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10151 SIR WILLIAM COTTON was born about 1420 of Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England, to Walter Cotton (1376-1445) and Joane Reade (1376-1445.) He married Alice Ann Abbott about 1438 of Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England.

Sir William Cotton died 22 May 1455, killed at St. Albans., age 34.

Cambridgeshire, England

The First Battle of St Albans, fought on 22 May 1455 at St Albans, 22 miles north of London, traditionally marks the beginning of the Wars of the Roses in England. Richard, Duke of York, and his allies, the Neville earls of Salisbury and Warwick, defeated a royal army commanded by Edmund Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, who was killed. With King Henry VI captured, a subsequent parliament app

Landwade, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire,
St Nicholas, Landwade was originally the private chapel to the Cotton family of the nearby Landwade Hall. Built in about 1465, as a result of brothers Walter and Thomas Cotton, purchasing Landwade it has many memorials to the Cotton family.


Brass epitaph of William Cotton

The Tomb of William Cotton from The Ancestry of Thomas Bradbury and His Wife Mary Perkins, p. 151



The Chapel At Landwade, Cambridgeshire from The Ancestry of Thomas Bradbury and His Wife Mary Perkins, p. 152



Battle of St Albans Warwick

William Cotton in
The Ancestry of Thomas Bradbury and His Wife Mary Perkins
By John Brooks Threlfall

p. 135: William was the eldest son and inherited Landwade Manor from his father. "Here he lived while serving the crown in various capacities. He was Attorney General and Receiver General of the Duchy of Lancaster for feoffees of Henry VI from Michaelmas 1444, Receiver General of Queen Margaret 19 July 1446, Constable of Clitheroe, Keeper and Ranger of Enfield Park and Parker of Walden. He was Usher of the Chamber in 1444 and 1447, when also Clerk and Porter of the Great Wardrobe, surrendering the clerkship in June 1553, Keeper of the Great Wardrobe, 23 December 1450. He was then the king's Esquire, Justice of the Peace for Cambridge 1447 to his death, also of Cambridge borough and Huntingdon, Member of Parliament representing Cambridge1447 and 1453, He was at the Winchester Parliament 1449 on Duchy business, likewise at Leicester April to June 1540. He was Steward of the Franchises to the Abbey of Bury Saint Edmunds. On 17 August 1446 he was on an enquiry at Lancaster concerning the sheriff's misdeeds. He had a house at Exning, Suffolk, in 1450.

pp. 135-6: "His staunch support of King Henry VI cost him his life, for he fell on the Lancastrian side at Saint Albans on 22 May 1455. There were two principal factions among the English lords. On one side was the king and his advisor Edmund, Duke of Somerset. On the other was Richard, Duke of York, a more popular man. Fearing the malice of Edmund, Duke Richard, Richard Earl of Salisbury, Richard Earl of Warwick, .... a large number of their supporters gathered about the town of Saint Albans. On 21 May 1455 Henry VI set out from Westminster to Saint Albans, resting at Watford that night and arriving in the morning at Saint Albans. With him were many dukes, lords, gentlemen and yeoman to the number of 2,000 or more. On this day assembled the Duke of York, the the Earls of Salisbury and Warwick with divers knights and squire to the Key Field by Saint Albans. The king, hearing the duke's coming, put his banner at the place called Butt's Lane in Saint Peter's Street and commanded the ward and barriers to be kept in strong wise. The Duke of York stood firm from 7 in the morning until almost 10 without any blows on either side."

p. 136-7: "The duke sent a message to the king demanding that he 'deliver such as we will accuse'. The king in reply threatened him and his followers with the penalties of treason if they did not leave the field at once. The duke thereupon held a council with his leaders and they decided to give battle.

"This decided, the Duke of York and the Earls of Salisbury and Warwick between 11 and 12 of the clock at noon broke into the town in three different places and several places of the aforesaid street. Lord Clifford held the barriers that the Duke of York might not enter the town. The Earl of Warwick gathered his men and ferociously broke in by the garden side between the sign of the Key and the sign of the Chequer in Hollowell Street; and as soon as they were in town they blew trumpets and shouted with a great voice, 'A Warwick! A Warwick! And at once forthwith after the breaking in, they set on them manually. And as of Lords, of name were slain the Lord Clifford, the Duke of Somerset, the Earl of Northumberland, Sir Bertram Entwistle, knight, and of men of court, William Zouch, John Batryaux, Ralph of Bapthorp and his son, William Corbin, squire, William Cotton, receiver of the Duchery of Lancaster, etc. About 50 in all of the king's followers were killed. The king was wounded in the neck with an arrow. The Duke of Buckingham with an arrow in the visage, the Lord of Stafford in the hand by an arrow in the visage, the Lord of Stafford in the hand by an arrow, the Earl of Dorset, Sir John Wenlock and other Lancastrians. Some fled the scene, abandoning their arms, even horses. This done, the Duke of York, the Earl of Salisbury, and the Earl of Warwick came to the king and on their knees besought him of grace and forgiveness for what they had done, begged him to take them as his true liege men, saying that they never intended hurt to this person. The king forgave them and ordered them to stop their followers and see that no harm should be done. They obeyed his command and the cry to cease the fighting went out. So ended the battle (excerpts from an account of the battle in the Paston Letters I:327).

"This battle was the first of the hostilities between the parties of York and Lancaster, in what came to be known as the War of the Roses. The Lancastrians, that is King Henry's forces, lost this battle and a few years later Henry lost his throne.

"Inquisitions Post Mortem were held, one at Exning on 31 October, and one 3 November at New Market. Both state that he died on the Thursday before the Feast of Pentacost, which was the 22nd of May.

"William Cotton's daughter-in-law's father, Nicholas Sharp, succeeded him as Receiver General of the Duchy of Lancaster.

"William Cotton was buried in the Landwade Chapel and his manor of Landwade passed to his eldest son, Sir Thomas Cotton, then aged 17."

p. 141: "In addition to the estate at Landwade originally purchased by his father, William Cotton also received from his father an estate in nearby Exning, county Suffolk, called Cotton Manor."

p. 143: "For many years William Cotton was a Commissioner of the Pease for Cambridgeshire, for the town of Cambridge and for H
Wikitree:
Landwade is a parish four miles north of Newmarket. One of the smallest parishes in the county, it is only 1 kilometre from north to south and at most 500m from east to west. William Cotton inheritted Landwade manor from his father Walter in 1445, and on his death in 1455 it passed to his son Thomas (d. 1499)[1]
He died 22 May 1455 in St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England.
Alice ABBOTT, born 1418 in London, Middlesex, England.
Alice married William Cotton, Esq. on 1438 in Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England.
She died on Nov. 21st 1473 in Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England
They had the following children:
Sir Thomas COTTON Knight was born 1439 and died 30 Jul 1499.
William COTTON II was born 1441 in Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England.
Joan COTTON was born 1443.
Katherine COTTON was born 1445.
Andrew COTTON was born 1447 in Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England.
Edmund COTTON was born 1449.
John COTTON was born 1451 in Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England.
Audrey COTTON was born 1453 and died 1505.
Robert COTTON was born 1455 in Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England. [2]

[example] ALICE ANN ABBOTT was born about 1418 of Landwade, Forest Heath, Suffolk, England, to John Symond Abbott III (1381-1443) and Agnes Elmyre (1387-1443.) She married Sir William Cotton about 1438 of Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England.

