Early volumes of the Transactions of the Devonshire Association (1862-1908, 1910-1920) are available online as scanned copies, free to read or download: https://devonassoc.org.uk/publications/transactions/ A complete list of all papers (1863 to date) is available at: https://devonassoc.org.uk/publications/transactions/contents/ They are mostly of a geological, scientific, architectural or literary nature, but do include some local town histories. Fewer than 5% of the titles seem relevant to our family history interests, but may contain some hidden gems, as found in Bev Edmonds' extraction from Ogwell church. Does anyone know if the missing 1909 volume XLI (41) is anywhere online? That's the one I'd most like to access. Martin Beavis - DFHS 23203 -----Original Message----- From: B. Edmonds Sent: Sunday, December 30, 2018 12:17 AM To: devon@rootsweb.com Subject: [DEV] Re: The Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature For anyone not sure about ploughing through this book. It might be worthwhile. 234 CHURCHES AND MANORS OF E. AND W. 0GWELL. Copy/paste On the east wall of the " dormitory " there is a large slab of marble, from the encrinite quarry in the neighbourhood, inscribed - " Here lyeth ye Body of S' Richard Reynell of Ogwell Kn* (sonne of S' Thomas Reynell Kn^) who dyed the 12*** day of February 1648, being aged 64 yeares two moneths and three weekes. He had issue by Mary his first wife (eldest daughter of Richard Reynell of Credywiger Esq') five sonnes (three of them dyed very young) foure daughters. "Here lyeth also ye body of Dorothy second wife of S' Richard Reynell of Og wells Kn* (who married her December ye 15"� 1636) and she died March the 28*^ 1642. By her he had noe issue. She was the first that was laide in this dormitory which was founded and built in y� yeare 1633 by the above mentioned S*" Richard Reynell. The above saide Dorothy was aged forty nine yeares and ten dayes when she dyed. " Hereunder also lye the bodyes of Richard Reynell eldest son of Thomas Reynell Esq"^ born ye 26*** of August 1652 and died March 27*** 1660. Joanna Reynell third daughter of Thomas Reynell Esq born 12*** of August 1654 and died 27*** January 1662. --------------------------------------------------
In my transcription of the Aveton Gifford Parish Registers I added an index with people grouped by surname, and there are many examples of all the variants of Stear. see http://www-civ.eng.cam.ac.uk/cjb/ag/pr/agprindS.htm I came to the conclusion that Stear; Sture and Stert were distinct families but that Stear, Steer and Steere were indistinguishable. I accept that my distinction is subjective, although the acid test is how the names sound. My mother (who was a Stear) insisted that the Steers were a completely different family, but I have seen her father's own signature in both forms. It is fairly clear that spelling was very fluid. There are examples in the AG marriage register, which for some periods had the actual signatures of bride, groom and their fathers, where father and son used different spellings of their surname in their signatures on the same document. The priest, or the parish clerk, or the census enumerator, would write down what they heard, especially if the family was not known to them. It probably is true that these names have a common origin, but surnames have been around since about the 13th century, 300 years before we have written records for common people, and well before most of the population was literate. All the AG entries can be found at http://www-civ.eng.cam.ac.uk/cjb/ag/pr/agpr2.htm (The commonest name in the village is Elliot, and I found at least 8 ways in which that was spelt!) Chris Burgoyne OPC for Aveton Gifford On 02/01/2019 12:30, Joy Langdon via DEVON wrote: > I llive in Devon and am old enough to remember the softly spoken, broad accents of my old relatives and neighbours who hadn't been subjected to estuary English or any other accent from constant television and radio etc. I can easily imagine that Steer coud be heard as Sture - think of it as pronounced "Steyur" in the same way that "here" is pronounced in Devon "Yur tis" (here it is). > > Joy > > ----Original message---- > From : ourmail@chez-williams.com > Date : 02/01/2019 - 08:22 (GMT) > To : devon@rootsweb.com > Subject : [DEV] Re: Stear family of Kingsbridge > > Yes I have Nancy. I have found the names Stear, Steer, Steere, Star and > Sture in Kingsbridge. With my recollection of the Devon accent (I was > brought up in Plymouth) the first 3 spellings are obviously OK, and > possibly the 4th. However, try as I might, I can't see how Sture can be > confused with Stear. Perhaps someone on the list knows differently? I > would add that I have looked at the images on FMP and the entries are > definitely Sture. The parents shown on the baptisms for the various > spellings are the same, so it's very tempting to take ownership of all > the children. > > Cheers, > John > > _______________________________________________ > ------------------------------------------ > The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon > http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS (http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community
