Ward & Related Families

of Nova Scotia & Yorkshire

Marske By Richmond, Yorkshire (North Riding), England


 

Notes:




The Church is dedicated to St Edmund, who was a Saxon King and Saint put to death by the Danes in AD 870. It is known that the bones of St Cuthbert rested in Marske for a time during the period when the monks were protecting them from the Danes who had sacked the abbey at Lindisfarne in AD 793. The saint's bones were later put to rest at Chester-le-Street and finally in Durham Cathedral.



This seems to point to an earlier church on the site of the present one founded in AD 1090. The north and south doors and the hexagonal pillars are from the Norman building. In a recess in the north aisle is a pointed stone tracery arch, carved from one block of stone, which may be the East window from this time. There are also theories that either the square stone base of the font or the square stone base of the 1914-1918 War Memorial is the base of a Norman or earlier cross.



Little except the names of the clergy is known until Matthew Hutton, Archbishop of York, bought the Marske estate for his son Timothy in 1597. The Church registers start from this date. From this time the history of the Church and village is closely linked with the Hutton family and there is no record of them building a chapel in the Hall. The family produced two Archbishops, two High Sheriffs of Yorkshire and a very famous stallion called Marske. This was the sire of Eclipse from whom most British racehorses are descended including Mill Reef, Nijinsky and Northern Dancer.



In 1634 following a reprimand from the Bishop-of Chester, Matthew Hutton the ¬squire paid for repairs to the chancel, paving the floor (which been mud-strewn with rushes) and "some seating". His brother Timothy gave the font. In 1655 Matthew gave the silver chalice and paten. There is a magnificent memorial to him and his wife, also depicting their twelve children, in Richmond Parish Church. He was followed in 1666 by his grandson, John Hutton, who put in the two windows in the south aisle and the sundial. The second, third and fourth John Huttons are buried under the Church floor and there is a memorial to the fourth John Hutton on the north wall of the sanctuary.



It seems that it was not until the time of the fourth John Hutton that anything more was done to the Church. Again there was a diocesan reprimand in 1822, and in 1823 John Hutton rebuilt the chancel and put in the box pews on top of the graves of his father and grandfather. He also added the porch and the crenellation around the roof.

In 1896 the present East window was given in memory of Colonel John Cameron who rented the Hall from the Huttons at this period. The Georgian silver candlesticks were given in 1966 in memory of Mrs D'Arcy Sykes who was a daughter of Timothy Hutton. These candlesticks are now deposited in Ripon Cathedral.



The village of Marske in Norman times was a community of foresters and huntsmen. Subsequently it developed into coal and lead mining, while farming became viable much later. Until the 18th century all the cottages were single storey and thatched with heather. The thatched roofs were very steep, sometimes almost touching the ground. The housing was improved in the 18th century and stone slates replaced the ling thatch. Because the stone slate roofs could be made much less steep, it -was possible to raise the walls and add another storey to the cottages. Many gable ends show evidence of this.



The Rectory was built in 1755 by the ten Rector Richard Horne at a cost of £185! It also housed a preparatory school for Richmond Grammar School. The magnificent stables near the Hall are also of this period.



The obelisk at the high point od Deer Park, south of the village, marks the burial place of Matthew Hutton who died in 1813. He requested that he be buried in his favourite place overlooking all the Hutton estate.



The ornamental gardens were made in 1836 when the new Downholme Bridge was built and gave access to the turnpike road down Swaledale. The Huttons gave land to make a road to connect the village with this bridge and this cut through their drive and left the lime avenue isolated. They pulled down the old manorial corn mill by Marske Bridge and made the splendid gardens at the other side of the road.



The Huttons built Marske Lodge at the beginning of the 20th century and at about the same time the family ceased living in Marske. When John Timothy D’Arcy Hutton died the inheritance passed to a nephew who sold the whole estate in 1960 without even seeing it.



Today the village has no resident squire, parson, doctor or publican but village life remains very strong.



(From a leaflet someone online picked up in St. Edmund's Church)











The Church is dedicated to St Edmund, who was a Saxon King and Saint put to death by the Danes in AD 870. It is known that the bones of St Cuthbert rested in Marske for a time during the period when the monks were protecting them from the Danes who had sacked the abbey at Lindisfarne in AD 793. The saint's bones were later put to rest at Chester-le-Street and finally in Durham Cathedral.



