, who seemed to the bystanders to be rapt in an agony, suddenly rallied and spoke to her son. She asked him about his father and brother. He was unwilling to tell the truth, and fearing that if she heard of their death she herself would immediately die, he replied that they were well. But, with a deep sigh she exclaimed, 'I know it, my boy, I know it. By this holy cross, by the bond of our blood, I adjure you to tell me the truth.' Thus pressed, he told her exactly all that had happened . . .
Feeling now that death was close at hand, she at once began the prayer which is usually uttered by the priest before he receives the Body and Blood of our Lord, saying, 'Lord Jesus Christ, who according to the will of the Father, through the co-operation of the Holy Ghost, hast by Thy death given life to the world, deliver me.' As she was saying the words, 'Deliver me,' her soul was freed from the chains of the body, and departed to Christ, the author of true liberty; to Christ whom she had always loved, and by whom she was made a partaker of the happiness of the saints, as she had followed the example of their virtues. Her departure was so calm, so tranquil, that we may conclude her soul passed at once to the land of eternal rest and peace. It was remarkable that her face, which, when she was dying had exhibited the usual pallor of death, became afterwards suffused with fair and warm hues, so that it deemed as if she were not dead but sleeping. Her corpse was shrouded as became a queen, and was borne by us to the Church of the Holy Trinity [in Dunfermline], which she had built. There, as she herself had directed, we committed it to the grave, opposite the altar and the venerable sign of the Holy Cross which she had erected. And thus her body at length rests in that place in which, when alive, she used to humble herself with vigils, prayers, and tears. Turgot, Life of St Margaret, ed. W. F. Leith, Edinburgh, 1896.


---------------
St Margaret's Chapel, Edinburgh Castle.
An interior picture of the tiny chapel at the highest point in Edinburgh Castle, this is the oldest part of the castle and dates from the 11th century.
Margaret was an Anglo-Hungarian princess who fled the Norman conquest of England to the court of Malcolm III of Scotland, she was a very pious Roman Catholic and was known as the 'Pearl of Scotland' for her good work at Dunfermline Abbey with the lepers and the poor and needy.
The towns of North and South Queensferry were named after her as these were the places where Margaret crossed the Firth of Forth, the road leading from Edinburgh Castle to South Queensferry, The Queensferry Road has been there for almost 1,000 years.
Malcolm and Margaret were married in 1070 and she bore six children to her husband, three of who became Kings in their own right of Scotland.
In 1250 Margaret was canonized by Pope Innocent IV and became St Margaret of Scotland.
In 1093 while returning to Scotland from the court of William II (William Rufus) of England Malcolm was ambushed by Robert de Mowbray the Earl of Northumbria over a land rights issue and was slain along with his eldest son Edward in what became known as the Battle of Alnwick, the date was 13th November 1093, by the 16th Margaret passed away, its thought her cause of death was grief for her lost husband and son.
Fact.
It was Malcolm III who slew MacBeth at the Battle of Lumphanan in 1057, thus ending the old ways of Tanistry in Scotland where a King, the Ard Righ an Alba was elected to power rather than it being his hereditary right, Malcolm Canmore then became the first feudal King of Scotland.
It was not the end of the old ways just the beginnings of a new way that would have ramifications for centuries to come including being a catalyst for the infamous Clan battles. 
Saint Margaret (I2003)
 
4224 St. Geo. East 1c 828 Family (F1591)
 
4225 St. Luke, Shepherds Bush, Hammersmith, Middlesex, England
Lloyd James chr 17 Jan 1883 to Joseph Lloyd and Sarah, residing 4 Godolphin Road, Commercial Traveller, child bn 14 May 1881

Maud Sarah Elizabeth chr 17 Jan 1883 to Joseph Lloyd and Sarah, residing 4 Godolphin Road, Commercial Traveller, child bn 22 May 1875

Proof that Lloyd James Apsey was the brother of Maud Sarah Elizabeth Apsey. Brother and sister marrying brother and sister. 
APSEY, Lloyd James (I11184)
 
4226 St. Thomas Times Journal
St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada
September 1937

Headline Miller, Mary Lucy / Souder, Charles Kenneth Page 13 Date Friday, September 17, 1937 Newspaper Evening Review Type Marriage Announcement 
Family (F3346)
 
4227 St. Thomas Times-Journal
St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada
25 September 1941 Page 12

John Albert Miller, son of Burt Miller to Miss Viola Mona Englehart, daughter of Fred Englehart, Sept 23 
Family (F3347)
 
4228 Stacey
Variants: Stacy

• Current frequencies: GB 10216, Ireland 279

• GB frequency 1881: 6656

• Main GB location 1881: widespread in S England; also WR Yorks

• Main Irish location 1847–64: Wexford

English: relationship name from the Middle English personal name Stacy , a diminutive form of Stace, a pet form of Eustace. The 1292 early bearer Staci de Gynes is called Eustace, 1299 in London Letter Books C.