Alice Abbott passed away 21 November 1473, Landwade, Cambridgeshire, England, age 55.



Cambridgeshire, England


Landwade Chapel Cambridgeshire England


Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England

Wikitree:
Ann Abbot was the daughter of John Abbott, Esq., (1381-1443) in London, an armiger, and Agnes (b. 1390). She m. William Cotton Esq. and they had 6 sons and 3 da.
Children:
1.Catherine m. Thomas Higham
2.Joan m. Clement HIgham
3.Etheldreda [Audria] m. (1) Thomas Barton, (2) Sir Richard Gardiner, Lord Mayor of London and (3) Sir Gilbert Talbot
4.Thomas
5.William of Clavering, Essex
6.Andrew dsp.
7.Edmund of Redgrave, Suffolx m. Ela Convers, gd. of Sir Robert Conyers
8.John dsp.
9.Robert

Children of William Cotton and Alice Ann Abbott:

1.Janet Cotton (1424-)
2.Elizabeth Cotton (1446-)
3.Catherine de Cotton (1446-1494)
4.Etheldreda Cotton (1446-1494)
5.Edmund Cotton (1449-)
6.William Cotton (1450-1461)
7.Andrew Cotton (1450-)
8.*AUDREY OR ETHELDREDA COTTON (1453-1505)
9.Joan Cotton (1455-)
10.Robert Cotton (1455-)
COTTON, Sir William Vice Chamberlain to Henry VI (I594768785)
 
10152 Sir William de Plumpton, of Plumpton, d. 1362; m. (1) c 1330, Alice, daughter of Sir Henry Byaufiz (mar. sett. 1322). Her property did not go to the Plumptons, but to a distant cousin, so Alice was not her daughter; m. (2) by 1338, Christianna Mowbray, widow of Richard de Emildon, d. 1333. [Ancestral Roots]
--------------------------------------
Sir William de Plumpton, Knt., of Plumpton, keeper of Knaresborough Forest 1332, knighted 1340, Knight of the shire 1350, High Sheriff of Yorkshire 1351; m. (1) c 1330, Alice de Swillington; m. (2) c 1338, Christian Mowbray, d. 1365, widow of Richard de Emildon, alderman of New Castle. [Magna Charta Sureties]

sir,William Plumpton, Lord of Jesmond by right of wife's dower, Sheriff of Yorkshire 1349
s/o sir Robert III Plumpton & Lucia Ros
b- 1295 - Plumpton, Spofforth, Yorkshire, England
m-1- 1322 - Alice Beaufitz, heiress d- by 1334 no suviving issue
m-2- 1334 - 3rd husband - Christina Mowbray
d- 13622 - Plumpton, Yorkshire, England


From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Plumpton-3
Biography
Sir William de Plumpton was born circa 1297 at of Plumpton, Yorkshire, England, the son of Sir Robert de Plumpton and Lucia de Roos.[1][2]

"Sir William de Plumpton was descended through his mother from William the Lion, King of Scotland. [COMPLETE PEERAGE (hereafter CP) 11: 92-93, 117-118.] Plumpton's first marriage was to Alice, daughter and heir of Sir Henry Beaufiz [also seen as Beaufitz and Byaufiz]. They were married no later than 14 April 1322, the date of a settlement by his father upon Sir William and Alice, his wife, and heirs of their bodies of the manor of Nesfield. [PLUMPTON CORRESPONDENCE, ed. Thomas Stapleton, CAMDEN SOCIETY PUBLICATIONS no. 4 (1839), p. xx.] At the death of Sir Henry in 1325, Alice was said to be aged 28 and more. [CIPM 6: 399.] If she were born about 1297, and considering that this was likely the first marriage for each of them, Sir William's birth year can be estimated at 1295. No surviving children resulted from this marriage and Alice was dead by 30 June 1334 when Christiana de Emeldon's dower was "made to the said William and Cristiana." [CCR Edward III 1333-1337, p. 319.]

"The Plumptons had since ancient times held most of their Yorkshire properties as tenants of the Percys, and in 1295, Sir Robert de Plumpton, Sir William's grandfather, adopted "the armorial insignia of his lord paramount, 'the Sire de Percy,'" slightly modified. [Stapleton, pp. xvii-xix.] William de Plumpton had been knighted by 19 September 1328 when he and his brother-in-law Sir Peter de Middelton witnessed a charter by Sir Henry Percy. [CPR Edward III 1327-1330, p. 398.]

"On 24 August 1330, before Sir William married Christiana, a commission of oyer and terminer convened to hear the complaint of John, Lord Mowbray, that a large number of men, including Plumpton and Sir Peter de Middelton, had "entered his free chaces and warrens" at Kirkby Malzeard and other Mowbray holdings in Yorkshire and had "hunted there without license, and carried away deer, hares, rabbits, partridges, and pheasants." [CPR Edward III 1327-1330, p. 569.] Henry and Geoffrey le Scrope, members of the commission, were related to Plumpton. Geoffrey's wife was Juetta de Ros, a sister of Plumpton's mother Lucy de Ros. The complaint made by Mowbray may reflect enmity arising from the fact that Plumpton had acquired an interest in the manor of Kirkby Malzeard through his father-in-law, Sir Henry Beaufiz, who held "the manor of Kirkeby Malasart, now in the king's hand through the forfeiture of John de Moubray," a reference to Lord Mowbray's father who was executed after being captured at Boroughbridge in 1322. [CIPM 6: 399.]

"Neighborly relations may have improved for many years, because it was not until 20 August 1351 that a commission of oyer and terminer was convened on the complaint of John, Lord Mowbray, that Plumpton, who was then the Sheriff of York, and others had entered Mowbray's free chace at Kirkby Malzeard, hunted therein, carried away deer, and assaulted his men. On the same day, another such commission looked into a complaint made by Blanche de Mowbray that Plumpton and others had "broke her closes and houses" and drove away oxen and cows at several other Mowbray holdings in Yorkshire. [CPR Edward III 1350-1354, pp. 159-160.] Blanche is identified as the daughter of John de Mowbray on 10 August 1349 in CCR 23 Edward III 1349-1354, p. 51. The last of Lord Mowbray's complaints of poaching against Plumpton and several other prominent Yorkshire men was heard by a commission of oyer and terminer on 20 October 1354. This action again complained of an entry into his free chace at Kirkby Malzeard as well as at Burton in Lonesdale, County of York, the hunting and carrying away of deer, and assaults upon his men. [CPR Edward III 1354-1358, p. 130.]

