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5801 from Kutter Haas, Anna Katharina (I22140)
 
5802 from Kutter colony Krumm, Konrad (I24237)
 
5803 from Laub Friedrich, Maria Magdalena (I23136)
 
5804 From Margaret Moore's tree. Phelps, Donald Frederick (I5805)
 
5805 From MayflowerHistory.com:

John Howland was born about 1599, probably in Fenstanton, Huntington. He came on the Mayflower in 1620 as a manservant of Governor John Carver. During the Mayflower's voyage, Howland fell overboard during a storm, and was almost lost at sea--but luckily for his millions of descendants living today (including Presidents George Bush and George W. Bush, and Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt) he managed to grab hold of the topsail halyards, giving the crew enough time to rescue him with a boat-hook.

It has been traditionally reported that John Howland was born about 1592, based on his reported age at death in the Plymouth Church Records. However, ages at death were often overstated, and that is clearly the case here. John Howland came as a servant for John Carver, which means he was under 25 years old at the time (i.e. he was born after 1595). William Bradford, in the falling-overboard incident, refers to Howland as a "lusty young man," a term that would not likely have applied to a 28-year old given that Bradford himself was only 30. Bradford did call 21-year old John Alden a "young man" though. Howland's wife Elizabeth was born in 1607: a 32-year old marrying a 17-year old is a relatively unlikely circumstance. Howland's last child was born in 1649: a 57-year old Howland would be an unlikely father. All these taken together demonstrate that Howland's age was likely overstated by at least 5 years. Since he signed the "Mayflower Compact", we can assume he was probably at least 18 to 21 years old in 1620.

John Howland had several brothers who also came to New England, namely Henry Howland (an ancestor to both Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford) and Arthur Howland (an ancestor to Winston Churchill). 
Howland, John (I24200)
 
5806 from message board at http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.michigan.counties.tuscola/868.1/mb.ashx

Jason P Spickerman b abt 1849 d 1884 m Hattie Schultz 1871
R Conrad Schultz (View posts) Posted: 9 Nov 2003 9:40AM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames:
I am looking for the parents and children of Jason and Hattie.
He was b in New York abt 1849. He drowned in a river accicent at age 32. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
Conrad

reply:Gloria (View posts) Posted: 11 Nov 2003 11:18AM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames:
In the 1880 census they are in Petosky, Emmet Co, MI. They have no children living with them at that time. You can find this on the FamilySearch site.
 
Spickerman, Jason P (I5331)
 
5807 from Norka Colony Wetlaifer, Anna Margaretha (I884)
 
5808 from Norka Colony Spaeth, Maria Katharina (I19458)
 
5809 from obit Family: Dewitt David Cole / Isa Woodin (F4344)
 
5810 from online tree Bentley, John Thomas (I2553)
 
5811 From probate file, in the order listed, children of Thomas Hulse are:
William Hulse of Ohio
Margaret Longstreet of Enfield and wife of Gilbert Longstreet
Deborah Jeffry of place unknown
Patty Wickham of Tompkins County
Polly Wickham of Tompkins County
Descendants of deceased son Thomas Hullse of Enfield 
Hulse, Anthony (I5789)
 
5812 From Probate filing Chase, Sharley B. (I5673)
 
5813 From Saginaw County Public Libraries On-line obit index
BEARDSLEY, ROY L.
Spouse's Name: ADELINE WALSH
Married: 05/29/1937
Age: 50
Birth Date: 08/25/1909
Birth Place: QUANICASSEE, MI
Death Date: 10/06/1959
Death Place: SAGINAW, MI
Miscellaneous

Cemetery: FOREST LAWN
Church: LATTER-DAY SAINTS
Funeral Home: CHILSON

Name:
WAKEFIELD, ADELINE J. BEARDSLEY
Maiden Name: WALSH
Spouse's Name: RAYMOND (2) ROY (1)
Birth Date: 08/28/1918
Birth Place: BAYPORT, MI
Death Date: 03/31/1985
Death Place: WEST BRANCH, MI
Miscellaneous
Cemetery:
FOREST LAWN
 
Walsh, Adeline Jane (I2994)
 
5814 From Scots-Irish in Va.-Vol-2: David Caruthers filed a marriage bond to Elizabeth Jackson, dau of David Jackson on 14 March 1786.

From Virginia Marriages to 1800: David Caruthers married Elizabeth Jackson on 18 March 1786 in Augusta County, Virginia.

From Virginia Bond, Marriage, Probate Records 1639-1850: The will of David Caruthers dated 25 May 1810 in Augusta County, Virginia mentions wife Elizabeth, sons John and James and oldest daughter Jean. Book WB12-164 Prove Date 27 May 1816

From his obituary John Caruthers was born in Augusta County, Virginia 4 July 1793.

Therefore, we know that David of Augusta County, Virginia had a son named John sometime after 1786. We know that our John was born 4 Jul 1793 in Augusta County, Virginia. But is there any information to show that they are the same person?

After studying Census and Tax lists for Augusta County (details follow) it would appear that there were at most two Caruthers families in Augusta County-The David Caruthers family and the Thomas Caruthers family. We do not see another John as a head of household. Therefore, it would appear likely that there was only one John in Augusta County during this time period.

1790 US Census: Unfortunately the Virginia census records for this year is missing. A reconstructed Tax list for 1790 http://www.binnsgenealogy.com/VirginiaTaxListCensuses/ shows David Caruthers in Augusta County.

1800 US Census: Unfortunately the Virginia census records for this year is missing. A reconstructed Tax list for 1800 http://www.binnsgenealogy.com/VirginiaTaxListCensuses/ shows David Caruthers in Augusta County and Thomas Caruthers in Augusta County.

1810 US Census: David Caruthers in Augusta and Thomas Careathers in Augusta

1820 US Census: Elizabeth Caruthers in Stanton, Augusta County and John Careathers in Waynesboro, Augusta County. (1 male 26-44 and 1 female 26-44 is consistent with his just marrying Nancy Brown earlier in 1820.)

The date of birth of all of David's children is not known. However David's will shows two sons, the eldest born 1786 and one eldest daughter, Jean, birth unknown. He mentions the other daughters would receive bequests as they come of age. Which would imply they were born after 1794, as the will is dated 1810. So, if James was the oldest child, David's birth date was probably 1766 or before. Which means he was aged at least 50 or more when he died in 1816. This would change to an older age if Jean was the oldest child or if he had started having children later in life.
 
Caruthers, David (I2872)
 
5815 from SS Records:
Name: Ace Durwin Gordon
[Ace D Gordon]
SSN: 385189934
Gender: Male
Race: White
Birth Date: 4 Apr 1922
Birth Place: Clare, Michigan
Father Name: James Gordon
Mother Name: Virginia Crothers
Death Date: 3 Dec 1992
Type of Claim: Original SSN.
Notes: Apr 1941: Name listed as ACE DURWIN GORDON; 12 Dec 1992: Name listed as ACE D GORDON 
Gordon, Ace Durwin (I5655)
 
5816 from SS Records:
Name: James Nelson Gordon Jr
[James N Gordon Jr]
Gender: Male
Race: White
Birth Date: 13 Jul 1920
Birth Place: Clare County, Michigan
Father Name: James N Gordon
Mother Name: Virginia F Kretheres
Death Date: 13 Mar 2007
Type of Claim: Original SSN.
Notes: Jul 1938: Name listed as JAMES NELSON GORDON JR; 23 Mar 2007: Name listed as JAMES N GORDON 
Gordon, James Nelson Jr. (I24225)
 
5817 from SS Records:
Name: Mildred Ethel Gordon
[Mildred Eth Herr]
[Mildred Herr]
SSN: 367282660
Gender: Female
Race: White
Birth Date: 4 May 1929
Birth Place: Harrison, Clare, Michigan
[Harrison, Michigan]
Father Name: James N Gordon
Mother Name: Virginia F Crothers
Death Date: 5 Aug 1993
Death Certificate Number: SSA 721
Type of Claim: Original SSN.
Notes: Jun 1945: Name listed as MILDRED ETHEL GORDON; Aug 1954: Name listed as MILDRED ETH HERR; 22 Nov 1989: Name listed as MILDRED ETHEL HERR; 24 Aug 1993: Name listed as MILDRED E HERR 
Gordon, Mildred Ethel (I5885)
 
5818 from SS records:
Name: Onnalee Ruth Gordon
[Onnalee Rut Richardson]
[Onnalee Heltsley]
SSN: 373103459
Gender: Female
Race: White
Birth Date: 21 Oct 1917
Birth Place: Harrison Cla, Michigan
Father Name: James N Gordon
Mother Name: Virginia Crothers
Death Date: 19 Apr 2005
Type of Claim: Original SSN.
Notes: Nov 1936: Name listed as ONNALEE RUTH GORDON; Feb 1956: Name listed as ONNALEE RUT RICHARDSON; May 1973: Name listed as ONNALEE R HELTSLEY 
Gordon, Onnalee Ruth (I5849)
 
5819 from SS Records:
Name: Robert Earl Gordon
[Robert E Gordon]
SSN: 384307117
Gender: Male
Race: White
Birth Date: 2 Apr 1931
Birth Place: Harrison, Michigan
Father Name: James N Gordon
Mother Name: Virginia F Cruthers
Death Date: 14 Dec 1992
Type of Claim: Original SSN.
Notes: Apr 1949: Name listed as ROBERT EARL GORDON; 22 Dec 1992: Name listed as ROBERT E GORDON 
Gordon, Robert Earl (I5659)
 
5820 from Stahl Am Tarlyk Schanz, Susanna (I24377)
 
5821 from Stahl am Tarlyk Grahs, Johanna Ottilia Krass (I26137)
 
5822 From Stahl Am Tarlyk Colony
From Stahl Am Tarlyk Colony
From Stahl Am Tarlyk Colony 
Muck, Unknown (I753)
 
5823 from Stahl Am Tarlyk Colony Kress, Anna Maria (I805)
 
5824 From The "Descendants of John Owen of Windsor Connecticut" dated 1941 we have John Owen Married Rebecca Wade of nearby Hartford, the daughter of Robert and Jemima Wade.

The name Robert Wade appears on the Hartford Settlers Monument as one of the 127 original settlers of Hartford in 1639.

From "Annals of Dorchester" we have a land record concerning Robert Wade dated 4 Jan 1635. (?? Robert Charles Anderson of Great Migrations Books shows no entry for Robert Wade before 1639.)

In the "Memorial History of Hartford County, Connecticut" the following appears "Robert Wade, Dorchester, 1635, removed soon to Hartford, where he was one of those who received land"

The name of Robert Wade appears in Hartford land records in Feb 1639.

In Aug 1657 Robert Wade was divorced from his wife, Jane or Joan, by the General Court at Hartford on the grounds of her refusal for 15 years to leave England and join him in the colony. (15 years goes back to 1642, which does not align well with the other dates of 1635 and 1639 as being in the colonies. Or perhaps his wife was here and then returned to England in 1642. Other than starting with the same letter the wife's name also does not match up well.)

Probate records dated June 1682 of Robert Wade mentions 3 daughters, but none named Rebecca!!!

To summarize we have a Robert Wade from England in Dorchester by 1635 and one of the founders of Hartford in 1639. Of much else we cannot be certain.
 
Wade, Robert (I2598)
 
5825 From the Great Migration Begins; "Savage states that WIlliam Hayden, "Dorchester, came probably in the Mary & John, 1630" [Savage 2:387]. This may be a false association of William Hayden with John Hayden, who was in Dorchester from about 1632 to 1639. There is no record of William Hayden in Massachusetts Bay, and he first appears in Connecticut records in the late 1630s."

The following is per William J. Dowell http://stithvalley.com/ancestry/taylor/johnhayd.htm

Again and again we read that Gideon Haydon and Margaret Davy of Cadhay House, Ottery St Mary, Devonshire, were the parents of John Hayden, the 1632 immigrant to Dorchester, Massachusetts.

However, tracing the origins of an early New England immigrant ancestor can be an extremely challenging exercise, not least because, in the past, genealogists have often reached firm conclusions based upon very inadequate evidence, such as a coincidence of names and dates. Frequently, New England settlers have been identified as members of gentry families in England, who were generally well documented. However, relatively few immigrants came from a gentry background; they were mostly tradesmen or yeomen. Thus the Gideon Haydon genealogy has gained wide acceptance among John Hayden's descendants in America, but without any proof beyond a coincidence of name and date.

On the other hand, there are two strong arguments against this genealogy. First, the Gideon Haydon family of Cadhay were adherents of the Church of England, and their sons, Gideon Haydon (1609-1680) and Nicholas Haydon (1620-1676), were ardent Royalists during the English Civil War, whereas our John Hayden was clearly a Puritan. Second, coinciding with John Hayden's arrival in Massachusetts is the presence there of William Hayden and James Hayden. There is the possibility that either or both of these men were brothers of John. In that case, however, it is unlikely that they were children of Gideon Haydon, because no record exists of a child named William born to Gideon and Margaret Haydon. Gideon and Margaret had a child named James, but this son died in infancy. Of course it is equally possible that these three were cousins, or even strangers, which would not necessarily upset the identification of John Hayden as the son of Gideon and Margaret Haydon of Cadhay. 
Hayden, William (I23851)
 
5826 From the probate file of Jonathon Cutting filed 3 Nov1778 in Shrewsbury, Worcester, Massachusetts:
Administrators: Zadock Cutting, son and Sarah Cutting, widow
Children: Josias, Silas, Zadock, Abigail
Minor Children: Ebenezer, Jonathon
Widow Sarah is guardian of Josias and Alpheus Pierce (perhaps grandchildren?)
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/61934/images/FS_100379722_00666 
Cutting, Jonathan (I8476)
 
5827 From the Thrall website at http://www.thrale.com/history/usa/william_thrall.php: Note-This passage contains errors-see below.
William Thrall is the founder of the Thrall family in the United States. He was born in 1605 in Sandridge, Hertfordshiure, England and came to the Colonies on the 'Mary and John' in the year 1630. The Mary and John was a vessel of four hundred tons captained by a man named Squeb and the vessel sailed with 180 passengers.

William was part of a company of Puritans under the leadership of Rev. John Wareham of Exeter and Rev. John Meverick, both ministers of the Church of England Setting sail from Plymouth, England on 20 March, they first came ashore on 30 May 1630. They disembarked with what goods they had, to some high land in the salt meadow, now a part of the city of Boston. They named the place Dorchester, which was selected by the captain of the "Mary and John" as he came from Dorchester, England. Page 277 of Prince's Chronology of New England records…

“May 30, Lord's Day. Mr. Wareham and his church, and their goods, were put ashore at Nantasket Point. The went immediately to Charlestown, and from thence to Mattepan, and began a town and named it Dorchester, and the native Indians were kind to them.”

Revs. Wareham and Meverick and their group stayed in Dorchester less than five years, as a number of their menfolk had discovered more fertile land below the first falls of the Connecticut River, at the junction of the Farmington River just above Hartford. Part of the Colony went by boat and the remainder traveled across the one hundred miles of virgin forest, to establish the town of Windsor. Windsor was unofficially known as Thrallville in the early years.

The first we know of William Thrall is that he is listed with the following men who were among the thirty men who went from Windsor to join in the fight against the Pequod Indians in May 1637. Capt. John Mason, Sgt. Benedict Alvord, Thomas Barber, Thomas Buckland, George Chappel, John Dyer, James Eggleston, Nathaniel Gillet, Thomas Gridley, Thomas Styles, Sgt. Thomas Stares, Richard Osborn, Thomas Parsons, William Thrall. The Indian village in this case was so completely destroyed that for many years, the settlers had no further trouble with the Indians. Some years later, the participants were given land grants. To quote from Dr. Styles records with regard to the first Indian war in New England,

“The danger was imminent, and so complete the victory that it caused universal rejoicing throughout New England, and a grant of land was given each soldier and officer, and to this day the memory of an ancestor who was in the Pequod fight, is an honorable heirloom in every Connecticut family”

William Thrall is mentioned many times in the early records. His lot shows up in the first plot of Windsor, between the lots of Nicholas Palmer and Thomas Bascomb, and ran from the road to the Farmington River. In 1646, William sold this lot to Nicholas Palmer and moved to Simon Hoyte's place, north of the village. Robert Wilson bought a half interest with William in the Hoyte's 80 acres, but sold his half to Thrall in 1654. This 80 acres has been part of the holdings of the Thrall family ever since.

William Thrall was born in 1605 in Sandridge, Hertfordshire, England, and died on 3 August 1679 in Windsor, Connecticut, America. William Thrall made a will.

We know very little about the wife of William Thrall. She is referred to in the Old Windsor records as Goode Thrall, but 'Goode' was an expression applied to women with families and it is simply an abbreviation of 'Goodwife'. Whether she came over to New England on the "Mary and John" with her husband or they met in Dorchester, has never been established. The record of her death simply states… “Goode Thrall, wife of William, died 30 July 1676”

The above quote from the Thrall website has some good information, but some of the important details are incorrect. The birthdate of 1605 in Sandridge is generally accepted to be another William Thrall. There is no evidence that William was aboard the 1630 voyage of the Mary & John. It is generally accepted that he was not. Records with his name begin in 1637. It may be a good assumption that he arrived in 1636 with another voyage of the same ship. The other information given above does all appear to be correct.

There is no good evidence of birthplace or parents name. There were a lot of Thralls in England and there are many possibilities. Winthrops Journal did have an entry that William Thrall was 60 years old in 1666. See TAG V24 P112.

Digest of Early Connecticut Probate Records:
Page 27-8.
Thrall, William, Windsor. Died 3 August, 1679. Invt. £158-09-06. Taken by Christopher Sanders, Jacob Drake. Will dated 11 December, 1678.
I William Thrall of Windsor do give and bequeath my Outward Es tate, my House Barn & all my Lands of one sort or other, Upland or Meadow, to my son Timothy Thrall, to be his & his heirs forever, yt with this Proviso, that upon his possession thereof he stand bound to discharge the Legacies as followeth: First: that he pay to Daughter Phillip(i) Hosford the sum of £45, to be paid within 3 years after my decease. Sec-ond : that he pay to Samuel Cross, & also to her that was Mary Cross, both which live with me, 5 Shillings apeice. Third: That he pay to Mr. Ben jamin Woodbridge 20 Shillings. It is my Will & I do give to my gr. child Sarah Hosford the little House I have begun to build on John Hosford's Land. For my Household Goods, what is in the possession of my son Timothy Thrall I do bestow on him, & what part of my Household Goods is in the possession of John Shepherd I do give to my daughter Phillipi Thrall. A Cow of mine in John Hosford's Hands I do give to Daughter Phillip(i) Hosford, & the Cattle or Stock in my son Timothy Thrall's Hands I give to him. I ordain my son Timothy Thrall Executor. Also I desire Mr. Benjamin Woodbridge and Abraham Phelps to be my Over- seers.

Witness: Job Drake, william X thrall.
Mary Woodbridge.

Court Record, Page 18-4 December, 1679: Will & Invt. proven.
 
Thrall, William (I5607)
 
5828 From transcription of stones in Lebanon's Old Cemetery:

"Here Lies the Body of Ebenezer Dewey ye son of Dn Josiah and Mrs Hepzibah Dewey who Devoted his Life to God and Having Lived A Short Life in Love & Charity Towards men Died in faith glorifying God Dec 3rd AD 1711 in Ye 38th year of His Age."
 
Dewey, Ebenezer (I1847)
 
5829 from transcription of stones in Lebanon's Old Cemtery:
"Here lies ye body of ye worth Mrs. Hephzibah ye wife of Don Josiah Dewey. She was the daughter of Mr. Richard Lyman of Hartford. She was one that feared ye Lord & slept in Jesus June ye 4 1732 in ye 89 year of her age." 
Lyman, Hepzibah (I2258)
 
5830 from tree Merrill, William W (I4690)
 
5831 from tree entry Merrill, William Greenleaf (I2736)
 
5832 from tree entry Merrill, William Greenleaf (I2736)
 
5833 from Wakemanfuneralhome.com

Obituary for Mrs. Anna R. Grefe
Grefe, Mrs. Anna R.
Saginaw, Michigan

Anna passed away Thursday, February 25, 2016, at Covenant Medical Center - Harrison Campus surrounded by her family. Age 92 years. Anna Rose Jeruskewicz was born April 10, 1923, in Saginaw to the late Julius and Marie (Ruezka) Jeruskewicz. On July 29, 1939, she married her soulmate Robert (Bob) E. Grefe, and after 70 years of marriage, Bob predeceased her on March 3, 2010. A lifelong devoted Christian, her beautiful soprano voice was enjoyed for decades within the local church community. Anna worshiped at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, where she was a faithful member and attended weekly Bible study.

Surviving are her three children and their spouses: Gretchen Grefe (Gary Szymzak), Saginaw; Timothy (Tamara) Grefe, and their children, Andrew and Alexandra Grefe, Saginaw; Rosalyn (Larry) Rohn, Merrill, and their children, Lisa (Jamey) Good, Steven (Rhonda) Rohn, Heidi (Chuck) Frakes, Kevin (Stacey) Rohn, Karl (Sherry) Rohn; nine great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren. She was predeceased by two sisters and two brothers.

Anna’s funeral service will take place 11:00 a.m. Monday, February 29, 2016, at the Wakeman Funeral Home, Inc., 1218 N. Michigan Ave., Saginaw. The Rev. Robert M. Eggers will officiate with burial in Roselawn Memorial Gardens. Friends are welcome to visit with the family at the Wakeman Funeral Home, Inc. on Sunday from 2:00 to 6:00 p.m., then on Monday from 10:00 a.m. until the time of service. Memorials may be given to Good Shepherd Lutheran Church. Memories and sympathies of Anna may be shared with the family on her memorial website at WakemanFuneralHome.com

To send flowers or a memorial gift to the family of Mrs. Anna R. Grefe please visit our Sympathy Store.
Cemetery Details
Roselawn Memorial Gardens
950 N. Center Rd.
Saginaw, MI, 48638 
Jeruskewicz, Anna Rose (I5993)
 
5834 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1st Lord of Thomond
CoA Gilbert de Clare.svg
Arms of the de Clare Family
Hereditary
Lord of Thomond 1276-1287
Predecessor New Creation
Successor Gilbert de Clare, 2nd Lord of Thomond
DetailTitles and styles
1st Lord of Inchiquin and Youghal
Born 1245
Tonbridge Castle, Tonbridge, Kent, England
Died 29 August 1287
Thomond, Ireland
Family de Clare
Spouse(s) Juliana FitzGerald
Issue
Maud de Clare, Baroness de Welles
Gilbert de Clare, 2nd Lord of Thomond
Richard de Clare, Steward of Forest of Essex
Margaret de Clare, Baroness Badlesmere
Father Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford, 2nd Earl of Gloucester
Mother Maud de Lacy
Occupation Peerage of England
Thomas de Clare, 1st Lord of Thomond, 1st Lord of Inchiquin and Youghal (1244×1247[1] - 29 August 1287) was a Hiberno-Norman peer and soldier. He was the second son of Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Gloucester and his wife Maud de Lacy, Countess of Gloucester. In 1272 he served a term as Lieutenant of the Duchy of Aquitaine.[1] On 26 January 1276 he was granted the Lordship of Thomond by Edward I of England; he spent the next eight years attempting to conquer it from the O'Brien dynasty, kings of Thomond.

Career
Thomas was born in about 1245 in Tonbridge, Kent, England, the second eldest son of Richard de Clare and Maud de Lacy.[2] He and his brother Bogo received gifts from King Henry III when they were studying at Oxford from 1257-59.[3] Thomas was a close friend and intimate advisor of Prince Edward of England, who would in 1272 accede to the throne as King Edward I. Together they took part in the Ninth Crusade. He held many important posts such as Governor of Colchester Castle (1266) and Governor of The City of London (1273). He was made Commander of the English forces in Munster, Ireland and created Lord of Inchiquin and Youghal. On 26 January 1276, he was granted the entire lordship of Thomond by King Edward.

That same year, he jointly commanded a Norman army along with Sir Geoffrey de Geneville, Justiciar of Ireland against the Irish clans of County Wicklow. They were joined by a contingent of men from Connacht led by his father-in-law Maurice FitzGerald, 3rd Lord of Offaly. Thomas and Justiciar de Geneville's forces attacked the Irish at Glenmalure, but they were soundly defeated and suffered severe losses.[4]

Civil War in Thomond
Civil war raged in Thomond between the rival factions of the O'Brien dynasty. In 1276, Brian Ruad, the deposed King of Thomond appealed to Thomas for support to help him regain his kingdom from his great-nephew Toirrdelbach MacTaidg O' Brien, who had usurped the throne. In return for his aid, Brian Ruad promised that Thomas would be allowed to colonise all the land between Athsollus in Quin and Limerick.[5] Together, Thomas and Brian Ruad expelled Toirrdelbach MacTaidg O'Brien and recaptured Clonroad which the latter had taken from Brian Ruad. O'Brien escaped to Galway where he elicited the help of his cousin William de Burgh, and in 1277 together with the assistance from clans, MacNamara and O'Dea they defeated the combined forces of Thomas and Brian Ruad. The latter fled to Bunratty Castle, but Thomas had his former ally hanged and drawn for treason.[6] The civil war continued for the next seven years, with Thomas supporting Brian Ruad's son Donnchad against Toirrdelbach; however, following the drowning death of Donnchad in 1284, Toirrdelbach emerged the victor. Thereafter until his death in 1306, Toirrdelbach MacTaidg O'Brien ruled as undisputed King of Thomond and Thomas had no choice but to accommodate him. O'Brien rented part of Bunratty Manor at £121 per annum.[6] In 1280, Thomas embarked on a castle-building project at Quin, but was disrupted in his efforts by the O'Briens and MacNamaras. Thomas also reconstructed Bunratty Castle in stone, replacing the earlier wooden building.

