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4801 Biography from wikitree.com:

Zachary married Susanna Baxter on 5 Jul 1596, at St Michael Cornhill, London, England. [1][2]

Will: "Zacharye Goodyeare, citizen and vintner of London, 18 July 1613, proved 31 July 1613. To be buried in the parish church at St. Gregory near Paul's in London. To My loving mother ten pounds. To my cousin Mary Storye five pounds. the residue to my son Stephen Goodyere whom I make executor. I make, nominate and ordain my brothers John Partridge, scrivener, and Ralph Bowlton, merchant tailor, citizens of London, overseers.[3]

Source
↑ England Marriages, 1538-1973, online database, family search.org, accessed 7 May 2017, Zacharye Goodyeare and Suzanna Baxster, 05 Jul 1596; citing Saint Michael Cornhill,London,London,England, reference ; FHL microfilm 374503, 942 B4HA V. 7.
↑ Extracts from English Parish Registers. New England Historical and Genealogical Register. 61:189
↑ "English Ancestry of Stephen Goodyear, Deputy Governor of the New Haven Colony. TAG 57:1
Green, Scott Wesley. Further Information Regarding the English Origins of the Goodyear Family, Connecticut Ancestry (Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc., Stamford, Conn., May 2006) Vol. 48, No. 4, Page 157.
"Zachary Goodyear was probably born between 1570 and 1572, assuming he was 12-14 when apprenticed as a vintner to his Uncle Andrew Goodyear 31 March 1584, and 21-23 when made a freeman of the Vintners' Company of London 11 May 1593. He actively pursued the vintners' trade, taking on apprentices of his own on a regular basis over the years." 
Goodyear, Zachary (I27562)
 
4802 Biography from wikitree:

According to the latest research by Craig Partridge, Ph.D. in "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist the parents Edmund Tapp(1592-1653) are Edmund Tapp (c.1550 - 1635) and Margaret (Unknown) (c 1550 - 1639).[1] His father was born about 1550 in Felmersham, Bedfordshire, England. He was the son of Robert Tapp (1515-) and his mother is unknown.[2] Edmund attended Caius College in Cambridgshire in 1568 when he was 18.[3] He married about 1585 to Margaret (Unknown).[4] The widow Margaret Tapp was buried at Chellington in Bedfordshire on 26 Apr 1639. She left a Will which mentioned her daughter Agnes Welles as well as Agnes’ husband and children.[5]

In 1582, in the court of Common Pleas, Edmund Tappe was suing Thomas Tappe of Radwell in the parish of Felmersham, husbandman, for a debt of 20 pounds.[6]

The “old man” Tapp, was buried at Bennignton in Hertfordshire on 2 May 1635, where the record list’s “1635 - Edmundus Tappe senex (old man) sepult: May 2nd.”[1] His estate was administered on 28 May 1635, and given to his son Edmund Tapp.[7]

Education
From John Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses:

TAPPE, EDMUND. Admitted pensioner, (age 18) at Caius, July 14, 1568. Son of Robert, of Felmersham, Beds. School, Felmersham.[8]

Sources
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ http://aalt.law.uh.edu/AALT5/Eliz/CP40no1399/aCP40no1399Pt1fronts/IMG_0748.htm
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ https://archive.org/details/p1alumnicantabri04univuoft/page/200/mode/2up?view=theater
Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73 
Tapp, Edmund (I27594)
 
4803 Biography from wikitree:

Agnes was the heiress of her father and brought to the marriage Brazen Head Farm in Lindsell. She was admitted tenant of her father 's lands 21 Dec 1493. Manor court record: "and that Robert Algor died since the last court and that he held of the lord the day he died ...a tenement & 3 acres of land with the appurtenances, called Loves & one toft called Madges and one other called Dottes, as well as one other tenement and 14 acres of land called Hoberdes...and that Agnes, wife of Thomas Fitche is his daughter and next heir...admitted tenant thereof."

In the same year, Agnes received more land when her mother died. She takes control of Hubbardes (or 'Hoberdes' as it is spelled here) with its 14 acres of land and buildings. And she also gets three more acres, also with some buildings called Loves, and a couple of 'tofts' (which can be houses and outbuildings or the sites for same) called Madges and Dottes. All of these are in the parish of Lindsell.

After the death of her husband Thomas, the following court record appears on 23 Dec 1514: Friday in St. Thomas Apostle, 6 Henry VIII: Thomas Fytche died since last court, who held 12 acres of land in field called Baresley, etc. and who 'languens in extremis' surrendered same to use of Agnes his wife for her life, with remainder to William Fytche, son of same Thomas and Agnes. Also one field called Herteshede, etc., to use of said Agnes, for her life, with remainder to Roger, son of said Thomas and Agnes. And said Agnes surrenders into hands of the lord one tenement and 14 acres of land called Hobbardes, and lordre-grants same to said Agnes, and William Fytche, son of said Thomas and Agnes. And said Agnes is admitted to one toft and 3 crofts of land called Gobyes, which she and Thomas Fycche her late husband held jointly.

Agnes died sometime prior to 3 May 1527.

Sources
A Fitch Family History - English Ancestors of the Fitches of Colonial Connecticut by John T. Fitch, publ. 1990 by Picton Press, Camden, Maine. (Abstracted at https://web.archive.org/web/20211130035405/http://www.baronage.co.uk/bphtm-01/fitch-1.html)
History of the Fitch Family A.D. 1400-1930, Vol. I, Ch. 1, compiled by Roscoe Conkling Fitch, publ. privately by the Fitch Family, p. 12
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=24279608&pid=1545859074 
Algore, Agnes (I3571)
 
4804 Biography from wikitree:

Ann Hirtz Tapp. Ann died between the age of 89-90 years.

The origins, maiden name, parents and date of birth of Ann, wife of Edmund Tapp are unknown.[1] She first appears in the baptism record of her first child on 30 JAN 1613 in Great Haddam, Hertfordshire, England.[1] From this we estimate that the couple probably married about 1612 and that they were born around 1592. Her husband Edmund Tapp was born about 1592 in Felmersham, Bedfordshire, England to Edmund Tapp (1550-1635) and Margaret (Unknown) (1550-1639).[1] They set sale with their children on 31 May 1637 and arrived on 31 Jul 1637 and settled first in New Haven.[1][2][3]

He died Before 1 Apr 1653 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut when his will was proved.[1] Find A Grave: Memorial #8490 for Edmund Tapp has a burial monument or cenotaph in the Milford Cemetery, Milford, New Haven, Connecticut. [4]

Ann died August or early September 1673 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut.[1][5]

Her will is dated 17 August 1673 and her inventory was taken on 8 September 1673 and recorded in New Haven.[6]

Children:

Edmund bp 30 JAN 1613 • Great Haddam, Hertfordshire, England, died young.[1]
Mary bp 10 DEC 1615 • Great Haddam, Hertfordshire, England, died young[1]
Anne bp 8 MAR 1618 in Ware, Hertfordshire, England[1]
Elizabeth bp 26 DEC 1619 Ware, Hertfordshire, England, died 1 MAY 1676 New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut[1]
Mary (2nd of the name) born about 1622 Ware, Hertfordshire, England, died before 1 NOV 1670 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut [1]
Margaret bp 6 JUN 1624 in Bennington, Hertfordshire, England[1]
Edmund (2nd of the name) bp 20 JUL 1626 in Bennington, Hertfordshire, England - died before 4 DEC 1626 in Bennington, Hertfordshire, England[1]
Jane bp 14 FEB 1627 in Bennington, Hertfordshire, England, died 31 OCT 1703 in Milford, New Haven Colony, Connecticut, married Gov Robert Treat[1]

Sources
↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73 link
↑ Robert Charles Anderson Great Migration Directory p 329 ("Bennington, Herfordshire; 1637; New Haven, Milford")
↑ The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1847-. (Online database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1900) 54:352 link
↑ Husband Ed's Find A Grave, database and images (accessed 05 May 2019), memorial page for Edmund Tapp (c.30 Jan 1578-26 Apr 1653), Find A Grave: Memorial #8490, citing Milford Cemetery, Milford, New Haven County, Connecticut, USA ; Maintained by Find A Grave .
↑ Ann's Find A Grave, "Find a Grave", database with images, Find A Grave: Memorial #83609716 (accessed 31 March 2023), Memorial page for Ann Hirtz Tapp (1583-Aug 1673), citing Milford Cemetery, Milford, New Haven County, Connecticut, USA; Maintained by Linda Mac (contributor 47062703).
↑ “New Haven Probate Records, Vol. 1-2, 1647-1703”, database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L92K-G9NN-2 : 9 March 2021), New Haven, Connecticut, FHL microfilm 007626739, image 167. New Haven Probate Record, 1647-1687, Vol. 1, Part 2, page 50-51.
Reuben H. Hyde genealogy, or, The descendants in the female as well as the male lines : from William Hyde of Norwich, with their places of residences, and dates Note: Errata: p. 1442-1446
The family of Anthony L. Davis & Caroline E. Wilcox & other Hoosier kin / by James Earl Davis -- Yankee & English ancestors of Caroline (Wilcox) Davis / Steven Earl Coulter. (p. 85) and index. link
Ancestry.com 
Unknown, Anne Tapp (I27593)
 
4805 Biography from wikitree:

Anne (Tapp) Andrews immigrated to New England as a child during the Puritan Great Migration (1621-1640).
Birth
Before 8 MAR 1618/9 Ware, County Hertford, England[citation needed]
Baptism: 8 MAR 1618/9 Ware, County Hertford, England[citation needed]
Father: Edmund Tapp[1]

Marriages
Anne Tapp married first William Gibbard.

"Willm Andrewes & Anne Gibbard were married by Mr Wm Jones Decemb: 7th 65"[2][1]

Death
1701 New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut[1]

Gibbard Children
Hannah bp 1641 m. Thomas Clark.
Esther bp 1642; d young.
Mary bp 1644; m. Jeremiah Horton.
Phebe bp 1646; d 1720; m. Nathan Andrews.
Sarah bp 1648; m. Andrew Sanford Jr.
Rebecca b. 1650; m. Thomas Yale
Samuel b 1653 d 1673
Timothy b. 1655; d. 1684/5; m. Sarah Coe
John b. 1658; d. 1659,
Abigail b. 1660 m. John Goodyear
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Jacobus, Donald Lines (compiler). Families of Ancient New Haven, Vol I-VIII. and Index Vol IX New Haven: 1931. Reprint, Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1974, 1981, 1997. Originally published as New Haven Genealogical Magazine, Volumes I-VIII. Rome, NY and New Haven, CT 1922-1932.
↑ Vital Records of New Haven 1649-1850 Part I. Hartford: The Connecticut Society of the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America, 1917
Donald Lines Jacobus, Families of Ancient New Haven ([CD]Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1981[originally]Rome, N.Y. and New Haven, Conn., 1922-1932), vol 8, p 2031, vol 1 p 40, vol 3 p 641.
Susan Woodruff Abbott, Families of Early Milford, Connecticut, CD-Local and Family Histories: CT, 1600's - 1800's, (Produced in collaboration with the Genealogical Publishing Company, 2000), p. 204, p. 736
White, Almira Larkin. Ancestry of John Barber White and His Descendants (J.B. White, Kansas City Mo., 1913) Page 272.
Mindrum, Thomas L., The English Origin of William Gibbard of Bearley, Warwickshire, England, and his life in New Haven, Connecticut Ancestry (Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc., Stamford, Conn., Nov 2023) Vol. 66, No. 2, Page 60. 
Tapp, Edmund (I27592)
 
4806 Biography from wikitree:

Anne was the daughter of Thomas Tyrrell of Gipping, Suffolk[1] and Margaret Willoughby. She may have been born at Gipping Suffolk, where her father had lands, but this is not certain.[2][3] Her birth date is not known and has been estimated, based on what is known about her marriage date.

Anne married John Clere.[1] before 19 August 1529.[2][3] They had the following children:

Robert[1][2][3]
Thomas[1][2][3]
Edward[1][2][3]
Margaret,[1] who married Walter Haddon[2][3]
Elizabeth, who married Walter Herenden and Francis Trevor[1][2][3] and was named in her father's will[4]
Anne's father complained in his 1551 will that[5]

"I paid the day of the marriage of my said daughter one hundred marks of ready money over & besides the apparel of my said daughter, and also I kept my son-in-law, Sir John Clere that now is, and his wife, my daughter, and all his at my proper costs and charges by the space of 7 years and more, and found them not only meat and drink, but also all that ever longed to them and theirs besides.
"And so all things duly considered, with the miserable estate that he hath brought my daughter, his wife, unto, my conscience is discharged, for I owe Sir John Clere never a penny, but rather he me, for I bare the great part and most part of the marriage dinner and feast which continued by days, and my brother Clere [meaning his daughter Anne's father-in-law] and my Lady should have borne the charges & not I."
The couple's financial position substantially improved when John Clere inherited substantial lands in Norfolk from his mother in 1538.[6]

In 1551 Anne was one of the legatees in her father's will.[2][3]

Anne's husband died in 1557.[2][3] Richardson's Magna Carta Ancestry says that Anne was "apparently" buried at Cotton, Suffolk on 14 May 1576[2] but he omits this statement in his slightly later Royal Ancestry[3] and gives no clear source. An unsourced entry on FindAGrave says she was buried at Cotton, Suffolk in May 1576.[7]

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Walter Rye (ed.). The Visitacion of Norfolk... Anno 1563... enlarged with another Visitacion... and also the Vissitation... Anno 1616, Harleian Society, 1891, p. 75, Internet Archive
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 Douglas Richardson. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 4 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham, 2nd edition (Salt Lake City: the author, 2011), pp. 6-7, ALSOP 13, Google Books
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), Vol. I, p. 116, ALSOP 14
↑ Will of John Clere, the National Archives, ref. PROB 11/39/381, transcript on the Oxford Shakespeare website, accessed 13 July 2022
↑ Will of Thomas Tyrrell, the National Archives, ref. PROB 11/34/309, transcript on the Oxford Shakespeare website, accessed 13 July 2022
↑ History of Parliament Online, entry for 'CLERE, Sir John (?1511-57), of London, Norwich and Ormesby, Norf.
↑ Find A Grave: Memorial #106979929 
Tyrrell, Anne (I7424)
 
4807 Biography from wikitree:

Birth:
Date: 1586
Place: England
Death:
Date: 1650
Henry Lewens married Sage Tancke on 7 February 1607/8 in Saint Giles Cripplegate, City of London, London, England.[1]

Sources
↑ Marriage: "London, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812," database with images, Ancestry Sharing Link (free access)
(Ancestry Record 1624 #6621684 : subscription required, accessed 2 August 2024), Marriage Place Saint Giles Cripplegate, City of London, London, England, Name Henry Lewens, Marriage Date 7 Feb 1607/8, Spouse Saye [Sage] Tancke, Gender Female [Male], Record Type Marriage; citing London Metropolitan Archives, London, England, London Church of England Parish Registers, Reference Number P69/Gis/A/002/Ms06419/002.
See also:

Four American Ancestries: White, Griggs, Cowles, Judd, Including Haring, Phelps, Denison, Clark, Foote, Coley, Haight, Ayers, and Related Families. United States: P.H. Judd, 2008. https://books.google.com.sl/books?id=-O9atQEACAAJ&q=lewen#v=snippet&q=lewen&f=false Page 520 
Lewen, Henry (I27589)
 
4808 Biography from wikitree:

Deborah Peck, the daughter of Joseph and Sarah Peck, was born July 31, 1672, in Lyme, New London, Connecticut, New England.[1][2]

Deborah Peck married Daniel Sperry in 1694 in Lyme. There are two records, one is Apr 3, 1694. The other is Aug 3, 1694.[2] The New Haven Records say, "Daniell Sperry & Deborah Peck were maried at Lime by mr Wm Eely Comr ye 3rd day of Aprill 1694.[3]

She died Dec 16, 1711[4], and was buried at the New Haven Town Green. [5] Her stone was moved to the Grove street Cemetery where it can still be seen.

Daniel and Sarah had children:[6]

Deborah born 10 Jan. 1694/5.
Ann born 3 Sept. 1696.
Daniel born10 Aug. 1698.
Abel born 15 Nov. 1700.
William born 23 Sep. 1702.
Esther born about 1704.
Elizabeth born about 1707.
Joseph born 30 Dec. 1709.

Sources
↑ "Births Marriages and Deaths in Lyme, Connecticut." New England Historical and Genealogical Register vol Oct 1879, p 438. Boston: NEHGS, 1879
↑ 2.0 2.1 White, Lorraine Cook, ed. The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records: Lyme Connecticut. Vol. 1-55. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1994-2002.
↑ Vital Records of New Haven, 1649-1850 (Connecticut Society of the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America, Hartford, 1917) Part 1, Page 66.
↑ Vital Records of New Haven, 1649-1850 (Connecticut Society of the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America, Hartford, 1917) Part 1, Page 117.
↑ Find A Grave, database and images (findagrave.com : accessed 28 January 2019), memorial page for Deborah Peck Sperry (31 Jul 1672-16 Dec 1711), Find A Grave: Memorial #8705494, citing Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut, USA ; Maintained by Nareen, et al (contributor 46613568) .
↑ Jacobus, Donald Lines (compiler). Families of Ancient New Haven, Vol I-VIII. and Index Vol IX New Haven: 1931. Reprint, Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1974, 1981, 1997. Originally published as New Haven Genealogical Magazine, Volumes I-VIII. Rome, NY and New Haven, CT 1922-1932.
Parker, Edwin Pond. Family Records, Parker-Pond-Peck (Case, Lockwood & Brainard Co., Hartford, Conn., 1892) Page 9.
Lyme (Conn.) Vital Records, from Town Records, Book I., The American Genealogist (1933) Vol. 10, Page 217. 
Peck, Deborah (I27567)
 
4809 Biography from wikitree:

Eleanor of Aquitaine (Aliénor/Aénor d'Aquitaine in French, Alienora in Latin) was Duchess of Aquitaine, Queen Consort of France from 1137 to 1152, and Queen Consort of England from 1154 to 1189.[1]

Birth and Parents
Eleanor was the older daughter of Guillaume d'Aquitaine and Aliénor/Aénor de Châtellerault. She was probably born in 1122-1124.[1] Her place of birth is uncertain: places that have been suggested are Nieul-sur-Autize in the Vendée,[2] the Château de Belin in Guyenne (part of Aquitaine) and the Palais d’Ombrière, Bordeaux (also in Aquitaine).[3] She is named as daughter of Guillaume and Aliénor/Aénor in a charter of 1130.[3]

Inheritance
Eleanor's father died in 1137, leaving her heir to vast parts of the France, centred on the Duchy of Aquitaine (she became Duchess in her own right). She also had a claim on the County of Toulouse, which both her husbands attempted to make good.[1]

Queen Consort of France
In late July 1137), in the Cathedral of Bordeaux, Eleanor was married to Louis VII, who had been crowned French king in 1131, in his father's lifetime.[1] There is some slight disagreement about the exact date of their marriage. Charles Cawley's Medieval Lands gives it as 22 July.[3] Both the English and French versions of Wikipedia cite modern historians giving the date as 25 July.[4] They had two daughters, whose husbands were brothers:

Marie, born in about 1145, who married Henri, 1st Count of Champagne[2][1]
Alix, born in about 1150, who married Thibaut, Count of Blois[2][1]
The marriage brought large parts of France within the more direct control of the French crown. The importance of this is demonstrated by Louis being styled "rex Francorum et dux Aquitanorum" - "king of the French and Duke of the people of Aquitaine".[1]

On 11 June 1147 Eleanor and Louis VII set off from Vézélay to participate in the ineffectual Second Crusade. Eleanor's uncle Raymond of Poitiers, Prince of Antioch, wanted the crusaders to help besiege Aleppo, but Louis declined. This led, or contributed, to friction between Eleanor and Louis.[1]

When Eleanor and Louis sailed back to France in separate ships. She was captured by a Greek but soon rescued, and rejoined her husband: they received a warm reception in Sicily in September 1149. In October, they visited the Pope, who, it is said, was keen to foster good relations between them. But reconciliation did not last, and on 11 March 1152 their marriage was formally dissolved at the castle of Beaugency, the official reason being consanguinity.[1]

Marriage to Henry II of England
This left Eleanor, with her substantial possessions, a very desirable marriage prospect. Within weeks of the dissolution of her first marriage, she married the future Henry II, on 18 May 1152 at either Poitiers Cathedral[1][5] or Bordeaux Cathedral.[6][3] (The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entry for Henry II does not give a marriage place.[7]) The marriage created what is often known as the Angevin Empire, covering England, part of Ireland and large parts of France, and made Henry II one of the most powerful rulers in Europe.

Eleanor was crowned Queen of England at Westminster Abbey on 19 December 1154.[1]

Children of her second Marriage
William, born in Normandy on 17 August 1153, died at Wallingford, Berkshire about 15 December 1156[6]
Henry, known as the Young King, born at Bermondsey, Surrey on 28 February 1155, died in Touraine on 11 June 1183 and was buried in Rouen Cathedral, Normandy[6]
Maud/Matilda, born in 1156, married Henry the Lion, died at Braunschweig (Brunswick), Germany on 28 June 1189[6]
Richard, who became King Richard I, born at Oxford, Oxfordshire on 8 September 1157[6]
Geoffrey, born on 23 September 1158[6]
Eleanor, born at Domfront, Normandy on 13 October 1162, married Alfonso VIII of Castile, died at Burgos, Spain on 25 October 1214[8]
Joan, born at Angers, Anjou in October 1165, married William II of Sicily and Raymond VI of Toulouse, died on 24 September 1199[6]
John, born at Oxford, Oxford on 24 December 1166, who succeeded his brother Richard as King of England [6]
Reign of Henry II
For some years Eleanor played an active role in the administration of both Aquitaine and England. In 1168 she was in Poitou with her son Richard and Patrick, 1st Earl of Salisbury. Patrick was killed in an affray with local barons, and, according to a later account, Eleanor herself came close to being captured and was saved by William Marshal. The next year Richard paid homage to Louis VII for the Duchy of Aquitaine, suggesting that it had been formally vested in him by his parents, but, given that he was only 12, his mother is likely to have taken a leading part in the governance of the Duchy.[1]

In 1173 her children Henry, Richard and Geoffrey rebelled against their father, with Eleanor Backing, and possibly inciting, them. Allegedly disguised as a man, she was seized by supporters of Henry II and taken to England where she was held prisoner for ten years or more. In 1183 her son Henry, just before his death, urged that the conditions of her confinement be relaxed, and this seems to have happened: the next year she met her daughter Matilda and Matilda's husband Henry the Lion when they visited England, with expensive new clothing being ordered for her. In 1185 Henry II ordered their son Richard to hand over to her formal governance of Poitou.[1]

Reign of Richard I
When Richard I came to the throne in 1189, one of his first acts was to set Eleanor free. He restored lands she had held before the 1173 rebellion, and gave her extensive power in England. In 1190-1 she escorted Richard I's wife-to-be Berengaria of Navarre to Messina, Sicily. When Richard was captured by the Duke of Austria as he was returning from crusade and held prisoner, Eleanor corresponded with him about English affairs, took a major role in negotiations for his release, and made an extended visit to Germany. She facilitated reconciliation between Richard and his brother, the future King John, who had engaged in rebellion during Richard's absence. After this she sought retirement in the Abbey of Fontevraud.[1]

Reign of John
The accession of her son John to the throne in 1199 brought her out of retirement, though her focus was on French, not English affairs. She helped to secure for John the support of the barons of Poitou. That year she paid homage in her own right to Philippe Auguste, King of France, for Poitou. This was part of a set of arrangements designed to safeguard John's right to inherit Poitou and to counter claims on Aquitaine and Poitou of her grandson Arthur of Brittany. Now well into her seventies, she found herself involved in military action against Arthur: she oversaw the sacking of the region around Angers. In July 1202 she was besieged by Arthur's forces in Mirebeau, Poitou: King John came to her aid, relieving the town and capturing Arthur.[1]

Patronage of Literature
Eleanor was a significant patron of literature. She attracted troubadours like [Bernart de Ventadorn Bernart de Ventadorn/Bernard de Ventadour] to her court, though suggestions that he was her lover should be discounted. She was one of the dedicatees of the Roman de Rou by Wace, an account in verse of the Dukes of Normandy. Unusually for this period, her funeral monument shows her holding an open book.[1]

Death and Burial
Eleanor died on 31 March 1204, either at Poitiers or at Fontevraud Abbey, Anjou. She was buried next to Henry II and Richard I at Fontevraud Abbey.[1]

Sources
↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Jane Martindale for 'Eleanor [Eleanor of Aquitaine], suo jure duchess of Aquitaine', print and online 2004
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), Vol III, pp. 21-24, FRANCE 6
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Charles Cawley. Medieval Lands: A Prosopography of Medieval European Noble and Royal Families, entry for 'ELEONORE d'Aquitaine', accessed 13 October 2023
↑ Eleanor of Aquitaine and Wikipédie, Aliénor d'Aquitaine
↑ Alison Weir. Britain's Royal Families, Vintage Books, 2008, p. 60
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), Vol. I, pp. 24-43, ENGLAND 4
↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Thomas K Keefe for 'Henry II', print and online 2004, revised online 2008
↑ Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Viol. II, pp. 114-115, CASTILE 5
See also:

Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Vol. 17, pp. 175-178, entry for ' (Quaker 6th month)', Wikisource
Andrews, J F. The Families of Eleanor of Aquitaine: A Female Network of Power in the Middle Ages, History Press, 2023
Cockerill, Sara. Eleanor of Aquitaine: Queen of France and England, Mother of Empires, Amberley Publishing, 2019
Duffy, Mark. Royal Tombs of Medieval England, History Press, 2003, pp. 57 and 60
Weir, Alison. Eleanor of Aquitaine, Vintage Press, 2007 (paperback 2008)
Eleanor of Aquitaine
Wikipédie, Aliénor d'Aquitaine (article in French version of Wikipedia)
Wikidata: Item Q178525, en:Wikipedia help.gif 
Aquitaine, Eleanor of Aquitaine (I7303)
 
4810 Biography from wikitree:

Father in law of Edward de Clere

Knt of Ipswich, Suffolk and Thetford, Norfolk, Burgess (MP) variously for Southwark, Great Bedwyn, Horsham, New Shoreham, and Thetford, and servant of Thomas Howard. 3rd Duke of Norfolk, under Reward to Mary, Duchess of Richmond, steward to Henry, Earl of Surrey, Marshal of the King's Bench, Comptroller of the Household to Edward, Duke of Somerset. Treasurer to Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk.