"Kirkby Malzeard, a locale of all three of Lord Mowbray's complaints of poaching against Plumpton and his associates, was a major holding of the Mowbrays. [CIPM 3: 357.] As noted above, Plumpton also had an interest in Kirkby Malzeard through his father-in-law who had acquired it from the Crown after its forfeiture by John I, Lord Mowbray, executed following the Battle of Boroughbridge. On 24 April 1345, Plumpton received a license for the alienation in mortmain affecting some of his holdings in Kirkby Malzeard and elsewhere in Yorkshire for the celebration of divine services in the church of St. Wilfrid, Ripon, for his good estate, his soul when he is dead, and the souls of his parents, ancestors, and heirs. [CPR Edward III 1343-1345, p. 455.] In any event, Kirkby Malzeard continued to be listed as one of the four Mowbray manors in Yorkshire. [CIPM 11: 138-139 (1361).]

"Although the Plumpton holdings were mostly in Yorkshire, he eventually acquired an estate in Nothumberland which was not part of Christiana's dower. As early as 1346 and as late as 1358, "William de Plumpton and Christiana his wife" held the manor of Brenkley, located 7 miles NNW of Newcastle, of Sir John de Eure for one-eighth of a knight's fee. [FEUDAL AIDS 4: 57-59; and NCH 12: 522-523.]

"Sir William de Plumpton served as a Member of Parliament representing Yorkshire in 1331. [Godfrey Richard Park, PARLIAMENTARY REPRESENTATION OF YORKSHIRE (1886), p. 288.] He was on many occasions called upon for his services in the North of England. On 10 February 1354 and again on 2 July 1354, Plumpton and others were appointed justices to enforce the Statute of Labourers in parts of Yorkshire. [CPR Edward III 1354-1358, pp. 58-61.]

"On 20 January 1347, an order of appointment by the king's council noted that "William de Plumpton who is of the retinue of Henry de Percy" was "about to go in his company to the march of Scotland for the defence thereof." [CFR Edward III 1337-1347, p. 493.] The Percys, long an important family in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, had become dominant landowners in Northumberland as the result of their 1309 purchase of Alnwick from the Bishop of Durham. [CP 10: 458.] King Edward III having made over to Henry Percy the reversionary interests in Warkworth and other Clavering estates on 2 March 1328, they passed to the Percy family in 1332 upon the death of John de Clavering. [W. Percy Hedley, NORTHUMBERLAND FAMILIES (1968) 1: 161.] Sir William de Plumpton was no doubt a member of Henry Percy's retinue because Plumpton owed knight's service to Percy (1301-1352), his feudal lord. Percy must have called upon Plumpton for services in his retinue with some frequency. Percy took "part in the siege of Berwick, of which he was made the keeper, and fought at Halidon Hill." [CP 10: 461.] This is the battle in which Richard de Emeldon was killed.

"Plumpton and Lord Mowbray served together at least four times on commissions of oyer and terminer. First, Mowbray and Plumpton served on a commission convened on 8 February 1350 to hear a complaint by Christopher Maillore that several miscreants had "broke his close and houses" at Hoton Conyers, Yorkshire, and done other damage. [CPR Edward III 1348-1350, p. 520.] On 6 July 1352, Lord Mowbray and two others were added to a commission of which Plumpton was a member and which looked into a claim that a ship had been broken up and its timbers carried away. [CPR Edward III 1350-1354, p. 289.] On 10 July 1356, Plumpton, Lord Mowbray, and three others were members of a commission that heard a complaint that an abbot, his fellow monks, and others had besieged a house near Knaresborough in Yorkshire and carried away goods. [CPR Edward III 1354-1358, p. 498.] Last, on 26 June 1361, Lord Mowbray and Plumpton served together on a commission that heard a complaint by the Abbot of Fountains that disturbers of the peace had entered his free chaces and free warrens, felled trees, and carried away game from several places in Yorkshire. [CPR Edward III 1358-1361.] This may have been the last time that Lord Mowbray and Sir William de Plumpton were together as Mowbray died on 4 October 1361. [CP 9: 383.]

"Plumpton's life, too, was coming to an end. "He died 36 Edw. III. 1362, towards the close of the year." [Stapleton, p. xxi.] Christiana survived her husband for about a year, the date of her death in 1363 being given both as "20 December" and the "Saturday after Christmas." [CIPM 11: 459-460.]William de Plumpton ... " [3]

Marriage & Children
A settlement for the marriage Sir William de Plumpton and Alice Beaufitz was made on 14 April 1322; They had no issue.[4][5]
Sir William de Plumpton married, secondly, Christian Mowbray before 24 February 1334. They had 1 son & 1 daughter:[4][5]
Sir Robert
Alice, wife of Sir Richard de Sherburne, & of Sir John le Boteler
Sources
? Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 365.
? Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 385.
? http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/sources/mowbray/christiana2.shtml
? 4.0 4.1 Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 365-366.
? 5.0 5.1 Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 385-386.
"Royal Ancestry" D. Richardson 2013 Vol. IV p. 387
See Also:
http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/sources/mowbray/christiana1.shtml 
PLUMPTON, William De Sheriff Of York, Sir (I25159)
 
10153 Sir William Dennis, of Dunham, co. Gloucester. [Magna Charta Sureties]

Sir William Dennis (or Denys), of Durham, co. Gloucester, and his wife Anne, daughter of Maurice Berkeley. [Ancestral Roots]

Note: I find no Dunham, Gloucestershire, but I have found a Dyrham and Hinton, Gloucestershire, near Chipping Sodbury. Sounds like Dyrham combined with a nearby town Hinton. 
DENNIS, William Of Dirham, Sir Knight (I12928)
 
10154 Sir William Douglas of Nithsdale (c. 1370-1391 AD) was a Scottish knight and Northern Crusader.

Early life
William Douglas was an illegitimate son of Archibald the Grim, 3rd Earl of Douglas and an unknown mother.

A man of apparently dashing bearing, Douglas was with the Franco-Scots army when it unsuccessfully besieged Carlisle Castle in 1385, the defending Governor being Lord Clifford. He is recorded as there performing feats of valour and killing many Englishmen.

According to Andrew of Wyntoun:

"A yhowng joly bachelere
Prysyd gretly wes off were,
For he wes evyr traveland
Qwhille be se and qwhille be land
To skathe his fays rycht besy
Swa that thai dred him grettumly"

Marriage
Douglas certainly had gained his spurs by 1387 when he married Egidia (or Gelis) Stewart, princess of Scotland, a daughter of King Robert II. According to the Liber Pluscarden, Egidia Stewart's beauty was well renowned. Charles V of France had "sent a certain most subtle painter to do her portrait and portray her charms, intending to take her to wife." But the King of France and all other of Egidia's admirers had lost out to the chivalric charms of Douglas. As part of her marriage portion went the lands of Nithsdale in south-western Scotland, Herbertshire in the county of Stirling and an annuity of £300.

