Gibbs Family Tree

Notes


Matches 1,751 to 1,800 of 2,252

      «Prev «1 ... 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 ... 46» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
1751 Original data: Anglican Parish Registers, Oxfordshire Family History Society and Oxfordshire History Centre. Please be aware that images may not be used for purposes incompatible with the tenets of the Church of England, and that the Church of England or its agents may take action against anyone who does so. Source (S419)
 
1752 Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. Source (S519)
 
1753 Orlando Bridgeman, 1st Earl of Bradford (19 March 1762 – 7 September 1825) was a British peer and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1784 to 1800. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orlando_Bridgeman,_1st_Earl_of_Bradford Bridgeman, Orlando 1st Earl of Bradford (I5274)
 
1754 Orlando Frank Montague Ward, was born at Rougham, near Bury St Edmund's, Suffolk on 19 February 1868, son of Francis Beckford Ward (1821-1876), a poor-law inspector, and his wife Emily Louisa Gertrude née Bridgeman (1827-1916), who married at Oswestry, Shropshire in 1859. In 1871, the family were living at Belvedere, Melcombe Regis, Dorset from where young Orlando was sent to a boarding school kept by Edward Herbert Cook at 20-23 Montpelier Place, Brighton and later went to Felsted School in Essex. In 1891, Orlando was a 22 year old artist, lodging at The Studio, 4 Blythe Road, Hammersmith with a fellow artist, 23 year old Arthur Bartlett. He illustrated a handful of books in the early 20th century, primarily concerned with scenes from France and Italy, including 'Venice and its Story' (1903) and 'Paris and its Story' both by Thomas Okey (1904); 'In Unknown Tuscany' (1909) and 'Siena and Southern Tuscany' (1910) both by Edward Hutton. In 1911, a 42 year old painter artist, living at 8 Oakley Street, Chelsea, London and during the Great War, on 12 February 1915 was gazetted a 2nd Lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery. He married at St Martin, London in 1924, Brita de Lagerberg (16 July 1878-26 January 1952), who was also a painter artist and in 1939 they were living at 14 Springfield Place, Bath, Somerset. His wife died at Netherton House, Newton Abbot, Devon in 1952 and Orlando Ward died at St Clements, Ash Hill Road, Torquay, Devon on 12 April 1955, aged 86. See https://suffolkartists.co.uk/index.cgi?choice=painter&pid=935 Ward, Orlando Frank Montagu (I4345)
 
1755 Orpington Hospital Martin, Frank (I4441)
 
1756 Orrok Mills Doulton (later Sir Orrok Doulton) worked in the family pottery business before serving as a cavalry officer in the First World War. He died, reputedly of Spanish Influenza, but probably of war wounds, in 1922 shortly after the end of the war. Orrok Mills Doulton married Catherine May Duke and of five children. " (Daniel Doulton www.potteryhistories.com/Doultonfamilymembers.html#OrrokMillsDoulton) Doulton, Sir Orrok Mills (I5403)
 
1757 Our Hatfield - DAME ANSTICE GIBBS, CRVO 1905 -1978
https://www.ourhatfield.org.uk/content/topics/organizations/girl_guides/dame_anstice_gibbs_crvo
 
Gibbs, Dame Anstice Rosa DCVO, CBE (I1936)
 
1758 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Rous, John (I5570)
 
1759 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - William Gibbs https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/89656
 
Gibbs, William of Tyntesfield (I1611)
 
1760 Oxford University. Alexander Wilton DASHWOOD s/o Thomas DASHWOOD of Calcutta, East Indies, armiger. Merton College matriculated 23 June 1815 aged 18. Lieut Col in the Army, died 15 Mar 1877. See Foster's Peerage. [ALumnae Oxoniensis]
 
Dashwood, Lieut. Colonel Alexander Wilton (I1796)
 
1761 Parish Church McCausland, Lucia (I923)
 
1762 Pembroke Family Vault Vorontsov, Count Semyon Romanovich (I3431)
 
1763 Pembroke House Herbert, George Augustus 11th Earl of Pembroke 8th Earl of Montgomery (I3095)
 
1764 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Starey, Penelope Harvey (I5983)
 
