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Matches 351 to 400 of 3,417
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Acted as information on her father's death. Her address at the time, in 1914, was given as 2626 Glasgow Aveue, St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.. On her own death certificate, cause of death are listed as chronis poreuchyuiation, nephritis due to cystitis, with long-standing conditions of myocarditis and arthritis. She was widowed twice and the information on her death was a Mr. William Carlin, 2030 East Harris Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri. | JEMMETT, Matilda Adella (I8009)
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| 352 |
Additional avenues for further research of the life and times of Count Andrea Sarteschi
Libri antichi in Toscana 1501-1885Catalogo cumulato di edizioni antiche conservate in biblioteche toscane
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 44/3084IntAutorePer: Armellini, Carlo AreaTitolo: Allegazione a favore del conte Andrea Del Medico Staffetti ed in risposta ai scritti prodotti in detto giudizio delle nobili ricorrenti Sarteschi, Borghini e Nobili, Carlo ArmelliniAreaPubblic: Pisa, Nistri, 1846
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 44/3086IntAutorePer: Beverinotti, T. AreaTitolo: Controreplica del conte Andrea Del Medico Staffetti in appoggio delle sue risposte ai motivi del ricorso in revisione delle nobili signore Sarteschi, Borghini e Nobili, T. BeverinottiAreaPubblic: Pisa, Nistri, 1846
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 44/3083IntAutorePer: Carmignani, Giovanni AreaTitolo: Nella causa di pretesa nullit… di testamento olografico pendente in grado di revisione avanti il Supremo consiglio di giustizia in Modena infra il nobile sig. conte Andrea Del Medico Staffetti reo convenuto e le nobili sigg. Sarteschi, Borghini e nobili attrici, Giovanni CarmignaniAreaPubblic: Pisa, Nistri, 1846
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 44/3082IntAutorePer: Ferrigni, Giuseppe AreaTitolo: Ragionamento in difesa del conte Andrea De Medico Staffetti ricorrente contro le contesse Elena ed Anna Monzoni e' signori fratelli Sarteschi nella Suprema corte di giustizia a relazione del chiarissimo consigliere De Tommaso, Giuseppe Ferrigni, Girolamo PolitiAreaPubblic: Napoli, Stamperia filantropica, 1856
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 31 bis/2173IntAutorePer: Maestri, FerdinandoAreaTitolo: Risposta alle allegazioni pubblicate dal c.te Andrea Del Medico nella causa ora pendente davanti il Supremo consiglio di Modena tra esso ele dame Sarteschi Borghini e De Nobili, Ferdinando MaestriAreaPubblic: Parma, Tip. Carmignani, 1845
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 44/3089IntAutorePer: Maestri, Ferdinando AreaTitolo: Risposta alle allegazioni pubblicate dal conte Andrea Del Medico nella causa ora pendente davanti il Supremo consiglio di Modena tra esso e le dame Sarteschi Borghini e De Nobili, Ferdinando MaestriAreaPubblic: Parma, Tip. Carmignani, 1845
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 44/3085IntAutorePer: Minghelli, Ferdinando AreaTitolo: Confutazione del contrammotivo alla sentenza proferita in Carrara stampato dal cav. avv. Ranieri Lamporecchi presidente degli avvocati toscani nella causa tra le nobili signore Carlotta Sarteschi, Elena Borghini ed Anna De Nobili attrici ed il signor conte Andrea Del Medico reo convenuto, Ferdinando MinghelliAreaPubblic: Modena, Tip. Vincenzi, 1845
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 44/3081IntAutoreEnt: Modena, Ducato, Supremo consiglio di giustiziaAreaTitolo: Decisione dell'illustrissimo supremo Consiglio di giustizia residente in Modena proferita a sezioni riunite nel giorno 4 febbraio 1850 nella causa vertita fra le nobili donne contessa Carlotta Del Medico in Sarteschi Elena Manzoni in Borghini ed Anna Manzoni in De Nobili col sig. conte Andrea Del Medico di Carrara in punto di nullit… d'istituzione fiduciariaAreaPubblic: Modena, Tip. Cappelli, 1850
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 44/3091IntAutoreEnt: Regno delle Due Sicilie, Gran corte civile. NapoliAreaTitolo: Estratto da' registri di cancelleria della Gran corte civile sedente in Napoli ... nella causa ... tra ... Borghini ... De Nobili ... Sarteschi ... contro il conte Andrea Del Medico Staffetti ..AreaPubblic: [S.l.], [s.n.], [18--?]
