436.
CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
3 1
924 091 179 501
XI
Cornell University Library
The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library.
There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text.
http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924091179501
In compliance with current copyright law, Cornell University
Library produced this replacement volume on paper that meets the ANSI Standard
Z39.48-1992 to replace the irreparably deteriorated original.
2001
(Sfornell IttioctHUg ffiibrarg
3tt)ata, New fatk
BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME OF THE
SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND
THE GIFT OF
HENRY W. SAGE
1891
LONDON MARRIAGE LICENCES,
15 2 1-1 8 6 9.
^^r?'^ ' X" C-K.£^uZ
Conbon !Eama$e iiccnas,
1B21— 1869.
EDITED BY
JOSEPH FOSTER,
Author of '■'■The British Peerage and Baronetage," "Members of Parlia'ment, Scotland,"
" Our Nohle and Gentle Families of Ro'yal Descent," '• Men at the Bar,"
a/nd many other genealog^ical works.
FROM EXCERPTS BY THE LATE COLONEL CHESTER, D.C.L.
With Memoir and Pobteait.
LONDON : BBBNARD QUARITCH, 15 PICCADILLY, W.
1887.
-4' \\\
vl
WYMAN AND SONS, PBINTEKS,
GREAT (JUEEN STREET, UNCOLn's INN FIELDS,
LONDON. W.C.
PREFACE,
" They throw a flood of light on the genealogies of the diocese of London, and especially of London itself. I regard them as one of my greatest genealogical treasures." — J. L. Chestee, 16 Feb., 1880.
" We doubt if a single work treating on pedigrees, or on matters of family research, has been published in the English language during the last twenty years which has not benefited by the stores of knowledge accumulated by his unwearied labours." — Academy,
THE fam6 of Colonel Chester's genealogical collections is, like that of their compiler, world-wide. There are few genealogists or antiquaries of repute, whether in the Old or in the New World, who have not, at one time or another, been indebted to their large-hearted possessor for welcome and highly-prized extracts from these unrivalled treasures.
The Marriage Licences consist of five folio volumes, of about 400 pages each, the entries written out in chronological order, and carefully indexed, from the following offices, viz. : —
The Bishop of London's Office, 1521 to 1828. Also the Dean and
Chapter of Westminster's Office (all taken), 1599 to 1699 3 vols.
Faculty Office of the Archbishop of Canterbury, 1543 to 1869 1 vol.
Vicar- General's Office of the Archbishop of Canterbury, 1660 to
1679 1vol.
This magnificent series of extracts, together with his other MSS., were transcribed (in duplicate), it may be explained, (at the sole cost of George E. Cokayne, Esq., Norroy King of Arms) by the late Col. Chester to enable him to annotate, from the information they afford, his celebrated magnum opus on the Registers of Westminster Abbey. There is probabably no page in that superb work, iinrivalled in modern genealogy, that has not a reference to this wonderful collection.
The following introduction to the Marriage Licences from the Office of the Bishop of London is from the pen of Col. Chester himself : —
"The marriage allegations now in the Bishop of London's Eegistry do not begin until 7th December, 1597. I extracted the most important of them from that date down to about 1700, while engaged in my work on the Begisters of Westminster Abbey. Subsequently I discovered a series of books at the principal registry of probate called ' Vicar General's Books,' which had been trans- ferred from the Bishop's registry, in which are entries of licences issned, beginning 5th January, 1520-1. The whole of these I have copied, and they will be found in the following pages. After 7th December, 1597, the two series are incorporated, and the entries from the ' Vicar General's Books' will be readily recognized by their brevity. The series from 5th January, 1520-1, to 7th December, 1597, is invaluable, as no other record of them exists. It will be seen that the entries of the first eighteen years are anterior to the date of the earliest parish registers, and they, therefore, possess a special value.
"JOS. L. CHESTER."
" London, XOth June, 1876.
vi Preface.
The following extract from a letter by Col. Chester affords a fair example of the practical value of these marriage licences : —
" I suppose that entry of the marriage licence is the only record that exists of Sir ■William Harper's second wife, and no one would ever And it if he searched for it or think of looking for it where it exists. These entries are scattered through some forty folio volumes among a mass of other records, all in crabbed Latiu and entirely unindexed. Seeing the value of them, I commenced going through them some years ago, page by page, and extracted every licence there is — they fill more than two of my folio volumes of four hundred pages each. ... I shall expect you to give me due credit for the discovery of what, I am sure, you would have sought in vain."
Mr. Quaritch, the eminent bookseller, having commissioned me to edit his copy of this valuable MS., I decided to carry out the work on the plan laid down in my " Collectanea Genealogica," viz., the alphabetical plan, so as to keep all possible rivals out of the field. By this arrangement anyone can see at a glance the male entries under a particular name, and as the columns are also numbered instead of the pages, the female names will be less diflScult to find from the references in the index. By this plan the annoyance of having to consult four indices will be avoided, an annoyance entailing on students for all time to come a needless waste of time and labour. Such is the unfortunate plan adopted in the Harlein Society's edition, forced by the Council on its its members at a loss of several hundred pounds, reducing the utility of their publication to a minimum.
I should here state that I have adopted a novel style of arrangement by placing the different forms of the same surname under the form ordinarily used, and by inserting the original form in parenthesis, thus as far as possible aiding the genealogist in his researches, and at the same time retaining the ancient orthography so highly prized by the student and scholar.
I need scarcely point out to genealogists, lawyers, and students, both historical and biographical, the extreme value of such records as these, yielding, as they do, a fund of absolutely original information. But I may perhaps remind them that Marriage Licences have an interest peculiar to themselves, not only from their mention, most important though it is, of the social status of the contracting parties, but also from the fact that while baptisms and burials can be traced from Parish Registers with com- parative ease, Marriages, on the contrary, from the nature of the case, have often to be sought for far afield. Thus it is that such a collection as this is simply indispensable to working Genealogists and to all real students, supplying them, as it does, readily and promptly, with the evidences of many a missing marriage, and the names of many a wife unknown ; — ^information which, even with much time and labour, they could other- wise, as they know too well, scarcely, if ever, have obtained.
I am unwilling to allow this opportunity to pass, without attempting to do justice, inadequate though it may be, to the memory of the late Col. Chester, by including, by permission of Mr. J. Ward Dean, of Boston, a reprint, with additions, of his biographical notice of Col. Chester, also to acknowledge, with thanks, the courtesy of Mr. J. J. Latting, of New York, who has supplied copies of Col. Chester's portrait for this edition at prime cost.
JOSEPH FOSTER.
21, Boundary Egad, London, N.W.
MEMOIR
OF
COL. JOSEPH LEMUEL CHESTER, D.O.L LLD.
BY
JOHN WARD DEAN, A.M. Editor of the Neio England Historical and Genealogical Register. Reprinted hy Special Permission.
THE life of the late Col. Chester, whose career has added lustre to the names of genealogist and antiquary, has a peculiar interest for the readers of the Register, in whose pages his writings have often appeared. He was the third son and fifth child of Joseph and Prudee (Tracy) Chester, of Norwich, Connecticut, and was born in that town April 30, 1821.
His earliest known ancestor in this country was Capt. SamueP Chester, of New London, who removed to that town about the year 1663 from Boston. Samuel Chester wa"s in the West India trade, and in connection with William Condy, who is styled his nephew, received in 1664 a grant of land for a warehouse. " He was," says Miss Caulkins, "much employed in land surveys, and in 1693 was one of the agents appointed by the general court " of Connecticut " to meet with a committee from Massachusetts to renew and settle the boundaries between the colonies."*
Joseph Lemuel Chester was the sixth in descent from Capt. Samuel,' through John,^ Deacon Joseph^ and his second wife, Elizabeth Otis, Joseph* and wife, Elizabeth Lee, and his father Joseph^ above named. His mother, Prudee Tracy, was a daughter of Major Eleazar Tracy, of Norwich, by his wife, Prudee, daughter of Captain Uriah Rogers, of that town. She was descended from Lieut. Thomas Tracy, an early settler of Norwich ; and she inherited also the blood of the Rev. John Rogers, the famous Puritan preacher of Dedham, England, his son the Rev. Nathaniel Rogers, of Ipswich, Mass., the Rev. William Hubbard, author of the History of New England, and other distinguished personages.
Joseph Chester, the father of Col. Chester, was a grocer in moderate circumstances, an honest and upright man. He died at Norwich, January 30, 1832, aged 44 ; but having had a large family of nine children to support, left little property to his widow and children. His eldest son, now the Rev. Albert Tracy Chester, D.D., of Buffalo, was then a student at Union College, Schenectady, N.Y. The next son, Charles Huntington Chester, a youth of sixteen, carried on the grocery store for his mother for two or three years. In 1835 the family removed to Rome, Ohio, where Erastus Chester, a brother of Mr. Chester, resided, and where they took a small farm. Albert was graduated from Union College in 1833, studied for the ministry, and when settled as a clergyman took his younger brothers and sisters successively into his family. Mrs. Chester, the widow, on 6th September, 1837, married the Rev. John Hall, rector of the Episcopalian church at Ashtabula, Ohio.
Joseph obtained his education at the common schools, though possibly he m^-y have attended for a short time the academy at Ashtabula, where his mother resided after her second marriage. One of his teachers, Othniel Gager, who kept the district school at Norwich when Joseph was eight or ten years old, is the present town clerk of Norwich, Ct. Mr. Latting, the author of the excellent Memoir of Col. Chester in the New York
* See Caulkins's History of New London, pp. 145 and 353 j Hinman's Early Puritan Settlers of Connecticut, pp. 557-9 ; Memoir of Joseph Lemuel Chester, by John J. Latting, in N. Y. Genealogical and Biographical Secord, vol. siii. pp. 149-56.
Yiii Memoir of Colonel Chester.
Genealogical and Biographical Record, has seen Mr. Gager, -who described his pupil to him as a handsome, bright boy, but he had no i-emembrance of any peculiar mental traits. That Joseph made himself proficient in his studies at the various schools, is shown by the fact that before he had reached his majority, he himself taught a school. This -was at Ballston, N.Y., which is near Ballston Spa, where his brother Albert was first settled as a clergyman. In 1837 he was for a short time a clerk at Warren, Ohio, in the land agency office of Gen. Simon Perkins and the Hon. Frederick Kinsman, the latter of whom remembers him as a young man, " tall and commanding in appearance, and very ready as a clerk to comprehend and do what was required of him."
In 1838, being then seventeen years old, he went to New York city, and commenced the study of law. He soon abandoned it for the mercantile profession. He was at one time employed as a clerk by Messrs. Arthur Tappan & Co. in that city, silk merchants, the members of the firm being noted for their enterprise and also for their philanthropic labours. " They were," Mr. Latting writes me, " very strict in the enforcement of a printed set of rules for the moral conduct of their clerks and other employes. They made them all workers in the causes of Temperance and Anti-Slavery." One of the partners, Lewis Tappan, estabUshed in 1841 a mercantile agency in New York, and employed Mr. Chester as a clerk.
His literary taste was early developed. While in New York he contributed articles to the newspapers and magazines of the day, " chiefly of a poetic character." The Knickerbocker for January, 1843, contains a poem by him entitled " Greenwood Cemetery," and signed " Julian Cramer." This pseudonym is that by which he became best known ; though he wrote under several other signatures. The Knickerbocker, in which his poem appeared, was then the leading literary magazine in the United States. The same year his first volume, " Greenwood Cemetery and Other Poems," was pub- lished at New York and Boston. The Knickerbocker for March, 1843, has a favourable notice of the book, written, I presume, by the editor, Lewis Gaylord Clark, a competent critic. It states that though the poems had " some faults," which were to be expected in so young a writer, there were in them " marks of a veritable taste and a pleasing imagination, and evidence of an eye that sees and a heart that feels the beautiful in nature, and the bright, tender, or sorrowful in humanity." Mr. Latting states that this volume comprises " fifty-four separate pieces, mostly written prior to attaining his majority. The lines ' On the Death of President Harrison,' ' On the Loss of the Steam- ship President,' and ' The Captives of L' Amis tad,' were all composed in his twentieth year." His other early publications are, "A Preliminary Treatise on the Law of Repulsion as a Universal Law of Nature," Philadelphia, 1853 ; and " Narrative of Margaret Douglas," Boston and Cleveland, 1854.
He also entered the lecture field. In the winter of 1839-40, he lectured before the Mechanics' Institute, as I am informed by Benson J. Lossing, LL.D., the historian, who was chairman of the board of directors of that institution, and who then made Mr. Chester's acquaintance. One of Mr. Latting's correspondents writes to him that he met Mr. Chester while the latter was lecturing on Temperance in western Massachusetts, and Judge Kinsman remembers him as visiting Ohio on a similar lecturing tour.
About the year 1845 he removed to Philadelphia, where he obtained a situation as merchant's clerk. In 1847, and for some years subsequent, his occupation is given in the Philadelphia Directory as a commissioner of deeds. In the years 1848, 1849, and 1850, he was also the musical editor of Godey's Lady's Book. " In 1852," says Mr. Latting in his Memoir, " he became one of the editors of the Philadelphia Inquirer and of the Daily Sun, in conjunction with Colonel James S. Wallace. These positions brought him into notice politically, and on the consolidation of the city of Philadelphia, in 1854, he was elected a member of the City Council from the sixth ward, serving in that capacity for one term, commencing May 7, 1855. During several sessions of Congress at Washington, he visited that city as corresponding editor, and a portion of the time of his residence there, he was, through the favour of his friend, Colonel John W. Forney, then Chief Clerk of the House of Representatives, employed as one of the assistant clerks." In one of Col. Chester's letters to me, he mentions having held the last named office in the spring of 1856. He was appointed by the Hon. James Pollock, who was governor of Pennsylvania from 1855 to 1858, one of his aids with the military rank of colonel.
While residing at Washington, he was employed to make sale in England of some patents, and in 1858 left his native country. He landed in England on the 6th of September. Various causes prevented him from succeeding in his undertaking ; biit he settled in London and made it his residence thereafter till his death. For a time he kept up his connection with the newspaper press, and for about three years furnished a
Memoir of Colonel Chester. ix
weekly letter from London to the Philadelphia Inquirer. After taking up his residence in England, he made, at least, one visit to the continent, for in one of his letters to me he gives an account of an interview with the Hon. Charles Sumner in March, 1859, in the Museo Borbonico in Naples, and of dining the same evening at the American Minister's. He seldom left England, however, for on the 14th of September, 1872, he wrote me — " I have spent some weeks in Ireland this summer, my first visit there. It was the first real holiday I have taken during the last fourteen years."
It was a tradition in the Rogers family, though the tradition had been rejected by the best New England antiquaries, that his ancestor, the Rev. Nathaniel Rogers, of Ipswich, Mass., son of the Rev. John Rogers, of Dedham, England, was a descendant of the famous John Rogers, the Marian Proto-martyr, whose fate has been made familiar to the children of our land by one of the pictures in the New England Primer. Being in England and having heard the tradition from his youth, he determined to investigate the matter. His researches, however, did not result favourably. On the contrary, he found proof that the Dedham minister, through whom he hoped to trace his lineage, could not have been a descendant of the martyr. This, no doubt, was a sore disappoint- ment to him, as few who pride themselves on their New England blood would not prefer to be descended from John Rogei-s than from any of the sovereigns of England- But these researches led him to undertake the life of Rogers, as he tells us, in the following words, in the preface to that work —
Personally nnsatisfaotory aa were his labours in that direction, they led him into another, and it was not long before he was thoroughly imbued with the conviction that historical justice had never been done to the person whose eventful career forma the subject of these pages. He soon discovered that the only original account concerning him, which had been received as authentic for nearly three centuries, was full of the wildest discrepancies and grossest errors. Modest and humble, unambitious of a record on the common roll of fame, actuated by higher and holier motives than the attainment of a name among men, while he lived, he carefully avoided all appearance of ostentation, and never claimed the honours to which he was justly entitled ; while after his death his very memory was rudely thrust aside in order to make room for that of those of his associates who had been, indeed, his official superiors, but who, generally, were infinitely his inferiors, as well in regard to their character and attainments, as to the services which they rendered the church and the world.
This work, under the title of " John Rogers : the Compiler of the First Authorized English Bible ; the Pioneer of the English Reformation ; and its First Martyr," was published in the autumn of 1861. The claims which he made for his hero in the title of the work were abundantly proved in its pages. The boolc attracted immediate attention, and English and American antiquaries awarded him high honour for his first antiquarian work. It was also the foundation of an acquaintance with Sir Frederic Rogers, Bart., now Lord Blachf ord. The book was dedicated to him, and the friendship between them became intimate and lasting.
The war of the Rebellion had then broken out. While he was thinking of returning home, he "received a commission from the United States Government for a service which he could render in England,"* and decided to remain in that country.
[" It was during this period that, under the auspices of the then Dean of West- minster, he commenced his researches in the Abbey Registers. He soon became more thoroughly interested — infatuated with the work of genealogical investigations. The privilege of access to other public as well as private records had begun to be accorded him. Not without great difficulties, and through prejudices which he patiently over- came, had he obtained the advantages this privilege gave him. A friend, who visited him in the summer of 1881, communicates to me the following facts, substantially as related to him by his host at that time — ' When Colonel Chester commenced his labours, more than twenty years ago, he had to encounter a marked indifference on the part of those who had the custody of the records and papers referring to the emigration to this country. In other words, while they gave much time to the careful preparation of their own pedigrees, they did but little to try and preserve the connecting links with the Puritan descendants emigrating to New England in the early part of the seventeenth century. Again, the professional pedigree searchers, as a class, were not such as commended themselves to the authorities, and it was only after several years hard and faithful service, during which time Colonel Chester had furnished England herself with some of the results of his system, that his merits began to be recognised, and he was then consulted by eminent antiquarians and genealogists, and his briefs and proofs were put to the test, and became authority in many controverted questions.'
"As early as the year 1866, Colonel Chester had made considerable progress in the
* Mr. Latting's Memoir.
Memoir of Colonel Chester.
work of investigating, transcribing, and annotating the registers of Westminster Abbey, and it was in connection with this work that the ' Marriage-allegations in the Bishop of London's Registry,^ a sealed book to all prior investigators, were opened to him. This and other like favours and privileges were accorded him partly through the influence of his personal friend, the late Dean Stanley, but undoubtedly, in great measure, through the appreciation which now began to be publicly felt of the benefits to accrue to English history and biography from his investigations. As Colonel Chester stated to our informant at the interview above alluded to, he was now given ' access, without being subject to the surveillance of attendants or the customary fees, to the British Museum, Westmister Abbey, and Somerset House.' " — Memoir by J. J. Latting, Esq.'}
It was natural that one who had met with such decided success in antiquarian and genealogical researches should continue to prosecute them. On the 24th of October, 1862, he thus wrote to the Eev. Caleb Davis Bradlee, of Boston —
I have been fortunate enougli to obtain free aooes8 to Doctors' Commons, and am preparing to make thorough investigations among the wills of that famous repository. My admission as a " Literary Inquirer " enables me to examine all wills recorded previous to 1700, and to make any extracts I choose, or even to copy the whole wills. Hitherto, as you are doubtless aware, we could only looh at a single will by paying a fee of 23 cents, and then were not suffered to make so much as a note on our finger nails. The regulation ia » new one, and the number to whom permission is granted will be very limited.
I am now devoting all my leisure to examining the wills from 1600 to 1650, and shall go back to the earliest date and down to 1700, designing to use such information as I may acquire for my own literary purposes. There is no doubt but that much which has been indistinct in the genealogy of the early settlers of New England will be cleared up by a careful examination of these wills.
He continued for twenty years to collect materials illustrating the ancestry of American families in the mother country. In the meantime he made special searches for clients, and investigated the English ancestry of noted Americans. The result of each research he arranged and wrote out carefully. Some of these monographs have been printed by himself or others ; but probably the greater number remain in manuscript in the hands of his clients. They are characterised by fullness and minute- ness of detail, the result of the most persistent and thorough research. Among them may be named the Wentworth, Hutchinson, Marbury, Tilden, Pelham, Dummer, Baldwin, Wheelwright and Ferneley families. The Wentworth research, for the Hon. John Wentworth, LL.D., of Chicago, was a marvel of completeness. His early investigations are embodied in an article in the Register in April, 1868 ; but the full results of his labours did not appear till the two editions of the Wentworth Genealogy were published in 1871 and 1878. It would be difficult to name any Wentworth of prominence in English history or literature whose ancestry is not given in that book. The Tilden pedigree, for the Hon. Samuel J. Tilden, ex-governor of New York and Democratic candidate of the Presidency of the United States in 1876, is. Col. Chester wrote me October 17, 1873, " the most complete in its minuteness that I have ever done." The Wheelwright, Hutchinson, Marbury, Pelham and Dummer genealogies have appeared in the Register, and the Baldwin will be printed in it this year. The Ferneley research, made for the late Joseph Ballard, of Boston, filling ten closely written foolscap pages with precise information, is in the possession of the New England Historic Genealogical Society.
He delighted to grapple with difficulties which had foiled other antiquaries. When a genealogical mystery was cleared up by him, he did not often rest satisfied till he had traced the connections of the person whose history he was tracing through all their ramifications. In a letter of January 6, 1872, he writes that one of the most eminent English genealogists, whom he names, had recently appealed to him in a genealogical matter, after he had exhausted all his own resources, and Col. Chester adds with pride that he was able to "help him out of his difficulties." Many instances of similar success could be named, but I will refer to only three — one whose interest is co-extensive with English literature, and two in which it is confined to Americans.
1. For a long time the surname of the mother of the poet Milton had been a puzzle for his biographers. In the words of one of them, Prof. Masson, the problem had " been waiting unsolved by native ingenuity for two hundred years." Even Edward Phillips, Milton's own nephew, gave a wrong surname ; Caston, and John Aubrey, the antiquary^ called her a Bradshaw. Col. Chester proved that her maiden name was JefEerys. The evidence by which he arrived at this result he communicated to the London Athenceum
Memoir of Colonel Chester. xi
Nov, 7, 1868, and Mr. Latting gives a good abstract in his Memoir.* Prof. Masson accepted the result, and, in announcing it, styled Col. Chester "a Hercules of genealogy."
2, The parentage of Mrs. Anne Hutchinson, the friend of Sir Henry Vane, whose religious zeal and skill in controversy had set the infant colony of Massachusetts ablaze, had been hopelessly sought by our genealogists (see Registee, xvii. 65). Col. Chester proved that she was the daughter of the Rev. Francis Marbury, of London, and that her mother, Bridget Dryden, was a sister of Sir Erasmus Dryden, Bart., the grandfather of the poet Dryden.
3. The maiden name of Mrs. Mary Norton, the wife of the Rev. John Norton, of Boston, and the liberal benefactor of the Old South Church (her bequest of landed property having made that church one of the richest in this city), had foiled all the efforts of our genealogists, not even a clue having been obtained. Col. Chester proved that she was Mary, the third daughter of John Ferneley of West Creting, by his wife Temperance, daughter of Sir Miles Corbet, and that Miles Corbet, famous in English history, was her own cousin, while two of her great aunts were wives of two of the most eminent statesmen of their day. Sir Nicholas Bacon and Sir Thomas Gresham.
Col. Chester, in his letter to the Rev. Mr. Bradlee, refers to the extracts he was then making from the wills at Doctors' Commons, now at Somerset House, London. He availed himself also of many other sources of genealogical information. Prominent among them are the Parish Registers, of which at his death he left eighty-seven folio volumes of extracts, of more than 400 pages each. Seventy of these volumes are carefully indexed. | The Manuscripts of the Rev. Matthias Candler, the Puritan vicar
* " In the early part of the month of November, 1868, in the coarse of his investigations, Colonel Chester accidentally discovered, in the Bishop of London's Registry of Marriage Allegations, the first link in the chain of evidence which disclosed the parentage of the mother of the poet Milton, ' a problem,' says Professor Masson, in his recently published second edition of the ' Life of MiltoD,' ' that had been waiting unsolved by native ingenuity, for two hundred years.' The most that had been previously known with certainty was that her Christian name was Sarah. John Aubrey, ' antiquarian and gossip,' who had been personally acquainted with Milton, and who furnished Anthony Wood, also Milton's contemporary, with the materials for the first published memoir of the poet, included in the ' Athense et Fasti Oxonienses,' says she was a ' Bradshaw,' giving, in connection with this statement, a pedigree of the Bradshaw family, with their coat-of- arms. Then followed Edward Phillips, Milton's own nephew and pupil, and naturally presumed to have known who his own grandmother was, and who, writing in 1694, calls her Sarah, of the family of the Castons, derived originally from Wales, a woman of incomparable virtue and goodness.' But, from the year 1610, there had existed in the Parish Register of Allhallows, Bread Street, London, where Milton's father and his family resided, the following entry, not unknown to later pedigree hunters : ' The 22nd day of February, A" 1610, was buried in this Parish, Mrs. Ellen Jefferys, the mother of Mr. John Mylton's wife, of this parish.' Upon this apparently more official authority, later biographers asserted that the poet's mother must have been a Jeffery, but of an unknown and unidentified family.
" These accounts continued to puzzle the numberless biographers of the great poet until our own time, when, as Professor Masson forcibly expresses it, ' Into this most unsatisfactory Bradahaw- Caston-JefEerys imbroglio there has descended a Hercules of Genealogy. It was in 1868 that Colonel J. L. Chester, the Editor and Annotator of the Registers of Westminster Abbey, whose researches into the histories of English families are probably more miscellaneous and thorough than those of any other living man, came accidentally upon a record definitely connecting Milton's mother with a Jeffry stock; and, of late, devoting a good deal of his time and skill to the investigation, expressly on its own account, he has succeeded in clearing up the whole subject to a degree beyond former hope.'
" Want of space in the present paper will not allow fuller particulars of Colonel Chester's discovery. They will be found detailed at length in a communication published by him in the London Athenceum of November 7, 1868, and also in a subsequent issue of the same paper of May 29, 1880, and embodied in Professor Masson's last edition of the first volume of the ' Life of Milton.' It may be sufBoient to say that these discoveries clearly disclose the fact that she was Sarah, the eldest daughter of Paul Jeffrey, citizen and merchant tailor of London, and of a family of that name in East Eanningfield, Essex.
" We may well conceive that of this discovery Colonel Chester was reasonably proud. The full honour and distinction of its accomplishment are wholly his, and we doubt not will continue to be cheerfully accorded him so long as the great English poet's life and works shall be known and read." — From Memoir ly J. J. Latting, Esq.
t These eighty-seven volumes of Parish Register extracts form the first of the nine series of Col. Chester's manuscripts in the lists prepared by Mr. Cokayne, his executor, the substance of which list will be appended to this memoir. Of the nine series, the second, third, and fourth have been sold, while the sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth are not for sale. Col. Chester's library was sold at auction in London, April 17-20, 1883, by Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge.
The Parish Registers, mentioned in the text, are said to be the most valuable series of the above manuscripts. A more particular description will be found in the list just referred to. They had not been sold when I last heard from Mr. Cokayne. It would be a fitting tribute to the memory of one
xii Memoir of Colonel Chester.
of Cocklenham, Suffolk, containing much genealogical information relative to families which emigrated to America, early engaged his attention. In 1862 he sent to the Register, of which I was the editor, au article on the " Rogers Genealogy and the Candler Manuscript," meaning the volume in the Harleian MSS., British Museum, which had been made known to New England readers by the Rev. Joseph Hunter and Mr. Horatio G. Somerby. In 18G6 Col. Chester • learned that there were two other volumes by Candler in the Tanner MSS., Bodleian Libi-ary, and in July visited Oxford, where he spent a week. He wrote me the result of his discoveries in a letter dated the 30th of that inonth. An extract from this letter is printed in my " Memoir of Nathaniel Ward," page 122. In the summer and fall of 1869 he spent several weeks at Oxford, and on the 19th of October wrote that the two Candler volumes, which he had been having copied, were finished ; adding, " I have found two more volumes in his handwriting, relating to SuHolk people exclusively, not pedigrees, but personal sketches, copies of monuments, etc., which I am copying. They will all be very valuable."