1765 Personal life and origin
Faure was the eleventh and last child of Jacobus Christiaan Faure and Aletta Hendrina (born Blanckenberg). Four of their children died young. Their second child and first son were dr. Abraham Faure, who was a teacher of the Dutch Reformed Church Cape Town for 45 years. The latter linked his youngest brother on January 12, 1835 at Wynberg to Anna Wilhelmina Cambier (whose mother was also a Blanckenberg). Eight children were born from marriage: Wilhelmina Hendrina (born 1835), Jacobus Christiaan (1837), Aletta Hendrina (1839), Jan Gijsbertus Reijnier Cambier (1841), Philibert Carel Gerard (1844), Maria Cornelia (1845), Abraham Iodocus Heringa (1847) and Philip Carel Dirk (1849).

Abraham and Philip Eduard's grandfather, Abraham, was the son of the ancestor of the family in South Africa. He was born on 17 August 1717 and died on 22 July 1792 in Stellenbosch. From his marriage to Anna Maria Wium (September 30, 1731 to 1811, Philip Eduard's birth year), seven children were born, of which Abraham and Philip Eduard's father, Jacobus Christiaan, was sixth.

Faures' ancestor, Antoine Alexandre, was born in Orange on 2 February 1685 and died in 1736 in Stellenbosch. He fled to Prussia in 1703 because of his persecution because his grandfather Phillipe accepted the Reformed faith. From Prussia he settled in the Cape. His wife and the father-in-law of the Faures were Rachel de Villiers (1694 to 1773). They had seven children, of which Abraham sr. was the oldest. 
Faure, Dr. Philip Eduard (I909)
 
1766 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Hall, Peter Barrington (I4592)
 
1767 Philip Gibbs of Little Fulford in Shobrooke of Ebford in Woodbury and of Clyst St. George, all in Devon. Will dated 8 December 1656, proven 27 July1661 in the Consistory Court of the Dean and Chapter of Exeter.

Will mentions wife Mary; sons John, Philip, daughter Mary; brothers George, Robert and Abraham. 
Gibbs, Philip of Little Fulford (I2913)
 
1768 Photo of Mabel at Cevedon Court with the Elton family, see marriage scrapbook of Sir Edmund Harry Elton.
Photo of Mabel with Sir Charles & Laura with Gibbs family, see marriage scrapbook of George Louis M. Gibbs.

1891 CENSUS - Aged 26. Living with Charles, and children Laura, aged 1, and Matthew aged 1 month.
1901 CENSUS - Aged 36. Living with husband and family.
1911 CENSUS - Living at 79 Cornwall Gardens, Kensington. Aged 46. Family listed, husband Charles, aged 54; daughter Laura, aged 21: son Matthew aged 20: and son Edmund aged 10.

Died at 10 Sheen Gate-gardens, East Sheen, Surrey on 11 March 1944.

Probate read 24 August 1944 at Llandudno "the said Sir Charles F-B knight and Matthew F-B OBE company director . Effects £2668 8s 4d." 
Gibbs, Lady Mabel Beatrice (I2588)
 
1769 Piers Alexander Hamilton Edgcumbe, 5th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe DL (1865-1944), was a soldier who served in the South African War with distinction.

He was the son of William Henry Edgcumbe, 4th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe by his first wife.

Educated at Oxford University and a keen horseman, he was part of the varsity polo team playing against Cambridge in 1885-1887.[2]

He was appointed a Captain in the 3rd (Militia) Battalion of The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry on 23 March 1891. After the outbreak of the Boer War in 1899, he went to serve in South Africa. He left Cape Town for the United Kingdom in early May 1902, shortly before the end of the war.[3]

He succeeded his father to the earldom and Mount Edgcumbe House in 1917. He had married in 1911 Lady Edith Villiers, the only daughter of Edward Hyde Villiers, 5th Earl of Clarendon. They had no children and he was succeeded by his cousin, Kenelm William Edward Edgcumbe, 6th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piers_Edgcumbe,_5th_Earl_of_Mount_Edgcumbe 
Edgcumbe, Piers Alexander Hamilton 5th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe (I1513)
 
1770 PILKINGTON, Sir ANDREW (1767?–1853), general, born about 1767, obtained his first commission in the army on 7 March 1783, and was promoted lieutenant 24 Jan. 1791, captain 2 March 1795, major 31 March 1804, lieutenant-colonel 5 Oct. 1809, colonel 12 Aug. 1819, major-general 22 July 1830, lieutenant-general 23 Nov. 1841.