Early bearers:
given names

Staci de Gynes, 1292 in Subsidy Rolls (London); Stacy Hernowe, 1327 in Subsidy Rolls (Somerset); Stacy Bocher, 1377 in Poll Tax (Northampton, Northants).

surnames Robert Staci, 1270 in Eynsham Cartulary (Oxon); William Stacy, 1275 in Hundred Rolls (Devon); Lucia Eustasy, 1327 in Subsidy Rolls (Somerset); Johannes Stacy, 1377, Robertus Stasy, 1379 in Poll Tax (Handsworth, WR Yorks); Gilbertus Stacy, 1379 in Poll Tax (Ibberton, Dorset); Thoma Stacy, 1379 in Poll Tax (Anstey, Leics); Johannes Stasy, 1379 in Poll Tax (Finedon, Northants); Rogerus Stacy, 1379 in Poll Tax (Lewes borough, Sussex); Willelmo Staci, 1379 in Poll Tax (Bodenham, Wilts); Johanne Stacy, 1381 in Poll Tax (Sparsholt, Berks); Anna Stacey, 1599 in IGI (Sutton Courtenay, Berks); Johannes Stacy, 1381 in Poll Tax (Stanford Rivers, Essex); Susan Stacey, 1603 in IGI (North Petherton, Somerset); William Stacey, 1610 in IGI (Bythorn, Hunts); William Stacey, 1612 in IGI (Lingfield, Surrey); John Stacey, 1622 in IGI (Saint Botolph without Aldgate, London); Franc Stacey, 1625 in IGI (Sheffield, WR Yorks); Jone Stacey, 1646 in IGI (Lancing, Sussex).

The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland
Patrick Hanks, Richard Coates, and Peter McClure
Publisher: Oxford University PressPrint Publication Date: 2016Print ISBN-13: 9780199677764Published online: 2016Current Online Version: 2016eISBN: 9780191781797

https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199677764.001.0001/acref-9780199677764-e-38590?rskey=QDlZiR&result=38582

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
STACEY, John (I16301)
 
4229 standard-bearer to Edward IV

Sir David ap (son of) Mathew (1400–1484; born Dafydd ap Mathew, was a Welsh Knight. He was Lord of Llandaff and Seneschal of Llandaff Cathedral, and one of the ten Great Barons of Glamorgan, a Marcher Lord. It was said he was one of the most distinguished men of his age [3][4] and a zealous supporter of the Yorkist cause. After saving the life of King Edward IV at the Battle of Towton in 1461, he was appointed Grand Standard Bearer of England and King Edward IV granted the use of 'Towton' on the Mathew Family Crest .

Sir David Ap Mathew is the distant great uncle to the Commonwealth Governor of Virginia, Lt. Col. Samuel Mathews (1630–1660)

Biography[edit]
Sir David Mathew was the son of Mathew ap Ieuan (or Evan).[b]

Sir David was also Lord of Llandaff and Seneschal of Llandaff Cathedral. He had a grant of 2,232 acres of land from Henry VI, the reversion of Caneton, and from William, Earl of Pembroke lands at St Fagans and at Pentyrch.[5]

Sir David was a zealous supporter of the Yorkist cause, whose extraordinary prowess and daring in the field, even at a very advanced age, were used on behalf of the White Rose of York.[6] He was a very tall man, said to stand 6 feet 8 inches (2.03 m) tall.[c] At the Battle of Towton, on Palm Sunday, March 29, 1461, although by then about sixty years old, he saved the life of Edward IV and was rewarded by his grateful monarch with the honour of Grand Standard Bearer of England.[3]

Sir David was one of the ten Great Barons of Glamorgan, and a Marcher Lord. He received from Edward IV the grant of the use of the word "Towton" as an augmentation over his crest. In 1480 he restored the shrine of Saint Teilo which had been pillaged and desecrated by a gang of pirates from Biston, and was presented by Bishop Marshall with St. Teilo's skull, set in a costly reliquary, to be an heirloom in his family, who carefully preserved it for about 200 years, until the death of William Mathew in 1658 at Llandeilo.[7]

Browne Willis reported in his An survey of the Cathedral-Church of Landaff that Sir David was murdered in an altercation at Neath, West Glamorgan by some members of the Turberville family of Coity Castle.[3][d]

hew family, both consisting of a lion rampant, but with differing tinctures. The branch seated at Llandaff, thus the senior line, is generally ascribed Or, a lion rampant sable,[8] whilst the branch seated at Radyr, descended from Sir David Mathew's younger brother, is generally ascribed Sable, a lion rampant argent.[9] Yet confusingly the 1980 heraldic restoration of the Mathew tombs at Llandaff carried out by Hugh P. Mathew, who was recognised by the College of Arms as having proved his direct descent from Sir David Mathew,[10] has resulted in the Radyr coat being painted on the tomb of Sir Christopher, who was head of the Llandaff branch. Rev. Murray Mathew (1895) assigns to Sir David the Radyr coat.[11] Moreover, the Earls Landaff used the coat of the Llandaff branch even though they were descended from the Radyr branch.[citation needed] Unfortunately the tomb of Sir David bears no heraldry by which the confusion might be resolved. The arms of Radyr Sable, a lion rampant argent were supposedly adopted in honour of the White Rose, according to Rev Murray Mathew.[12]