This seems to point to an earlier church on the site of the present one founded in AD 1090. The north and south doors and the hexagonal pillars are from the Norman building. In a recess in the north aisle is a pointed stone tracery arch, carved from one block of stone, which may be the East window from this time. There are also theories that either the square stone base of the font or the square stone base of the 1914-1918 War Memorial is the base of a Norman or earlier cross.



Little except the names of the clergy is known until Matthew Hutton, Archbishop of York, bought the Marske estate for his son Timothy in 1597. The Church registers start from this date. From this time the history of the Church and village is closely linked with the Hutton family and there is no record of them building a chapel in the Hall. The family produced two Archbishops, two High Sheriffs of Yorkshire and a very famous stallion called Marske. This was the sire of Eclipse from whom most British racehorses are descended including Mill Reef, Nijinsky and Northern Dancer.



In 1634 following a reprimand from the Bishop-of Chester, Matthew Hutton the ¬squire paid for repairs to the chancel, paving the floor (which been mud-strewn with rushes) and "some seating". His brother Timothy gave the font. In 1655 Matthew gave the silver chalice and paten. There is a magnificent memorial to him and his wife, also depicting their twelve children, in Richmond Parish Church. He was followed in 1666 by his grandson, John Hutton, who put in the two windows in the south aisle and the sundial. The second, third and fourth John Huttons are buried under the Church floor and there is a memorial to the fourth John Hutton on the north wall of the sanctuary.



It seems that it was not until the time of the fourth John Hutton that anything more was done to the Church. Again there was a diocesan reprimand in 1822, and in 1823 John Hutton rebuilt the chancel and put in the box pews on top of the graves of his father and grandfather. He also added the porch and the crenellation around the roof.

In 1896 the present East window was given in memory of Colonel John Cameron who rented the Hall from the Huttons at this period. The Georgian silver candlesticks were given in 1966 in memory of Mrs D'Arcy Sykes who was a daughter of Timothy Hutton. These candlesticks are now deposited in Ripon Cathedral.



The village of Marske in Norman times was a community of foresters and huntsmen. Subsequently it developed into coal and lead mining, while farming became viable much later. Until the 18th century all the cottages were single storey and thatched with heather. The thatched roofs were very steep, sometimes almost touching the ground. The housing was improved in the 18th century and stone slates replaced the ling thatch. Because the stone slate roofs could be made much less steep, it -was possible to raise the walls and add another storey to the cottages. Many gable ends show evidence of this.



The Rectory was built in 1755 by the ten Rector Richard Horne at a cost of £185! It also housed a preparatory school for Richmond Grammar School. The magnificent stables near the Hall are also of this period.



The obelisk at the high point od Deer Park, south of the village, marks the burial place of Matthew Hutton who died in 1813. He requested that he be buried in his favourite place overlooking all the Hutton estate.



The ornamental gardens were made in 1836 when the new Downholme Bridge was built and gave access to the turnpike road down Swaledale. The Huttons gave land to make a road to connect the village with this bridge and this cut through their drive and left the lime avenue isolated. They pulled down the old manorial corn mill by Marske Bridge and made the splendid gardens at the other side of the road.



The Huttons built Marske Lodge at the beginning of the 20th century and at about the same time the family ceased living in Marske. When John Timothy D’Arcy Hutton died the inheritance passed to a nephew who sold the whole estate in 1960 without even seeing it.



Today the village has no resident squire, parson, doctor or publican but village life remains very strong.



(From a leaflet someone online picked up in St. Edmund's Church)







The Church is dedicated to St Edmund, who was a Saxon King and Saint put to death by the Danes in AD 870. It is known that the bones of St Cuthbert rested in Marske for a time during the period when the monks were protecting them from the Danes who had sacked the abbey at Lindisfarne in AD 793. The saint's bones were later put to rest at Chester-le-Street and finally in Durham Cathedral.



This seems to point to an earlier church on the site of the present one founded in AD 1090. The north and south doors and the hexagonal pillars are from the Norman building. In a recess in the north aisle is a pointed stone tracery arch, carved from one block of stone, which may be the East window from this time. There are also theories that either the square stone base of the font or the square stone base of the 1914-1918 War Memorial is the base of a Norman or earlier cross.



