Showing posts with label england. Show all posts
Showing posts with label england. Show all posts

Thursday, July 4, 2019

A Wollin, Walen, Wallen, Walling by Any Other Name is Probably Just the Same Kin

Ralph Wallen is no stranger to controversy after his death. Misspellings plagued the family as well as inaccurate or sparse records. 

Here is a profile found online:

There are several conflicting estimates of the date of Ralph Wallen's birth. It has been placed as early as 1590 and as late as 1600. Anderson estimates, based on the date of marriage, that Ralph was born about 1595.[1] Profiles merged into this profile show his birth in London or Lancashire. The village of Halton, Lancashire, near Lancaster, still has Wallen & Walling families living there and has been chosen here, although Ralph Jr., a tailor by trade, also very-probably lived in London as a young man.

Extracted Parish Records show a marriage in Rotherham, West Riding, Yorkshire, of a Ralph Wallen to a Margaret Lawson 13 July 1578. There is also a wedding at All Saints church in Rotherham on 02 Dec 1600 of Ralph Wollin and Margaret Woodruff. Unfortunately, there is no evidence, other than the family tradition that Ralph & Margaret Walling were Ralph Jr.'s parents, to prove that either of these has any connection to the Ralph Wallen born about 1590-1595.[2]

Ralph Wallen's name was spelled several different ways. On the 1623 Plymouth division of land, he is called Ralfe Walen,[3] while in a 1627 land division, he is called Ralph Wallen.[4] Family genealogies state that his name was Walling. As his father's marriage record was for Ralph Wallen, and he was usually called Wallen in Plymouth colony, that spelling is used for this profile.
Biography

The Wallen (Walling) story of Plymouth in New England begins in Halton, near Lancaster, a tiny English village, where three brothers: Richard, Ralph Jr., and Thomas Wallen, lived. Their parents were Ralph Wallen, Sr., and his wife Margaret (Lawson) Wallen, both from Yorkshire, England. They had been married in Rutherford, West Riding of Yorkshire, in 1578 and lived in Halton, Lancashire. Ralph Jr., was born around 1590. Richard and Thomas were born around 1595 to 1598. Apparently the family were Puritans who hoped to reform the Church of England from within rather than organizing a new religion.

In either 1619 or 1621 (stories vary) Ralph Wallen Jr., who had become a tailor in London, married a woman named Joyce who was born about 1600. Some family genealogies say they married in London; others state they married in Leiden, Holland, where a few hundred English Puritans had voluntarily exiled themselves, having a special church with an English pastor there. Several family genealogists state Joyce's maiden name was "Nail" or "Nell" but as no marriage certificate has been found, this is unproven and officially her last name at birth remains "Unknown".

What is known is that in April 1623 Ralph and Joyce Wallen sailed from London on the HMS "Anne," accompanied by the "Little James," bound for Plymouth in the New World. These were the 3rd Puritan sailings for America, following the "Mayflower" in 1620 and the "Fortune" in 1621. Ralph and Joyce's first child, appropriately named "Ann Wallen," was born either just before the "Anne" landed at Plymouth on July 10, 1623, or shortly afterwards. There is no manifest of the passengers on the Anne, however their passage is proven by their inclusion in the 1623 land division specifically for passengers on the Anne.[5]
  • Ralph and Joyce (Nail ?) Wallen had the following 5 children:
  • Ann Wallen - b: July 1623, aboard the Anne or in Plymouth; m. John Smalley and moved to Eastham (Cape Cod) in 1645
  • Thomas Wallen - b: 1627 in Plymouth colony; m. Mary Abbott
  • Mary Wallen - b: 1628 in Plymouth; m: (1) Henry Ewer in 1651 and (2) John Jenkins in 1653; moved to Eastham & Barnstable
  • Richard Wallen - b: ca. 1630 in Plymouth, died young
  • Jane Wallen b: 1623 (may have been Ann's twin; died at birth). Ann (Wallen) Smalley had a set of twins in 1647.
The Wallen (aka Walling) family lived in Plymouth on a farm: "Wallens Wells" near the Eel River where their neighbors were Nicholas and Constance (Hopkins) Snow. Nicholas Snow had been their shipmate aboard the "Anne" in 1623 and the families knew each other well. Eventually, Nicholas' son John B. Snow, Sr., b: 1638, married Ralph & Joyce's grand-daughter, Mary Smalley, born in 1647 in the Plymouth colony. Mary's father was a tailor by trade, like Ralph Wallen.

