Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Microsoft Solitaire - an addiction or a pastime

The last day of the month and I completed my Microsoft Solitaire games. I have been playing this set of five games every morning since October 2013. It has been fun actually. I love Solitaire and Microsoft has chosen my five preferred solitaire games. Occasionally I do play some of their other games but not very often. There are not enough hours in the day!

Isolation day 18 and the 31st of March. I wonder how many people saw this coming. I wondered how long it would take to reach us here in Canada. Memories of the adults talking about the Spanish Flu swept back into my mind in late January; how it crept around the world; crept into Canada. No TV in those days to keep us up to date by the hour on how the contagion is spreading. There was real fear in the faces of my relatives as they talked about the Spanish Flu. They were still washing their hands vigorously in those days; washing mine vigorously as I recalled. Perhaps that will be what stays in the minds of people this time too; the need to be constantly washing ones hands.

A month ago I started to really think about it. Being 74, our age group is most susceptible to succumb to COVID-19 although not exclusively it would appear. It was wonderful that younger children are less affected. Our youth must inherit this world. Are they enjoying, around the world, the fresher air as industry has ground to a halt? They will eventually inherit it all and control it all. What will they think of our generation; the generation that follows us. I was born in September of 1945. The war in Europe had been over for four months and the war in the East had been over for one month. I am a baby boomer in those terms but I was a year ahead in school so never really thought of myself as a baby boomer. All of my classmates for the most part were born in 1944 or 1943.

I accomplished very little on Chromosome 2 yesterday. Just a few lines but they were interesting, a match with my Pincombe cousins that I had missed earlier although I had noted that the individual could be Pincombe; but they are actually matching one of my third cousins but not the other six Pincombes that are in that particular database.

I managed 188 minutes of active exercise; we went for a walk in the rain. It was quite pleasant actually and we weren't the only ones. Although most of the people were walking their dogs. Today looks a little brighter but no sun yet.

Started the weekly task of cleaning and scrubbing. I spread it out these days; the arthritis in my hands does complicate all of those chores.

The WHO website keeps us up to date on life during COVID-19. Today there are 801,117 (increase of 67,054) cases worldwide, 38,540 deaths (increase of 3,718) and 161,542 recovered (increase of 9,753). There are now 161,542 people with antibodies worldwide. That is wondrous to see. In Canada we have 7,435 cases (increase of 1,118), there have been 89 deaths (increase of 23) and 1,079 recovered (increase of 571). We are now 16th in the world, Portugal has passed us.

Tomorrow is April 1st and my paternal grandmother's birthday. She was born in 1876; 144 years ago.  I know so much about her mother and her mother's parents with whom she lived until her mother married William Taylor in 1882. Her grandparents didn't care that she was illegitimate; she was their daughter's child and they loved her I assume. It was wondrous to discover her on the census with them in 1881 listed as their grand daughter. I have a picture of that grandfather and he has a big smile. His sons have held him up in the picture because he was likely paralyzed by them (mentioned on his death registration). Family pride showed in their picture. They weren't wealthy; they were hard working. It is a family that has spread around the world but particularly to Australia. Will I ever discover my grandmother's father? DNA has led me towards that individual but no close matches yet although I do have one match that is 77 centimorgans (one solid length) that I think might be his line. I just marked it the purple colour I use for her line and haven't really thought beyond that yet. Perhaps in these months ahead I will think more about it especially when I reach Chromosome five.

Goodbye March; you will be a month forever remembered and the generations to follow will carry in their souls the reminder that COVID-19 came to Canada in March (it was already here but in March it dominated our lives; controlled our lives and had the biggest impact on our skies than anything in the past century).


Monday, March 30, 2020

Approaching April

Looking out the window at 7:00 am and no traffic once again. One solitary figure walking pushing a baby carriage and a dog on a leash ahead of him. What a strange Monday morning to start a new week that takes us into April. The month of regrowth, renewal as the small animals appear out of their winter hiding spots. The chipmunk (or maybe there are more) has arrived back sitting upon the bird feeder demanding his morning feed. Generations of them have lived in our yard somewhere emerging every spring and looking for the bird seed on the tray. They do not eat a lot but they have certainly become part of the family. Enough so that they run across in front of us moving hither and yon around the yard.

Yesterday I mused about life after COVID-19 but I really do wonder if mercantilism will take charge once again and the larger corporations will continue to choke off the smaller ones if they stand in their way of controlling empires of purchasing. That has been the way of the human race it would appear if one looks at history. Always aggressive; always wanting more. It has got us where we are although I suspect many of us are much more mellow than our ancestors were.

I did manage to get in some time on Chromosome 2 but double vision plagued me yesterday for some reason. Probably too much computer time so will set that aside today and watch a movie instead of concentrating on the computer. There is a desire on my part to collect and preserve what I have done thus far in the one name studies and I may direct more time to that over the coming weeks.

But overall this is another day like the last. Isolation Day 17 has dawned somewhat gloomy but that is April for you; a rainy month that brings forth the best that Mother Nature has. There is nothing like the spring as the trees burst into bud, the grass turns green and the small creatures that surround us emerge from their winter darkness to the banquet to come as summer beckons us forward.

Will COVID-19 retreat just a little as the weather improves? That would be helpful although with our physical distancing we may just slow down this march towards death for so many. I guess in the back of my mind is the thought will COVID-19 return to ravage us once again as the long days of autumn return and winter to follow? But for the moment no thought of that; summer beckons us to welcome spring more fully as April waits around the corner.

Sunday, March 29, 2020

What will life be like on the other side of COVID-19?

A gloomy day here today and possibly rain. Rain is a good thing; it washes away the snow and weakens that four inches (10 centimetres) of ice that sits under the snow. But I find myself wondering what life will be like after COVID-19 has passed through. In theory, life will just pick up where it left off and move forward. I am hoping that life will change a little. Home industries will be created to support the fight against COVID-19 and I, for one, am hoping that these industries succeed and remain instead of being swallowed up by huge companies. Hopefully this will teach us the lesson that having needed supplies produced closer to home is always good. Supporting those industries even though they may look like they cost more is good policy. When times are bad they will still be producing and the products are readily available where they are needed. The regrowth of Canadian industries would be a marvelous gift of COVID-19 since there will be very few pluses on that side.

I can remember as a child visiting older relatives the discussion around the Spanish Flu. In the early 1950s it was just 30 years earlier and one of my great grandparents died in that time period. My mother thought he died of the Spanish Flu but his death registration did not list that as his cause of death. He was in a tent though on the property which was common apparently during those times of the Spanish Flu. She lived on a farm and he must have been brought there from his home in a village nearby. Even 30 years later people talked in hushed tones about the Spanish Flu. It must have been terrible at that time. Of course no electric ventilators to help people. The toll according to historical reference was 25 to 39 million as cited in 1991 and later in 2005 estimated at probably 50 million to 100 million which represented 3 to 5% of the population. But by 2018 the total was estimated at around 17 million (in the 50s I can vaguely recall 18 to 20 million being the numbers mentioned and that would have been closer to 1 to 2% of the population). It was thought to have infected 500 million people (1/3rd of the population) around the world.

But this is 2020 and all of the attributes of modern medicine are at our disposal. The death toll has now exceeded 30,000 and we are just really at the beginning of the pandemic. By smoothing the curve we save people (especially health care workers) because our hospitals will be able to manage a steady influx of patients but not a huge crest of patients. The numbers are a mystery; we have no idea where it will all end up.

The numbers today 677,622 worldwide cases (increase of 80,370 over the last 24 hour cycle), 31,750 deaths (increase of 4,385 over the last 24 hour cycle) and 141,698 recovered (increase of 8,335 over the last 24 hour cycle). Canada is number 15 on the World Health Organization list at 5,607 cases, 61 deaths and 479 recovered. We are the 39th most populous country in the world at 37,742,154 people. The reality though is this is the beginning of COVID-19 worldwide. Like all new diseases we either have to have the disease to have immunity or we need to be vaccinated. No vaccine yet so immunity is only gained by having the disease. It will take several waves to give immunity to most people in Canada unless a vaccine comes in between the first and second wave. That is where we are sitting at the moment.

I am optimistic though that in the end we will come out of this actually stronger than we went in. The growth of native born industries will help us to prosper once again and we need to keep those industries. We need to support those industries and not be led astray by larger companies promising cheaper prices. Where our essential facilities are concerned we need to be more cautious.

The loss of a portion of an entire generation of the elderly (and I am one of that group now) will be painful; you can see that in Italy. We tend, as a whole, to support local industry and spend a lot of money. We are in the stores every day spending money helping to support the local economy especially. But not all of us; too many go south and spend their money in the southern states for five months of the year. Perhaps that will end for a bit and the money will stay here and support Canada. I could scarce believe that 400,000 Canadians were in the south needing to come back. Add to that they were careless thinking they could stop and shop on their way back to their homes when they arrived in Canada. Quebec has paid the price dearly for that foolishness and hopefully we will not pay the price here in Ontario. We have gone to Florida for a week in the winter and it is fun but to spend so much money there when it could be spent here; that has always bothered me.

Yesterday we completed the puzzle; it is quite the beautiful scene. A lot of work went into it but we enjoy doing puzzles.

I also got started on Chromosome two and will continue working on that today.

Isolation Day 16 and I suspect we will not go anywhere other than home spots or a walk around the block until after Isolation Day 40.

Saturday, March 28, 2020

Colourful sunrise across the sky

Another beautiful sunrise and now the sun shining brilliantly. The snow will melt today; not all of it but more will be gone. Love the snow but glad to see it go in the spring. Mud season is upon us.

Yesterday I completed my look at the phasing of Chromosome one. I am happy with it finally. Today I move to Chromosome two; same pattern, paint all the matches that I have and see how that compares with my phasing of my grandparents. A good check on the entire process and lets me see what I have acquired over the last year in matches that I did not paint at the time.

Great day for exercise. Still too many minutes as I am quite tired by evening; 195 minutes but 30 minutes of that is Yoga and we did add to our walk yesterday. Walking outside was a complicated process to keep up with physical distancing but we managed and added another 1000 steps to our regular walk with just a few additions. Closing streets sounds like a good plan actually. I see that we are not to go more than 2 kilometres from home; I didn't realize that. Our walk though is never more than that anyway and in a circular motion around where we live.

I was on a Microsoft Teams call with other members of the Guild around the world trying out a system to do the Annual Meeting since that has been cancelled in the United Kingdom. Still necessary to do an Annual Meeting though and a great opportunity to bring in the entire world. There are more than five thousand members of the Guild worldwide. I have gotten to know a number of them over time. The Guild is a must organization if you are doing a one name study as so many of the English members do Marriage Challenges which add greatly to a study like Blake or even Pincombe. But for Blake I have acquired thousands of marriages with full details which I am just now thinking I could work on organizing all those details into Excel Charts. I have an overall chart extracted from Free BMD for all the marriages but it does not contain all the details I have obtained. They are in separate Excel Charts or images depending on how I receive the material.