Sources
Magna Carta Ancestry. Line ALSOP. 14. Edward Clere
History of Parliament online [1] 
Fulmerston, Sir Richard (I7421)
 
4811 Biography from wikitree:

Found to be heir of his father by inquisition at the manor court of Widdington on 9 April 1468, he being then aged 3 years.

On 9 Nov 1487, Thomas was admitted to his inheritance of land at the Widdington manor court. The clerk quoted from the record of 9 Apr 1468 noting the death of John Fytche.

Thomas and Agnes were married before 22 Dec 1490: Court record, dated 22 Dec 1490: "To this court came Robert Algore & Margaret, his wife...and surrendered into the hands of the lord a tenement called Bynwodes...and the lord re-granted the same to the said Margaret and her daughter, Agnes, wife of Thomas Fytche." One might speculate that Agnes was less than 21 years old when she married and that her mother acted temporarily as custodian for her.

Thomas and Agnes had 11 children -- six sons & five daughters -- as pictured on the church brass at St. Mary's.

On 21 Dec 1497 in Essex , Thomas Fytche "took from hands of the lord" 12 acres of land in field called Baresley next tenement called Hubberdes, etc. in tenure of said Thomas Fytche, etc.

In Nov 1505, "Thomas Fitch, as son and heir of Juliana Fitch, admitted to three roods of land and one acre of meadow in field called Cressewelfeld and Cresswelmedowe etc. formerly belonging to Juliana wife of John Fitch who was after wife of Richard Westely, which Richard Westeley after the death (a long time before this court) of Juliana, for 30 years held said land and occupied without licence and authority of this court."

On 21 Dec 1511, "Thomas Fytche and Agnes his wife exchange for one acre of land called Blakacre lately in tenure of Margaret Yorde, widow and Robert her son, one acre of land caled Ryklottes-acre lately in tenure of Robert Algore."

His death was reported at the Court of the Manor of Lindsell 23 December 1514 and at the Court of the Manor of Widdington 9 November 1514.

His grave is in the center aisle of the old parish church at St. Mary's in Lindsell. A brass, commemorating Thomas (and Agnes) is set in the floor before the chancel arch. The inscription (on a plate 17 x 2-1/2") immediately below the principal figures reads (translated): Here lies Thomas Fytche and Agnes his wife, which same Thomas died the twenty-first day of April in the year of our Lord 1514; on whose souls may God have mercy."

There is also a set of stained-glass portraits in the east window over the altar; portrayed in separate are two couples at prayer: one portraying Thomas & Agnes, and the other their son William and his first wife, Elizabeth. These may have been commissioned by William, who had bought Lindsell Hall in 1529 and got title to the church in 1543.

Sources
A Fitch Family History - English Ancestors of the Fitches of Colonial Connecticut by John T. Fitch, publ. 1990 by Picton Press, Camden, Maine
History of the Fitch family A.D. 1400-1930 : a record of the Fitches in England and America, by Roscoe Conkling Fitch, publ. 1930
http://billputman.com/the-genealogy/canaday-related-families/Fitch1.pdf The Fitch Family, based on John T. Fitch's A Fitch Family History. 
Fytche, Thomas (I3521)
 
4812 Biography from wikitree:

Frances was born in 1540. Frances Fulmerston ... She passed away in 1579.

Sources
The National Archives. Probate Sir Edward Clere
Blomefield, Francis. An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk (W. Miller, Norfolk, England, 1807) Vol. 6, Page 389. 
Fulmerston, Frances (I7418)
 
4813 Biography from wikitree:

He was found to be heir to his father by Inquisition 3 March 1468. He made a settlement of lands called "Bynwodes" in Lindsell on 22 December 1490. He held Brasonhead, capital mansion of his estate.

In 1477 Agatha Flegge was suing Robert Algore, of Lyndesell, yeoman, and others, in Common Pleas for trespass: breach of close, cutting down and taking wood at Latcheley in Lindsell.[1] Also in 1477, Agatha Flegge was suing John Algore, of Lyndesell, Essex, yeoman, for debt.[2]

A door knocker from Brazen Head Farms, dating to circa 1200, is in the British Museum. It is bronze, cast; in the form of a lion's head emerging from a circular disc base with fixing holes (four of the nine holes modern); the elongated head with eyebrows and moustache of stylized curls or tufts; two rows of larger curls representing the lion's mane link the head with the disc base; well-modelled eyes with pupils indicated by lines; notrils formed of deep holes; ring not original.

His death was reported at Court of the Manor of Lindsell on 21 Dec 1493[3]

Sources
↑ http://aalt.law.uh.edu/AALT3/E4/CP40no861/aCP40no861fronts/IMG_0918.htm
↑ http://aalt.law.uh.edu/AALT3/E4/CP40no861/bCP40no861dorses/IMG_0949.htm
↑ Fitch, Roscoe Conkling. 1974. History of the Fitch family, A.D. 1400-1930: a record of the Fitches in England and America, including "pedigree of Fitch" certified by the college of arms, London, England. Volume I. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Vol. 1, p. 12 , (https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE190639) 
Algore, Robert (I3569)
 
4814 Biography from wikitree:

Helen Little, daughter of William Little and Margaret Murray, was born say 1534.[1]

Marriages and Children
Helen married (1) Alexander Gray, son of Richard Gray and Marion Napier, before 9 May 1553. Their children:[1]

Grissell Gray born say 1555; died after December 1594
Richard Gray born. say 1560; died between 1594 - 17 February 1604
Agnes Gray born say 1563; died between 4 February 1590 and 1 May 1594
John Gray born say 1565; died after 17 July 1602
Sara Gray born say 1570; died before November 1605
She married (2) Thomas Livingston, son of Henry Livingston and (…) Livingston, between May 1571 and 28 October 1580.[2] They apparently had one daughter:

Mary Little born say 1584; contracted to marry Alexander Somerville, fiar of Plane, 2 March 1602.[2]
She was a royal nurse (wet nurse to King James I/VI) and died after 17 July 1602.

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Adrian Benjamin Burke, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland: Part III of III: Identifying their maternal grandmother Agnes Gray," The Genealogist 28 (Spring 2014): 58-89, at 72, 84,
↑ 2.0 2.1 Adrian Benjamin Burke, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland: Pt I of III: Identifying their mother Helen Livingston," The Genealogist 27 (Spring 2013): 28-50, at 40-41, 
Little, Helen (I9273)
 
4815 Biography from wikitree:

Helen Livingston, daughter of Henry Livingston and Agnes Gray, was born say 1585.[1] See the research note below regarding proof of her parentage.

Helen married James Duncanson, son of John Duncanson and Janet Watson, before 12 October 1610, but more likely about 1603 before the birth of their first son. They had:[2][3]

Henry Duncanson born say 1604 (had his master's degree in 1626); died after 20 September 1626 when named in the will of his uncle, Walter Duncanson.[4][5]
Jonet Duncanson baptized 13 April 1613;[6] married (1) John Ardes, at Amsterdam, 20 December 1639,[7] (2) Thomas Powell, widower of her sister Anne, and (3) Robert Orchard, by 1671;[8] died after 21 November 1683 when she sponsored her niece's baptism;[9] no known issue.[10]
Maria Duncanson born say 1614; married at age 25, Jan MacFasse at Amsterdam, after 14 January 1640;[11] and perhaps second, Pieter Loockermans;[12] perhaps had issue with Loockermans. (there are some doubts about Maria and her parentage: please see the Research Notes on her profile).
John Duncanson baptized December 1615.[13]
Anne Duncanson born say 1616 - 1617; married at age 28, Thomas Powell, at Amsterdam, about October/November 1646;[14] died before her widowers marriage to her sister Jonet.[8]
Margaret Duncanson baptized 17 March 1618;[15] married at age 20, William Teller at Amsterdam, 6 February 1639;[16] died probably at Albany, before 7 December 1662.[17]
Katherine Duncanson baptized 15 April 1621;[18] married at age 18, Alexander Glen, at Amsterdam, 31 October 1638;[19] died at Schenectady, 13 November 1685.[20]
James and Helen apparently had three additional children whose names are unknown. A directive from Charles I, about November 1633, directed payment of her late father-in-law's unpaid pension, styling her as "shoe being a poore widow haveing the charge of ten children."[21]

She died after 15 August 1633 when she petitioned the King for her late father-in-law's overdue pension.[22] It is not known if she remarried. It is also possible that she immigrated to Amsterdam where her five daughters were married (or published intentions to do so) between 1638 and 1646: her brother James was there at least as late as 1617, and she had Livingston relatives serving in the Scots Brigade in Holland in this time.[23][24][25]

Research Notes
Proof of Parentage
On 12 October 1610, a John Livingston, styled as a legitimate son of Henry Livingston, witnessed a land purchase by James Duncanson. Later that same day, James and his wife, Helen Livingston, transferred the property to a James Livingston (relationship unknown). One of the witnesses to this transaction was the same John Livingston, but styled in this record as "brother german to the said Helen." Adrian Burke gives a complete transcript of both records.[26]

Sources
↑ Adrian Benjamin Burke, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland: Part I of III: Identifying their mother Helen Livingston," The Genealogist 27 (2013): 28-50 at 45, American Ancestors.
↑ Adrian Benjamin Burke, "Livingston Ancestry, pt I", 49-50.
↑ Gordon L. Remington, "The Duncanson Wives of Four New Netherland Settlers: Glen, Teller, Powell, and Loockermans," New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, 128 (1997) 1-10 at 10, New York Genealogical and Biographical Society.
↑ Will of Walter Duncanson, National Archives PROB 11/150/84, National Archives Discovery Centre catalogue entry.
↑ Adrian Benjamin Burke, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland: Part III of III: Identifying their maternal grandmother Agnes Gray," The Genealogist 28 (2014): 58-89 at 86-87, appendix I (full transcript) American Ancestors.
↑ Remington, "The Duncanson Wives" 4, citing Old Parish Registers, Alloa, Clackmannanshire, Scotland, FamilySearch Library microfilm 1040205, img 331, FamilySearch Image: 3Q9M-CSHZ-RH78.
↑ Amsterdam DTB 990:57, FamilySearch Library microfilm #113359, item 1, img 61, FamilySearch Image: 3QS7-L9QV-K57W.
↑ 8.0 8.1 Jonathan Pearson, Contributions for the Genealogies of the First Settlers of the Ancient County of Albany, From 1630 to 1800 (Albany: J. Munsell, 1872) 85, 88, Internet Archive.
↑ Records of the Reformed Dutch Church of Albany, New York 1683-1809 Excerpted from Year Books of The Holland Society of New York (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co. for the Clearfield Company, 2003), 1: 32, Internet Archive.
↑ Adrian Benjamin Burke, "Re: Duncansons," email to Greg Cooke, 20 September 2023.
↑ Amsterdam DTB 453:70, FamilySearch Library microfilm #113199, img 530, FamilySearch Image: 3QS7-89QV-49Q5-M.
↑ Joel Munsell, The Annals of Albany, 10 vols., (Albany: Munsell & Rowland, 1858), 9: 82, Internet Archive.
↑ Remington, "The Duncanson Wives 4, citing Old Parish Registers, Alloa, Clackmannanshire, Scotland", FamilySearch Library microfilm 1040205, img 335, FamilySearch Image: 3Q9M-CSHZ-RH7X.
↑ Amsterdam DTB 464:53, FamilySearch Library microfilm #113204, img 260, FamilySearch Image: 3QS7-L9QV-7XJW.
↑ Remington, "The Duncanson Wives", 4, citing Old Parish Registers, Alloa, Clackmannanshire, Scotland, FamilySearch Library microfilm 1040205, img 338, FamilySearch Image: 3Q9M-CSHZ-RHQ5.
↑ Amsterdam DTB 450:41, FamilySearch Library microfilm #113199, item 1, img 41, FamilySearch Image: 3QS7-89QV-49WD-Z.
↑ Janny Venema, Deacons’ Accounts 1652-1674, Beverwijck/Albany (Rockport, Maine: Picton Press, 1998), 106.
↑ Remington, "The Duncanson Wives", 4, citing Old Parish Registers, Alloa, Clackmannanshire, Scotland, FamilySearch Library microfilm 1040205, img 445, FamilySearch Image: 3QS7-89QV-VJ3T.
↑ Amsterdam DTB 970: n.p., FamilySearch Library microfilm #113353, img 331, FamilySearch Image: 3QSQ-G9QV-GV3W.
↑ Jeannie F-J. Robison & Henrietta C. Bartlett, Genealogical Records: Manuscript Entries of Births, Deaths and Marriages Taken From Family Bibles 1581-1917 (New York: The Colonial Dames of the State of New York, 1917), 94, Google Books.
↑ The Earl of Stirling's Register of Royal Letters: Relative to the Affairs of Scotland and Nova Scotia From 1615 to 1635, 2 vols., (Edinburgh, p.p., 1885), 2: 698, Internet Archive.
↑ Adrian Benjamin Burke, "Livingston Ancestry, pt I", 48, (full transcript of record) citing National Library of Scotland, "Fletcher of Saltoun Papers, MSS. 17503, folio 19 National Library of Scotland catalogue entry.
↑ James Balfour Paul, The Scots Peerage, 9 vols., (Edinburgh: David Douglas,1904-1914) 6: 448-450, Internet Archive.
↑ Adrian Benjamin Burke, "Livingston Ancestry, pt I", 49.
↑ James Ferguson, Papers Illustrating the History of the Scots Brigade in the Service of the United Netherlands, 1572-1782 (Edinburgh: Scottish Historical Society, 1899), 69n, Google Books.
↑ Adrian Benjamin Burke, "Livingston Ancestry, pt I", 29-31, citing National Archives of Scotland, B66/1/9, Protocol Book of John Williamson, 1605-1613, National Archives of Scotland catalog entry.
Acknowledgements 
Livingston, Helen (I9287)
 
4816 Biography from wikitree:

Henry Livingston, son of Henry Livingston and Margaret Forrester, was born about 1560 (enrolled at St. Andrews in 1574).[1][2][3] Please see the research note below for proof of his parentage.

At St. Andrews, he was nominated for his Bachelor's degree in 1576,[4] and for his Master's degree in 1578,[5] though this last may not have been awarded until 1583.[6] Degrees were often withheld until "fees were paid or final examinations written."[7] It was certainly awarded before 23 July 1584 when he was styled "Mr. Henry Lewingstoun" when he witnessed a Precept of Clare Constat.[8]

From 1574 to 1576 and then in 1584 and 1586, Henry witnessed five charters in Melrose,[9][10] apparently as an assistant or apprentice to his elder half-brother, Alexander Coleville, Commendator, and later Iconomus of Melrose. The break was probably due to his studies at St. Andrews.[11]

Henry married Agnes Gray, daughter of Alexander Gray and Helen Little, say 1584 (based on eldest daughter's own estimated birth).[2][3] Their children (baptisms at Stirling, Stirlingshire):[12]

Helen Livingston born say 1585; married James Duncanson (1564-1624) by 1603 (first child); died after 15 August 1633 when she appealed to the king.[13]
Marion Livingston baptized 25 February 1587/88.[6][14]
Alexander Livingston baptized 3 April 1589;[6][15] died before 18 March 1617 when his surviving younger brother John stated he was the eldest son.[16]
John Livingston baptized 31 January 1590/91;[6][17] died after 8 March 1619 when he was represented by his attorney.[16]
Henry Livingston born say 1593/94 (awarded master's degree in 1616);[18] unknown wife; died August 1665, aged about 70; issue.[19][20]
Henry was inaugurated as minister of St. Ninians in Stirlingshire, 15 October 1587 and would spend his entire career there, at times acting in opposition to the established policies of the Church. In June 1607 he was restricted "from exercising his functions, save in his own kirk, during His Majesties pleasure."[6]

Inspite of the restrictions, he remained at his post until 14 June 1624 when he resigned his duties as minister, probably for health reasons,[2][21] and died shortly thereafter, before 26 August 1624.[6][22][23]

Research Notes
Proof of Parentage
In "The Livingston Ancestry," Adrian Burke identifies a circular argument as to the identity of Henry's parents. The first edition of Scott's Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae (published 1866-1871) did not mention Henry's parentage.[24] Scots Peerage (published 1906) does, but does not give a source.[22] The second edition of Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae (publshed 1923) does mention his parents, but gives the unsourced Scots Peerage as its source.[6]

Henry is proved to be a son of Margaret Forrester by the charter he witnessed, 26 July 1586, wherein he is styled "Mr. Henry Lewingstoun, brother of the Iconimus…."[25] The Iconimus at this time was his half-brother, Alexander Coleville, eldest son of Margaret by James Coleville.[11][26]

Sources
↑ James Maitland Anderson, ed., Early Records of the University of St. Andrews…. (Edinburgh: Scottish Historical Society, 1926), 284, Google Books.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Adrian Benjamin Burke, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland: Part I of III: Identifying their mother Helen Livingston," The Genealogist 27 (2013): 28-50 at 42, American Ancestors.
↑ 3.0 3.1 James Balfour Paul, The Scots Peerage 9 vols., (Edinburgh: David Douglas,1904-1914), 6: 446-448, Internet Archive.
↑ Anderson, Records of St. Andrews, 175.
↑ Anderson, Records of St. Andrews, 179.
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 Hew Scott, Fasti Ecclesiæ Scoticanæ: The Succession of Ministers in the Church of Scotland from the Reformation, new ed., 8 vols. (Edinburgh: Tweedale Court, 1915-50), 4: 313, Internet Archive.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 42n.
↑ Charles S. Romanes, Selections from the Records of the Regality of Melrose, 3 vols (Edinburgh: Scottish History Society, 1915-1917), 3: 316, Internet Archive.
↑ James Balfour Paul, ed., Registrum Magni Sigilli Regum Scotorum: The Register of the Great Seal of Scotland, A.D. 1306-1668, 11 vols. (Edinburgh: General Register House, 1882 -1914), 5: 367 #1109, Internet Archive.
↑ Romanes, Regality of Melrose, 3: 262, 266, 316, 325-6, Internet Archive.
↑ 11.0 11.1 Adrian Benjamin Burke, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland: Part II of III: Identifying their maternal great-grandmother Margaret Forrester," The Genealogist 27 (2013): 162-181 at 172-174, American Ancestors.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 44-45.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 48, (full transcript of record) citing National Library of Scotland: Papers of the Family of Fletcher of Saltoun, Documents concerning the administration of Scotland, 1628-1740, Mss 17503, folio 19 National Library of Scotland catalogue entry.
↑ "Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQWN-2XL : 16 September 2021), Henrie Levingstone in entry for Marione Levingstone, 1587.
↑ "Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQWJ-SF3 : 16 September 2021), Henrie Levingstone in entry for Alexander Levingstone, 1589.
↑ 16.0 16.1 Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 44n, 45n citing Register of Deeds, 1st Series 1552-1659, Gibson's Office, 18 Dec 1618-22 Mar 1619, National Archives of Scotland RD1/281 folio 358, National Records of Scotland catalog entry.
↑ "Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQWJ-H5X : 16 September 2021), Johne Levingstone, 1591.
↑ Joseph Robertson and C. N. Jones, Munimenta Alme Universitatis Glasguensis: Records of the University of Glasgow…, 4 vols. (Glasgow: The Maitland Club, 1854), 3:12, Internet Archive.
↑ Scott, Fasti Ecclesiæ Scoticanæ, 4: 351, Internet Archive.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 45n.
↑ Robert Renwick, ed., Extracts from the Records of the Royal Burgh of Stirling, A.D. 1519-1666 (Glasgow: Glasgow Stirlingshire and Sons of the Rock Society, 1887), 159, Internet Archive.
↑ 22.0 22.1 Scots Peerage, 6: 448.
↑ Edwin Brockholst Livingston, The Livingstons of Callendar… new ed. (Edinburgh: 1920), 186, FamilySearch Library microfilm 924848, item 1, img 131: FamilySearch Image: 3Q9M-CSZX-RSZ4-3.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 42n, citing Hew Scott, Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae: The Succession ministers in the Parish Churches of Scotland from the Reformation…, 3 vols in 6, 1st ed., 2 (Edinburgh, 1866-71), pt 2: 708-9.
↑ Romanes, Regality of Melrose, 3: 325-6, Internet Archive.
↑ Romanes, Regality of Melrose, 3: viii n, Internet Archive.
See also:

Gordon L. Remington, "The Duncanson Wives of Four New Netherland Settlers: Glen, Teller, Powell, and Loockermans," New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, 128 (1997): 1-10 at 8, New York Genealogical and Biographical Society. 
Gray, Agnes (I9271)
 
4817 Biography from wikitree:

Henry Livingston, son of Henry Livingston and Margaret Forrester, was born about 1560 (enrolled at St. Andrews in 1574).[1][2][3] Please see the research note below for proof of his parentage.

