_Antoine ACHIN ______ | m 1646 _Andre ACHIN ________| | (1646 - ....) m 1667| | |_Anne _______________ | m 1646 | |--Barbe ACHIN | (1676 - ....) | _Martin PIETON ______ | | m 1651 |_Francoise PIETON ___| (1651 - 1700) m 1667| |_Catherine BOURG ____ m 1651
Date of Import: Oct 24, 2000
Date of Import: Oct 24, 2000
Date of Import: Oct 24, 2000
__ | _Hugh BARDOLF _______| | | | |__ | | |--Isolde (Iseude) BARDOLF | (1182 - 1246) | __ | | |_Isobel AQUILLION ___| | |__
[93122]
also b. 1168
The Village of Hoo St Werburgh
Here we have another of those Hoo Peninsular villages distinguished from its neighbours by the name of its 13th century church, one of the wonders of which is the yew tree in the churchyard which is said to be anything from six hundred to a thousand
years old.
In fact, the parish became formally Hoo St Werburgh only as recently as 1968. Before that, although the name was used, most of the local people simply called it Hoo - as, indeed, they still do.
When Richard Church wrote about Hoo in 1948 he referred to it as cut off from the mainstream of life, but since then the mainstream has broadened out a bit in this part of the county and today Hoo St Werburgh is no longer small and remote, but quite
large, although there is still a sense of remoteness about it, and some vestiges of its past linger among the modernity.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the village was almost thrust into that mainstream of life when land that had been wholly agricultural until then began to be valued more as an industrial raw material. Gravel was dug there, bricks were made
there, so was pottery. The barges that carried away the products busied the river frontage. The industrial life of Hoo St Werburgh lasted until the 1930s after which it declined, leaving behind the pits from which the mineral wealth was dig.
The embarrassing Dutch raid on the Medway in 1667 brought soldiers to Hoo, to man Cockham Wood Fort, but the fort was never needed and very little of it remains now. The Hoo fort, like its twin, Darnet Fort, was built in the 1860s as part of the
defences against the expected Napoleonic invasion. Both were originally intended to mount twenty-five guns on two tiers, but while the forts were still being built it was obvious they were going to sink into the marsh under the weight of that much
ordnance, and in the end the Hoo fort was armed with only eleven 9 inch rifled muzzle loaders, with stores and accommodation for the gunners.
The fort remains in reasonably good condition and although it was disarmed before WW1 it remained Ministry of Defence property and cannot be visited.
Neither the brickworks nor the pottery have survived and today farming is again the most important local industry, while most of the residents look to the Medway Towns, Thames-side or London for their daily bread.
[46579] Still Living.
[112481] CHAN20 Jun 2001
__ | _Jacques DAUDELIN ___| | (1611 - ....) m 1636| | |__ | | |--Nicolas DAUDELIN | (1636 - ....) | __ | | |_Jeanne LEPINE ______| (1615 - ....) m 1636| |__
Date of Import: Oct 24, 2000
Date of Import: Oct 24, 2000
Date of Import: Oct 24, 2000
Date of Import: Oct 24, 2000
_____________________ | _Richard GODFREY ____| | | | |_____________________ | | |--John GODFREY | | _John II TURNER _____+ | | |_Jane TURNER ________| | |_Jane _______________
_Robert NEVILLE ________ | (1223 - 1282) m 1240 _Robert de NEVILLE __| | (1240 - 1271) m 1260| | |_Mrs Robert de NEVILLE _ | (1223 - 1273) m 1240 | |--Anastacia de NEVILLE | (1261 - 1321) | _Ralph FITZ RANDOLPH ___ | | (1206 - ....) |_Mary FITZRANDOLPH __| (1244 - ....) m 1260| |_Anastasia PERCY _______ (1216 - ....)
[77710]
Ancestral File Number:
[77711]
[S578]
Ancestral File (TM)
[93024]
After the massive battle of Mons Graupius in 80-84, where Agricola marched with 30000 romans and killed, according to tacitus, 10000 caledonians, but then retreated, the romans seemed to have left northern caledonia alone. During the time of fedlimid,
[92759]
Francis West: On 2 November 1640 Francis West and Margery his wife were
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Feidhlimhioh (Fedlimid) REACHTMAR
[93024]
____ - ____
Father: Tuathal TEACHTMAN
Family 1
:
__
|
_Tuathal TEACHTMAN __|
| (0100 - ....) |
| |__
|
|
|--Feidhlimhioh (Fedlimid) REACHTMAR
|
| __
| |
|_____________________|
|
|__
the Romans are intent on keeping Briton, building the Hadrian wall in 122, and the Antonine wall in 142, which will be garrisoned for the next 20 yrs. Thus Caledonia and the Picts were prevented (saved) from being romanized like the britains and
angles.
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Emma Elizabeth SHAFFER
____ - ____
Father: Michael SHAFFER
Mother: Mary INFIELD
_____________________
|
_Michael SHAFFER ____|
| |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Emma Elizabeth SHAFFER
|
| _Frederick INFIELD __+
| |
|_Mary INFIELD _______|
|
|_Catherine BOYER ____
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Francis WEST
[92759]
1610 - ____
Family 1
: Margaret REEVES
found guilty of incontinency with one another before marriage, and both
were sentenced to sit in the stocks; interestingly, Francis was also
sentenced to build a pair of stocks in Duxbury within two months.
Source: Plymouth Colony: Its History and People 1620-169, Part Two:
Topical Narratives, Chapter 12: Morality and Sex
__________________________________________________________________________
_________________
The 1643 Able to Bear Arms (ATBA) List, Duxborrow, 1643, Francis West
Source: Plymouth Colony: Its History and People 1620-169, Part Four:
Appendices, Appendix J:
__________________________________________________________________________
_______________
1623 June (end) The arrival of the Plantation with Captain Francis West
with his commission as Admiral of New England.
Source: Plimoth Plantation, P. O. Box 1620, Plymouth, MA 02362, (508)
746-1622
__________________________________________________________________________
_________________
Francis West, was born about 1606 and lived in Salisbury, Wiltshire,
England. He was a carpenter by trade, and is said to have come to Duxbury
as a single man, upon the invitation of Nathaniel Thomas of Marshfield,
and after his arrival .in his new home, married Margaret Reeves, Feb. 27,
1639, by whom he had five children, Mary (1640), Samuel (1643), Thomas
(1646), Peter (1648), and Ruth (1651). He died Jan. 2, 1692, aged 86
years. The descendants of Samuel are mostly found in Connecticut, and
those of Peter in Plymouth Colony. [ See N. E. Gen. Reg., LX, 142
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