Joseph Louis Matté married Marie Josephte Bénoit dit Vaillancourt 5 Feb 1839 at St Jérome.
M Louis Matté et Marie Josephte Bénoit dit Vaillancourt 15
Le cinq Fevrier, mil huit cent trente neuf
après les publications ordinaires entre
Louis Matté fils majeur de Augustin
Matté Cultivateur et de Angèlique Déragon,
de cette paroisse d'une part; et Marie
Josephte Bénoit dit Vaillancourt fille Mineure
de Joseph Bénoit dit Vaillancourt Cultivateur
et de Josephte Charette de cette paroisse
d'autre part; ne s'étant rencontré aucune
opposition, ni empechement au dit mariage,
Nous Pretre Soussigné Curé de cette
paroisse de l'assentiment des parens avons reçu
leur mutuel consentement de Mariage; et
leur avons donné la bénédiction Nuptiale
En présence de Augustin Matté, Père; de
Joseph Matté, Frère, de l'époux; et de
Joseph Bénoit Père de l'épouse. Lesquels
n'ont su signer.
Et Blyth Pretre
The parents of Louis Matté being thus identified as Augustin Matté and Angélique Déragon who were themselves married 1 Nov 1808 at St Eustache. I tried to find the baptism of Angélique (Judith) Déragon but did not find that. It would be nice to verify the name since she is listed as Angélique on the marriage of her son Louis and Judith on her own marriage.
Next research day I will continue to search out more information on Angélique/Judith/Thérèse Déragon to see if I can find her baptism/burial before moving back to the next marriage.
This Blog will talk about researching my English ancestors from Canada but also the ancestors of our son in law whose families stretch back far into Colonial French Canada. My one name study of Blake and of Pincombe also dominate my blog these days.
Monday, May 30, 2011
Friday, May 27, 2011
Taylor at Birmingham, UK
Researching the Taylor family at Birmingham, UK sounds like an awesome task and indeed it has proven to be. Unfortunately I know very very little about my great grandmother Ellen Taylor. She is my mtDNA line as well which has proven to provide me with more information than the actual records. Tantalizing tales in my childhood about this particular family line circulate in my memories as I try to discover more about her.
My mtDNA which is H11a2 according to the latest build of the Phylogenetic Chart and which, by the Blood of the Isles mtDNA database, may have its origins in the Argyllshire County of Scotland has a couple of unusual mutations which have resulted in my have 27 matches with HVRI and 26 matches at HVRII in the control region and no perfect matches thus far in the Coding region although I have five matches with the Coding region minus one probably personal mutation. All of these matches, I am happy to say, take me back to Argyll Scotland or County Antrim Ireland making me think that the Ireland people may have emigrated from Scotland in the late 1600s early 1700s at the time of the Planters. So with that in mind, I am looking at my great grandmother and thinking at what period of time did your line arrive in the Birmingham area? Did they come from Ireland during the Famine? Did they come from Scotland at the time of the Industrial Revolution looking for work? Did they come even earlier and do they have deep roots in England? Was the Irish lullaby that my grandmother sung (and she knew it from her mother) because she was Irish or was it just popular? So many questions and no answers thus far.
My great grandmother had a reddish tinge to her dark brunet hair and my grandmother used to say that I looked like her somewhat because I was tall and thin (my grandmother was just over five feet so five feet six inches looks tall!). Then I have this mass of curly hair which she was apparently gifted with as well and the rosy English complexion (which I think might be Scots as well). But no pictures unfortunately have survived of my grandmother's parents.
My grandmother's siblings were all sent to Canada by the Birmingham Union and I have learned a great deal about their placements here in Canada (two in the Maritimes and two in Ontario). My grandmother was already working in England and decided to emigrate to be with them when the last two were sent to Canada in 1908. Surprisingly my grandmother never said she had a hard life as a child. Actually the reverse, her father worked two full time jobs and they always had a nice home and everything else that went towards a nice life when she was a child. She was the eldest of seven children born in 1886. Her father is a bit of a mystery except I can trace back quite a ways on some of his lines - his parents were Buller and Welch and his grandparents were Buller, Beard, Welch and Cheatle. I can find him on the census in 1851, 1861 and 1891. I have his birth registration and his baptism. I know exactly where he lived and where his father worked and I have a picture of the house. All good and interesting information but he disappeared from 1861 to 1886. His father died in London (probably on a buying trip for their pork butcher, confectionary, news shops businesses) and at that point everyone moved in with Grandmother Welch who owned a few buildings that her husband had had as restaurants. But he wasn't with her on the 1871 census. His younger brother was an apprentice jeweller and I do find Clement Charles Buller in South Africa later. Was Edwin in South Africa? I haven't found him there yet but I know that he was in Africa because my grandmother said he was.
Anyway, life was pleasant my grandmother always said when she was a child until her mother died when she was eleven years old. Grandma liked going to school but at that point her father needed someone to look after the children and Grandma was it unfortunately. Now her father must have been educated somewhat because he then taught her in the evenings so that she would not miss out on school which was excellent. Plus one brother was just two years younger and he would soon be up to her form when she left. But still she had to take on cooking and sewing and looking after a small baby (Aunt Sarah was just 14 months when her mother died). Plus there were two other sisters 6 and 4 years of age. Twin brothers had died at two and three weeks of age in early 1895. Grandma always said that her father would take them for little trips when he could and except for not being able to go to school life was still very pleasant. Then her father took ill with pneumonia and he passed away 21 Oct 1899 and life changed drastically. They were all placed at Marston Green Home in Coleshill which again Grandma said was a pleasant place but sad because now both of her parents were gone. She was trained as a seamstress and went to work at 16. She lived with a younger sister of her mother (Kate Taylor) until she went to Canada in 1908 at the age of 20. I also know that her Taylor grandfather was a shoemaker.
With that in mind I collected over time all the birth registrations for Ellen Taylor born in Birmingham between 1859 and 1861. Her death registration of 27 Feb 1897 stated that she was 37 years of age. My grandmother said she was 37 and the other clue that dangles about at the back of my mind is that her birthday and my mother's were close in time. My mother was born on 18 October and the Ellen Taylor that most fits in with all the details was born 9 Oct 1859 which makes her 37 years of age when she died 27 Feb 1897. This Ellen Taylor is the eldest daughter of Thomas Taylor and Ellen Roberts who were themselves married 29 Jun 1857 at Saint Martin Parish in Birmingham. They had seven children all of whom I have located on the census. The seven tends to ring a bell somewhat as well - my parents had seven children and it is a vague memory that my mother used to say that her grandmother had had seven children and I know that wasn't her father's mother.
But am I correct? There is a sister named Kate which ties in with my grandmother's story as well. But of the rest I have no knowledge or family lore. One other item about Ellen Taylor was that she had an illegitimate child Florence Elizabeth Taylor who was born 24 Dec 1879. Florence Elizabeth Taylor was sent to Canada as a Home Child in 1887 to London Ontario where she lived until her marriage to Arthur Andrew Hull 19 January 1898 at London Ontario. They had two children Violet Christiana (born 28 May 1899) and Allan Wilfred (born 29 May 1902). Unfortunately I do not have any further information on this family other than that they moved to Chicago in 1913 and Sarah my youngest great aunt went with them. Sarah was actually sent to live with Florence Elizabeth Hull and her family in 1908 by the Birmingham Union. I find Florence at Aston Workhouse in 1881 on the census but the Ellen Taylor also listed there has her age as only 20 so I suspect it is not Florence's mother. Where Ellen Taylor is in 1881 I do not know for sure. I know where Edwin and Ellen Buller lived from 1886 to 1899 but I do not know where either of them was from 1881 to 1886 when my grandmother was registered (born).
Looking at Thomas Taylor and Ellen Roberts, I have traced them back a couple of generations to see if I can find anything that would help me to ensure that I have the correct parents for Ellen. Unfortunately the marriage registration for Edwin Buller and Ellen Taylor has not yet been located. I again have this strange story about them; marrying in Paris, France but I have not yet attempted to find that information. Why would they go there I wonder? But perhaps I should just follow the family lore as it might give me the answers I need and I think perhaps that will be my next research day for the Taylor family at Birmingham.
My grandmother had a wonderful life actually and was a very happy person. The sadness of those few years after her parents died was replaced soon by coming to a new country and starting a new life. She married John Routledge Pincombe in 1913 and enthusiastically learned all about farming since she was actually a "city girl" and perhaps her time at Marston Green prepared her somewhat for that as they used to have a garden that they tended there. She was "Head Girl" of the cottage where she lived and probably learned a great deal about managing people as she used to take care of organizing the hired hands who came in to help with harvest time. In her memory I would like to learn more about her mother's family and perhaps as time passes I will be able to do that.
My mtDNA which is H11a2 according to the latest build of the Phylogenetic Chart and which, by the Blood of the Isles mtDNA database, may have its origins in the Argyllshire County of Scotland has a couple of unusual mutations which have resulted in my have 27 matches with HVRI and 26 matches at HVRII in the control region and no perfect matches thus far in the Coding region although I have five matches with the Coding region minus one probably personal mutation. All of these matches, I am happy to say, take me back to Argyll Scotland or County Antrim Ireland making me think that the Ireland people may have emigrated from Scotland in the late 1600s early 1700s at the time of the Planters. So with that in mind, I am looking at my great grandmother and thinking at what period of time did your line arrive in the Birmingham area? Did they come from Ireland during the Famine? Did they come from Scotland at the time of the Industrial Revolution looking for work? Did they come even earlier and do they have deep roots in England? Was the Irish lullaby that my grandmother sung (and she knew it from her mother) because she was Irish or was it just popular? So many questions and no answers thus far.
My great grandmother had a reddish tinge to her dark brunet hair and my grandmother used to say that I looked like her somewhat because I was tall and thin (my grandmother was just over five feet so five feet six inches looks tall!). Then I have this mass of curly hair which she was apparently gifted with as well and the rosy English complexion (which I think might be Scots as well). But no pictures unfortunately have survived of my grandmother's parents.
My grandmother's siblings were all sent to Canada by the Birmingham Union and I have learned a great deal about their placements here in Canada (two in the Maritimes and two in Ontario). My grandmother was already working in England and decided to emigrate to be with them when the last two were sent to Canada in 1908. Surprisingly my grandmother never said she had a hard life as a child. Actually the reverse, her father worked two full time jobs and they always had a nice home and everything else that went towards a nice life when she was a child. She was the eldest of seven children born in 1886. Her father is a bit of a mystery except I can trace back quite a ways on some of his lines - his parents were Buller and Welch and his grandparents were Buller, Beard, Welch and Cheatle. I can find him on the census in 1851, 1861 and 1891. I have his birth registration and his baptism. I know exactly where he lived and where his father worked and I have a picture of the house. All good and interesting information but he disappeared from 1861 to 1886. His father died in London (probably on a buying trip for their pork butcher, confectionary, news shops businesses) and at that point everyone moved in with Grandmother Welch who owned a few buildings that her husband had had as restaurants. But he wasn't with her on the 1871 census. His younger brother was an apprentice jeweller and I do find Clement Charles Buller in South Africa later. Was Edwin in South Africa? I haven't found him there yet but I know that he was in Africa because my grandmother said he was.
Anyway, life was pleasant my grandmother always said when she was a child until her mother died when she was eleven years old. Grandma liked going to school but at that point her father needed someone to look after the children and Grandma was it unfortunately. Now her father must have been educated somewhat because he then taught her in the evenings so that she would not miss out on school which was excellent. Plus one brother was just two years younger and he would soon be up to her form when she left. But still she had to take on cooking and sewing and looking after a small baby (Aunt Sarah was just 14 months when her mother died). Plus there were two other sisters 6 and 4 years of age. Twin brothers had died at two and three weeks of age in early 1895. Grandma always said that her father would take them for little trips when he could and except for not being able to go to school life was still very pleasant. Then her father took ill with pneumonia and he passed away 21 Oct 1899 and life changed drastically. They were all placed at Marston Green Home in Coleshill which again Grandma said was a pleasant place but sad because now both of her parents were gone. She was trained as a seamstress and went to work at 16. She lived with a younger sister of her mother (Kate Taylor) until she went to Canada in 1908 at the age of 20. I also know that her Taylor grandfather was a shoemaker.
With that in mind I collected over time all the birth registrations for Ellen Taylor born in Birmingham between 1859 and 1861. Her death registration of 27 Feb 1897 stated that she was 37 years of age. My grandmother said she was 37 and the other clue that dangles about at the back of my mind is that her birthday and my mother's were close in time. My mother was born on 18 October and the Ellen Taylor that most fits in with all the details was born 9 Oct 1859 which makes her 37 years of age when she died 27 Feb 1897. This Ellen Taylor is the eldest daughter of Thomas Taylor and Ellen Roberts who were themselves married 29 Jun 1857 at Saint Martin Parish in Birmingham. They had seven children all of whom I have located on the census. The seven tends to ring a bell somewhat as well - my parents had seven children and it is a vague memory that my mother used to say that her grandmother had had seven children and I know that wasn't her father's mother.
But am I correct? There is a sister named Kate which ties in with my grandmother's story as well. But of the rest I have no knowledge or family lore. One other item about Ellen Taylor was that she had an illegitimate child Florence Elizabeth Taylor who was born 24 Dec 1879. Florence Elizabeth Taylor was sent to Canada as a Home Child in 1887 to London Ontario where she lived until her marriage to Arthur Andrew Hull 19 January 1898 at London Ontario. They had two children Violet Christiana (born 28 May 1899) and Allan Wilfred (born 29 May 1902). Unfortunately I do not have any further information on this family other than that they moved to Chicago in 1913 and Sarah my youngest great aunt went with them. Sarah was actually sent to live with Florence Elizabeth Hull and her family in 1908 by the Birmingham Union. I find Florence at Aston Workhouse in 1881 on the census but the Ellen Taylor also listed there has her age as only 20 so I suspect it is not Florence's mother. Where Ellen Taylor is in 1881 I do not know for sure. I know where Edwin and Ellen Buller lived from 1886 to 1899 but I do not know where either of them was from 1881 to 1886 when my grandmother was registered (born).
Looking at Thomas Taylor and Ellen Roberts, I have traced them back a couple of generations to see if I can find anything that would help me to ensure that I have the correct parents for Ellen. Unfortunately the marriage registration for Edwin Buller and Ellen Taylor has not yet been located. I again have this strange story about them; marrying in Paris, France but I have not yet attempted to find that information. Why would they go there I wonder? But perhaps I should just follow the family lore as it might give me the answers I need and I think perhaps that will be my next research day for the Taylor family at Birmingham.
My grandmother had a wonderful life actually and was a very happy person. The sadness of those few years after her parents died was replaced soon by coming to a new country and starting a new life. She married John Routledge Pincombe in 1913 and enthusiastically learned all about farming since she was actually a "city girl" and perhaps her time at Marston Green prepared her somewhat for that as they used to have a garden that they tended there. She was "Head Girl" of the cottage where she lived and probably learned a great deal about managing people as she used to take care of organizing the hired hands who came in to help with harvest time. In her memory I would like to learn more about her mother's family and perhaps as time passes I will be able to do that.
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Fournier dit Larose family
Emilie Fournier dite Larose married Thomas Welland/Whélan 13 Jan 1835 at Notre Dame Cathedral in Québec City.
The parents of Emilie Fournier dite Larose were identified as Jean Baptiste Fournier dit Larose and Elizabeth Labbé who were themselves married 10 Oct 1809 in Québec City.