At St. Andrews, he was nominated for his Bachelor's degree in 1576,[4] and for his Master's degree in 1578,[5] though this last may not have been awarded until 1583.[6] Degrees were often withheld until "fees were paid or final examinations written."[7] It was certainly awarded before 23 July 1584 when he was styled "Mr. Henry Lewingstoun" when he witnessed a Precept of Clare Constat.[8]

From 1574 to 1576 and then in 1584 and 1586, Henry witnessed five charters in Melrose,[9][10] apparently as an assistant or apprentice to his elder half-brother, Alexander Coleville, Commendator, and later Iconomus of Melrose. The break was probably due to his studies at St. Andrews.[11]

Henry married Agnes Gray, daughter of Alexander Gray and Helen Little, say 1584 (based on eldest daughter's own estimated birth).[2][3] Their children (baptisms at Stirling, Stirlingshire):[12]

Helen Livingston born say 1585; married James Duncanson (1564-1624) by 1603 (first child); died after 15 August 1633 when she appealed to the king.[13]
Marion Livingston baptized 25 February 1587/88.[6][14]
Alexander Livingston baptized 3 April 1589;[6][15] died before 18 March 1617 when his surviving younger brother John stated he was the eldest son.[16]
John Livingston baptized 31 January 1590/91;[6][17] died after 8 March 1619 when he was represented by his attorney.[16]
Henry Livingston born say 1593/94 (awarded master's degree in 1616);[18] unknown wife; died August 1665, aged about 70; issue.[19][20]
Henry was inaugurated as minister of St. Ninians in Stirlingshire, 15 October 1587 and would spend his entire career there, at times acting in opposition to the established policies of the Church. In June 1607 he was restricted "from exercising his functions, save in his own kirk, during His Majesties pleasure."[6]

Inspite of the restrictions, he remained at his post until 14 June 1624 when he resigned his duties as minister, probably for health reasons,[2][21] and died shortly thereafter, before 26 August 1624.[6][22][23]

Research Notes
Proof of Parentage
In "The Livingston Ancestry," Adrian Burke identifies a circular argument as to the identity of Henry's parents. The first edition of Scott's Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae (published 1866-1871) did not mention Henry's parentage.[24] Scots Peerage (published 1906) does, but does not give a source.[22] The second edition of Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae (publshed 1923) does mention his parents, but gives the unsourced Scots Peerage as its source.[6]

Henry is proved to be a son of Margaret Forrester by the charter he witnessed, 26 July 1586, wherein he is styled "Mr. Henry Lewingstoun, brother of the Iconimus…."[25] The Iconimus at this time was his half-brother, Alexander Coleville, eldest son of Margaret by James Coleville.[11][26]

Sources
↑ James Maitland Anderson, ed., Early Records of the University of St. Andrews…. (Edinburgh: Scottish Historical Society, 1926), 284, Google Books.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Adrian Benjamin Burke, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland: Part I of III: Identifying their mother Helen Livingston," The Genealogist 27 (2013): 28-50 at 42, American Ancestors.
↑ 3.0 3.1 James Balfour Paul, The Scots Peerage 9 vols., (Edinburgh: David Douglas,1904-1914), 6: 446-448, Internet Archive.
↑ Anderson, Records of St. Andrews, 175.
↑ Anderson, Records of St. Andrews, 179.
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 Hew Scott, Fasti Ecclesiæ Scoticanæ: The Succession of Ministers in the Church of Scotland from the Reformation, new ed., 8 vols. (Edinburgh: Tweedale Court, 1915-50), 4: 313, Internet Archive.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 42n.
↑ Charles S. Romanes, Selections from the Records of the Regality of Melrose, 3 vols (Edinburgh: Scottish History Society, 1915-1917), 3: 316, Internet Archive.
↑ James Balfour Paul, ed., Registrum Magni Sigilli Regum Scotorum: The Register of the Great Seal of Scotland, A.D. 1306-1668, 11 vols. (Edinburgh: General Register House, 1882 -1914), 5: 367 #1109, Internet Archive.
↑ Romanes, Regality of Melrose, 3: 262, 266, 316, 325-6, Internet Archive.
↑ 11.0 11.1 Adrian Benjamin Burke, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland: Part II of III: Identifying their maternal great-grandmother Margaret Forrester," The Genealogist 27 (2013): 162-181 at 172-174, American Ancestors.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 44-45.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 48, (full transcript of record) citing National Library of Scotland: Papers of the Family of Fletcher of Saltoun, Documents concerning the administration of Scotland, 1628-1740, Mss 17503, folio 19 National Library of Scotland catalogue entry.
↑ "Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQWN-2XL : 16 September 2021), Henrie Levingstone in entry for Marione Levingstone, 1587.
↑ "Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQWJ-SF3 : 16 September 2021), Henrie Levingstone in entry for Alexander Levingstone, 1589.
↑ 16.0 16.1 Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 44n, 45n citing Register of Deeds, 1st Series 1552-1659, Gibson's Office, 18 Dec 1618-22 Mar 1619, National Archives of Scotland RD1/281 folio 358, National Records of Scotland catalog entry.
↑ "Scotland Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQWJ-H5X : 16 September 2021), Johne Levingstone, 1591.
↑ Joseph Robertson and C. N. Jones, Munimenta Alme Universitatis Glasguensis: Records of the University of Glasgow…, 4 vols. (Glasgow: The Maitland Club, 1854), 3:12, Internet Archive.
↑ Scott, Fasti Ecclesiæ Scoticanæ, 4: 351, Internet Archive.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 45n.
↑ Robert Renwick, ed., Extracts from the Records of the Royal Burgh of Stirling, A.D. 1519-1666 (Glasgow: Glasgow Stirlingshire and Sons of the Rock Society, 1887), 159, Internet Archive.
↑ 22.0 22.1 Scots Peerage, 6: 448.
↑ Edwin Brockholst Livingston, The Livingstons of Callendar… new ed. (Edinburgh: 1920), 186, FamilySearch Library microfilm 924848, item 1, img 131: FamilySearch Image: 3Q9M-CSZX-RSZ4-3.
↑ Burke, "Livingston Ancestry pt 1," 42n, citing Hew Scott, Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae: The Succession ministers in the Parish Churches of Scotland from the Reformation…, 3 vols in 6, 1st ed., 2 (Edinburgh, 1866-71), pt 2: 708-9.
↑ Romanes, Regality of Melrose, 3: 325-6, Internet Archive.
↑ Romanes, Regality of Melrose, 3: viii n, Internet Archive.
See also:

Gordon L. Remington, "The Duncanson Wives of Four New Netherland Settlers: Glen, Teller, Powell, and Loockermans," New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, 128 (1997): 1-10 at 8, New York Genealogical and Biographical Society.
 
Livingston, Henry (I9289)
 
4818 Biography from wikitree:

John Alsop, Gent., son of and heir of Anthony Alsop and Jane Smith, married Temperance Gilbert, daughter of William Gilbert and Anne Clere, at Mickleover, Derbyshire, England, on 1 May 1617, They had four sons, Anthony, John, Timothy and George, and four daughters, Jane (wife of Roger Jackson), Mary, Elizabeth and Clere. John Alsop left a will proved 8 June 1631, (Cons. Court of Lichfield). His widow Temperance married (2nd) at Alvaston, Derbyshire 20 Aug. 1633 William Hopkins.

Research Notes
aet 15 in 1611.[1]

Sources
↑ Visitation of Derby,1611
Richardson, Douglas. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, Royal Ancestry series, 2nd edition, 4 vols., ed. Kimball G. Everingham, (Salt Lake City, Utah: the author, 2011), volume I, page 8-9, #16. Space:Magna_Carta_Ancestry
Hunter, Joseph (ed. J.W. Clay): Familiae Minorum Gentium, Vol. 3, p. 1038.
William Dugdale, The visitation of Derbyshire, taken in 1662, and reviewed in 1663 (London: Golding and Lawrence, 1879), page 18 
Alsop, John (I7436)
 
4819 Biography from wikitree:

Margaret was the daughter of Christopher Willoughby[1] and Margaret Jenney.[2][3] Her parents had property in several English counties[4][5] and her birth place is not known. Nor is her birth date. It has been guesstimated based on the possible birth date of about 1510 of her daughter Anne.

Margaret married Thomas Tyrrell of Gipping, Suffolk.[1][2][3] Their marriage date is not known but was almost certainly after 1500. They had two children:

John,[1][2][3] named in his father's will[6]
Anne], who married John Clere[2][3][7]
The 1878 Harleian Society edition of Essex Visitations lists two other sons:

George[1]
Vincent[1]
Margaret died after 14 November 1526, but before 1544, when she was referred to as deceased in the will of her brother Thomas Willoughby.[2][3]

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Walter C Metcalfe (ed>). The Visitations of Essex, Harleian Society, 1878, p. 112, Internet Archive
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Douglas Richardson. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 4 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham, 2nd edition (Salt Lake City: the author, 2011), Vol. III, p. 185, MORLEY 12
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), Vol. IV, pp. 159-160, MORLEY 16
↑ Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry,Vol. IV, p. 339, WILLOUGHBY 11
↑ Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, p. 366, WILLOUGHBY 14
↑ The National Archives, ref. PROB 11/34/309, transcript at the Oxford Shakespeare website, accessed 15 July 2022
↑ Brigadier-General Bulwer. The Visitation of Norfolk in the year 1563, Vol. II, 1895, p. 267, Internet Archive 
Willoughby, Margaret (I7427)
 
4820 Biography from wikitree:

Name
Alpaida (also Alphaida, Alpoïde, Elphide, Elfide, Chalpaida;[1]
Chalpais "Alpais,"[1] is first referred to by the Liber Historiae Francorum (c. 725). While it does not name her, it states she was married to Pippin, and the mother of Charles Martel. Frédégaire's, slightly later Continuation calls her Chalpais, stating she was beautiful, and belonged to Frankish nobility.

Neither source mentions her parents or relatives, but during the 9th century she was named the sister of the domesticus Dodo.[2]

"Alpaida (also Alphaida, Alpoïde, Elphide, Elfide, Chalpaida; ca. 654 - ca. 714) was a noblewoman of the House of Pepin, who hailed from the Liège area. The daughter of Alberic of Austrasia and Adèle of Poiters, she was Pepin II's (635 or 640 - December 16, 714) second wife and mother to two sons, Charles Martel (Charles the Hammer) (d. October 22, 741) and Childebrand (678-751)."[3]

654 Birth
She was born about 654 [1]

Parents and Family
Alpaida was a Frankish noblewoman who hailed from the Liège area. [4][5]

UNKNOWN[6]

Siblings
Dodo
Mistress or Marriage
She became the mistress of Pippin of Herstal (635 or 640 - December 16, 714) and mother to two sons by him, Charles Martel (Charles the Hammer) (d. October 22, 741) and Childebrand (678-751). [7]

In the Liber Historiae Francorum and the Continuations of Fredegar she is referred to as Pepin's wife. [8]

m. (bigamy) Pepin I "le gros" d'Herstal (645/50 - 16 Dec 714 Jupille, near Liège)[2].[3] Issue: 1[4]

Charles Martel (690 - 16 or 22 Oct 741 Quierzy-sur-Oise, Aisne)
There's doubt that a daughter of Frankish nobility would be the second, bigamous wife or mistress of Pippin.

714 Death
She died about 714. [1]

Issue
Charles Martel (690 - 16 or 22 Oct 741 Quierzy-sur-Oise, Aisne). Charles Martel (Charles the Hammer) (d. October 22, 741) [1]
Childebrand (678-751)."[1]
Research Notes
Disambiguation
For the saint of this name, see Alpaïs of Cudot. [1]

Cross Reference -- merge once proper LNAB is determined:Day-1904 08:23, 7 April 2018 (EDT)

Clotilde, born 620, no family links, no sources, no data.
Clotilde Alpais d'Heristal, born 620, daughter of Rippert, no spouse or child linked. Sources say married Childebrande, had daughter Alpaid, concubine.
Alpais Unknown, born 654, d. 714. No parents on WT. Married/concubine Pippin. Mother of Charles Martel. Apparently daughter of Clotilde, but delinked because of lack of evidence of relationship.
Conjecture: Origins
Some postulate that Chalpais belonged to the nobility of Liege, and was of lower rank than ruling dynasties.[2]

As for her parents, two theories exist. The first assumes that she's the mother of Childebrand, usually considered an illegitimate son of Pepin by an unnamed mistress. Not only does it justify the Pippinid introduction of this name, it makes her father another, Childebrand - a Frankish noble who signed Clotilde's charter (673 A.D.), which founded an abbey at Bruyères-le-Chatel.[2]

The second assumes that she's the sister of Bertrada of Prum, and grandmother of Pepin III's wife, Bertrada "au grand pied."[2]

Some think Hugobert and Irmina, Abbess of Oeren are the parents of Bertrada of Prum.[5][6] But this is problematic, since contemporary sources state that Pepin II's first wife, Plectrudis, is their daughter.[7][9] If Pepin's wives were sisters, it would probably be mentioned in early documents ... but that's not the case.[8]

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Wikipedia: Alpaid Accessed April 7, 2018 jhd
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Settipani, 1993, p. 156
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpaida
↑ Wood, Ian (2004). "Genealogy defined by women: the Pippinids". In Leslie Brubaker. Gender in the Early Medieval World: East and West, 300-900. Julia M. H. Smith. Cambridge UP. p. 244ff. ISBN 9780521013277.Cited by Wikipedia: Alpaid Accessed April 7, 2018 jhd
↑ Theuws, Frans (2001). "Maastricht as a centre of power". In Frans Theuws. Topographies of Power in the Early Middle Ages. Mayke B. de Jong, Carine van Rhijn. BRILL. pp. 190-91. ISBN 9789004117341. Retrieved 13 October 2015.Cited by Wikipedia: Alpaid Accessed April 7, 2018 jhd
↑ The idea that she is the daughter of Ervigio, King of the Visigoths, and his wife Liubigotona, and thereby (very arguably) a descendant of the late Roman emperors seems to be without any foundation.
↑ Commire, Anne, ed. (2002). "Alphaida (c. 654-c. 714)". Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Waterford, Connecticut: Yorkin Publications. ISBN 0-7876-4074-3. (Subscription required (help)). Cited by Wikipedia: Alpaid Accessed April 7, 2018 jhd
↑ Fouracre, Paul. "Writings about Charles Martel", Law, Laity and Solidarities, (Susan Reynolds, ed.), Manchester University Press, 2001, ISBN 9780719058363, p. 23. Cited by Wikipedia: Alpaid Accessed April 7, 2018 jhd
↑ Hlawitschka, 1965
 
Unknown, Alpais of Herstal (I9296)
 
4821 Biography from wikitree:

Name
Sage was her proper name, and Tancke was her last name at birth. It was her actual name according to her marriage record.[1]

Birth
Sage Tancke was born about 1590, based on the marriageable age of 18.[1]

Marriage
The parish registry of St. Giles Cripplegate says, "Henry Lewens and Sage Tancke" were married on 7 February 1607/[08] at the church of St. Cripplelegate in London, England.[1]

Death
Sage Lewens died in 1650. No citation or reference is given for her death.

Research Notes
St. Giles Cripplegate and St. Botolph records (christening, marriage, and burial) show that the surname Tancke is sometimes an alternate spelling for Tench, Tenche, Tanke, Tancke, Tincke, or Tonk.

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Church of England Parish Registers, 1538-1812. London, England: London Metropolitan Archives. London Metropolitan Archives; London, England; London Church of England Parish Registers; Reference Number: P69/Gis/A/002/Ms06419/002, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/10035476:1624. 
Sage, Tancke (I27590)
 
4822 Biography from wikitree:

Richard Gibbard / Gybberd born Tredington as he states in his will. He was living in Snitterfield as at 1597 as his name is in a list of parishioners there re the vicar Mr John Smith and the articles of religion being read during morning prayer. [1] [2]

m1. Elizabeth Cookes 26 Jan 1590 at Snitterfield, Warwickshire. [3] [4]

Elizabeth died and was buried December 1598/9 in Snitterfield. The burial entry states Elizabeth, wife of Richard Gibberd. [5]

Children born Snitterfield:

Elizabeth 14 Mar 1593 Snitterfield, Warwickshire, England, mother given as Elizabeth. [6]
m2. Judeth ___ (pos. Cookes or Edkins) as named in his will.

Children born Bearley: (from his will and parish registers)

John Gibberd, chr. 28 Jan 1598 at Wroxall, son of Richard of Bearley;[7]named in will as eldest son.
Tymothy Gibbard c. 1600
Constance, c. 1602 m. at Bearley 6 Feb 1629/30 Thomas Smith
Anne Gibbarte 1604-07-01 at Bearley, mother given as Judith.[8]
Shusanna Gyball chr May 1608 at Bearley, mother give as Judith. [9]
William Gibbard (6 Nov 1614 at Bearley -d.1663) [10] m. Anne Tapp ( d. 1701) as per U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700.
Ester / Hester Gibbard c. 15 Jul 1610 at Exhall (near Coventry), Warwickshire, England. [11]
Richard Gibbard of Bearley, will is dated 1 Jan 1626/7 and proved 5 May 1628/9. He gives 10 shillings to the poor of Tredington parish where testator states he was born. [12] The will named Gibbard’s wife Judeth; eldest son John to have land and tenements in Bearley; son Tymothy, and wife Judith, the rest of the good and chattles; youngest son William to have the moities of porton of on dec'd daughter; daughters Constance, Anne, Suzanna, Ester; brothers-in-law Joshua Edkins, William Cookes, Nathaniel Cookes, one hundred pounds apiece. If wife Judith shall sue and recover dower out of lands and tenements....Executors were wife Judeth and son Tymothy. Witnesses were William Cookes and Nathaniel Cookes." [13]

Burial: 7 Jan 1629 at Bearley. [14]

Sources
↑ Snitterfield parish register https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/4523394:2416?tid=&pid=&queryId=65948c1a-6d93-41ff-8a38-1461f59f14d5&_phsrc=COi146&_phstart=successSource
↑ Pedigree file https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/L2MY-K8G
↑ Snitterfield Parish Register https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/4523394:2416?tid=&pid=&queryId=65948c1a-6d93-41ff-8a38-1461f59f14d5&_phsrc=COi146&_phstart=successSource
↑ "England Marriages, 1538-1973", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NVBQ-8H7 : 13 March 2020), Elizth. Cookes in entry for Rich Gibbard, 1590.
↑ Snitterfield Parish Register image 2 - https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/4523394:2416?tid=&pid=&queryId=65948c1a-6d93-41ff-8a38-1461f59f14d5&_phsrc=COi146&_phstart=successSource
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JWZS-TPN : 4 February 2023), Rich Gilbard in entry for Eliz Gilbard, 1593.
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JW39-QHL : 5 February 2023), Richard Gibberd in entry for John Gibberd, 1598.
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NY5H-1NR : 5 February 2023), Richarde Gibbarte in entry for Anne Gibbarte, 1604.
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NY5H-1VQ : 5 February 2023), Richard Gyball in entry for Shusanna Gyball, 1608.
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NG1Q-T2G : 5 February 2023), Richard Gibbard in entry for Willam Gibbard, 1614.
↑ "England, Warwickshire, Parish Registers, 1535-1963", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VH61-MT5 : Thu Nov 02 02:27:30 UTC 2023), Entry for Hester Gibbard and Richard Gibbard, 15 Jul 1610.
↑ "The will of Richard Gibbard of Bearley, also discovered by Gordon Remington, is held by The National Archives, Kew, and is found at TNA PROB 11/153/468; PCC 49 Barrington, accessible at nationalarchives.gov.uk and on Ancestry.com.
↑ England & Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384-1858 for Richard Gibbard. PROB 11: Will Registers Piece 153: Barrington, Quire Numbers 1-63 (1628) https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/828367:5111?tid=&pid=&queryId=16aa2013-3f8e-45e9-b6b8-3b48bda26d0b&_phsrc=ddh1&_phstart=successSource
↑ Bearley Parish register https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/10362654?mark=7b22746f6b656e223a226e62575a475043654263565a4333385473686631714e39546d4c39677049546a36314d754b7759345a4a4d3d222c22746f6b656e5f76657273696f6e223a225632227d
Mindrum, Thomas L., The English Origin of William Gibbard of Bearley, Warwickshire, England, and his life in New Haven, Connecticut Ancestry (Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc., Stamford, Conn., Nov 2023) Vol. 66, No. 2, Page 64. 
Gibbard, Richard (I27591)
 
4823 Biography from wikitree:

She made a settlement of lands in Lindsell on her Fitch granddaughters shortly before her death. Her death was reported at Court of the Manor of Lindsell on 21 December 1505: "Sunday in St. Thomas Apostle, 21 Henry VII (21 Dec 1505) - Court of the Manor of Lindsell: Margaret formerly wife of Robert Algore died since last court; `languens in extremis' surrendered certain lands for use of Margaret senior daughter of Thomas Fytche and her heirs; if she die without any, to Katherine another daughter of Thomas Fitch and her heirs; if she dies without any to Joan another daughter of Thomas Fitch and her heirs; if she die without any, to right heirs of said Margaret formerly wife of Robert Algore and said Margaret being under age, 11 and more, she to be in custody of Thomas Fitche, and Katherine and Joan likewise."

Sources
Back to the Mayflower by Karren Minkler, 5 Sep 2002.
A Fitch Family History - English Ancestors of the Fitches of Colonial Connecticut by John T. Fitch, publ. 1990 by Picton Press, Camden, Maine
Fitch, Roscoe Conkling. 1974. History of the Fitch family, A.D. 1400-1930: a record of the Fitches in England and America, including "pedigree of Fitch" certified by the college of arms, London, England. Volume I. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Vol. 1, p. 12 , (https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE190639)
The Alger Clan Family History and Ancestry 
Cowley, Margaret (I3583)
 
4824 Biography from wikitree:

Sources
Adrian Benjamin Burke, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland", The Genealogist 27 (2013): 28-50, 162-181, and 28 (2014): 58-89. 
Gray, Alexander (I9275)
 
4825 Biography from wikitree:

Sources
Magna Carta Ancestry. Line ALSOP. 14. Edward Clere
Mother-in-law of Edward

History of Parliament online entry for her second husband, Richard Fulmerston [1] 
Lonzam, Alice (I7580)
 
4826 Biography from wikitree:

The House of Normandie crest.
Gunnora (Unknown) de Normandie is a member of the House of Normandie.
Notice of resolution of ambiguous parentage
This profile has been edited with regard to parents in accordance with principles established by the European Aristocracy user-group. Medieval genealogy is not an exact science, and digital collaborative genealogy must therefore occasionally make choices where old-fashioned print-scholarship did not have to. The parents (or lack of parents) of the person described in this profile were decided upon in consultation with primary sources especially as collected in the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy’s Medieval Lands project. There is, in particular, NO EVIDENCE AT ALL OF ANY DESCENT FROM THE KINGS OF DENMARK.

Extract from Wikipedia Gunnora

Gunnora (or Gunnor) (c. 936 - 1031) was the wife and consort of Richard I of Normandy. Her parentage is unknown, earliest sources reporting solely that she was of Danish ancestry and naming siblings INCLUDING BROTHER HERFAST DE CREPON WHO IS SOMETIMES ERRONEOUSLY GIVEN AS HER FATHER.
Gunnora long acted as Richard's mistress or wife by "more danico", but when Richard was prevented from nominating their son Robert to be Archbishop of Rouen, the two were married, making their children legitimate in the eyes of the church. As duchess, was able to use her influence to see her kin favored, and several of the most prominent Conquest-era Norman magnates, including the Montgomery, Warenne, Mortimer, Vernon/Redvers, and Fitz Osbern families, were descendants of her brother and sisters.

Richard and Gunnora were parents to several children:
Richard II "the Good", Duke of Normandy (966)
Robert, Archbishop of Rouen, Count of Evreux, died 1037.
Mauger, Earl of Corbeil[disambiguation needed ], died after 1033.
Robert Danus, died between 985 and 989
Emma of Normandy (c. 985-1052) wife of two kings of England.
Maud of Normandy, wife of Odo II of Blois, Count of Blois, Champagne and Chartres
Hawise of Normandy, wife of Geoffrey I of Brittany
Sources
See the link to the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page for our documented knowledge of this person. There is in particular no evidence at all of descent from the Kings of Denmark: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMAN%20NOBILITY.htm
http://scangen.se/medieval/gunnor.htm
Newberry genealogy : the ancestors and descendants of Thomas Newberry of Dorchester, Mass., 1634, 920-1914 Author: Ancestry.com Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2005.Original data - Bartlett, J. Gardner. Newberry genealogy: the ancestors and descendants of Thomas Newberry of Dorchester, Mass., 1634, 920-1914. Boston: Published by the author for John S Note: Includes index. 
Gunnora (I27602)
 
4827 Biography from wikitree:

The House of Normandie crest.
Richard I (Normandie) de Normandie is a member of the House of Normandie.
Notables Project
Richard I (Normandie) de Normandie is Notable.
Richard 'Sans Peur' (the Fearless), Comte de Normandie

b. 932 Fécamp
d. 20 Nov 996 Fécamp
bur. Fécamp.
Richard is the son of William I of Normandy and Sprota, a Breton concubine. He's also the grandson of Rollo. He was about 10 years old when his father was killed. His mother remarried to Esperleng, and had Richard's half-brother, Rodulf of Ivry.

