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2501 Alice Montacute (1407 – before 9 December 1462) was an English noblewoman and the suo jure 5th Countess of Salisbury, 6th Baroness Monthermer, and 7th and 4th Baroness Montagu, having succeeded to the titles in 1428. Her husband, Richard Neville became 5th Earl of Salisbury by right of his marriage to Alice.
Alice was born in 1407, the daughter and only legitimate child, of Thomas Montagu, 4th Earl of Salisbury, and Eleanor Holland, who was the daughter of Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent, and Lady Alice FitzAlan. The latter was a daughter of Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel, and Eleanor of Lancaster.

In 1420, she married Richard Neville, who became the 5th Earl of Salisbury by right of his wife on the death of her father Thomas Montagu in 1428. Alice was thereafter styled as Countess of Salisbury.
The principal seat of the family was at Bisham Manor in Berkshire although their lands lay chiefly around Christchurch in Hampshire and Wiltshire.
She died some time before 9 December 1462 and was buried in the Montagu Mausoleum at Bisham Abbey.
Alice and Richard had ten children who survived infancy:
1. Lady Joan Neville (1423-9 September 1462), who married William FitzAlan, 16th Earl of Arundel.
2. Lady Cecily Neville (1424-28 July 1450), who married Henry de Beauchamp, 1st Duke of Warwick.
3. Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick (1428– 1471), who married the heiress Anne Beauchamp, suo jure 16th Countess of Warwick. They were parents to queen consort Anne Neville.
4. Lady Alice Neville (1430– after 1503), who married Henry FitzHugh, 5th Baron FitzHugh.[1][2] Their daughter, Elizabeth, married William Parr, 1st Baron Parr of Kendal. The two were grandparents to Queen consort Catherine Parr, sixth wife of King Henry VIII.
5. John Neville, 1st Marquess of Montagu (1431– 1471).
6. George Neville (1432– 1476), who became Archbishop of York and Chancellor of England.
7. Lady Eleanor Neville (1438– c. 1472), who married Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby.
8. Lady Katherine Neville (1442– 1503/04), who married firstly William Bonville, 6th Baron of Harington, and secondly William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings. By her first husband, she was the mother of Cecily Bonville.
9. Thomas Neville (1443– 1460), who was knighted in 1449 and died at the Battle of Wakefield.
10. Lady Margaret Neville (1444 – 20 November 1506), who married John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Montacute,_5th_Countess_of_Salisbury 
MONTAGUE, Alice Countess Of Salisbury (I7670)
 
2502 Alice of Saluzzo, Countess of Arundel (died 25 September 1292), also known as Alesia di Saluzzo, was an Italian-born noblewoman and an English countess. She was a daughter of Thomas I of Saluzzo, and the wife of Richard Fitzalan, 8th Earl of Arundel. She assumed the title of Countess of Arundel in 1289.

Family
Alesia was born on an unknown date in Saluzzo (present-day Province of Cuneo, Piedmont); the second eldest daughter of Thomas I, 4th Margrave of Saluzzo, and Luigia di Ceva (died 22 August 1291/1293), daughter of Giorgio, Marquis of Ceva and Menzia d'Este. Alesia had fifteen siblings. Her father was a very wealthy and cultured nobleman under whose rule Saluzzo achieved a prosperity, freedom, and greatness it had never known previously.

Marriage and issue
Sometime before 1285, Alice married Richard Fitzalan, feudal Lord of Clun and Oswestry in the Welsh Marches, the son of John Fitzalan, 7th Earl of Arundel and Isabella Mortimer. Richard would succeed to the title of Earl of Arundel in 1289, thus making Alice the 8th Countess of Arundel. Along with her aunt, Alasia of Saluzzo who married Edmund de Lacy, Baron of Pontefract in 1247, Alice was one of the first Italian women to marry into an English noble family. Her marriage had been arranged by the late King Henry III's widowed Queen consort Eleanor of Provence.

Richard and Alice's principal residence was Marlborough Castle in Wiltshire, but Richard also held Arundel Castle in Sussex and the castles of Clun and Oswestry in Shropshire. Her husband was knighted by King Edward I in 1289, and fought in the Welsh Wars (1288-1294), and later in the Scottish Wars. The marriage produced four children:

Edmund Fitzalan, 9th Earl of Arundel (1 May 1285- 17 November 1326 by execution), married Alice de Warenne, by whom he had issue.

1.) John Fitzalan, a priest

2.) Alice Fitzalan (died 7 September 1340), married Stephen de Segrave, 3rd Lord Segrave, by whom she had issue.

3.) Margaret Fitzalan, married William le Botiller, by whom she had issue.

4.) Eleanor Fitzalan, married Henry de Percy, 1st Baron Percy, by whom she had issue.

Alice died on 25 September 1292 and was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire. Her husband Richard died on 09/03/1301 and was buried alongside Alice. In 1341, provision was made for twelve candles to be burned beside their tombs. The Abbey is now a ruin as the result of a fire during the English Civil War. Her many descendants include pretty much everybody in the Western Hemisphere. 
DE SALUZZA, Alisona (I23427)
 
2503 Alice was the daughter of Sir Edmund Trafford. She married firstly Sir William Leyland and then Sir Urian Brereton and together they had a son Urian and daughters Margaret, Jane, Mary and Dorothy. This son Urian did not succeed to the title. TRAFFORD, Lady Alice (I594766345)
 
2504 Alice [Waleran's] Daughter (by Alice his last Wife) became the Wife of William Manduit of Hanstape in Com. Buck. having for her marriage portion, the Mannor of Wauton, (since called Wauton-Manduit) in com. Warr. but being married very young, continued in the custody of her Mother for some time after Espousals.

--- William Dugdale, *The Baronage of England*, vol I, 1675(reprint 1977, Georg Olms Verlag, Hildesheim & New York), p 71.