The Matriculation Register of the University of Oxford is another source from which he gathered information. On the 2nd of March, 1866, he wrote me from Oxford—
I have been very hard at work here day and night. I am making a complete copy of the Matri- culation Registers of the University, from 1564 to 1750, permission having been kindly afforded me. There will be more than one hundred thousand entries, name, parentage, residence, age, &o. It will be invaluable, as such a list never will be printed. I have already identiiied members of onr early New England families, and among other things settled the ancestry of the famous Anne Hutchinson, as well as completed my chain of evidence disproving the Washington pedigree.
On the 16th of October, 1869, he wrote from Oxford that he was there, and would remain till Christmas, and would complete his copy of the Matriculation Register to that year ; " so that," he adds, " I shall have it perfect for over three hundred years."
The Old Marriage Allegations in the Bishop of London's Register, extending from 1598 to 1710, furnished him another source from which he drew his information. He wrote me August 29, 1868, that he had completed his examination, and had secured " no less than thirty-five hundred choice extracts."
I shall not attempt to specify the variety of materials illustrating the family history of England, chiefly in the seventeenth century, which he collected, methodically arranged and indexed. A general idea may be obtained from the list of manuscripts appended to this Memoir.
The work to which he devoted a large portion of his time during his residence in England, was an annotated transcript of the Registers of Westminster Abbey. It was no doubt owing to this undertaking that free access to many parish and other records which we have referred to, was accorded to him. At first ho contemplated only a partial transcript, but at the suggestion of Dean Stanley he was induced to enlarge his plan. On the 9th of November, 1867, he wrote me, "I think I told you that I am engaged in preparing for the press and annotating the entire Register of Marriages, Baptisms and Burials in Westminster Abbey. I am quite proud of this work." On the 13th of the next month he wrote —
My labour on the Abbey Eegisters is excessive, and likely to be protracted, though I confine my notes simply to the identification of the parties. Still, it is a labour of love, and it is surely some- thing for an American to be proud of, thus to have his name perpetually connected with the glorious old Minster.
His letters abound in references to this work, the progress he had made, and the new materials which had been opened to him. June 17, 1871, he wrote me —
A paper of mine was read before the Historical Society last Monday, a copy of which I will send you as soon as printed. That paper will show you one of the causes of ray slow progress with my Abbey Book. I had paid no attention to the Royal Family, supposing that if the history of any
of the most unselfish antiquaries that ever lived, if these manuscripts could be purchased for some public institution in this country, where they would be kept together. Mr. Cokayne says of them : " Judging from the price which MSS. of this nature have fetched during recent years, it is more than probable that, if sold (by auction or otherwise) separately, they would command, at the lowest calculation, an average price of £50 a volume (£4,350) j but as it is wished, for the sake of doing honour to their great and indefatigable collector, to keep them together, the whole series is now dffered as one collection at a very considerably less rate, viz., £3,000 net (which is the minimum snm that will be taken), being less than £35 a volume." [The College of Arms acquired these manuscripts in 1886. — J. F.]
Memoir of Colonel Chester. xiii
family was thoroughly known it was that. And yet the seoond burial in the Abbey Eegister, when I reached it, I found to be entirely wrong, and it cost me a month's labour to set it right. These interruptions delay me very much, but I still hope to go to press this year.
On the 4tli of May, 1872, he wrote—
Yes, every day's delay tends to make my Abbey Book more perfect, and as it is probably the great work of my life — my legacy to the nation — and as I mean it to be a standard book for ever, I am not sorry for the delay. I am constantly at work on it, and as constantly im- proving it.
In the spring of 1874 his work was sufficiently advanced to make arrangements for its publication. On the 11th of April he wrote that he had presented it to the Harleian Society, and that it would appear as one of its serials. About two weeks later, on the 24th, he informed me with gratification that the Queen had that week accepted the dedication of his book, an honour " not often accorded." On the 30th of May he writes more fully on this subject —
It seemed proper, as my book is a national work, that it should be dedicated to the head of the nation. I left the matter to Dean Stanley whether I should dedicate it to him or whether he thought the Queen should be asked, and I knew nothing more of it until I received her formal per- mission through her private secretary.
On the 16th of May, before the last letter, but after the Queen had accepted the dedication of his book, to which patronage he attributed the favour granted to him, he wrote —
The Lords of the Treasury have just given me free access to the wills at Doctors' Commons of the last century, my present privilege only extending to the year 1700 — the only thing I yet wanted to perfect my book. This is a concession never before granted to anybody. Dean Stanley and I have been trying for it for the last five years, and have only just succeeded.
The next year he commenced printing his book, and sent me a proof of the first pages, August 28, 1875. Progress in the printing is frequently noted. On the 10th of March, 1876, he writes —
Ky Abbey volume has been some time all printed, making S26 pages of text. Its issue is only delayed by the index, a most important feature, on which I have now been at work four weeks, twelve hours a day, and it will occupy me at least a fortnight longer. I hope to forward the volume some time next month.
In 1876 the work was issued as the tenth volume of the publications of the Harleian Society. A small edition was printed separately for presents to the author's friends. The work more thau met the high expectations that had been raised. The English and American press spoke highly of its merits. The London Times of Sept. 1, 1876, devoted three and a half columns, and the Morning Post of Nov. 2, more than a column to a review of the work. The Times said —
Throughout the whole of this huge volume, with its profusion of names, illustrious or obscure, it is only at rare intervals that a case is to be found of which the industry of its annotator has failed to obtain some particulars. Such a happy result has been secured by protracted investiga- tions possible only to an antiquary industrious beyond his fellows. The wills at Somerset House, the marriage records preserved in the various offices belonging to the Sees of London and Canterbury, the matriculation registers at Oxford — all these have yielded up their dead ; and from such original research Col. Chester has amassed a wealth of biographical illustration almost without parallel for novelty and accuracy.
The London Morning Post said —
There is scarcely a family of rank and position which may not learn something — some out-of- the-way fact or incident of interest — ^from the prodigious amount of accurate information here provided by Colonel Chester, who is thoroughly and completely master of his subject. When it is borne in mind how inexact many persons have been and are as regards dates, how one mis- statement (made often not intentionally, but through carelessness and to save trouble) is handed on, repeated and enlarged, writers of general or personal history cannot but be grateful for this admirable work. Colonel Chester brings to light facts which have been forgotten ; tracks out errors and inaccuracies, which have had a loug life, with unceasing care j and provides in this book a monument of his painstaking industry and patient self-sacrifice. As long as Westminster Abbey lasts his name will be remembered because of this magnificent work.
The warm encomiums given it on its publication have been repeated by the press and individuals since his death, B. Beedham, Esq., of Ashfield House, Kimbolton, aii English antiquary of note, in a recent letter to me writes — " These Registers were worthy of the most ample illustration, and at his hands they . received it to an extent which has never been accorded to any similar records. He has thus added a page to the
xiv Memoir of Colonel Chester.
history of the church, so splendid and so rich in associations, to which every intelligent countryman of his directs his earliest steps on visiting the land of his forefathers."
Col. Chester was justly gratified by the manner in which his book was received. On the 22nd of Decembei-, 1876, he wrote me —
I have something like two hundred letters of the most complimentary and appreciative character, from the best men in the country, and am amply repaid for all my labour. The Queen sent me a kind message some days ago, through the Dean of Westminster, with her " sincere thanks " for my " valuable and interesting volume." On my return home yesterday I found from her a copy of the Life of the Prince Consort (-written by Mr. Theodore Martin under her direction) with her autograph insari'ption, " To Colonel Chester, from Victoria B."
On the 26th of January, 1877, he wrote —
You will be pleased to hear that the Queen has j ust sent me the second volume of the Life of the Prince Consort, with, as before, her autograph presentation inscription (only this time she signs her name " Victoria R. & I.") and this kind message, " that she has not been forgetful of your labours, and wishes you to understand how much she appreciates them."
On the 9th of March, 1878, he writes with equal pleasure that he had received from the Queen the third volume of that work. Mr. Latting has sent me a copy of the letter of Dean Stanley accompanying the book, which is as follows —
Deanery, Westminster.
My dear Col. Chester ;
I have been graciously commanded by the Queen to send you the 3rd volume of the Prince
Consort's Life. It may please you the more because it is entirely the Queen's own thought — the more
remarkable at this moment when her mind must be so much occupied by the overwhelming anxieties
of public afiairs.
I have not myself seen the Queen, having been kept at my house by a troublesome cold, which is, I
trust, at last giving way.
Tou will remember that yesterday was the 2nd Anniversary of the eclipse of my life.* March 2, '78. Yours sincerely, A. P. Staneby.
A few years latei', December 31, 1881, he informed me with pride that a handsome card-tray, made from old oak taken from Westminster Abbey, had been sent him as a Christmas present by the Dean and Chapter.
In the preface to his Abbey book he made the following announcement —
It may be as well to add that the Editor has a large collection from which he may eventually decide to print a list of such persons as were probably buried in the Abbey, but whose names do not appear in the Registers, with the evidences ; and also that, if his life is spared a few years longer, he intends to embody in a supplement such important information as he may acquire respecting the persons named in the present volume, and especially concerning the few still unidentified.
Such a volume would have been a valuable supplement to his great work, but unfortunately he did not live to compile it. Nor did he finish the other work on which he bent all his energies after the publication of his Westminster book, and which he refers to in the following extract from a letter dated Dec. 2, 1876 — "I am devoting all my leisure time to working up the immense amount of Washington material I have collected, and clearing away the rubbish. I have now the means to explode utterly the South Cave theory, which has always been a giant in the way. I believe I have the clue to the President's real ancestry, but I some time ago made up my mind not to say or print anything more on the subject until I can lay the subject complete before the world." Though he was not able to finish these works, he found time, however, to edit several volumes for the Harleian Society, the titles of which will be found in the list of his writings appended.
His labours were soon recognized by the learned societies. The earliest to bestow its honours upon him was, I think, the New England Historic Genealogical Society, which elected him a corresponding member in 1862. He was elected to the same membership in the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society in 1871. From the title-page of his Westminster volume we learn that he was also an honorary or a corresponding member of " the Historical Societies of the States of Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Minnesota," in this country. In England he was one of the founders of the Harleian Society, and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He was a
* JVbte iy X J. Latting. — Lady Augusta Stanley, the Dean's wife, died on Wednesday, March I, 1876.
Memoir of Colonel Chester. xv
member of the councils of both societies at their organisation, and held that office in the former society till his death. In October, 1880, he was elected an honorary member of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire. He was doubtless a member of other learned societies in England and America.
He was also the recipient of academic honours. In the spring of 1877, the late Evert A. Duyckinck, A.M., the senior author of the " Cyclopasdia of American Literature " and one of the trustees of Columbia College, New York, wrote to me that it was contemplated by this college to honour Col. Chester with a degree. In writing to my friend I hinted this to him, but without naming the college. He replied on the 11th of May that he should value highly such a recognition by an American college, as it would show that his work was appreciated by his countrymen. He then adds, " There has been an intimation to the same effect here." After the degree of LL.D. was con- ferred on him by Columbia College, he wrote July 10, 1877, to me —
I appreciate this honour for three reasons ; First, because it proves that the prophet is not always without honour even in his own country. Secondly, because it was in New York, and almost under the shadow of this college, that I began my manhood career nearly forty years ago. Thirdly, because I know, as you say in your kindly note in the Ira-dsarvpt, that Columbia College has always been very sparing and discriminating in conferring its highest honours.
The intimation to which he refers in his letter in May, was doubtless a degree from Oxford. This, four years later, he received, for on the 22d of June, 1881, that ancient University conferred its highest degree, D.C.L., upon him, " in acknowledg- ment," says Mr. Latting, " of his services as a genealogist ; the first and only instance, it is understood, in which that degree was given for such a cause." For this honour Col. Chester was profoundly grateful.
In March, 1850, a portrait of him, with his autograph, "Julian Cramer," appeared in Godeifs Lady's Book. In 1874 I met with this portrait, and wrote him to that efEect, adding that I could see little resemblance in it to the photograph taken in 1869, which he had sent me. He replied Feb. 7, 1874 —
The portrait you mention was considered a good one when it was engraved, now some twenty -four or five years ago, when I was of course so many years younger. I now wear my hair and beard differently, which naturally alter one's appearance. I suspect that portraits taken at an interval of a quarter of a century would seldom exhibit much similarity, unless one had some strongly marked features.
Of this portrait Dr. Lossing, the well-known author referred to in the beginning of this Memoir, wrote me, December 28, 1883 —
Col. Chester presented me with his engraved portrait when it was first published. He was then about twenty-nine years of age. His almost black hair and whiskers were close out. The latter ex- tended under his chin. He had no moustache, and his chin was shaven. He wore a " turn-down " collar, and was enveloped in a cloak.
The portrait which embellishes this Memoir is from a photograph taken at Oxford in 1881, when he received his degree. It was engraved for the New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, to accompany Mr. Latting's Memoir in that periodical, October, 1882.
Time works great changes in the features of an individual, but seldom so great as is shown by these three portraits. A friend, after comparing them together, remarked that he could not see a single feature that was the same in all ; and yet the portraits have all been pronounced good likenesses. The mind, however, looks out from each of them. At twenty -nine we see a fair brow and an eye full of hope and confidence ; at forty-eight we notice that time has stamped a deeper impression on the features ; and at sixty the full character is written on the face and brow. I, myself, never saw Col. Chester, but from all descriptions which I have heard or read, it is evident that he was a fine looking man and had a commanding presence. Dr. Lossing writes —
I first met Ool. Chester as a lecturer in New York. He was then a very handsome, finely propor- tioned young man in the nineteenth year of his age. From that time we met occasionally and kept up an occasional correspondence until he went to Europe. Our acquaintance was kept bright chiefly through letters ever afterwards. Our personal intercourse was very slight. We were wide apart, geographically, most of the time. The last time I saw him was in Harper's Building, New York, the year before he went to England. For years after that I lost trace of him. Two or three years before the appearance of his Westminster Abbey book, I received letters from him, and from that time until the year before his death we corresponded briefly at rather wide intervals. When his Westminster book was published he sent me a copy. His letters were warm and sympathetic, and
xvi Memoir of Colonel Chester.
I f alfc it a privilege to be remembered in his list of friends. One of the earliest tokens of his regard for me was a copy of his " Greenwood Cemetery and Other Poems," presented to me soon after its appearance in 1843. My brief personal acquaintance with him and our exchange of epistles taught me to esteem him very highly as a most genial, generous, scholarly and every way attractive man.
The Eev. Alexander B. Grosart, in dedicating to him, in 1869, his edition of the Poems of Sir John Beaumont, thus addresses him —
I like you for your English Puritan name and for your English face — that of " a brave gentleman" all of the olden time ; I like you for your right good service in writing for the first time adequately, the Life, a supremely noble and beautiful one, of " John Rogers," Proto-martyr of England under Mary ;■ I like you as an American proud of your lineage and unmixed English descent ; and I like you for your cathoUo literary sympathies and brotherhood.
George W. Marshall, LL.D., P.S.A., the founder and for seven years the editor of The Genealogist, published in the number of that quarterly for July 1882, an appre- ciatiye Memoir of his friend Col. Chester. He thus describes him —
His personal appearance was in every way characteristic. Tall, of stout build, well proportioned, with long flowing gray beard, and a peculiarly kindly expression of countenance, he naturally pre- possessed those with whom he came in contact at first sight, and his quiet, nnobtrasive manner at once commanded respect. Generous and genial in disposition far beyond most men, he was at the same time highly sensitive, and felt keenly any want of gratitude on the part of those who obtained his assistance in their researches, while, on the other hand, the most trivial attention shown hira was accepted and valued with childlike simplicity and delight. Ever ready to afford to anyone who asked him all the aid which his large collection could supply, he spent half his time in replying to the in- quiries of his numerous correspondents, and it was rarely, however much trouble it involved or time it took, that the desired information was not supplied by return of post. The only return he expected, though for that he never asked, was thanks.
He was always ready, as Dr. Marshall says, to help his brother antiquaries. The author of a biographical sketch in the New Monthly Magazine, published during his lifetime, also says : " The accumulations of more than twenty years .... are generally known to be at the service of anyone requiring them for legitimate historical purposes ; and it "will be found that scarcely a modern book appears relating to biography, genealogy, county or parish history, that is not more or less indebted to him." This many of us know to be true in our own cases, and the numerous acknowledgments to him which we meet with in books, are additional confirmations of the fact.
He had a keen intellect, great versatility of talent and a ready command of language. He expressed himself forcibly, and did not hesitate to say -what he thought. His readi- ness of expression is shown by his letters and other manuscripts, which are written in a free, legible and uniform hand, with hardly an erasui'e or interlineation.
His truthfulness was conspicuous. He would not encourage the pretensions of those who sought to connect themselves with the gentry of England when no evidence could be found to favour it ; and he had no patience with those who pandered to the vanity of such persons. At the request of an acquaintance I wrote to Col. Chester asking him to prepare a chapter on " The Armorial Insignia of American Families," for a work which that gentleman had undertaken. I stated that it was desired that the whole truth should bo told. He replied March 25, 1881 —
I have been in doubt whether it would be politic in me to write an article that would place me in such open antagonism with so large a portion of my countrymen whom I know to be claiming and using armorial bearings to which they have no shadow of right. The truth is that they do not wish to be undeceived, and will not only not thank me for undeceiving them, but will be angry with me for having done so. I have had experience of this already, in a number of cases in which I have dealt with the matter in detail.
No statements I can make, however fortified, will convince the descendants of a score of families which I could name, that they have no more right to the arms they claim and use than they have to the royal coat of England, and yet I know that it is true.
He finally consented to write the chapter ; but the projected work was abandoned before he had begun to write the article.
He was proud of the land of his birth, and loved to have his countrymen call on him, and delighted in showing them his wonderful collections. No one visited him without carrying away an exalted opinion of the man and his work. He wished to be known as an American, and rejoiced that he was able to do honour to his country by his pen ; and yet, perhaps, a residence of twenty years and upwards in England had assimilated him more than he was aware to the people with whom he lived. The late S. Whitney Phoenix, in giving an account, in a letter to his friend Henry T. Drowne, of New York, September 21, 1880, of a pleasant visit to Col. Chester, pronounces him " a thorough Englishman in speech and manner." Such assimilation is not unfrequent.
Memoir of Colonel Chester. xvii
As to his residence \\\ London, his earliest letters to me do not give it, his address being to the care of Mr. Moran, of the American Legation. In I860 it was " 14, George's Terrace, Bine Anchor lload, BenTioiulsoy." He removed to " 16, Linden Villas," in the same street, in April, 1870, on the 16th of which month he writes me —
I have been in sad oonf asion for the last fortnight, moving, and have but just got settled in my new quarters, where I hope to remain permanently. I have fitted up my library to my own taste, and write this from it. If yon ever come to see me, as I hope you may, I think you will say I am very cosy and comfortable.
This house lie made his home till his death, twelve years later, though in December, 1878, the name of the street was changed to Sonthwnr'k Park Road, his number being 124. On the 30tli of that month he writes—
I change my address, happily, thants to the authorities, without changing my residence, and the new name of my street is so distinctive that I am able to drop the " Linden Villas " and " Bermondsey " altogether, much to my own satisfaction, and greatly to the relief of my correspondents.
The close of his life and his funeral rites are thns described by Dr. Marshall in his Memoir —
Incessant work, and the sedentary life which it enforced, naturally told on what was to all appearances a robust constitution, but till within a few weeks of his demise, the gout, from which he frequently suffered, was his only serious complaint. He spent a fortnight last Christmas, as he had been in the habit of doing during the most of his residence in England, at the house of his friend, Mr. Cokayne, and seemed, though perhaps a little less active, much in his usual health and spirits.* In February he was attacked by his old enemy the gout, and though he did not rally as soon as usual, nothing serious was anticipated till the end of April, when his medical attendant, Mr. Cooper, suspected that he was sufEeriug from disease of the nature of internal tumour. On the 5th of May, Sir James Paget, and Dr. Moxon, of Guy's, examined him, and pronounced the case to be that of a cancerous tumour in the stomach of considerahle size and long standing, but not of necessity imme- diately fatal. Tliese, or some such words, were told him by Sir James, and since that time he seemed to lose all heart, and I believe never wrote a line more. He continued, however, to sit up in his library on an invalid couch, and though his voice became feeble, was able to converse with his friends till the 23rd of May, when, though weak, he appeared much as usual ; but on that night came an attack of bronchitis, then an abscess in the throat, and though he appeared to recover from both of these, soon after midnight his strength gave way j and on the 25th he gradually sank, and at 10 a.m., on the 26th, expired.
On the last day of the month his funeral, which was of a private character, took place at Nunhead Cemetery ; a large number, however, of his poorer neighbours (among whom he had so long resided, and to whom he had ever been a liberal and most kind benefactor) were present. The American Embassy was represented by Mr. B. S. Nadal, one of the Secretaries of Legation. The service was read by Dr. Bradley, Dean of Westminster, who thus, on behalf of himself and his Chapter, testified the respect due to one who had done so much towards illustrating the history of their glorious Abbey.
Nothing more remains to be told, unless it be to add that of the many good qualities exemplified in his life, his genial disposition was the most striking. Having acquired knowledge himself, by im- parting it to others he made the best possible use of it, and thns derived the truest and noblest enjoy- ment from its possession. In this respect he has left behind him a bright example and taught a use- ful lesson. His too early death has caused a general and heartfelt feeling of sorrow amongst all whose good fortune it was to come in contact with him. We shall see his kindly face no more, ilo longer learn our work imder his able guidance, and though we cannot wish to recall him from the reward of a life well spent and of work well done, our heart is still human, and
" It mourns that dust should part.''
Li 1876, he wrote to his early employer. Judge Kinsman, of WaiTen, Ohio, in a letter accompanying a presentation copy of his Westminster book, that he had been pro- mised by Dean Stanley that, if the dean outlived him, he should have a place in the Abbey. This would have been pleasing to his friends. Next to this a tablet to his memory in the " glorious old minster " as he called it, has been placed there by the Dean and Chapter, see next page.
The life of Col. Chester adds another proof to the many with which literature abounds, that great things may be accomplished when the energies are concentrated on a single object and the powers of mind are equal to the undertaking. He had not the advantage of an early antiquarian training. Till he arrived in England in his thirty- eighth year, we do not learn that he had attempted anything in the line in which lie
* I am just starting for a friend's house in the country, where I always spend a fortnight at Christ- mas and New Year. (Col. Chester's Letter, Deo. 23, 1881.)— J. W.D.
7;
xviii Memoir of Colonel Chester.
afterwards distinguished himself.*'' The capacity and taste for what was to become here- after his life-work no doubt were in him, though undeveloped, and he soon placed hinself in the front rank of antiquaries. When he died it is acknowledged that he had no superior as a genealogist among English-speaking people ; and his reputation had been steadily increasing. lie had gained the position which he had long laboured for ; but he was not permitted to enjoy it many years. In the midst of his activity and usefulness his work was arrested, as his friend Dr. Marshall has told us. Another friend, Joseph Jackson Howard, LL.D., F.S.A. the editor of Miscellanea Genealogiea et Heraldica and his co-worker in the Harleian Society, in a letter dated July 10, 1882, thus describes his condition in the last days of his life —
I saw poor Chester three days before he went to rest. He was quite prepared for the change, and seemed, and I fully believe was, at peace with all. He then told me that although he could not read his books, yet he liked to be carried into his study. He knew the position of every volume, and called them his "familiar faces," bringing, as he glanced from one to the other, to his recollection many happy hours spent in collecting the memoranda stored in each volume.
J. Ward Dean.
* Mr. Hassam, of this city, has shown in an article which will appear in the April number of the Register, the disadvantages under which Col. Chester laboured, and under which genealogists in London now labour, in comparison with the facilities afforded for genealogical research in Boston. Dean Stanley and Col. Chester were only able, after years of solicitation, to obtain free access to the wills of the last century for a work of national interest. In this city access to all the probate records is given without fee to any person. In London the literary inquirer, even for the period for which he has the use of the records, has not access to the files. Here records and files are equally at his service without charge.
WESTMINSTER TABLET.
Colonel Joseph Lemuel Chester, LL.D.
Of Columbia College, New York City,
As also D.C.L. of the University of 0-xford.
Born April 30th, 1821, at Norwich, Connecticut, U.S.A.
Died May 26th, 1882, in London,
Where he had resided for many years.
The Learned Editor of the Westminster Abbey Eegister.
In grateful memory of the disinterested labour of an
American Master of English G-enealogical Learning,
This tablet
Was erected
By the Dean and Chapter of Westminster.
Memoir of Colonel Chester. xix
Inscription ovek the Grave ok Colonel Chester at Nunhead Cemetery,
Surrey.
Beneath this stone
Are deposited the remains of
Colonel Joseph Lemuel Chester,
LL.D. of Columbia College, New York City (1877) ;
D.C.L. of the University of Oxford (1881) ;
And for nearly 20 years a resident in the parish
Of St. James', Bermondsey, in this county.
Born 30 April, 1821, at Norwich, Connecticut, U.S.A.,
He landed in England 6 September, 1858,
Where he employed the remaining years of his life
In collecting materials to illustrate
The Genealogical History
Of his Native and of his Adopted Country.
The indefatigable Energy, marvellous Accuracy,
And patient Ingenuity displayed in his writings,
Are established to postei-ity in the work entitled
" The Westminster Abbey Registers,"
Of which he was the sole Editor and Annotator,
A Monument of literary lore Unrivalled in its kind ;
In grateful appreciation whereof,
A tablet to his memory has been erected
By the Dean and Chapter of Westminster in that Abbey.
These great and rare qualities were not more admirable
Than the Generous and disinterested Sympathy,
Which made him always willing to give
Gratuitous Assistance to his Fellow Workers
On both sides of the Atlantic
(Many of whom be had never seen) ;
An Assistance which will long be missed,
And long had in thankful remembrance.
Beloved by all who knew him.
And deeply regretted by many more,
He departed this life
(In which he had played so active a part)
On 26 May, 1882,
In the 62nd year of his age.
" Eest, happy Dead, Sleep all thy Weariness away. Thou sbalt be waked, on God's great day,
From thy cold bed."
APPENDIX.
Col. Chester's Manuscripts.
Ahstract of a List prepared hy his Executor, Qeorge E. OoTiayne, M.A., F.S.A., at whose ei7>e)ise these Gollections ioere originally made and who possesses duplicate Copies of these Manuscripts,
They may be divided into nine series, each series being quite separate and unconnected with the other, viz. : — ■
I. The splendid collection of Extracts from Parish Eegistees from nearly all the counties in England, consisting of 87 folio volumes, each containing about 400 pages, closely written. Of these volumes 70 are full and are carefully indexed, the " index nominum" to each being a work of immense labour. The other 17 are partially filled.
They contain the entries of all the families of note in the parishes thus dealt with, but wei'e, it is believed, made with the special view of illustrating such families as emigrated to America. They are therefore particularly oiaJuaftJe to the American nation, and it was in America that Colonel Chester fully believed they would eventually find their home (although now the property of the College of Arms, England). They are as follows, viz.: Beds 1 vol., Berks 1 vol., Bucks 1 vol., Cambridgeshire 1 vol., Cheshire 1 vol., Cornwall 1 vol., Derbyshire 2 vols., Devon 3 vols., Dorset 1 vol., Essex 3 vols., Gloucestershire 1 vol., Hants 1 vol., Herts 2 vols., Huntingdonshire 1 vol., Kent 2 vols., Lancashire 1 vol., Lincolnshire 5 vols., Middlesex 4 vols., Middlesex Westminster 10 vols., Middlesex London 12 vols., Middlesex Private Chapels 1 vol., Norfolk 2 vols, Northants 2 vols., Northumberland 1 vol., Notts 2 vols., Oxfordshire 3 vols., Oxfordshire Oxford City 5 vols., Shropshire 1 vol., Somerset 3 vols., Staffordshire 1 vol., Suffolk 1 vol., Surrey 4 vols., Sussex 2 vols., Warwickshire 1 vol., Wilts 1 vol., Worcestershire 1 vol., Yorkshire 2 vols. Total, 87 vols.
II. A complete series of all the Matriculations at the University of Oxfobd from the commence- ment in 1567 to 1869, beautifully written. Seven enormous folio volumes, viz. : Vol. 1. — A.D. 1567 to 1580; with Index. [Mem. The information given at this time was very scant.] Vols. 2 to 4. — A.D. 1581 to 1714. Vols. 5 to 7. — A.D. 1715 to 1869. Tlio names arranged in strict alphabetical order. These entries (about 95,000 in number) show for the most part, not only the College, the age and birthplace of the person who matriculated, but also the name and description of his father. (Now the property of Mr. Joseph Eoster).