Collocazione: Misc. BLDM 23 bis/1639IntAutorePer: Sarteschi, Giovan Battista AreaTitolo: Proposta fatta al Consiglio comunale per la costruzione del nuovo Spedale Manzoni a S. Francesco invece che alla Lavatella, Giov. Battista SarteschiAreaPubblic: Carrara, Tip. Il Carrione, 1872 | SARTESCHI, Count Andrea Nobile di Pontremoli e Nobile di Fivizzano (I10940)
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| 353 |
Address given was Gatefield Lane, Annie aged 7 years. | KEARN, Annie Catherine ^ (I56)
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| 354 |
Address given was Gatefield Lane, Minnie aged 4 years. Unfortunately, the burial entry recorded Minnie as Johnnie.
Birth registered Dec Qtr. 1882, vol. 2a, pg 831
Death registered Mar Qtr 1886, vol. 2a, pg. 614 | KEARN, Minnie ^ (I58)
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| 355 |
Address recorded was Park Place and Rosa as being 20 months old. | KEARN, Rosa ^ (I61)
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| 356 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I11024)
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| 357 |
ADELINE, daughter of ---. "Walterii de Meduana…[et] uxor eius Adelina et filius eorum Hamelinus…alter filius Juhellus" consented to a donation by "Ruellonius de Gorron, filius Gaufredi" of the church of Brecé to Marmoutier, by charter dated to [1099/1124]. According to Kerrebrouck, she was "de Baugency". In Europäische Stammtafeln, she is "de Presles". The basis for these suppositions is not known. "Juhellus Goualterii filius, dominus castelli Meduanæ…matre mea Adelina et sorore Felicia" organised the transfer of the monks of Saint-Martin to Mayenne castle, for the souls of "Gaufredi…avi mei et Gualterii patris mei…Hamelini fratris mei", by charter dated 1144, witnessed by "…Hugo de Lavalle…". The necrology of Beaune names "Aelina" as mother of Mathilde, wife of Hugues II Duke of Burgundy. Gauthier & his wife had [five] children:
i) HAMELIN de Mayenne (-[1119]) ...
ii) JUHEL [I] de Mayenne (-23 Dec 1161, bur Evroux). ...
iii) MATHILDE de Mayenne (-Beaune, Côte-d'Or or château de Méduan, near Magny-lès-Villers 8 Feb after 1162, bur Notre Dame de Beaune). ...
iv) FELICIE de Mayenne. ...
v) daughter." | DE MEDUANA, DE BAUGENCY AND DE PRESLES, Walter (I14084)
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| 358 |
Adm. pens. at TRINITY, June 25, 1894.S. of Francis (1866), of Wychfield, Huntingdon Road, Cambridge.B. Sept. 7, 1876, at Down, Bromley, Kent.School, Eton.Matric Michs. 1894; B.A. 1897; LL.B. 1897; M.A. 1901.Called to the Bar, 1904.Articled to Messrs Baker and Macrae, Solicitors.Played golf for the University, 1895-7 (Capt. 1897); for England v. Scotland eight times, for Great Britain v. America, 1922. Captain: (1897); for England v. Scotland eight times, for Great Britain v. USA 1922 Twice in semi-final of Amateur Championship.Golf correspondent to The Times and Country Life for many years.Served in the Great War [ 1914-18 ]. (Major, R.A.O.C.; D.A.D.O.S. Spent 2½ years in Macedonia.Mentioned in despatches.) C.B.E., 1937.Author: chiefly on golf and Charles Dickens; Wind on the Heath (1940).