Our royal, titled, noble and commoner ancestors

Alice de Newburgh1,2,3
Last Edited      4 Apr 2020
F, #6147, b. 1196, d. after 1253
Father      Waleran Newburgh, 4th Earl Warwick2,4 b. b 1153, d. 24 Dec 1203
Mother      Alice de Harcourt2,4 d. a Sep 1212
Charts      Some Descendants of Charlemagne
Alice de Newburgh was born in 1196 at of Hanslap, Warwickshire, England. She married Sir William V Mauduit, Chamberlain of the Exchequer, Baron Hameslepe & Mauduit, son of Robert Mauduit, Chamberlain of the Exchequer and Isabel Basset, before 3 March 1216; They had 1 son (Sir William, 8th Earl of Warwick) & 1 daughter (Isabel, wife of Sir William de Beauchamp).2,3 Alice de Newburgh died after 1253.2
Family
Sir William V Mauduit, Chamberlain of the Exchequer, Baron Hameslepe & Mauduit b. c 1190, d. b 14 Feb 1257
Child     
Isabel Mauduit+2 d. b 30 Jan 1268 
DE NEWBURGH, Alice (I3688)
 
2505 Alice, d. 1475, widow of Sir John Philip & dau. & heir of Thomas Chaucer, Chief Butler to Richard II & Henry IV, speaker of the House of Commons, probably son of Geoffrey Chaucer, English poet, brother-in-law of John of Gaunt. [Ancestral Roots]

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

He [William de la Pole] married (licence 11 November 1430) Alice, the childless widow of Thomas (MONTAGU), 4th EARL OF SALISBURY (died 3 November 1428), and before that of Sir John PHILIP (died 2 October 1415), only child and (in 1434) heir of Thomas CHAUCER, of Ewelme, Oxon, Speaker of the House of Commons (son and heir of Geoffrey CHAUCER, the poet), by Maud, daughter and coheir of John DE BURGHERSH [LORD KERDESTON] of Ewelme. While leaving England in accordance with the King's sentence, his ship was intercepted by the Nicholas of the Tower in Dover Roads, 1 May, and he was murdered there, 2 May 1450, his head being cut off in an open boat, aged 53. His body was thrown upon the beach near Dover and was buried at Wingfield. After his death, although he was never under attainder, the Earldom of Pembroke seems to have lapsed. His widow, who was born about 1404, died 20 May (or possibly 9 June) 1475, and was buried at Ewelme. M.I. [Complete Peerage XII/1:443-8, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 
CHAUCER, Alice (I13124)
 
2506 Alice, heiress of Stafford Earls of Devon, dead by 24 Apr 1448, widow of Sir Henry Cheyney, Knight, and daughter of Sir Humphrey Stafford. [Ancestral Roots]

Note: Alice was widow of Edmond, not Henry Cheyney - see notes from Doug Gentile below.

Note: Burke's Peerage, p. 832, on the history of the Earldom of Devon, states "Subsequently a member of the Stafford family who were for a while Dukes of Buckingham (see Stafford, Baron) was created Earl of Devon in 1469 by Edward IV. On joining an uprising in the North of England, however, he was executed later the same year, having held the title exactly three months." This is the only Stafford Earl of Devon (the rest were almost all Courtenay family), which makes the "Earls" plural in the above citation from AR a little bit of an exageration. On p. 2680, Stafford, Baron, Burke's lists Humphrey Stafford, 1st Duke of Buckingham, b. 15 Aug 1402 (too late to be Alice's father), d. 10 July 1460. There were no Humphrey's listed before him and no one was listed who was Earl of Devon or died in 1469 (It is very small text with the 1st Duke's family going on for 2 long pages, and I have been known to miss things, but I did search thoroughly). Who the Humphrey cited above is or his relationship to the "Stafford Earls of Devon" or Dukes of Buckingham or Earls/Barons of Stafford is a mystery.

Subsequent Note: According to Doug Gentile, soc.genealogy.medieval newsgroup, in a 20 Oct 1999 posting, Humphrey's ancestry is:

1. Humphrey Stafford of Hooke, Knight, c1380-27 May 1442; m. Oct 1397
....Elizabeth Mautravers d, c1426, daughter & heir of Sir John Mautravers of Hooke. (I spell it Maltravers)

2. Humphrey Stafford of Southwick in North Bradley, Wiltshire, Knight, c1343-15 Oct 1413; m1. c1365
3. Alice Greville, b. c1345, daughter & heir of Sir John Greville of Southwick in North Bradley, Knight.
....m2. 1386-8, Elizabeth d'Aumarle, 2nd daughter & coheir of Sir William d'Aumarle of Woodbury, Knight

4. Sir John Stafford of Bramshall, Knight, c1302-c Aug 1373, m1. c1327
....Elizabeth Somerville, c1320-1341, daughter and coheir of Sir Philip Somerville of Wychnor, c1278-1355
5. m2. c1342 Margaret Stafford, daughter of Ralph Stafford, 1st Earl Stafford, 1301-1372.

Note: Doug Gentile states that Alice had children by Edmund (NOT Henry) Cheyney of Brook in Westbury, Knight, 1401-1430; and that she was the de facto eventual heiress of Humphrey, even though he had 4 sons and 2 daughters. One of the sons, William, had a son Humphrey, who became Earl of Devon 7 May 1469. but dsp. 
STAFFORD, Alice Heiress Of Hook & Southwick (I13443)
 
2507 Alice, most likely, was a daughter of the West family that lived in Shirley Hundred Plantation in Charles City County, Va. Thomas Harris and his new wife, with his children by his first marriage, moved about 1650 across the James River to the Pagan Creek area of Isle of Wight County, Va. This area has been referred to as a part of the great dismal swamp.
After the death of Thomas, Alice West Harris married John Sojourner of Virginia in 1673.
RE: The prenuptial agreement between Alice Harris (the widow of Thomas Harris who was born in England in 1614 and died in Virginia in 1672), and her intended 2nd husband, John Sojornour.
This document is important because of the information the widow of Thomas Harris gave about the children she had borne to the deceased Thomas Harris. This document and its contents, together with the information contained in the will of 1672 of Thomas Harris, were quite important in proving that the deceased Thomas Harris had, indeed, had more than one wife and that he had fathered two sons by the name of Thomas Harris - one by his last wife and one by an earlier wife. 
WEST, Alice (I1574)
 
2508 Aline, d. bef. 20 July 1331, daughter of William de Braiose, Lord of Bramber and Gower in Wales; she m. (2) Sir Richard de Peshale, living Nov 1342. [Magna Charta Sureties] BRAOSE, Aline De Heiress Of Bramber & Gower (I12962)
 
2509 Aline, daughter and coheir of Philip de Gai. [Burke's Peerage] GREY, Aline De (I17872)
 
2510 Alisa and James were first cousins. Regarding the spelling of her first name, written by Ralpha Whipple, of the Kitterman Family Association. "This is where there is confusion. There are two land records where she signed her X, (obviously, she couldn't write or say the correct spelling of her name). One has her X where the spelling is 'Alvisa' and the other by the spelling of 'Alisa'. I requested her birth record out of NC in 1988 and the lady wrote and said that the book wouldn't open wide enough to copy, but that the entry was short. It was spelled 'Alisa'. Get this...the Polk County, Oregon census lists her as 'Alvira'!