Ralph Wallen died in Plymouth in February 1643 and was buried at the Old Burying Ground there in what is now an unmarked grave. He left no will and his modest estate was not probated. We know that he was alive on February 5, 1638, as he acknowledged receipt of a payment from Thomas Clark on that day.[6] He also received a portion of a cow in a distribution in July 1638. [7] He died before August 1643, when Plymouth Colony listed its men between the ages of sixteen and sixty who were able to bear arms. Ralph's name was not on that list, nor did he request a dispensation, so he must have already been dead.[8] Furthermore, Joyce Wallen sold property on September 7, 1643, calling herself a widow.[9]

Joyce Wallen re-married to Thomas Lombard (b: 1582 in England) in early 1645; he had been twice widowed beforehand and ran an Inn at Barnstable on Cape Cod, near where the Snow family moved, founding Eastham that same year. [10] As Joyce was about 45 years old and Thomas was over 60, the couple had no children together. Thomas Lombard died in 1663; Joyce survived him and is said to have died in 1683.

Notes:
  1. #S-201 Page 1915
  2. #S-202 Rotherham register
  3. #S-409 PCR 12:6
  4. #S-409 PCR 12:12
  5. #S-409 PCR 12:6
  6. #S-410 PCR 1:76
  7. #S-411 Eleanor Cooley Rue, "Widow Joyce Wallen of Plymouth (1645) and Widow Joyce Lombard of Barnstable, One and the Same?" in The American Genealogist, 67(Jan 1992):47-53 at 48
  8. #S-412 PCR 8:187-189
  9. #S-409 PCR 12:95
  10. #S-411 TAG 67(Jan 1992):48
See also:
  • Source S-409 New Plymouth Colony. Records of the colony of New Plymouth, in New England (PCR). Vol. 12 - Deeds, etc, 1620-1651. Boston: Press of W. White, 1855. Open Library
  • Source S-410 New Plymouth Colony. Records of the colony of New Plymouth, in New England (PCR). Vol. 1 - Court Orders, 1633-1640. New York: AMS Press, 1968. Open Library
  • Source S-411 The American Genealogist. (TAG) New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, 1937-. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2009 - .) (Subscription required.)
  • Source S-412 New Plymouth Colony. Records of the colony of New Plymouth, in New England (PCR). Vol. 8 - Miscellaneous records, 1633-1689. Boston: Press of W. White, 1855. Open Library
  • Source S-201 Title: The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, -1633. Vol. 1-3. Repository: #R-172 Author: Robert Charles Anderson Publication: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995
  • Source S-202 Title: FreeReg - U.K. Parish Registers Publication: Online database of parish registers by FreeBMD URL: www.FreeReg.org.uk
  • Source S1287001405 Title: Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s Repository: #R-172 Author: Gale Research Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2009.Original data - Filby, P. William, ed.. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2009.
  • Source S-1024580409 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Repository: #R-172 Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.
https://familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/6400877

Source: Wikitree

see, Walling

Viking, Normans Nobility in France and England

List of descendants of Norman rule of France, England, and other minor principalities in the western world.
Vintage News

Source: Vintage News   



Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Lawrence, Bradley, Tuttle Line from England to the British Colonies

The Tuttles came to the British Colonies from England.

Genealogy
General Genealogical Consensus
John William Totehyll b. 1462 d. 1552
marriage: 1480, England
Joan C. Grafton b. 1462 d. 1561

Humphrey Totehyll b. 1482 d. 1594
marriage: about 1505, Staffordshire, England
Elizabeth Maude Wood b. 1485 d. 1540

Thomas Tuttle b. 1506 d. 1554
marriage: 1526, England
Elizabeth Mason b. 1510 d. 1590 

Richard Tuttle b. 1530 d. 1589
marriage: about 1560, Woodford, Northamptonshire, England
Elizabeth unknown b. 1526 d. 1590

Simon Tuttle/Symon TOOTHILL
 b. 1565 d. 1630
marriage 1579, Ringstead, Northhamptonshire, England
Isabell Wells b. 1565 d. 1635

Colonial Documented Line
William Tuttle b. 1607 d. 1673
marriage: about 1630, Northamptonshire, England
Elizabeth unknown b. 1613 d. 1684
arrived: 1635, Boston, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America

Thomas Tuttle b. 1634 d. 1710
marriage: May 21, 1661, New Haven, Connecticut, British Colonies
Hannah Powell b. 1641 d. 1710 

Thomas Tuttle Jr. b. 1667 d. 1703
marriage: June 28, 1692, New Haven, Connecticut, British Colonies
Marcy Sanford b. 1679 d. 1735 

Martha Tuttle b. 1697 d. 1776
Benjamin Bradley II b. 1692 d. 1726
marriage: April 2, 1719, New Haven County, Connecticut

Andrew Bradley b. 1723 d.  1798
marriage: November 3, 1744
Mary b. unknown d. unknown

Margaret Bradley b. 1755 d. 1828
William T. Lawrence b. 1752 d. 1838
marriage 1780 Newark, New Castle, Delaware,