Marriage and children
In February 1275, he married Juliana FitzGerald, the 12-year-old daughter of Maurice FitzGerald, 3rd Lord of Offaly and Maud de Prendergast.[7] During their marriage, Thomas and Juliana lived in Ireland and in England. For instance, on 5 May 1284 the King notified his bailiffs and lieges in Ireland of the attorneys who were to act in Ireland on behalf of the couple as they were then in England. This arrangement was to continue for three years, except when Thomas and Juliana went to Ireland.[8]

Thomas and Juliana had four children:

Maud de Clare (1276-1327), married firstly, Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford, by whom she had issue; and secondly Robert de Welles, 2nd Baron Welles.
Gilbert de Clare, Lord of Thomond, (3 February 1281 - 1308)
Richard de Clare, Steward of Forest of Essex, 1st Lord Clare, Lord of Thomond (after 1281 - 10 May 1318), married a woman by the name of Joan, by whom he had one son, Thomas. He was killed at the Battle of Dysert O'Dea.
Margaret de Clare (c. 1 April 1287 - 22 October 1333/3 January 1334), married firstly, Gilbert de Umfraville; and secondly Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere, by whom she had issue.
Death
When evidence was taken in 1302 to prove the age of his son Gilbert, it was established that Thomas had died on 29 August 1287.[9] A mid-18th century compilation known as the Dublin Annals of Inisfallen states that Thomas was killed in battle against Turlough son of Teige and others. However, none of the earlier records of his death indicate that Thomas met a violent end. Some of the witnesses to Gilbert's age in 1302 referred to the date of Thomas' death in their calculations but all were silent as to its circumstances. This and much other evidence on the subject has been set out and evaluated by Goddard Henry Orpen of Trinity College, Dublin.[10] Thomas was succeeded as Lord of Thomond by his eldest son, Gilbert who was six years old. His widow Juliana, aged 24 years, would go on to marry two more times. 
de Clare, Thomas (I7298)
 
5835 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alice Clere (died 1538) was the daughter of Sir William Boleyn and his wife Margaret Ormond (otherwise Butler), the daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond. Alice was thus the sister of Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire, and the aunt of King Henry VIII's second Queen, Anne Boleyn.[1]

Life
Alice married, as his second wife, Sir Robert Clere (c. 1453 - 10 August 1529) of Ormesby St. Margaret, Norfolk, the son and heir of Robert Clere and his wife Elizabeth, the daughter and heiress of Thomas Uvedale.[2]

In 1533, Alice and her sister, Anne Shelton, were placed in charge of the household of the King's daughter, Princess Mary.[3] Alice was also a senior member of Princess Elizabeth's household while she was living at Hatfield Palace in Hertfordshire.[citation needed] It has been supposed that Alice Clere was the kinder of the two guardians appointed to Mary. Anne Shelton is believed to have been harsher.[citation needed]

Alice died on 1 November 1538, leaving a will dated 28 October 1538 which was proved 23 January 1539. Both she and her husband were buried at Ormesby St. Margaret.[4]

Issue
Sir John Clere (c. 1511 - 21 August 1557) of Ormesby St Margaret and Norwich, married Anne Tyrrell, the daughter of Sir Thomas Tyrrell of Gipping, Suffolk[5]
Richard Clere[citation needed]
Sir Thomas Clere (d. 14 April 1545)
Edward Clere,[citation needed] killed at the battle of Pinkie in 1547. 
Boleyn, Alice (I7322)
 
5836 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anne Welles, Countess of Ormond
Born 1360
Grainsby, Lincolnshire, England
Died 13 November 1397
Spouse(s) James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond

Issue
James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond
Anne Butler
Sir Richard Butler

Father John de Welles, 4th Lord Welles
Mother Maud de Ros
Anne Butler, Countess of Ormond (née Welles; 1360 - 13 November 1397), was the first wife of Irish noble James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond, and the mother of James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond. She was the first countess of Ormond to live at Kilkenny Castle, Ireland.

According to Frederick Tupper, Professor of English at the University of Vermont, she was commemorated as "Anelida, Queen of Armenia" in Geoffrey Chaucer's poem Anelida and Arcite. [1]

Family and lineage
Anne Welles was born in Grainsby, Lincolnshire, England in 1360, the daughter of John de Welles, 4th Baron Welles (23 August 1334 - 11 October 1361) and Maud de Ros (died 9 December 1388). She had an elder brother John de Welles, 5th Baron Welles (born 20 April 1352), who married Eleanor de Mowbray, by whom he had issue. She had a sister Margery de Welles, who married firstly, John de Huntingfield, 1st Baron Huntingfield and secondly, Stephen Scrope, 2nd Baron Scrope of Masham.[citation needed]

Her paternal grandparents were Sir Adam de Welles, 3rd Baron Welles and Margaret Bardolf, and her maternal grandparents were William de Ros, 2nd Baron de Ros and Margery Badlesmere, the eldest daughter of Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere and Margaret de Clare.[citation needed]

Marriage

Kilkenny Castle, Ireland. After 1391, this was the principal residence of the Earls of Ormond. Anne Welles was the first countess of Ormond to reside at the castle
Prior to 17 June 1386, Anne Welles married James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond (died 6 September 1405), son of James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond and Elizabeth Darcy. He twice served as Lord Justice of Ireland. Upon her marriage to the earl, she assumed the title Countess of Ormond.

In September 1391, James purchased Kilkenny Castle from Hugh le Despenser, and the Ormonds subsequently made this magnificent stone fortification set in a park their chief residence with the earl using this as a base from which he ruled over the district. Previously they had lived at Gowran Castle. James and Anne hosted King Richard II when he visited Kilkenny Castle in 1395. King Richard showed his favour to the earl and countess by acting as godfather to their second son, named Richard in honour of the king.[2]

It was suggested by Frederick Tupper, Professor of English at the University of Vermont, that Anne was commemorated as "Anelida, Queen of Armenia", in Geoffrey Chaucer's poem Anelida and Arcite with "Arcite" having been her husband.[1]

Issue
James and Anne had three children:[3]

James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond (1392- 22 August 1452), known as The White Earl. He married firstly, Joan de Beauchamp, by whom he had five children, including James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond, John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormond, and Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond. Thomas was the great-grandfather of queen consort Anne Boleyn.[4] He married secondly, Joan FitzGerald.
Anne Butler, married John Wogan, by whom she had issue.
Sir Richard Butler, of Poulstown, Kilkenny (b. 1395), married Catherine O'Reilly, daughter of Gildas O'Reilly, Lord of East Breffny, by whom he had issue.
Death
On 26 June 1397, Anne issued a lease to Sir John Drayton, of the manor of Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, and rents and appurtences of the towns of Aylesbury and Burton.[5] Anne Welles died on 13 November 1397, around the age of 37.[6] The Earl of Ormond married secondly, Katherine FitzGerald of Desmond, by whom he had four children. The Earl had an illegitimate son, Thomas Le Boteller, Prior of Kilmainham by an unknown mistress.[3] He is often incorrectly listed as a child of Anne Welles. 
Welles, Anne (I7440)
 
5837 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born 1 April 1274
Clifford Castle, Herefordshire, England.
Died 24 June 1314 (Died at the Battle of Bannockburn)
Bannockburn, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
Title Baron de Clifford
Tenure 1299 - 24 June 1314
Other titles Lord of Skipton
Nationality English
Residence Appleby Castle
Brougham Castle
Skipton Castle
Successor Roger de Clifford, 2nd Baron de Clifford
Spouse(s) Maud de Clare
Issue Roger de Clifford, 2nd Baron de Clifford
Idonia de Clifford, Baroness Percy
Robert de Clifford, 3rd Baron de Clifford
Margaret de Clifford, Lady Mauley
Parents Roger II de Clifford
Isabella de Vipont

Seal of Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford (c.1274-1314) affixed to the 1301 Barons' Letter to the Pope, in the Latin text of which he is described as Robertus de Clifford, Castellanus de Appelby ("Constable of Appleby Castle"). Legend: S(igillum) Roberti de Cliford ("Seal of Robert de Clifford"). Arms: Chequy or and azure, a fesse gules

Caesar's Tower, 12th century keep of Appleby Castle, seat of Robert de Clifford
Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford (1 April 1274 - 24 June 1314), of Appleby Castle, Westmorland, feudal baron of Appleby and feudal baron of Skipton in Yorkshire, was an English soldier who became 1st Lord Warden of the Marches, responsible for defending the English border with Scotland.

Origins
He was born at Clifford Castle,[citation needed] Herefordshire, a son of Roger II de Clifford (d.1282) (a grandson of Walter II de Clifford (d.1221), feudal baron of Clifford[1][2]) by his wife Isabella de Vipont (d.1291), one of the two daughters and co-heiresses of Robert II de Vipont (d.1264), feudal baron of Appleby, grandson of Robert I de Vieuxpont (d.1227/8). Thenceforth the Clifford family quartered the arms of Vipont: Gules, six annulets or.

The ancient Norman family which later took the name de Clifford arrived in England during the Norman Conquest of 1066, and became feudal barons of Clifford, first seated in England at Clifford Castle in Herefordshire.

Inheritances
As his father had predeceased his own father, in 1286, Robert inherited the estates of his grandfather, Roger I de Clifford (d.1286). Following the death of his mother, Isabella de Vipont, in 1291, he inherited a one-half moiety of the extensive Vipont feudal barony of Appleby in Westmorland, including Appleby Castle and Brougham Castle. During the outbreak of the Wars of Scottish Independence, in 1296, Brougham Castle became an important military base for Robert, and in 1300, King Edward I of England visited there. In 1308, Robert was granted the remaining moiety of the barony of Appleby, by his childless aunt Idonea de Vipont (d.1333),[3] and thus became one of the most powerful barons in England.

Career
During the reigns of the English Kings, Edward I and Edward II, Clifford was a prominent soldier. In 1296, he was sent with Henry de Percy, 1st Baron Percy to quell the Scots who asked for terms of surrender at Irvine. He was then appointed Governor of Carlisle. During the reign of King Edward I, he was styled Warden of the Marches, and during the reign of King Edward II, as Lord Warden of the Marches, being the first holder of this office.[4] In 1298, he fought for King Edward I at the Battle of Falkirk, in which William Wallace was defeated, for which he was rewarded with Governorship of Nottingham Castle. In 1299, he was created Baron de Clifford by writ and summoned to Parliament. He won great renown at the Siege of Caerlaverock Castle, in 1300, during which his armorials (Chequy or and azure, a fesse gules) were recorded by the heralds on the famous Caerlaverock Roll or Poem, which read (translated from French):[5] "Strength from wisdom drawing, Robert Lord de Clifford's mind is bent on his enemies' subjection. Through his mother his descent comes from that renowned Earl Marshal at Constantinople, said to have battled with a unicorn and struck the monster dead. All the merits of his grandsire, Roger, still in Robert spring. Of no praise is he unworthy; wiser none was with the King. Honoured was his banner, checky gold and blue, a scarlet fess. Were I maiden, heart and body I would yield to such noblesse!" Clifford was one of many who sealed the 1301 Barons' Letter to the Pope, in the Latin text of which he is described as Robertus de Clifford, Castellanus de Appelby ("Constable of Appleby Castle").[6] After the death of King Edward I, in 1307, he was appointed counsellor to his son, King Edward II, together with Henry de Lacy, 3rd Earl of Lincoln, the Earl of Warwick, and the Earl of Pembroke. In the same year of 1307, the new King appointed him Marshal of England, and in this capacity he probably organised Edward II's coronation on 25 February 1308. On 12 March 1308, he was relieved of the marshalcy, the custodianship of Nottingham Castle, and of his Forest justiceship, but on 20 August 1308, he was appointed captain and chief guardian of Scotland.[7] In 1310, King Edward II granted him Skipton Castle, and he was created Lord of Skipton, being given the feudal barony of Skipton in Yorkshire, held until that date by Earl Henry de Lacy (1251-1311).[8] Henry had married Margaret Longespée, Clifford's cousin and heiress of the feudal barony of Clifford, which had descended in the female line from Clifford's great-great-uncle, Walter II de Clifford (d.1263), Margaret's maternal grandfather.[2] Skipton Castle would later become the principal seat of the Clifford family until 1676.

In 1312, together with Thomas Crouchback, 2nd Earl of Lancaster, he took part in the movement against Piers Gaveston, King Edward II's favourite, whom he besieged at Scarborough Castle.

Marriage & progeny
In 1295, at Clifford Castle, he married Maud de Clare, eldest daughter of Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond and Juliana FitzGerald. By Maud, he had four children:[9]

Roger de Clifford, 2nd Baron de Clifford (b. 21 January 1281)
Idonia (or Idonea) de Clifford (b. c.1303), married Henry de Percy, 2nd Baron Percy.
Robert de Clifford, 3rd Baron de Clifford (b. 5 November 1305)
Margaret de Clifford (b.1307), married as her second husband, Piers de Mauley, 5th Lord Mauley (1300-1355).
Death & burial
Clifford was killed on 24 June 1314 fighting at the Battle of Bannockburn[4] and was buried at Shap Abbey in Westmoreland. 
Clifford, 1st Baron Clifford Robert (I7296)
 
5838 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edmund Butler, Earl of Carrick and 6th Chief Butler of Ireland (1268 - 13 September 1321) was a noble in the Peerage of Ireland. He was the second son of Theobald Butler, 4th Chief Butler of Ireland. Edmund went on pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in 1321 but died in London on 13 September 1321. He was buried in St. Mary's Collegiate Church Gowran, County Kilkenny on 10 November 1321.

Career
Edmund succeeded to his father's lands upon the death of his elder brother Theobald, the 5th Chief Butler of Ireland, in 1299. He was created Justiciar of Ireland in 1303 with a fee of £500 per annum. In 1309 was knighted by Edward II in London. Three years later he defeated the O'Byrne and O'Toole clans in Glenmalure.

At a great feast in Dublin on Sunday 29 September 1313, he created 30 Knights, by patent, dated at Langley 4 January 1314.[1]

Having distinguished himself during the Bruce campaign in Ireland alongside John de Bermingham, 1st Earl of Louth and Roger Mortimer, Edmund was granted a charter of the castle and manor of Karryk Macgryffin and Roscrea to hold to him and his heirs sub nomine et honore comitis de Karryk. The patent was dated at Lincoln 1 September that year, 1315; on that date, he was given the return of all the King's writs in the cantreds of Oreman (sic Ormond), Elyogerth (sic Eliogarty), and Elyocarroll in County Tipperary. To these was added, on 12 November 1320, all the lands of William de Carran in Finagh and Favmolin in County Waterford.[2]

However, the charter, while creating an earldom, failed to make Edmund's heir James Earl of Carrick. James was later created Earl of Ormond (Ireland) in his own right in 1328 alongside Roger Mortimer, who was created Earl of March, and the newly created John of Eltham, Earl of Cornwall), brother of King Edward III.

In 1317, after suffering a military defeat in a rebellion led by Edward Bruce, brother of Robert Bruce, he was replaced as Justiciar by Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March.[3]

Marriage and children
He married Joan FitzGerald in 1302, daughter of the John FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Kildare and together they had several children, the eldest of whom succeeded him as Chief Butler of Ireland but not as Earl of Carrick.

James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond (1304-1338)
John Butler of Clonamicklon (or Limallon) (c. 1305-1330) was the ancestor of the later creation of Viscount Ikerrin and Earl of Carrick (Ireland). By his wife Johanna, he had issue, Edmond.[4]
Lawrence Butler (1306-6 January 1338)
Joan Butler (1309- 3 November 1405) who was married in 1321 to Roger Mortimer (second son of Roger, brother to Edward, Earl of March.)
Margaret who married Sir Thomas Dillon of Drumrany, ancestor to Viscount Dillon.[5]
Alice (1290-15 March 1356)
William (8 September 1296 - 1361) 
le Boteler, Edmund (I7329)
 
5839 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eleanor de Bohun
Countess of Ormond
Born 17 October 1304
Knaresborough Castle, Knaresborough, North Yorkshire, England
Died 17 October 1363 (aged 59 years)
Aldgate, Middlesex, England
Burial Chapel of Saint Edmunds, Westminster Abbey, London, Middlesex, England
Spouse James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond

Issue John Butler
Petronilla Butler
James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond
Eleanor de Dagworth

Father Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford
Mother Elizabeth of Rhuddlan

Eleanor de Bohun, Countess of Ormond (17 October 1304 - 7 October 1363) was an English noblewoman born in Knaresborough Castle to Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford, and Elizabeth, daughter of King Edward I of England and Eleanor of Castile. After the deaths of her parents, she was placed in the care of her aunt Mary Plantagenet and brought up at Amesbury Priory alongside various cousins including Joan Gaveston, Isabel of Lancaster and Joan de Monthermer. Edward II of England gave the priory a generous allowance of 100 marks annually for the upkeep of Eleanor and her younger cousin, Joan Gaveston.[1]

Eleanor was married twice; first in 1327 to James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond, (son of Edmund Butler, Earl of Carrick and Lady Joan FitzGerald) who died in 1337 and secondly, six years later in 1343, to Thomas de Dagworth, Lord Dagworth who was killed in an ambush in Brittany in 1352.

By her first marriage, Eleanor was an ancestress of Anne Boleyn and Catherine Parr,[2] Queens consort of King Henry VIII of England. Other descendants include the Dukes of Beaufort, Newcastle, Norfolk, Earls of Ormond, Desmond, Shrewsbury, Dorset, Rochester, Sandwich, Arundel, and Stafford.[1]

Children
By James Butler:

John Butler (born 6 November 1330, died young)
Petronilla (or Perina) Butler, Baroness Talbot (died 1387) who married Gilbert Talbot, 3rd Baron Talbot and had a daughter, Elizabeth Talbot, who married Sir Henry de Grey of Wilton, 5th Baron Grey de Wilton.[3]
James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond (4 October 1331 - 18 October 1382) who married Elizabeth Darcy
By Thomas de Dagworth:

Eleanor de Dagworth who married at Vachery (in Cranley), Surrey by licence dated 23 June 1362 Walter Fitz Walter, Knt, 3rd Lord Fitz Walter (1345-1386). Eleanor was living 29 Nov 1375. At her death, she was buried in Dunmow Priory.[4] 
De Bohun, Eleanor (I7325)
 
5840 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elizabeth Darcy
Countess of Ormond
Born Elizabeth Darcy
3 April 1332
Platten, County Meath, Ireland
Died 24 March 1390
Spouse(s) James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond
Sir Robert Lukyn de Hereford

Issue
Ralph Butler
Eleanor Butler
James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond
Thomas Butler
Catherine Butler
Joan Butler

Father Sir John Darcy, 1st Baron Darcy of Knaith
Mother Joan de Burgh

Elizabeth Butler (nee Darcy), Countess of Ormond (3 April 1332 - 24 March 1390) was the wife of Irish peer James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond, and the mother of his six children, including James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond.

Family and lineage
Elizabeth Darcy was born on 3 April 1332 at Platten, County Meath, Ireland, the daughter of Sir John Darcy, 1st Baron Darcy de Knayth, Justiciar of Ireland, and his second wife Joan de Burgh.[1] Sir John was a veteran of the Battle of Crecy. He held the offices of Constable of Nottingham Castle, Constable of the Tower of London, and Sheriff of Lancashire. From 1341- 1346, he was Chamberlain to King Edward III.

Elizabeth had a brother Sir William Darcy, who married Catherine FitzGerald, by whom he had issue. She also had numerous half-siblings from her parents' previous marriages. Her father's first wife was Emeline Heron, by whom he had eight children, including his heir, John Darcy, 2nd Baron Darcy of Knaith. Elizabeth's mother's first husband had been Thomas FitzGerald, 2nd Earl of Kildare, by whom she had three sons, John FitzGerald, Richard FitzGerald, 3rd Earl of Kildare, and Maurice FitzGerald, 4th Earl of Kildare.

Elizabeth's paternal grandparents were Roger Darcy and Isabel d'Aton, and her maternal grandparents were Richard de Burgh, 2nd Earl of Ulster and Margaret de Burgh, daughter of Sir John de Burgh and Cecily de Balliol.

One of her maternal aunts was Elizabeth de Burgh, the second wife of Robert the Bruce.

Marriages and issue
On 15 May 1346 in Ormond, Ireland, when Elizabeth was fourteen, she married her first husband James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond, the son of James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond. He was Lord Justice of Ireland in 1359, 1364, and 1376. He was also Constable of Dublin Castle in 1349. He was known as the Noble Earl, however, the Irish called him The Chaste. As they were related in the fourth degree of kinship, a papal dispensation was required for their marriage.[1]

Upon her marriage to the Earl, Elizabeth assumed the title of Countess of Ormond. Historian Thomas Carte described her as having been a "wise and honourable lady".[2]

James and Elizabeth had six children:[1]

Ralph Butler
Eleanor Butler (died 1392), married Gerald FitzMaurice FitzGerald, 3rd Earl of Desmond, by whom she had issue, including the 4th and 6th Earls of Desmond.
James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond (died 6 September 1405), before 17 June 1386, married firstly, Anne Welles, Countess of Ormond, daughter of John Welles, 4th Lord Welles and Maud de Ros, by whom he had issue, including James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond. He married secondly, Katherine FitzGerald of Desmond, by whom he had further issue. In 1391, he purchased Kilkenny Castle.
Thomas Butler
Catherine Butler (born 1361), married firstly, Thomas Reade, by whom she had one son, Richard; and secondly, Thomas Fleming of Slane.
Joan Butler, married Tiege O' Carroll
Elizabeth's husband died on 18 October 1382 in Knocktopher and was buried in Gowran Church, Co. Kilkenny. She married secondly, Sir Robert Lukyn de Hereford, Seneschal of the Liberty of Tipperary, between 28 December 1383 and 30 March 1384.[3]

Death
Elizabeth Darcy died on 24 March 1390, shortly before her 58th birthday. 
Darcy, Elizabeth (I7417)
 
5841 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elizabeth de Bohun
Countess of Arundel
Countess of Surrey
Born c.1350
England
Died 3 April 1385
England
Noble family Bohun
Spouse(s) Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel
Issue
Thomas FitzAlan, 5th Earl of Arundel
Lady Eleanor FitzAlan
Lady Elizabeth FitzAlan
Lady Joan FitzAlan
Lady Alice FitzAlan
Lady Margaret FitzAlan
son FitzAlan (name given as either Richard or William)
Father William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton
Mother Elizabeth de Badlesmere
Lady Elizabeth de Bohun, Countess of Arundel, Countess of Surrey (c. 1350 - 3 April 1385) was a member of the Anglo-Norman Bohun family, which wielded much power in the Welsh Marches and the English government. She was the first wife of Richard FitzAlan, a powerful English nobleman and military commander in the reigns of Edward III and Richard II. She was the mother of seven of his children, and as the wife of one of the most powerful nobles in the realm, enjoyed much prestige and took precedence over most of the other peers' wives.

Family and lineage
Lady Elizabeth de Bohun was born around 1350, the daughter of William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton and Elizabeth de Badlesmere. Her older brother Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford married Joan FitzAlan, a sister of the 11th Earl of Arundel, by whom he had two daughters. Elizabeth had a half-brother, Roger Mortimer, 2nd Earl of March, by her mother's first marriage to Sir Edmund Mortimer.

Her paternal grandparents were Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford and Elizabeth of Rhuddlan, daughter of King Edward I of England and Eleanor of Castile. Her maternal grandparents were Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere and Margaret de Clare.

Lady Elizabeth's parents both died when she was young, her mother having died in 1356, and her father in 1360.

Marriage and issue
On 28 September 1359, by Papal dispensation,[1] Elizabeth married Richard FitzAlan, who succeeded to the earldoms of Arundel and Surrey upon the death of his father, Richard FitzAlan, 3rd Earl of Arundel in 1376. Their marriage was especially advantageous as it united two of the most powerful families in England. The alliance was further strengthened by the marriage of Elizabeth's brother, Humphrey to FitzAlan's sister Joan.

As the Countess of Arundel, Elizabeth was one of the most important women in England, who enjoyed much prestige, and after the Queen, the Duchesses of Lancaster and York, and the Countess of Buckingham, took precedence over the other noble ladies in the realm.

At the coronation of King Richard II, FitzAlan carried the crown. In the same year, 1377, he was made Admiral of the South and West. The following year, 1378, he attacked Harfleur, but was repelled by the French.

FitzAlan allied himself with the King's uncle Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester, who was married to FitzAlan's niece Eleanor de Bohun, who was also Elizabeth's niece. The two men eventually became members of the Council of Regency, and formed a strong and virulent opposition to the King. This would later prove fatal to both men.

Richard and Elizabeth had seven children:[1]

Thomas FitzAlan, 5th Earl of Arundel, Earl of Surrey KG (13 October 1381 - 13 October 1415), married 26 November 1405, Beatrice, illegitimate daughter of King John I of Portugal and Inez Perez Esteves.[2] The marriage was childless.
Lady Eleanor FitzAlan (c.1365- 1375), on 28 October 1371, at the age of about six, married Robert de Ufford. Died childless.
Lady Elizabeth FitzAlan (1366- 8 July 1425), married firstly before 1378, Sir William de Montagu, secondly in 1384, Thomas Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk, by whom she had four children, thirdly before 19 August 1401, Sir Robert Goushill, by whom she had two daughters, and fourthly before 1411, Sir Gerard Afflete. The Howard Dukes of Norfolk descend from her daughter Margaret Mowbray who married Sir Robert Howard. Joan Goushill, daughter from the 3rd marriage, was ancestress of James Madison,[3] 4th President of the USA
Lady Joan FitzAlan (1375- 14 November 1435), married William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny, by whom she had a son, Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester and a daughter Joan de Beauchamp, wife of James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormonde.
Lady Alice Fitzalan (1378- before October 1415), married before March 1392, John Cherlton, Lord Cherlton. Had an affair with Cardinal Henry Beaufort, by whom she had an illegitimate daughter, Jane Beaufort.[4]
Lady Margaret FitzAlan (1382- after 1423), married Sir Rowland Lenthall, of Hampton Court, Herefordshire, by whom she had two sons.
Son FitzAlan (his name is given as either Richard or William).
Death
Elizabeth de Bohun died on 3 April 1385 at the age of about thirty-five. She was buried at Lewes in Sussex. Her husband married secondly Philippa Mortimer on 15 August 1390, by whom he had a son: John FitzAlan (1394- after 1397).

Richard FitzAlan was executed by decapitation on 21 September 1397 at Tower Hill Cheapside, London for having committed high treason against King Richard.[5] His titles and estates were attainted until October 1400, when they were restored to his son and heir, Thomas FitzAlan, 5th Earl of Arundel, by the new king, Henry IV, who had ascended to the English throne upon the deposition of King Richard in 1399. 
de Bohun, Elizabeth (I7412)
 
5842 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Henry Percy, 9th Baron Percy of Topcliffe, 2nd Baron Percy of Alnwick (1298-1352) was the son of Henry de Percy, 1st Baron Percy of Alnwick, and Eleanor Fitzalan, daughter of Sir Richard FitzAlan, 8th Earl of Arundel, and sister of Edmund FitzAlan, 9th Earl of Arundel.

Henry was sixteen when his father died, so the Barony was placed in the custody of John de Felton.[1]

In 1316 he was granted the lands of Patrick IV, Earl of March, in Northumberland, by King Edward II of England.[2] In 1322, was made governor of Pickering Castle and of the town and castle of Scarborough and was later knighted at York.[3] Henry joined with other barons to remove the Despensers, who were favorites of Edward II.

Following a disastrous war with the Scots, Henry was empowered along with William Zouche to negotiate the Treaty of Edinburgh-Northampton.[4] This was an unpopular treaty and peace between England and Scotland lasted only five years.

He was appointed to Edward III's Council in 1327 and was given the manor and castle of Skipton. Was granted, by Edward III, the castle and barony of Warkworth in 1328. He was at the siege of Dunbar, the siege of Berwick and the Battle of Halidon Hill and was subsequently appointed constable of Berwick-upon-Tweed.[5] In 1346, Henry commanded the right wing of the English, at the Battle of Neville's Cross.[6]

He married Idonia, daughter of Robert Clifford, 1st Baron Clifford,[7] and had the following children;

Henry, b.1320, succeeded his father as 3rd Baron Percy of Alnwick
Thomas Percy, Bishop of Norwich
Roger
Maud Percy, married John Neville, 3rd Baron Neville
Eleanor Percy, married John FitzWalter, 2nd Baron FitzWalter (c.1315 - 18 October 1361)[8]
Isabel Percy, married Sir William de Aton, 2nd Lord Aton, and had a daughter, Katherine Aton. Katherine Aton's son, William Eure, married Maud FitzHugh, daughter of Henry FitzHugh, 3rd Baron FitzHugh.[9]
Margaret married in 1340 Sir Robert d'Umfraville of Pallethorp, Hessle, Yorks; she married as his 2nd wife before 1368 William Ferrers, 3rd Baron Ferrers of Groby (1332-1370) son of Henry Ferrers of Groby by Isabel de Verdun. Margaret died 1375 at Gyng, Essex.[10]
In 1329, he founded a chantry, to celebrate divine service for his soul.[11] 
Percy, 2nd Baron Percy, Henry (I7294)
 
5843 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugh Bigod
Born c. 1182
Died 18 February 1225
Title 3rd Earl of Norfolk
Tenure 1221-1225
Nationality English
Predecessor Roger Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk
Successor Roger Bigod, 4th Earl of Norfolk
Spouse(s) Maud Marshal
Parents Roger Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk
Ida de Tosny

Hugh Bigod (c. 1182 - 18 February 1225) was a member of the powerful early Norman Bigod family and was for a short time the 3rd Earl of Norfolk.
He was born c. 1182, the eldest son of Roger Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk by his wife Ida de Tosny.

