Gibbs Family Tree

Notes


Matches 1,951 to 2,000 of 2,226

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
1951 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Martin, Lydia Denise (I2038)
 
1952 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Peter Noel Houldswoth Gibbs / Katharine Constance Hurst (F1095)
 
1953 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Alan Francis Gibbs / Francine Nicola Preston (F889)
 
1954 St. Mary's (RC), Cadogan Street Family: Charles Stanley Mordaunt / Edith Violet Wood (F1268)
 
1955 St. Mary's, Bryanston Square,  Family: Robert Wyndham Humphrey Marcial Bland / Mildred Dorothea Mordaunt (F1272)
 
1956 St. Paul's Church Family: Michael Aubrey Hamilton, MP / Lavinia Rosalind Ponsonby (F869)
 
1957 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: George Henry Paul Gibbs / Janet Elizabeth Scott (F833)
 
1958 St. Peter's in the East Family: John Arthur Gibbs / Emily Gertrude Franck Bright (F917)
 
1959 St. Peter's, Eaton Square, Family: Leslie Hamilton Gault / Iris Hilda Gordon Young (F1170)
 
1960 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Gordon-Lennox, Lucinda Jean (I1803)
 
1961 State of California. California Death Index, 1940-1997. Sacramento, CA, USA: State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics. Source (S518)
 
1962 State Registered Nurse (New Zealand), trained at Cook Hospital, Gisbourne and nursed for ten years in New Zealand and Australia. PNEU trained and now teaching 5 year olds at a school in Sussex.

Interests: flowers and flower arranging.

Last address: Nyewood House, Rogate, Petersfield, Hants. 
McLernon, Jane Isobel (I1958)
 
1963 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Hall, Stephen Francis (I4593)
 
1964 Succeeded Catherine Boevey on her death at Flaxley Abbey, 21 January 1726, in accordance with the will of William Boevey, proved 22 October 1692, by which he was required to take the name Boevey, and to "write himself" Crawley alias Boevey.
 
Crawley, Thomas alias Boevey (I3147)
 
1965 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Hanbury-Tracy, Nicholas Edward John 8th Baron Sudeley (I4090)
 
1966 Sudeley Charles George Hanbury-Tracy, 3rd Baron Sudeley (9 April 1837 – 28 April 1877), styled The Honourable Sudeley Hanbury-Tracy between 1858 and 1863, was a British colliery owner. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudeley_Hanbury-Tracy,_3rd_Baron_Sudeley

 
Hanbury-Tracy, Sudeley Charles George 3rd Baron Sudeley (I5238)
 
1967 Susanna Crawley (3rd daughter), born at Exeter 28 April 1790; died at Rugby unmarried on 14 April 1865, and was buried at Stowe.
 
Crawley, Susannah (I5491)
 
1968 Sussex Square Gibbs, Lady Lilian Mary (I2591)
 
1969 Sybella Mary Crawley-Boevey was a British author of Victorian fiction novels. She was born in 1851 at Flaxley Abbey, Gloucestershire, the youngest daughter of Sir Martin Hyde Crawley-Boevey, 4th Baronet. She is the sister of author and civil servant Arthur William Crawley Boevey and the cousin of famous Victorian author Charlotte Mary Yonge.

In 1888, Crawley-Boevey wrote Dene Forest Sketches, a study about the Forest of Dean where her father was the verderer. She followed this with two novels: the mystical-themed Beyond Cloudland and the love story Conscience Makes the Martyr.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sybella_Mary_Crawley-Boevey 
Crawley-Boevey, Sybella Mary (I2312)
 
1970 Sylvia was Francis's first cousin. 4th daughter of George Edward Adams, afterwards Cokayne. Born at 92 Inverness Terrace, Paddington, 18 May and baptised 19 June 1863 at St. John's, Paddington. Was buried at Putney Vale.

In the Great War she was a working member of the Putney Depot of Queen Mary's Needlework Guild.