Joseph Lawrence  b, 1783 d. 1842
marriage about 1806
Rebecca J. Van Eman
b. 1787 d. 1822

 Familial Documented Line
Samuel Lawrence b. 1819 d. unknown
marriage June 5, 1838, Kane, Illinois
Marilla Gibbs 1810-1883

Leonard Gibbs Lawrence 1839-1916
m. May 26, 1861, Delaware, Iowa
 -Castine R. Reynolds 1841-1933

Ethel "Bay" Ilena Lawrence 1884-1973
-Bert Stephen(?) Mullan October 16, 1880-1966


Source: Family Tree



Monday, July 1, 2019

The Lineage of Margaret Montfort Married to Nicolas Girlington

The de Montfort line is complicated by both lack of and too much information about the family. There are still connections which need to be made but this sketch is a good place to begin more research.

Alexander de Montfort
-unknown spouse

Image Credit: John M. Watson






Alexander de Montfort d. before June 1287
-Maud unknown

Alexander de Montfort b. born about 1272 d. October 1326 and April 1335
-Elizabeth Brough (de Burgh, possibly kin or daughter of Philip de Burgh of Cawthorne, Walton and Hackforth, Yorkshire and Burgh, Cambridgeshire)

Sir Laurence de Mountfort b. about 1310
-Isabel de Toutheby,  daughter of Gilbert de Toutheby, king’s serjeant-at-law by his wife Joan, daughter of John Hansard

Thomas de Mountfort b. 1340
knighted before 16 December 1380
-Elizabeth de Swinhoe
daughter of William de Swinhoe of Scremerston

Thomas Mountfort
-Elizabeth Aske, daughter of Conan Aske and Eleanor Widdrington b. about 1380-90

Sir Thomas Mountfort b. 1402
knighted before 1453
-Elizabeth Strangeways, daughter of Sir James Strangeways of West Harlsey, Yorkshire by his wife Joan Orell and sister of Sir James Strangeways, later Speaker of the Commons

Thomas, Mountfort, esquire, b. 1420 d. 1490
"Here lyeth Thomas Mountford, esquyer, and Agnes, his wief which Thomas deceased ye xx day of January the yere of our Lord God anno m° cccc° lxxxix, and the vth yere of the reigne of our soveraigne lord, King Herry the vij, on whose soules Jhesu have mercy."
-Agnes Killom, John Killom of Kilham on the Wolds, and Danby upon Ure in Yorkshire, by Joan his wife

Thomas, Mountfort, esquire, b. 1440 d. 1485
-Isabel Norton, daughter of Sir John Norton, of Norton Conyers

Nicholas Girlington, II, b. 0___ 1455, Deighton-Juxta-Escrick, North Yorkshire, England, d. 0___ 1531, (Yorkshire) England (Age ~ ? years)
-Margery Montfort, b. ~ 1468, Hackforth, Hornby Parish, North Yorkshire, England, d. 7 Apr 1557, (Yorkshire) England (Age ~ 89 years)

see, de Grylyngton


Source: British History
John M. Watson

Sunday, June 30, 2019

Charlemagne Plus Viking, Spanish, French Lineage byway of Hasnard, Girlington

Elizabeth Hasnard also contributed to the royal lineage of the de Grylyngton line by marrying Nicolas Girlington III.

Genealogy
Guillaume d'Aubigny, Seigneur de Saint-Martin-d'Aubigny,   b. ~1010, Saint-Martin-d'Aubigny, Basse-Normandie, France,  d. ~1068, Le Plessis, Colombiers, Lower-Normandy, France   (Age ~ 58 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Adeliza FitzOsulf, of Plessis, Heiress of Belvoir,   b. ~1027, Le Plessis, Colombiers, Lower-Normandy, France,   d. ~1088, Belvoir Castle, Belvoir, Leicestershire, England  (Age ~ 61 years)

Roger d'Aubigny,   b. 0___ 1045, Aubigny, Normandy, France,   d. 0___ 1084  (Age ~ 39 years)(Merovingian descendant)
Amice de Mowbray,   b. 0___ 1045, (Normandy, France),   d. 1084  (Age ~ 39 years) (Merovingian descendant)

Nigel d'Aubigny, 3rd Baron of Thirsk,   b. 0___ 1170, Thirsk Castle, Thirsk, Yorkshire, England,   d. 26 Nov 1129, Normandy, France (Merovingian descendant)
-Gundred de Gournay,   b. 1097,   d. 1155  (Age 58 years) (Merovingian descendant)

Roger de Mowbray, Knight Templar,   b. 1120, Thirsk, Yorkshire, England,   d. 1188, Palestine (Age 68 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Alice de Gand,   b. ~1120, Yorkshire, England,   d. <1176, Masham, Yorkshire, England (Age ~ 56 years)

