Gibbs Family Tree

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2051 This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Source (S314)
 
2052 Thomas Boothby Parkyns, 1st Baron Rancliffe (24 July 1755 – 17 November 1800) was an English soldier, Member of Parliament and Irish peer.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Parkyns,_1st_Baron_Rancliffe 
Parkyns, Thomas Boothby 1st Baron Rancliffe (I1454)
 
2053 Thomas Charles Hanbury-Tracy, 2nd Baron Sudeley (5 February 1801 – 19 February 1863), known as Thomas Leigh between 1806 and 1838 and styled The Honourable Thomas Leigh between 1838 and 1839 and The Honourable Thomas Hanbury-Tracy between 1839 and 1858, was a British colliery owner and politician. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Hanbury-Tracy,_2nd_Baron_Sudeley
 
Hanbury-Tracy, Thomas Charles 2nd Baron Sudeley (I5229)
 
2054 Thomas Gibbs of Woodbury aforesaid and Clyst St. George, husbandman, buried at Clyst St. George 3 September 1629. Will proved 1629 in the Archdeaconry Court of Exeter.

His Will mentions wife Joan and daughters Agnes and Joan. Witness Robert Gibbe. 
Gibbs, Thomas of Woodbury (I208)
 
2055 Though it looks like a mistake, in two consecutive generations, a Thomas Crawley-Boevey married a Susannah Lloyd

This THOMAS, eldest surviving son of THOMAS CRAWLEY was baptized 3 May, 1680, at St. Dunstan's in the East. He succeeded Mrs. Catherine Boevey (Bovey) 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. He was buried at Flaxley 7 February, 1741. -- from the Perverse Widow


THE ORIGINS OF THE FAMILY OF CRAWLEY-BOEVEY

Thomas Crawley was a merchant in London. He assumed the surname of Boevey, as a requirement to inherit the estate of Flaxley Abbey, given to him by the will of William Boevey, Esq. He became known as Thomas Crawley-Boevey. Until the 1800s, the eldest son inherited the estate and adopted the Crawley-Boevey surname. Younger sons and daughters used only the name Crawley.

He married Susanna Lloyd. His oldest son Thomas also married a Susanna Lloyd. So there are two generations of Thomas Crawley-Boevey and Susannah Lloyd.

Pedigree of Crawley-Boevey by A.C. Crawley-Boevey shows his birthdate as 1680.

Excerpt from "A Bedfordshire Family" by William Austin:

Thomas, eldest eldest surviving son of Thomas Crawley, was baptized 3rd May 1680, at St Dunstan's in the East. He married by licence (Vicar-General), on the 2nd February 1702, at Great St Bartholomew's, London, Susanna, daughter of John Lloyd and Susanna Hollier.

We have mentioned that· his father, Thomas Crawley was the friend of William Boevey, Esq., of Flaxley Abbey, and that two of his children, namely, David and John, were beneficiaries of William Boevey and his sister, Mrs Cornelia Bateman.

This Thomas Crawley lived to be a recipient of still greater favours from the family. The Boevey family came from Courtral in Flanders in 1573, and settled in St Dunstan's in the East. They acquired considerable wealth, and the above-named William Boevey purchased the estate of Flaxley Abbey, in the county of Gloucester, and married Catherine, daughter of John Riches.

Catherine Boevey was a famous beauty, but was still more famous for her great benevolence and numerous benefactions. She also became interesting to later generations as the subject of Sir Richard Steele's essays, wherein he alludes to the relations between the more or less fictitious character, Sir Roger de Coverley, and the "Perverse Widow" (see 'Mr CrawleyBoevey's The Perverse Widow for an account of this lady), the widow being, it is said, Calherine Boevey, the widow of William Boevey.

Mr Boevey died at the early age of thirty-five, leaving his estate and much wealth to his beautiful widow, who survived him till the 21st January 1726. Thomas Crawley was William Boevey's executor, and by the terms of Mr Boevey's will he succeeded to the estate of Flaxley Abbey upon the condition that he took the name of Boevey.

By the will of Mrs Boevey he also received a pecuniary legacy of £500, her coach-horses, etc., and books which she gave to "my kind friend Thomas Crawley-Boevey."

