Notes
Matches 801 to 850 of 923
# | Notes | Linked to |
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801 | Rozela 'Susanna' verch Berengar II of Italy - in Flanders, France | Lombardy, Rozala of (I3533)
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802 | Rudolph or Ralph Count of Guines | le Blount, Rudolf (I1447)
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803 | Saint | de Hertsal, Clothilde (I1131)
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804 | Saint of Treves | Leutwinus Saint (I1372)
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805 | Samuel Pytts of Kyre in Worcester | Pytts, Samuel (I821)
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806 | Sarah Foreman is a witness on the marriage certificate | Foreman, Ann (I61)
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807 | Serving in the marines in 1927 | Goswell, James H (I4200)
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808 | She was Cassie Bell Grant when she married John Goswell She was Cassie B McKenzie when her son John Calder married | Hearne, Catherine "Cassie" (I2052)
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809 | Sheep overseer, Kentucky, Corowa... adjacent to Quat Quatta | Gregory, James William (I441)
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810 | Sigurd King Of Denmark [Ring] | Sigurd (I1483)
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811 | Single on 1911 census aged 32 | Harvey, Alice (I271)
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812 | Sir Brian Lawrence Goswell 1935-11-26 Education St David's Sch High Wycombe, Univ of Durham Books & Publications Recreations shooting, horse racing, cricket, fishing Clubs Carlton, City Livery, United & Cecil, MCC, The Rifles London Officers, Leander Style Sir Brian Goswell, FRICS, FRSA Career served Oxford & Bucks Light Infantry 1954-57; Healey & Baker (surveyors and valuers): joined 1957, ptnr 1969, managing ptnr 1977, dep sr ptnr 1988, dep chm 1997-2001, conslt 2000-02; chm: Brent Walker Group plc 1993-97, Sunley Secure plc 1993-99, William Hill Organization Ltd 1994-97, International Security Management Group Ltd 1998-2002, ISS Group Ltd 2004-07; memb: Advsy Bd Sir Alexander Gibb & Partners 1989-95, Advsy Panel AIM Gp plc 2005-07; past pres The Land Inst; past pres: ISVA, Br Cncl for Offices, American C of C London; tstee Cons and Unionist Agents' Superannuation Fund 1997-2001; Liveryman Worshipful Co of Gold and Silver Wyre Drawers; FRICS, FRSA Sir Brian Goswell, who has died aged 78, was a Conservative Party fundraiser, a grandee of the City property scene, and the last chairman of the Brent Walker leisure group. Goswell’s base of operations was Healey & Baker, the chartered surveyors and commercial property consultants of which he was a partner for more than 30 years and deputy chairman from 1997 to 2000. He specialised in advising landlords and developers of office space in the City, and was particularly associated with the 32-acre Broadgate estate close to Liverpool Street station - the largest development in late-1980s London before the advent of Canary Wharf. He also advised several major banks on real estate matters. A tireless networker, fixer and luncher, Goswell was generous with his own resources and adept at persuading wealthy connections to support the Conservative cause. To that end he reinvigorated the United & Cecil Club, which brought politicians and donors together at dinners in the House of Commons and elsewhere. He was also a leading light of the Carlton Club, where he was chairman of the political committee and later a trustee; the two clubs between them regularly channelled six-figure annual donations to the party. Having been a devotee of Margaret Thatcher, he was knighted for political services by John Major in 1991 and was a funder of Michael Portillo’s abortive leadership bid in 1995. Brian Lawrence Goswell was born in the East End of London on November 26 1935. His father worked for the Castrol oil company, and the family moved to Beaconsfield during the war years. Brian was educated at St David’s School in High Wycombe and served in the Oxford & Bucks Light Infantry from 1954 to 1957. He then joined Barclays Bank, but was soon recruited into Healey & Baker - largely, he liked to say, because they needed a bowler for their cricket team. He also became an ardent Young Conservative, rising to be a regional chairman and national committee member, though he never pursued parliamentary ambitions. He became a partner of Healey & Baker (now part of an American group, Cushman & Wakefield) in 1969, concentrating on retail property in north-east England. When asked to establish