Parents
Father: William I de Normandy (d. 17 Dec 942).[1]
Mother: Sprota[1]
Marriage
m.1 (960 Rouen) Emma (943-aft. 19 Mar 968), dau. of Hugues 'le Grand,' Duc de Francs, Comte de Paris and Hedwig of Germany. No issue.[2]

m.2 (bef. 989) Gunnora UNKNOWN (950-05 Jan 1031). Issue: 8.[2]

Richard II 'le Bon/l'Irascible' (d. 23 Aug 1026; bur Fécamp).
Robert (d. 1037), Comte d'Evreux. Archbishop of Rouen 989.
Robert "Danus" (d. 12 Aug 985/89).
Mauger (d. 1033/40), Comte de Corbeil (wife's right).
(son) UNKNOWN
Emma "Ælgifu" of Normandy (985 14 Mar 1052 Winchesterl)
m.1 Æthelred II
m.2 (2 or 31 Jul 1017) Canute
Havise (d. 21 Feb 1034).
m (996) Geoffrey I, Duke of Brittany (980-20 Nov 1008).
Mathilde (d. 1005)
m. (1003/4) Eudes II, Comte de Blois
Mistress
mistress(es) UNKNOWN. Issue: 5[2]

Godfroy "Geoffrey" de Brionne (953-1015), Comte d'Eu after 996.
Guillaume (978-1057), Comte d'Hiémois. Comte d'Eu.
Robert (d. after 1015), Comte d'Avranches
Beatrix (d. 18 Jan 1035)
m (bef. 1001 ... divorced) Ebles, Vicomte de Turenne, (d. after 1021).
(dau) UNKNOWN
m. Gilbert, Advocate of Saint Valéry
Sources
Ademari Historiarum III.33, MGH SS IV, p. 131.
Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.4. Fmg.ac.[1][3]
Flodoard of Reims (1855). Flodoardi Chronicon. Reims : Regnier. Google Books. [2][4]
Wikipedia: Richard I, Duke of Normandy
Citations and Notes

↑ 1.0 1.1 Notice of resolution of ambiguous parentage: profile been edited in accordance with European Aristocracy user-group. Parents (or lack of) decided upon in consultation with primary sources collected by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Cawley, 2006
↑ CITING: Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Du Chesne, 1619), Liber III, II, p. 234; Flodoard 943, MGH SS III, p. 389; Dudo of Saint-Quentin, Chapter 27; Orderic Vitalis, Vol. II, Book III, p. 9; Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Du Chesne, 1619), Liber III, XI, XII, p. 238; Kerrebrouck, P. Van (2000) Les Capétiens 987-1328 (Villeneuve d'Asq), p. 50 footnote 6; Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Du Chesne, 1619), Liber IV, II, III, IV, pp. 239-40; Dudo of Saint-Quentin, Chapters 43-45; Kerrebrouck (2000), p. 47; Chavanon, J. (ed.) (1897) Adémar de Chabannes, Chronique (Paris), Book III, 27, and Rodolfus Glauber, Life of William Volpiano, 7. Houts (2000), p. 102; Bonnin, T. (ed.) (1870) Cartulaire de Louviers (Evreux) ("Louviers"), Tome I, I, p. 1; Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Du Chesne, 1619), Liber IV, XX, p. 249; Brevis Relatio de Origine Willelmi Conquestoris, p. 14. Hugonis Floriacensis, Liber qui Modernorum Regum Francorum continet Actus 5, MGH SS IX, p. 383; Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Du Chesne, 1619), Liber IV, X, XII, pp. 243-4; Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Du Chesne, 1619), Liber IV, XVIII, p. 247; Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Du Chesne, 1619), Liber VIII, XXXVI, p. 311. Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Du Chesne, 1619), Liber IV, XVIII, p. 247; Robert de Torigny, Book VIII c. 36; Chronica Albrici Monachi Trium Fontium 998, MGH SS XXIII, p. 777.
↑ see: year 960. Records marriage to Emma; see also: Space: Flodoardi Chronicon 
Normandy, Richard of (I27601)
 
4828 Biography from wikitree:

The wife of Richard Sperry was Dennis ______ who died in 1707.[1]

Dennis Goodyear. Given Name: Dennis. Surname: Goodyear. [2]

Died 1707 New Haven, New Haven, CT. [3]

Christening: 9 May 1624. , Monkleigh, Devonshire, England.

Marriage Husband Richard Sperry. Wife Dennis Goodyear. Marriage 1648 New Haven, New Haven, CT. [4] Child: Esther Sperry.

Sources
↑ Jacobus, Donald Lines (compiler). Families of Ancient New Haven, Vol I-VIII. and Index Vol IX New Haven: 1931. Reprint, Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1974, 1981, 1997. Originally published as New Haven Genealogical Magazine, Volumes I-VIII. Rome, NY and New Haven, CT 1922-1932.
↑ Source: #S1384 familysearch.org
↑ Source: #S1384 familysearch.org
↑ Source: #S1384 familysearch.org
WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-183538 created through the import of ClarkTree.GED on Dec 3, 2012 by Eric Clark. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Eric and others.
Thank you to Julie Baldwin for creating WikiTree profile Goodyear-205 through the import of Jhoward.ged on May 31, 2013. Click to the Changes page for the details of edits by Julie and others.
FindAGrave.com; http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=12320118.
Source: S1384 familysearch.org The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Disputed Surname
Denise/Dennis the wife of Richard Sperry is frequently called Dennis Goodyear, daughter of Stephen Goodyear. Stephen's family has been well documented and he has no known child Denise/Dennis. 
Goodyear, Dennis/Denise (I27598)
 
4829 Biography from wikitree:

This profile is part of the Baldwin Name Study.
Buckinghamshire (historic flag)
Richard Baldwin was born in Buckinghamshire, England.

Richard Baldwin immigrated to New England as a child during the Puritan Great Migration (1621-1640).
Birth and Parents
Richard, the eldest son of Sylvester Baldwin Jr. and Sarah Bryan was born in 1622 and baptized in the parish of Aston Clinton, Buckinghamshire, England on 25 August of that year.[1][2]He is known as "Richard Baldwin of Milford."

When he was approximately 16-years-old, Richard boarded the ship Martin in 1638 with his family for headed for New England. His father, Sylvester Baldwin Jr., died during the voyage in June of 1638. His father's noncupative will had been written and signed while at sea, and was filed in the Boston courts in July of that same year.[1]

Richard and his mother, Sarah (Bryan) Baldwin, were named executors of Sylvester Baldwin's will in Boston where the ship "Martin" arrived.[need citation] Sylvester Baldwin left a large estate.[1]

In the Milford Records for Nov 20 1639, Richard's name appears among those persons whose names are hereunder written are allowed to be Free Planters, having for the present liberty to act in the 'choyce' of public officers for the carrying on of public 'affayers' in this plantation.[3]His name appears again May 9, 1641, as a member of the Milford church.[3]

Marriage and Children
Richard married say 5 February 1642/3, Elizabeth Alsop, the daughter of John and Temperance (Gilbert) Alsop at Milford, New Haven, Connecticut.[3], as on that date she had joined the church in her maiden name.[3][4]They had twelve children Milford, Connecticut:

Mary Baldwin (bp. 1643; d. young),
Elizabeth Baldwin, (bp. 1644; d. 1663),[5] m. 18 Nov 1663 at Milford, CT, Zachariah Burwell (1640-1711)
Silvanus (alias Sylvanus) Baldwin (bp.1646; d. 1727),[6] m. 26 Sep 1671 at Milford, CT, Mildred Prudden (1653-1712)
Richard Baldwin Jr. (bp. 2 Nov 1647; d. young),[7]
Sarah Baldwin (bp. 1649; d. 1712),[8] m. 14 Jun 1667 at Derby, CT, Samuel Riggs (1642-1738)
Temperance Baldwin (bp. 29 Jun 1651; d. 1674),[9] m. 14 Jun 1673 at Milford, CT, Nathan Burwell (1646-1696)
Mary Baldwin (bp. 6 Nov 1653; d. 1725),[10] m. 1) Sep 1675. Isaac Nichols (1654-1690); m. 2) Daniel Comstock
Samuel Baldwin (b. 1656; d. 1696),
Theophilus Baldwin (b. 26 Apr 1659; d. 1698),[11] m. 8 Feb 1683 at Milford, CT, Elizabeth Canfield (1660-1730)
Sgt. Zachariah Baldwin (b. 22 Sep 1660; d. 1722),[12] m. 1) say 1679 at Milford, CT, Mary Atkinson (1652-1691); m. 2) Mrs. Elizabeth Sanford
Martha Baldwin (b. 1 Apr 1663; d. 1740),[13] m. 8 Feb 1681 at Milford, CT, Samuel Nettleton II (1648-1717)
Barnabas Baldwin (b. 1665; d. 1741), m. 1) say 1683 at Milford, CT, Sarah Buckingham (1664-1691); 2 more marriages and 7 children.
Richard Baldwin was quite prominent in the settlement of Paugussett (now Derby, Connecticut). At a Milford, Connecticut meeting on 10 June 1655, as Sgt. Baldwin, he was chosen along with Mr. Fenn, Ensign Bryan, and Sgt. East to "treat and agree with the Indians, being the true proprietors for all or any part of the land purchased betwixt Pagasieh and us that falls within our line; and what agreement they make, the town is to stand to it, according to the promises expressed."[3]

Milford Connecticut (Early)
Richard Baldwin and other colonists negotiated with the Indians to buy land over Naugatuck River, agreed to bear a proportion of public service, paying jurisdiction rates, and received a parcel of land from an Indian known as 'hoggs meadow' between the years 1655 and 1660.[14]

There are deeds recorded (Col. Record of Lands, vol I, p. 292), in which "At a meeting with Towtanimoe, Sagamore of Pawgusset, together with some other Paguseet Indians, his subjects, at the house of Richard Baldwin March 2nd 1659-60, the sayd Sagamore did grant the meadow, known as Hogg Meadow unto Richard Baldwin with other conditions, primarily that upon improvement of the meadow, a 2nd meadow convenient to the Indians be given to them. signed by Tawtanimoe, James Club, Succuseoge, Secochduneege, Sassanghsough, and Wanwumpecun Idians, then present.[14]

Richard Baldwin was a member of the General Court for Milford, from May 1662 to May 1664. In 1664, Milford had broken off from the colony, and by vote of the town, they had submitted themselves to Connecticut on 17 November 1664.[15]

Death and Burial
Richard Baldwin died on 23 July 1665 in his 42nd year at Milford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony while serving as "a deputy to the General Court." His estate was presented at Hartford, Connecticut on 23 September 1665. His eldest son received a double portion, and his youngest child born after his death, was omitted altogether, his widow married 2nd in 1670, as his 2nd wife, William Fowler.[16]The inventory of his estate was taken on 28 September 1665 by Robert Treat and William Fowler and was distributed as follows: to the widow 150 pounds, to the eldest son, Silvanus 70 pounds, and to each of the other children: 36 pounds at legal age or at their marriage. He is buried in Milford Cemetery at Milford, New Haven, Connecticut.[17]

Richard's widow, married 2) William Fowler in 1670.

Research Notes
John Baldwin, author of "A Record of the descendants of John Baldwin of Stonington.....(1880); only shows eleven children for Richard Baldwin and Elizabeth Alsop (page 10). Son: Samuel shown above as #8 (1656-1696) is not listed as one of the eleven children.
Charles Candee Baldwin, author of Baldwin Genealogy from 1500-1881, in a footnote on page 85, states that Mary shown for daughter of Richard, was daughter of Timothy Baldwin, and son John, shown for Richard is really the grandson of John of Stonington, as mentioned in the will of the Mrs. Astwood, not his son.
In 1646, Richard's home lot was located on the west side of the Wepawaug River between his step-father Captain Astwood and his brother-n-law, Benjamin Fenn.
In 1648, Richard Baldwin was Milford Town Clerk.
In 1654, Richard was appointed Ensign of the New Haven Colony Troop and took part in the demonstration against the Dutch on the Hudson River. An educated man, he often appeared as an attorney before the General Court at New Haven, and he was chosen deputy to represent Milford at the General Court in New Haven several times between 1662 and 1664. He kept an ordinary (Inn) in his house
In 1655, Richard, was Sergeant of the Train Band in Milford CT.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Page 9/10 of Descendants of John Baldwin of Stonington, by John D Baldwin (1880)
↑ Page 77 Baldwin Genealogy from 1500-1881
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Page 78 Baldwin Genealogy from 1500-1881
↑ "Connecticut, Vital Records, Prior to 1850," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QP34-K86H : 21 September 2019), Richard Baldwin in entry for Elizabeth Alsop, ; citing Marriage, , Compiled by Lucius A. and Lucius B. Barbour, housed at State Library, Hartford, Connecticut; FHL microfilm 008272218.
↑ "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V2SC-GW1 : 7 January 2020), Richard Baldwin in entry for Elizabeth Baldwin, 1644.
↑ "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V2SS-V3V : 7 January 2020), Richard Baldwin in entry for Sile Baldwin, 1646.
↑ "England, Hampshire Parish Registers, 1538-1980," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q581-HCW2 : 13 February 2021), Richard Baldwine in entry for Richard Baldwine, 2 Nov 1647; citing Christening, , Lancashire Record Office and Hampshire Record Office, England; FHL microfilm .
↑ "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V2SC-5T5 : 7 January 2020), Richard Baldwin in entry for Sarah Baldwin, 1649.
↑ "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V2SC-G3N : 7 January 2020), Richard Baldwin in entry for Temperance Baldwin, 1651.
↑ "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F776-7PP : 7 January 2020), Richard Baldwin in entry for Mary Baldwin, 1653.
↑ "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F7WY-ZJN : 7 January 2020), Richard Baldwin in entry for Theophilus Baldwin, 1659.
↑ "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F7WY-8Z5 : 7 January 2020), Richard Baldwin in entry for Zachariah Baldwin, 1660.
↑ "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F776-WQF : 7 January 2020), Richard Baldwin in entry for Martha Baldwin, 1663.
↑ 14.0 14.1 Page 79 Baldwin Genealogy from 1500-1881
↑ Pages 82/83 Baldwin Genealogy from 1500-1881
↑ Page 83 Baldwin Genealogy from 1500-1881
↑ Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/28225733/richard-baldwin: accessed 06 August 2023), memorial page for Richard Baldwin (25 Aug 1622-23 Jul 1665), Find a Grave Memorial ID 28225733, citing Milford Cemetery, Milford, New Haven County, Connecticut, USA; Maintained by V. Nareen Lake (contributor 46613568).
Other Sources
Chester, Joseph Lemuel."Investigations concerning the Baldwin Family of Aston Clinton, co., Bucks. Published privately 1884 by David Clapp & Son, and from the Historical & Genealogical Register. Page 16.
Baldwin, Charles Candee. Baldwin Genealogy Supplement. Cleveland, OH: Leader Printing, 1889.
Baldwin, John D. A Record of the descendants of John Baldwin of Stonington, Conn.: with notice of other Baldwins who settled in America in early colony times. Worcester, MA: Tyler and Seagrave, 1880. Pages 9-10.
Compilation by Abbott, Susan Woodruff, Families of Early Milford, Connecticut. Edited and Prepared for Publication by Jacquelyn L. Ricker. Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. (Baltimore 1979) p. 51. Ancestry.com
Wheeler, Richard Anson. History of the Town of Stonington, County of New London, Connecticut. Accessed online at Google Books on January 17, 2009. online link at Google Books (Note: I browsed this book and could not find Richard Baldwin - a page number would be helpful, since Richard did not settle in the Stonington, CT area)
Benton, Charles Edward, Ezra Reed and Esther Edgerton: Their Life and Ancestry, A.V. Haight Company, 1912 On Archive.org
Orcutt, Samuel. The History of the Old Town of Derby, Connecticut, 1642-1880 (Springfield Printing Co., Springfield, Mass. 1880) Page 693
Clough, Irene Hahn, Whose Family is it Anyway? Freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com - whosefamilyisit 
Baldwin, Richard (I7109)
 
4830 Biography from wikitree:

This profile is part of the Gilbert Name Study.
This William Gilbert of Mickleover may be related to the Gilbert family of Locko shown in the Visitation Pedigrees for the County of Derbyshire as they are 8 miles apart but with a common ancestor before they acquired Locko in 1576 when some descendants may have been living in and around Barrow Upon Trent.

The Lysons in 'General history: Gentry families extinct since 1500', in Magna Britannia: Volume 5, Derbyshire, claim that "The heiress of a younger son of the Gilberts of Locko, settled at Mickle-Over, married Newton in the reign of Queen Elizabeth."[1]

William's daughter Clere Gilbert married her first husband Robert Newton on 8 May 1609. Queen Elizabeth died on 24 Mar 1603.
16 Feb 1575: Lease by Sir Thomas Gresham to William Gilbert of Mickleover manor house and other premises in Mickleover:[2]

Indenture between Sir Thomas Gresham of Osterley, Middlesex, and William Gilbert, servant to Sir Thomas, of the manor house of Mickleover, a messuage called Fowlers and close of land in the field of findern (late in the tenure of John Adderley) and a cottage on the common of Mickleover and several closes of land, in consideration of £180, for a term of 1000 years at an annual rent of £6.
7 Dec 1575: Copy of deed and other papers relating to premises at Mickleover and payments by William Gilbert to Richard Harpur and others. Including copy deed of conveyance by Sir Thomas Gresham to William Gilbert, of the manor house of Mickleover, 7 Dec 18 Elizabeth [1575].[3]

4 Dec 1576: William Gilbert of Great Over, als. Mickleover, co. Derby, gent. received a grant of arms by G. Dethick.[4]

7 Feb. 1578. Licence for William Gilberte to alienate lands in Great Over alias Mickleover and Finderne, co . Derby, to Edward Clere to the use of William and his heirs until the marriage of William and Anne Clere, and then to the use of William and Anne and the heirs of William's body by her, with successive remainders to the heirs male of the body of William and to his right heirs. For 40s. 11d. paid to the Queen's farmer.[5]

23 April 1578: William Gilbert (Gent) married Anne Clere at Blickling in the county of Norfolk. [6]

His wife Anne was the daughter of Edward Clere and Frances Fulmerston. [7] They had two sons, Henry and John, and two daughters, Temperance and Clere (wife of Robert Newton, Gent., and John Beresford, Gent.). [7]
2 September 1585: A licence of alienation. William Gilbert, Anne his wife, to John Adderley. Fields lying in parish of Mickleover, Derby. [8]

William was escheator of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire from 1591 to 1593. [7]

In 1604, William Gilbert of Mickleover, gentleman, appears as one of the witnesses at the inquisition after the death of Philip Okeover, esq.[9]

INQUISITION taken at Derby, 24th September, 2 James I. (1604), before Thomas Tye, esquire, escheator, and John Bullocke, esquire, feodary, after the death of Philip Okeover, esquire, by the oath of William Gilbert of Mickeover, gentleman, Robert Hant, Francis Bruckshawe, William Trubshawe, John Gregson, George Gregson, William Meriman, Christopher Bentley, John Richardson, Edward Newton, William Smyth, Robert Walker, robert Whiniard, Hugh Royle, William Revet, Richard Mesham, William Meakin, William Henshawe, and Thomas Hill ; WHO SAY that Philip Okeover was seised of the manors of Okeover, Woodhowses, Casterne, Ham, and Swynscowe, in the county of Stafford, with messuages and lands there; and of the manor of Atlowe ; and lands there and in Snelston, county Derby, Which Nicholas Okeover, gentleman, lately held for his life, and Other lands in Atlowe...[10]
William made his will on 27 Feb 1607/08 when he describes himself as a Gent of Mickleover in the county of Derbyshire. He names his son John, friend Sir John Harper, cousin William Fisher, three children Henry, Clere and Temperance Gilbert. He notes that Sir Edward Clere owed him 200 markes and 20 pounds. The Will was proved on 2 May 1609.[11]

He was buried at Mickleover on 21 Feb 1607/08.[12]

Memorial Inscription reportedly indicates that he was the husband of Anne Clere, daughter of Sir Edward Clere and Frances Fulmerston. They had two sons and two daughters; Henry, John, Clere, wife of Robert Newton and John Beresford, and Temperance.
His widow Anne married Okeover Crompton about 1610. [7]

Brief in the Chancery case of John Harpur, knight, executor of the late William Gilbert of Mickleover, gentleman, against Anne Gilbert, wife of Oker Crumpton, gentleman, Agnes Cleere, widow of the late Edward Cleere, knight and William Reade, knight.[13]

Research Notes
The Jan 1613/14 Will of John Newton of Littleover (right next to Mickleover) bequeaths £5 to his brother-in-law William Gilbert and £5 to William's son John. This is after the William of this profile had died. William's daughter, Clere, had married a Robert Newton on 8 May 1609, only a few days after her father's will was proved. It is to be assumed that Robert was John Newton's brother. This suggests that William may also have had a son called William, with a grandson John. The timing of Clere's wedding and the fact that neither a son William or a grandson John are mentioned in William's will suggests the possibility of a family rift. (From the Will, John Newton's wife would appear to be a Locker and he had another brother-in-law called William Collier.)

Sources
↑ Daniel Lysons and Samuel Lysons, 'General history: Gentry families extinct since 1500', in Magna Britannia: Volume 5, Derbyshire (London, 1817), pp. cxii-clii. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/magna-britannia/vol5/cxii-clii [accessed 29 April 2021].
↑ Ref D2375/D/D/31/2 at Derbyshire Archives
↑ Reference D2375/D/D/31/1 at Derbyshire Archives
↑ Grantees of arms named in docquets and patents to the end of the seventeenth century: in the manuscripts preserved in the British museum, the Bodleian Library, Oxford, Queen's College, Oxford, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and elsewhere: alphabetically arranged by the late Joseph Foster and contained in the Additional ms. no. 37,147, in the British museum by Foster, Joseph, 1844-1905; Rylands, W. Harry (William Harry), 1847-1922 Published 1915
↑ Great Britain. Public Record Office. Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved In the Public Record Office. Elizabeth I. London, Eng.: H.M. Stationery Off., digitized at Hathitrust.
↑ Image of Bickling Church Register on Find My Past
↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Douglas Richardson. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 4 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham, 2nd edition (Salt Lake City: the author, 2011), Vol. I, p. 8, ALSOP 15
↑ Reference: MS 917/1199 at Birmingham Archives
↑ Collections for a History of Staffordshire; Staffordshire Record Society, Vol 7, 1904, p 81.
↑ https://archive.org/stream/collectionsforhi07stafuoft/collectionsforhi07stafuoft_djvu.txt
↑ Will of William Gilbert, Gentleman of Mickleover, Derbyshire Ref PROB 11/113/392 at the National Archives, IMAGE on Ancestry.co.uk
↑ Derbyshire Deaths And Burials, FindMyPast
↑ Ref D2375/L/A/2/4/3 at Derbyshire Archives 
Gilbert, William (I7413)
 
4831 Biography from wikitree:

This profile is part of the Sperry Name Study.
Children bpt in Thurleigh, Bedford, England. John's bpt lists John and Mary. Others just list John.:

John Spery bpt 27 Oct 1598, son of John and Mary.[1]
Agnes Spery bp 16 Nov 1600.[2]
Elizabeth Sperrey bpt 13 May 1604[3]
Mary Sperey bpt 13 Jan 1604[4]
Richard Spery bpt 16 Feb 1606[5]
PLEASE NOTE there was no Esther / Hester listed.