Nigel de Mowbray,   b. 1146, Thirsk, Yorkshire, England,   d. 1191, Acre, Palestine (Age 45 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Mabel de Braose (William I the Conquerer descendent via Agnes St. Clair to Mauger Normandie),   b. 1151, Bramber, Sussex, England,   d. 1203, (Axholme, Lincolnshire, England)  (Age 52 years)  (Merovingian descendant)

William de Mowbray, Knight, 6th Baron of Thirsk,   b. 1172-1173, Thirsk Castle, Thirsk, Yorkshire, England,   d. 1223-1224, Epworth, Lincolnshire, England (Age 51 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Avice d'Aubigny,   b. 0___ 1196,   d. 0___ 1214  (Age ~ 18 years) (Merovingian descendant)

Matilda de Mowbray  (Merovingian descendant)
-John Hansard,   b. ~1205,   d. ~1253  (Age ~ 48 years)

Gilbert Hansard, b. ~1225, d. ~1290 (Age ~ 65 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Egelina de Columbars

Robert Hansard,   b. 0Dec 1272, Walworth, Durham, England,   d. ~1313  (Age ~ 40 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Margaret Redman, of Walworth,   b. ~1272, England,   d. ~1313  (Age ~ 41 years)

Gilbert Hansard,   b. Abt 1300, (Durham) England (Merovingian descendant)
-Lora unknown,   b. Abt 1300, England,   d. Aft 1349  (Age ~ 50 years)

Robert Hansard,   b. Abt 1330, (Walworth, Darlington, Durham) England,   d. Aft 1391  (Age ~ 62 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Beatrix unknown,   b. Abt 1330, (Yorkshire) England

Robert Hansard, 9th Lord of Walworth,   b. Abt 1360, (Walworth, Darlington, Durham) England,   d. 22 May 1441, South Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England (Age ~ 81 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Margaret Gascoigne,   b. Abt 1360, Harewood, Yorkshire, England

Richard M. Hansard, Knight, MP,   b. 1377, South Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England,   d. 25 Nov 1428, South Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England (Age 51 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Joan Hedworth,   b. Abt 1390, Southwick, Sunderland, Durham, England,   d. 1419, South Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England (Age ~ 29 years)

Richard Hansard, III,   b. Abt 1419, South Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England,   d. 1460  (Age ~ 41 years)  (Merovingian descendant)
-Margaret Delamore,   b. Abt 1425, North Bradley, Wiltshire, England

Richard Hansard, IV,   b. Abt 1446, Girsby, Lincolnshire, England,   d. 1497, South Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England (Age ~ 51 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Elizabeth Blount ,   b. Abt 1454, Girsby, Lincolnshire, England

William Hansard, Knight,   b. 0___ 1478, Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England,   d. 11 Jan 1521, South Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England  (Age ~ 43 years) (Merovingian descendant)
-Elizabeth Hutton,   b. 0___ 1480, Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England,   d. 11 May 1550, Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England (Age ~ 70 years)

Elizabeth Hansard,   b. 0___ 1511, Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England,   d. 0___ 1577, Hackforth, Hornby Parish, North Yorkshire, England (Age ~ 66 years)
*(also is a William I, the Conquerer descendent and Spanish when GGGgrandfather Walter Blount, Knight & Baron married Donna Sancha de Ayala; royal lineage through Isabel Beauchamp, Henry de Beaumont, Alice de Harcourt, Joan de Broase, Gundred de Warenne, Isabel de Vermandois to Henri I, King of France) (Merovingian descendant)
-Nicholas Girlington, III,   b. 0___ 1510, Hackforth, Hornby Parish, North Yorkshire, England,   d. 10 Jan 1584, Hackforth, Hornby Parish, North Yorkshire, England  (Age ~ 74 years) 

see, de Gyrlyngton






Mystery of Girlington Move to America Solved: Bankruptcy of War

Various excerpts detailing the history and sale of Thurland Castle and the reason Nicholas al et were not named in their father's will.

[Carson-Nunn, Gary Carson]

The original name was Gyrlyngton and S L O W L Y became Girlington and finally after the 1800 US census, Gillentine. The name Gyrlyngton was, according to The Yorkshire Place Name Society has identified the Gyrlyngton family to have derived it's name from the "tun" or "town" of Gyrla, a Saxon settlement of early Yorkshire prior to the Norman invasion. This was also a period of time before surnames were used. The first recorded Gyrlyngton was Waleran De Gyrlyngton b: abt. 1058 . Waleran was Lord of Gyrlyngton-juxta-Wycliffe near Richmondshire during the reigns of Henry I and Stephen (1100-1154). Waleran may well have been a descendant of one of William the Conqueror's invading Normans, most of whom were given land for their support.