the firm’s first City office he was initially reluctant, but went on to build a highly successful business. He also took charge, from London, of business development in New York. Goswell was often to be spotted, wreathed in cigar smoke, as he was chauffeured between the City, the West End and the Carlton Club in limousines with the registrations BLG1 and BLG2. In 1988 he succeeded the banker Michael von Clemm as chairman of Michel and Albert Roux’s restaurant empire, and in 1993 he took on the less congenial task of chairing Brent Walker (of which he was already a non-executive director) as well as its two major subsidiaries, the Pubmaster chain and William Hill betting shops. Brent Walker had been created by the former boxer George Walker during the 1980s boom. It was built on a £1.4 billion mountain of debt, and after its collapse in the early-1990s recession, Goswell’s task was to oversee the sale of its remaining assets: Pubmaster in due course fetched £170 million and William Hill £700 million - an “incredible result”, according to one analyst, that secured for the banks far more by way of repayment than they first expected. Brent Walker itself was then wound up. Goswell was president of the British Council for Offices and the Society of Valuers and Auctioneers, and the first non-American president of the American Chamber of Commerce in London. Among many charitable commitments, he raised funds for the Army Benevolent Fund; the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Scheme; the Headway charity for victims of head injuries; and the World Wildlife Fund. His final business involvement was as chairman until 2007 of Intelligence & Security Solutions, a private security business with a history of financial trouble - run by an ex-SAS officer, John Wick, who was later an intermediary in the sale of data on MPs’ expenses claims. “Wick is a military man,” was Sir Brian’s comment. “What he is not is much of a businessman.” Goswell was passionately keen on shooting, for many years running a shoot on the Fleming family estate at Nettlebed; he also enjoyed fishing. He married, in 1961, Deirdre Stones, after a first date at a Young Conservatives meeting. She survives him with their two sons, both of whom followed him into the property world having made their early careers in Healey & Baker. He then joined Barclays Bank, but was soon recruited into Healey & Baker - largely, he liked to say, because they needed a bowler for their cricket team. He also became an ardent Young Conservative, rising to be a regional chairman and national committee member, though he never pursued parliamentary ambitions. He became a partner of Healey & Baker (now part of an American group, Cushman & Wakefield) in 1969, concentrating on retail property in north-east England. When asked to establish the firm’s first City office he was initially reluctant, but went on to build a highly successful business. He also took charge, from London, of business development in New York. Goswell was often to be spotted, wreathed in cigar smoke, as he was chauffeured between the City, the West End and the Carlton Club in limousines with the registrations BLG1 and BLG2. In 1988 he succeeded the banker Michael von Clemm as chairman of Michel and Albert Roux’s restaurant empire, and in 1993 he took on the less congenial task of chairing Brent Walker (of which he was already a non-executive director) as well as its two major subsidiaries, the Pubmaster chain and William Hill betting shops. Brent Walker had been created by the former boxer George Walker during the 1980s boom. It was built on a £1.4 billion mountain of debt, and after its collapse in the early-1990s recession, Goswell’s task was to oversee the sale of its remaining assets: Pubmaster in due course fetched £170 million and William Hill £700 million - an “incredible result”, according to one analyst, that secured for the banks far more by way of repayment than they first expected. Brent Walker itself was then wound up. Goswell was president of the British Council for Offices and the Society of Valuers and Auctioneers, and the first non-American president of the American Chamber of Commerce in London. Among many charitable commitments, he raised funds for the Army Benevolent Fund; the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Scheme; the Headway charity for victims of head injuries; and the World Wildlife Fund. His final business involvement was as chairman until 2007 of Intelligence & Security Solutions, a private security business with a history of financial trouble - run by an ex-SAS officer, John Wick, who was later an intermediary in the sale of data on MPs’ expenses claims. “Wick is a military man,” was Sir Brian’s comment. “What he is not is much of a businessman.” Goswell was passionately keen on shooting, for many years running a shoot on the Fleming family estate at Nettlebed; he also enjoyed fishing. He married, in 1961, Deirdre Stones, after a first date at a Young Conservatives meeting. She survives him with their two sons, both of whom followed him into the property world having made their early careers in Healey & Baker. | Goswell, Brian Lawrence (I3184)