Portraits: Oil, 'The Dead robin,' by E.U. Eddis (1870), last in possession of her brother Lord Cullen (engraved by Algernon Graves, circ. 1873). Water-colour by Fred. Pegram (1920); miniature by Mrs Kay Robertson; drawing by P. Downes; a chalk by E.U. Eddis (original drawing for 'The Dead Robin'; all four in possession of her husband in 1932; 'The Dead Robin' by Eddis, in possession of George Medley in 1980, now with Alexandra White (2021). 
Cokayne, Sylvia Beatrice (I2021)
 
1971 Taxed 1524, 1543 and 1546.

There are 13 men at the beginning of this Gibbs Family Tree: John Gibbe, Henry Gibbe, Richard Gybbe, Thomas Gybbe, John Gybbe, Rev. William Gybbe, Geroge Gybbe, Walter Gybbe, Andrew Gybbe, George Gibb, Richard Gibbe, Robert Gibbe and Thomas Gibbs who are set down as the first three generations. The connection between these 13 men is conjectural. In the 1903 edition of the 'Gibbs Pedigree' there were only two conjecturally arranged generations but they embraced the same men, except that Richard and John Gibbe were not brought in, though the latter was mentioned under John the buyer of Pytte. The new arrangement follows Appendix XIII of Lord Hunsdon's 'Gibbs of Fenton'. His Chapter III must be read to appreciate the full force of the arguments for relationship between these persons and between them and the Gibbs family of Fenton, but the following short - though incomplete - statement may be useful.

It is not very likely that among these 13 men living in the contiguous parishes of Clyst St. George and Woodbury there would be any of an unrelated family of the same surname, and there is actual evidence of relationship in some cases. Thus, John Gibbe renting Pytte and John Gybbe succeeding him (first as a renter, afterwards as owner) declares them to be relations and with little doubt father and son, while George Gibb, who is known to be father of John of Pytte must also have owned Pytte and have succeeded John as his son as shown in the Chart, or perhaps as his nephew. Again, there is evidence pointing to relationship between Henry of Woodbury, William, the rector and George of Claypitt, and between the last named and John of Pytte.

The name, not having been found in the parishes concerned at a period earlier than that of the first generation suggests that the family had recently come from outside to settle there. This is consistent with the tradition that the family was an offshoot from that of Fenton in Dartington (near Totnes and under 30 miles from Clyst St. George), a tradition till recently mainly only supported by an unofficial Ordinary of Arms of about 1689 in the College of Arms which quoted the Dartington family's arms as belonging to both families, and to the actual use of those arms by members of the Clyst family from at least 1691 onwards. Now, however, that Lord Hunsdon has produced other evidence for the connection, and especially evidence that William, the rector, was some relation of that family (and if he, then all the Clyst family), little doubt remains of the truth of the tradition. The pedigree of Gibbs of Fenton, embodying Lord Hunsdon's surmise that John Gybbe of Pytte was a son of William Gibbs of Fenton who died before October, 1487, is therefore inserted before Chart 1.
In the Lay Subsidy Roll of 15 Henry VIII, quoted on p. 80 of 'Gibbs of Fenton', he appears as 'John Gybbe at Pytte asessed for his goods at 100s tax 2s.6d.' Pytte, the cradle of our Clyst St. George family, is the house, 300 yards north of the church, which remained in the family till 1790, was restored to it in 1839. John probably died before 1543, the year of the next subsidy ('Gibbs of Fenton', p.54).

The tax dates referred to are those of the Lay Subsidies ordered by Henry VIII respectively (see 'Gibbs of Fenton', pp. 54-5). Later Clyst St. George assessments to subsidies were in 3 Edward VI, 13, 23 (1580-1), and 31, Elizabeth; and 21 James I; all, together with the earlier ones, extracted on pp. 76-88 of 'Gibbs of Fenton'. In a case such as No. 4 it cannot be quite certain that the Henry Gibbs taxed in 1524 was the same Henry as he who died and made his will in 1549. In such cases the tax date is inserted in the Chart with a ?. 
Gibbe, John (I2955)
 
1972 Taxed 1531 at Clyst St. George; buried there 5 June 1584. Joanes, Anne (I1240)
 
1973 Taxed at Clyst St. George 1581, buried there 14 December 1593. Will dated 10 October, proved 20 December 1593 in the Consistory Court of the Dean and Chapter of Exeter or the Archdeaconry Court of Exeter. Monumental Inscriptions in Clyst St. George church.