Ireland
Within his first year of marriage the young Nithsdale led a punitive raid against Irish raiders who had been troubling the tenantry of his father's Fiefdom of Galloway. In early summer 1388, with a party of 500 well prepared veteran men-at-arms he sailed into Carlingford Lough, landed outside the town and summoned their leaders. The chief of the townsfolk offered a sum for a temporary truce, to which Nithsdale agreed. Secretly the townsfolk sent off to Dundalk for reinforcements, with which they were obliged. 800 spearmen from Dundalk surprised the Scots camp by night, and were supported by a sortie from Carlingford town. The Scots, veterans of years of brutal Border warfare, drove the Irishmen off, captured the town and burnt it, seized the Castle and captured 15 ships in the harbour. En route back to Scotland Nithsdale "ravaged" the Isle of Man. Nithsdale's expeditionary force sailed back into Loch Ryan with enough time to participate in the raiding of Northern England that was to culminate in the Battle of Otterburn on 19 August, in which he fought with distinction.

Feuding, Crusading and Death
The year after Otterburn a truce was called between Scotland and England. Nithsdale on a knightly quest for glory decided, about 1389, to join the Teutonic Knights, who were fighting the Lithuanians in Baltic region. Nithsdale had previously quarrelled with Lord Clifford, a former adversary at Carlisle and whose forebear had claimed Douglasdale under Edward I of England's oppression. While both were abroad, it is alleged that Clifford challenged Nithsdale to single combat, and that Douglas even went to France to obtain special armour for the fight. Clifford, however, died on 18 August 1391, but Nithsdale is said to have kept their 'tryst', and whilst walking upon the bridge leading to the main gate at Danzig was "killed by the English". The burghers of Danzig decided that "upon account of a signal service which the Douglas family did to this city in relieving it in its utmost extremities against the Poles, the Scotch were allowed to be free burghers of the town". Subsequently, the stone fascia of the Hohe Thor (High Gate) was adorned with the coat of arms of this nobleman and for centuries it was commonly referred to as the Douglas Port or Douglas Gate, described as such as late as 1734.

In 1391, Douglas was in the Baltic, and became involved in a brawl with Sir Thomas de Clifford, in which Douglas was killed.

Issue
By Princess Egidia, Nithsdale had two children:

1.)Egidia Douglas, known as the "Fair Maid of Nithsdale" married:
a.) Henry Sinclair, 2nd Earl of Orkney (d. 1422)

b.) Sir Alasdair Stewart (executed 1425) son of Murdoch Stewart, 2nd Duke of Albany

2.) Sir William Douglas, Knt., Lord of Nithsdale (d.c.1419), knighted when very young as he is described as chevalier in a safe-conduct dated 30 January 1406, when he could not have been more than nineteen. 
DOUGLAS, Sir William (I25737)
 
10155 Sir William Ferrers of Chartley, age 23 in 1435, d. 9 June 1450; m. Elizabeth, daughter of Hamon Bealknap of Seintlynge in St. Mary Cray, co. Kent, etc., d. 28 May 1471. [Ancestral Roots]
--------------------
BARONY OF FERRERS OF CHARTLEY (CP doesn't give numbers/recognize the title?)

SIR WILLIAM FERRERS, of Chartley, &c., frequently called LORD FERRERS, son and heir, aged 23 and more at his father's death. The King took his homage and fealty, and he had livery of his father's lands, 9 February 1435/6. On 18 December 1440, he had livery of the manor of Keyston, and obtained that of Bugbrooke, both of which his mother had held in dower.

He married Elizabeth, daughter of Hamon BEALKNAP, of Seintlynge in St. Mary Cray, Kent, Knell, Sussex, &c., by Joan, younger daughter and, in her issue, coheir of Sir Thomas BOTELER, of Sudeley, co. Gloucester. He died s.p.m., 9 June 1450. His widow's dower was ordered to be assigned, 12 November 1450: on the same day the King took her fealty, and the manors, which she and her husband had held jointly, were liberated to her. In May 1455 she conveyed to feoffes the manors she held for life, in dower or otherwise. She died 28 May 1471. [Complete Peerage V:320-1, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 
FERRERS, Sir. William De Baron (I8309)
 
10156 Sir William Gascoigne (I) was a Yorkshire knight who was a captain for Sir Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland. High Sheriff of York, 1442 He fought for him at the battle of Wakefield (1460), and also at the battle of Towton (1461), where he was on the Lancastrian (losing) side and so was attained by the victorious Edward IV. He died peacefully in 1466 and his son took over the reigns of the family. GASCOIGNE, Sir. William X Knight (I8748)
 
10157 Sir William Harris (21 September 1556 – 14 November 1616) was an English knight, land owner, and a notable incorporator in the third Virginia Company of London.

Sir William Harris, his brother in law, Sir Thomas Smythe and his son, Sir Arthur Harris, each, were Incorporators and Subscribers to the third charter of the Virginia Company of London, and each paid £75 as their subscription.[12] Both Harris and Smythe were very interested in the development of Virginia. They exerted their influence to secure money, men, equipment, supplies, and ships for the colonization efforts.[13]

This Harris family appears to have originated some 40 to 50 miles (64 to 80 km) east-north-east of London and on the north bank of the River Crouch. The village of Cricksea (or Creeksea) exists today on this peninsula in Essex County. Creeksea is located about 2 miles (3 km) west of Burnham-on-the-Crouch and about 18 miles (29 km) inland from the North Sea. Anciently called "Danes Island", this area was inhabited largely by Norman families after the conquest in 1066.

Sir William Harris was knighted on 23 July 1603 at Whitehall on the eve of the coronation of James I.[2] His elevation to the knighthood was the result of military service in Ireland during the Nine Years' War along with his cousin Sir William Harris of Shenfield, Essex.[3]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Harris_(Tudor_person)

Notes By Noël J. Harris Robertson

More About WILLIAM HARRIS, SIR: 1: 1563, Alternate birthdate found in "Visitation of Essex 1612" Baptism: 04 May 1563, Cold Norton, Essex, England Burial: All Saints Church in Creeksea, Essex, England Occupation: 1603, Knighted at Whitehall @ Otelands by King James I (Bible) THIS MAY BE INCORRECT Probate: 20 November 1616, Crixsey, Essex, 1615 Cope No. 119 Probate 1616 Will: 21 December 1615, Crixsey, Essex, England

He was was the high sheriff of Essex County, England.

