Hackborne
(Hachborn)
1) Mr. Hackborn – a farmer who occupied common land on Kings Sedgemoor Ground belonging to Stephen Porter from 1801 – 1803/4.
Hacker
(see also Hucker, Hake)
1) Humphrey Hacker [a Humphreys buried in Somerton 21 Jun 1758]
Married: Jane bur. 24 Feb 1773 Butleigh
Children:
1) John Chr. 26 Jul 1727 Butleigh, bur. 4 Jan 1728 Butleigh
2) John Chr. 5 Sep 1729 Butleigh
Humphrey provided bell ropes for the church in 1726/27. In 1731/36 Humphrey provided new ropes for all the bells in the church. In 1739/40, 1742/43 Humphrey was paid for more bell ropes. In 1743/44 the CW bought their bell ropes from a Mr. Fflower. In 1746/47, 48/49 they bought bell ropes from Humphrey again..
2) John Hawker of Somerton [see under Hake]
A John Hacker was paid for whitewashing the church in 1731-6. John was paid by the OOP in 1737/8 for his time in mixing two sacks of lime for the bridge.
3) Daniel Hacker [Chr. 6 Jun 1720 Somerton s.o. William and Sarah Hacker]
In 1759 a Daniel Hacker was paid for a bell rope (CW).
DD/S/BT/20/6/8 1] Christopher Wittick of London, sugar refiner and wife Phebe, daughter of William Hacker [and Elizabeth] of Somerton, roper, decd 2] Philip Peddle of Somerton, farmer and grazier Lease for 700 years of Stoney Shord (4a ar.) in Somerton. 1778
4) Sarah Hacker bur. 4 Apr 1772 Butleigh
In 1766 the OOP paid for a bedstead and other necessities for a Sarah Hu.... - see Hucker[age]
5) Thomas Harker [Chr. 4 Nov 1705 Somerton s.o. Thomas and Mary Hacker]
Married: Butleigh 20 Sep 1726 Ann Walker from Somerton - the Ann Haker bur. 28 Nov 1789 Butleigh pauper
In March 1779 Ann received aid from the OOP concerning her 'lame knee'. In Aug 1787 she received 10 weeks assistance in her sickness. In October she received another 10 weeks and 3 bottles of Daffey's Lectery. [Daffy's Elixir was invented in Leicestershire by Thomas Daffy in 1647 – used for many illnesses but mainly stomach related – and remained in production until the late 19th century]. In Nov 1787 the OOP bought her a bottle of oil – she received aid in Nov – Dec 1787 and during 1788.
6) Frances Hacker married John Gare Butleigh 12 Nov 1749
Frances was Chr. 10 Apr 1720 Somerton d.o. John and Frances Hacker.
7) Thomas Hacker married Eliz. Bishop of Butleigh in Somerton on 12 Oct 1758 (Phill.)
Two possible Thomases – 21 Apr 1725 and 23 Jun 1727
8) George Hacker bur. 5 May 1769 Butleigh
Several Georges born in Somerton 19 Jun 1715, 14 Feb 1718, 3 Dec 1743.
9) James Haker
In March 1830 a James Haker had his fees paid concerning Jane Willcox (OOP). Probably a doctor since the family Willcox was ill.
Hackington
1) Charles Hackington servant
Fathered an illegitimate child, Edwin William Chr. 30 May 1830 Butleigh, by the servant Mary Bryant. # No person of this surname found.
Haddock
1) Noah Haddock b. 1854 (Dec Q 8c/373 Bury) Pilkington, Lancashire, store manager, s.o. Robert Haddock, d. 1926 (Jun Q 8c/528 Bury, Lancs) 81-102, 91-113, 01-135 PHOTO
Married: 1876 (Jun Q 8c/651 Bury) Sarah Stott b. 1853 Radcliffe, Lancs., d.o. Samuel and Ellen Stott, died 10 Feb, bur. 13 Feb 1915 (Mar Q 5c/755 Wells) Butleigh 81-102, 91-113, 01-135
Child:
1) Bertha b. 1877 (Jun Q 8c/615 Bury). Whitefield, Lancs. 81-102, 91-113, 01-135
Nephew: 1) Herbert Haddock b. 1881 Pilkington 91-113
Noah was the son of Robert Haddock, an engine driver at a cotton factory in Pilkington. At age 14 he was a grocers apprentice and he married Sarah in 1876 in Bury. She was the daughter of a grocer and had lived with her parents at 61, Stand Lane, Pilkington in 1871. The Co-op movement bought the shop at 13 High Street, Butleigh and with Robert Neville-Grenville as the President of the local committee they advertised in 1880 in the Co-op Society News for 'a thoroughly experienced married man to manage a village Co-operative Society store, to start at Lady Day next; he must be a churchman, and have an unimpeachable character'. Noah applied and was accepted as manager, taking up residence in the managers house next to the store. He was there with his wife and daughter for the censuses 1881 – 1901. In 1911 Noah, Sarah and Bertha lived alone at the Co-op still. Sarah died in 1915 aged 62. Noah retired after WWI and returned to Pilkington with Bertha. (AH)
Herbert Haddock (10), Noah's nephew (son of William & Mary Haddock) visited from Pilkington in 1891. Herbert went to Bristol where in 1901 he was in lodgings, a clerk to a Pension Office.
Both Noah and Bertha appeared in the Butleigh Revel of 1906. Noah was also responsible not only for training the dancers in the Revel but for acquiring, via the Co-operative society, all the old-fashioned sandals and shoes which were made especially at the Co-op wholesale works in Leicester.
Haggard
1) Percy Lester Haggard b. 12 Aug 1883 Fulham
Married I: 20 Aug 1904 (Sep Q 2c/511 Basingstoke) Gertrude Geraldine Lee
Child: 1) Dorris Eugene Haggard b. 1906 (Sep Q 5c/489 Bath).
'married' II: Neasden 1909 Annie Baulch b. 14 Jul, Chr. 29 Sep 1890 (Sep Q 5c/508 Wells) Butleigh d.o. William and Rhoda Baulch
Child:1) Irene Mabel b. 3 Aug, Chr. 24 Aug 1910 (Sep Q 5c/381 Wells) Butleigh
Married III & IV: 4 May 1910 (Jun Q 1a/105 Paddington) and 1912 (Jun Q 3a/341 Brentford) Mary Coles Maidment b. 1876 (Jun Q 5c/553 Shepton Mallet) Lottisham, d.o. Joseph and Fanny Maidment bur. 3 Apr 1956 Butleigh
Percy listed in 1905 as a Member of the Institute of Mechanical Engineers – a member since 1903 and address Onega Lodge, Bath. No burial found for Percy but Mary Cole Haggard died and was returned to Butleigh. Percy's name occurs in respect of Liverpool Corporation Deeds, mortgages etc. in respect of Liverpool property in 1921.
See under Maidment and Baulch for this history – for the bigamy case see REPORT
The case was reported as far as New Zealand and more detail appears in the Hawera & Normanby Star, Vol. LX, 5 Jan 1911, p. 7. REPORT 2
Haggot
(Hacket)
1) John Haggatt
A John Haggatt Chr. 4 May 1643 in Bristol to a Richard Haggatt and Jane – related?
DD/S/BT/4/3/13-14 1] Thomas Symcockes, John Haggatt and Christopher Griffith of Bristol 2] Mary Butcher and Ralph Haine of Bristol, yeoman Grant in fee of Butleigh manor, endorsed with attornment of tenants. Another copy. 1651
2) Bernard Haggatt bur. 10 Apr 1764 Butleigh
Married: Joan bur. 3 Mar 1760 Butleigh
Children:
1) John Chr. 7 Jan 1717 Butleigh (2a)
In 1731 the OOP paid Bernard for the clerk Henry Popes rent (for 1730). In 1743 Bernard was Overseer for John Slade. In 1747 the OOP paid Bernard for carrying a load of wood to George Croft's. In 1737 9 weeks assistance given to Joan Haggot and she was paid for making head cloths for Ruth Polletts child. In 1737/8 she was first paid for keeping Mary Pollett (Ruth's child) – until 1739+. The child's shoes mended 1737 (in error called Mary Haggott's child). In 1751 Bernard carried the deal (wood) from Bridgwater during the re-building of the church roof. In 1759 Bernard paid window tax of 3/- on nine windows.
2a) John Haggot Chr. 7 Jan 1717 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 16 Apr 1745 Mary Horsey
Children:
1) James Chr. 21 Feb 1746 Butleigh
2) John Chr. 23 Aug 1749 Butleigh
3) William Chr. 12 Feb 1752 Butleigh
4) Mary Chr. 23 Apr 1754 Butleigh
5) Jane Chr. 28 Jan 1756 Butleigh,
6) Thomas Chr. 9 Oct 1758 Butleigh
7) Elizabeth Chr. 7 Mar 1761 Butleigh
Haimes
(Haime – Hayme – Hames - Haines)
1) Thomas Haimes
Thomas appears paying rates jointly with [Thomas] Rowley in 1687. He appears again in the same property in 1694 paying rates but alone. Nfi – there were also Haymes in Baltonsborough at this time.
DD\BRIp/5 Moiety of mess. and 44a. of land variously called Daws, Dares, Balls or Oburns, 1597-1804,incl. abst.of title,1597-1680, with further rough notes to 1731, made c.1804, culminating in possession of George Tuson of Ilchester,gent.; marr.settlement of Thos. Atwater of Keinton Mandeville,husb.,and Margaret Hayme, dau.of Thos.Hayme of Barton St.David, husb., 1643; 1½a. in the East Field in a furlong called Siddowne, 1 beasts leaze in a common called Kington (Keinton) Combe, pt.of Keinton Farm, 8a. called Tuthills, 1659; exchange of 3a. of meadow in Horsy Mead in the North Furlong for 2 closes at Hoggets, Baltonsborough, 1659.
2) France Hames – received Rocke bequest money in 1705 – nfi – surname uncertain (Baines?)
3) Edward Haime appears in the churchwarden's accounts in 1702-3 when he was paid for killing two hedgehogs
4) Sarah Hayme? bur. 25 Jul 1731 Butleigh
5) Elizabeth Hayme bur. 29 May 1737 Butleigh
6) Richard Haime
Married: Butleigh 20 Apr 1715 Alice Bartlet bur. 14 Jun 1719 Butleigh?
7) John Hayme bur. 23 Jul 1754 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 27 May 1737 Hope Strode
8) Thomas Hayme
Married: Butleigh 8 Nov 1746 Jane Holman
9) Thomas Hayme as last?
Married: Butleigh 28 Dec 1750 Jane Davis
DD\BRho/32 Land, orig. belonging to Haymes of Baltonsborough, passing ultimately to Allen of Compton Dundon. Copy wills, John James of Butleigh, 1724; Samuel James of East Harptree, gent., 1748; Jacob James of East Harptree, maltster, 1767 [related in some way?]
10) Thomas Hayme as last?
Married: Butleigh 10 Jul 1756 Elinor Rowles
Child: 1) Mary Chr. 20 Oct 1756 Butleigh
OOP entry for 1756: 'paid for going to Bristol for Thomas Haimes', 'paid Mr. Hood for marrige of Thomas Haime - £1 13s 6d' and 'meat and drink for Haime and ye guard'. Obviously a shotgun marriage!
11) Charlotte Haime Chr. 25 Dec 1808 Butleigh d.o. James and Mary Haime
12) Ethel J. Haimes b. 1882 (Jun Q 5c/543 Wells) West Pennard, parlourmaid, d.o. John and Ellen Haimes 01-134
Ethel was parlour maid at the Vicarage in 1901. Ethel had lived with her parents in Newtown, West Pennard in 1891. Her father was a carpenter. She married Charles H. Lock in 1915 (Sep Q 5c/1049 Wells).
13) Leonard Bond Haimes b. 28 Sep 1905 (Dec Q 5c/390 Wells) Glastonbury, council road repair foreman, d. 1972
Married: 1935 Margaret E. M. M. b. 1913
Children:
1) M. A. Chr. 23 Nov 1935 Butleigh
2) D. M. Chr. 21 Aug 1937 Butleigh
3) S. L. Chr. 3 Sep 1939 Butleigh bur. 24 Aug 1944 Butleigh
4) A. B. b. 1943
5) S. J. b. 1947
In 1911 Leonard, the son of one of their four daughters, was staying with his grandparents John and Sarah Haimes at 79, Chilkwell Street, Glastonbury. His grandmother had been Sarah Vincent born 31 Jul 1850 Butleigh.# Margaret's father was head gardener at Butleigh Court. Leonard served in the Somerset Light Infantry between the World Wars and was in Egypt some of that time. During WWII he served in the local Home Guard and was a life-long member of the British Legion..
Haines
1) Ralph Haine
DD/S/BT/4/3/13-14 1] Thomas Symcockes, John Haggatt and Christopher Griffith of Bristol 2] Mary Butcher and Ralph Haine of Bristol, yeoman Grant in fee of Butleigh manor, endorsed with attornment of tenants. Another copy. 1651
2) John Haynes
The OOP paid the house rent for John Haynes in 1754.
DD/S/BT/19/6/1-2 1] William Stroud of Somerton 2] James Grenville of Butleigh Lease for 21 years of Black Haynes (14a), Clasey's Close (7a), Copley (18a), Bolster wood (8a) and 40a in Butleigh West Field. Rent £8 10s. 1761
DD/S/BT/27/7/3 Part draft deed between John Sturge and wife Ann and others and John Haine of 13a at Brindham uppingstock, Glastonbury 1774
3) James Haines agricultural labourer
Married: Joanna b. 1800 Puriton
Children:
1) John Hains Chr. 3 Oct 1830 Butleigh
2) Betsey b. 1826
3) Harriet b. 1829
4) Henry b. 1839
James was Overseer from October 1830. Son John may have died before 1841 since James (45) and Joanna (40) lived with daughters Betsey (15), Harriet (12) and Henry (2) at Huntspill in 1841.
4) James Haines b. 1831 Martock, blacksmith 51-33
James lodged in Fore Street with Alexander Higgins in 1851. Nfi
Hake
1) John Hake of Beaminster, sackclothweaver
Married: Anne
Children:
1) Ann Hacker Married: Somerton 16 Feb 1734 (Phill.) William Oldish
John began paying rates in 1715 (OOP) and [or occupiers] paid until 1734. He seems to have been followed by William Oldish. In 1717 his rates paid along with those of Richard Holman.
On 16 Jul 1772 an Ann Hake married John Pearce in Beaminster [d.o. John Chr. 25 Feb 1736 Beaminster?]. In the 1730's and 1740's a John Hake and wife Mary were having children in Beaminster.
DD/S/BT/21/3/2 Draft deed between John Hake of Beaminster, Dorset, sackcloth weaver and wife Anne and Thomas Pope of West Lydford concerning a cottage, 2a in Sower Down, and 32nd lott of moor, Butleigh. [The above two documents in an envelope with a loose seal] ND
DD/S/BT/11/2/8 1] John Hake of Beaminster, Dors., sackclothweaver and wife Anne 2] Thomas Pope of West Lydford Assignment in trust of cottage, 2a in Sower Down, and 32nd lott of moor, Butleigh. 1714
DD/S/BT/11/2/11 1] Thomas Pope 2] John Hake and wife Anne Fine on cottage and land in Butleigh. 1717 – 1718
DD/S/BT/11/2/32 John Hake of Beaminster's bond to keep covenants with William Oldish of Butleigh, tailor. 1739
DD/S/BT/14/2/23 1] John Hake of Beaminster, clothier 2] William Oldish of Butleigh, tailor Assignment of cottage in Butleigh. 1739-1740
Hall
1) Maria Hall d.o. Elizabeth Hall Chr. 9 Jan 1619 Butleigh, bur. 4 May 1621 Butleigh
2) Henry Hall fl. 1829
DD/S/BT/27/3/4 & 28/8/19 - 1] Revd. George Neville Grenville of Hawarden, Flints 2] Henry Hall of Butleigh Draft lease of Butleigh House for five years, grape house, greenhouse, icehouse, stables, gardens, gravel walks, Cooks orchard (20, Beggars well (12a), Berril (11a), part of the Park, contents Date: 1829.
Hallarib?
1) John Hallarib?
Child: Margaret Chr. 28 Apr 1580 Butleigh
Hallett
1) George Hallett b. 1859 Chaffcombe, carter, s.o. Robert Hallet, bur. 18 Nov 1936 Butleigh 81K-108, 91-119, 01-135
Married I: 1900 (Mar Q 5c/659 Wells) Kate Pearce b. 1875 Glastonbury, d.o. Joseph Henry and Elizabeth Pearce, bur. 1 Jul 1920 Butleigh 01-136
Children:
1) Robert George b. 25 Feb, Chr. 16 Apr 1906 (Jun Q 5c/389 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 12 Jan 1987 Butleigh
2) F. J. Chr. 19 May 1917 Butleigh
Married II: Butleigh 16 Dec 1922 ( Mary J. G. bur. 12 May 1930 Butleigh
3) D. Chr. 6 Sep 1925 Butleigh
4) S. Chr. 3 Jul 1927 Butleigh
5) G. Chr. 2 Dec 1928 Butleigh
In 1881 George was a carter lodging in Kingweston but by 1891 he was a general labourer lodging with Silas Higgins at 26, High Street, Butleigh. He married Kate in 1900 - she had been a servant at Pear Tree Cottage, North Cray, Bromley, Kent in 1891. By 1901 they lived in four rooms in the High Street. In 1911 George and son Robert lived at 2 Rood Cottages but Kate's name has been crossed out. A deceased child is also mentioned on the census. Living with them was a boarder John Evil Nicolson (76).
Kate died in 1920 and George (aged 61) married again in 1922 but his wife Mary died in childbirth in 1930, aged 42, and the stillborn child was buried with her in the same coffin. George died six years later in Quarry Road aged 86. Mr. R. Hallett was renting 64, Butleigh at £10 per annum at the time of the 1947 estate sale, next door No. 63 was let to the Butleigh Co-op. At the sale 62, 63 and 64 were bought by Reginald Higgins.
2) Henry John Hallet b. 23 Dec 1866 (Mar Q 5c/483 Langport) Fivehead, carter, s.o. Frederick and Mary Ann Hallett, d. 22 Apr, bur. 25 Apr 1942 Butleigh 01-139
Married: 1890 (Mar Q 5c/613 Yeovil) Louisa Cox b. 9 May 1869 East Coker, d.o. Luke and Elizabeth Cox, d. 6 Nov, bur. 10 Nov 1945 Butleigh 01-139
Children:
1) Marjorie Elizabeth b. 1891 (Mar Q 5c/426 Yeovil), Ash 01-139
2) Charles Luke b. 1893 (Mar Q 5c/403 Yeovil), Ash 01-139
3) Henry John b. 1895 (Sep Q 5c/399 Yeovil) Ash 01-139
4) Fred Arthur b. 1898 (Mar Q 5c/457 Wells) Butleigh 01-139
5) Nora Louisa b. 1900 (Jun Q 5c/437 Wells) Butleigh 01-139
6) Dorothy b. 1900 (Dec Q 4c/428 Wells), bur. 11 days later on 28 Dec (De Q 5c/285 Wells) Butleigh
7) Edith Susan b. 24 Jul, Chr. Sep/Oct 1902 (Sep Q 5c/426 Wells) Butleigh
8) Eileen Mary b. 10 Oct, Chr. 14 Nov 1904 (Dec Q 5c/396 Wells) Butleigh, died 2 Oct, bur. 7 Oct 1958 Butleigh
9) Kathleen Alice b. 25 Aug, Chr. 29 Sep 1909 (Sep Q 5c/394 Wells) Butleigh
Henry J. Hallet and his family lived at Broadmoor Farm by 1901 though their fourth child indicates that they had arrived in Butleigh before 1898. Henry had lived with his parents in Swell, near Crewkerne in 1871, his father was also a carter. Louisa had lived with her parents at 8, Sheep's Vale, East Coker where her father was an agricultural labourer. They married in 1890 and by 1891 they lived at Ash, Martock with Louisa's sister Susan Cox. In 1911 Henry and Louisa lived on Butleigh Hill in four rooms with children John, Fred, Nora, Edith, Eileen and Kathleen. Dorothy had died in infancy and wasn't included amongst their list of children 'born alive'.
3) Dr. Denys Bouhier Imbert Hallett b. 3 Oct 1887, St. Pancras, London s.o. Forbes Hallett bur. 6 May 1969 Butleigh
Married I: Annie Smith
Children: P. L. F. b. 1915 d. 18 Dec , bur. 23 Dec 2004 St. Audries
Married II:
Denys died at Wootton House. In 1911 he was a medical student living with his parents at 47, Gordon Square, London WC. His father was a barrister at law (retired). Denys became a radiologist and his professional qualifications were (MB, BCh Oxon, MRCS, LRCP, DMRE Camb). In 1936 he appeared at “The Haven”, Lonsdale Avenue, Margate as a radiologist.
Halton
[Malton?]
1) Susan Halton b. 1875 Sandford, Devon, upper house maid 01W-140
Susan worked at Wootton House in 1901. Nfi
Hamilton
1) Mr. George Hamilton b. 1697, d. 3 May 1775
Mr. Hamilton paid rates on South Moor land in 1725 (OOP), late Mr. Hamilton (CW). The land was retained by 'Mr. Hamilton' and let out to tenants until 1748 when Mr. Hamilton was named as George Hamilton Esq. He retained the land until 1759 then it passed to Caleb Dickinson Esq. George is the George Hamilton (1697- 3 May 1775) who was MP for Wells (1734-54). He married Bridget Coward in Oct 1719 by whom he had eleven children. The Hamilton's Southmoor land was mostly farmed by Richard Holman, often with various partners. George Hamilton was Churchwarden in 1745.
DD/DN/89 Various pieces of land in South Moor alias Alder Moor and Butleigh Moor (approx. 80a., abuttals and names of tenants and former tenants given), the property of the Hon. George Hamilton, purchased by Caleb Dickinson.. [Somerset Archive and Records, Dickinson Date: 1759.
2) Henry Hamilton b. 1866 Pylle, gardener, coachman, d. 1939 Bath
Married: 1886 (Mar Q 5c/467 Taunton) Orchard Portman Alice Tucker Chr. 7 Aug 1864 (Jun Q 5c/641 Wells) Butleigh, d.o. Levi Tucker, d. 1905 #
Children:
1) Ada b. 30 Sep 1886 (Dec Q 5c/320 Taunton), Chr. 9 Jan 1887 Butleigh
2) Henry F. b. 1889 Thurlbear
3) Charles b. 1891 Pylle
Alice was a parlour maid at Whittington Rectory, Gloucs. in 1881. She married gardener, coachman Henry Hamilton in 1886 and they lived in 1891 at Pylle and later, by 1901, at West Tisbury, Wilts. Alice died after giving birth to her sixth child, Wilfrid Levi in 1904 at West Tisbury, dying in The Infirmary, Salisbury in 1905. In 1911 Harry lived with daughter Ada and two other children at 4, Park Cottages, Boreham, Warminster.
Ham - see Hann
Hammett
1) Richard Hammett b. 1776 of Street, Land Agent, d. 1847 (Jun Q 10/372 Wells)
Richard Hammett was appointed as a valuer in the 1827/8 assessment of the village survey. In 1841 he lived in Street with his wife Frances and two children.
Hammond
1) James Hammond b. 1844 St. James', London, butler 71W-86
James worked at Wootton House in 1871. James seems to be the person born in 1849, son of James, a coachman, and Mary Hammond in St. James. If so, he eventually became a bailiff living at 44, Tamworth Rd., Elswick, Northumberland with a wife Eliza Spatchett (widow) b. 1839 Southampton.
Hanbury
1) John Hanbury bur. 14 Sep 1746 Butleigh
Hancock
1) Thomas Hancock bur. 1690 Butleigh (OOP)
In 1688 the overseers recorded the burial of 'a child of Thomas Hancock'. In 1714 5s 5d was paid to 'Hancock for money charged on our tything for robbery' – possibly a child of the latter?
2) John Hancock
Thomas paid 3 months and 2 weeks bastardy pay to the OOP in 1802 then a further 3 months that year. In 1803 he paid 3 months and in 1809 seven months. The recipient was Betty Pollett who received bastardy pay from July 1801 until Jan 1811 – for her child Ann Christened 21 Jun 1801 Butleigh. In April 1811 the OOP paid 12/- owed by John Hancock to Richard Hodges in bastardy pay for 1809. [A John Hancock b. 1775 Westbury, Glos lived in Wells in 1851 - ?]
Hann
[Ham]
This name originally seems to have been Ham but became Hann by the 19th century.
1) John Hamm bur. 29 Aug 1636 Butleigh
Children:
1) Thomas Chr. 13 Jun 1579 Butleigh
2) William Chr. 1 Mar 1581 Butleigh
3) Elizabeth Chr. 25 Mar 1583 Butleigh
4) Robert Chr. 15 Sep 1583 Butleigh, bur. 19 Jul 1593 Butleigh
5) Elizabeth Chr. 4 May 1589 Butleigh
Elizabeth Ham married Henry Poope Butleigh 25 Jan 1615 (Dwelly's PR). John donated 8d towards the building of Chelsea College in1617. see D/D/cta/H22 1638
2) John Ham bur. 19 Oct 1629 Butleigh
3) Elizabeth Ham bur. 23 Aug 1638 Butleigh [widow of John above?]
4) Andrew Ham
Andrew paid rates fro 1673-8 – in 1683 his property was let as 'late Andrew Ham'.
5) Thomas Hann
A Mr. Hann paid rates on part of late William Gathren's from 1753/4 – 1806. Often the ratepayer given as 'Thomas Hann or occupiers' [or 1777/8 Thomas Look occupier]. He was Overseer in 1780. Listed as ratepayer in the 1772 John Rocke Scheme.
6) Henry Hann Chr. 18 Apr 1813 Butleigh illegit. s.o. Ann Hann
7) Bryer Ham b. 1781 Somerset, painter, bur. 15 Dec 1849 (Dec Q 10/398 Wells) Butleigh 41-4
Married: Ann b. 1781 Somerset, bur. 8 Mar 1849 (Mar Q 10/362 Wells) Butleigh 41-4
Children:
1) Reuben Chr. 7 Aug 1796 Butleigh, bur. 14 Apr 1816 Butleigh
2) Susannah Chr. 14 Aug 1798 Butleigh
3) Betty Chr. 17 Aug 1800 Butleigh
4) Jane Chr. 19 Aug 1804 Butleigh, bur. 9 Jan 1840 (Mar Q 10/377 Wells) Butleigh
Child: 1) Susan Ann Chr. 15 Aug 1830 Butleigh - father Richard Spicer 41-4
5) Elizabeth b. 1806 41-4
6) John Bicknell Hann Chr. 21 Aug 1809 Butleigh, d. 1886 (Mar Q 5c/432 Wells)
7) Charles Chr. 17 Aug 1811 Butleigh 41K-20, 51K-43, 61K-68 (7a)
8) Francis Ann Chr. 11 Aug 1814 Butleigh, bur. 12 May 1833 Butleigh aged 19
10) Reuben Chr. 18 Aug 1817 Butleigh, bur. 13 Aug 1824 Butleigh
Brier Hann appears in the OOP accounts in August1805 when an order was issued for his examination. In March 1816 he was paid for his work done at Sealy's Row. In Sep 1818 Brier was paid for tiling the privy at the Poor House. He appears occasionally for similar work, i.e. white-washing in Sep 1830. Bryer Hann (60 - whose name is spelt Ham on the early Parish Records) and his wife Ann (60) lived with Elizabeth (35) and Susan (11) in Butleigh High Street in 1841. Elizabeth Hann, d.o. Bryer, married William Higgins on 7 Apr 1845 in Butleigh but died in 1848 and her husband in 1859.#
Brian (Bryer) and Ann both died in 1849.
Susan Hann, (b. 1830), the illegitimate daughter of Jane, is found in the High Street, Glastonbury in 1851 living with her uncle John Bicknell Hann, a painter, and his wife Virtue Petvin (b. 1815 Street), a straw bonnet maker who he had married in Glastonbury on 22 Oct 1835. Virtue remained in Magdalen St., Glastonbury up to the 1881 census whereafter her husband John died in 1886 aged 77. Susan married watchman Thomas Hillsdon (b. 1827 Aylesbury, Bucks) in 1852 (Jun Q 2a/263 Bromley) and they lived in Shoreditch, London in 1861 with son Walter b. 1858 Deptford, Kent In 1881 she was widowed, but still in Shoreditch and still there in 1891
7a) Charles Hann Chr. 17 Aug 1811 Butleigh, mason, died 1869 (Dec Q 5c/306 Langport) 41K-20, 51K-43, 61K-68
Married: Butleigh 22 May 1832 Mary Seymour b. 1811 Kingweston 41K-20, 51K-43, 61K-68, 71k-90
Children:
1) Matilda Chr. 30 Dec 1832 Butleigh 41K-20
2) Sarah Ann Chr. 28 Jun 1835 Butleigh 41K-20, 51K-43, 61K-68
3) Francis b. 1838 Kingweston 41K-20, 51K-43, 61K-68
4) Beriah b. 1840 Kingweston 41K-20, 51K-43, 61K-68
5) Elizabeth b. 1843 Kingweston 51K-43, 61K-68, 71k-90
Charles and Mary lived in Kingweston with four children by 1841, including Beriar b. 1840 - named after Charles' father. Matilda married labourer William Wills in 1856 (Dec Q 5c/1091 Wells) and in 1861 they lived at Chilkwell St., Glastonbury with five children - by 1881 they lived at Northload Bridge, Glastonbury. By 1911 the couple lived in two rooms of the Men's Alsmhouses, Glastonbury.
Sarah Ann married Tea Dealer William Bennett in 1864 (Sep Q 2c/263 Alresford) and by 1891 they lived at 111, Chapel Street, Edgley, Cheadle, Cheshire with three of their children.
8) George Hann b.1864 (Jun Q 5c/498 Langport) Somerton, labourer, s.o. Joseph and Amelia Ann Hann 81-99
George lodged with Frederick Turner at Copley Cottage in 1881. He had lived with his parents at St. Clears, Somerton in 1871 - his father was a labourer born in Somerton. Nfi
9) Sidney Hann Chr. 13 May 1866 Butleigh, s.o. Charles and Jane Hann
Sidney's father was stated to be a labourer and since no Charles Hann can be found married to a Jane that fits the bill, it is probable that this was an illegitimate child of one of (3a) Charles's daughters. The birth wasn't registered, nor any death or other reference recorded.
Hannam
1) Morgan Hannam b. 1743, bur. 21 Feb 1819 Charlton Adam
A Morgan Hannam appears in the OOP accounts receiving assistance from July 1806 (10 weeks pay). He was paid monthly assistance until October 1814 then in June 1815 he was paid 21 weeks pay up to April 19th 1815. In August 1815 the OOP paid for a letter from Morgan and then made a journey to Norton Turnpike [expenses for a horse and person for a day and night] to see Morgan Hannam. In Jan 1816 Morgan Hannam was paid 23 weeks pay up to Sept 17th 1815. In March 1816 the OOP paid Morgan Hannam's bill at Philips Norton to Mr. Gray the Overseer there and the bill of 15/- for a man, horse and cart to go to Norton and bring Morgan home – plus 3 turnpikes, hay, bread, corn and beer etc 6/1d. The journey took 1 day 2 nights. From April 1816 Morgan received pay of 14/- per month until Feb 1819. In that month the OOP paid his funeral expenses of £1 8s 6d. There is no burial recorded in Butleigh but a Morgan Hannam buried 21 Feb 1819 at nearby Charlton Adam, aged 82 – i.e. born 1743 is almost certainly him.
It is not known why Morgan was regarded as a Butleigh resident but the name, especially the forename, seems to link this Morgan to a family with a common ancestor and this forename was used by several generations such as the grandfather, son and grandson living in Kington Magna in the 1700's. This branch of the family seems imperfectly recorded but an earlier Morgan Hannam Chr. 1690, s.o. John and Ursula (nee Board) Hannam was buried on 28 Dec 1731 in Charlton Mackrell. That Morgan's parents, John and Ursula had married in Charlton Mackrell on 24 Jan 1687 and John Hanam was buried in CM on 23 Aug 1731. A Mary Hannam was buried in Charlton on 8 Oct 1731. There ia a gap between these Charlton Morgans but a William Hannam of Huish married a Mary Castle of Ham in Charlton Mackrell on 26 Sep 1739 and he may be possibly the father of the later Morgan. Other related Charlton Adam burials are a Thomas Hanam bur. 27 Feb 1799 and Hannah Hannam bur. 1 May 1823 aged 90 [possibly Morgan's wife?]
2) David Hannam born 15 Sep1805 Fivehead-Magdalen, shoemaker, s.o. John and Luce (nee Gillet) Hannam
Married: 4 Dec 1832 Gillingham Grace Hayter b. 1814 Gillingham [Chr. 18 Aug 1817 East Stower, d.o. John and Mary Hayter?]
Children: [Quaker and Primitive Methodist records for births]
1) John b.. 27 Nov, Chr. 29 Dec 1833 Gillingham, d. 1903
2) Mary b. 23 Oct 1835, Chr. 3 Jan 1836 Gillingham m. 6 Jun 1861 Kingston Magne George Trim #
3) Anna b. 1838 Fifehead-Magdalen
4) Martha b. 1840 Fifehead-Magdalen (2a) 71W-87
5) James b. 1844 Fifehead-Magdalen
6) David b. 1846 Fifehead-Magdalen
7) Daniel b. 1849 Fifehead-Magdalen
8) Lucy b. 3 Mar, Chr. 25 May 1851 Marnhull Fiffid (2b)
9) Susanna Harriet b. 1855 Kingston Magna mother of (3) married Charles Collier in 1879
David was a shoemaker and in 1841 and 1851 the family lived together at Fivehead-Magdalen. 'In Fifehead Magdalen on the road from the Mill, near the Long House, was a farmhouse which stood well back from the road and had been the home of the Hannam family for more than a hundred years, having previously been in the occupation of members of the Gillett family. The farm had been a holding of forty acres and some of the Hannam family had been important enough to hold all the parish offices and to give their names to a number of the fields but in the 1830s the holding began to decrease in size. The farmhouse was divided to make a home for two Hannam families and when the patriarch Robert Hannam died in 1840, aged eighty, the property consisted of just the house, some outbuildings and two small fields. The house was then occupied, with their families, by David Hannam, a shoemaker, and Charles Hannam, an agricultural labourer. In 1861 David, now widowed lived in Kingston Magna with five of his children. In 1871 he lived with his brother Daniel, a farmer at Kington Magna.
2a) Martha Hannam/Hanham 1840 Fifehead-Magdalen, Dorset, dairymaid, d.o. David and Grace Hannam, bur. 13 Feb 1873 (Mar Q 5c/438 Wells) Butleigh 71W-87
In 1851 Martha had lived with her parents and sister Lucy and six other children at Fivehead-Magdalen. In 1861 she had been dairymaid to the Benjafield family in Motcombe, Dorset. Martha lived in 1871 with George Trim's family at Broadway Farm, Butleigh Wootton. He had also come from Shaftesbury, Dorset. His father was Thomas Trim who had married Mary Hannam in Kington Magna in the early 1800's and George Trim also married a Mary Hannam who is the sister of Martha and Lucy who came to, and were buried in Butleigh. At some time Martha found employment in Kingweston, probably after her sister Mary and family had left Broadway Farm.
2b) Lucy Hannam b. 3 Mar, Chr. 25 May 1851 Marnhull Fiffid, d.o. David and Grace Hannam, bur. 22 Apr 1870 (Jun Q 5c/319 Bridgwater) Butleigh
In 1851 Lucy and her sister Martha lived with their parents in Fivehead-Magdalen. In 1861 Lucy Hannam lived with her widowed father David and siblings in Kington Magna, Dorset. On their Butleigh tombstone it states:- “ Lucy beloved daughter of David Hannam who died [April] 1870 aged 19 years, also of Martha her sister who died Dec 7th 1872 aged 31, of Kingweston.
3) Ada Winifred Ridgley Hannam b. 5 Sep 1877 (Dec Q 5c/534 Wells) Glastonbury, d.o. Susannah Hannam 81W-105
Aged 4, Ada boarded with Jane Allen in Wootton Street in 1881. In 1891 she was a servant in Henstridge. On 5 Aug 1907 (Sep Q 5c/827 Wincanton) at the Weslyan Chapel, Milborne Port, Ada married William James Hillier (b. 1880 S. Cheriton) a carpenter from Horsington, of South Cheriton, s.o. James Hillier. On the 1911 census Ada was in Merthyr Guest Hospital, Abbas & Templecombe, and had already given birth to two children, still living. One of the children Kathleen (1), was at home with her father in South Cheriton. The other daughter Marjorie (b. 1908 Horsington) was staying with her paternal grandparents. Two more children, Sylvia (1914) and Winifred T. P. (1921) were born later.
Martha Hannam, (2a) above, had lived with the Trim family (wife Mary nee Hannam) in 1871 at Broadway Farm, Butleigh Wootton, next to the Allen family - and the Trim family subsequently moved to live in Henstridge by 1891. Ada was the illegitimate daughter of Mary/Martha/Lucy's sister Susannah born in St. Benedict St. Glastonbury – no father on the birth certificate. Susannah later married a Charles Collier in 1879. .
Harding
1) Thomas Harding – paid rates 1674-8 (OOP)
2) Caroline Harding Chr. 31 Dec 1822 Puriton, ladies maid, d.o. William and Betsy Harding 51W-39
Caroline worked at Wootton House in 1851. She had lived with her parents in Burnham in 1841 and is possibly the Caroline Harding who married in 1859 (Mar Q 5c/1149 Bedminster).
3) Mr. William George Harding b. 1864 bur. 25 Mar 1949 Butleigh
Lived at 69 Butleigh in 1947 [Estate sale] paying £5 per annum rent.
Hardinman
[Hardiman]
1) Rebecca Hardinman b. 1827, Chr. 20 Feb 1829 Stratford on Avon, Warwicks., housekeeper, died 1898 (Mar Q 2a/30 Chertsey) 71-72
Rebecca worked at Butleigh Court in 1871. In 1861 Rebecca had been a housemaid at 32, Norfolk Street, Hanover Square, Westminster, home of Sarah Cohen. In 1881 she lived 'from friends and letting house' and resided at Sussex Villas, Weybridge, Surrey. She married John Harewood Lampard, a widower, in 1881 (Sep Q 2a/68 Chertsey, Surrey). He was a retired Civil Service pensioner (Dockyards).
Hares Hare
1) Mr. Hare
A Mr. Hare was paid for what he sent to Mary Abbotts daughter in 1736.Mr. Hare of Somerton was paid £28 18 6d for three ton of lead for the church roof in 1750-1. In May 1763 the OOP paid Mr. Hare his bill for William Collins.
DD/S/BT/28/7/2 1] Thomas Rooke of Somerton and Joseph Hare of Somerton, apothecary 2] Richard Guppy of Somerton and wife Jane 3] Mary Norton of Wells 4] Thomas Hughes of Wells Copy release in trust of 3 yards of arable at Gardners Bush in common field of Somerton early. 1736 [related?]
2) John Hares b. 1837 Croscombe, labourer 51-36 [one of the two Johns Christened in Croscombe in 1835?]
John lodged with William Pyke at Barton Stone in 1851 when just 14 years old. He married Keziah Perham in 1858 (Dec Q 5c/989 Shepton Mallet) and by 1861 they lived in Croscombe, Shepton Mallet. They are missing from intervening censuses, but by 1891 they both lived in Hackney, London and appear to have been childless.
Harker
see Hacker
Harris
[Harries]
1) Mr. Harriss's estate referred to from 1689 -occupied by Humphrey Callow. Possibly a corruption of Hayse?
2) Sergeant Harris – the OOP paid him £1 10s 0d in Dec 1803 for 12 days instructing of the 'volunteers'
3) Charles Harris b. 1836 Barnstable, Devon, gardener 61W-63
Married: 1857 (Dec Q 6a/458 Gloucester) Charlotte Nash b. 1833 Upton St. Leonards, Gloucs., d.o. William and Hannah Nash 61W-63
Children:
1) William b. 1858 Upton St. Leonards 61W-63
2) James Chr. 22 Jan 1860 (Mar Q 5c/659 Wells) Butleigh 61W-63
3) Alice Chr. 15 Jun 1862 Butleigh
4) Emma b. 1865 Christchurch, Mon.
Charles lived with Charlotte and their first two children in Butleigh Wootton in 1861. The family moved to Monmouthshire by 1865 and in 1871 they lived at Llanfoist, Monmouthshire. By 1891 they had moved to Bower House, East Grinstead, Sussex, including both James and Alice [Harres]. All three, including the unmarried Alice, lived in "The Gardens", Hammerwood House, Forest Row, Sussex by 1901. In 1911 Charles and daughter Alice lived at Maindee, Portland Rd East Grinstead, though Alice was mysteriously ten years younger!
4) Charles Harris b. 1862 Stonehouse, Devon, gamekeeper, s.o. Mary Harris, died 12 Feb, bur. 16 Feb 1937 Butleigh 01-140
Married: 1889 (Sep Q 5b/545 East Staffordshire, Devon) Eliza Frances Cook b. 1865 Millbrook, Cornwall, died 31 Mar, bur. 5 Apr 1935 Butleigh 01-140
In 1871 Charles lived with his widowed mother at 28 Cambridge Rd., Stoke Damerel, Devon. After their marriage, Charles and Frances lived at Golden Lake Lodge, Cardinham, Cornwall in 1891 where Charles was a gamekeeper. In 1901 he followed his occupation in Butleigh and lived at Beggars Grave. The couple were still there in 1911 and Charles' wife called just 'Frances' – they state that they had had no children. Eliza Frances died at Keepers Cottage in 1935 and Charles died at Rawdens House, Wells in 1937.
5) Matilda Harris b. 1834 Butleigh, servant
Matilda lived in 1851 at 4, Tailors Court, St. John the Baptist, Bristol. Her employer was Richard Harris (56) a mail guard (or possible father?) with wife Sarah (52).