III. Complete list of Entrances at Gray's Inn, 1381 to 1781, arranged chronologically, showing in most instances the name and description of the father of the student. Barristers, 1657 to 1865, &c. One thick quarto volume, nicely written. (This MS. is a transcript from a transcript made by Mr. Cokayne).
IV. Mabeiage Licences. Elve folio volumes, of about 400 pages each, nicely written and care- fully indexed, from the following offices, viz. : The Bishop of London's Ofiice, 1521 to 1828. Also the Dean and Chapter of Westminster's Office (all taken), 1559 to 1699, 3 vols. Faculty Office of the Archbishop of Canterbury, 1543 to 1569, 1 vol. Vicar-General's Office of the Archbishop of Canter- bury, 1660 to 1679, 1 vol. (Purchased and published by Mr. Quarich, of London, publisher).
V. Abstract of Wills and Admons, 9 vols, (one only partially filled), one vol. of noble admons from C. P. C. In all 10 vols. Index to testators only.
VI. Pedigrees, 2 vols, (one only partially filled), entitled " Chaos." Pedigrees, 2 vols, (one only partially filled), from Candler's Saffolk Collection. Pedigrees, 1 vol. (only partially filled), relating to Westminster Abbey.
VII. Pedigrees and miscellaneous matters (unindexed), 9 vols, folio, of which eight are devoted to the following families, viz. : Adams, Chester, Hutchinson, Rogers, Taylor, Washington, Wentworth, Whitmore ; the others being miscellaneous.
VIII. Tabular Pedigrees, printed and MSS., arranged in boxes under the first letter of the principal degree.
IX. Four enormous volumes, full of misoellaneons coUectioaa as to the family of Eogers.
Works of Col. Ghesxer.
1. Greenwood Cemetery and other Poems. New York and Boston, 1843. 12mo. pp. 132.
2. A Preliminary Treatise on the Law of Repulsion as a Universal Law of Nature. Philadelphia, 1853. 8vo.pp. 64.
Appendix. xxi
3. Educational Laws of Virginia. The Personal Narrative of Mrs. Margaret Donglass, a Southern woman, who was imprisoned for one month in the Common Jail of Norfolk, under the Laws of Virginia, for the crime of teaching Free Coloured Children to read. Boston and Cleveland, 1854.. 12mo. pp. 65.
4i John Rogers : the Compiler of the First Authorized English Bible ; the Pioneer of the English Reformation and its First Martyr. Embracing a Genealogical Account of his Family, biographical sketches of some of his Principal Descendants, his own Writings, etc. etc. London, 1861. Svo. pp. xii. + 452.
5. Notes on the Ancestry of William Hutchinson and Anne Marbury. Prom Hesearohes recently made in England. Boston. Sm. 4to. pp. 24.
Reprint of an article in the Register for October, 1866.
6. A Preliminary Investigation of the Alleged Ancestry of George Washington, First President of the United States of America j exposing a Serious Error in the Existing Pedigree. Boston. 1866. Svo. pp. 23.
This is a reprint from the Seraldic Journal for October, 1866, where it was printed from advance sheets of the London Herald and Qenealogist for January, 1867. It was also printed in the Regibtee for January, 1867 j and in pamphlet form in London, Svo. pp. 15.
7. A Genealogical Memoir of the Wentworth Family of England, from its Saxon origin in the Eleventh Century to the Emigration of one of its Representatives to New England about the year 1636. Boston, 1868. Svo. pp. 20.
This is a reprint, with pagination unchanged, of an article in the Register for April, 1868.
8. An Official Inaccuracy respecting the Death and Burial of the Princess Mary, daughter of King James I. Read at a, meeting of the Historical Society of Great Britain, June 12, 1871. London, 1871. Svo. pp. 8.
Reprinted from the first volume of the Transactions of the Historical Society.
9. The Marriage, Baptismal and Burial Registers of the Collegiate Church or Abbey of St. Peter, Westminster. London, 1876. (Editor.) Royal Svo. pp. xiii. + 631.
This is the tenth volume of the Publications of the Harleian Society,
10. The Reiester Booke of Saynte De'nis Backohurch parishe (City of London) for Maryages, Chiistenynges and Burjalles, Begynnynge in the Yeare of o' Lord God 1538. (Editor.) London, 1878. Royal Svo. pp. viii. + 369.
The third volume of the Register Section of the Publications of the Harleian Society.
11. Herbert Pelham ; his Ancestors and Descendants. Boston, 1879. Svo. pp. 11. Reprinted from the Register for July, 1879.
12. The Parish Registers of St. Mary Aldermary, Lon'lon, containing the Marriages, Baptisms, and Burials fiom 1558 to 1754. (Editor.) London, 1880. Royal Svo. pp. vi. + 277.
The fifth volume of the Register Section of the Pablicatious of tho Harleian Society.
13. The Parish Registers of St. Thomas tlie Apostle, London, containing Marriages, Baptisms, and Burials from 1558 to 1754. (Editor.) Lcndun 1881. Royal Svo. pp. vi. + 190.
The sixth volume of the Register Section of the Publications of the Harleian Society.
14. The Family of Dummer. Boston, 1881. Svo. pp. 29. Reprinted from the Register for July and October, 1881.
15. The Parish Registers of St. Michael, Cornhill, London, containing the Marriage.', Baptisms, and Burials from 1546 to 1754. (Editor in part.) London 1882. Royal 8vo. pp. viii. + 348.
This is the seventh volume of the Register Section of the Publications of the Harleian Society. Col. Chester died while the book was in press, and his work was completed by other hands. A notice of Col. C. is prefixed to the volume.
He also assisted Joseph Jackson Howard, LL.D., P.S.A., in editing the fifteenth volume of the Publications of the Harleian Society, viz.:
The Visitation of London, Anno Domini 1C33, 1634, and 1635. Made by S' Henry S' George, K', Richmond Herald, and Deputy Marshall to S' Richard S' George, K', Clarencieux King of Armes. London, 1880. Royal Svo. pp. vi. + 434.
CoLOXEL ChKSTEu'b CoKTKIBUTXOXS to the liEGlSTEK.
1. The Rogers Genealogy and the Candler Manuscript. January, 1863, vol. xvii. p. 43.
2. The Rogers Family. Wills of the Revs. Richard and John Rogers. October, 1868, vol. xvii. p. 326.
3. Genealogical Waifs. January, 1864, vol. xviii. p. 81 : July 1877, vol. xxxi p. 323.
4. The Hutchinson Family of England and New Eng'and, and its connection with the Marburys and Drydens. October 1866, vol. xx. p. 355. See Works, No. 5.
5. Rev. John Wheelwright. October, 1867, vol. xxi. p. 363.
6. Rev. John Wheelwright's Wife. January 1868, vol. xxii. p. S3.
7. A Genealogical Memoir of the Wentworth Family of England, from its Saxon origin in the Eleventh Century to the emigration of one of its Representatives to New England, about the year 1636. April 1868, vol. xxii. p. 120. See Works, No. 7.
8b Genealogy of the Hutchinsons of Salem. July, 1868, vol, xxii. p. 236.
xxii Appendix.
9. Herbert Pelham and his Ancestors and Descendants. July, 1879, vol. xxjdii. pp. 285 and 35S. See Works, No. 11.
10. Tranaaotions'of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire. April, 1881, vol. xxxv. p. 200.
11. The Family of Dummer. July and October, 1881, vol. xxxv. pp. 254 and 321. See Works, No. 14.
Col. Chester's Conteibutions to other Periodicals.
Transactions of the Histobical (now Eoyal Histobicai) Society. — An Official Inaccuracy respecting the Death and Burial of the Princess Mary (1872, vol. i. p. 344). See Works, No. 8.
Pkoceedings ok the MASSACHrsBTTS Histobical Society. — Some particulars respecting the Family of Major Andre (March, 1876, vol. xiv. p. 217).
The Athenjjum, London. — Milton's Mother (Nov. 7, 1868).
The Academy, London.— Original Lists of Persona of Quality, Emigrants, &c. (Oct. 24, 1874). This is a review of John Camden Hotten's book. It was reprinted in the Boston Evening Transcript, Nov. 9, 1874.
The Academy, London. — Collectanea Genealogica. Edited by Joseph Foster.
Hotten's Orifjinal Lists (Nov. 7, 1874). Another article on Hotten's book, reprinted in the Transcript, Nov. 20. 1874.
The life of Benedict Arnold (Jan. 31, 1580). This is a review of Isaac N. Arnold's Memoir of Gen. Arnold.
Notes an-d Queries, London. — Bridget Cromwell (Dec. 26, 1868).
George Washington and Rev. Jonathan Boucher (Jan. 19, 1878). Besides nnmerous shorter articles in the various issues.
Note. — I am aware that this is a very imperfect list.
Memoirs and Biographical Sketches of Col. Chester. — 1 . Memoir by John J. Latting in New York Genealogical and Biographical Eecord, October, 1882. Eeprinted as a pamphlet, 8vo., New York, 1882, pp. 10. 2. Memoir by George W. Marshall, LL.D., P.S.A., in The Genealogist, October, 1882. 3. Memoir in The Biograph and Review, May, 1881. 4. Memoir in Colbum's New Monthly Magazine, June, 1881. (Note. This is the same as No. 3 with a single new paragraph inserted.) 5. Sketch by J. W. Dfan in DuyckiDck's " Cyclopaedia of American Literature," ed. 1866, supplement, p. 88 ; ed. 1875, vol. ii. p. 447. 6, Sketch in Parish Registers of St. Michael. See Works No. 14. 7. Obituary in the Boston Evening Transcript, June 1, 1882. 8. Obituary in the London Athenoeum, June 3, 1882. 9. Obituary in the London Academy, Jane 3, 1882. 10. Obituary in the Eegisteb, October, 1882.
Letters used as Authorities besides those Cited. — From John J. Latting, New York, Dec. 1, 4, 22, 24, 26, 27, 29, and 30, 1883 ; Eev. Albert T. Chester, of Buffalo, Nov. 19 and 28, Deo. 17 and 25, 1883 ! Dr. Benson J. Lossinsr, of Dover Plains, Deo. 15, 1882, Jan. 8, Nov. 28, Dec. 22, 1883 ; Charles Hervey Townshend, New Haven, July 18, 1882; George E. Cokayne, M.A., F.S.A., of London, Norroy King of Arms, July 15, Aug. 1 and 24, 1882 ; F. Kinsman, Warren, Ohio, Dec. 5 and 13, 1883 J Thompson Westoott, Philadelphia, Dec. 10, 1883 ; William W. Harding, publisher of the Inquirer, Philadelphia, to T. Weatcott, Deo. 3, 1883 ; B. Beedham, Oct. 29, 1883.
&^ I would return thanks to the gentlemen who have furnished information used in this Memoir, particularly to John J. Latting, Esq., Rev. Albert T. Chester, D.D., and Benson J. Lossing, LL.D.
J. Ward Dean.
LONDON MARRIAGE LICENCES,
1521-1869.
LONDON
MARRIAGE LICENCES AND ALLEGATIONS,
15 21-18 6 9.
AbbreviaUons. — B. Biahop of London's Office ; D. Dean and Chapter of Westminster ; F. Faculty Office of Archbishop of Canterbury ; V. Registry of the Vioar-General of Canterbury.
Abarrow, William, of the town of Southampton, gent., bachelor, 30, and Mary Hunt, of Mort- lake, Surrey, spinster, 23, with her father's consent — at Knightsbridge, Middlesex. 2 July, 1649. F.
Abberforthe, Richard, of St. Osyth, and Elizabeth Lucas, widow, of St. Giles, in Colchester— at St. Giles aforesaid. 2 Jan. 15^§. B.
Abbott, Anthony, of Edmonton, Middlesex, miller, bachelor, 23, and Mary Salter, of same, spinster, 22, father's consent — at All Hallows-in-ye- Wall. 7 Feb. 168?. B.
Abbott, Edward, of U.^bridge, Middlesex, bachelor, 24, and Anne Reyner, spinster, 24, daughter of Awdrie Reyner, of Rowley parish, Hellingdon, Middlesex, widow, who consents — at St. Gregory, St. Bartholomew-the-Less, or St. Sepulchre, London. 8 July, 1663. F.
Abbott, Edward, of St, Clement Danes, bachelor, about 32, and Elizabeth Chapman, of the precinct of Bridewell, London, spinster, about 22, and at own disposal — at parish church or chapel of Gray's Inn. 10 Oct. 1672. V.
Abbott, Edward, rector of Qalby, co. Leicester, widower, and Anne Paul, of St. James-in-tho- Fields, Middlesex, spinster, 30, at her own disposal — at St. Mary, Savoy, Middlesex, or .... 10 Not. 1692. F.
Abbott, Edward, of Galby, co. Leicester, clerk, widower, and Mary Wood, of South Mims, Middlesex, spinster, about 40, at her own disposal— at St. Gregory, London, or ... . 14 April, 1703. F.
Abbott, George, of Inner Temple, esq., bachelor, about 24, aid Mrs. Mary Reynolds, of Lee, CO. Kent, widow, about 30 — at church or chapel of Paddington, Middlesex ; Newington, co. Surrey ; Wye, oo. Kent ; or St. Clement Danes. 5 May, 1665. V.
Abbott, Henry, of St. Paul, Covent Garden, cook, widower, about 33, and Ursula Robinson, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, spinster, about 32 — at Gray's Inn chapel. 13 Oct. 1662. V.
Abbott, Hev. John, D.D., of Abingdon, Berks, bachelor, above 30, and S. Farr, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, spinster, about 21 — at St. Botolph aforesaid. 22 March, 1755. B. Abbott, Joseph (Abbot), of St. Neots, Hunts, 26, and Ann Coriugton, of St. Giles, Cripplegate, spinster, 30 — at St. James, Clerkenwell. 31 March, 1C91. B.
Liyndon Marriage Licences.
Abbott, Maurice, of St. Michael, Bassishaw, draper, aged 30 or more, a widower about eight months past, and Margaret Barnes, maiden, of Widdford, co. Herts, daughter of Bartholomew Barnes, of same, gent., and with his consent, age about 18 — at Widford Church, where she dwells. 27 May, 1598. B.
Abbott, Morris, of St. Martin-in-tho-Pields, gent., bachelor, about 32, and Mrs. Mary Brewer, of St. Dunstan-in-the-West, spinster, about 20, consent of father, John Brewer, of same, esq., alleged by Edward Corbett, of Gray's Inn, gent, —at St. Giles, Cripplegate. 23 Feb. 167f V.
Abbott, Thomas, of London, clerk, widower, 31, B.nd Mrs. Frances Allioocke, of St. Margaret, Westminster, spinster, 30, at church or chapel of St. James, Westminster. 16 Ma)', 1692. B.
Abbott, William, yeoman, and Susan Homos, of London, spinster, daughter of Nicholas Homes, late of Denham, co. Bucks, yeoman, deceased, gen. lie, 24 Oct. 1596. B.
Abbott, William, of St. Clement Danes, widower, 34, and Mary Fuller, of same, spinstei-, 30— at Knightsbridge. 4 March, 169f . B.
Abbott, William, and Agnes Wilkj^nson, of St. Clement, dioc. of Westminster. 16 Feb. 154^. F.
Abbott, William, of St. Andrew, Holborn, cross- bow - maker, and Elizabeth Birde, of St. Margaret, Westminster, spinster — at St. Margaret, Westminster. 28 March, 1608. D.
Abbott, William, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, and Ann Benson, of Stepney — at St. James, Duke's Place. 15 Jan. 170^. B.
Abby, Richard, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, Loudon, carman, and Elizabeth Hodgkins, of same, widow of Christopher Hodgkins, late of same, victualler — at St. Botolph al'oresaid. 13 March, 160i. B.
Abdy, Christopher (Abdye), of St. Thomas Apostle, grocer, and Mary Sentell, widow, of same, relict of Peter Sentell, merchant taylor gen. lie, 29 May, 1583. B.
Abdy, Christopher, of the City of London, gent., widower, 60, and Alice Heath, of St. Andrew, Holborn, 50, widow of Henry Heath, butcher, deceased — atSt. George, BotolphLane, London. 14 Nov. 1620. B.
Christopher Abdy
1521-T869.J
Thomas Acton
Abdy, Ghtiatopher, of Inner Temple, esq., bachelor, aboud 30, and Mrs. Dorothy Halsoy, of Great Gaddesdon, Herts, spinster, about 18, consent of her parents — at St. Panl, Govent Garden ; St. Gregory, London; or Great Gaddosden aforesaid. 29 July, 1G63. V.
Abdy, George (Abdey), of tho City of London, founder, and Joane Thomas, of same, widow of Walter Thomas — at St. Benet ITink, London. 7 Aug. 1624. B.
Abdy, Thomas, of Lincoln's Inn, esq., bachelor, 25, and Mary Corceles, of St. Peter-le-Poor, spinster, 21, daughter of Lucas Corceles, late of London, merchant, deceased, and at the disposal of Sir James Oambell, knight and alderman of London, who consents, as attested by James Meggs, clerk— at St. Peter-le-Poor. 30 Jan. 163J. B.
AboU, Samuel, gent., of St. Anne and Agnes, Aldersgate, and Joziana Awsten, widow, of City of London, gen. lie, 11 Feb. 158-|. B.
Abell, William, yeoman, and Timothea Mann, of London, widow of William Mann, late of Chislest, CO. Kent, yeoman, gen. lie, 19 July, 1597. B.
Abell, William, of Westbery Holt, co. Essez, gent., and Margaret Lynne, of Great Horksley, said county, spinster, daughter of William Lynne, of same, gent. — at St. Clave, Hart Street, London. 11 Nov. 1615. B.
Abelson, Richard, of St Margaret, Westminster, clerk, and Ellen Brooke, of City of London, widow — at St. Margaret, Westminster. 6 June, 1623. D.
Abelson, Eichard, of Westminster, clerk, and Anne Mills, of same, widow — at St. Leonard, in precinct of St. Martin-le- Grand. 4 Feb. 162|. D.
Abei'-CJroiuey. See Ceomey.
Abere, Robert, and Margaret Nayler, of the city of Canterbury. 11 June, 1546. F.
AberfoztJie, Thomas, and Isabell Bragenden, spinster, of London, gen. lie, 4 July, 1575. B.
Abingbosi, Charles, of New Inn, Middlesex, bachelor, 27, and Isabella Oompton, of Sutton Bingham, co. Somerset, spinster, above 24, at her own disposal — at Sutton aforesaid, or ... . 23 May, 1696. F.
Abin^ton, William, of St. Gregory, London, statiouer, bachelor, about 23, and Mrs. Catharine Leeke, of Christchurch, London, spinster, about 18, with her mother's consent — at parish church or chapel of the Temple, London, or ... . 21 May, 1679. V.
Abuey, Edward, of Wilsloy, 00. Derby, gent., bachelor, 29, second son of James Abney, of same, esq., and Damaris Andrewes, spinster, about 18, daughter of Thomas Andrewes the younger, late of St. Margaret, New Fish Street, London, deceased, with consent of her mother, Damaris Cadworth, alias Andrewes, now wife of Dr. Ralph Cudworth, Master of Christ's College, Cambridge — at St. Gregory, or St.Dionis Baokohuroh, London. 20 July, 1661. F.
Abney, Thomas, of All Hallows-in-the-Wall, London, citizen and fishmonger, bachelor, about 26,and Mrs. Sarah Caryl, of Berry Streete, London, spinster, about 19, consent of father, Joseph Caryl, of same, clerk — at St. .Tames, Duke's Place, or St. Catharine Cree Church, London. 24 Aug. 1668. V.
Aborowglie, Stephen, and Johanna Overye, of Stepney, gen. lie, 26 March, 1563. B.
Aborowgflie, William, gent., and Judith Joanes, widow, of Stepney — to marry there. 17 Nov. 1571. B.
Abowen, Evan, of Woodford, co. Essex, husband- man, and Isabel Vauso, spinster, daughter of — Vause, deceased — at Christchurch, London.
5 Aug. 1618. B.
Abrahall, Gilbert, of St. Botolph, Aldgate, gent., bachelor, about 25, and Rebecca Blaokwell, of Deptford, Kent, spinster, about 18, consent of mother, Rebecca Blaokwell, of same, widow —at St. Swithin, London. 30 May, 1666. T.
Abraham, Henry, of Westminster, yeoman, and Margaret Thompson, of same, " ancillara innuptam." 5 April, 1584. D.
Abraham, Matthew, of St. Peter, in Maldon, co. Essex, draper, and Dorothy Rob Jorn, alias Rap Jorn, of ToUishunt Major, said county, widow of Peter Rob Jorn, alias Rap Jorn, late of same, yeoman — at St. Peter, Maldon, aforesaid. 28 June, 1608. B.
Aburne, John, of Weybridge, co. Surrey, gent., bachelor, 21, and Anne With, of same, spinster, 22, daughter of Mr. Robert With, who consents — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, or ... . 29 July, 1695. F.
Ace, William, carpenter, and Alice Dixon, widow — at St. Stephen, Coleman Street. 31Mar.l581. B.
Acheley, William, grocer, and Johanna Chattf eilde, widow, of St. Andrew Hubbard — to marry there. 9 June, 1581. B,
Acherley, Roger, of the Inner Temple, esq., bachelor, 29, and Elizabeth Vernon, of St. Mary, Savoy, Middlesex, spinster, about 25, at her o>vn disposal — at St. Lawrence Jewry, Loudon, or ... . 6 Feb. 169i. F.
Ackyiison, John, and Elizabeth Byghton, widow, of All Saints, Honey Lane, London. 8 Oct. 1545. F.
Acland, Sir Hugh, bart., of Culliam John, co. Devon, bachelor, about 35, and Mrs. Ann Daniel], of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, spinster, about 20, consent of father, Sir Thomas Daniell, of same, knight — at St. Mary Magdalene, Old Pish Street. 19 March, 167J. V.
Acton, John, of St. Matthew, Friday Street, London, goldsmith, and Mary Ailmer[? Elmer], of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex, spinster — at St. Faith, London. 29 Nov. 1626. B.
Acton, John, gent., of Ipswioh, Suffolk, widower, about 33, and Elizabeth Baynye, of St. Bennett, Graceohurch, spinster, 19, daughter of John Raynye, of same, woollendraper, consent of her parents — at St. Beunet, Graceohurch.
6 April, 1618. B.
Acton, John, of the Middle Temple, esq., bachelor, 31, and Margaret Cutts, of St. Martin-in-the Fields, Middlesex, spinster, 26, at her own disposal — at St. Martin Outwioh, London. 6 April, 1687. F.
Acton, Thomas, of Morvall, 00. Salop, gent., bachelor, about 35, and Mabel Stoner, of St. Mary-le-Bow, London, spinster, about 19, consent of father, Clement Stoner, of same, goldsmith — at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf. 10 Dee 1661. V.
Acton, Thomas, of St. Andrew, Holborn, gent., bachelor, about 35, and Dorothy Goodwin, of St. Paul, Covent Garden, spinster, about 26, and at own disposal — at St. Mary, Savoy ; St. Clement Danes; or Little St. Bartholomew, London. 16 Dec. 16G2. V.
Acton, Thomas, of St. Matthew, Friday Street, bachelor, 21, son of John Acton, late citizen and goldsmith of London, deceased, and Mary Gardiner, of St. Giles, Cripplegate, spinster, 17, daughter of Jeremy Gardiner, of same, gent., who consents — at St. Faith-the-Virgin, London. 2 Nov. 1638. B.
Abraham Acwortb
[1521-1869.]
John Adams
Acworth,, Abraham, of St. John, Westminster, bachelor, 24, and upwards, and Margaretta MabeUa Buckeridge, of same, spinster, 19, and upwards, with consent of her mother, Ann Ball, widow, who attests that her late hus- band, Anthony Rodney Buckeridge, father of said Margaret, appointed no testamentary guardian, &o. — at the Bolls Ohapel, Chancery Lane. 29 April, lli'o. F.
Acwocth, John, of Woolwich, Kent, gent , bachelor, about 27, and Sairah Spreever, of same, widow, about 24 — at Stepney, Middle- sex ; Dartford, 00. Kent j or St. George, Soath- wark, CO. Surrey. 4 March, 166 J. V.
Adam, John, of Ohesthunt, Herts, and Ellen Snowe, spinster, of Bdmnnton — at St. Benet, Paul's Wharf. 26 June, 1578. B.
Adam, Symon. See Adams.
Adam., Thomas, and Alice Hyll, of the diocese of London. 11 Feb. 154?. F.
Adams, Abel, of St. James, Clerkenwell, bachelor,
26, and Sarah Bradshaw, of same, spinster, 26 — at St. James, Duke's Place. 12 Jan. 170|. B.
Adams, Alexander, of St. Martin-in-the-Pields, gent., 22, son of Thomas Adams, of Marl- borough, Wilts, gent., said Alexander atten- dant upon the Right Hon. the Lord Keeper of the Broad Seal of England in Ordinary, and Jane Russell, of All Hallows-the-Great, Thames Street, spinater, 19, daughter of Thomas Russell, of same, clothworker, with his consent, consent of said Alexander Adams' father attested, as well as that of the Lord Keeper and the Lady Bgerton— at Great All Hallows aforesaid. 29 May, 1598. B.
Adam.a, Charles, of St. Sepulchre, London, gent,, bachelor, 28, and Sarah Burdett, of St. Stephen, Coleman Street, spinster, 28, at her own disposal — at St. Sayiour, Southwark, or St. Gregory, London. 3 Feb. 166^. F.
Adamis, Charles, of St. Foster, London, bachelor, 25, and Elizabeth Verney, of Claydon, Bucks, spinster, 25, her parents dead — at Gregory's, London. 2 Oct. 1662. F.
Adams, Christopher, ship carpenter, and Elizabeth Presshes, spinster, daughter of Thomas Presshes, deceased — at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf, London. 14 Feb. 162J. B.
Adams, Dennis, of Streatham, Surrey, bachelor,
27, and Mrs. Elizabeth Fletcher, of same, spinster, 23, her parents dead — at St. James, Duke Place. 29 Dec. 1696. B.
Adams, Edward, of Stepney, widower, 26, and Elizabeth French, of same, spinster, 22, father's consent — at St. George, Botolph Lane. 6 Dec. 1695 B.
Adams, Edward, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, widower, 48, and Deborah Lewis, of same, spinster, 33 — at St. Michael, Wood Street. 12 Sept. 1702. B.
Adam.s, Francis, servant to Arthur, Lord Grey, and Mary Grey, servant to — Lowe, of city of Westminster, widow. 7 Feb. 158f . D.
Adam.s, Francis (Addams), of St. Martin, Lud- gate, saddler, and Edith Younge, spinster, of St. Trinity, London, daughter of — Younge, late of Dorceter, yeoman, deceased — at St. George, Botolph Lane. 11 Jan. 158f. B.
Adams, Francis, of St. Ann, Aldersgate, bachelor, 30, and Susanna White, of same, spinster, about 30— at St. Botolph, Aldersgate. 16 Nov. 1721. B.
Adams, Henry, of City of London, haberdasher, and Anne Spensore, widow, of St. Mary, Whitechapel, gen. lie, 13 Dec. 1570. B.
Adam,s, Henry, of St. Michael, Cornhill, scrivener, bachelor, 33, and Elizabeth Newman, of same, maiden, 17, daughter of Thomas Newman, of same, deceased, her mother's consent — at St. Michael, Cornhill, aforesaid. 12 Dec. 1601. B.
Adam,s, Henry, of St. Margaret, Westminster, widower, 23, and Anne King, of Tunbridge, Kent, widow, about 30, at Maidstone, co. Kent. 5 Sept. 1662. F.
Adam.B, Henry, of St. James, Clerkenwell, bachelor, 30, and Mary Haywood, of same, spinster, 21— at St. Gregory. 20 Dec. 1718. B.
Adam.3, James, of St. Andrew, Holborn, bachelor, and Mary Atkinson, of St. Margaret, West- minster, spinster, 24, parents dead, at St. Andrew aforesaid, or ... . 18 May, 1696. F.