M Jean Baptiste Fournier et Elizabeth Thibaut dite Labbé
Le dix Octobre Mil huit Cent neuf, après la publica
tion de trois bans de mariage faite au prones de nos
messes paroissiales entre Jean Baptiste Fournier, cha
retter, domicilié en cette ville, fils mineur de jérome
Fournier Charretier et de Magdelaine Godin, consente
au dit mariage et de cette paroisse d'autre part et Eliza
Thibaut dite Labbé domiciliée en cette ville, fille mineure de Franç
ois Thibaut dit Labbé journalier consentant au dit mariage et de def
Françoise Perpignan dite Pougeollo de cette paroisse
d'autre part, ne s'étant découvert aucun empechement
nous curé soussigné avond reçu leur mutuel consen
tement et leur avons donné la bénédiction nuptials en
présence de jérome Fournier Père et d'André gi__
ami de l'époux; de Franç Thibault dit Labbé
Père et de Marie Anne Brauché amie de l'épouse
ont tous déclarés avec les époux ne savoir signer
Trois _____
A Daoust Pretre
The parents of Jean Baptiste Fournier being thus identified as Jérome Fournier and Magdeleine Godin who were themselves married 17 Jan 1786 at Québec City.
Mariage de Jerome Fournier et de Magdaleine Gaudin
Le dix sept janvier mil sept cent quatre vingt six après la publication
de trois bans de mariage faite au prone de notre messe parosialle le jour
des trois ____dimanches consecutifs entre Jerome Fournier, fils d'emerie
Fournier dit Larose et de Marguerite Guenet de cette paroisse d'une
part; et Magdlaine Gaudin aussi en cette ville fille de Thiery
Gaudin et de défunte Marguerite Lefebvre ses pere et mere de la paroisse
des Ecureuils d'autre part; ne s'étant découvert aucun empechement
au dit mariage, nous soussigné curé de Québec avoir reçu leur mutuel
consentement et leur avoir donné la bénédiction nuptiale selon
la forme proscrite par notre mere la Ste église en presence de
Emerie Fournier pere, Jean Baptiste Fournier frere, Antoine _____
______ Antoine Jacsonpere, Simon Delmasec amis, Nicolas
Gaudin frere, Jean Ahrens amies de l'épouse et de plusieurs autres parens
et amis. ___quelques ajssi ont signé avec nous, les époux et autres ne le savoir. Lecture faite.
Emery Fournier [signed]
antoine jacsonpere [signed]
Johan Ahrens [signed]
Aug: D Hubin Pretre
The parents of Jérome Fournier being thus identified as Emerie Fournier dit Larose and Marguerite Quenet who were themselves married 14 Feb 1757 at Québec. The marriage lines identify Emerie Amien dit LaRose as a soldier in the Guienne Regiment and a son of Jean Baptiste Amien and Pauline Fournier who live in France. Hence Emerie Fournier dit Larose is the emigrant ancestor and Generation 1. Interesting that he has chosen to carry the name of his mother rather than his father since the marriage registration does list him as Emers Amien dit LaRose.
Jérome Fournier dit Larose married to Magdeleine Godin is Generation 2.
Jean Baptiste Fournier dit Larose married to Elizabeth Thibaut dite Labbé is Generation 3.
Emilie Fournier dite Larose married to Thomas Welland/Whélan is Generation 4.
The next research day I will ensure that I have collected all the documents plus see what I can learn about the Guienne Regiment.
The parents of Emilie Fournier dite Larose were identified as Jean Baptiste Fournier dit Larose and Elizabeth Labbé who were themselves married 10 Oct 1809 in Québec City.
M Jean Baptiste Fournier et Elizabeth Thibaut dite Labbé
Le dix Octobre Mil huit Cent neuf, après la publica
tion de trois bans de mariage faite au prones de nos
messes paroissiales entre Jean Baptiste Fournier, cha
retter, domicilié en cette ville, fils mineur de jérome
Fournier Charretier et de Magdelaine Godin, consente
au dit mariage et de cette paroisse d'autre part et Eliza
Thibaut dite Labbé domiciliée en cette ville, fille mineure de Franç
ois Thibaut dit Labbé journalier consentant au dit mariage et de def
Françoise Perpignan dite Pougeollo de cette paroisse
d'autre part, ne s'étant découvert aucun empechement
nous curé soussigné avond reçu leur mutuel consen
tement et leur avons donné la bénédiction nuptials en
présence de jérome Fournier Père et d'André gi__
ami de l'époux; de Franç Thibault dit Labbé
Père et de Marie Anne Brauché amie de l'épouse
ont tous déclarés avec les époux ne savoir signer
Trois _____
A Daoust Pretre
The parents of Jean Baptiste Fournier being thus identified as Jérome Fournier and Magdeleine Godin who were themselves married 17 Jan 1786 at Québec City.
Mariage de Jerome Fournier et de Magdaleine Gaudin
Le dix sept janvier mil sept cent quatre vingt six après la publication
de trois bans de mariage faite au prone de notre messe parosialle le jour
des trois ____dimanches consecutifs entre Jerome Fournier, fils d'emerie
Fournier dit Larose et de Marguerite Guenet de cette paroisse d'une
part; et Magdlaine Gaudin aussi en cette ville fille de Thiery
Gaudin et de défunte Marguerite Lefebvre ses pere et mere de la paroisse
des Ecureuils d'autre part; ne s'étant découvert aucun empechement
au dit mariage, nous soussigné curé de Québec avoir reçu leur mutuel
consentement et leur avoir donné la bénédiction nuptiale selon
la forme proscrite par notre mere la Ste église en presence de
Emerie Fournier pere, Jean Baptiste Fournier frere, Antoine _____
______ Antoine Jacsonpere, Simon Delmasec amis, Nicolas
Gaudin frere, Jean Ahrens amies de l'épouse et de plusieurs autres parens
et amis. ___quelques ajssi ont signé avec nous, les époux et autres ne le savoir. Lecture faite.
Emery Fournier [signed]
antoine jacsonpere [signed]
Johan Ahrens [signed]
Aug: D Hubin Pretre
The parents of Jérome Fournier being thus identified as Emerie Fournier dit Larose and Marguerite Quenet who were themselves married 14 Feb 1757 at Québec. The marriage lines identify Emerie Amien dit LaRose as a soldier in the Guienne Regiment and a son of Jean Baptiste Amien and Pauline Fournier who live in France. Hence Emerie Fournier dit Larose is the emigrant ancestor and Generation 1. Interesting that he has chosen to carry the name of his mother rather than his father since the marriage registration does list him as Emers Amien dit LaRose.
Jérome Fournier dit Larose married to Magdeleine Godin is Generation 2.
Jean Baptiste Fournier dit Larose married to Elizabeth Thibaut dite Labbé is Generation 3.
Emilie Fournier dite Larose married to Thomas Welland/Whélan is Generation 4.
The next research day I will ensure that I have collected all the documents plus see what I can learn about the Guienne Regiment.
Labels:
Amien,
Fournier dit Larose,
Godin,
Quenet,
Thibaut dite Labbé,
Welland,
Whelan
Whélan Family
On the 1871 census Thomas Whélan and his wife listed as Emilie Whélan are living at Quebec city and he is a carpenter (they have seven children listed (their daughter Emélie married Charles Alexandre Bédard in 1863) and Thomas lists his Origin as French.
Thomas Welland married Emilie Fournier dit Larose 13 Jan 1835 at Notre Dame Cathedral in Québec City.
M 1 Thomas Welland and Emilie Fournier dit Larose
Le treize janvier mil huir cent trente cinq après la
publication de trois bans de mariage faite aux prones des messes pa
raissoiles de Québec entre Thomas Welland peinteur, domicilié en la
paroisse de Québec, fils majeur de feu Thomas Welland et de defunte Elizabeth
pepin dit Lachance d'une part; et Emilie Fournier dit Larose, fille mineure
de Jean Baptiste Fournier dit Larose et de Elizabeth Labbé, domiciliée, ainsi
que leur dite fille en la paroisse de Québec, d'autre part; auque la dite
Emilie Fournier dit Larose avait le consentement de ses peère et mère
et que d'ailleurs il n'opparaissait aucun empechement nous pretre Curé
de Québec soussigné avont reçu leur mutuel consentement de mariage et
leur avons donné la bénédiction nuptiale en présence de pierre drolet
ami de l'époux et de Joseph Fournier dit Larose, père de l'épouse
qui tous deux ainsi que les époux ont déclaré ne savoir signer
M T Baillargeon Pretre
The priest has recorded his surname as Welland although the census uses Whélan as the surname.
The burial of Thomas Welland is recorded at Sherington
S 3 Thomas Welland
Le huir Fevrier mil huit cent soixante
cinq Nous curé soussigné avons inhume
dans le cimetière de cette paroisse le
corps de Thomas Welland décédé avante
hier a l'agé de soxiante treize ans
veuf de Mary Griffin de cette paroisse.
Etaient présents François Gilineau
et Raymond Robert qui son déclaré ne savoir signer
J Mineau Pretre
I do not know if this is the father of Thomas Welland married to Elisabeth Pépin dit Lachance, I have not yet found this marriage. In contact with another researcher and he hasn't been able to locate the marriage or discover anything further on Thomas Welland/Whélan.
Noting that Thomas Whélan married to Emilie Fournier dit Larose saw his origin as French, I think that I should perhaps look further back in the registers and not assume that Thomas Welland is necessarily from Ireland in the late 1700s. I did indeed find that one of the witnesses at the burial of Patrice Whelan in 1802 was Pierre Bédard. I also found there were two Bédard/Whélan marriages in the late 1700s. More investigation needed into this and see what I can find on the Whélan family in the 1700s. Next research for the Whelan will involve my having a look at the records in the 1700s for this family.
Thomas Welland married Emilie Fournier dit Larose 13 Jan 1835 at Notre Dame Cathedral in Québec City.
M 1 Thomas Welland and Emilie Fournier dit Larose
Le treize janvier mil huir cent trente cinq après la
publication de trois bans de mariage faite aux prones des messes pa
raissoiles de Québec entre Thomas Welland peinteur, domicilié en la
paroisse de Québec, fils majeur de feu Thomas Welland et de defunte Elizabeth
pepin dit Lachance d'une part; et Emilie Fournier dit Larose, fille mineure
de Jean Baptiste Fournier dit Larose et de Elizabeth Labbé, domiciliée, ainsi
que leur dite fille en la paroisse de Québec, d'autre part; auque la dite
Emilie Fournier dit Larose avait le consentement de ses peère et mère
et que d'ailleurs il n'opparaissait aucun empechement nous pretre Curé
de Québec soussigné avont reçu leur mutuel consentement de mariage et
leur avons donné la bénédiction nuptiale en présence de pierre drolet
ami de l'époux et de Joseph Fournier dit Larose, père de l'épouse
qui tous deux ainsi que les époux ont déclaré ne savoir signer
M T Baillargeon Pretre
The priest has recorded his surname as Welland although the census uses Whélan as the surname.
The burial of Thomas Welland is recorded at Sherington
S 3 Thomas Welland
Le huir Fevrier mil huit cent soixante
cinq Nous curé soussigné avons inhume
dans le cimetière de cette paroisse le
corps de Thomas Welland décédé avante
hier a l'agé de soxiante treize ans
veuf de Mary Griffin de cette paroisse.
Etaient présents François Gilineau
et Raymond Robert qui son déclaré ne savoir signer
J Mineau Pretre
I do not know if this is the father of Thomas Welland married to Elisabeth Pépin dit Lachance, I have not yet found this marriage. In contact with another researcher and he hasn't been able to locate the marriage or discover anything further on Thomas Welland/Whélan.
Noting that Thomas Whélan married to Emilie Fournier dit Larose saw his origin as French, I think that I should perhaps look further back in the registers and not assume that Thomas Welland is necessarily from Ireland in the late 1700s. I did indeed find that one of the witnesses at the burial of Patrice Whelan in 1802 was Pierre Bédard. I also found there were two Bédard/Whélan marriages in the late 1700s. More investigation needed into this and see what I can find on the Whélan family in the 1700s. Next research for the Whelan will involve my having a look at the records in the 1700s for this family.
Labels:
Bédard,
Fournier dit Larose,
Pépin dit Lachance,
Welland,
Whélan
Woodcock of Castle-Donnington
Looking at this family is a curiosity for me since it is the only William Cheatle marriage to a Sarah that I find in the IGI or the BVRII.
William Cheatle married to Sarah Woodcock 23 Feb 1773 at Castle Donnington. This is possibly the Sarah Woodcock baptized 10 Apr 1748 at Castle Donnington as the daughter of John Woodcock and Elizabeth Stevenson who were married 23 Dec 1747 at Melton Mowbray. This is possibly the William Cheatle baptized 7 Jan 1752 at Loughborough as the son of William Cheatle and Elizabeth Adcock who were married 29 Mar 1749 at Loughborough with William being baptized 1 Jan 1702 at Loughborough. All very speculative and I will be including these thoughts as I research the Cheatle family in the parish registers of Castle Donington and Loughborough both of which I purchased over three years ago but have scarcely looked at. This will be my incentive to dig into those registers.
William Cheatle married to Sarah Woodcock 23 Feb 1773 at Castle Donnington. This is possibly the Sarah Woodcock baptized 10 Apr 1748 at Castle Donnington as the daughter of John Woodcock and Elizabeth Stevenson who were married 23 Dec 1747 at Melton Mowbray. This is possibly the William Cheatle baptized 7 Jan 1752 at Loughborough as the son of William Cheatle and Elizabeth Adcock who were married 29 Mar 1749 at Loughborough with William being baptized 1 Jan 1702 at Loughborough. All very speculative and I will be including these thoughts as I research the Cheatle family in the parish registers of Castle Donington and Loughborough both of which I purchased over three years ago but have scarcely looked at. This will be my incentive to dig into those registers.
Labels:
Adcock,
Castle Donnington,
Cheatle,
Loughborough,
Melton Mowbray,
Stevenson,
Woodcock
Cheatle at Ashby de la Zouch and possibly Castle Donnington
Sarah Cheatle married William Welch 24 Aug 1818 at Longdon by Lichfield as mentioned in the Welch blog yesterday. One of the witnesses at the wedding was William Cheatle. On the census Sarah always stated her place of birth as Ashby de la Zouch and the year was generally 1795. There is a baptism 27 Jan 1795 at Ashby de la Zouch of Sarah Cheatle daughter of William and Sarah Cheatle. Sarah died at Aston, Warwickshire 26 Jul 1872.
The Cheatle family is a small one on the census and having not looked at this family on Find My Past for awhile I will spend my research time today looking at the Cheatle family there. Unfortunately Leicestershire records CMBs are not yet up on Find My Past. Looking at the spelling of Cheatle plus variants 10% use the Cheatle spelling. Eventually I expect there will be CMBs on Leicester on FMP.
Looking at Leicestershire record office, I searched their catalogue (ongoing in terms of material entered in) but did not find anything helpful yet. There were five entries for Cheatle and 47 for Woodcock. I am checking Woodcock because of the interesting marriage of William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock 23 Feb 1773 at Castle Donington. A few years ago I purchased the parish registers for Castle Donnington and Loughborough on fiche to have a look at the Cheatle families in these areas. I need to purchase more fiche and will do that on the next research day.