6) Jemima Harris b. 1821 Somerset, d.o. Thomas Harris 41W-15
Jemima was a servant to Charles Roop in Wootton in 1841. She married John Davis in Butleigh on 1 Apr 1848 (Jun Q 10/859 Wells). #
7) Herman Harris b. 1815 Lawford, Essex, seafarer, s.o. Philip Harris (farmer)
Married: Butleigh 16 Sep 1854 (Sep Q 5c/915 Wells) Hope Curtis Chr. 27 Apr 1829 Butleigh d.o. Thomas Curtis (Mason) and his wife Hannah #
Hope lived in Butleigh with her parents before her marriage and then appeared in 1861 at Wignall Street, Lawford, Essex with two small children and 'man at sea'. Her husband was at home in Wignall Street in 1871 but Hope was widowed by 1881 and worked as a housekeeper.
8) Albert Harris Electrician
Married: 1919 E. W.
Children:
1) R. H. Chr. 3 Jun 1920 Butleigh
2) P. R. b. 1922 Yeovil
3) M. A. b. 1925 Yeovil
At the time of R's baptism his father was described as of Stoke under Ham. In Stoke sub Hambdon St. Mary's church, Lieut. R. H. Harris R.A.C appears on the 1939-45 memorial.
Harrison
1) Benjamin Harrison b. 1759, bur. 4 Apr 1820 Butleigh aged 61
2) Robert Harrison
Robert had an order taken out against him at Wells in May 1779 for bastardy. The child was Robert Harrison Withers Chr. 27 Sep 1779 Butleigh, though Jane Withers had also a previous child. Jane b July 1778. Robert paid bastardy in Sep 1779 for 16 weeks pay. He paid a further 12 weeks pay in October 1779 and Jane and her child received pay from November. The OOP paid for the child's coffin in July 1781.
DD/S/BT/14/1/9 1] Thomas Medlycot Riggs of Binfield, Berks and Catherine daughter and heir of John Webb decd 2] Alexius Clayton and Robert Harrison of Middle Temple Post nuptial marriage settlement of Thomas and Catherine comprising the manor and advowson of Butleigh and Whitley hundred. 1737 [unlikely connection?]
Harte
1) Mark? Harte bur. 18 May 1597 Butleigh
2) Katherine Harte widow, bur. 24 Nov 1603 Butleigh
3) Alice Harte married Butleigh 8 Jan 1598 Noah Barnet
4) Mary Harte married Butleigh 27 Apr 1598 Walter Bennet (Dwelly's PR)
5) Thomas Harte bur. 16 Feb 1626 Butleigh
Married: Alice bur. 27 Apr 1600 Butleigh
Thomas donated 6d towards the building of Chelsea College in 1617
6) John Harte [a John Harte was buried in Long Sutton 8 Jan 1764]
bell worker – appears in the churchwarden's accounts 1688-1695 for work he carried out in the church, e.g. making a bell-wheel and bringing it from Long Sutton.
7) Mr. Hart of Huish
From 1796 Mr. Hart of Huish farmed the land belonging to Samuel Galton on the Kings Sedgemoor Ground. He was occupier until 1803 then in 1804 replaced by Aaron Wheller. [a John Hart of Huish Champflower was buried 25 Feb 1818 aged 73 in Huish – connected?]
Hartnell
1) Bishop Hartnell b. 1831 Butleigh, journeyman carpenter, s.o. James and Susan Hartnell
In 1851 Bishop lived with his parents in Tricky Warren, Churchstanton, Somerset. Bishop married Ann Lawton (b. 1838 Congleton, Ches.) in 1853 (Dec Q 5c/711 Wellington) and he farmed Court Farm, Church Stanton in 1861. By 1871 Bishop was just a labourer. Bishop and wife Ann lived in 1881 at Blagdon, Pitminster. In 1901 they lived next to Bishop's widowed sister-in-law Jane and also had his sister-in-law Mary Lawton living with them. On each census Bishop gave a different place of birth so Butleigh might not be accurate!
2) Matilda Hartnell b. 1882 Sampford Arundel, servant, d.o. Richard and Louisa Hartnell 01W-142
Matilda worked for Edwin Burnett, farmer, in Wootton, in 1901. Matilda's father was a mason and she had lived with her parents at Wykes Corner, Sampford Arundel in 1891.
Harvey
1) Agnes Harvey b. 1756, bur. 30 Mar 1835 Butleigh aged 79
2) Amy Harvey b. 1790 Ditcheat, servant, bur. 14 Nov 1865 (Dec Q 5c/377 Wells) Butleigh 41-5, 61-56
Children:
1) John Chr. 2 Jun 1816 Butleigh (2a) [the father was John Barber who paid bastardy pay for him - OOP]
2)? Elizabeth b. 1819 – fathered by Richard Higgins (?) - see (3) where Elizabeth herself had a child, Edwin fathered by Edward Perch
3) child b. May/Jun 1821, died Aug/Sep 1821 – no record in PR
4) William Chr. 29 Jun 1828 Butleigh, fathered by William Hodges, bur. 5 Dec 1873 (Dec Q 5c/353 Wells) Butleigh 41-5, 51-32, 61-56
An Amy Harvey born in Ditcheat in April 1808 was the base born child of Sophia Harvey – hardly this Amy, but no other Amy baptism recorded there.
In April 1816 Amy received OOP assistance – 6/6d. In May she was 'examined' and lodged at Mary Pike's house for 8 weeks. Her child was delivered and she received assistance – paid for in May 1816. She received assistance in the following months and in July 1816 a man fetched her bed and possessions with a horse and cart from Pennard. Amy occasionally appears receiving aid from the OOP thereafter. In July 1818 Amy's child was ill (OOP). In October 1818 Unity Burton (Britton) was paid for Amy's child (delivery?). Amy received assistance in this period 1818-1819 and she was bought a spinning turn made by William Higgins. Amy was again receiving assistance in 1821 and in June Mary Willcox delivered her baby and was attended by Rebecca Knowle [herself a mother of 3 illegitimate children]. The child died I Sep/Oct 1821 and the OOP bought the coffin in September. In November 1821 Amy was paid for attending Davis' wife. In July 1828 Amy was attended by Rebecca Knowle again and in Aug received aid in her distress as well as bastardy pay (for Hodges bastard). In August a summons was issued against William Hodges. In Jan 1829 OOP paid Amy Harvey for '2 bastards' [Barber and Hodges] and aid while she had 'no work'. From May 1829 she received aid just for son William but from August received bastardy pay for Barber, Hodges and Hutchings bastard (looking after the latter for Rebecca Knowles? - in September reverts to Rebecca receiving the bastardy pay from Hutchings).
Amy Harvey (50), unmarried, and her son William (12) lodged at No. 4, Sealy's Row in 1841 with Jane Talbot (30). Amy was in West Pennard in 1851 visiting Henry and Maria Clark (relatives?). William was found lodging with George Brice at 1, Fore Street, Butleigh in 1851. There may have been a family relationship with the Talbots since in 1861 Amy and William were found together again lodging with William Talbot. Amy died in 1865. William was a pauper in the Wells Union Workhouse in 1871 and died in 1873 aged 49.
2a) John Harvey Chr. 2 Jun 1816 Butleigh, farm labourer, died 1869 (Mar Q 5c/451 Wells) 41W-15?
Married: [1840 (Dec Q 10/737 Wells)?] Mary [Davis?] b. 1823 Glastonbury
Child: 1) Maria b. 1858 (Mar Q 5c/625 Wells) Glastonbury
The OOP bought John a pair of shoes in July 1832. The above John is probably the servant of that name who lodged with Nathaniel Look in Butleigh Wootton in 1841. John next lived in Somers Square, Glastonbury, in 1851, with his wife Mary [Davis] (b. 1823 Glastonbury) and cousins John and Caroline Davis plus grandmother Dianna Davis (79) who was a pauper. In 1861 John and Mary lived with just Maria (3) in Somers Square and John died in 1869 aged 52. In 1871 Mary was a widow boarding at Hill Head, a shoe binder. No trace of the young Maria. Nfi
3) Edwin Harvey Chr. 5 Jun 1836 Butleigh, sawyer, illegitimate son of Elizabeth Harvey and farmer Edward Perch 51-26, 61-58
Married: 1860 (Dec Q 5c/1120 Wells) Caroline Cox b. 1834 Wells, Dressmaker, d.o. George and Phyllis Cox 61-58
Children:
1) Frank Chr. 21 Apr 1862 (Jun Q 5c/636 Wells) Butleigh
2) Mary Jane Chr. 20 Mar 1864 (Mar Q 5c/648 Wells) Butleigh
3) Frederick b. 1867 Glastonbury
4) Alice b. 1870 Glastonbury
5) Herbert b. 1872 Glastonbury
6) Frances b. 1874 Glastonbury
7) Ernest b. 1878 Glastonbury
Edwin's mother was probably the Elizabeth Harvey b. 1819, bur. 23 Mar 1847 (Mar Q 10/450 Wells) Butleigh who died in Well Union Workhouse. Edwin lodged with Richard Higgins [his grandfather] at 20 High Street in 1851. In 1860 he married Caroline Cox who in 1851 had lived with her parents in Townsend, Wells.
In 1861 they lived in Barton Stone. By 1871 they lived in Benedict Street, Glastonbury at which time they had three children, the first two of which had been born in Butleigh - They went on to have several more children.
In 1881 Edwin, a 'timber loader', lived in Benedict Street with wife and six of his children. By 1891 they lived at 10, Grope Lane, Glastonbury with two remaining children. Edwin was noted as being specifically a 'Railway' timber loader. In 1901 Edwin and Caroline lived alone at 44, Benedict Street, Glastonbury.
Frank joined the Army and in 1881 was at The Raglan Barracks, St. Aubyn, Devonport. He married Louisa Pavey in 1884 (Sep Q 5c/536 Taunton) and in 1891 they lived in Taunton. In 1901 he was at the Royal Victoria Hospital, Hound, Southamptonshire - listed as married, Corporal, Ro. So. Reserve.
4) Joseph Harvey b. 1829 Frome Selwood, labourer, s.o. John and Elizabeth Harvey 51-26
Married: Butleigh 24 Sep 1850 (Sep Q 10/657 Wells) Hannah Broughton Chr. 24 Apr 1831 Brauncewell, d.o. Thomas and Susannah Broughton 51-26 #
Children:
1) James Chr. 9 Mar 1851 (Mar Q 10/542 Wells) Butleigh 51-26
Joseph had lived with his parents in Frome Selwood in 1841, his father was a farmer. Hannah had appeared with her parents in 1841 at Thornton le Moor, Lincoln but then moved to Butleigh with them when they occupied Bridge Farm. Joseph married Hannah in 1850 and they, and their son, lived next to the Broughtons in Bridge farm in 1851. No other census record found for Joseph. He could be the one Chr. 8 Mar 1828 at St. John, Frome, s.o. John Harvey - in which case his mother was Joan Hoddinott and the Elizabeth mentioned above may have been his father's second wife. This is most likely since John Hoddinot of Frome, farmer, lived and farmed in Butleigh during this period. This would account for Joseph's arrival in Butleigh. There is an error in the PR where James' baptism is recorded under Hannah and Joseph Broughton! The Harveys emigrated to Australia together with Hannah's brother Robert and family. They left aboard the “Anne Thompson” from Liverpool on 1 Sep 1852 arriving at Geelong on Christmas Day but unfortunately their son James died during the voyage. Joseph found work at Geelong but Hannah died there in 1853 and is buried at Barrabool.
5) Lydia Harvey b. 1835 Frome, d.o. Thomas and Betsy Harvey 51-35
Lydia lodged with John Hoddinot at Higher Rockes in 1851. Lydia Harvey possibly makes a temporary appearance in 1881 as Head of household (with lodgers) at 312 Coldharbour Lane, Brixton. This shows another Harvey-Hoddinott-Frome link as with (4).
6) George Harvey b. 1858 (Mar Q 5c/608 Shepton Mallet) East Lydford, stone mason, illegitimate son of Susan Harvey 91-123
Married: Butleigh 5 Feb 1883 (Mar Q 5c/799 Wells) Louisa Jane Andrews Chr. 20 Feb 1859 (Mar Q 5c/658 Wells) Butleigh, d.o. Thomas Andrews, bur. 17 Mar 1942 Butleigh 91-123, 01-137 #
Children:
1) Fanny b. 15 May, Chr. 22 Jun 1884 (Jun Q 5c/529 Wells) Butleigh 91-123, 01-137
2) Percival b. 7 Sep, Chr. 8 Nov 1885 (Dec Q 5c/490 Wells) Butleigh died 23 May, bur. 27 May 1891 (Jun Q 5c/371 Wells) Butleigh 91-123
3) Mabel b. 29 Nov 1886, Chr. 6 Feb 1887 (Mar Q 5c/483 Wells) Butleigh, d. 8 May, bur. 11 May 1889 (Jun Q 5c/335 Wells) Butleigh
4) Robert b. 6 Apr, Chr. 7 May 1889 (Jun Q 6c/507 Wells) Butleigh 91-123, 01-137
5) Percival Joseph b. 2 Jun, Chr. 16 Aug 1891 (Sep Q 5c/488 Wells) Butleigh 01-137
6) Florence b. 6 Apr, Chr. 4 Jun 1893 (Jun Q 5c/493 Wells) Butleigh d. 11 Sep, bur. 15 Sep 1893 (Sep Q 5c/338 Wells) Butleigh
In 1871 George lived in East Lydford with his mother Susan (b. 1817 West Lydford) who was described then as an unmarried agricultural labourer, and pauper. In 1861 they had lived in East Lydford together with Susan's daughter Fanny (b. 1852, Shepton Mallet - married in 1878), and George's pob was then given as Shepton too. Susan, their mother, died in 1878 (Mar Q 5c/426 Shepton Mallet).
In 1881 George was a stone mason boarding in the High Street, Street and he married Louisa in 1883. She was from Butleigh as were all their children later. George (33) with wife Louisa (30) and children Fanny, Percival and Robert lived in four rooms in an undetermined place in Butleigh in 1891.
Percival died in 1891 aged 5 and Mabel in 1889 aged 3. Louisa, a dressmaker, and the remaining children are found in Sealy's Row in 1901 while her husband was living with John and Fanny Porter (his sister) in West Lydford, where he was born. Florence died in 1893. In 1911 Louisa Jane lived at 34 Butleigh with dressmaking daughter Fanny and farm labouring sons Robert and Percival Joseph.
Fanny died 9 Feb 1927 Mar Q 5c/642 Wells), bur. 12 Feb Butleigh. Percival Joseph, called Joseph was bur. 13 Oct 1951 Butleigh.
Harwood
1) George Harwood b. 1810 Martock, journeyman smith, died in 1851 (Jun Q 10/244 Chard) 51-24
George may be the man married to Hannah who lived in Ilminster in 1841. Hannah died in 1848. He lodged with Jacob Blake in the High Street in 1851 and was listed as a widower.
Haskell
1) William Andrew Haskell b. 14 June, Milton, Chr. 18 Jun 1891 (Mar Q 2b/647 Lymington) Butleigh, s.o. Edwin and Lucy Haskell
William was born in Milton, Clevedon where his father (b. 1862 Deny St. Andrew, Wilts) was a carter and he was presumably baptised in Butleigh during some temporary work period there. Two younger children were later born in Bagborough where the family are found in 1901 - Bagborough Lane, Evercreech.
Hassold
1) Louisa Antonie Hassold Chr. 23 Feb 1870 (Mar Q 2a/234 Croydon) Penge, Surrey, children's governess, d.o. John Christopher and Antonie Hassold 91-123
Louisa's parents were born in Bavaria and Prussia but were naturalised Britons, and lived in England since before 1863, when their first child was born - John being a merchant. In 1881 there were seven children in all living at 47, Manor Park, Lee, London with their parents. Louisa was employed as children's governess at the Cottage Hospital in Butleigh in 1891. Louisa married Johann Schneckenbuhl in 1907 (Sep Q 3a/1495 Hitchin).
Hatch
1) Roger Hatch
Married: Butleigh 4 Nov 1610 Rabody C...
2) Thomas Hatch
Thomas paid rates from 1673 – 75.Nfi
Hathspens
1) Ann Hathspens married Butleigh 25 Apr 1672 John James
Hatto
1) Edith Hatto b. 1870 Beenham, Norfolk, housemaid, d.o. Joseph and Ann Hatto 91W-117
Edith worked at Wootton House in 1891. In 1881 she lived with her parents in Beenham - her father being a stationary-engine driver. By 1901 she was a housemaid at Hinton House, Hinton Ampner, Hampshire.
Hawke
1) Mary Elizabeth Hawke b. Jan 1871 (Mar Q 5c/529 Wincanton) Corton Denham, housemaid, d.o. Edward and Catherine Hawke 91-123
Mary was housemaid at Corville for Robert Neville-Grenville in 1891. In 1871 she had lived with her parents in Corton Street, Corton Denham where they were visiting Charles and Mary Fox (in-laws). Mary's father was a steward in the Royal Navy. In 1881 Edward Hawke was in the Fire Brigade and the family lived at 13, Broad Street, Ancoats, Manchester. Mary married Bertram Joy in 1900 (Sep Q 5c/715 Wincanton).
Hawker
1) John Hawker of Somerton [probably Hacker]
John was paid by the OOP in 1737/8 for his time in mixing two sacks of lime for the bridge.
2) Thomas Hawker [Chr. 4 Nov 1705 Somerton s.o. Thomas and Mary Hacker] – [death not listed unless the Thomas Hockey bur. 28 Feb 1791 Butleigh?]
Married: Butleigh 20 Sep 1726 Ann Walker from Somerton - the Ann Haker bur. 28 Nov 1789 Butleigh pauper ? [see also under Hacker]
Thomas started paying rates in 1771 for 'part of Periams'. [see under Thomas Hawkins – probably the same]. Sometimes listed as Hacker and lastly as Haker. He last paid rates in 1790/91. The Hoods acquired his property.
3) Arthur Hawker b. 1839 Low Ham, labourer 61W-65
Married: 1861 (Mar Q 5c/687 Langport) Sarah Hill b. 1836 Paradise, High Ham, d.o. George and Harriett Hill 61W-65 .
Children:
1) Mary Ann b. 1863 High Ham [Butleigh]
2) Francis George b. 1864 High Ham
3) William b. 1866 High Ham
4) Elizabeth b. 1867 High Ham
5) Edward b. 1870 High Ham
In 1861 the couple lodged with Edward Mogg at Sedgemoor together with Eliza Hill, sister-in-law. By 1871 they lived in High Ham with five children and remained there up to the 1901 census. Mary Ann Hawker (b. 1863 Butleigh) married Francis Small (b. 1865 High Ham) in 1896 (Jun Q 5c/639 Langport) – gives pob as Butleigh on 1901 and 1911 censuses.
Hawkins
1) Mr. Hawkins – supplied the CW with three new books in 1752/3 - £3 4s 0d.
Mr. Hawkins paid rates on late Henry Gregory's house from 1749/50 - 1751/52. (OOP). A William Hawkins buried Philip Huckerage in Feb 1767 and his expenses paid by the OOP.
2) Sarah Hawkins bur. 27 Jan 1769 Butleigh d.o. William and Elizabeth Hawkins of Street
3) Thomas Hawkins
Thomas was listed as a ratepayer in 1772 when the John Rocke scheme for apprentices was drawn up. [meant for Hawker?
4) Mr. Hawkins – doctor – in May 1814 he was paid £3 5s 6d for curing John Wilcox's hand and arm.
5) Samuel Hawkins of Kingweston
Married: Butleigh 29 Mar 1818 Anne Holbrook
6) Edmund Hawkins b.1822 Street, Chelsea Pensioner, s.o. John Hawkins, bur. 25 May 1910 (Jun Q 5c/287 Wells) Butleigh 71-84, 81-103, 91-127, 01-145
Married I: Butleigh 4 Jul 1861 (Sep Q 5c/923 Wells) Betsy Withers b. 1814 Butleigh, illegit. d.o. Jane Withers and Henry Corp, bur. 10 Jul 1880 (Sep Q 5c/355 Wells) Butleigh 71-84 #
Married II: 6 Jan 1886 (Mar Q 5c/727 Wells) Butleigh Clara Wason, widow of Walter Wason (d.o. Daniel and Elizabeth Heal/Hale) b. 1833 Glastonbury, bur. 20 Sep 1923 Butleigh 91-127, 01-145 #
Betsy Withers appeared in Butleigh Wootton in 1841 with James Pollett and his wife Jane. In 1861 she had lived at 12, High Street Butleigh with James Pollet, now called her father-in-law (Step father). She married Edmund in 1861. At her marriage she gave her father's name as Henry Corp.
Edmund and Betsy lived in Water Lane in 1871 but Betsy died in 1880 aged 68. Edmund, then a labourer, lived alone in the New Road in 1881. Betsy had been 8 years older than Edmund and he then married Clara Wason, the widow of Walter Wason (of Watchwell) in 1886 and she was 12 years younger than him! They lived in Watchwell at the 1891 census with Claras youngest son John Wason and a visitor, Ann Walters (81) a widow living on Parochial relief.
At the time of the 1901 census they lived at Moorhouse and had Mary A. Heal (69) widow and sister-in-law of Clara staying with them plus Clara's grandson Walter Wason (7). Edmund died in 1910 aged 89. In 1911 Clara Hawkins lived at Moorhouse with her son John Wason.
Clara was the sister of Daniel Heal, Mary's husband.
7) Henry Hawkins b. 1819 Glastonbury, farmer, died 1892 (Dec Q 5c/315 Wells) 51W-41
Married: 1841 (Sep Q 11/31 Bath) Elizabeth Jacobs Chr. 6 Aug 1817 West Pennard d.o. Benjamin and Adria Jacobs 51W-41
Children:
1) Adria b. 1844 (Jun Q 10 481 Wells) West Pennard
2) Benjamin John Chr. 10 Apr 1842 West Pennard, bur. 3 Feb 1845 West Pennard
2) Joseph Chr. 17 Nov 1844 (Dec Q 10/498 Wells) West Pennard 51W-41
3) Jane Jacob Chr. 17 Feb 1846 ( Sep Q 10/476 Wells) West Pennard 51W-41
4) Eliza Chr. 14 Jan 1848 (Mar Q 10/487 Wells) West Pennard (given as Butleigh Wootton)
5) John Chr. 3 Mar 1850 (Mar Q 10/515 Wells) Butleigh Wootton 51W-41
6) Henry Chr. 7 Sep 1852 (Sep Q 5c/579 Wells) Butleigh Wootton, d. Sep 1852 Butleigh, bur. West Pennard
7) Mary Ann Holder Chr. 18 Sep 1853 ( Sep Q 5c/577 Wells) Butleigh Wootton
8) Ellen Kate Chr. 24 Aug 1858 (Sep Q 5c/598 Wells) West Pennard
In 1851 Henry and Elizabeth with three of their children lived in Molton Street, Butleigh Wootton where he was a dairy-man and his wife a dairy-woman. By 1861 he was farming 145 acres at East Street, West Pennard with wife Elizabeth plus children Adria, Joseph, John and Ellen Kate. They were still there in 1871, Henry, Elizabeth and the three youngest children.
Eliza boarded with 'Professor' George Kirby at Roseville House, Lambrook Street, Glastonbury in 1861. It was an establishment for Young Ladies. In 1871 she was an assistant draper in Glastonbury High Street. Her sister Jane Hawkins boarded there too. Another sister Mary Ann [Marianne] was a visitor at the farm of Robert Creed (46) in South Town, West Pennard (1861). In 1881, called Annie, she lived with Ellen Kate and her father at Green Hill Far, 6, Worms Lane, Baltonsborough (next door to their brother John).
John lived in 1881 at 5, Worms Lane, Baltonsborough with his wife Annie Allen Coward (b. 1856 Pilton, d.o. John and Ann) - married 27 May 1880 (Jun Q 5c/821 Wells) West Pennard. He farmed 100 acres. In 1891 John farmed at Brick House Farm, West Pennard and was an agent for 'Harris & Co.". He and his wife Annie had 5 children with them. In 1911 they lived in Leigh on Mendip but John was a widower and only three of his five children were at home.
Joseph married Mary Jane Martin in West Pennard on 12 Feb 1877. In 1891 Joseph farmed at Main Road, West Pennard farm and was visited there by his two unmarried sisters, Annie and Kate, both housekeepers. He himself was widowed and had two sons and his father living with him. He was still there in 1911 and visited by Mary Ann and Eliza, his sisters.
Eliza still single, was a housekeeper to the Rev. J. D. Jones at Church End, Tempsford, Beds. in 1901. She was a visitor in 1911 at her brother Joseph's farm – Pennard farm, West Pennard, as was her sister Mary Ann Hawkins.
8) John Hawkins b. 1856 Middlesex, London, painter's apprentice 71-72
John lodged with John Richardson in the High Street in 1871. Not possible to identify with certainty which John who lived in London was this one.
9) Job Hawkins b. 1780 Butleigh, labourer, bur. 7 Feb 1870 (Mar Q 5c/488 Wells) Butleigh 41W-15, 61W-65
Married: Mary b. 1791 Somerset, bur. 9 Feb 1850 (Sep Q 10/321 Wells) Butleigh 41W-15
Job lived at Butleigh Wootton in 1841 with his wife Mary, who died in 1850. In 1851 Job was in Midsomer Norton with his nephew William Hawkins (b. 1800 Midsomer Norton) and wife Harriet, and their nephew William Maggs. In 1861 he was back in Butleigh Wootton aged 81, living with Edith Turner, his housekeeper.
10) Elizabeth Hawkins b. 1785 Street, housekeeper, bur. 4 Jan 1855 (Mar Q 5c/533 Wells) Butleigh 41W-17, 51W-40
Elizabeth never married and was housekeeper to John Newport on both 1841 and 1851 censuses.
11) Charles Hawkins b. 1838 St. Audries, groom, s.o. George and Mary Hawkins 61W-64
Charles was groom at Wootton House in 1861. His father was a labourer and he had lived with his parents at West Quantoxhead in 1841/51. By 1871 he was married to Eleanor and lived at Louth, Lincolnshire with two children, and remained there for the next two censuses.
Hawthorn
1) M. A. Hawthorn b. 1847 London, governess 71-81
Miss Hawthorn lodged with Joseph Hickman at the Drapers Shop in 1871. Possibly Mary Ann Hawthorne, daughter of Josiah (Tea dealer) and Frances W. Hawthorne. She never married and in later censuses lived 'from her own means'.
Haydon
[Hayden - Heyden]
1) Charles Hayden
Married: Mary bur. 18 Oct 1792 Butleigh
Children:
1) Betty Chr. 19 Mar 1762 Butleigh
2) David Hayden
Child: William (2a)
2a) William Hayden b. 1735, shoemaker, bur. 27 Feb 1814 Butleigh aged 79
Married: Butleigh 26 Aug 1760 Mary Periam (witness Thomas Periam) – widow of Thomas Periam, bur. 9 Sep 1779 Butleigh
Children:
1) Ann ? b. 1760 bur. 8 Aug 1813 Butleigh (Ann aged 53)
2) William Chr. 19 Mar 1764 Butleigh (2a1)
3) Hannah Chr. 19 Aug 1766 Butleigh bur. May/Jun 1810
William was Overseer in 1762. In 1760 a William Hayden began paying rates on 'part of Thomas Periams' – he paid until 1774/75 after which it is mostly 'or occupiers'. Last mentioned in 1778 then becomes 'now Gilberts'.. In a list of commoners from 1779 who were to serve in rotation as Tythingmen, William Hayden was listed as 'for Diffords – Mr. Grenville'. A Mary Hayden attended John Gregory and his wife for 7 weeks in March 1771 (OOP). In April she was paid for looking after her mother for 5+ weeks. From March 1779 the OOP gave aid to William, his wife and children in their sickness (sometimes specifically to Mary Hayden up to her death [OOP paid for her coffin in Nov 1779] then just William and family). The OOP paid the rent for William Hayden in 1796 (half year) and 1805 – 14. In 1811 - 13 the OOP paid rent for William Hayden and daughter. In Jan 1784 3 yds dowlas bought for Hannah. There is the odd payment to Hannah and these become more frequent beginning in June 1787. The William Hayden who received relief from Sep 1794 – Jul 1795 must be this one. In June 1795 the OOP paid 2½ years interest on William Hayden's house. In July they paid Lord's rent on the house.
From July 1798 William Hayden received OOP money in his distress on a monthly basis which in April 1799 was noted as 'William Hayden and daughter' – this must be a different daughter than Hannah – see below. In Jan 1804 William was removed to another house. In July 1804 Betty Brooks was paid in part for the rent for William and daughter. Payments continued to William Hayden [&] daughter or just William Hayden up to his death in 1814 when the OOP paid for his funeral and coffin (called old William Hayden). Towards the end he had been cared for by John Rowley's wife. Hannah Hayden was buried at the OOP expense in June 1810. His 'daughter' {Ann] had died in 1813 and the OOP had paid for her coffin in Sept. 1813..
DD/S/BT/12/1/49 - 1] William Haydon of Butleigh, yeoman and wife Mary, widow and executrix of Thomas Periam the elder of Butleigh, blacksmith, decd 2] James Grenville Conveyance of 2a at Moor Mead and 1/2a part Diffords tenement in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, Date: 1770.
DD/S/BT/20/3/3-4 - 1] William Hayden of Butleigh son of David Hayden decd 2] Jonathan Hayden of Butleigh 3] Thomas Jeanes of Little Load, Long Sutton 4] George Harris the elder of Somerton, yeoman Assignment of mortgage of messuage and 34a at Coat, Martock.. [Somerset Archive Date: 1786.
2a1) William Heyden Chr. 19 Mar 1764 Butleigh bur. 19 Feb 1792 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 26 Dec 1787 Ann Hodges (witness William Heyden), [Chr. 22 Mar 1767 Butleigh, d.o. Jane Hodges?] [as widow married Robert Pike sojourner, Butleigh 18 Apr 1798?]
Children:
1) Sarah Chr. 9 Oct 1788 Butleigh [d.o. William and Ann]
2) Helen bur. 7 Aug 1803 Butleigh d.o. William Heyden
A William Hayden received 2/- in necessity in Dec 1778 – possibly this William. In Jan 1779 the OOP bought linsey coats for his two daughters. In the first half of 1779 the family received assistance in their sickness. Aid received regularly thereafter. There are references to 'William Haydens bill for shoes' in 1787. Two years of the 'Common Fine' paid to a William Hayden in Oct 1789. From Aug 1791 William was in receipt of assistance from the OOP. In Oct 1791 Mary Hayden was examined at Somerton and William Haydon junr. was also examined [misspelled Wheadon junior]. William received assistance in distress Nov/Dec 1791 and Jan 1792 carried off 'in a chaise' to Somerton and again in Feb for examination..
Not known who the Mary Hayden was – unless the widow of Charles buried in 1792? – Thomas' death may be related to the matter? From April/May 1796 Elener/Elner Hayden received OOP assistance – probably Helen. In March 1799 payments were made to Elener Martin Hayden – an Elener Martin (who died 18 Dec 1801 – in which case it couldn't be Helen who died two years later) had been receiving payments alongside Elener Hayden and this may be a mistake, though from that time Elener Hayden disappears – until in Oct 1802 the OOP paid the expenses of carrying Elner Hayden to Bath 'Hostible' [Hospital]. The Overseer John Dyke paid the bill for Bath in May 1803 and the carriage of Elner to Street Inn – he also bought her a blanket. The OOP paid for her coffin in Sep 1803.
3) Joseph Hayden bur. 26 Apr 1793 Butleigh
Married: Ann buried March/April 1803 Compton.
Children:
1) Jacob Chr. 22 Sep 1765 Butleigh
2) Isaac Chr. 22 Sep 1765 Butleigh
Joseph received 2 shill. In his distress from the OOP in Feb 1763. In June 1769 he received further assistance and his rent paid. In July, Dec '69 and Jan, Feb 1770 he received further assistance and his rent paid in April. In April 1784 Bridget Look (Lucke) was paid for the 'cure' of An Haydens 'brest'. Joseph received his house rent and occasional aid from the OOP in 1791/2. The OOP paid for his wife's delivery in July 1765 and her attendance over the next two months.(by Ann Davis). In November they paid for a coffin for one of her children (not in PR). In April 1793 the OOP paid for Joseph's coffin. Ann paid in Jan 1794 for looking after William Hodges and wife. Ann Haydon was in receipt of regular aid in this period from March1794. .In Jan 1796 a distress payment made to Joseph Hayden's wife. From April 1801 to March 1802 the payments were made to Ann Hayden of Compton. She was paid until March 1803 and in April the OOP paid William Sweet to make her a coffin and the sexton at Compton for burying her. A payment to 'old Ann Hayden' in March 1801 may be to another person?
4) Jonathan Hayden of Butleigh
DD/S/BT/20/3/3-4 - 1] William Hayden of Butleigh son of David Hayden decd 2] Jonathan Hayden of Butleigh 3] Thomas Jeanes of Little Load, Long Sutton 4] George Harris the elder of Somerton, yeoman Assignment of mortgage of messuage and 34a at Coat, Martock.. [Somerset Archive Date: 1786.
5) James Hayden
Married: Butleigh 17 Jun 1760 Sarah Slade
Children:
1) John Slade Chr. 31 May 1763 Butleigh
2) Maria Chr. 8 Feb 1769 Butleigh
3) Stephen Chr. 9 Aug 1772 Butleigh (5a)
4) Richard Chr. 28 Apr 1776 Butleigh
5) Elizabeth Chr. 11 Feb 1783 Butleigh
6) Mary Anne Chr. 19 Mar 1786 Butleigh
James travelled to the justices at Wells for the examination of Mary Larcombe in April/May 1777 (her child was fathered by William Hockey). He travelled to apprehend Edward Ashley in June 1777. James was Overseer in 1777 for Reverend Prat. James Hayden overseer for Mrs. Smithfield in 1783. In July 1783 he examined Edard Nutt/Naits and travelled to Merret (?) to appeal the order of removal of John Streate to Butleigh.
John Hayden was 'examined' in Feb 1803 and given assistance. He received more aid in March 1803 but the OOP paid for his burial in April 1803 [listed next the burial of Ann Hayden in Compton].
5a) Stephen Haydon b. '1780', Chr. 9 Aug 1772 Butleigh, gardener
Stephen was the 'grandfather' of either George Heale (b. 1806 Wells) or his wife Sarah (b. 1810 Wells) with whom he lived in 1851 in Priests Row, Wells. In 1841 he had been a labourer living alone. Probably the Stephen Hayden who died in 1858 (Mar Q 5c/498 Wells).
Hayes
1) William Hayse – paid rates from 1704 – 1723 (OOP/CW). Possibly the Mr. Hayse who paid rates on South Moor grounds in 1688.
2) Joseph Hayes
Married: Butleigh 19 Aug 1743 Mary Eades
3) George Hayes b. 1806 Somerset, farmer, died in 1841 (Jun Q 10/382 Wells)? 41-11
Married: Ann b. 1811 41-11
Children:
1) George b. 1829 Somerset 41-11
2) Mary b. 1831 Somerset 41-11
3) William b. 1834 Somerset 41-11
4) Sarah b. 1835 Somerset 41-11
5) Henry b. 1837 Somerset 41-11
6) Charles b. 1839 Somerset 41-12
7) Georgenia Chr. 17 Apr 1842 (Jun Q 10/508 Wells) Butleigh
This family lived on Butleigh Hill in 1841 but thereafter there is absolutely no trace. Georgenia must have been born just before or after her father's death.
4) Mary A. Hayes b. 1854 Meare, servant, d.o. James and Mary Ann Hayes 71-78
Mary worked at Lowe Rockes Farmhouse in 1871. In 1861 Mary appears with her parents in Meare - her father was a labourer. She probably married in the 1870's.
5) Jane Hayes b. 1859 Meare, d.o. Elias Giblett Hayes and Sarah Hayes 71W-84
Jane lived with her uncle Edward Mogg at Sedgemoor in 1871. Edward's wife was born Ruth Hayes. In 1881 she lived in Bridgwater with her widowed aunt, Ruth Mogg (as companion) and they were still together in 1891, but at Ashcott.
Hayles
1) William Hayles
Married: Butleigh 25 Nov 1717 Catherine Abels (unc. surname) Mrs./widow
2) Mr. Hayle
Paid in part in March 1796 for William Lemon's broken leg. In Sep 1799 Mr. Hayle/Hayte paid for Stephen Hockey's wife's treatment.
Hayward
1) Elizabeth Hayward married Butleigh 8 Feb 1588 John Baker
2) William Hayward bur. 2 Feb 1594 Butleigh
Married: Alice bur. 29 Apr 1585 Butleigh
3) Joanna Hayward widow bur. 21 Apr 1599 Butleigh
4) Edward Hayward bur. 29 Nov 1623 Butleigh
Edward Hayward was in receipt of Poor relief in 1606, 1613 and 1614. A Katherine Hayward also was in receipt of relief in 1613 – his wife?
5) Michael Hayward bur. 20 Nov 1810 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 4 May 1772 Betty Look, bur. 21 Aug 1790 Butleigh (Elizabeth)
Children:
1) Betty Chr. 8 Apr 1775 Butleigh
2) Sarah Chr. 2 Oct 1776 Butleigh
3) Thomas bur. 2 Feb 1784 Butleigh
4)? William bur. 18 Oct 1792 Butleigh
Michael was Overseer in 1769 – being unable to write he signed the accounts with a 'mark'. In Feb 1767 the OOP paid him for 24 loads of stone and their carriage.
DD/S/BT/12/1/35-6 1] Robert Cooper of Salisbury, linen draper and George Cooper of Freshford, clothier, trustees of Robert Hayward decd [of Freshford] 2] Catherine Howe of Bath, widow of William Howe of Bowlish decd 2] James Grenville of Butleigh Conveyance of Butleigh rectory, Shoares tenement, Hutchins (8a), 24a at West wood and Churchhouse, Butleigh. Part of a copy of the conveyance. 1767 [related? Robert Hayward married Hannah Gibbs on 2 Sep 1734 in Freshford]
Head
1) Harriet Head b. 1815 Gorley, Hampshire, ladies maid 51-30
Unmarried, Harriet was a servant at the Vicarage in 1851. In 1841 a person of the same name, age and spelling (Harriot) had lived at Ringwood, Hampshire, and is almost certainly the same person.
2) Robert William Head b. 1825 Wadden, Wilts., coachman, s.o. Robert and Meriam Head 61W-65
Married: 1858 (Sep Q 2c/157 Winchester) Mary Ann Pearce b. 1833 Winchester, Hampshire 61W-65
Children:
1) Henry Philip Head Chr. 2 Aug 1860 (Sep Q 5c/571 Wells) Butleigh 61W-65
2) Eliza Amelia Chr. 1 Dec 1861 (Dec Q 5c/566 Wells) Butleigh
Robert and Mary Ann were in Butleigh Wootton for the 1861 census with 9 month old Henry who was born there. In 1871 Mary Ann and four children lodged in Lyndhurst, Hamps., while Robert was away working. Eliza was absent in '61, the Amelia Head who married James Brinley Ware # in 1881 (Dec Q 2b/826 Portsea Island)? By 1901 Henry was an upholsterer, married to Matilda Gillard [1890 (Dec Q 2b/1208 Christchurch)] from Crewkerne and lived at 27, Collands Rd., Bournemouth with three children.
Headford
1) John Headford b. 1828 Charlinch, blacksmith, s.o John and Elizabeth Headford, died 1856 (Dec Q 6a/208 Clifton)?
Married: 1851 (Jun Q 10/767 Langport) Jemima Oram Chr. 13 May 1827 Long Sutton, d.o. George and Elizabeth Oram, died in 1855 (Sep Q 6a/58 Clifton)
Child:
1) William Chr. 30 Jan 1853 Butleigh, Carpenter
In 1841 John had lived with his parents John and Elizabeth in Cannington where his father John was described as a 'Malster'. By 1851 he was a visitor and blacksmith staying in Long Sutton where Jemima lived with her parents. They married in 1851 and their son was born in 1853.
William was orphaned soon after his birth and he surfaced living with his 'yeoman' grandfather John Headford in 1861 who ran the "Malt Shovel Inn", Cannington. For some reason his name was given on that census as John, not William. His mother was the Jemima Headford who died in 1855 and his father may be the John Headford who died in 1856.
William lodged at St. Mary St., Bridgwater in 1871. In 1881 he was a Railway Station Master living at Watling Street (Railway Station), Wilnecote, Warwickshire. He had married Ann Allsop (b. 1856 Gainsboro, Lincs.) in 1875 (Dec Q 7b/536 Nottingham). By 1891 he was the Station Master at Eccleshall Bierlow, Yorkshire. He lived at 2, Broadfield Park Rd., with his wife Annie and nephew George H. Tongue (11).
Heal
1) Elizabeth Heal b. 1762 Butleigh, widow, annuitant
Elizabeth lived in Bove Town, Glastonbury in 1851, with her grandchildren, Jane Hunt (23), Joseph (4) and Ann Hunt (2). The last two were probably great-grandchildren. Possibly, but unlikely, the Elizabeth Heal who died in 1863 (Mar Q 5c/505 Wells). Grandmother of Daniel Heal - see next? Possibly the Elizabeth Hale (75) living with Thomas and Jane Hodge in Baltonsborough in 1841.
DD/S/BT/2/13 Survey of the farm, c 900 a, let to John Heale with land use and rent. 1769 [unrelated?]
2) Mary Ann Heal b. 1832 Bristol, previously Franklin, bur. 4 Sep 1902 (Sep Q 5c/270 Wells) Butleigh 01-145
Mary Ann Heal, widow, was the sister in law of Clara Hawkins (widow of Walter Wason). Mary Ann was the widow of Daniel Heal, shoemaker (b. 1837 Glastonbury) and they had a daughter Emily Jane (b. 1863) who lived with them at 19, Denmark Street, St. Augustine, Bristol in 1881. Mary Ann and Daniel had married in 1862 (Jun 6a/150 Bristol). Daniel Heal was the son of Daniel (b. 1807 Glastonbury) and Elizabeth Heal (in Cinammon Lane in 1851) and he had a sister Clara b. 1833.
Mary Ann Franklin was possibly the daughter of James and Elizabeth Franklin who had lived in St. Augustine, Bristol in 1861, though her birth year was given then as 1829.
