Is anyone in the UK or the USA researching the Ripple, Kent, UK Warren's? Please reply. Thanks. Learry L. Warren, Dunn, N.C. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Janet" <smallj@hypertech.net> To: <WARREN-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 9:10 AM Subject: RE: [WARREN] Warrens of Caswell County, NC > > Nat, my line is through Thomas Warren 1668-1749 who married Mary Elizabeth > Hackley of Spotsylvania, VA. Do you know what the connection is between > these two couples? > Janet > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: NBlackw125@aol.com [mailto:NBlackw125@aol.com] > > Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 7:54 AM > > To: WARREN-L@rootsweb.com > > > > I have followed this list for many-many months but do not > > remember seeing any > > references to the WARREN line that settled in Caswell County, NC. > > Is there > > anyone on the list with interest in this line? > > > > They descend from William WARREN Sr. (1680-1726) and Elizabeth HACKLEY of > > Virginia. > > > >
At 12:08 31/07/2002 -0400, you wrote: >Is anyone in the UK or the USA researching the Ripple, Kent, UK Warren's? >Please reply. Thanks. Learry L. Warren, Dunn, N.C. Not sure. This is what I have: Alice Martha Barber was born in Ipswich, Suffolk, in 1862. She married William Harvey in 1882 and continued to live in Ipswich. She had a son, George, in 1887 although it is not clear who the father is. She then had a daughter, Maude Elizabeth, born at Seabrooke, Kent in about 1888 (details from the 1891 UK census). Seabrook is about 10 miles from Ripple. I cannot find her birth certificate in the UK records (having searched under Barber, Harvey and Warren) so do not know what her birth surname was. However, Maude was married twice and both times gave her father as George Warren. The situation is complicated by the fact that her mother, Alice, later lived (possibly without the benefit of a marriage) with Benjamin Beal Warren in Denford, Northhamptonshire, with whom she had several more Warren children. George Warren might have truly been the father. Alternatively, Alice might have fallen pregnant by someone unknown to us and she went to Seabrooke in true Victorian style to have the baby and then returned home with her "neice" and so the George Warren father might have been a cover story. Food for thought. any connections? Rick -------------- Rick Edmondson rick@hunter.co.uk Tel, office: 01622 717861 Fax, office: 01622 719140 Tel, home: 01959 532575 Fax, home 01959 532832