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813 | Sir Bryan Cornwall of Kinlet descendant of King John through his son Richard, Earl of Cornwall and King of the Romans | Cornwall, Brian (I990)
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814 | Sir Cuthbert Leighton | Leighton, Cuthbert (I910)
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815 | Sir Edmund Cornwall | Cornwall, Edmund (I991)
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816 | Sir Hamond Peshale of Willey | Peshale, Hamond (I1018)
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817 | Sir Henry Neville, MP | Neville, Henry (I4570)
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818 | Sir Hugh Pershall, of Knightly, in Staffordshire | Pershall, Sir Hugh (I1353)
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819 | Sir John Burgh of Wattlesborough | Burgh, John (I908)
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820 | Sir Lacon Childe the eldest son of Sir William Childe and his wife Anne Lacon was baptized at Higley Church, 1644, and succeeded to Kinlet in 1678. During his father's life he resided at West Coppice near Buildwas belonging to the Lacons. He married firstly his cousin Ultrafutina the daughter of Francis Coventry, 3rd son of the 1st Lord Coventry; secondly Mrs. Hughes (her maiden name unknown); thirdly her niece Priscilla, daughter of Sir Thomas Morgan of Kinnersley Castle. Her sister married Thomas Clutton of Pensax, where she resided latterly and was buried at Pensax 1734 as " the good Lady Childe." | Morgan, Priscilla (I3771)
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821 | Sir Lacon William Childe of Kinlet (dsp) from http://www.memorial-inscriptions.org.uk/stpeters-kinlet.htm Lacon Gulielmus CHILDE Esq., Mort Die Quarto A. D. 1719 age 76 Graduated from Queens College, Oxford University, 26 nov 1662 aged 17. Bar at law Lincoln's Inn1670, a master at Chancery 1673 knighted at Whitehall on 16 june 1673 | Childe, Lacon William (I829)
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822 | Sir Nicholas de Bruxton | Bruxton, Nicholas (I887)
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823 | Sir Richard Brooke, kt of Norton | Brooke, Richard (I713)
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824 | Sir Richard Corbert of Morton Corbertt | Corbert, Richard (I996)
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825 | Sir Richard Croft of Croft Castle from John Burke's "A genealogical and heraldic history of the commoners of Great Britain" | Croft, Richard (I980)
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826 | Sir Richard Laken, knight, sherrif of Salop in 1477 | Lacon, Richard (I1012)
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827 | Sir Robert Purslowe of Sidbury & Monyhull, Sheriff of Salop | Purslowe, Robert (I3420)
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828 | Sir Robert Winnington, knight. | Winnington, Robert (I983)
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829 | Sir Thomas Laken of Willey sherrif of Salop in 1510 | Laken, Thomas (I994)
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830 | Sir Thomas Leighton of Wattlesborough or Watlesborough, Sheriff of Shropshire (b 1454) | Leighton, Thomas (I909)
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831 | Sir William Babington of Kiddington) | Babington, William (I844)
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832 | Sir William Childe (master in Chancery) from http://www.memorial-inscriptions.org.uk/stpeters-kinlet.htm Sir William CHILDE, Knight and Doctor of Law, second son of William CHILDE of Northwick in Worcester buried May 8th 1678 and Dame Anne, his wife, daiughter of Roland LACON Esq., buried June 28th 1693 a knight, LL.D Graduated BCL from Pembroke College Oxford university on 5 July 1672 and All Souls College Oxford University DCL on 29 May 1638 a master in Chancery, knighted 12 May 1651 | Childe, William (I4813)
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833 | Sir William Laken, knight, of Willey, sherrif of Salop in 1452 | Lacon, William (I1015)
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834 | Slain by Llewelyn ap Madog of Powis | de Bollers, Stephen (I1040)