3) Thomas Heal Chr. 20 Mar 1835 Glastonbury, nurseryman, farmer, s.o. John and Maria Heal 81W-107
Married: 1858 (Dec Q 5c/744 Bridgwater) Anna Churches Chr. 22 Dec 1839 Godney, d.o. Jeremiah and Joanna Churches 81W-107
Children:
1) Samuel b. 1866 (Jun Q 5c/635 Wells) Glastonbury 81W-107
2) William b. 1868 (Dec Q 5c/576 Wells) Glastonbury 81W-107
3) Anna Maria b. 1872 (Dec Q 5c/571 Wells) Glastonbury 81W-107
4) Ernest Thomas b. 1875 (Dec Q 5c/521 Wells) Glastonbury 81W-107
5) Herbert b. 1878 (Dec Q 5c/528 Wells) Glastonbury 81W-107
6) Annie Louise b. 17 Feb 1881 (Mar Q 5c/531 Wells) Chr. 2 Sep 1883 Butleigh Wootton 81W-107
7) Beatrice Mary b. 9 Jul, Chr. 2 Sep 1883 (Sep Q 5c/483 Wells) Butleigh Wootton
Thomas appeared with his parents on the 1841 census in Glastonbury. In 1871 Thomas lived with his wife Ann and four children (including Sarah A. b. 1860 and George b. 1864) on the Old Wells Road, Glastonbury. In 1881 they lived in Looks Lane, Butleigh Wootton. By 1891 they had returned to the Old Wells Road, Glastonbury where they still were in 1901, with their two youngest children Annie and Beatrice. In 1911 Thomas and Annie were at 24a, Old Wells Rd., Glastonbury with grandchild Winnie (b. 1904).
Samuel became a railway packer and, married to Sarah Harris, lived in Edington 1891-1901. In 1901 Anna Maria was housekeeper at Brook Farm in Backwell. Of the other children nfi.
4) Jane Rood Heal [b. 1842 Butleigh] actually Chr. 8 May 1835 Glastonbury d.o. William (a farmer) and Elizabeth Heal
Jane's parents lived in Above Town, Glastonbury when she was born. She married farmer Emanuel Walton (b. 1838 Glastonbury) in 1860 (Mar Q Mar 5c/923 Wells) and lived in Glastonbury - though on the 1861 census her name is given as Julia. In 1881 when they retired and lived with Emanuel's widowed mother in Bove Town, Glastonbury, her name was then rightly given as Jane R. Walton.
Hearn
1) Richard Hearn
In the OOP accounts for 1733/34 7½d spent at th agreement with Richard Hearn to marry Hannah Sweet. Hannah had been I receipt of OOP assistance since 1733.
Hebberd
1) Agnes Hebberd b. 1857 Binstead, Hants, housemaid, d.o. John and Eliza Hebberd, bur. 23 Sep 1926 Butleigh 01-134
In 1871 Agnes was in service at 10, Castle Street, Farnham, Surrey and in 1891 she was a housemaid at 29, Christchurch Rd., St. Faith, Winchester. She was single then and still so in 1901 when she served at Butleigh Court. She was still at Butleigh Court in 1911 as housemaid but her surname given as Hibbert.
2) Mary Eliza Hebberd b. 1884 (Dec Q 2a/155 Dorking) Betchworth, Surrey, housemaid, d.o. George and Jane Hebberd 01-134
Mary lived with her Police Constable father, and mother at Broom Park Cottage, Betchworth, Surrey in 1891. She was in service at Butleigh Court in 1901.
Hebditch
1) John Hebdiche bur. 16 Oct 1597 Butleigh
Married: Joanne bur. 20 Mar 1591 Butleigh
Children:
1) William Chr. 28 Mar 1580 Butleigh
2) Katherine Chr. 19 Jan 1583 Butleigh
3) Mary Chr. 4 Mar 1585 Butleigh
4) Robert Chr. 26 May 1588 Butleigh (1a)
1x) Richard Hebdich (son of last?)
Married: Butleigh 26 Apr 1604 Maria Jones
Children:
1) Mary Chr. 3 Feb 1605 Butleigh
2) Edward Chr. 21 Sep 1606 Butleigh
3) Jane Chr. 16 Oct 1608 Butleigh
1a) Robert Hebditch bur. 27 May 1657 Butleigh
Alice bur. 24 Oct 1618 Butleigh (after birth of Anna)
Children:
1) Alice bur. 19 Mar 1612 Butleigh (dau. of John?)
2) Alice Chr. 27 Dec 1613 Butleigh
2) Robert Chr. 29 May 1616 Butleigh (1a1?)
3) Anna Chr. and bur. 21 Oct 1618 Butleigh
Married II: Elizabeth
A Robert received Poor relief in 1613 and 1614.
DD/S/BT/13/1/5 - 1] Robert Hebditch of Butleigh, yeoman 2] Thomas Steaney of Butleigh, husbandman Assignment of part Peckham lease (1562) to George Rodney of a messuage and land, Butleigh. [DD/S/BT/13/1/5-10 tied together]. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT Date range: 1635 - 1636. 1] Robert Hebditch of Butleigh, yeoman and wife Elizabeth, Richard Mogg of Farrington, Robert Russe of Croscombe, clothier, William Stocke of North Wootton, husbandman, 2] John Hutton Assignment of part Peckham lease (1562) of 5.5a in Fishwell and 7a in Date: 1639. DD/S/BT/25/1/2 - Proceedings in Hebditch v. Rugge, a case of alleged cattle stealing at Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1655. DD/S/BT/6/6/1 - 1] Robert Hebditch and son Roger of Butleigh, husbandmen 2] Mary Fry the elder of Street, widow Assignment of 2a in Westwood, Butleigh, part Peckham lease (1562), with bond attached.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1648.
1a1?) Robert Hebdich
Married: Bridget
Child: 1) Elizabeth Chr. 2 Aug 1635 Butleigh, bur. 6 Mar 1641 Butleigh
Jewers note: 33. John Jacklett and Dorothy Frie marr. 27 May 1641. (Mary Frye of Street widow. Will dated 10 March 1650 . To the parish church of Street 3s. 4d., and to the poor 3s. 4d. Son William Frye. Grandchild Mary Jacklett £20. Grandsons Thomas and John Jacklett 40s. each. A chattle lease of 1 acre 1 rood Meadow in Wottons Mead in Butleigh parish for 2000 years to daughter Mary Jackett during her widowhood, then to her son John Jacklett. Mary Masters 1s. Elizabeth White 1s. A lease of two acres of wood in Butleigh from Robert Hebditch for a great number of years, for the same purpose. Residuary legatee and executor daughter Dorothy Jacklett. Proved 10 Jan 1660. [SPRp.14]
2) Roger Hebdich (son of Robert)
Married: Bridget bur. 2 Mar 1672 Butleigh
1) Lucia Chr. 1 May 1638 Butleigh
2) Alice Chr. 2? Feb 1641 Butleigh
3) Eddath Chr. 26 Dec 1643 Butleigh
4) Rogger Chr. 25 Dec 1646 Butleigh
Edith married Butleigh 22 Apr 1672 John Soomer
3) Constance Hebditch – recorded in the OOP accounts for 1680 as looking after Sarah Holman's child, a boy, for whom two shirts were made and clothes mended. Nfi
4) Bridget Hebditch bur. 1724
Bridget and Constance were probably children or grandchildren of the previous family. Bridget was paid for the relief of Henry Homan and Sary Backhouse in 1683, 4 and 1685 in which year he died. In 1693 she was paid for dressing Elizabeth Masters leg for five weeks. In 1705 and '07 she received Rocke and Symcocke bequest money and in 1708 her rent in addition (and relief in her sickness). Bridget appears receiving cothes and relief yearly until 1724 when the Overseers paid for her shroud and coffin, digging the grave and ringing the bell.
Helbern
1) George Helbern b. 1838 Charlton, farm servant 61W-63
George worked at Henry Maidment's farm in Wootton in 1861. Nfi
Hellard
[Hillard, Hillyard, Hillier, Hilliar, Helliar, Helyar]
1) Daniel Hellier
Married: Butleigh 9 Oct 1601 Alice Caple #
2) John Hillard bur. 3 Sep 1607 Butleigh
Married: Joanna bur. 12 Ag 1600 Butleigh
John received Poor relief in 1606.
3) Margaret Hillard married Butleigh 3 Oct 1608 George Burdham #
4) Henry Helyar of East Coker, d. 18 Apr 1634, s.o. Archdeacon William Helyar of East Coker (had been chaplain to Queen Elizabeth, d. 1645 in his nineties)
Married: Christian Cary d.o. William Cary esq of Clovelly, Devon
Children:
1) William b. 8 Mar 1621 East Coker
2) Gartred Chr. 26 Dec 1623 East Coker
3) Richard Chr. 5 Aug 1627 East Coker (4a)
4) Christian Chr. 25 Apr 1630 East Coker
5) Robert Chr. 11 Sep 1631 East Coker
6) Carey Chr. 8 Sep 1633 East Coker
Henry's eldest son and heir William raised troops at his own expence for the Royalist cause and subsequently had to pay a fine of £1522. He married Rachel the daughter of Sir Hugh Wyndham bart., of Pitsdon, Dorset.
4a) Richard Hellyer Chr. 5 Aug 1627 East Coker, matric. 1639, died 27 Feb 1683 (tomb inscription in Butleigh Church)
Married: Butleigh 29 Sep 1663 Edith Billing Chr. 14 Apr 1619 Baltonsborough, d.o. Richard Billings (the younger) and Susan Rushe of Baltonsborough [mar. 22 May 1617], bur. 9 Dec 1700 (Will) #
Nephew: John (4a1)
Richard was Overseer in 1671, churchwarden of Butleigh in 1678 and appears in the overseers/churchwarden's accounts between 1673 and 1684, having donated the account book to the churchwardens in 1675. He made a donation to St. Paul's Cathedral and he was described as a Gentleman. He paid rates on South Moor from 1673-78 and Butleigh from 1673 – 1683. From 1684 the rates were paid by Mistriss Edith Helyar. There is a tombstone in Butleigh church floor - his wife paid two year's rent for a woman's seat in the church 1687-8, a further year in 1688/9, and appears in the churchwarden's account up to 1693. She was Overseer of the Poor in 1691.
Edith was paying rates up to 1700 but in 1701 the rates were paid by Mr. John Helyar (churchwarden in 1702) and thence up to 1713. John Helyar of Chard was Richard Hellyer's nephew – see her Will in which Edith mentions several kinsmen and women living in Yeovil and Wells with surnames Rushe, Conyers, Hulett, Read, Everton and Vivian.
DD/S/BT/6/7/2 - 1] Richard Helliar and wife Edith, executrix of Richard Billings decd 2] William Webb of Butleigh Assignment of a messuage late Dyer Symcockes and lands and Hutchings (8a) in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date range: 1671-1672.
Will of Edith Helyar DD/WHh/24 - (Formerly Billing) of Butleigh Co. Som., widow of Richard Helyar; 22 June, 1699. Probate 10 Dec. 1700.. [Somerset Archive and Records, HELYAR DOCUMENTS AND...] Date: 1700. PROB 11/458 – WILL of Edith Helyar Widow Butleigh, Somerset Date: 1700.
4a1) John Hellier
John was churchwarden in 1702 and overseer of the poor in 1704. He paid rates 1701 -13 in Butleigh
5) Thomas Hellier bur. 16 Dec 1641 Butleigh
Thomas was a witness to the churchwarden's accounts 1701-2
6) Alice Hellyar married Butleigh 25 May 1672 Thomas Talbott
7) James Helliar/Hillard born 1 Apr 1765 Ditcheat, s.o. James Hillard, labourer, Somerset 41-10
Married: Butleigh 25 Dec 1789 Anne Hodges [the Ann Chr. 1 Nov 1767 Butleigh, d.o. William & Ann or the Ann Chr. 22 Mar 1767 Butleigh, illegitimate d.o. Jane Hodges?] bur. 24 Sep 1836 Butleigh aged 72
Children:
1) Thomas Chr. 14 Apr 1791 Butleigh, bur. 3 May 1811 Butleigh
2) John b. 1794 Butleigh (7a)
3) James Chr. 4 Sep 1796 Butleigh 41-10, 51-26
4) Solomon Chr. 25 Dec 1800 Butleigh, bur. 11 Oct 1801 Butleigh
5) Solomon Chr. 22 Apr 1804 Butleigh, bur. 16 Mar 1806 Butleigh
6) Solomon Chr. 17 Feb 1808 Butleigh (7b)
The OOP paid James's rent in 1796 – 1798, 1801, 02, 05, 1818. Assistance given to James and wife from Feb 1797. In April 1800 OOP assistance given to James Hellard's children and periodically to James thereafter. The OOP paid for Solomons coffin in 1801. A load of turf was carried to James in Dec 1815 and in Jan 1816 he received 6/- in his distress. In March 1817 the OOP paid assistance to James Hellard senior. In July/Aug 1830 James had no work and his wife was ill
From August 1835 Solomon was at Bridport and ill - and the OOP sent him assistance there. In Feb 1836 the OOP paid assistance to James and his wife, gave James 10/- towards his travel to Bridport and paid for taking Solomon to Bridgwater Infirmary and his lodging there. In Jul 1834 Ann Hellard was bought a pair of shoes (OOP).
In 1841 James Hillard lived with two of his sons in one part of the High Street (No. 13) while his son John and wife Mary lived separately in another part of the High Street (No. 21). John stayed in Butleigh in 1851 and was joined by his brother James while another brother Solomon married Edith Perry from Somerton in 1844 and was a Tailor and Draper living in Goswell Lane, Street by 1851. His father James lived with him.
Two James Hillards died in the 1850's, probably this father and son - one in 1856 (Mar Q 5c/397 Wells) – probably the father, and the other in 1858 (Mar Q 5c/504 Wells).
7a) John Hellard b. 1794 Butleigh, agricultural labourer, bur. 18 Dec 1871 (Dec Q 5c/418 Wells) Butleigh 41-11, 51-26, 61-50, 71-84
Married: Butleigh 7th (month off register) 1818 Mary Masters b. 1795 Butleigh, bur 23 Nov 1868 (Dec Q 5c/383 Wells) Butleigh 41-11, 51-26, 61-50
John appears in the OOP records in Feb 1813 when he received 2 guineas for the local (militia?). In 1841 John and Mary lived together at 21, High Street and in 1851 they were joined by John's brother James who was a 'road labourer'. James probably died in 1856 or '58 (see previous) - he disappears from the censuses. In 1861 John and Mary have Elizabeth Lye (b. 1784) lodging with them who died in 1867 (a sister?). #
Mary Hillard died in 1868 aged 73 and John went to live in Water Lane where he appeared 1871, the year he died, aged 78.
7b) Solomon Hillard Chr. 17 Feb 1808 Butleigh 41-10 tailor and draper, s.o. James and Ann Hillard, died 1874 (Jun Q 5c/393 Wells)
Married: 1844 (Jun Q 10/621 Bridgwater) Edith Perry b. 1813 Somerton
In June 1818 Solomon was ill and received 1/- from the OOP. Solomon lived with his wife, son James Elihu (b. 1848 Street) and father in Goswell Lane, Street in 1851. Solomon was at 9, Townsend, Street by 1861 with 2 children, James Eliker B. and Anna M. Hillard. In 1871 as a widower, he lived with his daughter-in-law Julia (b. 1848 Bridgwater) and grandson John (b. 1869). He died in 1874 aged '66'.
8) William Helliar
William was a tailor and in Oct 1789 made clothing for Edward Talbotts children.
9) John Hellyer
A John Helliar's bill was paid in Oct 1789. John occupied Sedgemoor Ground belonging to Late Betty Brook from 1805 – 1806 [same John?]. From1806/07 he was the owner and ratepayer on the ground and paid the rates until 1818. Lord Glastonbury then acquired his land. In 1819/20 a John Hellard/Hillard began paying rates in Butleigh and was probably the same person. He was there beyond 1827 and in that year besides his house owned late Comer's and a tenement in the street.
10) Reuben Charles Helyar Chr. 4 Jan 1835 Walcot, soldier, s.o. James and Matilda Helyar, died before 1861 [1858 Sep Q 2b/285 Fareham or 1861 Mar Q 5c/373 Yeovil?]
Married: 1855 (Jun Q 1a/245 Chelsea) Emily Davis Chr. 18 Nov 1838 Butleigh, d.o. James and Ann Davis, bur. 9 Dec 1876 ( Dec Q 5c/375 Wells) Butleigh 61-59 #
Child:
1) Fanny Matilda Chr. 29 Sep 1857 (Dec Q 5c/570 Wells - Hellier) Butleigh 61-59
In 1841 Reuben lived with his parents, brother Alfred (3) and sister Isabella (1) in St. Peter, St. Paul, Bath. His father was a trunk maker. In 1851 they lived at 5, Union Passage St. Peter & St. Paul.
Emily, a widow at 22, lodged in 1861 with her daughter Fanny at 41/2 Sub Road, with her parents, - she was an 'attendant at the junior school'. She was there in 1871 but listed as Emily Davis, widow! Emily died in 1876 (as Hellier). Fanny Matilda Helyar married Henry George Webber in 1878 (Jun Q 5c/1068 Bath). Henry Webber was a music teacher born 1854 in Upton, Som. and in 1881 the couple lodged at 6, Cheltenham Street, Lyncombe and Widcombe, Bath. Nfi
11) Mary A. Hilliar b. 1866 (Jun Q 5c/637 Wells - Hayluer) Butleigh, servant 81-100
Mary was servant to Alexander Higgins at Late Holmans Farm in 1881. Nfi
12) Sarah M. Hillier b. 1872 Panborough, Som., barmaid 91-123
Sarah worked at the Rose & Portcullis in 1891. Nfi -unless she is the Elizabeth Sarah Hillier from Wells, born 1872 and who married in 1892 (Dec Q 5c/978 Wells). The only earlier census-recorded Sarah born in Panborough was a Sarah Vowels b. 1866 in Panborough.
Henbury
1) Joseph Henbury
Married: Butleigh 8 Jun 1756 Mary Gregory
Child:
1) John Henbury Chr. 21 Aug 1756 Butleigh
Hennessey
1) Mr. H. L. Hennessey rented 'Corvyle House' Wood Lane from the Butleigh Court Estate at £70 per annum which expired on 25 March 1947 at the time of the sale.
Herman
see Hurman
1) Mr. Herman (Hermon)
Occupied and farmed land on Sedgemoor Ground belonging to Mr. Atkins from 1819. In the OOP accounts for March 1834 is 'paid Mr. Welch for order of John Herriman' who may be the same person.
Hern
1) Thomas Hern Chr. 6 Mar 1659 Butleigh illegitimate s.o. Frances Hern
Hewett
1) Thomas Down Hewett b. 1813 Glastonbury, shoemaker, died 1882 (Dec Q 5c/341 Wells) or 1885 (Dec Q 5c/339 Wells - Hewlett)
Married: 1882 (Dec Q 5c/1029 Wells) Eliza A. Buxton Chr. 17 Apr 1853 (Jun Q 5c/627 Wells) Butleigh d.o. Frederick Buxton #
Children:
1) Eva b. 1873 (Jun Q 5c/573 Wells - Buxton) Street/Wells
2) Mary A. b. 1876 (Dec Q 5c/510 Wells - Buxton) Street
3) Charles John b. 1879 (Jun Q 5c/637 Wells - Buxton) Street
Eliza appears with Thomas and these three children in 1881 though she doesn't appear to have married him until after the census. Thomas was much older and died either within a short while of the marriage or in 1885. The children may have been his but Eva was born when Eliza was only 16 and after Thomas's death their mother retained her married name but the children reverted to their original surname of Buxton and in 1891 lived in three rooms at Teetotal Row, Street. In 1901 Eliza and her children (called boarders) lived at 19, Brutasche Terrace, Street where they were all in the shoe trade. In 1911 she lived with her daughter Mary Burrows and son-in-law Edward Burrows at No. 8, Beckery Terrace, Glastonbury.
Hewlitt
[Hewlett]
1) Ann Hewlett/Hulett of Compton Dundon
OOP entry of March 1795 concerns a marriage to a Silvester Lush of Yeovilton [3 Feb 1795 Compton Dundon] paid for by them (2 guineas to Mr. Periam) and Mr. William Eades expences of £2 19s 11d.
2) Elizabeth Hewlitt Chr. 7 Oct 1824 East Quantoxhead, servant, d.o. James and Anne Hewlett 41-10
Elizabeth was a servant lodging with John Wake in the High Street in 1841. Even though she was only 16 and John Wake was 35, they married in 1841 (Dec Q 10/709 Wells). # They lived in Church Street in 1851.
Heyluer
1) Robert Heyluer b. 1869 (Jun Q 5c/563 Wells) Blagrove Farm Cottages, Butleigh Police Constable, s.o. Thomas and Elizabeth Heyluer
Married: 1891 (Dec Q 5c/1038 Clutton) Emily Lockyer b. 1870 Radstock
In 1911 Robert (p.o.b. Butleigh) lived with wife and daughter at Beckington,near Bath. In 1871 Robert lived with his parents at Blagrove Farm cottages and in 1891 at Marshall's Elm, Street and his p.o.b. given as Street o both those occasions.
Heywood
1) John Heywood b. 1840 (1842? Sep Q 10/67 Crediton) Oakford, Devon, agricultural labourer , s.o. William and Mary Heywood 91W-116, 01-144 PHOTO
Married: 1862 (Jun Q 5c/565 Williton, Som) Florence Tapp b. 1837 (Dec Q 10/407 Williton) Chr. 30 Jan 1838 Treborough, Som., d.o. Philip & Mary Tapp bur. 5 Apr 1897 (Jun Q 5c/315 Wells) Butleigh 91W-116
Child:
1) Ada b. 1871 (Dec Q 5c/341 Dulverton) Winsford 01-144 PHOTO
In 1841 John lived with his parents in East Mildon, Oakford, Devon where his father was a farmer. John had an older brother William and three sisters. In 1861 John lived with his parents at Great Norcott, Winsford where they farmed 307 acres. Florence Tapp lived with her parents at Yard, Nettlecombe in 1861 where her father farmed 200 acres. They married in 1862.
John Heywood was a successful farmer himself by 1871 farming 424 acres at Lower Norcott, Winsford, Somerset and with Florence had four children (Philip, Mary, John and Florence) plus five servants and two farm workers. By 1881, however, John was unemployed and lodging with his wife and last daughter, Ada at 'The Limes' in Ditchling, Sussex. In 1891 John and Florence lived at No. 27, Butleigh Wootton but Florence died in 1897 and John appeared living in four rooms at 42/3 Sub Road Butleigh by 1901. His single daughter Ada was looking after him - in 1891 she had been a stationer's assistant at No. 11, Glastonbury High Street. In 1906 John played the 'Hermit' in the Butleigh Revel and Ada also played a part. In 1911 John and daughter Ada lived at 55 Butleigh. John noted that he had 4 children still living but a fifth had died.
Hibbert
See under Hebberd.
Hickley
1) John George Hickley b. 1817 Portsmouth, vicar of Street and Walton, m. II
Married I: 21 Apr 1853 (Jun Q 5c/1058 Wells) Sophia Mary Hood b. 16 Nov 1820, Chr. 28 Jun 1821 Butleigh, d.o. Alexander and Amelia Hood, died 31 May, bur. 6 Jun 1857 (Jun Q 5c/394 Wells) Butleigh #
Child:
1) Arthur Chr. 28 Jun 1857 Butleigh, died June, bur. 11 Aug 1859 (Sep Q 5c/363 Wells) Butleigh
Married II: 1860 (Dec Q 6c/496 Upton upon Severn) Helen Wood b. 1836 Prestbury, Cheshire
Sophia presumably died in childbirth, or shortly afterwards, soon followed by her son. The Rev. John Hickley married again in 1860 to Helen Wood from Cheshire, a young lady 20 years his junior, and remained vicar of Walton for over 30 more years.
Hickley
1) John George Hickley b. Portsmouth 1817, Rector of Street and Walton s.o. John Allon Hickley
Married I: 1853 (Jun Q 5c/1058 Wells) Sophia Mary Hood b. 16 Nov 1820, Chr. 28 Jun 1821 Butleigh, d. 31 May, bur. 6 Jun 1857 (Jun Q 5c/394 Wells) Butleigh d.o. Alexander and Amelia Hood
Children:
1) Arthur b. May, Chr. 28 Jun 1857, d. June, bur. 11 Aug 1859 (Sep Q 5c.363 Wells) Butleigh
Married II: 1860 (Dec Q 6c/496 Upton on Severn, Worcs) Helen Wood
Arthur aged 2 years 2 months was brought from Walton for burial. His father was Rector of Walton. The birth of their only child probably resulted in Sophia's death. The Reverend Hickley subsequently married a young lady 20 years his junior and served his community in Street and Walton for over 30 years.
Hickling
1) Ann Hickling
In November 1783 the OOP records 'to ye charge of marrin John Periam and An Hickling with a licence and to ye charge of thei examination and orders fro removal from Butleigh to Chilton and all other expenses attending' £4 18 6d. The marriage took place on 8 Nov 1783 Butleigh.
Hickman
1) Henry Hickman b. 1810 Wichford, Warwicks, gardener
Married: Dinah b. 1809 Wootton, Oxon.
Children:
1) Joseph b. 1832 Deddington (1a)
2) Sarah b. 1834 Deddington
3) Charlotte b. 1836 Deddington
4) Henry b. 1837 Deddington 61-55
5) Ann b. 1839 Deddington
6) - 10) Thomas, William, George, James and Rhoda
1a) Joseph Hickman b. 1832 Oxon, draper & grocer, bur. 6 Nov 1884 (Dec Q 5c/365 Wells) Butleigh 61-55, 71-81
Married: 1855 (Mar Q 2c/287 Newbury) Fanny [Frances] Lloyd b. 1825 Llanfyllin, Montgom., d.o. Francis and Margaret Lloyd, bur. 21 Apr 1915 (Jun Q 5c/583 Wells) Butleigh 61-55, 71-81, 81-101
Children:
1) Edward Lloyd b. 1855 1855 (Dec Q 2c/160 Newbury) Marcham, Berks (1a1)
2) Charlotte Owen b. 1857 (Dec Q 10/576 Wells - Ch. Given) Chr. 3 Jan 1858 Butleigh 61-55, 71-81
3) Fanny G. Chr. 28 Aug 1859 (Sep Q 5c/593 Wells) Butleigh 61-55, 71-81
4) Elizabeth Chr. 1 Apr Feb 1861 (Mar Q 5c/624 Wells) Butleigh 61-55, 71-81, 81-101
5) Mary Ford Chr. 8 Feb 1863 Butleigh 71-81, 81-101
6) Margaret Jane Chr. 1 Nov 1864 (Dec Q 5c/588 Wells) Butleigh 71-81
In 1861 the Draper's Shop, 13 High Street was occupied by Joseph Hickman (29), draper and grocer, the son of Henry and Dinah Hickman who had lived at Deddington, Oxfordshire in 1841 (though father absent on census night). His brother Henry who appears with his parents at Tackley, Oxon in 1851, lodged with him as a gardener before migrating to Sydenham, Kent where he married a local girl. Frances Lloyd had appeared with her parents in Meifod, Llanfyllin, in 1841. Joseph had married Frances in Marcham in 1855 and their first child Edward Lloyd was born there in 1855. They had moved to Butleigh by 1858 when their daughter Charlotte was born, named after Joseph's sister. Fanny was born 1859 and Elizabeth in 1861.
In 1871 Joseph Hickman (39) and Fanny (called Frances on census) had added two more children to their brood, Mary b. 1863 and Margaret Jane b. 1864. Joseph became a patient in the Somerset and Bath Lunatic Asylum in 1881 and died there in 1884. His wife had set up shop in the newly built 'Laurels' at the eastern end of the High Street and their son Edward took it over by 1891. Frances moved to 7, Disraeli Rd., Putney, London where she ran a boarding house in 1891 but was absent from the 1901 census. In 1911 she was at Ham Street, Baltonsborough with her daughter Fannie. She died in 1915 aged 90. Her daughter Charlotte was a governess at a school at 141 Shardeloes Road, Deptford St. Paul, London in 1881. Fanny became a governess at Chapel Farm in Evercreech (1881-91) but as stated above, lived in Ham Street, Baltonsborough, with her mother in 1911. Lizzie Hickman was a drapers assistant in Ham Street Baltonsborough in 1891.
Mary in 1891 was a drapers housekeeper and lived at 44/42 High St., Putney, London. Mary Ford Hickman married Robert James Scriven in 1891 (Sep Q 1d/1280 Wandsworth) - they then lived in Glastonbury.
Lizzie Hickman married carpenter Samuel Herbert Griffin in 1892 (Jun Q 1d/1231 Wandsworth) and they lived in Baltonsborough. In 1911 they lived at Hillside, Baltonsborough with their two children. The other daughters of Joseph had presumably married too.
1a1) Edward Loyd Hickman b. 1856 Marcham, Berks, grocer 61-55, 71-81, 81-101, 91-120, 01-137
Married: 1888 (Mar Q 5c/727 Wells) Margaret Eades b. 1863 Kingweston, d.o. Edmund (blacksmith) and Eliza Eades 71K-89, 91-120, 01-137
Children:
1) Hilda F. M. b. 1890 (Sep Q 5c/429 Wells) Butleigh 01-137 PHOTO
2) Edward Lloyd b. 1893 (Mar Q 5c/477 Wells) Butleigh 01-137
In 1891 Edward Lloyd Hickman (35) the son of Joseph Hickman who had run the shop in the West end of the High Street (No. 13a today) lived at the Laurels. By 1901 Edward and Margaret had two children. Margaret Eades' father was a blacksmith in Kingweston in 1871 but the family had lived in Barton St. David by 1881. The four still lived together in Butleigh in 1911. Hilda appeared in the Butleigh Revel of 1906.
Hicks
1) Jane Hicks b. 1801 Somerset 41-9
Jane was left in charge of Butleigh House with two other servants in 1841, one whom was Ann Higgins (Higgins 2b) or possibly even Ann Higgins Oldish (see Higgins 1c) She is probably the Jane Hicks (b. Camborne, Cornwall) who married William Kelway in 1842 Mar (Q 10/755 Wells). #
2) James Hicks b. 1858 Loxton, farmer, s.o. John and Anne Hicks
Married: 1881 (Dec Q 5c/961 Axbridge) Annie Whitehead b. 1856 N. Petherton
Children:
1) Alice Maude b. 7 Nov, Chr. 31 Dec 1882 (Dec Q 5c/519 Wells) Butleigh
2) Henry James b. 4 Jan, Chr. 2 Mar 1884 (Mar Q 5c/498 Wells) Butleigh
3) Francis John b. 30 Mar, Chr. 2 May 1886 (Jun Q 5c/633 Wells) Butleigh
At the baptism of Henry James in 1884, his father's address was given in the PR as Compton Street, Butleigh. James was a gamekeeper in Batcombe in 1891. Their son Henry James was bur. 11 Jun 1890 (Jun Q 5c/347 Shepton Mallet) Batcombe, aged 6. Francis was still living with his parents in 1891 but is absent from the census in 1901. In 1901 Maude's father, a cowman, and mother lived in Church Street, Bathford. An Alice Maud Hicks married in 1909 (Jun Q 5c/1115 Bath). In 1911 James, now a market gardener, and Annie lived at Alma Cottage, Bathford – by themselves. Of their three children one had died by then. Henry James may be the horse cab driver at 26, station Street, Brighton in 1911 – no pob given and he was already a widower.
3) Charles Edward Hicks b. 1868 (Jun Q 5c/622 Axbridge) Weare, farmer, s.o. Charles and Ann Puddy Hicks
Married: Butleigh 9 Apr 1891 (Jun Q 5c/815 Wells) Susan Ann Killen b. 1865 (Dec Q 5c/636 Clutton) Cameley #
Child:
1) William Reginald Chr. 27 May 1898 (Jun Q 5c/580 Lymington) Butleigh
In 1891 Charles lived with his widowed mother and two younger siblings on their farm at Weare. After their marriage the couple went to live in Berry Hill, Winterbourne, Mangotsfield, Gloucs., where Charles was a colt trainer (groom).
Hide
1) Mary Hide married Butleigh 22 Jul 1662 John Rayment the younger
Hiett
Heiatt - Hyett
A Robert Hyett (d. circa 1558) acquired Wootton estates in 1545 from Edward Carne. His son Thomas sold some of the estate to Richard Walton in 1566 though retaining a life interest which he subsequently sold to Andrew Dyer. (VCH) Not known if there is a connection between Thomas Hyett and Richard (2).
1) Joane Hiett – in 1680 a warrant was issued for Joane – possible wife of one of the following?
2) Richard Hiett d. 1686?
Children:
1) John Chr. 27 Apr 1676 Street (?)
2) Richard
3) George
Richard was churchwarden in 1684-5 and paid rates from 1681-6. The Richard and George who received relief (+ stockings and shoes) in 1687 may have been his children (or John's). They received this relief again in 1688 and '89 in which latter year George was taken in by Robert Barnard and Richard by Edward Jacklett. In 1687 the rates were paid by John and his neighbour (looking after George) was Robert Barnard. From 1688 the rate was paid jointly Robert Burnard and John Hiett until 1695 when it was just John Heiat again – up to 1700 when he emigrated to America. All this time the adjoining property was was 'late John Hiett deceased. In 1703 Richard Heiatt becomes a rate payer – but on a different property and was there until 1707. Probably the Richard Hiatt who was in Kingweston in 1715.
DD?S?BT?6/8/5 1] Richard Hiatt of Kingweston and wife Amy daughter of John Gregory decd 2] John Gregory of Butleigh, yeoman and son of John decd 3] John Reynolds the elder of Kingweston, yeoman Assignment of 1a at Nurslinge gate in the West field and 1a at north end Date: 1715.
2a) John Hiett b.c. 1676, d.c. 1727
Married: c. 1695 Mary Smith b.c. 1677 d.o. William and Grace Smith
Children:
1) John b. 1696
2) George b. 1698
3) William b. 1700 Bucks County, Pennsylvania
DD/S/BT/6/8/3 1] John Hiett late of Butleigh but now of Pennsylvania, America and wife Mary 2] Henry Coate of Kingsbury, yeoman Mortgage of Hiett's messuage, 6a in the moor, Darksome (1/4a), 4a at East end by Barton river, 2a at Whitewell, 6a at Shilfehedge, 6a at Brownswell Date: 1700.
John
Hiett,
arrived in Bucks County, Pennsylvania in the autumn of 1699. On 11
April 1700 he purchased 300 acres of land (Bucks Co. Pennsylvania DB
3, page 27) from John Rowland for 350 p. (The foregoing deed is also
mentioned in the 'Inventory of Church Archives, Pennsylvania -
Friends' . ( In 1700, John Hiett bought 300 a. of John Rowland, a
Quaker, who had given the land for the Watson Graveyard out of his
tract previous to 1700. The land had been granted to John Rowland by
William Penn in 1673. In 1702, John Hiett sold this 300 a. to Thomas
Watson, tanner, for 400 p. (DB 3, p. 88) Deed book 4, p. 15, Bucks
County: On April 22, 1706, John Hiett of the County of Bucks in ye
province of Pensilvania Yeom'n - bought land granted and confirmed
unto Andrew Ellet by patent under the hand of William Penn ".
John's
wife was Mary Smith, the daughter of William and Grace Smith. William
lived in Cecil County, Maryland, where on the 20th of May 1710 his
will was proven.
Some
50 miles SW of Philadelphia in the north east corner of the State of
Maryland, lies the county of Cecil. It was here, in Cecil Co., MD
that William Smith wrote this will on the 20th of September 1708, it
was proved the 20th of May 1710. He leaves to 2nd son John and heirs
1000 acres, dwelling plantation, to daughter Mary,
wife of John
Hayet,
and granddaughter Hannah, daughter of son William personalty
(Personal property) . Executors wife Grace, and son John. Teste:
David Evans, William Smith 13:113. The name Hayet becomes Hiett in
further court proceedings regarding this will.
Both,
Hietts and Smiths families were members of the Religious Society of
Friends (Quakers) in Somersetshire, England. William Smith, the
Quaker, bought a certificate to Philadelphia for himself and wife and
family, dated 1699, from Glastonbury
Monthly Meeting in
Somersetshire, England. It is quite possible, that our John Hiett,
immigrant, came to America with his wife's family. William and John
Smith, brothers of Mary Smith Hiett, are probably the ancestors of
the Smiths show settled in Virginia in the same community and at
about the same time as did John Hiatt Jr. and his brother William
Hiatt, sons of John and Mary Smith Hiett.
Mary
Hyot was noted in the Falls Monthly Meeting in Bucks Co. PA, she was
received on certificate the 7th of the 6th month in 1706.
The
History of Bucks Co. Pennsylvania mentioned that the families of
Roberts, Foulke, Gilbert, Nixon, Edwards and Hyatt were prominent
among those who formed the early community, his was in early 1700's.
John
Hiett is called a yeoman, in the early deeds of Bucks Co. A yeoman is
a freeborn common man of the most respectable class, a freeholder.
John is known to have resided in the town of Makefield in Bucks Co.
at one time, it is possible that he was a merchant, by which means he
acquired the 350 p. (over $1500) to make his first purchase of land
in 1700. Andrew Ellet, from whom John Hiett purchased land, was a
merchant. He is most probably identical with the John Hyatt who was a
witness to the will of Thomas Masters of Philadelphia, Merchant,
dated 4 Dec. 1723. Also he was a witness to a will of Abraham
Bickley, a Quaker merchant from Burlington, New Jersey and
Philadelphia, PA. ( Hiatt - Hiett, Genealogy and Family History,
compiled and edited by William Petty Johnson, Payson , Utah )
2) John Heiatt d. 1686?
John paid rates from 1681-6 when his property becomes 'late John Hieatt deceased' – see above. Probably brother of Richard (2).
2) Walter Hiett b. 1825 Taunton, tailor, s.o. James and Mary Hiett, died 1908 (Mar Q 5c/271 Langport)
Married: 1897 (Mar Q 5c/723 Wells) Elizabeth Britton b. 1835 Taunton #
Elizabeth Britton was the widow of William S. Britton. This couple lived at Rockwell [Brittons Court] in 1901. Walter was thrice married and his two previous marriages took place in Taunton in 1876 (Martha - who died in
1879) and 1880. Walter was the son of a tailor, James Hiett (b. 1796) and his wife Mary, and appeared with them in 1841. He appeared with his widowed father in 1851 and with two of his sisters (at 3, Murry's Court, Taunton) in 1861. In 1871 he lived with one of his sisters, Mary Tapper, and her daughter, at 5, Paynes Court. He seems to be missing from the censuses in 1881 and 1891 when he was married to his second wife. He died in 1908 aged 81.
Higdon
1) John Higden
John paid rates jointly with Thomas Look on the property of the late George Hooper in 1715. A John Higdon, yeoman of Street was brother of James Higdon – see Jewers notes (Street Parish Registers) no. 100.
2) Robert Higdon b. 1872 (Sep Q 5c/531 Shepton Mallet) East Pennard, farm servant, died 1896 (Jun Q 5c/288 Shepton Mallet) 91-124
Robert was a labourer on the farm of Joseph Maidment, Lower Hill Farm in 1891. In 1881 he lived with his widowed mother Eliza and eight brothers at West Bradley, Lottisham. He died in 1896 aged just 23. The Higdons had been neighbours of the Maidments in Lottisham in 1881 and it is perhaps this connection that lead to his position in 1891.
Higgins/Higgens
Higginses became increasing numerous during the 18th century to become the most common surname during the 19th. Unlike other families, comparatively few children died in infancy. See Tree A Higgens from West Lydford was forcibly removed from Butleigh, together with his wife, in 1714. (OOP). Higgens families lived in neighbouring Baltonsborough before the ones in Butleigh.
1) Thomas Higgens [bur. 21 Jan 1725 Baltonsborough/ 4 Dec 1731 Baltonsborough ?]
Married: Butleigh 10 Dec 1719 Mary Marsh
Children:
1) Sarah bur. 12 Feb 1721 Baltonsborough
2) Joan Chr. 27 Nov 1721 Baltonsborough
3) Sarah Chr. 26 Sep 1724 Baltonsborough, bur. 23 Oct 1726 Baltonsborough
The above references to children is assuming that the Thomas and Mary having children there are this couple.
2) Samuel Higgins of Baltonsborough [bur. 13 Jul 1720 Baltonsborough?]
Married: Butleigh 27 Jun 1717 Mary Payne Chr. 30 Apr 1684 West Pennard d.o. Johnand Honour Paine
3) Lydia Higgins married John Jennings Butleigh 1 Jun 1731
4) William Higgins [bur. 29 Apr 1746/ 16 Jan 1765 Baltonsborough ?]
Married: Butleigh 7 Nov 1723 Mary Cooper
Child:ren:
1) John Chr. 11 Apr 1725 Baltonsborough (4a)
2) William Chr. 16 Mar 1727 Baltonsborough
3) Amy Chr. 29 Dec 1735 Baltonsborough
4) Sary Chr. 2 Feb 1738 Baltonsborough
5) Thomas Chr. 15 Feb 1743 Baltonsborough bur. 13 Sep 1743 Baltonsborough
4a) John Higgins
Married: Butleigh 17 Oct 1748 Mary Chapple Chr. 1 Jan 1724 Butleigh d.o. Robert and Mary Chapple #
Child: 1) John Higgins Chr. 5 Jan 1752 (4a1)?
The son John married on: 20 Apr 1772 by banns East Pennard Sarah Parriss and II: 13 Aug 1788 Baltonsborough Sarah Appleby. A son of this second marriage, Peter Higgins married Mary Gill (nee Slade) 26 Dec 1826 in Baltonsborough and they emigrated to New Zealand.
4a1)? John Higgins
Married I: 20 Apr 1772 East Pennard Sarah Parriss
Married II: 13 Aug 1788 Baltonsborough Sarah Appleby
Far from certain if this is the same couple. See also 5x below.
5) John Higgins bur. 29 Aug 1787 Butleigh?
Married: Butleigh 14 Apr 1735 Mary Brice
As with several families here – a couple fitting this bill were having children in Baltonsborough and 'John & Mary' seem fairly common – more than one couple with these names having children at the same time.