Sources
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N585-632 : 30 December 2014, John Spery, 27 Oct 1598); citing THURLEIGH,BEDFORD,ENGLAND, index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 908,072.
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J7SB-KB3 : 30 December 2014, Agnes Spery, 16 Nov 1600); citing THURLEIGH,BEDFORD,ENGLAND, index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 908,072.
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N585-XQF : 30 December 2014, Elizabeth Sperrey, 13 May 1604); citing THURLEIGH,BEDFORD,ENGLAND, index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 908,072.
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J7SB-VJM : 30 December 2014, Mary Sperey, 13 Jan 1605); citing THURLEIGH,BEDFORD,ENGLAND, index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 908,072.
↑ "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JWN9-HZJ : 30 December 2014, Richard Spery, 16 Feb 1606); citing THURLEIGH,BEDFORD,ENGLAND, index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 908,072. 
Sperry, John (I27599)
 
4832 Biography from wikitree:
Lieutenant Daniel SPERRY [1][2][3][4] was born [5] 1665 in New Haven, CT. He died [6] 24 Apr 1750 in New Haven, CT. Daniel married Deborah PECK on 3 Apr 1694. [7]

"sonne of Richard Sperry" was born in New Haven, Connecticut.[8] The record is missing a first name and date, but is listed between two others dated 1665. We know who he was from his baptismal record. Danill, son of Sister Sperry was baptized ____ 1665.[9] He was the son of Richard & Dennis/Denise.[10]

Daniel Sperry married:

1st Deborah Peck, d/o Joseph, 3 Apr 1694 at Lyme, Connecticut.[p66][8][10]
2nd Sarah (Wilmot) Hotchkiss. d/o William, widow of Thomas, about 1713.[10]
3rd Lieut. Daniel Sperry & Sarah (Clark) Wilmot. d/o John Clark, widow of John Wilmot 7 Feb 1732/3.[p217][8][10]
Daniel died 24 Apr 1750, ae. 86, according to his tombstone which was on the New Haven town green.[10] Apparently the tombstone no longer exists.

Sources
↑ Donald Lines Jacobus, Families of Ancient New Haven ([CD]Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1981[originally]Rome, N.Y. and New Haven, Conn., 1922-1932), vol 1, p 243.
↑ Selected and Introduced by Gary Boyd Roberts, Genealogies of Connecticut Families From The New England Historical and Genealogical Register ([CD]Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., 1983), vol 2, p 184.
↑ Donald Lines Jacobus, Families of Ancient New Haven, vol 8, p 1982.
↑ Donald Lines Jacobus, Families of Ancient New Haven, vol 2, p 404.
↑ Donald Lines Jacobus, Families of Ancient New Haven, vol 7, p 1619.
↑ Donald Lines Jacobus, Families of Ancient New Haven, vol 7, p 1619.
↑ Vital Records of New Haven, 1649-1850 (Connecticut Society of the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America, Hartford, 1917) Part 1, Page 66. "married at Lime by mr Wm Eely Comr ye 3d day of Aprill 1694"
↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 Vital Records of New Haven 1649-1850 Part I. Hartford: The Connecticut Society of the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America, 1917
↑ Connecticut Church Records Index: New Haven First Congregational Church 1639-1937. Vol. J-Z. Hartford: Connecticut State Library, 1947.
↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 Jacobus, Donald Lines (compiler). Families of Ancient New Haven, Vol I-VIII. and Index Vol IX New Haven: 1931. Reprint, Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1974, 1981, 1997. Originally published as New Haven Genealogical Magazine, Volumes I-VIII. Rome, NY and New Haven, CT 1922-1932.
See also:

Torrey’s New England Marriages Prior to 1700
Daniel (1665-) & 1/wf Deborah PECK (1672-1711); 3 Apr 1694, ?3 Aug; Lyme, CT/New Haven
{New Haven VR 66; Lyme CT VR; Windsor CT 2:695; New Haven Gen. Mag. 1385, 1669; Noyes-Gilman 169; Dickerman 183; Peck (1877) 15; TAG 22:262}
White, Henry. List of Baptisms, In the Church in New Haven, Conn., 1639-1666, The New England Historical & Genealogical Register (New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Mass., 1855) Vol. 9, Page 362
Parker, Edwin Pond. Family Records, Parker-Pond-Peck (Case, Lockwood & Brainard Co., Hartford, Conn., 1892) Page 9 
Sperry, Daniel (I27566)
 
4833 Biography from wikitree:
Puritan Great Migration
Stephen Goodyear immigrated to New England between 1621 and 1640 and later departed for London, England
Stephen Goodyear, Deputy Governor of the New Haven Colony and Commissioner for the United Colonies.[1]

You can read a sketch of his contributions to New Haven Here on page 40.

Origins
Stephen was christened on 26 November, 1598 at Saint Gregory by Saint Paul, London, England.[2] He was a son of Zachary Goodyear and Susanna Baxter.[3]

"Stephen Goodier son of Zacharie Goodier," was bound apprentice 14 Aug 1614 for seven years to Ralph Bowlton of the Merchant Tailors' Company, and admitted to the freedom of the Company 12 Nov 1621.[4]

Marriages
Stephen married first Mary _____, about 1625 in England. She was lost at sea in 1646 on Lamberton's "Phantom" ship,[5] which contained goods to be sold in England and about 70 passengers.

Stephen married, about 1648, in New Haven, Margaret (Lewen) who was the widow of George Lamberton, also lost when his ship disappeared.[5]

Life in London
Before he emigrated, Stephen was a goldsmith in London, England.[6]

In 1638 his house in the parish of St Mary Woolnoth in the City of London was valued at £30 rental.[7]

Arrival
Stephen Goodyear, signed the New Haven Fundamental Agreement, but he was not in Mr. Newman's barn 4 June 1639, when the first 63 men signed. His name is first on the list of the following 43 signers.[8] Other evidence points to his later arrival. His daughter Sarah was baptized and buried in England Nov. 1639, granted he could have left his wife home. He was first appointed a Deputy to the Court May 1641[9] and his son was baptized Aug 1641.[1] Further a Mr. Goodyear was licensed 26 Jan 1640 to carry 250 passengers to New England in the St. John of London.[5]

New Haven
Stephen by the nature of his position in New Haven Colony is amply represented in the early colony records.

Hoadley, Charles J, MA. (editor) Records of the Colony and Plantation of New Haven, From 1638 to 1649.] Hartford: Case, Tiffany and Company, 1857. Goodyeare There are also a few listings under Goodyear.
New Haven town records, Vol I, 1649-1662 edited by Franklin Bowditch Dexter et al. Publ. New Haven: New Haven Hist. Soc. 1917. at Google Books
Records of the Colony or Jurisdiction of New Haven, From May 1653 to the Union Together with the New Haven Code of 1656. Hoadley, Charles J, MA. (editor) . Hartford: Case, Tiffany and Company, 1858.
He was chosen a Deputy May 1641, and one of the two Magistrates (with Mr. Eaton) 27 Oct 1641 and 26 Oct 1642. 6 Apr 1643 he was a member of the advisory committee consulting with the New Haven Commissioners of the United Colonies. On an early rates list he had 9 heads in his family and an estate of £1000. He became the Deputy-Governor of New Haven Colony 26 Oct 1643 and remained in that office until he died. He was the Town auditor 22 Oct 1645; and one of six commissioners (17 June 1650) to set the boundaries between New Haven and MIlford.[5]

Stephen Goodyear was given permission to brew beer for the town of New Haven, 1 Feb 1647. He was a merchant and a ship owner. He bought Shelter Island from Mr. Farrett 18 May 1641, and 10 years later, 9 June 1651, sold it for £1600 of merchantable sugar. He owned 5/8 of the ship Swallow with Edward Stanton. 1655-1657 he had an interest in the Iron Works at Stony River. The Colony of New Haven proposed to create a settlement at Delaware Bay. 10 Mar 1651, Stephen was part of the committee. He said in 1655 that he would be interested in settling there himself. The venture to Delaware Bay never materialized.[5]

Death
27 May 1658 Goodyear returned to London, England, after June 30, 1657, and died there.[10]
Inventory in New Haven was taken on 15 Oct 1658[11][10]
Parish register at St. Martin Ludgate, London: Buried in 1658 May 7 Stephen Goodyer, Marchant Taylor.[4]
Children
Stephen had ten children with his first wife, Mary:

Rebecca, b. abt. 1626; m. Rev. John Bishop of Stamford, Connecticut[5]
Stephen, bur'd. 25 Feb. 1627/8[12]
Mary, bapt. 22 Jan. 1629/30;[12] m. Capt. Thomas Lake of Boston[12]
Stephen, bapt. 2 June 1631;[12] d. young[12]
Thomas, bapt. 3 Jan. 1632/3;[12] d. young[12]
Andrew, bapt. 3 Apr. 1634;[12] bur'd. 8 Sept. 1635[12]
Hannah, b. abt. 1637; m. (1) 29 Oct. 1656 Rev. Samuel Wakeman of Fairfield, Connecticut; m. (2) Nathaniel Burr
Sarah, bapt. 12 Nov. 1639;[12] bur'd. 14 Nov. 1639[12]
Stephen, bapt. at New Haven, Aug. 1641 d.s.p[1]
Lydia, bapt. at New Haven, June 1645;[1] d. 29 Sept 1700; m. Capt. John Watts of Boston
Stephen had three children with his second wife.

Andrew, bapt. 8 April 1649[1]
John, b. 8 March 1650/1; bapt. in 1651; d. abt. Nov 1702; m. 26 June 1683 Abigail Gibbard, daughter of William and Anna (Tapp) Gibbard[1]
Esther, b. 12 May 1654; bapt. May 1654; d. 9 Feb 1690/1; m. 10 Aug. 1682 Nathan Smith[1]

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Jacobus, Donald Lines (compiler). Families of Ancient New Haven, Vol I-VIII. and Index Vol IX New Haven: 1931. Reprint, Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1974, 1981, 1997. Originally published as New Haven Genealogical Magazine, Volumes I-VIII. Rome, NY and New Haven, CT 1922-1932.
↑ England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975, index, FamilySearch (accessed 26 Apr 2014), Stephen Goodyere, 26 Nov 1598; citing SAINT GREGORY BY SAINT PAUL,LONDON,LONDON,ENGLAND, reference ; FHL microfilm 375028.
↑ Beers Josephine W., and Prindle, Paul W., "The English Ancestry of Stephen Goodyear, Deputy Governor of the New Haven Colony," The American Genealogist. Vol 57 (1987) Pg 2. AmericanAncestors.org (by subscription)
↑ 4.0 4.1 Hinman, Barry E. "The Burial of Stephen Goodyear 7 May 1658. New England Historical and Genealogical Register.
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Jacobus, Donald Lines. "Deputy-Governor Stephan Goodyear of New Haven, Reverend John Bishop of Stamford, and the Lake and Watts Families of Boston." The American Genealogist 16:193 (1940).
↑ Sir Edward Lake's Interviews with Charles I, Camden Society Miscellany volume 4, 1859 - introduction p.ix
↑ Dale, T.C. "Inhabitants of London in 1638: St. Mary Wolnoth", in The Inhabitants of London in 1638, (London, 1931) pages 123-124. British History Online, accessed May 31, 2024, https://www.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/london-inhabitants/1638/pp123-124.
↑ Charles J, Hoadley (editor) Records of the Colony and Plantation of New Haven, From 1638 to 1649. Hartford: Case, Tiffany and Company, 1857. p. 18
↑ Charles J, Hoadley (editor) Records of the Colony and Plantation of New Haven, From 1638 to 1649. Hartford: Case, Tiffany and Company, 1857.p. 51
↑ 10.0 10.1 Kirkland, Grace Goodyear, Genealogy of the Goodyear family, published San Francisco 1899. Page 36 via InternetArchive
↑ “New Haven Probate Records, Vol. 1-2, 1647-1703”, database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L92K-G9NY-J : 5 March 2021), New Haven, Connecticut, FHL microfilm 007626739, image 51. New Haven Probate Record, 1647-1687, Vol. 1, Part 1, page 78-79.
↑ 12.00 12.01 12.02 12.03 12.04 12.05 12.06 12.07 12.08 12.09 12.10 Extracts from English Parish Registers. St. Mary Woolnoth, London. New England Historical and Genealogical Register. 61:189 (1907)
See also:
Anderson, Robert Charles, The Great Migration Directory, (NEHGS, 2015) p. 135. Goodyear, Stephen: London; 1640; New Haven; returned permanently to England in 1657. Cites: Lechford 315; NHCR 1:51; Waters 888-89; TAG 16:193-200, 57:1-11, 100-2; NEHGR 61:189, 168:271; CA 48:149-57; Grace Goodyear Kirkman, Gen. of the Goodyear Family, (San Francisco, 1899); Abandoning 120-21. Intro and key to citation titles (download pdf).
Hoadley, Charles J, MA. (editor) Records of the Colony and Plantation of New Haven, From 1638 to 1649. Hartford: Case, Tiffany and Company, 1857.
Jacobus, Donald Lines. "Deputy-Governor Stephan Goodyear of New Haven, Reverend John Bishop of Stamford, and the Lake and Watts Families of Boston." The American Genealogist 16:193 (1940).
English Origins of New England Families, Vol. I
London, England, Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812 Publication: Ancestry.com Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. Original data - Church of England Parish Registers, 1538-1812. London Metropolitan Archives and Guildhall Library Manuscripts, London.Images produced by permission of the City of London
Dexter, Franklin Bowditch (compiler). Historical Catalogue of the Members of the First Church of Christ in New Haven in Connecticut. (New Haven, 1914) Page 3. Lists wife Margaret (Lewen) Lamberton and children: Hester (Goodyear) Smith and John Goodyear.
St. Martin within Ludgate Churchyard. Ludgate, City of London, Greater London, England: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=139993092
Hollister, Gideon. The History of Connecticut, From the First Settlement of the Colony to the Adoption of the Present Constitution (Case, Tiffany & Co., Hartford, 1857) Vol. 1, Page 509 
Goodyear, Stephen (I27561)
 
4834 Biography from wikitree:
Robert was born about 1515.

According to the latest research by Craig Partridge, Ph.D. in "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist the parents Edmund Tapp(1592-1653) are Edmund Tapp (c.1550 - 1635) and Margaret (Unknown) (c 1550 - 1639).[1] His father was born about 1550 in Felmersham, Bedfordshire, England. He was the son of Robert Tapp (1515-) and his mother is unknown.[2] Edmund attended Caius College in Cambridgshire in 1568 when he was 18.[3] He married about 1585 to Margaret (Unknown).[4] The widow Margaret Tapp was buried at Chellington in Bedfordshire on 26 Apr 1639. She left a Will which mentioned her daughter Agnes Welles as well as Agnes’ husband and children.[5]

Research notes
In 1525 John Tappe, of Radwell Grene, in the parish of Felmersham, Beds, husbandman, was a defendant for debt in the court of Common Pleas.[6]

There is a will of John Tape of Felmersham, proved 25 May 1528. [7] In it he mentions his daughter Joan Leche and son in law Edmund Leche. To Robert Tappe's children he left 4 pence each. The executors were his wife Alice, son Robert Tappe, and son in law Edmund Leche.

Sources
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73
↑ http://aalt.law.uh.edu/AALT3/H8/CP40no1046/bCP40no1046dorses/IMG_0911.htm
↑ Bedfordshire Wills 1484-1533, Bedfordshire Historical Record Society Vol. 76. Edited by Patricia Bell, page 128
Craig Partridge, Ph.D. "The English Origins of Edmund Tapp of New Haven and Milford, Connecticut" in The American Genealogist (New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, April 1997) 72:65-80 and 73:65-73 
Tapp, Robert (I27596)
 
4835 Birth
Jean Le Faucheur was born about 1648 (based on 1st known child) in France.

Marriage & Children
He married Judith abt 1673 (based on 1st known child) probably in France. The two known children of Jean Le Faucheur and Judith are:

Jean (Le Faucheur) Fauce (abt.1674-bef.1732) m. Eva Matthyse Franse
Pierre Le Faucheur (1683-) m. Abigail DePew
[1] [2]

Sources
↑ additional info from Pane-Joyce Genealogy.
↑ Glenna See Hill, “The Foshay family of Philipse Manor,” New York Gen. Biog. Reg., 118 (1987): 76-81, 156-161, 222-228. 
Le Faucheur, Jean (Jan) (I16492)
 
4836 Birth
Judith (Unknown) was born about 1652 (based on 1st known child born abt 1674), most-likely in Brittany, France.[1]

Surname
Judith's name was listed as "Judic Enrion" in the baptismal record for her son Pierre, christened 30 April, 1682 at the Threadneedle Huguenot Church in London.[2]

Marriage & Children
She married Jan/Jean Le Faucheur abt 1673 (based on birth of 1st known child) in France. The surname Le Faucheur [means "the Reaper" or "the Mower" as in harvesting wheat] still exists in France and is primarily found in Brittany (Cotes du Nord departement). The couple had 2 known sons,

Jean (Le Faucheur) Fauce (abt.1674-bef.1732)
Pierre Le Faucheur (1683-abt. 1751)[3][4]

Burial
There is a record of the French Church du Saint Esprit, New York City, that the funeral expenses, £1.1.9, for Judith Le Faucheur were paid 12 Nov 1694.[5] This means that Judith and her children were French Reformed Protestants, otherwise known as "Huguenots," who had to flee France after Roman Catholic King Louis XIV revoked the Edict of Nantes that guaranteed Protestants religious tolerance. [1] Judith Le Faucheur can be assumed to be for the mother of Jan (AKA Jean) and Pieter (AKA Pierre) Le Faucheur. Others say Judith Le Faucheur arrived in New York City with her 2 sons (no husband mentioned) from France around 1695; if this is true, then they most-likely arrived in 1694 and she died soon after their arrival.

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Glenna See Hill, “The Foshay family of Philipse Manor,” New York Gen. Biog. Reg., 118 (1987): 76-81, 156-161, 222-228.
↑ Christening of Pierre Lefaucheurs, Father: Jean Lefaucheurs, Mother: Judic Enrion, 30 Apr 1682, Threadneedle Street French Huguenot, London, London, England, "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", , FamilySearch https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V5LK-P2F
↑ Christening of Pierre Lefaucheurs, Father: Jean Lefaucheurs, Mother: Judic Enrion, 30 Apr 1682, Threadneedle Street French Huguenot, London, London, England, "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", , FamilySearch https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V5LK-P2F
↑ Christening of Pierre Fauchrues, 30 Apr 1682, Spitalfields, London, Father: Jean Fauchrues, Mother: Judith Fauchrues, "England and Wales Non-Conformist Record Indexes (RG4-8), 1588-1977," FamilySearch https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FWG5-B52, citing p. 186, Spitalfields, London, record group RG4, Public Record Office, London.
↑ The Huguenot Church of New York : a history of the French Church of Saint Esprit by John A. F. Maynard. New York, 1938. p. 79, "Mme Faucheur received one pound, four shillings on October 22nd, then on Nov. 12, Monsieur Chevallier was given one pound, one shilling and nine pence for the funeral expenses of Judith Le Faucheur." http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.$b463089;view=1up;seq=83
additional info from Pane-Joyce Genealogy. 
Enrion, Judith (I16493)
 
4837 birth and death dates not confirmed Schmitt, Eva (I4883)
 
4838 Birth appears in the Kukkus records, perhaps entered due to a mail update to Kukkus relatives? Freehling, Adam (I25947)
 
4839 Birth appears in the Kukkus records, perhaps entered due to a mail update to Kukkus relatives? Freehling, Katharine Margaret (I25967)
 
4840 birth calc incorrect from age 75 on death cert Gibbons, Ellen (I6845)
 
4841 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I25605)
 
4842 Birth Certificates, 1631-1920. New Hampshire Department of State. Concord, New Hampshire. Source (S1071)
 
4843 Birth dates are actually baptism dates Source (S1261)
 
4844 Birth entry in Kukkus birth records, but probably entered after moved from Russia and family notified relatives in Kukkus of the birth. Johannes, Heinrich (I2917)
 
4845 Birth entry in Kukkus birth records, but probably entered after moved from Russia and family notified relatives in Kukkus of the birth. Johannes, Johann Philipp (I3151)
 
4846 Birth name is her Patronymic Dutch for "Jacobs daugher".

Sources and write up at https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Jacobs-3162 
Jacobs, Aechtje (I8933)
 
4847 birth of child Family: / Anna Elisabeth Gammel (F7565)
 
4848 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I21077)
 
4849 Birth records, select counties and years. California State Archives, Sacramento, California. Source (S1232)
 
4850 Birth records, select counties and years. California State Archives, Sacramento, California. Source (S1367)
 
4851 BIRTH:
14 July 1786 from inscription on gravestone. In Pennsylvania per 1850 Census.

NAME:
From death record of dau Mary Ann: Mary Ann Norbury
From death record of dau Nancy: Mary Norberry

PARENTS:
Unknown. The name Norberry comes from the death registers in Tuscola County of two of her children, Nancy and Mary Ann. There are no Norberry's in the Columbia or Luzerne Will Index, nor in the Columbia County census records 1850 and earlier. Nor in Luzerne County census records 1840 or prior. Columbia deed records show a Joseph B. Norbury in Danville-about 35 miles away. He is 2 years younger than Mary. His father is Heath Norbury who had connections to Northumberland and who died there.

MARRIAGE:
By 1807 to Samuel Shultz. Date of birth of first known child.

CENSUS RECORDS:
1850 Federal Census. We find Samuel Shultz in Sugarloaf, Columbia, Pennsylvania.
Samuel 63 b. Pennsylvania
Mary 55 b. Pennsylvania (age apparently in error)
Sarah 33 b. Pennsylvania
Samuel B 35 b. Pennsylvania

DEATH:
18 Dec 1852 from inscription on gravestone.

BURIAL:
In Rohrsburg Cemetery, Columbia County, Pennsylvania with her husband, Samuel Shultz. Inscription reads “Mary wife of Samuel Shultz died 18 Dec 1852 age 66yrs 5 mons 14days”

CHILDREN:
Joseph Henry Schultz b. abt 1807 Pennsylvania m. Mary Jane Dill 3 Oct 1853 Botetourt, Virginia d. 14 Mar 1887 in Botetourt, Virginia
Jesse K Shultz b. 30 Sep 1811 Pennsylvania m. Hannah Mayberry abt 1834 in Pennsylvania d. 21 Aug 1853 in Tuscola, Michigan
Andrew Shultz b 4 Oct 1814 Pennsylvania m. Lucia Sweat 30 Jul 1865 in Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan m. Lodema Bennett 24 Nov 1868 in Tuscola, Michigan d. 18 Jan 1873 in Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan
Nancy A Shultz b. abt 1815 in Pennsylvania m. Gearhart Kile 8 Feb 1838 d. 7 Sep 1899 in Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan
Samuel B Shultz b. 8 Jul 1815 Pennsylvania d. 12 May 1897 in Pennsylvania
Sarah A Shultz b. 18 Oct 1827 in Pennsylvania m. Unknown Brittain d. 21 Dec 890 in Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan
Elisha Shultz 12 Jun 1825 Pennsylvania m. Unknown Mary d. 10 Dec 1876 in Pennsylvania
Mary Ann Shultz 18 Oct 1827 Pennsylvania Married Samuel York d. 28 May 1903 in Tuscola, Michigan

NOTES:
Various online trees show Mary as a daughter of Heath Norbury of Philadelphia. However, that appears unlikely. Heath did have a daughter names Mary, who has a birth record dated in 1784. That is 2 years earlier than our Mary's birthdate as shown on her gravestone, also in another month, on a different day. Unless Mary's gravestone is majorly in error, she is a different person. Thus, it is unlikely that she is a daughter of Heath Norbury.
 