Succeeded his father at Claypitt. His Monumental Inscriptions are on a brass on the south wall of Clyst St. George church and a tile on the nave floor. Both give December 1594 for his burial, which is obviously wrong, no such burial being in the Register. His will mentions his wife Cecily, son William, daughters Margaret, Christian, and Jane the wife of Baker. Residuary legatee of William, the rector, Rev. William Gybbe. 
Gibbe, John of Claypitt (I2958)
 
1974 Taxed at Clyst St. George 1581; buried there 25 August 1606. Will dated 24 February 1605-6, proved 29 August 1606 in the Archdeaconry Court of Exeter.

He is the earliest actually proved ancestor of the family. The pedigree from this George and his wives was recorded in the books of the College of Arms in 1858; see p. xvi, 1 of the Additions of 1927 to 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs. George's will, proved by his widow Mary, mentions his sons John the elder, John the younger, Edward, Andrew, and George, daughter Catherine, grandson George, son of John the elder, also his brother-in-law Andrew Loveringe. John Gib a witness, William Gib an overseer of the will. 
Gibbes, George Richard of Clyst St George (I100)
 
1975 Taxed there 1524, 1543 and 1546, bought Claypitt there 1560; buried at Clyst St. George 1562.

Claypitt, which no longer exists, was situated near to and South of the church at Clyst St. George. For George's purchase of it from Lord Wentworth through William, the rector, see entry for Rev. William Gybbe. The agreement shows that it was '1 messuage, 1 garden, 20 acres of land, 1 acre of meadow and 2 acres of marshland'. 
Gybbe, George of Claypitt (I2957)
 
1976 Technical advisor with the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). He has an MPH and has worked as researcher, epidemiologist and disease prevention expert in the UK, Australia, the Pacific and Eastern Europe and Central Asia. His work within UNFPA covers support for key and other vulnerable populations, co-leading the Interagency Working Group on SRHR/HIV Linkages (to strengthen linkages between HIV and broader SRHR programmes) and the Interagency Working Group on HIV and Key Populations (to coordinate community-led programmes with and for key populations). His work focuses on developing human rights-based, people-centred services and community empowerment for reducing risk of HIV infection. Sladden, Tim (I615)
 
1977 Temple Hill Downall, Annie Katharina (I2587)
 
1978 Temple Hill Gibbs, Rev. William Cobham (I2579)
 
1979 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Source (S348)
 
1980 The barony Edgcumbe of Mount Edgcumbe in the County of Cornwall, was created in 1742. In 1781 the title became Viscount Mount Edgcumbe and Valletort and in 1789 an Earldom was created.

Kenelm William Edward Edgcumbe was a Fellow of University College, London; late Lt-Col RE (TA); JP for Herts; son of the late Richard Edgcumbe; succeeded his cousin to the title in 1944. He married in 1906 Lillian Agnes daughter of Col A C Arkwright of Hatfield Place Essex. They had three daughters and one son who was killed in action in 1940.
He was educated at Harrow (with Winston Churchill who was said to be stupid and unpopular) and studied Electrical Engineering in Germany and at University College, London. He served throughout the 1914-18 war. He was an Hon. Member and past president of the Institution of Electrical Engineers; late Hon. Secretary of the International Electrotechnical Commission; Fellow (Past President) of the Illuminating Engineering Society of Great britain; Member of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers; He was M.I.C.E. and F Inst P.