Sir William Harris was Knighted on July 23, 1603 at Otelands by King James I of England. This same King gave us the King James verson of the Bible.

The English place of Orgin of the particular Harris family to be related herein is located some 40 to 50 miles east-north-east of London and on the north bank of the River Crouch.

The very old village of Cricksea (or Creeksea) exists today on this peninsula in Essex County. Creeksea is located about 2 miles west of Burnham-on-the -Crouch and about 18 miles inland from the North Sea. Anciently Called "Danes Island", this area was inhabitted largely by Norman families after the conquest 1066.

Here was the home of our immigrant ancestor, John Harris, and his parents, lady Alice and Sir William Harris.


Captain Thomas Harris was a nephew of Sir. Thomas Smith, Treasurer of the Virginia Company and Governor of the East India Company, and was grandson of "Customer" Smith who rose from obscurity in Queen Elizabeth's time by marrying the daughter of Sir Andrew Judd, the Lord Mayor, of humble origin himself. Sir William Harris, father of Captian Thomas,was descended from Sir thomas Percy, executed ! in Aske's Rebellion; five Percy Earls of Northumberland, the Spencers, Calthorpes, Drury's, Howards, Wentworth's and Waldegraves." 
HARRIS, Sir William (I5074)
 
10158 Sir William Heron, Knight, of Ford, b. Nov 1400, d. 1425, knighted Feb 1421/2, Justice of Northamptonshire 1422, Sheriff of same 1425. [Ancestral Roots]

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Sir William Heron, Knight, of Ford, b. 1400, d. 1425. [Magna Charta Sureties]

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Note: Both AR and MCS are probably wrong (above) about William being "of Ford". CP, the senior source in this line (AR and MCS use CP as a source) states that this branch of the family was NOT of Ford, until Elizabeth Heron m. John Heron of Ford, reuniting the two branches.

-----------------------------------------------------------

4- SIR WILLIAM HERON, son and heir, aged 3 months in January 1400/1. In 1407, being then aged 7 years, he was in ward to Robert Ogle. He was of full age and already a knight in February 1421/2, and did fealty to the Bishop of Durham for his lands in Norhamptonshire on 14 September 1421. He was appointed a justice in Northumberland in 1422, and was Sheriff of the county at the time of his death in 1425. He married (dispensation 13 January 1411/2, the parties being related in the fourth degree) Anne, daughter of Sir Robert OGLE. He died s.p.m., 1 September 1425. [Complete Peerage VI:487-8, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

-----------------------------------------------------------

Note: I rechecked, and AR definitely has him Sheriff of Northamptonshire, while CP has him Sheriff of Northumberland. I would tend to believe that AR is wrong because William was of a Northumberland family; however CP does say he was involved in Northamptonshire in 1421. I will leave it as AR has put it until I find another source that can resolve the descrepancy. 
HERON, William Of Croydon, Sir (I13437)
 
10159 Sir William Keith, succeeded his father [Lord Robert de Keith] between 2 July 1430 and 20 May 1431.

In a charter dated 20 May 1442, he conveyed to Robert de Keth, Knight, his eldest son, whom failing, to William, John, or Alexander, brothers of the said Robert, the lands of Keith, Garvock, Dunottar, Fetteresso, Strathechin, Culpersow, Kintore, and Aden, together with the offices of Marischal of Scotland and Sheriff of Kincardine.

Between 1446 and July 1451 he was made a Lord of Parliament as LORD KEITH. The date of creation can only be approximately ascertained. In an official report of evidence regarding a dispute between the family of Skene of Skene and that of the Marischal, held before a Court in the Cathedral of Aberdeen on 22 September 1446, he is styled Sir William Keith, Marischal.

In a series of charters granted by King James II on 6 July 1451, he is styled Lord Keith, and appears as the latest on the list of Peers after William, Lord Hay, the constable, who was created before 10 april 1450. His creation, therefore was then probably of recent date.

He was one of the guarantors of a treaty of peace with the English in 1457, and on 6 August of that year he witnesses the confirmation of a treaty by King James II as Lord Keith. Later he was raised a step in the Peerage, as in a royal charter dated 7 October of the following year (1458), he is designed 'dilectus consanguineus noster' EARL of MARISCHAL and 1ST LORD KEITH.

He died probably before Witsunday 1463, and certainly before 16 March 1463-64.

He married a lady named Mary who is usually said to have been the daughter of Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow, but there is no evidence of this, and the dates make it doubtful.

On 26 April 1414, Pope Benedict XIII issued a commission to grant dispensation for the marriage of 'William de Ketht' of St. Andrews diocese and Marjorie Fraser, daughter of Alexander Fraser of Moray diocese. This is probably the wife of Sir William Keith, and the daughter of Alexander Fraser of Kinnell and Lovat, who, as stated above, appears to have married about the same time Sir William's youngest sister, Marion.

She was dead before August 1442.

Thy had issue:

1. Sir Robert, in whose favour his father resigned his estates and offices in 1442. He is said to have died v.p. in 1446, ...
2. William, who succeeded as second Earl Marischal.
3. John, mentioned in a charter by his father dated 20 May May 1442.
4. Alexander, mentioned in the same charter with his elder brother John.
5. Janet, married, first to John Leslie, Master of Rothes; secondly, to Thomas, second Lord Innermeath. Based on the ages of her husbands, this Janet is most likely to be the daughter of William, Second Earl, and she has been moved to his family.
6. Egidia, married to James, second Lord Forbes, and was still a widow 14 August 1473.

Source: THE SCOTS PEERAGE, ed. by Sir James Balfour Paul, Vol IV, Edinburgh, 1906, pp. 39-41.
------------------------------
I also found reference to his wife as the above Marjorie Fraser, dau of Alexander Fraser and Elizabeth Keith, The marriage date is correct, 26 April 1414, but to Marjorie Fraser. 
DE KEITH, Sir William 1st Earl of Marischal (I594767576)
 
10160 Sir William le Vavasor, lord of Haselwood, judge in the reign of Henry II and one of the witnesses to the charter of the abbey of Sawley, in Yorkshire, re-founded by Matilda de Percy, Countess of Warwick. To this abbey he himself also made a considerable donation of land. He was s. by his son, Sir Robert le Vavasor. [John Burke, History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. I, R. Bentley, London, 1834-1838, p. 51, Vavasour, of Weston]


This file is as error-free as my sources. IF you should discover an error, I would appreciate it if you would bring it to my attention and provide me with the correct information and source for that information. Many thanks. 
LE VAVASOR, William Lord Of Haselwood, Kt. (I11036)
 