Norbury, Mary (I5930)
 
4852 BIRTH:
1706 in Germany. From 1727 to 1737 he had six children appear in the birth records for Froeschen in the Südwestpfalz district, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

PARENTS:
Unknown

IMMIGRATION:
11 Sep 1738 Valentine Schults appears on the arrival list in Philadelphia, Delaware, Pennsylvania, USA on ship “Robert & Alice”.
The Register zu den Evangelish-Lutherischen Kirchenbuchern Der Pfarri Thaleishweiler 1720-1798 FHL Film # 193184 mentions the birth of Johann Velten’s daughter Anna Magdalena along with a note that the family moved to America. No date is given for the note. Nothing else is known about his life in Froeschen (which today is called Thaleishweiler-Froeschen in the Südwestpfalz district, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany)

MARRIAGE:
Anna Kunigunde Unknown by 1727. Based on birth of first known child.

CHURCH:
Valentine was a member of the St Johns Evangelical Lutheran Church or "Old Straw Church" in Greenwich. This Lutheran Church was erected by 1762. It was constructed of logs, about 30' by 40' with a thatched roof made of straw, hence the name. It was enlarged and rebuilt in 1790 with stone, but it was still referred to as the Old Straw Church. (citation: The Early Germans of New Jersey, Their History, Churches and Genealogies" by Theodore Frelinghuysen Chambers publication date unknown p625)

Records of the St Johns Evangelical Lutheran Church (Communion Records of St. James Lutheran ("Straw") Church Greenwich, Warren County, NJ 1770-1773 from the Genealogical Magazine of New Jersey Volume VIII, 1932-33 as appears at http://www.raub-and-more.com/straw/strawcommunion1.html) show that Valentin Schultz took communion on the following dates:
26 Oct 1771
29 May 1773
11 July 1774
2 Dec 1780

A list of names signed to the "articles of faith and order" in 1772 at the Old Straw Church includes Peter Schaultz. (citation: The Early Germans of New Jersey, Their History, Churches and Genealogies" by Theodore Frelinghuysen Chambers publication date unknown p626)

DEATH:
1786 in Greenwich, Warren, New Jersey

BURIAL: Unknown

PROBATE RECORDS:
from "Documents related to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey Calendar of New Jersey Wills, Vol VI, 1781-1785 by Elmer T Hutchinson published 1939:
1771, July 12, Shults, Valentine, of Greenwich, Sussex Co., Yeoman: will of. Daughter, Lany Shoults, all real and personal estate during her life, and then to be sold, and given to the rest of my children, Peter, Phillip, Barbary, Elizabeth, Sarah and Eve Shults. Son, Peter, £9. Executors-son, Peter, and friend, Abraham Kline. Witnesses-Jacob Lunger, Abraham Lunger, Fredrick Eveland. Proved Nov 30, 1786. Lib 28, P. 457.

CHILDREN:
George Heinrich b. 6 Mar 1727 in Froeschen, Germany
Johann Peter b. 24 Jun 1729 in Froeschen, Germany m. Mary Weller d. 1790-1791 Sussex, New Jersey
Anna Barbara b. 7 Jan 1732 in Froeschen, Germany
Johann Georg b. 7 Jun 1734 in Froeschen, Germany d 16 May 1737 Froeschen, Germany
Johann Reinhardt b. 7 Jun 1734 in Froeschen, Germany d. 22 Feb 1736 Froeschen, Germany
Anna Magdalena b. 11 Jan 1737 in Froeschen, Germany
Philip Shultz b. 1741 probably in New Jersey
Eve Shultz b. b. 1 Jan 1751
Elizabeth (name in will)
Sarah (name in will)

NOTES: I have seen an online tree showing the father of Johann Velten to be Ferdinandus Schulte baptized 5 Dec 1677 in a catholic church in Coesfeld. Coesfeld is about 250 miles from Froeschen. Our ancestor was a member of the Evangelich Church, not Catholic. This identification without evidence seems highly doubtful.
However, there is a different Ferdinandus Schultz who had baptized Johann Valentin Schultz on 10 Oct 1706 in the Evangelisch-Reformierte Kirche, Dackenheim, Bayern, Germany. Dackenheim is about 50 miles from Froeschen. That is not outside the realm of possibility, but we have no corroborating evidence that this is the same person. The record can be found at familysearch.org.
 
Shultz, Johann Velten {Valentine} (I5911)
 
4853 BIRTH:
30 Sep 1811 in Pennsylvania. Date from gravestone inscription. Place from Census.

PARENTS:
Samuel Shultz and Mary Norbury of Sugarloaf, Columbia, Pennsylvania.

MARRIAGE:
6 Mar 1835 to Hannah Gibbons b. 5 Nov 1815 in Pennsylvania. (per a 2/17/1982 family tree chart on file with the Columbia County Historical and Genealogical Society in Bloomsburg, PA-unable to find confirming document)

CENSUS RECORDS:
1840 US Federal Census Jesse Shults in..
Males 20-30: 1 matches Jesse
Males less than 5: 2 matches Joseph and C.A.
Females age 20-30: 1 Matches Hannah
Females under 5: 1 matches Lucinda.
Next household listed on the page is his father Samuel Shultz.

1850 US Federal Census Jesse Shultz in Hayfield, Crawford, Pennsylvania:
Jesse 39 b. Pennsylvania
Hannah 36 b. Pennsylvania
Lucinda 14 b. Pennsylvania
Joseph 13 b. Pennsylvania
C A 12 b. Pennsylvania
Issac 9 b. Pennsylvania
S A 5 b. Pennsylvania
Emily 3 b. Pennsylvania
Thomas J 1 b. Pennsylvania

DEATH:
21 Aug 1853 in Tuscola County, Michigan. Date from gravestone inscription.

BURIAL:
Juniata Township Cemetery AKA Watrousville Cemetery Juniata Township, Tuscola, Michigan. Gravestone reads J K Shultz, died 21 Aug 1853, aged 41 years 11 months, 21 days.

NOTES ON GRAVESITE:
Basically Watrousville is a few buildings on the corner of M-81 and Ringle Rd in Tuscola County. Just west of the corner on the north side of the road is the Juniata Township Cemetery. The cemetery is also referred to as the Watrousville Cemetery. The cemetery is small, just a few hundred graves. I found it to be quite clean and well maintained.

The first group of stones I came to look for consists of 3 graves, but 2 stones. The taller stone, about a 3 1/2 foot tall spire, is engraved on the left side J.K. Shultz DIED Aug. 21, 1853 Aged 41 yrs 11 mos 21 days. The opposite side is engraved Hannah Shultz DIED Dec 10, 1865 Aged 50 yrs 1 mo 5 days. Right next to this taller stone is a stone engraved C.A. Schultz Co F 2 Mich Inf. Next to the stone is an American flag. Right behind the stone is a metal plaque which reads Albert C Schultz Corp Co F 2 Mich Inf Civil War. (Note how it went from C. A. to Albert C.)

The next group of stones I wanted to look at consists of 3 stones in a row with a fourth stone in the middle represented only by a base in the ground. The first stone is engraved Lucia E wife of Andrew Shultz died Mar 13, 1867 Aged 27 yrs 1 mo 27 dys. The 2nd stone is engraved Lucia (hard to read-but here goes) 22 Aug 1877 10 yrs m 20dys daughter of A & L Shults. The third stone is the one which is missing. (According to Gloria Hall in 1939 the stone was read as Andrew Shults died 18 Jan 1873 age 63 yrs 3 mo 14 dys. With a note in the 1990’s that the stone is now missing.) The fourth stone reads Samuel infant son of A & L Shults Died Mar 9, 1866.

The final group of stones which I wanted to see consists of 3 stones. The first reads Emiley Smith(Emily Shultz) Died Jan 1 A.D. 1865 Aged 17 yrs 7 m’s 8 d’s. The next stone reads George Spickerman Died Sept 5, 1883. Aged 10 yrs 5 mos 21 dys. The final stone reads Harriet C Spickerman Mother of George Spickerman Apr 21, 1851 Apr 13, 1929

NOTES ON PROBATE RECORDS:
File #1-89, Tuscola County, Michigan Probate Records, Estate of Jesse K Shultz:
We show Jesse Shultz dying in 1853, but the probate file was opened in 1866. Hannah, Jesse's wife died in Dec 1865 which is what triggered the probate, because now the real estate and other assets had to be disbursed to the heirs. I think that the prevailing law is that the real estate belongs to the husband, but the wife can stay there until she dies, then it goes into probate. Many of the papers mention the estate of both Jesse K Shultz and C Albert Shultz, deceased. (he is also referred to as Albert Shultz or Charles Albert Shultz on one paper). C Albert is one of Jesse's sons on the census, so apparently he died between 1860 and 1866. There is also a reference to the estate of Hannah Shultz. So all 3 people are included in this one file.
Jesse Fox (the spouse of Lucinda Shultz) was appointed guardian of the minors; Thomas Shultz, Harriet Shultz and Jesse Zephaniah Shultz (also referred to as Zephaniah Shultz or Jesse Z).
The date of death is almost never mentioned, it is always the previously deceased, so I would guess that the date is not important to the probate court. Fortunately one of the receipts for services rendered listed an approximate date for Jesse's death. William Johnson, apparently a Doctor billed the estate for services performed: "surgical services provided to Mr. Shultz in 1852 (“or at the date of his death”) and on Mrs. Shultz at her death in December 1865; (only one paper had an actual death date for Jesse K, but it was not entirely legible, I could read Aug 1853), (from cemetery transcriptions we know Jesse K died 21 Aug 1853 and Hannah died 10 Dec 1865).
So, who are the heirs?
Lucinda Fox (who also purchased the rights of Joseph Shultz in the estate of C.A. Shultz), Mary E Russell of Juniata (Mary’s husband, Henry E Russell is the administrator of the estate) Thomas Shultz of Fairgrove, Harriet Shultz, Zephaniah Shultz and Albert A Smith (this would be the child of Emily who died 1 Jan 1865, leaving 2 month old Albert without a mother). (Emily was married to Alanson Smith, I do not know what happened to him). Also David Altingburg (Altingberry?) purchaser of the rights of Joseph Shultz, I believe in regards to Jesse K estate. Apparently my ancestor was in need of quick cash at the time.
There is a receipt where Joseph Shultz signed for his share of the estate of C Albert Shultz. He received $48.84. It is signed Joseph O. Shultz.
58 papers in the file, some of them written on both sides, so a lot to look up. Other items of interest.
Gearhart Kile filed an objection to the sale of the estate in that it was not handled fairly. He stated that he was prepared to offer $2000 for the real estate, as were other people and that it was sold for too little. Gearhart apparently wanted to purchase the estate using credit terms for part of the payment, which is why his bid was not allowed.
The auctioneer filed a statement that the sale held at the hotel of G.W. Buddington of Watrousville was conducted fairly. He obtained a bid of $1662. He announced to everyone in the room, that if he did not receive a higher bid he would close the sale. He then closed the sale. The judge ruled that the sale was conducted fairly.
There was also a petition filed by Jesse Fox that Henry E Russell had concealed and disposed of certain assets. I cannot tell what that was about.
There is also a note that papers are missing from the file.

CHILDREN:
Lucinda Shultz 03 Apr b. 1836 in Pennsylvania, USA d. 07 Dec 1893 in Fannin, Texas, USA Marriage: 02 Jul 1856 in Rogers, Tuscola, Michigan, USA Spouse: Jesse Fox
Joseph Oscar {Schultz} Shultz B. Abt. 1837 in Pennsylvania, USA d. Bet. 1880-1889 Marriage: 15 Dec 1861 in Fairgrove, Tuscola, Michigan, USA Spouse: Sarah Rebecca Phelps
Charles Albert Shultz b. 1838 in Sugarloaf, Columbia, Pennsylvania, USA d. Bet. 28 Jul 1865-28 May 1866 in Michigan, USA; prob of chronic pneumonia caused by exposure at pow camp. Burial: Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan, USA; Juniata Township Cemetery
Isaac Shultz b. 1842 in Pennsylvania, USA
Mary Ellen Shultz b. 1843 in Pennsylvania, USA d. Aft. 1866 Spouse: Henry E Russell
S A Shultz b. 1845 in Pennsylvania, USA
Emily Shultz b. 24 May 1847 in Pennsylvania, USA d. 01 Jan 1865 in Caro, Tuscola, Michigan, USA Burial: Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan, USA; Juniata Township Cemetery Marriage: 18 Dec 1863 in Tuscola, Michigan, USA Alanson A Smith
Thomas A Schultz b. 1849 in Pennsylvania, USA d. 08 Feb 1903 in Harrison, Clare, Michigan Marriage 16 Aug 1883 in Saginaw, Saginaw, Michigan Spouse Malinda J Gregory
Harriet C Schultz b. 21 Apr 1851 in Pennsylvania d. 13 Apr 1929 Burial Juniate Township Cemetery Marriage 05 Nov 1871 in Tuscola, Michigan to Jason P Spickerman.
Jesse Zephaniah Shultz Birth 20 Sep 1853 in Michigan d. 20 Mar 1933 in Stevenson, Jackson, Alabama Married 31 Aug 1875 in Botetourt, Virginia to Mary Frances Dawson.
 
Schultz, Jesse Kyle (I5869)
 
4854 BIRTH:
5 Nov 1781 in Pennsylvania. Birthdate from gravestone inscription.

PARENTS:
Philip and Anna Barbara Shultz.

MARRIAGE:
By 1807 to Mary Norberry. Date of birth of first known child.

CENSUS RECORDS:
1810 Greenwood, Northumberland (would become Columbia)
Males:
under 10: 2
26-44: 1
Females:
under 10: 1
16-25: 1

1830 Federal Census. We find Samuel Shults in Sugarloaf, Columbia, Pennsylvania.
Age ranges:
Males:
0-4: 1
5-9: 1
12-19: 2
30-39: 1
Females:
0-4: 1
5-9: 1
10-14: 1
20-29: 1
40-49: 1

1840 Census Records. We find Samuel Shults. We find Samuel Shults in Sugarloaf, Columbia, Pennsylvania.
Age ranges:
Males:
20-29: 1
15-19: 1
50-59: 1
Females:
10-14: 1
15-19: 1
20-29: 1
50-59: 1

1850 Federal Census. We find Samuel Shultz in Sugarloaf, Columbia, Pennsylvania.
Samuel 63 b. Pennsylvania
Mary 55 b. Pennsylvania
Sarah 33 b. Pennsylvania
Samuel B 35 b. Pennsylvania

1860 Federal Census. We find Samuel Shults in Benton, Columbia, Pennsylvania with his son Elisha. (This may be the same location as 1850 due to redrawing of borders)
Saml 79 b. Pennsylvania
Elisha 35 b. Pennsylvania
Mary 32 b. Pennsylvania
Andrew 12 b. Pennsylvania
Henry C 11 b. Pennsylvania
Frank h 5 b. Pennsylvania
Nancy R 2 b. Pennsylvania

DEATH:
24 Feb 1862 in Pennsylvania. Birthdate from gravestone inscription.

BURIAL:
In Rohrsburg Cemetery, Columbia County, Pennsylvania. Both parents and his spouse are buried in the same cemetery.

PROBATE RECORDS:
Mentioned in will of his father Philip Shultz, 1813, filed in Greenwood, Columbia, Pennsylvania. “I give and devise to my twelve children namely, Daniel, Elisabeth, Katterean, Ann, Sarah, Mary, Samuel, John, Peter, Margret, Nancy & Joseph”

CHILDREN:
Joseph Henry Schultz b. abt 1807 Pennsylvania m. Mary Jane Dill 3 Oct 1853 Botetourt, Virginia d. 14 Mar 1887 in Botetourt, Virginia
Jesse K Shultz b. 30 Sep 1811 Pennsylvania m. Hannah Mayberry abt 1834 in Pennsylvania d. 21 Aug 1853 in Tuscola, Michigan
Andrew Shultz b 4 Oct 1814 Pennsylvania m. Lucia Sweat 30 Jul 1865 in Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan m. Lodema Bennett 24 Nov 1868 in Tuscola, Michigan d. 18 Jan 1873 in Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan
Nancy A Shultz b. abt 1815 in Pennsylvania m. Gearhart Kile 8 Feb 1838 d. 7 Sep 1899 in Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan
Samuel B Shultz b. 8 Jul 1815 Pennsylvania d. 12 May 1897 in Pennsylvania
Sarah A Shultz b. 18 Oct 1827 in Pennsylvania m. Unknown Brittain d. 21 Dec 890 in Juniata, Tuscola, Michigan
Elisha Shultz 12 Jun 1825 Pennsylvania m. Unknown Mary d. 10 Dec 1876 in Pennsylvania
Mary Ann Shultz 18 Oct 1827 Pennsylvania Married Samuel York d. 28 May 1903 in Tuscola, Michigan
 
Shultz, Samuel (I5185)
 
4855 BIRTH:
Abt 1741 per gravestone inscription. Probably in Greenwich, Warren, New Jersey where his father lived.

PARENTS:
Johann Velten and Anna Kunigunde Shultz.

MARRIAGE:
By 1765 to Anna Barbara Unknown. Based on birth of first known child. (The Barbara Klein name in some online trees comes from a different Philip Schultz who married Barbara Klein 3/16/1806 in New Hanover, Montgomery County, Pa.)

CENSUS RECORDS:
1800. Pennsylvania Septennial Census shows the name of Philip Shultz in Greenwood, Northumberland, Pennsylvania. It also shows an entry for his brother Daniel. No other pertinent information is included.

LOCATION: left New Jersey for Pennsylvania between 1778 and 1781 based on births of children. In Greenwood by 1800 based on Census.

DEATH:
5 Apr 1816. Per gravestone inscription.

BURIAL:
Rohrsburg Cemetery, Bloomsburg, Columbia, Pennsylvania. Inscription reads “Philip Shultz died 5 Apr 1816 Aged 75 years.

PROBATE RECORDS:
From Columbia County, Pennsylvania Will Book #1 Pages 47, 48 & 49

Phillip Shults will
No. 5 will

I, Phillip Shults of the Township of Greenwood in the county of Northumberland in the State of Pennsylvania being sick and weak of body but of sound mine and memory and calling to mind the certainty of death and uncertainty of life do make and ordain this my last will and testament in manner and form following that is to say firstly and principally I commit my soul into the hand of almighty god who gave it and my body to be buried in a decent and becoming manner at the discretion of my Executors hereafter named and secondly I order all my just debts for funeral expenses to be paid and discharged by my Executors as soon as may be out of my Estate items. I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Barbary my Plantation whereon I now dwell farming fifty one acres with the appurtenances hereunto belonging to her use and benefit together with all household & kitchen furniture with two cows & seven sheep and give all the residue of moneys that may be left after my debts are paid aforesaid. All of which I give and bequeath to her for her use and benefit to have & to hold during her natural life and no longer. From and after which time & as soon as is convenient my will further is that my plantation be sold either at public or private sale for the best price that can be conveniently had for it. I hereby impower my executors hereafter named to make as good a title or titles to the purchaser or purchasers as I myself might or could have done were I personally present. And I further order that all of my personal property that my wife may be possessed of at the time of her decease by sold at either public or private sale and the moyney arising therefrom together with the money arising on the sail of my plantation, I give and devise to my twelve children namely, Daniel, Elisabeth, Katterean, Ann, Sarah, Mary, Samuel, John, Peter, Margret, Nancy & Joseph to be equally divided amongst them share and share alike and to be paid to them as soon as the money can be collected by my executors and lastly, I constitute and appoint my son Daniel Shults and my trusty friend William Mather to be my whole and sole Executor to this my list will and testament disannulling and making void all other wills or testaments by me heretofor made declaring this and no other to be my last will and testament in testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal the eleventh day of March in the year of our lord one thousand eight hundred and thirteen. (signature Phillip Shults seal) signed sealed published pronounced and declared by the said Phillip Shults to be his last will and testament in the presents of us Henry Harris John Miner Homer Mendenhall

No 5 will
I Philip Shults of the township of Greenwood County of Northumberland, State of Pennsylvania do hereby make and publish this codicil to be added to my last will and testament in manner following to wit I give and bequeath to my son Daniel Shults all my right title claim & interest to and in a certain plantation in the State of New Jersey Sussex County Grenage Township amounting to an undivided right bequeathed to me by my father Valluntine Shults becoming payable at the decease of my sister Leah Shults & it is my will that this my present codicil be annexed to and made a part of my last will and testament aforesaid in witness whereof I have set my hand and seal this eleventh day of March one thousand eight hundred and thirteen(signature Philip Shults Seal) Signed, Sealed, Published, Pronounced and declared by the said Philip Shults to be his last will and testament in the presence of us Henry Harris, John Miner

No 5 will
I Philip Shults of the Township of Greenwood County of Columbia State of Pennsylvania do make and publish this codicil to my last will and testament in manner following that is to say I have sold five acres of land off the north west corner of my place to my son Peter and I have received payment in full for the same and lastly it is my desire that this my present codicil be annexed and made a part of my last will and testament to all intents and purposes. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my name and seal this 12th day of February in the year of our Lord ( )(signature Philip Shults seal) Signed sealed published & declared by the above named Philip Shults as a codicil to be annexed to his last will and testament in the presence of us Henry Harris John Miner.

Be it remembered that on the 25th day of April 1816 personally appeared before me Josia McClure Register for said County Henry Harris & John Miner and being sworn according to law did depose and say that they were personally present & did see Phillip Shults the within testator sign seal publish & declare the same as and for his last will and testament & likewise the codicil thereto following as also his last will and testament and at the time of ( ) Testator was of sound mind & ( ) memory & understanding and that they witnessed the same in the presence and at the request of the said testator and in the presence of one another and that their names Henry Harris & John Miner subscribed thereto as witnesses are their own hand writing and further Deponent saith not. Henry Harris, John Miner sworn & subscribed before me Josiah McClure Register date above.
Be it remembered that on the 25th day of April AD 1816 before me Josiah McClure Regr for said county was proved and approved the Last will and Testament of Philip Shults of Greenwood Township deceased of which the preceding is a true copy and that Letters Testamentary in due and common form of law were granted unto Daniel Shults and William Mather Executors therein named.
Witness my hand the day aforesaid (signature Josiah McClure) Regr

CHILDREN:
Jacob b. 1765 d. 1804 Montour, Pennsylvania
Daniel b. 2 Mar 1769 m. Elizabeth White d. 30 Apr 1852 Columbia, Pennsylvania
Mary b. 20 Dec 1778 d. 39 Apr 1852 Columbia, Pennsylvania
Samuel b. 5 Nov 1781 m. Mary Norbury d. 24 feb 1862 Columbia, Pennsylvania
Elizabeth
Katterean
Ann
Sarah
John
Margret
Nancy
Joseph
Peter
 
Shultz, Philip (I5912)
 
4856 BIRTH:
Abt 1744 per gravestone inscription.

PARENTS:
Unknown. Online we can find trees listing Anna Barbara Hughes and Anna Barbara Klein, but we can find no documentation on either of those names. There is a Pennsylvania Marriage in New Hanover on 3/16/1806 between Barbara Klein and Phlip Schultz, however the date would indicate a different Philip Shultz. This may be the origin of the Klein name.

MARRIAGE:
By 1765 to Philip Shultz. Based on birth of first known child.

CENSUS RECORDS:
1820 US Federal Census. We find Barbara Shoults listed in Greenwood Township, Columbia, Pennsylvania.
Male under 10: 1
Female under 26: 1
Female over 45: 1

DEATH:
20 Sep 1828. Per gravestone inscription.

BURIAL:
Rohrsburg Cemetery, Bloomsburg, Columbia, Pennsylvania. Inscription reads “Anna Barbara w/0 Philip Shultz died 20 Sep 1828 Aged 84 years.