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835 | Sometimes written as Jeams. Was living in Aldermaston at the time of his death. Buried on 19 Mar 1838 at St Mary the Virgin, Aldermaaston | Goswell, James (I1983)
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836 | St Botolph Aldgate, London | Goswell, Henry (I2289)
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837 | St Mary the Virgin, Twickenham, Middlesex, England | Goswell, Sarah (I2186)
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838 | St Mary, Hendon, England | (Goswell), Theodosia (I3963)
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839 | Stonewall manor, Frome, Somerset, BA114AS 1 River Park, marlborough, Wilts, SN81NH Phone: 01672515877 | Aldridge, Living (I288)
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840 | Swallowfield | Goswell, William (I2361)
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841 | Taverham and Cossey face each other across the river. Costessy manor held lands in 18 Norfolk parishes granted by Henry VIII. The list includes Taverham and Cossey | Spaul, Barnard (I1735)
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842 | The 1945-6 census records a John Spring at Fort St, Sydney (Gipps Ward) The 1948-9 census records a John Spring at Princest St, Sydney (Gipps Ward) and at Brisbane Ward The 1949-50 census records a John Spring at Market St, Sydney (Brisbane Ward) According to WDG, the Springs came to Australia to publish one of the early newspapers. Apparently highly regarded by the government of the day and involved in the early days of the development of Parramatta. | Spring, John (I4441)
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843 | The 1960 & 1961 electoral roles had her living with Robin W Goswell at 34 Crediton Rd, Brondesbury Park Ward, Willesden, Mapesbury Another 1961 electoral role had marilyn J Goswell and Robin W Goswell living at 12 Prince's Ave, Honsey Muswell Hill Flew from London to Portland, Oregon, USA on 23 Jun 1961. Home address 30A Downleaze, Bristol, England. Stayed coirtesy of Professor Berg, Dept Enology, Davis, university of California. | Powell, Living (I4192)
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844 | THE BODDIES The Unpublished McCarty Manuscript Chapter 1 The Boddie line to which the McCartys trace their line of descent is the South Carolina line. It is traced by John Bennett Boddie in his "Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County, Virginia." In his book Mr. Boddie says the Virginia Boddies probably are descended from William Boddie of Essex, England, who was a captain in the English Navy during the time of Henry VIII, serving there 40 years. He says, however, that this connection has not been proved. [1] This William had a son John, who was buried May 22, 1591 in London. His wife was Thomasine Mildmay, who died in 1613. Their son Thomas married his cousin, Mary Mildmay. She was buried July, 1634, and Thomas was buried in 1627, both in Freyering, Essex, England. Their son John and his wife Mary are thought to be the parents of William Boddie of Isle of Wight County, Virginia, ancestor of the Virginia Boddies. [2] William Boddie was baptized in 1633 in Essex, England. His will was probated February 25, 1717 in Isle of Wight County, Virginia. He married, first, Anna, who died about 1683 in Isle of Wight County. He married, second, Elizabeth, about 1684, who died about 1699 in Isle of Wight County. He married, third, Mrs. Mary (Edwards) Griffin about 1700. William Boddie became a Quaker about 1672. [3] William owned about 8,000 acres of land in Isle of Wight County, some of which he purchased but most of which was grants for bringing colonists from England to Virginia. On October 20, 1661 he received 550 acres for transporting 11 persons to Virginia. On July 12, 1655, he received 3,350 acres (including the above 550) for transporting 56 other persons. For transporting an additional 1. Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County, Virginia, p. 339 2. Ibid p. 341 3. Ibid p. 345, 347 -------------------- Page 2 67 persons to Isle of Wight County on April 26, 1684 he received another 3,350 acres. [4] Since the Boddie line married into the Bennett family, the connection between the two families might be clearer if the Bennett line is set down here and now and the Boddie line connection is shown later. Edward Bennett was christened February 2, 1577-78 in Somerset, England, and died before September 20, 1664 in Isle of Wight County, Virginia. He married Mary Bourne, who was born about 1600 in Middlesex, England. She died after 1635 in Isle of Wight County. Edward founded a successful Puritan colony in Virginia; he transported about 600 immigrants to Virginia; he was a member of the London Company of Virginia; and he was a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses, May 29, 1628. [5] Sylvester Bennett, daughter of Edward, was christened October 25, 1630 in London, England. She died about 1706 in Isle of Wight County. She married Col. Nicholas Hill about 1658 in Isle of Wight County. He was born about 1620 in England. He was a member of the House of Burgesses 1659-1666. His will was probated October 20, 1675 in Isle of Wight County. [6] Elizabeth Hill, daughter of Sylvester Bennett and Col. Nicholas Hill, was born about 1670 in Isle of Wight County. She married William Thomas before 1692 in Isle of Wight County and died after 1702 in Isle of Wight County. He was born about 1660 in Isle of Wight County and died about 1710 in Isle of Wight County.[7] Elizabeth Thomas, daughter of Elizabeth Hill, married John Boddie, a son of William Boddie, the first Boddie to settle in Isle of Wight County, Virginia. She was born in 1692 in Isle of Wight County and died about 1752 in Bertie precinct, 4. Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County, Virginia, pp. 342-343 5. Ibid pp 14, 34, 38, 41 6. Ibid pp 276-78 7. Ibid pp 255-57 -------------------- Page 3 North Carolina. He was born about 1685 in Isle of Wight County and died March 1720. They married in Isle of Wight County about 1708.[8] On December 7, 1734 William's son, [grandson] John Boddie, Jr., married Elizabeth Jefferys in Bertie County, North Carolina. He was born between 1710 and 1715 in Isle of Wight County and died after October 6, 1777, in Edgefield County, South Carolina. Elizabeth was born in 1718 in Isle of Wight County and died after June 20, 1742 in Granville County, North Carolina, or Edgefield, South Carolina.[9] Their son John Boddie III, a Revolutionary soldier, was born before 1750 and died between the census of 1790 and 1800 in Granville County, North Carolina, and Edgefield County, South Carolina.10 He married Hannah before 1770 in Granville, North Carolina. Hannah was born about 1745 and died after 1830, probably. She maintained a home until 1810 but she does not appear in the 1820 census. However, her son, Nathan Boddie, in the 1830 census has in his household one female between the ages 80 and 90. This, no doubt, is his mother Hannah. Nathan himself is between ages 60 and 70, and his second wife, Elizabeth is between ages 20 and 30. John Boddie III was a soldier in the company of his uncle, Captain Osborne Jefferys, in the North Carolina Militia for Granville County in 1771. (North Carolina Col. Rec. Vol. 22, p. 161) He was also a soldier in the Revolution. The North Carolina Revolutionary Army Accounts on file in the Historical Mission at Raleigh show that he received 40 pounds as a soldier of the North and South Carolina Militia. (Book C, P. 147, #5049. See also Vol. 1. Folio 44, p. 44.)[10] Nathan Boddie, probably the oldest son of John Boddie III and Hannah, was born between 1760 and 1770, as his age is given in the 1830 census as between 8. Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County, Virginia pp 352-53 9. Ibid pp 355, 377-79 10. Ibid p. 379 -------------------- Page 4 60 and 70 years. He died November 8, 1841. He married between 1790 and 1800, probably about 1792. He appears alone in the 1790 census, but in the 1800 census he has a family consisting of two boys and two girls under ten years of age and a wife between ages.... Allen Boddie was evidently Hannah's second son, as he was probably born about 1774. The 1800 census shows that he is between the ages 16 and 26. This census also shows that he has three girls and two boys under ten years of age. Allen died about 1826, as administration papers were taken for his estate in that year. He married Elizabeth, who had married Elisha Jones before the estate was settled in 1832.[11] Philip McCarty, husband of Allen's sister Mahala, was made guardian of his children. Joshua Boddie died during or after 1830, as he appears in that census as being between ages 50 and 60. He was, therefore, born about 1776. His estate was settled in 1839 when his heirs named were his widow and 15 children. John Boddie married Sallie Mitchell in 1802, daughter of John Mitchell. She was born in 1780 and died in 1820.[12] He was born about 1778 and died before 1820. They had eight children. He had been married before he married Sallie and had one child. Obediah Boddie was born in South Carolina in 1786 and died in 1864. His first wife was Margaret Durham. His second, Jane, was born in 1804. Obediah had 13 children. He lost three sons in the Confederate service.