As for Thurland Castle:

Sir John Girlington, b: 1560, was Lord of Hackforth and Hutton Longvillers in Richmondshire. He exchanged the manor of Hutton Longvillers with Francis Tunstall of Wycliffe in Lancashire for the castle and manor of Thurland and the manor and advows on of the Church of Tunstall in 1605. He died in Thurland Castle on 28 Feb.1613. Before his death, he conveyed the Manor of Hackforth to his brother Thomas.

Sir John Girlington (son of Nicholas) b: July 19, 1613 at Kirkby, Malham, Yorkshire, d: March 1645 in Melton Mobray, England +Katherine Girlington (his 5th cousin - daughter of William Girlington) b: 1617 in Southcave, Yorkshire. Made knight, major general, and sheriff of Lancshire by Charles I on the 6th of June, 1642. Killed in the King's Service at Melton Mowbray (may have actually died a few weeks later due to gange green from a musket ball in his foot). He became heir to the family fortunes after the death of his brother Josias in youth. Like all his predecessors, he was a Roman Catholic; therefore a staunch supporter of Charles I during the English Civil War. After a seven week siege on the castle, he surrendered Thurland Castle to the Protestant Parlimentary forces who backed the Cromwell lead Civil War / Revolt - approximately in 1644.

Sir John's son was the last Girlington to actually inhabit the castle or the castle grounds. John Girlington b: July 9, 1634 d: 1706 m: abt 1674 +Margaret Duckett b: abt 1638, Westmoreland, England. Apparently allowed to reside in Thurland Castle for some time after the war ended. However, most likely lost nobility title and ownership of the castle and lands. Margaret was pledged to Sir John Girlington's male heir as part of an alliance between the Bellingham/Duckett families and the Girlington families. Bellingham was strategically located near the Scottish border to the north. (Margaret was John's 1st wife and Nicholas was the only child. She most likely died in childbirth or from complications shortly thereafter. 2d wife Margaret Curven produced 5 daughters) Ironically, Margaret Duckett was a descendant of the Tunstall and Bellingham families. The Tunstalls were the original owners of Thurland Castle, as well as the original grant of 1004 acres around the castle. What's more ironic, after the leases to the castle paid of the fines on Margaret and John Girlington for being "Jacobites" (supporters of James II and the Stewart line), John was allowed to live on the grounds but not in the castle ... the Tunstall family was eventually granted back the castle. John Girlington died almost penniless. The only recognition remaining today of the Girlington family and Thurland castle is a small gold plaque that the friars placed in the small church on the Thurland grounds .. it merely bares his name, birth in 1634, Lord of Thurland Castle, and that he died in 1706.

So as castles go, the Girlington family actually lived in Thurland for a relatively short period ... 1605 to sometime before 1706.

Yes, Nicholas did have a drawing of the remaining wing. Since he was born some years after the siege destroyed the rest of the castle, that wing is all he knew. It was the billiard room, what we would call a den, dining hall, smaller ante rooms, and a kitchen on the first floor. The upstairs area of that wing was merely sleeping quarters.


[Johnson-Johnston and Related Lines, Doc Johnson]


John Girlington was christened on 9 July 1637 at Tunstall, Lancashire. Upon the death of his brother Nicholas in 1644, John became eldest surviving male heir. As such, John succeeded his father Sir John Girlington as heir to the family possessions at Thurland Castle and elsewhere while still a minor after Sir John died during the defense of Pontefract Castle and Newark Castle in 1644/1645.

Sometime between 1649 and 1659, John Girlington was stripped of all hereditary title and wealth after the Commonwealth government was in power. This was punishment for his father's support of Charles I.

Apparently about 1653, while still a minor, an arranged marriage between Sir John's aunt (half sister to Sir John's father, John), Christiana, was the only way to stave off Cuthbert Parkinson from taking over Thurland and all it's manors and grounds. Cuthbert had bought up all the debts of Sir John's father, and attempted to what would amount to today as a foreclosure. Cuthbert had been granted Thurland by the high court in Preston as a result of the suit, then abruptly dropped the suit. But he did not drop the suit until his new wife, Christiana, gave him male heirs.

About 1655, John Girlington married Margaret Duckett, daughter of James Duckett Esquire of Grayrigg, Westmoreland County and Magdalen Curwen (sister of Anthony Duckett, the last male heir of the Duckett of Grayrigg line). Margaret was a grand daughter of Sir Henry Curwen who died in 1622/1623 via his second wife, Margaret Bouskel..