I have not proved these out, the information should be checked again by you. Most of the Chitwood's came from Melissa Bank genealogy list.

Betty 
CHITWOOD, Alisa (I19814)
 
2511 All children have Peter (Per) Brovall and Catharina (Cajsa) Aberg as parents on birth registers.

Occupation: Sjöman, Krögare, Dagakarl

Brita Catharina
Daughter
F
Name      Brita Catharina
Sex      Female
Birth Date      1 Sep 1820
Father's Name      Petter Brovall
Father's Sex      Male
Mother's Name      Catharina Aberg
Mother's Sex      Female
Event Type      Christening
Event Date      3 Sep 1820
Event Place      Österlövsta, Uppsala, Sweden
Event Place (Original)      Osterlovsta, Uppsala, Sweden

Carl Peter
Son
M
Name      Carl Peter
Sex      Male
Birth Date      24 Sep 1825
Father's Name      Per Brovall
Father's Sex      Male
Mother's Name      Catharina Aberg
Mother's Sex      Female
Event Type      Christening
Event Date      24 Sep 1825
Event Place      Österlövsta, Uppsala, Sweden
Event Place (Original)      Osterlovsta, Uppsala, Sweden 
BROVALL, Peter "Per" (I594778500)
 
2512 All details for this living person have been suppressed. GOODRICH, Sarah (I3204)
 
2513 All details for this living person have been suppressed. BISSELL, Elisha (I5500)
 
2514 All details for this living person have been suppressed. BISSELL, David (I5698)
 
2515 All details for this living person have been suppressed. WATKINS, Lynn Keith (I11400)
 
2516 All details for this living person have been suppressed. LATHIM, Arthur Byron (I11516)
 
2517 All details for this living person have been suppressed. LATHIM, Robert Lewis (I11518)
 
2518 All details for this living person have been suppressed. GARST, Nora Faye (I11519)
 
2519 All details for this living person have been suppressed. GAMMONS, Anna (I11540)
 
2520 All details for this living person have been suppressed. HASKINS, Aleck (I11541)
 
2521 All details for this living person have been suppressed. SLOAN, Daniel (I11543)
 
2522 All details for this living person have been suppressed. WATKINS, Leslie Margaret (I11545)
 
2523 All details for this living person have been suppressed. WATKINS, Lila Katherine (I11548)
 
2524 All details for this living person have been suppressed. WATKINS, Albert Curtis (Babe) (I11550)
 
2525 All details for this living person have been suppressed. COOK, Edbert Bartlett (I11551)
 
2526 All details for this living person have been suppressed. WATKINS, Laurence Jonathon (I11553)
 
2527 All information from Church records and deeds. Children's names are listed in Parish Register of Trinity Episcopal Church in Charles Co., MD. William, Stephen, and Zachariah, not named in the Parish Register, appear to be eldest sons. Matthew's will names Stephen, Matthew, John, Barton, Alexander, and Edmund Howard. Stephen's will names all except Barton, who it is presumed was dead at that time. Stephen, in his will, refers expressly to "my brother, Zachariah." See "MARYLAND WILLS" by Baldwin for details on above mentioned wills.

LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF MATTHEW COMPTON February 1770
"In the name of God Amen. I Matthew Compton of St. Marys County, in the province of Maryland, taking into consideration the uncertainity of this most transitory life, do make this my Last Will and Testament in manner and form following.
First and principally, I give my soul to Almighty God that gave it to me, whom He in His wisdom shall see fit to call me home, trusting in His infinite mercy through the above merits and mediation of Jesus Christ for the full pardon and remission of all my sins, and that at the judgment day of account when all men shall appear before the Tribunal of the Just and everliving God, I shall be counted worthy to be summoned amongst those that shall have that Blessed and heart rejoicing soul and a prouncement unto them come ___ Blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. Asto my body, I commit it to the Earth from whence it was taken, to be buried by my executrix hereafter named, in a Christian like manner, and asto my Temporal Estate, which it hath pleased God to bestow upon me, after all my just debts are paid, I give and bequeath in the manner following - sinpinnis
I give and bequeath unto my pious and well beloved wife, Rachael Compton, my whole Estate both real and personal during her widowhood, but if it should be her pleasure to marry, then my will and desire is that my Estate, aforesaid be divided amongst my six children as follows. Viz
The Tract or parcel of land whereon I now dwell called Wornout, I give and bequeath unto my sons Barton, Alexander and Edmund Howard Compton to be for their support and maintenance untill they arrive to full and lawful age, and no longer thou after my said wifeâ?™s death or marriage, my children aforesaid come to full age, I give and bequeath the aforesaid Tract or parcel of land called Wornout unto my son Stephen Compton and his heirs forever but if my said son Stephen should die without heirs, then I give and bequeath said Tract of land unto my son Matthew Compton and his heirs forever and if my said son Matthew should die without heirs, then I give and bequeath said Tract of land unto my son John Compton and his heirs forever and in case my said son John Compton should die without heirs, then I give and bequeath said Tract of land unto my son Barton Compton and his heirs forever, and if my said son Barton should die without heirs, then I give and bequeath said Tract of land unto my son Alexander Compton and his heirs forever, and if my said son Alexander Compton shoudl die without heirs, then I give and bequeath said Tract of land unto my son Edmund Howard Compton, and his heirs forever.
After my wifeâ?™s death or marriage, it is my will and desire that my personal Estate be equally divided amongst my six children Mtthew, John, Samuel, Barton, Alexander and Edmund Howard Compton and provided my wife should die or marry before my children come to lawful age, to take the Estate into their own hands then I do hereby nominate and appoint my son John Compton to be guardian for my said children and to take their Estate immediately into his hands.
Lastly, I do hereby constitute and appoint my said wife Rachael Compton whole Executrix of this my said Will and testament. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this Day of February Anno Domini 1770.
Signed, sealed and published Matthew Compton (Seal) pronounced and declared in the presence of us
Robert Slye Wood Henry Morris Samuel Briscoe
In September 1770, you Rachael Compton, as Executrix of Matthew Compton, solomonly make oath on the Holy Evangels of Almighty God, that this is the only true Last Will and testament of Matthew Compton late deceased that has come to your mind, hand, possession or knowledge.
Sworn before Owen Allen, Deputy, St. Mary County ________ September 1770
3 September 1770 Then Rachael Compton widow of deceased, made her election and chose to abide by the Will.
______ Owen Allen Rachael (mark) Compton
Saint Maryâ?™s County, to wit:
On the 5 day of September, 1770, came Robert Slye Wood, Henry Morris, two of the three subscribing witnesses to written Last Will and Testament of Matthew Compton, late of this county, aforesaid deceased and severally made oath on the Holy Evalgels of Almighty God that they did see the said Matthew Compton, the Testator therein named, sign and seal this Will and heard him publish and declare the same to be his Last Will and Testament that at the time of his so doing he was to the best of their apprehension of sound and disposing mind memory and understanding and that they respectively subscribed their names as witnesses to the said Will, in the presence, and at the request of the aforesaid Testator and that they did so each other together with Samuel Briscoe the other subscribing witness, subscribe those names thereto as Evidencios.
Sworn before Owen Allen Deputy St. Maryâ?™s County, MD
Reference: Maryland Hall of Records, Wills, Liber 38, Folio 53, pg 592-593
a:Wmattcom.doc 
COMPTON, Matthew II (I10068)
 