Crest[edit]
The crest is also not without confusion, being given variously as a "heathcock" (another name for partridge, of the pheasant family), a "moorcock",[8] a "fieldcock", (a vague term possibly denoting grouse), a blackcock, (of the grouse family) and is shown on the Earl Landaff memorial in a form akin to a farmyard cock or rooster.[citation needed] The effigy of Sir David does however show most of the bird forming the crest of his helm upon which he rests his head, but it is missing the head. The feet are short and sturdy, suggesting a grouse-type bird and are not the long legs of a rooster[e] A gilded bird, probably a dove, is used as a foot-rest in the effigy of St Teilo in Llandaff Cathedral.

Motto[edit]
The motto of Mathew is in Welsh: Y Fyn Duw A Fydd ("What God willeth will be").

Family[edit]
Sir David married Wenllian 1396–1470 of Glamorgan, daughter of Sir George Herbert. He left by Wenllian three sons.

He had the following three sons:[13]

David (born 1425 1st. son) He married Ann Myddletonn (b. 1430), with whom he had one son, Jenkyn Mathew. David was the founder of the "Mathews" American line, which would eventually arrive in the new world with Thomas Mathews (b. 1660) Thomas arrived in Halifax, Virginia, circa 1700.
Reyborn (or "Reinborn, Rimbron," etc.)(d.1470), 2nd. son. He was the founder of the Llandaf line of Mathew, having married Isabella (or Elizabeth) Denys, daughter of Maurice Denys(d.1466), esquire, of Alveston, Glos., Sheriff of GlouceCatherine, by his 2nd wife Alice Poyntz, da. of Sir Nicholas Poyntz of Iron Acton, Gloucestershire. Reyborn's will (dated 20 October 1470, proved 15 March 1471)[14] directed that he should be buried in the Chapel of the Virgin Mary within The Gaunt's Chapel, Bristol, where the Poyntz family later in about 1520 built a family chapel. His will directed that gold & silver items be placed upon the shrine of "his kinsmen" Saint Teilo, Saint Oudoceus and Saint Dubricius at Llandaff Cathedral. Reyborn's eldest son and heir was Sir Christopher Mathew(d.1528), whose effigy is one of three surviving Mathew effigies in Llandaf Cathedral. Sir Christopher's son was Miles Mathew, Sheriff of Glamorgan in 1547. A later descendant was Admiral Thomas Mathews(d.1751) who built Llandaff Court and was court-martialled in mysterious circumstances.
Thomas (1438–1470), 3rd son. He is mentioned in Reyborn's will, and had been the custodian of the relics of St Teilo. He married Catherine Fetch Morgan (1436–1468), daughter of Welsh nobleman Morgan Ap Llewellyn, and founded the Radyr line of Mathew. He was also buried at The Gaunt's Chapel, Bristol. On Thomas' death in 1470, his lands passed to his son William Mathew (1460–1528), who was knighted by King Henry VII at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485.[15] Sir William accompanied King Henry VIII to the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520. His successor was his eldest son Sir George Mathew (1486–1557) who became the MP for Glamorgan constituency and in 1545 Sheriff of Glamorgan.[15][16] From the Radyr line was founded the family of the Earls Landaff in the peerage of Ireland.[citation needed]
Notes[edit]
Jump up ^ Earliest effigy is of David Mathew, knight(d.1484), 2nd of Sir Christopher Mathew(d.1527), eldest son of Reyborne Mathew, 2nd son of Sir David
Jump up ^ Sir David was the first to adopt the modern style of Welsh surname, "Mathew", having discontinued use of the traditional Welsh patronymic "ap Mathew", meaning "son of Mathew". The name, properly "Mathew", was spelt by Sir David's descendants variously, e.g., in the Funeral Entries, preserved in the Record Tower at Dublin, vol. vii., p. 18, the name of the founder of the Irish branch of the family is entered as "George Matthewes, Oct. 1670". Admiral Mathew of Llandaff Court, and all his descendants, spelt their name invariably "Mathews".(Mathew 1895, p. [page needed])
Jump up ^ He was buried in Llandaff Cathedral, where his altar tomb may still be seen, the effigy of him thereon measuring 6 feet 7 inches (2.01 m) (Mathew 1895, p. [page needed]).
Jump up ^ His tomb, ornamented with full-length effigy in alabaster, is in Saint Mary's Chapel in Llandaff Cathedral, which has ever since been the property and burial-place of the family of (Mathew) is one of the most interesting extant monuments of that time. An accurate description of the various monuments of the family in this chapel may be found in An survey...: "This is said to be the Monument of David Matthew the Great, who was Standard-Bearer to Edward IV, and was murther'd at Neath ... by some of the Turberviles, with whom he was at Variance" (Willis 1718, p. 25).