PROBATE RECORDS:
She is in the will of her husband Philip.
From Columbia County, Pennsylvania Will Book #1 Pages 47, 48 & 49

Phillip Shults will
No. 5 will

I, Phillip Shults of the Township of Greenwood in the county of Northumberland in the State of Pennsylvania being sick and weak of body but of sound mine and memory and calling to mind the certainty of death and uncertainty of life do make and ordain this my last will and testament in manner and form following that is to say firstly and principally I commit my soul into the hand of almighty god who gave it and my body to be buried in a decent and becoming manner at the discretion of my Executors hereafter named and secondly I order all my just debts for funeral expenses to be paid and discharged by my Executors as soon as may be out of my Estate items. I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Barbary my Plantation whereon I now dwell farming fifty one acres with the appurtenances hereunto belonging to her use and benefit together with all household & kitchen furniture with two cows & seven sheep and give all the residue of moneys that may be left after my debts are paid aforesaid. All of which I give and bequeath to her for her use and benefit to have & to hold during her natural life and no longer. From and after which time & as soon as is convenient my will further is that my plantation be sold either at public or private sale for the best price that can be conveniently had for it. I hereby impower my executors hereafter named to make as good a title or titles to the purchaser or purchasers as I myself might or could have done were I personally present. And I further order that all of my personal property that my wife may be possessed of at the time of her decease by sold at either public or private sale and the money arising therefrom together with the money arising on the sail of my plantation, I give and devise to my twelve children namely, Daniel, Elisabeth, Katterean, Ann, Sarah, Mary, Samuel, John, Peter, Margret, Nancy & Joseph to be equally divided amongst them share and share alike and to be paid to them as soon as the money can be collected by my executors and lastly, I constitute and appoint my son Daniel Shults and my trusty friend William Mather to be my whole and sole Executor to this my list will and testament disannulling and making void all other wills or testaments by me heretofor made declaring this and no other to be my last will and testament in testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal the eleventh day of March in the year of our lord one thousand eight hundred and thirteen. (signature Phillip Shults seal) signed sealed published pronounced and declared by the said Phillip Shults to be his last will and testament in the presents of us Henry Harris John Miner Homer Mendenhall

No 5 will
I Philip Shults of the township of Greenwood County of Northumberland, State of Pennsylvania do hereby make and publish this codicil to be added to my last will and testament in manner following to wit I give and bequeath to my son Daniel Shults all my right title claim & interest to and in a certain plantation in the State of New Jersey Sussex County Grenage Township amounting to an undivided right bequeathed to me by my father Valluntine Shults becoming payable at the decease of my sister Leah Shults & it is my will that this my present codicil be annexed to and made a part of my last will and testament aforesaid in witness whereof I have set my hand and seal this eleventh day of March one thousand eight hundred and thirteen(signature Philip Shults Seal) Signed, Sealed, Published, Pronounced and declared by the said Philip Shults to be his last will and testament in the presence of us Henry Harris, John Miner

No 5 will
I Philip Shults of the Township of Greenwood County of Columbia State of Pennsylvania do make and publish this codicil to my last will and testament in manner following that is to say I have sold five acres of land off the north west corner of my place to my son Peter and I have received payment in full for the same and lastly it is my desire that this my present codicil be annexed and made a part of my last will and testament to all intents and purposes. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my name and seal this 12th day of February in the year of our Lord ( )(signature Philip Shults seal) Signed sealed published & declared by the above named Philip Shults as a codicil to be annexed to his last will and testament in the presence of us Henry Harris John Miner.

Be it remembered that on the 25th day of April 1816 personally appeared before me Josia McClure Register for said County Henry Harris & John Miner and being sworn according to law did depose and say that they were personally present & did see Phillip Shults the within testator sign seal publish & declare the same as and for his last will and testament & likewise the codicil thereto following as also his last will and testament and at the time of ( ) Testator was of sound mind & ( ) memory & understanding and that they witnessed the same in the presence and at the request of the said testator and in the presence of one another and that their names Henry Harris & John Miner subscribed thereto as witnesses are their own hand writing and further Deponent saith not. Henry Harris, John Miner sworn & subscribed before me Josiah McClure Register date above.
Be it remembered that on the 25th day of April AD 1816 before me Josiah McClure Regr for said county was proved and approved the Last will and Testament of Philip Shults of Greenwood Township deceased of which the preceding is a true copy and that Letters Testamentary in due and common form of law were granted unto Daniel Shults and William Mather Executors therein named.
Witness my hand the day aforesaid (signature Josiah McClure) Regr

CHILDREN:
Jacob b. 1765 d. 1804 Montour, Pennsylvania
Daniel b. 2 Mar 1769 m. Elizabeth White d. 30 Apr 1852 Columbia, Pennsylvania
Mary b. 20 Dec 1778 d. 39 Apr 1852 Columbia, Pennsylvania
Samuel b. 5 Nov 1781 m. Hannah Mayberry d. 24 feb 1862 Columbia, Pennsylvania
Elizabeth
Katterean
Ann
Sarah
John
Margret
Nancy
Joseph
Peter
 
Unknown, Anna Barbara (I5572)
 
4857 BIRTH:
Abt 1803 in Warren County, New York. We have birth years running from 1801 to 1811 from various census records. We are using 1803 as that is what is on her gravestone in Seelye Cemetery.(Other than the 1811 dates, all other entries are 1801-1805) Three New York State census records (1855, 1865 , 1875) show her birthplace as Warren County. We have no record of her parentage. They were several Burdick families in Warren County at the approximate time of her birth. We believe her parents were Daniel Burdick and Annie Shaw of Caldwell (now called Lake George). The 1810 census shows two female children under the age of 10. One of which could be Minerva. We also show a DNA match with Daniel's brother Ephraim. We also show a DNA match with Annie's brother Ephraim, Annie's brother David and 3 matches with Annie's sister Mary.

MARRIAGE:
1st marriage to Fredrick Plumb by 1824. Based on Frederic Plumbe and his wife Minerva Plumbe being named on a court summons dated 24 Apr 1824. The birth of their only known child, Martha Minerva Plumb 30 Oct 1838 was in Bolton, Warren, New York. This birth is based on the Death Certificate of Martha Minerva, where birth date and parents’ names are given.
2nd marriage abt 1842 to Norman Phelps Jr. Marriage date based on wording in 1855 New York State Census for Fort Ann, Washington County. Minerva listed living in Washington County for 13 years, while her husband listed living in Washington County for life. This could imply that Minerva moved to Washington County upon her marriage to Norman Phelps. First child (Andrew James Phelps) has birth date listed of 30 Dec 1842 (12 1/2 years earlier) on his death certificate. (Although only Norman's name is listed on certificate as parent). 1865 NY census states married 2 times and 10 children. We believe that this means 10 children total for her and Norman. We only know of 9. Possibly her and Frederic had an earlier child that we do not know about.

1824 Court Case: 1824 court case. She testified against Isaac Simpson, as he was charge with raping her. Documents in the Warren County Archives show some details in the case, but do not show if Simpson was convicted or not.

CENSUS RECORDS:
1840 US Federal Census
Queensbury-Fredrick Plum-shows males: 1 age 10-15 1 age 40-50 (Frederic) Females: 1 under 5 1 age 5-10 1 age 10-15 1 age 15-20 1 age 20-30 1 age 40-50 (Minerva)

1850 US Federal Census
Fort Ann, Washington, New York. Minerva Phelps 45

1855 New York State Census
Fort Ann, Washington, New York Manervy Phelps/54/F/wife/born in Warren County/yrs in Washington County 13/domestic

1860 US Federal Census
Fort Ann, Washington, New York. Minerva Phelps 49 b. New York

1865 New York State Census
Fort Ann, Washington, New York Menerva Phelps/63/f/ /b. Warren County/10 children/marr 2x

1870 US Federal Census
Queensbury, Warren, New York. Minerva Phelps 67 b. New York

1875 New York State Census
Bolton, Warren, New York Minerva Phelps, 72, b. Warren County

DEATH:
27 Sep 1878. Per the inscription on her gravestone. “Minerva wife of Norman Phelps died sept 27 1878. AE 75 years.”

BURIAL:
Seelye Cemetery, Glens Falls, Warren, New York

CHILDREN:
1st marriage to Fredrick Plumb (age & parents unknown) by 1824.
Martha Minerva (or Minerva Martha) Plumb b. 30 Oct 1838 Bolton, Warren, New York d. 15 Oct 1911 Bolton, Warren, New York.(Info from death certificate).

2nd marriage to Norman Phelps Jr by 1843
Andrew James Phelps b. b. 9 Dec 1842 Warren County, New York d. 5 Oct 1923 Washington County, New York (info from death certificate).
Sarah Rebecca Phelps b. 1945 New York d. 5 Apr 1932 Bay City, Bay, Michigan

In an email from John Austin, Warren County, New York Historian:
From my notes on early families of Bolton:
-Plum-
Frederick Plum m. Minerva Burdick; listed in 1840 (0010001/1111101, “Fredrick”); note Joseph at Westfield in 1790 and John Plumbe at Queensbury in 1810; known child:
i Minerva M. b. Bolton c. 1838; Minerva Plumb, 12, was in the Paul Thomas h/h at Queensbury in 1850; d. Bolton 15 Oct. 1911, ae. 73, a housewife and 56-year resident; m. ----- Burgess.
 
Burdick, Minerva (I5546)
 
4858 BIRTH:
Est 1706 Germany. Estimate to be close to husband’s age and to be about right for first known child in 1727.

PARENTS:
Unknown.

MARRIAGE:
Johann Velten Shultz by 1727. Based on birth of first known child.

DEATH:
After 1751 but by 1771. Child born in 1751. She is not mentioned in a will her husband made in 1771.

CHILDREN:
George Heinrich b. 6 Mar 1727 in Froeschen, Germany
Johann Peter b. 24 Jun 1729 in Froeschen, Germany m. Mary Weller d. 1790-1791 Sussex, New Jersey
Anna Barbara b. 7 Jan 1732 in Froeschen, Germany
Johann Georg b. 7 Jun 1734 in Froeschen, Germany d 16 May 1737 Froeschen, Germany
Johann Reinhardt b. 7 Jun 1734 in Froeschen, Germany d. 22 Feb 1736 Froeschen, Germany
Anna Magdalena b. 11 Jan 1737 in Froeschen, Germany
Philip Shultz b. 1741 probably in New Jersey
Eve Shultz b. b. 1 Jan 1751
Elizabeth (name in will)
Sarah (name in will)
 
Unknown, Anna Kunigunde (I5159)
 
4859 BIRTH: 9 Mar 1892 Fraser, Bay, MI

PARENTS: William Hayden Osborne and Mary Ann Elizabeth Hider

MARRIAGE: 11 Aug 1917 to Mabel Fern Seeley and Prescott, Ogemaw, MI

DEATH: 12 May 1973 in Standish, Arenac, MI

BURIAL: Elm Lawn Cemetery in Bay City
 
Osborne, Norman William (I5876)
 
4860 BIRTH: 03 Aug 1898 in Bay City, MI per Terry---Mabel according to everyone in the family was born July 1, 1900. But the 1900 census says she was one year old in May of 1900. Mom swears her birthday is July 1st 1900. However, Bay City birth records show the true birth date. The 1900 Census says born July 1899. It is odd that when the month and year is given on such a young person, it could be a year off. Although I have seen that before and upon thinking about it I can understand how it could happen. Assume Mabel was born in July 1898 (the date of record over a year later could have been a few days off). Census taker asks on June 19, 1900 how old is Mabel? correct answer is 1, because she has not reached her second birthday, yet. The census taker asks what month was she born? Correct answer is July. I can then see the census taker writing down July 1899 because that was about 1 year ago. I don't know if that makes sense, but I have seen other children listed one year off, when it just didn't make sense that the parent would be a year off on the birthdate, especially such a young child.

PARENTS: George Seeley and Harriet Emily Schultz

MARRIAGE: 11 Aug 1917 in Prescott, Ogemaw, MI

DEATH: 15 May 1943 Bay City, MI

BURIAL: 18 May 1943 Elm Lawn, Bay City per Terry--I have Gramma (Mabel) Osborne's funeral home book with signatures of people paying respects: Includes....Walter Schultz, Mrs. O.E. Schultz (difficult to make out if O or C for initial in name), Mr. and Mrs. Paul Scholtz, Mr. N. Schultz, Mr. & Mrs. R. Schultz, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Talor or Tabor, Mr. Fred Storrs & family, references on flowers from Uncle Walt and Uncle Rube. I suspect that a sister (named Emma) to George Seeley Jr. (the George married to Harriet) was married to Fred Storrs.
 
Seeley, Mabel Fern (I5735)
 
4861 BIRTH: 13 Jan 1912 in Michigan

PARENTS: August Schimmelpenny Jr and Mary Gaave

MARRIAGE: 22 Nov 1929 Mt Pleasant, MI

DEATH: 19 May 1990 in Clare, Clare, MI

BURIAL: Wise Cemetery Loomis, MI 
Schimmelpfennig, Esther Francis (I5650)
 
4862 BIRTH: 15 Jun 1781 per age on gravestone in Hamline Cemetery. 1850 Census gives born Pennsylvania.

MAIDEN NAME: In a letter written in 1939, Sarah's great granddaughter Mrs. James (Della) W. Good states that her great grandma's maiden name is Davis. Her son Isaac's death certificate lists parents as Charles Gibbons and Catherine Davis.

MARRIAGE: On the land grant application she gave a marriage date of 23 Feb 1806. No location was given.

RESIDENCE: Sugarloaf until husband died, then moved into home of Isaiah Cole in Salem Township, Luzerne County per land grant application. Isaiah Cole b. 1800 is husband of Mary Gibbons b. 1809. It would seem probable that Mary is a previously unknown daughter of Sarah.

DEATH: 8 Aug 1859 from gravestone.

PROBATE: Probate case opened 14 Aug 1877. Samuel Gibbons, (I assume her son) as administrator swears and affirms that she died on 8 Aug 1859. I am guessing that this is related to her son Thomas's probate in 1876. I am suspecting that the status of the160 acres she received in a land grant warrant (due to deceased husband's War of 1812 Service) in 1859 had to be cleared up in order to close Thomas's probate case. The Land Warrant (for land in Larned, Kansas) was sold and assigned to Lizzie Boyd on10 Feb 1880. Letters of administration were filed 14 Aug 1877 Vol 4 Page 499. (Year of record 1877 File No. 44). No apparent will for her or Charles.

I was researching Charles Gibbons online and found 20 documents relating to his widow’s application for a Bounty Land Warrant in regards to his war of 1812 service. These documents can be viewed at https://www.fold3.com/image/1/313139604 This database is free, but you need to register.

Also the probate index page at https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9SM-75BW?i=840&wc=9PMK-JWG%3A268497701%2C268527501&cc=1999196 (also a free site, need to register) shows wills on file for Thomas and Isaac (sons of Charles). Although nothing listed for Charles himself. The wills themselves can be looked up on the familysearch.org site by going to the appropriate volume and page number.
 
Davis, Sarah (I5386)
 
4863 BIRTH: 15 Nov 1933 in Harrison, Clare, MI
PARENTS: James Nelson Gordon and Virginia Franklin Caruthers
MARRIAGE: 1955 to Ruth Ann Snear in Farwell, Clare, MI
DEATH: 21 Jun 1975 in Flint, Genesee, MI
BURIAL: 25 Jun 1975 Evergreen Cemetery, Grand Blanc, MI
 
Gordon, Melvin Dale (I5658)
 
4864 BIRTH: 17 May 1909 in Michigan

PARENTS: William Snear and Cora Anita Rowling

MARRIAGE: 22 Nov 1929 Mt Pleasant, MI

DEATH: 21 Aug 1982 in Mount Pleasant, MI

BURIAL: Wise Cemetery Loomis, MI
 
Snear, Mirlie H (I6194)
 
4865 Birth: 18 Feb1850 in Ira, Cayuga, New York per Michigan death certificate.

On the 1861 Canadian Census for Cramahe, Northumberland, Canada, his father & Aunt, Levi and Lucinda appeared in the household of Abert(age 54) & Abigail Porter(age 50). Also in the household children, Maurice Porter(age 25 and Porthena Porter(age 22). All were listed as born in the U.S. Willis appears on the 1861 Census in Brighton, Northumberland County. (Cramahe is about 11 miles from Brighton). We believe that his wife Sophronia died approximately 1861. This is probably indicative that she died prior to the 1861 census.

On the 1850 census in Ira, Cayuga, New York Willis (must be Levi) is listed as 6 months old on 8/10/1850.

Levi was a preacher for the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ and Latter Day Saints. Elder Levi Phelps had given sermons in Flint, Saginaw and Grand Rapids according to newspaper listings. By 1920 he was living in Saline, Missouri where his third wife Anna Bierie died in 1929. He appeared on the Saline census in both 1920 and 1930. He moved back to Michigan and died in Tuscola County in 1935 at the age of 85. He appeared on the 1930 census with a fourth wife, Louie(Louise/Lorie?). We know little about her. He was unmarried on his death certificate. His death certificate listed him as a retired minister. 
Phelps, Levi (I6207)
 
4866 BIRTH: 1834-1835 in Saxony per census records. 24 Oct 1834 by calculating birth date from age of 54 yrs 11 mos 22 days on death certificate.

NAME: have seen first name references as Mary, Amelia and Tressa. From a child's baptism record in a German Language Church in Detroit her full name is Christina Amalia Theresia Thümler.
.
PARENTS: Unknown. A number of DNA matches to Johanna Sophia Thummler suposedly from Niederhesslau (note-unable to identify this place name on a map or even on google, perhaps is misseplled-no sources supplied) in Saxony b. 1807. Perhaps she is closely related. Sister? Aunt? Cousin??

DATE OF IMIGRATION: Unknown

MARRIAGE: By 1856 when she had the first of 9 children. Place of marriage unknown.

RESIDENCE:
Born 1834-1835 in Saxony
By 1856 living in Michigan (first child)
By 1860 living in Detroit (census)
By 1870 living in Bay CIty area (census)
1889 died in Bay City

DEATH: 16 Oct 1889 in Bay City, Michigan. She took extremely ill while cooking dinner and died shortly after the doctor arrived at her house on Webster St. She is buried in Pine Ridge Cemetey in Bay City.
 
Thuemler, Christina Amalia Theresia (I5643)
 
4867 BIRTH: 1894-1895 in Missouri

PARENTS: Leander Caruthers and Ella Price Hutchison

MARRIAGE: 3 Jan 1916 to James N Gordon in Boone County, Missouri. They divoced on 13 May 1940 in Clare, Michigan.

RESIDENCE:

DEATH: abt 1957 in Clare, Michigan

BURIAL: 1957 Hillcrest Cemetery in Clare, MI
 
Caruthers, Virginia Franklin (I6076)
 
4868 BIRTH: 20 Apr 1881 in Caseville, Michigan.

PARENTS: Stephen Gordon and Harriet Campbell

MARRIAGE: Cora Taylor 4 Aug 1908 in Essex, Ontario, Canada. They had one child, a daughter, Capitola. They divorced 30 Oct 1913.
second 3 Jan 1916 he married Virgina Caruthers in Boone, Missouri. They had 11 children. They divoced on 13 May 1940 in Clare, Michigan.

OCCUPATION: James listed his occupation as barber on his 1908 marriage record. Various census and other records list his occupation as farmer. On 11 Nov 1940 he was employed as a deck hand on the 420 foot Great Lakes freighter, SS William B. Davock. It was on this date that a major storm on Lake Michigan with winds of up to 80 mph (referred to as The Armistice Day blizzard) sunk the SS WIlliam B Davock off Pentwater, Michigan with the loss of all lives (either 32 or 33) on board.

DEATH: 11 Nov 1940

BURIAL: Died at sea. Body not recovered.

THE SS WILLIAM B DAVOCK:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The SS William B. Davock was a lake freighter that was constructed in 1907 by Great Lakes Engineering Works, at their St. Clair, MI facility for the Vulcan Steamship Co. (R.H. Pigott, Mgr.). She was operated by Vulcan Steamship from 1907 to 1915 in The Great Lakes coal, iron ore, grain and stone trades. In 1915 the ship came under the management of The Interlake Steamship Co. (Pickands Mather & Co., Mgrs.). While laid up for the winter (1922-23) in Fairport, Ohio, she was reconstructed and updated, this work lead to a tonnage change in the amount of 4220 gross - 2671 net. The Davock resumed its traditional trade pattern of coal carried to upper lakes ports from Lake Erie and iron ore from Lake Superior ports to the steel mills of Lake Erie and Lake Michigan.
This routine was permanently disrupted on November 11, 1940 as a ferocious storm swept the lakes late on that Monday afternoon. Considered to be the worst storm to that point on Lake Michigan it saw 75 mph winds and rain turning to snow. Several vessels transiting Lake Michigan were caught with little warning. The Davock making her way down the lake with coal for Chicago was presumably overwhelmed at the height of the storm succumbing to the intense wind and waves, and slipping to her final resting place ~200 feet below the surface five miles out from Little Sable Point between Ludington, Michigan and Pentwater, Michigan. None of the 32 (some sources cite 33) hands survived. In total the storm took two vessels and their entire crews (Davock, and Kinsman Steamer Anna C. Minch). Several other vessels were damaged, or ran aground trying to escape the storm's fury. Overall estimates state 59 sailors were lost in what would be the worst maritime disaster on the Great Lakes since the Great Storm of 1913.
Early in 2015, Michigan Shipwreck Research Association, a 501(c)3 non-profit based in Holland, MI announced the results of a 2014 survey of the wreck which revealed the cause of the William B. Davock's loss was a broken rudder, which jammed against the propeller breaking off one or more blades, rendering the vessel without steering or propulsion. This allowed the boat to fall into the trough of the waves, where it was swamped and perhaps capsized before sinking. It sank in more than 200 feet of water, taking all hands with it. Diver Jeff Vos captured the only video images of the wreck showing the damaged rudder and propeller.[1]
The Davock today
The sunken hull of the Davock was discovered in May 1972, capsized in over 200 feet (60m) of water, off Little Sable Point Light, not far from the wreck of the SS Anna C. Minch, which went down in the same storm. The light is located south of Pentwater, Michigan.[2]
References
1.Champion, Brandon (March 11, 2015). "Shipwreck explorers solve 75-year-old mystery surrounding William B. Davock freighter sunk in Lake Michigan". Muskegon Chronicle. Muskegon, Michigan. Retrieved November 16, 2016.
2.Dwight Boyer (1974). Strange Adventures of the Great Lakes. LOC #74-7771.

The wreckage of the Davock was found in May of 1972 by John Steele, Kent Bellrichard and Bill Cohrs. She lies upside-down with coal strewn about and her rudder hard to port.
The following is the text from a Michigan Historical marker in Pentwater:
“The most disastrous day in the history of Lake Michigan shipping was Armistice (now Veterans) Day, November 11, 1940. With seventy-five-mile-per-hour winds and twenty-foot waves, a raging storm destroyed three ships and claimed the lives of fifty-nine seamen. Two freighters sank with all hands lost, and a third, the Novadoc, ran aground with the loss of two crew members. Bodies washed ashore throughout the day. As night fell, a heavy snow storm arrived. Rescue efforts by the Coast Guard and local citizens continued for three days after the storm. Three Pentwater fishermen were later recognized by the local community and the Canadian government for their bravery in rescuing seventeen sailors from the Novadoc.” These fishermen, aboard the Three Brothers, ventured out to rescue the men when even the official search and rescue agencies would not.
Early in 2015, Michigan Shipwreck Research Association announced the results of a 2014 survey of the wreck which revealed the cause of the Davock loss was a broken rudder, which jammed against the propeller breaking off one or more blades, rendering the vessel without steering or propulsion. This allowed the boat to fall into the rough of the waves, where it was swamped and perhaps capsized before sinking. It sank in more than 200 feet of water, taking all hands with it. Diver Jeff Vos captured the only video images of the wreck showing the damaged rudder and propeller.
 