Career
In 1215 he was one of the twenty-five sureties of Magna Carta of King John. He succeeded to his father’s estates (including Framlingham Castle) in 1221.

Marriage & progeny
In late 1206 or early 1207, Hugh married Maud Marshal (1192 - 27 March 1248), daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke (1147-1219), Marshal of England, by his wife Isabel de Clare, 4th Countess of Pembroke. They had four, or possibly five, children:

Roger Bigod, 4th Earl of Norfolk (c. 1209-1270), died without progeny.
Hugh Bigod (1211-1266), Justiciar of England. Married Joan de Stuteville, by whom he had issue.
Isabel Bigod (c. 1212- 1250), married twice: Firstly to Gilbert de Lacy (son of Walter de Lacy, Lord of Meath and his wife Margaret de Braose), by whom she had issue; Secondly to John FitzGeoffrey, Lord of Shere, by whom she had issue, including Maud FitzJohn, and Joan FitzJohn who married Theobald le Botiller, and from whom descended the Irish Earls of Ormond.
Ralph Bigod (born c. 1215)
Contrary to the assertion of Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, there is no evidence for a fourth son called Simon Bigod. A man of that name appears as a witness to one of Earl Hugh's charters (Morris, HBII 2), but as the eighteenth name in a list of twenty, suggesting no close connection to the main branch of the family. He is also named among the knights who surrendered to King John at Framlingham Castle in 1216. He was a probably a descendant of Hugh or William Bigod, half-brothers to Earl Roger II Bigod.

Simon le Bigot is recognized as the third son of Hugh Bigod in Francis Blomefield, 'North Erpingham Hundred: Felbrigg', in An Essay Towards A Topographical History of the County of Norfolk: Volume 8 (London, 1808), pp. 107-119. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-hist-norfolk/vol8/pp107-119 [accessed 2 June 2019]. He is also recognized by Gary Boyd Roberts in The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants to the American Colonies or the United States Vol 1 p528.

Death
Hugh died on 18 February 1225. Very soon after Hugh's death, his widow Maud remarried William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey. 
le Bigod, Hugh (I7343)
 
5844 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond (October 17, 1304 - January 6, 1338) was a noble in the Peerage of Ireland. He was born in Arklow, Wicklow, Ireland and died in Gowran, Kilkenny, Ireland.

Family
James Butler was the son of Edmund Butler, Earl of Carrick, (1268 - 13 September 1321), Justiciar of Ireland and Joan FitzGerald, Countess of Carrick. His paternal grandparents were Theobald le Botiller (1242-1285), (the son of Theobald le Botiller and Margery de Burgh) and Joan FitzJohn (FitzGeffrey) (d. 4 April 1303), who was the daughter of John FitzGeoffrey, Lord of Shere, Justiciar of Ireland and Isabel Bigod.[1] His maternal grandfather was John FitzThomas FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Kildare.

Titles
Upon his father's death in 1321, the only hereditary title James succeeded to was that of Chief Butler Of Ireland. As the 7th Chief Butler, he inherited the title from his ancestor Theobald Fitzwalter, or Theobald Butler, whose successors adopted the surname Butler.[2] The hereditary office of butler of Ireland was one of particular fealty to the Crown, whereby Theobald and his successors were to attend the Kings of England at their coronation.[3] A gap of seven years followed before James was rewarded for his especial loyalty with an earldom in his own right. His benefactor, the young King Edward III, created him the first Earl of Ormond by patent dated 2 November 1328, at Salisbury-the king was holding a Parliament there-with the creation fee of £10 a year.[4] Seven days later by patent dated at Wallingford, in consideration of his services and the better to enable him to support the honour, the king gave James the regalities, liberties, knights fees, and other royal privileges of the county of Tipperary, and the rights of a palatine in that county for life.

At about the same time, September 1328, the king created Roger Mortimer the 1st Earl of March, who would soon arouse the anger of those most loyal to the Crown.[5]

In 1336 James founded the friary of Carrick-Begg (a townland on the River Suir opposite Carrick-on-Suir) for Franciscan Friars. On 3 June of that year he gave the friars his castle and estate of Carrick, which they occupied on the feast day of SS. Peter and Paul.

Marriage and children
In 1327 James was offered a marriage arrangement that would give him the castle and manor of Kilpec, Hereford, for life. He married Eleanor de Bohun (1304-1363), daughter of The 4th Earl of Hereford and The Lady Elizabeth, daughter of King Edward I of England; they had 6 children together, four of which survived infancy:

Anne Butler (1328-1329)
Eleanor Butler (?)
John Butler (born and died an infant in 1330)
Elizabeth Butler (1330-1392), married (after July 20, 1359), Gerald FitzGerald, Earl of Desmond, son of Maurice FitzThomas, Earl of Desmond and Aveline FitzMorice, and had issue.
James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond (October 4, 1331 - October 18, 1382), married Elizabeth Darcy, daughter of Sir John Darcy, Lord Justice of Ireland, and Joan de Burgh, and had issue. He was born at Kilkenny and given in ward on 1 September 1344-his father, James Butler, had died in 1338-to Maurice, Earl of Desmond, for the fine of 2306 marks; and afterward to Sir John Darcy who married him to his daughter Elizabeth. James Butler the son was called the Noble Earl on account of his descent from the Royal Family through his mother.[6]
Petronella Butler (1332 - April 23, 1368), married Gilbert Talbot, 3rd Baron Talbot, son of Richard Talbot, 2nd Baron Talbot and Elizabeth de Comyn, and had issue.
James' successors held the title Earl of Ormond, which was later merged with the higher title of Duke of Ormonde; they held palatine rights in County Tipperary[5] until the County Palatine of Tipperary Act 1715. 
Boteler, Jamesle (I7420)
 
5845 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond (October 4, 1331 - October 18, 1382) was a noble in the Peerage of Ireland. He was Lord Justice of Ireland in 1359, 1364, and 1376, and a dominant political leader in Ireland in the 1360s and 1370s.

The son of James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond and Lady Eleanor de Bohun, James was born at Kilkenny Castle and given in ward, September 1, 1344, to Maurice FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Desmond for the fine of 2,306 marks; and afterward to Sir John Darcy who married him to his daughter Elizabeth. He was usually called The Noble Earl, being a great-grandson, through his mother, of King Edward I of England.[1] He died at Knocktopher Castle in Kilkenny, Leinster, Ireland.

Career
In 1362, he slew 600 of Mac Murrough's followers at Teigstaffen (County Kilkenny). On 22 April 1364, was appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland to Lionel of Antwerp, Duke of Clarence: Clarence, from his first arrival in Ireland, placed great trust in him, and for a few years it seems that as Deputy he was almost all-powerful. In the 1360s he clashed with Maurice FitzGerald, 4th Earl of Kildare. In 1364 the Irish House of Commons sent a delegation to England, headed by Kildare, to complain of misgovernment, and to ask for the removal of "corrupt" officials, some of whom had links to Ormond. A number of these officials were removed, but Ormond's position was not seriously threatened.

He was Lord Justice by 24 July 1376, with a salary of £500 a year, in which office he was continued by King Richard II of England. On 2 April 1372, he was made constable of Dublin Castle, with the fee of £18 5s. a year.[2] He was summoned to the Parliaments held by Richard II.

He died 18 October 1382 in his castle of Knocktopher (near which he had, in 1356, founded a Friary for Carmelite friars). He was buried in St. Canice's Cathedral, Kilkenny.

Marriage and Children
On May 15, 1346, he married Elizabeth Darcy, daughter of Sir John Darcy, Knight of Knaith (another Lord Justice of Ireland) and Joan de Burgh. They had five children:

James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond (1362-1405).
Thomas Butler, Justice of Cork 1359-1396
Eleanor Butler 1350-1392, married Gerald FitzGerald, 3rd Earl of Desmond
Joan Butler 1360-1393 (plague) married Teige O'Carroll, Prince of Éile
Ralph Butler 1356-1367 
Boteler, Jamesle (I7414)
 
5846 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond (c. 1359 - 7 September 1405), was a noble in the Peerage of Ireland. He acceded to the title in 1382 and built Gowran Castle three years later in 1385 close to the centre of Gowran, making it his usual residence, whence his common epithet, The Earl of Gowran. James died in Gowran Castle in 1405 and is buried in St. Mary's Collegiate Church Gowran together with his father James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond, his grandfather James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond and his great great grandfather Edmund Butler, Earl of Carrick and 6th Chief Butler of Ireland.[1] James the 2nd Earl was usually called The Noble Earl, being a great-grandson, through his mother, Eleanor de Bohun, of King Edward I of England.

Career
In 1391 he purchased Kilkenny Castle from the Despencer family.[2][3] He also built the castle of Dunfert (also called Danefort) and in 1386 founded a Friary of minorities at Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire.[4]

In 1384 he was deputy to Sir Philip Courtenay, the then Lieutenant of Ireland, who was the nephew of the Archbishop of Canterbury, William Courtenay. The two men for a time were united in opposition to Robert Wikeford, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, who resented the Butler dynasty's power and influence. Butler's title was Governor of Ireland. A rift occurred between them over the disagreement between the Archbishop of Canterbury and Richard II with Butler taking the side of the latter. Insurrection followed which prompted Richard II to an expedition under the banner of his close friend Robert de Vere, Duke of Ireland to quell it. This enterprise was led by Sir John Stanley who was accompanied by Bishop Alexander de Balscot of Meath and Sir Robert Crull.[5] Butler joined them upon their arrival in Ireland. The result of its success was Stanley's appointment as Lieutenant of Ireland, Bishop Alexander as chancellor, Crull as treasurer, and Butler again as governor.[6] On 25 July 1392, he was appointed Lord Justice of Ireland as he was again in 1401. On the departure of Sir Stephen Scrope to England on 26 October 1404, by commission, dated at Carlow, 12 February 1388-9, he was appointed keeper of the peace and governor of counties Kilkenny and Tipperary. He was vested with full power to treat with, to execute, to protect, and to give safe conduct to any rebels, etc. In 1397 he assisted Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March, the Lord Lieutenant, against O Brien, and in 1390 took prisoner Teige O Carrol, Prince of Elye.

Marriage and Children
Some time before 17 June 1386, he married Anne Welles, the daughter of John de Welles, 4th Baron Welles by his spouse Maud (née de Roos). Anne Welles died on 13 November 1397, around the age of 37. They had five children:

James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond (1392-1452), married firstly Joan de Beauchamp, daughter of William Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny and Lady Joan FitzAlan, and had issue. He married secondly, Lady Joan, widow of Jenico Grey, and daughter and heiress of Gerald FitzGerald, 5th Earl of Kildare, but had no children.
Sir Richard Butler of Polestown, county Kilkenny, (born c.1396). His godfather was King Richard II of England. He married Catherine, daughter of Gildas O'Reilly of Cavar, Lord of East Breffny, and had issue.
Anne Butler, married John Wogan, and had issue.
Sir Philip Butler, married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Cockayne, Chief Baron of the Exchequer, by his wife Ida de Grey, and had issue. Ancestor of Barons Boteler of Brantfield.[7][8][9]
Sir Ralph Butler, married Margaret de Berwick, and had issue.
In 1399 the Earl married Katherine FitzGerald of Desmond. They had four children:

James "Gallda" Butler,
Edmund Butler
Gerald Butler
Theobald Butler
By an unknown mistress he had at least one illegitimate son, Thomas Le Boteller (died 1420) aka Thomas Bacach (the lame). Thomas joined the order of Knights Hospitaller. He was Lord Deputy of Ireland and Prior of Kilmainham. He was a distinguished soldier who led an Irish force of 700 men at the Siege of Rouen in 1419. 
Boteler, Jamesle (I7437)
 
5847 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond
Born May 23, 1393
Kilkenny, Ireland
Died August 23, 1452
Dublin, Ireland
Buried St. Mary's Abbey, Dublin
Spouse(s) Joan de Beauchamp
Elizabeth FitzGerald

Issue
James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond
John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormond
Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond
Elizabeth Butler
Anne Butler

Father James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond
Mother Anne Welles
James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond (23 May 1393 - 23 August 1452) was the son of James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond. He was called 'The White Earl' and was esteemed for his learning. He was the patron of the Irish literary work, 'The Book of the White Earl'. His career was marked by his long and bitter feud with the Talbot family.

Family
James Butler was the second but eldest surviving son of James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond, and his first wife Anne Welles, daughter of John de Welles, 4th Baron Welles by Maude de Ros, daughter of William de Ros, 2nd Baron de Ros of Helmsley.[1]

Career
He prevailed upon Henry V to create a King of Arms in Ireland, with the title of Ireland King of Arms (altered by Edward VI to Ulster King of Arms), and he gave lands in perpetuity to the College of Heralds, London. He was appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland in 1405, and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in 1420, 1425, and 1442. He appointed James FitzGerald, 6th Earl of Desmond as Seneschal of Imokilly in 1420.

The Butler-Talbot feud
His term as Lord Lieutenant was marked by his bitter feud with the Talbot family, headed by John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury and his brother Richard, Archbishop of Dublin. The dispute reached its height in 1442 when Archbishop Talbot, supposedly acting on behalf of the Irish Parliament, presented the Privy Council with a long list of grievances against Ormonde, who was accused of being old and feeble (in fact he was only fifty, which was not considered a great age even in the fifteenth century), and of having lost most of his Irish estates through negligence; there were also vague references to treason and "other crimes which could not be named".[2] The Council summoned Ormonde to account for his actions: he defended himself vigorously, and made detailed counter-charges against the Archbishop. The Council took no action against him. Instead it rebuked both sides to the dispute severely for disrupting the good governance of Ireland. The feud gradually cooled off, and friendly relations between the two families were finally established by the marriage of Ormonde's daughter Elizabeth to Shrewsbury's son and heir John.[3]

Later years
Ormonde remained an influential figure in Irish politics, although his later years were troubled by fresh quarrels with the Earl of Desmond, with Giles Thorndon, the Treasurer of Ireland, with Thomas Fitzgerald, Prior of the Knights Hospitaller at Kilmainham, and with Richard Wogan, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland. Wogan in particular complained that he was no longer able to endure the burden of Ormonde's "heavy lordship" and asked to be allowed to deputise his duties.[4] Relations between Ormonde and Prior Fitzgerald became so bad that in 1444 it was seriously suggested that they settle the matter through trial by combat, but King Henry VI intervened personally to persuade them to make peace.[5]

In 1440 Ormonde had a grant of the temporalities of the See of Cashel for ten years, following the death of the Archbishop of Cashel, Richard O'Hedian. He built the castles of Nenagh, Roscrea and Templemore in north County Tipperary and Tulleophelim (or Tullowphelim) in County Carlow. He gave the manor and advowson of Hickcote in Buckinghamshire to the Hospital of St Thomas of Acre in London, which was confirmed by the Parliament of England (in the third year of Henry VI) at the suit of his son.[6]

Since his father-in-law had no surviving son, Ormond, in right of his second wife Elizabeth, claimed possession of the Earldom of Kildare, and for some years was able to keep the legitimate heir out of his inheritance.

He died in Dublin on 23 August 1452 on his return from an expedition against Connor O'Mulrian, and was buried in St. Mary's Abbey near Dublin.

Marriage and Children
He married firstly, in 1413, Joan Beauchamp (1396-1430), the daughter of William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny and Joan Arundel, by whom he had three sons and two daughters:[7]

James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond, who died without any legitimate children.
John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormond, who died without any legitimate children.
Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond.
Elizabeth Butler, who married John Talbot, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury.
Anne Butler, who died unmarried.
He married secondly, by licence dated 18 July 1432, Elizabeth FitzGerald (c. 1398 - 6 August 1452), widow of John Grey, 2nd Baron Grey of Codnor (died 14 September 1430), and daughter of Gerald FitzGerald, 5th Earl of Kildare and his second wife Agnes Darcy, by whom he had no children. 
Boteler, Jamesle (I7312)
 
5848 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joan de Beauchamp
Baroness Bergavenny
Born 1375
Arundel Castle, Sussex, England
Died 14 November 1435
Buried Black Friars, Hereford, England
Noble family Fitzalan
Spouse(s) William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny
(m. 1392-1411; his death)

Issue
Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester
Joan de Beauchamp, Countess of Ormond
Father Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Arundel
Mother Elizabeth de Bohun

Joan de Beauchamp, Baroness Bergavenny (née FitzAlan; 1375 - 14 November 1435) was an English noblewoman, and the wife of William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny of the Welsh Marches.

Family and lineage
Lady Joan FitzAlan was born in 1375, at Arundel Castle, Sussex, England, one of the seven children of Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Arundel, Earl of Surrey, and his first wife Elizabeth de Bohun. Her only surviving brother was Thomas Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel, of whom Joan was his co-heiress. She had an older sister Lady Elizabeth FitzAlan who married as her second husband Thomas Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk. Her paternal grandparents were Richard Fitzalan, 10th Earl of Arundel and Eleanor of Lancaster, and her maternal grandparents were William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton and Elizabeth de Badlesmere.

On 3 April 1385, her mother died. Joan was about ten years old. Her father married secondly, Philippa Mortimer on 15 August 1390, by whom he had a son, John Fitzalan, who was born in 1394.[1] John died sometime after 1397.[2]

On 21 September 1397, Joan's father, the Earl of Arundel, who was also one of the Lords Appellant, was beheaded on Tower Hill, London, on charges of high treason against King Richard II of England. The Earl had always enjoyed much popularity with the citizens of London. His titles and estates were forfeited to the Crown.[3]

In October 1400, the new king Henry IV who had ascended the throne following Richard's deposition in 1399, restored the titles and estates to Thomas Fitzalan, Joan's brother. He became the 12th Earl of Arundel and Earl of Surrey. Although he married Beatrice, an illegitimate daughter of King John I of Portugal and Inez Perez Esteves, he died childless on 13 October 1415. The Earldom and castle of Arundel passed to a cousin John Fitzalan, 13th Earl of Arundel, the remainder of his inheritance was divided among Joan and her two surviving sisters, Elizabeth and Margaret.[citation needed]

Marriage and issue
On 23 July 1392, Joan was married to William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny (c.1344 - 8 May 1411) the son of Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick and Katherine Mortimer. He was more than thirty years Joan's senior.[citation needed]

The marriage produced a son and a daughter:

Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester, 2nd Baron Bergavenny (born before 1397 - died 1422), married Isabel le Despenser, daughter of Thomas le Despenser, 1st Earl of Gloucester and Constance of York, by whom he had one daughter Elizabeth de Beauchamp, Lady of Abergavenny.
Joan de Beauchamp (1396 - 3 August 1430), married 28 August 1413 James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond, son of James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond and Anne Welles, by whom she had five children, including Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond. Anne Boleyn and Mary Boleyn were notable descendants of Joan and her husband.
Death
Joan, Baroness Bergavenny, died on 14 November 1435, at the age of 60. She was buried in Black Friars, Hereford.[2] 
FitzAlan, Joan (I7419)
 
5849 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joan de Beauchamp
Countess of Ormond
Born 1396
Died 3 or 5 August 1430 (aged 33-34)
Buried Mercers' Chapel, St Thomas of Acre, London
Noble family Beauchamp
Spouse(s) James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond

Issue
James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond
John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormond
Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond
Elizabeth Butler, Countess of Shrewsbury
Anne Butler

Father William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny
Mother Lady Joan FitzAlan

Joan Beauchamp, Countess of Ormond (1396 - 3 or 5 August 1430) was the first wife of James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond, and the mother of his five children. Their principal residence was Kilkenny Castle in Ireland.

Joan de Beauchamp was the daughter of William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny and his first wife, Lady Joan FitzAlan. She had a brother and sister:[1]

Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester, 2nd Baron Bergavenny (c.1397 - 18 March 1422), who married Lady Isabel le Despenser (27 July 1400 - 26 or 27 December 1439), by whom he had one daughter, Elizabeth de Beauchamp, Baroness Bergavenny.[2]
Elizabeth de Beauchamp.[1]
Joan's paternal grandparents were Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick and Lady Katherine Mortimer, and her maternal grandparents were Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel and Elizabeth de Bohun.

Joan de Beauchamp died 3 or 5 August 1430, and was buried in the Mercers' Chapel, St Thomas of Acre, London.[3]

Marriage and issue
She married, before 28 August 1413, James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond, by whom she had three sons and two daughters:[3]

James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond, who died without legitimate issue.
John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormond, who died without legitimate issue.
Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond, whose daughter Margaret was a grandmother of Anne Boleyn.
Elizabeth Butler, who married John Talbot, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury and had issue.
Anne Butler, who died unmarried. 
Beauchamp, Joan (I7315)
 
5850 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joan FitzGerald
Countess of Carrick
Born c. 1281
Fermoy, County Cork, Ireland
Died 2 May 1320
Laraghbryan, County Kildare, Ireland
Noble family FitzGerald
Spouse(s) Edmund Butler, Earl of Carrick

Issue
James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond
John Butler

Father John FitzThomas FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Kildare, Baron of Offaly
Mother Blanche de La Roche
Joan FitzGerald, Countess of Carrick (1281 - 2 May 1320) was an Irish noblewoman, and the wife of Edmund Butler, Earl of Carrick, Justiciar of Ireland (1268 - 13 September 1321). She was the mother of James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond.

Family
Joan FitzGerald was born in Fermoy, Co. Cork, Ireland, in 1281, the daughter of John FitzThomas FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Kildare, Baron of Offaly, and Blanche de La Roche. She had two brothers, Gerald (died 1303), and Thomas FitzGerald, 2nd Earl of Kildare (died 5 April 1328), who married Joan de Burgh (c. 1300 - 23 April 1359), daughter of Richard Óg de Burgh, 2nd Earl of Ulster and Margaret de Burgh of Lanvalley, by whom he had issue. Joan had one sister, Elizabeth, who married Nicholas Netterville, by whom she had issue.

Joan FitzGerald's paternal grandparents were Thomas FitzMaurice FitzGerald and Rohesia de St. Michael, and her maternal grandparents were John de La Roche, Lord of Fermoy, and Maud de Waleys (Walsh). The latter was a daughter of Henry le Walleis, Mayor of London.

Marriage and issue
In 1302, Joan married Sir Edmund Butler, Earl of Carrick, the son of Theobald le Botiller (1242-1285) and Joan FitzJohn (FitzGeoffrey) (died 4 April 1303). The marriage produced two sons:

James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond (1305 - 6 January 1338), who married Lady Eleanor de Bohun (17 October 1304 - 7 October 1363), by whom he had four children, including James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond who in his turn married Elizabeth Darcy and had issue, from whom descended the subsequent Earls of Ormond.
John Butler of Clonamicklon
In 1307, Sir Edmund and Joan's father dispersed rebels in Offaly who had burnt the town of Leix and destroyed the castle of Geashill.

In 1315, Sir Edmund Butler was appointed Justiciar of Ireland.

That same year, in July, Joan's husband and her father led the Munster and Leinster contingent of armed forces who were allied with the combined armies of Richard de Burgh, 2nd Earl of Ulster and Felim mac Aedh Ua Conchobair, King of Connacht against the Scottish and Irish troops of Edward Bruce who had been crowned King Of Ireland at Carrickfergus. They were repelled by Bruce, at the River Bann near Coleraine and forced to retreat. Sir Edmund, due to lack of supplies, returned to Ormond.

Edward Bruce was later killed in 1318, at the Battle of Faughart.

On 1 September 1315, for services against the Scottish raiders and Ulster rebels, Edmund Butler was granted a charter of the castle and manor of Karryk Macgryffin and Roscrea to hold to him and his heirs sub nomine et honore comitis de Karryk. However, the charter, while creating an Earldom, failed to make Edmund Butler's issue Earls of Carrick.[1]

Joan's father, John FitzThomas FitzGerald, died a year later on 10 September 1316, several months after being created Earl of Kildare by King Edward II.

Death
Joan FitzGerald died on 2 May 1320 in Laraghbryan, County Kildare. She was the ancestress of the earls of Ormond, the queen consort Anne Boleyn and Diana, Princess of Wales. 
John, Joan Fitz (I7313)
 
5851 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John FitzGeoffrey
Arms of Eustace FitzJohn, Lord Vesci.svg
Arms of John FitzGeoffrey.
Quarterly, or and gules, a border vair.[1]
Born 1205?
Shere, Surrey,
Kingdom of England
Died 23 November 1258
Spouse(s) Isabel Bigod
Father Geoffrey Fitz Peter, 1st Earl of Essex
Mother Aveline de Clare

John FitzGeoffrey, Lord of Shere and Justiciar of Ireland (1205? in Shere, Surrey, England - 23 November 1258) was an English nobleman.

John Fitz Geoffrey was the son of Geoffrey Fitz Peter, 1st Earl of Essex and Aveline de Clare, daughter of Roger de Clare, 2nd Earl of Hertford and his wife Maud de Saint-Hilaire.

He was appointed Justiciar of Ireland, serving from 1245 to 1255.[2]

He was not entitled to succeed his half-brother as Earl of Essex in 1227, the Earldom having devolved from his father's first wife. He was the second husband of Isabel Bigod, daughter of Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk and his wife Maud Marshal of Pembroke. They had six children, one being Maud who married William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick.

Children
Note: The males took the FitzJohn surname ("fitz" means "son of").

John FitzJohn of Shere (?-1275). Married Margary, daughter of Philip Basset of Wycombe (?-1271).
Richard FitzJohn of Shere (?-1297). Lord FitzJohn 1290. Married as her first husband, Emma (?-1332).
Maud FitzJohn (? - 16/18 April 1301). Married firstly to Gerard de Furnival, Lord of Hallamshire (?-1261). Married secondly to William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick, son of William de Beauchamp of Elmley, Worcestershire and his wife Isabel Mauduit. Had issue.
Isabel. Married Robert de Vipont, Lord of Westmorland (?-1264). Had issue.
Aveline (1229-1274). Married Walter de Burgh, Earl of Ulster (1230-1271). Had issue, including Richard Óg de Burgh, 2nd Earl of Ulster who in turn married Margaret de Burgh, by whom he had ten children.
Joan (? - 4 April 1303). Married Theobald le Botiller. Had issue, from whom descend the Butler Earls of Ormond. 
Geoffrey, John Fitz (I7320)
 
5852 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Juliana FitzMaurice
Lady of Inchiquin and Youghal
Lady of Thomond
Born c. 1263
Dublin, Ireland
Died 24 September 1300 (aged about 37)
Noble family FitzGerald
Spouse(s) Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond, Lord of Inchiquin and Youghal
Nicholas Avenel
Adam de Cretynges
Issue
Maud de Clare
Gilbert de Clare, Lord of Thomond
Richard de Clare, Steward of Forest of Essex
Margaret de Clare, Baroness Badlesmere
Father Maurice FitzGerald, 3rd Lord of Offaly, Justiciar of Ireland
Mother Maud de Prendergast
Juliana FitzMaurice, Lady of Thomond (12 April 1266 - 29 September 1300) was a Norman-Irish noblewoman, the daughter of Maurice FitzGerald, 3rd Lord of Offaly, and the wife of Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond, a powerful Anglo-Norman baron in Ireland, who was a younger brother of Gilbert de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford. Juliana was married three times; Thomas being her first. She is sometimes referred to as Juliane FitzMaurice.