Isolation Day 15 and we begin the second set of a two week interval. Personally I think we will be locked down for four sets or eight weeks which should really help to flatten the curve. I do not expect to see any loosening of that at all. It will bring us to mid May when we should really see a good effect on the flattening of the curve. There may still be another series of four sets since the funding proposed is looking at a possibility of a four month shutdown. The hospitals in Ontario are at 77% capacity which is really good news at this time of year with flu season just starting to see an end in the next couple of weeks. We do not know whether the cases in ICU centre on care centres/senior residences and perhaps knowing that will help to understand the percentage of use of ICU beds right now. A clearer picture is emerging of the coronavirus and its impact. The lucky ones have the virus and it lasts at least seven days and then recovery; the unlucky ones have the same seven days but at that point pneumonia sets in and then a gradual deterioration in breathing ability and the need for ventilation. Preventing the pneumonia seems the key and one wonders if taking the pneumonia shots (there are two) is helping people. No news on that at the moment.

I am a little later today getting started on my exercises. I have been enjoying watching the sunrise.

Friday, March 27, 2020

Isolation Day 14

Isolation Day 14 and it does look like we are headed towards Isolation Day 28 for sure and probably Isolation Day 56 before we finally see the light at the end of the tunnel. Having now reached Day 14 I have to admit Day 56 doesn't actually look that far away. We have mud season ahead here as the snow melts. Our backyard will be a sodden wasteland which we tend to view from the back patio for at least a couple of weeks. Our walks around the block can continue once a day and physical distancing has worked out fairly well. Younger people seem less in tune with that but I can also remember being their age and in a hurry to get where I was going. We can just stand aside (6 metres away) and let them pass as they hurry on to whatever they are doing. It is good actually for them to keep really busy. Inactivity isn't actually good for the mind.

I never did get back to looking at Chromosome One yesterday but will try to do that today. I did not like the way one of my sibling's results worked up. Four of us tested at 23 and Me and I am using those four results as my key and adding in the fifth one once I am satisfied with the four of us. The fifth one just doesn't seem to look correct and I do not have a sufficient number of matches to smooth it out. However, I did my usual checking of all the different databases and found a couple more results which might just be helpful. Will work away at that today. One new one is nearly 40 centimorgans for three of us and obviously on my paternal grandfather's side although I do not appear to have found that particular line but I still have several of my grandfather's aunts and uncles descendants to bring down to the present. But when I searched my database there was John Scuton Petty son of John Henry Petty and Sarah Anne Butt and my 3rd cousin twice removed. Matching on the Butt line means that he is a double 3rd cousin (and on my paternal grandfather's side as his mother was Maria Jane Knight whose mother was Louisa Butt. I shall have to look at that today but the individual who tested the line was only 20 years of age so I am not likely to find very much.

The puzzle is doing really well. The top is all finished now. It is a thousand pieces; we tend to enjoy that size. It is not so big that it sits for weeks but large enough to be a challenge that just keeps bringing us back again and again through the day.

The United States our next door neighbour has a staggering number of COVID-19 cases. The United States is in a position that I have never seen it in throughout my seventy four years of life. I am used to looking at our great neighbour to the South and admiring how efficiently they have handled a number of crises. But this time the Centre of Disease Control (CDC) just has not been able to control the situation in their usual efficient manner. Generally they appeared to have worked with a fairly free hand unfettered by government controls and they have done it very well. SARS they managed extremely efficiently. I prefer our Medical System here in Canada but they appeared to have made theirs work for them down there. My prayers are with them very much. I can hardly believe that New York is going through such a crisis.

On the home front, I now have both pairs of reading glasses out of play. My husband will try to put the arm back on today. That isn't getting repaired at the Glasses Shop for a while I suspect. 

We made a pound cake the other day (actually it probably weighed closer to three pounds as it is a large 12 inch tube pan. We cut it up into six pieces and freeze five of them. I love it buttered but that comes out of my childhood and English grandparents who buttered their cake to eat with their tea. I copied them as I really enjoy butter on my cake more than icing.

Last night we actually had shrimp for dinner, sweet potato and beans with raw vegetables and crusty bread dipped in an olive oil/spice mixture to start. Our meals are really quite interesting as we have oodles of time to plan them. We stocked up on frozen fish before the great Isolation began. But we also have frozen meat balls, frozen meat patties, frozen pork chops, frozen chicken thighs, frozen ham slices and my favourite eggs but fresh (three dozen in the refrigerator at the moment from a farm about ten kilometres away). I really do dislike freezing my meat; I never think it is quite as nice as fresh. We also bought a large bag of brown rice and although I really prefer white rice in rice pudding we make enough to have a rice pudding every time that we make rice.

We bought a couple of extra bags of flour, some yeast and other baking needs and have done all of our baking of cookies, cakes, etc since the beginning of February. Our new mixer has proven to be very handy. The arthritis in my hands has made it difficult for me to bake the last couple of years but together we are back working away on baking together. We are ready to make bread if need be but I suspect that probably will just be because we want to and not because our country has shut down so much that bread making isn't happening.

The weather is warming up here although still below freezing most nights. The snow is melting and probably early April will see the old piles of it gone. There can still be new snow but it doesn't last long especially once it is April. Easter will be quiet this year. It is Ed's birthday on the 16th and usually we have family to celebrate but not this year. Perhaps we will order food in from the Mandarin. Will think about that as we can always go to the Mandarin sometime down the road when the quarantine is lifted and life returns to normal. Eventually it will. When I was a child there were several quarantines of city blocks in London and they would last a little while and then the signs would come down again. This will be longer; the longest that I have ever seen in my life but it too will pass. In the meantime, we will all just hunker down and wait for the bright sun of the summer and make physical distancing work for us so that eventually we can all get back to work at whatever it is that we retired people do and the younger people can get on with their working lives.

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Snow melting - end of winter

The snow is definitely melting in the backyard. There is maybe half a foot (15 centimetres) on average across the whole back yard now. I haven't been in the back yard walking now for a few days and it is coming into mud season. We have been walking around the block once a day for exercise. It has been relatively easy to maintain physical distancing from anyone.

Our neighbours bought our groceries once again for us; much appreciated that we have fresh milk, eggs, bread, cheese and fruit and some other perishables. We bought frozen meat to last us a month or so and will replenish that in mid April. Not being a large meat eater I could well live on meat substitutes for quite a while.

Spent a little time looking at Chromosome one yesterday now that all the matches have been painted. It is looking quite good now; the two charts - DNA Painter for each of the five siblings (myself included) and the phasing charts that I have produced in Powerpoint for each of us. A little more work on that today and I will proceed to work on Chromosome two.

A teleconference today for the Guild; the system is being tested for an online conference perhaps since the face to face conference was cancelled in England. I didn't really keep up with all the wording in the emails but when asked to help with testing the system to see if it works around the world I did say I would do that.

A lot of exercise again yesterday although I seem to be managing it well. I think our age group needs to keep our lungs in good shape just in case we acquire COVID-19. At least it might give us a fighting chance.

This is Isolation Day 13 and the 26th of March 2020. I think we might be isolation for longer than the 30 days that I originally thought. It may well be into May before we really get into stores again and that probably fairly cautiously.


Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Misty on Isolation Day 12

It has been a few days since we had a bright sunny day. Hoping for the warm sun to be shinning on the swing; it is a bit cold to be outside swinging otherwise! Isolation Day 12 and still snow covered but there is melting. Ground still frozen but the snowdrops have managed to work their way through and one of these days will bloom. You always know that everything is moving along when the snowdrops pop out of the frozen ground.

Yesterday was a day of accomplishment as I completed painting all of the matches for Chromosome 1. Today I shall have a good look at them and see if I can clearly see the maternal and paternal lines on the five different profiles for myself and four siblings. I have just a couple of known matches on Chromosome and all are somewhat small (less than 20 cm and actually less than 15 cm) but their actual relationship to us is known and a look at their tree indicates that our only possible sharing of an ancestor is the one that is shown. I do have some substantial matches on chromosome 1 including a likely double or triple fourth cousin whose parentage is unknown. I have assigned that match as well to the appropriate grandparent line with one caveat he may be matching be on more than my Blake line (he matches me on both Blake and Knight (my Blake great grandparent's surnames). If I am correct that he may also be matching me on my paternal grandmother's line then I have to remain somewhat suspicious but a known Knight descendant is matching on one of his in common matches with myself and siblings so I know that one is likely Knight but the other one I am suggested it belong to my paternal grandfathers side but another match is really needed to collaborate that. My Blake-Farmer descendancy is huge (my 2x great grandparents Blake) and that is perhaps showing up with some of these matches that appear to be Blake (I have between 12 and 18 pages of matches that all match each other at 23 and Me).

The puzzle also benefited from our time yesterday. I filled in more of the tree area on the upper part of the puzzle and I am now working on the lower part of the trees working downwards towards the creek and rocks. It is a really nice puzzle and we have two more like it to work at later.

Still looking overcast but a little brighter so perhaps we will get some sun this afternoon.

COVID-19 dominates the news stories - Prince Charles now has COVID-19. Ontario has closed all but essential workplaces; many people are working from home is mentioned. Being retired we are always home but these days we have really limited ourselves. Just a twenty minute walk around the block each day but otherwise we are here the other 23 hours and 20 minutes a day. I do not miss shopping at all actually. We usually go shopping every day; spending about two or three hours out and about often including a 30 min walk at the Mall. We are not going anywhere at the moment; our neighbours have been doing our groceries.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Snowfall

We had a 5 centimetre snowfall yesterday. The world is beautiful looking out the window, so uniform as far as you can see. Mud season is covered up once again. There is no traffic out there; quite eerie at 7:00 am not to see the road behind us full of traffic. With each light snowfall though we know that spring is not far away. Overcast again today though; must check the weather to see if there is  more snow coming.

Worked on the puzzle yesterday for a couple of hours. I love puzzles; they relax the mind and sharpen the wits. I was working on the trees in the top left and right. The center is filled in with bright autumn colours but my section yesterday was evergreens thickly filling the area around the bursts of colour and in the middle a waterfall I worked on a day earlier. My husband has been working on the rocks and the lower bushes in the middle of the puzzle below the waterfall. Finally I got a big section put together that I was able to fill in quite a sizeable hole on the top left side. Today I will work on the puzzle again for a while.

