Gibbs Family Tree

Notes


Matches 901 to 950 of 2,228

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901 Buried 29 May 1654 at St. Mary Arches, Exeter. Gibbs, Rebecca (I3020)
 
902 Buried at Clyst St. George 7 May 1618. Administration of the Will 1 May 1619 in the Archdeaconry Court of Exeter. This Administration mentions his widow Joan, mentions John Gibbe. Gibbe, Richard (I194)
 
903 Buried in the Chancel of Beaumaris Church Woodward, Mary Albinia (I1545)
 
904 Buried in the Church of St. Mary Arches in Exeter. Will dated 12 September 1668, proved 6 November 1668 in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Doctors Commons, London. Gibbs, Abraham of Exeter (I2916)
 
905 Burke, Ashworth P. Burke’s Family Records. Baltimore, MD, USA: Clearfield Company (Genealogical Publishing Co.), 1994. Source (S463)
 
906 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Carr-Gomm, Adam Richard (I2522)
 
907 By Rev. Abraham Pierson Family: Francis Lindley / Susanna Culpeper (F542)
 
908 Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England Source (S416)
 
909 Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England Source (S398)
 
910 Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England Source (S412)
 
911 Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England Source (S399)
 
912 Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England Source (S381)
 
913 Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England Source (S382)
 
914 Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England Source (S383)
 
915 Calmer Hambro (1747-1806) was a Danish merchant and banker.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calmer_Hambro 
Hambro Levy, Calmer Joachim (I1405)
 
916 Cambridge House, Piccadilly Frederick, Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge Adolphus (I4339)
 
917 Canada. "Soldiers of the First World War (1914-1918)." Record Group 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 4930 - 35. Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa. Source (S451)
 
918 Cancer Fleming, Robert Duncan Bothwell (I1887)
 
919 Cancer Lategan, Johannes Paulus (I3503)
 
920 Capt. 5th Bn. E. Yorks Regt. (T.A.). Served in World War II (1939-43). Wounded and retired from ill-health 1944. Member Queen's Body Guard for Scotland (Royal Co. of Archers). Macdonald of Sleat, Captain Alexander Somerled Angus Bosville ACA (I2510)
 
921 Captain James Neale O'Neale , a purser for King Charles I.
1615–1684
Birth 1615 ENGLAND • "King Charles I was married to Queen Henrietta Maria (formerly of Spain). Capt. Neale married Ann Gill, who was a maid in the Queen's court. When Charles was beheaded, Henrietta Maria went back to Spain."
Death 3/26/1684 MD, CHARLES CO • "When James & Ann had a daughter, they named her "Henrietta Maria" and the Queen was her godmother. James & Ann came to Maryland... Their daughter, Henrietta Maria married a Lloyd. Every generation through today, has had a "Henrietta Maria"
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1615 England • "King Charles I was married to Queen Henrietta Maria (formerly of Spain). Capt. Neale married Ann Gill, who was a maid in the Queen's court. When Charles was beheaded, Henrietta Maria went back to Spain."

1615

(AGE)
Death of Father Raphael O'Neale(1584–1643)
10 Dec 1643 • Wollaston, Northamptonshire, England

1643

28
Birth of Daughter Henrietta Maria Neale (read bio re name)(1647–1697)
27 Mar 1647 • Isle of Wight, Isle of Wight, Virginia, Colonies

1647

32

Death
3/26/1684 MD, Charles Co • "When James & Ann had a daughter, they named her "Henrietta Maria" and the Queen was her godmother. James & Ann came to Maryland... Their daughter, Henrietta Maria married a Lloyd. Every generation through today, has had a "Henrietta Maria"

1684

69

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Raphael O'Neale

1584–1643
Unknown Mother

Spouse & Children

Anna Maria Gill

1647–1697
Henrietta Maria Neale (read bio re name)

1647–1697



Anna Maria Gill
1647–1697
Birth 27 MAR 1647 • England or Spain
Death 21 MAY 1697 • MD, Talbot County, Maryland, USA
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27 Mar 1647 • England or Spain