In 1658, he appeared before the Prerogative Court of Canterbury with a plea to assist in the restoration of his property. He stated in this plea that Thurland Castle had been taken and demolished by Parliamentary forces and that his father (Sir John) had conveyed all of his title deeds to Pontefract Castle for safe-keeping. He further stated that afterwards, Pontefract was also taken by the Parliamentarians (in 1644) and that all the said deeds were then destroyed by those forces. At the time, he probably had no idea that his mother, Katherine Girlington, had been fined 800 pounds for being a Jacobite, and that fine was being held against her inherited West Hall estate at Southam Cave (South Cave).

After the restoration of the Stuarts, in 1660, Charles II knighted John as a member of the new order of knights, "Knight of the Royal Oak".

Also in 1660, John returned to Southam Cave (South Cave) and sold his mother's West Hall estate. Upon the sale, the Parlimentary court that still had power in spite of the restoration, placed the sale proceeds into a trust, to go towards his mother's fine. As such, John received little or nothing after the sale.

Listed on the Roll of Burgesses at the Guild Merchant on 10 Sep 1662.

Charles II appointed Sir John as High Sheriff of Lancashire in 1663.

1663 - 1671 Held a Knight's Commission at at Kirkby Lonsdale (similar to a JP Court today)

In 1671, John again filed a bill touching his mother's inheritance. Again, his pleas went unanswered - there was no record of the trust account to be found, so there was nothing to to "touch". It would appear from the notes of this court hearing that once again, Sir John was victim of the Parliamentary authorities that had been in power prior. In as much, in 1671, there was mysteriously no record of the trust that had supposedly been set up in 1660 at the time of the opriginal sale. Just another way for the previous Commonwealth authorities to punish the Loyalist family.

As Knight and High Sheriff, John was able to return just one wing of Thurland Castle to a habitable condition - setting up a series of living quarters, or apartments as they were referred to at the time.

Margaret Duckett Girlington died during the birth of a second daughter named Elizabeth in December 1675. Both Domina Margaret Girlington and daughter were buried in Tunstall parish on 07 Dec 1675. Perhaps in a gesture of romanticism of the time, it was reported that mother and daughter were buried together, with the mother holding the infant in her arms.

Soon after the death of his first wife, John was secondly married to Margaret Curwen, daughter of Sir Patricus Curwen and also a grand daughter of Sir Henry Curwen of Workington by his first wife, Catherine Dalston. Sir John's only son, Nicholas Girlington, was born from this marriage on 28 Nov 1676 (baptized at Chritmas Eve mass on 24 Dec 1676).

Margaret Curwen Girlington died in 1683 (buried on 12 May 1683 in Tunstall Parish). John's eldest surviving daughter, Magdalen, (by his first marriage) had married just before Margaret's death.

1689-1694 Sir John Girlington served as a Lieutenant Colonel during the Lancashire Plot

Sir John's daugher Katherine, (by his first marriage), remained at home to help care for her father and young brother, Nicholas, until 1692 when she was married (Nicholas was 16 at that time). That left just John and his young son, Nicholas, by themselves.

As a result of the devsatation associated with the English Civil War and with the loss of all of his mother's inheritance, the Girlington's seemed to have constantly been plagued with financial difficulties. With the castle in such disarray and only John and a young Nicholas available to tackle the task of restoring Thurland Castle any further, John Girlington sold the castle in 1698 to John Bennett, a lawyer of some importance in London. Following the sale of Thurland, Sir John Girlington and Nicholas moved to the nearby town of Hornby and took residence in Hornby Hall.

Based on the circumstances, John Girlington wanted to give his only son a start on his future. It appeears John exercised a very common custom of the times and gave Nicholas his rightful inheritance prior to John's death. This would account for Nicholas coming to the colonies un-indentured, bypassing the indentured route through Barbados, being able to marry soon after arrival and having funds available to purchase land.

Either about the time of Nicholas' departure for the colonies, or most likely shortly thereafter, John Girlington died in at Hornby Hall in 1706. He was buried in Tunstall Parish on 19 Sep 1706. Daughter Katherine Girlington Ayscough (pronounced Askew) was the executrix of her father's estate. Nicholas, who had already been given his inheritance, was not mentioned in his father's last will and testament. Based on the willl mainly containing minor personal items being given to his daughters, and a few monetary gifts to the church, it appears Sir John had also given his daughters their monetary share of their inheritance prior to his death.

(Note: Since his son had already departed for the colonies, there would have been no logical expectation that Sir John or his daughters would have been able to contact Nicholas, or know with any certainty that Nicholas had even survived the voyage to the colonies or his forray in the colonies. As evidenced by the bequeathments of the will, no monetary sums were mentioned other than the final gifts to the church. This strongly indicates that Nicholas, Magdalen and Katherine had already received their respective monetary inheritances prior to Sir John writing his will - probab;y soon after the sale of Thurland castle in 1698 when the funds were finally available to Sir John.)