I llive in Devon and am old enough to remember the softly spoken, broad accents of my old relatives and neighbours who hadn't been subjected to estuary English or any other accent from constant television and radio etc. I can easily imagine that Steer coud be heard as Sture - think of it as pronounced "Steyur" in the same way that "here" is pronounced in Devon "Yur tis" (here it is). Joy ----Original message---- From : ourmail@chez-williams.com Date : 02/01/2019 - 08:22 (GMT) To : devon@rootsweb.com Subject : [DEV] Re: Stear family of Kingsbridge Yes I have Nancy. I have found the names Stear, Steer, Steere, Star and Sture in Kingsbridge. With my recollection of the Devon accent (I was brought up in Plymouth) the first 3 spellings are obviously OK, and possibly the 4th. However, try as I might, I can't see how Sture can be confused with Stear. Perhaps someone on the list knows differently? I would add that I have looked at the images on FMP and the entries are definitely Sture. The parents shown on the baptisms for the various spellings are the same, so it's very tempting to take ownership of all the children. Cheers, John
John I think you also have to remember that rectors/vicars often came from other parts of the country and would use forms of spelling with which they were familiar, so, this combined with an accent with which they weren't familiar can create quite wide variations in spelling.....this can sometimes be observed in the PRs quite clearly over the years following the introduction of new vicars, especially when not prepared to continue using local variations. Paul Benyon (N Wales)/Beynon (S Wales)/Bennion (Lancs/Cheshire) &c a couple of the various spellings of my surname even today, but especially when the name has been taken verbally/orally, when you can count on getting a few Bunyans, usually to satisfy someone's sense of humour -;) but, nevertheless, I think it probably demonstrates the familiarity theme. On Wed, 2 Jan 2019 19:22:02 +1100, you wrote: >Yes I have Nancy. I have found the names Stear, Steer, Steere, Star and >Sture in Kingsbridge. With my recollection of the Devon accent (I was >brought up in Plymouth) the first 3 spellings are obviously OK, and >possibly the 4th. However, try as I might, I can't see how Sture can be >confused with Stear. Perhaps someone on the list knows differently? I >would add that I have looked at the images on FMP and the entries are >definitely Sture. The parents shown on the baptisms for the various >spellings are the same, so it's very tempting to take ownership of all >the children. > >Cheers, >John > >On 2/01/2019 5:25 pm, Nancy Frey wrote: >> Hi John, >> >> I don't have any STEAR but I do have STEER and found them spelled STEAR on >> occasion. Have you checked this spelling variation? >> >> Regards, >> >> Nancy Frey >> OPC for Ansford & Castle Cary, Somerset >> >> On Tue, Jan 1, 2019 at 6:12 PM Our Mail <ourmail@chez-williams.com> wrote: >> >>> I posted the following message on the South Hams list, but thought I'd >>> send to this one in the hope of a wider audience. >>> >>> One of my ggg grandfathers, Richard Stear, was bpt in Kingsbridge on 20 >>> March 1775, the son of Richard & Mary (nee Weeks). Richard & Mary >>> married in South Milton on 10 Oct 1771. That Richard was also the son >>> of a Richard, and his wife Margaret Clements, who married in Aveton >>> Gifford on 29 Aug 1737. That is where I run into a brick wall with the >>> Stear line.\com and our loyal RootsWeb community >>> >> _______________________________________________ >> ------------------------------------------ >> The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon >> http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS (http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) >> _______________________________________________ >> Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref >> Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com >> Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 >> Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog >> RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community >> > >_______________________________________________ >------------------------------------------ >The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon >http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS (http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) >_______________________________________________ >Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref >Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com >Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 >Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog >RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community 50° 33' N, 2° 26' W http://www.pbenyon.plus.com/Naval.html