I did extract all the Cheatle entries that I found in the time period around the baptism of Sarah Cheatle at Ashby de la Zouch (1785 to 1804):
Baptisms
27 Jun 1785 Benjamin son of Benjamin Cheatle baptized
16 Apr 1787 Richard son of Benjamin and Mary Cheatle baptized
30 Sep 1789 Sarah Cheatle daughter of William and Ann Cheatle
27 Sep 1790 Ann Cheatle daughter of William and Elizabeth Cheatle baptized
19 Sep 1790 John Cheatle son of Benjamin and Catherine baptized
15 Jun 1790 Simeon son of George and Ann Cheatle baptized
27 Dec 1791 Joseph son of Benjamin and Catherine Cheatle baptized
8 Apr 1793 William son of William and Elizabeth Cheatle baptized
17 June 1794 James son of Benjamin and Mary Cheatle baptized
10 Nov 1793 Sarah daughter of Benjamin and Catherine Cheatle baptized
24 Jun 1794 Mary daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth Cheatle baptized
9 June 1802 William, Elizabeth and Frances son and daughters of William and Ann Cheatle baptized
27 Jan 1795 Sarah baptized daughter of William and Sarah Cheatle
28 Mar 1804 Catherine daughter of William and Elizabeth Cheatle baptized
21 Sep 1804 Catharine daughter of Benjamin and Catharine Cheatle baptized
Marriages
6 March 1786 William Cheatle and Elizabeth Sherwin both of this parish by banns
28 April 1788 Benjamin Cheatle and Katherine Adams both of this parish by banns
12 Apr 1792 Joseph Cheatle and Elizabeth Hefford both of this parish by banns
Burials
28 Aug 1781 Sarah Cheatle buried
11 April 1790 Ann Cheatle buried
31 May 1793 Sarah Cheatle buried
7 June 1793 John Cheatle buried
1803 Joseph Cheatle buried
30 Dec 1804 Catherine Cheatle buried
8 Oct 1805 Elizabeth Cheatle buried
7 Feb 1 807 Thomas Cheatle buried
20 Apr 1808 Ann Chettle buried
15 Mar 1808 Catharine Cheatle buried
11 Sep 1810 Benjamin Cheatle buried
28 Nov 1818 Elizabeth Cheatle buried 55 years
1818 Mary Cheatle buried 24 years
I learned a little from this extraction. Only three Sarahs were baptized in this time period and two of them had father George or Benjamin. Neither of these names were repeated in the family later. Sarah baptized in 1789 I eliminated as simply being too early she would have been 31 at her marriage which was possible but Sarah Cheatle Welch in the census always gave a date of birth around 1795 or within one year of that date. The person witnessing her marriage was William Cheatle and there are three possibilities for a father William - William married to Ann, William married to Sarah and William married to Elizabeth. William married to Ann is the father of Sarah baptized in 1789 so eliminated him. William married to Elizabeth; all of their children appear to have been baptized at Ashby de la Zouch following their marriage at Ashby de la Zouch in 1786 and they were an Ann, a William and a Catherine. Although given the spread in dates it was possible but Sarah Cheatle Welch always said she was born at Ashby de la Zouch. That left me with Sarah baptized in 1795 as the daughter of William and Sarah Cheatle (they were not married at Ashby de la Zouch at least as far back as 1780. There are also two Williams baptized who could have been witnesses in 1818; William son of William and Elizabeth and William son of William and Ann. Neither of these two appeared to have named a daughter Sarah though.
I received some interesting information from another Cheatle researcher:
Ashby de la Zouch Directory in 1855
Benjamin Cheatle, farmer and butcher, Wood street
Cheatle James, butcher, Market street
Cheatle James, farmer, Old park
Cheatle Thomas, farmer and cattle dealer, Holywell farm
Cheatle William, auctioneer, Wood street
Cheatle William, farmer, Mount house
Cheatle William, pork butcher, Kilwardby street
In that the Welch family were owners of eating establishments and my Henry Christopher Buller was a pork butcher this all seems to fit for this family line that they would be known to each other. By 1855 though the father William Cheatle would have died so he is not one of these men. The William Cheatles baptized in the 1790s early 1800s would have been alive possibly so could be these men.
I also received a family chart for the William Cheatle and Elizabeth Sherwin family and she shows an extra daughter Sarah baptized in 1787 but married to a John Taylor which eliminates her anyway. Only the children baptized are shown by her and she has investigated them quite actively. I think I can eliminate myself from that family grouping which eliminates the William baptized in 1793 as well. Although my William could be a cousin to this William as her chart begins with William and Elizabeth so will not eliminate that idea of a relationship between the families as it is a relatively uncommon surname.
As well a directory of 1828 for Ashby de la Zouch lists
Cheatle Benjamin, junior, Wood street, auctioneer
Cheatle Benjamin, Wood St, Butcher
Cheatle James, Market St, Butcher
Cheatle William, Mill lane, Butcher
Putting together family groupings of the baptisms:
William Cheatle and Elizabeth Sherwin married 1786
Sarah baptized 1787 (from researcher)
Ann baptized 1790; buried 1790
William baptized 1793
Catherine baptized 1804
Benjamin Cheatle and Mary married ?
Benjamin baptized 1785
Richard baptized 1787
James baptized 1794
Benjamin Cheatle and Katherine Adams married 1788 (possibly a second marriage)
John baptized 1790; buried 1793
Joseph baptized 1791
Sarah baptized 1793
Catherine baptized 1804; buried 1804
William Cheatle and Ann ?
Sarah baptized 1789; buried 1793
William baptized 1802
Elizabeth baptized 1802
Frances baptized 1802
Joseph Cheatle and Elizabeth Hefford married 1792
Mary baptized 1794; buried 1818
William Cheatle and Sarah married ?
Sarah baptized 1795
George Cheatle and Ann married ?
Simeon baptized 1790
Separating into family lines lets me relate somewhat to the directories but does not tell me which William is mine or whether he remained in Ashby de la Zouch since Sarah married at Longdon by Lichfield in 1818 with a William Cheatle present. My correspondent traces down from William son of William and Elizabeth Cheatle and he had sons William, Thomas, James and Mark and daughters Mary and Sarah. The Sarah is interesting for this family I think but could be quite coincidental. The 1828 directory has one William on Mill Lane and he is a butcher. the 1855 directory has William, Thomas and James all involved with meat in some way or another. My correspondent has found that Benjamin Cheatle married to Mary ? and William Cheatle married to Elizabeth Sherwin were brothers as the youngest child Catherine names Benjamin as her uncle on five post civil registrations.
From another Cheatle researcher I have
Abraham Cheatle of Ashby de la Zouch married to Sarah Tompson of Swebston in 1705 (occuring on page 98 of the register).
Michael Cheatle of Long Whattong marrying Anne Skirmer of Belton in 1717 (located at B 4-33 in the register).
From a set of the fiche of the 1741 Poll book I have transcribed
Hundred Freeholder Freehold
Framland Chettle, Robert Ab Kettleby
Goscote East Twiford Chettle, William Siston
Guthlaxton Knaptoft Chettle, William Kilworth North
Goscote West Donnington Castle Chettle, John Donnington on the Heath
Guthlaxton Walcote Chettle, John Long Whatton
Guthlaxton Walcote Chettle, Michael Belton
Sparkenhoe Ratcliffe Cuiley Chettle, Joseph
Sparkenhoe Witherley Chettle, Richard
From another research the Leicestershire Freeholders book of 1630
Whatton Longe, Michaell Cheatle
and from the 1719 Poll book
Witherley, Richard Cheatle
and from the Goscote West Hundred Freeholders
Beau Manor, Messuage and Land , Elizabeth Cheatle
All of these bits are interesting and might fit together later on but for the moment I have been looking at a marriage for William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock at Castle Donington 23 Feb 1773. It is the only William and Sarah marriage that I have found thus far in the IGI and I will now start going through the Parish Registers that I have purchased thus far. I want to buy Ashby de la Zouch and a couple of others as well and that I will do on the next research day for Cheatle.
William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock married 23 Feb 1773
Mary baptized 28 May 1775
John baptized 27 Oct 1777
Ann baptized 20 May 1780
Sarah baptized 3 Jan 1783
Elizabeth baptized 12 Jan 1786
At Ashby de la Zouch there was a Sarah Cheatle buried 31 May 1793; the priest did not note whether it was a child/adult/wife/ etc. in the register.
Also baptized at Castle Donnington (IGI)
George Cheatle son of John Cheatle and Ann 31 Aug 1760
William Cheatle son of Elizabeth Cheatle 6 May 1807
Marriages at Castle Donnington (IGI)
William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock 23 Feb 1773
Mary Cheatle and David Leevers 6 Jul 1776
Ann Cheatle and Joseph Hays 3 Nov 1778
Mary Cheatle and Francis Rayns 9 Jul 1781
George Cheatle and Mary Smith 3 Dec 1782
Thomas Cheatle and Sarah Marson 16 May 1784
Elizabeth Cheatle and Francis Bailey 31 May 1807
Ann Cheatle and John Stokes 24 Oct 1808
Ann Cheatle and Richard Wright 1 Apr 1811
Mary Cheatle and Thomas Peach 29 Oct 1811
Hannah Cheatle and William Green 27 May 1812
It is not apparent that William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock remained at Castle Donnington.
On the Census of 1841 at at Ratby there is a William Cheatle born about 1776 and a William Cheatle born about 1796 at Ashby de la Zouch looking only at those borne before 1800.
On the census of 1851 there is a William Cheatle married to a Sarah with birth year about 1786 at Castle Donnington but living in Nottingham. There is also a William Cheatle married to Mary born about 1793 at Ashby de la Zouch and living at Ashby de la Zouch. All interesting and wets the appetite to look further but I need something to link the entries to the census and perhaps it would be to look at the land tax assessments and I will investigate to see if that is possible. In the meantime the next research day will see me start to finally look at the fiche for Castle Donnington more out of curiosity since that is the only place I have found a marriage for a William Cheatle to Sarah.
The Cheatle family is a small one on the census and having not looked at this family on Find My Past for awhile I will spend my research time today looking at the Cheatle family there. Unfortunately Leicestershire records CMBs are not yet up on Find My Past. Looking at the spelling of Cheatle plus variants 10% use the Cheatle spelling. Eventually I expect there will be CMBs on Leicester on FMP.
Looking at Leicestershire record office, I searched their catalogue (ongoing in terms of material entered in) but did not find anything helpful yet. There were five entries for Cheatle and 47 for Woodcock. I am checking Woodcock because of the interesting marriage of William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock 23 Feb 1773 at Castle Donington. A few years ago I purchased the parish registers for Castle Donnington and Loughborough on fiche to have a look at the Cheatle families in these areas. I need to purchase more fiche and will do that on the next research day.
I did extract all the Cheatle entries that I found in the time period around the baptism of Sarah Cheatle at Ashby de la Zouch (1785 to 1804):
Baptisms
27 Jun 1785 Benjamin son of Benjamin Cheatle baptized
16 Apr 1787 Richard son of Benjamin and Mary Cheatle baptized
30 Sep 1789 Sarah Cheatle daughter of William and Ann Cheatle
27 Sep 1790 Ann Cheatle daughter of William and Elizabeth Cheatle baptized
19 Sep 1790 John Cheatle son of Benjamin and Catherine baptized
15 Jun 1790 Simeon son of George and Ann Cheatle baptized
27 Dec 1791 Joseph son of Benjamin and Catherine Cheatle baptized
8 Apr 1793 William son of William and Elizabeth Cheatle baptized
17 June 1794 James son of Benjamin and Mary Cheatle baptized
10 Nov 1793 Sarah daughter of Benjamin and Catherine Cheatle baptized
24 Jun 1794 Mary daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth Cheatle baptized
9 June 1802 William, Elizabeth and Frances son and daughters of William and Ann Cheatle baptized
27 Jan 1795 Sarah baptized daughter of William and Sarah Cheatle
28 Mar 1804 Catherine daughter of William and Elizabeth Cheatle baptized
21 Sep 1804 Catharine daughter of Benjamin and Catharine Cheatle baptized
Marriages
6 March 1786 William Cheatle and Elizabeth Sherwin both of this parish by banns
28 April 1788 Benjamin Cheatle and Katherine Adams both of this parish by banns
12 Apr 1792 Joseph Cheatle and Elizabeth Hefford both of this parish by banns
Burials
28 Aug 1781 Sarah Cheatle buried
11 April 1790 Ann Cheatle buried
31 May 1793 Sarah Cheatle buried
7 June 1793 John Cheatle buried
1803 Joseph Cheatle buried
30 Dec 1804 Catherine Cheatle buried
8 Oct 1805 Elizabeth Cheatle buried
7 Feb 1 807 Thomas Cheatle buried
20 Apr 1808 Ann Chettle buried
15 Mar 1808 Catharine Cheatle buried
11 Sep 1810 Benjamin Cheatle buried
28 Nov 1818 Elizabeth Cheatle buried 55 years
1818 Mary Cheatle buried 24 years
I learned a little from this extraction. Only three Sarahs were baptized in this time period and two of them had father George or Benjamin. Neither of these names were repeated in the family later. Sarah baptized in 1789 I eliminated as simply being too early she would have been 31 at her marriage which was possible but Sarah Cheatle Welch in the census always gave a date of birth around 1795 or within one year of that date. The person witnessing her marriage was William Cheatle and there are three possibilities for a father William - William married to Ann, William married to Sarah and William married to Elizabeth. William married to Ann is the father of Sarah baptized in 1789 so eliminated him. William married to Elizabeth; all of their children appear to have been baptized at Ashby de la Zouch following their marriage at Ashby de la Zouch in 1786 and they were an Ann, a William and a Catherine. Although given the spread in dates it was possible but Sarah Cheatle Welch always said she was born at Ashby de la Zouch. That left me with Sarah baptized in 1795 as the daughter of William and Sarah Cheatle (they were not married at Ashby de la Zouch at least as far back as 1780. There are also two Williams baptized who could have been witnesses in 1818; William son of William and Elizabeth and William son of William and Ann. Neither of these two appeared to have named a daughter Sarah though.
I received some interesting information from another Cheatle researcher:
Ashby de la Zouch Directory in 1855
Benjamin Cheatle, farmer and butcher, Wood street
Cheatle James, butcher, Market street
Cheatle James, farmer, Old park
Cheatle Thomas, farmer and cattle dealer, Holywell farm
Cheatle William, auctioneer, Wood street
Cheatle William, farmer, Mount house
Cheatle William, pork butcher, Kilwardby street
In that the Welch family were owners of eating establishments and my Henry Christopher Buller was a pork butcher this all seems to fit for this family line that they would be known to each other. By 1855 though the father William Cheatle would have died so he is not one of these men. The William Cheatles baptized in the 1790s early 1800s would have been alive possibly so could be these men.
I also received a family chart for the William Cheatle and Elizabeth Sherwin family and she shows an extra daughter Sarah baptized in 1787 but married to a John Taylor which eliminates her anyway. Only the children baptized are shown by her and she has investigated them quite actively. I think I can eliminate myself from that family grouping which eliminates the William baptized in 1793 as well. Although my William could be a cousin to this William as her chart begins with William and Elizabeth so will not eliminate that idea of a relationship between the families as it is a relatively uncommon surname.
As well a directory of 1828 for Ashby de la Zouch lists
Cheatle Benjamin, junior, Wood street, auctioneer
Cheatle Benjamin, Wood St, Butcher
Cheatle James, Market St, Butcher
Cheatle William, Mill lane, Butcher
Putting together family groupings of the baptisms:
William Cheatle and Elizabeth Sherwin married 1786
Sarah baptized 1787 (from researcher)
Ann baptized 1790; buried 1790
William baptized 1793
Catherine baptized 1804
Benjamin Cheatle and Mary married ?
Benjamin baptized 1785
Richard baptized 1787
James baptized 1794
Benjamin Cheatle and Katherine Adams married 1788 (possibly a second marriage)
John baptized 1790; buried 1793
Joseph baptized 1791
Sarah baptized 1793
Catherine baptized 1804; buried 1804
William Cheatle and Ann ?
Sarah baptized 1789; buried 1793
William baptized 1802
Elizabeth baptized 1802
Frances baptized 1802
Joseph Cheatle and Elizabeth Hefford married 1792
Mary baptized 1794; buried 1818
William Cheatle and Sarah married ?
Sarah baptized 1795
George Cheatle and Ann married ?