2528 All of the children are in the Abingdon Register as children of "Edward STEVENS", sometimes with wife Eliz., sometimes not. The dates are the ones that fit - but there were other Edward STEVENS and duplicate names.

*** Researcher's Warning***

View everything with healthy skepticism! Not all information has been proven or even sourced. There is a solid core that has been and will be noted. Where it is not, take it as a useful hint or starting point and double-check.

This is shared with others in the spirit that others have shared with me. Please use for your own interest, and not for profit.
@HI23123@ 
BURT, [Elizabeth?] (I14585)
 
2529 All of the following information came from Jane Williams Flank, World Connect db=jwflank, rootsweb.com:

Bleddyn Cynfyn ruled Powys 1063-1075

_____________________
From http://homepages.tesco.net/~plk33/plk33/History/KingListBritain:

By 1063, Blethyn (Bleddyn) rules a mostly united Wales, and Powys is detached from Gwynedd & Deheubarth for, or by, his son.

_____________________

Bleddyn and his brother Rhiwallon were half-brothers of Gruffydd ap Llywelyn. Their mother, Angharad, married Cynfyn ap Gwerstan o the death of Llywelyn ap Seisyll. Cynfyn ap Bwerstan may have been a Powys nobleman; there is also some suggestion that he may have been half Saxon. Bleddyn remained a strong supporter of the Mercians in their battles against the Normans.

Bleddyn and Rhiwallon also had to contend with internal revolution. The sons of Gruffydd ap Llywelyn, Maredudd and Idwal, attempted to reestablish their claim to the throne. However, they were also killed in the Battle of Mechain in 1070; Bleddyn now ruled without internal challenge.

He is reported to having been a generous king, giving to church and populous. He was the first king in over 100 years to revise the laws developed under Hywel Dda.

Unfortunately, in 1073, the Normans began their advance through north Wales, and defeated Bleddyn in a surprise attack. Weakened, he became vurnerable to his southern neighbor, Rhys ab Owain of Deheubarth. In 1075, Rhys betrayed Bleddyn, leading to his murder. However, Bleddyn's descendents became the main ruling family of Powys. [The Welsh Kings]

_______________________

During the later years of the reign of his half-brother, Gruffyd, the English had brought Wales into at least nominal subjection. Gruffyd was killed by the English 5 Aug 1063. Bleddyn and his brother Rhiwallon, having submitted to King Edward, were made rules of Gwynedd and Powys. The Normans who came with William the Conqueror soon encroached upon the Welsh who resisted them and Rhiwallon was slain in battle in 1070. Bleddyn was then the sole Ruler. [The Weaver Genealogy]

___________________________

In 1075, Bleddyn was killed by Rhys, the brother of Maredudd ab Owain, and Rhys in turn was likeed in 1078 by Caradog ap Gruffudd. Bleddyn's kingdom passed to his cousin, Trahaearn ap Caradog, but Trahaearn was killed, along with Caradog ap Gruffudd, in the battle of Mynydd Carn in 1081. [A History of Wales; John Davies] 
CYNFYN, Bleddyn "Sais" Ap Prince Of Powys (I2733)
 