Jump up ^ The heathcock crest may be observed on the helm of the effigy of Sir David Mathew in Llandaff Cathedral. The "Genealogy of the Earls of Landaff" gives the crest for Sir David as a blackcock proper, although the Earls of Landaff bore as crest a "heathcock proper", which is however depicted akin to a rooster on the mural monument erected in 1987 in memory of Thomas James Mathew(d.1862), son and heir of Francis Mathew, 2nd Earl Landaff in the Mathew Chapel, Llandaff ([citation needed])
Jump up ^ Burke 1884, p. 669 (Mathew co. Glamorgan)
Jump up ^ Jones, Anthony (1987), p.9
^ Jump up to: a b c Burke 1847, p. 844.
Jump up ^ Mathew 1895, p. [page needed].
Jump up ^ Boots 1970, p. 17 quotes Clark 1886
Jump up ^ Mathew 1895, p. [page needed].
Jump up ^ Mathew 1895, p. [page needed].
^ Jump up to: a b Burke 1884, p. 669 (Mathew co. Glamorgan).
Jump up ^ Burke 1884, p. 669 (Mathew Castle-Menych).
Jump up ^ Jones 1987, p. 21.
Jump up ^ Mathew 1895, p. [page needed].
Jump up ^ Mathew 1895, p. [page needed].
Jump up ^ Lecture given by Mr J. Barry Davies at the Friends of Llandaff Cathedral 2003 annual lecture, published in "Friends of Llandaff Cathedral 71st annual report 2003/4"; Notes from site of Barry L. Matthews, www.users.qwest.net
Jump up ^ National Archives Prob/11/6, image ref 7
^ Jump up to: a b New Horizons History Group (1991). Twixt Chain and Gorge (PDF). Shadowfax Publishing, Radyr, Cardiff. ISBN 0-9514887-4-0.
Jump up ^ Moore 1995, p. [page needed].
References[edit]
Boots, John R. (compiler) (1970), The Mat(t)hews family: an anthology of Mathews lineages, p. 7
Willis, Browne (1718), An survey of the Cathedral-Church of Landaff, London: R. Gosling, p. 25
Burke, Sir Bernard (1884), The General Armory of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. Comprising a registry of Armorial Bearing from the earliest to the present time, London: Harrison, p. 669
Jones, Anthony L. (1987), Heraldry in Glamorgan, South Glamorgan No.3, Llandaff Cathedral, D.Brown & Sons Ltd, ISBN 0905928946 (Cathedral booklet)
Moore, Patricia, ed. (January 1995), Glamorgan Sheriffs, Cardiff: Gwasg Prifysgol Cymru / University of Wales Press, ISBN 978-0-7083-1264-3
Attribution
This article incorporates text from a work in the public domain: Burke, John (1847), Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 2, H. Colburn, p. 844
This article incorporates text from a work in the public domain: Clark, George T (1886), Limbus Patrum Morganiae et Glamorganiae, London
This article incorporates text from a work in the public domain: Mathew, Rev. Murray Alexander (1895), The Genealogy of the Earls of Landaff of Thomastown, County Tipperary, Ireland, London: Simpkin (A rare book)
Further reading[edit]
Odell, Dr. Garner Scott (2003), Sir David: The Life and Loves of a Welsh Knight (Historical romance of life of Sir David Mathew)
Rees, William Jenkins (1840), The Liber landavensis, Llyfr Teilo, or, The ancient register of the cathedral church of Llandaff; from mss. in the libraries of Hengwrt, and of Jesus college, Oxford, Llandovery, W. Rees
Mathews, David. Mathew of Llandaf, 1997 (PDF), Docs.google.com, retrieved December 2012 Check date values in: |access-date= (help) (A history of the family)
Mathew, David; Mathew, Hugh Pawley, "Mathew Family", Welsh Biography Online, National Library of Wales

Heraldic achievement at top of mural memorial tablet erected 1987 in Llandaff Cathedral, Mathew Chapel:[2]
"In memory of Thomas James Mathew son and heir of Francis James Mathew second Earl of Landaff born in London 1798 died in Cape Town 1862".
The arms are blasoned: Or, a lion rampant sable.
Crest: A heathcock proper.
Supporters: Two unicorns rampant silver maned tufted hooved collared and chained or.
Motto: A Fynno Duw a Fydd ("What God wills will be") 
MATHEW, Sir David ap (I15040)
 
4230 Staple.
PAGE 186, 2 last lines. For Grove read Groves.
PAGE 190, line 8 from the bottom. Add, on one of these tombs is an inscription for Lawrence Omer, alias Homer, gent. of Staple, obt. 1661, at. 25, having married Rebecca, daughter of John Degnez, by whom he had Mary, deceased, and Charles. Arms, Quarterly, per pale and fess indented, on a bend, 3 lozenges impaling quarterly first and fourth 3 birds, second and third 5 lozenges in fess.