Adams, James, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, bachelor, 40, and Hannah Kellett, of same, spinster, 24, at her own disposal, alleged by John Streatfield, of St. Martin aforesaid, cabinet-maker — at St. Martin aforesaid; St. Paul, Covent Garden; or St. Clement Danes, Middlesex. 5 Aug. 1678. F.
Adam.s, James, of Stepney, Middlesex, farmer, widower, 35, and Katherine Grigge, spinster, 26, daughter of one Grigge, of St. Sepulchre, London, gent., deceased, her mother also dead — at Stepney aforesaid. 5 Deo. 1632. F.
Adam.s, James, of St. Olave, Southwark, 00. Surrey, bachelor, 29, and Anne Stevens, of St. Mary Magdalen, Bermondsey, said county, spinster, 23, at her own disposal — at St. Mary Magdalen aforesaid, or . . . 1 Aug. 1695. F.
Adams, James, of Raydon Hamlett, Essex, bachelor, above 24, and Sarah Brett, of Waltham Abbey, spinster, above 22 — at St. Botolph, Bishopsgate. 5 Dec. 1720. B.
Adams, James, of Broxbourn, Herts, bachelor, 21, and Elizabeth Broughton, of AVormley, said county, spinster, 21 — at Broxbourne aforesaid. 24 Nov. 1716. B.
Adams, Isaac, of AVare, co. Herts, gent., and Elizabeth Humerston, widow, of St. Magnus, London — at St. Magnus. 31 Jan. 158j. B.
Adam.s, Job, of St. Benet Fink, London, bachelor, 22, and Sarah Savery, of St. Botolph, Aiders- gate, London, widow — at St. Botolph aforesaid, or .... 12 Dec. 1700. F.
Adams, John, and Lucy Reddington, spinster, of Hunsdon, Herts — to marry there. 25 June, 1579. B.
Adam.s, John, jun., of Harlow, Essex, and Mary Duke, spinster, of City of London — at St. Sepulchre. 22 Sept. 1579. B.
Adams, John, of Aberton, chandler, and Anne Lynes, of Great Wigborow, spinster, daughter of John Lynes, of same, yeoman, gen. lie, 23 Sept. 1595. B.
Adams, John, of Oheshunt, Herts, yeoman, bachelor, 26, and Elizabeth Lowen, of same, spinster, 20, daughter of Elizabeth Lowen, widow, who consents — at St. Faith. 31 Dec. 1641. B.
Adams, John, of St. Matthew, Friday Street, bachelor, 25, and Bridget Ridley, spinster, 21, with consent of her father, of co. Here- ford, gent,, alleged by Richard Adams, of St. Mildred, clerk — at St. Mildred aforesaid, or St. Foster, London. 22 April, 1661. F.
Adams, John, of Edmonton, Middlesex, bachelor, 24, and Isabel Page, spinster, 20, daughter of William Page, of Hendon, said county, husband- man, who consents — at Hendon aforesaid. 11 May, 1670. F.
B a
John Adams
[1521-1869.
Thomas Adams
Ada,ins, JohB, of St. Foster, Foster Lane, London, esq., widower, and Elizabeth Wyseman, of Bolestones, co. Essex, spinster, 21, consent of mother, Elizabeth Wyseman, widow — at Bore- ham or Widford. 11 Aug. 1671. B.
Adams, John, of Chesthunt, Herts, poulterer, bachelor, about 21, his father's consent, and Philippa Asser, of Tewing, Herts, spinster, about 20, her father's consent — at Chesthunt aforesaid. 4 Dec. 1671. V.
Adams, John (Addams), of St. Olave, Southwark, Surrey, bachelor, 25, and Elizabeth Holden, of Bowlehurst, Beds, spinster, 16, her parents dead, with consent of Joseph Holden, her uncle and guardian — at Bowlehurst aforesaid. 23 Nov. 1680. F.
Adams, John, of St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, bachelor, 41, and Alice King, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, said city, widow — at St. Botolph aforesaid. 5 April, 1684. F.
Adams, John, of St. Andrew, Holborn, " a black," bachelor, and Hannah Ghantrell, of same, spinster, 21 — at St. Botolph, Aldgate. 7 March, 169 J. B.
Adams, John, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, bachelor, 30, and Elizabeth Acanan, of same, widow, 35 — at Trinity Chapel, in said parish. 25 April, 1698. B.
Adam.s, John, of the University of Cambridge, gent., bachelor, 22, and Anno Lett, of St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, spinster, 22, with her father's consent, at St. Giles aforesaid, or ... . 24 Feb. 170J. F.
Adams, John, of St. Dunstan, Stepney, bachelor, 27, and Sarah King, of same, spinster, 22 — at St. Clement Danes. 19 Aug. 1717. B.
Adams, John Quincy, esq., of Boston, in North America, bachelor, above 21, and Louisa Catherine Johnson, of All Hallows Barking, London, spinster, above 21 — at All Hallows Barking aforesaid. 24 July, 1797. P.
Adams, Leonard, widower, and Anne King, widow 9 Oct. 1666. D.
Adams, Leonard, of St. Mary, Savoy, mariner, bachelor, 30, and Elizabeth Goodman, of same, widow. 20 May, 1698. B.
Adams, Matthew, of Fulham, Middlesex, bachelor, 27, and Martha Marshall, of Barnes, Surrey, spinster, 25, at her own disposal — at St. Andrew, Holborn. 14 Sept. 1687. B.
Adams, Michael, of Ireton, co. York, clerk, bachelor, 27, and Anne Bradshaw, spinster, 23, daughter of Elizabeth Bradshaw, of Eyam, 00. Derby, widow, who consents — at St. Faith, London, Ireton, or Eyam afortesaid, or All Hallows, in Cambridge. 16 Nov. 1664. F.
Adams, Nathaniel, of St. Giles -in -the - Fields, Middlesex, potter, bachelor, 27, and Susan Coleton, of same, maiden, 27, her parents dead — at St. Giles aforesaid, or St. Botolph, Alders- gate, London. 13 Deo. 1669. F.
Adams, Nathaniel, of St. Martin-in-the-Pields, bachelor, 35, and Jane Davis, of same, spinster, 26— at same. 15 Deo. 1692. B.
Adams, Nicholas, and Mary Fissher, of the diocese of Westminster. 17 Jan. 154^. P.
Adams, Nicholas, of St. Mary Magdalen,' Ber- mondsey, 00. Surrey, mealman, age 23 and upwards, and Jane Crosfeild, of same, widow, about 20, with consent of her father, James Launce — at Oamberwell, 00. Surrey. 6 June, 1679. V.
Adams, Nicholas, of St. Margaret, Westminster, bachelor, 34, and Ann Lawrence, of same, widow— at St. Mary Magdalen, Old Fish Street, or St. Bride, London. 5 Jan. 171-?. F.
Adam.s, Nicholas, of Pennyfield, parish of Stepney, mariner, bachelor, 32, and Susanna Gross, of Stepney Casey, in said parish, spinster, 31 — at Stepney. 29 Dec. 1696. B.
Adams, Eiohard (Adames), grocer, of St. Mary Wooluoth, bachelor, 20, father dead, and Katherine Ashecroft, of St. Martin, Ludgato, 30, widow of James Ashecroft, of same, com- figmaker, who died about nine weeks since —at St. Sepulchre, London. 5 Feb. 160-J. B.
Adams, Richard (Addams), of the City of London, butcher, and Lucy Baker, of same, spinster, daughter of — Baker, deceased. 14 Aug. 1620. B.
Adams, Bichard, of the City of London, clerk, widower, about 50, and Ann Wadsworth, of St. Olave, Southwark, co. Surrey, widow, about 26 — at St. Saviour, Southwark, co. Surrey, or St. Leonard, Shoreditch, Middle- sex. 7 Sept. 1678. V.
Adamis, Richard, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, bachelor, 23, and Sarah Judd, of same, spinster, 24— at same. 7 July, 1704. B.
Adams, Richard, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, bachelor, 22, and Elizabeth Garland, of Rat- cliffe, parish of Stepney, spinster, about 21 — at St. Clement Danes. 22 June, 1713. B.
Adams, Robert, of St. Peter, Cornhill, and Eliza- beth Thurlande, widow, of Christchnroh, New- gate — at Christchnroh aforesaid. 2 June, 1579. B.
Adams, Robert, mariner, of St. Paul, Shadwell, bachelor, 24, and Sarah Smith, of Poplar, spinster, 19, consent of parents, on oath of William Smith, her father — at Stepney. 11 July, 1699. B.
Adam.s, Robert, of St. Bishopsgate (sic), London, bachelor, 25, and Jane Peirson, of Islington, Middlesex, spinster, 21, parents dead — at St. Sepulchre, London. 11 July, 1681. B.
Adam,s, Robert, of St. James within the Liberty, in the co. of Middlesex, bachelor, 21, and Mary Julian, of same, spinster, 18, now maid- servant to Mrs. Dy mocke, of same parish, also a spinster, parents dead — at St. Olave, Jury. 6 Jan. 170f. B.
Adams, Roger, of Gedlestone, and Agnes Spencer, spinster, daughter of Michael Spencer, of East- wick, Herts, yeoman, gen. lie, 10 Sept. 1583. B.
Adams, Samuel, of St. Olave, Southwark, bachelor, 22, and Elizabeth Lunt, of Rotherhithe, spinster, 18, her parents dead, consent of her father-in-law, Nathaniel Cutler, of St. John, Wapping, sailmaker. 15 April, 1703. B.
Adams, Samuel, of St. Olave, Southwark, widower, 50, and Mary Page, of same, widow, 30 — at St. Botolph, Aldgate. 18 Dec. 1706. B.
Adam.s, Symon (Addams) [in Vic-General's book Adam], gent., of Westham, Essex, widower, about 50, and Grace Awgus [in Vic- General's book Awgur], about 56, of same, widow of Richard Awgus [in Vic-General's book Awgur], of City of London, apothecary, who died about five years past — at Westham aforesaid. 28 June, 1603. B.
Adam.8, Thomas, of Twickenham, Middlesex, yeoman, and Margaret Lancaster, of East Greenwich, co. Kent, spinster — at Chelsea, Middlesex. 4 Sept. 1623. B.
Adams, Thomas (Adames), gent., of Cheshunt, Herts, widower, 36, and Elizabeth Emersen, of same, widow, 30 — at St. Botolph, Aldersgate. 18 Feb. 1645. B.
Thomas Adams
[1521-1869.]
Thomas Adclis
10
Adams, Thomas (Addama), of St. Benet, Grace- ohtirch, gont., bachelor, 31, and Jane James, of Ighthatn, Kent, spinster, 20, consent of mother, Jane James, widow — at. . . . 28 Jan. 166i. B. [This entry erased and " Vacat " written,]
Adams, Thomas, of St. Bennet, Graoechnrch, gent., bachelor, about 31, and Jane James, of Ightham, Kent, spinster, about 20, consent of mother Jane James, of tame, widow — at Ightham aforesaid. 28 Jan. 166^. V.
Adams, Thomas, of Battersea, Surrey, gent., widower, about 35, and Mrs. Ann Jaggard, of Beddington, Surrey, spinster, 21 and upwards, her parents dead — at Stratham, Tootinjr, or Martyo, CO. Surrey. H April, 1665. V.
Adams, Thomas (Addams), of New Windsor, Berks, widower,about22,and Ellen alias BUenor Monntaguo, of .... in said county, spinster, about 21, her father's consent — at Sunning- hill, or Windfill, said county. 14 Dec. 1669. V.
Adam.s, Thomas, of Chelmsford, Essex, tallow- chandler, bachelor, 21, and Susan Shonk, of same, widow, 26 — at Stepney. 11 May, 1689. B.
Adam.s, Thomas (Addams), of Chesham, Bucks, bachelor, 34, and Martha Millard, of Denham, Bucks, widow, 25 — at Lincoln's Inn Chapel. 8 March, -^^J. B.
Adams, Thomas, of St. Clement Danes, widower, 34, and Ann King, of same, spinster, about 40 — at same. 5 May, 1712. B.
Adams, Thomas, widower, and Margaret Perkins, widow, both of St. Mary, Whitechapel — at Bromley, Stepney, or Bow, 00. Middlesex. 30 Dec. 1749. B.
Adams, William, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, farrier, bachelor, and Elizabeth Martin, of St. Andrew, Holborn, spinster, servant to Mr. Meade, cook — at St. Mary, Islington, Middlesex. 31 July, 1610. B.
Adams, William, fustian maker, and Mary Morley, of Finchingfield, co. Essex, spinster, daughter of John Morley, deceased — at Finchingjield aforesaid. 4 Sept. 1618. B.
Adams, William, of Great Stanmore, co. Middle- sex, yeoman, and Elizabeth Cocke (sic), widow of Nicholas Cooke (sic) — at St. Bride, Fleet Street. 18 July, 1625. B.
Adams, William, of Hornechnrch, Essex, tanner, widower, 50, and Jillian Amarus, of same, 43, widow of John Amarus, deceased — at St. Botolph, Aldgate, or St. Mary Magdalen, Old Fish Street. 4 May, 1639. B.
Adams, William, of St. Dunstan-in-the-West, London, gent., bachelor, 23, and Ann Pike, of St. Mary-le-Bow, London, spinster, 17, her father dead, consent of her mother, Ann Pike, widow — at St. Mary Staining, London. 2 Jan. 164f. F.
Adams, William, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, bachelor, 25, and Mary Manning of ... . spinster, 25, her parents dead — at St. Paul, Covent Garden, Middlesex. 13 Jan. 167-J. F.
Adams, William, of St. Michael - le - Querne, London, citizen and fishmonger, bachelor, about 27, and Mrs. Mary Adams, of Temps- ford, CO. Bedford, spinster, about 22, with consent of her mother, Mrs. Mary Adams, widow — at Tempaford or Amesbury, co. Bed- ford, 19 Deo. 1678. V.
Adams, William, of St. Antholin, London, haber- dasher, bachelor, about 22, and Mrs. Elizabeth Turner, of Hesse, co. Kent, spinster, about 23 and upwards, at her own disposal — at Croydon, CO. Surrey or . . . 25Feb, 167^. V.
Adams, William, of St. Andrew Undershaft, London, pewterer, widower, about 27, and Sarah Oramphorne, of Sabridgeworlh, Herts, spinster, about 24., with consent of her mother, Mary Oramphorne, widow — at St. Andrew TJndershaft aforesaid. 19 April, 1679. V.
Adams, William, of Sprowston, Norfolk, esq., 21 and upwards, and Mary Buller, of Islam, co. Cambridge, widow, granted at request of father of said William Adams. 13 June, 1682. B.
Adams, William, of Acton, Middlesex, widower, and Rebecca Russell, of same, spinster, 23, her parents dead — at Chiswick, Brentford, or PerriBeld, CO. Middlesex. 10 June, 1687. F.
Adams, William, of St. Bride, 44, and Mary King, of St. Andrew, Holborn, widow, 31 — at St. Andrew aforesaid. 2 June, 1690. B.
Adams, William, of St. Mary, Whitechapel, widower, 47, and Elizabeth Haydon, of same, widow, 46— at St. James, Duke Place. 12 Jan. 169?. B.
Adams, William, of St. Dionis Backchurch, bachelor, 25, and Ann Phillis Morris, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, widow, 34 — at St. James, Duke's Place, alleged by Wm. Adams, of St. Martin, Ludgate, tailor. 22 Nov. 1697. B.
Adams, William, of Paddington, Middlesex, bachelor, 28, and Mrs. Ann Burgess, of St. Giles, Crjpplegate, spinster, 23 — ■ at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf. 3 Feb, 17lf . B.
Adam.s, William, of St. Andrew, Holborn, bachelor, 22, and Sarah Smith, of same, spinster, 23 — at Lincoln's Inn Chapel. 27 June, 1719. B.
Adams, William, of Lusam, Kent, bachelor, 28, and Elizabeth Hyde, of same, spinster, 28 — at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf. 22 July, 1720. B.
Adams, William, advocate in the College of Doctors' Commons, London, Doctor of Laws, widower, and Mary Anne Cockayne, of St. Mary-le-Bone, Middlesex, spinster, above 21 — at St. Mary-le-Bone (said William Adams sworn before John Dodson, surr.). 4 April, 181L B.
Adamson, Edmund, and Margaret Alsopp, of S^. Martin Orgar, London — to marry there. 29 April, 1559. B.
Adamson, John, of Stamford, co. Lincoln, clerk, bachelor, about 30, and Mary Symonds, of Ken- sington, Middlesex, spinster, about 23, con- sent of father, — Symonds, merchant — at Fulham or Kensington, Middlesex. 9 May, 1663. V.
Adamson, Thomas, of St. Nicholas Aeon, London, and Alice Kitler, widow, of Chipping Barnett, Herts — at Sandridge, Herts. 6 Aug. 1579. B.
Adamson, Timothy, of Bury St. Edraond, Suffolk, clerk, bachelor, about 27, and Martha Feltham, of same, widow — at Westley, Hessett, or St. Mary, in Bury aforesaid. 14 Jan. 166f. V.
Addams. See Adams.
Adderley, Sir Charles, knight, of Hams Hall, co. Warwick, Middlesex, about 40, and Mrs. Frances Jesson, of Coventry, said county, widow, about 35 — at Colshill, 00. Warwick. 18 Nov. 1662. V.
Adderley, Charles, of Hams, co. Warwick, esq., widower, 30, and Constance Willmore, of Sywell, 00. Northampton, widow, 24, and late ux. — Willmore, of same, deceased — at St. Andrew, Holborn, or St. Giles-in-the-Fields. 4 Feb. 164^. B.
Addis, Thomas, " fabrum," and Prances Dier, of St. Botolph, Aldgate, London, widow of Philip Dyer, late of same, " fabri," gen. lie, 30 April, 1596. B,
1 1 Edward Addison
[1521-1869.]
Christopher Aishe 1 2
Addison, Edward, of St. Paul, Covent Garden, Middlesex, gent., bachelor, 28, and Margaret Edwards, of Leeds Castle, co. Kent, spinster, 24, with consent of her mother, Joane Edwards, widow — at Leeds aforesaid, or ... . 24 Aug. 1685. F.
Addison, Lancelot, of Milaton, co. Wilts, clerk, bachelor, abont 34, and Jane Gouldston [i.e., Gnlston], of St. Clement Danes, spinster, about 25, alleged by Francis Ashley, of St. Clement Danes, gent. — at St. Clement Danes, St. Mary, Savoy, or Gray's Inn chapel. 11 June, 1670. V.
Adelame, John, of St. Gabriel, Fenohnrch, yeo- man, and Mary Wrighte, of All Hallows Barking, widow of Richard Wrighte, late of same, "botesone," gen. ]io.,_12 April, 1589. B.
Aderton, Anthony, and Katherine Wade, widow, of Stepney — to marry there. 31 Oct. 1572. B.
Aderton, John, of All Hallows ■ in - the - Wa^l, London, merchant taylor, and Joane Cannoj widow of same, relict of — Cannon, late of the City of London, gen. lie, 19 Sept. 1589. B.
Aditor, Thomas, of Harvil, co. Middlesex, husband- man, and Elizabeth Palmer, of Hillingdon, said county, widow of Robert Palmer, lato of same, butcher — at Hillingdon aforesaid. 10 May, 1620. B.
Adkyns, Ambrose, husbandman, and Avice Dowghtie, of London, spinster, daughter of Thomas Dowghtie, of West Drayton, yeoman, gen. lie, 16 June, 1593. B.
Adlande, Miles, of St. John, Walbrook, merchant taylor, and Jane Sleighe, spinster, of St. Mildred, Poultry, daughter of John Sleighe, of Barwick, mercer — at St. Stephen, Coleman Street. 23 April, 1583. B.
Adlington, Walter, of Exeter House, co. Middle- sex, gent., about 25, and Mrs. Avis Joyner, of St. Martin-iu-the-Fields, spinster, about 19, her parents consent — at St. Martin afore- said. 22 Deo. 1666. V.
Aduey, John, of Inner Temple, gent., bachelor, 32, and Mary Steedman, 41, widow of Edmund Bteedman, late of St. Mildred, Poultry, milliner, deceased — at Hackney, co. Middlesex. 9 Feb. 161|-. B.
Adson, John, of St. Sepulchre, London, musician, and Jane Lanarie, of same, spinster, daughter of Abraham Lanarie, of St. Trinity, in the city of Ely, brewer — at St. Sepulchre aforesaid. 16 Feb. 161f. B.
Adwaye, John, barber, and Elizabeth Roberts, of St. Sepulchre, London, widow of Thomas Roberta, late of same, merchant taylor — at St. Sepulchre aforesaid. 20 July, 1598. B.
Adye, John (Addye), and Elizabeth Walker, widow of city of Westminster— at St. Margaret, West- minster. 10 Jan. 157f . D.
Adye, John, of Gray's Inn, gent., bachelor, about 25, and Mrs. Elizabeth Stuart, of Hartley Maudit, CO. Southampton, spinster, about 21, consent of father, Sir Nicholas Stuart, bart. — at Hartley Maudit or Wormesey, co. Southampton. 21 Dec. 1672. V.
Adye, Thomas, of New Inn, bachelor, about 21, and Mary Carpenter, of St. Clement Danes, spinster, about 20, her father's consent, alleged by Roger Adye, of St. Giles-in-the- Fields, firrier — at St. Andrew, Holborn, or Gray's Inn chapel. 3 Feb, 167i. V.
Adye, Thomas (Adie), of St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, baker, bachelor, 24, and Anne Cooking, spinster, a minor, above 18, daughter of William Cocking, of same, distiller, who con- sents— at St. Giles aforesaid or St. Luke, Middlesex. 17 Nov. 1738. F.
Adye, William (Adde) , of St. Mary-at-Hill, London, oordwainer, and Anne Alderson, of same, widow —at same. 16 Sept. 1626. B.
Agar, Richard, esq., of Middle Temple, bachelor,
39, and Elizabeth Tregenna, spinster, 20, parents consent, attested by her father, Edward Tregenna, esq. — at St. Alphage. 9 Oct. 1707. B.
Agar, Thomas, of the Middle Temple, esq., widower, and Mary BoUes, of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex, spinster, abont 22, her parents dead — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, or the chapel of Clarendon House, in said parish. 8 June, 1674. F.
Agar, William, of Gray's Inn, gent., bachelor, about 23, and Mrs. Elizabeth Ward, of White- chapel, Middlesex, spinster, about 17, consent of father, John Ward, of same, "iremonger," at parish church of AVhiteohapel aforesaid. 7 Nov. 1677. V.
Agard, John, esq., of Poston, co. Derby, bachelor,
40, and Mary Adderly, of South Mims, Middle- sex, spinster, 19, daughter of John Adderley, esq., of same, who consents — at St. Antholin. 20 May, 1634. B.
Aggas, Edward, of Wymondham, oo. Norfolk, clerk, and Elizabeth Beckett, of Westminster, spinster — at St. Margaret, Westminster. 13 Nov. 1613. D.
Aglionby, George, B.D., of St. Martin-in-the- Fields, bachelor, 36, and Sibella Smith, of same, spinster, 26, at own disposal, alleged by Erasmus Smith, of same, gent. — at All Hal- lows - the - Great or St. Magnus-the-Martyr. 3 Jnly, 1635. B.
Aglionl)y, William, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, bachelor, 50, and Catherine Hildeyard, spinster, 24, her parents dead — at St. James, Duke's Place. 9 July, 1702. B.
Agynor, Nicholas, of St. Martin-le-Grand, and Margaret Grene, spinster, of St. Margaret, New Fish Street, at St. Margaret aforesaid. 30 Nov. 1568. B.
Ainge, John, of St. Catherine, Tower of London, citizen, fishmonger, bachelor, about 25, and Elizabeth Deane, of St. Margaret Pattens, London, spinster, about 19, consent of father, Clutterbuck Deane, of Minohinghampton, co. Gloucester, gent.— at St. Margaret Pattens aforesaid. 17 Jan. 167-S-. V.
Ainge, Samuel, of Haysley, co. Warwick, clerk, bachelor, 30, and Susannah Parsons, of Kingston-on-'Thames, co. Surrey, widow, about 30 — at St. Mildred, Bread Street, London, or .... 16 Sept. 1686. F.
Ainge, Thomas, fee Anqe.
Ainsworth, John. See Ayj^swortii.
Aiscoughe, John, and Griselle Tuko, he of diocese of London and sho of diocese of Canterbury. 18 Deo. 1545. P.
Aisgill, Joshua, S. T. P., and Hester Sandford, spinster. 11 Nov. 1628. D.
Aislidone, Thomas, of Westminster, bachelor, and Mary Dave, of Lyngfield, Surrey, spinster— at St. Margaret, Westminster. 25 Sept. 1620. D.
Aishe, Christopher, of Lincoln's Inn, gent., bachelor, abont 22, and Mrs. Penelope Peedle, of Stow-in-the-Wold, co. Gloucester, spinster, about 15, consent of mother, Mrs. Anne Fletcher, alias Peedle— at Upper Swell, co. Gloucester. 20 Dec. 1673. V.
13
John Aishe
[1521-1869.J
Augustine Alexander
14
Aishe, John, of Lincoln's Inn, gent., bachelor, about 24, and Frances Olutterbook, of Wella, CO. Somerset, spinster, about 20, consent of her parents, James and Elizabeth Olutterbook — at parish of Cuthbert, in town of Wells, or .... 00. Somerset. 20 Jane, 1672. V.
Aishe, Thomas (Aysshe) , gent., of St. Martin-in-the- Fields, bachelor, 24, and Katherine Sheppard, of same, spinster, 22, her parents deceased — at St. Martin aforesaid, 30 Oct. 1627. 13.
Aishton, Robert, of St. James, Garliok Hithe, and Elizabeth Kyrshawe, of same, widow, gen. lie, 80 Sept. 1564. B.
Akeriuan, Henry, of St. Leonard, Sboreditch, Middlesex, weaver, bachelor, and Joane Dawbney, of same, spinster, daughter of Humphrey Dawbney, late of samo, musician, deceased — at St. Leonard aforesaid. 27 May, 1620. B.
Akers, Bartholomew, of St. Martin-iu-the-Fields, Middlesex, widower, and Joane Jones, of same, spinster— at St. Mary Magdalen, Old Fish Street, London. 19 Dec. 1661. B.
Alamby, Richard, of Waltham Cross, Herts, yeoman, and Mary Skelson, spinster, daughter of — Skelson, late of co. Leicester, deceased — at St. Trinity-the-Less, London. 11 Jan. 161J. B.
Albania, William, jun., of City of London, mer- chant taylor, and Margaret AUatt, spinstei-, of St. Margaret Moyses, daughter of — AUatt, citizen and alderman of London, gen. lie, 14 Feb. 158f B.
Alcetor, Robert, and Agnes Allen, spinster, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, to marry there. 6 May, 1574. B.
Alchorn, John, gent., of Feversham, Kent, bachelor, 23, and Anne Beverton, of St. Catherine Cree Church, spinster, 23, daughter of Simon Beverton, citizen and clothworker, deceased — at St. Andrew Wardrobe. 25 April, ' 1629. B.
Alchorn, John, jun., of Boughton Munchelsea, CO. Kent, esq., bachelor, 30, and Prances Colepepyr, spinster, about 24, daughter of Dame Helen Colepepyr, of Aylesford, said county, widow, who consents— at Aylesford or Ditton, 00. Kent. 15 Feb. 166?. F.
Alchorn, Richard (Alchome), of Crowhurst, Sussex, esq., and Elizabeth Ball, of Town Mailing, Kent, widow — in any church in said county. 4 March, 166f. F.
Alcocke, Lawrence, of Midhurst, Sussex, esq., bachelor, above 23, and Mrs. Anne Fuller, of Watford, Herts, spinster, 20, -with consent of her father, Edward Fuller, of same, esq. — at Watford aforesaid. 6 May, 1701. F.
Alcocke, Nicholas (Alooke), of diocese of West- minster, and Margaret Turner, of diocese of London. 23 Feb. 154|.
Alcocke, William (Awoocke), of St. Catharine Cree Church, bachelor, 22, and Rebecca Richardson, of same, spinster, 22, daughter of William Richardson, of Pomfret, co. York, gent., at St. Faith. 20 April, 1633. B
Aldaye, John, of Harwich, Essex, and Anne Cowper, widow, of Stepney, relict of William Cowper, of same, mariner — at Stepney. 1 June, 1584. B.