2530 All of the following information came from Jane Williams Flank, World Connect db=jwflank, rootsweb.com:

Cadwgan (d 1112), a Welsh prince, was a son of Bleddyn, who was the son of Cynfyn, and the near kinsman of the famous Gruffudd, son of Llewelyn, on whose death Harold appointed Bleddyn and his brother Rhiwallon kings of the Welsh. This settlement did not last very long, but Bleddyn retained to his death possession of a great part of Gwynedd., and handed his territories down to his sons, of whom, besides Cadwgan, four others, Madog, Rhirid, Maredudd, and Iorwerth, are mentioned in the chronicles. Cadwgan's name first appears in history in 1087, when, in conjunction with Madog and Rhirid, he led a North Welsh army against Rhys, son of Tewdwr, king of South Wales. The victory fell to the brothers, and Rhys retreated to Ireland, whence he soon returned with a Danish fleet, and turned the tables on his foes in the battle of Llechryd. Cadwgan escaped with his life, but his two brothers were slain. Six years later Rhys was slain by the Norman conquerors of Brecheiniog (1093), and Cadwgan availed himself of the confusion caused by the catastrophe of the only strong Welsh state in South Wales to renew his attacks on Deheubarth. His inroad on Dyved in May prepared the way for the French conquest of that region, which took place within two months, despite the unavailing struggles of Cadwgan and his family. But the Norman conquest of Ceredigion and Dyved excited the bitterest resistance of the Welsh, who profited by William Rufus' absence in Normandy in 1094 to make a great attack on their newly built castles. Cadwganl now in close league with Gruffudd, son of Cynan, the chief king of Gwynedd, was foremost among the revolters. Besides demolishing their castles in Gwynedd, the allied princes penetrated into Ceredigion and Dyved, and won a great victory in the wood of Yspwys, which was followed by a devestation foray whcih overran the shires of Hereford, Gloucester, and Worcester. But, as Mr Freeman points out, Cadwgan fought in the interest of Gwynedd rather that of Wales. His capture of the castles of Ceredigion was followed by the wholesale transplantation of the inhabitants, their property, and cattle into North Wales. A little later Cadwgan's family joined in forays that penetrated to the walls of Pembroke, the only stronghold, except Rhyd y Gors, now left to the Frenchmen. Two invasions of Rufus himself were needed to repair the damage, but the great expedition of 1097 was a signal failure. Rufus 'mickle lost in men and horses,' and Cadwgan was distinguished as the worthiest of the chieftains of the victorious Cymry in the pages of the Peterborough chronicler, who in his distant fenland monastery commonly knew little of the names of Welsh kings. Such successes emboldened Cadwgan and his ally Gruffudd to attempt to save Anglesea when threatened in 1099 by the two earls Hugh of Chester and Shrewsbury. But the treachery of their own men - either the nobles of Mona or some of their Irish-Danish allies - drove both kings to seek safety in flight in Ireland. Next year they returned to Wales, and made peace with the border earls. Cadwgan became the man of the Earl of Shrewsbury, and received as a feif from his Ceredigion and part of Powys. In 1102 Robert of Belleme called upon Cadwgan and his brothers Iorwerth and Maredudd for help in his great war against Henry I. Great gifts of lands, horses, and arms persuaded Cadwgan and Maredudd to join Robert in Shropshire, but Iorwerth stayed behind, and his sudden defection is regarded by the Welsh chroniclers as a main cause of Robert's fall. Iorwerth now appears to have endeavoured to dispossess Cadwgan and Maredudd of their lands a supporters of the fallen Earl of Shrewsbury. But though he succeeded in putting Maredudd into a royal dungeon, he made peace with Cadwgan and restored him his old territories. Thus Cadwgan escaped sharing in the disgrace and imprisonment of Iorwerth by Bishop Richard of Belmeis, Henry's steward in Shropshire. It is probable that it was some other Cadwgan who became an accomplice in the murder of Howel, son of Goronwy, in 1103, and the Owain son of Cadwgan, slain in the same year, was probably this unknown Cadwgan's son. Anyhow Cadwgan, son of Bleddyn, had a son Owain, who in 1105 began his turbulent career by two murders, and in 1110 was the hero of a more famous adventure. Cadwgan had given a great feast in his castle of Aberteiv, the modern Cardigan, which was largely attended by chieftains from all parts of Wales, for whose entertainment bards, singers, and musicians were attracted to the rejoicings by costly prizes. Among the guests were Gerald of Windsor, who after the fall of Arnulf of Montgomery was the most powerful man among the French in Dyved, and his famous wife Nest, whos beauty so excited Owain's lust that not long after he took advantage of his father's absence in Powys to carry her off by violence from the neighbouring castle of Cenarth Bychan. The rape of the Welsh Helen excited great commotion, and Cadwgan, hurrying back in great anxiety to Ceredigion, found himself powerless to effect her restoration to Gerald. Ithel and Madog, sons of Rhirid,a nd Cadwgan's nephews, were incited by Richard of Belmeis to attack Owain, and even Cadwgan, who fled to an Irish merchant ship in the harbour of Aberdovey, After running all kinds of dangers, Owain escaped to Ireland, while Cadwgan privately retired to Powys. Thence he sent messengers to Bishop Richard. King Henry's lenient treatment of him showed that the king regarded Owain's crime as no fault of his father. For a while Cadwgan was only suffered to live on a manor of his new wife, a Norman lady, daughter of Pictet Sage, but a fine of 100 £ and a promise to abandon Owain effected his restoration to Ceredigion, which in his absence had been seized by Madog and Ithel. But the fiat of the English king could effect little in Ceredigion. Owain continued his predatory attacks on the French and Flemings, in one of which a certain William of Brabant was slain. In anger Henry sent again for the weak or impotent Cadwgan, and angrily told him that he was unable to protect his territory, he had determined to put Ceredigion into more competent hands. A pension of twenty-four pence a day wa assigned to the deposed king on the conditon that he should remain in honourable restraint - he was not to be a prisioner - at the king's court, and never seek to return to his native soil. These terms Cadwgan was compelled to accept, and Gilbert, son of Richard, was invested with Ceredigion. But next year the murder of Iorwerth by his nephew Madog put Powys, which Iorwerth had lately governed, into the king's hands. He then gave it to Cadwgan, who thus once more acquired lands of his own. But Madog, already deprived of Ceredigion, was determined not to yield Powys as well to his uncle. Meanwhile Cadwgan, 'not imagining mischief,' returned to his dominions. Surrounded by Madog's retainers at Trallong Llewelyn, he as usual conducted himself weakly. Unable to fight, unwilling to flee, he fell an easy victim to hs enemies. 'Knowing the manners of the people of that country, that they would all be killing one another,' says the 'Brut y Tywysogion,' Richard, the steward, gave Cadwgan's lands to Madog, his murderer. But Henry I reversed his act and made Owain, the abductor of Nest, his father's successor. [Dictionary of National Biography III:644-6]



After the death of Bleddyn, his sons, Madog, Cadwgan and Rhiryd ruled over Powys. In 1098 they attacked Rhys ap Tewdwr, ruler of Deheubarth, and drove him into exile. He collected a fleet, returned and gave battle to them in which Madog and Rhiryd were slain. Cadwgan then became sole ruler of Powys. In 1094 he rallied the Welsh chieftains and attempted to throw off the Norman yoke. The Brut Tywysogion states that they "placed their hope in God, the creator of all things, by fasting and praying and giving alms and undergoing severe bodily penances." He was very sucessful and by 1098 had recovered nearly all the territory that had belonged to the Cymri before the Conquest. In that year the tide turned. Cadwgan and his allies were defeated and he fled to Ireland. He returned in 1099, made peace with the NOrmans and receifed Credigion and a part of Powys. He is said to have been amiable, but he lacked the stronger elements of character which the situation required. On account of the misdees of his eldest son Owain he was called before King Henry, dispossessed of his lands and placed on a daily pension of twenty-four pence on condition that he should not set foot on his native soil. He soon came to terms with the king "and was allowed to settle in the border vill which he had received as the dowry of his Norman wife" (Lloyd). This was doubtless in the valley of the Clun in Shropshire where the lands of Lord Robert de Sai were located and near the Welsh border. King Henry restored to him the Kingdom of Powys in 1111, but his reign was brief, for in that year he was slain at Welshpool by his nephew, Madog ap Rhizyd. The "border vill" or village, mentioned above, where Cadwgan settled, must have been located quite near if not entirely within the English limits of Offa's Dike. This would be a very uncomfortable location for a Welsh family at that time. Perhaps his Norman wife saved the family from trouble. He is called "Cadwgan of Nannau" in Dwnn's Visitation of Wales. That place has not been located, but probably it was the "border vill' or village in Shropshire which he received as dowry from his father-in-law, Lord Robert de Sai. [The Weaver Genealogy]

__________________________________

Cadwgan became king of Powys on the death of his elder brothers, Madog and Rhiryd in 1088. Cadwgan lived in a period when the Norman border earls, with the authority of Kind William II (William Rufus), were consolidating their control over Wales. In addition, there were the continuing rivalries between the Welsh princes and nobility which had become a way of life and prevented unified actions. Further complicating matters, many of the the Welsh princes establishied alliances with the English, either out of necessity or self interest. "From 1094 dow through his death in 1111, this king from Powys would be the focus and centre of Welsh politics, pursuing a policy of considered and sometimes devious resistance to the Norman kings while attempting to exploit the growing power of the Norman border lords."