Married and had issue.Resident at Downe, Kent, 1941.(Compiled from: Who's Who, 1940; Law List, 1940; Eton Sch. Lists as viewed on http://venn.csi.cam.ac.uk/.)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Darwin)
Bernard Richard Meirion Darwin CBE, JP (7 September 1876-18 October 1961) a grandson of the British naturalist Charles Darwin, was a golf writer and high-standard amateur golfer.
Darwin was the son of Francis Darwin and Amy Ruck, his mother dying from a fever on 11 September, four days after his birth. He was the first grandson of Charles Darwin (see Darwin - Wedgwood family), and was brought up by Charles and his wife Emma at their home, Down House. His younger half-sister was the poet Frances Cornford.
Darwin was educated at Eton College, and graduated in law from the Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was a Cambridge Blue in golf 1895-1897, and team captain in his final year.[1]
Darwin married the engraver Elinor Monsell in 1906. They had one son, Sir Robert Vere Darwin, and two daughters; the potter Ursula Mommens, and Nicola Mary Elizabeth Darwin. During the First World War he served with the Royal Army Ordnance Corps in Macedonia as a lieutenant.
After Cambridge, Darwin became a court lawyer, but did not particularly enjoy that career, and gradually moved into journalism, despite having no formal training. He covered golf for The Times from 1907 to 1953 and for Country Life from 1907 to 1961, the first writer ever to cover golf on a daily basis, instead of an occasional feature. He played the game at an excellent level himself well into middle age, and competed in the British Amateur Championship on several occasions, with his best results being semi-final appearances in 1909 and 1921. In 1922, while in the United States to report on the first Walker Cup amateur teams match between Britain and Ireland and the U.S., and also appointed as non-playing captain, Darwin was pressed into service at the last minute as a player, when one of the British team members, Robert Harris, was unable to play. He lost his team match, but won his singles match.
He was Captain of The Royal and Ancient Golf Club in 1934, and was President of the Golf Club Managers' Association (then the Association of Golf Club Secretaries) from 1933 to 1934 and then again from 1955 to 1958. Though mainly a golf writer [1], he also occasionally wrote on cricket.
Bernard Darwin was an authority on Charles Dickens. He frequently contributed the fourth leading article in The Times. The fourth Leader was devoted to flippant themes, and Darwin was known to insert quotes from or about Dickens in them. When Oxford Press issued all classics by Dickens around 1940, each with a foreword by a Dickensian scholar, Darwin was chosen to contribute the foreword to The Pickwick Papers. And he was also asked by The Times to pen the main tribute to cricketer W G Grace when WG's birth centenary was celebrated in 1948. The article has been included since in a few anthologies.
In 2005, Darwin was elected to the World Golf Hall of Fame, in the Lifetime Achievement category. | DARWIN, Bernard Richard Meirion (I3536)
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| 359 |
Admitted a solicitor in 1882. | CARTER, George William (I7351)
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| 360 |
Advocate at St. Bertin | Gerbod (I8293)
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| 361 |
Aeronautical Engineer | THEOBALDS, Phillip E. (I13771)
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| 362 |
Affidavit signed by Margaret Seely of Wye, infant. | WORGER, Sarah ^ (I10906)
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| 363 |
After a tragedy in the family in 1876 (the loss of all hands, including my Capt. Vincent John Berry, together with the schooner Sampson) which rocked the close-knit communities to which he belonged - Milton, Sittingbourne and Faversham, it is unknown, at this time, how many members of the Berry family continued to pursue a life on the rivers and seas. Captain Berry's sons didn't. But there were at least two other master mariners in the family and the rest were fishermen and oystermen and dredgermen. | BERRY, Vincent (I11655)
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| 364 |
After the death of her husband in 1498, Edith, married Thomas Darcy, 1st Baron Darcy of Darcy, who was beheaded on Tower Hill 30 June 1537 for his part in the Pilgrimage of Grace. She died at Stepney on 22 August 1529, and was buried at the Friars Observant, Greenwich.[3]