Little except the names of the clergy is known until Matthew Hutton, Archbishop of York, bought the Marske estate for his son Timothy in 1597. The Church registers start from this date. From this time the history of the Church and village is closely linked with the Hutton family and there is no record of them building a chapel in the Hall. The family produced two Archbishops, two High Sheriffs of Yorkshire and a very famous stallion called Marske. This was the sire of Eclipse from whom most British racehorses are descended including Mill Reef, Nijinsky and Northern Dancer.



In 1634 following a reprimand from the Bishop-of Chester, Matthew Hutton the ¬squire paid for repairs to the chancel, paving the floor (which been mud-strewn with rushes) and "some seating". His brother Timothy gave the font. In 1655 Matthew gave the silver chalice and paten. There is a magnificent memorial to him and his wife, also depicting their twelve children, in Richmond Parish Church. He was followed in 1666 by his grandson, John Hutton, who put in the two windows in the south aisle and the sundial. The second, third and fourth John Huttons are buried under the Church floor and there is a memorial to the fourth John Hutton on the north wall of the sanctuary.



It seems that it was not until the time of the fourth John Hutton that anything more was done to the Church. Again there was a diocesan reprimand in 1822, and in 1823 John Hutton rebuilt the chancel and put in the box pews on top of the graves of his father and grandfather. He also added the porch and the crenellation around the roof.

In 1896 the present East window was given in memory of Colonel John Cameron who rented the Hall from the Huttons at this period. The Georgian silver candlesticks were given in 1966 in memory of Mrs D'Arcy Sykes who was a daughter of Timothy Hutton. These candlesticks are now deposited in Ripon Cathedral.



The village of Marske in Norman times was a community of foresters and huntsmen. Subsequently it developed into coal and lead mining, while farming became viable much later. Until the 18th century all the cottages were single storey and thatched with heather. The thatched roofs were very steep, sometimes almost touching the ground. The housing was improved in the 18th century and stone slates replaced the ling thatch. Because the stone slate roofs could be made much less steep, it -was possible to raise the walls and add another storey to the cottages. Many gable ends show evidence of this.



The Rectory was built in 1755 by the ten Rector Richard Horne at a cost of £185! It also housed a preparatory school for Richmond Grammar School. The magnificent stables near the Hall are also of this period.



The obelisk at the high point od Deer Park, south of the village, marks the burial place of Matthew Hutton who died in 1813. He requested that he be buried in his favourite place overlooking all the Hutton estate.



The ornamental gardens were made in 1836 when the new Downholme Bridge was built and gave access to the turnpike road down Swaledale. The Huttons gave land to make a road to connect the village with this bridge and this cut through their drive and left the lime avenue isolated. They pulled down the old manorial corn mill by Marske Bridge and made the splendid gardens at the other side of the road.



The Huttons built Marske Lodge at the beginning of the 20th century and at about the same time the family ceased living in Marske. When John Timothy D’Arcy Hutton died the inheritance passed to a nephew who sold the whole estate in 1960 without even seeing it.



Today the village has no resident squire, parson, doctor or publican but village life remains very strong.



(From a leaflet someone online picked up in St. Edmund's Church)







The Church is dedicated to St Edmund, who was a Saxon King and Saint put to death by the Danes in AD 870. It is known that the bones of St Cuthbert rested in Marske for a time during the period when the monks were protecting them from the Danes who had sacked the abbey at Lindisfarne in AD 793. The saint's bones were later put to rest at Chester-le-Street and finally in Durham Cathedral.



This seems to point to an earlier church on the site of the present one founded in AD 1090. The north and south doors and the hexagonal pillars are from the Norman building. In a recess in the north aisle is a pointed stone tracery arch, carved from one block of stone, which may be the East window from this time. There are also theories that either the square stone base of the font or the square stone base of the 1914-1918 War Memorial is the base of a Norman or earlier cross.