He was a keen Territorial for 20 years, a DL for the County of Cornwall from 1961 until his death and awarded the Order of St john in 1964. He was succeeded by his cousin Edward Piers Edgcumbe (b 1908) elder son of late George Valletort Edgcumbe who had married in 1944 Victoria Effie Warbrick. 
Edgcumbe, Kenelm William Edward 6th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe (I1263)
 
1981 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R) (Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998), Source Medium: (null)
_MASTER: Y
Source (S319)
 
1982 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R) (Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998), Source Medium: (null)
_MASTER: Y
Source (S21)
 
1983 The Cokayne association with Rushton in Northamptonshire arose when Sir William Cokayne bought Rushton Hall from the Tresham family in 1614. William's son Charles was made Viscount Cullen. The hall was sold to the Hope family in 1731: it originally contained a small church, which stood near the entrance, but this was demolished in the early 18th century and the glass incorporated into the Great Hall of the hall.
 
Cokayne, William (I1218)
 
1984 The Diary of Frances Lady Shelley 1818-1873
https://ia800202.us.archive.org/10/items/diaryoffrancesla02sheluoft/diaryoffrancesla02sheluoft.pdf 
Winckley, Frances Lady Shelley (I3298)
 
1985 The Duke of York's School Crutchley, The Hon. Alice Mary (I1984)
 
1986 The elder son of the late Mr. Charles Edward Bright and the Hon. Mrs. Bright, he was educated at Melbourne Grammar School and Eton College, England. He was a leader in Victorian commerce for many years, and was president of the Associated Chambers of Commerce in 1928-29. He was created C.B.E. in 1918. Bright, Alfred Ernest (I5289)
 
1987 The eldest of John Charles Molteno’s children. When her mother, Elizabeth Maria Jarvis, died in 1874, Betty took responsibility for bringing up several of her younger brothers. Only when she was in her mid thirties, did she begin teaching. During the 1890s, she was headmistress of The Collegiate School for Girls in Port Elizabeth, which is where she met her lifelong partner, Alice Greene.

Betty is perhaps the most remarkable of John Charles’s children. She took up many causes, including opposition to Britain’s war against the Boer Republics. She was active in support of the rights of Indian South Africans (she was a friend of Gandhi and spoke at many of his public meetings).

She also supported Black South Africans’ early struggles over land and political rights, and lived for a time in a cottage built for her at the Ohlange Institute (next door to Gandhi’s Phoenix Settlement) which was founded by John Dube, first President General of the African National Congress. She was a particular friend of Sol Plaatje. Betty was also a feminist and demanded the franchise for women.

 
Molteno, Elizabeth Maria (I371)
 
1988 The eldest son of George Anthony Molteno. Anthony took over the family printselling business in Pall Mall. For many years he prospered, but eventually he went bankrupt towards the end of his life. This marked the end of over half a century of Molteno art dealing in London. A devoted Roman Catholic, Anthony was executor of his father’s will. He married Mary Mylius. They had eight children. Only two of these offspring married and had children – Mary Molteno, who married Charles Parker, agent to the Duke of Bedford; and William ‘Frederick’ Molteno, who married Letitia Jones. The latter’s descendants are on the Family Tree, but Charles and Mary Parker’s have not yet been traced genealogically.
 
Molteno, James Anthony (I3405)
 
1989 The family name was originally Crawley but his grandfather took the name of Crawley-Boevey under the terms of the will of William Boevey of Flaxley Abbey in 1692. Only the male descendants of the eldest some seem to have used the additional surname.
Thomas inherited Flaxley estate in 1726 
Crawley, Thomas (I3145)
 
1990 The History of Houses of Parliament website: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1558-1603/member/gibbes-william-i-1570 Gibbs, William of Fenton (I2946)
 
1991 The Hon. Edith Caroline Gibbs (only daughter), born at 13 Hyde Park Street, Paddington, 2 November and baptised privately 19 December 1848, received into the Church 26 February 1850 at St. John's, Hampstead. Died unmarried 25 July 1942.

She and her brother, Vicary Gibbs, lived with their father and on his death they sold the lease of St. Dunstan's, Regent's Park, which he left them, taking 12 Upper Belgrave St., Westminster, for their London residence while continuing to occupy Aldenham House as tenants of their brother Alban Lord Aldenham.