From: 'Addenda and corrigenda to volume 9', The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent: Volume 10 (1800), pp. 425-438. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=63630&strquery=omer. Date accessed: 17 January 2008.

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Hasted's History of Kent, p. 189

Staple
There was a family of the name of Omer, called likewise Homer, which had constantly resided in this parish, their mansion being in Staple-street, for upwards of four hundred years, as appears by old court rolls, wills, and other evidences. The last of them who resided here, was Laurence Omer, gent. who died about the year 1661, leaving an only son Charles, who died unmarried; their burial place was in this church-yard, and there are now two of their tombs remaining there, one of which is much adorned with sculpture, but the inscriptions are nearly obliterated, only there can be read on the latter, the name Omer, alias Homer. 
OMER, Laurence (I8137)
 
4231 Stated on burial as being husband of Catherine Parker, abode Walcot.

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Walcot St. Swithins
Parker Betty c 1 Mar 1737 Richard/Anne
Parker Anne c 26 Dec 1735 Richard/Anne


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St Mary's Church, Bathwick (also called Bathwick Old Church) was a parish church in Bathwick in the city of Bath in England. The church was demolished in 1818. Its parish was succeeded by St Mary the Virgin's Church, Bathwick (completed by 1814) on Church Road at the base of Bathwick Hill. Its churchyard is currently contained in that of St John the Baptist's Church, Bathwick. The medieval church of St. Mary's, then called Bathwick Old Church, was demolished in January 1818.

Many of the stones, as well as the altar, pulpit and roof timbers, were recycled to construct St Mary the Virgin Parish Church's new mortuary chapel. However, this new chapel never was licensed to perform marriages and only occasionally performed funerals and baptisms. It is now bricked in, abandoned, and thoroughly decrepit.

The churchyard and many of the burial plots of Bathwick Old Church still exists in St John the Baptist, Bathwick Churchyard. The east end of the Victorian church of St John's now occupies the west end tower location of Bathwick Old Church. The entirety of St John's was designed to fit in the old church's space.
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Don't know if this is my Robert Parker:

Doc type Miscellaneous Address Not stated
Doc source Bath Loyal Association Petition
Doc desc 1792/93 Parish Not stated
Reference BC/9/2/3
Index prepared by Roderick Sampson

possible baptism:
County Somerset
Place Wedmore
Church name St Mary
Register type Parish Register
Baptism date 26 Feb 1752
Person forename Robert
Father forename John
Father surname PARKER
Mother forename Mary

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other baptisms at Walcot:
First name(s) Sarah
Last name Parker
Birth year -
Baptism year 1751
Baptism date 17 Dec 1751
Denomination Anglican
Place Walcot
County Somerset
Country England
Father's first name(s) John
Father's last name Parker
Mother's first name(s) Anne
Event type Baptisms, marriages & burials
Archive Somerset Archives
Document type Bishop's transcripts
Archive reference D/D/RR 430


First name(s) George
Last name Parker
Birth year -
Baptism year 1599-1812
Baptism date 04 Jun ?
Denomination Anglican
Place Walcot
County Somerset
Country England
Father's first name(s) George
Father's last name Parker
Mother's first name(s) Dinah
Event type Baptisms, marriages & burials
Archive Somerset Archives
Document type Bishop's transcripts
Archive reference D/D/RR 430


Parker Henry Merchant Jane m 27 Jan 1722/3 he reputed parishioner of Street, she of Wookey - banns Walcot St. Swithins PR

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British Actor bears a striking resemblance to John James Harris Hill
!Births Jun 1962 PARKER Nathaniel ROWE-DUTTON Kensington 5c 1821

!parents: Sir Peter Parker, industrialist he died 2002
Gillian Rowe-Dutton, bn London 1925 y oungest daughter of Sir Ernest Rowe-Dutton 1891-1965 a high ranking civil servant in the Treasury, she died 11 Mar 2010 aged 85

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index on ancestry
Robert Parker
Baptism 26 Feb 1752 Wedmore John,
Mary
View Record
Robert Parker
Baptism 1 Jul 1753 Wells, St Cuthbert John
View Record
Robert Bargery
Baptism 3 Oct 1750 Crewkerne Samuel
View Record
Robt Sever Parker
Baptism 29 Dec 1748 Wells, St Cuthbert George
View Record
Robt Parker
Baptism 2 Nov 1746 Wells, St Cuthbert George
View Record
Robt Parker
Baptism 4 Aug 1740 Lympsham Robt,
Ann
View Record
Robert Bargery
Baptism 3 Nov 1751 Crewkerne Samuel
View Record
Robert Porker
Baptism 5 Oct 1757 Wembdon Robert,
Joan 
PARKER, Robert (I11878)
 
4232 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I12651)
 
4233 Stephen s/o John/Frances Collard at Chislet chr May 29, 1724.


Query: Did he marry Elizabeth Taylor on 12 Jun 1789 at St. Martin, Canterbury?