Nothing accomplished on my genealogy endeavours except finding a couple more matches. I have quite a few that are over 20 centimorgans but are unknown to me. There are distinctly four sets of matches though and with my siblings results and my own I can generally separate them into groups but separating them into maternal and paternal can be a challenge on occasion except when one of my cousin matches helps out. I do not have a lot of known matches on that first chromosome though but it is the chromosome with the greatest number of matches and just sorting them into order will be helpful especially if some of them have several matches on different chromosomes. I will work some more on that today and see if I can complete the task of painting them over the next couple of days. I do not want to rush it. My memory still holds a lot of material and I want to feel comfortable with all those results.

Day eleven of isolation and the sun is just now trying to break through the overcast with bands of light above the trees. When we moved here there weren't any trees and now we have so many; I love the trees and it is wondrous to see every spring the budding and then the beautiful foliage coming out and gracing us with their beauty.

One hundred and seventy two minutes of exercise yesterday. I can see that the regimen I have set for myself will mean three hours per day. My knee is coming along nicely; I still would rather have had an MRI to be comfortable with my exercises and I could have moved quicker to running but I am running now albeit for only twenty minutes or slightly more instead of an hour every day but cross training is the way to really exercise the muscles in actual fact so it perhaps better. The sun has broken through and perhaps we will have a bright sunny day today. That fresh snow of yesterday will melt and the snowdrops trying so hard to bloom will be graced by sun once again instead of buried under a fresh blanket of snow.

Monday, March 23, 2020

No traffic

We have lived in our home for 42 years; longer than I ever lived anywhere else. We anticipate being here another five years but we work on a five year plan most of the time. Does COVID-19 change that? Thus far no. We are close to the grocery store and pharmacy; we still drive. Day ten of self-isolation and for the last two days we have gone for a walk around the block managing to physically distance (new phrase) ourselves from everyone else. We are wearing our high rubber boots so that we can easily move off of the sidewalk into the grass or onto the road if need be. Ottawa may have/had as many as 4000 cases of the virus the modelling is showing.

Yesterday I managed to keep my active minutes at 172. That seems like a good amount of exercise in one day.  I still, however, did not accomplish very much on the research side. We are putting a puzzle together (1000 pieces) and did get more of that done so a different kind of accomplishment!

People are home and watching Netflix it would appear. Sometimes it is a bit slow to get on but so far we always do manage to get in our couple of hours of Netflix each day. Still binge watching Homeland but will move to another soon as we are into Season 6 and there is just one more season on Netflix.

Today I must get to my research and complete Chromosome 1. I never dreamed when I had this new idea I would spend three days on the first chromosome. It is an interesting way to look at all the matches and I am gradually eliminating matches under 20 centimorgans unless it is a known match.  I have a lot of matches now that I can place into paternal or maternal and then further into grandmother or grandfather in that side.

We bought several bags of frozen fish fillets. That has worked out very well. Usually we shop every day for our food; just part of our routine of getting out each day. I must admit getting out each day for three hours or so always seemed like a long time to me. I am still enjoying the solitude of being at home; my husband is finding it much harder as he likes to be out and about. Soon the snow will melt and we will be outside working in the garden and that he really enjoys. Mud season is ahead though!

Dawn is about to break and no traffic out there.

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Another beautiful sunrise

Another beautiful sunrise to start the 9th day of isolation.Although we are isolated we have begun to take a walk around the block and that has been successful. It is important to get some exercise but I have not been face to face with anyone other than my husband since this began. I am skyping with my daughters and have emailed my siblings. I am a hermit by nature and if I had no one then I would just continue being a hermit. My husband does drag me off to things (I do like to go to Church but have not done that for quite a while; my Anglican Church has changed so much and I never really felt comfortable in other Churches) so I have done a myriad of things through our married life (54 years in the fall) that I would never have done on my own. Occasionally I wonder what my life would have been like; I was thinking of becoming a medical missionary in my teen years. My husband did distract me from that goal at the young age of twenty years when we married and I just never got back to thinking about doing it. I have no regrets; these days we do not have enough doctors in Canada!

Yesterday passed extremely quickly. The garden swing is now out and that will be another diversion and some fresh air for both of us. A mite chilly still but I find that rocking back and forth in the swing is really good for my knee. I continue doing my physio exercises modified somewhat now to fit in with my regular calisthenics. I have already put in 64 minutes of activity today (walking, running and calisthenics). I like to do that first thing in the morning before breakfast. I used to run a mile first thing in the morning when I was younger.

I accomplished practically nothing on my phasing project yesterday. I am still  on Chromosome 1 but have not yet completed entering in all the matches that I have gleaned from the various testing companies (23 and Me, myself and three siblings, FT DNA, myself and four siblings, Living DNA, myself and one sibling, My Heritage, myself and four siblings, and, of course, Ancestry, myself and three siblings (but only in the instance that the match has taken their results into FT DNA, My Heritage or Gedmatch). I still have 85 lines of matches to enter. It is a slow process as I have a lot of 23 and Me matches and I am working up a list of in-common matches and blocking them into grandparent match (paternal or maternal where I can determine, I ballpark into likely as that is easy to change if needed). The visual though is quite stunning and gives me a different look.

COVID-19 continues to infect and take lives. Canada now has 1331 cases and 19 deaths. My mother used to talk about the Spanish Flu of 1918-1919 because her grandfather died during the Spanish Flu. But it was second hand information from her brother as she was only three years of age at the time (although she always said she could remember the tent where he died). She said that people put their loved ones into isolation tents away from the family (he died the 7th of June).

We made our lemon scones yesterday and yes truly they were delicious. We had scrambled eggs with them for dinner and I had brussel sprouts (love them with scrambled eggs). My husband enjoyed some raw vegetables (carrots and celery). Then rice pudding for dessert.

I managed to do 219 minutes of exercise yesterday. I was exhausted by 10 pm. I think today I shall try to keep that down to 180 minutes or less. I am not as young as I used to be! Plus I do need to do more work on the phasing. Hard to believe that in isolation I didn't have enough time.

Saturday, March 21, 2020

Is the sky clearer?

Yesterday was pretty dull but today the sunrise was quite beautiful and the sky just a little cloudy. Our skies are always pretty clear (we are surrounded mostly by woods once you get out of the metropolitan area) but there is a freshness in the air these days.

Second week, day eight, in isolation and our neighbours picked up a couple of bags of groceries for us. I actually didn't mind the milk powder but will admit fresh milk to cook my oatmeal in was pretty tasty yesterday morning. Will enjoy that again today and then back to powdered milk as we do not like to overdo asking our neighbours. They volunteered to do groceries for us though which was very nice. We haven't been in any stores now for over a week and will not do so. Tried to get my husband's prescription that last day but it wasn't ready so will have to get the drug store to deliver it to us once prepared.

Yesterday flew by, I manged to put in 197 minutes of active exercise which included a 23 min walk, a 22 min run, 22 min of calisthenics, another 23 min walk, a 43 min aerobic workout, a third 19 min walk and then 30 min of yoga. Looking back I now understand why I put in so little time on my phasing charts for DNA of my grandparents.

We are watching Homeland on Netflix and nearly at the end of Season 5 now. We tend to binge watch Netflix shows and have been subscribers for about five years now. At the beginning we were watching it a few times a week and had joined to watch Murdoch's earlier series but since then we have increased our watching to about two hours per day. Our television sets have never been in the living room but this past fall we decided to move the TV in there and it is nice for my husband to sit and watch TV for several hours a day especially now that we are isolating ourselves from the world.

Today we will make lemon scones again. The original recipe called for one teaspoon of lemon but we increased that to the juice of the entire lemon as well as zesting the entire lemon skin into the mix. Quite delicious actually and wonder why we didn't do it earlier! The recipe makes about 14 2 inch circles and they last a couple of days. We will make a pound cake next; quite a large one in a tube pan (12 inch). We bought an electric mixer for ourselves for Christmas and have used it several times a week ever since. My husband likes to watch cooking shows and has learned a lot of new and interesting ways to use our many tools to bake that saves on a lot of hand work. I have arthritis in my fingers that prevents me from readily doing all the fine bits of baking.

Today I must get back to phasing my grandparents. Assigning all matches to chromosome one in my DNA Painter Chart led to a couple of surprises which I am working my way through and will be a much more complete way to look at the overall phasing. I do not have a lot of known matches on Chromosome one but do have a few that are helpful in ball parking the matches for the five of us. I have 214 lines of matches for that chromosome and 80% of them are over 20 centimorgans. About 2% are over 35 centimorgans.


Friday, March 20, 2020

Microsoft Solitaire again

Microsoft Solitaire is an interesting way to start a day especially on Day 7 of isolation; it is an entire week since I have directly spoken to anyone outside of the house. I find it quite easy actually and can keep going for quite a while. My husband finds it very frustrating; he is much more of a people person than I am. I grew up in a household of nine people. It is hard to find a quiet time with eight other people in a house. I have always relished my quiet times. I lived upstairs in our house. Probably when our house was built the idea was that at some time one would put a dormer roof on the house and build a couple of bedrooms up there; the staircase already existed and we had large attic spaces around a largish room (probably 40 feet by 20 feet but I am not really good at guessing such things. There was a large closet at one end where surplus clothing hung and a portion of that closet was mine. I asked to sleep up there when I was seven years of age. My mother was conflicted on that idea but my father was fine with it and I moved up there into that enormous room. I loved it there from day one. It was all mine. Before moving up there it was a playroom and on wet days we would play board games; card games up there my siblings and myself but my older siblings (three of them) were not so much into those board games and card games by the time I was seven and no one objected to the loss of the playroom. I loved my own bedroom and that is probably a novelty for most children where they have six siblings. I was to share it though as my younger sister would arrive when I was eight years of age and join me upstairs when she was two years of age.

Exercise Time. Back from exercise (69 active minutes on my Fit Bit - 23 min walk, 22 min run and 24 minutes of calisthenics which includes my physio exercises modified somewhat to fit into my calisthenics routine). Still to come a walk outside (it is pouring with rain here but I have an absolutely waterproof rainsuit that will fit over my snow jacket!) of approximately 20 minute duration. Then aerobic exercise this afternoon (one hour) and yoga this evening (30 minutes). I am waiting to put my swing up (soon; perhaps the beginning of April). That will be excellent for my knee; helping to strengthen it.

Off to breakfast and I especially look forward to my breakfast. Lunch can be interesting with yoghurt, walnuts, cashews and almonds plus chocolate and ginger root and a slice of toast and either a banana, orange or pepper or tomato. Dinner I have always found less interesting unless it is fish and sweet potato and a vegetable that I especially like (brussel sprouts are one of my favourites). We usually bake our own desserts these days.