Gordon, James Nelson (I6089)
 
4869 BIRTH: 26 Dec 1924 Bay City, MI

NAME: Betty Mae Osborne. Betty's original registration of birth has her name spelled wrong... Bettie May Osborne. I remember mom some years back saying she went to the court house to get her name spelled right on her birth certificate because it would mess up her social security. Her school records listed her as Betty Mae Osborne. Her school record in 1930 lists her as going to Fremont School in Bay City with an address of 1218 Marsac St. Her birth certificate was corrected on Feb 7, 1984. The school records are some of the things she used to prove how she spelled her name.

PARENTS: Mother Mabel Fern Seeley. DNA tests have shown that her biological father was not Norman Osborne who was married to her mother and who raised her. DNA tests have shown that her biological father was Glaud Phelps. Some of the DNA tests consist of the following:
William Pugh, Jr whose mother was Doris Phelps (grandson of Levi and Anna; and child of Alvin) His DNA at 541 cM’s matching is consistent with 1st cousin once removed. This would mean that my mother’s father is a brother of Alvin Phelps.
Randy Gulick (grandson of Levi and Anna’s daughter Lydia) at 291 cM’s matching DNA. This is consistent with the lower end of a 1st cousin once removed relationship. This also means that my mother’s father is a brother of Lydia Phelps.
Harold Gulick (son of Levi and Anna’s daughter Lydia). This match was at 874 cM’s, which is a first cousin match. This also means that my mother’s father is a brother of Lydia Phelps.
Mooremaggie23 is a granddaughter of Glaud’s son Frederick. If mother was a child of Glaud, then Frederick would be a ½ brother, his child would be a ½ niece, and his grandchild would be a ½ grandniece. The match was 430 cM’s, which is fully consistent with a match of ½ grandniece.

MARRIAGE: 24 Feb 1945 to Ervin Felsing in Bay City, MI

RESIDENCE: Born in Bay City.
By 1935 lived in Turner, MI.
By 1940 back in Bay CIty.
1945 AuGres, MI until her death

DEATH: 02 Sep 2016 in Bay Medical Center, Bay City. Residence in AuGres.

BURIAL: 05 Sep 2016 in Linwood Cemetery, AuGres, MI

OBITUARY: Betty M. Felsing, 91, of Au Gres, Michigan passed away Friday, September 2, 2016 at McLaren Bay Region in Bay City, Michigan.

Betty was born December 26, 1924 in Bay City, Michigan to the late Norman W. and Mabel F. (Seeley) Osborne. She married Ervin Felsing on February 24, 1945 in Bay City, Michigan and together they raised two children, Richard and Terry.

Betty owned and operated Betty’s Boutique in Au Gres for many years. She enjoyed sewing and baking. Her beloved brownies will be greatly missed by her grandchildren and great grandchildren all of whom looked forward to devouring them. Betty was a member of Au Gres United Methodist Church.

Betty is survived by her children, Richard (Judy) Felsing of Grand Blanc, Michigan, Terry (Dan) Heinrich of Au Gres, Michigan; six grandchildren, Tonya (Garrett) Badour, Karen (Ken Weiss) Heinrich, Jaime (Ron Markey) Roth, Lynn (Fred) Gauthier, Tina (Stu) Forman, Renee (Jim) Kage; 15 great-grandchildren; brother, Dick Osborne; sister-in-law, Shirley Osborne. In addition to her husband, Ervin, Betty was preceded in death by her parents; brothers, Bill, Norm, and Bob.

Visitation for Betty will take place 12:00 Noon to 4:00 p.m. Wednesday, September 7, 2016 at Buresh Funeral Home, 101 E. Michigan Ave., Au Gres, Michigan. Funeral service for Betty will take place 4:00 p.m. Wednesday, September 7, 2016 at the funeral home. Interment will follow in Linwood Cemetery in Au Gres next to her husband, Ervin. Online condolences may be offered at www.bureshfuneralhomes.com.
 
Osborne, Betty Mae (I72)
 
4870 BIRTH: 28 Apr 1876 in Kukkus, Samara, Russia to ethnic German parents
NAME: Born Johannes Felsing. He went by Johannes Felsing on his info in the early years. Later he used John Felsing.
PARENTS: Johann Philipp Felsing and Katherine Margaretha Baum
IMMIGRATION: He immigrated on the SS Lauenburg arriving on March 1, 1898 in Galveston, Texas. He is number 29 on the passenger list. The column that asks where will you be staying is marked 'Aug Hergen', possibly August Hergenröder. Tthe name cousin is next to it. I can not find anyone with that name living in Nebraska at that time. Also if you look up further on the name list there is someone listed with last name Klemm who looks like they have the same info listed as Johannes for 'Aug Hergen'.

MARRIAGE: 29 Oct 1899 in Lincoln, Lancaster, Nebraska
DEATH: 17 Oct 1967 in Au Gres, Arenac, MI
BURIAL: 20 Oct 1967 Sims-Whitney Cemetery in AuGres, MI 
Felsing, Johannes (John) (I5503)
 
4871 BIRTH: 29 Aug 1879 in Kukkus, Samara, Russia to ethnic German parents.

PARENTS: Johann Philipp Reitz and Anna Margaret Maser

MARRIAGE: 29 Oct 1899 in Lincoln, Lancaster, Nebraska

DEATH: 5 Jun 1958 in AuGres, MI

BURIAL: 7 Jun 1958 in Sims-Whitney Cemetery
 
Reitz, Elizabeth (I5318)
 
4872 BIRTH: 30 Apr 1780 from age given on Hamline Cemetery Records. 1850 census gives New Jersey as birthplace.

PARENTS: Unknown. We need a person living in New Jersey. Some online trees show a John Gibbons for a parent. However they also show him born and dying in England. In 1800 we do have a John Gibbons in Turbot, Northumberland, Pennsylvania, which is about 45 miles from Sugarloaf. He could be a possible father to Charles. I could not find John Gibbons in the will index for Northumberland, Pennsylvania.

LIVED IN: Pennsylvania by 1808 (1808 birth for son Thomas lists Pennsylvania on census records.) In Sugarloaf by 1821 (Pennsylvania Septennial Records)

MILITARY: )
MARRIAGE: 23 Feb 1806 per wife Sarah Gibbons on Land Grant application in 1858. Wife Sarah (Maiden name unknown). Marriage place unknown.

DEATH: 22 Mar 1857 from Historic Pennsylvania Church and Town Records (Hamline Cemetery Records). In his wife's application for a Land Warrant related to his War of 1812 service it was stated that he died at the household of his son Charles in Benton, Columbia, Pennsylvania on 22 Mar 1857.

BURIAL: Hamline Cemetery in Benton, Columbia, Pennsylvania. Sons Isaac, Thomas and Reuben along with Charles' wife are also in Hamline.

PROBATE: There is no entry for Charles Gibbons in the Index of the Columbia County, Pennsylvania Wills and administration records 1850-1869 Vol 3. No apparent will. A Probate case opened 14 Aug 1877 for Sarah Gibbons (18 years after her death) . Samuel Gibbons, (I assume her son) as administrator swears and affirms that she died on 8 Aug 1859. I am guessing that this is related to her son Thomas's probate in 1876. I am suspecting that the status of the160 acres she received in a land grant warrant (due to deceased husband's War of 1812 Service) in 1859 had to be cleared up in order to close Thomas's probate case. The Land Warrant (for land in Larned, Kansas) was sold and assigned to Lizzie Boyd on 10 Feb 1880. Letters of administration were filed 14 Aug 1877 Vol 4 Page 499. (Year of record 1877 File No. 44). No apparent will for her or Charles.

DEEDS: There is no record of Charles Gibbons as Grantee of Grantor in Columbia County and Northumberland County Real Property Records.

CENUS RECORDS:
1810: Brunswig, Berks, Pennsylvania, United States 1M under 10 1F under 10 1M 26-44 1F 26-44 Consistent with 1 son Thomas and 1 dau Mary. (Cannot be sure is the same person, though.)
1820: Unable to locate in 1820
1830: Sugarloaf 5-10 2M 1F, 10-15 1M, 15-20 1M 2F, 20-30 1M, 40-50 1M 1F (Total 6M 3F)
1840: Sugarloaf 15-20 1M 1F, 20-30 1M, 50-60 1M 1F
1850: Sugarloaf wfe Sarah and children Isaac, Amelia. Children Thomas and Reuben are heads of nearby households.

CHILDREN:
Thomas 1808 (same page in 1850 census)
Mary 1809 (married Iasiah Cole, Sarah moved in with them when Charles died)
Reuben 1813 (same page in 1850 census)
Samuel 1818 (lives next to Charles Jr 1860, also administrator Sarah's estate)
Sarah 1819 (in household 1850 census)
Charles 1822 (different page in Sugarloaf in 1850 census, next to Samuel 1860, Sr died at Jr's house in 1857)
Isaac 1825 (in household 1850 census)

Possible additional children-not proven:
Hannah 1815
Amelia 1841 (in household 1850, probable dau of Sarah)
 
Gibbons, Charles (I5375)
 
4873 BIRTH: 30 May 1923 AuGres, MI

PARENTS: Johannes Felsing and Elisabeth Reitz, ethnic German immigrants from Kukkus, Samara, Russia

MARRIAGE: 24 Feb 1945 to Betty Mae Osborne in Bay City, MI

RESIDENCE: lived in or near AuGres, MI his entire life.

DEATH: 24 Jul 2005 in AuGres, MI

BURIAL: 27 Jul 2005 Linwood Cemetery, AuGres, MI

OBITUARY:
Bay City Times, The (MI) - Tuesday, July 26, 2005
Deceased Name: Ervin Phillip Felsing
Felsing, Ervin Phillip AuGres, Michigan Age 75 years, passed away at his home Sunday, July 24, 2005 with his family by his side. He was born in AuGres on May 30, 1923 the son of John and Elizabeth Felsing. Ervin was a member of the AuGres Lions Club, AuGres United Methodist Church and a volunteer for the AuGres Fire Department. He loved baseball, but loved being the pitcher. Ervin is survived by his wife of 60 years, Betty; daughter, Terry (Dan) Heinrich; son, Rick (Judy) Felsing; grandchildren: Tonya (Garret) Badour, Karen (Jeremy) Heinrich, Jaime Roth, Lynn Heinrich, Tina (Stu) Foreman, Renee' Felsing; 8 great- grandchildren; sister, Lillian (Roy) Lung of Fresno, CA. His parents, brothers, John Jr., Henry, Laven; sisters, Ann Krum, Linda Duffy, Freida Willett, predecease him in death. Funeral Services will be held at 11:00 a.m. Thursday, July 28, 2005 at AuGres United Methodist Church. Rev. Tim Woycik will officiate with interment at Linwood Cemetery. Visitation will be held Wednesday from 12:00 until 9:00 p.m. at the Forshee Funeral Home in AuGres. Forshee Funeral Home AuGres, Michigan 
Felsing, Ervin Philip (I5429)
 
4874 BIRTH: 7 July 1938 Farwell, Clare, MI

PARENTS: Mirle Snear and Ester Francis Schimmelpfennig

MARRIAGE: 1955 to Melvin Dale Gordon in Farwell, Clare, MI. He died 21 Jun 1975.
married second 1 Jun 1985 to J.D. Wilkerson

DEATH: 16 Jul 2010 in Burton, Genesee, Mi

BURIAL: 19 Jul 2010 in Flint Memorial Park

OBITUARY: WILKERSON, Ruth of Burton, age 72, died Friday, July 16, 2010 at her residence.A Funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. Monday, July 19, 2010 at the Swartz Funeral Home, 1225 West Hill Road, Pastor Sarah LaRose-Nettell officiating. Burial in Flint Memorial Park. Those desiring may make contributions to the family.

Visitation 4-7 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. Ruth was born in Clare, Michigan on July 7, 1938, the daughter of the late Merle and Ester Snear. She enjoyed crocheting, listening to country music and loved animals, especially her dogs.Surviving are children, Cindy Gordon, Sue Gordon, Rick Gordon, Judy and husband Rick Felsing, Debbie Altman, David Gordon, Janet Eagan and Vickie Herrick; step-children, Chuck and wife Mary Wilkerson, Sue and Diane; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren; many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her husband, J.D.; step-son, Jim; brother, Bill Snear; sisters, Rose Slocum and Betty Spicer. 
Snear, Ruth Ann (I5329)
 
4875 BIRTH: abt 1760 from death record.

MARRIAGE: To Joseph Norbury 12 Jun 1783 at 2nd Presbyterian Church in Philadelpha - U.S., Presbyterian Church Records, 1701-1970

BURIAL: Monument cemetery, Philadelphia - Monument Cemetery Records

From Wikipedia: Monument Cemetery was a cemetery located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania from 1839 to 1956. The land is now part of the campus of Temple University.

The cemetery was opened in about 1839. It was second garden or rural cemetery in Philadelphia, after Laurel Hill Cemetery, and was based on Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. It was located near Broad and Berks streets.

Though originally intended to be called "Pere La Chaise" itself by founder John R. Elkington, Iit was soon renamed Monument Cemetery, based on a plan to include a central obelisk dedicated to George Washington and Marquis Lafayette. Designed by John Sartain, the obelisk was not actually dedicated until 1869. One notable monument was created for William De La Mater Caldwell, who left $3,000 in his estate for that purpose.

Burials stopped by the late 1920s, and the cemetery was in disrepair by the early 1950s. Temple was eventually able to acquire the land, which it wanted for use as a parking lot and athletic fields. After families claimed about 8,000 of the 28,000 bodies on the site, the rest of the remains were placed in an unmarked grave at Lawnview Memorial Park.

Many of the remaining headstones from the cemetery were used as riprap for the Betsy Ross Bridge, some of which can be still be seen at low tide. 
Britt, Susanna (I5138)
 
4876 BIRTH: abt 1838 probably in or near Bolton, New York.

PARENTS: Frederic Plumbe and Minerva Burdick

MARRIAGE: 1st-abt 1855 to Justin Merrill, 2nd-23 Aug 1894 to Jonathon Burgess.

CHILDREN: Silas Merrill b. 1857 d. 1925

NEWSPAPER ENTRIES:
(Note-All of these entries were under the heading of Bolton Landing)
23 Aug 1894 Warrensburg NY Lake George News-Mrs. Justin Merrill has returned from Ballston where she was called by the dangerous illness of Mrs. Mary Ann Robinson.

28 Mar 1901 Glens Falls NY Daily Times-Mrs. Justin Merrill and Jonathan Burgess were married yesterday.

10 Sep 1906 Glens Falls NY Daily Times-Letters of Administration were filed in the estate of Jonathan Burgess by Minerva Burgess and Daniel L. Rogers.

11 Nov 1909 Glens Falls NY Daily Times-Minerva Burgess has purchased Henry Menill's (Merrill??) land on School St, consideration $2000.

15 Oct 1911 Glens Falls NY Daily Times-Mrs. Minerva Burgess is seriously ill.

26 Oct 1911 Warrensburg NY Lake George News-The death of Mrs. Minerva Burgess at her home her, occurred on October 15. She was about 75 years of age and the widow of the late Jonathan Burgess of Northwest Bay. One son, Silas Merrill, survives, also two grandchildren, Everett Merrill and Mrs. Harry Finkle, all of this place. The funeral was held Tuesday from her late residence. The Rev. George Gates of the Baptist church officiating. Interment was made in the Bolton Cemetery.

1 Nov 1911 Glens Falls NY Daily Times-Estate of Minerva Burgess. Petition for letters of administration filed and letters granted to Cyrus J. Merrill.(probate forms show Silas J Merrill as admr.)

CEMETERY: Bolton Cemetery, Bolton Rd, Bolton, N.Y. Inscription: Justin Merrill b May 16, 1828 d June 20, 1900 wife Minerva 1838-1911

PROBATE: Warren County Probate Packet 4472 (image 141)- 3 pages. Admr was her son Silas J Merrill. No will or other info.
 
Plumb, Martha Minerva (I5301)
 
4877 BIRTH: According to fathers 1769 will in New Jersey, Heath was one of his minor children. "I wish them to be put to apprenticeship in Philadelphia to trades." Age 64 in 1824 according to Newpaper obit.

MARRIAGE: To Susannah Britt 12 Jun 1783 at 2nd Presbyterian Church in Philadelpha - U.S., Presbyterian Church Records, 1701-1970

CENSUS:
1793 Philadelphia Dock Ward-Septennial Census
1800 Kengsessing, Philadelpha, Pa
1810 Venango, Northumberland, Pa
1820 Point, Northumberland, Pa

DEATH: 26 Oct 1824 Northumberland, Pa - US, Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930 (New York Evening Post) - Heath Norbury Esquire age 64

PROBATE: 27 Dec 1824 John Frick Admr-Letter of Administration filed 27 Dec 1824 file No, 24

DEEDS: A search of property deeds in Northumberland County shows that Heath Norbury was not listed as a grantor or a grantee.

TRANSCRIPTION OF FATHERS WILL:
CALENDAR OF NEW JERSEY WILLS, ADMINISTRATIONS, ETC, VOLUME IV- 1761-1770 :
1769, Nov. 15. Norbury, Joseph, of Cumberland Co.; school mas-
ter; will of. At present of said Co., but formerly of the Parish of
St. Clements, in Liberty of Westminster, County of Middlesex, in
England, taylor, son of Joseph Norbury of Little Share Lane, in said
Parish, born in 1722, christened and registered in the Register Book
of said Parish, which Kingdom I left in 1753. My plantation in New
England Town to be sold. Children, Joseph, Heath and Mary, to
have my money, when they come of age. My sons, Joseph and Heath,
to be disposed of, as my Executors think best, till they are 14, then
I wish them to be put to apprenticeship in Philadelphia to trades.
My daughter, Mary, I leave to the discretion of her mother. Wife,
Lida, the rest of my estate. Executors - Doctor Samuel Ward and
my wife, Lydia. Witnesses - Abel Shepherd, William Fithian, Joseph
Fithian. Proved Dec. 6, 1769. 
Norbury, Heath (I5495)
 
4878 Birth: In Pennsylvania per census. 23 Apr 1817 appears in an online tree with no citation. Cannot locate in findagrave. Can find no death record.

Parents: May be son of Charles and Sarah Gibbons of Sugarloaf, Columbia, Pennsylvania - This is unproven

Death: Last known census entry - 1880

Burial: Unknown. not in findagrave.com

Probate: No entry for Samuel Gibbons in the Luzerne County will index.

Children:
Mary 1845
Robert 1848 - mother is given as Sarah Davis on death cert. All later children give Fritz as mother's surname on death certs.
Ellen 1850-1926
Elizabeth 1852-1925
Daniel 1856-1939
Anna 1859-1939
Kate 1863-1934
 
Gibbons, Samuel (I6823)
 
4879 BIRTH: We know that his father was born 2 Jan 1725. We know that his father married Jane Bennett 14 Sep 1744. Assuming he was a first child he would have been born by 1745 or later. According to the Burdick book his child Ephraim was born 1763. We have no citation on the birth of Rachel. Either he married very young or else our understanding of this is flawed. Burdick, Nathan (I6330)
 
4880 Birthdate and 30 year gap since previous child, makes it unlikely that 70 year old Sarah Davis wa the mother. Perhaps a grandson. Kramer, Everitt Leroy (I15058)
 
4881 Blackwell Cemetery Gordon, Leah Elizabeth (I4413)
 
4882 blind Heinrich, Johann Georg (I22496)
 
4883 Blind & Deaf:1798 Census Krumm, Konrad (I24237)
 
4884 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I17669)
 
4885 Board of Guardian Records, 1834-1906 and Church of England Parish Registers, 1813-1906. London Metropolitan Archives, London.<p>Images produced by permission of the City of London Corporation Libraries, Archives and Guildhall Art Gallery Department. The City of London gives no warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or fitness for the purpose of the information provided. Images may be used only for purposes of research, private study or education. Applications for any other use should be made to the City of London, Guildhall, PO Box 270, London EC2P 2EJ. Infringement of the above condition may result in legal action.</p> Source (S405)
 
4886 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I14080)
 
4887 Bohun-40 De Bohun, Eleanor (I7325)
 
4888 Boleyn-3 Boleyn, Sir William (I7323)
 
4889 Boleyn-38 Boleyn, Alice (I7322)
 
4890 Bolton Rural Cemetery Taylor, Amy V (I2021)
 
4891 Bond, Henry. Family Memorials. Genealogies of the Families and Descendents of the Early Settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts, Including Waltham and Weston; to Which Is Appended the Early History of the Town.. Vol. I. Boston, MA, USA: Little, Brown, and Company, 1855. Source (S986)
 
4892 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I23361)
 
4893 Book - Descendants of Robert Taylor, (1925) Shows name Thomas NORBURY, father of Deborah NORBURY. Shows "The Will of Thomas Norbury, of Newtown, Chester County, Pa., dated July 16, 1702, proved August 10, 1702, mentions children: Stephen, Jacob, Deborah, Thomas, Philip, John, Benjamin, Mary, Hannah, Sarah and Rachel. Executors: David Williamson and Evan Lewis. Witnesses: Bartholomew Coppock and Jonathan Taylor.". Norbury, Thomas (I8986)
 
4894 Born and married to Charlotte Hider as George Willey. At some point, he and his family started using the surname of Willard.
The last Willard Child was born in New York. James William Willard born 1866. Anneta Willard was born Aug 1864 in Canada. So moved to New York between those 2 dates.
The 1866 Rochester City Directory lists George Williard, the 1865 does not. The 1867 City Directory lists Charlotte, Widow of George. So that along with the children’s birth dates ties in with moving to New York between late 1864 and early 1866.
That would also give us a death date for George of about 1866-1867.
The 1920 census for Anneta Debats in Bay City shows immigration in 1864 and born in Canada. So means between August to end of December 1864 if that is not an error. The 1930 census in Bay City says Annetta immigrated in 1867. But James born in New York 1866. Any of the Census info on James in Bay City gives his birth place as New York.
 
Willard, George (I5306)
 
4895 born Canada or U.S? All census entries after 1850 and death cert say Michigan. Only 1850 census says Canada.

Marriage record shows Hattie McDonald. Appears to be Harriet Campbell, time frame, township are all correct. Harriet had a prior marriage to John Sanfield McDonald.
 
Campbell, Harriet (I6073)
 
4896 Born in 1819, she married William B. Creasy 1833 in Fluvanna County, Virginia. She had 5 children with him. In 1846 she married Alexander Douglas in Boone, Missouri.

On the 1850 census in Boone,Missouri we find 3 of her Creasy children, James, Melvina and VIrginia living in her parents houshold , William and Mary Hensley. The children are listed with the surname of Hensley (probably censustaker's error), Which is why in many online trees they are listed as children of the Hensley's instead of grand children. On the same page we find Ann Eliza in the Alexander Douglas household with the remaining two of her Creacy children along with 2 children she had with Alexander Douglas.

On the 1860 census in Boone, Missouri, on the same page, we find the Hensley houshold with no children listed, the Douglas houshold with 5 Douglas children and immediately after the Douglas houshold, the James Caruthers household with his with Melvina. James married Melvina Creacy 1858 in Boone, Missouri.

In 1880 on the obituary of John Caruthers, Jame's father, in mentioning something about each surviving child it says "James is married and lives on the farm formerly owned by his father-in-law, Alexander Douglas". 
Hensley, Ann Eliza (I5943)
 
4897 born in America Johannes, Jakob (I19206)
 
4898 born in America Becker, Henry (I26321)
 
4899 born in the 1790's Brown, Nancy (I5104)
 
4900 Born in Withyham, Sussex, England in 1794, Peter Hider, emigrated to Canada in 1857, 6 years after the death of his wife, Mary Ann Pratt.

On 10 Feb 1857, Peter Hider, son Peter, dau. Elizabeth, dau. Charlotte, granddau. Mary Ann Elizabeth (also: John William Barnett) all departed from London, on the ship Christiana. The ship landed at NYC on 8 Apr 1857. On 10 Apr 1857 the family arrived at Woodstock, Ontario, Canada. 
Hider, Peter (I4729)
 

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