1647

(AGE)
Death of Husband Captain James Neale O'Neale , a purser for King Charles I.(1615–1684)
3/26/1684 MD, Charles Co • "When James & Ann had a daughter, they named her "Henrietta Maria" and the Queen was her godmother. James & Ann came to Maryland... Their daughter, Henrietta Maria married a Lloyd. Every generation through today, has had a "Henrietta Maria"

1684

36
Death of Daughter Henrietta Maria Neale (read bio re name)(1647–1697)
21 May 1697 • Talbot, Maryland, Colonies

1697

50

Death
21 May 1697 • MD, Talbot County, Maryland, USA

1697

50

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Unknown Father
Unknown Mother

Spouse & Children

Captain James Neale O'Neale , a purser for King Charles I.

1615–1684
Henrietta Maria Neale (read bio re name)

1647–1697
 
Gill, Anne Marie (I3150)
 
922 Captain Marcus McCausland, as an officer in the Ulster Defence Regiment, became the first soldier to be murdered by the Official IRA on 4th March 1972 when he was kidnapped while travelling home after visiting friends in Donegal. He was the third generation of the McCausland family to serve as a Unionist Councillor in the Limavady area following the footsteps of his Grandfather Maurice and father Conolly.  McCausland, Marcus Edgcumbe (I1391)
 
923 Car Accident Otter, Emily Anna (I1733)
 
924 Car Crash Cowles, Harriet Virginia Spencer (I2288)
 
925 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. B. (I5862)
 
926 Carol Williamson (nee Molteno) wrote recollections of her life when she was already in her mid eighties. A copy of these is available on the Molteno family website at:

https://www.moltenofamily.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Carol-Williamson-Reminiscences-pdf.pdf 
Molteno, Caroline (I1109)
 
927 Caroline sold the lease of 11 Bedford Square in 1849 and resided at Aldenham House 1846-50. In 1843-6 she built at Clifton Hampden, where her brother in law Joseph Gibbs was Perpetual Curate, a new parsonage to take the place of the old one which Anne Noyes gave in 1832. By a re-exchange in 1905 the former is now the Manor House and the latter has since been demolised.

She also completely restored the church of St. Michael of All Angels there, mainly with money set aside by her husband when he inherited the property, but with contributions added by herself, and her son Henry. G Gilbert Scott was her architect in both cases. The Living was augmented under her Will. See article on Clifton Hampden in the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs pp. 447-50. For her 'Royal Descent' see entry for her father, Rev. Charles Crawley.

For note of portraits of her see the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs p. 435, to which add that a copy was in possession of Lord Cullen (in 1932) of Sir William Ross's miniature, done by Ross's daughter under her father's supervision. Caroline was buried at Clifton Hampden. Monumental Inscription in church and church yard there and in Aldenham church. Her Will was printed on 16 July 1950 at the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Doctors Commons, London. 
Crawley, Caroline (I434)
 
928 Carr-Gomm was deeply affected during the Billy Graham crusade to London in 1954. In 1955 he left the Army and became a volunteer home-help. Perceiving the loneliness of the people whom he was helping to be a particular problem, he spent his Army gratuity on buying a house which he invited some of them to share with him. In his subsequent life he founded a number of charities which run care homes for the elderly, the disadvantaged, and those suffering from loneliness. For this work he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1985, and in 2004 received a Beacon Prize for lifetime achievement.

He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1957 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at the BBC Television Theatre.

The Carr-Gomm Society published his autobiography, Push on the Door in 1979. Loneliness: The Wider Scene was published in 1987.

A blue plaque in Gomm Road, Bermondsey, London Borough of Southwark, commemorates Richard Carr-Gomm and the Abbeyfield and Carr-Gomm societies.
 