Today I shall continue working on Chromosome 1 and my DNA Painter Profiles for the five of us. I am nearly finished with chromosome 1. I have two files for matches - one by chromosome and one by grandparent match. I have two excel files, both by chromosome, with one being known matches and the other being all the matches. I use my 23 and Me results for four of us to create the phasing graphs that I use to see where we are in common, where we share just one of the two chromosomes and where we do not share any. For the most part this works very well with occasional small discrepancies. I have retested myself because I tested six years before my other three siblings and that may make a difference. The other difference is of course because not the entire chromosome is being compared but rather a selective number of SNPs are compared between each set of crossovers.


Thursday, March 19, 2020

Mind wandering - Day 6 of isolation

On Day 6 of our isolation my mind started to wander somewhat and I decided I needed to force myself to focus. I always begin my day with an hour of exercise - 20 min walk, 20 min run and 20 min of calisthenics (which now includes my physio exercises which I have modified in some cases to fit into existing calisthenics exercises). Then breakfast which is always (rather boringly to some perhaps) cooked oatmeal (1 C of milk (I am now using milk powder), 1/3 C of oats, 1/3 C of raisins) and then when finished cooking (5 minutes) I add 1 heaping tablespoon of wheat germ and 1 heaping tablespoon of wheat bran. I find it quite delicious but will admit I miss my 2% milk which has been replaced during this isolation by skim milk. I drink a glass of cranberry juice and 2 glasses of water (with my vitamins and I am gradually weaning myself off of my daily ASA since it is a problem if you happen to catch COVID-19). I will be weaned off of the ASA in another week or so. Then a cup of green tea to complete.

I am usually awake around 6:00 am and do my Microsoft Solitaire daily games (I subscribe to avoid the advertisements). Today one was a little more difficult and it took me about 35 minutes to complete the 5 games.

Now I am settled back at my computer and I decided while I was running that I would complete a task that I work at intermittently on DNA Painter (I subscribe to this site and have 40 profiles, great site and I am not utilizing it fully even yet). As I phase I am assigning a family line to each match (unless it is impossible) and I am now entering each match into one of the profiles for myself and each of my four siblings. Since I have reached chromosome three in my analysis and I am bogged down thinking about some of the unknown matches, I decided to go back and do all the matches from Chromosomes 1 and 2 and add them to the appropriate sibling profile on DNA Painter. It has already proven to be an interesting exercise. During my run, I visualized that I might find Chromosome 3 easier to deal with if I assigned each of the matches that I could in that chromosome and than play with the others on each siblings profile. Amazing sometimes what you come up with when you are running (or walking has the same effect). Especially as I am doing all of that at home, I do not have to worry about the traffic!

My distractions at the moment are my daughter who is a Family Medicine practitioner here in Ontario (the small group of doctors in small town Ontario manage the hospital there, the Emergency Room and their clinic loads) and all that entails during the present crisis and my other daughter who is still in Milwaukee where she teaches (Associate Professor) at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. Coming home was not an option for her really as she is asthmatic and risking two plane trips was not the best plan. Given that West Jet just announced 14 planes that had been compromised by COVID-19 active patients it was a wise move. However, she must then isolate herself away from family and is on my mind somewhat constantly (she is covered for health care by her employment but the preferred thing (and why she is isolating) is to avoid getting COVID-19). My husband does need me full time or I would have joined her in her isolation (hopefully they would have let me in!). Add to that my husband is fragile with regard to COVID-19 if only because he is nearly 77 but he has a lung condition that would be a problem if he catches COVID-19.

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Working on phasing my grandparents

Day 5  of isolation and I am working on phasing my grandparents. COVID-19 is definitely occupying our thoughts at the moment. The number of cases is slowly climbing; we are not yet at a thousand but sadly eight have died (seven were in one nursing home and the other in a hospital). All were over 70 years of age. It reminds me of my youth when I visited Nursing Homes with my grandmother. Most of the people were in their late 60s and early 70s and the average age of death was in that age range. The person we visited was 101 years old actually. She and her daughter were both in the home; her daughter had multiple sclerosis. I can not remember how my grandmother knew them but she visited them every week and I would meet her there after school and then walk her part way back home to her house before I then headed home on my bicycle. Some how, I wasn't settling into phasing.

I decided to do a walk in the backyard and it is sufficiently long that I could do 12 full circles and add 1600 steps to my FitBit in just 17 minutes. Sunny and about 5 degrees celsius here today. I am not seeing much melting; we need 10 degrees celsius before much melting really occurs. Perhaps that is in the cards for us in the next couple of weeks. It is still technically winter so I do not hold out a lot of hope for melting and warmer weather yet. Instead it was a nice refreshing walk. Not many cars around so the air is quite fresh. I actually think I can smell the Ottawa River (not because it has a dreadful odour; it just smells like there is running water nearby). Our planet will do well with everything shutting down. One wonders if everyone will start thinking that it is so much nicer to have fresh clean air (ours is usually pretty good here as other than the large city that we live in we are surrounded by woods for quite a few miles).

Now that I have done that perhaps I will get back to phasing. I am working on Chromosome 3. I need several more known matches on that chromosome to really positively decided on my maternal grandparents. All of the matches are on my paternal grandparents' sides. Two of them are good substantial matches which have made it easy to do the phasing. I need to sit and concentrate on the matches in common which will let me look at the unknown matches and place them.

I have started to use milk powder now making up my oatmeal porridge (my husband can have the fresh milk then to make it a longer period before we need to stock up again). I think there is enough food for a month but I am sure my husband feels strongly that we need to get more fresh fruit, fresh meat and fresh milk. I am not a great lover of a lot of fruit (being allergic to strawberries taints that somewhat for me and I avoid some fruits because of that). I probably could make it to the month with the food on hand but I expect we will be purchasing some more food in a couple of days.  Not being a meat eater (love fish though and we have quite a bit of frozen) I can manage long periods without fresh meat as well.

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

COVID-19 Blog - 30 day isolation

My husband and I are on Day 4 of not leaving the house except to walk around the backyard. We did stock up for two weeks a week or so ago and then added in milk powder and more cans/bottles/dried stuff to take us to one month. On Day 4 one month still seems like a long way away - April 12. We had thought on my husband's birthday we might go to Mandarin for their buffet as that is one of his favourite restaurants (there are many that he enjoys). However, they are doing take-out so still doable if we are still isolating ourselves on the 16th of April. I am 74 and he will be 77 so following the Guidelines suggested by Public Health. We haven't traveled out of the country or province for two years now. It is fun to go south in the winter for a week but we need to stay closer to home because of Ed's health and I actually enjoy the snow. Not quite so easy for me to manage as it once was but I can still shovel and chop ice when I need to. But the views are fabulous and I never tire of them.

It is snowing here today and it looks like we have 5 centimetres already and it comes down light and then heavy periodically. Since we were only supposed to get 1 to 2 centimetres no ideas on how much we might actually get. Snowstorms in March can often be quite heavy but I find it not to be too arduous since we know that spring is coming one of these days. Snow into April quite common but it is actually melting in between now.

My new Fit Bit for Christmas has been great. I am managing 135 minutes of identified exercise a day with 60 to 80 minutes being very active and the rest medium activity (walking and calisthenics). I am an exercise fiend my husband always says and I must admit I do enjoy a good run although do most of my running indoors these days. There are so many exercise videos these days - I have at least ten different ones to choose from. I do Yoga sometimes but prefer cardio more.

It will be interesting to look back on these blogs if God grants me longer days into the future. I think I might blog my way through this COVID-19 pandemic. I have been busy doing my bi-yearly rephasing of my grandparent's DNA.

I am starting to get interested in who my paternal grandmother's father may have been as I acquire more and more matches on the Rawlings-Taylor side. I have two mysteries as my maternal grandmother's mother was Ellen Taylor born in Birmingham circa 1850 according to the census and her death registration. Plus my grandmother remembered her mother very well (she was eleven when her mother died of pneumonia at the age of 37 years). So I had both the death registration which gave her age as 37 years and my grandmother's memory. All of us (my four siblings and myself having tested out of a block of seven siblings) show some Irish DNA and family lore does give Ellen Taylor an Irish back ground (she was very pale with dark hair that had red highlights). She sang Irish lullabies to her children with Danny Boy being the one she often sang and which was one of my grandmother's favourite songs. I do have possible parents for her but her six siblings can not be easily located on the census. Perhaps in this month of isolation I will have a very controlled look at the DNA and see if I can do any selective placement of matches into these two family lines - Taylor for my maternal great-grandmother and Rawling-Taylor matches that do not fit into the known Rawling-Taylor matches that I can place into my known family. My grandmother's birth name was Ada Bessie Cotteril Rawlings when she was born in 1876 but on the 1881 census she is referred to as Ada Rawlings living with her grandparents William Rawlings and Elizabeth (Lywood) Rawlings. On the 1891 census she is referred to as Bessie Taylor living with her mother and stepfather Elizabeth (Rawlings) Taylor and William Taylor. On the 1901 census she is listed as Edith B Taylor and then at the time of her marriage Edith Bessie Taylor. One of my Australian cousins who grew up in Wiltshire where the family lived said that "Ada" would easily have been written down as Edith by a census taker. My father was baptized at the same Church as his mother by the same priest. There was only one Cotterill family in the parish at the time that my grandmother was conceived/born. I need to check and see if any of the descendants of this family are matching me or my siblings. There is an interesting medical side to this as well that I have noted but not really looked at in depth. Perhaps in this month ahead of me I will spend a little time looking. My grandfather always said that my grandmother was very happy as a child.

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Re-organization

I am just organizing some of my work but continuing with my will transcriptions. My aim to complete the PCC wills for Blake this year is an earnest one and hopefully achievable. That would then let me move to the county Blake wills. I have perhaps 2000 of them overall but they do tend to be somewhat shorter although not necessarily easier to read!

Attempted login

Google blocked an attempted entry into my blog. Someone in another country had managed to work their way into my password (now changed) but was blocked from entering into the account; I was already in my account several thousand miles away! Much appreciated and I shall make sure that that password is no longer used by me. I tend to have a number of different passwords thus making access into my accounts slightly more difficult!

Monday, March 2, 2020

Pincombe-Pinkham Newsletter, Volume 5, Issue 2, 2020

 Pincombe-Pinkham Newsletter

Table of Contents
1.    Pincombe Charts, original One-Name Study at the Guild of One-Name Studies
2.    Will of William Pincombe, 1812
3.    North Molton Parish Records (Part 15)


1.    Pincombe Charts, original One-Name Study at the Guild of One-Name Studies

These Pincombe Charts were created by the two researchers in the original One-name-study at the Guild of one-name-studies. I reprint them with the thought in mind that others could add to the knowledge of these charts. I have reworked some of them and will publish that information when complete. I am publishing Chart 13 – Stepney-Holborn-Hendeon-Croydon in this issue. This is another Chart that I have done some work on plus I have information from a Pincombe descendant who corresponded with one of the original researchers Dr Richard Pinkham. He shared all of his correspondence with me including anything that he submitted. Any comments, corrections, additions to this chart known by any of my readers is much appreciated. I am looking forward now to updating this information to pass on to another researcher.