Alden, Charles. See Allden.
Alden, Gawin, and Joanna Cogerams, widow, of
City of London, gen. Ho., 30 Aug. 1572. B. Alden, Thomas, and Mary Parker, spinster, of
Watford, gen. lie, 21 July, 1574. B. Alder, William, of City of London, fletcher, and Mary Freeman, spinster, of St. Bartholomew, Exchange, London, daughter of John Freeman, late of CO. Worcester, yeoman, deceased, gen. lie, 14 Oct. 1586. B.
Alderman, John, of Brigstook, co. Northampton, gent., bachelor, 23, and Mrs. Martha Maiden, of Wittlesford, co. Cambridge, spinster, 30,'her parents dead — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, or ... . 1 June, 1698. F.
Alderne, Thomas, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, citizen and draper, widower, about 25, and Mrs. Ellinor Guise, of same, spinster, about 18, her father's consent — at St. Olavo, Sonthwark, Surrey. 11 Aug. 1675. V.
Aldersey, John, of St. Olave, Southwark, Surrey, citizen and dyer, bachelor, about 24, and Mrs. Elizabeth Baines, of same, spinster, about 18, with consent of her mother, Mrs. Baines, widow — at St. Dunstan-in-the-East, London.
8 July, 1678. V.
Alderson, Anthony, gent., of St. Giles, Cripple- gate, bachelor, 50, and Margaret Askell, of St. Michael Baslshaw, spinster, 30, her parents dead— at Stepney or All Hallows-in-the- Wall.
9 April, 1634. B.
Alderson, Samuel, of St. Mary Magdalen, Ber- mondsey, 00. Surrey, clerk, and Mrs. Anne Walton, of St. Pauoras, SoperLane, London, spinster, about 19, with her father's consent — at Cnmberwell, co. Surrey. 9 Sept. 1678. V.
Alderton, John, and Alice Whiting, spinster, of City of London, gen. lie. 1 Sept. 1578. B.
Aldred, Richard, and Elizabeth Stevenson, of Westminster. 28 Nov. 1631. D.
Aldredd, Robert, of St Sepulchre, and Matilda Collins, widow, of St. Michael, Queenhithe, gen. lie, 13 Jan. 157-f. B.
Aldrich, Peter, of St. Alphage, London, currier, and Catherine Eowell, of St. Stephen, Coleman Street, said city, widow of John Rowell, late of same, draper — at St. Alphage aforesaid. 15 Feb. 16a5. B.
Aldridgfe, Richard, yeoman, and Anne Miller, spinster, daughter of — Miller, deceased — at St. Mary-at-Hill. 31 July, 1624. B.
Aldridg'e, Samuel, of Clement's Inn, gent., bachelor, about 25, and Mrs. Dorothy Gould, of Ivor, Bucks, spinster, about 20, her father's consent — at St. Peter, Chalfont, co. Bucks. 21 Aug. 1672. V.
Aldwell, 'Thomas, of St. Botolph, Aldgate, London, tailor, and Margaret Langton, of St. Anne, Blackfriars, London, widow of Peter Langton — at St. Anne, Blackfriars, aforesaid. 15 Jan. 162f. B.
Aldwin, Philip, of Aldenham, Herts, bachelor, about 24, and Susanna Weekes, of same, spinster, about 20, with consent of her mother, her father dead, alleged by John Burgis, of St. Sepulchre, London, gent. — at Aldenham afore- said, or St. Sepulchre, St. Bartholomew-the- Great, or All Hallows Barking, London. 25 Feb. 1675- V.
Aldworth, Henry, of St. Mary Overy, Surrey, bachelor, 37, and Ann Tracy, of St. Martin, Vintry, widow, 38— at St. Botolph, Aldgate. 8 Jan. 170-;-. B.
Aldworth, Thomas, of St. Maiy-at-Hill, fish- monger, and Alice Briaiite, of St. Magnus, said city, spinster, daughter of Thomas Briante, of Bedmester, co. Somerset, yeoman —at St. Magnus aforesaid. 26 Oct. 1609. B.
Aldyn, Edward, husbandman, and Sarah Weden, of Watford, Herts, spinster, daughter of William Weden, of same, yeoman — at St. Giles-in-the-Fields, Middlesex. 28 Feb. 160J. B.
Alexander, Augustine,gent., and Venetia Twydall, spinster, of Rickmansworth, Herts, daughter of John Twydall, of samo, gent., gen. lie.
10 Jan. 158,2. B.
15 Christopher Alexander [[521-1869.
Henry Aliiigfon 16
Alexander, Christopher.baker, and JoaneBroughe, of St. Botolph, Aldgate, London, spinster, daughter of Richard Bronghe, of Newland, co. Gloucester, blacksmith— at St. Botolph, Aldgate, aforesaid. 13 May, 1598. B.
Alexander, Edmund, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, gent., widower, 48, and Mary Steedman, of same, spinster, 27, at hor own disposal — at St. Martin, Ludgate. 20 Deo. 1637. B.
Alexander, Edward, of St. Catharine Croe Church, London, gent., widower, about 36, and Mrs. Elizabeth Pampion, of Stepney, Middle- sex, widow, about 30 — at Stepney, White- ohapel, or St. James, Duke's Place, London. 29 July, 1668. V.
Alexander, George, of Pinchley, co. Middlesex, husbandman, and Dorothy Simpson, of same, spinster, daughter of Thomas Simpson, husbandman — at Einchley aforesaid. 1 Nov. 1619. B.
Alexander, the Bight Hon. Henry, Earl of Sterling, in Scotland, bachelor, about 30, and Judith Lee, spinster, 18, daughter of llobert Lee, of Binfield, oo. Berks, esq., who consents, alleged by Philip Lee, of St. Dionis Back- church, London, citizen and grocer — at Binfield or Wokingham, Berks. 23 Dec. 1663. P.
Alexander, Henry, Earl of Sterling [he signs "Stirline"], in the kingdom of Scotland, widower, and Dame Priscilla Reynolds, of Elvetham, co. Southampton, widow — at St. Mary-at-Hill, London, or St. Clement Danes, or St. Paul, Covent Garden, Middlesex. 17 Nov. 1683. F.
Alexander, Nicholas, of St. Gregory, Loudon, bachelor, 29, and Johanna Smith, spinster, 16, daughter of Stephen Smith, of Blaokmore, co. Essex, esq., who consents — at Blaokmore or Stoneden, co. Essex. 15 Sept. 1663. ¥.
Alexander, Peter, of St. Martin-in-the-Eields, gent., bachelor, about 24, and Prances Scnrrier, of same, spinster, about 25, and at own disposal — St. James, Clerkenwel), or Kentish Town, Middlesex. 10 Aug. 1668. V.
Alexander, Richard, of St. Mary, Savoy, fish- monger, and Isabell Withington, of St. Mary Somerset, London, widow — at St. Mary Somerset aforesaid. 3 June, 1626. B.
Alexander, Paul, and Alice Gwilliame, of city of Westminster, widow. 20 May, 1639. D.
Alexander, Thomas, 1564. See ALiSArNDiiE.
Alexander, Thomas, of Penthurst, co. Kent, gent., bachelor, about 32, and Mrs. Sarah Courbridge, of same, widow, about 26 — at St. Gregory, London. 29 April, 1666. V.
Alexander, William, of St. Helen, London, scrivener, and Elizabeth Malcott, of same, spinster — at St. Helen aforesaid. 17 Peb. 162f B.
Alexander, William, of Binfield, Berks, esq., bachelor, 26, and Mrs. Mary Smith, of TurviU Court, CO. Bucks, widow, 28 — at TurviU Court aforesaid, or. . . . 24 May, 1693. P.
Alfeild, Edward, carpenter, and Anne Man, of the City of London, spinster, daughter of Anthony Man, mariner — at St. Mary Abchuroh, London. 18 Oct. 1617. B.
Alford, Edward, of Christchurcli, London, grocer, and Sarah Harding, of St. Faith, London, spinster, daughter of John Harding, yeoman, deceased — ^at All Hallows Barking, London. 1 May, 1631. B.
Alford, Sir Edward, of Gifington, Sussex, knight, bachelor, about 40, and Mary Cooper, of Cashoebury, Herts, about 38, widow of Sir John Cooper, late of St. Giles, oo. Dorset, knight and bart., deceased — at St. Andrew, Holboru. 11 Deo. 1632. F.
Alford, John, of St. Andrew, Holborn, esq., 21 and upwards, and Mrs. Sarah Jackson, of same, spinster, about 17, her parents dead, consent of her uncle and guardian, Philip Jackson— at St. Martin-in-the-Pields. 4 Dec. 1667. V.
Alford, Richard (Alforde), and Jane Bryggs, widow, of St. Anne, Blackfriars — to marry there. 10 Deo. 1573. B.
Alford, Robert, of the city cf Wells, gent., 29, and Sarah Blackdou, of Winsham, oo. Somerset, spinster, above 21 — at St. Cnthbert, Wells, or ... . 12 Deo. 1689. F.
Alford, Thomas, draper, bachelor, and Margaret Harrison, of same, spinster, daughter of Martin Harrison, late of Colchester, co. Essex, clothier, deceased — at St. Mary, Whitechapel, Middlesex. 5 Deo. 1620. B.
Alford, Thomas, gent., of Salisbury, Wilts, bachelor, 30, and Bennett Bensford, of Wan- stead, Essex, spinster, 21— at St. John Zachary. 6 Sept. 1631. B.
Alfrey, Mickepher (Alphrey) (sic subs.), of St. Martin-in-Fields, gent., widower, about 42, and Mary Wood, of Chelsey, Middlesex, spinster, about 25, at own disposal — at St. Michael, Ooruhill. 1 June, 1666. V.
Algatc, Martin, of RatclifEe, oo. Middlesex, mariner, bachelor, and Mary Skott, of same, spinster, daughter of Edward Skott, late of same, mariner, deceased — at Stepney, co. Middlesex. 20 Jan. 161^. B.
Algood, Richard, and Senoe Dunne, of St. Botolph, AlderEgate, gen. lie, 14 Sept. 1570. S.
Alie, Abel. See Aly.
Alie, Richard, of City of London, merchant, bachelor, about 30, and Lucy Sweet, of Moulsey, Surrey, spinster, about 22, consent of father, Henry Sweet, esq. — at Moulsey aforesaid. 24 Feb. 166|. V.
Alies, Edward, gent., of St. Andrew, Holborn, bachelor, 27, and Hanna Taylor, of same, maiden, 23 — at St. Andrew, Holborn, or St. Bride, London. 13 Nov. 1637. B.
Aliheyn, Robert, of Little St. Bartholomew, London, yeoman, and "Marciam" Byvers, of same, widow, gen. lie, 31 Oct. 1565. B.
Alington, Christopher (AUington), of Bearden, oo. Essex, esq., and Anne Cosbie, of Manudon, said county, spinster, daughter of — • Cosbie, deceased — at Bearden aforesaid. 21 Oct. 1615. B.
AUngton, Sir Giles, knight, and — Argall, widow, of St. Faith-the-Virgin, London, gen. lie, 21 June, 1564. B.
Alington, Giles, of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex, bachelor, 40, and Mary Lunn, of St. Botolph, Aldgate, London, spinster, 38 — at St. Mary Aldermary, or St. Mary Abchurch, Loudon. 27 May, 1687. P.
Aliugton, Henry (AUington), of St. Michael Baasishaw, and Anne Elkyn, widow, of St. Faith, Loudon. 2 Jan. 157^. B.
Alington, Henry, of Hoddesdon, parish of Broxbourne, co. Herts, esq., bachelor, 22, and Elizabeth Bowyer, of Leighton, Essex, spinster, 18, consent of her mother, Katherine Bowyer, widow — at All Hallows Barking, or St. Mary, Whitechapel. 7 July, 1663. B.
ly Henry Alington
[1521 -1869.]
Henry Allen
18
Alington, Henry, of All Hallows, Bread Street, LondoD, bachelor, 28, and Eliza- beth Havera, spinster, 22, daughter of Gilbert Havers, of St. George, Southwark, 00. Surrey, esq., who consents — at Barnett, co. Herts. 15 Aug. 1664. F.
Alington, the Right Hon. William, Lord of Alington, widower, about 30, and Julian Noel, spinster, about 16, daughter of the Right Hon. the Lord Visoonnt Oampden, who consents — at .... in co. Northampton or Rutland. 30 July, 1664. F.
Alington, Hugh (Allingtou), of St. Andrew, Holborn, widower, about 28, and Mrs. Jane Leister, of St. Olement Banes, spinster, about 22, her parents dead — at St. Olement afore- said. 26 June, 1671. V.
Alington, John, of St. Antholin, London, draper, and Alice Elkyn, spinster, of St. Mary Wool- ohuroh— at Wormley, Herts. 18 Deo. 1581. B.
Alington, the Right Hon. William, Lord, of Horsheath, 00. Cambridge, widower, and the Hon. Lady Diana Verney, widow, daughter of the Right Hon. William, Earl of Bedford— at St. Paul, Covent Garden, Middlesex. 5 July, 1675. F.
Alisaunder,Thomas,and Margaret Pynde,8pin8ter, of Great Wigborowe — to marry there. 6 Oot. 1564 B.
Alkin, John, bachelor, aged 11 (sic), son of Richard Alkin, esq., of City of London (who alleges), and Mrs. Mary Greene, spinster, 14, consent of mother, Mrs. Mary Greene, widow —at St. George Botolph Lane. 22 July, 1693. B.
Alkin, Thomas, of St. Augustine, London, grocer, and Mary Newman, of St. Gregory, London, spinster, daughter of Thomas Newman, deceased — at Stepney, co. Middlesex. 12 July, 1G17. B.
Alkyns, James, of St. Beuet Fink, ironmonger, and Katherine Garton, spinster, of St. Margaret, New Fish Street, daughter of Giles Garton, of same, ironmonger — at St. Margaret, New Fish Street. 27 Nov. 1583. B.
AUabaster, Mr. William, D.D., of St. Mary Wool- noth , bachelor, 50, and Katherine Lloyd, of same, widow of Thomas Lloyd, esq., deceased — at St. Bennett Sherehogg. 20 June, 1618. B.
Allaby, Thomas, of Great St. Bartholomew, London, gent., widower, about 40, and Rebecca Terrett, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, widow, about 35 — at St. Gregory or St. Peter, Paul's Wharf. 19 Feb. 166-?. V.
AUam, Esaia, of All Hallows, Lombard Street, and Jane Lloide, of St. Andrew TJndershaft, spinster — at St. Andrew TJndershaft. 28 Nov. 1578. B.
Allam, Eugene, of St. Mary Magdalen, Ber- mondaey, and Ursula Bellingham, of St. Andrew TJndershaft, London, spinster — at St. Michael, Queenhithe, London. 8 Sept. 1626. B.
Allam, William, of St. Martin-in-tho-Pields, gent, bachelor, about 27, and Bridget Clifton, of St. Margaret, Westminster, spinster, about 25, and at own disposal — at St. Mary, Savoy. 21 Sept. 1671. V.
Allanson. See also Allen'son.
Allanson, Charles, of the Middle Temple, esq., bachelor, 31, and Alethea Tempest, of St. Andrew, Holborn, widow — at St. Andrew, aforesaid, or ... 23 July, 1698. F.
Allanson, Francis (Alanson), of Wem, 00. Salop, gent., bachelor, about 22, and Dorothy North- leigh, of St. Michael Basishaw, London, spinster, about 22, her mother's consent — at Greenwich, Kent. 28 March, 1676. V.
Allanson, John, of Croft, 00. York, bachelor, and Mary Meriton, of St. Antholin, London, spinster — at St. Nicholas Aeon, London. 11 Nov. 1661. B.
Allanson, Ralph (A.lanson), and Elizabeth Good, widow, relict of Richard Good, of St. Martin-in- the-Fields, to marry there. 26 Sept. 1583. B.
Allanson, William (Alanson), of St. Margaret, Wescminster, gent., widower, about 42, andMrs. Sarah Osbalston, of same, widow, about 44 — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields. 3 Sept. 1668. V.
Allden, Charles, yeoman, and Mary Potherley, of Riokraansworth, Herts, spinster, daughter of Thomas Potherley, of same, gent., gen. lie. 15 Jan. 159J. B.
Allen, Barkley, gent., of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, bachelor, 37, and Joane Neve, of All Hallows Barking, London, 23, widow of Henry Neve, merchant taylor — at St. Mary, Savoy, Middlesex. 13 April, 1620. B.
Allen, Edmund, gent,, and Anno Hopkins, of St. Mary-at-Hill, London, spinster, daughter of — Hopkins, deceased — at St. Mary - at - Hill aforesaid. 16 Jan. 1621-. B.
Allen, Edward, of Broad Street, London, citizen and scrivener, of London, bachelor, about 24, and Mrs. Judith Bull, of St. Catharine Cree Church, spinster, about 19, consent of her uncle, Allen Cliffe, esq., her parents dead — at St. Peter-the-Poor, London. 8 April, 1670.
Allen, Edward, of St. Btholburgh, London, bachelor, 30, and Elizabeth Cornwallia, spinster, 20, daughter of Charles Cornwallis, of Rock, CO. Worcester, esq., who consents — at St. Bartholoroew-the-Great or Less, London. 1 Jan. Iti7j. F.
Allen, Francis, of Little Stanraore, 00. Middlesex, oat mealman, bachelor, and Anne Philpott, of same, spinater, daughter of — Philpott, deceased — at Christ Church, London. 5 Feb. 16ia. B.
Allen, George, and Dorothy Crook, widow, of City of London — anywhere in diocese. 15 April, 1555. B.
Allen, George (AUeyn), Dr. of Physic, widower, 40, and Elizabeth Walker, 28, widow of Jeromy Walker, gent., who died about 1^ years since, attested by her brother, Richard Barlee, of London, gent. — at St. Faith, London. 15 Aug. 1614. B.
Allen, George, of St. Michael, Queenhithe, London, olothworker, and Katherine Slarks, spinster, daughter of — Slarks, deceased — at All Hallows, Honey Lane, London. 4 Nov. 1624. B.
Allen, George, gent., of St. Sepulchre, bachelor, 28, and Penelope Woodward, of same, widow, 30, relict of Thomas Woodward, deceased — at St. Mary, Savoy. 26 July, 1628. B.
Allen, George (Aleyn), esq., of Hatfield Peverell, CO. Essex, widower, 30, and Martha Jones, of St. Anne, Blaokfriars, spinster, 22, her parents dead— at St. Ann, Blaokfriars. 13 June, 1640. B.
AUon, Henry, of St. Sepulchre, London, widower, and Elizabeth Hasten, of same, widow of Thomas Hasten, late of same, ponlter — at St. Bennet, Paul'i Wharf, London. 31 Oct. 1616. B.
19
Henry Allen
[1521-1869.J
Ttomas Allen
20
Allen, Henry, of the Inner Temple, esq., bachelor, 27, and Frances Drury, spinster, 30, daughter of Sir Henry Drury, late of Hudgeley, co. Bucks, knight, deceased, with consent of her mother. Dame Susan Drury, of same, widow —at Hugely aforesaid. 6 Feb. 163i. F.
Allen, Hiigh, of St. Margaret, Westminster, taylor, bachelor, and Hester Floud (in margin Lloyd), of same, spinster — at St. Leonard, ia St. Martin-lo- Grand. 26 Sept. 1622. D.
Allen, James, of Lincoln's Inn, gent., bachelor, about 25, and Lucretia Johnson, of St. Andrew, Holborn, spinster, about 26, at own disposal — at St. Clement Danes, or at Meere, CO. Stafford. 26 Sept. 166V. V.
Allen, John (A.len), and Margaret Knyghton, of diocese of Westminster. 11 Nov. 1514. F.
Allen, John (Alen), and Elizabeth Casshyng, of London. — May, 1548. F.
Allen, John, of St. Mary Magdalen, Old Fish Street, and Barsaba Walden, spinster, of St. Martin, Ludgate, gen. lie., 17 Nov. 1570. B.
Allen, John, and Elizabeth Wright, spinster, to marry at Feltham. 12 May, 1572. B.
Allen, John, of TJxbridge, Middlesex, glover, and Agnes Peter, widow, of same, gen. lie, 5 Dec. 1580. B.
Allen, John, smith, and KatherineSmithe, spinster, of Kelvedon, Essex, to marry there. 10 July, 1581. B.
Allen, John, of London, barber-surgeon, and Mary Elliott, spinster, of St. Magnus, London, daughter of Robert Elliott, of Wickham, co. Bucks, yeoman — at St. Andrew Hubbard, London. 23 Oct. 1594. B.
Allen, John, of St. Andrew, Holborn, barber, and Margery Fletcher, of St. Dunstan-iu-the-West, London, widow of Thomas Fletcher, gent. — at St. Mary Mounthaw, London. 17 Sept. 1621. B.
Allen, John, of St. Mary, Whitechapel, Middlesex, butcher, and Bridget Stanes, of Stepney, said county, her parents dead — at St. Mary, Isling- ton, Middlesex. 16 Aug. 1622. B.
Allen, John, of Heybridge, Essex, clothier, and Elizabeth Withams, of Chelmsford, said county, spinster — at Chelmsford aforesaid. 5 Aug. 1624. B.
Allen, John, gent., of St. Lawrence, Old Jury, bachelor, 26, and Thomazine Stampe, of same, widow, 30 — at St. Lawrence aforesaid, or at Thistleworth. 15 July, 1626. B.
Allen, John, gent., of Elson, 00. Norfolk, bachelor, 40, and Alice Adams, of Ware, Herts, 80, widow of Richard Adams, deceased — at St. Faith or St. Mary Mounthaw. 18 Dec. 1626. B.
Allen, John, gent., of Chigwell, Essex, widower, 54, and Jane Bardolfe, of Roapsford parish, Hornchurch, Essex, widow, 45 — at St. Nicholas Aeon. 11 Sept. 1637. B,
Allen, John, gent., of Chigwell, Essex, bachelor, 22, and Jane Bardolfe, of same, spinster, 16, consent of her mother, Jane Bardolfe alias Allen, as attested by her husband, John Allen, at Lambourne, Essex. 1 Oct. 1638. B.
Allen, John (Alleyn), of Stone, co. Kent, gent., widower, 86, and Frances Somers, of St. Mar- garet, near Rochester, said county, widow, about 40 — at St. Margaret aforesaid, Wonld- ham, or Stone aforesaid. 15 Dec. 1648. F.
Allen, John, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, esq., bachelor, about 40, and Dame Frances Towers, of same, widow — at Greenwich, Kent. 19 Aug. 1675. V.
Allen, John, of Bridgnorth, co. Salop, Dr. of Physic, 24 and upwards, and Prudence Edwards, of same, spinster, 18 and upwards, daughter of John Edwards, of same, gent., who alleges — at Oldbury, co. Salop, or ... . 15 July, 1698. F.
Allen, Joseph, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, London, taylor, and Alice French, of same, spinster, daughter of William French, of Med- menham, co. Berks, bargeman — -at St. Botolph aforesaid. 5 June, 1619. B.
Allen, Joshua, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, bachelor, above 21, and Elizabeth Wentworth, of St. James, Westminster, spinster, above 21 —at St. Ann, Westminster. 17 May, 1729. B.
Allen, Matthew. Seo Allin.
Allen, Morgan, of St. Dunstan - in - the -West, London, merchant taylor, and Anne Bacon, of St. Anne, Blackfriars, spinster, daughter of — Baoon, late of Hedingham Castle, co. Essex, gent., deceased, gen. lie, 22 May, 1596. B.
Allen, Nicholas, of St. Mary-at-Hill, haberdasher, and Jane Sledd, spinster, daughter of Henry Sledd, of St. Margaret, New Fish Street, fishmonger — at St. Margaret, New Fish Street. 25 Nov. 1583. B.
Allen, Peter, of University of Oxon, gent., bachelor, about 28, and Mrs. Frances Barker, of city of Oxford, spinster, about 21, and at own disposal, her parents dead — at Sanford, CO. Oxon. 10 Aug. 1666. V.
Allen, Ralph, of Great All Hallows, London, merchant, widower, about 50, and Mary Green, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, widow, about 40 — at St. James, Garliok Hythe. 1 July, 1662, T.
Allen, Richard, and Ann Partridge, of St. Sepulchre. 22 Nov. 1537. B.
Allen, Richard, of St. Sepulchre, London, and " Sitham " Ferneley, widow, of Stratford Langthore, gen. lie, 13 Dec. 1570. B.
Allen, Robert. See Aliheyn.
Allen, Robert, of St. Saviour, Southwarfc, and Ellen Hiller, widow — at St. Giles-in-the-Fiolds, Middlesex. 5 June, 1626. B.
Allen, Robert, and Frances Rntlidge. 28 Nov. 1632. D.
Allen, Roger, mariner, and Joane Tucker, of St. Mary, Whitechapel, widow of — Tucker, late of same, gen. lie, 25 Jan. 159f. B.
Allen, Samuel, of St. Michael, Cornhill, London, merchant, bachelor, 30, and Elizabeth Dowse, spinster, 19, daughter of Thomas Dowse, of Brooke, parish of King's Somborne, co. South- ampton, gent., who consents — at King's Somborne, Little Somborne, or Upper Eldes, CO. Southampton. 2 Jan. 167|. F.
Allen, Thomas, of St. Martin, Ludgate, yeoman, and Isabell Stafford, widow, relict of Thomas Stafford, of same, clerk, deceased — at St. Sepulchre. 15 March, 158f. B.
Allen, Thomas, of St. Andrew, Holborn, yeoman, and Anne Chambers, of same, spinster, daughter of — Chambers, late of co. Derby, yeoman, deceased, gen. lie, 18 Sept. 1588. B.
Allen, Thomas, of St. Bride, London, gent., and Anne Kempe, of Westminster, widow. 17 Nov. 1595. D.
Allen, Thomas, of Stepney, Middlesex, silk weaver, and Margaret Grimley, spinster, daughter of David Grimley, of same, woodmonger — at St. Mary, Whitechapel, co. Middlesex. 2 Sept. 1619. B.
Allen, Thomas, of Haddenham, Isle of Ely, co. Cambridge, gent., bachelor, about 40, and Mary Hall, of Northallerton, co. York, widow, about 30— at St. Bartholomew-the-Less, St. Mary, Savoy, or St. Dunstan-in-the-Weat. 19 July, 1666. V.
21
Thomas Allen
[1521-1869.]
John Alshere
22
Allen, Thomas, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, gent., bachelor, about 22, and Mrs. Luce Johnson, of same, spinster, about 32, her father's consent — at Paddington or Marybone, Middle- sex. 7 Sept. 1667. V.
Allen, Thomas, of Orutohed Fryars, London, esq., bachelor, about 21, his father's consent, and Mrs. Mary Colwall, of St. Bartholomew-the- Great, London, spinster, about 21, consent of father, Thomas Colwall, of same, esq. (who alleges) — at St. Bartholomew aforesaid, or St. Foster, Foster Lane. 16 Dec. 1672. V.
Allen, Thomas, of St. Foster, London, citizen and goldsmith, bachelor, about 25, and Mrs. Mary Lincoln e, of Satterley, co. Suffolk, spinster, about 22, with her father's consent — at St. Andrew, Holborn, London. 3 March, 167§. V.
Allen, Thomas (AUeyn), of Little Barfields, Essex, clerk, bachelor, 40, and Anne Young, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, spinster, 18, daughter of Elizabeth Young, widow, who consents — at Little St. Bartholomew, Loudon, or .... 2 Jan. I695. F.
Allen, William, yeoman, and Mary Larkin, of London, widow of William Larkin, late of Hetcorue, co. Kent, yeoman, gen. lie, 23 Oct. 1595. B.
Allen, William, and Margaret Gnildeforde, widow, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, gen. lie, 9 Jan. 157^. B.
Allen, William, of St. Bartholomew-the-Less, London, carpenter, and Jane Hardie, of St. Mary, Islington, Middlesex, spinster, daughter of — Hardye, of same, yeoman, of St. Bsir- tholomew aforesaid. 13 Aug. 1602. B.