Yes I have Nancy. I have found the names Stear, Steer, Steere, Star and Sture in Kingsbridge. With my recollection of the Devon accent (I was brought up in Plymouth) the first 3 spellings are obviously OK, and possibly the 4th. However, try as I might, I can't see how Sture can be confused with Stear. Perhaps someone on the list knows differently? I would add that I have looked at the images on FMP and the entries are definitely Sture. The parents shown on the baptisms for the various spellings are the same, so it's very tempting to take ownership of all the children. Cheers, John On 2/01/2019 5:25 pm, Nancy Frey wrote: > Hi John, > > I don't have any STEAR but I do have STEER and found them spelled STEAR on > occasion. Have you checked this spelling variation? > > Regards, > > Nancy Frey > OPC for Ansford & Castle Cary, Somerset > > On Tue, Jan 1, 2019 at 6:12 PM Our Mail <ourmail@chez-williams.com> wrote: > >> I posted the following message on the South Hams list, but thought I'd >> send to this one in the hope of a wider audience. >> >> One of my ggg grandfathers, Richard Stear, was bpt in Kingsbridge on 20 >> March 1775, the son of Richard & Mary (nee Weeks). Richard & Mary >> married in South Milton on 10 Oct 1771. That Richard was also the son >> of a Richard, and his wife Margaret Clements, who married in Aveton >> Gifford on 29 Aug 1737. That is where I run into a brick wall with the >> Stear line.\com and our loyal RootsWeb community >> > _______________________________________________ > ------------------------------------------ > The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon > http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS (http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community >
Hi John, I don't have any STEAR but I do have STEER and found them spelled STEAR on occasion. Have you checked this spelling variation? Regards, Nancy Frey OPC for Ansford & Castle Cary, Somerset On Tue, Jan 1, 2019 at 6:12 PM Our Mail <ourmail@chez-williams.com> wrote: > I posted the following message on the South Hams list, but thought I'd > send to this one in the hope of a wider audience. > > One of my ggg grandfathers, Richard Stear, was bpt in Kingsbridge on 20 > March 1775, the son of Richard & Mary (nee Weeks). Richard & Mary > married in South Milton on 10 Oct 1771. That Richard was also the son > of a Richard, and his wife Margaret Clements, who married in Aveton > Gifford on 29 Aug 1737. That is where I run into a brick wall with the > Stear line.\com and our loyal RootsWeb community >
There are trees on Ancestry which have Richard Steare baptised at Kingsbridge 9 May 1714 son of Thomas and Joan but they don't say where the information came from. Try contacting the OPC for Kingsbridge: https://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/Kingsbridge#Genealogy Joy ----Original message---- From : ourmail@chez-williams.com Date : 01/01/2019 - 09:02 (GMT) To : devon@rootsweb.com Subject : [DEV] Stear family of Kingsbridge I posted the following message on the South Hams list, but thought I'd send to this one in the hope of a wider audience. One of my ggg grandfathers, Richard Stear, was bpt in Kingsbridge on 20 March 1775, the son of Richard & Mary (nee Weeks). Richard & Mary married in South Milton on 10 Oct 1771. That Richard was also the son of a Richard, and his wife Margaret Clements, who married in Aveton Gifford on 29 Aug 1737. That is where I run into a brick wall with the Stear line. Although I have found the bpts of the various children of the 3 Richard's marriages, I haven't found Mary Weeks' baptism. I have traced Margaret Clement's parents (William and Margaret nee Derry) as well as her maternal grandparents, James Derry and Joan (nee Collings). I think I've exhausted online resources (FMP, Ancestry & Familysearch), so I'm hoping that someone might have information regarding these families of suggest further avenues to explore that might help me make further progress with any of these families? I would add that I am the only member of Devon FHS who has declared an interest in Stear. John in NSW _______________________________________________ ------------------------------------------ The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS (http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) _______________________________________________ Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community