Edith Sandys was the daughter of Sir William Sandys and Margaret Cheney.1,2 She married, firstly, Ralph Neville, Lord Neville, son of Ralph Neville, 3rd Earl of Westmorland and Isabel Booth, after 1489.1 She married, secondly, Sir Thomas Darcy, 1st Lord Darcy, son of Sir William Darcy and Euphemia Langton, between 15 July 1499 and 4 March 1500.2 She died on 22 August 1529 at Stepney, London, EnglandG, from the 'gret sykenesse'.2 She was buried on 25 August 1529 at Friars Observant, Greenwich, London, EnglandG.2
From after 1489, her married name became Neville.1 From between 15 July 1499 and 4 March 1500, her married name became Darcy.2
Children of Edith Sandys and Ralph Neville, Lord Neville
unnamed Neville, Lord Neville2 d. b 1498
Ralph Neville, 4th Earl of Westmorland+2 b. 21 Feb 1497/98, d. 24 Apr 1549
Citations
[S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume XII/2, page 552. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
[S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XII/2, page 553. | SANDYS, Edith (I14885)
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| 365 |
After the death of Nathaniel, Martha married a Mr. Bond. | BRYSSENDEN, Martha (I4888)
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| 366 |
After Thomas Ruck's death, Sarah went on to have three illegitimate children. The first of those children was by John Ruck, Thomas' brother. It is uncertain if John Ruck was also the father of Ann and Sophia. Sarah was buried at age 57 years. | BEER, Sarah (I5870)
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| 367 |
Agatha is believed to be the daughter of Stephen, King of Hungary. | Agatha (I2007)
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| 368 |
Age 13 on death index registration. | LAST, Winifred Daisy ^ (I2363)
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| 369 |
Age 55 years on death index. | MOUNT, Matilda Emma (I6493)
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| 370 |
Age 57 years recorded on death index. | KIRBY, Charles Edward (I9475)
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| 371 |
Age 61 on death index entry.
HYLAND, WILLIAM HOMER -
GRO Reference: 1843 S Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 05 Page 294
Birth registrations of his children
Jun Qtr 1864
HYLAND, WILLIAM PEARSON
GRO Reference: 1864 M Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 02A Page 544
HYLAND, GEORGE PEARSON
GRO Reference: 1865 D Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 02A Page 552
HYLAND, MATILDA PEARSON
GRO Reference: 1873 S Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 02A Page 591
HYLAND, ALBERT PEARSON
GRO Reference: 1876 J Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 02A Page 660
HYLAND, CLARA PEARSON
GRO Reference: 1877 J Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 02A Page 632
HYLAND, HENRY PEARSON
GRO Reference: 1880 M Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 02A Page 686
HYLAND, FRED PEARSON
GRO Reference: 1882 S Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 02A Page 712
HYLAND, ALBERT PEARSON
GRO Reference: 1884 S Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 02A Page 723
HYLAND, HESTER PEARSON
GRO Reference: 1887 J Quarter in MAIDSTONE Volume 02A Page 745 | HYLAND, William Homer (I10765)
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| 372 |
Age 62 years on burial. | DAWE, Ambrose (I15237)
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| 373 |
Age 62 years on death. | A’DENNE, David (I16354)
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| 374 |
Age 65 years on death index | CLAYTON, Francis George (I6442)
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| 375 |
Age 78 on death index, registration Surrey Northern District, Surrey, England (vol. 5g, p. 491) | OSBORNE, Ivy Catherine Marie (I6603)
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| 376 |
Age 78 years on death certificate found in index at GRO online | SMITH, Abraham (I17206)
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| 377 |
Age 81 years recorded on death index. | OWLETT, Elizabeth Emma (I9474)
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| 378 |
Age 83 on death registration. | PAY, Archibald Frank (I2222)
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| 379 |
age 88 on death index, registration Kensington District, Middlesex, England (vol. 5c, p. 711) | COLLINS, Cecil Frederick (I11217)
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| 380 |
Age 88 on death registration index. | GREGORY, William (I2308)
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| 381 |
Age 89 on death index. | BAKER, William Charles T. (I8208)
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| 382 |
Age about 1 year on death registration. | EPPS, Alexander ^ (I7781)
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| 383 |
Age at burial 78 years.