10161 Sir William made high sheriff of Glouchestershire in 1269. TRACY, William (I4114)
 
10162 Sir William Molyneux, of Sefton, co. Lancaster, son & heir, b. 1481, d. 1548; m. (1) Jane Rugge, dau. and heir of Sir Richard Rugge, co. Salop; m. (2) Elizabeth, dau. & heir of Cuthbert Clifton, Esq. Monumental brass for Sir William Molyneux and his two wives in parish church of Sefton. [Ancestral Roots] MOLYNEUX, William Of Sefton, Sir (I13496)
 
10163 Sir William Oliphant Seal Attached : A shield, three crescents. Legend : …: WILLELMI:OLIFAVN: Under King John Balliol and the Guardians, Sir William Oliphant had been the commander of Stirling Castle. Falling in to the hands of the English in 1304 he spent four and a half years in prison until he consented to fight against the Bruce. He was installed as commander of the Perth Garrison. The garrison was overrun by the Bruce and the loyal Scots in January 1313. He joined the Bruce there after and remained loyal. The name Oliphant came from the Norwegian name Holifard/Holifarth. David Holifard who came back north with King David I from whom he received lands in Roxburghshire. David Holifard saved the King's life at the Battle of Winchester in 1141. A descendant of the above David was Sir William Oliphant who played an important role in the struggle for Scottish independence. He defended Stirling Castle during the wars and in 1320 after being set free signed the Declaration of Arbroath, a letter from Scottish barons to maintain Scottish independence and support Robert I. His son Sir Walter Oliphant of Aberdalgy married the Princess Elizabeth youngest daughter of Robert the Bruce as appears by a charter of David II erecting the lands of Gask in Perthshire. His descendant Sir Laurence Oliphant of Aberdalgy was the first Lord Oliphant. He had three sons, John the 2nd Lord Oliphant, William from whom descended the Oliphants of Gask and George who was styled of Bachilton. OLIPHANT, Sir William Of Aberdalgy (I28986)
 
10164 Sir William Tailboys (or Talboys), Knight, son of 1st unkown wife (received none of the inheritance of Alice Stafford), Lord Kyme, knighted 19 Feb 1460/1, b. c 1415, beheaded 26 May 1464; m. Elizabeth Bonville, d. 14 Feb 1490/1, daughter of Sir William, Lord Bonville, KG, d. 1461 and (1) wife Margaret Grey. [Ancestral Roots]

-------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------

BARONY OF KYME (VII) 1444

SIR WILLIAM TAILBOYS, of Kyme, co. Lincoln, de jure LORD KYME, son and heir, born circa 1415, being aged 28 at his father's death. He had licence, 8 January 1444, for an oratory within his dwelling in the diocese of Lincoln. He is called the "King's esquire" 7 June 1444, when Harbottle Castle was restored to him. From 1441 onwards he was a justice of the Peace in Lincolnshire and in Northumberland. He supported Croyland Abbey in a dispute with Thomas Dacre concerning Whaplode. Here, and later, in official records, up to 1460, he is called "esquire," but, apparently in consequence of having inherited the castle and estate of Kyme, he was generally known as the "Earl of Kyme." He gave a release, 2 April 1446, as Lord of Reddesdale and of Kyme. In 1448 he and his servants were charged with many outrages in Lincolnshire, and he was imprisoned in the Marshalsea, his pardon being procured by the Duke of Suffolk, whose adherent. he was. On 10 October 1449 he was appointed a Commissioner in an inquiry in co. Lincoln. Later he was accused of having made an attempt to murder Ralph, Lord Cromwell, in the Star Chamber at Westminster on 28 November 1449. On 18 February 1458/9 be was appointed a Commissioner of Array in Lincolnshire and on 19 February 1460/1 was knighted at the battle of St. Albans, where, as at Towton on 29 March following, he fought on the Lancastrian side. On 14 May 1461 the new King, Edward IV, ordered Kyme and other manors of William Tailboys, knight, to be taken into his hand, the said William being a rebel and adherent of the King's enemies of France and Scotland. On 26 June following he took part in a Lancastrian assembly in Durham and in August was with Queen Margaret in Scotland. On 4 November 1461 he was attainted, whereby all his honours became forfeited. He was Captain of Alnwick Castle for Henry VI when it was besieged in July 1462, and surrendered it on condition of life and property being spared. He fought on the Lancastrian side at the battle of Hexham, 15 May 1464, and, escaping after the defeat, was captured in a coal pit near Newcastle (or in Redesdale, according to one account) towards the end of the month, and beheaded.

He married Elizabeth, daughter of William, LORD BONVILLE. He died at Newcastle-on-Tyne, circa 26 May 1464, and was buried in the Grey Friars at Newcastle. His widow, who was allowed one-third of his lands in December 1464, died 14 February 1490/1. [Complete Peerage VII:359-61, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 
TAILBOYS, Sir William (I13442)
 
10165 Sir, Hugh Venables, Baron of Kinderton 1228-40
s/o sir, William I Venables, 2nd Baron Kinderton &
b- 1200 - Kinderton, Cheshire, England
m-1- Wentilian divorced
m-2- Agnes Oxton
d- 1240 - Kinderton, Cheshire, England 
DE VENABLES, Hugh Baron of Kinderton (I594766485)
 
10166 Sir: Knight of Cargill and Stobhall. Clan Macfarlane
3rd of Drummond
SIR MALCOLM DRUMMOND was born 14 July 1415, Stobhill, Midlothian, Scotland, to Walter Drummond (1395-1455) and Margaret Ruthven (1398-1475.) He married Lady Mariot Tullibardine (Lady Marion Mariot Murray.)

Malcom Drummond died about 1470 of Cargill, Perthshire, Scotland, age 55.

Sir Malcolm Drummond[1]
Sir Malcolm Drummond married Mariot Murray, daughter of Sir David Murray of Tullibardine and Margaret Colquhoun, in 1445.[1]
He died in 1470.
He was the son of Sir Walter Drummond and Margaret Ruthven.
Child of Sir Malcolm Drummond and Mariot Murray
• 1. John Drummond, 1st Lord Drummond+ b. c 1438, d. c 1519
This book goes into the deep history of the Drummond family, and how they fit into the peerage of Scotland. Sir John Drummond, 1st Lord Drummond lived during the reigns of King James III, James IV, and James V from about the years 1470 to 1519. He was an important legal and political leader of that time. James IV was so enamoured with Lord Drummond's eldest daughter, Margaret, that he intended to make her his wife. The nobles and royal council did not approve of the marriage, so they poisoned Margaret and two of her sisters over breakfast one morning so that James would cooperate in an arranged marriage with the daughter of King Henry VIII of England. However, under promise of marriage, she bore to the King a daughter, Lady Margaret Stewart from whom our family descends.
LADY MARION MARIOT MURRAY (LADY MARIOT TULLIBARDINE) was born about 1411 of Huntington Tower, Ruthven Castle, Blackford, Perthshire, Scotland, to Sir David Murray (1359-1451) and Isabel Stewart (1377-1460.) She married Malcolm Drummond.