The link for the original chart (image above):
http://www.kipp-blake-families.ca/Chart13.jpg 

Ideally, I will use the information which I received from Richard Phillips to discuss this chart. It is interesting that the Will of William Pincombe discussed below should coincide with Chart 13. It was unintentional on my part. Richard Phillips’ ancestor was Arthur Pincombe baptized 26 Dec 1761 at Roborough by Torrington and son of Arthur Pincombe and Agnes Heard who themselves were married 19 Jun 1750 at Roborough by Torrington. This Arthur Pincombe was baptized 28 Aug 1727 at Roborough by Torrington the son of John Pincombe and Mary Peardon (married 28 Oct 1726 at Roborough by Torrington). All dates were verified with the original images on Find My Past. As you read through the will below and the comments you will see the relationship between these two lines.

Richard Phillips sent me a CD with 131 files; all of his Pincombe-Pinkham research. I did extract some material at the time but publishing these charts has brought me back to these files once again. There was one particular letter that I had forgotten and it was between Richard Pinkham MD and Richard Phillips and Richard Pinkham mentions his ancestry in this particular letter. I never corresponded with Richard Pinkham. I discovered reading these letters that his eyesight was failing him in the early 1990s and by the time I arrived on the scene it was already fourteen years later and I think he was in his late 80s in the early 1990s. But Richard identified his 4x great grandfather as John Pincomb (baptized 10 Mar 1728) and a brother to Arthur Pincombe who was baptized 28 Aug 1727. Looking at Chart 4, Arthur and John were the sons of John Pincombe and Mary Peardon who had married 28 Oct 1726 at Roborough. Richard then mentioned his great grandfather was Richard Pincombe (1831-1913) (baptized 20 Mar 1831 at Roborough son of William and Ann Pincombe) and married to Maria Pyke 31 Mar 1861 at Torrington. Chart 4 traces that particular Richard back to his parents William Pincombe and Ann Winson who married 13 Oct 1830 at Roborough. All of these dates in the paragraph above this line were verified on Find My Past. William was baptized 25 Dec 1799 son of George Pincombe and Grace Page who were married 7 Nov 1790 at Roborough. These dates in the preceding sentence were repeated on Ancestry but no images available. George was baptized 24 Feb 1766 at Roborough and was the son of John Pincombe (baptized 10 Mar 1728) and Elizabeth married circa 1760 at Roborough. I was not able to verify this information other than finding it as entries on Family Search. Richard Pinkham MD also mentions that it was his grandfather William (1861-1938) (baptized 25 Dec 1861 at Great Torrington son of Richard Pincombe and Maria Pyke) who changed the spelling of his name to Pinkham). These two men shared their 5x great grandparents making them sixth cousins. I have not yet found mention of that.

At a later date I will redraw these charts with all the new information that I have acquired and they will be electronic. It is perhaps a challenge that I should take on with the Pincombe project and will consider what other elements I want to pass on to another researcher when I step down. As well I will give copies to both the Guild of one-name Studies and the Society of Genealogists. I continue as a member of both groups.

These tables represent many years of work at the record offices by the two original Pincombe-Pinkham family researchers and Richard Pinkham was a physician and able to make contact with some of the Pincombe families living in Devon. The names seen on these charts usually in the top corners are individuals who provided information for that particular chart. In the case of charts from the United States, Galen Pinkham has contributed a great deal of information to the descendants of the Pincombe/Pinkham family and this information can be found on the charts which he produced. I do remind other researchers that there are discrepancies in these charts and I would appreciate knowing of any that you may find so that eventually a corrected chart will be published.

2.    Will of William Pincombe 1812

Recorded: 27 Oct 2011
Source: Inland Revenue Wills - p 886
Place: Beaford, Devon, England
Type of Record: Will
Dated: 6 Apr 1811, Probated 2 Jan 1812
Presentation: four pages - Original will (2 pages) and Probate (1 page)

1    This is the last Will and Testament of me William Pincombe
2    of Beaford in the County of Devon Yeoman First I Give and Bequeath unto Sarah my wife
3    during the Term of her Natural Life one third Part of the Issues and Profits arising from all
4    that my Messuage and Tenement called or known by the Name of late Alfords situate in the
5    Parish of Saint Giles in the said County I also Give and Bequeath unto my said wife during
6    the Term of her natural Life All that my Leasehold Messuage and Tenement to consist
7    of a House Garden and Orchard commonly known by the Name of the Lower House being that of a Tenement called Wayhouse  situate
8    in the parish of Beaford aforesaid Also I Give and Bequeath unto my Daughter Mary
9    one other third Part of the Issues and Profits arising from the above mentioned Tenements
10    during my Right and Interest therein now depending on the Lives of Mary How the
11    wife of Thomas How of Alverdiscott in the said County Yeoman and Sarah my wife And
12    on the Death of my said wife my Will and Desire is and I hereby give and Bequeath unto my
13    said Daughter Mary two third Parts being the Remainder of the Issues and Profits arising
14    from the above named Tenements during the Life of the said Mary How I also Give and
15    Bequeath unto my said Daughter Mary after the Death of her Mother the said Messuage
16    and Tenement called the Lower House during her natural Life if my Interest so long
17    continue therein And after her Decease I Give and Bequeath the same Lower House
18    with the appurtenances unto my Daughter Sarah during all my Right and Interest thereon
19    and she to have receive and enjoy all the Rights Privileges Profits and Incomes from thenceforth
20    as her Sister Mary had before her And in case of Nonpayment by my Executors
21    hereafter named of any or either of the above mentioned Issues and Profits to my said wife
22    and Daughters or either of them on any part thereof That then my said Wife and Daughters
23    or either of them shall and may enter and distrain on the said Tenements and sell the
24    same or any part of the Goods and Chattels therein for so much as shall be due to her
25    or them and the serplus to pay back again to my Executors I Give and Bequeath unto
26    my Daughter Mary One Pound per Annum and unto my Daughter Sarah five Pounds per Annum to be paid out of the Profits arising from
27    Weyhouse with a like Power of Distress and Sale in case of Nonpayment as above specified
28    All the Rest Residue and Remainder of my Goods and Chattels Rights and Credits
29    I give to the Use only of my Sons Richard William and John they paying and discharging
30    all my Debts Legacies and Funeral Expences And I hereby nominate constitute and appoint
31    my said Sons Richard William and John Executors of this my Last Will and Testament
32    hereby revoking and making void all wills by me at any time heretofore made and declare
33    this only to be my last Will and Testament And I hereby appoint John Cox of Roborough
34    Yeoman and Thomas How of Alverdiscott Yeoman Trustees to superintend the education of
35    my younger Sons William and John In Witness whereof I the said William Pincombe
36    the Testator have unto this my last Will and Testament set my hand and seal this sixth
37    Day of April one thousand eight hundred and eleven
38    W[illia]m Pincombe [signed] [sealed]
39    Signed Sealed Published and Declared by the said
40    William Pincombe the Testator as and for his last Will
41    and Testament (the words "and Bequeath" other "Theirs"
42    Being first interlined) in the Presence of us who at his Request in his
43    presence and in the Presence of each other have subscribed our
44    Names as Witnesses thereto
45    Rob[er]t Wilson Jun[ior]
46    Mary Banten [signed]
    [Codicil]
47    Whereas I William Pincombe of Beaford in the County of Devon Yeoman did on
48    about the sixth day of April one thousand eight hundred and eleven publish my Last Will
49    and Testament in writing Now my will and Desire is and I hereby request and direct that
50    in case my wife should think proper to reside in Way House that she shall have an
51    particle of a sort of the Household Furniture therein at the time of my Decease for her
52    own use without any Molestation whatsoever And I hereby direct that this may be
53    taken as a Codicil to my said Will and to be annexed thereto and a part thereof be
54    Witness whereof I the said William Pincombe have to this my said Codicil to be annexed
55    unto my said last Will and Testament and to be taken as part thereof my hand and
56    Seal this third day of June one thousand eight hundred and eleven
57    W[illia]m Pincombe [signed] [sealed]
58    Signed Sealed Published and Declared by the said William Pincombe the Testator
59    as and for a Codicil to his last Will and Testament in our Presence; who in his Presence
60    and in the presence of each other have subscribed our Names and Witnesses thereto
61    Rob[er]t Wilson Jun[ior] [signed]
62    Mary Banten [signed]
63    W[illia]m Pincombe wishes to have it mentioned that should Mrs. Pever come to want
64    (which at present there is no probability of) that not only the Laws of Nature but the
65    Laws of England will in such an Event oblige her Son Richard to maintain her.
66    This is inserted in order to give Mrs. Pincombe satisfaction
67    by R Wilson [signed]
68    This and the foregoing sheet of Paper contain a true Copy of  the last Will
69    and Testament of the said William Pincombe deceased having been compared thus
70    this 5th day of Apr 1812
71    James Pearse Jun[io]r N[otar]y Public
    [Probate}
72    No.
73    For the Stamp Office
74    Copy of the Will of
75    William Pincombe
76    late of Beaford Devon Yeoman
77    Executors
78    Richard Pincombe William Pincombe
79    and John Pincombe of Beaford
80    foresaid sons of the deceased
81    No. 2 REG NR B 12
82    FOL 209 H T
83    Proved in the Archdeaconial Court
84    of Barnstaple, Devon 2 Jan[ua]ry 1812
85    Effects under 300£
86    James Pearse Jun[io]r Reg[iste]r
87    Barnstaple Devon
88    12 Folios at 6 ... 6
    [P. 886 in margin]

First a little background on Alverdiscott (also known as Alscott) is a village/parish five miles (eight kilometres) SE of Bideford. The Parish Registers commenced in 1602 for baptisms and marriages and in 1612 for burials. William Pincombe was buried the 14th of July 1811 at Beaford. Discovering his parentage did not prove to be an easy task. There are a number of William Pincombe baptisms in this particular area within a reasonable time frame. The loss of the many wills in the bombing of the Exeter Record Office has made it much more difficult to trace some of these lines. Plus this particular William does not appear to be on the Charts produced by the earlier study. Trying to follow the name of the tenement did not lead to any new information; it is not a listed British Building.

Using the excellent Genuki webpages for Devon (I have made some contributions there), I continued hunting for information on the Pincombe family in the Beaford area.