Newspaper article:
Coasters cleared outwards
From Faversham: the Sea-salter, John Collard.

Collard Elizabeth bn 6 Mar 1822 daughter of John/Mary, labourer of Chartham, chr. 14 Apr 1822 CBY, St. Peters Street Wesleyan PR
Collard John bn 12 Aug 1824 son of John/Mary, labourer of Chartham, chr. 2 Sep 1824 CBY, St. Peters Street Wesleyan PR
Collard Rebecca bn 21 Oct 1833 d/o John/Mary of Chartham, chr. 12 Dec 1833 ibid


Thos Collard of Petham blacksmith bach (40) & Jane Goldfinch of Waltham sp (25), at W. 12 Jul 1788.
Book: Volume 32
Collection: Kent, Surrey, London: - Canterbury Marriage Licences, 1781-1809 (Marriage)


Thos Coller of Thanington wid & Sarah Smitten of the s sp, at T. 07 Sep 1761.
Book: Volume 30
Collection: Kent, Surrey, London: - Canterbury Marriage Licences, 1751-1780 (Marriage)


First name(s) Stephen
Last name Collar
Birth year -
Baptism year 1720
Baptism date 28 Feb 1720
Place Folkestone, Ss Mary & Eanswith
Father's first name(s) Henry
Mother's first name(s) Catherine


COLLARD Henry RICHARDS Catharine M 27 Apr 1717 Stowting BT
COLLARD Henry RICHARDS Catharine ML 11 Oct 1717 he of Coldred, bachelor, and she of Lyming, spinster. At Lyminge or Stowting. 11 Oct 1717 Canterbury ML BOYDS G & B II




First name(s) Stephen
Last name Coller
Gender Male
Birth year -
Birth place -
Baptism year 1722
Baptism date 06 May 1722
Place Canterbury
County Kent
Country England
Father's first name(s) -
Father's last name - illegitimate
Mother's first name(s) - not recorded
Mother's last name - Coller

First name(s) Stephen
Last name Coller
Baptism year 1743
Baptism date 19 Jan 1743
Father's first name(s) Thos
Father's last name Coller
Mother's first name(s) Mary
Place Barking, St Margaret
County Essex

If so Henry/Catherine of Folkestone then additional siblings are:
Dorothy 15 Jun 1718 at Folkestone
Henry 23 Jun 1722 at Dover
Thomas 03 Jul 1724 at Dover
John 03 Dec 1727 at Dover
William 11 Jul 1729 at Dover


Misc information
Collard Mary dbl 24 Jun 1832 aged 4 years, residing at Petham Petham PR
Collard Henry dbl 20 Jul 1833 aged 7 years, residing at Petham Petham

Gregory Richard Luff Sarah m 21 Jan 1816 both widowed, he of this parish, she of Waltham - banns. Wit: John Collard, John Hambrook 
COLLARD, Stephen (I3765)
 
4234 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I15843)
 
4235 Stephen was a cordwainer living in Barming during the time of the 1871 census. RUCK, Stephen (I7035)
 
4236 Stephen was cut-off from the LDS on 7 Feb 1854, the same date as his mother, but no reasons were stated. He must have been re-instated as during January 1855, he emigrated to the USA with his brother Daniel and John on the Charles Buck, an LDS emigration ship. Stephen was described as a shoemaker. SPILLETT, Stephen (I4071)
 
4237 Stephen's age at death was recorded as 29 years. COLLARD, Stephen ^ (I3768)
 
4238 Steward to her Uncle the Arch-Bimop, and Anceftor to the Darrels of Calehill and Scotney. The Arch-Bimop purchafed
the Manor and Eftate of this latter place, of the Family of Afiburnham ; and
gave it as a Portion to his Niece, on her Marriage with Barrel, who fettled it
on his younger Son 'Thomas.
DARREL, John (I9286)
 
4239 STICKARD, Nicholas, of Biddenden, husbandman, widower, and Mildred COPPINGE of Marden, widow of John Coppinge, late deceased. At Marden. John Nethersole of Marden, gent., bondsman. July 3, 1632. STIKER, Nicolas (I12281)
 