Marion Murray died 14 July 1445, Cargill, Perthshire, Scotland, age 34.

Children of Malcom Drummond and Marion Murray:

1. *LORD JOHN DRUMMOND (1438-1519)
2. James Drummond (1438-1519)
3. Eupheme Drummond (1441-1502)
4. William Drummond (1454-)
5. Margaret Drummond (1455-)
6. Andrew Drummond (1459-)
7. Malcolm Drummond (1461-)
8. Thomas Drummond (1462-)
9. Walter Drummond (1466-) 
DRUMMOND, Sir Malcolm of Cargill and Stobhill (I594767778)
 
10167 Sire of Lezingen LUSIGNAN, Hugh VI "Diable" Sire De Lezingen De (I10618)
 
10168 SirJohn of Heron, Knight, Speaker of the House of Buttsbury TYRREL, Sir Knight John of Heron (I594763711)
 
10169 Sister of Theodoric the Great, King of the Ostrogoths, and mother ofTheodahad, King of the Ostrogoths. Her second husband was Thrasamund,King of the Vandals. Amalafrida Of The Ostrogoths (I25588)
 
10170 Sister to Jackson Willis Sullivan. SULLIVAN, Willie Josephine (I20385)
 
10171 sister-in-law of 21st cousin 3x removed GRUVER, Carrie Bell (I1133)
 
10172 SL Family (F1348)
 
10173 Slain at battle of Evesham. LE DESPENCER, Sir Knight Hugh (I25715)
 
10174 Slain in 876 HY KINSALE, King Caipre Na (I28877)
 
10175 Slain in Battle SICAMBRI, Clodius I Of (I5180)
 
10176 So far I believe this to be the right last name for Anna. Everything seems to confirm it, but I need to get the Marriage license between Thomas and Anna to confirm. The name is close to what i had been told (Donahoe). cannot find any correlation for any Anna Donahoes or Donahues. the Irish census of 1911, the 1927 ships manifest and the 1930 US census all point to this being the right name.
SEX: SOUR @S1484437077@
PAGE Year: 1940; Census Place: New York, New York, New York; Roll: m-t0627-02653; Page: 2B; Enumeration District: 31-1239
NOTE http://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=2442&h=6982754&indiv=try
DATA
TEXT Record for Thomas O'Leary
_APID 1,2442::6982754
SEX: SOUR @S1484437106@
PAGE New York City Municipal Archives; New York, New York; Borough: Manhattan; Volume Number: 7
NOTE http://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=61406&h=7983555&indiv=try
DATA
TEXT Record for Anna E Donaghy
_APID 1,61406::7983555
SEX: SOUR @S1484437105@
NOTE http://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=60901&h=767946801&indiv=try
DATA
TEXT Record for Anna Donahue
_APID 1,60901::767946801
NOTE http://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=60901&h=17946801&indiv=try
DATA
TEXT Record for Thomas Francis Jr Oleary
_APID 1,60901::17946801
NOTE http://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=60901&h=617946801&indiv=try
DATA
TEXT Record for Thomas F Oleary
_APID 1,60901::617946801 
DONAHUE, Anna E. Donaghy (I30228)
 
10177 soc.genealogy.medieval on 10 Nov 1996 (in part): Subject: Re: Will the real Boso please stand up (was Re: SAVOY) "That King Boso was the son of count Bivin [or Budwine] is proven by the contemporary "Annals Bertiniani" ("Annals of St. Bertin" in English), under the year 869, where Boso is explicitly called a son of Bivin. Boso's maternal grandfather was another Boso, an Italian count. It was this Italian Boso who was the father-in-law of Lothar II and Bivin." . . . "The confusion that has led some to make Theodoric [Thierry I "the Treasurer" (RIN 1240)] the father of Boso [King of Provence (RIN 2137)] is briefly discussed by Settipani. Here is the short version. Theodoric did have a son named Richard [RIN 3473], who has been erroneously identified by some with duke Richard of Burgundy (King Boso's brother) [i.e. RICHARD THE JUSTICIAR (RIN 1238)], and this erroneous identification has led to Boso being incorrectly called the son of Theodoric." METZ (ARDENNES), Count Bivin (I688)
 
10178 Social Security Applications and Claims, 1936-2007. Source (S1126)
 
10179 Sold Oct 5 1783 tract of land on side of the James acreage - John Cantley and Elinor his wife of Greenbrier County to Walter Linsay. Conideration 50 pounds LINDSEY, Elinor Jane (I594765215)
 
10180 Solomon b. 1778 VA wife Sarah Wright- w/10 children incl. William P. b. 1810 VA m.Elizabeth A. Higgins w/only one child James Higgins Parker b. 1836 VA-m. Elizabeth Field w/9 children b. TX and MO incl Wm. Walter Parker b. 1866 MO who m. Annie Eliza Youngs w/5 children only two living to adulthood including Marion Francis b. 1896 MO. PARKER, Solomon (I16239)
 
10181 Some have Alice also married to Thomas Leigh, with a son Thomas, b. 1415. There is no way, except for divorce or extra-marrital affair, that Alice could be married and had the children by both husbands. I have three published sources on Alice's marriage to John Gerard and none of them mention a second marriage for Alice, nor a divorce which would have allowed her to marry another before her husband died.

One source (Denise Plath-Slattery, World Connect), has the Alice who m. Thomas Leigh as a daughter of Thomas Boteler (and Alice Beauchamp). The dates support that pedigree.

From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Boteler-8
Biography
Alice Boteler was born circa 1385 at Bewsey, Lancashire, England, the daughter of John le Boteler and Alicia Plumpton.[1][2][3][4]

Marriage & Children
A contract for the marriage of Alice Boteler and John Gerard, Esq., Justice of the Peace for the county palatine was signed in 1402. They had 1 son and 1 daughter:[1][2][3][4]
Sir Peter
Constance, wife of Sir Alexander Standish
Death
Alice Boteler died on 27 February 1442.[4]
Sources
? 1.0 1.1 Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 265-266.
? 2.0 2.1 Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 248-249.
? 3.0 3.1 Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. I, p. 443-444.
? 4.0 4.1 4.2 Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 82. 
BOTELER, Alice Le (I25163)
 
10182 Some have suggested a DOB in 1644??? Martha (I838)
 
10183 Some histories shown him as Judiarch of Narbonne and Exilarch of Bagdad, and secretly a prince of the house of David. This theory derives from Arthur Zuckerman's book _A Jewish Princedom in Feudal France, 768-900_ (New York, 1972), the thesis of which is not accepted by historians. Regardless, William was an impressive figure about whose career the largest body of heroic poetry in medieval France, the 'Saint William cycle' of chansons de geste, developed in the centuries following his death.According to Pierre Betourn‚ d
Haucourt in "Heraldique et Genealogie, 1981, p.363: Guilhem, Margrave of Toulouse, later monk at Gellone, canonised as St. William of the Desert (St.Guilhem du Desert), * ca. 752, +812. The remains of the monastery where he resided and which was named after him (Saint-Guilhem-le-D‚sert) were transported to New York and re-built in the Cloisters complex of the Metroploitan Museum of Art earlier this century;.