Early life and family
Juliana FitzMaurice was born on 12 April 1266 in Dublin, Ireland, the eldest daughter of Maurice FitzGerald II, 3rd Lord of Offaly, Justiciar of Ireland and Maud de Prendergast. She had a sister Amabel who married but was childless. Her first cousin was John FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Kildare. Her paternal grandparents were Maurice FitzGerald I, 2nd Lord of Offaly and Juliana, and her maternal grandparents were Sir Gerald de Prendergast of Beauvoir and the unnamed daughter of Richard Mor de Burgh, Lord of Connacht and Egidia de Lacy. Juliana's maternal ancestors included Brian Boru, Dermot McMurrough, and Maud de Braose.

Juliana's father, Maurice FitzGerald, was married twice, first to Maud de Prendergast and secondly to Emmeline Longespee. It has been some source of contention as to which of his two wives had issue Juliana. However, at her death, Emmeline Longespee did not mention Juliana as her daughter and heir; rather, Emmeline's heir was her niece, Maud la Zouche, wife of Robert la Zouche, 1st Lord Holland. It has been concluded by several reputable researchers that Juliana's mother was Maurice FitzGerald's first wife, Maud de Prendergast. Supporters for Emmeline Longespee being the mother have yet to produce any counter-evidence beyond hearsay.

Marriages and issue
In 1278, at the age of 12, Juliana married her first husband, Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond, Lord of Inchiquin and Youghal. He was the second eldest son of Richard de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford, 2nd Earl of Gloucester and Maud de Lacy. Thomas was a friend of King Edward I of England, with whom he went on a Crusade. He held many important posts including the Office of Governor of Colchester Castle (1266), Governor of the City of London (1273). He was also the commander of the English forces in Munster, Ireland, and on 26 January 1276, he was granted the lordship of Thomond. He was born in 1245, which made him about eighteen years older than Juliana. Throughout their marriage, the couple lived in both Ireland and England. It is recorded that on 5 May 1284, King Edward notified his lieges and bailiffs in Ireland of the attorneys who were to act on behalf of Thomas and Juliana as they were in England at the time. This arrangement continued for another three years except while they were residing in Ireland.[1]

Thomas and Juliana had four children:[2]

Maud de Clare (c. 1276-1326/27), married firstly on 3 November 1295 Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford, by whom she had issue; she married secondly after 1314 Robert de Welle.
Gilbert de Clare, Lord of Thomond (3 February 1281-1308)
Richard de Clare, Steward of Forest of Essex, 1st Lord Clare, Lord of Thomond (after 1281 - 10 May 1318 at the Battle of Dysert O'Dea), married a woman by the name of Joan by whom he fathered one son, Thomas.
Margaret de Clare (c. 1 April 1287 - 22 October 1333), married firstly in 1303 Gilbert de Umfraville; she married secondly before 30 June 1308 Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Lord Badlesmere, by whom she had four daughters and one son.
The era was marked by unrest and strife as civil war was waged between rival factions of the powerful O'Brien clan. In 1277, Juliana's husband had his former ally Brian Ruad, the deposed King of Thomond, hanged for treason at Bunratty.[3]

Thomas died on 29 August 1287, leaving Juliana a widow at the age of twenty-four with four small children; the youngest, Margaret was not quite five months old. On an unknown date she married her second husband, Nicholas Avenel. He presumably died before 11 December 1291/16 February 1292, as this is when she married her third husband, Adam de Cretynges.[4][5]

Death and legacy
Juliana died on 24 September 1300. Her numerous descendants included Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland who married Lady Joan Beaufort and thus their descendant, the English king Edward IV. By Edward IV's daughter, Elizabeth of York, consort of Henry VII, she was an ancestress to all subsequent monarchs of England and the current British Royal Family. Henry VIII's queens consort Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Catherine Howard, and Catherine Parr also descended from her. 
FitzMaurice, Juliana (I7299)
 
5853 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lady Margaret Butler
Lady Boleyn
Born c. 1454
Kilkenny Castle, County Kilkenny, Ireland
Died 1539 (aged 84-85)
England
Noble family Butler
Spouse(s) Sir William Boleyn

Issue
Anne Boleyn
Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire
John Boleyn
Anthony Boleyn
Jane Boleyn
Alice Boleyn
Margaret Boleyn
William Boleyn
James Boleyn
Edward Boleyn
Father Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond
Mother Anne Hankford

Lady Margaret Butler, Lady Boleyn[2] (c. 1454 [3] - 1539) was an Irish noblewoman, the daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond. She married Sir William Boleyn and through her eldest son Sir Thomas Boleyn, was the paternal grandmother of Anne Boleyn, second wife of King Henry VIII of England, and great-grandmother of Anne and Henry's daughter, Elizabeth I of England.

Life
She was born at Kilkenny Castle in County Kilkenny, Ireland, the daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond and Anne Hankford. Her paternal grandparents were James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond and Joan de Beauchamp. Her maternal grandparents were Sir Richard Hankford (c. 1397 - 1431) and Anne de Montagu.

She had two sisters: Anne who married Sir James de St. Leger, by whom she had issue, and Elizabeth. Anne and Margaret claimed to be co-heiresses of their father and the Earldom of Ormond, but their cousin, Piers Butler, who had physical control of the Irish estates and the backing of the Irish Council, claimed to be the heir through the direct male line. In 1520, the King granted her a pardon for the alienation of Fritwell Manor, Oxfordshire.[4] The issue wasn't resolved until 1528, by which time Margaret's position was good, with the influence of her granddaughter, then betrothed to Henry VIII, and Margaret's son, Thomas Boleyn's, status as King's adviser.[5]

In 1465 Margaret married Sir William Boleyn, and in total they had ten children. Her son, the ambitious courtier Sir Thomas Boleyn, became the first Earl of Wiltshire and by his marriage to Elizabeth Howard, the Duke of Norfolk's daughter, was the father of Anne Boleyn, Queen Consort of England. Thus, Margaret was great-grandmother to Queen Elizabeth I of England.

Margarets role in the rise and fall of the Boleyn clan is unknown, although there has been much speculation and theorizing.[citation needed]

She was the last of the Boleyns to live in Hever Castle as it was given to Anne of Cleves in 1540 sometime after her death. Margaret's lands were claimed by her only surviving grandchild, Mary Boleyn and her husband William Stafford.[6]

Issue
Name Birth Death Notes
Anne 18 November 1475 6 January 1555 married John Shelton; had issue
Thomas, 1st Earl of Wiltshire and Ormonde c. 1477 12 March 1539 married Lady Elizabeth Howard; had issue, including Queen Anne Boleyn
John 1481 1484
Anthony 1483 30 September 1493
Jane c. 1485 unknown married Sir Philip Calthorpe
Alice c. 1487 1538 married Robert Clere
Margaret c. 1489 unknown married John Sackville, Esq.
William c. 1491 18 December 1571
James c. 1493 5 December 1561 married Elizabeth Wood
Edward c. 1496 unknown married Anne Tempest
 
Butler, Margaret (I7326)
 
5854 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maud de Clare
Baroness de Welles
Baroness de Clifford[1]
Born 1276[2]
Tewkesbury, Tewkesbury Hundred, Gloucestershire, England
Died 4 May 1327
Badlesmere, Faversham Hundred, Lathe of Scray, Kent, England
Family de Clare
Spouse Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford[1]
Robert de Welles, 2nd Baron Welles[2]
Issue
Roger de Clifford, 2nd Baron de Clifford[1][2]
Robert de Clifford, 3rd Baron de Clifford[1][2]
Idonia de Clifford, Baroness de Percy[1][2]
Father Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond[1][2][3]
Mother Juliana FitzGerald of Offaly[1][2][3]
Occupation Baroness de Welles
Maud de Clare, Baroness de Welles was the eldest daughter of Thomas de Clare, Lord of Inchiquin and Youghal, Lord of Thomond, Lord of Bunratty Castle (1245-1287) and Juliana FitzGerald (1236-1290).[1][4] She married two times. Her first marriage was to Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford, 1st Lord of Skipton (1274-1314) on 3 November 1295 by which she had four children.[1][3][4] Her second marriage was to Sir Robert de Welles, 2nd Baron Welles, Constable of Pendragon Castle (1297-1326) on 16 Nov 1315. They had no children.[4] She was born in 1276 in Tewkesbury, Tewkesbury Hundred, Gloucestershire, England and moved to Badlesmere to be near her sister, Margaret de Clare, Baroness Badlesmere. She died in Badlesmere in 1327 twice a widow.[4]

Life
Maud de Clare had an unfortunate life full of drama and controversy. In 1314 at the Battle of Bannockburn both her husband Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford and her nephew Gilbert de Clare, 8th Earl of Gloucester, 7th Earl of Hertford, 10th Lord of Clare, 5th Lord of Glamorgan (1291-1314) were both killed in battle.[3][4] Her second marriage to Robert de Welles, 2nd Baron Welles was done without royal licence and this angered the King of England. She was initially the co-heiress to her nephew's estates along with her sister, Margaret de Clare, Baroness Badlesmere, before the King issued the estates to Lord de Clare's three sisters. Some say this is due to the fact that she married Lord de Welles without royal licence.[4] Maud de Clare and her Sister Margaret were the next heirs of their father's estate which included the Stewardship of the Forest of Essex, the town and castle at Thomond and numerous other properties in Ireland.[4] 
de Clare, Maud (I7297)
 
5855 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maud Marshal
Countess of Norfolk
Countess of Surrey
Born 1192
Died 27 March 1248
Noble family Marshal
De Clare
Spouse(s) Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk
William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey

Issue
Roger Bigod, 4th Earl of Norfolk
Hugh Bigod
Isabel Bigod
Ralph Bigod
William Bigod
John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey
Isabella de Warenne
Father William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke
Mother Isabel de Clare, suo jure 4th Countess of Pembroke
Maud Marshal, Countess of Norfolk, Countess of Surrey (1192 - 27 March 1248) was an Anglo-Norman noblewoman and a wealthy co-heiress of her father William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke, and her mother Isabel de Clare suo jure 4th Countess of Pembroke. Maud was their eldest daughter.[1] She had two husbands: Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk, and William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey.

Maud was also known as Matilda Marshal.

Maud's birthdate is unknown other than being post 1191. She was the eldest daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke and Isabel de Clare, 4th Countess of Pembroke, herself one of the greatest heiresses in Wales and Ireland. Maud had five brothers and four younger sisters. She was a co-heiress to her parents' extensive rich estates.

Her paternal grandparents were John FitzGilbert Marshal and Sybilla of Salisbury, and her maternal grandparents were Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, known as "Strongbow", and Aoife of Leinster.

Marriages and issue
Sometime before Lent in 1207, Maud married her first husband, Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk. It was through this marriage between Maud and Hugh that the post of Earl Marshal of England came finally to the Howard’s (Dukes of Norfolk).[2] In 1215, Hugh was one of the twenty-five sureties of the Magna Carta. He came into his inheritance in 1221, thus Maud became the Countess of Norfolk at that time. Together they had five children:[3]

Roger Bigod, 4th Earl of Norfolk (1209-1270) He died childless.
Hugh Bigod (1212-1266), Justiciar of England. Married Joan de Stuteville, by whom he had issue.
Isabel Bigod (c. 1215-1250), married firstly Gilbert de Lacy of Ewyas Lacy, by whom she had issue; she married secondly John Fitzgeoffrey, Lord of Shere, by whom she had issue.
Ralph Bigod (born c. 1218, date of death unknown), married Bertha de Furnival, by whom he had one child.
Contrary to the assertion of Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, there is no evidence for a fourth son called Simon Bigod. A man of that name appears as a witness to one of Earl Hugh's charters (Morris, HBII 2), but as the eighteenth name in a list of twenty, suggesting no close connection to the main branch of the family. He is also named among the knights who surrendered to King John at Framlingham Castle in 1216. He was probably a descendant of Hugh or William Bigod, half-brothers to Earl Roger II Bigod.

Hugh Bigod died in 1225. Maud married her second husband, William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey before 13 October that same year. Together they had two children:

Isabella de Warenne (c. 1228 - before 20 September 1282), married Hugh d'Aubigny, 5th Earl of Arundel. She died childless.
John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey (August 1231 - c. 29 September 1304), in 1247 married Alice de Lusignan, a half-sister of King Henry III of England, by whom he had three children.
Maud's second husband died in 1240. Her youngest son John succeeded his father as the 6th Earl of Surrey, but as he was a minor, Peter of Savoy, uncle of Queen consort Eleanor of Provence, was guardian of his estates.

Death
Maud died on 27 March 1248 at the age of about fifty-six years and was buried at Tintern Abbey with her mother, possibly her maternal grandmother, and two of her brothers. 
Marshal, Maud (I7344)
 
5856 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maurice FitzMaurice FitzGerald
Justiciar of Ireland
Born 1238
Wexford, Ireland
Died Before 10 November 1286
Ross, County Wexford, Ireland
Spouse(s) Maud de Prendergast
Emmeline Longespee
Issue
by Maud de Prendergast
Amabel FitzGerald
by Emmeline Longespee
Juliana FitzGerald, Lady of Thomond
Father Maurice FitzGerald, 2nd Lord of Offaly
Mother Juliana de Grenville
Maurice FitzMaurice FitzGerald (1238 - 2 September 1277) was an Irish magnate born in Ireland; a soldier, and Justiciar of Ireland from 1272 to 1273. His family would come to epitomize the ideal of cultural synthesis in Ireland, becoming More Irish than the Irish themselves, fusing Gaelic and Norman customs in Irish identity. "But others say that he never enjoyed that lordship himself, but passed it the son and grandson of his eldest brother Gerald."[1]

Career
He was born in 1238 in Wexford, Ireland, the second son of Maurice FitzGerald, 2nd Lord of Offaly and Juliana de Grenville. He had three brothers, Gerald fitz Maurice II (died 1243), Thomas fitz Maurice (died 1271), and David fitz Maurice (died without issue). Maurice was known by the nickname of Maurice Mael (from an old word meaning "devotee" in Irish). He was granted his father's lands in Connacht in exchange for quitclaiming the barony of Offaly sometime before 20 May 1257,[2] when his father Maurice FitzGerald II died at Youghal Monastery.

Before his father died, Maurice was custos of Offaly, but after the 2nd Lord of Offaly died, the countess of Lincoln, Margaret de Quincy, sued him for custody of Offaly.[3]

Terrible feuds raged in his time between the Geraldines and the DeBurghs.[4] Maurice FitzMaurice and his nephew John, son of his brother Thomas,[5] captured the justiciar, Richard de la Rochelle, Theobald Butler IV, and John de Cogan I (whose son was married to Maurice FitzGerald III's sister, Juliana). The capture of the three magnates led to a private war in Ireland, with the Geraldines on one side and Walter de Burgh and Geoffrey de Geneville on the other. However, the Second Barons' War in England forced them to come to a temporary peace while they battled Montfortians in the English Midlands in 1266.[6]

In May 1265, Maurice FitzMaurice was among the chief magnates in Ireland summoned to inform King Henry III of England and his son Prince Edward about conditions in the country, and again in June 1265. These were the result of the private war between the Geraldines and Walter de Burgh, lord of Connacht (who was later made the 1st earl of Ulster). Maurice was appointed Justiciar of Ireland on 23 June 1272[4] following the accidental death of his predecessor, James de Audley on 11 June of that year; his father had served in the same capacity from 1232 to 1245. Maurice himself held the post until September 1273, when he was succeeded by Sir Geoffrey de Geneville, Seigneur de Vaucouleurs.

He held four knight's fees in both Lea and Geashill from Roger Mortimer, 1st Baron Mortimer who had inherited them from his wife, Maud de Braose.[7]

In 1276, he led a force of men from Connacht against the Irish of County Wicklow. Maurice's contingent joined the main army of English settlers jointly commanded by his son-in-law, Thomas de Clare, Lord of Inchiquin and Youghal who had been made Lord of Thomond earlier that same year, and Sir Geoffrey de Geneville, Maurice's successor as Justiciar of Ireland. The English under Thomas de Clare and Geoffrey de Geneville attacked the Irish at Glenmalure, but were defeated and suffered heavy losses.[8]

Marriages and issue
Sometime between May 1258 and 28 October 1259, he married his first wife, Maud de Prendergast, daughter of Sir Gerald de Prendergast of Beauvoir and an unnamed daughter of Richard Mor de Burgh. Together he and Maud had one daughter:[9]

Amabel FitzGerald, married but died childless.
Maurice was Maud's third husband. She died on an unknown date. In 1273, Maurice married his second wife, Emmeline Longespee (1252-1291), daughter of Stephen Longespée and Emmeline de Ridelsford. He and Emeline had one daughter.[10]

Juliana FitzGerald (d. 24 September 1300), married firstly, Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond, by whom she had four children; she married secondly Nicholas Avenel, and thirdly, Adam de Cretynges.
Maurice died 2 September 1277, at Ross, County Wexford. Emmeline Longespee then fought until her death to claim her dower against her daughter, Juliana, her step-daughter, Amabilia, and John FitzGerald, who would be created 1st Earl of Kildare on 14 May 1316. John was the son of his brother Thomas by Rohesia de St. Michael. John sued or physically took lands from the bailiffs of Emmeline, Juliana, and Amabilia.[11]

There is some confusion as to whether Gerald Fitzmaurice FitzGerald was the first or second son of Maurice FitzGerald, 2nd Lord of Offaly. Most, like M. Hickson, of the RSAI say he was the eldest. Lord Walter FitzGerald says he was the second. In any event, he predeceased his father in 1243. His son, Maurice FitzGerald,[12]drowned in the Irish Channel in July 1268. His son was Gerald FitzMaurice III (born in 1263). Gerald's marriage was sold to Geoffrey de Geneville, who matched Gerald with his own daughter, Joan, but he died childless on 29 August 1287.[citation needed]

Maurice Fitzmaurice FitzGerald 3rd Earl of Offaly was succeeded by nephew John, son of his younger brother Thomas Fitzmaurice FitzGerald. 
FitzMaurice, Maurice (I7300)
 
5857 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ralph Lumley, 1st Baron Lumley (died January 1400) was an English nobleman, soldier and administrator under King Richard II, who was stripped of his lands, goods and title for rebelling against King Henry IV and executed.[1]

Born about 1360, he was the second son and heir of Sir Marmaduke Lumley (1314-1365), a landowner and administrator in Northumberland, and his second wife Margaret,[1] daughter of Robert Holland, 2nd Baron Holand.[citation needed]

Career
Under age at the death of his father in 1365 and of his elder brother Robert in 1374, his guardian was John Nevill. In 1383 he received his inherited lands and had already embarked on a military career, being knighted and holding for ransom a number of French prisoners of war. The next year he was summoned to Parliament as a baron and in 1385 was under the command of Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland, fighting the Scots in the defence of Berwick-upon-Tweed. At the Battle of Otterburn in August 1388, he was taken prisoner by the Scots, not being freed until October 1389 after payment of a sizeable ransom, toward which both King Richard and the Bishop of Durham contributed.[1]

In 1391 he was appointed Captain of Berwick and in 1392 received royal permission to rebuild and crenellate his castle at Lumley. In 1394 and 1397 he was on the commission of the peace for the North Riding of Yorkshire and in 1397 attended the Parliament at which all members had to swear loyalty to King Richard.[1]

In the Parliament of September 1399 he accepted the seizure of power by King Henry IV and the imprisonment of Richard, but in December joined his cousin Thomas Holland, 1st Duke of Surrey, in the conspiracy known as the Epiphany Rising, which aimed to murder Henry and restore Richard. He was one of the conspirators captured and beheaded at Cirencester in January 1400. All his moveable possessions were given to the King's half-brother John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset, and his estates were forfeited to the crown, apart from lands yielding 100 pounds a year left to support his widow and twelve children.[1]

Family
He married Eleanor (died after 1441), third daughter of his guardian John Nevill and his first wife Maud, daughter of Henry Percy, 2nd Baron Percy.[1] Their children included:

Thomas (died 1400), implicated in his father's treason.[1]
Sir John (1383-1421), whose son Sir Thomas obtained a reversal of his grandfather's attainder in 1461.[1]
Marmaduke (died 1450).
Catherine (died 1461), who before 1425 married Sir John Chideock, of Chideock in Dorset.[citation needed]
Elizabeth, who married Adam Tyrwhitt, of Kettleby in Lincolnshire.[citation needed] 
Lumley, 1st Baron Lumley, Ralph (I7291)
 
5858 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard FitzAlan
Earl of Arundel, Earl of Surrey
Royal Arms of England (1154-1189).svg
gules, a lion rampant or[1]
Born 1346
Died 21 September 1397 (aged 50-51)
London, England
Spouse(s) Elizabeth de Bohun
Philippa Mortimer

Issue
Thomas Fitzalan
Elizabeth FitzAlan
Joan FitzAlan
Margaret Fitzalan
Alice Fitzalan
William Fitzalan

Father Richard Fitzalan
Mother Eleanor of Lancaster
Richard Fitzalan, 4th Earl of Arundel, 9th Earl of Surrey, KG (1346 - 21 September 1397) was an English medieval nobleman and military commander.

Lineage
Born in 1346, he was the son of Richard Fitzalan, 3rd Earl of Arundel and Eleanor of Lancaster.[2] He succeeded his father to the title of Earl of Arundel on 24 January 1376.

His brother was Thomas Arundel, the Bishop of Ely from 1374 to 1388, Archbishop of York from 1388 to 1397, and Archbishop of Canterbury in 1397 and from 1399 until his death in 1414.[3]

At the coronation of Richard II, Richard Fitzalan carried the crown.[2]

Richard Fitzalan, 4th Earl of Arundel; Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester; Thomas Mowbray, Earl of Nottingham; Henry, Earl of Derby (later Henry IV); and Thomas Beauchamp, 12th Earl of Warwick, demand Richard II to let them prove by arms the justice for their rebellion
In 1377, Richard Fitzalan held the title of Admiral of the North and West.[2] In this capacity, he attacked Harfleur at Whitsun 1378, but was forced to return to his ships by the defenders. Later, he and John of Gaunt attempted to seize Saint-Malo but were unsuccessful.[4]

Power Struggle
Fitzalan was closely aligned with Thomas, Duke of Gloucester, who was uncle of King Richard II. Thomas was opposed to Richard II's desire for peace with France in the Hundred Years War and a power struggle ensued between him and Gloucester. In late 1386, Gloucester forced King Richard II to name himself and Richard Fitzalan to the King's Council.[5] This Council was to all intents and purposes a Regency Council for Richard II. However, Richard limited the duration of the Council's powers to one year.[6]

Knight of the Garter
In 1386, Richard II named Richard Fitzalan Admiral of England and made him a Knight of the Garter.[2] As Admiral of England, he defeated a Franco-Spanish-Flemish fleet off Margate in March 1387, along with Thomas de Mowbray, Earl of Nottingham.[6]

New favourites
In August 1387, the King dismissed Gloucester and Fitzalan from the Council and replaced them with his favourites - including the Archbishop of York, Alexander Neville; the Duke of Ireland, Robert de Vere; Michael de la Pole; the Earl of Suffolk, Sir Robert Tresilian, who was the Chief Justice; and the former Mayor of London Nicholas Brembre.[7]

Radcot Bridge
The King summoned Gloucester and Fitzalan to a meeting. However, instead of coming, they raised troops and defeated the new Council at Radcot Bridge on 22 December 1387. During that battle, they took the favourites prisoner. The next year, the Merciless Parliament condemned the favourites.

FitzAlan was one of the Lords Appellant who accused and condemned Richard II's favorites.[5] He made himself particularly odious to the King by refusing, along with Gloucester, to spare the life of Sir Simon de Burley who had been condemned by the Merciless Parliament. This was even after the queen, Anne of Bohemia, went down on her knees before them to beg for mercy. King Richard never forgave this humiliation and planned and waited for his moment of revenge.

Arundel was named Governor of Brest in 1388.[2]

Opposed to peace
Peace was concluded with France in 1389. However, Richard FitzAlan followed Gloucester's lead and stated that he would never agree with the peace that had been concluded.[5]

Marriage and children
Arundel married twice.

His first wife was Elizabeth de Bohun, daughter of William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton and Elizabeth de Badlesmere. They married around 28 September 1359 and had seven children:[2][8]

Thomas Fitzalan, 5th Earl of Arundel[2]
Lady Eleanor Fitzalan (c. 1365 - 1375), on 28 October 1371, at the age of about six, married Robert de Ufford. Died childless.
Elizabeth Fitzalan (c. 1366 - 8 July 1425), married first William Montacute (before December 1378); no issue. Married second, in 1384, Thomas Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk; had issue. Married third, before August 1401, Sir Robert Goushill of Hoveringham; had issue. Married fourth, before 1411, Sir Gerard Usflete, son of Sir Gerard Usflete (d.1406),[9] MP, without issue.[2][10]
Joan FitzAlan (1375 - 14 November 1435), who married William Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny;[2]
Alice Fitzalan (1378 - before October 1415), married before March 1392, John Charleton, 4th Baron Cherleton. (not mentioned as an heir of Thomas in the Complete Peerage). Had an affair with Cardinal Henry Beaufort, by whom she had an illegitimate daughter, Jane Beaufort.
Margaret Fitzalan, who married Sir Rowland Lenthall;[2] by whom she had two sons.
William (or Richard) Fitzalan
After the death of his first wife in 1385, Arundel married Philippa Mortimer, daughter of Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March. Her mother was Philippa Plantagenet, the only daughter of Lionel of Antwerp and thus a granddaughter of Edward III. They had no children.[2]

Death and succession
By 1394, Arundel was again a member of the royal council, and was involved in a quarrel with John of Gaunt, whom he accused in the parliament of that year.[11] Fitzalan further antagonized the King by arriving late for the queen's funeral. Richard II, in a rage, snatched a wand and struck Fitzalan in the face and drew blood. Shortly after that, the King feigned a reconciliation but he was only biding his time for the right moment to strike.

Arundel was persuaded by his brother Thomas to surrender himself and to trust to the king's clemency.[11] On 12 July 1397, Richard was arrested for his opposition to Richard II,[2] as well as plotting with Gloucester to imprison the king.[12] He stood trial at Westminster and was attainted.[13] He was beheaded on 21 September 1397 and was buried in the church of the Augustin Friars, Bread Street, London.[2] Tradition holds that his final words were said to the executioner, "Torment me not long, strike off my head in one blow".[14]

In October 1400, the attainder was reversed, and Richard's son Thomas succeeded to his father's estates and honours.[2] 
FitzAlan, Richard (I7416)
 
5859 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roger Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk

Born c. 1144/1150
Died 1221
Noble family Bigod family
Spouse(s) Ida de Tosny
Father Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk
Mother Juliana de Vere

Roger Bigod (c. 1144/1150 - 1221) was the son of Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk and his first wife, Juliana de Vere. Although his father died 1176 or 1177, Roger did not succeed to the earldom of Norfolk until 1189 for his claim had been disputed by his stepmother for her sons by Earl Hugh in the reign of Henry II. Richard I confirmed him in his earldom and other honours, and also sent him as an ambassador to France in the same year. Roger inherited his father's office as royal steward. He took part in the negotiations for the release of Richard from prison, and after the king's return to England became a justiciar.

During the Revolt of 1173-74, Roger remained loyal to the king while his father sided with the king's rebellious sons. Roger fought at the Battle of Fornham on 17 October 1173, where the royalist force defeated a rebel force led by Robert de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Leicester.[1]

In most of the years of the reign of King John, the earl was frequently with the king or on royal business. Yet Roger was to be one of the leaders of the baronial party which obtained John's assent to Magna Carta, and his name and that of his son and heir Hugh II appear among the twenty-five barons who were to ensure the king's adherence to the terms of that document. The pair were excommunicated by the pope in December 1215, and did not make peace with the regents of John's son Henry III until 1217.