Pilkington saw much and varied service. With the Channel fleet in 1793–4 he commanded a company of the Queen's Royals on board the Royal George on ‘the glorious first of June’ 1794, when Lord Howe defeated the French off Ushant. Pilkington received two splinter wounds. He was next employed in the West Indies, and was present at the capture of Trinidad, 1795–7. He served in Ireland in the suppression of the rebellion in 1798, and was with the expeditions to the Helder in 1799 and 1805. He was severely wounded in the defence of the Kent, East Indiaman, against a large French privateer in 1800, on his passage to India. He served on the staff at the Horse Guards in 1807–8, and in Nova Scotia from 1809 to 1815. During the latter period he commanded several successful expeditions. He reduced the islands in Passamaquody Bay, between New Brunswick and Maine, U.S. He was created K.C.B. on 19 July 1838. He died on 23 Feb. 1853 at his residence, Catsfield Place, Battle, Sussex, which he had purchased from James Eversfield, esq.

Sir Andrew married at Hayes, on 9 May 1808, Maria Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Vicary Gibbs [q. v.], who survived him, with two daughters, Maria Georgina, married to Burrell Hayley, rector of Catsfield in Sussex, on 18 July 1848, and Louisa Elizabeth, married on 1 Sept. 1853 to Richard Thomas Lee.
 
Pilkington, Lieut. General Sir Andrew (I1774)
 
1771 Pneumonia, 3 days. States age as 88 (b1781). Her nephew, who was present at death, was Francis Edmund Stacey, husband of Theodosia Tyndall, who was the niece of Onesiphorus Tyndall-Bruce. The Stacey family owned Llandough Castle in Wales Bruce, Margaret Stuart (I2144)
 
1772 Pretty Miss Maud Hobson, the actress, has enjoyed an experience such as not given to all women to have. She had hardly been on the stage a year when Captain W.B.Hayley, of the 11th Hussars, asked her to be his wife. they were married and went together to the Sandwich Isles, and Captain Hayley became Vice-Chamberlain to King Lalakum, wile Miss Hobson was a lady-in-waiting to the Queen. She was there five or six years. Of course she wore the native dress, and adorned herself with flowers. She lived on native dishes, such as dog backed under the ground, raw fish etc., and rode on horseback astride. However she is not sorry to be coming back to her old love, the English stage,
Chilian Times 
Hobson, Maud (I4966)
 
1773 previously Esseg, Slavonia Alexander, Duke of Teck Francis Paul Charles Louis (I4337)
 
1774 Principal Probate Registry. <i>Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England</i>. London, England © Crown copyright. Source (S337)
 
1775 Private donor. Source (S466)
 
1776 Probate 20 Sept 1916 to John Stanhope Arkwright & Samuel Ronald Courthope Bosanquet, effects L25,843 3s 2d Arkwright, Arthur Chandos Lt Colonel (I1606)
 
1777 Probate to Waring Robinson MRCS and a solicitor. Effects £100 Waring, Frances Ann (I3588)
 
1778 Probate £6772 6s 4d Ward, Serena Lucy (I4334)
 
1779 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Pott, Professor Francis John (I3857)
 
1780 Quartermaster of London Voluntary Aid Detachment No. 30 of the British Red Cross Society, 1910; commandant of No. 116, 1913. Served with Bulgaria Red Cross Society in Kirk Kilisse 1912-13 (decorated by the Queen of Bulgaria). In the Great War, amongst other V.A.D. services in London, was in 1915 successively a Nurse at Westminster V.A.D. Hospital, in charge of a Belgian Refugee Convalescent Hostel, and on Air Raid duty; and, from October 1915 to November 1918, Head of the Posting Department of County of London Branch of the Bulgaria Red Cross Society. Attached to the Westminster Division of the B.R.C.S. October 1919, sometime temporary secretary and vice-chairman, chairman 1926-8. Resigned V.A.D. 1929. 'Member' 1918, 'Officer' 1919, of the Order of the British Empire. Member of the Church of England National Assembly from 1925.