In 1094, there was an uprising against the Nomans in Gwynedd, "almost certainly masterminded by Cadwgan." Norman attempts to quell the uprising failed, and it spread to Deheubarth where all but Pembroke Castle and Rhyd-y-Gors fell to the Welsh, and continued into the southeast of Wales. The rebellion continued through 1097 - almost all fo the leaders appear to have been allied with Cadwgan. By 1098, however, internal rivalries, bribery, and Norman strenght had takedn much of the force out of the rebellion. In 1099, formal peace was negotiated including rights to hold certain lands - Cadwgan seems to have gotten the better share, including all of central Powys and Ceredigion, much of which had been previously controlled by the Norman earls.

Unfortunately, Cadwgan was unable to use his success to fully consolidate his power. He, at a minimum, was distracted by family conflicts. Relations between the brothers Cadwgan, Iorweth and Maredudd deteriorated.

His son, Owain, also makes fro an interesting story, which had significant effects on Cadwgan's rule. Owain's story leads, indirectly, to the murder of Iorweth by his nephew Madog ap Rhirid, Cadwgan's murder also by Madog, and the subsequent rule by Maredudd.

______________________________________

In consequence, by the death of William II (William Rufus) in 1100, Welsh control had been sucessfully restored over the greater part of Wales. It is doubtful whether the insurrection which led to that restoration should be considered national in character, for it was largely motivated by local issues, racial anger and the interests of royal houses; without its comparative success, however, it is likely that Welsh nationhood could have survived in any form. The most prominent of the leaders of the insurrection were Cadwgan, Iorwerth and Maredudd, the sons of Bleddyn ap Cynfin. By 1096, they had captured Montgomery Castle and their allies had come very close to success in their attack upon Pembroke Castle. The Normans were swept out of Gwynedd, Credigion and most of the cantrefi of Powys, and their forces were defeated in Brycheiniog, Gwent, Cydweli and Gower. In about 1094, Gruffud ap Cynan escaped from prision and re-established himself as the ruler of the kingdom of his ancestors. In 1098, the earls of Chester and Shrewsbury led a campaign against him, but they were defeated on the banks of the Menai by a force of Scandinavians, and the earl of Shrewsbury was shot dead by Magnus Barefoot, king of Norway. Gruffudd consolidated his hold upon Gwyneed, and for decades he patiently rebuilt the strenght of his kingdom. Powys and what was left of the kingdom of Deheubarth came into the possession of Cadwgan ap Bleddyn and his brothers. All the later rulers of Powys would be descendants of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn; thus was the union between Gwynedd and Powys broken, a happening full of significance for the future of Wales. [A History of Wales; John Davies] 
BLEDDYN, Cadwgon Ap Of Nannau, King Of Powys (I10892)
 
2531 All of the following information came from Jane Williams Flank, World Connect db=jwflank, rootsweb.com:

From www.castlewales.com/gwent.html:

Iestyn ap Gwrgan ruled Glamorgan (Morgannwg) 1081-1091 when it was taken over by the Normans and put under the control of Robert Fitzhamon. Iestyn was deposed and died in a priory. 
GWRGAN, Iestyn (Jestyn) Ap Lord Of Glamorgan (I12568)
 
2532 All of the following information came from Jane Williams Flank, World Connect db=jwflank, rootsweb.com:

Little is known of Cynfyn. His fame, like that of many of his descendants, was only the reflection of the fame of his distinguished wife. There is no evidence that he ever attempted to rule in the right of his wife as did her first husband. The sons of Cynfyn and Angharad were Bleddyn and Rhiwallon. The pedigree of Cynfyn which appears in Vol 1, p 63 of the Historical Manuscripts Commission, London, 1898, extends back through twenty-two generations to Beli Mawr and Anna through their son Llud. Prof Lloyd thinks that it is mythical. It is certainly incomplete. It would require many more thatn twenty-two generation to cover the period of more than one thousand years. In the History of Radnorshire it is stated that Cynfyn was the son of Gwerstan and the grandson of Gwaethfoed Fawr. [The Weave Genealogy] 
GWERYSTAN, Cynfyn Ap Prince Of Powys (I11674)
 
2533 All of the following information came from Jane Williams Flank, World Connect db=jwflank, rootsweb.com:

Sources:

Annals and Antiquities of the Counties and County Families of Wales; Dr Thomas Nicholas 1875, p. II:208.

Ancestors of Evelyn Wood Keeler; Josephine C Frost 1939, p. 425
Note: Cites as references for Welsh lineages: Royal Families of England, Scotland, Wales: Volume I & 2; Genealogical Tables of the Sovereigns of the World; Maunder's Biographical Treasures; Universial Biography; etc.

The Mathew Mathes Family in America, I C VanDeventer 1929, Page: 13.

History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, John Burke 1834-1838, III:387 
YNYR, Morfudd Verch (I12630)
 
2534 All people that have a death date for Roger, state that it is 1471, yet Royal Descents has Margaret Touchet marrying 2nd Richard Grey, Baron of Powis, who supposedly died 1466. VAUGHAN, Roger Of Tretwr, Sir Knight (I13388)
 
2535 All that is known of Childeric is that he did not out-live his father,King Chlotar I of Soissons and eventually of all the Franks. Childeric De Franconie (I8595)
 
2536 All: CONFLICT: John Le Despencer also reported as the son of Galfridus (Geoffrey) Le Despencer and Emma St. John. LE DESPENCER, Sir John (I23175)
 
2537 Allows Hunold to hold the duchy of Aquitaine in fief. Charles Martel "The Hammer" Mayor Of Palace (I11289)
 
2538 Almost Certain the Spelling is Lothario. The name comes Don Quixote. It loosely means "The man of the ladies" or ladies man. MCANULTY, Lothario Fernando (I101597)
 
2539 Aloisia was born about 1875. She passed away in 1904.

Died when son Paul was 8 years old according to Joyce Wehofer (Daughter-in-law). Research confirmed this.

I have copy of Pal Wehofer Hungarian Birth Registration from registration on 12 May 1897 in Pinka-Miske. Details match recollections of William and Joyce Wehofer which leads to further varification of details through the Catholic Church records of his father Franz and his mother Aloisia.

I have picture of Aloisia in 1904 the year she died of Tuberculosis... (tudo gumokor) supplied by a distant relative in Austria.