Around Christmas 1181, Roger married Ida, apparently Ida de Tosny (or Ida de Toesny),[2] and by her had a number of children including:

Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk who married in 1206/ 1207, Maud, a daughter of William Marshal
William Bigod
Ralph Bigod
Roger Bigod
Margery, married William de Hastings
Mary Bigod, married Ralph fitz Robert[3]

Many historians, including Marc Morris have speculated that the couple had a third daughter, Alice, who married Aubrey de Vere IV, Earl of Oxford as his second wife. If so, the marriage would have been well within the bounds of consanguinity, for the couple would have been quite closely related, a daughter of the second earl of Norfolk being first cousin once removed to the second earl of Oxford. 
Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk, Roger (I7345)
 
5860 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sir John Clere (1511? - 21 August 1557), of London, Norwich and Ormesby St Margaret, Norfolk, was an English politician and naval commander.

He was eldest surviving son of Sir Robert Clere of Ormesby, and his second wife Alice, daughter of Sir William Boleyn, of Blickling Hall, Norfolk. He had succeeded to his father's estates in 1529 and in 1538 he came into possession of about 20 manors, mostly on the Norfolk coast, following his mother's death.[1]

He married, by 1531, Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Tyrrell of Gipping, Suffolk, with whom he had three sons and two daughters.[1]

He was knighted in 1539.[1]

He was a Member of Parliament (MP) for Bramber 1542 and 1545, Thetford March 1553 and Norfolk 1555.[1]

He served in the Royal Navy as captain of the ships Peter Longanarde (1545) and Swepestake (1546). He served in France as treasurer of the English army stationed there from November 1549 to April 1550. In 1556 he was appointed Vice-Admiral at Portsmouth. His first mission was to escort the abdicated Emperor Charles V to retirement in Spain, receiving a golden chain from him. His second assignment was to command an English naval expedition against Scotland; he was drowned in August 1557 in battle with a Scots fleet in the Orkney Islands.[1] According to the report of John Southerne, captain of the Gabriel, Clere burnt Kirkwall town on 11 August and on next day entered the Cathedral and brought six cannon on shore to batter the castle. On Friday 13 the force on shore attempting to take the Bishop's Palace was beaten back to sea by 3000 islanders, and 97 men including Clere were drowned.[2]

His third and first surviving son, Edward Clere, also became an MP and led an illustrious career.[3] 
Clere, Sir John (I7423)
 
5861 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sir William Boleyn (1451 - 10 October 1505) was the son of Sir Geoffrey Boleyn, a wealthy mercer and Lord Mayor of London, and his wife, Anne Hoo. He was the father of Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire, and the paternal grandfather of King Henry VIII's second Queen, Anne Boleyn.

Life
William Boleyn was born at Blickling, Norfolk,[citation needed] the younger of the two sons of Sir Geoffrey Boleyn, a wealthy mercer and Lord Mayor of London, and his wife, Anne Hoo.[1] Sir William was heir to his elder brother, Sir Thomas Boleyn, in 1471/2.[2]

Boleyn married Margaret Ormond (otherwise Butler) (d. before 20 March 1540), the daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond (died 3 August 1515), by his first wife, Anne Hankford. They had six sons, Sir Thomas, William (Archdeacon of Winchester), Sir James, Sir Edward, John and Anthony, and four daughters, Margaret (wife of [[John Sackville, and later Sir Nicholas Pelham), Anne (wife of Sir John Shelton), Alice (the wife of Sir Robert Clere) and Jane (wife of Sir Philip Calthorpe).[3]

Boleyn was created a Knight of the Bath by Richard III and was charged by Henry VII to take care of the beacons that were used to warn in case of an attack on England.[4] Sir William served as High Sheriff of Kent in 1489 and High Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1500.[citation needed]

Issue
Anne Boleyn (18 November 1475 - 6 January 1555)[citation needed] married Sir John Shelton[5]
Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire (c. 1477 - 12 March 1538/9) married Elizabeth Howard, daughter of Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk and his first wife, Elizabeth Tilney[6]
John Boleyn (1470 - 1484)
Anthony Boleyn (c. 1473 - 1599)
Jane Boleyn (c. 1475 - died after 1521)[7] married Sir Phillip Calthorpe[8]
Alice Boleyn (c. 1478 - 1 November 1538) married Sir Robert Clere (died 10 August 1529)[9]
Margaret Boleyn (born about 1479)married John Sackville[10]
William Boleyn (c. 1481 - 18 December 1571)[11]
Sir James Boleyn (c. 1485- 5 December 1561)[12] married Elizabeth Wood
Sir Edward Boleyn (born about 1486)[13] married Anne Tempest 
Boleyn, Sir William (I7323)
 
5862 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Theobald Butler, 4th Chief Butler of Ireland (1242 - 26 September 1285) was the son of Theobald Butler, 3rd Chief Butler of Ireland and Margery de Burgh, daughter of Richard Mor de Burgh, 1st Lord of Connacht. He assisted King Edward I of England in his wars in Scotland. He died at the castle of Arklow, County Wicklow, Ireland, and was buried at Arklow Monastery.[1]

Marriage and children
He married Joan FitzJohn in 1268, the fourth and youngest daughter of John Fitzgeoffrey, Lord of Kirtling, Sheriff of Yorkshire, and Isobel Bigod and the granddaughter of Geoffrey FitzPeter, Earl of Essex.[2] She was co-heir with her three sisters to her brothers John and Richard.[3] On her marriage, she brought Theobald the manor of Faubridge in Essex, the hamlet of Shippeley in Hants, the manor of Shire in Surrey, the hamlet of Vacherie and the manor of Ailesbury (in Buckinghamshire). Joan died on 4 April 1303. Their children were:

Theobald Butler, 5th Chief Butler of Ireland (1269-1299)
Edmund Butler, Earl of Carrick and 6th Chief Butler of Ireland (1268-1321)
Thomas Butler, 1st Baron Dunboyne (1271-1329)
Margaret Butler (1294-1344), she married John de Trenouth
John Butler (1270-1321)
Richard Butler (b.1275)
Gilbert Butler (b.1275)
Nicholas Butler (b.1277), elected Archbishop of Dublin by the Prior and Convent of the Holy Trinity in January 1306, but was never consecrated.
James Butler (1278-1337) 
le Boteler, Thebaud (I7316)
 
5863 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond
Born 1426
Kilkenny, Ireland
Died 3 August 1515 (aged 88-89)
London, England
Buried Mercers' Chapel, St Thomas of Acre, London
Spouse(s) Anne Hankford
Lora Berkeley
Issue
Anne Butler
Margaret Butler
Elizabeth Butler
Father James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond
Mother Joan de Beauchamp

Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond, P.C. (1426 - 3 August 1515) was the youngest son of James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond. He was attainted, but restored by Henry VII' s first Parliament in November 1485, and the statutes made at Westminster, by Edward IV, which declared him and his brothers traitors, were abrogated.

Family
Bench end in Monkleigh Church, Devon (parish church of Annery) showing the Ormonde knot and arms of Butler: Gules, three covered cups or,[2] both displayed on escutcheons within Gothic cusped lancet arches
Thomas Butler was the third son of James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond, by his first wife, Joan de Beauchamp (d. 3 or 5 August 1430). He had two elder brothers, James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond, and John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormond, as well as two sisters, Elizabeth Butler, who married John Talbot, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury, and Anne Butler (d. 4 January 1435), who was contracted to marry Thomas FitzGerald, 7th Earl of Desmond, although the marriage appears not to have taken place. [3]

Career
Thomas Butler, as an Irish peer, should only have sat in the Irish Parliament. However, as a personal friend of Henry VII he was summoned to the English Parliament in November 1488 as "Thomas Ormond de Rochford chevaler". At this time he was already 8th Earl of Carrick and 7th Earl of Ormond,[4] having succeeded his elder brothers James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond and John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormond, neither of whom left legitimate issue.

He was afterwards sworn of the Privy Council of England.

He was known as The Wool Earl, due to his enormous wealth. Besides being in the possession of major lands in the Irish counties of Kilkenny and Tipperary, he owned 72 manors in England, making him one of the richest subjects in the realm.[5]

In 1509, he was appointed Lord Chamberlain to Catherine of Aragon.[6] He held this post until 1512.

Marriage and progeny
He married twice:

Firstly in 1445 to Anne Hankford (1431-1485), daughter and co-heiress of Sir Richard Hankford (c. 1397 - 1431) of Annery, Monkleigh, Devon, jure uxoris feudal baron of Bampton[7] (grandson of Sir William Hankford (c. 1350 - 1423), Chief Justice of the King's Bench) by his 2nd wife Anne Montagu (d. 1457), a daughter of John Montacute, 3rd Earl of Salisbury (c. 1350 - 1400).[8] By Anne Hankford he had two daughters and co-heiresses who inherited the Butler estates in England:
Lady Anne Butler (1455-June 5, 1533), heiress through her mother of Annery,[9] who married firstly Ambrose Cressacre, esquire, by whom she had no issue, and secondly Sir James St Leger (d. 1509), by whom she had two sons, Sir George St Leger, and James St Leger.[10]
Lady Margaret Butler (1465-1537), who married Sir William Boleyn, by whom she had six sons and five daughters, including Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire, father of Queen Anne Boleyn, second wife of King Henry VIII.[11]
Secondly in 1486[citation needed], he married Lora Berkeley (1454-1501), widow successively of John Blount, 3rd Baron Mountjoy (by whom she had two sons and two daughters[12][13][14][15]), and Sir Thomas Montgomery (d. 2 January 1495) of Faulkbourne, Essex, and daughter of Edward Berkeley (d. March 1506) of Beverston Castle, Gloucestershire, by his wife Christian Holt (d.1468), second daughter and coheir of Richard Holt. By his second wife Lora Berkeley, Ormond had one daughter:
Elizabeth Butler[16] (d. 1510).[citation needed]
Death & succession
Ormond died on 3 August 1515 and was buried in the Mercers' Chapel of the Hospital of St Thomas of Acre in the City of London.[17] As he died without male progeny the barony supposedly created in 1488 fell into abeyance. The Earldom devolved to his heir male and distant cousin Piers Butler, 8th Earl of Ormond, 1st Earl of Ossory (1467-1539), the grandson of his first cousin Sir Edmund MacRichard Butler (1420-1464) of Polestown, County Kilkenny, Ireland, a grandson of James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond (c. 1359 - 1405) of Gowran Castle in Ireland. 
Butler, Sir Thomas (I7328)
 
5864 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William de Beauchamp
Baron Bergavenny
William Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny.jpg
Sir William Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny, KG
Born c. 1343
Died 8 May 1411 (aged 67-68)
Noble family Beauchamp
Spouse(s) Lady Joan FitzAlan
(m. 1392-1411; his death)

Issue
Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester
Joan Butler, Countess of Ormond

Father Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick
Mother Katherine Mortimer

William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny, KG (c. 1343 - 8 May 1411) was an English peer.

Beauchamp was the fourth son of Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick, and Katherine Mortimer. He served under Sir John Chandos during the Hundred Years' War, and was created a Knight of the Garter in 1376. He served as Captain of Calais in 1383.[1]

Upon the death of his first cousin once removed, John Hastings, 3rd Earl of Pembroke on 30 December 1389, William inherited the lordship of Abergavenny, including Abergavenny Castle.[1] He was summoned to Parliament on 23 July 1392 as "Willilmo Beauchamp de Bergavenny", by which he is held to have become Baron Bergavenny, a barony by writ.[2] In 1399, he was appointed Justiciar of South Wales and Governor of Pembroke.[3] He entailed the castle and Honour of Abergavenny on the issue male of his body, with remainder to his brother Thomas de Beauchamp, 12th Earl of Warwick and his heirs male; his wife enjoyed it in dower until her death in 1435. Bergavenny died in 1411 and was buried at Black Friars, Hereford.[4]

Marriage and offspring
Bergavenny married Lady Joan FitzAlan, daughter of Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel, and Elizabeth de Bohun, and they had the following children:

Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester, 2nd Baron Bergavenny (bef. 1397 - 1422), married Isabel le Despenser, daughter of Thomas le Despenser, 1st Earl of Gloucester and Constance of York, by whom he had one daughter Elizabeth de Beauchamp, Baroness Bergavenny.
Joan de Beauchamp (1396 - 3 August 1430), married 28 August 1413 James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond, son of James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond and Anne Welles, by whom she had five children, including Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond. Anne Boleyn and Mary Boleyn were notable descendants. 
Beauchamp, William (I7422)
 
5865 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
wikitree Badlesmere-6

Elizabeth de Badlesmere
Countess of Northampton
Born 1313
Castle Badlesmere, Kent, England
Died 8 June 1356 (aged 43)
Blackfriars, London
Noble family Badlesmere
Spouse(s) Sir Edmund Mortimer
William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton
Issue
Roger Mortimer, 2nd Earl of March
John Mortimer
Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford
Elizabeth de Bohun
Father Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere
Mother Margaret de Clare
Elizabeth de Badlesmere, Countess of Northampton (1313 - 8 June 1356) was the wife of two English noblemen, Sir Edmund Mortimer and William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton. She was a co-heiress of her brother Giles de Badlesmere, 2nd Baron Badlesmere.

At the age of eight she was sent to the Tower of London along with her mother, Margaret de Clare, Baroness Badlesmere and her four siblings after the former maltreated Queen consort Isabella by ordering an assault upon her and refusing her admittance to Leeds Castle.

Elizabeth was born at Castle Badlesmere, Kent, England in 1313 to Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere and Margaret de Clare. She was the third of four daughters. She had one younger brother, Giles de Badlesmere, 2nd Baron Badlesmere, who married Elizabeth Montagu, but did not have any children.

Her paternal grandparents were Guncelin de Badlesmere and Joan FitzBernard, and her maternal grandparents were Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond and Juliana FitzGerald of Offaly.

Elizabeth's father was hanged, drawn and quartered on 14 April 1322 for having participated in the Earl of Lancaster's rebellion against King Edward II of England; and her mother imprisoned in the Tower of London until 3 November 1322. She had been arrested the previous October for ordering an assault upon Queen consort Isabella after refusing her admittance to Leeds Castle, where Baron Badlesmere held the post of governor.[1] Elizabeth and her siblings were also sent to the Tower along with their mother.[2] She was eight years old at the time and had been married for five years to her first husband; although the marriage had not yet been consummated due to her young age.

In 1328, Elizabeth's brother Giles obtained a reversal of his father's attainder, and he succeeded to the barony as the 2nd Baron Badlesmere. Elizabeth, along with her three sisters, was a co-heiress of Giles, who had no children by his wife. Upon his death in 1338, the barony fell into abeyance. The Badlesmere estates were divided among the four sisters, and Elizabeth's share included the manors of Drayton in Sussex, Kingston and Erith in Kent, a portion of Finmere in Oxfordshire as well as property in London.[3]

Marriages and issue
On 27 June 1316, when she was just three years old, Elizabeth married her first husband Sir Edmund Mortimer (died 16 December 1331)[4] eldest son and heir of Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March and Joan de Geneville. The marriage contract was made on 9 May 1316, and the particulars of the arrangement between her father and prospective father-in-law are described in Welsh historian R. R. Davies' Lords and Lordship in the British Isles in the late Middle Ages. Lord Badlesmere paid Roger Mortimer the sum of £2000, and in return Mortimer endowed Elizabeth with five rich manors for life and the reversion of other lands.[5] The marriage, which was not consummated until many years afterward, produced two sons:

Roger Mortimer, 2nd Earl of March (11 November 1328 Ludlow Castle- 26 February 1360), married Philippa Montagu, daughter of William Montagu, 1st Earl of Salisbury and Catherine Grandison, by whom he had issue, including Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March).
John Mortimer (died young)
By the order of King Edward III, Elizabeth's father-in-law, the Earl of Mortimer was hanged in November 1330 for having assumed royal power, along with other crimes. His estates were forfeited to the Crown, therefore Elizabeth's husband did not succeed to the earldom and died a year later. Elizabeth's dower included the estates of Maelienydd and Comot Deuddwr in the Welsh Marches.[6]

In 1335, just over three years after the death of Edmund Mortimer, Elizabeth married secondly William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton (1312-1360), fifth son of Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford and Elizabeth of Rhuddlan. He was a renowned military commander and diplomat. Their marriage was arranged to end the mutual hostility which had existed between the Bohun and Mortimer families.[7] A papal dispensation was required for their marriage as de Bohun and her first husband, Sir Edmund Mortimer were related in the third and fourth degrees of consanguinity by dint of their common descent from Enguerrand de Fiennes, Seigneur de Fiennes. Elizabeth and de Bohun received some Mortimer estates upon their marriage.[8]

By her second marriage, Elizabeth had two more children:[9]

Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford 6th Earl of Essex, 2nd Earl of Northampton (24 March 1342 - 16 January 1373), after 9 September 1359, married Joan Fitzalan, Countess of Hereford, by whom he had two daughters, Eleanor de Bohun, Duchess of Gloucester, and Mary de Bohun, wife of Henry of Bolingbroke (who later reigned as King Henry IV).
Elizabeth de Bohun (c.1350- 3 April 1385), on 28 September 1359, married Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Arundel, by whom she had seven children including Thomas Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel, Elizabeth FitzAlan, and Joan FitzAlan, Baroness Bergavenny.
In 1348, the earldom of March was restored to her eldest son Roger who succeeded as the 2nd Earl.

Death
Elizabeth de Badlesmere died on 8 June 1356, aged about forty-three years old. She was buried in Black Friars Priory, London. She left a will dated 31 May 1356, requesting burial at the priory. Mention of Elizabeth's burial is found in the records (written in Latin) of Walden Abbey which confirm that she was buried in Black Friars: 
Badlesmere, Elizabeth (I7439)
 
5866 from wikipedia:
Lawrence and Cassandra were married 25 January 1623/4 at Kingswinford, Staffordshire, England.[1][2] Along with their four surviving children, John, Josiah, Mary, and Daniel, the Southwicks emigrated to Salem, Massachusetts, sometime between mid-1637 and early-1639 when they were admitted to the First Church in Salem.[3][4] Lawrence was one of the first glassmakers in America, and practiced his craft in the part of Salem now known as Peabody, which was the first glass manufacturing district in America.[5] Lawrence left the industry in 1642,[6] and turned his attention to animal husbandry at which he was very successful.[7]

Persecution as Quakers
In 1657 the Southwicks were put in jail for hosting two visiting Quaker preachers, John Copeland and Christopher Holder. Lawrence Southwick was found to be a member of the First Church of Salem and was released to be dealt with by the leaders of that church. Cassandra remained in jail for seven weeks and was fined forty shillings for possessing a paper written by their two visitors. The paper was considered heretical by Governor John Endicott and others.

In 1658 the Southwicks and their son Josiah were put in jail for twenty weeks for being Quakers.

In 1659, the two youngest of the Southwick's children, a daughter named Provided Southwick and a son named Daniel Southwick, were sentenced to be sold as slaves in the Barbadoes for unpaid fines - fines related to their being Quakers. The sentence was not carried out, however. The entire family went to Shelter Island, New York together.

In 1660 Lawrence and his wife Cassandra died within three days of each other on Shelter Island.

Legacy
A plaque in Southwick Hall at University of Massachusetts Lowell commemorates "Royal Southwick, Lowell's anti-slavery Quaker senator and manufacturer and a descendent of Lawrence and Cassandra Southwick who were despoiled, imprisoned, starved, whipped, banished from," Massachusetts Bay Colony "and persecuted to death in the year 1660 for being Quakers." 
Southwick, Lawrence (I6670)
 
5867 From Wikipedia:
Mills House is a house in Springer, New Mexico, in Colfax County, New Mexico, that was built in 1877. It was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1970. The locals have dubbed it the "Clegg Mansion”, after Luke and Myrtle Clegg who owned and lived in the house for several decades beginning in about 1915.
The original owner, Melvin Whitson Mills, was an attorney, politician, and businessman who was one of the founders of Springer NM. He needed a home large enough for him and his wife, his parents, and five adopted children. Mills lost the house and land as a result of bankruptcy in 1905.
It is a three-story 32-room adobe house on a rise near Cimarron Creek on the edge of Springer. It is made of adobe, has a metal mansard roof with four chimneys protruding above. 
Mills, Melvin Whitson (I8368)
 
5868 from wikitree

Biography
Father John Hastings, Esq., Lord Hastings, Sheriff of Norwich, Constable of Norwich Castle & gaol[1] b. c 1412, d. 9 Apr 1477

Mother Anne Morley[2] b. c 1413, d. 1471

Elizabeth Hastings was born circa 1437 at of Fenwick Manor, Campsall, Yorkshire, England.

She married Sir Robert Hildyard, son of Sir Robert Hildyard and Katherine de la Hay, before 8 April 1459; They had 14 sons (Peter, Esq; Robert; Thomas; John; William; Adam; Edward; Hugh; Ralph; Henry; Richard; Stephen; George; & Anthony) and 6 daughters (Muriel, wife of (Mr.) Philpot; Denise, wife of Charles Barneby; Anne; Agnes; Katherine, wife of John Haldenby, & of William Girlington; & Margery, wife of Sir William Ayscough).[3][4]

Ellizabeth, wife of Sir Robert Hildyard is believed to have been buried at the Hildyard family parish church of St. German, Winestead in Holderness, East Riding of Yorkshire. Hildyard family burials had been made for centuries at the 12th century church of St. German. The church has Hildyard tombs and memorials.

Family

Sir Robert Hildyard b. c 1436, d. 21 May 1501

Children

Peter, Esq
Robert
Thomas
John
William
Adam
Edward
Hugh
Ralph
Henry
Richard
Stephen
George
Anthony
Muriel, wife of (Mr.) Philpot
Denise, wife of Charles Barneby
Anne
Agnes
Katherine, wife of John Haldenby, & of William Girlington
Margery, wife of Sir William Ayscough

Sources
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 289-290.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 117.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 30.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 499.
Foster, Joseph. Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire. 1874. Vol 3. Pg. 167-8. Archive.org. [1]
Glover, Robert. The visitation of Yorkshire, made in the years 1584/5. 1587. Pg. 51 and 373. Archive.org. [2] [3]
Flower, William. The visitation of Yorkshire in the years 1563 and 1564. 1881. Vol 16, 18. Pg. 156 and 170. Archive.org. [4] [5]
Dugdale, William, Sir. Dugdale’s Visitation of Yorkshire, with additions. 1899. Vol 3. Pg. 332. Archive.org. [6]
TAG Whole No 275 Vol 69 No 3 July 1994 p. 131-133
Royal Ancestry D. Richardson 2013 Vol. IV p. 638
Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, (2011), Douglas Richardson, 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 IV, page 30 #11

See also:
The baronetage of England: containing a genealogical and historical account ... By Thomas Wotton:-

143. HILDYARD, of Pattrington, Yorkshire. or The History of the English baronets ..., Volume 2, Hildyard of Pattrington, Yorkshire:-

re Robert Hildyard Sir Robert Hildyard, Knt. who was a person os great note, in the reigns os Henry VI. Edward IV. and Richard III. and was was commonly called Robin, of Riddesdale

But after the establishment of the house of York, it seems that he adhered firmly to that family ; since we find him employed to conduct five thousand men out of the north, to support the coronation of Richard III. at which coronation he received the honour of knighthood. His wife was, Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Sir John Hastings, Knt. (and Anne, his wife, daughter of William, Lord Morley) by whom he had a numerous progeny ; whereof Anthony, the youngest son, was a Knight of Rhodes.

[edit] 
Hastings, Elizabeth (I16811)
 
5869 from wikitree

Biography
John Hastings, Esquire (armiger), is considered to have been Lord Hastings, as shown in Complete Peerage. However, in his own lifetime his family's claim to that title was not accepted and he was not known this way.[1] He was age 26 in 1438, when his father died. He was Sheriff of Norwich, and constable of Norwich Castle and gaol. He was lord of Elsing, Gressenhall, and Weasenham, all in Norfolk. He was Captain of Saint-Lô in the Cotentin in Normandy in February 1437/8 (near the end of the period in the 100 years war when England held significant parts of France after the victories of Henry V). He left a will on 8 April 1477.

Family
He and Anne Morley obtained a marriage license on 21 April 1434 (date of Papal Dispensation for being related in the 3rd and 4th degrees of kindred). They had 3 sons (Sir Hugh; Sir Edmund; & Robert) & 2 daughters (Isabel, wife of Sir Thomas Bosvile; & Elizabeth, wife of Sir Robert Hildyard).

Children:

Sir Hugh
Sir Edmund, 2nd son. m. Elenor Woodhouse, daughter of Edward of Kimberley
Robert, 3rd son. m. Elizabeth Thwaytes
Isabel, wife of Sir Thomas Bosvile
Elizabeth, wife of Sir Robert Hildyard
The version of the Yorkshire visitation "D2" held by the college of arms also shows sons named John and Charles, and a daughter Meryall who married a Pierpoynt and had no children.[2]

Burial of John Hastings and wife Anne
He died on 9 April 1477 at Elsing, Norfolk, England, and was buried in Gressenhall Church, Norfolk. This date and place is given in his inquisition post mortem which is transcribed in Latin by Carthew (p.209 "obiit apd Elsyng p'dict' die Marcurii in septia Pasche ultio jam p't'io").

His wife Anne had died in 1471.

Both were buried in the parish church of Gressenhall, Norfolk which was St. Mary's Church (Church of St. Mary the Virgin). The parish church of St. Mary's still exists and has a 15th century font and tower similar to that of the church at Castle Rising.[3]

Blomefield reports:[4]

In Hastings chantry on the pavement, lies a large marble stone, disrobed of its effigies, brass shields and ornaments; on a brass plate remaining,
Nobilitas gen'is quid p'dest, o'ia solvit, Mors que sub lapide ho. p'cerum duo corpora volvit; Morib; insigni comitu de sanguine natus, Pembrochie jacet hic John Hastyng pulv'e strat; Uxor et Anna sibi que sangui'e filia scitur De Morley, d'no moriens p. eum sepelitur. Quisquis et ista legas fusa prece siste, rogatus, Ut Deus amborum velit indulgere reatus. Ann. erat Christi poliando co'gru; isti Mill. quadringen; uno plus septuagenus.

On the gravestone of Sir John Hastings abovementioned, in the chapel of Hastings, there was, I find, these following verses which began the epitaph;
Hic stratus, si quo sit natus sanguine, quœris; A proavo genitam noscas cui nupserat heres Pembrochie Comitum Vallensis origine nata. Huic comites plures donec crudelia fata Extulerant pestem (Woodstock) te convoco testem Qui nece sub mœstâ cecidit dum frangitur hasta Hugo successit miles sibi qui sociavit Lordani Foliot natam, de qua generavit Hugonem sed huic Everingham nata potentis Nupsit, et Hugonis sit mater ad arma valentis Nata cui D'ni Spencer tedis generavit Edwardum, cui John Dinham natam sociavit. E quibus hoc tumuto stratus sit origo Johannes Cui requies detur cunctis viventibus annis Hugo, Roberte, quibus Edmundus frater habetur Poscatis precibus celis requiescere detur.