Thomas Crawley-Boevey was buried at Flaxley on 7th February 1741. His will was proved in the P.c.~. in February 1742 (46 Trenley). His wife predeceased him on the 17th July 1739. They had issue:-

I. William Boevey Crawley, born 27th October 1702; died 12th November.
2. Catharina, born 12th October 1704; died unmarried.
3. Susanna, born 7th September 1705; buried 10th November 1752, in the church vault of St James', Duke Place, Aldgate.
Married, 14th May 1745,Rev. John Lloyd, Rector of St James', Duke Place, Aldgate, her first cousin. She had no issue.
4. Mary, born 23rd September 1706.
5. Thomas Crawley alias Boevey, of whom next section.
6. John Crawley, born 7th November 171o; attorney-at-law; died unmarried.
7. William Crawley, born 12th October 1711; died 28th November 1780, at Gravesend, and was buried at Flaxley,
of which parish he was Perpetual Curate from 1741 to 1780.
8. Robert Crawley, born 20th September 1712; died unmarried in the East Indies.
9. Cornelia, born 14th January 17I4; married James Heywood, Esq., of London, merchant.
10. Lucy, twin with James, born 12th May 1716; married 23rd February 1745, at Flaxley, Robert Longden, Esq., of Doctors' Commons, and left issue.
11. James, twin with Lucy, born 12th May1716.
12. Aurelia, buried at Flaxley, 2nd July 1741.
13. Joanna, buried at Flaxley, 22nd February 1730-1. 
Crawley, Thomas alias Boevey (I3147)
 
2056 Timothy Brown (1743/1744 – 4 September 1820) was an English banker, merchant and radical, known for his association with other radicals of the time, such as John Horne Tooke, Robert Waithman, William Frend, William Cobbett, John Cartwright and George Cannon; his political views gave him the nickname "Equality Brown". He was also one of the early partners of Whitbread, and became the master of the Worshipful Company of Brewers.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy_Brown_(radical)

 
Brown, Timothy (I1354)
 
2057 Timothy Green was born in 1765. He resided in Worcester, Massachusetts with his wife Mary (aka "Polly" or "Serena") before moving to New York City. Green received his education at Rhode Island College (now Brown University) and practiced law in New York City. He predominantly worked in probate law and the settlement of minor financial disputes. Green was a land speculator and engaged in other mercantile affairs, especially with his brothers Samuel Green, who operated a store in Columbia, South Carolina, and Meltiah Green, who settled in Jamaica and died of yellow fever on the Island of St. Bartholomew. In December 1813, Timothy Green became lost at sea while returning from Charleston, South Carolina aboard the pilot boat, the Patriot . Colonel Aaron Burr's daughter, Theodosia was also onboard. Timothy Green's son, Timothy Ruggles Green, inherited the legal practice. Timothy and Mary's other children included Joseph Martin, Mary E., Martha Lynde Mitchell, Caroline Mitchell, and Elizabeth H. Green. Green, Timothy (I4779)
 
2058 Timothy Ruggles Green was born to Timothy Green and Mary Green in 1806. He earned a law degree from Brown University in 1840 and inherited his father's legal practice, partnering with his brother-in-law, John W. Green. He served as a trustee of Brown University. He married Cornelia Elizabeth Arnold and they had two children, Arnold Green and Timothy R Green. Timothy Ruggles Green became ill in late 1839 in Providence, Rhode Island, and died on March 16, 1840, in South Carolina where he had gone in the hope of recovering. Green, Timothy Ruggles (I5727)
 
2059 Timothy Yeats Brown (14 July 1789 – 3 February 1858) was an English banker and head of his family firm Brown, Cobb & Co. He became the British consul to Genoa from 1840 to 1857.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy_Yeats_Brown
 
Brown, Timothy Yeats (I3072)
 
2060 Timothy Yeats-Brown (1789-1858), a banker, was the British consul to Genoa from 1840 to 1857.

Between 1832 and 1840 he lived on the Island of Palmaria with his wife Stuarta (née Erskine) before moving to Genoa to become a consul. He died shortly after his retirement in 1858.

His son Montague Yeats-Brown succeeded him as British consul to Genoa.