Hi: Here is the latest tranche of additions to GENUKI/Devon: Dec 2018 Major additions: Devon - Church Records: Methodist Cicuits and Churches in Devon (2018) - listing Devon - Genealogy/B: Devon Farmers' Account Book [re Berry Family] (1910) - transcript Devon - Genealogy/F: The Foote Family (1910) - transcript Devon - Genealogy/F: Matthew Arnold's Royal Descent [re Ford Family] (1910) - transcript Devon - Genealogy/F: Fursdon Family (1910) - transcript Devon - Genealogy/H: Thomas Hillman of Coleraine (1910) - transcript Devon - Genealogy/S: Southwood Family (1910) - transcript Devon - Periodicals: Review of the Devonian Year Book for 1911 (1910) - transcript Axmouth: Early Cider Mill from Axmouth (1910) - transcript Axmouth: James Manning [re Oke family] (1910) - transcript Barnstaple: Puritan Divines (1910) - transcript Barnstaple: Christmas Family (1910) - transcript Bideford: Christmas Family of Bideford (1910) - transcript Bideford: Bideford Methodist Circuit baptisms (1819-1870) - transcript Bovey Tracey: Wreyland Documents by Cecil Torr (1910) - transcript Bovey Tracey: Wreyland Documents (1910) - transcript Bovey Tracey: Wreyland Documents, Notes 191 & 192 (1910) - transcript Colyton: Thomas Brerewode, Vicar of Colyton (1910) - transcript Dartmouth: Vicars of Townstall and Dartmouth (1910) - transcript Drewsteignton: Carew and Pole Letters (1910) - transcript Exeter: Tucker Family (1910) - transcript Exeter: Manuscripts of the late Robert Dymond (1910) - transcript Exeter Cathedral: Assumed Names: Nicholas Hall, Treasurer of Exeter Cathedral (1910) - transcript Holcombe Burnell: Ford Family (1910) - transcript Honiton: St. Michael's Church, Honiton (1910) - transcript Kentisbeare: Who was John, son of Mauger? (1910) - transcript North Bovey: The Plague at North Bovey (1910) - transcript Northam: Charity Plaque in Northam Parish Church (1879) - transcripts (2) Northam: Northam Burials (1841-1918) - transcript Okehampton: Honour and Barony of Okehampton (1910) - transcript Plymouth Charles the Martyr: Charles Church, Plymouth (1910) - transcript Plympton St Mary: Sir Joshua Reynolds' MS (1910) - transcript Salcombe Regis: Ball (1910) - transcript Salcombe Regis: Thorne in Salcombe Regis (1910) - transcript Slapton: Ancient Heraldic Glass in Slapton Church (1910) - transcripts (3) South Hams: South Ham District (1910) - transcripts (2) South Tawton - Printers of the Statutes in the Sixteenth Century, South Tawton, Devon (1910) - transcript Stoke Gabriel: Waddeton Court Chapel, Stoke Gabriel (1910) - transcript Topsham: Topsham and the Duke of Monmouth (1910) - transcript Upton Pyne: Seventeenth Century Stained Glass in Upton Pyne Church (1910) - transcript Happy New Year Brian Randell — School of Computing, Newcastle University, 1 Science Square, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE4 5TG EMAIL = Brian.Randell@ncl.ac.uk PHONE = +44 191 208 7923 URL = http://www.ncl.ac.uk/computing/people/profile/brianrandell.html
I posted the following message on the South Hams list, but thought I'd send to this one in the hope of a wider audience. One of my ggg grandfathers, Richard Stear, was bpt in Kingsbridge on 20 March 1775, the son of Richard & Mary (nee Weeks). Richard & Mary married in South Milton on 10 Oct 1771. That Richard was also the son of a Richard, and his wife Margaret Clements, who married in Aveton Gifford on 29 Aug 1737. That is where I run into a brick wall with the Stear line. Although I have found the bpts of the various children of the 3 Richard's marriages, I haven't found Mary Weeks' baptism. I have traced Margaret Clement's parents (William and Margaret nee Derry) as well as her maternal grandparents, James Derry and Joan (nee Collings). I think I've exhausted online resources (FMP, Ancestry & Familysearch), so I'm hoping that someone might have information regarding these families of suggest further avenues to explore that might help me make further progress with any of these families? I would add that I am the only member of Devon FHS who has declared an interest in Stear. John in NSW
For anyone not sure about ploughing through this book. It might be worthwhile. 