A John Higgins received aid in late 1787 and in Sep the OOP recorded they had received 7 peck of wheat in his wife's sickness. In the Oct accounts the OOP paid for John's burial.
5x) John Higgins
Married: Butleigh 10 May 1779 Sarah Underwood
Children:
1) Ann (Chr. 2 Nov 1783 Butleigh, d.o. John and Sarah Higgins, bur. 28 Mar 1825 Butleigh aged 42)
2) William (Chr. 29 Apr 1780 Butleigh s.o. John and Sarah Higgins)
From Nov 1816 an Ann Higgins was in receipt of assistance – in Aug 1817 her goods were transported to Butleigh Wootton – she was paid until March 1825 whe she was cared for by Jane Withers then James Blacker paid to bury her.
6) Henry Higgins [bur. 17 Apr 1762 Baltonsborough ?]
Married: Butleigh 4 Apr 1738 Mary Walter
Children:
1) Amy Chr. 11 Feb 1739 Baltonsborough bur. 28 Mar 1749 Baltonsborough
2) Ann Chr. 4 May 1740 Baltonsborough
3) Mary Chr. 4 May 1740 Baltonsborough
4) Henry Chr. 7 Feb 1742 Baltonsborough
5) William Chr. 12 Mar 1744 Baltonsborough
6) Sarah Chr. 6 Oct 1746 Baltonsborough bur. 26 Oc 1746 Baltonsborough
7) James Chr. 18 Feb 1748 Baltonsborough
7) Joseph Higgins
Married: Butleigh 1 Jan 1742 Sarah Sprenton died 18xx?
A Sarah Higgins received OOP aid from Oct 1787 and had her rent paid by the OOP in 1788/89 -1807. In May 1788 the OOP paid for transporting her and her goods to Butleigh. When she received aid in May it referred to Sarah Higgins and children. In Feb 1800 Sarah Higgins children received dowlas. In May 1800 Sarah Higgins and children received 3/-. Sarah received payments from October to December 1800 and up to Oct 1801. She received occasional payments after that From Aug 1806 the payments made to Sarah Higgins daughter but in July 1806 rent paid for Sarah. In May 1807 Sarah Higgins rent for daughter was paid. From 1808 Sarah Higgins daughter had her rent paid by the OOP. In 1809 the (error?) entry reads Sarah & daughter. In Jan 1812 is an entry that the OOP paid for Sarah Higgins to visit her daughter at Bath – previously an Elizabeth or Betty had been ill and taken to Bath. In Feb 1813 Sarah received assistance and again in Aug 1815. In May 1826 Sarah Higgins was bought a spinning turn – the same Sarah? (See 14, 10 and 5x! - still work to do here). Sarah Higgins received 10/- monthly aid from Oct 1832 – Feb 1833.
From 1815 - 1827 Mary Higgins received her house rent from the OOP.
9) William Higgins [bur. 16 Jan 1765 Baltonsborough?]
Married: Butleigh 29 Nov 1749 Hester Fox bur. 1 Mar 1812 Baltonsborough
Children:
1) Lucy Chr. 14 Jul 1751 Baltonsborough
2) Stephen Chr. 13 Jan 1754 Baltonsborough
3) Jacob 18 Jan 1756 Baltonsborough
4) Samuel Chr. 1 Jun 1760 Baltonsborough
5) William Chr. 28 Feb 1764 Baltonsborough, bur. 8 Dec 1765 Baltonsborough [s.o. Hester]
6) Hester Chr. 28 Feb 1764 Baltonsborough bur. 16 Feb 1766 Baltonsborough [d.o. Hester]
10) John Higgins bur 16 Feb 1769 Butleigh
Married: 16 May 1744 Baltonsborough Jane Periam of Butleigh
Children:
1) William Chr. 7 Aug 1745 Butleigh (10b)
2) Mary Chr. 13 Apr 1747 Butleigh
3) Thomas Chr. 15 Jul 1749 Butleigh
4) ?John Chr. 5 Aug 1751 Butleigh m. Sarah Underwood?
5) Henry Chr. 16 Mar 1754 Butleigh
6) Jacob Chr. 19 Feb 1758 Butleigh [bur. 8 Feb 1761 - Jacob, or 7 Feb 1762 Butleigh s.o. Jacob and Jane?]
7) Ambrose Chr. 2 Feb 1760 Butleigh (10a)
8) Hester Chr. 4 Apr 1763 Butleigh bur. 5 Mar 1794 Butleigh
An Ambrose Higgins had married a Hester Martin in Baltonsborough on 26 Jul 1731 – in view of the forename he may have been a brother of John?
A John Higgins was a carpenter working on the rebuilding of the church roof in 1750-51. A Jane Higgins received OOP assistance in distress in March, May, Jun 1770 then from September monthly until October 1790. She received rent in 1772 and 1773, 74. In June 1774 the OOP paid for 5 yards of dowlas for her children.
The mother of John (s.o. John) is not given in the PR but he is almost certainly of this family. He is probably the John who married Sarah Underwood in Butleigh on 10 May 1779 (see 5x above, 10b1 below, and 14). # [One correspondent has an Elizabeth Higgins b.c. 1765 of Butleigh, d.o. John and Jane (nee Persun) marrying Thomas Whitnell in Street on 2 Apr 1784 – which daughter could be a child of this family?]. Hester was apprenticed to James Grenville in 1772 under the 'John Rocke scheme'. (OOP)
A Henry Higgins was examined at Wells with Betty Clarke in Oct 1785. In October Henry and Betty and children were taken to Edington. The removal order was confirmed at Bridgwater in Dec 1785. [A Henry Higgins and Jane had several children in Edington 1788-99]
A Hester received assistance from the OOP from Sep 1781 – March 1782. Hester was paid for four weeks attendance on George Withers' wife in Oct 1793.
10a) Ambrose Higgins Chr. 2 Feb 1760 Butleigh, s.o. John and Jane Higgins, bur. 21 Aug 1831 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 17 Sep 1781 Betty Ann Hodges b. 1763, bur. 8 Mar 1845 (Mar Q 10/404 Wells) Butleigh 41-11
Children:
1) Ambrose Chr. 22 Oct 1782 Butleigh
2) Betty Chr. 28 Dec 1783 Butleigh, bur. 9 Nov 1848 (Dec Q 10/331 Wells) Butleigh [Wells Union Workhouse] 41W-17
3) James Chr. 27 Mar 1785 Butleigh, bur. 31 Dec 1870 (Dec Q 5c/429 Wells) Butleigh 41-11, 51-28, 61-51
4) Ambrose Chr. 22 Jul 1787 Butleigh (10a1)
5) Ann Chr. 21 Mar 1790 Butleigh [bur. Oct 1795?]
6) Richard Hodges Chr. 17 Jul 1792 Butleigh (10a2)
7) Thomas Chr. 7 Aug 1796 Butleigh (10a3)
8) William Chr. 14 Apr 1799 Butleigh [bur. April 1800?]
9) William Chr. 5 Apr 1801 Butleigh (10a4)
10) John Chr. 4 Mar 1804 Butleigh (10a5) bur 29 Jun 1834 Butleigh
Ambrose received 2 shirts from the OOP in Jan 1773. Ambrose was in receipt of OOP house rent from 1791 – 1820/21. In 1790 he began receiving OOP assistance. From 1822/23 - 1827+ the recipient is identified as Ambrose Higgins junior. In Oct 1795 the OOP paid for the coffin of one of Ambrose's children and in April 1800 for the coffin of another. Ambrose received occasional assistance in distress from the OOP from 1800. A payment made to his son in Sep 1805 and a bill from Mr. J. Bartlett in his regard in October. In May 1816 Ambrose received OOP assistance alongside his son Ambrose. Ambrose is listed as a cottager in the 1827/28 poor rate assessments and Sarah Sweet lived in the property too.
Elizabeth (Betty) Ann is listed as mother under names Betty or Ann, buried as Betty Ann. Betty Higgins (70) widow and James Higgins (50), stone cutter, lived at 20, High Street in 1841. James was her son and is described as unmarried in 1851 when he lodged with William Bond. He was still with William Bond and family in 1861 (at Curtis's) when he is described as 'uncle'. He died in 1870. His mother had died in 1845.
Betsy (Betty) Higgins was a relative of Susan, with whom she lived in 1841, and also a labourer. Though possibly a widowed sister-in-law rather than Ambrose's daughter, she could also have been the Betty Higgins Chr. 18 Feb 1787 Butleigh, d.o. John and Jane Higgins. She died in 1848 (Dec Q 10/331 Wells)
10a1) Ambrose Higgins Chr. 22 Oct. 1782/7 Butleigh, agricultural labourer, s.o. Ambrose and Ann Higgins, bur. 18 Oct 1859 (Dec Q 5c/403 Wells) Butleigh 41-11, 51-31
Married: Butleigh 29 Mar 1813 Sarah Wilcox b. 1793 Butleigh, bur. 28 Dec 1872 (Dec Q 5c/383 Wells) Butleigh 41-11, 51-31, 61-60, 71-80
Children:
1) John Chr. 24 Oct 1813 Butleigh (10a1A)
2) James Chr. 18 Jan 1816 Butleigh [Ambrose & Sophia]
3) William Chr. 24 Oct 1819 Butleigh (10a1B)
4) Anne Sophia Chr. 13 Jan 1822 Butleigh
5) Thomas b. 1825 Butleigh (10a1C)
Ambrose had an illegitimate daughter, Sarah Knolles, born in 1810, d.o. Rebecca Knowles, who married Joseph Russell in 1833. # Ambrose was paying bastardy pay from March 1810 to March 1821 [Sarah gave her father's name as Ambrose Higgins at her second marriage to Charles Andow]. In April 1814 Ambrose was summonsed and brought before the justice at Somerton. Both Ambrose senior and junior received OOP assistance in May 1816. In Oct 1835 Ambrose' son was ill with a broken arm and received 4/6d from the OOP. In Oct 1835 the OOP paid assistance to Ambrose's son with a broken arm. They also paid ½ years rent for Ambrose to Mary Hodges.
In 1841 Ambrose lived in Water Lane with his wife and sons but by 1851 their sons had married and Ambrose and Sarah were alone. Ambrose died in 1859. In 1861 Sarah Higgins (68) lived with her now widowed son William (41). Sarah then lived with her niece Edith Wilcox by 1871 while William went to live in Butleigh Wootton with his new wife Elizabeth. Sarah died in 1872 aged 79. It is not known what happened to James - he is not the James born the same year who was a carpenter in Glastonbury (10). Anne Sophia was probably the Ann Higgins who married George Hillborne in 1845 (Dec Q 10/771 Wells).#
10a1A) John Higgins Chr. 24 Oct 1813 Butleigh, stableman, bur. 23 Jun 1893 (Jun Q 5c/329 Wells) Butleigh 41-11, 51-31, 61 - 60, 71-72, 81-94, 91-118
Married: Butleigh 29 Mar 1842 (Mar Q 10/751 Wells) Mary Rose Chr. 28 May 1815 Keinton Mandeville, d.o. Thomas and Mary Rose, bur. 14 May 1867 (Jun Q 5c/387) Butleigh [41-14], 51-31, 61-60 #
Children:
1) William Chr. 11 Feb 1844 Butleigh, bur. 22 Mar 1851 (Mar Q 10/382 Wells) Butleigh
2) Mary Ann b. 1845 (Mar Q 10/539 Wells), Chr. 1 Nov 1846 Butleigh [father given as Thomas in PR], bur. 12 Apr 1851 (Jun Q 10/373 Wells) Butleigh 51-31
3) James Chr. 9 Oct 1849 (Jun Q 10/522 Wells) Butleigh (10a1Ai)
4) Elizabeth Ann Chr. 26 Sep 1852 (Sep Q 5c/577 Wells) Butleigh 61-60, 71-72
5) William Chr. 26 Mar 1854 (Mar Q 5c/633 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 28 May 1855 (Jun Q 5c/417 Wells) Butleigh
John Higgins, had lived with his parents in 1841 but married Mary Rose, a servant, in 1842. By 1851 John (30) and wife Mary (30) lived with their children Mary Ann (5) and James (1) in Water Lane. Mary Ann died in 1851. In 1861 John and Mary lived with James and Elizabeth in Water Lane but thereafter James left home.
Two Jameses were born in Butleigh in the same year - this one became a gardener and found employment outside Somerset while the other (son of Silas) stayed in Butleigh as a farm labourer. Mary died in 1867 aged 52. In 1871 John, as a widower, lived with his daughter Elizabeth in the High St.
In 1875 Elizabeth Ann married Caleb Higgins and in 1881 her father John lived together with them at 14, High Street. Caleb, Elizabeth and John Higgins moved to 19 High Street by 1891 where John died in 1893. #
10a1Ai) James Higgins Chr. 9 Oct 1849 (Jun Q 10/522 Wells) Butleigh, died 1911 (Mar Q 5c/334 Shepton Mallet) 51-31, 61-60 [PR Thomas & Mary]
Married: Butleigh 28 Oct 1875 (Dec Q 5c/907 Wells) Margaret Emma Lacey b. 1850 Kinton, Devon, d.o. James Lacey
James became a gardener and lodged at 1, Raybrook Cottage, Burnham, Bucks in 1871, and at Maesgwynne Lodge, Llanboidy, Carmarthen in 1881 - by which time he was married to Margaret Emma. By 1891 they had moved to Shepton Mallet together with his wife's niece, Edith Sevenoaks (18), and in 1901 they were at Longstock Park Gardens, living in four rooms. In 1911 they were at Horseshoes, Hazelmere, High Wycombe. James died in 1911 aged 63. They never had children.
10a1B) William Higgins Chr. 24 Oct 1819 Butleigh, farm servant, bur. 15 Apr 1884 (Jun Q 5c/383 Wells) Butleigh 41-11, 61-60, 71W-85, 81W-106
Married I: c. 1845/6? [Possibilities - Sarah Gilbert/Mary Ann Sealy]
Married II: Butleigh 9 Nov 1861 (Dec Q 5c/1062 Wells) Elizabeth Martin b. 1838 Compton Dundon, d.o. Thomas and Joan Martin, married II Butleigh 13 Sep 1886 (Sep Q 5c/755 Wells) William Allen 71W-85, 81W-106 #
William lived with his parents in 1841 but was missing in 1851 during which period he married and was widowed - the situation he was in when living with his parents in 1861. He married Elizabeth Martin in 1861 and lived with her in Rowley Cottage between 1871 - 81. In that last decade he aged only one year and his wife seven, according to their census return! William died in 1884 aged 66 and Elizabeth married William Allen on 13 Sep 1886 (Sep Q 5c/755 Wells) Butleigh. #
10a1C) Thomas Higgins b. 1825 Butleigh, labourer, bur. 10 Dec 1890 (Dec Q 5c/373 Wells) Butleigh 41-12, 51-32, 61-48, 71-72, 81-94
Married: 1846 (Dec Q 10/768 Wells) Sarah Green Chr. 16 Oct 1825 Butleigh, d.o. William and Hannah Green, bur. 31 Oct 1882 (Dec Q 5c/339 Wells) Butleigh 51-32, 61-48, 71-72, 81-94 #
Children:
1) Priscilla Chr. 23 Apr 1848 (Jun Q 10/555 Wells) Butleigh 51-32, 61-48
2) Elizabeth Green Chr. 8 Jun 1851 (Jun Q 10/535 Wells) Butleigh 61-48 m. James Higgins
3) Eli Chr. 16 Apr 1854 (Mar Q 5c/634 Wells) Butleigh 61-48, 71-72
4) Mary Jane Chr. 9 Dec 1855 (Dec Q 5c/536 Wells) Butleigh 61-48, 71-80
5) Agnes Chr. 3 Apr 1859 (Jun Q 5c/646 Wells) Butleigh 61-48, 71-72
6) Albert William Chr. 2 Feb 1863 (Mar Q 5c/653) Butleigh 71-72
Thomas appeared as a manservant in 1841. He married Sarah Green in 1846 and their first child Priscilla was born in 1848. In 1851 Thomas Higgins (26) with wife Sarah (25) and daughter Priscilla (3) lived in Water Lane. Thereafter they moved to 8, High Street where they are found in 1861. On that census Thomas (37) now a garden labourer, and wife Sarah lived with five children;
Priscilla married labourer Job Ford of West Pennard in Butleigh on 23 Apr 1867 (Jun Q 5c/875 Wells). # Several of their children later lived in Butleigh (see under Ford) and in 1911 Priscilla and Job still lived in West Pennard, at Woodlands. They had had eleven children.
Elizabeth Green Higgins married James Higgins in Butleigh on 31 Jan 1871 (Mar Q 5c/805 Wells); Eli was apprenticed to Mr. Richardson at No. 16 in 1871 and is probably the Eli Higgins, an unmarried private in the Raglan Barracks, St. Aubyn, Devon in 1881;
Mary Jane, who was a servant in 1871 to Jacob Blake at The Blacksmith's Shop, married a brickmaker Edwin Foster in 1877 (Dec Q 2b/822 Portsea Island) and they lived at 131, Somers Rd., Portsea, Portsmouth. In 1911 they lived at 10, Jessie Rd., Southsea, Portsmouth with three of their four children.
Boading with the family in 1861 was William Green (79), Sarah's father, who died in 1865.
In 1871 Thomas and wife Sarah lived with daughter Agnes (12) and Albert William only.
In 1881 Agnes was a visitor at 48 Tavistock Terrace, Islington and unemployed - the home of clerk Douglas William Quaife who she married in 1884 (Sep Q 1b/402 Islington). Agnes lived with her husband, three children and her mother-in-law at 139, Station Rd., Finchley in 1911.
In 1881 Albert William was a gardener in Hitcham, Bucks - nfi.
By 1881 Thomas (57) and wife Sarah (58) lived alone. Sarah died in 1882 and Thomas died in 1890.
10a2) Richard Hodges Higgins Chr. 17 Jul 1792 Butleigh, thatcher, s.o. Ambrose and Ann Higgins, bur. 21 Jun 1877 (Jun Q 5c/374 Shepton Mallet) Butleigh 41-9, 51-25, 61-58, 71-84
Married: West Lydford 14 Feb 1820 Susan Harvey? b. 1797 Compton Dundon, bur. 1 Jun 1870 (Jun Q 5c/423 Wells) Butleigh 41-9, 51-26, 61-58
Children:
1) Silas Chr. 12 Nov 1820 Butleigh, bur 26 Jan 1827 Butleigh
2) Samuel Chr. 16 Mar 1823 Butleigh (10a2A)
3) Silas Chr. 26 Jan 1827 Butleigh (10a2B)
4) Richard Chr. 5 Sep 1830 Butleigh 41-9, 51-26, 61-60
5) Eliza Ann Chr. 7 Jul 1833 Butleigh 41-9, 51-26
6) Sidney Chr. 13 Mar 1836 Butleigh (10a2C)
7) Susan Chr. 17 Nov 1839 Butleigh 41-9, 51-26, 61-58
From July 1819 Richard Higgins illigitimate child received pay (child of Amy Harvey?). Richard was given a summons in August 1819. In March 1820 he was taken and put in gaol at Ilchester. In August he was examined by Mr. Welch. Another summons taken out against him in Nov 1820 and Jan 1821. From 1820 Richard Higgins paid 15 weeks bastardy pay to the OOP from May to August. In Feb 1821 has another summons and Dr. Colston ordered him relieved. In March 1821 the OOP paid for his examination at Somerton and travel to Bath concerning his case. Yet another summons in April. In May 1821 a special warrant was issued against him and assistance given to his wife – she received monthly assistance until Feb 1822. From 20th May to 26th Oct 1821 she was given room and lodged at Samuel Bulford's house (OOP Dec 1821). In 1826 bastardy pay received from Thomas and Susannah Higgins (for Richard?). Susan paid for caring for J. Fry from Oct, Nov 1827 – August 1828.
Richard Hodges Higgins lived in Compton Street in 1841 with his wife Susan and their six children; Samuel (15), Silas (13), Richard (10), Eliza (6), Sidney (4) and Susan (1). By 1851 the main family had moved to 20, Main Street Butleigh but Sidney, who was later to live in Compton Street again (and for the rest of his life) was to be found as Page to the squire, Ralph Neville, at Holmans.
1851 20, High Street - Richard (58) lived with his wife Susan and children Richard (19), Eliza (17), Susan (11) plus a lodger Edwin Harvey (14). Their son Richard jnr lodged with his older brother Silas Higgins in 1861 and their daughter Eliza married Elias Clark in Butleigh on 11 Dec 1851 (Dec Q 10/783 Wells) #.
In 1861 Richard Higgins (69) lived in the High Street with his wife Susan (66) and daughter Susan (21) plus a lodger James Castle (23). Susan Higgins died in 1870 aged 73. James Castle married Susan in Butleigh on 29 Feb 1862 (Mar Q 5c/877 Wells) and they lived at Baker's Grave in '71. #
Richard's son Richard lived in Benedict Street, Glastonbury in 1871 with his wife Eliza Wills [Married 1868 Sep Q 5c/517 Taunton, d.o. John and Ann Wills] and sons Albert and Arthur. The children lived with their grandparents John and Ann Wills in 1881 who then lived at 1, Chapel Street, Bristol. The parents disappear - nfi.
In 1871 Richard (78) lived alone in Water Lane. He seems to be the Richard Higgins who died in 1877, in Shepton Mallet, aged 84. and the death in Shepton suggests that he probably went to live with one of his children there.
10a2A) Samuel Higgins Chr. 16 Mar 1823 Butleigh, thatcher, bur. 6 Jul 1873 (Sep Q 5c/323 Wells) Butleigh 41-9, 61-51, 71-74
Married: 1848 (Jun Q 10/717 Langport) Louisa Edgar b. 1830 Compton Dundon - Married II: 1874 Sep Q 5c/857 Wells) George Linman/Linham, Married III: 1884 Sep Q 5c/852 Wells) Robert Baunton Hyde, Married IV: 1890 (Dec Q5c/944 Wells) John Welchman, died 1908 (Dec Q 5c/286 Wells) 61-51, 71-74
Children:
1) Dina [Dora] (b. 1852 (Sep Q 5c/434 Langport) Compton Dundon 61-51, 71-74
2) Agnes Haraly Higgins b. 1858 (Mar Q 5c/482 Langport) Compton Dundon 61-51, 71-74
3) William b. 1860 (Jun Q 5c/480 Langport) Compton Dundon Chr. 13 Feb 1861 Butleigh 61-51, 71-74
4) Julia Chr. 24 Aug 1862 Butleigh 71-80
5) Susan[na] Chr. 18 Apr 1865 (Jun Q 5c/647 Wells) Butleigh 71-74
6) Frederick George Chr. 5 Apr 1868 Butleigh, bur. 21 Apr 1870 (Jun Q 5c/420 Wells) Butleigh
Samuel had married Louisa in 1848 and they appeared together in Compton Dundon on the 1851 census. They lived next door to James and Honour Edgar who may be her parents though an alternative could be William and Frances Edgar?
In 1861 Samuel (34) lived with his wife Louisa (31) and children Dinah, Agnes and William in Bethel Cottage on Oddway.
In 1871 the family lodged with Judith Perriam at Perriam's House in the High Street. Samuel died in 1873 aged 50 and in a very short space of time his widow had married George Linham and the couple moved to Goswell Lane, Street. George Linham was a stone cutter and Louisa became a butter dealer. George died in 1883 and Louisa then married Robert Baunton Hyde in 1884 but he also died - in 1887. She next married John Welchman in 1890, her fourth and last husband. In 1891 they lived in Teetotal Row - John was a carpenter and Louisa's name was spelt Laura on the census. In 1901 they lived at 52, West End (Louisa's name written Lusia on the census) with John now a road labourer aged 64 and Louisa a shopkeeper. Louisa died in 1908 aged 79.
After 1871 there is nfi on Dina but she seems to be the Dora who married railway porter William Alfred Broom (b. 1848 Cardiff) in 1878 (Dec Q 2b/1243 New Forest) and lived in South Stoneham Hamps, in 1881.
Agnes had married Henry Fairbrass (b. 1855 Kent) in 1879 (Dec Q 1a/884 Westminster). By 1881 Susan, a servant, was living at 20, Raywood Street, Battersea with her sister Agnes Fairbrass. In 1891 she was a housemaid at the Cocoa Tree Club, 64 St. James's Street, Westminster. Susan was pregnant at the time with her first child, Reuben James and by 1901 had two more children by his father, the coachman, later Inn keeper J. Reuben Hollingshead and they all appeared together on the 1901 census at Dilton Farm, Brockenhurst, Southampton. Susan died in Basingstoke on 4 Feb 1950.
Note: The Cocoa Tree Club (No. 64), was named from a chocolate-house of Queen Anne's reign, and became, about 1745, a centre for the English Jacobite party.
"Gambling also went on to a fearful extent at the Cocoa-Tree. Horace Walpole relates, in 1780, that a Mr. O'Birne, an Irishman, won £100,000 from a young Mr. Harvey. "You can never pay me," said O'Birne. "I can," replied the young fellow; "your estate will sell for the amount." "No," said the Irishman, "I will take £10,000, and we will throw for the odd ninety." They did, and Harvey won."
William Higgins seems to be absent from the 1881/91 censuses (abroad?) but in 1901 surfaced in Islington at 29, Cheverton Road where his occupation was 'waiter and billiard marker'. He was married to a young lady Lillie b. 1874 Wilts and had two young children John (2) and Lily (1 month).
Julia was looking after Betsy Coombs in Oddway in 1871. By 1881 she lived in extensive servants lodgings at 57/8 St. James' St., Westminster where she is listed as a housemaid. She married Frederick Augustus Wheatley in 1882 (Mar Q 1a/650 Westminster).
10a2B) Silas Higgins Chr. 26 Jan 1827 Butleigh, thatcher, bur. 30 Aug 1902 (Sep Q 5c/270 Wells) Butleigh 41-9, 51-34, 61-59, 71-83, 81-95, 91-119, 01-136
Married: Butleigh 25 May 1848 (Jun Q 10/860 Wells) Eliza Edgar b. 1825 Compton Dundon, d.o. James Edgar, bur. 7 Sep 1895 (Sep Q 5c/287 Wells) Butleigh 51-34, 61-59, 71-83, 81-95, 91-119
Children:
1) James Phelps Chr. 17 Jun 1849, 1850 (Jun Q 10/521 Wells) Butleigh (10a2Bi)
2) Christopher Chr. 16 Oct 1853 (Sep Q 5c/578 Wells) Butleigh (10a2Bii)
3) Clara Chr. 20 Apr 1856 Butleigh, bur. 6 May 1878 (Jun Q 5c/393 Wells) Butleigh 61-60, 71-83
4) Stephen Chr. 28 Mar 1864 (Mar Q 5c/671 Wells) Butleigh 71-83
Eliza Edgar was possibly the sister of the Louisa Edgar who had married Silas' brother Samuel. They also married in 1848. In 1851 Silas Higgins (24) lived with his wife Eliza (26) and son James Phelps at No. 2, "Court", next to the Globe Inn. In 1861 Silas lived with Eliza (36) and children James (12), Christopher (7) and Clara (5) plus his brother Richard Higgins (31) somewhere close to Sub Road/Dumb Lane. By 1871, probably still at the same place, they had added Stephen to their family. Clara died in 1878 aged just 23.
In 1881 Silas may have been already at 26, High Street where he appears in 1891/1901. He was living with wife Eliza (53) and son Christopher (27), an engine driver. James had married and lived in Selley's Row.
Stephen is found in 1881 (as was Caroline Stacey, also from Butleigh) # as a servant (he was a Page) at the house of Philip Charles Hardwick JP at Hereford Gardens, Bond St., Hanover Square, London. He was elevated to footman at Catmose House, Rutland in 1891 and then married Edith Louisa Watson. In 1901 he was the proprietor of the "Norfolk Hotel", 11/12 Langhorn Gardens, Folkestone, and had three children. In 1911 he was the steward of the Hythe Golf Club in Kent and they had four children living with them in the ClubHouse..
Christopher married in 1885 and lived at Oddway in 1891.
Silas lived with his wife Eliza and son James (42), also a thatcher, who was now a widower, at 26, High Street or possibly at Curtis's in 1891. James Phelps Higgins married Mary Elizabeth Willis and went to live with her and her two daughters in Baltonsborough by 1901. Silas' wife Eliza died in 1895.
In 1901 Silas (74) lived at the High Street address with his son Christopher (49), a hurdle maker, who had returned from Oddway with his wife and youngest daughter Cecilia. Silas died in 1902 aged 74.
10a2Bi) James [Phelps] Higgins Chr. 17 Jun 1849, 1850 (Jun Q 10/521 Wells) Butleigh, labourer, 51-34, 61-59, 71-78, 81-102, 91-119
Married I: Butleigh 31 Jan 1871 (Mar Q 5c/805 Wells) Elizabeth Green Higgins Chr. 8 Jun 1851 (Jun Q 10/535 Wells) Butleigh, d.o. Thomas and Sarah Higgins, bur. 1 Mar 1890 (Mar Q 5c/414 Wells) Butleigh 71-78, 81-102 #
Children:
1) Henrietta Chr. 3 Jun 1873 (Jun Q 5c/577 Wells) Butleigh 81-102
Married II: 1892 (Sep Q 5c/777 Shepton Mallet) Mary Elizabeth Willis b. 1853 East Lydford #
In 1871 after their marriage, James and Elizabeth lived a few doors down from his mother in Selley's Row. In 1881 the couple seem to have lived at 26, High Street with their daughter Henrietta. Elizabeth died in 1890.
Henrietta became a servant in the household of Edward Rapson, Vicar of West Bradley and Lottisham by 1891. In 1901 she was a servant in Portsmouth, visiting Mary Topple (b. 1872 West Pennard) at 36, Hampton Street, Portsmouth. She married Charles Edward Cardinal in 1906 (Jun Q 2b/1102 Portsmouth) but in 1911 she was an inmate in Canterbury Union Workshouse (occup. Parlour maid) as was her husband, and probably their two children also.
Meanwhile James lived with his father Silas in 1891 until he remarried in 1892. His new bride, Mary Elizabeth Willis was a widow with two children and they all lived together in Baltonsborough by the 1901 census.
10a2Bii) Christopher Higgins Chr. 16 Oct 1853 (Sep Q 5c/578 Wells) Butleigh, engine driver, bur. 1 Oct 1934 Butleigh 61-59, 71-83, 81-95, 91-126, 01-136
Married: Butleigh 7 May 1885 (Jun Q 5c/902 Wells) Sarah Ann Eades Chr. 6 May 1849 (Jun Q 10/518 Wells) Butleigh d.o. John Sealey and Martha Eades, bur. 14 Sep 1929 Butleigh 91-126, 01-136 #
Children:
1) Clara b. 22 Mar, Chr. 16 May 1886 (Jun Q 5c/534 Wells) Butleigh 91-126
2) Ellen Elizabeth b. 19 Jun, Chr. 28 Aug 1887 (Sep Q 5c/502 Wells) Butleigh 91-126
3) Ce[ci]lia Fanny b. 30 Oct 1889 (Dec Q 5c/488 Wells), Chr. 26 Jan 1890 Butleigh 91-126, 01-136
After their marriage in 1885 the couple lived in Pouncy's Villa where they were at the time of the 1891 census. Christopher (39) lived there with his wife Sarah Ann (41) and children Clara, Ellen and Celia Fanny plus his sister-in-law Mary Eades (61). Mary Eades returned to live at Pond Head by 1901 while Christopher. Sarah and Ce[ci]lia went to live at 26 High Street with Christopher's father Silas. Clara is found in 1901 as a domestic nurse in the house of a butcher in Paddington, London (178, Shirland Road). Ellen (Nellie) was unemployed, boarding in Bridgwater with her uncle James Pike (milkseller) and his wife Minnie (née Eades) - at 30, Taunton Road. In 1911 Clara was housekeeper to her aunt Mary Eades (81) at Pond Head 2 while her parents lived at Brickhill House with Ellen and Celia (an assistant teacher)..Celia Fanny married postman Reginald Cooper in Butleigh on 15 Nov 1911 (Dec Q 5c/997 Wells).
10a2C) Sidney Higgins Chr. 13 Mar 1836 Butleigh, sawyer, d. 13 Oct, bur. 17 Oct 1911 (Dec Q 5c/545 Wells) Butleigh 41-9, 51-35, 61-47, 71-71, 81-93, 91-114, 01-133
Married: Butleigh 28 Aug 1858 (Sep Q 5c/915 Wells) Eliza Brooks Chr. 3 Aug 1834 Keinton Mandeville, d.o. George and Eliza Brooks, d. 18 Jan, bur. 23 Jan 1912 (Mar Q 5c/638 Wells) Butleigh 61-47, 71-71, 81-93, 91-114, 01-133
Children:
1) Alexander Brookes Chr. 9 Feb 1859 (Mar Q 5c/656 Wells) Butleigh 61-65, 71-83
2) Emily Rebecca Chr. 1 Apr 1861 (Mar Q 5c 6 24 Wells) Butleigh 61-47, 71-71, 81-93
3) Constance Alexandra Chr. 24 Jun 1863 (Jun Q 5c/665 Wells) Butleigh 71-71
4) Ann Chr. 13 Oct 1865 (Dec Q 5c/600 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 30 Nov 1898 (Dec Q 5c/261 Frome)? 71-71, 81-93 (91-121?)
5) Mary Jane b. 1867 (Dec Q 5c/540 Wells) Chr. 5 Jan 1868 Butleigh 71-71, 81-93, 91-114
6) Le(o)na Beatrice Chr. 25 Jul 1870 (Jun Q 5c/606 Wells) Butleigh 71-71, 81-93
7) Rose Eliza Chr. 29 Jun 1872 Butleigh, bur. 15 Nov 1873 (Dec Q 5c/358 Wells) Butleigh
8) Rose Eliza Chr. 28 Oct 1874 Butleigh, bur. 30 Jun 1879 (Jun Q 5c/407 Wells) Butleigh
9) Gertrude Ellen Chr. 17 Mar 1877 (Mar Q 5c/543 Wells) Butleigh 81-93
10) Sidney George Brooks Chr. 28 Sep 1879 (Sep Q 5c/524 Wells) Butleigh 81-93, 91-114
Granddaughters:
1) Constance K. b. 1886 Berkhampstead, Herts 91-114
2) Kate Roles Chr. 14 Oct 1894 Ansford, d.o. Herbert and Constance Alexandria Roles 01-133 #
After his stint as Page to the squire Sidney married Eliza Brooks who in 1851 had lived with her widowed mother Eliza, a nurse, in Keinton. In 1861 they lodged with Charles Davis at 4, Compton Street with their two children; Alexander Brookes and Emily Rebecca. In 1871 Sydney having 'transferred' from lodging at No. 4 in 1861 was now at No. 6 and described as a 'portable engine driver'. Alexander was living with his grandfather Charles Davis but daughter Emily was still at home plus four new children
In 1881 Sidney was now a Traction Engine driver and besides Eliza, his wife, had Emily, Ann, Mary and Leona still at home plus two new additions; Gertrude and Sidney.
Alexander was lodging at Sundridge park, Bromley Kent in 1881, described as a gardener. He married Emily E. Beckwith (b. 1865 Kemington, Surrey) in 1885 (Sep Q 1d/313 St. Saviour, Southwark) and by 1891 they lived at Ashlyns Cottages, Berkhampstead with their three sons. They were still there in 1901, with yet more children. Their daughter May lived with her grandparents Sidney and Eliza in Butleigh in 1911. (see below)
Emily Rebecca married a wheelwright, Alfred Hill in Butleigh on 3 Nov 1884 (Dec Q 5c/939 Wells) and in 1891 they were found living in Mill Lane, Castle Cary with a son Leonard plus sister Gertrude Ellen Higgins (14) and lodger George Castle from Butleigh. # They had three more children in Castle Cary before moving to 241, High Street, Gt. Berkhampstead where they had another child Sam and a visit from Sidney G. Higgins (21). #
Constance - who was at school in Bickenhall, Taunton in 1881 became a cook in service in Ditcheat by 1891. She married Herbert John Roles in Butleigh on 25 Nov 1891 (Dec Q 5c/911 Wells) and in 1901 they lived at Evercreech Railway Junction Hotel where Herbert was the Innkeeper. # Gertrude (called her stepsister) lived with them as mother's help.
Ann is probably the laundress lodging at 50, Butleigh with Elizabeth Merriot # rather than the one who died in 1890 aged 25 (Dec Q 5c/369 Wells) - see (2b1-4).
Mary Jane is listed in 1891 as a Nursemaid at Eaton Hall, Cheshire. Mary Jane Higgins married Edwin Meredith in 1892 (Sep Q 5c/797 Wells).and of their two daughters, one Evelyn Mary Meredith b. 31 Jul 1893 was, Chr. 10 Sep 1893 Butleigh Edwin was a butler from Amersham in Bucks. In 1911 they lived at Amersham, Bucks and the p.o.b. of Mary Jane is given as Butleigh but her daughter Evelyn as Amersham.
Leona Beatrice called Lena, was a kitchen maid at Buckland Court, Buckland Surrey in 1891. As Leona Beatrice Higgins she married a William Henry Noble in Hackney London in 1894 (Sep Q 1b/940 Hackney).
Gertrude Ellen stayed with sister Emily Hill in Castle Cary in 1891 but in 1901 was 'mother's help' to her 'stepsister' Constance Roles who was then married to Herbert. Gertrude married innkeeper Arthur George Rice (b. 1871) of 18, Market Place, Glastonbury in Butleigh on 26 Jan 1904 (Mar Q 5c/687 Wells). In 1911 they had three children with them.
In 1891 at No. 5, Compton Street Sydney is recorded as being a Stationary Engine driver and lived with his wife Eliza plus Mary Jane and Sidney and also had his granddaughter Constance visiting from Berkhamstead. She was the daughter of Alexander and Emily.
Sidney George Brooks Higgins became a carpenter in Gt. Berkhampstead, Herts in 1901 but died 6 Sep 1910 (Sep Q 5c/241 Wells) aged 31 and was buried on 10 Sep 1910 Butleigh.
His father Sidney, now aged 65 and still an engine driver, lived in Butleigh with just his wife and his granddaughter Kate Roles (Daughter of Constance - see above) aged 6. # In 1911 Sidney and Eliza lived with their granddaughter May [Florence May Higgins b. 1893 (Jun Q 3a/658 Berkhampstead, Herts, d.o. Alexander and Emily Higgins] at 5 Butleigh. Sidney died in 1911 aged 76 and Eliza died in 1912 aged 77.
10a3) Thomas Higgins Chr. 7 Aug 1796 Butleigh, bur. 30 Jun 1842 (Jun Q 10/348 Wells) Butleigh 41-5
Married: Butleigh 15 Jan 1827 Jane Oldis alias Riddick b. 1806 Somerset, bur. 26 Dec 1849 (Dec Q 10/399 Wells) Butleigh [aged 48] 41-5
Children:
a) Ann Higgins Oldish alias Riddock Chr. 6 Aug 1826 Butleigh
1) Elizabeth Chr. 16 Aug 1828 Butleigh 41-5 bur. 23 Sep 1853 (Sep Q 5c/344 Wells) Butleigh aged 25 [same?]
2) Susan Chr. 12 Aug 1832 Butleigh [bur. 15 Feb 1835 Butleigh Sarah?]
3) Susan Chr. 21 Jun 1835 Butleigh, bur. 3 Jan 1851 (Mar Q 10/379 Wells) Butleigh 41-5
A daughter Ann Higgins Oldish alias Riddock was as an illegitimate child of Jane's by Thomas - nfi unless she is the servant at Butleigh House in 1841 with Jane Hicks. In Feb 1813 Thomas received 2 guineas for serving in the local (militia). In Sep 1826 a summons was issued against Thomas Higgins in connection with the child Ann Higgins Oldish. Jane Riddock received bastardy pay until her marriage to the father.
In 1841 Thomas and family lived at No. 7, Sealys Row, High Street. Elizabeth Higgins, house servant, appears at Dinder Rectory in 1851 together with Elizabeth Davis from Butleigh. Elizabeth is possibly the Elizabeth Higgins b. Butleigh [1826/8] who married Simion Glover in 1855 (Dec Q 5c/811 Langport) who lived first in Kingsdon (1861) but later is found in London (1891/1901). In 1911 they lived at 135 Offred Rd., Bambridge, Islington with 2 of their four surviving children (of 6).
10a4) William Higgins Chr. 5 Apr 1801 Butleigh, labourer, bur. 11 Dec 1858 (Dec Q 5c/432 Wells) Butleigh 41-8, 51-32
Married: Butleigh 1 May 1826 Jane Penny Chr. 21 Aug 1799 Butleigh, illegit. d.o. Elizabeth Penny, bur. 15 Apr 1882 (Jun Q 5c/353 Wells) Butleigh 41-8, 51-32, 61-55, 71-81, 81-102 #
Children:
1) Betsy Chr. 1 Apr 1827 Butleigh 41-8, 51-32
2) Eliza Chr. 21 Jan 1829 Butleigh, bur. 29 Jan 1829 Butleigh
3) Charles Chr. 6 Jan 1829 Butleigh (10a4A)
4) George Chr. 11 Mar 1832 Butleigh (10a4B)
5) Elizabeth Ann Chr. 8 Jun 1835 Butleigh 41-8, 51-32, 61-55
Granddaughter: 1) Matilda Chr. 5 Aug 1860 (Sep Q 5c/577 Wells) Butleigh bur. 4 Jan 1862 (Mar Q 5c/435 Wells) Butleigh 61-55
6) Joseph Chr. 18 Sep 1836 Butleigh (10a4C)
7) Marina Chr. 10 Feb 1839 Butleigh, bur. 14 Mar 1842 (Jun Q 10/344 Wells) 41-8
8) Martha Chr. 13 Feb 1842 (Dec Q 10/486 Wells) Butleigh 51-32
The family lived in Fore Street? in 1841. William Higgins (39) and his wife Jane lived with Betsy (13), Charles (10), George (8), Elizabeth (6), Joseph (4) and Marina (2). Marina died in 1842. In 1851 William Higgins (50) farm labourer and his wife Jane lived in Fore Street with their five children; Betsy (24), George (19), Elizabeth (16), Joseph (14) and Martha b. 1842. William died in 1858.