 
Brown, Timothy Yeats (I3072)
 
2061 Tommy was brought up in Long Wittenham, Berkshire (now in Oxfordshire) before going off to boarding school and training as a Master Mariner. After sailing the oceans for 25 years or so he farmed his smallholding in New South Wales, Australia. Tommy died on 7th November 2019 at the age of 91. In his last years Tommy suffered from alzheimer’s dementia and lived in residential care close to his former home in Nambucca Heads where his widow Gwen now resides. The end came quite quickly after a fall and he was taken to hospital at Coffs Harbour where Gwen was with him when he died. A funeral service was held on 14th November at St John’s Anglican Church, Nambucca Heads where Gwen was well supported by Australian family members and their friends and their local congregation. Tommy will be remembered as an active, gentle and generous man of faith with a lasting love for his family, church and the communities of his birth and residence.
 
Ward, Thomas Gray Spencer (I4287)
 
2062 Trained in his father's business, from the age of 15 he paid 6 visits of 6 to 10 months each to the Peninsula (Portugal and Spain) between 1801 and 1807. Present in Cadiz at the Spanish revolt against the French in June 1808, he reopened his father's house of business there and remained till 1810. Partner with his father in Antony Gibbs & Sons, London, (and in the Cadiz branch) from the founding of the firm in Sep. 1808. From 1815 till he died he was head of Antony Gibbs & Sons, who, under him and his brother William, opened branches at Gibraltar 1818, Lima 1822, Arequipa and Guayaquil 1823, Valparaiso 1826 (see the History of the Business in the book 'Antony and Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs). A director of the London Assurance Corporation 1822-42. A member of the club 'Nobody's Friends' 1832-42 and of the 'City of London Club' 1840-2. A member of the London Committee which (1832-5), with the Bristol Committee, promoted the Great Western Railway, and an original Director of that Company 1835-42. Between 1819 and 1840 he and his brother William voluntarily completed the payment of those of their father's and grandfather's debts which were still outstanding from their bankruptcy in 1789.

A few months before he died in 1842 he succeeded to most of the properties (for particulars see the book 'Antony and Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs) which his cousins Sarah (died April 1842) and Anne Noyes (died Dec. 1841) had inherited in 1814 from their uncle Robert Hucks of Aldenham, Herts (his mother's 2nd cousin): namely as heir at law to Sarah he received Aldenham House and other estates in Herts, and Middlesex; and under Anne's will, on Sarah's death, estates in Oxon and Berks, and in Lambeth, Surrey. With these properties he became lord of the manors of North Moreton, Berks (sold by his son Henry), Burston, Herts. (sold by his grandson, Alban), and Clifton Hampden, Oxon; and patron and lay rector of the last named. His residence was 2 Powis Place 1817-21, 11 Bedford Square 1821-42 (both in the Borough of Holborn). For note of portraits and sculptures of him see the book 'Antony and Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, p. 435 and the Additions of 1927, to which add that a replica or copy of the portrait by Edmund Gill was in possession of Lord Cullen in 1932, who also had a miniature by Miss Ross (1860) (? founded on a portrait by Gill of 1843); and that a portrait in oils belonged to A. Gibbs and Sons (in 1932) after the min by Ross in Lord Aldenham's possession. 
Gibbs, George Henry (I616)
 
2063 Trinity College Oxford, Graduate Research Development, Economics. UC Berkeley, California: BA, Economics & Political Science. City University, London UK: MBA, Finance, Risk Management & Systems Analysis.

1976/79: Shell International, Manager Economic Financial Evaluations, Simulations & Supplier Coordination; 1979/81: InterMatrix Group, London, Director, Client Studies and New Business Development; 1980/82: University Telematics, VP and Chief Operating Officer; Universal Machine Intelligence, Ann Arbor, Michigan: Chief Executive Officer, 1992/94: University of Michigan Health System, Director Technology Transfer, 1997/2000: Triada, Senior VP, 2000-date: Henny & Associates, Chief Executive Officer

Other: Adjunct Professor, Strategic Management, Wayne State University Business School

Married to Linda Henny, lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan 
Henny, Geoffrey Charles (I685)
 
2064 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Ormerod, Zachary (I3516)
 
2065 Twin Gibbs, Dame Anstice Rosa DCVO, CBE (I1936)
 
2066 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Ormerod, Isadora (I3517)
 
2067 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Gibbs, Elizabeth Helen (I1857)
 
2068 Twin brother to Hugo Gibbs Woodard Woodard, Justin Gibbs (I5384)
 
2069 Twin brother to Justin Gibbs Woodard Woodard, Hugo Gibbs (I5383)
 
2070 Twin daughter of Robert Shawe Templer of Upcott, nr. Barnstaple, Devon, and Treenlaur, Newport, co. Mayo, by Frances Anne, 1st daughter by the 2nd marriage of Edmund Beauchamp Beauchamp of Trevince, Gwennap, Cornwall for whom see Burke's 'Landed Gentry'.