234 CHURCHES AND MANORS OF E. AND W. 0GWELL. Copy/paste On the east wall of the " dormitory " there is a large slab of marble, from the encrinite quarry in the neighbourhood, inscribed - " Here lyeth ye Body of S' Richard Reynell of Ogwell Kn* (sonne of S' Thomas Reynell Kn^) who dyed the 12*** day of February 1648, being aged 64 yeares two moneths and three weekes. He had issue by Mary his first wife (eldest daughter of Richard Reynell of Credywiger Esq') five sonnes (three of them dyed very young) foure daughters. "Here lyeth also ye body of Dorothy second wife of S' Richard Reynell of Og wells Kn* (who married her December ye 15"» 1636) and she died March the 28*^ 1642. By her he had noe issue. She was the first that was laide in this dormitory which was founded and built in y® yeare 1633 by the above mentioned S*" Richard Reynell. The above saide Dorothy was aged forty nine yeares and ten dayes when she dyed. " Hereunder also lye the bodyes of Richard Reynell eldest son of Thomas Reynell Esq"^ born ye 26*** of August 1652 and died March 27*** 1660. Joanna Reynell third daughter of Thomas Reynell Esq born 12*** of August 1654 and died 27*** January 1662. -------------------------------------------------- From: "B. Edmonds" <beverley@yourisp.com.au> Sent: Sunday, December 30, 2018 9:23 AM To: <devon@rootsweb.com> Subject: [DEV] The Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature > This book can be downloaded but it is heavy reading, but could be > interesting, have not had time to look at it properly. Bev > > Report and Transactions - The Devonshire Association for the Advancement > of Science, Literature > > https://archive.org/stream/reportandtransa18artgoog/reportandtransa18artgoog_djvu.txt > _______________________________________________ > ------------------------------------------ > The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon > http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS > (http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb > community
Not my chaps Richard POPE of Harberton was buried 25 Feb 1815 aged 50 According to a Coroner's Report 26 Feb 1815 Richd. POPE died by a " fall from a ladder ", with information supplied by Wm. HARDY Robert CRIMP was buried at Buckfastleigh 10 Feb 1815 aged 48 According to a Coroner's Report Rob't. CRIMP of Buckfastleigh 9 Feb 1815 "Drowned." With information supplied R. HOLDITCH Regards Bev
This book can be downloaded but it is heavy reading, but could be interesting, have not had time to look at it properly. Bev Report and Transactions - The Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature https://archive.org/stream/reportandtransa18artgoog/reportandtransa18artgoog_djvu.txt
The following was distributed by a member of the Northumberland and Devon FHS. I somehow feel the GRO are not following the spirit of why pdfs. Cheers Paul It is reported on the Lost Cousins website that the cost of BMD certificates will rise on 16 Feb 2019. Paper certificates will rise from £9.25 to £11 and a PDF copy, where available, will rise from £6 to £7. There will also be an additional charge of £3 to search an index where full references are not provided. A fee of £3.50 will be retained where an entry cannot be found from the relevant information provided. Full details are contained in Statutory Instrument 1268 of 2018 available here https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2018/1268/pdfs/uksi_20181268_en.pdf
Best wishes for Christmas and the New Year to all of you from me also! Brian On 20 Dec 2018, at 18:42, tjleaman@gmail.com<mailto:tjleaman@gmail.com> wrote: A very merry Christmas and a happy and prosperous new year to you all. Terry List admin team — School of Computing, Newcastle University, 1 Science Square, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE4 5TG EMAIL = Brian.Randell@ncl.ac.uk<mailto:Brian.Randell@ncl.ac.uk> PHONE = +44 191 208 7923 URL = http://www.ncl.ac.uk/computing/people/profile/brianrandell.html
Thank you Terry.. merry Christmas to you and to the list. Thanks again to you and all the volunteers involved. Jane > On 20 Dec 2018, at 21:19, Doreen <rose.scarlett@hotmail.com> wrote: > > Merry Christmas to all. Thank-you for making my year an interesting, fun one. > cheers > Doreen in drizzling Victoria, Australia > > > Sent from Outlook<http://aka.ms/weboutlook> > > ________________________________ > From: ziggy beseler <trempealeau2@gmail.com> > Sent: Friday, 21 December 2018 6:32 AM > To: Terry Leaman; devon@rootsweb.com > Subject: [DEV] Re: Christmas > > Merry Christmas to you, Terry, Edna and everyone on the list. Lora in > raining Wisconsin! > >> On Thu, Dec 20, 2018 at 12:42 PM <tjleaman@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> A very merry Christmas and a happy and prosperous new year to you all. >> >> Terry >> >> List admin team >> >> _______________________________________________ >> ------------------------------------------ >> The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon >> http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS ( >> http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) >> _______________________________________________ >> Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref >> Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com >> Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: >> https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 >> Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog >> RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb >> community >> > > _______________________________________________ > ------------------------------------------ > The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon > http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS (http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community > > _______________________________________________ > ------------------------------------------ > The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon > http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS (http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community