Allen, William, of St. Michael Basiahaw, London, joyner, and Margaret Chapman, of St. Sepulchre, said city, widow of Peter Chapman, late of same, joyner — at St. Botolpb, Alders- gate. 8 March 160|. B.
Allen, William, of St. Botolph, Aldgate, London, "aquavite stiller," and Alice Cole, widow of Walter Cole, of Stepney, co. Middlesex — at
St , Paul's Wharf, London. 23 April,
1619. B.
Allen, William, of St. Margaret, Westminster, bachelor, and Margaret Vaux, of same, spinster. 8 Feb. 167?. D.
AUcnson. See also Allanson.
Allensou, Christopher (Allinson), and Anne Jackson, spinster, of St. Catherine Cree Church, London, daughter of John Jackson, late of said city, tailor, deceased, gen. lie, 22 March, 159-ft. B.
AUenson, George, of St. Lawrence, Jury, leather- seller, bachelor, about 28, and Constance Nevett, of St.MaryAldermary, spinster, about 18, consent of father, Edward Nevett, of same, grocer — at St. Michael Boyal, London. 16 Feb. 166^-. V.
Allensou, Gilbert, of St. Lawrence, Jury, London, silkman, bachelor, about 23, and Anne Boylston, of St. Bennet, Graceohnrch, spinster, about 17, her mother's consent — at St. Hellen, London. 3 March, 167^. V.
AUenson, Leonard (Allensonne), of the City of London, yeoman, and Christian Stavelly, of St. Andrew, Holborn, spinster, daughter of Paul Stavelly, late of the city {sic) of Southamp- ton, merchant, deceased — at St. Giles-in-the- Fields, Middlesex. 16Jan. 161f B.
AUestry, William, of Gray's Inn, esq., bachelor, about 26, and Mrs. Frances Lorymer, of St. James, Clerkenwell, spinster, about 24, and at own disposal— at Wandsworth, Battersoa, or Lambeth, Surrey. 14 Oct. 1668. V.
Allett, Benedict, of St. Bride, London, pewterer, and Anne Fisher, daughter of Richard Fisher, of same, merchant taylor — at St. Bride afore- said. 22 March. 162J. B.
Allett, John, " sayler," of Harwich, 00. Essex, and Margery Cliffe, spinster, of St. Margaret Pattens, London, daughter of Thomas Cliffe, of same, draper, gen. lie, 8 April, 1586. B.
AUeyn. See Allen.
AUiboud, Pombey, of Dagenham, co. Essex, gent., bachelor, about 26 [or 29 ?], and Mary Tillney, of same, widow, about 30 — at St. Andrew XJndershaft, London. 20 April, 1672. V.
AUin, Matthew, and Annabella Martin, spinster, of St. Andrew, Eastcheap, gen. lie, 14 July, 1578. B.
Allison, John (Alison), of Ooxall, 00. Essex, draper, and Anne Godderd, spinster, of Christchuroh, Newgate, London, daughter of John Godderd, late of All Hallows Barking, London, deceased, gen. lie, 6 July, 1590. B.
Allison, John, of All Hallows, Bread Street, London, Salter, and Thomazine Kettle, of St. MaryStayning, London, spinster — at St. Mary Stayning aforesaid. 3 Deo. 1631. B.
Allison, John, of Hemel Hempstead, co. Herts gent., widower, about 40, and Mrs. Alice Cor- feild, of King's Langley, said county, spinster, about 40, and at own disposal — at Watford, Hemel Hempstead, or King's Langley, said county. 24 Feb. 166|. T.
Allison, Robert (Alleson), and Margaret Ode,widow, of City of London, gen. lie, 17 April, 1574. B.
Allison, Robert, cook, and Elizabeth Emerye, widow, of City of London — at St. Catherine Cree Church. 10 July, 1581. B.
AlUson, Roger (Allyson), fishmonger, and Elizabeth Tistall, of London, widow of Michael Tistall, late of St. Olave, Southwark, gen. lie, 9 Nov. 1593. B.
Allison, William (Alleson), of South Mims, co. Middlesex, and Elizabeth Broomer, of same, spinster, daughter of Thomas Broomer, of same, yeoman — at South Mims aforesaid. 20 May, 1618. B.
AUiston, William, of Sturmore, co. Essex, gent., bachelor, 26, and Christian Elborowe, spinster, 16, daughter of John Elborowe, of St. Panoras, Middlesex, clerk, who consents — at St. Panoras aforesaid. 10 May, 1633. F.
AUwin, Richard, of TrefEord, Sussex, gent., bachelor, 24, and Elizabeth Burdett, of West Wortham, co. Southampton, spinster, 22, and at her own disposal— at West Wortham or TrefEord aforesaid. 4 May, 1648. F.
AUye, Robert, husbandman, and Anne Barnes, now of London, widow of John Barnes, late of Bovington, 00. Herts, husbandman, gen. lie, 14 June, 1592. B.
Almonde, Roger, and Margaret Horwood, widow, of Barking, Essex — at All Hallows Barking. 6 April, 1575. B.
Alnatus. See Altatus.
Alondon, John, and Margery Dixson, widow, of City of London — to marry at Barking, co. Essex. 28 May, 1563. B.
Alp, Edward, of All Hallows, Lombard Street, London, bachelor, 28, and Dorothy Wilson, of St. James, Clerkenwell, Middlesex, cousin- german once removed to William Jones, one of the procurators-general of the Arches Court of Canterbury, who alleges — at St. James, Clerkenwell aforesaid. 4 Feb. 169f . F.
Alphrey. See Alfrey.
Alshere, John, and Anne Gardiner, of diocese of Sarnni. 9 Feb. 154i. F.
23
Edward Alsopp
[1521-1869.
Vincent Araootts
24
Alsopp, Edward, of St. Matthew, Friday Street, London, leatherseller, and Anne Barker, widow of Hugh Barker, late of Christohureh, London — at St. Bartholomew-the-Great, London. 7 Feb. 162f. B.
Alsopp, Nathaniel (Alsop), clerk, rector of Lang- ton, CO. Leicester, bachelor, about 30, and Joanna Gregory, of Korton, near Golbye, said county, spinster, about 25, and at own dis- posal— at Acchoroh, co. Northampton, or Kib- ■worth, or Norton aforesaid, 00. Leicester. 11 July, 1671. T. [Crossed, but signed and fully executed.]
Alsopp, Nicholas, clerk, curate of All Hallows- the-Less, and Frances Ooppock, of Bridewell, London, widow of Robert Ooppock, late curate of Bridewell Chapel — at St. Martin, Ludgate. IS Dec. 1G03. B.
Alsopp, Thomas, of Kingsbury, 00. Warwick, gent., widower, about 55, and Mary Grosaevenure, of same, widow, about 55 — at Kingsbury afore- said, alleged by Bussell Alsopp, of St. Botolph, Aldgate, London, citizen and skinner. 9 March, 166^ V.
Alsopp, Walter (AUsop), of St. Olave, Hart Street, London, wheelwright, and Joane Hobbes, of St. Lawrence Ponntney, London — at St. Lawrence aforesaid. 13 April, 1626. B.
Alston, Edward, gent., of St. Mary Abchuroh, London, bachelor, 28, and Susan Hussey, of London, 32, widow of — Hussey, late merchant, deceased— at St. Botolph, Aldersgate, London. 8 Dec. 1624. B.
Alston, Sir Edward, knight, of Strixton, co. Northampton, widower, and Anne Stratton, of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex, widow — at St. Mary, Savoy, or St. Paul, Covent Garden, Middlesex, or Bridewell Chapel, London. 24 Nov. 1670. F.
Alston, Isaac, of Chelsea, Middlesex, gent., bachelor, about 21, and Mrs. Mary Seale, of St. Danstan-in-the-West, spinster, about 21, her mother's consent— at St. Sepulchre, London. 11 Sept. 1672. V.
Alston, James (Allstone), of St. Clement Dane.«, yeoman, and Joyce Wildinge, spinster— at St. Botolph, Aldgate. 19 June, 1581. B.
Alston, Joseph, of Edwardatone, Suffolk, esq., bachelor, 22, and Laurentia Trumbull, of Hadleigb, said county, spinster, 18, daughter of Charles Trumbull, doctor of law, who consents — at St. Bride, London, or .... 26 June, 1699. F.
Alston, Thomas, of Old Newton, co. Suffolk, gent., bachelor, aged 23, and Anne Nye, of St. Mary- le-Bow, London, widow, aged 27 — at Kentish Town, alias St. Pancras, in Middlesex, or Camberwell, in Surrey. 21 April, 1674. V.
Alston, Thomas, of the Inner Temple, esq., bachelor, 50, and Anne Guilford, of Chelsea, Middlesex, widow — at St. James-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, St. Anne, Aldersgate, London, or the Eoyal Chapel, Whitehall. 6 Aug. 1684. F.
Altham, Edward, of St. Martin Outwich, London, and Fortune Fowylle, of St. Margaret, Loth- bury — at St. Margaret, Lothbury. 16 June, 1558. B.
Altham, Edward, esq., of Latton, co. Essex, wi- dower, 28, and Joane Leaventhorpe, of Sabridg- wortb, Herts, maiden, 20, daughter of Sir John Leaventhorpe, knight, of same, who consents — at St. Clement Danes, Middlesex. 27 March, 1612. B. Altham, James, esq., of St. Martin Outwich, and Mary Grimes, of same, widow of Philip Grimes, merchant, of London — at St. Martin Oatwioh aforesaid. 10 Jan. 159^. B.
Altham, Richard, (Al tarn), of London, glazier, and Agnes Palmer, of same, widow of Henry Palmer, late of St. Margaret, Westminster — at St. Mary Mounthaw, Loudon. 28 Oct. 1597. B.
Altham, Robert, D.D., rector of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, bachelor, 45, and Mary Altham, of Latton, Essex, spinster, 18, consent of hor mother, a widow — at Latton or Harlow, co. Essex. 22 May, 1703. B.
Alured, Thomas, esq., of St. Anno, Blackfriars, bachelor, 23 (or 33), and Mary Jones, of St. Martin-in-tho-Fields, spinster, 21, daughter of Henry Jones, deceased, consent of her mother, Elizabeth Jones, widow — at Edmonton, Middlesex. 26 April, 1617. B.
Alvason, John, alias Aldersey, and Margaret Newberye — at St. Margaret, Westminster. [Bond by John Hughes, of Westminster, " vitler," and James Large, of samo, yeoman.] 1 Nov. 1573. D.
Alvatus, Alexander (or — natus), of Gray's Inn, esq., bachelor, about 27, and Prances Baker, of St. Mary, Strand, alias Savoy, spinster, about 22, consent of her mother. Dame Frances Baker, of same, her father dead — at St. Mary Magdalene, Old Fish Street. 3 April, 1662. T.
Alvie, Thomas, and Elizabeth Northo, of St. Margaret, Westminster— at same. 10 March, 165i. D.
Alway, Balph, and Mary Bylby, of the diocese of London. 6 Nov. 1544. F.
Alwyn, Roger, and Alice Durmon. 6 Jan. 157^. F.
Alwyn, Thomas (Alywyn), of Reading, Berks, gent., bachelor, about 28, and Mrs. Mary Hunt, of Theodon, 00. Southampton, spinster, about 22, consent of father, John Hunt, widower — at St. Clement Danes, St. Panchredge, or St. Giles-in-the-Fields. 17 Oct. 1666. V.
Aly. See also Ahe.
Aly, Abel, of Poick, 00. Worcester, gent., bachelor, about 26, and Mrs. Ellinor Coke, of Whitberne, 00. Hereford, widow, about 40 — at St. John, near city of Worcester. 30 March, 1676. V.
Amadas, Richard, clerk, rector of Hallingbury Morloy, co. Essex, and Dorothy Boighnolds, widow, of Layston, said county, relict of Lewis Reighnolds, clerk, late vicar of Layston, gen. lie, 27Jan. 15SS. B.
Amatt, John, of flutton, co. Essex, husbandman, and Elizabeth Wood, spinster, daughter of Christopher Wood, of Theydon Garnishe, said county, yeoman — at St. Mildred, Bread Street, London. 18 Nov. 1622. B.
Amber, Francis, of St. Clement Danes, Middle- sex, bachelor, 26, and Alice Whitmore, of same, widow, 24 — at St. Anne, Westminster, or St. Clement Danes aforesaid. 6 Deo. 1708. F.
Amblor, Humphrey, cf New Inn, Middlesex, gent., bachelor, about 28, and Mrs. Anno Baynes, of Hurstpierpoint, Sussex, spinster, about 25, and at her own disposal — at St. Dunstau-in-the-East, London. 30 May, 1670. V.
Amcotts, Henry, of St. Peter-the-Poor, London, and Johanna Frithe, widow, of Craneham, co Essex, gen. lie, 21 March, 157*. B.
Amcotts, Vincent (Amcotes), of Amootes, Lincoln, esq., widower, and Amey Mildmay. of Graces, in Little Baddow, co. Essex, spinster, about 25, and at her own disposal — at St. Stephen, Coleman Street, All Hallowa-in-the-Wall, or All Hallows Barking, London. 7 July, 1675 F.
!5
John Amegye
[1521-1869.J Samuel Anderson 26
Amegye, John, yeoman, and Margaret Streton, now of the City of London, widow of Christopher Streton, late of Gottington, co. Buoks, labourer, deceased, gen. lie, 16 Nov. 1588. B.
Ames, Henry, bachelor, and Joanna Lightfoote, spinster. 6 Feb. 167i. !>•
Ames, John. See John Akke.
Aiuherst, Jeffery, bachelor, about 22, son of John Amherst, of Gray's Inn, esq., and Elizabeth Yates, spinster, about 17, daughter of Dame Mary Onslow, wife of said John Amherst, both of whom consent — at Horsham or Crawley, oo. Sussex, or Bletoh- ingley or Mestham, co. Surrey. 19 Jaly, 1670. F.
AmJierst, Jeffery, of Bromley, co. Kent, esq., widower, and Dorothy Amherst, of Pembury, said county, spinster, 40 — at Pembury or Penshurst, Kent, or Frant, co. Sassex. 3 Feb. 168^ F.
Amherst, Jeffrey, of Hadlow, Kent, esq., bachelor, 30, and Elizabeth Knightly, spinster, 19, daughter of Sir Robert Knightly, of St. Olave, Hart Street, London, who consents — at St. Olave aforesaid, or ... . 16 April, 1688. F.
Amherst, John, of Gray's Inn, esq., widower, about 46, and Dame Jane Onslowe, of Warnham, co. Sussex, widow, about 40— at ^Horsham, co. Sussex. 7 Nov. 1668. V.
Amherst, William, of St. Todast, London, bachelor, 24, and Jane Stratford, of St. Andrew, Holborn, spinster, 22, with consent of her mother, a widow — at St. Leonard, Shoreditch, Middlesex, or ... . 17 Sept. 1683. F.
Amias, Francis. See Amyas.
Amias, Robert, of London, gent., and Anne Sparke, of St. Dunstan-iu-the-West, London, spinster, daughter of — Sparke, late of London, merchant, gen. lie, 8 Deo. 1596. B.
Amideus, Alexander (sic subs.), of St. Gregory, London, clerk, bachelor, about 38, and Pris- cilla Siibourne, of same, spinster, about 20, consent of her mother, — Sillbonrne, of St. Peter, in the city of Cambridge, widow — at St. Gregory aforesaid, or St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf. 10 Feb. 166^. V.
Am.or, Richard, of St. Mary Colechurch, London, tailor, and Anne Taylor, of same, spinster — at St. Peter, Paul's Wharf, London. 11 Nov. 1620. B.
Ampleforthe, Thomas, of St. Botolph, Bishops- gate, London, merchant taylor, and Margery Lyman, of the Minories, Aldgate, London, widow of Jerome Lyman, late of St. Olave, Hart Street, London, merchant, gen. lie, 4 March, 159^. B.
Am.y, Julian, draper, and Elizabeth Hunt, of St. Bennett, Graoeohurch, London — at St. Anne and Agnes, London. 7 Feb. 162J. B.
Amy, Robert (Ame), and Elizabeth Joyce, of diocese of Westminster. 30 April, 1546. F.
Amy, Samuel, of St. Margaret, Westminster, gent., bachelor, about 33, and Mary Ingram, of same, spinster, aged 17, consent of father, Richard Ingram, yeoman — at St. Antholin, London. 21 June, 1666. V.
Amy, Samuel, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, gent., widower, about 4U, and Mrs. Elizabeth Brad- ford, of Portsmouth, oo. Southampton, widow, about 30 — at Rowner, co. Southampton, or St. Mary Magdalene, Old Fish Street, London. 16 Dec. 1G73. V.
Amyand, Charles, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, bachelor, 32, and Justina Morris, of same, spinster, 23 — at St. Martin aforesaid. 18 Feb. 170^ B.
Amyas, Francis, gent., of St. Bartholomew-the- Less, bachelor, 24, and Anne Athill, of same, spinster, 22, daughter of William AthiH, gent., of Folsham, co. Norfolk, who consents —at All Hallows-in-the-Wall. 13 May, 1631. B.
Am.yas, Robert. See Amias.
Am.ys, William, of St. Olave, Hart Street, London, grocer, bachelor, and Mary Woodhouse, of same, spinster, daughter of Henry Wood- house, of St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf, London, Doctor of Laws — at Stepney, Middlesex. 8 June, 1622. B.
Anderson, Andrew, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, widower, and Margaret Chester, of same, spinster, 22 — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, St. George, Hanover Square, or Knightsbridge Chapel. 8 Dec. 1742. B.
Anderson, Anthony, of St. Andrew, Holborn, gent., bachelor, 40 and upwards, and Elizabeth Tolhurst, of St. Anne, Westminster, spinster, 30 and upwards, her parents dead— at St. Anne aforesaid, or .... 22 April, 1696. F.
Anderson, Edmund, of Gray's Inn, esq., son of William Anderson, of Broughton, co. Lincoln, esq., and Mary Wood, daughter of — Wood, wife of Mr. Dr. Robinson, of Enfield, CO. Middlesex — at St. Margaret, Westminster. 28 Nov. 1623. D.
Anderson, Edmund, of Gray's Inn, esq., bachelor, 30, and Margaret Cox, of Porters, parish of Shenley, Herts, spinster, 21, her parents dead — at St. Bartholomew-the-Great, London, or St. Marylebone, Middlesex. 31 May, 1662. F.
Anderson, Sir Edmund, hart., of Porters, parish of Shenley, co. Herts, widower, 46, and Elizabeth Deane, of All Hallows Staining, London, spinster, 26, daughter of Sir Anthony Deane, of same, who consents — at St. Martin Oatwich, London. 21 March, 168^. F.
Anderson, Francis, esq., of Manby, co. Lincoln, bachelor, 30, and' Mary Pelham, of Brockles- bury, said county, spinster, above 21 — at Hampstead, co. Middlesex. 16 May, 1708. B.
Anderson, Henry, and Elizabeth Bowier, spinster, of St. Bartholomew Exchange — to marry there. 5 Feb. 157f B.
Anderson, Henry, of Penley, Herts, esq., bachelor, 23, and Jacomina Caesar, daughter of Sir Charles Caesar, knight — at the Chapel of the Rolls, in pariah of St. Dunatan-iu-the- West, London. 18 Dec. 1632. F.
Anderson, John, and Elizabeth Johnson, of the city of Westminster, widow. 13 Oct. 1641. D.
Anderson, Peter, and Eleanor Ortoune, of St. John Zaohary, London — to marry there. 13 Nov. 1546. B.
Anderson, Richard, of St. Albans, Herts, and Margaret Bennett, widow, of St. Botolph, Aldgate— at St. Botolph aforesaid. 6 April, 1575. B.
Anderson, Richard, of Watford, co. Herts, yeoman, bachelor, son of John Anderson, of same, yeoman, and Elizabeth Hawkins, of same, spinster, daughter of William Hawkins, late of Waxham, co. Backs, deceased — at All Hallows, Honey Lane, London. 20 Dec. 1611. B.
Anderson, Samuel, of Lincoln's Inn, bachelor, 36, and Margaret Oldfeild, of St. Dunstan- in-the-West, spinster, 30 — at Hornsey or Highgate. 23 Jan. 168|. B.
27 Stephen Anderson
(1521-1869.] Richard Andrews
28
Anderson, Stephen, Jan., esq., bachelor, 20, son and heir of Stephen Anderson, sen., of Byworth, co. Beds, esq., who consents, and Mary G-lynue, spinster, 15, daughter of Sir John Glynne, knight, H.M.'s Serjeant-at-Law, of St. Giles-in-the-iFields, Middlesex, who consents — at .... 1 June, 1664. F.
Anderson, Sir Stephen, of Eworth, alias Eyworth, CO. Beds, bart., widower, about 28, and Mrs. Judith Lawrence, of St. Helen's, London, spinster, about 23, consent of father, Sir John Lawrence, knight, alderman of London — at Hackney or Islington, Middlesex, or St. Mary Axe, London. 5 April, 16V3. V.
Anderson, Thomas, and Johanna Taylor, spinster, gen. lie. 31 March, 1573. B.
Anderson, William, of London, farrier, and Agnes Mathewe, of All Hallows Barking, widow of
— Mathewe, late of same, farrier, gen. lie, 4 Feb. 1594. B.
Anderton, John, and Elizabeth Smyth, alias Gregson, gent., of the diocese of West Chester. 16 Feb. 154|. F.
Anderton, Thomas, of St. Clement Danes, bachelor, about 25, and Mary Herbert, of Bidmarley Dabitott, co. Worcester, spinster, about 19, consent of father, of same, gent. — at Eidmarley Dabitott aforesaid, Newent, in same county, or at any parish church in city of Worcester. 30 May, 1666. V.
Andlabye, Francis, gent., of Martin - in . the Fields, bachelor, 22, and Anne Turner, of same, spinster, 18, daughter of Allen Turner, of same, innholder, who consents — at St. Faith. 13 Jan. 163f. B.
Andrew, Edward, of city of Canterbury, gent., widower, about 40, and Mrs. Mary Goddin, of West Maling, in said county, about 32, her parents dead — at St. Dnnstan-in-the-Weet or St. Bride, London. 25 Aug. 1663. T.
Andrew, Hugh, clerk, rector of St. John Zaohary, London, and Johanna Stanley, widow, of same, relict of Edmund Stanley, late of same, goldsmith, gen. lie, 26 Dec. 1586. B.
Andrew, Michael (Androwe), and Anne Walden.
— July, 1547. F.
Andrew, Roger (Andrewe), gent., and Ellen Bayley, widow, of St. Mary, Shrewsbury. 14 Nov. 1547. F.
Andrew, Thomas, of the City of London, merchant, and Margaret Daniel, of Spring- field, CO. Essex, spinster, daughter of John Daniel, late of same, clerk, deceased — at Ingatestone, co. Essex. 20 Aug. 1619. B.
Andrew, Thomas, of Wandsworth, Surrey, gent., bachelor, about 30, and Mrs. Martha Bacon, of Hackney, Middlesex, spinster, about 20, her father's consent — at Bromley, Middlesex. 12 Oct. 1675. V.
Andrews, Amis (Andres), of St. Margaret, West- minster, gent., bachelor, 22, and Elizabeth Stone, spinster, 21, daughter of one Stone, late of London, gent., deceased, and her mother also (as is believed), she ather own dis- posal, and remaining in parish of St. Bartholo- mew, near the Exchange, London, alleged by Clement Wilson, of St. Bride, gent. — at Islington, Middlesex. 16 Jan. 163|. F.
Andrews, Bartimeus, clerk, rector of Magdalen Laver, co. Essex, and Judith Lane, of St. Mildred, Bread Street, London, widow of Henry Lane — at St. Anne, Blackfriars, or St. Nicholas Cole Abbey. 9 Jan. 162|i. B.
Andrews, Benjamin (Andrewes), of Caddington, Herts, gent., widower, about 53, and Mrs. Anne Borradale, of Stepney, Middlesex, widow, about 43 — at St. Dnnstau-in-the-East, London. 8 Deo. 1676. V.
Andrews, Daniel (Androse), bachelor, 25, son of Daniel Androse, of St. Stephen, Walbrook, London, esq., and Mary Harlakenden, 19, daughter of Mary Collier, of St. Foster, London, widow, who consents — at St. Giles, Cripplegate, St. Sepulchre, or St. Mary Magdalen, Old Fish Street, London. 15 May, 1672. F.
Andrews, Sir Edmond (Andres), knight, of St. Martin-iu-the-Fields, 00. Middlesex, widower, and Elizabeth Clapham, of St. Paul, Covent Garden, Middlesex, widow, alleged by Kalph Marshall, of St. Paul aforesaid, esq. — at St. Margaret, Westminster. 3 Aug. 1691. F.
Andrews, Edward, of the Six Clerks' Office, 23, and Mercy Clark, spinster, of Saltford, co. Warwick, 21, at her own disposal — at Trinity, Minories. 30 April, 1696. B.
Andrews, Francis (Androes), of St. Margaret Moses, London, draper, and Mary Carrier, spinster, daughter of Barnard Carrier, clerk — at Hadley, co. Middlesex. 18 Aug. 1618. B.
Andrews, Sir Henry, bart., of Lathbury, Bucks, widower, 34, and Elizabeth Drew, of South- broome, co. Wilts, widow, 28, alleged by William Andrewes, of Lathbury, gent. — at St. Gregory, London. 26 Feb. 166f . F.
Andrews, John (Androse), of Raynham, co. Essex, butcher, and Jane Hearde, of StifEord, said county, spinster, daughter of George Hearde, of Raynham aforesaid, yeoman, gen. lie, 17 Sept. 1596. B.
Andrews, Mr. Ambrose, of Newport Pond, co. Essex, gent., widower, 56, and Mrs. Mary Garnet, of Hodsden, Herts, widow —at Worm- ley, Herts. 13 Deo. 1701. B.
Andrews, John, of Great St. Bartholomew, London, oordwainer, and Sarah Knight, of St. Botolph, Aldersgate, London, widow of Thomas Knight, late of same — at St. Botolph aforesaid. 6 Dec. 1625. B.
Andrews, John, and Magdalen Pulfrey, of the city of Westminster, spinster. 2 June, 1640. D.
Andrews, John (Andrewes), of Middle Temple, gent., bachelor, about 27, and Anne Peacocke, aged 22, consent of her father, Lawrence Peacocke, of Battersea, Surrey, gent. — at Battersea aforesaid, or St. Mary Magdalene, Old Fish Street, or St. Nicholas Cole Abbey, London. 2 Jan. 166f. V.
Andrews, Joseph, of St. Clement Danes, bachelor,
20, and Ann Adams, of Whitechapel, spinster,
21, consent of Joseph Andrews, the father — at St. Andrew, Holborn. 3 Dec. 1720. B.
Andrews, Owen, gent., of St. Andrew, Holborn, bachelor, 23, and Rachel Motham, of same, spinster, 25, at St. James, Clerkenwell. 11 April, 1638. B.
Andrews, Randall (Andrewes), of St. Catherine Cree Ohtirch, London, pewtercr, and Elizabeth Browning, of St. Andrew-iu-the-Wardrobe, London, spinster, daughter of William Browning, of same, feltmaker — at St. Mary, Islington. 23 June, 1625. B.
Andrews, Randall, brewer, and Margery Duke, of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex, widow of Edward Duke — at St. Clement aforesaid. 26 January, 162^. B.
Andrews, Richard (Androwes), and Isabell Thomas, spinster, of Stepney— at St. Botolph, Aldgate. 4 March, 157|. B.
Andrews, Richard, esq., now of City of London, widower, 39, and Mary Felton, of St. Andrew, Holborn, maiden, 19, daughter of Edmund Felton, of the Charterhouse, in St. Sepulchre, gent., who consents— at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf. 27 Sept. 1609. B.
29
Eobert Andrews [1521-1869.]
Thomas Ansley 30
Andrews, Eobert, of St. Bride, London, bachelor and Kose Pludd, of St. Leonard, in precinct of St. Martin-le-Grand, spinster — at St. Leonard aforesaid. 25 Feb. 161f . D.
Andrews, Robert, of All Hallows Barking, London, bachelor, 22, and Mary Smith, spinster, 17, daughter of Abell Smith, of St. Dunstan-in- the-East, London, gent., who oousents — at St. Dunstan aforesaid. 8 July, 1662. F.