Little except the names of the clergy is known until Matthew Hutton, Archbishop of York, bought the Marske estate for his son Timothy in 1597. The Church registers start from this date. From this time the history of the Church and village is closely linked with the Hutton family and there is no record of them building a chapel in the Hall. The family produced two Archbishops, two High Sheriffs of Yorkshire and a very famous stallion called Marske. This was the sire of Eclipse from whom most British racehorses are descended including Mill Reef, Nijinsky and Northern Dancer.



In 1634 following a reprimand from the Bishop-of Chester, Matthew Hutton the ¬squire paid for repairs to the chancel, paving the floor (which been mud-strewn with rushes) and "some seating". His brother Timothy gave the font. In 1655 Matthew gave the silver chalice and paten. There is a magnificent memorial to him and his wife, also depicting their twelve children, in Richmond Parish Church. He was followed in 1666 by his grandson, John Hutton, who put in the two windows in the south aisle and the sundial. The second, third and fourth John Huttons are buried under the Church floor and there is a memorial to the fourth John Hutton on the north wall of the sanctuary.



It seems that it was not until the time of the fourth John Hutton that anything more was done to the Church. Again there was a diocesan reprimand in 1822, and in 1823 John Hutton rebuilt the chancel and put in the box pews on top of the graves of his father and grandfather. He also added the porch and the crenellation around the roof.

In 1896 the present East window was given in memory of Colonel John Cameron who rented the Hall from the Huttons at this period. The Georgian silver candlesticks were given in 1966 in memory of Mrs D'Arcy Sykes who was a daughter of Timothy Hutton. These candlesticks are now deposited in Ripon Cathedral.



The village of Marske in Norman times was a community of foresters and huntsmen. Subsequently it developed into coal and lead mining, while farming became viable much later. Until the 18th century all the cottages were single storey and thatched with heather. The thatched roofs were very steep, sometimes almost touching the ground. The housing was improved in the 18th century and stone slates replaced the ling thatch. Because the stone slate roofs could be made much less steep, it -was possible to raise the walls and add another storey to the cottages. Many gable ends show evidence of this.



The Rectory was built in 1755 by the ten Rector Richard Horne at a cost of £185! It also housed a preparatory school for Richmond Grammar School. The magnificent stables near the Hall are also of this period.



The obelisk at the high point od Deer Park, south of the village, marks the burial place of Matthew Hutton who died in 1813. He requested that he be buried in his favourite place overlooking all the Hutton estate.



The ornamental gardens were made in 1836 when the new Downholme Bridge was built and gave access to the turnpike road down Swaledale. The Huttons gave land to make a road to connect the village with this bridge and this cut through their drive and left the lime avenue isolated. They pulled down the old manorial corn mill by Marske Bridge and made the splendid gardens at the other side of the road.



The Huttons built Marske Lodge at the beginning of the 20th century and at about the same time the family ceased living in Marske. When John Timothy D’Arcy Hutton died the inheritance passed to a nephew who sold the whole estate in 1960 without even seeing it.



Today the village has no resident squire, parson, doctor or publican but village life remains very strong.



(From a leaflet someone online picked up in St. Edmund's Church)









The Church is dedicated to St Edmund, who was a Saxon King and Saint put to death by the Danes in AD 870. It is known that the bones of St Cuthbert rested in Marske for a time during the period when the monks were protecting them from the Danes who had sacked the abbey at Lindisfarne in AD 793. The saint's bones were later put to rest at Chester-le-Street and finally in Durham Cathedral.



This seems to point to an earlier church on the site of the present one founded in AD 1090. The north and south doors and the hexagonal pillars are from the Norman building. In a recess in the north aisle is a pointed stone tracery arch, carved from one block of stone, which may be the East window from this time. There are also theories that either the square stone base of the font or the square stone base of the 1914-1918 War Memorial is the base of a Norman or earlier cross.



Little except the names of the clergy is known until Matthew Hutton, Archbishop of York, bought the Marske estate for his son Timothy in 1597. The Church registers start from this date. From this time the history of the Church and village is closely linked with the Hutton family and there is no record of them building a chapel in the Hall. The family produced two Archbishops, two High Sheriffs of Yorkshire and a very famous stallion called Marske. This was the sire of Eclipse from whom most British racehorses are descended including Mill Reef, Nijinsky and Northern Dancer.