Sources
Complete Peerage, 2nd ed., vol. 6, under Hastings
Flowers Visitation p.156
St. Mary's Rector John Belham, "We do have a chapel in our church known as the "Hastings Chapel" and within it is a glass-covered tombstone of a knight and his wife dating from the 15th century.", March 6, 2008;
St. Mary's Church Warden Erich Driebholz, "the burial plaque on the floor of the chancel is that of John Hastings, 9th Baron Hastings, and that of his wife Anne", April 8, 2008.
Francis Blomefield, 'Launditch Hundred: Gressenhale', in An Essay Towards A Topographical History of the County of Norfolk: Volume 9 (London, 1808), pp. 510-520. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-hist-norfolk/vol9/pp510-520 [accessed 30 August 2018].
Foster, Joseph. Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire. 1874. Vol 3. Pg. 55-6. Archive.org. [1]
Flower, William. The visitation of Yorkshire in the years 1563 and 1564. 1881. Pg. 155. Archive.org. [2]
Glover, Robert. The visitation of Yorkshire, made in the years 1584/5. 1875. Pg. 373. Archive.org. [3]
The Publications of the Surtees Society. 1835. Vol 41. Pg. 73. Archive.org. [4]
Raine, James. Testamenta Eboracensia, Or Wills Registered at York. Pg. 273-8. Archive.org. [5]
Carthew, George Alfred. The hundred of Launditch and Deanery of Brisley. 1877. Vol 1. Pg. 199. Google Books. [6]
Surtees Society. Visitations of the North, Part IV. 1932. Pg. 45. Google Drive. [7]
Carthew The hundred of Launditch and deanery of Brisley p.209
see notes for his daughter
Richardson 2013 Royal Ancestry Vol. II p.499
Cockayne et. al., Complete Peerage. Vol 6 p. 360
See also:
Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, pp. 289-290.
Richardson 2011 Magna Carta Ancestry 2nd ed. Vol. II pp. 116-117, Vol. III p.183
http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p1072.htm#i32199
from p 159 of "The History and Genealogical Tables of the Boswells" Pt1, by Jasper John Boswell, privately published 1906, held by Alan Boswell, and Yale University Library.
[edit] 
Hastings, John (I17010)
 
5870 from wikitree

Biography
Sir Robert Hildyard was born circa 1436 at of Winestead, Yorkshire, England.

Robert Hildyard was knighted on the field of Selford by the Earl of Northumberland 22 Aug 1482. [1] Sir Robert Hildyard died on 21 May 1501.[2]

Burial for Sir Robert Hildyard is believed to have been in the Hildyard family parish church of St. German, Winestead in Holderness, East Riding, Yorkshire. Hildyard family burials had been made for centuries at the 12th century church, which has some Hildyard tombs and memorials.

Headed an insurrection in the north (9th year of Edward IV) made in favour of the Lancastrians, to the number of 20,000 men, who, meeting the Earl of Pembroke at the head of 18,000 Welshmen, at a place called Danes-More, near Edgecote, in Banbury in Northants entirely deserted them, with the slaughter of 5,000 men ............................................................................................................. Pedigree Hildyard of Patrington page 31:-

It is said that he was commonly called Robin, of Riddesdale. (Other authors have him not sio) About the ninth year of Edw; IV; he, together with Sir John Conyers, and others, headed an insurrection in the north, made in favour of the Lancastrians, to the number of twenty thousand men, who, meeting the earl of Pembroke at the head of eighteen thousand. Welshmen, at a place called Danes-More, near Edgecote, (three miles from Banbury) in Northamptonshire, entirely de¬feated them, with the (laughter of five thousand men, taking the said earl and his brother, Richard, prisoners, who, being carried to Northampton, were there, (together with Richard Woodvile, earl of Rivers, father of King Edward’s Queen, and John, his son) beheaded, by the command of George duke of Clarence, and Nevile, earl of Warwick, who, both of them, not long before, had revoked from King Edward to the Lancastrians. But after the establishment of the house of York, it seems that he adhered firmly to that family; since we find him employed to conduct five thousand men out of the north, to support the coronation of Richard III. at which coronation he received the honour of knighthood. His wife was, Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Sir John Hastings, Knt. (and Anne, his wife, daughter of William, Lord Morley) by whom he had a numerous progeny ; whereof Anthony, the youngest son, was a Knight of Rhodes

Family

He married Elizabeth Hastings, daughter of John Hastings, Esq., Lord Hastings, Sheriff of Norwich, Constable of Norwich Castle & gaol and Anne Morley, before 8 April 1459; They had 14 sons (Peter, Esq; Robert; Thomas; John; William; Adam; Edward; Hugh; Ralph; Henry; Richard; Stephen; George; & Anthony) and 6 daughters (Muriel, wife of (Mr.) Philpot; Denise, wife of Charles Barneby; Anne; Agnes; Katherine, wife of John Haldenby, & of William Girlington; & Margery, wife of Sir William Ayscough).[3]

Note about the children of Robert Hildyard: Various media name as many as twenty children for Robert Hildyard and Elizabeth Hastings, with Richardson's Royal Ancestry on page 638 naming fourteen sons and six daughters, although Royal Ancestry only defines in detail one son, Peter, and one daughter, Katherine. The American Genealogist source names five sons - Anthony, George, Henry, Stephen, Thomas and three daughters - Agnes, Elizabeth, Meriall (Muriel).

Father Sir Robert Hildyard[4] b. c 1416

Mother Katherine de la Hay[5] b. c 1412

wife Elizabeth Hastings b. c 1437

Children

Peter, Esq
Robert
Thomas
John
William
Adam
Edward
Hugh
Ralph
Henry
Richard
Stephen
George
Anthony
Muriel, wife of (Mr.) Philpot
Denise, wife of Charles Barneby
Anne
Agnes
Katherine, wife of John Haldenby
William Girlington
Margery, wife of Sir William Ayscough

Research Notes
The baronetage of England: containing a genealogical and historical account ... By Thomas Wotton:-

HILDYARD, of Pattrington, Yorkshire. or The History of the English baronets ..., Volume 2, Hildyard of Pattrington, Yorkshire:-

Robert Hildyard Sir Robert Hildyard, Knt. who was a person os great note, in the reigns os Henry VI. Edward IV. and Richard III. and was was commonly called Robin, of Riddesdale

But after the establishment of the house of York, it seems that he adhered firmly to that family ; since we find him employed to conduct five thousand men out of the north, to support the coronation of Richard III. at which coronation he received the honour of knighthood. His wife was, Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Sir John Hastings, Knt. (and Anne, his wife, daughter of William, Lord Morley) by whom he had a numerous progeny ; whereof Anthony, the youngest son, was a Knight of Rhodes.

Sources
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 30-31.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 635.
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 289-290
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 656.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 30-31.
Foster, Joseph. Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire. 1874. Vol 3. Pg. 167-8. Archive.org. [1]
Glover, Robert. The visitation of Yorkshire, made in the years 1584/5. 1587. Pg. 51 and 373. Archive.org. [2] [3]
Maddison, Arthur Roland. Lincolnshire pedigrees. 1902. Vol 51. Pg. 404-5. Archive.org. [4]
Flower, William. The visitation of Yorkshire in the years 1563 and 1564. 1881. Vol 16, 18. Pg. 140, 156 and 170. Archive.org. [5] [6] [7]
Dugdale, William, Sir. Dugdale’s Visitation of Yorkshire, with additions. 1899. Vol 3. Pg. 332. Archive.org. [8]

See also:
Royal Ancestry D. Richardson 2013 Vol. IV 638
Magna Carta Ancestry 2011 2nd ed. Vol. IV p. 30-31
TAG Whole No 275 Vol. 69 No 3 July 1994 p. 131-133 
Hildyard, Robert (I16812)
 
5871 from wikitree

Born 15 Jun 1536 in Norfolk, England
Son of John Clere and Anne (Tyrrell) Clere
Brother of Margaret (Clere) Haddon
Husband of Frances (Fulmerston) de Clere - married 16 Dec 1554 (to Mar 1579) [location unknown]
Husband of Agnes (Crane) Clere - married 7 Sep 1580 (to 8 Jun 1606) in Blickling, Norfolk, Englandmap
Father of Anne (Clere) Crompton
Died 8 Jun 1606 at age 69 in London, Englandmap
Biography
Edward was the son of John Clere and Anne Tyrrell.[1] He was born on 15 June 1536, possibly in Norfolk where many of his father's interests lay. He was his father's main heir.[2][3]

Edward studied at St John's College, Cambridge, matriculating in May 1553.[2][3][4] He was admitted to the Inner Temple in 1555.[4]

Edward was a Member of several Parliaments, representing Thetford, Norfolk in 1557-8 and 1562-3 and Grampound, Cornwall in 1571.[2][3] He appears not to have been very eloquent when speaking in the House of Commons. A diarist commented that on one occasion he made "a staggering [stumbling] speech: his conclusion I did not conceive" and on another, "such was my ill hap I could not understand what reason he made." In 1572 he unsuccessfully sought election to represent the county of Norfolk.[5]

Edward served as Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1567-8, and as Sheriff of Norfolk in 1580-1.[2][3][6] In the latter capacity he wrote to Elizabeth I's Council on 29 November 1580 to say that "Many persons, committed for disobeying the Acts of Uniformity of Common Prayer, remain in improper custody. Proposes to keep them at his several houses."[7] He presumably wanted to make their detention more comfortable - probably they were local gentry whom he knew.

The father of Edward's first wife was a servant of Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk and this led to Edward being questioned in 1569 following the Duke's arrest. In 1571 Edward was ordered to take an inventory of some of the Duke's property.[5][8]

In 1570 Edward was a collector in Norfolk of a forced loan to the government. There followed accusations of extortion and fraud.[5] That he was unpopular with at least some of the Norfolk gentry is evidenced by a 1577 record in which Roger Wyndham of Norfolk petitioned Elizabeth I's Council "Touching the wreck of a Scottish vessel at Runton. Desires that the cause touching their goods saved may be heard by impartial judges, as Sir Edw. Clere was partial and unjust, and his mortal enemy."[9]

In 1576, as "Kings chief swanner in Norfolk and Suffolk", Edward asked John Tirrell "to up all swans and cygnets in Felixstowe, Bawdsey, Alderton, Brightwell, Henley, Ramsholt, Shottisham and Sutton, and to mark all wild swans and all those lately belonging to suppressed religious houses or to persons attainted or convicted of treason, misprision of treason, praemunire, outlawry etc."[10]

Edward was knighted at Norwich, Norfolk on 22 August 1578[11] after he had entertained Elizabeth I at his homes in Blickling and Thetford, Norfolk.[5][12]

In the 1580s Edward was involved in proceedings against recusants - those who maintained allegiance to the Roman Catholic church.[13] He was one of those engaged in preparing Norfolk against the possibility of a Spanish invasion in 1587[14] and 1588.[15]

Lands
Edward inherited extensive lands in Norfolk. In 1558 he bought property at Wymondham, Norfolk. In 1561 he inherited Blickling, Norfolk following the death of his great-uncle James Boleyn, and this became his main residence. In 1567 Richard Fulmerston, father of Edward's first wife Frances, died and Edward and Frances came into possession of extensive properties in the area of Thetford, Norfolk. All this made Edward a substantial enough landowner for William Cecil, Lord Burghley, to include him in a 1588 list of those who might be able to support a peerage.[5]

Elizabeth I granted him a manor at Tacolneston, Norfolk[2][3] and, in 1594-5, lands at Ormesby, Norfolk.[16] His will shows that, in addition to property in Norfolk, he held leases in Lincolnshire and Suffolk.[17]

Marriages and Children
Edward married twice. His first wife was Frances Fulmerston, daughter of Richard Fulmerston[1] and Alice Lonzam: their marriage settlement was dated 16 December 1554.[2][3] They had eight children:

Edward,[1][2][3][4] named in his father's will[17]
Francis,[1][2][3] named in his father's will[17]
Fulmerston,[2][3] who died in childhood[12]
Charles,[2][3] who died in childhood[12]
Anne,[1] who married William Gilbert and Okeover Crompton[2][3]
Elizabeth,[2][3] who died in childhood[12]
Temperance,[1][2][3] who died in childhood[12]
another Elizabeth,[2][3] who died in childhood[12]
Frances Fulmerston was buried at Blickling, Norfolk on 20 March 1579/80.[2][3]

On 7 September 1580 Edward married Agnes Crane, daughter of Robert Crane and Bridget Jermyn. He was her 4th husband: she was widow of John Smith of Halesworth in Suffolk, Francis Clopton of Melford in Suffolk, and Christopher Heydon of Baconsthorpe in Suffolk.[2][3] They had one son:

Robert,[2][3] named in his father's will[17]
In 1583 Edward and his second wife engaged in a lawsuit relating to legacies from her third husband Christopher Heydon.[2][3]

Death and Burial
Edward died in London on 8 June 1606. He was buried at Blickling, Norfolk on 21 June 1606.[2][3][18] The entry, in Latin, in the Blickling parish register can be translated:[18]

"lord [of the manor of Blickling] Sir Edward Clere late lord of Blickling died in London on the 8th day of June and was buried at Blickling on the 21st day of the said month whose holy life was celebrated solemnly on 24 August 1606"
Will
Edward Clere's will was dated 4 April 1605 and proved on 2 August 1606.[2][3][5][17] In it he left:[17]

to his widow Agnes during her lifetime, various lands and rents in Norfolk, and jewels and the contents of Blickling Hall with a wish that his son Robert live with her at Blickling Hall; Agnes's bequest to pass to his son Robert on her death
to his grandson Henry Clere, the great chain of gold which Emperor Charles V had given his father John
to his son Robert, his London house and goods, his possessions at Holloway (grandson Henry to have them if Robert was dead), and some lands in Norfolk
to his son Edward, the manors of Thetford and Snareshill
to his son Edward and Edward's son Henry, properties and rights at Elveden, Monkshall, Ruster's[?], Tacolneston, Williams and Rekilton[?] and possessions in Norfolk which he was granted by Elizabeth I and which had formerly belonged the nuns and canons of Thetford
to his son Sir Francis, all his possessions in Suffolk and various properties in Norfolk
to Edward Clere, son of Humphrey, an annuity of £20 secured on property at Blickling
property at East Dereham to advance the marriage of his grandchild Clere Gilbert
an interest in an annuity and a lease to advance the marriages of Katherine and Temperance Gilbert, daughters of his daughter Gilbert
to his executors, a 15-year interest in properties at East Flegg, West Flegg and Hopping, these then passing to his grandson Henry
his possessions in Lincolnshire to be used for the performance of his will over a 20-year period, and then for establishing a fellowship and scholarship at St John's College, Cambridge
The will also contained a reference to a gift he had made to his daughter-in-law Dame Agnes Finch.[17]

The will was designed partly to keep much of his property out of the hands of his son Edward, who had Roman Catholic leanings.[5]

He named as sole executor his wife Agnes, who is left £100 in recognition of this, with a request that any unjust demands from Sir John Parker and Fulmerstons be resisted. The supervisors of the will were to be Sir Drew Drury and Master Edward Wymark.[17]

Research Notes
Death and Burial
The History of Parliament Online entry for Edward gives his death date as 3 June 1606,[5] as does the commentary on his will on the Oxford Shakespeare website.[17] The Blickling parish register has a date of 8 June,[18] confirming the date given by Douglas Richardson.[2][3]

FreeReg has a transcription which misinterprets the burial date as 14 August 1606.[19] This is also the date given in Athenae Cantabrigienses[12] and Alumni Cantabrigienses.[4] This was the date of a memorial service, not his burial, as is clear from the Blickling parish register.[18]

Sources
1 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 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. 7, ALSOP 14, Google Books
3 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. 116-117, ALSOP 15
4 J A Venn. Alumni Cantabrigienses from the earliest times to 1751, Vol. I, Cambridge University Press, 1922, p. 352, Internet Archive
5 History of Parliament Online, entry for 'CLERE, Edward (1536-1606), of Blickling, Norf.'
6 List of Sheriffs for England and Wales, Public Records Office Lists and Indices, HMSO, 1898 (Kraus Reprint Corporation reprint, 1963), p. 88, Internet Archive
7 'Queen Elizabeth - Volume 144: November 1580', in Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth, 1547-80, ed. Robert Lemon (London, 1856), pp. 685-689, British History Online, accessed 11 July 2022
8 'Queen Elizabeth - Volume 81: September 1571', in Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth, 1547-80, ed. Robert Lemon (London, 1856), pp. 421-424, British History Online, entry for 30 September 1571, accessed 11 July 2022
9 'Queen Elizabeth - Volume 120: Undated 1577', in Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth, 1547-80, ed. Robert Lemon (London, 1856), pp. 574-580, British History Online, entry 15, accessed 11 July 2022
10 National Archives Discovery Centre catalogue entry
11 W A Shaw. The Knights of England, Vol. II, Sherratt and Hughes, 1906, p. 78, Internet Archive
12 Charles Henry Cooper and Thompson Cooper. Athenae Cantabrigienses, Vol. II, 1861, p. 440, Internet Archive
13 See for instance 'Queen Elizabeth - Volume 208: January 1588', in Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Elizabeth, 1581-90, ed. Robert Lemon (London, 1865), pp. 456-461, British History Online, entry for 22 January 1588, accessed 11 July 2022
14 'Queen Elizabeth - Volume 204: October 1587', in Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Elizabeth, 1581-90, ed. Robert Lemon (London, 1865), pp. 428-434, British History Online, entry for 20 October 1587, accessed 11 July 2022
15 'Queen Elizabeth - Volume 209: April 1588', in Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Elizabeth, 1581-90, ed. Robert Lemon (London, 1865), pp. 472-481, British History Online, entry for 30 April 1588, accessed 11 July 2022
16 The National Archives, ref. E 40/15022, Discovery Centre catalogue entry
17 Oxford Shakespeare website, transcript of Edward Clere's will, The National Archives, PROB 11/108/169, PDF, accessed 12 April 2020
18 "England, Norfolk, Parish Registers (County Record Office), 1510-1997", database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JDCH-XJN : 6 November 2020), Edwardus Clere, 1606 and linked image of parish register
19 Blickling : St Andrew : Extract of a Register : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/58187a1be93790ec7537cee7 : viewed 12 Apr 2020) burial Edward Clere 14 Aug 1606 
Clere, Sir Edward (I7415)
 
5872 from wikitree

Thomas Tyrrell
Born about 1470 in Gipping, Suffolk, Englandmap
Son of James Tyrrell KB and Anne (Arundel) Tyrrell
Brother of James Tyrrell and Anne (Tyrrell) Wentworth
Husband of Margaret (Willoughby) Tyrrell - married after 1500 in Englandmap
Father of Anne (Tyrrell) Clere and John Tyrrell
Died 1551 at about age 81 in Gipping, Suffolk, Englandmap

Biography
Born: About 1470.
Estimated dated based on his parents marriage in 1469.
Married:
Margaret Willoughby[1][2]
Joan,[1][2] described as daughter of Thomas Carden of Minster, Isle of Sheppey, Kent in the History of Parliament Online entry for Nicolas Cutler, her second husband[3]
Died: Between 12 June 1551 and 25 August 1551.
Dates his will was made and proved.
1 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
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. IV, pp. 159-160, MORLEY 16
3 History of Parliament Online, entry for 'CUTLER, Nicholas (by 1513-68), of Eye, Suff.
Will of Thomas Tyrrell, the National Archives, ref. PROB 11/34/309, transcript on the Oxford Shakespeare website, accessed 13 July 2022
Wikipedia:James Tyrrell 
Tyrrell, Thomas (I7426)
 
5873 from wikitree
Born about 1560 in Norfolk, England
Daughter of Edward Clere MP and Frances (Fulmerston) de Clere
[sibling(s) unknown]
Wife of William Gilbert - married 23 Apr 1578 in Blickling, Norfolk, Englandmap
Wife of Okeover Crompton - married about 1610 in Englandmap
Mother of Clere (Gilbert) Berrisford, John Gilbert, Henry Gilbert and Temperance (Gilbert) Hopkins
before 6 Nov 1616 before about age 56 in Norfolk, Englandmap
Biography
Anne was the daughter of Edward de Clere and Frances Fulmerston.[1][2][3] She was probably born in Norfolk whee her father had his main interests. Her birth year is not known and has been guesstimated about 1560, based on her marriage date of 1578 and her parents' marriage in about December 1554.

Anne married twice. On 23 April 1578 she wed William Gilbert[3] at Blicking, Norfolk.[1][2][4] They had four children, all of whom were named in their father's will (dated 27 February 1607/8 and proved on 12 May 1609):[5]

Henry,[1][2] named in the will of Anne's father Edward Clere[6]
John[1][2]
Clere, who married Robert Newton[1][2][7] and John Beresford[1][2] and was named in the will of Anne's father Edward[6]
Temperance, who married John Alsop and William Hopkins[1][2] and was named in the will of Anne's father Edward[6]
In 1575 William Gilbert acquired Mickleover, Derbyshire, which became his main residence.[1][2]

William Gilbert was buried on 21 February 1607/8.[8] In about 1610 Anne remarried, her second husband being Okeover Crompton of Ormesby, Norfolk.[1][2]

In 1615 Anne's brother Edward granted her and Okeover an annuity of £30.[1][2]

Anne died a little before 4 November 1616, quite likely in Norfolk where her second husband had property.[1][2]

Sources
1 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, Google Books
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. I, pp. 117-188, ALSOP 16
3 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
4 "England, Norfolk, Parish Registers (County Record Office), 1510-1997", database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NXND-TQ9 : 6 November 2020), Anne Clere in entry for Willim Gilbert, 1578
5 The National Archives, PROB 11/113/392, Discovery Centre catalogue entry
6 Will of Edward Clere, the National Archives, ref. PROB 11/108/169, transcript at Oxford Shakespeare website, accessed 10 July 2033
7 Walter C Metcalfe. Pedigrees contained in the Visitations of Derbyshire, 1569 and 1611 in "The Genealogist, New Series, Vol. VIII, 1891, p. 23, Internet Archive
8 The Registers of Mickleover and of Littleover, co. Derby, Parish Register Society, 1909, p. 34, Internet Archive 
Clere, Anne (I7411)
 
5874 from wikitree
Born about 1595 in Derbyshire, Englandmap [uncertain]
Daughter of William Gilbert and Anne (Clere) Crompton
Sister of John Gilbert, Clere (Gilbert) Berrisford and Henry Gilbert
Wife of John Alsop - married 1 May 1617 in Mickleover, Derbyshire, Englandmap
Mother of Anthony Alsop, John Alsop, Timothy Alsop, Elizabeth (Alsop) Fowler and George Alsop
Died before 6 Nov 1648 before about age 53 in New Englandmap [uncertain]

Biography
Temperance was the daughter of William Gilbert[1] and Anne Clere. She may have been born in Derbyshire where her father acquired land. Her birth date is not known, but she married in 1617, her husband was born in about 1596 (said to be age 15 in 1611[2]), and she had 10 children, two of them from her second marriage in 1633:[3][4] on that basis, her birth year has been estimated as about 1595.

The 1605 will of Temperance's maternal grandfather Edward Clere left an annuity to be used for the advancement of the marriages of Temperance and her sister Katherine.[5] She, her brother Henry and her sister Clere were residuary legatees under the 1608 will of her father, proved in 1609.[6]

Temperance married twice. Her first husband was John Alsop.[1] They married on 1 May 1617 at Mickleover, Derbyshire.[3][4][7][8] They had eight children:

Anthony,[1][3][4] described as eldest brother in the will of his brother John[9]
John[3][4]
Timothy[3][4]
George[3][4]
Jane, who married Roger Jackson[3][4]
Mary[3][4]
Elizabeth, who married Richard Baldwin and William Fowler[3][4]
Clere[3][4]
John Alsop died in 1631. On 20 August 1633 Temperance married William Hopkins at Alvaston, Derbyshire.[3][4][10] They had two children:

William,[3][4] baptised at Mickleover, Derbyshire on 25 September 1636[11] and buried there on 14 January1636/7[12]
Temperance[3][4]
Temperance was left £50 in the 1643 will of her son John.[9]

Temperance died "overseas" (almost certainly meaning in New England where some of her children were) before 6 November 1648, when her second husband was granted administration of her estate.[3][4]

Disambiguation
Temperance Gilbart/Gilbert, daughter of William, baptised at West Camel, Somerset on 15 January 1597/8,[13][14] belongs to a different family, which included a number of other children baptised at West Camel in the 1590s.[15]

Sources
1 William Dugdale. The Visitation of Derbyshire, taken in the year 1662, and reviewed in 1663, Golding and Lawrence, 1879, p. 18, Internet Archive
2 Pedigrees contained in the Visitation of Derbyshire 1569 and 1611, in 'The Genealist', New Series, Vol. 7, 1890, p. 1, Internet Archive
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, pp. 8-9, ALSOP 16, Google Books
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. I, p. 118, ALSOP 17
5 Brigadier-General Bulwer (ed.). The Visitation of Norfolk in the year 1563, Vol. II, 1895, pp. 326-327, Internet Archive
6 The National Archives, PROB 11/113/392, Discovery Centre catalogue entry
7 The Registers of Mickleover and of Littleover, co. Derby, Parish Register Society, 1909, p. 29, Internet Archive: "Mr John Awsopp, gent. & Mrs. Temperence Gilbert were married the ffirst day of May in ye yere Abovesaid"
8 "England Marriages, 1538-1973 ", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N234-3B3 : 13 March 2020), Temperence Mrs Gilbert in entry for John Awsopp, 1617
9 Summary of John Alsop's will in Henry F Waters, Genealogical Gleanings in England, Vol. I, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1901, pp. 425-427, Internet Archive
10 "England Marriages, 1538-1973 ", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NJ1C-9XB : 6 January 2021), William Hopkins, 1633
11 The Registers of Mickleover and of Littleover, co. Derby, p. 14, Internet Archive
12 The Registers of Mickleover and of Littleover, co. Derby, p. 42, Internet Archive
13 Somerset : West Camel : All Saints : Dwelly's Transcripts : "Parish Register" database, FreeREG (https://www.freereg.org.uk/search_records/58182830e93790eca3922ab1 : viewed 9 Jul 2022) baptism Temperance Gilbert 15 Jan 1597/8
14 "England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9V-3NTK : 25 February 2022), Temperance Gilbart, 1597
 
Gilbert, Temperance (I7438)
 
5875 from wikitree
Born about 1622 in Englandmap
Daughter of John Alsop and Temperance (Gilbert) Hopkins
Sister of Anthony Alsop, John Alsop, Timothy Alsop and George Alsop
Wife of Richard Baldwin - married after 5 Feb 1643 (to 23 Jul 1665) in New Haven, Connecticutmap
Wife of William Fowler - married 1 Nov 1670 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticutmap
Mother of Mary Baldwin, Elizabeth (Baldwin) Burwell, Sylvanus Baldwin, Richard Baldwin, Sarah (Baldwin) Riggs, Temperance (Baldwin) Burwell, Mary Alsop (Baldwin) Comstock, Theophilus Baldwin, Zachariah Baldwin, Martha (Baldwin) Nettleton and Barnabas Baldwin
Died about May 1683 at about age 61 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticutmap [uncertain]

Biography
Elizabeth Alsop[1]