Monarchs during the life of John Girlington:

King Charles I reigned from 27 Mar 1625 to 30 Jan 1649

Parliamenatry Commonwealth from 30 Jan 1649 to 29 May 1660

King Charles II reigned from 29 May 1660 to 06 Feb 1685

King James II reigned from 06 Feb 1685 to 11 Dec 1688

King William and Queen Mary reigned from 13 Feb 1689 to 27 Dec 1694

King William continued to reign as King William III from 28 Dec 1694 to 08 Mar 1702

Queen Anne reigned from 08 Mar 1702 to 01 Aug 1714

Tunstall, parish and township, in north Lancashire, near the confluence of the Lune and the Greta, 3 miles S. of Kirkby Lonsdale - parish, 9360 acres; township, 1076 acres

Hornby, a village, a township, and a chapelry, in Melling parish, Lancashire. The village stands at the confluence of the Wenning and the Lune rivers, adjacent to the Little Northwestern railway, 8½ miles NE by E of Lancaster; is neatly built; commands beautiful scenery along the valleys; is sometimes visited by tourists; has a station on the railway, a post office under Lancaster, and an inn; is a seat of petty sessions; was formerly a market town; and has still cattle fairs on every alternate Tuesday of the summer months. The township comprises 2,115 acres. The manor belonged, in the 12th century, to Nicholas de Montbegon; passed to the Stanleys, Lords Monteagle; and belongs now to John Foster, Esq. Hornby Castle, the manorial seat, was founded by Nicholas de Montbegon; retains two towers built by one of the Lords Monteagle and by Lord Wemyss; has undergone recent extensive renovations and improvements; and stands on an eminence, overlooking the rich surrounding scenery. The estate was the subject of a famous litigation, called "the Great Will Cause, " begun in 1826. Hornby Hall was the seat of John Murray, Esq. A Roman mound is near the river Lune. A Premonstratensian priory, a cell to Croxton abbey, was anciently there; and was given, at the dissolution, to the Stanleys; and the remains of it are now a farm-house. The church is ancient; has a chancel, and an octagonal tower, built by the first Lord Monteagle, after the battle of Flodden; and contains a tablet to Dr. Lingard, the historian. The shaft of an ancient cross is in the churchyard. A small Roman Catholic chapel is just to the west of the church.


Source: Rootsweb


Saturday, June 29, 2019

Sir John Girlington: Thurland Castle, Tunstall, Lancashire, England

How Thurland Castle ended up in the Girlington family.

Genealogy
Sir John Girlington, b. 1560-1564, Tunstall, Lancashire, England, d. 28 Feb 1612, Thurland Castle, Tunstall, Lancashire, England (Age 48 years)
-Christianna Babthorpe, b. 1568, Osgodby, Yorkshire, England, d. 1640, (Lancashire) England (Age 72 years)

see, de Grylyngton 

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Photo Credit: Lancashirelife
History
The earliest existing fabric dates from the 14th century, and in 1402 Sir Thomas Tunstall was given a licence to crenellate the building in 1402.

It the passed down through his son Thomas to Bryan, a hero of the Battle of Flodden in 1513, who was dubbed the "Stainless Knight" by the king and immortalised in the poem The Stainless Knight and the Battle of Flodden Field by Sir Walter Raleigh. Bryan's son Marmaduke was High Sheriff of Lancashire for 1544.

After two or three further generations of Tunstalls the castle was sold to Sir John Girlington in 1605. After passing to his grandson, Sir John Girlington, a Royalist major-general during the Civil War, it was badly damaged by Parliamentarian forces during a siege in 1643, following which it was described as being "ruinous". Sir John's son, also John, was High Sheriff of Lancashire for 1663.

Tunstall is a village in north Lancashire, England (grid reference SD607736). It is 11.1 miles (18 km) northeast of Lancaster on the A683 road between Lancaster and Kirkby Lonsdale. In the 2001 census the civil parish of Tunstall had a population of 105,[1] increasing to 223 at the 2011 Census.[2]

To the north east of the village is the Grade I listed Church of St John the Baptist.

Several houses, a restaurant, a village hall, and a tennis court make up most of the village of Tunstall. The restaurant/pub, called the Lunesdale Arms hosts many village activities, such as carol services and quizzes.

Photo Credit: Wikpedia
Thurland Castle

To the south of the village is Thurland Castle, which dates from the fourteenth century. It was made ruinous following a siege in 1643, restored in 1809 and 1829, then gutted by fire in 1879 and rebuilt. It is now divided into apartments.