In 1634 following a reprimand from the Bishop-of Chester, Matthew Hutton the ¬squire paid for repairs to the chancel, paving the floor (which been mud-strewn with rushes) and "some seating". His brother Timothy gave the font. In 1655 Matthew gave the silver chalice and paten. There is a magnificent memorial to him and his wife, also depicting their twelve children, in Richmond Parish Church. He was followed in 1666 by his grandson, John Hutton, who put in the two windows in the south aisle and the sundial. The second, third and fourth John Huttons are buried under the Church floor and there is a memorial to the fourth John Hutton on the north wall of the sanctuary.



It seems that it was not until the time of the fourth John Hutton that anything more was done to the Church. Again there was a diocesan reprimand in 1822, and in 1823 John Hutton rebuilt the chancel and put in the box pews on top of the graves of his father and grandfather. He also added the porch and the crenellation around the roof.

In 1896 the present East window was given in memory of Colonel John Cameron who rented the Hall from the Huttons at this period. The Georgian silver candlesticks were given in 1966 in memory of Mrs D'Arcy Sykes who was a daughter of Timothy Hutton. These candlesticks are now deposited in Ripon Cathedral.



The village of Marske in Norman times was a community of foresters and huntsmen. Subsequently it developed into coal and lead mining, while farming became viable much later. Until the 18th century all the cottages were single storey and thatched with heather. The thatched roofs were very steep, sometimes almost touching the ground. The housing was improved in the 18th century and stone slates replaced the ling thatch. Because the stone slate roofs could be made much less steep, it -was possible to raise the walls and add another storey to the cottages. Many gable ends show evidence of this.



The Rectory was built in 1755 by the ten Rector Richard Horne at a cost of £185! It also housed a preparatory school for Richmond Grammar School. The magnificent stables near the Hall are also of this period.



The obelisk at the high point od Deer Park, south of the village, marks the burial place of Matthew Hutton who died in 1813. He requested that he be buried in his favourite place overlooking all the Hutton estate.



The ornamental gardens were made in 1836 when the new Downholme Bridge was built and gave access to the turnpike road down Swaledale. The Huttons gave land to make a road to connect the village with this bridge and this cut through their drive and left the lime avenue isolated. They pulled down the old manorial corn mill by Marske Bridge and made the splendid gardens at the other side of the road.



The Huttons built Marske Lodge at the beginning of the 20th century and at about the same time the family ceased living in Marske. When John Timothy D’Arcy Hutton died the inheritance passed to a nephew who sold the whole estate in 1960 without even seeing it.



Today the village has no resident squire, parson, doctor or publican but village life remains very strong.



(From a leaflet someone online picked up in St. Edmund's Church)









The Church is dedicated to St Edmund, who was a Saxon King and Saint put to death by the Danes in AD 870. It is known that the bones of St Cuthbert rested in Marske for a time during the period when the monks were protecting them from the Danes who had sacked the abbey at Lindisfarne in AD 793. The saint's bones were later put to rest at Chester-le-Street and finally in Durham Cathedral.



This seems to point to an earlier church on the site of the present one founded in AD 1090. The north and south doors and the hexagonal pillars are from the Norman building. In a recess in the north aisle is a pointed stone tracery arch, carved from one block of stone, which may be the East window from this time. There are also theories that either the square stone base of the font or the square stone base of the 1914-1918 War Memorial is the base of a Norman or earlier cross.



Little except the names of the clergy is known until Matthew Hutton, Archbishop of York, bought the Marske estate for his son Timothy in 1597. The Church registers start from this date. From this time the history of the Church and village is closely linked with the Hutton family and there is no record of them building a chapel in the Hall. The family produced two Archbishops, two High Sheriffs of Yorkshire and a very famous stallion called Marske. This was the sire of Eclipse from whom most British racehorses are descended including Mill Reef, Nijinsky and Northern Dancer.



In 1634 following a reprimand from the Bishop-of Chester, Matthew Hutton the ¬squire paid for repairs to the chancel, paving the floor (which been mud-strewn with rushes) and "some seating". His brother Timothy gave the font. In 1655 Matthew gave the silver chalice and paten. There is a magnificent memorial to him and his wife, also depicting their twelve children, in Richmond Parish Church. He was followed in 1666 by his grandson, John Hutton, who put in the two windows in the south aisle and the sundial. The second, third and fourth John Huttons are buried under the Church floor and there is a memorial to the fourth John Hutton on the north wall of the sanctuary.