There was a Philip Pincombe at Alverdiscott who signed the Devon and Exeter Oath Rolls in 1723. At Beaford, Stephen Pincombe of Swimbridge, Hugh Pincombe of Landkey, Thomas Pincombe of Bishop’s Nympton and William Pincombe of Bishop’s Nympton signed the same Oath Roll. Thomas and Hugh signed with the letter “P” and William also made a mark with Stephen signing his name (QS17/2/2/13 (1)). John Pincombe of Langtree signed (QS17/2/2/9a (16)). In total there were four documents signed at Beaford with just two of them including the surname Pincombe or Pincomb.

The Freeholders Index (1711-1799) for Alverdiscott had nine documents and no members of the Pincombe/Pincomb/Pinkham family listed. The Freeholders Index for Beaford had eight documents and no members of the Pincombe/Pincomb/Pinkham family listed but at Langtree a Pinkcombe, yeoman listed and one could surmise from the list above this would likely be John Pincombe of Langtree (QS17/2/2/9a (16)).

The Devon Wills Index has an Anthony Pincombe (probate 1715) at Beaford. Arthur Pincombe is also listed with a probate year of 1728 at Beaford. Mary Pincombe in 1729 at Beaford. William Pincombe in 1812 at Beaford. A little luck perhaps with that as there is a marriage between William Pincombe and Sarah Alford at Beaford the 29th July 1788. The residence for the groom is given as Roborough and for the bride as Beafford.

Using this information and Find My Past I will now attempt to discover more about the testator William Pincombe as well as    Anthony, Arthur and Mary Pincombe. Since William Pincombe, the testator, has a married daughter in 1811 then William and Sarah were perhaps married in the 1780s-early 1790s or earlier.

William Pincombe, the testator, identifies his wife Sarah, his daughters Mary How (married to Thomas How) and Sarah, and his sons Richard, William and John.

Baptisms at Beaford:

Mary Pincombe baptized 2 Oct 1788 daughter of William and Sarah Pincombe
Sarah Pencombe baptized 13 Jan 1793 daughter of William and Sarah Pencombe
John Pincombe baptized 22 Jan 1804 son of William and Sarah Pincombe
Thomas Pincombe baptized 8 Apr 1806 son of William and Sarah Pincombe; buried 15 Apr 1808 (not stated as a child but priest seemed to reference only infants and Thomas would have been 2 years of age)

Baptisms at Roborough:

Richard Budd Pincombe baptized 29 Dec 1790 son of William and Sarah Pincombe

I did not locate a baptism for William Pincombe the other son mentioned in the will. Remembering that in the marriage registration it was stated that the groom was of Roborough it is perhaps not surprising that the eldest son could be baptized there. But the middle name of Budd is a surprise. But I did note that there was a Richard Burd buried at Beaford in 1800.

Looking once again at the Pincombe charts created by the earlier researchers, There is a William Pincombe baptized 20 Jun 1756 (correct on Chart 4 but incorrect on Chart 5) who married Sarah (this William being of Roborough (the baptism can be located on Find My Past) and son of Mary Pincombe baptized 5 October 1731 (verified on Find My Past)    daughter of John Pincombe (baptized 21 Jul 1700) and married to Mary Peardon 26 Oct 1726 at Roborough (does not agree with Chart but found on Find My Past)). No children are listed on Chart 5 (Beaford-Roborough-Ramsgate published in Volume 3, Issue 3 of the Pincombe-Pinkham Newsletter)) for William and Sarah. The parents of John Pincombe married to Mary Peardon were Arthur Pincombe married to Mary Stabledon 31 Jul 1686 at Beaford (incorrect on chart (found on Find My Past)). An Arthur Pincombe was listed on the Devon Genuki Wills Index in 1728 at Beaford.

I leave it with the reader to decide if this is a reasonable line of descent.

3.    North Molton Parish Records (Part 15)

These baptismal records are transcribed from the fiche of the original Parish Records for North Molton, Devon. I have changed the orientation of the newsletter to make it easier to publish the transcriptions for North Molton directly from my Excel file.