12 Dec 1904 was her death with death certificate in hand.

Religion: Roman Catholic 
CSACSINOVICS, Aloisia "Louise" (I1937)
 
2540 Alonzo left home at the age of 12 due to the ill treatment of his father. He and Margaret Jane Coble were married in 1894. When he came to Ellensburg it was called "Robbers Roost." They had three sons; Ray Carl, Earl Bascom, and Asa Joel (Doc). Daniel and Sarah Coble were Margaret's (Maggie's ) father and mother. Daniel came to Washington on the way to Ballard, Wash. going through Kittitas Valley. Liking it better than Ballard, he came back to "Robbers Roost." He built the Coble Rooming House. It was eventually passed down to a daughter, Maude Coble Mitchell Hall. She ran the hotel until her death. Later the post office acquired it. That parking lot (Post Office) is where it stood. The Sackett brothers, with their father Alonzo, owned and operated the Sackett Hall on the Thorp highway, where they played for dances until the mid 20 s. Later they played for dances elsewhere, Doc's wife Patty, played for dances with them. Doc and Patty were known for their music in the 30's.. Alonzo and Margaret bought a farm in the Manastash Canyon. When they moved to town they bought the Union Hotel on West 3rd street. Doc acquired the hotel after his mother's death and ran it until his death. It is now part of Twin City Foods property. Ray did a little bit of everything. For a number of years he ran the Idle Hour tavern. He ran the Eclipse Hotel during WW II. Ray farmed with Doc in the Prosser Wash area then he moved to Corvallis, Ore. where he was School custodian and retired in 1964. A year later he died of a stroke.
-----------------------------
Both Asa Sackett and Ray Sackett are reportedly to have been in the first World War.
---------------------
Alonzo was about 12 years old when he ran away from home. He arrived in Washington before Wash. became a state.(1889) When Alonzo first arrived here Ellensburg was called, 'Robber's Roost.' The town had very little law and order and Alonzo saw a man hung from a tree on the outskirts of the small town.
----------------------------
Some of the information on Alonzo Sackett was obtained from the 1900 U. S. Census for Wash. and Kittitas Co. He reports that his mom was born in Penn. and his Dad in Maine. In this census, Carl was 5, Earl was 4, and Doc was 3.

US CENSUS 1900 Alonzo and Maggie Sackett are found in WA, Kittitas co., Manastash pct. Sheet 4 B

76/78Alonzo Sackett30headJune 1868 b IndF Mainem Penn
Maggie26wifeMarch 1874b ILF Pennm Penn
Carl R 5sonJuly 1894b WA
Earl B 4sonMar 1896b WA
A.C. 3sonMay 1897b WA
they have been married for 6 years.... 3 children born and 3 living. 1900 Census
----------------------------------------------------
------------------------------
I have Marriage info for Alonzo Sackett and Maggie Coble. Married on Feb 14 1894 in Kittitas co WA. Alonzo is 24 and born in IN. Maggie is 19 and born in IL. Maggie's parents are listed as Daniel Coble and Sarah Coble. Alonzo's parents are listed as Joel Sackett and Lena Coble. Wit Annie Casey and Simon Kuhn. # 63 and # A-298.
--------------------------------------
Annie Casey , the witness to the marriage of Maggie Coble and Alonzo Sackett, is the wife of Edward L. Casey.
-------------------------------------------
The Sackett family were wonderful people. All played music. That is Uncle Lon and the three boys. They played for dances and dad (Loran Giddings) called the square dances. Aunt Maggie was a wonderful cook. Maggie Coble was my great Aunt. Frances S. Langer (Giddings) 12/23/1991
----------------------------------------
Margaret J Coble was eight years old when she came to the E Burg area (1884) Walking behind the covered wagon, her family had traveled in from Kansas. They traveled over the Oregon Trail. At one point on the trail, the family stopped and Daniel went to find work in the silver mines. Margaret baked and sold bread to the travelers along the trail. Daniel was gone about one year. When he returned they continued on their way west. They arrived in the Kittitas Valley about 1884. Daniel continued on to the coast looking for a place to settle, but came back and decided to settle in the Ellensburg area. They never had any problems with the Indians, but Margaret would hide under the table when the Indians came to visit. Marlene J. Sackett 2-19-92
-------------------------------
Alonzo Sackett lived at 411 West 3rd Street, Ellensburg, Wash. He and his wife managed the Union Hotel. He had managed the hotel for 16 years and had lived in the town of Ellensburg for 63 yrs. Alonzo lived 82y 8m 25 days and died of pneumonia. The funeral cost $438.
-----------------------------
According to the 1900 Census, Alonzo Sackett, was Born in Indiana on June 1869. He is age 30. His father was born in Maine and his mother in Penn. Maggie was born in Mar 1874 and is 26 years of age. They have three kids and none have died. Carl R b July 1895 in Wash., Earl B b Mar 1896 age 4 in Wash., and A C J Sackett, b May 1898 age 2 in Wash.
----------------------------------
ALONZO SACKETT TAKEN BY DEATH Alonzo Sackett, 82, a Kittitas Valley resident since 1884, died at his home in the Union Hotel, on W. Third Avenue here, at 3:30 A.M. today. He had been ill for about two years. Sackett was born at Wabash, Ind. and came here from Michigan. He was first employed here making bricks in the old Scott Brickyard. Later, in 1894, he went into the brick business for himself. He was married here Feb.14, 1894 to Margaret Coble. They farmed in the Menastash district from 1898 until 1934 and for four years also operated a dance hall near the upper Yakima River Bridge, Mr and Mrs Sackett took over the Union hotel here in 1936 and have operated it since. Besides his widow, Sackett is survived by three sons: R.C. Sackett of Corvallis, Ore., J. D. Sackett of Prosser, and E.B. Sackett of Seattle, and six grandchildren and eight great grandchildren Arrangements are being made for funeral and burial here and will be announced by Honeycutt-Evenson Funeral Home.
----------------------
According to his Death Cert., Alonzo was born in Wabash, Indiana on June 15, 1869. He died Mar. 10, 1952 at Ellensburg, WA. His father was Joel Bascom Sackett and his mother was Lana Coble. He was 82 when he died. He lived at 411 W. Third St. in Ellensburg and the cause of death is listed as Pneumonia. Honeycutt-Evenson funeral Home was in charge of the services. He was buried at IOOF Cem. on 3-13-52. The informant was Mrs Margaret Sackett.
------------------------------- 
SACKETT, Alonzo Lincoln (I20560)
 
2541 Also called "Chlodovech", King of the Franks

SOURCES:
Clovis II, King de Bourgogne

(Rosamond, Frankish kingdom under Carolingians.) (Paul, Nouveau Larousse Universel.) (Stuart, Royalty for Commoners, Page 90, Line 123-47.)