It seems that it was not until the time of the fourth John Hutton that anything more was done to the Church. Again there was a diocesan reprimand in 1822, and in 1823 John Hutton rebuilt the chancel and put in the box pews on top of the graves of his father and grandfather. He also added the porch and the crenellation around the roof.

In 1896 the present East window was given in memory of Colonel John Cameron who rented the Hall from the Huttons at this period. The Georgian silver candlesticks were given in 1966 in memory of Mrs D'Arcy Sykes who was a daughter of Timothy Hutton. These candlesticks are now deposited in Ripon Cathedral.



The village of Marske in Norman times was a community of foresters and huntsmen. Subsequently it developed into coal and lead mining, while farming became viable much later. Until the 18th century all the cottages were single storey and thatched with heather. The thatched roofs were very steep, sometimes almost touching the ground. The housing was improved in the 18th century and stone slates replaced the ling thatch. Because the stone slate roofs could be made much less steep, it -was possible to raise the walls and add another storey to the cottages. Many gable ends show evidence of this.



The Rectory was built in 1755 by the ten Rector Richard Horne at a cost of £185! It also housed a preparatory school for Richmond Grammar School. The magnificent stables near the Hall are also of this period.



The obelisk at the high point od Deer Park, south of the village, marks the burial place of Matthew Hutton who died in 1813. He requested that he be buried in his favourite place overlooking all the Hutton estate.



The ornamental gardens were made in 1836 when the new Downholme Bridge was built and gave access to the turnpike road down Swaledale. The Huttons gave land to make a road to connect the village with this bridge and this cut through their drive and left the lime avenue isolated. They pulled down the old manorial corn mill by Marske Bridge and made the splendid gardens at the other side of the road.



The Huttons built Marske Lodge at the beginning of the 20th century and at about the same time the family ceased living in Marske. When John Timothy D’Arcy Hutton died the inheritance passed to a nephew who sold the whole estate in 1960 without even seeing it.



Today the village has no resident squire, parson, doctor or publican but village life remains very strong.



(From a leaflet someone online picked up in St. Edmund's Church)

Latitude: , Longitude:


Birth

Matches 1 to 50 of 308

1 2 3 4 5 ... Next»

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Birth    Person ID 
1 ADDAMS, Ann  Bef 1684I11750
2 ASCOUGH, Margaret  22 Jun 1682I10730
3 BATEMAN, Thomas  21 Jan 1731I8620
4 BELL, Christopher  23 Dec 1738I9918
5 BELL, Isobel  12 Aug 1736I9919
6 BINKS, Francis  1818I10113
7 BLINKIRON, Bartholomew  1771I10346
8 BROWN, George Ronald  10 Dec 1903I10410
9 CARTER, Fanny  1840I14986
10 CLARKSON, Nicholas  7 Nov 1648I7204
11 CLARKSON, Richard  15 Jul 1688I7202
12 CLARKSON, Timothy  15 Oct 1636I7333
13 CLEMINSON, Ethel Mary  1895I10608
14 CLEMINSON, Isabel Jane  1893I10611
15 CLESEBY, Agnes  I8933
16 CLESEBY, Elizabeth  I8902
17 CLESEBY, Harsculph  I8934
18 CLESEBY, John  I8928
19 CLESEBY, Peter  I8929
20 CLESEBY, Richard  I8930
21 CLESEBY, Robert  Abt 1440I8903
22 CLESEBY, Roger  I8931
23 CLESEBY, Thomas  I8932
24 CLESEBY, Thomas  Abt 1400I8905
25 COATES, A Child  Jun 1723I7261
26 COATES, Alice  Mar 1650I7195
27 COATES, Ann  3 May 1640I7197
28 COATES, Ann  1828I7216
29 COATES, Anthony  Abt 1681I7257
30 COATES, David  23 Feb 1768I7193
31 COATES, Dorothy  16 Apr 1638I7198
32 COATES, Eden  16 Jul 1648I7199
33 COATES, Elizabeth  28 Jan 1685I7274
34 COATES, Elizabeth  22 Mar 1704I7268
35 COATES, Elizabeth  17 Dec 1765I7249
36 COATES, Elizabeth  1823I7218
37 COATES, Ester  20 May 1770I7192
38 COATES, Frances  1 Jul 1705I7270
39 COATES, George  16 Mar 1740I7180
40 COATES, George  13 Oct 1773I7247
41 COATES, George  1825I7217
42 COATES, Jane  24 May 1743I7183
43 COATES, Jane  1836I7212
44 COATES, John  Abt 1665I7258
45 COATES, John  28 Sep 1760I7160
46 COATES, John  1 Oct 1778I7290
47 COATES, John  1832I7214
48 COATES, Joseph  20 Mar 1737I7166
49 COATES, Joseph  10 Feb 1800I7205
50 COATES, Joseph  1830I7215