Andrews, Silvester (Andrewes), husbandman, and Christian Towe, spinster, of Twickenham, Middlesex, daughter of John Towe, of Feltham, said county, husbandman, gen. lie, 10 Dec. 1594. B.
Andrews, Stephen (Andrewes), and Margaret Wemys, of St. Botolph, Billingsgate, London. 25 Jan. 154J. F.
Andrews, Thomas (Androwes), gent., and Jane Belson, of City of London, gen. lie, 4 Feb, 156f. B.
Andrews, Thomas (Androwes), gent., and Alice Wyseman, spinster, of St. Andrew, Holborn —at St. Bride, Fleet Street. 12 Deo. 1576. B.
Andrews, Thomas (Andrewes) , of St. Sepulchre, London, gent., and Mary Smithe, of the Savoy, London, spinster, daughter of — Smithe, of Abinghon, oo. Berks, gent., gen. lie, 23 Feb. 159|. B.
Andrews, Walter, of St. Andrew, Holborn, London, citizen and distiller, bachelor, about 22, and. Elizabeth Carter, of Stepney, Middle- sex, spinster, about 22, with her father's consent. 11 Sept. 1678. V.
Andrews, William (Androwes), yeoman, and Mildred Peters, widow, of City of London, relict of Andrew Peters, late of Hoggington, CO. Cambridge, yeoman deceased — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields. 4 March, 158f . B.
Andrews, William (Androwes), of St. Andrew Undershaf t, London, grocer, and Mary Nioholls, of St. Leonard, Shoreditoh, Middlesex, spinster, daughter of Thomas NichoUs, late of same, yeoman, deceased — at St. Leonard, Shoreditcb, Middlesex. 17 Feb. 160|. B.
Andrews, William (Andrewes), of Great St. Bartholomew, London, tailor, and Susan Gibbs, of same, daughter of John Gibbs, deceased — at St. Mary, Islington, Middlesex. 13 Sept. 1619. B.
Andrews, William (Andrewes), bachelor, and Jane Trevet, widow. 20 March, 167^. D.
Andros, &c. See Andrews.
Ang^e, Thomas, of the Inner Temple, gent., bachelor, 26, and Mary Heape, of St. Botolph, Aldersgate, London, spinster, 19, daughter of Elizabeth Samborne, of same, who consents — at Little Ilford, Essex, or .... 12 June, 1689. F.
Ang'ell, John, of Whiteohapel, Middlesex, silk- weaver, and Anne Palmer, spinster, daughter of — Palmer, deceased — at St. Andrew Under- shaft, London. 8 Feb. 161f . B.
A-ager, Thomas (? Anger), of St. Nicholas Aeon, London, clothworker, and Agnes Staunton, of All Hallows-ln-the-Wall, London, widow of — Staunton, late of same, clothworker, deceased, gen. lie, 27 Aug. 1588. B.
Angier, Bernard, of St. Margaret, Westminster, ' citizen and goldsmith, bachelor, about 22, and Mrs. Jane Salter, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, spinster, about 19, her mother's consent, alleged by John Angier, of Middle Temple, esq. —at St. Martin-in-the-Fields. 23 Deo. 1675. V.
Angier, Burrage, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, gent., bachelor, above 21, and Anna Maria Christian, of East Barnet, Herts, spinster, above 21, at her own disposal — at St. Martin aforesaid, or . , . . 15 July, 1701. F.
Angier, George, clerk, of St. Clement Danes, bachelor, 22, and Judith Conway Seymour, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, widow, 22 — at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf, alleged by Sophia Sylva- niuB, of St. James, Clerkenwell. 30 July, 1702. B.
Ankers, John, of St. Dionis Backchurch, London, gent., bachelor, about 30, and Dinah Lancaster, of same, widow, about 29 — at St. Martin-in- the-Fields. 18 Nov. 1673. T.
Anlaby, Francis. See Andlabye.
Anne, John (P Ames), of St. Benet Fink, London, merchant taylor, bachelor, and Jane Browne, of same, spinster, daughter of John Browne, of same, citizen and barber-chirurgeon — at St. Gregory, London. 31 Jan. 16|a. b.
Anneley, William, of city of Westminster, apothecary, and Jane Hatley, of same, widow — at St. Margaret, Westminster, between 8 and 11 a.m. 16 May, 1598. D.
Annesley, Arthur, esq., bachelor, above 21, and Mary Thompson, spinster, above 21, daughter of the Bight Hon. John, Lord Haversham, who consents — at .... 6 Jan. 170J. F.
Annesley, Elisha, of Great St. Bartholomew, and Margaret Sedgewick, of same, spinster, 36 — at St. James, Duke's Place. 10 Jane, 1705. B.
Annesley, James, Earl of Anglesey. — " Licentia matrimonial, inter p' nobilem ethon'dum Viru' Jacobum Annesley comitem de Anglesey, et p nobilem et hon'dam Fem. D'nam Catherinam Damley. 1699." D.
Annesley, Robert, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, esq., bachelor, about 22, and Mary Monck, of same, spinster, about 21, father's consent— at St. Martin or St. Giles-in-the-Fielda, or Mary- bone, Middlesex. 21 Aug. 1666. V.
Annwood, Edward, of All Hallows-the-Great, Thames Street, London, porter, and Joane Moseley, of St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, spinster — at St. Peter, Paul's Wharf, London. 5 April, 1624. B.
Annyon, John, gent., of Clement's Inn, bachelor, 26, and Martha Lownds, of St. Michael, Wood Street, spinster, 17, daughter of Francis Lownds, of same, gent., who consents — at St. Michael, Wood Street, or St. Mary Stayning. 24 Aug. 1640. B.
Ansell, Edmund, and Christian Ocle, widow, of parish of Woolchurch, London. 2 May, 1547. P.
Ansell, Humphrey, of St. James, Clerkenwell, Middlesex, and Elizabeth Bowen, of St. Gregory, London, widow — at St. Lawrence Pountney, London. 6 Nov. 1617. B.
Ansell, John, of St. Paul, Walden, co. Herts, yeoman, sou of John Ansell, deceased, and Mary Sanders, of Offley, said county, spinster, daughter of John Sanders, late of said parish, deceased — at St. Bartholomew ■ the - Less, London. 22 June, 1613. B.
Ansell, Nowell, bachelor, and Mary Snipe, spinster. 5 Aug. 1667. D.
Ansell, Richard. See Aunsell.
Ansell, William, of Chesthunt, Herts, husbandman, and Anne Rey, widow, of same parish, relict of John Rey, of same, husbandman, gen. lie, 11 July, 1588. B.
Ansley, Thomas, of Waltham Holy Cross, oo. Essex, yeoman, and Katherine Almery, of same, spinster, daughter of George Almerie, of Shipesbee, oo. Lincoln, yeoman — at St. Sepulchre, London. 6 June, 1603. B.
Ansley, Thomas (Ansly), of Waltham Abbots, co. Essex, and Katherine Eliott, of same, widow of Roger Eliott, late of same, yeoman — at St. Botolph, Aldgate, London. 6 Aug. 1608, B.
William Anslowe
[152 1- 1 869.] William Appleton
Auslowe, William, of St. Mary Somerset, LondoD, dyer, and Ursula Dormer, widove, of same, relict of — Dormer, late of same, cooper, gen. lie, 12 Feb. 159?. B.
Ansted, Stephen, of Chertsey, 00. Surrey, brick- layer, and Joane Duel], of Cranford, 00. Middle- ser, spinster — at St. Faith, London. 14 Deo. 1626. B.
Ansty, Christopher, of St. Botolph, Biahopsgate, London, widower, 40, and Anne Holden, of Hammersmith, Middlesex, spinster, 24, daughter of William Holden, of same, who consents — at St. Helen, London. 16 Feb. 169a. F.
Aiisty, John (Anstey), barber, and Mary Johnson, spinster, daughter of — Johnson, deceased — at St. James, Garliok Hithe, London. 31 Deo. 1624. B.
Anstye, Richard, gent., of city of Westminster, bachelor, 22, and Anne Churohey, of same, spinster, 21— at St. Bride. 6 Jan. 164^. B.
Antarbus, William. See Antrobus.
Anthony, Charles (Anthonie), of Roohford, co. Essex, physician ["Medions"], and Martha Thornton, of same, spinster — at St. Mary, Savoy, Middlesex. 9 Oct. 1626. B.
Anthony, Charles (Anthonye), of St. John Zachary, London, goldsmith, and Elizabeth Arnolde, spinster, daughter of Richard Arnolde, of St. Martin, Ludgate, haberdasher, gen. lie. 13 Jan. 159^. B.
Anthony, Francis, of Great St. Bartholomew, doctor of medicine, and Elizabeth Lante, of Trinity, Minories, London, widow of Thomas Lante, late of same, gont. — at tho church of the Savoy, Middlesex. 23 Sept. 1609. B.
Anthony, Mark, of Framlingham, Suffolk, clerk, bachelor, 38, and Mary Sparhauke, of same, spinster, 26, at her own disposal — at St. Swithin, London, or ... . 20 Feb. 169f . F.
Anthony, Peter, of St. John, Wapping, Middlesex, bachelor, 30, and Sarah Hawkins, of St. Catherine Coleman, spinster, 19, friends' con- sent— at All Hallows, London Wall. 7 Oct. 1703. B.
Anthony, William, of Little All Hallows, Thames Street, London, fishmonger, and Alice Blunt, of St. Margaret, Lothbury, said city, widow of Robert Blunt, late of the borough of Southwark, cordwainer — at St. Margaret, Lothbury, afore- said. IV May, 1598. B.
Antrobus, George, of St. Gregory-by-St. Paul, citizen, merchant taylor, of London, bachelor, about 28, and Anna Francklin, of St. Peter, Paul's Wharf, spinster, about IB, her father's consent — at Wandsworth, co. Surrey, or St. Mary Stayniug, London. 17 Oct. 1660. V.
Antrofcns, George, of Clifford's Inn, gent., bachelor, 30, and Catherine Bramston, of St. Bride, London, spinster, 21, at her own disposal — at St. Botolph, Aldersgate, or St. Andrew, Holborn. 27 Jan. 1661. F.
Aiitrohus, Huddleston, of St. Mary, Savoy, gent., bachelor, about 3S, and Anne Williams, of same, spinster, about 32, at her own dispose — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields. 18 July, 1672. V.
AntroTjiis, John, of St. Dunstan-in-the-West, London, gent., bachelor, about 23, and Mrs. Mary Powell, of Buckden, 00. Huntingdon, spinster, about 17, with consent of her mother, Mary Keene, alias Powell, widow — at Southa, Eaton, Buckden, or Ofiord Daoy, co. Hunting- don. 12 Aug. 1678. V.
Antrobus, Richard, of the Inner Temple, gent,, bachelor, 34, and Mary Seyliard, spinster, 22, daughter of Mary Seyliard, alias Lee, of Pens- hnrst, CO. Kent, who consents— at Penshurst or Heaver, 00. Kent. 20 Aug. 1078. F.
Antrobus, Robert, clerk, of St. Dunstan-in-the- East, bachelor, 30, and Mary Fairbeard, of Barfield, Berks, spinster, 20, consent of father, John Fairebeard, of same, gent. — at Littleton, 00. Middlesex. 17 Nov. 1038. B.
Antrobus, Robert, of St. Margaret, Lothbury, merchant taylor, bachelor, about 24, and Frances Hulse, of same, widow, about 25 — at St. Martin Outwich. 21 July, 1662. V.
Antrobus, Thomas, of Lincoln's Inn, and Eliza- beth Woodcock, spinster, of St. Mary, Alder- manbury — to marry there. 19 Sept. 1577. B.
Antrobus, William (Antarbus), draper, of St. Albans, Herts, and Johanna Rogers, spinster, daughter of John Rogers, late of same, " lanio- nis," deceased, gen. lie, 30 Nov. 1586. B.
Anyer, Thomas, of Keldon, co. Essex, and Agnes Halos, of Friering, in same county, widow, gen. lie, 19 June, 1574. B.
Apett, John, and Wonyfryde Harryson, of City of London, gen. lie, 3 Feb. 156^. B.
Aplegarthe, Humfroy, gent., and Hellen Eush- burghe, spinster, ot St. Dunstan-in-the-West — to marry there. 4 Aug. 1564. B.
Aplett, John, gent., and Elizabeth Roo, widow, of Kensington, Middlesex, relict of — Roo, of same, husbandman, deceased— -at Kensington. 26 Fob. 1583-4. B.
Apparry. See P/1bry.
Appleby, John, of St. Mary.Whitechapel, Middle- sex, and Mary Powell, of same, widow of Robert Powell, victualler — at St. Gregory, Loudon. 25 Oct. 1625. B.
Applebye, Roger (Aplebye), of St. Lawrence, Old Jewry, London, merchant taylor, and Jane Woste, of St. Gabriel, IFenchnroh, widow of
— Weste, late of same, merchant taylor, gijn. lie, 5 Dee 1593. B.
Appleston, John, innholder, and Susan Goodier, of Fulhani, Middlesex, spinster, daughter of
— Goodier — at Fulham, aforosaid. 24 Sept. 1613. B.
Appleton, Christopher, of Hurst, co. Berks, yeomau, and Mary Lovelasse, of city of West- minster, spinster — at St. Margaret, West- minster. 27 March, 1604. D.
Appleton, the Right Worshipful Sir Henry, knight and bavt., of Bemfleel, Essex, widower, 30, and Mrs. Alice Riplingham, of St. James, Clerkenwell, spinster, 22, daughter ot William Riplingham, esq., who consents — at St. Katherine Coleman. 11 Aug. 1628. B.
Appleton, Sir Henry, bart., of Much Baddow, Essex, bachelor, about 28, and Mrs. Mary Rivett, of St. Mary-at-Hill, London, spinster, about 19, mother's consent — at St. Mary-at- Hill aforesaid. 17 May, 1675. V.
Appleton, John, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, Middle- sex, husbandman, and Susan Grafton, spinster, of same, daughter of John Grafton, late of Hounslow, said county, yeoman, deceased, gen. lie, 29 April, 1590. B.
Appleton, Robert, of Gray's Inn, esq., bachelor, 28, and Mrs. Martha Moore, of Germaines, co. Norfolk, spinster, about 17, daughter of Thomas Moore, of same, gent., who consents — at Germaines parish church aforesaid. 27 April, 1649. F.
Appleton, William, of Bridewell precinct, bachelor, 26, and Mary Steele, of St. Bride, spinster, 19, her mother's consent, her father dead — at St. Bride or St. Andrew, Holborn. 9 July, 1687. B.
Appleton, William, of St. Qiles-iu-thc-Fiolds, bachelor, 40, and Elizabeth Stoddard, of same widow, 40 — at St. Giles-in-the-Fielda or Gray's Inn Chapel. 12 Nov. 1687. B.
33 John Appletree
[1521-1869.]
Tliomas Archer
Appletree, John, of St. MagDus, London, grocer, and Susan Hodges, of St. liawreuoe Pountuey, spinster, daughter of John Hodges, of same, clothworker — at St. Lawrence Poantney afore- said. 23 Feb. 161}. B.
Appleyard, Jonathan, of St. Catherine Creo Church, gent., bachelor, about 24, and Mrs. Maude Goddard, of same, spinster, about 27, and at own disposal — at St. Paul, Oovent Garden, or St. Mary, Savoy. 22 June, 1677. Y.
Apprice, &c. See Pbice.
Appnltre, Simon, and Agnes Rudyok. 21 Feb. ] 54^. F. [This entry erased.]
Apsley, Edward, gent., of St. James, Olerkenwell, bachelor, 30, and Anne Benton [Burton in margin], of same, widow, 40 — at St. Alphage. 3 Sept. 1629. B.
Apsley, Henry, of Sysehurst, Sussex, esq., bachelor, about 24, and Mrs. Cordelia Boys, of Hawkehurst, co. Kent, spinster, about 18, consent of father, Samuel Boys, of same, esq. — at St. Paul, Covent Garden, or St. Martin, CO. Middlesex. 9 June, 1676. V.
Apsley, John, of Greenwich, Kent, bachelor, 25, and Elizabeth Prideaux, of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex, spinster, 29, who alleges — at St. Clement aforesaid, or ... . 9 Jan. 169^. F.
Apsley, John, of Greenbank, parish of Stepney, mariner, bachelor, 28, and Rebecca Langham, of same, widow, 39 — at Stepney. 11 Aug. 1698. B.
Apsley, Michael, and Katherine Husey, of diocese of Chichester. 19 Jan. 154J. F.
Apsley, Sir Peter, of St. James, Westminster, widower, and Katherine Fortrey, of St. Martin- in-the-Fields, Middlesex, spinster, 22, her parents dead — at St. James, Westminster, or .... 24 Sept. 1687. F.
Aquanus, Cornelius, of St. Michael, Cornhill, goldsmith, and Mary Cloote, widow, relict of — Cloote, of St. Mary - at - Hill — at St. Botolph, Aldgate. 25 May, 1583. B.
Arbeto, Francis, of St. Peter - le - Poor, and Elizabeth Allen, widow, of St. Leonard, Shore- ditch, gen. lie, 26 July, 1578. B.
Arohbold, Francis, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, gent., bachelor, about 30, and Elizabeth Trapham, of same, about 20 [entry incom- plete]. 28 June, 1667. V.
Archbold, John. See Aeohibold.
Acchbould, William, of St. Saviour, Southwark, CO. Surrey, esq., bachelor, about 23, and Mrs. Mary Gillart, of Rye, 00. Sussex, spinster, about 17, her father's consent — at Beckley, Playdon, Bread, or Rye,co. Sussex. 25 April, 1673. y.
Archedale, Martin, of All Hallows! Barking, and Barbara Sexton, spinster, of St. Clave, Hart Street— at St. Olave aforesaid. 10 June, 1575. B.
Arche, Boniface, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, London, woodmonger, bachelor, and Joane Swene, of same, widow of William Swene, late of same, woodmonger — at same. 24 Jan. 161J. B.
Archer, Abraham, clerk, M.A., of Orsett, Essex, bachelor, 33, and Frances Holstcck, of same, spinster, 22, daughter of William Holstock, of same, gent., who consents — at St. Gregory or St. Lawrence, Old Jewry, or St. Magdalen, Old Fish Street. 8 Aug. 1628. B.
Archer, Cannon, of St. Mary, Whitechapel, Middlesex, waterman, and Anne Robson, of same, widow of Nathaniel Robson, late of same, gunner — at same. 17 Dec. 1603. B.
London Marriage Licences.
Archer, Charles, of St. Mary Somerset, London, tailor, and Margaret Harvey, of same, widow of William Harvey, late of same, tailor — at St. Triaity, Trinity Lane, London. 1 March, leif. B.
Archer, Edward, of South Weald, co. Essex, husbandman, and Joane Sandford, of same, spinster — at St. Audrew-in-the- Wardrobe, London. 25 Jan. 162f. B.
Archer, Francis, of St. Michael-ad-Bladum, London, tailor, and Isabell Bourne, of St. Michael, Cornhill, London, spinster, daughter of Reuben Bourne, of same, grocer — at St. Michael aforesaid. 22 Feb. 162^. B.
Archer, Henry, yeoman, and Clemenoe Wood- cooke, of Bpping, 00. Essex, widow of John Woodoocke, late of Munnisinge, co. Essex, yeoman, gen. lie, 1 Oct. 1595. B.
Archer, Henry, of Gray's Inn, Middlesex, gent., and Anne Crowche, of St. Mary Woolohurob, London, spinster, daughter of Giles Crowche, of same, haberdasher — at St. Mary Wool- church aforesaid. 13 Jan. 159|. B.
Archer, James, of Sabridgworth, 00. Herts, clerk, bachelor, and Ellen Dent, of the City of London, widow of George Dent, late of Buntingford, said county of Herts, clerk — at St. Botolph, Aldersgate, London. 25 March, 1612. B.
Archer, John, clerk, and Susan Rutton, of Trinity, Minories, London, spinster, daughter of Matthew Button, of same, gent. — at Trinity, Minories, aforesaid. 29 Deo. 1626. B.
Archer, John, and Elizabeth Home, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, London, spinster — at Stepney, co. Middlesex. 29 Jan. 162^. B.
Archer, John, of St. Giles, Cripplegate, gent., bachelor, about 26, and Mrs. Hester Cox, of Enfield, Middlesex, spinster, about 18, her father's consent — at Enfield or Tottenham, Middlesex. 15 Dec. 1673. Y.
Archer, John, of Gray's Inn, esq., bachelor, about 22, and Mrs. Mary Jhones, of Welford, Berks, spinster, about 17, consent of mother, Mrs. Anne Whitehead, of Titherley, co. South- ampton, now ux. — Whitehead, of same, esq. —at St. Clement Danes. 9 Feb. 167f . Y.
Archer, John, of Enfield, Middlesex, widower, 50, and Mary Middlemore, of Hackney, said county, spinster, 30, at her own disposal — at Enfield aforesaid or ... . 8 Aug. 1694. F.
Archer, Launcelot, and Joanna Seneger, of St. Andrew, Holborn — to marry there. 20 Deo. 1565. B.
Archer, Robert, of St. Martin - in - the • Fields, Middlesex, and Bridget lies, of the town of Colchester, 00. Essex, widow of Robert lies, late of same, sailor — at Great Braxted, co. Essex. 1 March, 160f . B.
Archer, Robert, of Middle Temple, esq., bachelor, about 26, and Mrs. Anne Ironside, of Heath and Reach, co. Beds, spinster, about 21, her father's consent — at Dunstable, Beds, or ... . 16 Deo. 1674. Y.
Archer, Simon, of Upton, 00. Warwick, bachelor, 30, and Elizabeth Hastings, of Hinton, 00. Northampton, spinster, 18, daughter of William Hastings, of same, gent., who con- sents— at St. Paul, Covent Garden, Middlesex, or ... . 4 April, 1684. F.
Archer, Thomas, of Sabridgworth, co. Herts, butcher, and Penelope Archer, of Royden, co. Essex, widow of Thomas Archer, late of same, butcher — at St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, London, 27 June, 1603, B.
35
Thomas Archer
[1521-1869.]
John Arnold
36
Archer, Thomas, of AaMom, Esbox, gent., widower, about 60, and Barbara Blinokoe, of Saflron Walden, said 00., widow, about 52 — at St. Mary Somerset, London. 10 Sept. 1662. V.
Archibold, John, gent., of St. Dunsfcan-in-tbe- West, bachelor, 23, and Anne GrifBn, of St. James, Clerkenwell, spinster, 20, her father dead — at St. Margaret Moses or St. Nicholas Cole Abbey. 1 Aug. 1633. B.
Ardeu, Henry, of Chelmsford, Essex, gent., widower, about 42, and Mary Boosie, of "Writtle, said county, spinster, about 28, at own disposal — at St. Magnus - the ■ Martyr, London. 22 March, 166$. V.
Ardem, John, and Dorothy Hassard|[in margin, Hazard], of city of Westminster, spinster. 15 June, 1639. D.
Ardeu, Robert, of St. Martin-in-the-Kelds, vintner, and Agnes Mather, of same, spinster — at any church in the jurisdiction of Westminster. 27 Nov. 1568. D.
Ardeu, Thomas, of the city of Westminster, esq., bachelor, 37, and Theodosia Long, of Parmen- ton, CO. Kent, widow, 40 — at St. Bartholomew- the-Less, London. 10 Oct. 1664. F.
Ardren, John, and Elizabeth Loo, " puella," of St. Andrew, Holborn — to marry there. 15 Jan. 15^. B. [In margin, " Nihil Soluta."]
Ardreue, William, jun., of St. Martin, Ludgate, gent., bachelor, about 28, and Mrs. Alice Smith, of .Great Wigborough, Essex, widow, about 34 — at Great Wigborough or Towels- bury, CO. Essex. 21 March, 166f . V.
Aveuon, Nicholas, of Westham, co. Essex, gent., and Margaret Spencer, widow, of St. Martin Outwioh — at St. Martin Outwioh. 14 Aug. 1576. B.
Argall, Reginald, of Lincoln's Inn, Middlesex, gent., and Anne Rowe, of Walthamstow, co. Essex, widow of William Rowe, late of same, esq. — at Walthamstow aforesaid. 7 April, 1599. B.
Argall, Thomas, of- the Inner Temple, esq., bachelor, 25, and Anne Wild, spinster, 17, daughter of Sir William Wild, knight and bart.. Recorder of London, who consents — at GreatSt.Bartholomew,London. 140ct.l662. E.
Aris, Richard, of Whitechapel, Middlesex, gent., bachelor, about 23, and Mary Hayes, of St. Bride, London, spinster, about 25, consent of mother, Anne Pleadwell, alias Hayes, of same — at Whitechapel aforesaid. 19 Dec. 1663. V.
Arkenstall, Giles, of London, gent., and Katherine Bladder, of Westminster, spinster. 12 April, 1583. D.
Arkeustall, Richard. See Artkynstall.
Arlcenstall, Robert, genb., of Ely, 00. Cambridge, widower, 40, and Constance Rayner, of St. Nicholas Cole Abbey, widow, about 30 — at St. Bartholomew-the-Less, or St. Mary Magdalen, Old Fish Street. 16 May, 1646. B.
Armager, James, of Stepney, Middlesex, gent., and Isabell Downer, of St. Sepulchre, London, widow of John Downer, late of same, wood- monger, gen. lie, 14 Jan. 159f. B.
Arme, Dionisius, and Ellen David widow, of St. Dunstan-in-the-West — to marry there. 16 Feb. 157f. B.
Armer, William, of All Hallows Barking, and Elizabeth Fraucklyn, of the City of London, spinster, gen. lie, 2 May, 1564, B.
Armetredyng', John, and Anne Lye, of diocese of Westminster. 23 March, 154§. F.
Armetredyugr, William (Armetredinge) , and Eliza- beth MuUener, of Eastham, spinster, gen. lie. 14 Dec. 1572. B.
Armiger, Edward, gent., of St. Giles, Cripplegate bach., 22, and Alse Budadell, of same, spinster, 21,fatherconseuts— atSt.Faith. 5July,1634.B.
Ariuiuger, William, esq., of St. Dnustan-in-the- West, London, bachelor, 27, and Elizabeth Blackman, of St. Catherine Coleman, London, widow, 30 — at Fulham, Middlesex. 28 Deo. 1665. P.
Armitchsted, William, of St. Sepulchre, London, skinner, and Margaret Cooper, of All Hallows- iu-the-Wall, London, widow — at All Hallows aforesaid. 15 Oct. 1624. B.
Armsted, Robert, of St. Sepulchre, London, and Bridget Carter, of same, spinster — at same. 12 Oct. 1611. B.
Armstrougf, James (Armestronge), and Jane Franoklin, spinster, of St. Dunstan-in-the-West —atSt.Bennet, Paul's Wharf. 4 April, 1578. B.
Armstrong, John, of Hamilton Court, co. Surrey (sic), gent., widower, about 31, and Hester Cleere, of same, spinster, about 24, consent of father, Henry Cleere, chirurgeon — at Kings- ton, Surrey. 28 Jan. 166*. V.
Armstrong, Robert, and EUena Pall, of St. Michael ad ripam Regine. 15 Jan. 153^. B.
Armstrong, Thomas (Armestronge), of St.Botolph, Bishopsgate, London, tallow - chandler, and Joanna Hyde, of Little St. Bartholomew, West Smithfield, widow of — Hyde, of same, yeoman, gen. lie, 24 Sept. 1588. B.
Armstrong, Thomas, of St. Margaret, West- minster, gent., and Margaret Miller, of same, spinster — at same. 15 May, 1610. D.
Armytage, Sir George, of Kirklees Hall, co. Tork, bart., bachelor, and Anna Maria Went- worth, of St. Mary-le-Bone, spinster, above 21 —at St. Mary-le-Bone. 9 April, 1760. B.
Aruald, Michael, of Ampthill, Beds, gent., bachelor, 25, and Susannah Blount, of Titten- hanger, Herts, spinster, 19, with consent of her father. Sir Thomas Pope Blount, bart., of same, attested by Richard Arnald, of St. Mavy-le-Bow, London, linendraper — at Shonloy, CO. Herts, or ... . 14 May, 1696. P.