Merry Christmas to all. Thank-you for making my year an interesting, fun one. cheers Doreen in drizzling Victoria, Australia Sent from Outlook<http://aka.ms/weboutlook> ________________________________ From: ziggy beseler <trempealeau2@gmail.com> Sent: Friday, 21 December 2018 6:32 AM To: Terry Leaman; devon@rootsweb.com Subject: [DEV] Re: Christmas Merry Christmas to you, Terry, Edna and everyone on the list. Lora in raining Wisconsin! On Thu, Dec 20, 2018 at 12:42 PM <tjleaman@gmail.com> wrote: > A very merry Christmas and a happy and prosperous new year to you all. > > Terry > > List admin team > > _______________________________________________ > ------------------------------------------ > The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon > http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS ( > http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb > community > _______________________________________________ ------------------------------------------ The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS (http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) _______________________________________________ Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community
He was probably Parliamentarian then, Plymouth sided with the Parliamentarians and was besieged almost continuously from 1642 to 1646. When Charles 11 became king he clearly remembered this and built the Royal Citadel with the unusual feature that the guns could also fire on the town! Joy ----Original message---- From : beverley@yourisp.com.au Date : 20/12/2018 - 19:24 (GMT) To : devon@rootsweb.com Subject : [DEV] Re: HALSE, Robert KYDLER, Peter PAYNE, 1640's For anyone interested Capt. HALSE married Joan HARREIS Plymouth St Andrew 10 Dec 1643 Bev --------------------------------------------------
Merry Christmas to you, Terry, Edna and everyone on the list. Lora in raining Wisconsin! On Thu, Dec 20, 2018 at 12:42 PM <tjleaman@gmail.com> wrote: > A very merry Christmas and a happy and prosperous new year to you all. > > Terry > > List admin team > > _______________________________________________ > ------------------------------------------ > The DEVON-L mailing list is co-sponsored by GENUKI/Devon > http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DEV/ and Devon FHS ( > http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/ ) > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/devon@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb > community >
For anyone interested Capt. HALSE married Joan HARREIS Plymouth St Andrew 10 Dec 1643 Bev -------------------------------------------------- From: "Chris Whitehead" <chris@coalole.eclipse.co.uk> Sent: Friday, December 21, 2018 12:21 AM To: <devon@rootsweb.com> Subject: [DEV] HALSE, Robert KYDLER, Peter PAYNE, 1640's > Does anyone have any information on any of the above. They are mentioned > on a requisition document for May 1643 during the Civil War.
Hi Chris and anyone trace Peter PAYNE Peter PAYNE may have been a Butcher, there is a Peter Payne, Butcher in the 1685 Mayor's Court Roll Exeter. Although this Peter may have been a son/relative of the one you mention. Also Roll of Freeman 1715, John PAYNE is an apprentice to Peter PAYNE, Butcher 1727 Peter PAYNE, fish-hook maker, apprentice to Richard TEMPLER 1753 Peter PAYNE, son of Peter PAYNE, Fish-hook maker by succession 1790 Peter PAYNE, a Quaker of London, sadler, son of Peter PAYNE, Fish-hook maker, by succession Bev -------------------------------------------------- From: "Chris Whitehead" <chris@coalole.eclipse.co.uk> Sent: Friday, December 21, 2018 12:21 AM To: <devon@rootsweb.com> Subject: [DEV] HALSE, Robert KYDLER, Peter PAYNE, 1640's > Does anyone have any information on any of the above. They are mentioned > on a requisition document for May 1643 during the Civil War. > > " > XI die Maii 1643 > The goods of Mr Thomas Carew of Studleigh w[hic]h were brought ?? > by Captayne Halse his Troopers were these viz two hundred twenty > & five Sheepe, Seaven & thirty Lambes, thirteen Oxen and Steers > Sixe kyne Five heiffers of Fouer yeeres old Fouer yearelings > deliverd unto ?? Robert Kydler and Peter Payne" >