      #         Surname      Forename          status        Fathers surname Fathers forename Mothers surname Mothers forename Year Month Day Details
3700    Viccarye    William    son    Viccarye    William        Margrett    1670    Nov    20   
3701    Viccarye    John    son    Viccarye    Christopher        Joane    1670    Nov    28   
3702    Alline    Elizabeth    daughter    Alline    Thomas        Eliza    1670    Dec    11   
3703    Burges    Jane    daughter    Burges    Phillip        Jane    1670    Dec    11   
3704    Moale    William    son    Moale    Michaell        Susan    1670    Dec    20   
3705    Abbott    Joane    daughter    Abbott    Robert        Jane    1670    Jan    10   
3706    Kingdon    Hugh    son            Kingdon    Thomazine    1670    Jan    15   
3707    Squyre    John    son    Squyre    John        Joane    1670    Jan    24   
3708    Bright    Katherine    daughter    Bright    Danyell        Mary    1670    Jan    24   
3709    Lawdye    Henry    son    Lawdye    Richard        Susan    1670    Feb    14   
3710    Squire    William    son    Squire    William        Elizabeth    1671    Mar    26   
3711    Seller    Margarett    daughter    Seller    Abednego        Mary    1671    Apr    13   
3712    Stephens    Joane    daughter    Stephens    John        Prudence    1671    Apr    25   
3713    Gould    Anne    daughter    Gould    John        Anne    1671    May    9   
3714    Millton    Christopher    son    Millton    Hugh        Anne    1671    May    23   
3715    Gould    Grace    daughter    Gould    Philip        Grace    1671    Jul    9   
3716    Gould    Henry    son    Gould    William        Thomazin    1671    Aug    6   
3717    Treble    George    son    Treble    William        Elizabeth    1671    Sep    6   
3718    Gould    George    son    Gould    George        Grace    1671    Sep    17   
3719    Locke    Joane    daughter    Locke    George        Joane    1671    Sep    19   
3720    Evans    George    son    Evans    Israell        Elizabeth    1671    Sep    24   
3721    Gould    Grace    daughter    Gould    Richard        Joane    1671    Nov    8   
3722    Wats    Susanna    daughter    Wats    John        Joane    1671    Dec    3   
3723    Pasmoore    Nicholas    son    Pasmoore    John        Joane    1671    Dec    7   
3724    Glasse    Elizabeth    daughter    Glasse    William        Eliza    1671    Dec    26   
3725    Tapp    Robert    son    Tapp    William        Mary    1671    Dec    28   
3726    Smyth    Joane    daughter    Smyth    Robert        Richord    1671    Jan    2   
3727    Squire    Charles    son    Squire    Charles        Joane    1671    Jan    14   
3728    Burges    Henry    son    Burges    Michaell        Catherine    1671    Jan    23   
3729    Moorman    Mary    daughter    Moorman    Richard        Joane    1671    Jan    30   
3730    Locke    Michaell    son    Locke    Peter        Susana    1671    Feb    5   
3731    Slader    Willmot    daughter    Slader    Peter        mary    1671    Feb    8   
3732    Huxtable    Emott    daughter    Huxtable    Charles        Agnes    1671    Feb    13   
3733    Moyey    John    son    Moyey    John        Mary    1671    Feb    13   
3734    Gould    Nicholas    son    Gould    William        Grace    1671    Feb    18   
3735    Irland    Mary    daughter    Irland    Peter        Grace    1671    Mar    19   
3736    Blakmore    Thomas    son    Blakmore    Thomas        Joane    1672    Mar    25   
3737    Lawdye    Peter    son    Lawdye    John        Sarah    1672    Mar    26   
3738    Squire    Philip    son    Squire    John        Eliza    1672    Mar    30   
3739    Squire    Elizabeth    daughter    Squire    John        Eliza    1672    Mar    30   
3740    Moule    Margarett    daughter    Moule    Matthew        Elinor    1672    Mar    31   
3741    Allen    William    son    Allen    John        Prudence    1672    Apr    14   
3742    Thorne    Susana    daughter    Thorne    Charles        Joane    1672    Apr    14   
3743    Balmant    John    son    Balmant    William            1672    Apr    16   
3744    Thorne    Thomas    son    Thorne    William        Elinor    1672    Apr    25   
3745    Locke    Willmot    base daughter            Locke    Gunet    1672    May    12   
3746    Stonman    Sarah    daughter    Stonman    Jefery        Margarett    1672    May    23   
3747    Bradford    Joane    daughter    Bradford    Peter        Edy    1672    May    23   
3748    Locke    William    son    Locke    John        Mary    1672    May    26   
3749    Halls    John    son    Halls    John        Joane    1672    May    27   
3750    Palmer    Joane    daughter    Palmer    Richard        Joane    1672    Jun    24   
3751    Locke    Robert    son    Locke    William        Elizabeth    1672    Jun    30   
3752    Squire    Elizabeth    daughter    Squire    William        Eliza    1672    Jul    30   
3753    Harris    Katherine    daughter    Harris    John        Martha    1672    Aug    25   
3754    Cottey    Elizabeth    daughter    Cottey    Gregory        Eliza    1672    Sep    3   
3755    White    Joane    daughter    White    Gilbert        Joane    1672    Sep    10   
3756    Stonman    William    son    Stonman    Henry        Prudence    1672    Sep    30   
3757    Thorne    Thomas    son    Thorne    James        Agnes    1672    Nov    20   
3758    Rooke    Richard    son    Rooke    English        Joane    1672    Dec    15   
3759    Rooke    English    son    Rooke    English        Joane    1672    Dec    15   
3760    Locke    Willmot    daughter    Locke    thomas        Joane    1672    Dec    22   
3761    Jones    John    son    Jones    William        Johane    1672    Dec    26   
3762    Squire    Philip    son    Squire    Charles        Joane    1672    Dec    29   
3763    Lawdye    Charity    daughter    Lawdye    Richard        Susanna    1672    Dec    30   
3764    Jones Thomazine daughter    Jones Owen     Grace    1672    Jan    17    lived at Maynard
3765    Loverton    Peter    son    Loverton    Peter        Petronell    1672    Jan    20   
3766    Mereyday    John    son    Mereyday    Roger        Margarett    1672    Jan    23   
3767    Ballmant    Agnes    daughter    Ballmant    George        Prescilla    1672    Jan    28   
3768    Treble    Alice    daughter    Treble    George        Alice    1672    Jan    29   
3769    Moysey    Mary    daughter    Moysey    John        Mary    1672    Feb    4   
3770    Passmoore    Philip    son    Passmoore    Richard        Margery    1672    Feb    16   
3771    Bray    Elizabeth    daughter    Bray    John        Joane    1672    Feb    25   
3772    Nott    Ruth    daughter    Nott    Thomas        Joane    1672    Mar    2   
3773    Stephens    Grace    daughter    Stephens    John        Prudence    1672    Mar    4   
3774    Day    Nicholas    base son            Day    Elizabeth    1672    Mar    9   
3775    Shopland    Elizabeth    daughter    Shopland    Christopher        Grace    1672    Mar    11   
3776    Locke    Elizabeth    dau    Locke    Peter        Susana    1673    Mar    26   
3777    Buckinham    Roger    son    Buckinham    William        Elinor    1673    Apr    1   
3778    Hunt    Mary    daughter    Hunt    John        Mary    1673    Apr    8   
3779    Gould    Johane    daughter    Gould    John        Anne    1673    Apr    22   
3780    Viccarye    George    son    Viccarye    Christopher        Willmott    1673    May    4   
3781    Clogg Lettice    daughter    Clogg    Roger        Anne    1673    Jun    2    of Twitchen
3782    Moule    William    son    Moule    Anthoney        Grace    1673    Jun    15   
3783    Tucker    Richard    son    Tucker    John        Anne    1673    Jun    17   
3784    Chapplman    William    son    Chapplman    Emanuell        Petronell    1673    Jun    24   
3785    Locke    Nicholas    son    Locke    Nicholas        Grace    1673    Jul    9   
3786    Zeale    Johane    dau    Zeale    John        Dorothy    1673    Aug    12   
3787    Hunt    Andrew    son    Hunt    Andrew        Joane    1673    Aug    17   
3788    Irland    John    son    Irland    Peter        Grace    1673    Aug    17   
3789    Hawten    William    son    Hawten    William        Joane    1673    Oct    14   
3790    Bright    Judeth    daughter    Bright    Daniell        Mary    1673    Oct    14   
3791    Squire    Roger    son    Squire    John        Johane    1673    Oct    21   
3792    Purchase    Anne    dau    Purchase    Nicholas        Johane    1673    Oct    21   
3793    Gould    Grace    daughter    Gould    William        Grace    1673    Nov    5   
3794    Willshire    George    son    Willshire    William        Margarett    1673    Nov    9   
3795    Berry    Mary    daughter    Berry    Alexander        Eliza    1673    Nov    23   
3796    Berry    Rachell    daughter    Berry    Alexander        Eliza    1673    Nov    23   
3797    Viccarye    Margarett    dau    Viccarye    John        Richord    1673    Dec    21   
3798    Moorman    Joane    dau    Moorman    Richard        Joane    1673    Dec    24   
3799    Locke    William    son    Locke    William        Johane    1673    Feb    10   
3800    Locke    Mary    daughter    Locke    George        Joane    1673    Feb    17   
3801    Locke    Prudence    daughter    Locke    thomas        Johane    1673    Feb    22   
3802    Lawdy    Susana    daughter    Lawdy    Richard        Susana    1673    Mar    1   
3803    Burges    Michaell    son    Burges    Michaell        Katherine    1673    Mar    3   
3804    Smyth    susana    daughter    Smyth    John        Johane    1673    Mar    22   
3805    Wisman    Joane    dau    Wisman    William        Margery    1673    Mar    22   
3806    Squire    Michaell    son    Squire    Michaell        Mary    1673    Mar    22   
3807    Palmer    Jane    daughter    Palmer    Richard        Joane    1674    Mar    31   
3808    Shopland    Michaell    son    Shopland    George        Joane    1674    Apr    30   
3809    Watts    Mary    daughter    Watts    John        Joane    1674    May    10   
3810    Gould    Elinor    daughter    Gould    George        Grace    1674    May    19   
3811    Davye    Thomas    son    Davye    Thomas        Joane    1674    Jun    28   
3812    Ballmant    Joane    daughter    Ballmant    John        Mary    1674    Jul    7   
3813    Mylton    Thomas    son    Mylton    Thomas        Anne    1674    Jul    13   
3814    Hunt    John    son    Hunt    John        Mary    1674    Jul    28   
3815    Thorne    John    son    Thorne    John        Joane    1674    Aug    2   
3816    Huxtable    Joane    daughter    Huxtable    Charles        Agnes    1674    Aug    11   
3817    Locke    Mary    daughter    Locke    Henry        Anne    1674    Aug    13   
3818    Blake    Joane    daughter    Blake    Christopher        Anne    1674    Aug    25   
3819    Viccarye    Charity    base daughter            Viccary    Johane    1674    Sep    20   
3820    Locke    Agnes    daughter    Locke    Charles        Joane    1674    Oct    6   
3821    Allen    Sarah    daughter    Allen    Thomas        Elizabeth    1674    Oct    20   
3822    Shopland    William    son    Shopland    Christopher        Grace    1674    Nov    23   
3823    Charden    William    son    Charden    William        Urith    1674    Nov    22    of Mesl__
3824    Bray    John    son    Bray    John        Joane    1674    Dec    30    archer
3825    Viccarye    William    son    Viccarye    Christopher        Willmott    1674    Jan    19   
3826    Allen    John    son    Allen    John        Prudence    1674    Feb    2   
3827    Squire    William    son    Squire    William        Elizabeth    1674    Feb    23   
3828    Viccary alias Pullam    Hugh    son    Viccary alias Pullam    Hugh        Mary    1675    Apr    5   
3829    Meare    Joane    daughter    Meare    Robert        Joane    1675    Apr    5   
3830    Locke    Elizabeth    daughter    Locke    William        Elizabeth    1675    Apr    18   
3831    Warren Henry    son    Warren    Henry        Mary    1675    Apr    25    of Bishops Nympton
3832    Locke    Mary    daughter    Locke    Nicholas        Grace    1675    May    20   
3833    Pulsford    Agnis    daughter    Pulsford    William        Grace    1675    Jun    20   
3834    Thorne    Joane    daughter    Thorne    Charles        Emolin    1679    Jul    8   
3835    Pasmoore    William    son    Pasmoore    John        Joane    1675    Aug    3   
3836    Davy    Grace    daughter    Davy    Robert        Mary    1675    Aug    10   
3837    Bright    Judeth    daughter    Bright    Daniell        Mary    1675    Aug    10   
3838    Lee    Mary    daughter    Lee    Charles        Joane    1675    Aug    12   
3839    Abbott    Joane    daughter    Abbott    Robert        Joane    1675    Sep    14   
3840    Tucker    Christopher    son    Tucker    John        Anne    1675    Sep    23   
3841    Williams    John    son    Williams    John        Christian    1675    Oct    5   
3842    Moorman    Elizabeth    daughter    Moorman    William        Joane    1675    Oct    12   
3843    Zeale    Stephen    son    Zeale    John        Dorothyu    1675    Oct    19   
3844    Rew    Thomas    son    Rew    John        Mary    1675    Oct    31   
3845    Goss    Joane    daughter    Goss    Roger        Petronell    1675    Oct    31   
3846    Harris    Martha    daughter    Harris    John        Martha    1675    Nov    3   
3847    Vellacot    William    son    Vellacot    William        Penticost    1675    Dec    13   
3848    Moule    Michaell    son    Moule    Michaell        Margery    1675    Jan    25   
3849    Lawdy    Thomas    son    Lawdy    Richard        Susana    1675    Feb    22   
3850    Thorne    Michaell    son    Thorne    Michaell        Elizabeth    1675    Feb    22   