Carr-Gomm, Major Richard Culling (I2515)
 
929 Catherine Murray, Countess of Dunmore (31 October 1814, London – 12 February 1886, Inveresk), was an English peeress and promoter of Harris Tweed.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_Murray,_Countess_of_Dunmore 
Herbert, Catherine Countess of Dunmore (I3430)
 
930 Catholic Church Records. FamilySearch, Salt Lake City, Utah. Source (S444)
 
931 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Douglas Riley, Surg Cdre Timothy Roger CBE OstJ MB BS MRSC MRCGP DA Dip.Sports Med (I3287)
 
932 Cecil Henry Rolt, MA (Oxon) was an eminent Anglican clergyman in the first half of the 20th century.

He was born into an ecclesiastical family in 1865 and educated at Winchester and New College, Oxford. Ordained in 1888, he held curacies at St Thomas’s Sunderland, Christ Church West Hartlepool, St Hilda’s South Shields and St Cuthbert’s Bensham before becoming Vicar of Holy Trinity, Darlington. He later held further incumbencies in Batley and Huddersfield before his appointment as Dean of Cape Town. He died on 14 September 1926

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cecil_Rolt 
Rolt, Very Rev. Cecil Henry (I2661)
 
933 Census of Ireland 1901/1911 Source (S335)
 
934 Census of Ireland 1901/1911 Source (S332)
 
935 Census Returns of England and Wales, 1901 Source (S392)
 
936 Census Returns of England and Wales, 1911 Source (S380)
 
937 Chaffeymoor Grange Elton, Laura Beatrice (I2594)
 
938 Chaffeymoor House Parr, Major-Gen. Sir Henry Hallam CMG, CB KCB (I2632)
 
939 Changed his name from Wood to Meynell on 8 February 1905
He was High Sheriff of Staffordshire, 1910.  
Meynell Wood, Hon. Frederick George Lindley (I4906)
 
940 Changed his Surname from Sidebottom to Edgedale during the 1920s (had enough of the jokes) Edgedale, His Honour Judge Samuel Richard QC (I2198)
 
941 Chapel of Bishop's Palace Family: Stephen Weston / Mary Gibbs (F1318)
 
942 Chapel of King Henry VII, Westminister Abbey Family: John Baynton Rolt / Ann Rachel Benita Fortescue-Brickdale (F1166)
 
943 Chapel of King Henry VII, Westminister Abbey Family: Charles David Rolt / Penelope Eve Bradford (F384)
 
944 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Henry Mark Jonathan Rolt / Marion Cameron Bensted (F392)
 
945 Charles Daubeny (1745–1827) was an English churchman and controversialist, who became archdeacon of Salisbury.

The second son of George Daubeny, a Bristol merchant, he was baptized 16 August 1745, educated at a private school at Philip's Norton, and sent when 15 years old to Winchester College. Shortly after his admission he fell ill, was incapacitated for more than a year, and never entirely recovered. He became head boy of the school, and at age 18 gained an exhibition at New College, Oxford, where he later became a Fellow.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Daubeny_(priest) 
Daubeny, Rev. Charles (I5486)
 
946 Charles Dominic Molteno, who has been mentioned as one of the three children in the Shelley miniature, was the younger brother of John and the uncle whose family seems to have maintained contact with Sir John Charles Molteno [in the Cape Colony] and his children over the years. The name of Uncle Charles occurs in this volume from time to time. Born in 1789, he married Mrs. Margaret Scott Glass (1786-1873) in 1851(?). She was the widow of the Rev. Lawrence Glass of Aberdeen, Scotland, by whom she had two daughters, Margaret Scott Glass (died 8 October 1888) and Catherine Glass (died 17 April 1901, aged 90 years). Mrs. Glass owned the property of Newton in Perthshire. There Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Molteno lived for many years.

Charles Dominic was just becoming known in the literary world when he was involved in a dispute with Lockhart, Sir Walter Scott's son-in-law, concerning the merits of Keats's poetry. The result was a duel which ended tragically in his death (1821). (Letters of Dr. John Brown, edited by his son, D.W. Forest.)
 