News and Real Estate
  • This link features Thurland Castle and is advertising the sale of a 3-bedroom apartment for about $1,000,000
  • Meet the owners of Thurland Castle

Source: Hackney Leigh
Lancashirelife
The Hennessee Family 
Wikpedia 

Emperor Charlemagne to Joan Plantagenet Lineage

Outline of the lineage from Emperor Charlegmange through the centuries to Edward I, King of England and his wife, Eleanor de Castile, Queen of England, and their daughter: Lady Joan (Plantagenet) of Acre.

Lady Joan of Acre's daughters:  Lady Margaret de Clare (1293-1342), Lady Eleanor de Clare, Baroness of Despencer (1292-1337), and Elizabeth de Clare (1295- ) are instrumental in connecting the various lines to Charlemange. 

Genealogy
Charlemagne, Holy Roman Emperor (747-814)
-Hildegard (758-783)

Pepin of Italy, King of Italy (773-810)
-Ingeltrude

Bernard of Italy, King of the Lombards (797-818)
-Cunigunda of Laon

Pepin de Vermandois, Count of Vermandois (815-849)
-unknown spouse

Herbert de Vermandois, I, Count of Vermandois (848-907)
-Bertha de Morvois

Herbert de Vermandois, II, Count of Meaux (884-943)
-Hildebranda of France (895-931)

Robert De Vermandois, Count of Meaux (918-968)
-Adelaide-Werra de Chaton (920-967)

Adele of Meaux
-Geoffrey of Anjou

Ermengarde of Anjou (966- )
-Conan of Rennes, I, Count of Rennes, Duke of Brittany (927-992)

Judith de Bretagne (982-1017)
-Richard de Normandie, II (963-1027)

Duke Robert de Normandie, II (1005-1035)
-Harriette de Falaise, Countess of Montaigne (1003-1050)

William the Conqueror, King of England, Duke of Normandy (1024-1087)
-Matilda of Flanders, Queen of England (1031-1083)

Henry I, King of England (1070-1135)
-Matilda of Scotland, Queen of England (1080-1118)

Matilda of England, Queen of England (1102-1167)
-Sir Geoffrey "Le Bon" Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, Duke of Normandy (1113-1151)

Henry II, King of England (1133-1189)
-Eleanore de Aquitaine, Queen of England (1123-1204)

John I, King of England (1166-1216)
-Isabelle of Angouleme, Queen of England (1188-1246)

Henry III, King of England (1207-1272)
-Eleanor of Provence, Queen of England, Princess of Castile (1222-1291)

Edward I, King of England (1239-1307)
-Eleanor de Castile, Queen of England (1241-1290)

Lady Joan (Plantagenet) of Acre (1272-1307)
-Sir Gilbert de Clare, Knight, Earl of Hertford (1243-1295)


see, de Chisholme and de Grylyngton















Nicholas Girlington III Burial Inscription, 1584, Hackforth, Hornby Parish, North Yorkshire, England

Nicolas Girlington III's burial in England as a member of the aristocracy.

Genealogy
Nicholas Girlington, III, b. 0___ 1510, Hackforth, Hornby Parish, North Yorkshire, England, d. 10 Jan 1584, Hackforth, Hornby Parish, North Yorkshire, England (Age ~ 74 years)
-Elizabeth Hansard, b. 0___ 1511, Kelsey, Lincolnshire, England, d. 0___ 1577, Hackforth, Hornby Parish, North Yorkshire, England (Age ~ 66 years)

Burial Inscription
0Jan 1584 
York Minster, York, Yorkshire, England
'Hic jacet magister Nicolaius Girlingtonius Hackforthiensis familie, armiger preclarus, vera pietate insignis et omni splendoris genere instructissimus qui ex hac vita migravit, decimo die Januaryii An. Dom. 1584--etatis sue vero 76.'

Translation
Here lies Master Nicholas Girlington of Hackforth, armor bearer, fully imbued with true piety, he departed this life the 10th day of January the year of our Lord 1584 at the age of but 76.


Source: The Hennessee Family 





Monday, June 17, 2019

Richard Chisholm, Cheesome 1613

Richard CHISHOLM, (c1613 - c1670)

Richard CHISHOLM also appears in records as Richard CHEESOME. He was bc. 1613 in London, Middlesex, England. Richard arrived in the American Colonies by 1643 when William Batt used the headright of Richard Cheesome to acquire 250 acres of land in York County, Virginia, lying along the banks of the North River, which flows into Mobjack Bay (today's Mathews County, VA)

Richard CHISHOLM married Margaret ISHAM, daughter of Roger ISHAM and Grace MADDISON, in Virginia, date unknown. Richard died circa 1670 in Lancaster County, VA.

Richard and Margaret CHISHOLM had three known children:
  1. William CHISHOLM - d. in Maryland
  2. Alexander CHISHOLM - d. King William County, VA.
  3. James CHISHOLM - See the next section

Source:  GILSTRAP-ANDERSON Genealogy