Charles was a farm worker staying at the house of Charles Strode in Water Lane before marrying Jane (10a4A). George married Ellen from Butleigh in 1854/5 and lived in Banbury Lane in 1861 (10a4B).
Joseph married Ann and lived in Street in 1871 (10a4C).
Martha became a servant in Street High Street in 1861, at the home of the draper John Coole. She married Thomas Norris in Butleigh on 21 Sep 1865 (Sep Q 5c/927 Wells). #
In 1861 Jane Higgins (61) widow, now lived with children Elizabeth, Joseph plus Matilda, her granddaughter (b. 1860, illegit. d.o. Elizabeth) who was probably sickly since she died in 1862.
By 1871 Jane Higgins (71) lived with her daughter Martha Norris, her husband Thomas and their children at 13, High Street, Butleigh. She was still there in 1881 but died in the following year, 1882, aged 82.
Elizabeth Ann, who had had an illegitimate child in 1860, married George Hodge in Butleigh on 14 May 1867 (Jun Q 5c/876 Wells) and lived in Water Lane before moving to Baltonsborough. #
10a4A) Charles Higgins Chr. 6 Jan 1829 Butleigh, farm servant, bur. 9 Jul 1864 (Sep Q 5c/379 Wells) Butleigh 41-8, 51-31, 61-60
1Married: 1852 (Jun Q 5c/777 Langport) Eliza Jane Ridewood Chr. 22 Apr 1832 Keinton Mandeville, d.o. Daniel and Charlotte Ridewood, bur. 6 Dec 1902 (Dec Q 5c/307 Wells) Butleigh 61-60, 71-78, 01- 134
Children:
1) Caleb Chr. 24 Oct 1852 Butleigh (10a4Ai)
2) Alfred Chr. 8 Aug 1854 Butleigh (10a4Aii)
3) Marina Ann Chr. 27 Jan 1856 Butleigh 61-60
4) Sarah Ann Chr. 7 Jun 1857 Butleigh, bur. 23 Jan 1858 (Mar Q 5c/503 Wells) Butleigh
5) Walter Chr. 15 Aug 1858 (Sep Q 5c/597 Wells) Butleigh (10a4Aiii)
6) Sarah Ann Chr. 15 Apr 1860 (Mar Q 5c/662 Wells) Butleigh 61-60, 71-78 - m. John Bond
7) Charlotte Matilda Chr. 16 Mar 1862 Butleigh, bur. 14 Oct 1862 (Dec Q 5c/416 Wells) Butleigh
8) Fanny Chr. 28 Jun 1863 (Jun Q 5c/661 Wells) Butleigh 71-78
After leaving home, Charles appears lodging with farmer Charles Strode and his wife in Water Lane in 1851. He married Eliza Jane, the daughter of a stone cutter, in 1852. The first three children's births are unregistered. In 1861 Charles Higgins (30) and his wife Jane (30) lived with children Caleb (8), Alfred (6), Marina (5), Walter (2) and Sarah Ann (15 months) next to Charles Strode in Water Lane. Charles died in 1864 and his widow is found with her children in Selley's Row in 1871.
Marina was a cook at Lansdown House, Clevedon in 1871 (as Marian) and in 1881 appears with her mother and three siblings at 2, Chapel Row, Baltonsborough. In 1891 she and her mother live there alone but in 1901 Eliza Jane (as she then called herself) lived with her daughter Sarah Bond and her family. She died in 1902. Marina married Albert Davies in 1894 (Sep Q 5c/773 Wells) # and lived in two rooms in the High Street in 1901. Sarah Ann was 'under housemaid' at Brymore House, Cannington in 1881 and she had married John Bond in 1885 (Dec Q 5c/907 Wells).
Fanny was in Baltonsborough with her mother in 1881 – she married Charles Rogers (b. 1858 Baltonsborough) in 1883 (Sep Q 5c/837 Wells) and appears with him in Baltonsborough in 1891 with the first four of their nine children, and again in 1901. (Not the Fanny Higgins who married Sidney Bush in 1892 (Dec Q 5c/953 Wells) and lived in Ham Street, Baltonsborough with her mother Mary Higgins).
10a4Ai) Caleb Higgins Chr. 24 Oct 1852 Butleigh, labourer and Sexton, bur. 13 Oct 1916 (Dec Q 5c/599 Wells) Butleigh 61-60, 71-78, 81-94, 91-118, 01-135 PHOTO
Married: Butleigh 20 Apr 1875 (Jun Q 5c/851 Wells) Elizabeth Ann Higgins Chr. 26 Sep 1852 (Sep Q 5c/577 Wells) Butleigh, d.o. John and Mary Higgins, bur. 8 Nov 1928 Butleigh 81-94, 91-118, 01-135 #
Children:
1) Charles John Chr. 10 Apr 1876 (Jun Q 5c/576 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 22 Apr 1876 (Jun Q 5c/397 Wells) Butleigh
2) James Chr. 21 Apr 1877 (Jun Q 5c/ 551 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 23 Apr 1877 (Jun Q 5c/390 Wells) Butleigh aged 2 days.
3) Mary Ann Chr. 29 Feb 1880 (Mar Q 5c/546 Wells) Butleigh 81-94, 91-118
4) Margaret Chr. 11 Jul 1882 (Sep Q 5c/526 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 1 May 1912 (Jun Q 5c/555 Wells) Butleigh 91-118, 01-135
5) Louisa b. 6 Nov, Chr. 8 Dec 1890 (Dec Q 5c/488 Wells) Butleigh 91-118, 01-135 PHOTO
6) Joshua b. 12 Jun, Chr. 13 Jun 1891 (Sep Q 5c/488 Wells) Butleigh, d.18 Sep, bur 21 Sep 1957 Butleigh 01-135
Caleb was still single and living with his widowed mother Jane in Sealy's Row in 1871. He then married Elizabeth Higgins in 1874 and their first child was born in 1880. In 1881 the family are found at 14 High St. living with Elizabeth's widowed father, John Higgins (67). Caleb and Elizabeth with their three children plus John Higgins moved to 19 High Street by 1891 where John died in 1893.
In 1901 Caleb Higgins and Elizabeth had Margaret (18) and Louisa (11) plus a new child Joshua b. 1891 living with them. In 1911 at 19 Butleigh Caleb and Elizabeth just had Joshua with them – he was apprenticed to a carpenter.
Mary Ann was a cook in 1901 at St. Mary's Vicarage, St. Mary, Reading Berks the home of Rev. William Neville (b. 1851 Butleigh), s.o. William Frederick Neville, vicar of Butleigh, and his wife Muriel. She married railway signalman John Richard Griffiths in 1910 (Sep Q 8a/989 Wirral) and in 1911 they lived at 34, Wycliffe St. Rock Ferry, Birkenhead. Louisa was a servant in Charlton Marshall, Blandford in 1911
Margaret died aged 30 in Wells Union Workhouse in 1912. Caleb died in 1916.
10a4Aii) Alfred Higgins Chr. 8 Aug 1854 Butleigh, labourer, steam roller driver, bur. 27 Oct 1920 Butleigh 61-60, 71-78, 91-125, 01-139
Married: 1881 (Dec Q 5c/683 Langport) Fanny Elizabeth Culling. b. 1859 (Jun Q 5c/503 Langport) Barton St. David, d.o. Josiah and Ann Culling, bur. 26 Nov 1913 (Dec Q 5c/523 Wells) Butleigh 91-125, 01-139
Children:
1) Alfred Charles b. 1888 (Sep Q 5c/501 Wells) Baltonsborough 91-125, 01-139 (10a4Aiia)
2) Hilda Edwina b. 23 Mar, Chr. 22 May 1892 (Jun Q 5c/461 Wells) Butleigh 01-139
3) Ernest Maxwell Henry b. 16 Oct 1893 (Dec Q 5c/465 Wells), Chr. 7 Jan 1894 Butleigh 01-139
4) Wilfred Cecil b. 25 Mar, Chr. 6 Apr 1899 (Jun Q 5c/456 Wells) Butleigh 01-139
Alfred had lived with his widowed mother Jane at Selley's Row in 1871 and the family moved to 2 Chapel Row Baltonsborough by 1881. Fanny had lived with her family at 8, Butleigh Road, Baltonsborough in 1871. In 1881 Fanny (called Cullins on census) was a servant at the "Crown Hotel" in Glastonbury. Alfred married Fanny in 1881 and at first they lived in Baltonsborough. Alfred (36) lived with his wife Fanny (33) and son Alfred Charles b. 1888 at Pond Head in 1891 and they were still there in 1901 plus three additional children, Hilda, Ernest and Wilfred. In 1911 Alfred and Fanny were still at Pond Head with Charles, Ernest and Wilfred plus two visitors, Mabel Smith (b. 1892 York) a housemaid and Mary Gadd (b. 1892 Coxley) a cook. Mabel married Charles Higgins the following year and Mary Gadd married Ernest in 1913 (Dec Q 5c/1009 Wells)
Alfred Charles (next) married Mabel A. Smith in 1912 and his sister Hilda Edwina married groom Alfred George Sturmey of Sparkford in Butleigh on 12 Feb 1912 (Mar Q 5c/679 Wells).
10a4Aiia) Alfred Charles Higgins b. 1888 (Sep Q 5c/501 Wells) Baltonsborough, labourer 91-125, 01-139
Married: 1912 (Mar Q 5c/681 Wells) Mabel Annie Smith b. 1892 Yorkshire d.o. Edmund Francis John and Annie Smith [Mabel Ellen bur. 9 Apr 1969 Butleigh]
Children:
1) A. C. F. J. b. 23 Jun, Chr. 15 Aug 1912 Butleigh d. 24 Feb 1994
2) L. E. Chr. 12 Jul 1914 Butleigh
3) R. A. b. 28 Aug, Chr. 24 Sep 1916 Butleigh
4) D. Q. Chr. 3 Nov 1918 Butleigh
5) C. M. H. Chr. 5 Sep 1920 Butleigh d. 21 Dec 1989
6) G. F. Chr. 15 Jan 1922 Butleigh bur. 23 May 1939 Butleigh
7) R. Chr. 28 Oct 1923 Butleigh
8) P. A b. 1926
9) D. C. Chr. 11 Dec 1927 Butleigh
10) K. J. Chr. 27 Jan 1929 Butleigh
11) T. R. Chr. 20 Jul 1930 Butleigh
12) B. M. Chr. 28 Apr 1932 Butleigh
13) D. E. Chr. 26 Nov 1933 Butleigh
Mabel Smith had appeared in 1901 with her mother Annie and step-father Charles Fairburn at 32 Knavesmire Crescent, Micklegate York G. F. died in 1939 aged just 17..
10a4Aiii) Walter Higgins Chr. 15 Aug 1858 (Sep Q 5c/597 Wells) Butleigh, labourer, bur. 18 Feb 1927 Butleigh 61-60, 71-78, 91-120, 01-136
Married: 1888 (Jun Q 5c/905 Wells) Sarah Purchase b. 1866 West Coker, bur. 7 Oct 1911 (Dec Q 5c/545 Wells) Butleigh 91-120, 01-136
Children:
1) Herbert Walter b. 1889 Sep Q 5c/500 Wells) Baltonsborough, bur. 3 Jun 1961 Butleigh 91-120, 01-136 (10a4Aiiia)
2) Charles William b. 29 Dec 1891, Chr. 27 Mar 1892 (Mar Q 5c/473 Wells), died 1893 (Jun Q 5c/326 Wells) Butleigh
3) Edith Marina b. 11 Jan, Chr. 1 Apr 1900 (Mar Q 5c/445 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 8 Dec 1948 Butleigh 01-136
Living with his widowed mother in Selley's Row in 1871, Walter was still with her when she moved to 2, Chapel Row, Baltonsborough, where they are found in 1881. Sarah Purchase appears in 1881 as a servant at 'The Duke of Cornwall Hotel” on Stoke sub hambden. Her birth was possibly that in 1867 (Jun 5c/503 Yeovil) and she may be related to the Sarah Purchase born in Butleigh in 1830 # - an illegitimate daughter?
Walter, Sarah and children lived in a cottage between or part of 29 - 30 High Street in 1891-1901. Marriage not traced. Charles William died aged 1. On the 1911 census Walter, Sarah Herbert and Edith lived at 41 Butleigh and Herbert was a mason.
Edith died in a hospital in Oxford aged just 48.
10a4Aiiia) Herbert Walter Higgins b. 1889 Sep Q 5c/500 Wells) Baltonsborough, bur.3 Jun 1961 Butleigh
Married: 1932 B M H
Children
1) M. J. Chr. 1 Dec 1935 Butleigh
The couple were living at 2, Compton Street when they died.
10a4B) George Higgins Chr. 11 Mar 1832 Butleigh, labourer, bur. 11 Mar 1882 (Mar Q 5c/377 Wells) Butleigh 41-8, 51-32, 61-52, 71-77, 81-97
Married: Butleigh 10 Dec 1854 (Dec Q 5c/1011 Wells) Ellen Cook Chr. 31 May 1829 Butleigh, d.o. Stephen and Mary Cook, died 1892 (Mar Q 5c/428 Wells) 61-52, 71-77, 81-97 #
Children:
1) Eliza Chr. 8 Jun 1856 (Jun Q 5c/648 Wells) Butleigh 61-52, 81-97
Child: Mary Ann b. 1875 (Dec Q 5c/517 Wells) Butleigh 81-97
2) William b. 1858 (Dec Q 5c/584 Wells) Chr. 3 Apr 1859 Butleigh, bur. 12 Jan 1894 (Mar Q 5c/413 Wells) Butleigh 61-52, 71-77, 81-97, 91-123
3) Fanny Jane b. 5 Apr, Chr. 19 May 1861 (Jun Q 5c/658 Wells) Butleigh bur. 13 Jul 1861 (Sep Q 5c/361 Wells) Butleigh 61-52
4) Fanny Chr. 22 Feb 1863 (Mar Q 5c/654 Wells) Butleigh 71-77
5) Charles Chr. 26 Nov 1865 (Dec Q 5c/600 Wells) Butleigh 71-77, 81-97, 91-123
6) George Chr. 12 Nov 1871 (Sep Q 5c/555 or 655 Wells) Butleigh 81-97, 91K-129
George married Ellen Cook in 1854. Ellen (sometimes called Eleanor) had lived with her parents in Quarry Lane. In 1861 the couple appear in Banbury Lane with their first three children. In 1871 the family were still on Butleigh Hill and two children had been added. Charles was born in 1865. By 1881 the family seemed to be living in a property adjoining Spring Gardens (?). Their daughter Eliza b. 1856 was a servant in 1871 at Brooks Farm, Street - the home of Edward Clothier. Of Jane nfi, though she probably married.
Fanny married farmer James Dallimore in 1886 (Jun Q 5c/877 Wells) and they lived at Hoares Close farm in St. Cuthbert, Wells in 1891 but moved to Spring Farm Litton, by 1901.
George died in 1882 aged 52. In 1891 Ellen appeared as a patient at the Somerset and Bath Asylum, Horrington, Wells and she died there in 1892 aged 63.
Young George appears at East Park, Kingweston as a boarder (Ag. Lab.) in 1891 and in Wyke Champflower in 1901, married to Charlotte (b. Charlton Musgrove). Charles and William lodged with John Matthews at 60 Barton Stone in 1891. No further information on these two. Mary Ann probably married - not traced.
Eliza married labourer William Close [William Frank Close Higgins on marriage record] in Butleigh on 10 Apr 1883 (Jun Q 5c/ 842 Wells) and in 1891 they lived in Tilham Street, Baltonsborough and Eliza had her daughter Mary (b. 1875 Butleigh) with her. Their oldest joint child, Fanny, was born b. 1884.
10a4C) Joseph Higgins Chr. 18 Sep 1836 Butleigh, labourer, died 1875 (Sep Q 5c/339 Wells) 41-8, 51-32, 61-55
Married: 7 Jan 1864 (Mar Q 5c/923 Wells) West Pennard Ann Collins Chr. 20 Feb 1831 West Pennard, d.o. Giles and Susannah Collins, died 1879 (Jun Q 5c/403 Wells)
Children:
1) Giles William Chr. 8 May 1864 (Mar Q 5c/673 Wells) Butleigh
2) Harry John b. 1865, Chr. 4 Feb 1866 (Dec Q 5c/603 Wells) Butleigh
3) Florence Ann Chr. 5 Apr 1868 Butleigh, bur. 27 May 1869 (Jun Q 5c/426 Wells) Butleigh
In 1871 Joseph and Ann lived at Thirty Acres, Street with their two sons Giles William and Harry John who were both born in Butleigh. Joseph died in 1875 aged 40 and Ann died in 1879 aged 47. In 1881 Giles was an agricultural labourer at Sedgemoor, farmed by George Richards. He married Clara Jane Sargent from Cucklington in 1887 (Mar Q 5c/629 Wincanton) and by 1891 lived with her and their three children at Hardway Row, Whitehorse Common, South Brewham. In 1901 Giles lived at Weston Town, Wanstrow with Clara and six children. By 1911 they had had 10 children, 8 still living of which 4 still lived with them at Wanstrow.
Harry is the Henry, shoemaker, in Glaston Road, Street (1881). In 1891, called Harry J., he is a shoemaker at 10, Benedict Street living with his father-in-law John Miles - having married Hannah H. Miles (b. 1864 Glastonbury). They had two small daughters, Florence (2) and Rosa (1). By 1901 at the same address Harry and Hannah had five children and John Miles was still head of household (he was a Railway points gateman). By 1911 Harry had six children and was head of the household though John Miles was still alive and living with him at No. 10.
10a5) John Higgins Chr. 4 Mar 1804 Butleigh son of Ambrose and Jane, bur. 29 Jun 1834 Butleigh aged 30
Married: Butleigh 11 Oct 1831 Eleanor Broom Chr. 25 May 1806 Willand, Devon, d.o. Henry and Mary Broom, m. II 1847 (Jun Q 14/16 Cambridge) William Jones 41-11 #
Children:
1) Henry John Chr. 24 Jun 1832 Butleigh 41-11
2) William Broom Chr. 30 Mar 1834 Butleigh, bur. 1 Jul 1843 (Jun Q 10/354 Wells) Butleigh 41-11
Eleanor (30), a widow, lived at 22 High Street in 1841 with her sons Henry (8) and William (7) plus 'lodgers' amongst whom was; William Jones (25) Carpenter b. Queen Camel, journeyman carpenter
In 1847 Eleanor married William Jones, the young carpenter who was her lodger! Eleanor's sister Ann Broom was shown as house proprietor (and sister-in-law of William) when they lived together in Cambridge St. Giles (1851). After William Higgins' death his mother became a 'College Servant'. Henry was listed in 1851 as a journeyman carpenter. Nfi
10b) William Higgins [Chr. 7 Aug 1745 Butleigh, s.o. John and Jane Higgins, bur. 13 Apr 1813 Butleigh] aged 70
Married: Butleigh 26 Nov 1770 Mary Nash b. 1752, sojourner, bur. 7 Sep 1836 Butleigh aged 84
Children:
1) Susanna Chr. 22 Nov 1771 Butleigh, bur. 27 Dec 1855 (Dec Q 5c/376 Wells) Butleigh 41W-17, 51W-40
2) Mary Chr. 14 Oct 1773 Butleigh [presumably died but not listed]
3) Mary Chr. 9 Jan 1774 Butleigh
4) William Chr. 15 Aug 1779 Butleigh (10b1)
5) Elizabeth Chr. 4 Apr 1782 Butleigh
6) John Chr. 6 Mar 1785 Butleigh (10b2)
William was the brother of Ambrose and these two lines are therefore related. A William Higgins received aid in April 1782. William received assistance for his family in sickness in Aug 1785. #
Elizabeth married John Oldish in Butleigh on 19 Aug 1805.# Susan(na) was an unmarried person, a labourer in 1841 and a Parish pauper out of the Union in 1851. She lived with Betsy Higgins in 1841 and they were probably cousins [her mother Mary Higgins had been cared for by Betsy Higgins from the late 1820's – possibly the same Mary who had cared for Elizabeth Hockey? - Betsy might also be Elizabeth Higgins, Susan's sister]. A Mary Higgins had a base born child in Aug/Sep 1793 (not in PR – the OOP paid the expenses thereof). Mary married James Bryant in Butleigh on 15 Apr 1800. #
10b1) William Higgins Chr. 15 Aug 1779 Butleigh, carpenter, bur. 20 Jul 1859 (Sep Q 5c/361 Wells) Butleigh 41-12, 51-30
Married I: 1797 Betty Hunt b. 1778/81, bur. 23 Mar 1844 (Mar Q 10/412 Wells - Elizabeth) Butleigh 41-12
Children:
1) Ann Chr. 21 Jun 1801 Butleigh
2) John Chr. 2 Apr 1804 Butleigh
3) Mary Chr. 17 Aug 1806 Butleigh
4) Susanna Chr. 3 Oct 1813 Butleigh [bur. 26 Aug 1834 Butleigh aged 21 - Susan]
5) Alexander Chr. 5 Aug 1816 Butleigh (10b1A)
6) Frederick James Chr. 30 Jan 1820 Butleigh 51-27 (10B1B)
Married II Butleigh 7 Apr 1845 (Jun Q 10/844 Wells) Elizabeth Hann b. 1806 d.o. Bryer Hann, bur. 16 Dec 1848 (Dec Q 10/326 Wells). Butleigh #
This William seems most likely to be, as suggested, the son of Ambrose's brother, William, since this family remained in Butleigh but it cannot be discounted at present that he may be the William Chr. 29 Apr 1780 Butleigh to John and Sarah Higgins (see G above) - only further research and Wills may prove this. If the latter were the case then Williams mother was a Sarah Underwood and his son Alexander married a Sarah Underwood! A William was paid assistance in early 1801 and in May shoes for his daughter. In June and July 1805 the OOP paid William the Bounty money due to the wife and child of a volunteer. He appears several times in the OOP accounts making coffins. His wife was ill (pregnant?) in July 1818 and Dr. Bond's bill was paid by the OOP.
William and Betty Higgins lived alone in 1841 in Oddway and Betty died in 1844. William married again very soon after - to Elizabeth Hann - but this brief marriage seems to have ended in 1848 with the death of Elizabeth. The widowed William stayed at the "New Inn", Butleigh, on census night 1851 and died in 1859. The "New Inn" was run by his daughter Ann and her husband. Ann Higgins had married John Ford in Butleigh on 12 Apr 1832 # - before the 1841 census.
John Higgins doesn't appear in Butleigh on the censuses but in 1851 lived with his wife Frances (b. 1809 East Lydford) in East Lydford with their daughter Ann (b. 1831 E. Lydford). The parents remained there 1861 - 81 and John died in 1883 (Mar Q 5c/391 Shepton Mallet) aged 79.
Mary Higgins had married William Look in Butleigh on 15 Mar 1839. #
10b1A) Alexander Higgins Chr. 5 Aug 1816 Butleigh, carpenter, s.o. William and Elizabeth Higgins, farmer, died 1909 (Jun Q 4a/325 Rochford, Essex) 41-12, 51-33, 61-56, 71-77, 81-100
Married: Butleigh 25 Jun 1839 (Jun Q 10/803 Wells) Sarah Underwood Chr. 15 Aug 1813 Butleigh, d.o. John Underwood, died 1892 (Sep Q 4a/261 Rochford, Essex). 41-12, 51-33, 61-56, 71-77, 81-100 #
Children:
1) Alexander Underwood b. 1840 (Jun Q 10/483 Wells) Butleigh 41-12, 51-33, 61-56
2) Amelia Chr. 17 Aug 1842 (Mar Q 10/535 Wells) Butleigh 51-33, 61-56
3) Edward Ch. 12 Nov 1843 (Dec Q 10/500 Wells), Butleigh (10b1Ai)
4) William Chr. 10 Aug 1845 (Sep Q 10/456 Wells) Butleigh 51-33, 71-77
In 1841 the young couple lived in Oddway with their first child but by 1851 were living in Fore Street with all four. By 1861 the three oldest children were still with their parents in Fore Street but Amelia then married William Kelway in Butleigh on 17 May 1866 (Jun Q 5c/944 Wells).# William Kelway was a nurseryman and they lived in Gladioli Villa, Huish Episcopi in 1871 (son of the famous Kelway nursery family). In 1881 William Kelway was in Langport and was a nurseryman and seed merchant "employing 30 men, 10 boys and 10 women on 140 acres of land and in warehouses and hothouses". Amelia died in 1882 (Sep Q 5c/239 Langport). Alexander's son Edward married Emily Kelway in Butleigh on 17 May 1866. His wife Emily Kelway was the sister of his brother-in-law William Kelway who had married his sister Amelia on the same day in 1866.
In 1861 William junior was a draper's assistant in East Street, Bridport, Dorset (house of James Templeman) - by 1871 he had returned to Butleigh and is referred to as a widower. A William Higgins married Ann Cheeseman in 1869 (Jun Q Sherborne) and an Ann Higgins died in 1869 (Sep Q Sherborne) and this would seem to have been this wife. William is probably the one who died in 1892 (Mar Q 5c/412 Shepton Mallet) aged 46.
In 1871 Alexander and Sarah lived, as mentioned above, with their widowed son William in Farm House [Holmans] where Alexander farmed 86 acres (rising to 98 by 1881). Their eldest son, Alexander Underwood Higgins married Rosalie Angier Moffatt in 1869 (Dec Q 1d/819 Wandsworth) and was listed in 1871 as 'lodger for two nights' with his wife Rosalie at Terrell's House, Brook St., South Weald Essex. In 1881 he was listed as an architect (Architick!) and surveyor lodging at the New Inn, West Down, Devon while his wife and children remained at 6, Derby Villas, Malden Rd., Kingston on Thames, Surrey. In 1891 he and his wife Rosalie lived in "Park Hill", Westerham, Kent. Just up the road at Patients Farm were his parents Alexander (75) and wife Sarah (78).
Young Alexander appeared in 1901 at Lapwater Hall, Leigh on Sea, Essex with wife and children plus his widowed father Alexander (88). They may have moved there in 1892 since Sarah died there that year. Alexander snr died in 1909 aged 92.
10b1Ai) Edward Higgins Ch. 12 Nov 1843 (Dec Q 10/500 Wells) Butleigh , timber merchant 51-33, 61-56
Married: Butleigh 17 May 1866 (Jun Q 5c/943 Wells) Emily Kelway b. 1842 Ilminster, d.o. James Kelway #
Children:
1) Edward Frank Chr. 21 Apr 1869 Butleigh
2) Constance Julia b. 1872 Newport, Mon.
3) Wyndham Augustus b. 1877 Newport, Mon.
Edward is missing from the 1871 census but in 1881 he lived in Chepstow Row, Christchurch, Monmouthshire. In 1891 he was a widower living at Little Portlands, Cudham Kent, a farmer with two sons, Edmund Frank and Windham Augustus plus daughter Constance Julia.
10b1B) Frederick James Higgins Chr. 3 Jan 1820 Butleigh, sawyer, died 1884 (Dec Q 5c/370 Wells) 51-27
Married: Butleigh 8 Sep 1851 (Sep Q 10/692 Wells) Amelia Grant Chr. 11 Oct 1829 Butleigh, d.o. Hannah Grant, died 1904 (Jun Q 5c/299 Wells) #
Children:
1) William Frederick Chr. 28 Mar 1852 (Mar Q 5c/635 Wells) Butleigh
2) Henry John Chr. 6 Aug 1854 Butleigh
3) Mary Ann Grant Chr. 10 Aug 1856 (Sep Q 5c/567 Wells) Butleigh 61-53
4) Elizabeth Ann b. 1858 Street, Chr. 28 Nov 1858 Butleigh
5) Sarah Ann b. 1860 Glastonbury, Chr. 4 Apr 1861 Butleigh
6) Susan Mary b. 1863 (Sep Q 5c/599 Wells) Glastonbury, Chr. 9 Aug Butleigh 71-78
7) Albert Edward b. 1866 Glastonbury, Chr. 25 Mar 1866 Butleigh
8) Fanny b. 1868 Glastonbury, Chr. 10 May 1868 Butleigh
9) Anne Amelia b. 1871 Glastonbury, Chr. 13 Aug 1871 Butleigh
Frederick J. Higgins was missing in 1841 but became a sawyer and lived with his sister Mary Look in 1851. He married Amelia Grant from Butleigh in 1851 and they lived in Butleigh until about 1857 (first three children born there) after which they moved first to Street, then Glastonbury (by 1861). They were at 10, Victoria Buildings in 1871 and by then had six children with them. They were at Hill Head in 1881 but Frederick died in 1884 aged 64. The widowed Amelia lived at 16, Northload Street in 1891 with several daughters and grandchildren. In 1901 she was at 77, Northload Street with her daughter Annie who had married William Fowler. Amelia died in 1904 aged 75.
Of their children; William F. Higgins was a baker/servant in 1871 in Magdalen St., Glastonbury (home of Joseph England, Miller and baker) but married Charlotte Jones and lived at 5, Waterloo Place, York Rd., St. James & St. Paul's, Bristol by 1881. He was a china and glass dealer, and by 1891 they lived at "The Ferns" 12, Wellington Avenue, Bristol where they still were in 1901. They seem to have been childless.
Henry George lived with his parents until his thirties (as a sheepskin dyer) when he married Sarah A. Withers and they lived in 9, Manor Rd., Glastonbury (1891), by which time he was a Railway plate layer. They were in King Street, Glastonbury in 1901 but still childless.
Mary Ann was staying with her aunt, Ann Ford, in Butleigh in 1861 but was with her parents in Glastonbury 1871. Nfi.
In 1871 Susan lived with her grandmother Hannah Grant in Selley's Row but Hannah died in 1875 and there is nfi about what happened to Susan next. (not to be confused with the d.o. Samuel).
10b2) John Higgins Chr. 6 Mar 1785 Butleigh, labourer, s.o. William and Mary Higgins, bur. 19 Apr 1869 (Jun Q 5c/423 Wells) Butleigh 41-7, 51-32, 61-56
Married: Butleigh 26 May 1817 Sophia Wilcox b. 1788 Butleigh, bur. 3 Sep 1877 (Sep Q 5c/325 Wells) Butleigh 41-7, 51-32, 61-56, 71-80
Children:
1) John Chr. 8 Feb 1818 Butleigh (10b2A)
2) Mary Sophia Chr. 17 Jun 1821 Butleigh
3) Anna Maria Chr. 1 Jun 1823, Butleigh, bur. 7 Mar 1824 Butleigh (Mary Ann)
4) Anna Maria Chr. 22 Jan 1826 Butleigh 41-9
5) William Chr. 25 Oct 1829 Butleigh, bur. 30 Jun 1830 Butleigh
A John Higgins was paying rates in Butleigh from 1819/20 – to beyond 1827 – possiby this John ?
The couple appeared with son John in what was called Silver Street in 1841 and with daughter Ann Turner in 1851. Ann was possibly the servant at Butleigh House in 1841 and had married Charles Turner in Butleigh on 7 Apr 1845 (Jun Q 10/843 Wells). # In 1861 John and Sophia lived alone, possibly in the High Street? John died in 1868 aged 84 and in 1871 Sophia lived next door to the blacksmith Jacob Blake, two doors down from her son John. She lived there with her granddaughter Emily (10). Sophia died in 1877 aged 89.
The daughter Mary Sophia is probably the Mary (b. 1821 Butleigh) who lived in Southampton. In 1851 Mary, a dressmaker, was visiting George and Mary Iverney, master tailor, at 1, South Front, St. Mary, Southampton. In 1861 she was stated as b. 1821 boarding with George and Mary Ivirnay. In 1871 she was at 11, Lower Lyon Street, St. Mary, Southampton, a tailoress - visiting John and Frances Withy. In 1881 she was at Elm Cottage No. 2, Avenue Road and lodging with Eliza Scholfield. In 1891 she was at 60, High Street, Holy Rood, Southampton nurse - back with George Ivirney (the son). Apart from the connection to the Iverneys, there is no clue to why Mary was in Southampton - she never married. Mary died in 1900 (Jun Q 2c/2 Southampton).
10b2A) John Higgins Chr. 8 Feb 1818 Butleigh, sawyer, bur. 7 Jan 1890 Butleigh 41-7, 61-56, 71-80, 81-101
Married: 1857 (Mar Q 3a/663 Bicester, Oxon) Sophia Tugwood b. 1825 Middleton Stoney, Oxford, died 1905 (Sep Q 5c/208 Bridgwater) 61-56, 71-80, 81-102, 91-119
Children:
1) Emily Sarah Chr. 30 Sep 1860 (Sep Q 5c/577 Wells) Butleigh 61-56, 71-80, 81-102
2) Alice Chr. 21 Apr 1862 (Mar Q 5c/650 Wells) Butleigh 71-80
3) Harry Chr. 27 Dec 1863 (Dec Q 5c/606 Wells) Butleigh (10b2Ai)
4) Ann Chr. 24 Feb 1865 (Mar Q 5c/662 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 15 Oct 1890 (Dec Q 5c/369 Wells) Butleigh 71-80, 81-102
5) Mary Elizabeth Chr. 4 Aug 1867 (Dec Q 5c/540 Wells) Butleigh 71-80, 81-102
6) Harriet Chr. 25 Mar 1869 Butleigh, bur. 24 May 1869 (Jun Q 5c/426 Wells) Butleigh
After appearing with his parents in 1841, John disappeared from the 1851 census to reappear only in 1861 already married to Sophia and with a 7 month old child Emily b. 1860 in Butleigh. Sophia was a 15 years old maidservant in Bicester on the 1841 census.
Their next appearance was at The Cottage in the High Street in 1871 together with the rest of their children. The first to leave home was Alice who became a servant at the Palace, Wells in 1881, home of Lady Patience Arthur Hervey (mother-in-law of Charles Hoare, the banker). In 1887 (Dec Q 1b/1099 Holborn) she married Albert Silcox and they ran "The Old Blue Anchor Inn" in Brook Street, Cannington. #
In 1881 John, now (63) and wife Sophia (56) still had Emily Sarah (20), Harry (17), Annie (16) and Mary (13) at home. Emily Sarah married Daniel Howells in Butleigh on 23 Sep 1886 (Sep Q 5c/756 Wells) and in 1891 they lived at Pembrey, Carmarthenshire with their three sons. # Ann Higgins died in 1890 (Dec Q 5c/369 Wells) aged 25. Mary (called Polly) became a nursemaid at Eaton Hall, Cheshire by 1891. She married Henry Shaddick (b. 1862) in 1893 (Dec Q 5c/625 Bridgwater) who worked for the Royal Household but he died in 1896 and in 1901 she lived in Belgravia as a widow with son Henry (b. 1896 Bridgwater). In 1911 she lived at 118, Lumley Bldg, St. George,Hanover Sq., with son Henry and daughter Marie Heeks Shaddick (b. 1902 illeg. Died 1920 aged 18) and nephew Ernest Silcox (b. 1895 Bridgwater). Mary Elizabeth (Polly) died in 1958.
John died in 1890 but the registration not found.
The widowed Sophia Higgins lived alone at 23 Butleigh High Street in 1891, a laundress. Next door lived her son Harry Higgins' wife and children (this and house 22b part of the same dwelling?). After Harry left for Nailsea/Wales Sophia went to live in Bridgwater with her daughter Alice and son-in-law Albert Silcox (Job master at a stables) where she appears on the 1901 census. She died there in 1905.
10b2Ai) Harry [James] Higgins Chr. 27 Dec 1863 (Dec Q 5c/606 Wells) Butleigh, traction engine driver 71-80, 81-102
Married: 1888 (Jun Q 5c/923 Wells) Annie Maria Hole b. 1864 Street, d.o. William (a gamekeeper) and Sarah Hole. 91-119
Children:
1) Eveline Mary b. 1888 (Sep Q 5c/507 Wells) Butleigh 91-119
2) Alice Hilda b. 7 Apr, Chr. 1 Jun 1890 (Jun Q 5c/484 Wells) Butleigh 91-119
3) Rose b. 1892 Nailsea
4) Olive b. 1893 Ruabon
Hilda Annie Hole had been a servant at 9, Lower Berkeley Street, Marylebone in 1881. She married Harry in 1888 and in 1891 as Annie Higgins (27) she lived in four rooms at 22 High Street with daughters Eveline Mary b and Alice. Her husband Harry, a traction engine driver, was elsewhere and can only be the James Higgins (b. 1864 Butleigh), Traction Engine Driver who was living in a caravan at Long Ashton on census night 1891.
Shortly after the census the family moved to Nailsea where a third child, Rose b. 1892 was born and then to Ruabon where Olive was born in 1893. In 1901 they lived at 3, Bodyllton (Wymstay Park), Ruabon, Denbigh where Harry was still working as a traction engine driver. Hilda A. was a 'help' at the Mildmay Arms, Queen Camel in 1911.
11) Thomas Higgins b. 1798 Butleigh Wootton, carpenter, bur. 25 May 1853 (Sep Q 5c/345 Wells) Butleigh 41W-17, 51W-41
Married I?: Mary
Married II?: Charlotte b. 1790/1800 Bristol, bur. 18 Jun 1881 (Jun Q 5c/378 Wells) Butleigh 41W-17, 51W-41, 61-59, 71W-87, 81W-105
Children:
1) Jane Chr. 15 Aug 1819 Butleigh Wootton, m. 1839 (Mar Q 10/707 Wells) Frederick Allen #
2) William Chr. 1 Jan 1824 Butleigh (11a)
This Thomas is probably the one Chr. 12 Nov 1794 Butleigh, s.o. John and Mary Higgins. He may have been married twice, first wife Mary, and a son James Chr. 1 Sep 1816 Butleigh may be his in view of the latter's profession as carpenter (see (10))
In 1841 Thomas and Charlotte lived with just their son William in Butleigh Wootton. By 1851 William was in Butleigh, married to Fanny and Thomas and Charlotte lived in Garden Allottments, Butleigh Wootton with their daughter Jane and son-in-law Frederick Allen plus three children. Thomas died in 1853 and Charlotte was then found in 1861 in Butleigh living with her son William in Dumb Lane. In 1871 she was back in Wootton with her daughter Jane Allen who was still with her in 1881 after her daughter's husband Frederick Allen had died in 1873 (Mar Q 5c/439 Wells). Charlotte died in 1881 aged 89. Jane married Joseph Blacker of Butleigh p35 in Butleigh on 14 Jun 1883 (Jun Q 5c/842 Wells) but he died in 1887. She was at Court Lodge in 1891, a widow aged 70 on Parish Relief (she died in 1900 (Dec Q 5c/281 Wells), living with Annie Allen granddaughter aged 10, the daughter of William and Anna Allen of Butleigh Wootton. #
11a) William Higgins Chr. 1 Jan 1824 Butleigh, timber sawyer, s.o. Thomas (carpenter) and Charlotte Higgins, bur. 1 Apr 1895 (Mar Q 5c/429 Wells) Butleigh 41W-17, 51-33, 61-59, 71-84, 81-104, 91-122
Married: Butleigh 23 Apr 1846 (Jun Q 10/801 Wells) Fanny (Frances) Rood b. 1828 Street, d.o. William Rood 51-33, 61-59, 71-84, 81-104, 91-122
Children:
1) Frank Rood Chr. 11 Dec 1846 Butleigh, bur. 18 Dec 1846 (Dec Q 10/383 Wells) Butleigh
2) Jesse Rood Chr. 27 Feb 1848 (Mar Q 10/487 Wells) Butleigh (11a1)
3) Henry/Harry Chr. 22 Sep 1850 (Dec Q 10/494 Wells - Harry) Butleigh 51-33 (11a2)
4) Jane Chr. 21 Mar 1852 (Mar Q 5c/638 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 16 Sep 1872 (Sep Q 5c/349 Wells) Butleigh 61-59, 71-84
5) Thomas Chr. 20 Sep 1853 Butleigh, bur. 30 Sep 1853 (Sep Q 5c/345 Wells) Butleigh
6) Charlotte Chr. 15 Oct 1854 Butleigh, bur. 18 Jun 1855 (Jun Q 5c/418 Wells) Butleigh
7) William Rood Chr. 11 May 1856 (Sep Q 5c/568 Wells) Butleigh 61-59, 71-84
8) Caroline Chr. 27 Jun 1858 (Jun Q 5c/628 Wells) Butleigh 61-59
9) Frances b. Mar/April, Chr. 19 May 1861 (Jun Q 5c/657 Wells) Butleigh 61-59, 71-84
10) Charlotte Rood b. 1862 Butleigh 71-84, 81-104 [1863 (Mar Q 5c/653 Wells)?]
11) Frank/Francis Chr. 16 May 1864 (Jun Q 5c/639 Wells) Butleigh 71-84 , 81-104
12) Albert Chr. 28 Dec 1868 (Dec Q 5c/579 Wells?) Butleigh 71-84, 81-104
In 1841 Fanny Rood lived in Street with her parents, her father being a farmer. She married William in 1846 and they appear together in Dumb Lane in 1851 with two children.
In 1861 William and Fanny (Frances), who was now a dressmaker, had four additional children as well as William's mother Charlotte (68) living with them. Charlotte returned to Butleigh Wootton later.
Jesse was a shop boy and Henry was now called Harry! Probably to provide income, at least two rooms in the house were let to two other families.
Caroline was visiting her aunt Harriet [née Allen] (b. 1842 Butleigh) in 1871, who had married Frances Collet (carpenter and grocer) and who lived in Coln St. Aldwin, Gloucs. # She married David Jones in Wales in 1880 (Mar Q 11a/445 Merthyr Tydfil) - he had been the schoolteacher in Butleigh - they both appeared together on the census there in 1881 at Butleigh schoolhouse in the High Street. #
By 1871 William and wife Frances had added three more to their previous total of children.
By 1881 William and Frances lived with just Frank, Charlotte and Albert. Their other children were elsewhere:-
Jane had died in 1872 (Sep Q 5c/349 Wells) aged 20.
William Higgins was a carpenter in 1881 lodging at Temperance Hotel, Bruton. In 1891, married to Frances, he was Publican of the Unicorn Inn in Frome. They were still there in 1901 with daughters Frances (15) and Mabel (9).