Molteno, Charles Dominic (I3412)
 
947 Charles Douglas Richard Hanbury-Tracy, 4th Baron Sudeley PC FRS (3 July 1840 – 9 December 1922), styled The Honourable Charles Hanbury-Tracy from 1858 to 1877, was a British Liberal politician. He served as Captain of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms under William Ewart Gladstone in 1886. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Hanbury-Tracy,_4th_Baron_Sudeley
 
Hanbury-Tracy, Charles Douglas Richard 4th Baron Sudeley (I5239)
 
948 Charles Edward Bright (1829-1915), businessman, was born on 20 May 1829 at Abbots Leigh, Somerset, England, the fifth son of Robert Bright (1798-1869) and his wife Caroline, née Tyndall. His father was a prominent landowner and partner in the mercantile and shipping house of Gibbs & Bright of Bristol, Liverpool and London, and his uncle, Dr Richard Bright (1789-1858), became physician extraordinary to Queen Victoria and is credited with discovering 'Bright's disease'. Charles was educated at Winchester, arrived in Melbourne in January 1854, and was a founder of Bright Bros & Co., steamship and general agents (agents for the Royal Insurance Co. of Liverpool and London). Later the firm became Gibbs, Bright & Co., a well-known and successful firm with a wide variety of financial interests.
See the Australian Dictionary of Biography https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/bright-charles-edward-149

 
Bright, Charles Edward (I3264)
 
949 Charles Edward Bright CMG JP (20 May 1829 – 17 July 1915) was an English businessman in colonial Victoria. Bright belonged to an old Worcestershire family possessing estates in the counties of Worcester and Hereford. He was the fifth son of the Robert Bright, of Bristol and Abbots Leigh, Somerset, by Caroline, daughter of Thomas Tyndall, of The Fort, Bristol. His father was a slaveholder who was compensated ₤8,384 by the British government for 404 slaves upon the abolition of slavery. Bright would benefit from his father's estate.

Bright's brothers were Richard Bright, who was elected M.P. for East Somerset in 1868, and Lieut.-General Sir Robert Onesiphorus Bright.

Bright emigrated to Australia, arriving in Melbourne in Jan. 1854. He became a partner in the firms of Messrs. Antony Gibbs & Co., and Gibbs, Bright & Co. He was twice Chairman of the Melbourne Harbour Trust, and for many years Trustee of the Public Library, Museum, and National Gallery of Victoria. He was Commissioner to the Exhibition of London, 1861-2; Dublin, 1864; Melbourne, 1866-7; London, 1873-4; Melbourne, 1880; Calcutta, 1883; Adelaide, 1887; and Melbourne, 1888. On 25 August 1868 he married the Hon. Anne Maria Georgiana Manners-Sutton, daughter of the third Viscount Canterbury (Governor of Victoria 1866-73), by Georgiana, youngest daughter of Charles Tompson, of Witchingham Hall, Norfolk; and was created CMG in the 1883 Birthday Honours

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Edward_Bright
 
Bright, Charles Edward (I3264)
 
950 Charles Edward Hogg filed for divorce in 1899 on the grounds of Caroline's adultery with Count George Borchgrave D'Altane born 1864 (a Belgian). Files in the National Archive Kew, London
In the Australian Police Gazette there is an article on Count George Borchgrave D'Altane
In 1894 there was an arrest warrant for his arrest  for fraudulently obtaining £50 from a Draper
 
Charles Edward Hogg came to Enland in 1893 and in the 1911 census he was a Civil Engineer (own account) living with Beachamp Ferdinand and his new wife Rosalie Alice Barnett born 30th Nov 1884 London and died March 1965 Newbury Berkshire
They married 1903 and had a son Audley Alltrees Hogg born 20th Dec 1904 London and died 21st Feb 1936 at sea  He was a Lt Commander RN on HMS Remillies (he was found dead in his cabin) aged 32
Rosalie Alice Hogg (nee Barnett) remarried 1922 Kensington London to Armar D Saunderson boen 1st May 1872 and died 1952 Newbury Berkshire aged 80  He was a Farmer
 
Notes
Charles Edward Hogg in 1872 aged 15 was named as one of five Co-Respondents in his uncles divorce petition   
Hogg, Charles Edward (I4230)
 

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