1 2 3 4 5 ... Next»



Death

Matches 1 to 50 of 156

1 2 3 4 Next»

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Death    Person ID 
1 ASCOUGH, Mary  29 Nov 1681I10744
2 BLACKBURN, Lucia  Jan 1717I1654
3 BUCKTIN, Margaret  8 Apr 1713I11761
4 CARTER, Susanna  Nov 1751I1649
5 CLARKSON, Francis  1682I7273
6 CLARKSON, Francis  4 Nov 1688I7203
7 CLARKSON, Nicholas  21 Dec 1690I7204
8 CLARKSON, Timothy  1690I7333
9 CLESEBY, Thomas  1450I8905
10 COATES, A Child  29 Jun 1723I7261
11 COATES, Anthony  29 Apr 1712I7200
12 COATES, Dorothy  2 Nov 1701I7198
13 COATES, Eden  30 Mar 1727I7199
14 COATES, Elizabeth  31 May 1713I7268
15 COATES, Elizabeth  2 Sep 1750I7185
16 COATES, Elizabeth  10 Mar 1845I7218
17 COATES, Frances  5 Apr 1713I7270
18 COATES, George  2 Apr 1740I7180
19 COATES, Jane  2 Jun 1751I7183
20 COATES, John  17 Dec 1726I7258
21 COATES, John  13 Jan 1830I7160
22 COATES, John  16 Apr 1850I7158
23 COATES, Joseph  27 Feb 1782I7166
24 COATES, Mary  17 Aug 1844I7210
25 COATES, Matthew  18 Feb 1779I7246
26 COATES, Richard  23 Aug 1696I7165
27 COATES, Richard  3 Jun 1723I7252
28 COATES, Richard  9 Nov 1776I7251
29 COATES, Thomas  9 Jun 1845I7213
30 COATES, Thomasin  9 Mar 1719I7269
31 COATES, William  8 Mar 1798I7206
32 COATES, William  15 Sep 1836I7184
33 COLLING, Sarah  Sep 1800I870
34 CONYERS, Christopher  1504I7691
35 CONYERS, Joan  I7671
36 CONYERS, William  11 Sep 1495I8890
37 CONYERS, William  1554I7683
38 CONYERS, William Esq.  1558I7677
39 CORBETT, Hutton  Bef 1673I7345
40 CORBETT, William  1626I7672
41 CORBIT, Bryan  31 Jul 1709I7338
42 CORBIT, Elizabeth  20 Jan 1655I7305
43 CORBIT, Frances  13 Dec 1654I7304
44 CORBIT, Frances  28 Jul 1693I7337
45 CORBIT, Frances  13 Feb 1741I7341
46 CORBIT, Jon  1 Nov 1693I7336
47 CORBIT, Mary  18 Dec 1694I7299
48 CORBIT, Matthew  13 Dec 1654I7303
49 CORBIT, Matthew  17 Nov 1707I7339
50 CORBIT, Stillborn Child  15 Sep 1656I7300

1 2 3 4 Next»



Burial

Matches 1 to 11 of 11

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Burial    Person ID 
1 BLACKBURN, Lucia  29 Jan 1717I1654
2 CARTER, Susanna  6 Nov 1751I1649
3 COLLING, Sarah  7 Sep 1800I870
4 HUTCHINSON, Annie Maria  7 Dec 1935I9967
5 HUTTON, Matthew  28 Dec 1813I8959
6 WARD, John  2 Jul 1727I1661
7 WARD, John  16 Mar 1753I1645
8 WARD, Mary  3 Apr 1731I1659
9 WARD, Ralph  12 Sep 1750I1646
10 WARD, Robert  27 Jan 1790I1647
11 WARD, Susannah  27 Mar 1824I1657