3851    Hawten    Joane    daughter    Hawten    William        Joane    1675    Feb    29   
3852    Loverton    John    son    Loverton    Peter        Jane    1675    Mar    7   
3853    Locke    Joane    daughter    Locke    William        Joane    1675    Mar    7   
3854    Locke    Christopher    son    Locke    John        Mary    1675    Mar    14   
3855    Buckinham    Mary    daughter    Buckinham    William        Elinor    1675    Mar    21   
3856    Treble    Agnis    daughter    Treble    George        Alice    1675    Sep    7   
3857    Mooreman    Robert    son    Mooreman    Robert        Joane    1675    Oct    17   
3858    Bondstone    Willmoth    daughter    Bondstone    John        Willmoth    1676    Apr    7   
3859    Slader    Michaell    son    Slader    Michaell        Jane    1676    Apr    9   
3860    Gould    John    son    Gould    William        Grace    1676    Apr    18   
3861    May    Joane    daughter    May    Phillip        Anstice    1676    May    1   
3862    Moule    Matthew    son    Moule    Matthew        Elianor    1676    May    4   
3863    Moule    Susanna    daughter    Moule    Anthony        Grace    1676    May    15   
3864    White    Mary    daughter    White    Gilberd        Joane    1676    May    16   
3865    Thorne    William    son    Thorne    John        Joane    1676    Jun    15   
3866    Meredith    Elizabeth    daughter    Meredith    Roger        Margarett    1676    Aug    10   
3867    Gould    Samuell    son    Gould    Samuell        Mary    1676    Aug    12   
3868    Locke    Charles    son    Locke    Charles        Joane    1676    Oct    9   
3869    Balmont    Elizabeth    daughter    Balmont    George        Precilla    1676    Oct    16   
3870    Shapland    William    son    Shapland    George        Joane    1676    Nov    14   
3871    Moreman    Anne    daughter    Moreman    Richard        Joane    1676    Nov    21   
3872    Huxtable    Grace    daughter            Huxtable    Emling    1676    Dec    10   
3873    Huxtable    John    son    Huxtable    Richard        Katherine    1676    Dec    20   
3874    Vicary    Joane    daughter    Vicary    Hugh        Mary    1676    Dec    20   
3875    Crange    John    son    Crange    John        Joane    1676    Dec    21   
3876    Thorne    Emling    daughter    Thorne    Charles        Emling    1676    Jan    16   
3877    Squire    Joane    daughter    Squire    Samuell        Dorothy    1676    Jan    27   
3878    Barrow    Grace    daughter    Barrow    Abraham        Rebekah    1676    Feb    4   
3879    Huxtable    John    son    Huxtable    Charles        Agnis    1676    Feb    13   
3880    Pulsford    Grace    daughter    Puls    William        Grace    1676    Feb    13   
3881    Smyth    Joane    daughter    Smyth    John        Joane    1676    Feb    14   
3882    Leigh    Joane    daughter    Leigh    Charles        Joane    1676    Mar    13   
3883    Locke    John    son    Locke    Thomas        Johane    1677    Apr    3   
3884    Locke    Mary    daughter    Locke    Thomas        Johane    1677    Apr    3   
3885    Pincombe    Mary    daughter    Pincombe    Thomas        Agnis    1677    Apr    8   
3886    Locke    John    son    Locke    John        Mary    1677    Apr    18   
3887    Avery    Samuell    son    Avery    Samuell        Johane    1677    Apr    16   
3888    Cotty    Dorothy    daughter    Cotty    Gregory        Elizabeth    1677    Apr    23   
3889    Thorne    Mary    daughter    Thorne    Michaell        Elizabeth    1677    Apr     26   
3890    Locke    Susanna    daughter    Locke    Peter        Susanna    1677    Apr    29   
3891    Bright    Elinor    daughter    Bright    Daniell        Mary    1677    Apr    30   
3892    Bray    Archelas    son    Bray    John        Johane    1677    May    17   
3893    Mooreman    Joane    daughter    Mooreman    Robert        Joane    1677    May    18   
3894    Gould    Elizabeth    daughter    Gould    John        Anne    1677    Jul    26   
3895    Locke    Christopher    son    Locke    Nicholas        Grace    1677    Sep    4   
3896    Marsh    Robert    son    Marsh    Robert        Elizabeth    1677    Sep    9   
3897    Locke    Henry    son    Locke    Henry        Anne    1677    Sep    11   
3898    Thorne    William    son    Thorne    John        Margreate    1677    Sep    16   
3899    Ireland    Peter    son    Ireland    Peter        Grace    1677    Oct    2   
3900    Kingdon    John    base son            Kingdon    Thomzine    1677    Oct    16   
3901    Burges    Ann    daughter    Burges    John        Temperance    1677    Oct    27   
3902    Squire    Johan    daughter    Squire    Charles        Johane    1677    Nov    26   
3903    Blake    Katherine    daughter    Blake    John        Johane    1677    Dec    4   
3904    Stonman    Prudence    daughter    Stonman    Henry        Prudence    1677    Dec    26   
3905    Lawdy    Elizabeth    daughter    Lawdy    Mathew        Agnis    1677    Jan    13   
3906    Vellacott    John    son    Vellacott    William        Pentecost    1677    Feb    11   
3907    Gould    John    base son            Gould    Katherine    1677    Feb    24   
3908    Vickary    William    son    Vickary    Hugh        Mary    1677    Mar    7   
3909    Kingdon    Phillip    son    Kingdon    William        Christian    1677    Mar    12   
3910    Mooreman    Ann    daughter    Mooreman    George        Mary    1677    Mar    12   
3911    Zeale    Mary    daughter    Zeale    John        Dorothy    1677    Mar    12   
3912    Locke    Jane    daughter    Locke    William        Johane    1677    Mar    12   
3913    Harris    Martha    daughter    Harris    John        Martha    1678    Apr    21   
3914    Prayer    Mary    daughter    Prayer    Nicholas        Elizabeth    1678    Apr    21   
3915    Mole    Johan    daughter    Mole    Michaell        Margery    1678    May    14   
3916    Thorne    Thomas    son    Thorne    John        Joane    1678    May    21   
3917    Rewe    William    son    Rewe    John        Mary    1678    Jun    17   
3918    Lawdy    Charles    son    Lawdy    Richard        Susan    1678    Jul    28   
3919    Thorne    Peternell    daughter    Thorne    John        Margareatt    1678    Aug    16   
3920    Dennis    Elizabeth    daughter    Dennis    Edmond        Katherine    1678    Sep    22   
3921    Balment    William    son    Balment    John        Mary    1678    Oct    1   
3922    Shapland    Phillip    son    Shapland    Nicholas        Charity    1678    Oct    14   
3923    Slader    Anne    daughter    Slader    Michaell        Jane    1678    Oct    15   
3924    Thorne    John    son    Thorne    Charles        Embline    1678    Oct    29   
3925    Vickary    Joane    daughter    Vickary    Christopher        Wilmott    1678    Dec    15   
3926    Locke    John    son    Locke    Charles        Joane    1678    Jan    3   
3927    Smyth    Mary    daughter    Smyth    John        Joane    1678    Jan    6   
3928    Pulsard    Mary    daughter    Pulsard    William        Grace    1678    Jan    7   
3929    Goase    Andrew    son    Goase    Roger        Peternell    1678    Jan    14   
3930    Gould    Mary    daughter    Gould    Samuell        Mary    1678    Jan    21   
3931    Williams    James    son    Williams    John        Christian    1678    Jan    24   
3932    Gould    Henry    son    Gould    William        Grace    1678    Feb    4   
3933    Pasmoore    Robert    son    Pasmoore    Richard        Margery    1678    Feb    21   
3934    Davey    Johan    daughter    Davey    Michaell        Susan    1678    Mar    4   
3935    Thorne    Mary    daughter    Thorne    Michaell        Elinor    1678    Mar    23   
3936    Wolland John son Wolland    Gregory    Margreate    1678    Mar    23    of the parish of Burndon
3937    Kedwill    John    son    Kedwill    William        Margrett    1679    Apr    13   
3938    Thorne    Grace    daughter    Thorne    John        Joane    1679    Apr    14   
3939    Mooreman    Richard    son    Mooreman    Richard        Johane    1679    Apr    15   
3940    Loverton    Bartholomew    son    Loverton    Peter        Jane    1679    Apr    30   
3941    Mole    Phillip    son    Mole    Anthoney        Grace    1679    Apr    30   
3942    Marsh    Johane    daughter    Marsh    Thomas        Mary    1679    May    20   
3943    Burges    John    son    Burges    Michaell        Kather    1679    Jun    24   
3944    Marsh    William    son    Marsh    Robert        Elizabeth    1679    Jun    24   
3945    Bright    Daniell    son    Bright    Daniell        Mary    1679    Aug    19   
3946    Mole    George    son    Mole    Mathew        Ellen    1679    Sep    23   
3947    Squire    Samuell    son    Squire    Samuell        Dorothy    1679    Sep    30   
3948    Crange    James    son    Crange    John        Johane    1679    Sep    30   
3949    Stoman    Margrett    daughter    Stoman    Henry        Prudence    1679    Oct    1   
3950    Lee    Emott    daughter    Lee    Charles        Johane    1679    Oct    14   
3951    Avery    John    son    Avery    Samuell        Johane    1679    Nov    11   
3952    Legg    Ismaell    base son            Legg    Martha    1679    Nov    11   
3953    Blake    James    son    Blake    William        Wilmote    1679    Nov    29   
3954    Tape    Michaell    base son            Tape    Mary    1679    Nov    30   
3955    Squire    Joane    daughter    Squire    John        Joane    1679    Dec    9   
3956    Blake    John    son    Blake    John        Joane    1679    Dec    10   
3957    Prayer    Elizabeth    daughter    Prayer    Nicholas        Eliza    1679    Dec    14   
3958    Hunt    Mary    daughter    Hunt            Mary    1679    Jan    4    widow
3959    Locke    Grace    daughter    Locke    Nicholas        Grace    1679    Jan    11   
3960    Davey    Anne    daughter    Davey    Henry        Elinor    1679    Jan    13   
3961    Hammer    Mary    daughter    Hammer    Richard        Joane    1679    Jan    13   
3962    Thorne    Joane    daughter    Thorne    John        Marian    1679    Jan    14   
3963    Vickary    Mary    daughter    Vickary    Hugh        Mary    1679    Feb    17   
3964    Buckingham    Christopher    son    Buckingham    William    Joane    1679    Feb    29   
3965    Vickary    John    son    Vickary    John        Richord    1680    Mar    30   
3966    Thorne    William    son    Thorne    John        Johane    1680    Mar    30   
3967    Huxtable    Wilmott    daughter    Huxtable    Charles        Agnis    1680    Mar    31   
3968    Johns    Thomas    son    Johns    Bartholomew        Agnis    1680    Mar    31   
3969    Allen    Thomas    son    Allen    Thomas        Elizabeth    1680    May    11   
3970    Balment    William    son    Balment    George        Prissilla    1680    Jun    5   
3971    Bray    Archelas    son    Bray    John        Johane    1680    Jun    5   
3972    Morrish    William    son    Morrish    Jerman        Elizabeth    1680    Jun    14   
3973    Slader    Margreat    daughter    Slader    George        Johane    1680    Jul    4   
3974    Hobbes    Elizabeth    daughter    Hobbes    Bartholomew        Rebecka    1680    Jul    12   
3975    Bushen    James    son    Bushen    James        Johane    1680    Aug    15   
3976    Locke    George    son    Locke    John        Mary    1680    Aug    17   
3977    Mole    Michaell    son    Mole    Michaell        Magery    1680    Sep    7   
3978    Locke    Joseph    son    Locke    William        Joane    1680    Sep    28   
3979    Locke    Mary    daughter    Locke    William        Joane    1680    Sep    28   
3980    Thorne    Alce    daughter    Thorne    John        Grace    1680    Oct    25   
3981    Locke    Agnes    daughter    Locke    Peter        Susan    1680    Nov    14   
3982    Davey    William    son    Davey    John        Anne    1680    Nov    16   
3983    Wates    John    son    Wates    John        Elizabeth    1680    Dec    5   
3984    Dendle    Johane    daughter    Dendle    William        Elizabeth    1680    Dec    9   
3985    Thorne    Ann    daughter    Thorne    John        Margreate    1680    Dec    16   
3986    Gould    Elizabeth    daughter    Gould    Phillip        Margreate    1680    Jan    11   
3987    Slader    Thomas    son    Slader    Michaell        Jane    1680    Jan    13   
3988    Moses    William    son    Moses    John        Mary    1680    Feb    15   
3989    Thorne    John    son    thorne    John        Willmot    1680    Feb    23   
3990    Pasmoore    Richard    son    Pasmoore    John        Joane    1680    Mar    3   
3991    Goase    Joane    daughter    Goase    Roger        Peternell    1680    Mar    7   
3992    Dee    Jonathan    son    Dee    Jonathan        Elizabeth    1680    Mar    8   
3993    Kingdon    John    son    Kingdon    William        Christian    1681    Mar    29   
3994    Thorne    John    son    Thorne    George        Mary    1681    Apr    1   
3995    Abbott    Robert    son    Abbott    Robert        Jane    1681    Apr    4   
3996    Zeale    Luther    son    Zeale    John        Dorothy    1681    Apr    10   
3997    Stonman    Elizabeth    daughter    Stonman    Henry        Prudence    1681    Apr    12   
3998    Thorne    Christian    daughter    Thorne    John        Margreatt    1681    Apr    24   
3999    Lawdy    Charity    daughter    Lawdy    Richard        Susan    1681    Apr    26   
4000    Williams    Johane    daughter    Williams    John        Christian    1681    May    10
           
Any material which you may wish to submit for the next issue of the newsletter (1st June 2020) concerning the Pincombe/Pinkham family needs to be submitted by the 15th of May 2020 and can be sent to:

Elizabeth Kipp (Editor)
kippeeb@rogers.com