Arne, Thomas, of St. Paul, Covent Garden, bachelor, 27 and upwards, and Mary Thurs- foild, of St. Martin-in-tlie-Fields, spinster, 20, with her father's consent — at St. Peter, CornhiU, or olsevvhore in diocese. 4 Fob. 168f . B.
Arueway, Thomas, of Westminster, gont., and Margaret Udall, of same, widow. 18 June, 1586. D.
Arney, John, of Yarwell, co. Northami^ton, gent., bachelor, 28, and Elizabeth Ground, of same, spinster, daughter of Margaret Arney, wife of Henry Arney, of same, gent., who alleges and attests his wife's consent — at Tarwell or Newton, co. Northampton, or Jarcott, co. Huntingdon. 25 May, 1667. F.
Arnold, Anthony, of St. Nicholas, city of Gloucester, gent., widower, about 51, and Mrs. Anne Guise, of the college, in said city, widow— at All Hallows, Bread Street, London. 1 Nor. 1678. V.
Arnold, James, of St. Alphage, London, coachman, and Anne Glover, of same, single woman — at St. Mary Somerset, London. 2 Dee 1623. B.
Arnold, John (Arnolde), husbandman, and Dioniso Cooke, spinster, of Bradwell-juxta-Mare, 00. Essex, daughter of Thomas Cooke, of Witham, said county, weaver — at Bradwell aforesaid. 4 Oct. 1585. B.
Arnold, John (Arnolde), grocer, of Great All Hallows, Thames Street, and Alice Shere- brooke, spinster, of St. Bartholomew, Ex- change, London, daughter of John Shere- brooke, late of same, founder, deceased — at St. Bartholomew Exchange. 2 Doc. 1586. B.
37
John Arnold
[1521-1869.
Thomas Arundell
38
Arnold, John, of Fulham, 00. Middlesex, yeoman, and Winifred Nelham, of Rialipp, said county, widow of — Nelham, late of Ickenham, said county, yeoman — at Acton, co. Middlesex. 2 Nov. 1611. B.
Arnold, Matthew, of St. Maiy Magdalen, oity of Oxford, bachelor, 27, and Prisoilla Sansbury, of Banbnry, co. Oxon, spinster, 21, daughter of Amos Sansbury, who consents — atWiokham, near Banbury, or ... , 1 Aug. 1701. F.
Arnold, Minhael, jun., of St. Margaret, West- minster, gent., bachelor, about 27, and Mrs. Dorothy Gongh, of same, spinster, about 20, her parents dead, consent of her brother, Henry Gough, of Penry Hall, 00. Stafford, esq., — at St. Margaret, Westminster, or new chapel of Westminster. 25 Feb. 167i. V.
Arnold, Michael, 1696. See Arnalb.
Arnold, Nemiah (so signed), of the city of Oxford, gent., bachelor, 30, and Martha Doiley, of Mixbury, co. Oxford, widow — at St. Sepul- chre, London, or .... 19 June, 1699, F.
Arnold, Eobert, of St. Mary Aldermary, citizen of London, bachelor, about 28, and Mary Tassall, spinster, about 20, consent of father, Samuel Vassall, of St. George, Southwark — at St. Mary Aldermary, or All Hallows Stayning, London, or Lambeth, Surrey. 12 Oct. 1661. V.
Arnold, Samuel, of St. Martin, Ludgate, London, haberdasher, and Mary Thornton, of St. Sepulchre, said oity, spinster, daughter of Thomas Thornton, late of same, glazier, deceased — at St. Olave, Silver Street, London. 9 April, 1602. B.
Arnold, Samuel, of Kensington, Middlesex, yeoman, bachelor, 20, and Elizabeth Panlet, ofWiladon, Middlesex,' spinster, 16, daughter of John Paulet, late of same, gent., consent of her mother and brother, alleged by William Arnold, of Kensington, yeoman — at St. Gregory, London. 12 Nov. 1632. B.
Arnold, Thomas, of London, blacksmith, and Elizabeth Holman, of same, spinster, daughter of Eobert Holman, of co. Berks, yeoman — at St. Sepulchre, London. 9 April, 1597. B.
Arnold, Thomas, of Ivill, Sussex, gent., bachelor, about 30, and Anne Ladds, of Croydon, Surrey, spinster, about 16, consent of father, Thomas Ladds, tanner — at Croydon aforesaid. 22 Nov. 1666. V.
Arnold, Tobias, of St. Dunstan-in-the-West, Loudon, brasier, and Susan Wittham, of same, spinster, daughter of Richard Wittham, of Dagenham, co. Essex, tanner — at St. Andrew- iu-the-Wardrobe, London. 8 Oct. 1610. B.
Arnold, William, of Fulham, Middlesex, yeoman, and Mary Marsh, of Hendon, said county, daughter of John Marsh, of same, yeoman, gen. lie, 9 Dec. 1596. B.
Arpe, Matthew, of St. Botolph, Aldersgate, and Amy Wyllson, ats StafEorde, widow, of Stepney —at Stepney. 18 Nov. 1574. B.
Arpe, Peter. 16 March, 160|. See Orpe.
Arragon, Robert, and Joanna Coole, widow, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, gen. lie, 1 July,
1567. B.
Arratt, William, and Alice Kinge, "puella" — to marry at St. Bthelbnrga, London. 11 Feb. 156f. B.
Arroweakar, John, yeoman, and Anne Sorrell, spinster, of Old Salinge, Essex, gen. lie, 31 Deo.
1568. B.
Arrowsmith, John (Arrowesmithe), and Agnes Brydges, widow, of Stepney — at Stepney. 25 Aug. 1576. B.
Arrowsmith, Peter, of St. Clement Danes, gent., bachelor, about 28, and Mrs. Rose Jermyn, of St. Dunstan-in-the-West, spinster, aged 19, consent of father, John Jermyn, of same, gent. — at St. Mary Mounthaw, London. 24 May, 1665. V.
Arrowsmith, Thomas, grocer, and Mary Cowley, of St. Dunstan-in-the-West, London, spinster, daughter of — Cowley, of . . . ., 00. Stafford, gent., gen. lie, 23 Nov. 1595. B.
Arrowsmith, William, and Joanna Maynford spinster, gen. lie, 15 Aug. 1561. B.
Artam, Leonard, and Johanna Germount^, widow, of St. Sepulchre — at St. Sepulchre. 16 Feb. 157i. B.
Arther, John, of Doncaster, 00. York, bachelor, about 25, and Katharine Msnwayring, spin- ster, about 22, daughter of Sarah Hunt, of same, widow, who consents, alleged by Thomas Baker, of Lambeth, co. Surrey, clerk — at Lambeth aforesaid. 16 June, 1673. F.
Arthur, John, of St. Clement, Eastcheap, and Alice Olyffe, of same, widow— at St. Clement aforesaid. 8 Deo. 1562. B.
Arthur, Richard, of All Saints, city of Bristol, gent., bachelor, about 22, and Mrs. Elizabeth Powlett, of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex, spinster, about 21, her parents dead — at St. Clement Danes aforesaid. 24 June, 1670. T.
Arthur, Robert, of Deptford, co. Kent, waterman, and Margaret Ballis, of Stepney, Middlesex, spinster, daughter of Christopher Ballis, of same, blacksmith — at Stepney aforesaid. 4 April, 1615. B.
Artkynstall, Richard, gent., and Elizabeth Ratt- liffe, of City of London, spinster, gen. lie 1 Jan. 1564. B.
Arton, Bartholomew, of King Street, St. Margaret, Westminster, butcher, and Elizabeth Pettiton, of same, widow — at St. Margaret, Westminster. 14 Feb. 159f . D.
Arton, Richard, of Westminster, bachelor, and Margaret Stake, of same, widow, [no place given]. "Last" of Feb. 161f. D.
Arundell, Francis, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, bachelor, above 21, and Isabella Wentworth, of same, maid of honour to the Queen, having the consent of her Majesty j above 21 — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields. 1 July, 1703. B.
Arundell, Gregory, gent., of Hampstead, Middle- sex, widower, 60, and Elizabeth Smithe, of same, maiden, 24, daughter of Robert Smith, late of same, yeoman, deceased, consent of her mother, Anne Smithe, of same, widow — at St. Andrew-in-the-Wardrobe. 28 May, 1612. B.
Arundell, the Right Hon. John, Baron Arundell, of Trerioe, bachelor, 20, consent of his mother, the Right Hon. Dame Jane Arundell, Baroness Dowager of Arundell, widow,and the Hon. Eliza- beth Wentworth, of St. James, Westminster, spinster, 25 — at St. James, Westminster. 1 June, 1722. B.
Arundell, John, jun., of St. James, Westminster, bachelor, 21, and Margaret Kelland, of same, 20— at St. Mary-le-Bone. 3 March, 170|. B.
Arundell, John, of Northall, co. Middlesex, yeoman, widower, and Dorothy Thornton, of same, spinster, daughter of Thomas Thornton, late of Greenford Magna, said county, yeoman, deceased — at Northall aforesaid . 23 July, 1608-
Arundell, Sir Matthew (Arundle), knight, and Mary Wrisley (Wriothesley) , spinster, daughter of Henry, late Earl of Southampton — to marry- in chapel of Mary, Countess of Southampton, in St. Andrew, Holborn. 18 June, 1585. B.
Arundell, Thomas, esq., and Mary Culpeper, widow — at St. Gregory, or elsewhere, in London. 9 Jan. 155 J. B.
c 2
39
Garrett Aryan
[1521-1869.] Henry Ashemore 40
Aryan, Garrett, mariner, and Mary Willyams, of St. Botolph, Aldgate, London, spinster, daughter of Henry Williamg, late of same, bricklayer, deceased — at St. Botolpli aforesaid. 23 Dec. 1598. B.
Asliury, John, of South Mima, Middlesex, glover, and Helen Archer, of same, widow of .Tamea Archer, husbandman — at St. Andrew-in-the- Wardrobe, London. 8 Sept. 1624. B.
Ascom, Charles, of Pennsylvania, in America, yeoman, bachelor, 42, and Marth Barle, of Eatcliffe, parish of Stepney, spinster, 20, at own disposal — at Stepney. 18 Aug. 1687. B.
Ascombe, Ephraim, gent., of St. Martin-in-the- Fields, bachelor, 26, and Martha Greene, of Boreham, Essex, spinster, 22, daughter of Eobert Greene, late of same, yeoman, deceased, consent of her mother, Priacilla Greene, of same — at Boreham aforesaid. 1 Feb. 163-J. B.
Asfordby, Charles, rector of Cranford, Middlesex, bachelor, 50, and Alice Tash, of Iver, Backs, spinster, 30, at her own disposal — at Stanwell or Harmsworth, Middlesex, or Iver aforesaid. 6 Nov. 1683. F.
Ashborne, Thomas, of Scroby, co. Notts, gent., and Elizabeth Wataon, of St. Bride, Loudon, spinster — at St. Dunstan-in-the-West, London. 15 Feb. 162|. B.
AsHbrooke, Samuel, and Elizabeth Barron, of St. Leonard, Foster Lane, London, widow — at St. Mary Magdalen, Old Fish Street, London. 25 July, 1626. B.
Ashburnham, Sir Denny, bart., of Eroomhara, CO. Sussex, widower, and Anne Watkins, spinster, 30, daughter of Dame Honor Wat- kins, of Tower Hill, and of the Tower parish, London, widow, who consents — at St. George, Southwark, co. Surrey. 4 Sept. 1675. F.
Ashbnmliani., John, esq., of the City of London, and Mary Fane, spinster, of said city, gen. lie. 28 Jun. 1569. B.
Ashbiiry, John (Ashberye) , baker, of All Hallows Steyning, and Anne Careles, spinster, of St. Sepulchre, daughter of George Careles, of Sutton Cofield, co. Warwick, smith — at St. Sepulchre. 3 Oct. 1586. B.
Aslibury, Joseph, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Middlesex, gent., bachelor, 27, and Elizabeth Moore, of same, spinster, about 24, her parents dead — at St. Martin aforesaid. 5 Aug. 1671. F.
Ashbiiry, William (Asheburie), and Anne Smith, spinster, of St. Clement Danes, gen. lie. 16 Feb. 157|. B.
Aslibury, William (Ashburye), of City of London, and Margt. Lysarde, widow, of St. Alban, Wood Street, 'gen. lie, 14 Dec. 1574. B.
Asliby, Anthony, and Johanna Gray, of Wool- church. 24 Jan. 153|. B.
Ashby, Bonaventure (Ashebeye), gent., and Sarah Sweettman, spinster, of Harefleld, Middlesex — at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf. 4 Dec. 1582. B.
Ashby, John (Asshebye), merchant taylor, of St. Alban, Wood Street, and Jane Denton, spinster, of St. Botolph, Aldersgate — at St. Botolph aforesaid. 25 Feb. 158?. B.
Ashby, John (Ashbey), of St. Martiu-in-the-Fielda, Middlesex, toome-maker, and Joane Watson, spinster, daughter of — Watson, deceased — at St. Peter, PauFs Wharf, London. 26 Dot. 1620. B.
Ashby, John, of St. Margaret Moses, London, merchant, widower, and Elizabeth Thorowgood, of Homohurch, Essex, spinster, 20, daughter of Richard Thorowgood, of same, esq., who consents — at Hornchuroh aforesaid, or the chapel of Havering belonging thereto. 29 Dec. 1671. F.
Ashby, Robert (Ashebie), and Dorothy Heydeu daughter of Francis Heyden, of Watfoi'd, Herts, spinster. 18 Feb. 158^. D.
Ashby, Stephen (Ashbey), and Martha PoUyn, of the city of Westminster, spinster. 3 Oct. 1633. D.
Ashby, Thomas (Ashbye), yeoman, and Agnes Broade, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, London, widow of Henry Broade, late of same, Salter —at St. Botolph aforesaid. 1 Nov. 1598. B.
Ashcroft, John, of Gray's Inn, bachelor, 24, and Hester Rea, of Molten, co. Lincoln, spinster, 21 and upwards, her parents dead— at St. Katherine, near the Tower, or the chapel within the Tower, London. 5 Aug. 1682. F.
Ashdowne, Bartholomew, gent., of Clifford's Inn, bachelor, 27, and Mary Cuddon, of Chiswick, Middlesex, 38, widow of Thomas Cuddon, gent., late of same, deceased — at Chiswick. 22 Jan. 164^. B.
Ashdowue, Thomas, 1620. See Aishdone.
Ashe, Benjamin, of Fleshford, co. Somerset, gent., bachelor, about 26, and Mrs. Elizabeth Stoakes, of Chippenham, Wilts, spinster, about 16, consent of mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Stoakes, of same, widow — at Chippenham, aforesaid. 6 May, 1670. V.
Ashe, Christopher (Ash), of St. Leonard, Shore- ditch, Middlesex, merchant tailor, and Joane Flendell, of same, spinster — at St. Leonard aforesaid. 5 Sept. 1625. B.
Ashe, Christophor, 1673. See Aishb.
Ashe, Hugh, of St. Bartholomew-the-Less, and Elizabeth Gale, of St. Mary Mounthaw — at St. Mary Mounthaw. 16 Jan. 155|. B.
Ashe, James, of the City of London, yeoman, and Agnes Lambden, spinster, of St. Gabriel Fenohurch, London, daughter of William Lambden, of Great Marlow, Bucks, hvisband- man. 2 July, 1589. B.
Ashe, James, of the Inner Temple, gent., bachelor, 30, and Playdell Tomlinson, of St. Olavo, Southwark, Surrey, spinster, about 20, her parents dead, with the consent of her guardian, Charlea Cox, esq., attested by Joseph Ashe, of Christ Church College, Oxford, gent. — at St. Olave aforesaid, or . . . 13 April, 1703. F.
Ashe, John, 1672. See AisnE.
Ashe, St. George, D.D., of St. James, Westminster, bachelor, 40, and Jane Newcomen, of same, widow, 27 — at All Hallows, Bread Street, London, or .... 29 May, 1695. F.
Ashe, William, of Inner Temple, esq., bachelor, about 22, and Mrs. Anne Popham, of Little- cott, Wilts, spinster, about 16, consent of her brother and guardian, Sir Francis Popham, K.B.— at Chelton, Wilts. 27 June, 1670. V.
Ashen, Thomas, of Horndon-on-the-Hill, Essex, gent., bachelor, about 22, and Mrs. Prances Carter, of Colue, co. Huntingdon, spinster, about 20, her mother's consent — at Rampton, co. Cambridge. 19 April, 1669. V.
Ashenden, John, of St. Martin, Ludgate, London, scrivener, and Barbara Andrewea, of St. Michael, Wood Street, spinster, daughter of George Andrewes, of same, gold-weaver — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Middlesex. 14 April, 1609. B.
Ashenhurst, John, of Great Baddow, co. Essex, gent., aged 30 and upwards, and Elizabeth Wells, of Great Gaddesden, Herts, spinster, 28, at St. Mary, Whiteohapel or Stratford, Bow, 00. Middlesex. 26 Aug. 1663. F. Ashemore, Henry, of Islington, oo. Middlesex, victualler, and Dorothy Webb, spinster, daughter of John Webb, deceased — at St. Mary, Islington, aforesaid. 12 Oct. 1615. B.
41 EdiuLindo A.sbofiukl [1521-1869.J
KoberL Aske
42
Ashfield, Edmunde (Ashefeilde), esq., of St. Sepulolire, London, and Clara Whorde, of Christ- church, Newgate, spinster, daughter of William Whorde, (? Horde) of same, esq., gen. lie, 12 Aug. 1588. B.
Ashfield, Sir John, knight, 30, and Dame Elizaheth Altham, 37, widow of Sir James Altham, knight, deceased — at St. Botoli^h, Aldersgate, London. 30 April, 1627. B.
Ashfield, Sir Richard (Ashfeild), bart., of St. Giles- in-y'-Fields, widower, 44, and Madam Daroase Burokett, of St. Katherine, Tower of London, widow— at St. Mary Magdalen, Old Fiah Street, St. Giles-in-the-Fields, or St. James, Clerken- well. 30 Deo. 1673. B.
Ashfield, Bichard (Ashfeild), of St. Giles-in-the- Fields, Middlesex, esq., bachelor, about 22, and Mrs. Mary Gunning, of St. Dunstan-in-the- West, spinster, about 22, her parents dead — at St. Mary Magdalene, Old Fish Street. 26 Dec. 1677. V.
Ashford, Thomas, of Axmiuster, co. Devon, clerk, bachelor, 36, and Milliam Galhampton, of Topsham, said county, spinster, 22, her father dead, and she at her own disposal — at Axminster, Kilmington, or Chardstoke, oo. Devon. 24 Nov. 1662. F.
Ashhnrst, Henry [seems to sign junior], of Hackney, Middlesex, gent., bachelor, about 24, and the Hon. Mrs. Dyana Pagett, of West Drayton, said county, spinster, about 22, con- sent of father, the Right Hon. William, Lord Pagett— at Hampton Magna, Middlesex. 26 March, 1670. V.
Ashhurst, Samuel, of St. Mary-at-Hill, London, gent., and Martha Smyth, of St. Giles, Cripple- gate, spinster, about 18, consent of her parents —at St. Giles aforesaid. 17 Oct. 1660. V.
Ashhurst, Samuel, of St. James, Clerkenwell, gent., widower, about 40, and Mrs. Elizabeth Perry, of Hornsey, Middlesex, spinster, about 24, and at own disposal — at Newington Green or Stoke Newington, Middlesex. 1 April, 1670. V.
Ashhurst, William ( Ashnrst) , of Hackney, Middle- sex, gent., bachelor, about 21, and Mrs. Eliza- beth Thompson, of Newington Green, said county, spinster, about 21, consent of father, Robert Thompson, of same, gent. — at Newing- ton aforesaid. 31 Aug. 1668. V.
Ashley, Anthony. The Right Hon. Anthony, Lord Ashley, alleged marriage of his son, Anthony Ashley, esq., and Dame Dorothy Manners, daughter of the Right Hon. John, Earl of Rutland — at parish church or chapel of Belvoir Castle, or in any church or chapel in province of Canterbury. 18 Aug. 1669. V.
Ashley, Francis, of St. Dunstan-in-the-West, gent., bachelor, about 28, and Miriam Merriton, of St. Clement Danes, widow, about 27 — at St. Clement Danes or St. Giles-in-the-Fielda. 4 March, 166?. V.
Ashley, Henry (Assheley), esq., and Katherine Basset, gent., of Hever, diocese of Canter- bury. 8 Dec. 1547. F.
Ashley, John (Assheley), of City of Loudon, esq., and Margaret Lenton, alias Grays, of co. Essex, gen. lie, 13 Oct. 1565. B.
Ashley, the Hon. Maurice, esq., of St. Giles-in- the-Pields, bachelor, 30, and Mrs. Catharine Popple, of St. Andrew, Holborn, spinster, 21 —at St. Giles aforesaid. 2 June, 1709. B.
Ashley, Michael, of Houghton, Notts, gent., bachelor, 27, and Mary Haywood, of same, spinster, 24, her parents dead, alleged by Francis Ashley, of Lincoln's Inn, gent. — at St. Mary, Savoy, or Islington, or Hampstead, CO, Middlesex. 29 May, 1666. F.
Ashley, William, of Tamworth, co. Stafford, gent., bachelor, about 31, and Mary Babington, of the city of Lichfield, spinster, about 31, con- sent of her parents — at Tamworth aforesaid.
6 Feb. 167i. V.
Ashmole, Elias, of Middle Temple, esq., widower, about 50, and Elizabeth Dugdale, of St, Dunstan-in-the-West, spinster, about 34 — at Gray's Inn Chapel, alleged by William Hobbs, of St. Mary, Savoy, gent. 24 Oct. 1668. V.
Ashton, Baldwin, of city of Westminster, yeoman, bachelor, 24, and Sara Croode, of same, spinster, 20, daughter of John Croode, late of . . . ., 00. Kent, yeoman, deceased, alleged by Robert Ashton, of same, 'gent. — at St. Pancraa. 14 Oct. 1630. B.
Ashton, Charles, of Gray's Inn, gent., and Alice Healye, spinster, of St. Mary, Aldermanbury, daughter of John Healye, late of Rochedall, CO. Lancaster, clothier, deceased, gen. lie,
7 Jan. 158^ B.
Ashtou, Lawrence, of St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, olothworker, widower, and Anne Monney, of Edmonton, co. Middlesex, spinster, her parents dead — at Edmonton aforesaid. 13 May, 1619. B.
Ashton, Matthew, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, gent., bachelor, 35, and Mrs. Ann Athy, of same, spinster, 23, consent of father, Mr. Richard Athy — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields. 26 Oct. 1696. B.
Ashton, Robert, 1564. See Aishton.
Ashton, Sedgwick, of the Middle Temple, bachelor, 23, and Sarah Capell, spinster, 18, daughter of Sarah Capell, of Willingale Doe, co. Essex, widow, who consents, alleged by Nicholas Ashton, of St. Gregory, London — at Bishops Hatfield, Herts, or .... 17 May, 1688. F.
Ashton, Thomas, of Upwood, oo. Huntingdon, gent., widower, about 50, and Elizabeth Hustwhat, of Ramsey, said county, widow, about 46 — at Ramsey aforesaid. 10 Jan. 166^. V.
Ashton, Walter, of Yerstone, co. Derby, gent., bachelor, about 26, and Mrs. Elizabeth Alestrie, of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex, spinster, about 21, her parents dead — at St. Mary, Savoy, Middlesex. 15 April, 1668. V.
Ashton, William, of St. Andrew, Holborn, gent., bachelor, about 25, and Mrs. Deborah Graves, of same, spinster, about 21, consent of guardian, her parents dead — at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, or St. Mary, Savoy. 30 Oct. 1673. V.
Ashton, William (i.e., Aasheton), D.D., of Beoken- ham, Kent, bachelor, 46, and Anne Peache, of Rotherhithe, co. Surrey, widow — at St. Ethel- burgh, London, or ... . 15 May, 1689. F.
Ashwell, Thomas, of St. Leonard, Shoreditch, gent., widower, about 46, and Jane Moye, of St. Nicholas Olave, London, spinster, about 26, and at own dispose — at St. Trinity, London. 31 Oct. 1663. V.
Ashwell, William (Asshewell), of St. Margaret, King's Lynn, of the diocese of Norwich, and Elizabeth Goldewell, of St. Botolph, Aldgate — at St. Botolph aforesaid. 17 Jan. 154^. B.
Ashewyn, Anthony, of St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, London, saddler, and Grace Bigrave, of same, spinster, daughter of — Bigrave, deceased — at St. Botolph aforesaid. 20 May, 1612. B.
Aske, Robert, of St. Mary, Aldermanbury, London, esq., widower, about 40, and Mrs. Mary Bonfoy, of Ealing, Middlesex, widow, about 40— at All Hallows-in-the-Wall, London. 17 Feb. 167g, V.
43
Josias Askerne
[1521-1869.J
Eichard Aston
44
Askerne, Josias, gent., of St. Bennett Sherehog, London, bachelor, 40, and Mary Munk, of precinct of Bridwell, widow, about same age — at St. Bennett Sherehogg aforesaid. 7 Feb. 162f. B.
Askeryck, William, and Elizabeth Ludford, of the diocese of Coventry and Lichfield. 26 April, 1548. F.
Askewe, Edward (Asttoe), esq., servant to our lord the king, and Margaret Skypwyth, of the diocese of Lincoln, widow. 27 April, 1545. F.
Aske-we, James, of St. Mary Magdalen, Milk Street, London, stationer, and Elizabeth Powell, widow, of St. Margaret Moses, Friday Street, London, relict of William Powell, late of All Hallows, Lombard Street, haberdasher, gen. lie, 28 July, 1590. B.
Askewe, James (Askew), tailor, bachelor, and Margaret Grundy, of St. Andrew, Holborn, London, widow of Thomas Grundy — at St. Andrew, Holborn, aforesaid. 10 Jan. 162^. B.
Askewe, John, 1545. See Aiscoughe.
Askewe, John, and Dorothy Ossybroke. 12 Deo. 1586. D.
Askewe, John (Askew), of city of Westminster, " nauta," and Elizabeth Burley, of same, widow. 3 Jan. 163|. D.
Askewe, Thomas (Askae), of Stepney, Middleser, sailor, and Elizabeth Baxter, widow of Andrew Baxter. 19 Jan. 162|. B.
Askewithe, William, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, and Kosina Gocianos, of Stepney, widow — at Bromley, Middlesex. 23 June, 1579. B.
Askey, Henry, of Stepney, 00. Middlesex, sailor, and Elizabeth Dimmooke, of same, spinster, daughter of Thomas Dimmooke, deceased — at Stepney aforesaid. 8 July, 1616. B.
Aslyn, John, poulter, and Johanna Hale, spinster, of Great All Hallows, Thames Street, daughter of — Hale, late of Awdenham, Herts, tailor, deceased — at St. George, Botolph Lane. 5 May, 1585. B.
Asmall, Thomas, of Elwioke, co. Durham, gent., bachelor, about 22, and Elizabeth Butler, of St. Andrew, Holborn, spinster, about 24, her parents dead — at Gray's Inn Chapel or St. Andrew, Holborn. 25 Nov. 1669. V.
Asmere, Eoger, of St. Andrew, Holborn, and Margaret Peter, spinster, of City of London — at St. Stephen, Coleman Street. 23 April, 1576. B.
Aspervill, Alexander, of Whayle, 00. Lancaster, gent., bachelor, 23, and Avis Wight, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, widow, 22, late nx. of William Wight, deceased — at St. Faith-the- Virgin, London. 15 Feb. 163^. B.
Aspinall, Eidgly, gent., of Great St. Helen, London, bachelor, 40, and Elizabeth Shelvocke, of St. Sepulchre, spinster, 49— at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf, or Little St. Bartholomew. 9 Oct. 1638. B.
Aspinwall, Gilbert, of Inner Temple, esq., bachelor, about 25, and Mrs. Mary Bushell, of Hackney, Middlesex, spinster, about 18, con- sent of father, Edward Bushel], merchant — — at Hackney, or St. Leonard, Shoreditoh. 9 May, 1672. V.
Aspley, William, clerk, vicar of Royston, and Alice Grewell, of same, gen. lie, 30 May, 1571. B.
Assheton, James, of St. Mary-le-Bow, bachelor,