Simeon baptized 1790
Separating into family lines lets me relate somewhat to the directories but does not tell me which William is mine or whether he remained in Ashby de la Zouch since Sarah married at Longdon by Lichfield in 1818 with a William Cheatle present. My correspondent traces down from William son of William and Elizabeth Cheatle and he had sons William, Thomas, James and Mark and daughters Mary and Sarah. The Sarah is interesting for this family I think but could be quite coincidental. The 1828 directory has one William on Mill Lane and he is a butcher. the 1855 directory has William, Thomas and James all involved with meat in some way or another. My correspondent has found that Benjamin Cheatle married to Mary ? and William Cheatle married to Elizabeth Sherwin were brothers as the youngest child Catherine names Benjamin as her uncle on five post civil registrations.
From another Cheatle researcher I have
Abraham Cheatle of Ashby de la Zouch married to Sarah Tompson of Swebston in 1705 (occuring on page 98 of the register).
Michael Cheatle of Long Whattong marrying Anne Skirmer of Belton in 1717 (located at B 4-33 in the register).
From a set of the fiche of the 1741 Poll book I have transcribed
Hundred Freeholder Freehold
Framland Chettle, Robert Ab Kettleby
Goscote East Twiford Chettle, William Siston
Guthlaxton Knaptoft Chettle, William Kilworth North
Goscote West Donnington Castle Chettle, John Donnington on the Heath
Guthlaxton Walcote Chettle, John Long Whatton
Guthlaxton Walcote Chettle, Michael Belton
Sparkenhoe Ratcliffe Cuiley Chettle, Joseph
Sparkenhoe Witherley Chettle, Richard
From another research the Leicestershire Freeholders book of 1630
Whatton Longe, Michaell Cheatle
and from the 1719 Poll book
Witherley, Richard Cheatle
and from the Goscote West Hundred Freeholders
Beau Manor, Messuage and Land , Elizabeth Cheatle
All of these bits are interesting and might fit together later on but for the moment I have been looking at a marriage for William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock at Castle Donington 23 Feb 1773. It is the only William and Sarah marriage that I have found thus far in the IGI and I will now start going through the Parish Registers that I have purchased thus far. I want to buy Ashby de la Zouch and a couple of others as well and that I will do on the next research day for Cheatle.
William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock married 23 Feb 1773
Mary baptized 28 May 1775
John baptized 27 Oct 1777
Ann baptized 20 May 1780
Sarah baptized 3 Jan 1783
Elizabeth baptized 12 Jan 1786
At Ashby de la Zouch there was a Sarah Cheatle buried 31 May 1793; the priest did not note whether it was a child/adult/wife/ etc. in the register.
Also baptized at Castle Donnington (IGI)
George Cheatle son of John Cheatle and Ann 31 Aug 1760
William Cheatle son of Elizabeth Cheatle 6 May 1807
Marriages at Castle Donnington (IGI)
William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock 23 Feb 1773
Mary Cheatle and David Leevers 6 Jul 1776
Ann Cheatle and Joseph Hays 3 Nov 1778
Mary Cheatle and Francis Rayns 9 Jul 1781
George Cheatle and Mary Smith 3 Dec 1782
Thomas Cheatle and Sarah Marson 16 May 1784
Elizabeth Cheatle and Francis Bailey 31 May 1807
Ann Cheatle and John Stokes 24 Oct 1808
Ann Cheatle and Richard Wright 1 Apr 1811
Mary Cheatle and Thomas Peach 29 Oct 1811
Hannah Cheatle and William Green 27 May 1812
It is not apparent that William Cheatle and Sarah Woodcock remained at Castle Donnington.
On the Census of 1841 at at Ratby there is a William Cheatle born about 1776 and a William Cheatle born about 1796 at Ashby de la Zouch looking only at those borne before 1800.
On the census of 1851 there is a William Cheatle married to a Sarah with birth year about 1786 at Castle Donnington but living in Nottingham. There is also a William Cheatle married to Mary born about 1793 at Ashby de la Zouch and living at Ashby de la Zouch. All interesting and wets the appetite to look further but I need something to link the entries to the census and perhaps it would be to look at the land tax assessments and I will investigate to see if that is possible. In the meantime the next research day will see me start to finally look at the fiche for Castle Donnington more out of curiosity since that is the only place I have found a marriage for a William Cheatle to Sarah.
Labels:
Ashby de la Zouch,
Castle Donnington,
Cheatle,
Welch,
Woodcock
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Patry Family
Marie Josephte Patry married Pierre Bédard 15 Jun 1819 in Notre-Dame Cathedral at Québec.
M34 Pierre Bédard et Marie Josephte Patrie
Le quinze juin mil huit cent dix neuf après la publication de trois bans
de mariage faite au prones de nos messes paroissiales entre Pierre
Bédard une mineur domicilié en cette ville fils majeur de Jacques Bédard
et de marie petitclair de cette paroisse d'une part, et josephte Patri
domiciliée en cette ville fille majeure de Pierre Patri cultivateur et de marie
girard de la paroisse de Beaumont d'autre part; consentant ne s'étant
découvert aucun empechement Nous pretre curé de Québec Lavigne
avons reçu leur mutuel consentement et leur avons donné la bénédiction
nuptiale en présence de Jacques Stanislas Bédard père
de Jacques Bédard frère et de Prisque Bédard oncle
paternel de l'époux; de Pierre Patri père, d'Etienne Patri
et Joseph Patri frères d'Etienne Michel d'Joseph Girard
oncle maternel de l'épouse, et les autres, ainsi que l'époux ont
déclaré ne la _____ faire. Deux mots ____ et ____
____
Pierre Bédard [signed]
Jacques Bédard [signed]
Prisque Bédard [signed]
Gignay John Curé de Québec
The parents of Marie Josephte Patry being thus idenfied as Pierre Patry and Marie Girard who were themselves married 18 Nov 1782 at St Michel Parish in Bellechasse. This is one of the few errors that I found in Tanguay. He has the father of Pierre Patry as André but in the marriage lines below
M 451 Pierre Patri et Marie Girard
La dix huit novembre mil sept cent quatre vingt deux après
la publication de trois bans de mariage au prone des nos messes paroissiales
entre pierre patri fils de pierre patri et de marie magdalen deynau
ses pere et mere de cette paroisse d'un part et marie girard fille
de feu joseph girard et de marie marguerite labrecsque ____
de la paroisse St Etienne Beaumont d'autre part, sans qu'il ne soit
trouvé aucun empechement ny opposition, ______ pretre
soussigné ay reçu leur mutuel consentement du mariage avons y
donné la bénédiction nuptiale _________
I will complete the transcription later.
The parents of Pierre Patri thus being identified as Pierre Patri and Marie Magdalen Deniau who were themselves married 29 Jan 1748 at St Michel. One of the very few errors that I have found in Tanguay concerns the father of Pierre Patry married to Marie Girard as he has directed one back to André III. The parents of this Pierre Patry are identified as René Patry and Marie Dupuis who were themselves married 27 Feb 1713 at Notre Dame de l'Assomption de Berthier, Bellechasse. The parents of René were André Patry and Henriette Cartois who were themselves married 23 Jul 1675 at Notre Dame Cathedral in Québec. André was born in France and so is the emigrant ancestor and would then be Generation 1.
René Patry married to Marie Dupuis is Generation 2. The present family is also descended from a second son of André and Henriette - André Patrie married to Catherine Pruneau 18 Nov 1711 at Berthier and they are also Generation 2
Pierre Patry (son of René) married to Marie Madeleine Daniau is Generation 3. Clement Patrie (son of André) married to Dorothee Marie Brochu 15 Jun 1744 at St Vallier, Bellechase is Generation 3. Their daughter Marie Patrie married François Plante 29 Aug 1774 St Michel de la Durantye and is Generation 4.
Pierre Patry (son of Pierre) married to Marie Girard is Generation 4. Clement Patry (son of Clement) married to Thérèse Queret 15 Jan 1770 at St Michel, Bellechasse is Generation 4. Their daughter Marie married to Etienne Fournier 12 Jul 1808 at St Charles, Bellechasse is Generation 5.
Marie Josephte Patry married to Pierre Bédard is Generation 5.
The next research day on the Patry family I will continue extracting records and transcribing them.
M34 Pierre Bédard et Marie Josephte Patrie
Le quinze juin mil huit cent dix neuf après la publication de trois bans
de mariage faite au prones de nos messes paroissiales entre Pierre
Bédard une mineur domicilié en cette ville fils majeur de Jacques Bédard
et de marie petitclair de cette paroisse d'une part, et josephte Patri
domiciliée en cette ville fille majeure de Pierre Patri cultivateur et de marie
girard de la paroisse de Beaumont d'autre part; consentant ne s'étant
découvert aucun empechement Nous pretre curé de Québec Lavigne
avons reçu leur mutuel consentement et leur avons donné la bénédiction
nuptiale en présence de Jacques Stanislas Bédard père
de Jacques Bédard frère et de Prisque Bédard oncle
paternel de l'époux; de Pierre Patri père, d'Etienne Patri
et Joseph Patri frères d'Etienne Michel d'Joseph Girard
oncle maternel de l'épouse, et les autres, ainsi que l'époux ont
déclaré ne la _____ faire. Deux mots ____ et ____
____
Pierre Bédard [signed]
Jacques Bédard [signed]
Prisque Bédard [signed]
Gignay John Curé de Québec
The parents of Marie Josephte Patry being thus idenfied as Pierre Patry and Marie Girard who were themselves married 18 Nov 1782 at St Michel Parish in Bellechasse. This is one of the few errors that I found in Tanguay. He has the father of Pierre Patry as André but in the marriage lines below
M 451 Pierre Patri et Marie Girard
La dix huit novembre mil sept cent quatre vingt deux après
la publication de trois bans de mariage au prone des nos messes paroissiales
entre pierre patri fils de pierre patri et de marie magdalen deynau
ses pere et mere de cette paroisse d'un part et marie girard fille
de feu joseph girard et de marie marguerite labrecsque ____
de la paroisse St Etienne Beaumont d'autre part, sans qu'il ne soit
trouvé aucun empechement ny opposition, ______ pretre
soussigné ay reçu leur mutuel consentement du mariage avons y
donné la bénédiction nuptiale _________
I will complete the transcription later.
The parents of Pierre Patri thus being identified as Pierre Patri and Marie Magdalen Deniau who were themselves married 29 Jan 1748 at St Michel. One of the very few errors that I have found in Tanguay concerns the father of Pierre Patry married to Marie Girard as he has directed one back to André III. The parents of this Pierre Patry are identified as René Patry and Marie Dupuis who were themselves married 27 Feb 1713 at Notre Dame de l'Assomption de Berthier, Bellechasse. The parents of René were André Patry and Henriette Cartois who were themselves married 23 Jul 1675 at Notre Dame Cathedral in Québec. André was born in France and so is the emigrant ancestor and would then be Generation 1.
René Patry married to Marie Dupuis is Generation 2. The present family is also descended from a second son of André and Henriette - André Patrie married to Catherine Pruneau 18 Nov 1711 at Berthier and they are also Generation 2
Pierre Patry (son of René) married to Marie Madeleine Daniau is Generation 3. Clement Patrie (son of André) married to Dorothee Marie Brochu 15 Jun 1744 at St Vallier, Bellechase is Generation 3. Their daughter Marie Patrie married François Plante 29 Aug 1774 St Michel de la Durantye and is Generation 4.
Pierre Patry (son of Pierre) married to Marie Girard is Generation 4. Clement Patry (son of Clement) married to Thérèse Queret 15 Jan 1770 at St Michel, Bellechasse is Generation 4. Their daughter Marie married to Etienne Fournier 12 Jul 1808 at St Charles, Bellechasse is Generation 5.
Marie Josephte Patry married to Pierre Bédard is Generation 5.
The next research day on the Patry family I will continue extracting records and transcribing them.
Brockhouse of Rugeley, Staffordshire
Margaret Brockhouse married John Welch 16 Feb 1783 at Rugeley Staffordshire UK with witnesses Mary Crutchley and Thomas Ward. Neither of these two people have been applicable to my research on this family to date. Margaret was baptized at Rugeley 22 Sep 1754 the daughter of Charles and Ann Brockhouse. Charles and Ann baptized eight children at Rugeley:
Charles baptized 8 Jul 1750 and he has one son baptized at Rugeley 30 Jun 1771 (no marriage details yet).
Sarah baptized 14 Mar 1752 at Rugeley
Margaret (as above)
John baptized 15 May 1757 at Rugeley
William baptized 7 Sep 1760 at Rugeley
Hannah baptized 7 Feb 1762 at Rugeley
Esther baptized 4 May 1766 at Rugeley
Joseph baptized 10 Jul 1768 at Rugeley
The marriage of Charles Brockhouse and Ann Lea was celebrated 23 Jan 1748 at Rugeley by Bans.
There wasn't a baptism for Charles Brockhouse at Rugeley but I did find a baptism 12 Oct 1721 at Saint Mary Parish in Lichfield, Staffordshire. The name of his father was given as John Brockhouse. It is possibly significant that the second son was named John. Interestingly there were four baptisms with John listed as the father in this time period with three at Lichfield and the fourth at Rugeley.
William baptized 26 Mar 1719 at Saint Mary, Lichfield
John baptized 2 Aug 1719 at Saint Mary, Lichfield
Charles (as above)
Margaret baptized 3 May 1724 at Rugeley
Possibly he is the John Brockhouse baptized 7 Apr 1695 at Rugeley Staffordshire and the son of John Brockhouse and Margaret Wood who were themselves married 27 April 1692 at Rugeley and the following four children are baptized at Rugeley as children of John and Margaret Brockhouse.
Margaret baptized 31 Dec 1693; buried 15 Jan 1693/94 at Rugeley.
John (as above)
William baptized 26 Nov 1697 at Rugeley
Joan baptized 14 Jul 1700 at Rugeley
This family does not appear on the Land Tax Assessments and I have no idea of their occupation. I have not followed the Brockhouse family down further other than noting the son of Charles (brother to Margaret who married John Welch).
I have not checked Find My Past for the Brockhouse family for a long time. The 1841 census has 63 records, the 1851 86 records, the 1861 has 75 records, the 1871 has 75 records, the 1881 census has 126 records, the 1891 census has 161 records, the 1901 census has 161 records and the 1911 census has 202 records. There are 829 records in births 1837 - 2006. There are only three baptisms recorded two in Derbyshire and one in West Riding of Yorkshire. There are 513 marriages between 1837 and 2005 and 37 in the parish records collection which include Lincolnshire, Derbyshire, London, Yorkshire, Essex, Cornwall, Durham, Surrey, Shropshire, Northumberland, Lancashire. The earliest is 1560 in Shropshire which might be interesting in the future but I am back in the late 1600s at Rugeley. Deaths include 526 between 1837 and 2006 and 137 parish records which do actually include Staffordshire so I shall extract them for my future use. This will let me look at the Brockhouse family and help to determine if Charles at Lichfield could also be my Charles at Rugeley. The distance between these two parishes is eight miles. I have not really investigated this family name at all. I discovered this connection whilst we were at Salt Lake City.
There were 127 distinct burials records for Brockhouse on Find My Past with 15 of then at Rugeley. All "Charles Brockhouse" were buried at Rugeley. Sixty four of the 127 burials were in Staffordshire with 19 in Warwick and 20 in Worcestershire and all other counties were seven or less. Sorting on the year is interesting and I am suspicious this name is a singleton with people moving out from Staffordshire and Lancashire towards Warwickshire and Northumberland and the area south of Warwickshire.
The next Brockhouse research day I shall see if anyone has now put up family trees for this family. It would appear that with the accumulated evidence having Charles baptized at Lichfield being the Charles at Rugeley and tracing back to the earlier Brockhouse family at Rugeley should be considered.