Frances in 1881 was ladies maid for an East India Merchant in Grosvenor Place, Knightsbridge - she married William Perry in Butleigh on 2 Jun 1884 (Jun Q 5c/939 Wells) - in 1901 the widowed Frances lived at 10, Orchard St., Frome with her mother Fanny, brother Frank and nephew Arthur. #
Charlotte married Edward Joseph Noble in 1888 (Jun Q 5c/829 Frome) and in 1891 they lived at 2, Hazel Villa, Butts Hill, Frome - Edward was a printer's reader. They were visited by Frances Perry (sister of Charlotte) and daughter Ethel. The Nobles lived at the same address in 1901 and by then had two children. A third child had died. In 1911 at the same address they had in additon a visitor – niece Mabel Annie Higgins (b. 1892 Frome).
Albert was probably the joiner who lodged with George Good in Western Way, Winsham in 1891 - nfi.
Frank in 1891 was a gardener lodging at the "Gun Inn", Dedham, Essex.
The 1891 census shows William Higgins plus Fanny and two grandchildren Arthur (13) and Frances (11) [children of Harry] living in Dumb Court.
Jesse Higgins married Matilda Dennis and lived in Butleigh Wootton and in 1891 worked as a gardener in Frome.
William died in 1895. His widow Frances went to live in Frome with her daughter Frances Perry who was also widowed by then. Living with Frances in addition were; her brother Frank who, in 1901, was a cellarman at a brewery; and her nephew, Arthur Higgins (b. 1878 Glastonbury - son of Harry (9a2)), who was a gunner in the Royal Horse Artillery.
11a1) Jesse Rood Higgins Chr. 27 Feb 1848 (Mar Q 10/487 Wells) Butleigh, gardener, bur. 8 Feb 1911 (Mar Q 5c/337 Wells) Butleigh 51-33, 61-59, 71-84, 81W-106
Married: 1876 (Jun Q 1a/742 St. George, Hanover Square) Matilda Dennis b. 1851 Exeter, Devon, d.o. Samuel and Susan Dennis 81W-106
Children:
1) Jane Chr. 29 Sep 1877 (Dec Q 5c/534 Wells) Butleigh Wootton 81W-106
2) Jessie Matilda Chr. 14 Jan 1879 (Mar Q 5c/549 Wells) Butleigh Wootton 81W-106
3) Agnes Catherine b. Feb, Chr. 10 Apr 1881 (Jun Q 5c/523 Wells) Butleigh Wootton 81W-106
4) Rachel b. 23 Jul, Chr. 24 Aug 1884 (Sep Q 5c/505 Wells) Butleigh Wootton
5) Louis Rooch [Lewis] Chr. 6 May 1888 Beckington, Som.
6) Beatrice b. Jan 1891 Beckington
Jesse lived with his parents in Dumb Lane until the 1870's. After marrying in 1876, Jesse lived in Butleigh Wootton in 1881 with his wife and children until moving to Beckington sometime before 1887. His daughter Rachel died there in 1887 (Mar Q 5c/399 Frome) aged 2. In 1891 they lived at 12, Waterloo, Frome and in 1901 they were at Christ Church Street East, Frome. Jesse died in Wells Asylum in 1911 aged 64.
Jesse Matilda married 'overlooker' Edgar Samuel Rawlings in 1905 (Mar Q 5c/661 Frome) and in 1911 they lived at 35, North Rd., Huddersfield together with Matilda Higgins her mother and Agnes and Beatrice Higgins her sisters.
11a2) Henry Higgins Chr. 22 Sep 1850 (Dec Q 10/494 Wells - Harry) Butleigh 51-33 Harry - 61-59, 71-84, 81-101
Married: 1877 (Jun Q 1a/754 St. George, Hanover Square) Phoebe Hunt b. 1847 Combrooke, Norwich, Warwicks, d.o. William and Sarah Hunt, d. 28 Sep, bur. 2 Oct 1882 (Sep Q 5c/312 Wells) Butleigh 81-101
Children:
1) Arthur Harry Chr. 23 Apr 1878 (Jun Q 5c/549 Wells) Butleigh 81-101, 91-122
2) Frances Chr. 4 Apr 1880 (Mar Q 5c/456 Wells) Butleigh 81-101, 91-122
Harry Higgins (30) Carpenter was christened Harry but on the '51 census his name was written Henry. In 1881 it was written Harrie. Harry had lived with his father William in St. James' Square in 1871 and married Phoebe Hunt in 1877.
On the 1881 census Harry lived with his wife Phoebe (34) and children Arthur Harry and Frances. Phoebe died in 1882 aged 32. The children went to live with their grandparents in Dumb Court (1891), about their father nothing more appears. No record of Henry/Harry after 1881.
In 1901 Arthur, who had joined the Royal Horse Artillery (Gunner) stayed with his Aunt, Frances Perry and grandmother Frances Higgins in Frome, at 10 Orchard Street. His sister Frances may be the Frances Higgins [transcribed as Wiggins!] b. 1876 Butleigh who was a maid at 37, Hyde Park Gate, Kensington in 1901. In 1909 (Jun Q 1d/1239 Wandsworth) Frances married Ettore Caviglioni a hotel stocktaker, born in Italy. In 1911 they lived at 68, Grandison Rd., Battersea with their 9 month old daughter Eda.
ADM 188/533 Arthur Harry Higgins Name Higgins Arthur Harry 353439 Butleigh, Somerset Date: 1876.
12) Charles Reakes Higgins b. 1861 Pylle, labourer 91-121
Married: 1887 (Sep Q 5c/775 Shepton Mallet) Eliza Jane Taylor b. 1858 (Sep Q 5c/603 Wells?) East Pennard, d.o. William and Mary Taylor 91-121
Children:
1) George b. 15 Jan, Chr. 9 Mar 1890 (Mar Q 5c/498 Wells). Butleigh 91-121
2) Mabel b. 5 Apr, Chr. 8 May 1892 (Jun Q 5c/472 Wells) Butleigh
3) Beatrice b. 26 Jul, Chr. 1 Sep 1895 (Sep Q 5c/470 Wells) Butleigh
4) Rose b. 21 Sep, Chr. 6 Nov 1898 (Dec Q 5c/424 Wells) Butleigh
Charles lived with his grandfather Edward Higgins at 23, Fosse Rd., Pylle in 1871. In 1881 he lived at Farge Well, East Pennard, with his brother James and family. Eliza was a servant at Sticklinch, West Pennard in 1881.
Charles (30), agricultural labourer, lived in Chapel Lane? or High Street in 1891 with his wife Eliza (30) and son George. The family had moved to Backwell, Long Ashton by 1901, where Charles (Charley) was a cattleman on a farm - but not before having Mabel, Beatrice and Rose, all born in Butleigh. They were still there in 1911 with George, Beatrice and Rose still at home. Mabel was in service at a boarding house, 4, Chesterfield Place, Weymouth.
13) William Higgins b. 29 Sep, Chr. 7 Dec 1834 Shepton Mallet [Canard's Grave], road contractor, s.o. James and Mary Higgins, died 26 Aug, bur 1 Sep 1900 (Sep Q 5c/278 Wells) Butleigh 71W-85, 81W-105, 91W-115
Married: 1857 (Dec Q 5c/985 Shepton Mallet) Emma James b. 27 Dec 1838, Chr. 3 Feb 1839 (Mar Q 10/427 Shepton Mallet) d.o. Edward and Mariah, d. 11 Jan, bur. 16 Jan 1904 (Mar Q 5c/347 Wells) Butleigh 71W-85, 81W-105, 91W-115, 01W-142
Children:
1) Mary Marie Chr. Dec 1858, reg. 1859 (Dec Q 5c/566 Shepton Mallet) Shepton Mallet 71W-85
2) William b. 1860 (Dec Q 5c/556 Shepton Mallet), Chr. 20 Jan 1861 SM 71W-85, 81W-105
3) Frederick Chr. 21 Nov 1862 (Dec Q 5c/577 Shepton Mallet) SM (13a)
4) Edmund James Chr. 7 Oct 1864 (Dec Q 5c/575 Shepton Mallet) SM (13b)
5) George Chr. 5 Oct 1866 (Mar Q 5c/646 Shepton Mallet) died 25 Dec 1927 71W-85, 81W-105, 91W-116
6) Frank Chr. 24 Feb 1869 (Mar Q 5c/604 Wells) Butleigh Wootton died 26 Jun 1932 71W-85, 81W-105
7) John Burt b. Feb, Chr. 2 Apr 1871 (Mar Q 5c/600 John Byrt) Butleigh Wootton (13c)
8) Charles Chr. 6 Apr 1873 (Mar Q 5c/584 Wells) Butleigh Wootton 81W-105, 91W-117
9) Harry Chr. 26 Dec 1875 (Jun Q 5c/553 Wells) Butleigh Wootton 81W-105, 91W-116, 01W-142
10) Giles Chr. 1 Jul 1877 (5c/552) Butleigh Wootton died 30 Dec 1929 81W-105, 91W-116, 01W-142
11) Jesse Chr. 30 Nov 1882 (Dec Q 5c/519 Wells) Butleigh Wootton (13d)
In 1851 William
lived with his brothers James and John and widowed
mother Mary (b. 1812? Mere, Wilts) at Town Lane, Shepton Mallet. His
mother is described as a pauper and living with them was Mary Curtain
(74) pauper and widow. Emma James
had lived with her widowed mother Maria on Silver Street
Hill, Shepton in 1851 and previously at Great Barton, Shepton in
1841.
William married Emma James in 1857 and by 1861, they lived at Cannards Grave with their first two children. William and Emma lived in Shepton Mallet until 1866/7 before moving to Butleigh Wootton by 1869. They appeared in 1871 in Butleigh Wootton with seven children.
By 1881 this had increased to ten, though Mary Maria had left home and was in service at 14, Elm Grove Road, Westbury on Trym, Gloucs. As Maria she married the carpenter Henry Hale [Heale] (b. 1858 Thornbury, Glos.) in Butleigh on 26 Jan 1884 (Mar Q 5c/779 Wells) and they lived in 1891 at 12, Muller Rd., Horfield, Gloucestershire with their two sons.
By 1891 Jesse was added to the family but their son William had married Alice Mary Stevens (b. 1863 Butleigh Wootton) in Butleigh on 7 Apr 1885 (Jun Q 5c/901 Wells) and they now lived in Hind Hayes, Street with their son George W. (5) - William was a road contractor like his father. # By 1901 William had taken up farming and lived at Portway Farm, Street with children Alice and George. They still had George with them in 1911.
Frank seems to have become a groom and worked at 1, Christchurch Rd, Clifton Mews, Folkestone, Kent in 1891. By 1901 he was a coachman living in the coachhouse of Willesley House, Cranbrook Kent with his wife Marion Wicks (b. 1873 Folkestone – married 1899 Jun Q 1d/1243 Wandsworth) and daughter Lucy (9). In 1911 they were at Gemmings, Maidstone with their two surviving (of 3) children.
William died on 26 Aug 1900 and by 1901 Emma lived with her sons Giles, Harry and Jesse, next to Look's Farm in Butleigh Wootton. John, called Burt, was living on his own next to the Parish Reading Room and the other children had all left Wootton. Frederick was in Butleigh (next 5a) while George had married Jane from Winterborne, Dorset and now lived in his shop at 76, Denmark Rd., Longfleet, Dorset where he was a 'general dealer'. Charles still single and a carter, lodged with William and Jane Good at Railway Crossing, Lamyatt, Shepton Mallet in 1901. The same Charles Higgins b. 1872 (?) a jobbing gardener lived at Hill View, Sandford, Wareham in 1911 with wife Mary (b. 1872 Anderson, Dorset). A Charles Higgins (b. 1870 Butleigh) was a shepherd boarding at the Royal Oak Inn, Bruton in 1911.
Emma, their mother died on January 11th 1904 and is buried with her husband in Butleigh. John Burt married Lilly Norris Chr. 20 Jan 1878 (Mar Q 5c/531 Wells) Butleigh in Butleigh on 20 Oct 1904 (Dec Q 5c/991 Wells). # Giles and Jesse lived together at 8 Butleigh in 1911 but Giles died in 1929 aged 51 and was bur. 2 Jan 1930 Butleigh.
13a) Frederick Higgins Chr. 21 Nov 1862 (Dec Q 5c/577 Shepton Mallet), road labourer, died 30 Jun, bur. 3 Jul 1936 Butleigh 71W-85, 81W-105, 91W-116, 01-144
Married: 1892 (Mar Q 6a/135 Barton Regis, Glos.) Kate Ann Davis Chr. 26 Dec 1866 (Dec Q 5c/552 Wells) Butleigh laundress, d.o. Edward and Sarah Davis, died 31 Oct, bur 4 Nov 1950 Butleigh 01-144 #
Children:
1) Joseph Frederick (called Frank) b. 1893 (Jun Q 5c/490 Wells) Street 01-144
2) Ellen Maria b. 23 Jan, Chr. 3 Apr 1898 (Mar Q 5c/459 Wells) Butleigh 01-144
Kate appeared with her parents at Kings Elm Field, Street in 1881 but in 1891 she was a housemaid living at 8, Cambridge Gate, St. Pancras, London. After living with his parents in Butleigh Wootton, Frederick, a road labourer, and his wife Kate, a laundress, lived first in Street where Joseph Frederick was born in 1893 and then Butleigh where Ellen Maria was born in 1898. They were still in Butleigh in 1911 living with Frank and Nellie. They had a visitor Ada Dawkins from Cambridge.
Frederick died on 30 June 1936. PHOTO Kate died on 31st October 1950 at Clematis House. Their son had died 4 Mar aged 25 in 1919 (Mar Q 5c/737 Wells) bur. 9 Mar Butleigh. Ellen Maria married carrier James Baulch of Butleigh in Butleigh on 17 Apr 1922 (Jun Q 5c/1015 Wells). #
13b) Edmund James Higgins Chr. 7 Oct 1864 (Dec Q 5c/575 Shepton Mallet) Shepton Mallet , labourer/ road contractor 71W-85, 81W-105
Married: 1888 (Dec Q 5c/952 Wells) Sarah Elizabeth Taswell b. 1869 (Dec Q 5c/423 Langport) Muchelny, d.o. Joseph and Eliza Taswell
Children:
1) William James b. 20 Jan Street, Chr. 30 Mar 1890 (Mar Q 5c/498 Wells) Butleigh
2) Lily [Lilias] B b. 1892 (Jun Q 5c/475 Wells) Street
3) Beatrice Emma b. 1895 (Jun Q 5c/479 Wells) Street
4) Ernest Edmund b. 1900 (Mar Q 5c/445 Wells) Street
5) Alfred George b. 1902 (Jun Q 5c/410 Wells) Street
6) Douglas John Chr. 15 May 1912 Butleigh
Edmund James, labourer, married and lived with his wife at Keens Elm Lane Cottage, Street by 1891 with son William James By 1901 the family lived at 12, Stone Hill, Street and Edmund (called Edward on the census) was a quarryman. They had three more children, Lily (9), Beatrice (6) and Ernest (1). A Beatrice Ema Higgins aged 15 of Street was servant in 1911 at Broadway Lodge, Butleigh Wootton and is probably this Beatrice rather than the daughter of Charles Reakes Higgins (see 12). In 1911 Edmund and Sarah lived in Butleigh with sons Ernest and Alfred.
13c) John Byrt Higgins b. Feb, Chr. 2 Apr 1871 (Mar Q 5c/600 John Byrt) Butleigh Wootton, gardener, d. 25 Sep, bur. 26 Sep 1925 Butleigh 71W-85, 81W-105, 91W-116, 01-146
Married: Butleigh 20 Oct 1904 (Dec Q 5c/991 Wells) Lilly Norris Chr. 20 Jan 1878 (Mar Q 5c/531 Wells) Butleigh #
Children:
1) Rose b. 12 Sep, Chr. 19 Oct 1905 (Dec Q 5c/390 Wells) Butleigh
John Byrt was called just Byrt and in 1911 lived at 8 Butleigh with Lily and Rose plus his mother-in-law Martha Norris. John Byrt died in 1925 in Baltonsborough.
13d) Jesse Higgins Chr. 30 Nov 1882 (Dec Q 5c/519 Wells) Butleigh Wootton bur 12 Jul 1958 Butleigh 91W-116, 01W-142
Married: 1911 (Jun Q 6a/72 Bristol) Ada Louise Dawkins b. 1885 (Jun Q 3b/491 Cambridge) d.o. Alfred W. and Ada Louise (Arch) Dawkins, bur. 16 Nov 1967 Butleigh
Children:
1) Alfred William b. 24 Dec 1911, Chr. 18 Feb 1912 Butleigh (13dA)
2) F. D. Chr. 12 Oct 1913 Butleigh
3) R. G. b. 2 Mar, Chr. 30 Apr 1916 Butleigh bur. 18 Apr 1950 Butleigh
4) S. J. Chr. 29 Sep 1919 (Dec Q 5c/669 Wells) Butleigh
5) V. Chr. 27 Aug 1922 Butleigh
In 1911 Jesse and Giles lived together at 8 Butleigh Wootton and described as 'road contractors' – they had a lodger in Ernest Birch. Jesse married Ada a parlour maid who was a 'visitor' at the home of Frederick and Kate Higgins in 1911. They married later that same year. An S. Higgins bought the 'infant school' [now No. 17 High Street) at sale of the Estate in Feb. 1947. - Stanley? Jesse rented No. 19 High Street at £5 p.a. at sale of the Estate in Feb. 1947. Water obtained from well. Reginald Higgins bought 62, 63 and 64 Butleigh [Oddway] for £560 at the 1947 Estate sale. Mrs. A. L. Higgins rented 68 Butleigh (lot 45) at £20 pe annum at the time of the 1947 sale. Jesse died at 65, Barton Road.
13dA) Alfred William Higgins b. 24 Dec 1911, Chr. 18 Feb 1912 (Mar Q 5c/753 Wells) Butleigh labourer
Married: M. M.
Children:
1) J M Chr. 8 Mar 1936 Butleigh
2) R. Chr. 24 Aug 1941 Butleigh
14) Sarah Higgins b. 1763 Somerset bur. 4 Dec. 1847 (Dec Q 10/311 Wells) Butleigh 41W-17
Sarah lodged with the Periams in 1841. This Sarah Higgins was 89 years old, b. '1771' on 1841 census. Probably Sarah Underwood, the widow of John Higgins. If the latter is true then she had two children - see (5x, 10).
From Nov 1816 an Ann Higgins was in receipt of assistance – in Aug 1817 her goods were transported to Butleigh Wootton – she was paid until March 1825 when she was cared for by Jane Withers then James Blacker paid to bury her.
15) Elizabeth Higgins b. 1832 Wells 51W-38
Elizabeth was a farm servant at Wootton Hill Farm in 1851. She doesn't seem to have married and as late as 1891 she is described as a charwoman living at Ham Street, Baltonsborough.
16) Ellen (Eleanor) Higgins b. 1837 Baltonsborough d.o. Eliza Higgins 51K-41
Ellen was a servant to William Tucker in Kingweston in 1851. Nfi
17) Mary Higgins b. 1819 Butleigh widow
Children:
1) Sarah Higgins b. 1838 Butleigh
2) William b. 1839 Butleigh
3) Thomas b. 1842 Butleigh
Presumably the death of Mary's husband caused their predicament - nfi, all are absent in 1841 and 1861. Possibly Glastonbury born, not actually Butleigh. In Wells Union Workhouse in 1851
18) James Higgins Chr. 1 Sep 1816 Butleigh Wootton, carpenter, butcher, s.o. Thomas and Mary Higgins, died 1886 (Jun Q 5c/386 Wells) aged 69
Married: 6 Aug 1839 (Sep Q 10/629 Wells) Jane Vincent b. 31 Oct 1817 Glastonbury St. Johns, d.o. Thomas and Susan Vincent
Children:
1) William b. 1843 Glastonbury
2) Mary b. 1845 Glastonbury
3) Joseph b. 1848 Glastonbury
4) Emma b. 1850 Glastonbury
5) Thomas b. 1852 Glastonbury
In 1851 and 1861 they lived in Magdalen St., Glastonbury, James at first was a carpenter then a butcher. In 1871 James was described as a cabinet maker. In 1881 he was a retired builder living with Jane at Magdalen St., Market House "Inn". His son William with wife Rebekah and two children also lived in the same building.
19) Henry Higgins b. 1862 Butleigh, servant [Henery]
Henry was a servant at a private house in Bruton in 1881. No other reference
20) Henry Higgins b. 1863 Butleigh, shoemaker
In 1881 Henry boarded with Hester Browning in Glaston Road, Street. No other reference.
21) George Higgins Wimbledon, servant, s.o. John Higgins (servant)
Married: Butleigh 17 Jun 1858 (Jun Q 5c/991 Wells) Ann Wellings d.o. Charles Wellings (farmer)
George was a widower when he married Ann Wellings.Nfi.
22) William Higgins b. 1874 East Pennard, carter, groom, s.o. James and Eliza Higgins 01-139 PHOTO
Married: Butleigh 7 Nov 1898 (Dec Q 5c/913 Wells) Bessie Louisa Gregory b. 1874 [1870 (Jun Q 5c/534 Frome)] Kilmersdon, d.o. George Gregory 01-139 #
William was the son of James and Eliza Higgins of East Pennard (and nephew of Charles above), a farm hand in East Pennard in 1891. At his marriage he was stated to be a groom residing in Salisbury. Bessie was in service at 46, Dorset Street, St. Marylebone, London in 1891 and gave her dob at marriage as being 1874. Her parents had moved to Butleigh prior to 1891. In 1901 William and Bessie lived in three rooms on Butleigh Hill.
23) The following not yet placed:
a) Eliza Higgins infant b. 1851 and bur. 7 Jul 1851 (Sep Q 10/371 Wells) Butleigh
b) William Charles Higgins b. 1892, bur. 6 May 1893 (Jun Q 5c/326 Wells) Butleigh
c) William Higgins b. 1810, bur. 20 Aug 1832 Butleigh aged 22 - probably son of William (10b)
d) Mary Higgins b. 1777, bur. 27 Apr 1819 Butleigh aged 42
24) Elizabeth Higgins b.c. 1765 Butleigh d.o. John and Jane (née Periam?) Higgins
Elizabeth married Thomas Whitnell (b. 5 Jan 1767 Ashcott) on 2 Apr 1784 in Street and they had eight children. Elizabeth was buried 17 Feb 1839 in Street.
25) Lawrence Read Colbourne Higgins Chr. 24 Jan 1849 (Mar Q 6/36 Bedford) Bedford, s.o. George and Caroline (nee Colbourne) Higgins (a Brewer), died 1930 (Jun Q 5c/491 Wells)
Aged 62, single and of independent means Lawrence occupied Wootton House in 1911 with 5 servants and had a boarder Sam Day (b. 1879 Walsall Wood, Staffs). He had taken over his father's brewing business (the Castle Brewery) and house (Castle Close, Bedford St. Paul). House and brewery occupied the site of Bedford castle – hence the name. The family acquired many public houses and also much property in Bedford. In 1902 the partnership with his brothers was dissolved, a Limited Company formed and Lawrence seems to have retired. Brewing ceased at Castle Lane on 5th October 1928. The site is now the home of the Bedford Museum.
26) Ralph Henry Higgins b. 1895 Fulham, London, West Pennard, farmer, s.o. Ralph William and Alice Higgins
Married: 1935 G. A. V.
Children:
1) P. M. Chr. 9 Apr 1936 Butleigh
2) B. F. b. 1937
At the birth of P., Ralph's address was East St., West Pennard where his parents had farmed.
Higgs
1) Kate Higgs b. 1895 (Jun Q 5c/485 Axbridge) Wedmore, servant, d. of William and Charlotte Higgs
In 1911 Kate was a general servant at the house of farmer James Burrough in Butleigh Wootton.
Hilborne
[Holborne]
1) George Hilborne b. 1821 Barton St. David, carpenter, died 1892 (Mar Q 5c/317 Langport) s.o. George Hilborne and Miranda (nee Barber) Hilborne
Married: 1845 (Dec Q 10/771 Wells) Ann Higgins [Anne Sophia Chr. 13 Jan 1822 Butleigh?] #
Children:
1) Sarah Ann b. 1846 (March Q 10/531 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 7 Aug 1861 (Sep Q 5c/314 Yeovil).Barton St. David aged 18
2) William George Chr. 12 Nov 1848 Barton St. David bur. 12 Apr 1850 Barton St. David
3) Elizabeth Ann b. Feb, Chr. 20 Jul 1851 Barton St. David [Holbourne] bur. 15 Jul 1872 Barton St. David
4) William George Chr. 17 Apr 1853 Barton St. David bur. 6 Feb 1886 Barton St. David
5) Tom Chr. 8 Jul 1855 Barton St. David bur. 26 Jan 1866 Barton St. David
6) Henry b. 1858 Barton St. David bur. 18 Feb 1866 Barton St. David
7) Emily Sarah b. 1861, Chr. 15 Mar 1863 Barton St. David
8) George Chr. 15 Mar 1863 Barton St. David bur. 26 Jan 1866 Barton St. David
9) Sarah Ann Chr. 16 Jul 1865 Barton St. David
It is uncertain which Ann Higgins married George Hilborne but most likely the daughter of Ambrose and Sarah shown above. They must have lived in Butleigh for a few years after their marriage before settling in Barton St. David where they appeared in 1851. In 1861 they were in Silver Street with five children but the eldest daughter Sarah was already in service as a nursemaid at the home of the dairyman Henry Pearce - at Hinton, Mudford. She is probably the Sarah Ann Holborn who died in 1861. Their son William George married Lucy Parker in 1873 (Sep Q 5c/627 Langport) and a son of that marriage was Arthur Hilborne (2) next.
In 1871 George and Ann were at 16, Silver Street, Street with three children. They were still there in 1881. In 1891 George and Ann lived alone at 10, Silver Street, Barton St. David. By 1901 Ann was a widow living alone in three rooms.
2) Arthur Charles Hilborne b. 1882 (Jun Q 5c/408 Langport), carter, s.o. William George and Lucy Hilborne [Arthur Charles Chr. 9 Jun 1878 Barton St. David s.o. William and Lucy]
Married: 1907 (Mar Q 5c/589 Langport) Blanche Beatrice Trenchard b. 1884 (Sep Q 5c/412 Chard), d.o. Rebecca Tranchard
Child:
1) Reginald Henry b. 1908 (Dec Q 5c/299) Barton St. David
2) Frank Cyril b. 9 Jul, Chr. 4 Aug 1911 Butleigh
3) H. A. Chr. 14 Sep 1913 Butleigh
4) P. R. b. 19 Dec 1915, Chr. 27 Jan 1916 Butleigh
In 1901 Blanche lived with her mother at Church Street, Upton Noble, Som., where her mother was a housekeeper. At the birth of Hubert she gave her maiden name as Pomeroy [the name of her step-father Daniel Pomeroy]. Arthur had lived in Barton St. David with his mother Lucy and stepfather Richard Barber in 1901. In 1911 Arthur and Blanche lived at Broadmoor, Butleigh with son Reginald and noted that they had had a further child which had died.
3) Henry Edward Hilborne b. 1884 (Dec Q 5c/389 Langport) Barton St. David died 1907 (Dec Q 5c/232 Langport)
Married: 28 May 1906 (JunQ 5c/889 Wells) Elizabeth (Bessie) Vincent b. 1884 Butleigh d.o. Charles and Hannah Vincent.
Child:1) Arthur George b. 1906 (Dec Q 5c/297 Langport) Barton St. David
On the 1911 census Elizabeth appears as a widow and servant [cook] at Butleigh Vicarage. Her husband had died aged just 23 and they had had one living child, George who lived with his grandparents, Charles and Hannah Vincent.
Hill
1) Edmund Hill bur. 22 Feb 1602 Butleigh
2) John Hill
Married: Butleigh 28 Jun 1611 Margaret Look
3) John Hill bur. 4 Feb 1748 Butleigh
Married: Joan
Children:
1) John Chr. 14 Apr 1716 Butleigh
2) William Chr. 16 Sep 1717 Butleigh
3) Thomas Chr. 7 Nov 1719 Butleigh, bur. 20 Nov 1720 Butleigh
John was a rate payer in Butleigh from 1720 -1747. Thereafter rates paid by 'late John Hill' but in just one year, 1748/9 rates were paid by Thomas Vearing and William Hill before in 1752 part of the property went to Stephen Periam.
4) Jon Hill
Jon/John was a vagrant that the OOP paid John Coombes to carry to Milborn Port in March 1777.
5) Abraham Hill sojourner, tailor
Married: Butleigh 28 Mar 1794 Mary Randel
Childen:
1) Hannah Chr. 6 Apr 1795 Butleigh
2) Elizabeth Chr. 3 Mar 1799 Butleigh
3) Nancy Chr. 31 May 1802 Butleigh
In January 1794 the OOP bought 3 yards of dowlas for Mary Rendall's boy [John Randell alias Oram] . In April 1794 there is a record in the OOP for ¾ yd of fustian for making Mary Randall's boy a pair of trousers – and clothing for Hannah Randall (Mary's sister?). In the same month they paid for warrants and oaths of Mary Randall and Abraham Hill, his arrest to Shepton Mallet and their marriage in Butleigh – cost £1 9s 0½d. In April and May 1794 the OOP gave aid to Mary Hill's boy. In Nov 1801 the OOP paid Abraham for making John Oram's clothing. Mary paid for attending on Mary Rowley in March 1804.
6) John, Ben, James Hill
In Oct 1796 the OOP paid Mr. Hill for supporting James Ruddock's wife and child. In June 1797 he was paid for medicines and visiting Sarah Ruddock. In Aug another bill concerning Sarah Ruddock and child was paid. In Aug 1797 a bill paid to Mr. Ben Hill for Jane Colmer may be connected.
A James Hill given aid in Jan 1830 when ill (OOP).
7) James Hill b. 1853 Brixton Deverill, Wilts., gamekeeper, s.o. Theophilus and Elizabeth Hill 81-99, 91-127
Married: Butleigh 22 Feb 1882 (Mar Q 5c/743 Wells) Frances Ann Castle Chr. 1 May 1863 (Jun Q 5c/661 Wells) Butleigh, d.o. James and Susan Hill 91-127 #
Children:
1) William b. and Chr. 26 Sep 1882 Butleigh, bur. 27 Sep 1882 (Dec Q 5c/339 Wells) Butleigh
2) William Frank b. 8 Jun, Chr. 28 Jul 1884 Butleigh, bur. 25 Jun 1885 (Jun Q 5c/387 Wells) Butleigh
3) Herbert Tom b. 6 Mar, Chr. 1 Jun 1887 (Jun Q 5c/522 Wells) Butleigh, d. 1887 (Dec Q 5c/332 Wells)
4) Alice b. 22 Mar, Chr. 25 May 1890 (Jun Q 5c/483 Wells) Butleigh 91-127
In 1861 James lived with both his parents at Woodcombe, Brixton Deverill where his father was a labourer. In 1871 James lived with his widowed mother and siblings at High Road, Brixton Deverell and in 1881 lodged with Arthur Prince at Baker's Grave as under keeper. After marrying Frances in 1882 they had three sons who died in infancy before they had a daughter Alice in 1890. In 1891 they still lived at Beggars Grave where James was principal gamekeeper. In 1901 James, Frances and Alice appear at "Dead Women", Whatley, Frome, where James was still a gamekeeper. In 1911 James, Frances and Alice were at 'Cumberwell. Bradford on Avon. Confusingly, Alice also appears as a boarder (Bonay embroiderer) at 26, Hebron Rd., Bedminster, Bristol in 1911. Alice never married and later lived at 1, Compton St., where she died 9 May 1962, bur 12 May Butleigh.
8) Francis Rosina Hill b. 1886 (Jun Q 5c/533 Wells) Street, factory worker, d.o. Samuel and Elizabeth Hill 01-145
Francis lived with her parents in Cobden Terrace Street in 1881 where her father was a 'laster' at the Boot & shoe factory. Francis was aged 15 and herself a Boot factory worker when she became a patient at the Cottage Hospital on census night in 1901.
9) Clara Hill b. 1882 Wookey 91-127
Clara was a visitor at Long Grove Farm, Butleigh, and was probably related to Charlotte Pearce (née James), the wife of Henry J. Pearce, farmer, since she also was Wookey-born. Nfi #
10) Alfred Hill b. 1861 Galhampton, North cadbury, wheelwright
Married: Butleigh 3 Nov 1884 (Dec Q 5c/939 Wells) Emily Rebecca Higgins Chr. 1 Apr 1861 (Mar Q 5c 6 24 Wells) Butleigh, d.o. Sidney Higgins # died 1908 (Mar Q 3a/607 Berkhampstead)
Children:
1) Eveline b. 1886, bur. 22 Jul 1889 (Sep Q 5c/298 Wells) Butleigh - died in Castle Cary
2) Leonard b. 1889 (Jun Q 5c/503 Wells) Butleigh
In 1891 the family lived at Mill Lane, Castle Cary with Emily's sister Gertrude Ellen Higgins (14). In 1901 they lived at 242 High Street, Great Berkhampstead, Herts. with five children and Emily's brother Sidney G. Higgins (21) a carpenter. In 1911 Alfred seems to have re-married – in 1908 to an Eliza Amie (b. 1872 India) and lived at 46, Ellesmere Rd., Sunnyside, Berkhampstead.
11) Sarah Hill b. 1842 Horrington, dairymaid 61W-64
Sarah worked on Charles Croom's farm in Wootton village in 1861. She had lived with 5 of her siblings in Pilton in 1851. Nfi
12) Eliza Hill b. 1844 Paradise, d.o. George and Harriet Hill 61W-65
Eliza appeared at Sedgmoor in 1861 when visiting her sister Sarah Hawker who lived there with her husband Arthur. By 1871 she was a housemaid at Binford Place, Bridgwater. Nfi
13) Florence E. Hill b. 1890 Highbridge, Somerset
In 1911 Florence was a domestic servant at Smithfield House, home of farmer George Burroughs.
14) Alice Hill b. 1875, d. 9 May, bur. 12 May 1962 Butleigh
Alice lived at 1, Compton Street when she died.
Hillard , Hilliar, Hilyard see Hellard
Hinch
1) Mary Ann Hinch Chr. 23 Mar 1845 Peterborough, Northants, servant, d.o. Edwin and Elizabeth Hinch 81-94
In 1881
Mary worked at Butleigh
Court. In 1851 she had lived with her parents
in New Town, Peterborough where her father was a carpenter. In 1861
she lived with her widowed mother in Sawtry All Saints, Northants. In
1891 she was ladiesmaid at 2, Lyall Street, Belgrave, home of the
Countess of Sefton and by 1901 she was the housekeeper there.
Hine – see Sweet
Hippesley
1) Mary Hippesley married Edward Knolls Butleigh 29 Apr 1616 (Dwelly's PR)
2) John Hippesley b. 1846 North Wootton, apprentice plumber, s.o. Edward and Matilda Hippisley 61-59
John lived with Frederick Shore, plumber and his wife Ann in the High Street in 1861. Ann Shore was previously Ann Hippesley of North Wootton and John was her brother - they had lived with their parents in North Wootton in 1851. Nfi .
Hiscock
[Hiscox]
1) John Hiscock b. 1796 Somerset, journeyman smith 41W-15
John worked with Jacob Blake in Wootton in 1841. Nfi
2) Viva Evelyn Hiscock b. 1908 Westbury on Trim d.o. coachman John and Martha W Hiscock.
Married: Butleigh 4 Aug 1927 Arthur Charles Smith b. 1903 E. Harptree
In 1911 Viva lived with her parents at Horton, Chipping Sodbury. Arthur lived with his parents (Seward and Emily Smith) at Brook Cottage, East Harptree, Bristol. His father was a gardener. Arthur became a bricklayer.
Hitchins
1) Mary Hitchins b. 1842 Lampeter, S. Wales, ladies maid 71-72
Mary served at Butleigh Court in 1871. Nfi
Hoare
1) Joan Hoare of Butleigh married John Burton in East Pennard on 19 Jan 1760 (Phill.)
2) Charles Ashford Hoare b. 1828 Bruton, carpenter, s.o. William Hoare
Married: Butleigh 1853 (Dec Q 5c/1115 Wells) Harriet Rawlins b. 1827 Pitcombe, d.o. James and Winifred Rawlins
Harriet was a laundress who lived with her widowed mother in Pitcombe in 1851. This couple married in Butleigh and in 1861 they lived in Shepton Montague with two young children. By 1871 they lived in Bruton.
3) William Hoare b. 1827 Bath, draper and grocer, died 1887 (Jun Q 5c/354 Wells). 81-101
Married: 1866 (Dec Q 5a/855 Bridport) Jane E. Swain b. 1833 Bridport, Dorset, died 1910 81-101
William lived in the High Street at The Laurels in 1881. William had previously (1871) been a commercial clerk in Bourton, Dorset. He died in 1887 and Jane returned to Dorset, where she had been born, to live with her sister Emma, who kept a boarding house in Lyme (Library Cottage No. 1). She died in 1910.
Hobbs
1) John Hobbes vicar of Butleigh 1451-1485 under the patronage of Glastonbury Abbey
DD/S/BT/2/1 - Compotus for Butleigh manor and rectory kept by John Hobbes, reeve.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date range: 1471 - 1472.
2) Alice Hobbes married Butleigh 20 Oct 1579 John Seymer
3) Agnes Hobbes wife of Philip bur. 29 Nov. 1585 Butleigh
4) Nicholas Hobbs bur. 1 Jun 1598 Butleigh (Dwelly's PR)
5) John Hobbes bur. 9 Sep 1610 Butleigh
Married: 8 Nov 1584 Agnes Bayley
1) Grace Chr. 31 Mar 1589 Butleigh
2) Avilie? Chr. 25 Oct 1592 Butleigh
3) Elizabeth Chr. 16 Jul 1594 Butleigh, bur. 16 Mar 1627 Butleigh
4) John Chr. 12 Jun 1596 Butleigh (5a)
5) James Hobbs Chr. 25 Jul 1598 Butleigh
6) Agnes Chr. 10 Oct 1600 Butleigh
7) Maria Chr. 20 Oct 1602 Butleigh
8) Richard Chr. 24 Aug 1608 Butleigh
Maria married Butleigh 29 Jul 1639 Edward Champen. # Avilie? May be the Dorothie who married William Atwool on Butleigh 26 Jun 1617
5a) John Hobbs d. bet.1635-47
Married: Frances, widow, bur. 3 Feb 1647 Butleigh
Children:
1) Agnes Chr. 29 Jul 1630 Butleigh
2) dau. Chr. 1 May 1632 Butleigh
3) Edward Chr. 29 Sep 1633 Butleigh
4) Elinor Chr. 11 Oct 1635 Butleigh, bur. 6 Feb 1640 Butleigh
6) John Hobbes
Married: 28 Apr 1588 Alice Pirry bur. 12 Oct 1590Butleigh ?
7) Dorothy Hobbes married Butleigh 26 Jun 1617 William Atwool
8) Thomas Hobbes died 1681
Thomas had worked for George Hooper and in 1680 must have had an accident. He was operated upon by Dr. Periam and the overseers bought him a new sheet. In 1681 he was given money for his relief and attendance in his sickness plus wood for heating. All to no avail – he died and was buried by the overseers in the same year.
9) Edward James Hobbs b. 1919, Leading Air Mechanic, s.o. Edward James Hobbs
Married: Butleigh 21 Dec 1940 Q. D. H.
Children:
1) B. A. Chr. 30 Nov 1940 Butleigh
2) D. b. 1952
Edward was stationed at RNG Station, Yeovilton and Q. lived at Oddway Villa, Butleigh when they married.
Hobson
1) Mary Elizabeth Hobson b. 9 Oct 1845, Chr. 29 May 1846 Ashbourne, Derbyshire, d.o. Robert and Eliza Hobson 71-79
Mary (23) was the niece of William Dyke (90) and acted as his housekeeper at Carvile House in 1871. In 1881 Mary lived with her parents in Wellington Shropshire. She was a teacher (governess) and her father was an Insurance agent. Her brother was a printer employing 11 people. She was looking after both her parents in 1891 and in 1901 was still caring for her widowed father.
Hockey
Hoce
1) John Hockey bur. 2 May 1725 Butleigh
Married: 'wife of John Hockey buried 1688' Overseers
Children?:
1) Ann
2) Thomas
3) Henry (1a+)
4) John (1b)
John paid rates from 1696 – 99 after which he was replaced by Ann Hockey in 1700. In 1701 the property became 'late Hockey' and next door is 'late Jacklett' – then together 'late Thomas Jacklet & Hockey'. In 1707 this property then pays rates under Thomas Hockey until 1713, jointly with Ann Vagg from 1709. In 1715 a John and Henry Hockey both become ratepayers replacing, Thomas, in adjoining properties – possibly the sons of this John, and next to Ann Vagg. A Ruth Hockey was buried in Butleigh in 1690 (OOP). An unspecified 'Hockey' appears in the churchwarden's accounts for 1708 when paid for killing four hedgehogs.
DD/S/BT/6/2/5 - 1] John and Katherine Webb of Butleigh 2] John Hockey of Butleigh, yeoman Lease for lives of Cattwell (4a), Butleigh. Rent 1s.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1693.
1a) Henry Hockey (s)
Henry paid rates with John from 1715 in succession of Thomas Hockey. In 1756 John Hockey paid until 1758 then a Henry again. Henry last paid rates in1765. In 1766/7 'the late Henry Hockey' appears followed by Henry Hockey of Charlton. Henry paid rates until 1822/23 then it appears Richard Holman was occupier, last listed in 1824. In July 1821 Henry Hockey had received assistance from the OOP.
DD\BR\ho/8 Land, orig. belonging to Hockey of Charlton Mackrell. Will, Henry Hockey, yeo., 1767; admon. Thos. Hockey, 1826, both of Charlton Mackrell.
DD\R\lp/1
Two messuages, tenements, etc., incl. lands called Clover Close, Bean
Close, Henley, Hither and Yonder Fishwell, Blondsley, Glovers, West
Wood, The Common, Dunhill, Horsey, a sandpit at Whiteland Way, land
at Hare Pits, Popes Cross, etc., 1744, 1752, 1759, latter also
includes land in East and West Common and at Long Hill and Stone
Pitts; 3a. called Fishwell, 1694, 1708, 1711, 1714; exchange of lands
at High Street in West Field and at Southern Hill Cross and
Kingweston Gate in East Field, 1770; meadow at Claps Corner formerly
Colmers, land at Whethill and Foxhanger, Sour Down, Beanslades, 1796;
Fishwell, Jackletts Woodclose and Turners Wood, 1787.