4240 STOTT, WILLIAM
Rank:
Private
Service No:
S/40889
Date of Death:
10/04/1918
Regiment/Service:
Black Watch (Royal Highlanders)
6th Bn.
Panel Reference
Panel 78 to 83.
Memorial
LOOS MEMORIAL
The Loos Memorial forms the sides and back of Dud Corner Cemetery. Loos-en-Gohelle is a village 5 kilometres north-west of Lens, and Dud Corner Cemetery is located about 1 kilometre west of the village, to the north-east of the N943, the main Lens to Bethune road.
Dud Corner Cemetery stands almost on the site of a German strong point, the Lens Road Redoubt, captured by the 15th (Scottish) Division on the first day of the battle. The name "Dud Corner" is believed to be due to the large number of unexploded enemy shells found in the neighbourhood after the Armistice. The Loos Memorial commemorates over 20,000 officers and men who have no known grave, who fell in the area from the River Lys to the old southern boundary of the First Army, east and west of Grenay. On either side of the cemetery is a wall 15 feet high, to which are fixed tablets on which are carved the names of those commemorated. At the back are four small circular courts, open to the sky, in which the lines of tablets are continued, and between these courts are three semicircular walls or apses, two of which carry tablets, while on the centre apse is erected the Cross of Sacrifice. 
STOTT, William ^ (I12526)
 
4241 sub-fonds PROBATE / COURT RECORDS
sub-series Archdeaconry Court, Miscellaneous
Repository Canterbury Cathedral Archives
Reference No. CCA-DCb-PRC/18/36/56
Title Archdeaconry Court , Miscellaneous
Date 28 Apr 1680
Description Plaintiff: Rich DALE vintner, Canterbury. Defendant: Jn MILSTEAD Woodchurch from Shadoxhurst; Document: Arts; Case: Disc Not attending parish church; fornication
Related Material See also: DCb/PRC/18/36/57
PublnNote For abbreviations, see introduction to CCA-DCb-PRC/18

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1679: John Milsted of Shadoxhurst, yeoman (116) 'Item paid unto Mr. Robert Steede for phisick by him administred to the said deceased' (CKS PRC2/38/51) 
MILSTED, John (I4903)
 
4242 Sub-Inspector of Police in Ireland JONES, Henry (I10514)
 
4243 Subject: James turner
MR. J. A. TURNER. BOONAH. July 7. Mr. James Albert Turner, a well known farmer of the Kalbar district, died at his home, near Mt. French, this morning, after an illness of several weeks. A distressing cir- cumstance associated with his death is that he leaves a widow and a young family of nine, the youngest of whom is only three weeks old. Mr Turner was 44 years of age and had been in the Fassifern district all his life. He was a son of Mr. George Turner, who at present lives in Ipswich and who spent many years in the Fassitern. Some weeks ago Mr. Turner sought medical treatment in Ipswich and entered hospital there, but his condition was beyondsurgical aid and he was allowed to return to his home. The funeral will leave the Kalbar Church of England at 2 p·.m. to-morrow.

Queensland Times (Ipswich) (Qld. : 1909 - 1954), Thursday 8 July 1937, page 8 
TURNER, James Albert (I451)
 
4244 Suicide by hanging in the stables at the George Inn. COLLARD, Stephen (I3771)
 
4245 Summary of the Ancestry of Elizabeth LOCK, who married Robert LANE (my 3xGGPs):



Ø Elizabeth LOCK (1808-1872) was born in Oake, Somerset d/o Thomas LOCK & Elizabeth “Betty” STEVENS, my 4xGGPs. Nothing is known of Betty’s STEVENS ancestry, as the couple married in 1803 Taunton;

Ø Thomas LOCK (c1775-1856) was the s/o George LOCK & Edith WHITE of Bradford on Tone, Somerset, my 5xGGPs. The couple married in Bradford in 1779;

Ø The WHITE family lineage in Bradford on Tone is:

o Edith WHITE (1755-1843) d/o Richard WHITE & Joan FRY (c1715-1768), my 6xGGPs, who married in 1739 Bradford. Nothing is known of Joan’s FRY ancestry;

o Richard WHITE (1717-1797) d/o Roger WHITE (c1670-1722) & Mary MORLEY (c1685-1744), my 7xGGPs, who married in 1705 Bradford. Nothing is known of Mary’s ancestry. Roger appears to have first married Margery SMITH in 1692 Bradford;

Ø The LOCK family lineage in Bradford on Tone is:

o George LOCK (1752-1836) is s/o George LOCK (c1710-1794) & Joan STACY who married in 1743 Bradford on Tone, my 6xGGPs. George appears to have married Elizabeth PRESCOTT (from my Bradford on Tone PRESCOTT family, see below) in 1732 Bradford, without apparent issue. There are no LOCKs in Bradford parish records prior to George’s 1732 marriage, so the LOCKs have origins in another Somerset village. George may have had a brother Joseph LOCK, who also married in Bradford about this time;

o Joan STACY (1719-1801) is the d/o Edward STACY & Anne PRESCOTT who married in 1713 Bradford on Tone, my 7xGGPs. Edward STACY (1668-1729) is the s/o Edward STACY & Joan MILLS (my 8xGGPs) who married in Martock, Somerset in 1658. No further information on the MILLS side;

o Ann PRESCOTT (1690) is d/o Robert PRESCOTT & Margaret EDNEY (or EDNY) who married in 1674 Bradford on Tone, my 8xGGPs. Margaret EDNEY (1654-1720) is the d/o Nicholas EDNEY & Anne KEENE, my 9xGGPs, who married in Halse, Somerset in 1651. Nicholas EDNEY (1626) is the Milverton-born s/o Nicholas EDNEY & Margaret JAMES who married in 1623 Milverton (my 10xGGPs);

o Robert PRESCOTT (bef 1653-1718) is the s/o James PRESCOTT (c1625-1667) & Justine TEMPLAR (1627 Bradford, d/o Thomas TEMPLAR and unknown wife, my 10xGGPs). My 9xGGPs married in Bradford in 1649;