Charles baptized 8 Jul 1750 and he has one son baptized at Rugeley 30 Jun 1771 (no marriage details yet).
Sarah baptized 14 Mar 1752 at Rugeley
Margaret (as above)
John baptized 15 May 1757 at Rugeley
William baptized 7 Sep 1760 at Rugeley
Hannah baptized 7 Feb 1762 at Rugeley
Esther baptized 4 May 1766 at Rugeley
Joseph baptized 10 Jul 1768 at Rugeley
The marriage of Charles Brockhouse and Ann Lea was celebrated 23 Jan 1748 at Rugeley by Bans.
There wasn't a baptism for Charles Brockhouse at Rugeley but I did find a baptism 12 Oct 1721 at Saint Mary Parish in Lichfield, Staffordshire. The name of his father was given as John Brockhouse. It is possibly significant that the second son was named John. Interestingly there were four baptisms with John listed as the father in this time period with three at Lichfield and the fourth at Rugeley.
William baptized 26 Mar 1719 at Saint Mary, Lichfield
John baptized 2 Aug 1719 at Saint Mary, Lichfield
Charles (as above)
Margaret baptized 3 May 1724 at Rugeley
Possibly he is the John Brockhouse baptized 7 Apr 1695 at Rugeley Staffordshire and the son of John Brockhouse and Margaret Wood who were themselves married 27 April 1692 at Rugeley and the following four children are baptized at Rugeley as children of John and Margaret Brockhouse.
Margaret baptized 31 Dec 1693; buried 15 Jan 1693/94 at Rugeley.
John (as above)
William baptized 26 Nov 1697 at Rugeley
Joan baptized 14 Jul 1700 at Rugeley
This family does not appear on the Land Tax Assessments and I have no idea of their occupation. I have not followed the Brockhouse family down further other than noting the son of Charles (brother to Margaret who married John Welch).
I have not checked Find My Past for the Brockhouse family for a long time. The 1841 census has 63 records, the 1851 86 records, the 1861 has 75 records, the 1871 has 75 records, the 1881 census has 126 records, the 1891 census has 161 records, the 1901 census has 161 records and the 1911 census has 202 records. There are 829 records in births 1837 - 2006. There are only three baptisms recorded two in Derbyshire and one in West Riding of Yorkshire. There are 513 marriages between 1837 and 2005 and 37 in the parish records collection which include Lincolnshire, Derbyshire, London, Yorkshire, Essex, Cornwall, Durham, Surrey, Shropshire, Northumberland, Lancashire. The earliest is 1560 in Shropshire which might be interesting in the future but I am back in the late 1600s at Rugeley. Deaths include 526 between 1837 and 2006 and 137 parish records which do actually include Staffordshire so I shall extract them for my future use. This will let me look at the Brockhouse family and help to determine if Charles at Lichfield could also be my Charles at Rugeley. The distance between these two parishes is eight miles. I have not really investigated this family name at all. I discovered this connection whilst we were at Salt Lake City.
There were 127 distinct burials records for Brockhouse on Find My Past with 15 of then at Rugeley. All "Charles Brockhouse" were buried at Rugeley. Sixty four of the 127 burials were in Staffordshire with 19 in Warwick and 20 in Worcestershire and all other counties were seven or less. Sorting on the year is interesting and I am suspicious this name is a singleton with people moving out from Staffordshire and Lancashire towards Warwickshire and Northumberland and the area south of Warwickshire.
The next Brockhouse research day I shall see if anyone has now put up family trees for this family. It would appear that with the accumulated evidence having Charles baptized at Lichfield being the Charles at Rugeley and tracing back to the earlier Brockhouse family at Rugeley should be considered.
Bédard Family at Québec
This Bédard research day will be dedicated to collecting records for the family as I have now completed the 32 3x great grandparents of the present family back to their emigrant ancestor in most cases (a few still to accomplish on their next research day) and searching for any interesting webpages on the family. I have now expanded the research to the 4x great grandparents lines so every other day I will be tracing another line back to the emigrant ancestor. Once I have completed the 63 days of research (I combined the last two as I thought the final one would be just too difficult to determine although yesterday's research may change that) then I will expand the coverage one more generation back to the 128 5x great grandparents.
It is amazing to be able to research every line of a family but that is the advantage to French Canadian research. Only three surnames are duplicated back to the 4x great grandparents - Séguin dit Ladéroute, Piché and Larente dit Vinette. There are just two names missing currently although I have not yet searched for the names. In order for all the names (128) to fit into 18 weeks I will only do one day for each of Piché and Larente dit Vinette although they occur in two family lines. It is hard to believe that once I complete this next set (9 weeks) and then do the following set of 18 weeks it will be over half of a year. At that point I need to decide about moving then to do 256 lines and at the moment I think that I will do that as it only takes me back to the 6x great grandparents and most of the lines go back to the 9x, 10x, 11x or 12x great grandparents as being the emigrant ancestor.
Imagine having had your ancestors from so far back arriving here (and certainly the First Nations are much much further back). All the emigration stories are lost for the most part whereas I know all of my emigration stories but then I have only five sets of emigrants all of whom when they reached marriage age (and that is just three because three sets were families where the child of the family was the one who married) they married a new emigrant from England (i.e. a Routledge from Cumberland married a Gray from Yorkshire - their child a Gray (first born ancestor in Canada) married a Pincombe from Devon and their child (my grandfather) married a Buller from Birmingham and their child (my mother) married a Blake from Hampshire. All three who married came to Canada as children - Elizabeth Mary Ann Routledge was 14 years old and born at Bewcastle Cumberland, William Robert Pincombe was 14 years old and born at Molland Devon and Ernest Edward George Blake was 9 years old and born at Eastleigh Hampshire. All remembered their trip to Canada and passed it on to their children.
One interesting detail I didn't notice before on the 1871 census for the Charles Bédard and Emilie Whelan family is the presence of Philomen Whelan aged 21 years (female), she is born in Quebec and a seamstress by trade. Emilie Whelan has just had her fourth child Eugènie (female) and the child is just 3 months old. The other children are Melvina 2 years, Eugene 4 years and Letitia 7 years (3 daughters and 1 son thus far). I need to investigate Philomène Whelan and see if I can learn anything further about the Whelan family there but will leave that for the Whelan research day.
Interesting websites for the Bédard family
http://larryvoyer.com/genealogy/familygroup.php?familyID=F52557&tree=v7_28
http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~maryc/presc04.htm (Bédard marriages)
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~snaylor/OntGraMk/Ottawa/Gloucest/NotreDame/F/F.HTM (Bedard burials)
An interesting read through these websites.
Next research day to pull more of the Bédard documents.
It is amazing to be able to research every line of a family but that is the advantage to French Canadian research. Only three surnames are duplicated back to the 4x great grandparents - Séguin dit Ladéroute, Piché and Larente dit Vinette. There are just two names missing currently although I have not yet searched for the names. In order for all the names (128) to fit into 18 weeks I will only do one day for each of Piché and Larente dit Vinette although they occur in two family lines. It is hard to believe that once I complete this next set (9 weeks) and then do the following set of 18 weeks it will be over half of a year. At that point I need to decide about moving then to do 256 lines and at the moment I think that I will do that as it only takes me back to the 6x great grandparents and most of the lines go back to the 9x, 10x, 11x or 12x great grandparents as being the emigrant ancestor.
Imagine having had your ancestors from so far back arriving here (and certainly the First Nations are much much further back). All the emigration stories are lost for the most part whereas I know all of my emigration stories but then I have only five sets of emigrants all of whom when they reached marriage age (and that is just three because three sets were families where the child of the family was the one who married) they married a new emigrant from England (i.e. a Routledge from Cumberland married a Gray from Yorkshire - their child a Gray (first born ancestor in Canada) married a Pincombe from Devon and their child (my grandfather) married a Buller from Birmingham and their child (my mother) married a Blake from Hampshire. All three who married came to Canada as children - Elizabeth Mary Ann Routledge was 14 years old and born at Bewcastle Cumberland, William Robert Pincombe was 14 years old and born at Molland Devon and Ernest Edward George Blake was 9 years old and born at Eastleigh Hampshire. All remembered their trip to Canada and passed it on to their children.
One interesting detail I didn't notice before on the 1871 census for the Charles Bédard and Emilie Whelan family is the presence of Philomen Whelan aged 21 years (female), she is born in Quebec and a seamstress by trade. Emilie Whelan has just had her fourth child Eugènie (female) and the child is just 3 months old. The other children are Melvina 2 years, Eugene 4 years and Letitia 7 years (3 daughters and 1 son thus far). I need to investigate Philomène Whelan and see if I can learn anything further about the Whelan family there but will leave that for the Whelan research day.
Interesting websites for the Bédard family
http://larryvoyer.com/genealogy/familygroup.php?familyID=F52557&tree=v7_28
http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~maryc/presc04.htm (Bédard marriages)
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~snaylor/OntGraMk/Ottawa/Gloucest/NotreDame/F/F.HTM (Bedard burials)
An interesting read through these websites.
Next research day to pull more of the Bédard documents.
Welch at Rugeley, Staffordshire and Birmingham
Anne Welch married Henry Christopher Buller 23 Aug 1838 at Edgbaston, Warwickshire, UK with this being a first marriage for Anne and a second marriage for Henry Christopher Buller. Anne was only 18 years of age but claimed to be "full age" or 21 years of age. The witnesses for the marriage are unknown to me and do not appear to provide any further details on this family. I suspect that she eloped although the next time we see Anne she is on the census with her family and first child also Henry a 2 year old (1841) whilst Henry is in London running his butcher shop in the Covent Garden area. At some point Anne joins Henry in London (or perhaps she was just on holiday back to her parents in 1841) but the next four children are born in London and baptized at St Martin in the Field. We visited this church which overlooks Trafalgar Square and ate at their cafeteria in the crypt when we visited last October.
Anne was a twin and baptized 4 Jan 1820 at Ashby de la Zouch, Leicestershire. According to the census she was born at Lichfield, Staffordshire. Her parents were William Welch and Sarah Cheatle who were themselves married 24 Aug 1818 at Longdon by Lichfield also Staffordshire. Both William and Sarah signed the marriage registration and one of the witnesses was William Cheatle.
In the 1851 census of the Welch family at Birmingham visiting them is Hannah Tomlinson who is soon to become the wife of one of Anne's brothers and by lucky coincidence is also a niece to William Welch. His sister Mary Welch married John Tomlinson 26 Jun 1814 at Rugeley, Staffordshire and both William and Hannah had listed Rugeley as their place of birth on this census. William on this census and on the 1841 census is listed as proprietor of Welch Eating House located on the corner of Lower Temple Street and King Street in Birmingham. His occupation is listed as Provision Dealer. The priest, on his daughter's marriage registration (and actually all of the children), has listed William Welch as a gentleman.
Locating William at Rugeley proved to be a fairly straightforward pursuit and he was the son of John Welch and Margaret Brockhouse and they were married 16 Feb 1783 at Rugeley. They had 11 children
Thomas baptized 3 Nov 1783 at Rugeley and married to Rebecca Reeves 8 Aug 1814 at Rugeley (and they had seven children - Mary b 1815, Elizabeth b 1816, John b 1819, Joseph b 1823, Thomas b 1826, Martha b 1833 and Samuel b 1838).
John baptized 3 Jul 1785 at Rugeley
Ann baptized 11 Nov 1787 at Rugeley and married to William Beardsmore 15 Sep 1812 at Rugeley (and they had 9 children - John b 1813, Ann b 1814, Esther b 1819, Louisa b 1821, Mary b 1822, Elizabeth b 1825, Samuel b 1826, Jane b 1829 and Thomas b 1832).
Sarah baptized 10 May 1789 at Rugeley and married to William Reeves 15 Oct 1812 at Rugeley (and they had five children - Susanna b 1813, Margaret b 1815, Samuel b 1817, Thomas b 1819 and William b 1821).
Mary baptized 25 Dec 1790 at Rugeley and married to John Tomlinson 26 Jun 1814 at Rugeley (and they had seven children - Mary b 1816, John b 1818, Elizabeth b 1820, Eliza b 1822, Ann b 1823, Lucy b 1825 and Hannah b 1830).
William baptized 11 Nov 1792 at Rugeley and married to Sarah Cheatle (as above) and they had six children 1. William baptized 5 Jan 1819 at Ashby de la Zouch and married to Elizabeth Brookes Wales Smith june quarter 1842 at Loughborough, Leicester (they had two children - Mary Ann Welch bc 1846 Birmingham who married Joseph William Hedge and John bc 1847 Birmingham). 2. Mary Welch baptized 7 Mar 1819 at Lichfield. 3. Anne (as above). 4. Sarah (twin to Anne and so baptized 1 Jan 1820 at Ashby de la Zouch) and she married Edwin Withers 5 Oct 1837 at Birmingham and they had 13 children (William Edward born dec quarter 1838 at Aston married to Anne Elizabeth Whitfield mar quarter 1867 at Aston and they had six children, Clara Harriet born mar quarter 1841 at Aston and married to John Shorten sep quarter 1865 at West Bromwich and they had one child, Amelia born jun quarter 1843 at Aston and married to Francis John Cresswell mar quarter 1868 at West Bromwich and they had five children, Samuel Francis born mar quarter 1845 at Birmingham and married to Elizabeth Jane Crane dec quarter 1884 at Birmingham and they had one child, Sarah Elizabeth born sep quarter 1846 at Birmingham and she married Alfred Cresswell march quarter 1868 at West Bromwich and they had five children, Fanny Louisa bc 1850, Augustus Henry b sep quarter 1851 at Aston, Caroline Rosina born mar quarter 1853 at Aston and she married Charles Seymour Davis dec quarter 1882 at West Bromwich and they had two children, Walter Herbert was born dec quarter 1854, Charles Ernest bc 1857 at Handsworth Staffordshire and married to Mary Rebecca Wootton sep quarter 1895 at West Bromwich, Emily Mary V was born june quarter 1859 at Handsworth, Alfred Weston Pitt was born sep quarter 1861 at Handsworth and Florence W bc 1864 at Handsworth). 5.John baptized 8 Aug 1824 at Lichfield. 6.Henry bc 1827 at Birmingham and married first to Hannah Tomlinson June quarter 1851 at King's Norton, Warwick and they had three children Charles bc 1853, Clara bc 1857 and Minnie bc 1859 all at Birmingham. Minnie married Walter James Haynes sep quarter 1884 at Birmingham and Anne Buller is found on the 1891 census with her niece and her family. Second marriage for Henry was to Mary Copeland Yates mar quarter 1863 at Aston and they had two children William bc 1864 and Albert C bc 1866 both at Birmingham. Third marriage for Henry was to Mary Newey march quarter 1870 at King's Norton and they had four children Frances E bc 1870, Sidney J bc 1872, Ernest E bc 1875 and Lilley bc 1880 all at Birmingham.
Hannah baptized 6 Apr 1794 at Rugeley and married to John Wilks 26 Dec 1814 at Rugeley (they had one daughter).
Susanna baptized 8 Nov 1795 at Rugeley.
Frances baptized 2 Jul 1797 at Rugeley.
Henry baptized 5 May 1799 at Rugeley and married to Elizabeth Radford 19 Apr 1824 at Colton Staffordshire (they had three children - Henry baptized 5 Feb 1826 at Rugeley and married to Elizabeth and they had six children, Elizabeth baptized 22 Aug 1827 at Rugeley and married to John Stretton mar quarter 1848 at Rugeley and they had a number of children, and Anne baptized 20 Jun 1830 at Rugeley.
James baptized 12 Jul 1801 at Rugeley married Lucy and they had six children .