(Andre Castelot, Histoire de La France, Tome 1, Pages 247 - 248, 256).

AKA: Clovis II, King de Neustrie. Born: in 634, son of Dagobert I, King d'Austrasie and Nantechild.

Occupation: between 639 and 657 Second son of Dagobert I, Clovis II was King of Neustrie and of Bourgogne from 639 to 657.

Married between 643 and 650 in Neustrie, France: Sainte Bathilde; A Saxon slave, Sainte Bathilde became queen by marrying Clovis II. She governed while the three sons (Childeric II, Clotaire III and Thierri III) were minors. Her Feast Day is 30 January. Died: between 11 September 657 and 10 November 657 in Connaught, Ireland, Clovis II was 23 years of age when he died. His son, Clotaire III, born in 652 would succeed him. However, since he is only 5 years of age at this time, it is the Queen Bathilde who reigns with the able hand of the Mayor of the Palace (Major Domo) of Neustria, Ebroin.

Title: The Franks, by Edward James, Basil Blackwell Ltd, Oxford, England, 1988


Source: lorenfamily.com 
FRANKS, Clovis II (Chlodovech Louis) King Of The (I28669)
 
2542 Also given as 18 Jun 1712. Not possible with these childre n. SMITH, Lydia (I8463)
 
2543 Also known as Anne. Husbands name shown as Philip Bell
Some records show birth location as Groton, New London, Connecticut
WFT Ref # 298 Vol 1
WFT Ref # 2202 Vol 1
American Families with British Ancestry, WFT CD367, page 2991.
WFT Ref # 5488 Vol 2
WFT Ref # 3588 Vol 7
Undated memorandum of John S. Lawrence
"She was the wife of Philip Bill. Her family name is not known. After the death of Philip Bill she married Samuel Bucknall. (Caulkin's Historyof New London, page 250)" 
WAIT, Hannah (I7122)
 
2544 Also known as Brunhilde, the Visigothic princess exerted great influence over political life in the Frankish kingdoms of Austrasia, Neustria, and Burgundy. Brunhilde married King Sigebert of Austrasia in 567, while her sister Galswintha married Sigebert's brother Chilperic, king of Neustria. Rivalry between the brothers developed into open war when Chilperic had Galswintha murdered and Brunhilde demanded that her sister's death be revenged. When Sigebert was assassinated on the orders of Fredegunde, Chilperic's second wife, in 575, Chilperic claimed his lands. Brunhilde resisted this claim in the name of her son Childebert II. However, her nobles deserted her and she fled to Burgundy. Childebert remained in Austrasia and in 592 inherited Burgundy. When Childebert died in 595, Brunhilde attempted to assert her control as regent over Burgundy and Austrasia, which her grandsons Theodoric II and Theodebert II had inherited. After successfully resisting attacks by Chilperic's heir Clotaire II, Brunhilde tried and failed to conquer Neustria in 600 and again in 603-04. In 612 Theodoric murdered his brother Theodebert at her instigation. Theodoric himself died in 613. When Brunhilde tried to make her great-grandson Sigebert II king, the nobles rebelled and acknowledged Clotaire as king. In the autumn of 613, near Dijon, France, Clotaire had both Sigebert II and Brunhilde executed. VISIGOTH, Brunhild The (I185)
 
2545 Also known as Frances Hinton.

Plantagenet Ancestry of 17th Century Colonists
Author: David Faris
Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 1996
Probability: good to very good
Page: 1st ed, pp 141-145 "Humphrey"
Text: her 3rd marriage, date based on death of 1st husband

Frances Grevill was one of four women who arrived at Jamestown from Bristol, England in September 1620 aboard the ship, Supply. She was first married to Captain Nathaniel West, brother of Thomas West, the third Lord Delaware, who had been governor of Virginia beginning in 1610.

After West's death several years later, Grevill married Abraham Peirsey, a wealthy man who had purchased Sir George Yeardley's Flowerdew Hundred Plantation after his death. Peirsey died several years later. Twice widowed, but with considerable legacies, she next married Samuel Mathews.

They had two sons Samuel, and Francis (1632– 1673). Francis, a tobacco planter had a large estate of some two thousand acres in Northumberland County.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Matthews_(captain) 
GREVILLE, Frances (I15312)
 
2546 Also Known As:<_AKA> Amorel PALMER, Arimnel (I112680452)
 
2547 Also Known As:<_AKA> Joan
Ancestral File Number: 8XJ6-KL 
VALLETORT, Joan de (I5983)
 
2548 Also Known As:<_AKA> The Immigrant
Name Prefix: Lt.
Name Suffix:Sr.
Cause of Death: Indian Attack
Ancestral File Number: 8KMN-7C
BIRTH: Noted possible birthplace as Dunston, Norfolk, England (1610-1615). He is also noted as being born in Yealmpton, Devonshire, England about 1610 by Patrick McDonald. Noted as being born in Charlestown, Suffolk, MA about 1610. I amgoing with information retrieved from Familysearch.com by LDS contributors.

BIOGRAPHY: Andrew was a fisherman by trade. He was also a juryman, constable,
selectman and surveyor.
Andrew ALGER named his plantation "Dunster" after hisbirthplace.He named this tract of land "Dunstan." "Blue Point" was named afterapart of Yealmpton, Devonshire. a thousand acres of land with his brother Arthur ABT 1651 Blue Point, It was purchased from the localIndians. One of the Indians made a formal declaration confirming the1651 sale on 19 Sep 1659.
Immigrated in 1632 to Richmond's Island, Cape Elizabeth, Cumberland, ME U. S. A. He immigrated with John Winter to go fishing and became one of the first Maine fishing captains

DEATH: Andrew ALGER was killed with his brother Arthur by Indians.10 Oct as result of Indian attack at Scarborough. Noted dates for his death are 10/9, 10 or 12th.

LDS: LDS Baptism: 13 MAY 1919 /Endowment: 23 JAN 1924 posted by Evan Leon Earl  
ALGER, Andrew Sr. (I112680437)
 
2549 Also Known As:<_AKA> The Innholder
Name Suffix: Sr.
Ancestral File Number: 8THL-01 
ALGER, John Sr. (I112680444)
 
2550 Also listed (by Edna) as born in 1639. They lived in Windsor, CN
until 1667 when they moved to Massacre (not Simsbury), CN. 
SPENCER, Sarah (I16102)
 

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