Portraits: in a group with her mother and brother Kenneth by E.U. Eddis (oil) 1859 in possession of Andrew Antony. Portrait by F.G Cotman 1876, Head by J. Sant R. A. Chalk drawing by E.Uk. Eddis 1872. Miniature by Edith Kemp-Welch 1948. All in possession of Lord Aldenham in 1932. 
Gibbs, Edith Caroline (I1632)
 
1992 The Hon. Frederick Stephen Archibald Hanbury-Tracy (15 September 1848 – 9 August 1906), was a British politician.

Hanbury-Tracy was a younger son of Thomas Hanbury-Tracy, 2nd Baron Sudeley, and his wife Emma Elizabeth Alicia, daughter of George Hay Dawkins-Pennant, of Baron Penrhyn's family. Charles Hanbury-Tracy, 4th Baron Sudeley, was his elder brother. He was educated privately and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA.

He succeeded the latter as Member of Parliament for Montgomery in 1877, a seat he held until 1885, and again from 1886 to 1892.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Hanbury-Tracy
 
Hanbury-Tracy, Frederick Stephen Archibald (I5227)
 
1993 The Honorable Thomas Addis Emmet served as Attorney General of New York State in 1812. He was an Irish patriot and rebel who came to the United States in 1804 after his brother, fellow Irish rebel Robert Emmet, was hanged in 1803 for his part in the 1798 Rebellion. A Cenotaph and Monument was erected to honor him in the churchyard of Saint Paul's Chapel on Fulton Street.  Emmet, Thomas Addis (I5505)
 
1994 The Honourable George Edgcumbe (23 June 1800 – 18 February 1882) was a British diplomat and politician.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Edgcumbe_(1800–1882) 
Edgcumbe, Hon. George (I3295)
 
1995 The illegitimate daughter of Miss Plowden and the Earl of Craven. She took her nurses name (Sweedland). A great beauty at school in Bath. She was drawn in pastels by Sir Thomas Lawrence. Sweetland, Harriet (I1260)
 
1996 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Lynch-Staunton, Captain Charles H C (I2509)
 
1997 The Manor House Gibbs, The Hon. Henry Lloyd (I1637)
 
1998 The Manor House Gibbs, Christian Louisa (I1987)
 
1999 The National Archives of the UK (TNA): Public Record Office (PRO).

War Office: Soldiers’ Documents, First World War ‘Burnt Documents’ (Microfilm Copies); (The National Archives Microfilm Publication WO363); Records created or inherited by the War Office, Armed Forces, Judge Advocate General, and related bodies; The National Archives of the UK (TNA), Kew, Surrey, England.

The National Archives give no warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or fitness for the purpose of the information provided. Images may be used only for purposes of research, private study or education. Applications for any other use should be made to The National Archives Image Library, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 4DU, Tel: 020 8392 5225. Fax: 020 8392 5266.

 
Source (S486)
 
2000 The National Archives of the UK, Kew, Surrey, England.
  • Admiralty: Service Records, Registers, Returns and Certificates. ADM 6/433-439.
  • Admiralty and predecessors: Office of the Director General of the Medical Department of the Navy and predecessors: Service Registers and Registers of Deaths and Injuries. ADM 104/102-118,122-149.
  • Admiralty: Royal Marines, Chatham Division: Order, Discharge and Letter Books, Registers and Returns. ADM 183/114-120.
  • Admiralty: Royal Marines, Plymouth Division: Order, Discharge and Letter Books, Registers and Returns. ADM 184/43-54.
  • Admiralty: Naval Casualties, Indexes, War Grave Rolls and Statistics Book, First World War. ADM 242/1-15.
  • Admiralty and Ministry of Defence: Chaplain of the Fleet and successors: Registers of Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages and Burials. ADM 338/141,145.
  • War Office: Officers' Birth Certificates, Wills and Personal Papers. WO 42/1-75.
  • War Office and predecessors: Records of Militia Regiments. WO 68/429A,441C,441D,497,499A,499B.
  • Ordnance Office, Military Branch, and War Office: Royal Artillery Records of Service and Papers. WO 69/67-69,72,73,551-573,575-577,579,580,582.
 
Source (S375)
 

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