In general, as far as I could tell from the parish registers, all of the Welch entries after the mid 1700s at Rugeley belong to the descendants of John Welch and Margaret Brockhouse.
Reading the Rugeley parish registers at Salt Lake City it was quite straightforward to trace John Welch back to his parents Thomas and Mary Welch at his baptism 25 Apr 1756 at Rugeley and their marriage as there was only the one Welch family at Rugeley. Thomas Welch married Mary Linn by Banns 2 Sep 1745. Thomas himself was baptized 22 Apr 1711 at Rugeley the son of William and Sarah Welch. Thomas and Mary Welch had five children
Sarah baptized 28 Jun 1747 at Rugeley
Mary baptized 8 Apr 1753 at Rugeley
John (as above)
Ann baptized 26 Dec 1758 at Rugeley
Susannah baptized 3 May 1761 at Rugeley
Since they had four daughters John was the only Welch to baptize children in the next generation at Rugeley.
The marriage of William and Sarah Welch does not appear to be at Rugeley; William was buried there 20 Apr 1713.
A few Welch entries from the Parish Register up to 1718:
Service Day-month Year Surname,forename Information
Marriage 30 Dec 1675 Welch, Richard Margery Litton
Baptism 22 Apr 1711 Thomas S William & Sarah Welch
Baptism 24 Jan 1713 Welch, Winifred D William & Sarah Welch, posthumous
Burial 26 Dec 1712 Welch, Mary D William Welch
Burial 20 Apr 1713 Welch, William
Baptism 10 Oct 1714 Welch, Anne D Mr. Henry & Anne Welch
Marriage 4 Nov 1717 Welch, Edith Thomas Harvey, banns
Baptism 16 Jan 1717 Welch, John Bastard son of Sarah Welch
The Welch family is found there as noted in 1675 and again the entries after 1713 which appear to be a different family from the William and Sarah Welch grouping from 1711 to 1713.
I had expected to find a lot of Welch families on the IGI in the area but the only one I found was a William Welch baptized 21 Jul 1666 at Farewell Staffordshire and the son of John Welch and that was between 1650 and 1690 in Staffordshire. Expanding that to Warwick I found two more entries - one at Wormleighton in 1664 and one at Claverdon in 1680. Leicester had no baptismal entries. Shropshire had one in 1690 at Bishops Castle.
I transcribed the land tax assessments for Rugeley and did not find any indication of my Welch family in those entries in 1783 and 1813.
Names of Proprietors Names of Occupiers Names of
Year Number Forename Surname Suffix Forename Surname Suffix Estates/houses
1813 1 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Trigs
1813 2 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Land
1813 3 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Woods
1813 4 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Sharps
1813 5 Lord Anson Lord Curzon P. Pennells
1813 6 Lord Anson Lord Curzon Palmers
1813 7 Lord Anson Lord Curzon William Pennells
1813 8 Lord Anson Lord Curzon Rileys
1813 9 Lord Anson Lord Curzon Bankes
1813 10 Mr. Nixon Lord Curzon Nixons
1813 11 Earl Talbot Lord Curzon William Pennells
1813 12 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Landers Land
1813 13 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Landers Land
1813 14 Lord Curzon Colonel Madan Turners Land
1813 15 Lord Anson Mr. Barker Forge
1813 16 School Mr. Barker Land
1813 17 Mr. Barker Mr. Barker Acid Work
1813 18 Mr. Barker Mr. Barker Land
1813 19 School Reverend Mr. Clarke House and environs
1813 20 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Norths
1813 21 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Wards
1813 22 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Moor and Hodgley
1813 23 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Palmers
1813 24 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Woods
1813 25 Reverend Mr. Inge Reverend Mr. Inge Land
1813 26 Lord Anson Reverend Mr. Inge Church dale
1813 27 Lord Anson Reverend Mr. Inge Cowpasture
1813 28 Lord Anson Reverend Mr. Inge Front Leasow
1813 29 Mr. Watson Mr. Watson Home & Land
1813 30 Mr. Armishaw Mr. Watson Land
1813 31 Mr. Pickering Mr. Watson House and environs
1813 32 Mr. Pickering Mr. Watson Marshes
1813 33 Mr. Pickering Mr. Watson Norries
1813 34 Miss Hopkins William Cheshire House and environs
1813 35 Mr. Hodson William Deakin Houses
1813 36 Mrs. Brittain Mr. Bullock Shop and Yard
1813 37 Mrs. Hitchock Mrs. Hitchcock Land
1813 38 Lord Anson Mrs. Hitchcock Wiltons
1813 39 Lord Anson Mrs. Hitchcock Cow pasture
1813 40 Lord Anson Mrs. Hitchcock Chantry croft
1813 41 Lord Anson Mrs. Cotton Land and Garden
1813 42 Lord Anson Mr. Hodson Cappers
1813 43 Lord Anson Mr. Hodson Church field
1813 44 Lord Anson Mr. Hodson Upfield
1813 45 Lord Anson Mr. Hodson Harleys
1813 46 Mr. Hodson Mr. Hodson House
1813 47 Mr. Bickley Mr. Bishop House
1813 48 Samuel Ruskton Richard Bramdrick House
1813 49 Samuel Ruskton Andrew Shawyer House
1813 50 Lord Anson Benjamin Sleigh House and Land
1813 51 Lord Anson William Woolley House
1813 52 Lord Anson James Richards House
1813 53 Lord Anson James Richards Land
1813 54 James Richards James Richards Land
1813 55 Lord Anson Mr. Wilson House
1813 56 Lord Anson Mr. Bennet House
1813 57 Lord Anson Mr. Bennet Land
1813 58 Lord Anson Mr. Ottey House
1813 59 Lord Anson Mr. Ottey Land
1813 60 Lord Anson Mr. Turner House
1813 61 Lord Anson Miss Barber House and Land
1813 62 Lord Anson Thomas Cheshire Hempholme
1813 63 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Cheshire House and Land
1813 64 Miss Barber Thomas Cheshire Land
1813 65 Mr. Godwin Mrs. Wyley House
1813 66 Mr. Walters Mr. Walters House
1813 67 School Joseph Ward House
1813 68 Mrs. parkyns Samuel Rushton House
1813 69 Mrs. Parkyns John Howkins House
1813 70 Lord Anson Thomas Lenton House
1813 71 Lord Anson Ann Harriman House
1813 72 Lord Anson Ann Chinnock House
1813 73 Lord Anson Thomas Ray House and Land
1813 74 Lord Anson Mrs. Wootton House and Land
1813 75 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley House and environs
1813 76 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley Corn Mills
1813 77 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley Land
1813 78 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley Malt house
1813 79 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley Taylors Croft
1813 80 School Mr. Bickley House
1813 81 Mr. Bickley Mr. Bickley Land
1813 82 Lord Anson Thomas Higgit House
1813 83 Lord Anson John Hillige House and Land
1813 84 Earl Uxbridge Mr. Woolley House
1813 85 Thomas Capper Samuel Devol Houses
1813 86 James Richards Joseph Richards House
1813 87 Mr. Lakin Moses Lakin House
1813 88 School Mr. Simpson House
1813 89 Earl Talbot Mrs. Birttain Land
1813 90 Lord Anson Mrs. Brittain Land
1813 91 Lord Anson Mrs. Armishaw House
1813 92 Lord Anson Mrs. Armishaw House
1813 93 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters House and Land
1813 94 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters Hays
1813 95 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters Riddings
1813 96 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters Bayenhill
1813 97 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters Great Meadow
1813 98 Lord Anson Mrs. Masters Land
1813 99 Lord Anson William Lawley House
1813 100 Lord Anson Richard Johnson House
1813 101 Lord Anson Mr. Mursh Mill Meadow
1813 102 Lord Anson Thomas Capper House
1813 103 Thomas Capper 3 Houses Halmans Lane
1813 104 Lord Anson Mr. Godwin Moor
1813 105 Mr. Godwin Mr. Godwin House
1813 106 Mr. Godwin Mr. Godwin Land
1813 107 Reverend Mr. Brandley Mr. Dickenson Great Tithe
1813 108 Lord Anson Mr. Dickenson Farm
1813 109 Mr. Dickenson Mr. Dickenson Landors Land
1813 110 Mr. Parkes Mrs. Robinson House
1813 111 Mr. Parkes Mr. Salisbury House and Land
1813 112 Lord Anson Mr. Palmer Bradley Moor
1813 113 Mr. Banks Mr. Banks Land
1813 114 Lord Anson Mr. Banks House and Land
1813 115 Lord Anson Mr. Banks Leas Land
1813 116 Lord Anson Mr. Moxon Land
1813 117 Mr. Moxon Mr. Moxon Land
1813 118 School Samuel Watson House
1813 119 Mrs. Parkyns Capper and Momford Houses
1813 120 Mr. Ottey H Richardson House
1813 121 Mr. Ottey Holt and Myat Houses
1813 122 Lord Anson Mrs. Averne Land
1813 123 Lord Anson Mr. Hawkins Land
1813 124 School Mr. Hawkins House
1813 125 Mr. Nixon Mr. Nixon Land
1813 126 Mr. Scragg Mrs. Gilbert House
1813 127 Samuel Watson Samuel Webb House
1813 128 Mr. Thacker Mrs. Thacker House
1813 129 Mrs. Simpson Mrs. Simpson House
1813 130 Mrs. Simpson George Cheshire House
1813 131 Mr. Jones Mrs. Fletcher House
1813 132 Mr. Jones William Hawley House
1813 133 Lord Anson Richard Hill House
1813 134 Lord Anson Mr. Pennell House and Land
1813 135 Lord Anson Mr. Pennell Wiltons
1813 136 Lord Anson Mr. Pennell Leas Land
1813 137 Earl Talbot Mr. Stones House and Land
1813 138 Earl Talbot Mr. Stones Land
1813 139 Lord Anson Mr. Stones Oxpasture
1813 140 Lord Anson Mr. Fortescue House and Land
1813 141 Lord Anson Mr. Fortescue Hodgley piece
1813 142 Lord Anson Mr. Fortescue Barlors Moor
1813 143 Lord Anson Mr. Brassington 6 acres Broad Meadow
1813 144 Lord Anson Mr. Twiner House
1813 145 Lord Anson J Stevenson House
1813 146 Lord Anson J Stevenson Land
1813 147 George Hunt George Hunt Houses
1813 148 Mr. Powers Mr. Powers Houses
1813 149 Colwich poor Mr. Foster Land
1813 150 Mr. Smith Mr. Smith Barn and Croft
1813 151 Mr. Smith Mr. Smith Land
1813 152 Mrs. Blood Mrs. Blood House and Land
1813 153 Mr. Hickin Mr. Hickin Land
1813 154 Lord Anson Mr. Hickin Land
1813 155 Earl Talbot Mrs. Seale House and Land
1813 156 Earl Uxbridge S. Harriman House
1813 157 Earl Uxbridge John Myat House
1813 158 Earl Uxbridge William Bennison House
1813 159 Miss Birch Miss Birch House and Land
1813 160 Miss Birch Miss Bir Dawcome
1813 161 Earl Talbot Earl Talbot House and Land
1813 162 Earl Talbot Earl Talbot Land Above Coppice
1813 163 Earl Talbot Earl Talbot Land below Coppice
1813 164 Earl Talbot Mr. Farmers House and Land
1813 165 Earl Talbot Mr. Ward House
1813 166 Earl Talbot Benjamin Lead Land
1813 167 Earl Talbot Mr. Birch Land
1813 168 Earl Talbot John Salt Land
1813 169 Earl Talbot Thomas Rowley Land
1813 170 Earl Talbot Mr. Glover Cloddy Croft
1813 171 Earl Talbot John Clarke House
1813 172 Mr. Ottey Benjamin Lead House
1813 173 Mr. Ottey Mr. Ottey House
1813 174 School Mr. Ottey House
1813 175 Mr. Birch Mr. Birch Sen Leasors
1813 176 Mr. Birch Mr. Birch Sen House and Garden
1813 177 Mr. Birch Mr. Birch Sen Godwins
1813 178 Mr. Birch Mr. Birch Sen Holts
1813 179 Mr. Timmis Mr. Timmis House
1813 180 Earl Talbot John Jones Land
1813 181 Earl Talbot John Cox Meadow
1813 182 Reverend Mr. Clarke Late C Hays Land
1813 183 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Land and Colliery
1813 184 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Cottages
1813 185 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Harways
1813 186 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Smiths
1813 187 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Late Arblasters
1813 188 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge John Brown
1813 189 Earl Uxbridge Joseph Smith House and Land
1813 190 Earl Uxbridge Hamilton Bradbury House and Land
1813 191 Earl Uxbridge Mark Richards House and Land
1813 192 Earl Uxbridge Joseph Moor House and Land
1813 193 Earl Uxbridge John Monk House and Land
1813 194 Earl Uxbridge Richard Arblaster House and Land
1813 195 Earl Uxbridge Richard Benton House and Land
1813 196 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Carr House and Land
1813 197 Earl Uxbridge James Craddock House and Land
1813 198 Earl Uxbridge Mr. Benton House and Land
1813 199 Earl Uxbridge Roebotham House and; Land
1813 200 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Crutchley House and Land
1813 201 Earl Uxbridge John Jones House and Land
1813 202 Earl Uxbridge Richard Whitaker House and Land
1813 203 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Lycett House and Land
1813 204 Earl Uxbridge George Benton House and Land
1813 205 Earl Uxbridge Richard Walker House and Land
1813 206 Earl Uxbridge John Rushton House and Land
1813 207 Earl Uxbridge Harold Godwin House and Land
1813 208 Earl Uxbridge John Hulse House and Land
1813 209 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Hill House and Land
1813 210 Earl Uxbridge Ann Tooth House and Land
1813 211 Mr. Vickers Mrs. Vickers House and Land
1813 212 Lord Anson Mrs. Vickers Land
1813 213 Lord Anson Gardems Land
1813 214 Mr. Barker Mr. Barker Roleing Mill
1813 215 Mr. Barker C James Land
1813 216 Senior William Wolsley Mrs. Allcock Land
1813 217 Senior William Wolsley Mrs. Allcock Millers
1813 218 Mr. Fernihough Mr. Fernihough Land
1813 219 Mr. Bullock Mr. Bullock Land
1813 220 School Mr. Bullock Land
1813 221 George Phillips George Phillips land
1813 222 Mr. Palmer Mr. Palmer Land
1813 223 Mr. Brandrick Mr. Brandrick Land
1813 224 John Waddams John Waddams Land
1813 225 Mr. Hatfield Mr. Hatfield Houses
1813 226 Mr Landon Mr. Landon Land
1813 227 School Mr. Sharrod Land
1813 228 Lord Anson William Wood House and Land
1813 229 School Hillige Land
1813 230 School John Lander Land
1813 231 School Robert Lead Land
1813 232 School Mr. Bishop Land
1813 233 Lord Anson Mr. Foster Land
1813 234 Mr. Birch Mr. Hammond Land
1813 235 Mr. Collet Mr. Collet Land
1813 236 Stephen Townsend Stephen Townsend Land
1813 237 Thomas Rowley Thomas Rowley Land
1813 238 Alexander Wood Alexander Wood House
1813 239 John Sturtin John Sturtin House
1813 240 Miss Ottey William Barker Land
1813 241 Mr. Turner John Pool House
1813 242 Thomas Cross Thomas Cross House
1813 243 Brereton Colliery Brereton Colliery Land
1813 244 Richard Bradbury Richard Bradbury House
1813 245 School Robert Wilcock House
1813 246 Mrs. Littlewood Mrs. Littlewood House
1813 247 Proprietors of Canal Proprietors of Canal Warf Buildings
1813 248 Miss Glover and Co Miss Glover and Co Foundry Buildings
1813 249 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon House, Garden and environs
1813 250 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Tomkinsons
1813 251 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Falkners
1813 252 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Brund Hill
1813 253 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Harveys
1813 254 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Ansons
1813 255 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Leas
1813 256 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Hines
1813 257 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Stable croft
1813 258 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Ashley
1813 259 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Coxes
1813 260 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Mr. Sneyds
1813 261 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Bullocks Moor
1813 262 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Red Brook and Westons
1813 263 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock House and Land
1813 264 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Land
1813 265 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Olditon
1813 266 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Lowes
1813 267 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Heaths
1813 268 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Ashleys
1813 269 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Smiths
1813 270 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Birds
1813 271 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Floyers
1813 272 Mr. Cotton Mrs. Cotton Bickleys
1813 273 Mr. Cotton Mrs. Cotton House and environs
1813 274 Mr. Palmer Hawkins & Pool Houses
1813 275 Junior Clubb William Rowley Houses
1813 276 Senior William Clubb William Wootton Houses
1813 277 Thomas Brown William Rogers House
1813 278 Mrs. Brown Mr. Chullenor House
1813 279 Mr. Dawes Mr. Dawes House
1813 280 Mrs. Barber Mrs. Barber House
1813 281 Mrs. Barber Mrs. Barber House
1813 282 Reverend Mr. Inge Reverend Mr. Inge House and Glebe Land
1813 283 Hannah Parker Hannah Parker House
1813 284 John Holt J Pinson House
1813 285 Mr. Seale William Mayham House
1813 286 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige House
1813 287 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Chanty croft
1813 288 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Inclose
1813 289 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Land
1813 290 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Smiths
1813 291 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Thomas Hatfield
1813 292 Mrs. Phillips Mrs. Phillips House
1813 293 Mrs. Phillips Miss Masters House
1813 294 Mrs. Phillips Thomas Hill House and Land
1813 295 Mrs. Phillips John Pennell House
1813 296 Mr. Brittain Mr. Brittain House and Land
1813 297 Mr. Brittain John Higgit Houses
1813 298 Mr. Lea Mr. Masters Moors
1813 299 Mr. Lea Mr. Banks Moors
1813 300 Mr. Lea William Brooks House and Land
1813 301 Mrs. Emery John Palmer House and Land
1813 302 Mr. Nixon Mr. Nixon House and Land
1813 303 Mr. Nixon Mr. Nixon Brogans Lake
1813 304 Mrs. Allcock Mr. Waddams House
1813 305 Mr. Hawkins Mr. Hawkins House
1813 306 Mr. Powell Mr. Powell House
1813 307 William Smytheman Christopher Tunstall House
1813 308 Mrs. Lakin Mrs. Lakin House
1813 309 Mr. Moxon Mr. Moxon House
1813 310 Mr. Moxon Mr. Boebotham House
1813 311 Mr. Hill Mr. Hill House
1813 312 General Avarne General Avarne House
1813 313 General Avarne General Avarne Hell and Ashley
1813 314 General Avarne Mr. Wood House and Land
1813 315 General Avarne Mr. Wood Brindleys
1813 316 General Avarne Mr. Pegg House
1813 317 John Tooth William Smytheman House
1813 318 William Holt Samuel Nixon House
1813 319 Edward Wollason Edward Wollason House
1813 320 Mrs. Sharp Mrs. Sharp House
1813 321 Thomas cox Thomas Cox House
1813 322 Mr. Ottey John Cordwell House
1813 323 Mr. Ottey Mrs. Moor House
1813 324 James Holt James Holt House
1813 325 James Holt Nixons House
1813 326 James Holt Hills House
1813 327 James Holt Watsons House
1813 328 Mr. Pennell Mr. Pennell Rileys Land
1813 329 Mr. Penne.. Mr. Hammond House and Land
1813 330 G Stevenson G Stevenson House
1813 331 G Stevenson G Stevenson Tophams
1813 332 Mr. Sanders John Cox Land
1813 333 Mr. Smith Mr. Ohey House and Land
1813 334 Mrs. Benton William Gee House and Land
1813 335 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Cresswells Land
1813 336 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Astburys
1813 337 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Leacrofts
1813 338 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Malthouse
1813 339 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Barlors Moor
1813 340 Mr. Lightwoods Mr. Dawson Meadow
1813 341 Mr. Lightwoods Mr. Dawson Brindleys
1813 342 Mr. Lightwoods Mr. Dawson Pollards
1813 343 Mr. Lightwoods Mr. Dawson Robinsons
1813 344 John Wood William Wood House
There are a few interesting entries that I will mention later for other families.