In medieval times Lifton, as a Royal Manor, was in the gift of the Sovereign and it was held for its revenues by a member of the royal family or a court favourite. It changed hands many times, very few of the owners ever coming to visit Lifton. However Charles I did spend a night in the village in 1644 during the civil war. By this time Lifton was no longer a Royal Manor. The estate had been sold by Queen Elizabeth I to a local landowner, William Harris of Hayne. The Harris of Hayne estate was vast with thousands of acres in other counties as well as in Devon. The Harris family were linked by marriage to several Royalist families in Cornwall, including the Arundells and by 1755 the Arundells had inherited the Manor of Lifton.
[Source: Lifton Village Trail, West Devon Borough Council, n.d.]
Exeter Flying Post 12 January 1809, p. 4, col. 3
Exeter. Wednesday, Jan. 11
On Friday the 30th ult. George Hill, late of the Cornish militia, was committed to the high gaol for this county, for beating and robbing William Harris of Lifton, esq. of his watch and great coat, on Lifton Down, between the hours of three and four of the clock in the afternoon of the preceding Tuesday.
on FindmyPast | HARRIS, William (I11673)
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| 384 |
Age at burial was recorded as 75 years. | Catherine (I5408)
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| 385 |
Age at burial was stated as being 73 years. | RUCK, Dorothy (I5407)
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| 386 |
Age given as 32 on burial. | JORDAN, Lucy (I13468)
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| 387 |
Age on burial entry was 15 years. | HILTON, Mary Eleanor ^ (I5565)
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| 388 |
Age on burial is recorded as 50 years. | GIBBS, Henry (I5450)
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| 389 |
Age on burial record is 66 years. It should also be noted that burial record has reversed the two Christian names to show Henry Biddingfield rather than Biddingfield Henry. | LEESE, Biddingfield Henry (I5417)
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| 390 |
Age on burial was 24 years. | BARROW, Thomas (I5499)
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| 391 |
Age on burial was 42 years. | CROUCH, Daniel (I5694)
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| 392 |
Age on burial was 48 years. On Dorothy's marriage, William Chapman was described as being a bachelor of Badlesmere. | COBB, Dorothy (I5558)
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| 393 |
Age on burial was 73 years. | CROUCH, John (I5690)
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| 394 |
Age on burial was recorded as 45 years. | BEAL, Susannah (I5496)
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| 395 |
Age on burial was recorded as 55 years. | RUCK, Richard (I5663)
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| 396 |
Age on burial was recorded as 67 and residence as Flood Lane. | ARNOLD, Deborah (I2211)
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| 397 |
Age on burial was recorded as 78 years | COBB, John (I5554)
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| 398 |
Age on burial was recorded as 80 and residence as Oyster Court.
Matthew and his wife, Ann Weeks of Ospringe, had ten children during their marriage. Sadly, four of the earliest born children did not survive to adolescence. As of June 1841 the family was living on the east side of Abbey Street close to his son James and daughter-in-law, Sarah (nee Ruck). Matthew was employed as a dredger, as was James. Living at home with Matthew were all five of their surviving daughters. Ann had died a few weeks before the 1841 census was taken.
By 1851 the family was found to still be living on Abbey Street with Matthew still following his vocation of dredging. Living with him at that time was his daughter, mary, her husband, Frederick Bunting, and one grandchild, Ann Weeks Bunting just 18 months old.
By 1861, despite his age, Matthew was still working. He had, however, switched from the heavy work of dredging to that of a mariner. He was still living with his daughter Mary and her family who by then had moved over to Oyster Court. | NUTT, Matthew (I2901)
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| 399 |
Age on death given as 82 but residence given as Tanner Street. | RUCK, Mary (I3365)
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| 400 |
Age on death registration is 69 years. | CHEESEMAN, Lucy (I7375)
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