Copy will of
Thomas Cook of St. Clements, London, dealer in bottles, 1802, pr.
1802; letters of admon. of Hen.
Hockey of
Charlton Adam, 1820.
DD/S/BT/26/12/13 1] John Hockey of Charlton Mackrell, shopkeeper 2] John Hockey of Charlton Adam, innkeeper son of Henry decd 3] Thomas Kendin of Stapleton, Glos Draft mortgage of Wakemoor (15a)in Charlton Adam and Charlton Mackrell. 1833
1b) John Hockey
[There may be two families from here – one paying rates and one receiving OOP aid]. A John Hockey paid rates (above until 1758) and in 1719 a John moved and paid rates on a different property (to that shared with Henry and possibly that previously owned by the earlier John Hockey above) until 1736.
DD/S/BT/6/2/5 - 1] James Grenville 2] John Hockey of Butleigh, yeoman Lease for lives of a messuage and 1a and Worthy (1a), Butleigh. Rent 2s.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1743.
1c) John Hockey bur. 15 Jun 1806 Butleigh
A John paid rates on 'part of Cooks' from 1744 until 1806 (then late John). In a list of commoners of 1779 to serve in rotation as Tythingmen, John Hockey 'for Cookes' is first on the list. The John Hockey receiving relief from the OOP from March to Sep 1801 [different from the John whose children were receiving aid at the same time].
DD/S/BT/16/2/39 - 1] John Hockey of Butleigh, yeoman 2] James Grenville of Butleigh Surrender of allotment in King's Sedgemoor, Butleigh. [Above 3 documents tied together]. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1796.
2) John Hockey bur. 17 Aug 1765 Butleigh
Married: Jane bur. 21 Nov 1742 Butleigh
Children:
1) Thomas Chr. 13 Sep 1720 Butleigh (2a)?
2) Jane Chr. 28 Feb 1725 Butleigh
3) Ann Chr. 8 Mar 1727 Butleigh
4) Betty Chr. 3 Apr 1730 Butleigh
5) John Chr. 9 Mar 1732 Butleigh (2b)
6) Stephen Chr. 9 Aug 1734 Butleigh, bur. 23 Nov 1735 Butleigh
7) Stephen Chr. 8 Dec 1736 Butleigh
John appears in the CW accounts 1748/9. He was a carpenter and in 1750-51 worked on the re-building of the church roof including the inside finish work. Worked on the bells in 1752/53 and made a chest for the church. In 1756/57 he presented the CW with a bill for £2 for work done and 18/7d for oil, colours and labour.
2a) Thomas Hockey bur. 28 Feb 1791 Butleigh
Married: Jane bur. 19 Jun 1774 Butleigh
Children:
1) Jane Chr. 31 May 1748 Butleigh
Child?: 1) b. 1775 fathered by Edward Ashley
2) Thomas Chr. 18 Jun 1750 Butleigh
3) William Chr. 28 Jan 1752 Butleigh, bur 8 Apr 1778 Butleigh
4) Mary Chr. 28 Nov 1753 Butleigh
5)? Stephen bur. 30 Aug 1755 Butleigh
6) Stephen Chr. 28 Jan 1756 Butleigh, bur. 15 Feb 1756 Butleigh
7) Stephen Chr. 27 Aug 1757 Butleigh (2a1)
8) John Chr. 5 Jan 1760 Butleigh, see (2a2)
The OOP paid house rent for Thomas Hockey in 1757/8, 1763. In 1762 Thomas was paid for 6 days work repairing the highways (OOP 1763). In April 1769 the family had the smallpox and were cared for 3 weeks by Susan Davis (OOP). Aid received from the OOP from Jan 1784 for Thomas to May. In June 1785 the OOP paid for 'the marying' of Thomas Hockey – must be the son – not in Butleigh PR.
In 1775 the OOP received' from Edward Ashley (of Taswick) to the 7th Feb 1775 for keeping his bastard by Jane Hockey. In April 1775 she received money is distress about her child. In September 1778 after many payments it was stated that 'this doth accomplish 7 year from the date of the order paid to Jane Hockey'. Mary married Butleigh 4 Nov 1776 John Davis. #
In April 1777 the OOP began pursuing Mary Larcomb about her illegitimate child [William Larcombe Chr 15 Sep 1777] and in October took her and William Hockey to Wells for examination. He began paying bastardy pay thereafter (Nov 1777) – until his death in 1778. The OOP paid bastardy pay to Mary up to April 1788. [or a different William Hockey?]. In May 1788 Thomas' goods (with those of Elizabeth, widow of John) were transported elsewhere – he also received assistance from then on. In April 1789 Thomas received assistance and the OOP must have sold some of his goods – they received £1 3s 2d for part of them. In March 1790 Bridget Look paid for curing Thomas' legs. The OOP paid for Thomas' coffin and burial in March 1791.
2a1) Stephen Hockey Chr. 27 Aug 1757 Butleigh, s.o. Thomas & Jane Hockey, bur. 18 Jan 1811 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 11 Apr 1780 Honor Grant b. 1758 Somerset, bur. 19 Dec 1841 (Dec Q 10/342 Wells) Butleigh 41-5
Children:
1) William Chr. 18 Jan 1781 Butleigh (2a1A)
2) [Jane b. 1784?]
3) Stephen Chr. 20 Feb 1785 Butleigh (2a1B)
4) Charles Chr. 29 Apr 1787 Butleigh
5) Honora Chr. 29 Jan 1792 Butleigh, died 1863 (Mar Q 5c/514 Wells)
6) Maria Chr. 9 Feb 1794 Butleigh
7) Elizabeth Chr. 17 Apr 1796 Butleigh # [see 2a2)
8) Thomas Chr. 25 Dec 1798 Butleigh (Stephen & Jane?) (see 5)
Stephen received rent from the OOP in 1783 and assistance several times. Stephen's parents had been in Butleigh since before 1748 when their first of eight children, Jane, was recorded as being Christened there. Stephen's mother Jane was bur. 19 Jun 1774 Butleigh. and father Thomas on 28 Feb 1791 Butleigh. In May 1787 Stephen began receiving assistance from the OOP. Stephen received OOP rent from 1791/2 until 1811 [in 1789 listed as paid to John Castle] then it went to his widow Honor. A Hockey girl, later called Elizabeth also received rent (see 2a2). For some reason the Honor Hockey payment linked to Jane Talbot – In 1812 then late Jane Talbot 1813. Honour was paid 2/- for looking after Joan Grant in Oct 1781. Mr. Hayle paid in Sep 1799 for treating Stephen's wife. Stephen occasionally received OOP assistance, cloth etc but mostly appears in the OOP accounts as sexton for burying people and often paid for ringing the bells at funerals. Payments made to Stephen's daughter in 1805. In March 1811 the OOP entry has Stephen Hockey coffin 16/-. Stephen Hockey's wife received OOP assistance from April 1811. Honor Hockey received assistance in April 1812. In Nov 1812 assistance was paid to Honor Hockey's daughter - A Hockey girl had her rent paid from 1812 (as did Honor Hockey) – looked after by Jane Gill. [see 2a2 – one Elizabeth/Betty or two there?] Honor received monthly assistance after her husband's death up to Oct 1833
A Charles Hockey received relief from the OOP from Oct 1826 when he was ill. In November the OOP paid for a journey to Taunton Hospital with him.
Honor lodged with John Davis and his wife Jane (her daughter?) in the High Street near Sealy's Row in 1841. A Jane Hockey also married John Davis in Butleigh on 27 May 1804 - probably a daughter of this couple. Honora married William Isaac in Butleigh on 15 Apr 1811. #
2a1A) William Hockey Chr. 18 Jan 1781 Butleigh, agricultural labourer, s.o. Stephen and Honora Hockey, bur. 20 Dec 1853 (Mar Q 5c/382 Wells) Butleigh 41-10, 51-27
Married: Butleigh 13 Sep 1802 Miriam Periam Chr. 18 Mar 1781 Butleigh, d.o. James and Zebra Periam, bur. 3 Mar 1855 (Mar Q 5c/538 Wells) Butleigh 41-10, 51-27
Children:
1) Elizabeth bur. 30 Jan 1803 Butleigh
2) Elizabeth Chr. 27 May 1804 Butleigh
3) Mary Ann Chr. 28 Sep 1806 Butleigh
4) Eliza Chr. 21 May 1809 Butleigh
Child: Maria b. Jan /Feb, Chr. 25 Mar 1827 Butleigh 41-10 [fathered by John Turner]
5) Joshua Chr. 17 Aug 1812 Butleigh (2a1Ai)
6) Charles Chr. 25 Dec 1814 Butleigh (2a1Aii)
7) William Chr. 19 Aug 1817 Butleigh (2a1Aiii)
8) Maria Chr. 18 Aug 1822 Butleigh, bur. 13 Mar 1825 Butleigh
In May 1805 the OOP paid the Bounty money allowed to his wife and child and a further bounty sum in June and July. A William Hockey had his rent paid by the OOP in 1812 – 1816. William Hockey's wife received assistance from April 1812. William also received assistance from the OOP in Feb 1816. In April 1816 Meriam Hockey received OOP assistance. In May 1817 the OOP paid Jane Gill for delivering William Hockey's wife. In Dec 1826 William was paid by the OOP for making out the Militia List. In Feb 1827 Eliza received pay in her 'illness'. Jane Gill was paid the same month for delivering her child. Eliza received bastardy pay thereafter. The father of the child was John Turner (see May 1831 OOP). In Dec Eliza Hockey of Wootton bought new shoes. In 1834 assistance paid to Meriam or Mary Ann Hockey of Wootton – could be the mother or the daughter.
This Hockey family lived in the High Street and seem to have been at either No. 12 or No. 14 - or possibly moved between these addresses between 1841-71. In 1841 William had lived there with his wife Miriam and children Joshua b. 1812, William b. 1817 and Maria b. 1827. A daughter Eliza had married Joshua Davis in Butleigh on 28 Jun 1838 (Jun Q 10/811 Wells) - this Eliza was almost certainly the mother of Maria b. 1827. #
Mary Ann married labourer Joseph Jeans (b. 1823 Long Sutton) in 1845 (Sep Q 10/625 Langport). #
In 1851 William and Miriam lived at the other end of the village at Oddway next to their son Joshua while William junior took over this house in the High Street. Miriam died in 1855 and William in 1853. In 1851 Maria was a housemaid at 15, Cavendish Square, Marylebone, London - home of Lady Frankland Russell. Maria married shepherd James Quarrington (b. 1801 Ellerborough, Bucks) in 1851 (Sep Q 6/585 Winslow, Bucks) and they lived in Buckinghamshire. Elizabeth married Charles Milton in Butleigh on 26 Apr 1841 (Jun Q 10/803 Wells), the brother of her brother Joseph's future wife Catherine. # On the PR record the names of the witness Charles, and father William Hockey, were exchanged.
2a1Ai) Joshua Hockey Chr. 17 Aug 1812 Butleigh, stone cutter & Parish Clerk, bur. 13 Sep 1890 (Sep Q 5c/300 Wells) Butleigh 41-10, 51-27, 61-57, 71-80, 81-98
Married I: 1842 (Jun Q 10/537 Bridgwater). Catherine Milton b. 1798 Bridgwater, schoolmistress, d.o. Mary Milton, bur. 21 Mar 1874 (Mar Q 5c/438 Wells) Butleigh 51-27, 61-57 #
Married II: Butleigh 29 Jul 1875 (Sep Q 5c/835 Wells) Marina Pouncey b. 1829 Butleigh, d.o. John Millard, bur. 1 Jul 1905 (Jun Q 5c/304 Wells) Butleigh 81-98, 91-126, 01-138 #
Catherine Milton lived with her widowed mother Mary and sister Elizabeth at Miltons Court, West Street, Bridgwater in 1841. She was a 40 year old spinster and schoolmistress when she married Joshua Hockey in 1842.
Joshua Hockey (39) and wife Catherine (53) with visitor John Hoddinott (3) lived in Oddway in 1851 in what was to become known as 'Hockey's Corner'. John Hoddinott appeared with his father John at Rockes Higher Farm in 1861. Joshua's parents lived next door.
In 1861 their abode was called on the census 'Hockey's Corner - Nodway School' and Joshua and Catherine had a visitor, Mary Tyack (25) from Bridgwater (a relative?). Joshua's brother Charles now occupied the house next door, vacated on the death of his parents. By 1871 Joshua (58) was now the Parish Clerk and a 'landowner'. Catherine died in 1874 aged 76. Charles still lived next door. Joshua married the widow Marina Pouncey (née Millard) in 1875 and they lived in Pouncey's Villa.
Pouncy's Villa is in Oddway next to Bethel Cottage and was built c. 1852 (date on gable) and occupied by Marina Pouncey from around 1871. In 1881 Joshua Hockey (68) and wife Marina (53) still lived in Pouncey's. Villa with Marina's sister Elizabeth Gilbert (62). Joshua died in 1890 (Sep Q 5c/300 Wells) and the house was empty for a time, Marina living elsewhere in Oddway.
She was followed in Pouncey's by Joanna Pouncey in 1897. Joanna E. Pouncy, of Evershot, was the great niece of Mary Pouncey and lived with her in Glastonbury in 1881 but by 1891 was back in Evershot and still there in 1901 - she probably rented out or had sold Pouncy's Villa.
In 1891 Marina Hockey (60) grocer, lived in three rooms in Oddway next door to her sister, also in three rooms, Elizabeth Gilbert (71). # She was still in Oddway in 1901 aged 78, and living with Elizabeth Gilbert (81). Marina died in 1905.
2a1Aii) Charles Hockey Chr. 25 Dec 1814 Butleigh, Post messenger, d. 8 Oct, bur. 14 Oct 1886 (Dec Q 5c/345 Wincanton?) Butleigh 41-13, 51-25, 61-57, 71-80, 81-96
Married: Butleigh 8 Mar 1836 Ellen [Eleanore] Oldis Chr. 2 Feb 1817 Butleigh, d. 1 Sep, bur. 8 Sep 1881 (Sep Q 5c/295 Wells) Butleigh 41-13, 51-25, 61-57, 71-80, 81-96 #
Children:
1) Mary Ann Chr. 13 Mar 1836 Butleigh 41-13, 51-25
2) Emily Chr. 22 Apr 1838 Butleigh 41-13, 51-25
3) Charles Chr. 21 Jun 1840 (Jun Q 10/483 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 29 Apr 1871 (Mar Q 5c/390 Wells) Butleigh 41-13, 51-25, 71-80
4) Henry Chr. 25 Dec 1842 (Dec Q 10/485 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 9 Jun 1863 (Jun Q 5c/470 Wells) Butleigh 51-25, 61-53
5) Fanny b. 1844 (Dec Q 10/494 Wells) Chr. 21 Jan 1845 Butleigh 51-25, 61-57
6) Miriam Periam. b. 1848 (Mar Q 8/83 Shaftesbury) Shaftesbury 51-25, 61-57
Charles Hockey (25), labourer, lived with his wife Ellen (20) and children Mary (5), Emily (3), Charles (1) in Oddway in 1841 but by 1851 had moved to the Main Street, No. 18. It would seem that sometime after 1844 Charles moved to Cann near Shaftesbury in Dorset for a few years, where Miriam was born, before returning to Butleigh.
Mary appeared as a cook at Charlton Rectory in 1871, Charlton Mackrell - possibly the Mary Ann Hockway in Kingweston in 1861. She married Charles Atkins in 1873 (Mar Q 5c/627 Langport) and they lived at Bruton.
Emily became a housemaid at 26, Bow Street, Covent Garden by 1861 - nfi.
By 1861 the family had moved next to Charles' brother Joshua at 'Hockey's Corner' in Oddway. Charles was now a post messenger and his wife a laundress. Henry Hockey (18) lodged with William Look and died in 1863. Miriam married John Oldish Munday in Butleigh on 12 Oct 1869 (Dec Q 5c/911/941 Wells - Mundy)# and Fanny moved away and married John T. Broom. #
Charles jnr was absent from the 1861 census and may have been abroad or in the army? When he returned he was sick. Still in Oddway in 1871 Charles Hockey (56) late Post Office messenger lived with his wife Ellen (54) and son Charles (30). Charles was described on the census as 'Ill' and he died shortly afterward aged 30. In 1881 Charles (66) with wife Ellen (65) lived with daughter Fanny Broom (36) and grandchildren Fanny Broom (8) and Joshua (4 months). Fanny was married to John T. Broom and they lived at 62, Livingstone Rd., Battersea - John Broom stayed home with children Henry (10) and Charles (2) while his wife was visiting her parents.# The visit may have been due to her mother's illness and Ellen died in 1881. Charles died in 1886, seemingly in Winvanton - possibly he moved there to live near one of his daughters (would have to be Emily or Mary) - but see death of brother William next.
2a1Aiii) William Hockey Chr. 19 Aug 1817 Butleigh, agricultural labourer, died 1899 (Mar Q 5c/336 Wells) 41-10, 51-24, 61-48, 71-72
Married I: Butleigh 31 Dec 1847 (Mar Q 10/691 Wells) Rebecca Barnard Chr. 30 Dec 1821 Butleigh, d.o. James Barnard/Barnet, bur. 15 Feb 1872 (Mar Q 5c/420 Wells) Butleigh 51-24, 61-48, 71-72 #
Children:
1) William Chr. 11 Apr 1847 Butleigh 51-24, 61-48, 71-72, 81-99
2) Susan Chr. 20 Aug 1848 Butleigh, bur. 21 Mar 1850 (Mar Q 10/408 Wells) Butleigh
Married II: Butleigh 11 Apr 1872 (Sep Q 5c/872 Wells) Elizabeth Martin Chr. 30 Jan 1820 Butleigh, d.o. John and Jane Davis (née Hockey) #
William married in 1847 and moved into High Street No. 12/14 where his parents and he had previously lived. In 1851 William (34) appeared with his with wife Rebecca (30) and son William. In 1861 William was now a gardener and still lived with Rebecca and son William, who has become an agricultural labourer.
In 1871 William, Rebecca and William still lived together and both men were labourers. Rebecca died in 1872 aged 51 and William married the widow of Thomas Martin (d. 1872), Elizabeth Martin (b. 1822, d.o. John Davis) in 1872. In 1881 Elizabeth lived alone in Glastonbury while William was probably the W. Hockey in Somerset and Bath Lunatic Asylum, Wells in 1881. In 1891 Elizabeth was in Street with Ann Tinney lodging. Walter died in 1899.
By the next census, 1881 William junior lodged with Richard Walter at 'Late Keepers'. He is absent from the 1891 census and died unmarried in 1892 (Dec Q 5c/318 Wells) aged 45.
2a1B) Stephen Hockey Chr. 20 Feb 1785 Butleigh, labourer, s.o. Stephen and Hannah Hockey, died in 1860 (Dec Q 5c/387 Wells)
Married: Butleigh 11 Feb 1805 Catherine Baker Chr. 1 Apr 1787 Butleigh, died 1872 (Dec Q 5c/381 Wells) #
Children:
1) Harriet Chr. 18 Aug 1805 Butleigh
2) Mary Ann Chr. 18 Oct 1807 Butleigh
3) Patience Chr. 30 Oct 1814 Butleigh
4) Stephen Chr. 11 May 1817 Butleigh
5) George Chr. 30 Jan 1820 Butleigh
6) Honore b. 1828 Butleigh
Stephen junior's wife received militia Volunteer money from the OOP in June and July 1805. For October 1st 1815 there is an OOP entry for payment 'to the carriage of a load of turf for Stephen Hockey called the 2nd poor' – and again in Nov 1816. Stephen carried ten loads of turf for the OOP in Oct 1818.
The couple lived in Benedict Street, Glastonbury in 1851. Previously in 1841 they had lived in Glastonbury with four of their children and a few doors away was their son Stephen Hockey. Stephen married Ann Granfield (b. 1813 Westbury) on 22 May 1838 (Jun Q 10/809 Wells) and in 1851 they lived in Stonehill, Street with their five children. They emigrated to Wellington, New Zealand around 1854 where two more children were born. Ann died 17 Aug 1882 in Marlborough and Stephen died 14 Jul 1897 Blenheim, New Zealand.
It is possible that it was this Mary Ann Hockey who married Joseph Jeanes in 1845 (Sep Q 10/625 Langport) # Stephen died in 1860 and Catherine then lived in 1861 with her daughter Honor who had married William Henry Fox in 1847 (Jun Q 10/805 Wells) but he died and in 1866 (Dec Q 5c/979 Wells) she married William G. Clark. Catherine who still lived with her daughter in 1871 died in 1872 aged 90.
2a2) John Hockey Chr. 5 Jan 1760 Butleigh, buried May 1788
Married: Butleigh 25 Dec 1781 Elizabeth (Betty) Pollett bur. 3 Jan 1790 Butleigh pauper
Children:
1) Thomas Chr. 23 Nov 1783 Butleigh
2) John Chr. 14 Nov 1784 Butleigh, bur. 21 Nov 1784 Butleigh
3) Anne Chr. 17 Apr 1786 Butleigh Ann Hockey bur. 7 Feb 1802 Butleigh
4) Betty Chr. 11 Mar 1788 Butleigh , bur. 3 Jun 1852 (Jun Q 5c/417 Wells) Butleigh from Wells Union Workhouse (aged 52)
Child: b. Jan 1818 fathered by John Gill [uncertain – possibly called Jane, or possibly the Mary Ann Hockey (6) below – see under John Gill]
In Feb 1782 the OOP paid for Jean Withers to be examined at East Pennard and then for her and John Hockey 'ye younger' to be taken to Evercreech to obtain a bastardy order and second examination of Jean. The child Richard Withers was Chr. 22 Jan 1782. The OOP paid aid to John Hockey's child from Feb 1782 – 1796 and then onwards as John Hockey's son. John Hockey was paid assistance by the OOP several times in 1788 and in May they paid for his coffin. In May 1788 when this John died an Elizabeth Hockey's goods were transported elsewhere and she received relief until 1790 when they buried her (paid for in April) and relief was then paid only to John Hockey's children. The OOP paid for the delivery of her child in 1788 (in the May account and duplicated in June a/c). An Elizabeth Hockey had her rent paid in 1788/89, 1789/90, 1790/91 (see Aug '88, paid to Thomas Cook) then assistance paid to Elizabeth Hockey's children until Feb 1802 when one of the daughters was buried at the OOP expense (Anne). In May 1796 Hockey's son had been taken to the Crown Inn, Wells. Payments continued for Betty alone as 'John Hockey's daughter' An Elizabeth Hockey had her rent paid by the OOP from 1816. In June 1816 a horse and cart and a man were paid for by the OOP to take Elizabeth's goods to Compton Dundon. In Jan 1817 Elizabeths goods were fetched (back). She was looked after by Jane Gill from February. In Oct 1817 a horse and cart were sent to Butleigh Wootton to remove her and her goods (and Thomas Higgins repaired her spinning turn). From Nov 1817 she was looked after by Mary Higgins and in Nov. 1818 is clearly called Elizabeth, not Betty. Cared for by Jane Gill and in Jan 1818 Elizabeth had a child by Jane's son John Gill who thenceforward paid bastardy pay [Mr. Burge the surgeon paid for delivering the child – in Feb 1818]. In Feb 1818 Elizabeth Hockey [John Hockey's daughter] and John Gill were summoned and a justice meeting held for Elizabeth. She been in the care of John's mother for a year. John began paying bastardy pay in January 1818. John died in 1824 but bastardy paid by OOP up to May 1826. In March 1826 the OOP bought her daughter a pair of shoes. Elizabeth must have been an invalid in some way since she was was still receiving OOP assistance in 1836 when the record ends and was attended by Mary Higgins. [see 2a1 – one Elizabeth dealt with here or two?].
The child of Elizabeth, in Wootton, was often ill and receiving aid in the 1830's.
4) Thomas Hockey Chr. 25 Dec 1798 Butleigh, labourer, s.o. Stephen and Jane, died 1870 (Jun Q 5c/417 Wells)
Married: Ann b. 1794 Charlton [A Thomas Hockey, of Horsington married on 6 Oct 1814 at Charlton Horethorne an Ann Vigour - seems too early to be this couple]
Children:
1) Rose Matilda Chr. 16 Aug 1824 Butleigh (dob 1831 on '61 census) d. 1873 (Jun Q 5c/372 Wells)
2) Daniel b. 1826 Glastonbury, Chr. 4 Mar 1827 Butleigh
3) Isabella b. 1827 Glastonbury, Chr. 4 Mar 1827 Butleigh
4) Rhoda Chr. 16 Jan 1830 Butleigh, bur. 28 Jan 1830 Butleigh
5) Rhoda b. 1831 Glastonbury, Chr. 3 Oct 1831 Butleigh
6) Kezia b. 1835 Glastonbury
A Thomas Hockey received his rent from the OOP in 1827. The OOP also paid Jane Gill for delivering his wife in Feb 1827 and his goods were transported to Butleigh in April 1827. Thomas was receiving aid from the OOP at this time while ill. In 1829 almost all the family seem to have been variously ill. In Feb 1830 the OOP paid James Blaker for his (burial) services for child Rhoda. Thomas was often in receipt of assistance in the 1830's. In April 1832 Thomas Hockey paid to lefe (leave) the house! His wife Ann may have been the Ann Hockey receiving aid from the OOP in 1835. Thomas appeared in Glastonbury on the 1841 and 1851 censuses - at Magdalen St. Matilda was called Pauper in '51. Kezia married Samuel Linham in 1852 (Mar Q 5c/903 Wells) and Rhoda married Eli Clothier in 1852 (Sep Q 5c/955 Wells). Eli and Rhoda emigrated to Australia on board the 'Blenheim' in 1857, Rhoda dying in Queensland on 6th June 1898.
In 1861 Thomas lived with his wife Ann plus Matilda and Kezia Linham and three Linham grandchildren in Cart Lane, Glastonbury. He died in 1870. By 1871 Rose Matilda was in the Wells Lunatic Asylum and died in 1873. [a Thomas Hockey married Anne Corpe in West Lydford 11 Jun 1822 - same?]
5) Ann Hockey b. 1799 Charlton Adam, died 1875 (Mar Q 5c/336 Langport) 51-24
Child?: 1) Mary b. 1836 Charlton Adam 51-24
An Ann Hockey appears in the OOP accounts in June 1813 receiving aid. In 1841 Ann had lived in Charlton Adam with three very young children while Mary was probably one of the young Hockey children in the High Ham Langport Union Workhouse. Ann Hockey (52), single, and her daughter Mary (15) were visitors at 13, High Street in 1851, the home of John Tripick (33), mason, and his wife Mary Ann. John and Mary Ann Tripick are absent from the 1861 census but appeared in Charlton Adam from 1871.
Ann Hockey who was born in Charlton Adam had returned there by 1861, living alone, but just two doors down from her brother William. In 1871 she lived with her brother William in Charlton Adam and died in 1875. Her daughter Mary probably married - nfi.
DD/S/BT/19/9/1 1] Mary Hockey of Cary Fitzpayne, Charlton Mackrell widow of John Hockey and children George, James and Jane 2] Elizabeth Hockey of Charlton Adam widow of Thomas Hockey decd and daughter Ann Hockey Deed of partition of Easterfield and Haywards, Charlton Adam with their great tithes. 1834
6) Mary Ann Hockey b.1821 Somerset 41W-17
A Miriam later Mary Ann Hockey of Wootton was in receipt of OOP assistance from March 1834 – Jan 1836 (record end) – but this is more likely to be the daughter/wife of William Hockey (above) rather than this girl. Mary Ann lodged with Susan Higgins in Wootton Street in 1841. Nfi
7) George Hockey constable
George Hockey's name appears on a slip of paper in the OOP accounts dated June 23rd 1836. It is a receipt for the seven rates of £1 16s 3d per rate £12 13s 9d for County Stock
Uncertain:
8) Joshua Hockey b. June 1850, bur. 7 Sep 1850 Butleigh
Hoddinott
1) Simon Hoddinott
From 1802 until 1814/15 Simon occupied and farmed the land on Southmoor Ground owned by William Dickinson, previously Clarkes. He was replaced by Lucas and Dyke. Nfi
2) John Hoddinott b. 1816 Frome, farmer, churchwarden, bur. 21 Oct 1874 (Dec Q 5c/395 Wells) Butleigh 51-35, 61-57, 71-80 [s.o. Benjamin and Elizabeth Hoddinott? Or b. 17 Apr 1809 s.o. James and Hannah Hoddinott?]
Married I: Frome 6 May 1830 Mira Jones b. 1816, bur. 26 Sep 1849 (Sep Q 10/334 Wells) Butleigh
Children:
1) Hannah Chr. 26 Nov 1831 Frome 51-35
2) Mary Ann Chr. 5 Feb 1837 Frome 51-35, 61-57
3) Joseph Chr. 6 Oct 1839 Frome (2a)
4) Richard Albert Chr. 20 Mar 1842 Frome 51-35, 61-57
5) Samuel Chr. 1 Sep 1844 (Sep Q 10/479 Wells) Butleigh 51-35, 61-57, 71-80
6) John Chr. 22 Aug 1847 (Sep Q 10/424 Wells) Butleigh 51-27, 61-57
7) George Chr. 14 Oct 1849 (Dec Q 10/477 Wells) Butleigh (2b)
Married II: 1850 (Jun Q 10/853 Wells) Eliza Maidment b. 1825 Bradley, d.o. Thomas and Mary Maidment, died 1904 (Sep Q 6d/429 Shipston On Stour). 51-35, 61-57, 71-80, 81-103, 91-118
Children:
1) Francis James Maidment Chr. 18 Apr 1854 (Mar Q 5c/634 Wells) Butleigh 61-57, 71-80
2) Georgeanna Eliza Chr. 23 Dec 1855 (Dec Q 5c/536 Wells) Butleigh 61-57, 71-80
John Hoddinott had farmed at Frome Selwood in 1841. His first wife was Mira (Miriam) and of their children, Hannah b. 1832, Mary Ann b. 1838, Joseph b. 1840 and Richard b. 1842 were born in Frome while Samuel b. 1844, John b. 1847 and George b. 1849 were born in Butleigh. This must have been after the family had moved into Higher Rockes Farm. Possibly the birth of George caused problems and Mira died in 1849 with the birth of George being registered after her death. John then married Eliza Maidment in 1850 who, in 1841, had lived with her parents in West Bradley - her father was a shoemaker.
In 1851 John Hoddinott (37) and second wife Eliza (26) had two servants, Lydia Harvey (16) from Frome and Kelap Nicholson (16) from Keinton who worked in the house and on the farm respectively. Their son John was temporarily living in the village with Joshua Hockey. John's brother Henry farmed Lower Rockes' Farm. Hannah married a farmer, Thomas Singer, in 1853 in Bath (Dec Q 5c/1245) and they lived at Warminster Road, Berkley, Frome.
In 1861 John Hoddinott (45) and Eliza (35) lived with Mary A. (22), Joseph (20), Richard (18), Samuel (16), John (13), George (11), Francis b. 1854 and Georgiana Eliza b. 1855. An Eliza Hoddinot (b. 1855 Butleigh) widow, had three daughters in Hereford, Myra (b. 1882) Edith (b. 1884) and Winifred (b. 1886) and, unless this was Georgiana Eliza, it must have been the wife of George, John or Samuel. (a Samuel died in Hereford in 1889). Both John and Richard are also absent from the 1881 census – mother's maiden name not found.
In 1871 Richard farmed 235 acres at Norton, Herefordshire (Glebe Farm) with his brother John and sister Mary Ann. She married farmer Peter Carter in Butleigh on 16 Apr 1861 (Jun Q 5c/993/933 Wells) but by 1871 was already widowed.
By 1871 John (62) was farming 280 acres with Eliza (45), Samuel (27), George (21), Frank (17) and Georgiana (15 - nfi). John died in 1874 aged 64. Eliza retired from farming and in 1881 lodged with Eliza Gilbert in Water Lane. Samuel is missing from the censuses after 1871. He may be the Samuel who died in 1889 (Mar Q 6a/44 Hereford) aged 44 which would suggest that after his father's death he may have gone to live with Richard. Frank (Francis) farmed 105 acres at Haviatt, Glastonbury in 1881 with wife Frances Penny [married 1876 Mar Q 5c/773 Wells) and son John (4). They were still there in 1891. By 1901 they had moved to Bowers Hill Farm, Badsey, Evesham, Worcs. In 1911 Frances with his wife and two of his three children farmed at Aston Magna, Moreton in Marsh, Warwicks.
In 1891 Eliza Hoddinott (60) widow was living on her own means, and alone - between No. 18 and the school in the High Street. She went to live with her son Francis who now farmed in Badsey, Worcestershire (1901) where she died in 1904 aged 78.
2a) Joseph Hoddinott Chr. 6 Oct 1839 St. John, Frome, farmer, bur. 18 Nov 1893 (Dec Q 5c/377 Wells) Butleigh 51-35, 61-57, 81-100, 91-120
Married: 6 Apr 1869 (Mar Q 5c/821 Wells) West Pennard Eliza Creed Chr. 13 Jun 1841 West Pennard, d.o. John [Robert and Ann?] Creed, bur. April 1927 Butleigh 81-100, 91-120
Joseph married Eliza Creed in 1869 but the first registration may not have been valid since a second was recorded (Jun Q 5c/899 Wells)! There may have been a connection between Elizas family and Joseph's mother since a servant at West Pennard while Eliza lived there with her widowed father (farming 73 acres) was Betsey Maidment from Bradley. Joseph had farmed the Church Farm at Barton St. David with Eliza in 1871. By 1881 Joseph (38), with wife Eliza (38) farmed at Higher Rockes Farm but by 1891 they had transferred to Holman's Farm. Joseph died in 1893 and Eliza surprisingly became a servant making cheese on a farm in Kilmersdon (1901).
2b) George Hoddinott Chr. 14 Oct 1849 (Dec Q 10/477 Wells) Butleigh, farmer, died 5 Apr, bur. 11 Apr 1887 (Jun Q 5c/353 Wells) Butleigh 51-35, 61-57, 71-80, 81-104
Married: 1880 Mar Q 5c/735 Wells) Ann Kate Biggin b. 1858 Baltonsborough, d.o. Ellen M. Biggin 81-104
Children:
1) John b. Jan, Chr. 2 Feb 1881 (Mar Q 5c/526 Wells) Butleigh 81-104
2) Jessie Ellen b. 6 Dec, Chr. 31 Dec 1883 (Dec Q 5c/520 Wells) Butleigh
3) Mabel Catherine b. 15 Nov, Chr. 14 Dec 1884, reg. 1885 (Mar Q 5c/543 Wells) Butleigh
4) Phyllis Mira b. 28 Oct, Chr. 21 Nov 1886 (Dec Q 5c/507 Wells) Butleigh
Anna Kate Biggin married George in 1880 and they farmed 220 acres at Lower Rockes Farm in 1881. Their son John was born in 1881 and the future must have seemed bright for George but he died on 5 April 1887 aged 37. His widow moved to Church Lane, East Lydford with her three children where she farmed (1891). They were still there in 1901 farming Vicarage farm but Mabel Catherine was a boarder at 12, Canonbury lane, Islington. In 1911 she was a drapers clerk at 1, Westgate St., Gloucester.
Phyllis was visiting her grandmother Ellen M. Biggin in South Cheriton Street, Horsington in 1891. Jessie Ellen married farmer Percy Robert Ings in 1906 (Dec Q 5c/861 Wincanton) and in 1911 lived at Bratton Farm, BrattonSeymour, Wincanton, with two children.. Phyllis married John Lovell Auston in 1908 (Dec Q 5c/887 Wincanton) and in 1911 live in South Chinton, Templecombe with their daughter Gwendolin (1). John lived with his widowed mother Ann Kate in South Cheriton, Templecombe in 1911 where he was a dairy farmer.
3) Henry Hoddinott b. 1826 Batcombe (Bruton), farmer, s.o. John and Maria (nee Butler) Hoddinot, bur. 13 Aug 1874 (Sep Q 5c/354 Wells) Butleigh 51-30, 61-54, 71-78
Married I: 1846 (Mar Q 10/644 Frome)? Betsy Hoddinott - died 1852 (Sep Q 5c/388 Wells)
Married II: Butleigh 26 Jan 1854 (Mar Q 5c/905 Wells) Elizabeth Richards b. 1830 Shapwick, d.o. William Richards, bur. 22 Oct 1879 (Dec Q 5c/353 Wells) Butleigh 61-54, 71-78
Children:
1) Ellen Louisa Chr. 8 Jul 1855 (Jun Q 5c/645 Wells) Butleigh 61-54, 71-78
2) William Henry Chr. 9 Aug 1857 (Sep Q 5c/571 Wells - as Hoddinote) Butleigh 61-54, 81W-104
3) Joseph John Chr. 26 Jun 1859 (Jun Q 5c/650 Wells) Butleigh 61-55
4) Frederick Walter Chr. 8 Dec 1861 (Dec Q 5c/568 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 16 May 1864 (Jun Q 5c/424 Wells) Butleigh
5) Alice Mary Chr. 13 Jan 1864 Butleigh, bur. 11 Aug 1865 (Sep Q 5c/358 Wells) Butleigh
6) Emily Isabel Chr. 24 Feb 1864 Butleigh, bur. 11 Aug 1865 (Sep Q 5c/358 Wells) Butleigh
7) Frederick Walter Chr. 18 Nov 1866 (Dec Q 5c/553 Wells)) Butleigh, bur. 29 Nov 1870 (Dec Q 5c/425 Wells) Butleigh
8) Emily Alice Chr. 6 Jun 1869 (.Jun Q 5c/568 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 19 Jun 1872 (Jun Q 5c/401 Wells) Butleigh 71-78
Visitors:
1) Mary A. Hoddinott b. 1842 Truddoxhill 61-55
2) Sarah I. Hoddinott b. 1849 Norton St. Philip 61-55
Elizabeth Richards had lived with her uncle Thomas in Gape Lane, Street, where he farmed 50 acres in 1851. A report of the marriage in the Bridgwater Times 2 Feb 1854 erroniously calls her Sarah, d.o. the decd William Richards.
In 1851 Henry lived alone at Lower Rockes Farm in Compton Street farming 120 acres. He was described as a widower at his marriage to Elizabeth in 1854. By 1861 they had three children. Staying at the house were two relatives; Sarah Hoddinott (12), daughter of his brother George (b. 1821 Witham Friary) and her cousin Mary. Four children were born before 1867 and all of them died - Alice and Emily may have been twins being baptised just a month apart and dying together.
In 1871 at the 'Farm House' Compton Street. Henry and Elizabeth farmed 229 acres. They had a new child Emily and on census night a visitor, Thomas Richards (b. 1840 Queen Camel), Elizabeth's brother.
Their two sons William and Joseph appeared boarding at the Grammar School in Shepton Mallet in 1871. Then a tragedy strikes when little Emily died in 1872 (Jun Q 5c/401 Wells). Shortly afterwards Henry died in 1874 aged 49 which must have left the family in some straights.
Ellen Louisa then married in 1877 (Sep Q 5c/789 Wells) Robert Maidment, the son of Thomas Maidment, a dairyman of West Bradley. # In 1881 they can be found in Butleigh Wootton at Smithfield Farm. More tragedy struck when her mother Elizabeth died in 1879. William joined his sister at Smithfield farm in 1881 while Joseph became a clerk in Islington and by 1901 he was a Civil Servant, Surveyor for the Inland Revenue in London. He had married Jacqueline Helene Panchaud de Bottens in 1896 (Sep Q 1d/1867 Greenwich). In 1911 they lived at 6, Raynham Ave., Didsbury manchester with their only child Yvonne Maud Helen (10).
Lower Rockes Farm was taken over by their cousin, George Hoddinot (1b).
DD/S/BT/27/4/36 - Information of Henry Hoddinott, yeoman, overseer of Butleigh concerning the relief of Caroline Barber a pauper.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1852.
4) Emma Hoddinot b. 1793 Mere, Wiltshire, widow, died 1873 (Mar Q 5c/441 Wells) 71-80
In 1841 and '51 Emma was living in Frome with her husband James (a publican in '41, at High Croft farm in '51). In 1861, as a 'farmers widow' she was in Norton St. Philip visiting Maria Hoddinott, widow (b. 1801 Nunney). Emma lived alone in 1871 in Butleigh village. She died in 1873 aged 80. The Sarah who visited Henry Hoddinot in 1861 was probably her daughter and her husband must have been a relative of Henry Hoddinott, though not his brother.
5) George Hoddinot [Chr. 2 Aug 1807 Keinton Mandeville, s.o. James and Sarah Hoddinott]
Married: Butleigh 5 Mar 1832 Isabella Dauncey Chr. 22 Aug 1809 Butleigh, d.o. Charles and Elizabeth Dauncey #
Children:
1) Richard b. 1833
2) Henry b. 1836 Cadbury
3) Sarah b. 1840 Harcot
4) Caroline b. 1842 Harcot
5) Eliza Chr. 27 Oct 1844 Isle Brewers
6) Mary Jame b. 1848 Isle Brewers
7) Emily Chr. 2 Mar 1851 Isle Brewers
This couple lived at Somerton in 1841. In 1851 they lived at Street, Isle Brewers with six children. By 1861 George was farming 123 acres at Witcombe Martock with 7 men and 4 boys. In 1871 they still lived in Martock and in 1881 at 28, Queen St., Keinton Mandeville.
Hodge
1) George Hodge [Chr. 28 Apr?] 1844 Baltonsborough, labourer, mason, s.o. Thomas Hodge (mason) 71-79
Married: Butleigh 14 May 1867 (Jun Q 5c/876 Wells) Elizabeth Ann Higgins Chr. 8 Jun 1835 Butleigh, d.o. William and Jane Higgins, died 1917 (Mar Q 5c/716 Wells) 71-79 #
Children:
1) Clara Chr. 10 May 1868 Butleigh 71-79
2) Celia Chr. 12 Nov 1871 (Sep Q 5c/555 Wells) Butleigh
George married Elizabeth in 1867 and they lived in Water Lane in 1871. George was born in Baltonsborough and by 1881 he had returned there with his family, including a second daughter Celia b. 1871 Butleigh. They remained there (in Well Street) until their deaths. Clara became a servant at the Vicarage, Long Load, Martock in 1891. She married Charles Appleby in 1893 (Sep Q 5c/869 Wells) and they lived at 110, Bove Town, Glastonbury where Charles was a nurseryman on his own account. Celia, still with her parents in 1881, married wheelwright William Thomas Rawlings in 1899 (Dec Q 5c/1015 Wells) and were at High Street, Epsom on the 1901 census. In 1911 they lived at 21, Wyeth Rd., Epsom (they had no children). George and Elizabeth were still in Baltonsborough on the 1911 census.