Portraits: one on china, 1879 (a companion picture to that of her sister but by a different & unknown artist). Drawing by W.E. Miller. Both in possession of Lord Aldenham. Crayon by E.U. Eddis in her possession (1932). 
Gibbs, The Hon. Mildred Dorothea OBE (I1792)
 
1781 Read more about Betty Molteno at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Maria_Molteno Molteno, Elizabeth Maria (I371)
 
1782 Rear Admiral Sir Alexander Henry Charles Gordon-Lennox KCVO CB DSO (9 April 1911 – 4 July 1987) was a Royal Navy officer who became President of the Royal Naval College, Greenwich.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Gordon-Lennox_(Royal_Navy_officer) 
Gordon-Lennox, Rear Adm Sir Alexander Henry Charles KCVO CB DSO (I1465)
 
1783 Rear-Admiral Sir Richard Bickerton, 1st Baronet (23 June 1727 – 25 February 1792) was a British naval officer who finished his career as a rear admiral in the Royal Navy and was ennobled as the first Baronet Bickerton of Upwood. He served in several naval engagements, and died Commander-in-Chief, Plymouth in 1792. His son Richard Hussey Bickerton, who likewise rose to flag rank in the Royal Navy, succeeded to the baronetcy following his death.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Richard_Bickerton,_1st_Baronet 
Bickerton, Rear Admiral Sir Richard 1st Baronet (I4810)
 
1784 Reception at Sandown, Rondebosch. Carol was given away by her Uncle Admiral Barclay Molteno Family: Arthur Faure Williamson / Caroline Molteno (F192)
 
1785 Records of the General Register Office, Government Social Survey Department, and Office of Population Censuses and Surveys. The National Archives, Kew, England.
  • General Register Office: Miscellaneous Foreign Returns. Registrar General (RG) 32.
  • General Register Office: Foreign Registers and Returns. Registrar General (RG) 33.
  • General Register Office: Miscellaneous Foreign Marriage Returns. Registrar General (RG) 34.
  • General Register Office: Miscellaneous Foreign Death Returns. Registrar General (RG) 35.
  • General Register Office: Registers and Returns of Births, Marriages and Deaths in the Protectorates etc of Africa and Asia. Registrar General (RG) 36.
 
Source (S433)
 
1786 Rector of Clyst St. George, buried there 30 May 1571. Monumental tile in the church. Will dated 6 May, proved 8 June 1571 in the Consistory Court of the Bishop of Exeter.

He was instituted to the Rectory of Washford Pyne, 8 miles north of Crediton, 18 October 1537; and to the Rectory of Clyst St. Mary, distant 20 miles from the former via Exeter and Crediton, 7 September 1542 (Bishop Veysey's Register, fo. 108). He resigned Washford on institution to the Rectory of Clyst St. George adjoining Clyst St. Mary, 11 July, 1554 ('Gibbs of Fenton', pp. 57 and n, and 58n). The following account of him in 1561 is in a report on the Clergy of Exeter Diocese made in that year by Bishop Alley to Archbishop Parker of which a MS copy is in Exeter Public Library: 'Clist Sancti Georgii Dominus Willelmus Gybbes, rector, non graduatus, presbyter, non conjugatus nec concubinarius, studiosus, non doctus Latine, residet, non predicat, duo possidet hanc et Clyst Marie dispensatus per statutum ut dicit': and 'Clist Sancti Marie Dominus Willelmus Gybbes, rector, responsus est per eundem ut supra'. Clearly up till 1561 he held both livings (the enquiry may, however, have been made earlier, for a list of rectors of Clyst St. Mary in possession of the rector (1932) states that William G's successor there was John Huntingdon, appointed '1560 before 4 Oct'. No evidence is available from the Exeter Episcopal Registers which are missing from this period. He witnessed and proved the will of Henry Gibbe of Woodbury in 1549. In his own will, 1571, he appointed John, son of George Gybbe of Clyst St. George, his executor and residuary legatee. In 1560, he acted for several Clyst St. George people (see agreement abstracted on pp. 140-1 of 'Gibbs of Fenton') in purchases of property from Lord Wentworth, among them for John Gybbe and for George Gybbe in their purchases respectively of Pytte and Claypitte. That he and his relations at Clyst St. George and Woodbury were related to the Gibbs family of Fenton in Dartington is made practically certain by the fact that the persons concerned in presenting him to the livings of Washford Pyne and Clyst St. Mary were relations of that family: see 'Gibbs of Fenton' pp.57-8. 
Gybbe, Rev. William (I2956)
 