To continue with the Welch family, I probably need a bit of serendipity and perhaps that will be forthcoming my next research day on the Welch family.
Anne was a twin and baptized 4 Jan 1820 at Ashby de la Zouch, Leicestershire. According to the census she was born at Lichfield, Staffordshire. Her parents were William Welch and Sarah Cheatle who were themselves married 24 Aug 1818 at Longdon by Lichfield also Staffordshire. Both William and Sarah signed the marriage registration and one of the witnesses was William Cheatle.
In the 1851 census of the Welch family at Birmingham visiting them is Hannah Tomlinson who is soon to become the wife of one of Anne's brothers and by lucky coincidence is also a niece to William Welch. His sister Mary Welch married John Tomlinson 26 Jun 1814 at Rugeley, Staffordshire and both William and Hannah had listed Rugeley as their place of birth on this census. William on this census and on the 1841 census is listed as proprietor of Welch Eating House located on the corner of Lower Temple Street and King Street in Birmingham. His occupation is listed as Provision Dealer. The priest, on his daughter's marriage registration (and actually all of the children), has listed William Welch as a gentleman.
Locating William at Rugeley proved to be a fairly straightforward pursuit and he was the son of John Welch and Margaret Brockhouse and they were married 16 Feb 1783 at Rugeley. They had 11 children
Thomas baptized 3 Nov 1783 at Rugeley and married to Rebecca Reeves 8 Aug 1814 at Rugeley (and they had seven children - Mary b 1815, Elizabeth b 1816, John b 1819, Joseph b 1823, Thomas b 1826, Martha b 1833 and Samuel b 1838).
John baptized 3 Jul 1785 at Rugeley
Ann baptized 11 Nov 1787 at Rugeley and married to William Beardsmore 15 Sep 1812 at Rugeley (and they had 9 children - John b 1813, Ann b 1814, Esther b 1819, Louisa b 1821, Mary b 1822, Elizabeth b 1825, Samuel b 1826, Jane b 1829 and Thomas b 1832).
Sarah baptized 10 May 1789 at Rugeley and married to William Reeves 15 Oct 1812 at Rugeley (and they had five children - Susanna b 1813, Margaret b 1815, Samuel b 1817, Thomas b 1819 and William b 1821).
Mary baptized 25 Dec 1790 at Rugeley and married to John Tomlinson 26 Jun 1814 at Rugeley (and they had seven children - Mary b 1816, John b 1818, Elizabeth b 1820, Eliza b 1822, Ann b 1823, Lucy b 1825 and Hannah b 1830).
William baptized 11 Nov 1792 at Rugeley and married to Sarah Cheatle (as above) and they had six children 1. William baptized 5 Jan 1819 at Ashby de la Zouch and married to Elizabeth Brookes Wales Smith june quarter 1842 at Loughborough, Leicester (they had two children - Mary Ann Welch bc 1846 Birmingham who married Joseph William Hedge and John bc 1847 Birmingham). 2. Mary Welch baptized 7 Mar 1819 at Lichfield. 3. Anne (as above). 4. Sarah (twin to Anne and so baptized 1 Jan 1820 at Ashby de la Zouch) and she married Edwin Withers 5 Oct 1837 at Birmingham and they had 13 children (William Edward born dec quarter 1838 at Aston married to Anne Elizabeth Whitfield mar quarter 1867 at Aston and they had six children, Clara Harriet born mar quarter 1841 at Aston and married to John Shorten sep quarter 1865 at West Bromwich and they had one child, Amelia born jun quarter 1843 at Aston and married to Francis John Cresswell mar quarter 1868 at West Bromwich and they had five children, Samuel Francis born mar quarter 1845 at Birmingham and married to Elizabeth Jane Crane dec quarter 1884 at Birmingham and they had one child, Sarah Elizabeth born sep quarter 1846 at Birmingham and she married Alfred Cresswell march quarter 1868 at West Bromwich and they had five children, Fanny Louisa bc 1850, Augustus Henry b sep quarter 1851 at Aston, Caroline Rosina born mar quarter 1853 at Aston and she married Charles Seymour Davis dec quarter 1882 at West Bromwich and they had two children, Walter Herbert was born dec quarter 1854, Charles Ernest bc 1857 at Handsworth Staffordshire and married to Mary Rebecca Wootton sep quarter 1895 at West Bromwich, Emily Mary V was born june quarter 1859 at Handsworth, Alfred Weston Pitt was born sep quarter 1861 at Handsworth and Florence W bc 1864 at Handsworth). 5.John baptized 8 Aug 1824 at Lichfield. 6.Henry bc 1827 at Birmingham and married first to Hannah Tomlinson June quarter 1851 at King's Norton, Warwick and they had three children Charles bc 1853, Clara bc 1857 and Minnie bc 1859 all at Birmingham. Minnie married Walter James Haynes sep quarter 1884 at Birmingham and Anne Buller is found on the 1891 census with her niece and her family. Second marriage for Henry was to Mary Copeland Yates mar quarter 1863 at Aston and they had two children William bc 1864 and Albert C bc 1866 both at Birmingham. Third marriage for Henry was to Mary Newey march quarter 1870 at King's Norton and they had four children Frances E bc 1870, Sidney J bc 1872, Ernest E bc 1875 and Lilley bc 1880 all at Birmingham.
Hannah baptized 6 Apr 1794 at Rugeley and married to John Wilks 26 Dec 1814 at Rugeley (they had one daughter).
Susanna baptized 8 Nov 1795 at Rugeley.
Frances baptized 2 Jul 1797 at Rugeley.
Henry baptized 5 May 1799 at Rugeley and married to Elizabeth Radford 19 Apr 1824 at Colton Staffordshire (they had three children - Henry baptized 5 Feb 1826 at Rugeley and married to Elizabeth and they had six children, Elizabeth baptized 22 Aug 1827 at Rugeley and married to John Stretton mar quarter 1848 at Rugeley and they had a number of children, and Anne baptized 20 Jun 1830 at Rugeley.
James baptized 12 Jul 1801 at Rugeley married Lucy and they had six children .
In general, as far as I could tell from the parish registers, all of the Welch entries after the mid 1700s at Rugeley belong to the descendants of John Welch and Margaret Brockhouse.
Reading the Rugeley parish registers at Salt Lake City it was quite straightforward to trace John Welch back to his parents Thomas and Mary Welch at his baptism 25 Apr 1756 at Rugeley and their marriage as there was only the one Welch family at Rugeley. Thomas Welch married Mary Linn by Banns 2 Sep 1745. Thomas himself was baptized 22 Apr 1711 at Rugeley the son of William and Sarah Welch. Thomas and Mary Welch had five children
Sarah baptized 28 Jun 1747 at Rugeley
Mary baptized 8 Apr 1753 at Rugeley
John (as above)
Ann baptized 26 Dec 1758 at Rugeley
Susannah baptized 3 May 1761 at Rugeley
Since they had four daughters John was the only Welch to baptize children in the next generation at Rugeley.
The marriage of William and Sarah Welch does not appear to be at Rugeley; William was buried there 20 Apr 1713.
A few Welch entries from the Parish Register up to 1718:
Service Day-month Year Surname,forename Information
Marriage 30 Dec 1675 Welch, Richard Margery Litton
Baptism 22 Apr 1711 Thomas S William & Sarah Welch
Baptism 24 Jan 1713 Welch, Winifred D William & Sarah Welch, posthumous
Burial 26 Dec 1712 Welch, Mary D William Welch
Burial 20 Apr 1713 Welch, William
Baptism 10 Oct 1714 Welch, Anne D Mr. Henry & Anne Welch
Marriage 4 Nov 1717 Welch, Edith Thomas Harvey, banns
Baptism 16 Jan 1717 Welch, John Bastard son of Sarah Welch
The Welch family is found there as noted in 1675 and again the entries after 1713 which appear to be a different family from the William and Sarah Welch grouping from 1711 to 1713.
I had expected to find a lot of Welch families on the IGI in the area but the only one I found was a William Welch baptized 21 Jul 1666 at Farewell Staffordshire and the son of John Welch and that was between 1650 and 1690 in Staffordshire. Expanding that to Warwick I found two more entries - one at Wormleighton in 1664 and one at Claverdon in 1680. Leicester had no baptismal entries. Shropshire had one in 1690 at Bishops Castle.
I transcribed the land tax assessments for Rugeley and did not find any indication of my Welch family in those entries in 1783 and 1813.