Elizabeth Alsop was the daughter of John Alsop, Gent., of Alsop-le-Dale and Mickleover, Derbyshire, and Temperance Gilbert and sister of Timothy, George, Anthony, John, Jane (married Jackson), Mary and Clere.[1][2] She was born in England, probably in Derby, but the date and place of her birth is unknown and is estimated.[3]
The date of her immigration to America is unknown, but on 5 February 1642/3, she joined the Milford Church (as Elizabeth Alsop).[1] In addition, the will of her brother, John Allsopp of Bonsall, Derby, dated 16 January 1643, proved 10 February 1646, names the following people: his mother, Temperance Hopkins; his eldest brother Anthony; sister Jane Jackson, wife of Roger; grandmother Mrs. Jane Allsopp; aunt Dorothy Hopkinson; his wife Mary Allsopp; and "my two brothers and sister now living in New England" [probably Timothy, George and Elizabeth].[4]
Elizabeth married twice. About 1643, in Milford, Connecticut, she married first Richard Baldwin, son of Sylvester Baldwin[1] and his wife Sarah Bryan.[5][6]
Children:
Mary Baldwin, baptized 1643 (died young)[5]
Elizabeth Baldwin, baptized 1644,[5] married Zachariah Burwell[1]
Sylvanus Baldwin,[1] baptized 1646, married on 26 September 1671 to Mildred Prudden, daughter of Rev. P. Prudden[5] (Sylvanus died 1727)[7]
Richard Baldwin, born in 1647 (died young)[5]
Sarah Baldwin, married Samuel Riggs[1][8] of Derby 14 June 1667; Sarah was baptized in 1649[5]
Temperance Baldwin, baptized 16 June 1651,[5] married Nathan Burwell[1] of Milford, 14 June 1673[5]
Mary Baldwin, baptized 6 November 1653,[5] married (1) Isaac Nichols, (2) Daniel Comstock[1]
Theophilus Baldwin,[1] born 26 April 1659,[5] married Elizabeth Campfield[5] (Theophilus died in 1698)[7]
Zachariah Baldwin,[1] born 22 September 1660, married Mrs. Elizabeth Sanfield[5] (Zachariah died in 1722)[7]
Martha Baldwin, born 1 April 1663,[5] married Samuel Nettleton[1] of Milford[5]
Barnabus Baldwin,[1] born in 1665, "after his father's death"; married three times[5] (Barnabus died in 1741)[7]
Richard Baldwin died 23 July 1665.[1] His estate was presented at Hartford, Connecticut, on 23 September 1665. Richard and Elizabeth's eldest son [Sylvanus] received a double portion and their youngest child [Barnabas], who was born after Richard's death, was not mentioned.[6]
In November 1670, also in Milford, she married second Lieutenant William Fowler.[1]
Elizabeth died perhaps in May 1683.[5][9] She is buried in the old part of Milford Cemetery (no grave marker remains), Milford, New Haven County, Connecticut.[7] Her husband, William, died about the same time. He left a will dated 3 October 1682, proved June 1683, in which he names ten of his children by his first marriage.[10]
Research Notes
CONFLATION WARNING
There is another Elizabeth Alsop (abt.1614-1669), who married Rosseter and was possibly a sister of another Timothy and Josias. See will of the "other" Timothy, who married Martha and had daughters, Betty and Prudence (Elizabeth's brother Timothy married Elizabeth and had two sons who died without issue).[11]
Anderson notes that she may be the sister of Joseph Alsop, but that more research is needed.[12] Charles C. Baldwin indicates the same.[13]
Unsourced Children
Royal and Magna Carta Ancestry
The line of her mother, Temperance Gilbert, goes back to King Edward I (Longshanks), King of England, Henry Plantagenet (King Henry III of England), Matilada Baldwin who married King William I (William the Conqueror) and their son, King Henry I of England (according to The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants...).[7]
She is a descendant of several Magna Carta Surety Barons, including the Bigods,[1] through her mother's ancestor Sir Richard FitzAlan. (See the Magna Carta Project section, below.)
Sources
1 Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition, 4 vols., ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City, Utah: the author, 2011), Volume I, pages 8-9 ALSOP 16.iii.
2 "Pedigree of the Family of Alsopp, of Alsopp-in-the-Dale" in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (Boston, MA: NEHGS, Oct 1892). Online at AmericanAncestors.org, vol. 46, page 367.
3 Find a Grave, database and images (accessed 27 November 2020), memorial page for Elizabeth Alsop Fowler (1625-Jul 1688), Find A Grave: Memorial #28226249, citing Milford Cemetery, Milford, New Haven County, Connecticut, USA; Maintained by V. Nareen Lake (contributor 46613568). NOTE: memorial shows birth in 1625, but no source. This WikiTree profile shows birth in 1622, Alsop-En-Le-Dale, Derbyshire, England, but no source. Rationale for 1622 birth (given by Anne B. in a comment): "The first husband's birth was 1622. Fowler's, I suspect is an estimate. Dtr Mary bpt 1643 and Eliza was bpt 1644. So I'd say the 1622 date is probably a better estimate."
4 "Genealogical Gleanings in England" in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1890). Online at AmericanAncestors.org, vol. 44, pages 91-92.
5 John D. Baldwin. A Record of the Descendants of John Baldwin of Stonington. (Worcester MA: Tyler & Seagrave, 1880). Online at Archive.org, page 10.
6 Samuel Orcutt. The History of the Old Town of Derby, Connecticut, 1642-1880. (Springfield MA: Springfield Printing Co., 1880, Reprint: Bowie, Maryland, Heritage Books, Inc., 1998). Online at HathiTrust, p. 693: Baldwin.
7 Find A Grave: Memorial #28226249
8 James Savage. A Genealogical Dictionary of The First Settlers of New England, Before 1692. Vol. 3. Online at USGenNet.org Riggs.
9 FindAGrave (citation above) says she died July 1688 but does not give a source.
10 Daniel Fowler. A Genealogy Memoir of the Descendants of Capt. William Fowler, of New Haven, Connecticut. (Milwaukee, WI: Starr & Son, 1870). Online at Archive.org, Pages 13-14.
11 "Genealogical Gleanings in England" in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1891). Online at AmericanAncestors.org, vol. 45, page 297.
12 Robert Charles Anderson, George F. Sanborn, Jr., and Melinde Lutz Sanborn. The Great Migration, Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635, Volume 1, A-B. (Boston: NEHGS, 1999). Online at AmericanAncestors.org, page 51.
13 Charles C. Baldwin. "Alsop and Harlakenden" in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (Boston, MA: NEHGS, Oct 1892). Online at AmericanAncestors.org, vol. 46, pages 368-369.
14 Richardson, Douglas. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 4 vols., ed. Kimball G. Everingham. 2nd edition. Salt Lake City, UT: the author, 2011. See also WikiTree's source page for Magna Carta Ancestry.
15 Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols., ed. Kimball G. Everingham. Salt Lake City, UT: the author, 2013. See also WikiTree's source page for Royal Ancestry.Vol. I, p. 118.
See also:
"Derby, Connecticut Town Records, 1655-1710" (New Haven, CT, The Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor Company, 1901.), p. 4. . "...Isaac Nichols of Stratford guniar have Sold.. unto Ebenezer Johnson of Pagasett, ... which was formerly Given to me by my honared mother in Law ElizaBeth Fowler .. hogges Meadow.." Online at Internet Archive.
Abbott, Susan Woodruff. Families of Early Milford, Connecticut. (Genealogical Publishing Co., 1979). Online at Google Books, p. 51: Richard Baldwin.
Lewis, Marlyn. Elizabeth Alsop in "Our Royal, Titled, Noble, and Commoner Ancestors and Cousins" (website, compiled by Mr. Marlyn Lewis, Portland, OR; accessed 17 January 2019). See also Temperance Gilbert
Torrey, Clarence A. New England Marriages Prior to 1700. (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2004). Online at Ancestry.com, page 36: Baldwin, m. aft. 5 Feb 1643?, and page 280: Fowler, m. 1 Nov 1670.
Ancestry.com. "Connecticut, U.S., Town Birth Records, pre-1870" (Barbour Collection) [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006. Online at Ancestry.com: marriage to Baldwin.
PROBABLY NOT THIS ELIZABETH: The Charles R. Hale Collection. Hale Collection of Connecticut Cemetery Inscriptions. (Hartford, CT: Connecticut State Library). Ancestry Record 2900 #264569. Online at Ancestry.com. Connecticut Newspaper Notices published July 1856:Mrs Elizabeth Fowler, Age: 65, Death Date: 28 Jul [no year], Death Place: Milford, Connecticut, USA. 
Alsop, Elizabeth (I7406)
 
5876 from wikitree Blossom-77:

Biography
John Blossom was born before 1505 at Great Shelford, co Cambridge.[1]

He was a yeoman who was taxed at Great Shelford in the Lay Subsidies of 1524 and 1546, but not mentioned in 1559 and 1571. He got a quarter of malt through the will of his son William Blossom, the testator of 1565/6.[1]

The name of John Blossom's wife is not known. She was buried as "Mother Blossome" at Great Shelford on December 26, 1570.[1]

He was buried 22 Mar 1572/3 in Great Shelford, Cambridge, England as "Father Blossome" which indicates that he was aged.[1]

Children:[1]

William b abt 1525 and buried at Great Shelford February 17, 1565/6
Peter of Great Shelford and later of Stapleford, co. Cambridge was born probably at Great Shelford about 1535 and was buried at Stapleford June 15, 1597. He married (1st) Margaret Roger who was buried August 27, 1568. Married (2nd) about 1570 to Anabel _____; who survived him and was his executrix.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 The American Genealogist. New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, 1937-. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2009 - .) John Insley Coddington, Maclean W. McLean. "The Blossom Family of Cambridgshire, England and New England" pp 71-77.subscription 
Blossom, John (I7121)
 
5877 From Wikitree:

A contract for the marriage of Elizabeth Morley and Sir John Arundel, Under-Sheriff, Sheriff, & Vice-Admiral of Cornwall was signed on 25 April 1446. They had 1 daughter:[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8]

Elizabeth Morley died between 12 November 1446 and 5 March 1451.[4][6][8][9]

Sources
1. Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 181.
2. Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 518-519.
3. Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 41-42.
4. Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 183.
5. Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 461.
6. Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 166-167.
7. Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 74.
8. Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 157.
9. Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage, Baronetage, and Knightage, 1938 ed., by Sir Bernard Burke, p., 159. 
Morley, Elizabeth (I16848)
 
5878 from Wikitree:

Biography
Aged 23 in 1416.

Married on or before 5 February 1402/3 to Isabel de la Pole.

They had one son and two daughters:

Robert, 6th Lord Morley
Elizabeth
Anne, who married John Hastings.
According to Richardson he fought at Agincourt and was present at the death Henry V.

Summoned to parliament 15 July 1427 to 5 July 1435.

Burial of Sir Thomas Morley 5th Lord Morley
He and his wife Isabel were buried in the chancel of Hingham, Norfolk. He died December 6, 1435. Isabel, Lady Morley, died February 8, 1467. The parish church of Hingham is St. Andrew's Church, which is an active, 14th century church with a huge Morley family tomb, one of the first tombs of this type. The church also has a memorial to Abraham Lincoln, whose English ancestor Samuel Lincoln immigrated from Hingham Norfolk in 1637.

St. Andrews Church and the tomb of Thomas Morley[1]

Sources
http://www.norfolkchurches.co.uk/hingham/hingham.htm
See Also:

Royal Ancestry 2013 Vol. IV p. 156-157
Magna Carta Ancestry 2011 2nd ed. Vol. III p. 182 
Morley, Thomas (I16831)
 
5879 From Wikitree:

Biography
Anne Morley, daughter of Thomas Morley, Knight, 5th lord Morley, by Isabel, daughter of Michael de la Pole, Knight, 2nd Earl of Suffolk, married John Hastings, Esq., son and heir of Edward Hastings by Muriel Dinham. [1] The license was dated marriage license on 21 April 1434. [2] They had three sons, Hugh, Knight, Edmund, Knight and Robert, and two daughters, Isabel (wife of Thomas Bosville, Knight), and Elizabeth. [3] Anne died in 1471. [4]
She was buried with her husband in the chancel of the parish church of Gressenhall, Norfolk, St. Mary's Church (Church of St. Mary the Virgin). Confirmation received in 2008 from the Rector and the Church Warden. (see note in John Hastings biography)

p159 - daughter of Lady Morley of Norwich, relict of Lord Morley.

p36 - In the parish church of Hingham (Norfolk, England) on the north side of the chancel ... is a monument ..to Lord Morley. Lord Thomas Morley died in 1435, leaving Isabel, daughter of of Michael De-la-Pole, Earl of Suffolk, his widow, who died in 1466 and was buried in this church. Her will is dated 1464 ... and left legacies to John Hastyngs her son-in-law. and Anne his wife, her daughter ... with gifts to Isabell Boswell, daughter of the said Anne

Sources
1- Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, vol II, page 117
2- Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors & Cousins
3- Foster, Joseph. Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire. 1874. Vol 3. Pg. 55-6. Archive.org. [1]
4- Flower, William. The visitation of Yorkshire in the years 1563 and 1564. 1881. Pg. 155. Archive.org. [2]
5- Glover, Robert. The visitation of Yorkshire, made in the years 1584/5. 1875. Pg. 373. Archive.org. [3]
6- The Publications of the Surtees Society. 1835. Vol 41. Pg. 73. Archive.org. [4]
7- Raine, James. Testamenta Eboracensia, Or Wills Registered at York. Pg. 273-8. Archive.org. [5]
8- Carthew, George Alfred. The hundred of Launditch and Deanery of Brisley. 1877. Vol 1. Pg. 199. Google Books. [6]
9- Surtees Society. Visitations of the North, Part IV. 1932. Pg. 45. Google Drive. [7]
10- Royal Ancestry 2013 D. Richardson Vol. II p. 499
11- Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, (2011), Douglas Richardson, 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 II, page 117 #10
12- Doubleday, H.A., Duncan Warrand, and Lord Howard de Walden, eds. The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom (originally edited by George Edward Cokayne and revised by Vicary Gibbs). Vol. VI. London: The St Catherine Press, 1926. (p. 360, FamilySearch Book: 483528)
13- Doubleday, H.A. and Lord Howard de Walden, eds. The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom (originally edited by George Edward Cokayne). Vol. IX. London: The St Catherine Press, 1936. (p. 218, FamilySearch Book: 421516)
14- Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors & Cousins database online, compiled by Mr. Marlyn Lewis, follows Douglas Richardson's Magna Carta Ancestry. It includes Magna Carta Surety Barons and many of their descendants. Anne Morley
15- from pp 36 & 159 of "The History and Genealogical Tables of the Boswells" Pt1, by Jasper John Boswell, privately published 1906, held by Alan Boswell, and Yale University Library.
Acknowledgements 
Morley, Ann (I17009)
 
5880 from Wikitree:

Biography
In the Visitation of Yorkshire for the years 1563-64 she is listed as: Margery Hyllyard = William Askew of Stalyngburgh. ; ch. Jane (m. Pheylp Hanby), Sir William Askew.

Sources
Royal Ancestry 2013 Vol. IV p. 638
Magna Carta Ancestry 2005 pg 751 
Hildyard, Margery (I16814)
 
5881 From Wikitree:

Birth
Isabel 's parents were married about April 13, 1383. [2] Given her marriage about twenty years later, she was probably born in the early years of her parents marriage, between 1384 and 1387. The established church expected girls to be of at least sixteen years of age to be married.

Death: 8 Feb 1466/7 [1]
She was buried with her husband Thomas Morley 5th Lord Morley (died in 1435), in the chancel of St. Andrews parish church in Hingham, Norfolk, England.[3] The church has a huge Morley tomb. (see burial information for Tomas Morley.)

Will: proved 27 Feb 1466/7[1]

Husband: Thomas Morley

Marriage: on or before 5 Feb 1402/3 [1]

Sources
1.Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. II page 416-417
2.1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, vol III, page 182
3.Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, vol II, page 40
4.Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, Douglas Richardson, 2013, Vol IV, page 157

See also:
Richardson, Royal Ancestry (2013) Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols., ed. Kimball G. Everingham, (Salt Lake City, Utah: the author, 2013), Vol. IV p. 156-157

Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, (2011), Douglas Richardson, 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 III, page 182 #9. AND vol II, page 40

Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors & Cousins database online, compiled by Mr. Marlyn Lewis, follows Douglas Richardson's Magna Carta Ancestry. It includes Magna Carta Surety Barons and many of their descendants. Isabel de la Pole

"The History and Genealogical Tables of the Boswells" Pt1, by Jasper John Boswell, privately published 1906, held by Alan Boswell, and Yale University Library. page 36 
Pole, Isabel (I16850)
 
5882 from Wikitree:

Marriage
m.1 Elizabeth Morley (Father: Thomas Morley, 5th Baron Morley).married 25 Apr 1446 . Issue:
Anne Arundell
m.2 Katherine Chideocke. (marriage settlement 05 Mar 1451). married 5 Mar 1451. Issue:
1. Catherine
2. Elizabeth
3. Thomasine
4.Margaret
5. Ellen
6.Dorothy
7. Jane
8.Thomas Arundell (1454 -01 Oct 1485)

Residence
Lanherne, Cornwall

Occupation
served in France during reign of Henry VI

Sources
married 25 Apr 1446Date given in the IPM of his grandfather,
Marlyn Lewis [1] Sir John Arundel, Under-Sheriff, Sheriff, & Vice-Admiral of Cornwall, M, #14462, b. 9 June 1421, d. 12 November 1473, citing:
Unknown author, The Complete Peerage, by Cokayne, Vol. II, p. 16, Vol. IV, p. 104, Vol. V, p. 461.
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 181.
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 518-519.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 41-42.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 19-20.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 141.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 183.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 217.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 238.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 310.
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 461.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 166-167.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 74.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 571-572.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 157.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 219.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 326.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 679-683.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 73-74.
The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom, by George Edward Cokayne, Vol. VIII, p. 523.
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 179.
Webb, Edward Doran, ed. Notes by The 12th Lord Arundell of Wardour on The Family History (Longmans, Green, and Co., London, 1916) Page 5 
Arundell, Sir John (I16849)
 
5883 from Wikitree:
Born about 1445 in Gipping, Suffolk, Englandmap
Son of William Tyrrell and Margaret (Darcy) Tyrrell
Brother of Dorothy (Tyrell) Boteler and Eleanor (Tyrrell) Knyvett
Husband of Anne (Arundel) Tyrrell - married 23 Mar 1483 [location unknown]
Father of James Tyrrell, Thomas Tyrrell and Anne (Tyrrell) Wentworth
Died 6 May 1502 at about age 57 in Tower Hill London London, Middlesex, England

Biography
James Tyrell, KB
Born: About 1445.
Aged 40 years and more in 1485.
A settlement for the marriage between him and Anne Arundell was made on 23 March 1469. He died on 6 May 1502 at Tower Hill, The City, London, England, beheaded, after having confessed to the murder of the two Princes in the Tower.

In 1469, Tyrrell married Anne Arundel, the daughter of John Arundel of Lanherne, Cornwall, by his first wife, Elizabeth Morley, daughter of Thomas, Lord Morley,[1] by whom he had three sons and a daughter:

Children:
Sir Thomas Tyrrell (d. 1551) of Gipping, Suffolk, who married firstly Margaret Willoughby, daughter of Christopher Willoughby, 10th Baron Willoughby de Eresby, by whom he had a son, Sir John Tyrrell (d. 1574), who married Elizabeth Munday, the daughter of Sir John Munday (d. 1537), Lord Mayor of London, and a daughter, Anne Tyrrell, who married Sir John Clere of Ormesby, Norfolk.

James Tyrrell (d. 1539) of Columbine Hall in Stowupland, Suffolk, who married Anne Hotoft.

Anne Tyrrell, who married Sir Richard Wentworth (d. 1528) of Nettlestead, Suffolk, by whom she was the mother of Thomas Wentworth, 1st Baron Wentworth.
He held the office of Master of the Horse to King Richard III. He lived at Gipping, Suffolk, England. He held the office of Lieutenant of the Castle of Guisnes in 1486. In 1501 he was connected with the flight of Edmund de la Pole, (titular) 3rd Duke of Suffolk.[1]

He was a trusted servant to King Richard III and was beheaded on the order of King Henry VII. He was known for confessing to the murders of the Princes in the Tower under Richard's rule. His confession was given under torture.

Sources:
Wikipedia contributors, "James Tyrrell," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 
Tyrrell, James (I16847)
 
5884 From wikitree:
Daughter of John Arundell and Elizabeth (Morley) Arundel
Sister of Margaret (Arundell) Capell [half], Elizabeth (Arundel) Aubigny [half], Thomasine Arundell [half], Thomas Arundell [half], Ellen (Arundel) Coplestone [half] and Dorothy (Arundell) Strangways [half]
Wife of James Tyrrell KB - married 23 Mar 1483 [location unknown
Mother of James Tyrrell, Thomas Tyrrell and Anne (Tyrrell) Wentworth
Died after 14 Feb 1486 after about age 38 in Gipping, Suffolk, England
Born: Say 1448 (between 1447 and 1451).
Estimated date based on her parents marriage in April 1446 and her marriage in 1469. Her mother was dead by 5 March 1450/1.
She is the daughter of John Arundell and Edith Morley.
Married: James Tyrrell K.B. by settlement dated 23 March 1469. [1]
Children of James Tyrrell and Anne Arundel: [1]
Thomas Tyrrell, knt.
James Tyrrell
William Tyrrell
Anne Tyrrell
Died: After 14 February 1485/6.
Date where, by an Act of Parliament, the lands previously restored to her were taken back and granted to her half-brother, Thomas Arundell. [1]

Sources
Marlyn Lewis [1] Anne Arundell, F, #46983, b. circa 1446, d. after 14 February 1486, citing:
Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage, Baronetage, and Knightage, 1938 ed., by Sir Bernard Burke, p., 159.
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 519.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 184.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 238.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 158.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 219.
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 518-519.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 183.
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 157.
Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 381.
 
Arundell, Anne (I16832)
 
5885 from wikitree:
Joseph Tillotson
Born about 1734 in Hartford County, Connecticutmap
Ancestors ancestors
Son of Joseph Tillotson and Hannah (Messenger) Tillotson
Brother of Mary (Graham) McFarland [half], John Tillotson, Hannah (Tillotson) Sedgwick, Martha Tillotson, Tabitha Tillotson, Ebenezer Tillotson and Ruth Tillotson
Husband of Theodocia (Young) Tillotson - married 15 Feb 1759 in Farmington, Hartford County, Connecticutmap
Descendants descendants
Father of Samuel Tillotson and Hannah (Tillotson) Way
Died about 1790 at about age 56 in Tyringham, Berkshire County, Massachusettsmap
Problems/QuestionsProfile manager: Connie Dahlke private message [send private message]
Tillotson-307 created 18 Jun 2015 | Last modified 19 May 2022
This page has been accessed 394 times.
Biography
1776 Project
Private Joseph Tillotson served with Berkshire County Militia, Massachusetts Militia during the American Revolution.
Daughters of the American Revolution
Joseph Tillotson is a DAR Patriot Ancestor, A115606.
Lived in Tyringham, Berkshire County, Massachusetts. Soldier in the Revolutionary War.

"Private in Capt. Noah Lankton's Company, Col. John Ashley's Regiment (1st Berkshire County), Entered service Sept 19, 1777. Discharged Oct. 11. 1777 - service 23 days. Was on expedition to Stillwater by order of General John Fellows.

"Private in Col. Benjamin Tupper's Regiment. Service from June 5, 1782 - 6 months, 26 days. Receipt dated Springfield, June 15, 1782, for bounty paid said Tillotson, by Seth Clark, chariman of Class No.1, of the town of Medfield to serve in the Continental Army for a term of three years." (Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War.) in "Tillotson Genealogy" by Dr. E. Ward Tillotson.

Sources
Daughters of the American Revolution, DAR Genealogical Research Databases, database online, (http://www.dar.org/ : accessed January 24, 2018), "Record of TILLOTSON, JOSEPH", Ancestor # A115606.http://services.dar.org/public/dar_research/search_descendants/?action=findlist&p_id=A115606

Family records
Tillotson Genealogy, researched 1955 by Dr. E. Ward Tillotson of Pittsburgh, PA and his daughter Mary K. Tillotson-Combs of Cleveland, OH. Pub. 1987 by Margery Tillotson Gaskill of Portland, OR. Publisher: Heritage Quest, International Genealogy Form, Orting, Washington 98360-0040
"United States Rosters of Revolutionary War Soldiers and Sailors, 1775-1783," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS3Q-C3X1-N?cc=2546162&wc=WD6Q-RMV%3A1588792211 : 24 January 2018), Massachusetts, vol 15, Stibbens, Joseph-Tozer, Simon > image 756 of 944; citing various published state rosters, United States. 
Tillotson, Joseph A (I27060)
 
5886 from will:
executor: Moses Lyon son-in-law

Children: Achdah Cobb, Clarissa Lyon, Rhoda Clapp of Syracuse, Jarvis Landry of Ithaca, Rhoda Patterson of Ohio, Mary Vincent of Iowa, Edward Sheldon of Iowa, Henry Sheldon of California, Joseph Sheldon, Benjamin Sheldon, James Sheldon of Sydney, Ohio

Grand children: Ruth Baldwin of Sydney Ohio, Julia Lee of Dayton Ohio, Ruth Sheldon and James Bradley of Ithaca.
 
Bradley, Unknown (I7597)
 
5887 From writeup on wikitree at https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Canfield-600:

MARY CANFIELD was born in abt 1622. He married Mary Canfield in 1643 in Milford, Connecticut. [1] [2] They had four children in 10 years. [3] She then married second JOHN LANE about 1660, in Milford, Connecticut. [4] She died before February 22, 1680, the date her estate's inventory was taken, in Milford, Connecticut, at the age of abt 58, and was buried there. [5]

'From The Ancestry and Descendants of Frederick Tracy Camp... page 2

At Branford on 15 Nov. 1660 the testimony of John Burwell [of Milford] was taken concerning a stray horse then in possession of Josias Ward of Branford demanded by John Nash of New Haven. He stated that "myself and my Cosen Edward Camp who was then living, this winter three years past, saw a colt with John Nash's mare." This was John Burwell, who must have been near Edward Camp in age, so the term "cousin" was probably used in the sense of first cousin rather than nephew. However, it may have been Edward's wife who was the actual cousin of John Burwell. She was MARY______, and her will made "Brother Canfield" an overseer. While this may have meant brother in the church, it is quite possible that she was a sister of Thomas Canfield of Milford. The Canfields, like the Burwells, were from Hitchin, Hertfordshire. If the father of John Burwell was uncle of Thomas Canfield and of Mary wife of Edward Camp, or if his mother was their aunt, these expression of relationship would be explained.

Edward's widow Mary married second, 4 Apr. 1662, being called "widow Camp that lived at Chestnut Hill," John Lane of Milford. He was a widower, with a son Isaac and daughter Sarah, wife of Jobanah Gunn. Lane's will, dated 11 Sept. 1669, made beuest to his sons-in-law [stepsons' Samuel and Edward Camp and daughter-in-law [stepdaughter' Mary Camp; and the codicil written the following day remembered his daughter-in-law [stepdaughter] Mercy Baldwin; son Isaac Lane and son-in-law Jobamah Gunn; brother William East.

Mary Lane died in 1680/1 and her will, dated 22 Feb. 1680, named her sons Samuel and Edward Camp, and daughters Mercy Baldwin, Mary Briscoe, and Mehitabel Camp [the last, the wife of her son Edward]; daughter-in-law [step-daughter] Sarah Gunn and son-in-law Jobamah Gunn [husband of Sarah Land]. Sher made Brother Canfield and John Fiske overseers of her will.

Note: Her will[6] (undated, linked below on Ancestry) mentions children SAMUEL, EDWARD, MERCY BRISCOE, and MARY BALDWIN. She mentions SON IN LAW JOBAMAH GUNN and DAUGHTER IN LAW SARAH LANE GUNN and their children. She also mentions DAUGHTER MEHITABEL, which actually a daughter-in-law, the wife of EDWARD?