Saint Guillaume, Count de Toulouse (Andre Roux: Scrolls, 156.)(Paul,
Nouveau Larousse Universel.) (Stuart, Royalty for Commoners,Page 234,
Line 329-40). AKA: Guillaume de Narbonne. AKA: Guillaume, Dukede
Septimanie.
Also Known As: Guillaume "Le Grand". Note -: Saint Guillaumefought
against the sarrasins. In Gellone (Herault, France), he foundedthe
monastery of Sain-Guilhem-du-Desert. He was Count de Toulouseand
also Duke of Aquitaine.
Born: before 776 in Languedoc, France, son of Theodoric=Thierri,Count de
Toulouse and Aldane=Aude Martel, Saint Guillaume is presumed tohave
been at least 18 years of age by the time his son Bera was born.
Married before 794 in France: Kunigonde N?; Kunigonde was St.
Guillaume's first wife. Married before 800: Guiburge deHornbach,
daughter of Lambert, Count de Hornbach. Guiburge was SaintGuillaume's
second wife. Died: in 812 in Gellone, Herault, France.


Source: lorenfamily.com 
TOULOUSE, Guilhem I (St Wm Of The Desert) Count (I9518)
 
10184 Some information regarding living individuals has been withheld.

E-mail me at [email protected] if you would like a GEDCOM file with more generations or containing any of the data (living individuals, addresses and such) that has been withheld from this file. 
SKINNER, Living (I5461)
 
10185 Some information regarding living individuals has been withheld.

E-mail me at [email protected] if you would like a GEDCOM file with more generations or containing any of the data (living individuals, addresses and such) that has been withheld from this file. 
SKINNER, Living (I6661)
 
10186 Some records including Wayne Greene indicate place of marriage as Westmoreland County, Virginia, American Colony. REF: FGR for Dennis McCARTY - AFN:VDPM-DK [LDK]

Donahue GEDCOM file references "Genealogies of Virginia Families", Vol. III, p 588 in listing wedding date as 22 Sept 1724. [LDK]

Darlene Homme record indicates marriage occurred at Cople Parish, Westmoreland Co.,VA. [SOURCE: "The McCarty Family" by Darlene Homme]

WFT Vol.3, Ed.1, Pedigree #3918 indicates marriage was in Lancaster County, Virginia. [LDK] 
Family (F1299)
 
10187 Some records indicate d of m as May 19, 1758; some as Aug 20, 1768. [LDK] Family (F1298)
 
10188 SOME RECORDS SHOW HER SURNAME AS "TURNER". TURNER, Mary Elizabeth (I1541)
 
10189 Some researchers claim that William married Joan Hawkins, hence the name of the only daughter Joan. HAWKINS, Margaret (I11578)
 
10190 some show him born 1647 WARREN, Jabez (I4882)
 
10191 Some source material from Key Stehly 5 June 2011 STAHLEY, Johannes "John" (I2854)
 
10192 Some sources indicate that Katherine's father was Christopher Lewis. In fact Christopher Lewis was Katherine's Godfather. Katherine is named in the will of her Godfather "Christopher Lewis" in 1674. On Aug. 10 1676, the title to two cows with calves was recorded in her name at the request of her father.
In the will of her father he inherited 40 shillings which today would be about $500 . 
PROCTOR, Catherine (I30217)
 
10193 Some sources states that she was born in 1123. AQUITAINE, Queen Eleanor De (I13601)
 
10194 Some state that John died without issue and that his younger brother Nicholas inherited Clayton from John in 1488 as a result. Nicholas did, according to Burke's Peerage, hold Clayton, and had another son John, who held Clayton. But the younger John was born too late to be Elizabeth's father. The John Byron who d. in 1488 seems to be the only likely choice, with no explanation as to why Elizabeth did not inherit Clayton. BYRON, John Of Clayton, Sir Knight (I13364)
 
10195 sometimes "Williams" in the records QUILLIAMS, Ella Amelia (I8482)
 
10196 Son born abt 1789 from Baptisimal record. WOOD, Nathaniel (I2077)
 
10197 Son Jack Higgins / Mother used of May HIGGINS, Unknown (I11871)
 
10198 Son of Alexander Kennadie and Jane Johnstone, Born in Logie, Perth Scotland. John served in the Second Jacobite Rebelion of 1745-46 in Keppoch's Regiment,32 years old, he was 5'9" tall, Black hair, well made. Taken south in May 1746 on board the transport "Jane of Leith" transported 5 May 1747 from Liverpool to Leeward Islands on "Vetran" The ship was Liberated by a French Privateer and landed on the Island of Martinique June 1747 with 1000 other prisoners taken at the Battle Culloden Moor, They were transported on 5 ships.

The British requested return of the Prisoners aboard the Vetran.

At what time John made his way to The Colonies is unknown but a Court record found in Halifax co Virginia for 1751 mentions John Kennedy living in a Scotch Settlement and was paid 65 pounds of tobacco for someone trespasing on his land.

In 1777 the family moved to Rowan county Now Guilford county North Carolina and settled. It is unknown if John served in any way in the war of the Revolution but it is highly likely since he had such deep scars from the English in his past..

Our John was 32 when he was taken prisoner and shiped to the Americas so he more than likely had a Wife and family that was left behind in Scotland when he was banished from Britain. Atleast 1 son did serve in the Revolution and that was Sgt. Sherwood Kennedy born October 14,1760 Halifax co Virginia. it is possible that his brother John also served in some way.. 
KENNEDY, John (I594763294)
 
10199 Son of Brian Boru and Gormflaeth ingen Murchada MacFinn. Only two of Brian Bórú's sons survived the battle of Clontarf; Donnchadh and Tadhg. However in 1023 Donnchadh had Tadhg killed and he became King of Mumhain and in 1024 he also became Ard Rí. Donnchadh's reign is described here: "He enacted salutory laws, sternly repressed robbery, caused the Sabbath to be observed". In his old age he went on a pilgrimage to Rome and died there.

see http://www.heraldry.ws/info/article12.html for more info. 
MUNSTER, King Donnchad Of (I28856)
 
10200 Son of Caibre-Lifeacher. Married Aoife, daughter of the King of Gall Gaodhal. This Fiacha, after 37 years' reign, was, in the battle of Dubhcomar slain by his nephews, the Three Collas, to make room for Colla Uais, who seized on, and kept, the Monarchy for four years.

This line documented in http://www.heraldry.ws/info/article12.html 
SRABHTEINE, Fiacha (I29096)
 

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