Names of Proprietors Names of Occupiers Names of
Year Number Forename Surname Suffix Forename Surname Suffix Estates/houses
1813 1 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Trigs
1813 2 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Land
1813 3 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Woods
1813 4 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Sharps
1813 5 Lord Anson Lord Curzon P. Pennells
1813 6 Lord Anson Lord Curzon Palmers
1813 7 Lord Anson Lord Curzon William Pennells
1813 8 Lord Anson Lord Curzon Rileys
1813 9 Lord Anson Lord Curzon Bankes
1813 10 Mr. Nixon Lord Curzon Nixons
1813 11 Earl Talbot Lord Curzon William Pennells
1813 12 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Landers Land
1813 13 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Landers Land
1813 14 Lord Curzon Colonel Madan Turners Land
1813 15 Lord Anson Mr. Barker Forge
1813 16 School Mr. Barker Land
1813 17 Mr. Barker Mr. Barker Acid Work
1813 18 Mr. Barker Mr. Barker Land
1813 19 School Reverend Mr. Clarke House and environs
1813 20 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Norths
1813 21 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Wards
1813 22 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Moor and Hodgley
1813 23 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Palmers
1813 24 School Reverend Mr. Clarke Woods
1813 25 Reverend Mr. Inge Reverend Mr. Inge Land
1813 26 Lord Anson Reverend Mr. Inge Church dale
1813 27 Lord Anson Reverend Mr. Inge Cowpasture
1813 28 Lord Anson Reverend Mr. Inge Front Leasow
1813 29 Mr. Watson Mr. Watson Home & Land
1813 30 Mr. Armishaw Mr. Watson Land
1813 31 Mr. Pickering Mr. Watson House and environs
1813 32 Mr. Pickering Mr. Watson Marshes
1813 33 Mr. Pickering Mr. Watson Norries
1813 34 Miss Hopkins William Cheshire House and environs
1813 35 Mr. Hodson William Deakin Houses
1813 36 Mrs. Brittain Mr. Bullock Shop and Yard
1813 37 Mrs. Hitchock Mrs. Hitchcock Land
1813 38 Lord Anson Mrs. Hitchcock Wiltons
1813 39 Lord Anson Mrs. Hitchcock Cow pasture
1813 40 Lord Anson Mrs. Hitchcock Chantry croft
1813 41 Lord Anson Mrs. Cotton Land and Garden
1813 42 Lord Anson Mr. Hodson Cappers
1813 43 Lord Anson Mr. Hodson Church field
1813 44 Lord Anson Mr. Hodson Upfield
1813 45 Lord Anson Mr. Hodson Harleys
1813 46 Mr. Hodson Mr. Hodson House
1813 47 Mr. Bickley Mr. Bishop House
1813 48 Samuel Ruskton Richard Bramdrick House
1813 49 Samuel Ruskton Andrew Shawyer House
1813 50 Lord Anson Benjamin Sleigh House and Land
1813 51 Lord Anson William Woolley House
1813 52 Lord Anson James Richards House
1813 53 Lord Anson James Richards Land
1813 54 James Richards James Richards Land
1813 55 Lord Anson Mr. Wilson House
1813 56 Lord Anson Mr. Bennet House
1813 57 Lord Anson Mr. Bennet Land
1813 58 Lord Anson Mr. Ottey House
1813 59 Lord Anson Mr. Ottey Land
1813 60 Lord Anson Mr. Turner House
1813 61 Lord Anson Miss Barber House and Land
1813 62 Lord Anson Thomas Cheshire Hempholme
1813 63 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Cheshire House and Land
1813 64 Miss Barber Thomas Cheshire Land
1813 65 Mr. Godwin Mrs. Wyley House
1813 66 Mr. Walters Mr. Walters House
1813 67 School Joseph Ward House
1813 68 Mrs. parkyns Samuel Rushton House
1813 69 Mrs. Parkyns John Howkins House
1813 70 Lord Anson Thomas Lenton House
1813 71 Lord Anson Ann Harriman House
1813 72 Lord Anson Ann Chinnock House
1813 73 Lord Anson Thomas Ray House and Land
1813 74 Lord Anson Mrs. Wootton House and Land
1813 75 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley House and environs
1813 76 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley Corn Mills
1813 77 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley Land
1813 78 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley Malt house
1813 79 Lord Anson Mr. Bickley Taylors Croft
1813 80 School Mr. Bickley House
1813 81 Mr. Bickley Mr. Bickley Land
1813 82 Lord Anson Thomas Higgit House
1813 83 Lord Anson John Hillige House and Land
1813 84 Earl Uxbridge Mr. Woolley House
1813 85 Thomas Capper Samuel Devol Houses
1813 86 James Richards Joseph Richards House
1813 87 Mr. Lakin Moses Lakin House
1813 88 School Mr. Simpson House
1813 89 Earl Talbot Mrs. Birttain Land
1813 90 Lord Anson Mrs. Brittain Land
1813 91 Lord Anson Mrs. Armishaw House
1813 92 Lord Anson Mrs. Armishaw House
1813 93 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters House and Land
1813 94 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters Hays
1813 95 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters Riddings
1813 96 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters Bayenhill
1813 97 Earl Talbot Mrs. Masters Great Meadow
1813 98 Lord Anson Mrs. Masters Land
1813 99 Lord Anson William Lawley House
1813 100 Lord Anson Richard Johnson House
1813 101 Lord Anson Mr. Mursh Mill Meadow
1813 102 Lord Anson Thomas Capper House
1813 103 Thomas Capper 3 Houses Halmans Lane
1813 104 Lord Anson Mr. Godwin Moor
1813 105 Mr. Godwin Mr. Godwin House
1813 106 Mr. Godwin Mr. Godwin Land
1813 107 Reverend Mr. Brandley Mr. Dickenson Great Tithe
1813 108 Lord Anson Mr. Dickenson Farm
1813 109 Mr. Dickenson Mr. Dickenson Landors Land
1813 110 Mr. Parkes Mrs. Robinson House
1813 111 Mr. Parkes Mr. Salisbury House and Land
1813 112 Lord Anson Mr. Palmer Bradley Moor
1813 113 Mr. Banks Mr. Banks Land
1813 114 Lord Anson Mr. Banks House and Land
1813 115 Lord Anson Mr. Banks Leas Land
1813 116 Lord Anson Mr. Moxon Land
1813 117 Mr. Moxon Mr. Moxon Land
1813 118 School Samuel Watson House
1813 119 Mrs. Parkyns Capper and Momford Houses
1813 120 Mr. Ottey H Richardson House
1813 121 Mr. Ottey Holt and Myat Houses
1813 122 Lord Anson Mrs. Averne Land
1813 123 Lord Anson Mr. Hawkins Land
1813 124 School Mr. Hawkins House
1813 125 Mr. Nixon Mr. Nixon Land
1813 126 Mr. Scragg Mrs. Gilbert House
1813 127 Samuel Watson Samuel Webb House
1813 128 Mr. Thacker Mrs. Thacker House
1813 129 Mrs. Simpson Mrs. Simpson House
1813 130 Mrs. Simpson George Cheshire House
1813 131 Mr. Jones Mrs. Fletcher House
1813 132 Mr. Jones William Hawley House
1813 133 Lord Anson Richard Hill House
1813 134 Lord Anson Mr. Pennell House and Land
1813 135 Lord Anson Mr. Pennell Wiltons
1813 136 Lord Anson Mr. Pennell Leas Land
1813 137 Earl Talbot Mr. Stones House and Land
1813 138 Earl Talbot Mr. Stones Land
1813 139 Lord Anson Mr. Stones Oxpasture
1813 140 Lord Anson Mr. Fortescue House and Land
1813 141 Lord Anson Mr. Fortescue Hodgley piece
1813 142 Lord Anson Mr. Fortescue Barlors Moor
1813 143 Lord Anson Mr. Brassington 6 acres Broad Meadow
1813 144 Lord Anson Mr. Twiner House
1813 145 Lord Anson J Stevenson House
1813 146 Lord Anson J Stevenson Land
1813 147 George Hunt George Hunt Houses
1813 148 Mr. Powers Mr. Powers Houses
1813 149 Colwich poor Mr. Foster Land
1813 150 Mr. Smith Mr. Smith Barn and Croft
1813 151 Mr. Smith Mr. Smith Land
1813 152 Mrs. Blood Mrs. Blood House and Land
1813 153 Mr. Hickin Mr. Hickin Land
1813 154 Lord Anson Mr. Hickin Land
1813 155 Earl Talbot Mrs. Seale House and Land
1813 156 Earl Uxbridge S. Harriman House
1813 157 Earl Uxbridge John Myat House
1813 158 Earl Uxbridge William Bennison House
1813 159 Miss Birch Miss Birch House and Land
1813 160 Miss Birch Miss Bir Dawcome
1813 161 Earl Talbot Earl Talbot House and Land
1813 162 Earl Talbot Earl Talbot Land Above Coppice
1813 163 Earl Talbot Earl Talbot Land below Coppice
1813 164 Earl Talbot Mr. Farmers House and Land
1813 165 Earl Talbot Mr. Ward House
1813 166 Earl Talbot Benjamin Lead Land
1813 167 Earl Talbot Mr. Birch Land
1813 168 Earl Talbot John Salt Land
1813 169 Earl Talbot Thomas Rowley Land
1813 170 Earl Talbot Mr. Glover Cloddy Croft
1813 171 Earl Talbot John Clarke House
1813 172 Mr. Ottey Benjamin Lead House
1813 173 Mr. Ottey Mr. Ottey House
1813 174 School Mr. Ottey House
1813 175 Mr. Birch Mr. Birch Sen Leasors
1813 176 Mr. Birch Mr. Birch Sen House and Garden
1813 177 Mr. Birch Mr. Birch Sen Godwins
1813 178 Mr. Birch Mr. Birch Sen Holts
1813 179 Mr. Timmis Mr. Timmis House
1813 180 Earl Talbot John Jones Land
1813 181 Earl Talbot John Cox Meadow
1813 182 Reverend Mr. Clarke Late C Hays Land
1813 183 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Land and Colliery
1813 184 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Cottages
1813 185 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Harways
1813 186 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Smiths
1813 187 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge Late Arblasters
1813 188 Earl Uxbridge Earl Uxbridge John Brown
1813 189 Earl Uxbridge Joseph Smith House and Land
1813 190 Earl Uxbridge Hamilton Bradbury House and Land
1813 191 Earl Uxbridge Mark Richards House and Land
1813 192 Earl Uxbridge Joseph Moor House and Land
1813 193 Earl Uxbridge John Monk House and Land
1813 194 Earl Uxbridge Richard Arblaster House and Land
1813 195 Earl Uxbridge Richard Benton House and Land
1813 196 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Carr House and Land
1813 197 Earl Uxbridge James Craddock House and Land
1813 198 Earl Uxbridge Mr. Benton House and Land
1813 199 Earl Uxbridge Roebotham House and; Land
1813 200 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Crutchley House and Land
1813 201 Earl Uxbridge John Jones House and Land
1813 202 Earl Uxbridge Richard Whitaker House and Land
1813 203 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Lycett House and Land
1813 204 Earl Uxbridge George Benton House and Land
1813 205 Earl Uxbridge Richard Walker House and Land
1813 206 Earl Uxbridge John Rushton House and Land
1813 207 Earl Uxbridge Harold Godwin House and Land
1813 208 Earl Uxbridge John Hulse House and Land
1813 209 Earl Uxbridge Thomas Hill House and Land
1813 210 Earl Uxbridge Ann Tooth House and Land
1813 211 Mr. Vickers Mrs. Vickers House and Land
1813 212 Lord Anson Mrs. Vickers Land
1813 213 Lord Anson Gardems Land
1813 214 Mr. Barker Mr. Barker Roleing Mill
1813 215 Mr. Barker C James Land
1813 216 Senior William Wolsley Mrs. Allcock Land
1813 217 Senior William Wolsley Mrs. Allcock Millers
1813 218 Mr. Fernihough Mr. Fernihough Land
1813 219 Mr. Bullock Mr. Bullock Land
1813 220 School Mr. Bullock Land
1813 221 George Phillips George Phillips land
1813 222 Mr. Palmer Mr. Palmer Land
1813 223 Mr. Brandrick Mr. Brandrick Land
1813 224 John Waddams John Waddams Land
1813 225 Mr. Hatfield Mr. Hatfield Houses
1813 226 Mr Landon Mr. Landon Land
1813 227 School Mr. Sharrod Land
1813 228 Lord Anson William Wood House and Land
1813 229 School Hillige Land
1813 230 School John Lander Land
1813 231 School Robert Lead Land
1813 232 School Mr. Bishop Land
1813 233 Lord Anson Mr. Foster Land
1813 234 Mr. Birch Mr. Hammond Land
1813 235 Mr. Collet Mr. Collet Land
1813 236 Stephen Townsend Stephen Townsend Land
1813 237 Thomas Rowley Thomas Rowley Land
1813 238 Alexander Wood Alexander Wood House
1813 239 John Sturtin John Sturtin House
1813 240 Miss Ottey William Barker Land
1813 241 Mr. Turner John Pool House
1813 242 Thomas Cross Thomas Cross House
1813 243 Brereton Colliery Brereton Colliery Land
1813 244 Richard Bradbury Richard Bradbury House
1813 245 School Robert Wilcock House
1813 246 Mrs. Littlewood Mrs. Littlewood House
1813 247 Proprietors of Canal Proprietors of Canal Warf Buildings
1813 248 Miss Glover and Co Miss Glover and Co Foundry Buildings
1813 249 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon House, Garden and environs
1813 250 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Tomkinsons
1813 251 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Falkners
1813 252 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Brund Hill
1813 253 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Harveys
1813 254 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Ansons
1813 255 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Leas
1813 256 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Hines
1813 257 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Stable croft
1813 258 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Ashley
1813 259 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Coxes
1813 260 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Mr. Sneyds
1813 261 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Bullocks Moor
1813 262 Lord Curzon Lord Curzon Red Brook and Westons
1813 263 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock House and Land
1813 264 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Land
1813 265 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Olditon
1813 266 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Lowes
1813 267 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Heaths
1813 268 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Ashleys
1813 269 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Smiths
1813 270 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Birds
1813 271 Mr. Hitchcock Mr. Hitchcock Floyers
1813 272 Mr. Cotton Mrs. Cotton Bickleys
1813 273 Mr. Cotton Mrs. Cotton House and environs
1813 274 Mr. Palmer Hawkins & Pool Houses
1813 275 Junior Clubb William Rowley Houses
1813 276 Senior William Clubb William Wootton Houses
1813 277 Thomas Brown William Rogers House
1813 278 Mrs. Brown Mr. Chullenor House
1813 279 Mr. Dawes Mr. Dawes House
1813 280 Mrs. Barber Mrs. Barber House
1813 281 Mrs. Barber Mrs. Barber House
1813 282 Reverend Mr. Inge Reverend Mr. Inge House and Glebe Land
1813 283 Hannah Parker Hannah Parker House
1813 284 John Holt J Pinson House
1813 285 Mr. Seale William Mayham House
1813 286 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige House
1813 287 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Chanty croft
1813 288 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Inclose
1813 289 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Land
1813 290 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Smiths
1813 291 Mr. Jackson Mr. Kitterige Thomas Hatfield
1813 292 Mrs. Phillips Mrs. Phillips House
1813 293 Mrs. Phillips Miss Masters House
1813 294 Mrs. Phillips Thomas Hill House and Land
1813 295 Mrs. Phillips John Pennell House
1813 296 Mr. Brittain Mr. Brittain House and Land
1813 297 Mr. Brittain John Higgit Houses
1813 298 Mr. Lea Mr. Masters Moors
1813 299 Mr. Lea Mr. Banks Moors
1813 300 Mr. Lea William Brooks House and Land
1813 301 Mrs. Emery John Palmer House and Land
1813 302 Mr. Nixon Mr. Nixon House and Land
1813 303 Mr. Nixon Mr. Nixon Brogans Lake
1813 304 Mrs. Allcock Mr. Waddams House
1813 305 Mr. Hawkins Mr. Hawkins House
1813 306 Mr. Powell Mr. Powell House
1813 307 William Smytheman Christopher Tunstall House
1813 308 Mrs. Lakin Mrs. Lakin House
1813 309 Mr. Moxon Mr. Moxon House
1813 310 Mr. Moxon Mr. Boebotham House
1813 311 Mr. Hill Mr. Hill House
1813 312 General Avarne General Avarne House
1813 313 General Avarne General Avarne Hell and Ashley
1813 314 General Avarne Mr. Wood House and Land
1813 315 General Avarne Mr. Wood Brindleys
1813 316 General Avarne Mr. Pegg House
1813 317 John Tooth William Smytheman House
1813 318 William Holt Samuel Nixon House
1813 319 Edward Wollason Edward Wollason House
1813 320 Mrs. Sharp Mrs. Sharp House
1813 321 Thomas cox Thomas Cox House
1813 322 Mr. Ottey John Cordwell House
1813 323 Mr. Ottey Mrs. Moor House
1813 324 James Holt James Holt House
1813 325 James Holt Nixons House
1813 326 James Holt Hills House
1813 327 James Holt Watsons House
1813 328 Mr. Pennell Mr. Pennell Rileys Land
1813 329 Mr. Penne.. Mr. Hammond House and Land
1813 330 G Stevenson G Stevenson House
1813 331 G Stevenson G Stevenson Tophams
1813 332 Mr. Sanders John Cox Land
1813 333 Mr. Smith Mr. Ohey House and Land
1813 334 Mrs. Benton William Gee House and Land
1813 335 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Cresswells Land
1813 336 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Astburys
1813 337 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Leacrofts
1813 338 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Malthouse
1813 339 Mr. Riley Mr. Riley Barlors Moor
1813 340 Mr. Lightwoods Mr. Dawson Meadow
1813 341 Mr. Lightwoods Mr. Dawson Brindleys
1813 342 Mr. Lightwoods Mr. Dawson Pollards
1813 343 Mr. Lightwoods Mr. Dawson Robinsons
1813 344 John Wood William Wood House
There are a few interesting entries that I will mention later for other families.
To continue with the Welch family, I probably need a bit of serendipity and perhaps that will be forthcoming my next research day on the Welch family.
Labels:
Beardsmore,
Brockhouse,
Brookes Wales Smith,
Buller,
Cheatle,
Cresswell,
Davis,
Haynes,
Hedge,
Linn,
Radford,
Reeves,
Tomlinson,
Welch,
Whitfield,
Wilks,
Withers,
Wootton Courtney
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