Her inventory was taken on 22 February 1680/81 and recorded in New Haven.[6]

Sources
↑ * Yates Publishing. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004. (Spouse; Mary Canfield)
↑ * Torry, Clarence A. New England Marriages Prior to 1700. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2004. (Spouse; Mary Camp, Year 1650, Death)
↑ * The ancestry and descendants of Frederick Tracy Camp and his wife Marion Fee. Vancouver, Wash.: J.F. Camp, 1961., pages 2-3 (Spouse, Children, Death)
↑ * The ancestry and descendants of Frederick Tracy Camp and his wife Marion Fee. Vancouver, Wash.: J.F. Camp, 1961., pages 2-3 (Spouse, Children, Death)
↑ * Find A Grave. Find A Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. [1]
↑ 6.0 6.1 “New Haven Probate Records, Vol. 1-2, 1647-1703”, database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L92K-G9NK-F : 10 March 2021), New Haven, Connecticut, FHL microfilm 007626739, image 187. New Haven Probate Record, 1647-1687, Vol. 1, Part 2, page 80-81. 
Canfield, Mary (I7139)
 
5888 from: http://www.gencircles.com/users/roberlin/1/data/1403

Dates in cemetery transcription are wrong -- 1819 for 1879 and 1898 for 189624 Nov 20028:09:11"Blind and idiotic" according to the 1880 census
"Johnnie"7 May 200215:10:39 
Snear, John (I4852)
 
5889 from: 1892 Portrait & Biographical Album of Genesee, Lapeer & Tuscola Counties, Chapman Bros.

Pages 237 - 240

SENECA SHELDON, a representative farmer and stock-raiser of section 36, Atlas Township, Genesee County, was born March 9, 1832 in Warren County, N.Y. He is a son of Allen and Priscilla (Irish) Sheldon, both of whom were born in New York, and of their family this son was the eldest, and in his native county he had his early training and education. From youth he has been engaged in farming and has pursued this calling with the exception of four winters when he aided his father in getting out logs from the woods. He received a common-school education, and has been an extensive and judicious reader.

The marriage of Seneca Sheldon and Servilla Babcock took place, February 28, 1854. This lady was born in Washington County, N.Y., and is a daughter of John and Ruth Babcock, of Washington County, N.Y. In the spring of 1854 he came too Genesee County, and established himself on the farm where he now lives, which was then practically unbroken and uncultivated and contained no buildings.

Upon settling here Mr. Sheldon at first built a board house and in that resided until 1876, when he erected the home in which his family now resides. He owns one hundred and five acres of land and is practically a self-made man as he and his faithful helpmate have gained their property by their determination and unflagging industry. He is a democrat in his political views but cooperates with any of his neighbors in efforts too secure the best of the community.

Mr. Sheldon raises a fine grade of American-Merinoes and Stropshire sheep and ahs made for himself a splendid reputation in this department of stock-raising. Mr. Sheldon and his wife aaaee active members in society and have seen this locality grow from a wilderness too its present prosperous conditions. They endured and encountered the usual self denials and hardships and carried through a vast amount of hard work during pioneer times. They are highly esteemed and have a large circle of friends.
 
Irish, Priscilla (I291)
 
5890 from: 1892 Portrait & Biographical Album of Genesee, Lapeer & Tuscola Counties, Chapman Bros.

Pages 237 - 240

SENECA SHELDON, a representative farmer and stock-raiser of section 36, Atlas Township, Genesee County, was born March 9, 1832 in Warren County, N.Y. He is a son of Allen and Priscilla (Irish) Sheldon, both of whom were born in New York, and of their family this son was the eldest, and in his native county he had his early training and education. From youth he has been engaged in farming and has pursued this calling with the exception of four winters when he aided his father in getting out logs from the woods. He received a common-school education, and has been an extensive and judicious reader.

The marriage of Seneca Sheldon and Servilla Babcock took place, February 28, 1854. This lady was born in Washington County, N.Y., and is a daughter of John and Ruth Babcock, of Washington County, N.Y. In the spring of 1854 he came to Genesee County, and established himself on the farm where he now lives, which was then practically unbroken and uncultivated and contained no buildings.

Upon settling here Mr. Sheldon at first built a board house and in that resided until 1876, when he erected the home in which his family now resides. He owns one hundred and five acres of land and is practically a self-made man as he and his faithful helpmate have gained their property by their determination and unflagging industry. He is a democrat in his political views but cooperates with any of his neighbors in efforts too secure the best of the community.

Mr. Sheldon raises a fine grade of American-Merinoes and Stropshire sheep and has made for himself a splendid reputation in this department of stock-raising. Mr. Sheldon and his wife are active members in society and have seen this locality grow from a wilderness too its present prosperous conditions. They endured and encountered the usual self denials and hardships and carried through a vast amount of hard work during pioneer times. They are highly esteemed and have a large circle of friends.
 
Sheldon, Seneca (I4314)
 
5891 From: findagrave.com:

Birth: Oct. 30, 1591, England
Death: Oct. 3, 1677
Windsor
Hartford County
Connecticut, USA

John Bissell, purportedly b. or bapt. on Oct. 30, 1591 in England. His gravestone indirectly says he was b. on or after Oct. the 4th 1591. He d. at Windsor, Conn. Oct. 3, 1677, Æ 86. He was twice married, but the name of each wife remains unknown.

Stile's first version of his "History of Ancient Windsor" (1859) contains a poor outline of the structure of the Bissell family of Windsor, Conn. He gave John Bissell only one wife in this version. Savage, Hinman, Cutter and others also misrepresent the initial Bissell family structure.

Stiles' more familiar second version of his "Ancient Windsor," in two volumes (1891 and 1893), does not correct the errors made forty years earlier in 1859. He continued to give the immigrant only one wife in Vol. II (1893 Genealogies). However, in Vol. I (1891 History) he added an obscure reference apparently contained in the 1662 deed to son Nathaniel of his housing at present-day East Windsor that proves the immigrant had two wives.

John Bissell, the immigrant, had six known children, all by his first wife who d. of record at Windsor, Conn. May 21, 1641. According to the Matthew Grant Records, Grant was aware only one child born to the immigrant at Windsor, and as only John's youngest son is recorded at Windsor prior to the death of his first wife, there were no children by his unnamed second wife.

Some writers give the first wife the name of Mary and still others claim she was Mary Drake. But, neither variation has any proof and it is quite likely Mary Drake has been confused with the married name of John Bissell's daughter Mary (Bissell) Drake. On this point, in 1969 the eminent genealogist, Donald Lines Jacobus, wrote:

• May I try to set the record straight once again? [The immigrant] John1 Bissell [Sr.] did indeed die in 1677; there is no authority that I know of for calling his wife Mary Drake. A nameless wife, perhaps the mother of his children, died in 1641; he thereafter had another nameless wife, whose death, as wife of John "Sr.", was recorded in 1665...(NEHGS Register, 123:278-279.)

John Bissell's second wife d. of record at Windsor Mar. 29, 1665 ["the wife of John Biffell senor dyed"]. Per Stiles in 1891, in 1662 when John Bissell was in excess of 70 years old he gave to youngest son Nathaniel his housing at present-day East Windsor:

• "in part of his portion of his marriage," a part of his land and house "at Scantuck," on the E. side of the Conn. River with provision for the remainder at his father's death...Nathaniel doubtless resided on the river bank, below the Scantic, from the time of his marriage. This home was garrisoned at the time of King Philip's War. John Bissell, Senr, evidently died here, having made provision for his second wife, stipulating that Nathaniel should give "his now present mother-in-law [i.e., stepmother], if she is willing and choose to have the use the parlor for her abode," it should be granted. (History of Ancient Windsor, 1891, Vol. I, p. 152.)

The aforementioned death of the immigrant's second wife has been consistently confused as the date that the wife of John Bissell, Jr., died. This caused Stiles to give John junior an unnamed second wife as the mother of his youngest children. John Bissell junior's wife, Israel Mason, outlived her husband. This error is more fully outlined in the Israel (Mason) Bissell memorial page.

The earliest in which the immigrant John Bissell appears at Windsor is in the record of youngest son Nathaniel's birth at Windsor, on Sept. 24, 1640. The earliest in which he appears in the Conn. Public Records is as a juryman in Sept. 1641. He was a juryman for numerous sessions of the Particular Court during the mid-1640s until he was elected a deputy to the Conn. Court from Windsor in Sept. 1648. He served as a deputy from Windsor almost continuously until 1656.

While some claim John held the title of Capt., he was relieved of the requirement for military training by the Conn. Court in April 1645, when he was about 53 years old. Unless one wishes to attach the title of Capt. to a public ferryman, there is no record of any military rank for the immigrant in the Windsor or Conn. records. Also, none of his sons reached the rank of Capt. during their lifetime.

On Jan. 5, 1641/2 Windsor was provided the right to operate a ferry across the Conn. River. However, not until Jan. 1648/9 was John Bissell, Sr. granted exclusive right to operate the Windsor ferry for the ensuing seven years (Conn. PR, Vol. I, p. 174-5). This right was extended annually beginning in May 1656 until eldest son John Bissell, Jr. was granted exclusive rights to operate the ferry in Mar. 1657/8 for the ensuing 10 years. This was followed in May 1677 by the immigrant's youngest son Nathaniel granted the right of operation for the ensuing 7 years.

Manwaring's abstract of John Bissell's estate, citing Hartford Probate District vol. III, p. 194:

• John Bissell of Windsor. Inventory of £520-16-03 taken Oct. 22, 1677 by Daniel Clarke, Benjamin Newbery and Return Strong. Will dated Sept. 25, 1673:
• I John Bissell of Windsor doe make this my last Will & Testament:
• I give to my daughter Mary, the wife of Jacob Drake, £10;
• to my daughter Joyce, wife of Samuel Pinney, £30.
• I give to my son John £50.
• The remainder of my estate after my just debts and funeral charges are paid, with 20 shillings a peice to each of my grand children naturally descending from my foure sons and two daughters, I bequeath to my four sons John, Thomas, Samuel, and Nathaniel.
• The remaynder of my estate to be equally divided.
• I appoint my sons John and Thomas Bissell to be executors.
• I desire Deacon John Moore and Daniel Clark to be supervisors......JOHN X BISSELL LS.
Witness:
John Moore sen.,
Daniel Clarke.
• Court Record, Page 165--6 December, 1677: Will approved.

The children of John Bissell, Sr. and his unnamed first wife, the order uncertain, are:

• i. Mary Bissell, b. circa 1631 in England, d. testate Sept. 11, 1689 at Windsor, Conn.; m. Apr. 12, 1649 at Windsor, Sgt. Jacob Drake, s. of John Drake & Elizabeth Rogers, b. circa 1624 in England. He d. testate at Windsor, Conn. Aug. 6, 1689. They had no known children.

• ii. Lieut., also referred to as Cornet, John Bissell, Jr., b. circa 1633 in England, d. intestate before Oct. 15, 1688 at an undefined place in the Province of New York while in the King's service; m. June 17, 1658 at Windsor, Isreal Mason of Saybrook, Conn., dau. of Maj. John Mason and his unnamed first wife, b. circa 1637-38, prob. at Windsor, and d. after Mar. 15, 1693/4. Nine children of the family.

• iii. Quartermaster Thomas Bissell, b. circa 1635 in England, d. testate at Windsor July 31, 1689; m. Oct. 11, 1655 at Windsor, Abigail Moore, dau. of Dea. John and Abigail Moore, b. June 16, 1639 at Windsor. She d. at Windsor purportedly July 31, 1728. Twelve children of the family, three dying in infancy.

• iv. Samuel Bissell, b. circa 1637 in England, d. testate at Windsor Dec. 3, 1700; m. 1) June 11, 1658 at Windsor, Abigail Holcomb, dau. of Thomas and Elizabeth Holcomb, bapt. Jan. 6, 1638/9 at Windsor, Conn. He d. at Windsor Aug. 17, 1688. Nine children of the family. Samuel m. 2) after Aug. 1688, Mary Buell, dau. of William Buell and Mary Post, and widow of Simon Mills, who had d. intestate at Simsbury, Conn. July 6, 1683. There were no children by this marriage, Mary having ten children by her first husband. She d. testate at Windsor, Conn. June 24, 1718.

• v. Joyce Bissell, b. circa 1639 in England, d. after Sept. 8, 1689 when named in her sister Mary's will of that same date; m. Nov. 17, 1665 at Windsor, Samuel Pinney, s. of Humphrey Pinney and Mary Hull, b. Mar. 30, 1635 at Dorchester, Mass. He d. after Dec. 13, 1689 when he was appointed one of four administrators of his sister-in-law Mary (Bissell) Drake's estate. Three children of the family.

• vi. Nathaniel Bissell, b. Sept. 24 (bapt. Sept. 27), 1640 at Windsor, Conn, d. testate at Windsor Mar. 12, 1713/4; m. 1) Mindwell Moore, dau. of Dea. John and Abigail Moore, and sister of his brother Thomas Bissell's wife Abigail, b. July 10, 1643 at Windsor. She d. at Windsor Nov. 24, 1682. Nine children of the family. Nathaniel m. 2) July 4, 1683 at Windsor, Dorothy Fitch, who d. at Windsor June 28, 1691 by whom he had four children. He m. 3) on an unknown date after June 1691, Deliverance Haines, formerly the wife of 1) John Rockwell of Windsor and 2) John Warner of Middletown, Conn. She d. intestate June 12, 1718. There were no children by this marriage. Deliverance had seven children by her first two husbands.

Family links:
Children:
Samuel Bissell (____ - 1700)*
John Bissell (____ - 1688)*
Thomas Bissell (1630 - 1689)*
Mary Bissell Drake (1631 - 1689)*
Nathaniel Bissell (1640 - 1714)*

*Calculated relationship

Inscription:
Heare Lyeth
The Body of Iohn
Bissell Deceased-
October the: 3: 1677
in the 86 Yeare of
his Age.

On the day that John died he was 85 years old, and Ætatis (i.e., Æ, "Aged," in the XX year of his Age) 86.

Burial:
Palisado Cemetery
Windsor
Hartford County
Connecticut, USA

Maintained by: Don Blauvelt
Originally Created by: Grant
Record added: Nov 05, 2000
Find A Grave Memorial# 5091692
 
Bissell, John (I3787)
 
5892 from: http://family.phelpsinc.com/phelpsfam/d0014/f0000006.html#I5389
1850 Federal Census listed Alpheus as a farmer with assets worth $2300.00.
Alpheus served as a drummer in Lt. Amos Green's Co., 121st Regt., NewYork Militia, in the war
of 1812. He was mustered at Sandy Hill, NY on September 10, 1814 and was discharged 15 days later at Burlington, VT.
He was described at enlistment: Age 19, as having dark hair, brown eyes and light complextion.
After his discharge they resided at Fort Ann, Washington Co. NY. and thenThe Town of
Queensbury, Warren Co. NY.
 
Phelps, Alpheus (I5158)
 
5893 from: http://family.phelpsinc.com/phelpsfam/d0014/f0000006.html#I5389
Was listed as an Innkeeper on the 1850 Federal Census for Washington Co., NY. John was the Manager of the "Trout Pavilion", Lake George, NY. 
Phelps, John (I2782)
 
5894 from: http://www.heritagepursuit.com/Morrow/MorSBlo.htm
WILLIAM HENRY HULSE, merchant; Sparta. Jabez Hulse was born in Tompkins Co., N. Y., Dec, 25, 1807, and is the son of Thomas and Leah (Weatherby) Hulse. Jabez's family consisted of his wife, Maria (Slack) Hulse, daughter of Theophilus and Mercy Slack, and seven children as follows Francis G. Albert S., William H., Jesse, Cornelia, James K. P. and Maria, all of whom are married, except Jesse, who lives with his father. Jabez was married Jan. 1, 1832, and came to Ohio in the fall of 1835, locating in South Bloomfield Tp., Morrow Co. His wife died March 10, 1870. Feb. 28, 1872, he was again married, his second wife being Maria Henry, daughter of Benjamin and Sarah Henry, with whom he is yet living. His son William Henry, or "Hank," as he is more familiarly known, was born in Morrow Co., Ohio, Nov. 7, 1837; be lived with his parents until he was 15 years old, and was then apprenticed to learn the carpenters' trade. During his youth he obtained a thorough knowledge of the chair making business, which trade was followed, more or less, after he became a man; he learned the carriage makers' trade and worked at that in connection with his other trades. When about 33 years old, he began clerking for S. L. Newcomb, in Sparta, who was in the general -mercantile business; was also at Pulaskiville in the same business for a few months. On the 13th of October, 1875, he formed a partnership with Wesley Chipps, at Sparta, to be known as Chipps & Hulse, dealers in general merchandise. The partners advanced equal amounts of capital, and bought the stock of W. C. Harris, which invoiced at $31.25. These young men have been in the business ever since, and have the liveliest business in their lively town. Mr. Hulse was married June 13, 1869, to Miss Ellen Bliss, daughter of Caroline and Mason Bliss. The wife is one of a family of six children, and was born Dee, 4, 1846. Henry Hulse is Deputy Postmaster at Sparta. He is a Universalist in his religious belief, and is one of the most enterprising and successful business men of Sparta.
 
Hulse, Jabez (I4907)
 
5895 from: http://www.mifamilyhistory.org/tuscola/Biographies/Almer%20Bio%201902.htm
FAIRBANKS, S.
Son of Joel and Alvira, born April 29, 1835; in Goveneur, St. Lawrence County, New York. At the age of ten years his parents moved to Plymouth Township, Ashtabula County, Ohio. In 1836 he began to sail on the lakes, and followed it for three seasons. He then worked on a dairy farm until he came to Watrousville, Michigan, in 1853. He worked in the lumberwoods that winter. The spring following he went to work for Mr. Watrous and remained with him three years, after which he went to work for Mr. Heartt, and worked for him three years. Married Maria L. Convis July 5, 1858. She was born October 13, 1840, in Russell Township, Cuyahaga County, Ohio, and came to Tuscola County with her parents at the age of thirteen. Mrs. Marla Fairbanks died July 19, 1893. Children born to them four, Maria C., born January 9, 1860, and died. January 6, 1863; Emma D., born October 22, 1866; Wallace J., born January 27, 1868; Bessie J., born May 14, 1877.
 
Fairbanks, Samuel (I2780)
 
5896 From: http://www.nps.gov/slbe/planyourvisit/shaldacabin.htm

The Shalda cabin is located at the intersection on M-22 about 7.7 miles past the intersection with M-109 in Glen Arbor. Just before you get to CR-669, you will see Shalda cabin on your right standing alone in a field.

This cabin is believed to have been built in the mid-1850s by Bohemian immigrants who settled in the North Unity and Shalda Corners area. North Unity was located near where Shalda Creek empties into LakeMichigan a couple of miles west of the GoodHarbor dock (located at the end of County Road 651). Several families moved here from Chicago in 1855, and because there was no time for each family to stake their homestead claim before winter set in, they built a barracks 150 feet by 20 feet with rooms partitioned off for each family.
The village thrived during the next few years as more people arrived. It had a schoolhouse, sawmill, and store. In 1859, it was awarded a post office, and John Shalda built a gristmill on the Lake Michigan outlet of the creek that bears his name. In 1871 (the same year as the Chicago Fire) the village was destroyed by fire, so the villagers moved inland to Shalda Corners (M-22 & CR 669).
This cabin was in poor condition when the Lakeshore obtained the property. It was surrounded by brush and weeds and the lower logs were rotted. Significant reconstruction work has been done to restore the cabin to its current condition. The cabin shows early log construction techniques of the Czech and German immigrants who settled in North Unity and Shalda Corners. They had brought methodology for building cabins from hand-hewn timbers from their native Black Forest of Central Europe. Note the dovetail notched corners of the logs, and that the logs were hewn to make them flat and improve the fit between logs. The Kraitz cabin <http://www.nps.gov/slbe/planyourvisit/kraitzcabin.htm> and North Unity School <http://www.nps.gov/slbe/planyourvisit/pounityschool.htm> were built in a similar style at about the same time.
 
Shalda, Joseph (I4112)
 
5897 from: http://www.usgennet.org/usa/mi/county/lapeer/bios/a-d.html
HENRY CLINTON DeGROAT, born 26 Feb 1845. in Dereham Twp. Oxford Co. Ont. s/o Henry DeGroat and Margaret Barker. Henry Jr married to Libby VanDyke, Henry Jr died 31 Jan 1903.To Lapeer 1860 with parents. Sources: Henry DeGroat obit.

From:
History of Lapeer - prominent men and pioneers
H.R. Page & Co Chicago 1884
Henry C. DeGroat is a native of Oxford Comity, Ontario, and was born in 1845. In 1860. he came to Arcadia with his parents, and located on section 26, but two years later removed to his present location, his father purchasing the quarter section. In 1867 ho commenced the purchase of the land and little by little has acquired the entire quarter section, and 40 acres besides lying opposite. He has made all the improvements now to be seen on his farm, and has 152 acres now under cultivation. His surroundings indicate prosperity and home comfort. He married Miss C. E. Van Dyke, of Lapeer, Michigan. 
DeGroat, Henry Clinton (I5764)
 
5898 FROM: https://volga.domains.unf.edu/surnames/scheidt-balzer-moor
Scheidt (Balzer / Moor)
Spelling Variations:
Scheidt (Balzer / Moor)
Шейдъ (Balzer / Moor)
Settled in the Following Colonies:
Balzer
Moor
Stahl am Tarlyk
Pre-Volga Origin:
Düdelsheim, Kr. Wetterau, Hessen
Discussion & Documentation:
There are several Scheidt families who immigrated from Düdelsheim to the Volga German colonies in Russia. Their relationship to each other, if any, needs further research.

(1) Johann Heinrich, son of Johann Henrich Scheid & Susanna Kneip, was born in Düdelsheim on 17 January 1740. He married there on 24 September 1761 to Anna Margaretha Hohenstein, daughter of Johannes Hohenstein. She had been born in Düdelsheim on 19 August 1745.

The baptism of a daughter born to Johann Heinrich Scheidt & Anna Margaretha Hohenstein is recorded in the parish register of Düdelsheim: Anna Maria, baptized 29 August 1762.

Heinrich Scheidt, a farmer, his wife Anna, and daughter Anna (age 4) arrived from Lübeck at the port of Oranienbaum on 4 July 1766 aboard a packet-boat under the command of Lieutenant Pyotr Malinkov.

Heinrich Scheidt, a farmer, and his wife [Anna] Margaretha are recorded on the 1767 census of Balzer in Household No. 52. They had settled in Balzer on 18 June 1767.

(2) Johann Philipp, son of Ludwig Scheid Jr. & Catharina Kayser (originally from Büches), was born in Potsdam on 13 January 1744 and baptized on 16 January 1744 in the Potsdam Garnisonskirche (Garrison Church). Ludwig was a Füsilier (soldier armed with a flintlock musket called a füsil) with the Regiment of Prince Heinrich of Prussia. Johann Philipp married in Düdelsheim on 11 March 1766 to Catharina Knack from Calbach.

Johann Philipp Scheidt, a farmer, his wife Katharina, and daughter Anna (age 6) arrived from Lübeck at the port of Oranienbaum on 4 July 1766 aboard a packet-boat under the command of Lieutenant Pyotr Malinkov.

Philipp Scheidt, a farmer, and his wife Katharina are recorded on the 1767 census of Balzer in Household No. 53. They had settled in Balzer on 18 June 1767.

In 1790, Philipp Scheidt and his family moved from Balzer to Stahl am Tarlyk.

Philipp Scheidt and his family are recorded on the 1798 census of Stahl am Tarlyk in Households No. St19 & St42.

(3) Johann Adam Scheidt, son of Johannes & Catharina Scheid, was baptized in Düdelsheim on 26 September 1724. He married there on 20 May 1757 to Scharlotta Klaus, daughter of Johann Peter & Anna Catharina Claus. They are recorded on the 1767 Census of Moor in Household No. 6 along with two daughters: Anna Barbara (baptized in Düdelsheim on 9 Dember 1760) & Katharina (baptized in Düdelsheim on 27 September 1762). Scharlotta Klaus is the sister of Johann Peter Klaus of Norka and Johann Stephan Klaus of Balzer.

Widow Charlotta Scheidt is recorded on the 1798 census of Moor in Household No. Mo58.

(4) Johannes Scheidt, his daughter Elisabeth, and son-in-law Johann Reuss arrived from Lübeck at the port of Oranienbaum on 4 July 1766 aboard the English frigate Love & Unity under the command of Thomas Fairfax. Elisabeth & Johann Reuss had been married in Vonhausen, near Düdelsheim, and it is believed that Johannes Scheidt is related to the other Scheidt families that settled in Balzer and Moor, but he has not been located among the Volga German colonies, so may have died before reaching there.

Sources:
- Bonner, Wayne H. Volga German Settlers Identified in Isenburg and Other German Church Records Part I (Gardena, CA: Wayne Bonner, 2007): 47.
- Decker, Klaus-Peter, Büdingen als Sammelplatz der Auswanderung an die Wolga 1766 (Büdingen: Geschichtswerkstatt Büdingen, 2009): 86.
- Düdelsheim Parish Records (LDS Intl Film #1201789).
- Mai, Brent Alan. 1798 Census of the German Colonies along the Volga (Lincoln, NE: American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, 1999): Bz053, Mo58, St19, St42, Mv0068.
- Parish records of Aulendiechbach (LDS Intl Film #1201847).
- Pleve, Igor. Einwanderung in das Wolgagebiet, 1764-1767 Band 1 (Göttingen: Göttinger Arbeitskreis, 1999): 87.
- Pleve, Igor. Einwanderung in das Wolgagebiet, 1764-1767 Band 3 (Göttingen: Göttinger Arbeitskreis, 2005): 157.
- Pleve, Igor. Lists of Colonists to Russia in 1766: Reports by Ivan Kulberg (Saratov: Saratov State Technical University, 2010): #1219, #1221, #1749.

Contributor(s) to this page:
Wayne Bonner

John Wall

Brent Mai 
Scheidt, Johann Philipp (I22096)
 
5899 from: Robert Eldred (Eldredge) of Yarmouth and Chatham, Cape Cod, Massachusetts and some of his descendants by Nelson B Eldred; Walter W Steesy pub 1996
Robert Eldred (Eldredge) (d. bef. 1682), the immigrant, was born in England, the son of Robert and Joan Eldred of Winfarthing, Norfolk County. He married Elizabeth Nickerson, the eldest daughter of William and Anne Busby Nickerson of Norwich, England. The Nickerson family came to Salem, Mass. in 1637. Robert Eldred was in Yarmouth, Cape Code, Mass. in 1639 under the contract of service with Nicholas Simpkins. By 1666 he had settled on a farm in Chatham. Descendants live in Massachusetts, New York, Rhode Island and elsewhere. 
Eldred(Eldredge), Robert (I6707)
 
5900 From: W. L. Irish - David Irish and family settled in Groveland Twp. Oakland County, Michigan in 1837. He purchased 80 acres for each of his 8 sons and 40 acres for each of his 2 daughters. One of his sons, Norman, brought a wife and three children with him to Michigan, and was killed a number of years later by a kick of a horse. Two of his sons, Damon and George, were living in the same neighborhood in 1877. Damon Irish of Groveland Twp., paid a bounty of $14 for a volunteer to serve in the Civil War in 1864. (Note: The book is in error on the relationship of George and Damon. George and Damon were his grand children, sons of Norman.)
Oakland County real estate records show an entry for David Irish of Washington County, New York purchasing land dated 13 June 1836.
David died intestate (with no will) in Brandon, Oakland, Michigan on 8 Jan 1855. His probate paperwork stated there were 8 heirs, although only Manley and Liberty were specifically mentioned. The probate petition ended up being dismissed when the heirs agreed among themselves on a settlement.
 
Irish, David (I5765)
 

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