Research into the lines in the area around Bradford on Tone is discussed on my “Bristol Branches” Facebook page, where I have built connected trees. It should be noted that not all families of these names can claim Bradford on Tone as their ancestral home as all are quite common in the immediate vicinity. Unfortunately, the quality of helpful research detail in Bradford parish records is poor.

[Source: http://creativegraces.net/genindex/lane.html]

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LOCK, Thomas (I12452)
 
4246 Surgeon LE GRAND, George (I12569)
 
4247 Surname Forename Parish Addr Date Details DocSrce Reference
Knight Aaron 01 Feb 1798 Inquest. Died 01 Feb 1798. Hanging Inquests BC/4/1/1/414 - 416
Knight Charles St Michaels Walcot Street [24 Dec 1766] City Rates BC/5/70/1/#1127
KNIGHT Henry [1792/93] Bath Loyal Assoc BC/9/2/3
KNIGHT J. [1792/93] Bath Loyal Assoc BC/9/2/3
KNIGHT James [1792/93] labourer Bath Loyal Assoc BC/9/2/3
KNIGHT Jane Langley Burrell, Chippenham, Wiltshire 23 December 1756 Discharged 20 April 1757 Min Water Hospital 0386/4/1/0152
Knight Jane 02 Sep 1763 Admitted Blue Coat School 0103/1/2/1/0321
Knight Jane St Michaels Gracious Street [24 Dec 1766] (Mr Richard Merchant) City Rates BC/5/70/1/#0988
Knight Jane St Michael Gracious St. 02 Apr 1772 Rate: 1sh. City Rates BC/5/70/8/0060
Knight John 30/12/1731 as Poulterer for 7 years Apprentices BC/15/3/0016
KNIGHT John Castle Precincts Bristol, Gloucestershire 22 June 1753 Age 50. Discharged 10 October 1753 Min Water Hospital 0386/4/1/0059
KNIGHT John [1792/93] Bath Loyal Assoc BC/9/2/3
Knight late John St Michaels Frog Lane [24 Dec 1766] (Pulled down) City Rates BC/5/70/1/#1225
Knight Mr St Michael Bond Street [24 Jun 1790] Rate: 9sh 4d. City Rates BC/5/70/30/0050
Knight Mr Walcot Walcot Street [24 Jun 1790] Rate: 2sh 11d. Also: Atkinson City Rates BC/5/70/30/0078
Knight Mr St James Galloway Bldgs [24 Jun 1790] Rate: 6sh 1½d. City Rates BC/5/70/30/0023
Knight Mr Henry St Michael Bond St. [24 Jun 1781] Rate: 10sh 10d. City Rates BC/5/70/19/0048
Knight Mrs Walcot Walcot Street [24 Jun 1781] Rate: 3sh 4d. City Rates BC/5/70/19/0077
Knight Mrs Walcot Vineyards [24 Jun 1790] Rate: 2sh 11d. Also: Chilton City Rates BC/5/70/30/0076
Knight Mrs Jane St Michael Gracious St. [24 Jun 1781] Rate: 1sh. City Rates BC/5/70/19/0058
KNIGHT Richard [1792/93] Bath Loyal Assoc BC/9/2/3
Knight Thomas St Michaels Trym Street [24 Dec 1766] City Rates BC/5/70/1/#0811
Knight Widow St Michaels Ladymead [24 Dec 1766] City Rates BC/5/70/1/#1011
KNIGHT William [1792/93] Bath Loyal Assoc BC/9/2/3 
KNIGHT, Catharine (I11879)
 
4248 SURNAME GIVEN NAME BRIDESUR BRIDE GIV EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
ANDREWS Henry PERRIN Elizabeth M 29 Oct 1694 Boughton Aluph AD  
Family (F5823)
 
4249 SURNAME GIVEN NAME BRIDESUR BRIDE GIV EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
BRIGHTLINGE John STIKER Janne M 25 Oct 1619 Marden AD 
STIKER, Joane (I12312)
 
4250 SURNAME GIVEN NAME BRIDESUR BRIDE GIV EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
HAMMON William PARHAM Charlotte M 11 Aug 1810 he of Great Chart, she of this parish - banns. Wit: Peter Parham/John Austen Westwell BT 
PARRAM OR PARHAM, Peter (I18379)
 

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