[13] The other son and two daughters of Hannah and John Boddie III have not been traced. One girl was born about 1780 and the other about 1792. The boy was born about 1790. Nathan Boddie and his first wife, name unknown, had eight children: David, 11. Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County, Virginia p. 385 12. Ibid p. 385 13. Ibid p. 380 -------------------- Page 5 Mahala, Wesley, Hannah, Nathan, Jr., Mary, Joseph, Rhoda. The four born before 1800 were David, 1793; Mahala, 1795; Wesley, 1797; and Hannah 1799 or 1800. Mahala was between ages 16 and 26 in 1820 and between 30 and 40 in 1830. Therefore, she could not have been born after 1800 or before 1794. Hannah was between ages 20 and 30 in 1830. That would place her birth about 1799 or 1800. Wesley's birth is known to be 1797. That would place the birth of David, the other boy born before 1800, at about 1793. David Boddie married Elizabeth Mitchell, daughter of John Mitchell. David died about 1823, as administration papers were taken out on his estate October 20, 1823. Wesley Boddie was born in South Carolina in 1797. He married Hannah Smith, and they had six children. They lived in Batesburg, South Carolina. Hannah Boddie was born about 1800 in South Carolina. She married Thomas Bartley, and the 1830 census shows that they had three boys and one girl. Nathan Boddie, Jr., was born in South Carolina in 1804 and died in 1873. He married, first, Edna Eidson; second, Elizabeth Warren; third, Nancy Warren,twin to Elizabeth. He had a large family. Mary Boddie was born about 1806 in South Carolina. She married Alexander Gregory and the 1830 census shows them with three children. Mary died between 1841 and 1843. In 1841 she signed a court petition concerning her father's estate, but in the settlement of the estate in 1843 Alexander is named "guardian of his minor children." Joseph Boddie was born in South Carolina about 1808. Whether he is married is unknown. Rhoda Boddie married Lewis Herlong. She was born about 1812. The 1830 census shows that they have four children and that she is between 15 and 20 years old. 14. Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County, Virginia pp. 389-90 -------------------- Page 6 Nathan Boddie married second, Elizabeth, who was between ages 20 and 30 in the 1830 census. They had two children, Elizabeth and Michael. In 1841 Michael was 12 years old, as shown by guardianship papers, and in 1830 Elizabeth was between five and ten years old. That would suggest that Nathan and Elizabeth were married around 1822. That would mean that he was some 50 years older than she was. Before Nathan's estate was settled in 1843, Elizabeth had married James B. Boddie. This fact was stated in the settlement when she was paid $400 and given other property which Nathan "had of her at marriage." Mahala Boddie married Philip McCarty probably in Edgefield County, South Carolina about 1817. Their first child, William Allen, was born in 1819 in Tennessee. They had six other children: Alsa, Wilson, Tillman, Mary Ann, Martha, Elizabeth. Mary Mitchell, daughter of Sion Mitchell, had taken care of Mahala in her last illness, and after Mahala's death, Mary and Philip were married at least by July, 1832. Twins were born to them April 8, 1833. The history of this McCarty family is told in the chapter on Philip McCarty. BODDIE The State of South Carolina Edgefield District To the Honorable Chancellors of the said state: Humbly complaining shew unto your Honors, your Orators Nathan Boddie, Alexander Gregory and his wife, Mary, Thomas Bartley and Hannah his wife, Lewis Herlong and Rhoda his wife, Joseph Boddie, Michael Boddie, Elizabeth Boddie, William M. McCarty, Alsey McCarty, Wilson McCarty, Tillman McCarty, Mary Ann McCarty, Martha McCarty, Elizabeth McCarty, Felix E. Boddie, and Epsy Boddie, which said Michael Boddie and Elizabeth Boddie are minors, and do hereby (shew) the said Nathan Boddie as their Guardian ad litem and which said Wilson, Tillman, Mary Ann, Martha and Elizabeth McCarty are also minors and sue hereby the said Alsey McCarty as their Guardian ad litem. That Nathan Boddie, Sr., late of the District and state aforesaid and departed this life on the 8th day of November, 1841, leaving his last will and testament only executed and unrevoked a copy of which is hereby filed as exhibit A. That the Testator by his last will and testament, after certain specific devises and bequeaths gave all the rest, residue and remainder of his estate real and personal to his children share and share alike and provided that the children of any deceased child should take