Interests: Church embroidery, fine dressmaking, gardening, Women's Institute, bookbinding. At various times Committee member, Chairman, Secretary, etc. of Holt W.I., Semley W.I., Embroiderers Guild, Trowbridge W.I. Market Stall. Official Wilts. County lecturer in Embroidery. 
Templer, Norah (I2076)
 
2071 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Thornewill, Luke Thomas (I1673)
 
2072 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Thornewill, Dr. John-Mark Judah PhD (I1671)
 
2073 Twin, unmarried, watercolour painter. Left many architectural sketches of cathedrals etc. Ward, Amelia Elizabeth Ann (I3228)
 
2074 Twin, unmarried, watercolour painter. Left many architectural sketches of cathedrals etc. Ward, Harriet Elinor (I3229)
 
2075 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Tugwell, Joanna Mary (I2723)
 
2076 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Tugwell, Sarah Margaret (I2724)
 
2077 Tynewyd, Erwood Gibbs, Major Antony Edmund (I2611)
 
2078 Uncle of Euphemia C. Gibbs. 3rd son of william Cunard, by Laura Charlotte, daughter of Thomas Chandler Haliburton, Judge of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia (see Cunard, Bart. in 'Burke's Peerage'). Baptised at Windsor, nr Halifax, Nova Scotia. Educated at Eton College.

Buried at Notgrove, Glos. Memorial Inscription in churchyard. Will proved 17 June 1914.

He was sometime Lieut, in the S.E. of Scotland Artillery, and a Justice of the Peace for Berks. 
Cunard, Cyril Grant (I2684)
 
2079 United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1930. T626, 2,667 rolls. Source (S520)
 
2080 United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1940. T627, 4,643 rolls. Source (S505)
 
2081 United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900. T623, 1854 rolls. Source (S502)
 
2082 United States, Selective Service System. World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. M1509, 4,582 rolls. Imaged from Family History Library microfilm. Source (S504)
 
2083 Unmarried in 1746. However, she produced an only son, Robert Remmett, by John Remmett of Crediton. There is some doubt of this, and the doubt only arises from the fact that certain deeds call his mother Susanna, but evidence mentioned in the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, p. 17, n3, almost proves that she and Anna were one and the same. Gibbs, Anna (I3115)
 
2084 Update May 2022: I have now retired from virtually everything
 
Loveday, Mark Antony (I2628)
 
2085 Upper Hamilton Place (or Terrace)  Gibbs, Elizabeth Ellin (I3104)
 
2086 Usual residence Gold Hill. Lower Bourne. Farnham. Surrey. England. Molteno, Vice-Admiral Vincent Barkly C.B.,R.N. (I98)
 
2087 Various academic records from institutions throughout South Africa. Source (S490)
 
2088 Various birth and baptismal records from institutions throughout South Africa. Source (S410)
 
2089 Various sources from across South Africa. Source (S482)
 
2090 Various sources from across South Africa. Source (S489)
 
2091 Venn, J. A., comp.. <i>Alumni Cantabrigienses</i>. London, England: Cambridge University Press, 1922-1954. Source (S339)
 
2092 Vicarage Gibbs, Dorothea Louisa JP (I1952)
 
2093 Vicarage Otter, Emily Anna (I1733)
 
2094 Vicarage Gibbs, Rev. John Stanley MC (I2766)
 
2095 Vicarage Gibbs, Mary Katharina Pynder (I2586)
 
2096 Vicarage Gibbs, Lieut. Colonel William Beresford (I2765)
 
2097 Vicarage Gibbs, Captain George Louis Downall RN, DSO, NVO (I2767)
 
2098 Vice-Admiral the Hon. Charles Orlando Bridgeman (5 February 1791 – 13 April 1860) was a Royal Navy officer who saw active service in the Napoleonic Wars and the Greek War of Independence. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Orlando_Bridgeman
 
Bridgeman, Vice-Admiral the Hon. Charles Orlando Henry (I5270)
 
2099 Villa Mont Fleury Gibbs, Caroline Blanche (I1514)
 
2100 Virginia, Births, 1864–2014. Virginia Department of Health, Richmond, Virginia. Source (S526)
 

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