Baptism

Matches 1 to 8 of 8

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Baptism    Person ID 
1 CLEMINSON, Augustus William  10 Aug 1883I10609
2 COATES, William  2 Jul 1797I7206
3 CORBIT, Bryan  4 Nov 1688I7338
4 MOORE, Ralph  18 Jun 1704I8634
5 WALKER, Mary  2 May 1784I1707
6 WARD, Mary  19 Jan 1731I1659
7 WARD, Ralph  10 Jul 1703I1665
8 WARD, Simon  25 Sep 1757I543

Birth

Matches 1 to 1 of 1

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Birth    Person ID 
1 HUTCHINSON, Joseph  I17458

Death

Matches 1 to 2 of 2

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Death    Person ID 
1 COATES, Richard  I7251
2 PLACE, John  26 Jul 1801I18670

Marriage

Matches 1 to 50 of 90

1 2 Next»

   Family    Marriage    Family ID 
1 Bateman / Moore  27 Jun 1730F2915
2 Bathurst / Willance  27 Jan 1635F2295
3 Bell / Moore  17 Feb 1724F2786
4 Bell / Unknown  Aft 1735F2785
5 Binks / Fenwick  8 Jun 1852F2838
6 Binks / Shaw  23 May 1825F2836
7 Blenkiron / Hodgson  9 Sep 1854F6132
8 Brown / Peacock  25 Nov 1886F2920
9 Brown / Perrigo  1 Jun 1924F8886
10 Cansick / Metcalfe  11 Jun 1827F2938
11 Chapman / Harker  22 Nov 1823F2713
12 Clarkson / Coates  29 Jan 1684F2181
13 Clements / Wilkinson  30 Apr 1807F6063
14 Cleminson / Iveson  31 Aug 1882F2973
15 Cleseby / Unknown  23 Jul 1438F2520
16 Coates / Ascough  29 May 1703F2184
17 Coates / Catchasides  29 Dec 1766F2166
18 Coates / Hearton  6 Dec 1784F2168
19 Coates / Metcalfe  23 Nov 1820F2169
20 Coates / Potter  3 May 1736F2163
21 Coates / Richardson  2 Jan 1758F2164
22 Coates / Unknown  13 Sep 1635F2175
23 Coates / Unknown  Bef 1720F2179
24 Coates / Unknown  Abt 1730F2204
25 Corbet / Ward  16 Apr 1653F2187
26 Corbit / Mawer  10 Feb 1683F2194
27 Fawcett / Iveson  4 Mar 1890F2971
28 Fryer / Hammond  10 Jan 1861F4304
29 Fryer / Wilkinson  24 Apr 1854F2258
30 Gill / Coates  3 May 1696F2183
31 Gill / Unknown  Abt 1720F2199
32 Heseltine / Catchasides  11 Jul 1770F3134
33 Hodgson / Cockfield  2 Jul 1853F6190
34 Hodgson / Fawcett  4 May 1921F6537
35 Hodgson / Ward  7 Feb 1747F684
36 Hutchinson / Addams  25 Aug 1703F3346
37 Hutchinson / Bucktin  1 Jun 1708F3350
38 Hutchinson / Bywell  22 Jan 1756F3341
39 Hutchinson / Coates  21 Jan 1714F3349
40 Hutchinson / Ellwood  17 May 1792F6068
41 Hutchinson / Gastel  5 Jun 1705F3353
42 Hutchinson / Houseman  29 Jan 1810F3488
43 Hutchinson / Musgrave  8 Apr 1716F3333
44 Hutchinson / Musgrave  30 May 1732F3343
45 Hutchinson / Parkin  26 Nov 1702F3334
46 Hutchinson / Scrafton  13 Aug 1764F3477
47 Hutchinson / Shaw  21 Feb 1680F3340
48 Hutchinson / Simpson  5 Jun 1734F6073
49 Hutchinson / Unknown  Bef 1714F3347
50 Hutchinson / Ward  27 Feb 1749F1558

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