1787 Rectory Medley, Captain Ralph Cyril DSO, OBE (I2071)
 
1788 Rectory Gibbs, Stanley Vaughan (I2610)
 
1789 Rectory Gibbs, Rev. Edward Reginald (I2769)
 
1790 Redcliffe Gardens Bland, Robert Wyndham Humphrey Marcial (I2908)
 
1791 Register of Clyst St George, Devon, 1565-1812, Vol 25 Gibbs, George Abraham of Pytte (I410)
 
1792 Registered in Huddersfield V 9a. Page 499. (FBMD)

Immigration & Travel.
14 July 1924. Arrival at Southampton, "SS Windsor Castle" from South Africa.
With parents and brothers. 
Rolt, John Baynton (I2660)
 
1793 Registry of Shipping and Seamen: Rolls of Honour, Wars of 1914-1918 and 1939-1945. BT 339/1-8. The National Archives of the UK, Kew, Surrey, England. Source (S462)
 
1794 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Caryl Antony Vaughan Gibbs / Christiana Maria-Theresa von Machanek zu Marienthal (F1207)
 
1795 Reverend William Hartley Carnegie (27 February 1859 – 18 October 1936) a Canon of Westminster starting in 1912. He was the Sub-Dean of Westminster from 1919 until his death. He was the Rector of St Margaret's, Westminster from 1913 to 1936.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Hartley_Carnegie 
Carnegie, Rev. William Hartley Canon of Westminster (I1932)
 
1796 Richard (frequently known as Dick) was born on 12th August 1843, the elder son of the Hon. George Edgcumbe of Edgbarrow Manor, Crowthorne, Berkshire and his wife, Fanny Lucy Shelley, daughter of Sir John Shelley 6th Bt. Richard was the grandson of the 2nd Earl of Mount Edgcumbe and at the age of 29 he married Mary Louisa Monck. Their only son, Kenelm William Edward (1873-1965) would later become the 6th Earl.

Richard was commissioned a Lieutenant in the 52nd Light Infantry, served with the 73rd and was later promoted Captain in the Royal Buckinghamshire Militia. He served as Serjeant-at-Arms for no less than 41 years to three successive monarchs: Queen Victoria from 1880 to 1901; Edward VII from 1901 to 1910 and George V from 1910 to 1921.

Known as ‘Grandipa’ to his grandchildren he was small in stature with a beard and a great love of Italy giving him something of an Italian appearance. A literary man himself he became a tireless campaigner for a memorial to his friend Lord Byron, writing lines titled The National Byron Memorial and subsequently penning its history in a leaflet published in 1883. Other works included his editing of his grandmother’s book The Diary of Frances, Lady Shelley, 1787-1817, Edward Trelawny, (A Biographical Sketch) and two sets of Musical Reminiscences in 1824 and 1828.

A great European traveller and a frequent visitor to Italy he died on 3rd November 1937 aged 94.  
Edgcumbe, Richard John Frederick (I1601)
 
1797 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Varvill, Richard Antony (I5129)
 
1798 Richard Bennett Lloyd, came from a wealthy family who owned tobacco plantations. He served as an English soldier in the Coldstream guards between 1773-1775. He resigned after his marriage and because of growing enmity between England and America. In 1773, the couple had their portraits painted in London. Richard was painted by the celebrated American artist Benjamin West. Lloyd, Captain Richard Bennett (I2823)
 
1799 Richard Bright (1822 – 28 February 1878) was an English politician.

He was born the son of Robert Bright and the brother of colonial businessman Charles Edward Bright and General Sir Robert Onesiphorus Bright.

He was Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for East Somerset from 1868 to 1878.
 
Bright, Richard (I3257)
 
1800 Richard Bright (28 September 1789 – 16 December 1858) was an English physician and early pioneer in the research of kidney disease. He is particularly known for his description of Bright's disease.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Bright_(physician) 
Bright, Richard FRS (I4614)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 ... 46» Next»