the share of their parents with certain exceptions herein mentioned which are as follows, to witt: That his grandson Felix Boddie should received one hundred and thirty dollars less than his share and that that sum should be equally divided between the balance of his children, and that Wiley Boddie, another grandson, should received five dollars and no more of all his estate. Testator died seized and possessed of the following bodies of land viz: one of one-thousand acres more or less situate in the district and state aforesaid on Clouds Creek, Waters of Saluda River composed of several parcel or tracts of land, all however adjoining each other and bounding lands of James Whittle, Zachariah Miller, William Whittle, William Magee, Ambrose Whittle, Precious Lark, and Sarah Stark, and other of eighteen acres more or less in the district and state aforesaid adjoining lands of Zachariah Miller and the estate of David Bodie, deceased. The Orators further shew unto your Honors that the said lands are subject to distribution under the will of the Testator in the following manner: One share thereof to your Orator Nathan Bodie, a son of the testator, one share to Mary Gregory, a daughter of the testator, one share to Hannah Bartley, a daughter of the testator, one share to Rhoda Herlong, a daughter of the testator, one share to Joseph Bodie, a son of the testator, one share to Michael Bodie, a son of the testator, one share to Elizabeth Bodie, a daughter of the testator, one share to the said William M., Alsey, Wilson, Tillman, Mary Ann, Martha and Elizabeth McCarty, children of the predeceased daughter of the testator, Mahala McCarty, one share to Felix E. Bodie, and Epsie Bodie, children of David Bodie, predeceased son of the testator, and the other share to Wesley Bodie, the defendant, a son of the testator. And your Orator shew unto your Honor that they desire to partition to be made of said lands and amongst the devisees aforesaid according to their rights in tender Consideration whereof and for as much as your Orators are without remedy save in the Honorable Court where such matters are alone cognizable. To the end thereof that the said Wesley Boddie may answer the matter herein stated and charged that your Honors may grant your Orators your writ of Partition and such other relief as in the premised may seem meet. May it please your Honors to grant your Orators your writ of Subpoena directed to the said Wesley Boddie requiring him to please answer or demur to the bill. Griffin and Burt, Comprs. Sols (No date given) (Wesley Bodie answers November 15, 1841 and consents for the land to be sold.) In Equity. Package No. 584. | Boddie, William (I4806)
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845 | The flood was 2036BC | Noah (I4051)
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846 | The Gazette lists John Fullstone as a prisoner, whose estates and effects have been vested in the Provisional Assignee, having filed their schedules, oredered to be brought before the court at the court house Portugal St, London's-Inn-Fields, Friday 2nd December 1842: John Fullstone, late of No 10 Orange St bethanl Green road, previously No 37 King St, Long-acre, then previously of No 21, Artillery-lane, Bishopsgate St, all in Middlesex, journeyman tailor. _UID: EE13EBC158C5D511BC068E21E2E4E4743F99 Birth: ABT 1815 in Cottenham, Cambs. Occupation: Tailor/Master Tailor FROM 1833 TO 1874 London 1 2 Residence: 22 Selon St, Stepney FEB 1841 Note: Very difficult to transcribe from original records Residence: Montague St, Bethnal Green 1835 Residence: Wellington Row, Bethnal Green DEC 1841 Note: Not there on 1841 census Residence: 34 Brick Lane, Spitalfields 1833 London 3 Census: 7 APR 1861 34 Well St, Mile End New Town, Stepney Note: Age 45. tailor. b.Cambs, Cottenham Census: 1851 34 Well St, Mile End New Town, Stepney Note: Head, age 35, tailor, b.Cambs, Cottenham, 4 Census: JUN 1841 White Street, Bethnal Green, London Note: Head, age 25 (to 29), Taylor, Not b in County 5 Census: 1871 Preston Street, Whitechapel Note: Head, 56, Tailor, b. Cottenham, Cambs 6 Event: Prison 1842 Queen's prison | Fullstone, John (I560)
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847 | The name is recorded in Jubillees 4:13 | Noam (I4720)
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848 | The name is recorded in Jubillees 4:14 | Mualaleth (I4721)
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849 | The name is recorded in Jubillees 4:15 | Dinah (I4722)
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850 | The name is recorded in Jubillees 4:16 | Baraka (I4724)
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