Hodge/Hodges
1) Leowdus (Jacobus)? Hodge bur. 8 Apr 1579 Butleigh
Another person with same uncertain forename bur. 25 Jul 1587 Butleigh
DD/S/BT/4/3/1-2 - 1] Christopher Symcockes of Butleigh and son and heir Thomas 2] James Hodges and Richard Halswell Settlement of Butleigh manor and advowson on Christopher and his male issue by his wives Mary Baylly of Wells and Joan Pettie of Lydford with successive Date: 1587.
2) Margaret Hodge
illeg. Children:
1) Margaret Chr. 8 Feb 1589 Butleigh
2) Philip Chr. 5 Nov 1596 Butleigh, bur. 6 Mar 1597 Butleigh
3) Maria Hodge married Butleigh 26 Nov 1587 Peter Toony
4) Jane Hodge wife of Thomas (1st wife of next?) bur. 24 Oct 1588 Butleigh
5) Roger Hodge bur. 20 Feb 1597 Butleigh
6) John Hodges bur. 4 Jul 1597 Butleigh
7) Isabella Hodges wife of Richard bur. 5 Mar 1598 Butleigh
8) Joanna Hodges widow, bur. 29 Jan 1603 Butleigh
9) Christian Hodge married Butleigh 18 Sep 1609 John Batt #
10) Thomas Hodges bur. 19 Jul 1604 Butleigh
Children:
1) Maria Chr. 27 Dec 1585 Butleigh
2) John bur. 24 Feb 1589 Butleigh, bur. 10 Mar 1598 Butleigh
3) Jane Chr. 30 Aug 1589 Butleigh, bur. 8 Mar 1598 Butleigh
4) Peter Chr. 17 Sep 1592 Butleigh (10a)
5) John Chr. 26 Oct 1595 Butleigh (10b?)
10a) Peter Hodges churchwarden in 1627 (d. bef. 1673)
Married: Joan widow, bur. 3 Apr 1673 Butleigh
Children:
1) Thomas Chr. 17 Dec 1626 Butleigh
2) William Chr. 27 Jul 1628 Butleigh (10a1)
3) Joanne Chr. 10 Mar 1630 Butleigh (d.o. Peter?)
4) Robert Chr. 2 Jan 1632 Butleigh
5) Elizabeth Chr. x Nov 1633 Butleigh, bur. 9 Sep 1638 Butleigh
6) Rebecca Chr. 27 Jul 1635 Butleigh
7) Robert Chr. 30 Apr 1637 Butleigh, bur. 16 Sep 1638 Butleigh
8) Peter bur. 4 Sep 1638 Butleigh
9) Robert bur. 27 Jan 1639 Butleigh
10a1) William Hodges bur. 28 Jul 1666 Butleigh
Married: Aug 1654 Elizabeth Collins of Dinder (not solemnized in Butleigh) [Banns pub. 2, 9, 16 August 1654]
Children: 1) Joanne Chr. 25 Aug 1654 Butleigh
The Elizabeth Hodges buried 1691 Butleigh (OOP) is probably this wife of William.
10b) John Hodges
Married: 1 Oct 1627 Thomasina Howill?
11) Moses Hodge bur. 6 Nov 1641 Butleigh
12) Thomas Hodges d. 1706
Children:
1) Hester Chr. 7 Aug 1672 Butleigh
2) William (12a)
3) Thomas? (13)?
This is probably the Thomas who was overseer of the poor 1674,5 and 84, churchwarden in 1677 then 1693 – appeared twice in 1672 on the list of commoners. The rate payer in 1673 appears to read James (possibly Jane) Hodges. Thomas paid rates from 1674 until 1706 after which his property is called ' late Thomas Hodges'. In 1686 he supplied wood to Elizabeth Clapp (OOP). William Hodges appeared in the churchwarden's accounts in 1706 and 1708 -probably his son and he paid the rates on the property from 1709-1713. From 1689-1691 he shared his dwelling or lived next to widow Elizabeth Hodges (she died that year) and this was probably his mother, making him almost certainly the son of William (10a1).
12a) William Hodges d. 1713?
Married: Ann Colmer?
Children:
1) William (12a1)
Paid rates from 1708-1713 the 'late Hodges' In 1716 joint rates paid by Thomas and William Hodges. From 1718 they appear separately but next to each other until 1743 when William is replaced by Ann Hodges widow.
12a1) William Hodges died 25 Apr 1742 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 12 Jul 1719 Ann Talbott, d.o. Henry and Elinor Talbot, bur. 11 Jun 1748 Butleigh? Aged 6x?
Children:
1) Elizabeth Chr. 17 Dec 1720 Butleigh
2)? Ann Chr. 8 Sep 1723 Butleigh (mother Mary?) bur. 1742? see below
William paid rates from 1716 until his death in 1742 [several William deaths in 1742 – see below], thereafter paid by his widow Ann until 1748 ('51 in CW). In 1731 the OOP paid rent to William for three of the poor. Ann was Overseer to the poor in 1747. The OOP paid her in 1747 for supplying 'bean helm' to the poor.
Elizabeth married James Withers. A William Hodges received rent from Roger and John Davis in 1716 (OOP). In 1720 paid rates with Elinor Talbott on an adjoining property. Overseer of the poor for his late father in 1721. Paid rates on a new property jointly with John Yeoman in 1721 [Yeoman alone in 1722]. Witnessed OOP accounts 1723. Possibly this William who hauled the tree used in building the church bell-cage in 1727/28. He was paid by the OOP the rent for keeping Joan Pope and Ruth Pollett in 1736, 37.
William was uncle and trustee of John Yeoman jun. of Glastonbury. William was accused of mishandling his nephew's affairs.[Money pp529, 540 585-7] and gave up the trust in Nov. 1740.
DD/S/BT/6/5/25 - 1] William Colmer the elder of Butleigh Wootton, yeoman 2] William Hodges of Butleigh, yeoman, grandson of William Colmer Assignment of four cottages, Ashemead brook (12a), Fishwell (3a) and 1/2a in Little Furlong in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, Date: 1715.
[11/2/13 1723/4 1] Elinor Talbot of Butleigh Wootton, widow of Henry Talbot John Yeoman of Glastonbury and wife Elinor, daughter of Henry Talbott, 2] Henry Talbot her son 3] William Hodges and wife Ann daughter of Henry Talbott. Assignment of 3a in West Wood, Butleigh.
DD/S/BT/11/2/36 - 1] William Hodges the elder of Butleigh, yeoman 2] Richard Corpe the younger of Butleigh, yeoman Assignment of Ivyleafe house in Butleigh. Rent 2s.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date range: 1741-1742.
DD/S/BT/12/1/5 - Letters of administration for property of William Hodges granted to his mother Ann Hodges.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1742.
DD/S/BT/7/8/6 Hodges William the elder Probate of will (1742) of Butleigh..
DD/S/BT/8/4/5 - Probate of Will (1742) of William Hodges the elder of Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1742.
DD/S/BT/8/4/6-7 1] Ann Hodges of Butleigh, executrix of her mother Eleanor Talbot widow of Henry Talbot. 2] William Hodges of Butleigh, yeoman 3] Henry Hodges of Butleigh, yeoman 4] Richard Toghill the elder William of Butleigh, yeoman Assignment in trust of two commons 1744
DD/S/BT/10/4/2 - 1] James Withers of Butleigh, yeoman and wife Elizabeth daughter of William Hodges and Ann decd and sister of William Hodges decd 2] John Moore of West Coker and John Rock of Butleigh Assignment in trust of 41st and 42nd lotts (6a) in Southmoor and 3a Date: 1765.
[There seems to be some confusion between the surname Rogers and Hodges and the following would appear a plausible explanation of the genealogy of the next branch]
13) Thomas Rogers [Hodges?] bur. 26 Jan 1738 Butleigh (?)
Married: Mary bur. 11 Mar 1727 Butleigh [Hodges, wife of Thomas]
Children:
1) Thomas Chr. 30 Apr 1715 Butleigh (13a)
2) William Chr. 15 Nov 1717 Butleigh (13b)
1) Henry Chr. 8 Feb 1720 Butleigh (13c)
Married II?: Elizabeth
Children:
1) Betty Chr. 18 Feb 1732 Butleigh
2) John Chr. 1 Oct 1734 Butleigh, bur. 19 Jan 1735 Butleigh
This must be the Thomas who paid rates from 1716 until 1739 after which he is referred to as the late Thomas Hodges. In 1738 the property was rated to Thomas and William and in 1738/9 his property was rated to Thomas William and Henry. It was 'occupiers of Thomas Hodges then until 1745/6 when rates were paid by William, Henry and Jane with William paying the largest share and this lasted beyond 1to 1804/5.. These would seem to be his sons William and Henry (under age) and his son Thomas' wife Jane? Thomas was Overseer in 1724 and churchwarden in 1727.
The daughter Jane had an illegitimate child in 1767 but possibly had a second illegitimate child in 1775 – William Vagg paid arrears to the 7th Feb 1775 for his illegitimate child by Jane Hodges who was in distress.Thomas received rent from Edward Larkham in 1716 (OOP). Witnessed the OOP accounts in 1717. Witnessed OOP accounts 1723, OOP in 1725, Churchwarden in 1728. He supplied two oak trees towards building the church bell-cage in 1727/28. In 1735, 36 he received rent for Edith Underwood. In 1737 he received rent for Thomas Pollett. Rent received in following years for other poor tenants. .
DD/S/BT/8/4/3 - 1] Thomas Hodges of Butleigh Wootton, tanner 2] Henry Talbott the elder of Butleigh, yeoman Assignment of 6a in Southmoor and 3a in West wood, Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1715.
DD/S/BT/8/7/2 Hodges Thomas the elder of Butleigh Probate of will (1737/8) . DD/S/BT/8/7/1-14 tied together]. Date: 1744. (?)
DD/S/BT/24/7/4 Hodges James of Butleigh.. Probate of will (1742) of Date: 1742. (?)
13a) Thomas Rogers of Butleigh
Married: Charlton Mackrell 5 Mar 1738 Jane Corp of Butleigh
Children:
1) Jane Chr. 1 Dec 1739 Butleigh
illeg. child: 1) Ann Chr. 22 Mar 1767 Butleigh
2) Thomas Chr. 27 Dec 1741 Butleigh bur. 9 Mar 1820 Butleigh aged 79?
In 1760/61 the OOP paid taxes for Jane Hodges' [house?]
13b) William Rogers of Butleigh
Married: Charlton Mackrell 5 Mar 1738 Jane Toghill
William Hodges [possibly the William Rogers [[illegit.or Rogers becomes Hodges?]] who married Jane Toghill of Butleigh in Charlton Mackrell 5 Mar 1738] died before 1765
Married: Jane [Toghill} bur. 19 Oct 1748 Butleigh (wife of William)
Children:
1) Thomas Chr. 8 Nov 1740 Butleigh (13b1)
2) William Chr. 12 Dec 1741 Butleigh, bur. 1742? see below
3) Mary Chr. 12 Jan 1744 Butleigh (see burials) bur. 11 Aug 1757 Butleigh (?)
4) Richard Toghill Chr. 29 May 1745 Butleigh (13b2)
5) John Chr. 29 Oct 1746 Butleigh
6) Henry Chr. 19 Sep 1747 Butleigh
Married: 10 Jul 1749 Wells St. Cuthbert Elizabeth Coombs spinster of Compton Dundon
If the change Rodgers/Hodges is accurate then William's father was Thomas Rogers and mother Mary [died 11 Aug 1757 Butleigh]. He had an older brother Thomas Chr. 30 Apr 1715 and was himself Chr. 15 Nov 1717 Butleigh.
A William Hodges supplied drink for John Hockey and James Callow while they worked on the church bells in 1752/53. (CW). William Hodges was churchwarden in 1745/46. In the CW and OOP rate accounts a Stephen Slade and Richard Toghill paid rates in adjoining properties and next to the properties of Thomas and William Hodges. Stephen Slade died in 1727 and his property was occupied first by John Holman than shortly after by Edward Talbott and then in 1735 by Richard Slade. By 1737 the property was 'or occupier'. In 1740 the property belonged to John Slade. By 1752 widow Toghill paid rates on the adjoining property and the names appear alongside of Thomas Hodges and Richard Toghill Hodges. Mary Toghill's husband died 1752 and her only son died 1744 – perhaps she was born a Hodges, sister of William? and these two children were to be her heirs. Her name disappears in 1763 when she died but their names continued to post 1772. In the John Rocke apprentice scheme of 1772 Thomas Richard Henry and Jane are listed together as ratepayers. In 1786/7 the Jane Hodges becomes 'now Davis' [she had married Philip Davis in 1778].- the question is whether this is Jane the mother (unlikely) or an unrecorded daughter.
From July, August 1772 a Jane Hodges received OOP assistance by order of the justice. From August 1772 – March 1773 payments made to Jane Hodges child then to just Jane up to March 1778. The father of the child was William Vagg an she received aid in distress about the child in April 1775. In July 1778 the OOP paid assistance to Jane Hodges for Blenman bastard.
13b1) Thomas Rogers [Hodges]
Married: Ann
Children:
1) William Chr. 13 May 1772 Butleigh
2) William Chr. 8 Jan 1774 Butleigh
3) Catherine Chr. 8 Jan 1774 Butleigh
If the Rodgers/Hodges name confusion continued then the Ann Rogers having illegitimate children may be Thomas' widow if he died c. 1775.
13b2) Richard Toghill Hodges Chr. 29 May 1745 Butleigh, bur. 13 Nov 1828 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 14 Dec 1767 Elizabeth Slade b. 1747, bur. 14 Nov 1817 Butleigh
Children:
1) Richard Slade Chr. 29 Dec 1768 Butleigh
Richard was Overseer in 1798. In Nov 1811 he attended meetings at Somerton on behalf of the OOP.
DD/S/BT/28/1/7 - 1] Thomas Toghill Hodges of Butleigh, yeoman, trustee for William Hodges 2] William Hodges of Butleigh, yeoman 3] Richard Toghill Hodges of Butleigh, yeoman Copy assignment of Brimsyate (5a) in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT Date: 1795.
PROB 11/1757 Hodges Richard Toghill Will of Richard Toghill Hodges Yeoman Butleigh , Somerset Date: 1829
This is the last Will and Testament of me Richard Toghill Hodges of Butleigh in the County of Somerset, yeoman, made the eighteenth day of August in the year of Our Lord one thousand eight hundred and twenty eight. I give devise and bequeath unto William Hodges, Betty Ann Higgins, John Higgins, Jane Strode, Richard Hodges and Maria Hodges, sons and daughters of my late brother Thomas Hodges and their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns as tenants in common and not as jointenants. All that my undivided Moitty or half part or share of and in the several lands tenements and hereditaments situate at Butleigh aforesaid and at Baltonsbury into the estate of my deceased ffather and devised to me by his Will I give devise and bequeath to my said nephew Richard Hodges his heirs executors administrators and assigns – my common called Abbots Common in Southmoor in Butleigh aforesaid I give to my nephew the said John Hodges The sum of twenty pounds to be paid him at the expiration of six calendar months after my decease and also the bed bolster and pillow on which I now sleep I give to my niece Ann Pike and to the said Jane Strode Betty Ann Higgins and Maria Hodges the sum of twenty pounds cash to be paid them at the expiration of six calendar months next after my death. I give to Thomas and William Hodges sons of my late niece Catherine Hodges the sum of ten pounds each to be paid them at the same. I give to Maria Williams the niece of my late wife the sum of ffifty pounds for her own sole and separate use and disposal and to be paid unto her own hands at the expiration of six calendar months after my decease I also give to her in like manner five pounds to be paid to her immediately after my death & a bed bedstead and ffurniture I give to John Holman of Glastonbury Gent. And Richard Holman his son two hundred pounds upon trust to invest the same at interest on good and sufficient security during the natural life of the said Maria Williams and to pay and apply the interest and dividends thereof unto and for her sole separate use & disposal and unto her own hands during her natural life and heirs after her decease I give the sum of one hundred pounds part of the said sum of two hundred pounds unto my said niece Maria Hodges and the remaining one hundred is to sink into my residuary personal estate I give to my daughter Elizabeth Slade Wyatt all my money in the public stocks funds of Great Britain and all the residue and remainder of my real and personal estate I give devise and bequeath unto and equally between the said Maria Hodges and Maria Williams their heirs executors administrators and assigns yet nevertheless as to the share of the said Maria Williams for her sole and separate use benefit and disposal And I do direct that my trustees shall not be answerable for any loss which may happen without their wilful geglect or default nor be answerable for each other and that they may retain to and repay themselves all their costs and expences And lastly I do appoint the said John Holman and Richard Holman Executors In trust of this my Will hereby revoking all former Wills by me made In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal the day and year before written [Richard Toghill Hodges] signed sealed published and declared by the said Richard Toghill Hodges as and for his last Will and Testament in the presence of ud who at his request in his presence and in the presence of each other have hereunto set our ames. Rd Periam Peat William Green Thos Newport.
Proved London 26th June 1828 before the Judge by the oaths of Hohn Holman & Richard Holman the executors to whom xxxx was granted having been first sworn by (canon? Caution?) duly to administer
DD/S/BT/17/6/13-14 - Notes on Toghill and Hodges families.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date range: 1447 - 1878.
13c) Henry Hodges died April/May 1789
Married I: Butleigh 5 Oct 1744 Mary Pope bur. 16 Nov 1757 Butleigh (?)
Children:
1) Henry Chr. 29 Jun 1745 Butleigh bur. 17 Apr 1754 Butleigh
2) William bur. 19 May 1749 Butleigh
3) William Chr. 29 Jan 1750 Butleigh
4) James Chr. 18 Sep 1752 Butleigh, bur 27 Jun 1753 Butleigh
5) Thomas Chr. 4 May 1754 Butleigh
6) Mary Chr. 19 Jul 1755 Butleigh
Married II: Butleigh 24 Dec 1763 Edith Atwood bur. 3 Jun 1788 Butleigh pauper
Children:
1) Mary Chr. 18 Oct 1764 Butleigh
2) Henry bur. 5 Aug 1769 Butleigh
A William and Henry Hodges were to serve in rotation as Tythingmen from a list of 1779 (OOP) Henry paid rates from 1738 – see above. In 1769 he was paid by the OOP for his work on the highways at 1s 2d per day. From Nov 1781 Henry Hodges received aid from the OOP – he received aid until June 1786 then aid given to 'Henry Hodges' wife' and separately Henry Hodges. In July 1788 the OOP paid for his wife's coffin. In May 1789 a coffin was paid for Henry Hodges [the Overseer charged £1 5s 0d for clothing for the deceased Henry the same month!]. In 1791 the property was rated by 'Henry Hodges or occupier' and in 1791 William junior, late Henry. William Hodges junior had his rent paid by the OOP in 1800 (see (19)). The Mary Hodges receiving aid from 1789 may be the daughter (though several payments made – more than one Mary?]. Payments made monthly to just one Mary from 1789 – 18 – but in Feb 1803 two Marys received dowlas – Dec 1804 a second Mary receiving distress money? -[In May 1806 additional payments made to Mary Hodges children – but this was 'William Hodges' children up to then, see below] – in May 1807 Mary Hodges of Glaston bought a shift and in March 1808 the regular payments now called 'Mary Hodges, Glaston'. The payments continued but in 1813 there do seem to be two Mary Hodges receiving assistance, one still identified as of 'Glaston' the other later denoted as 'of Butleigh'. The payments to Mary of Glastonbury carried on until August 1824 then in September the OOP paid for her coffin and burial. [payments to a Mary Hodges in Bath and to Mary Hodges in Butleigh continued]
DD/S/BT/6/5/38-40 - 1] John Moor of West Coker, executor of Henry Moor decd administrator of Henry Talbot of Butleigh decd 2] John Horner of Castle Cary, yeoman and wife Ann, Jane Withers and Elizabeth Horner of Ansford, three sisters and coheirs of William Hodges Withers Date: 1787.
14) Giles Hodges of Charlton Adam bur. 30 Oct 1775 Baltonsborough
Married: Butleigh 24 Jul 1732 Sarah Higgins of Baltonsborough bur. 9 Jan 1768 Baltonsborough
Children:
1) William Chr. 7 Aug 1734 Baltonsborough bur. 3 Dec 1752 Baltonsborough
2) Hannah Chr. 30 Sep 1744 Baltonsborough m. William Sugar of Charlton Mackrell
3) Samuel Chr. 25 Jun 1746 Baltonsborough bur. 21 Jan 1748 Baltonsborough
4) Samuel Chr. 16 Jan 1749 Baltonsborough
5) John bur. 26 Dec 1764 Baltonsborough
Married II: 25 Jan 1769 Baltonsborough Mary Ball of St. Johns, Glastonbury
Other uncertain burials
a) John Hodges ' a poor boy' OOP 1725
b) William Hodges bur. 1 May 1742 Butleigh
c) Thomas Hodges bur. 7 Jul 1742 Butleigh
d) William Hodges bur. 31 Jul 1742 Butleigh
e) Anne Hodges bur. 21 Aug 1742 Butleigh
f) James Hodges bur. 20 Aug 1752 Butleigh
g) Mary Hodges bur. 10 Aug 1754 Butleigh
h) Mary Hodges bur. 27 Sep 1754 Butleigh
i) Mary Hodges bur. 16 Nov 1757 Butleigh
j) John Hodges bur 20 Mar 1779 Butleigh
k) Elizabeth Hodges bur. 13 Oct 1791 Butleigh
l) Elizabeth Hodges bur. 30 Dec 1809 Butleigh
l) Sarah Hodges bur. 16 Sep 1811 Butleigh
n) Mary Hodges b. 1794, bur. 4 Mar 1820 Butleigh aged 26
This could be the daughter of Mary Hodges whose burial paid for by the OOP in April 1820.
unplaced female Hodges – their Marriages
1) Mary Hodges Butleigh 9 Oct 1736 John Davis
2) Mary Hodges Butleigh 14 Nov 1748 Jonathan Chamberlain
3) Bridget Hodges Butleigh 14 Dec 1752 Samuel Down
4) Jane Hodges Butleigh 11 Dec 1753 Humphrey Calloway
5) Elizabeth Hodges Butleigh 22 Apr 1754 Jacob Gollidge
6) Mary Hodges Butleigh 13 Jul 1756 William Rowley
7) Jane Hodges Butleigh 23 Nov 1778 Philip Davis#
16) William Hodges bur. 23 Dec 1770 Butleigh [?]
Married: Elizabeth bur. 16 Jan 1768 Butleigh?
Children:
1) Mary Chr. 18 Sep 1750 Butleigh, bur. 12 Oct 1750 Butleigh
2) Betty bur. 16 Oct 1751 Butleigh, bur. 14 Feb 1761 Butleigh
3) Mary Chr. 18 Apr 1754 Butleigh (see burials)
4) Jane bur. 9 Jun 1756 Butleigh
5) James Chr. 25 Jan 1758 Butleigh, bur. 5 Aug 1758 Butleigh
6) James Chr. 28 Feb 1759 Butleigh, bur. 30 Oct 1779 Butleigh
7) Henry bur. 26 Apr 1760 Butleigh
8) Ann Chr. 9 Jun 1763 Butleigh, bur. 23 Jun 1764 Butleigh
9) Ann bur. 15 Nov 1764 Butleigh?
In 1770 a William Hodges paid for a year's Lords Rent on the late Humphrey Vearing's house – due Lady Day. I May 1771 he received the Lords rent again – for the Parish House,late Vearings. He is listed in 1772 under the John Rocke apprenticeship scheme as a ratepayer. In 1774 James Grenville was Overseer for the 'late William Hodges estate'.
17) Thomas Hodges [son of Richard? – see (12a1Ai) above]
Married: Butleigh 21 Dec 1760 Ann Hockey, bur. 30 Oct 1762 Butleigh (in childbirth)
Children:
1) Betty Chr. 30 Oct 1762 Butleigh
Thomas Hodges Tythingman in Dec 1785 carried Ann Chard to Huish Episcopi under a removal order.
DD/S/BT/17/6/15-16 - 1] Solomon Reynolds of Butleigh, yeoman 2] Stephen Holman of Butleigh, yeoman 3] Thomas Hodges of Butleigh, labourer 4] James Grenville of Butleigh Lease and release of Southmoor (3a) and Newditch (2a), Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH Date: 1782.
DD/S/BT/17/6/12 - 1] Thomas Hodges of Butleigh, yeoman, grandson and devisee of Richard Toghill decd and Stephen Holman of Butleigh, farmer and grazier brother and heir of Richard decd 2] Solomon Reynolds of Butleigh, yeoman Mortgage of Southmoor (3a) and Newditch (2a), Date: 1777.
18) Henry Hodges
Married: Butleigh 24 Dec 1763 Edith Atwood bur. 3 Jun 1788 Butleigh pauper
Children:
1) Mary Chr. 18 Oct 1764 Butleigh
2) Henry bur. 5 Aug 1769 Butleigh
A William and Henry Hodges were to serve in rotation as Tythingmen from a list of 1779 (OOP) – probably the William next.
DD/S/BT/6/5/38-40 - 1] John Moor of West Coker, executor of Henry Moor decd administrator of Henry Talbot of Butleigh decd 2] John Horner of Castle Cary, yeoman and wife Ann, Jane Withers and Elizabeth Horner of Ansford, three sisters and coheirs of William Hodges Withers Date: 1787.
19) William Hodges
Married: Butleigh 19 Aug1766 Ann Champion Chr. 4 Aug 1747 Butleigh, d.o. Charles and Mary Champion #
Children:
1) Ann Chr. 1 Nov 1767 Butleigh, bur. 10 Feb 1788 Butleigh
2) William Chr. 28 Aug 1771 Butleigh
A William was Overseer in 1761, 1781 and churchwarden in 1784. Paid for carrying wood by the OOP in 1773/4. A Wwarant taken out at Wells in Nov 1777 to bring William Hodges to a justice. A William (one of the following?) had his rent paid by the OOP in 1783, 1788/89 – see above – called 'junior' in 1800 when his rent was paid again. In March 1788 the OOP paid for his daughters coffin (made by William Periam). A William Hodges and his wife received aid from the OOP in May 1788.
20) William Hodges widower bur. 14 May 1804 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 1 Jan 1794 Jane Withers the widow who married Edmund Barnes widower of Babcary in Butleigh 2 Mar 1807? #
William was paying rates from 1746 up to 1805 and is probably the 'late William Hodges' who paid rates on Kings Sedgemoor up to 1804. Jane Withers had married widower William Hodges on 1 Jan 1794 and he is probably the William who was bur. 14 May 1804 Butleigh making Jane his widow. This Jane had paid rates in her surname Hodges (as late William or occupiers) from 1805/6 on 'Chases and New Ditch' until 1814 when she paid the rates as 'Jane Hodges now Barnes'. By the 1820's she was paying rates on her original property, a common with others and a cottage in the High Street and still as 'Jane Hodges now Barnes'. In 1814 she had aslo started paying rates as Jane Hodges on land in Sedgemoor Grounds but listed them as occupied by J. Barnes! By the 1820's Jane Barnes was listed as the ratepayer and Charles Strode was the occupier. [no records after 1828]. Mrs. Barnes' property was assessed in 1827 and the rateable value was £19 16 2d on which she paid a rate of 10d in the pound, and again in 1828.. The OOP paid Lord's rent on her property in 1826 - 31.
21) Ann Hodges [b. 1749, bur. 6 Sep 1823 Butleigh aged 74?]
Children:
1) William bur. 5 Oct 1771 Butleigh
2) Thomas Chr. Jan 1772 Butleigh, bur. 6 Mar 1814 Butleigh
3) Catherine Chr. 5 Apr 1779 Butleigh, bur. 10 Aug 1806 Butleigh (see 23)
Ann Hodges (older widow?) looked after a mad woman for a day and night in 1773/4 and was paid 4/5d by the OOP. In Nov. 1777 her children were kept at Jones' house and dowlas and lincey bought for one. Feb/March 1778 assistance given to Ann Hodges' child (called bastard in May). In July/August payments 'for keeping Ann Hodges child'. In Nov. 1778 the OOP paid for the child to be sent to London. In May 1782 payments resumed to Ann's child. Payments were made until July 1785 when the OOP paid the expense and carriage of the child to London. [to a school for the blind?]
22) William Hodges [William Hogges in PR?] Second marriage of ?
Married: 28 Nov 1772 Butleigh Mary Underwood b. 1756 Somerset, bur. 16 Aug 1842 Butleigh 41-5
Children?:
1) John Chr. 1 Oct 1778 Butleigh
2) Richard Chr. 2 Feb 1786 Butleigh (22a)
3) Ann Chr. 25 Dec 1788 Butleigh
4) Ann Chr. 17 Nov 1793 Butleigh
5) Betty Chr. 21 May 1797 Butleigh
In May 1784 Bridget Look was paid for delivering a child of William Hodges wife (must have died) and again in Dec 1785. A Mary Hodges received 2 yds lincey from the OOP in May 1788 [see William (19) for possible references to this William and wife]. A William Hodges received aid in Jan 1794 and he and his wife received assistance that month from Ann Hayden and Bridget Look. William Hodges received regular assistance monthly until Nov 1800. In December payments to 'William Hodges family' changes to 'William Hodges wife and children'. In May 1806 becomes Mary Hodges and children and then Mary (or William) Hodges two children. In Jan 1814 this is reduced to one child and last payment March 1814. [two families? - From July, August 1807 payments in distress made to both Mary Hodges and two children and William Hodges two children]. In Oct 1807 OOP paid for two journeys to Bath taking William Hodges. The Mary Hodges and two children payments stopped in 1809 but the William and two children carried on. See (13a) above – needs sorting out!!
One William Hodges died on 2 Nov 1800 Butleigh [buried by the OOP coffin etc paid for in Dec 1800] who could be this parent and another on 14 May 1804 Butleigh who might be his son - the William (15) with whose son William his wife Mary apparently lived in 1841. In Jan 1822 the OOP appealed an order at Wells Sessions made respecting a William Hodges' wife. Assistance given to William Hodges' wife of Bath. The OOP paid Mary Hodges of Bath pay from March 1822 onwards – up to Jan 1836 when the records end. In Aug 1833 she was inadvertently called Sarah Hodges of Bath (?)
Other sites report John as marrying Ann Osmond on 16 Jun 1800 in West Camel and dying in 1841 in Trent (reg. Sherborne) – but this marriage probably refers to an unrelated John, probably not from Butleigh. A house belonging to a Mary Hodges was several times repaired by the OOP (1809) – she allowed the Overseers to keep and use part of the house until the bill of £32 2s 11½d was paid.
A 'William Hodges children' received aid from the OOP and in May 1806 this changed to 'Mary Hodges children'. A Mary Hodges received rent from the OOP in 1826.
A John Hodges paid 4 months then 3 months bastardy pay to the OOP in 1802. He paid 4 months in 1803. The recipient, Betty Talbott received bastardy pay from May 1801 (for Stephen Chr. 8 Mar 1801) up to Dec 1804 @ 6/- per month then John Hodges started paying for two children at 12/- per month. In fact he had paid bastardy pay to Betty Talbott from May 1804 when she bore him a second child (Thomas Chr. 4 Nov 1804). In Dec 1804 the OOP paid Samuel Clark for going to Bath to arrest John Hodges and hold him, bring him before the justice. He was taken to Street Inn by Mr. Vuigen. He then paid up the outstanding bastardy pay. Payments were made until August 1814, progressively being reduced back to 6/- per month. In July 1818 a John Hodges was examined by Mr. Welch.
A John Hodges received his rent from the OOP 1825 – 1827+.
22a) Richard Hodges b. 1786 Butleigh, labourer, bur. 16 Jan 1846 (Mar Q 10/355 Wells) Butleigh 41-12
Married: Butleigh 18 Oct 1819 Jane Close b. 1793, bur 19 Feb 1840 (Mar Q 10/379 Wells) Butleigh
Children:
1) Mary Chr. 19 Mar 1820 Butleigh
2) Elizabeth Chr. 28 Apr 1822 Butleigh 41-12
children:
1) William b. May, Chr. 27 Jun 1841 (Sep Q 10/467 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 5 Jun 1872 (Jun Q 5c/400 Wells) Butleigh 41-12, 61-60, 71-82 #
2) Jane [Birch] b. 1844 (Mar Q 10/527 Wells) Butleigh #
3) Sarah Chr. 28 Nov 1824 Butleigh
4) John Chr. 1 Apr 1828 Butleigh (22a1)
5) Matilda Ch. 25 Nov 1832 Butleigh 41-12
6) Thomas Chr. 13 Mar 1836 Butleigh (22a2)
A Richard Hodges started paying bastardy pay in May 1812. In June 1812 the OOP received from him £1 11s 6d for Ann Brice's bastard to May 19th. A Richard Hodges received his house rent from the OOP in 1825 - 1827+
Richard Hodges (55) lived in Oddway with his children Elizabeth, John, Matilda and Thomas plus William (b. May 1841) who was the illegitimate child of Elizabeth (Betsy). Richard's wife Jane had died in 1840 and his eldest child Mary lived with the Ag Lab/carpenter William Warman in Walton In 1841 they had a daughtr Sarah (aged 7) and a son John (aged 4) living with them. In view of her age it may be that Sarah was a child of William's by a previous spouse – though more likely is that Mary was born several years before she was Christened. By 1851 four more children, all born in Walton, had been added to the family. Sarah Warman was a servant in Street in 1851.
Richard's third daughter Sarah is absent from Butleigh on the 1841 census but may be the servant in Glastonbury in 1841. Sarah appeared in Wells Workhouse with a child Mary aged one in 1851 and in 1858 she married Joseph Bryant (Dec Q 5c/1039 Wells) and they are found living at North Wootton together in 1861 with daughter Mary Hodges as 'visitor'.
Elizabeth (Betsy) married James Birch in 1846 but she had already had two illegitimate children, William (b. 1841) and Jane (b. 1844). # In 1851 they appear with the surname 'Birch' but William reverted to his proper surname in 1861 - 1871. He lodged with Sarah Gillam in Water Lane in 1861 and was back with his mother and stepfather in 1871. William Hodges died in 1872 (Jun Q 5c/400 Wells) aged 31.
Jane Hodges appears as Birch in 1851 and 1861 but she married Charles Davis in Butleigh on 10 Aug 1863 (Sep Q 5c/940 Wells) as Jane Hodges.
Richard Hodges died in 1846. Thomas lodged in Butleigh Wootton and Matilda was missing in 1851 but then Matilda married William Wills in 1852 (Mar Q 5c/888 Wells) and in 1861 they lived in Chilkwell Street, Glastonbury with their five children (in 1871 at Northload Bridge).
22a1) John Hodges Chr. 1 Apr 1828 Butleigh, labourer, buried 15 June 1891 (Jun Q 5c/373 Wells) Butleigh 41-12, 51-29, 61-59, 71-83, 81-104, 91-121
Married I: 15 Dec 1851 (Dec Q 10/784 Wells) Rachel Periam, Chr. 5 Nov 1826 Butleigh, d.o. Thomas and Catherine Periam, bur. 22 Mar 1859 (Mar Q 5c/464 Wells) Butleigh #
Children:
1) Walter John Chr. 20 Jun 1852 Butleigh, bur. 25 Nov 1882 (Dec Q 5c/340 Wells) Butleigh 61-59, 71-83
2) Catherine [Kate] Periam b. 1853 (Dec Q 5c/529 Wells) Chr. 13 Jul 1856 Butleigh, bur. 11 Apr 1881 (Mar Q 5c/367 Wells) Butleigh 61-59, 71-83
Child: 1) [George] William Chr. 21 Mar 1872 Mar Q 5c/602 Wells) Butleigh 81-104, 91-122
3) Thomas Chr. 1 Jul 1856 (Jun Q 5c/647 Wells) Butleigh 61-59, 71-83, 81-104, 91-122, 01-143
4) William Benjamin b. 20 March, Chr. 17 Apr 1859 (March Q 5c/661 Wells) Butleigh, bur. 3 Sep 1859 (Sep Q 5c/365 Wells - Benjamin) Butleigh
Married II: 1 Nov 1859 (Dec Q 5c/1800 Wells) Caroline Martin b. 1831 Butleigh, d.o. Thomas Martin, bur. 14 Apr 1909 (Jun Q 5c/277 Wells) Butleigh 61-59, 71-83, 81-104, 91-122, 01-143 #
Children:
1) Sidney Chr. 19 Mar 1867 (Mar Q 5c/617 Wells) Butleigh 71-83, 81-104
2) Caroline Chr. 1869 (unnamed) Butleigh, d. 1870 (Mar Q 5c/489 Wells)
3) George James Chr. 8 Apr 1871 Butleigh (Mar Q 5c/599 Wells) Butleigh 71-83 81-104
In 1851 John lodged with George Turner, shepherd, on Butleigh Hill. Rachel Periam b. 1828 is found in Glastonbury, St. Benedict Street, as a servant aged 13 in 1841. Her mother had died in 1840 (Mar Q 10/377 Wells) They married in 1851 and proceeded to have three living children. In July 1856 a Thomas was christened on the 1 July and a Tom on the 13th! A fifth child, William Benjamin was born 20 March 1859. This birth lead to Rachel's death in 1859. Within the year John married again, this time to Caroline Martin. In 1841 Caroline had lodged with James and Elizabeth Andrews in Spring Gardens and in 1851 she had been a servant in the High Street, Wells, at the home of Henry Powell, Chemist & Druggist. The 'Victorian Somerset' booklet states that Caroline had also worked as a servant girl for Charles Dyer, the saddler but I have no proof of this.
In 1861 John (31) lived with Caroline and three of the children from his previous marriage, Walter, Catherine and Thomas at the cottage at the junction of Dumb Lane and 'Sub Road' [No. 41/2] A relative of his first wife was also lodging with them - Thomas Periam (44) widower, agricultural labourer - he next lodged with the Allen family in Butleigh Wootton in 1871.
By 1871 John and Caroline had added one child of their own to the previous three plus an illegitimate child of Catherine - George William. Catherine died in 1881 aged 27 in Wells Union Workhouse - called Kitty.
By 1881 John and Caroline had added two more children to their tally.
Walter appeared in Roath, Wales in 1881 lodging at 57, Edward Place and working in the docks but he returned home and died in 1882 aged 30. In 1891 John lived with Caroline and sons Tom and William (grandson). John died and was buried 15 June 1891.
Sidney had moved to the Hall, Yoxall, Staffs (1891) as a gardener, and in 1893 (Sep Q 5c/991 Bath) married Jane Emma Little and they lived in Lyncombe, Bath in 1901. Sidney lived at 9, Bruton Avenue Bath in 1911 with his wife and three surviving children.
George James was a general labourer lodging in Glastonbury with Frederick Parsons (1891) but died aged 29 in 1900 (Dec Q 5c/282).He was called just James on the 1871 censusi. William became a bricklayer and appears in 1901 at 9, Stanley Place, Twerton with his wife Ada Sparks (b. 1869 Twerton) and two children – they had married in 1897 (Jun Q 5c/1087 Bath).
In 1901 Caroline Hodges lived in two rooms with her stepson Tom (43). In 1907 she went into Wells Workhouse where she died on 14 April 1909. Her body was taken back to Butleigh and buried next to that of her husband. Tom had been an agricultural labourer all his life and remained so, unmarried at age 43 in 1901. He lodged at 47 Butleigh with Charles and Dinah Oram in 1911. He died and was bur. 19 Nov 1917 Butleigh Registered 1918 (Dec Q 5c/504 Wells). William George (b. 1872) was still a bricklayer and in 1911 was in the Bath Union Workhouse, Odd Down, Bath while his wife and two children were at 34, Lansdown View, Tiverton, Bath, his wife cooking from home.
22a2) Thomas Hodges b. 1836 Butleigh, labourer, d. 21 Dec, bur. 27 Dec 1867 (Dec Q 5c/370 Wells) Butleigh 41-12, 51W-38, 61-48
Married: Butleigh 1 Nov 1859 (Dec Q 5c/1081 Wells) Sophia Smart b. 1840 Glastonbury, d.o. John and Harriet Smart, d. 20 Oct, bur. 24 Oct 1901 (Dec Q 5c/313 Wells) Butleigh 61-48, 71-83, 81-104, 91-122
Children:
1) Harriet Chr. 9 Feb 1862 (Mar Q 5c/646 Wells) Butleigh 71-83
2) Frederick Chr. 12 Jun 1864 (Jun Q 5c/639 Wells) Butleigh (23a2A)
3) Sarah Jane Chr. 17 Jun 1866 (Dec Q 5c/556 Wells) Butleigh 71-83, 81-104
Thomas had lodged with Edith Turner at Butleigh Wootton in 1851 and probably worked at Wootton Hill Farm. Sophia had lived with her parents in Bovetown, Glastonbury in 1851, her father was a carpenter. They married in 1859 and lived in Butleigh High Street in 1861 lodging at Perriam's Cottage with John Arthur. They had three children before a tragedy took place. Thomas fell from a wall while collecting ivy for decorations. He landed on his back against stone and died the next day - in December 1867. Sophia became a laundress and moved into Dumb Lane. She appeared there in 1871 with her three children. Harriet went into service and, still unmarried, appears in domestic service, firstly at "Birling Manor" Kent, the home of Ralph P. Neville J.P. in 1881 and then at "Overblow" in Shorne, Kent in 1891 and next in Witley, Surrey in 1901. She married John Buxton in 1908 (Sep Q 6a 239 Bristol) # -his first wife Ann Dyer from Butleigh having died in 1901.
In 1881 Sophia Hodges, laundress, lived in St. James Square with her son Frederick, an apprentice harness maker and Sarah, an unemployed domestic servant. Sarah left in the 1880's and by 1891 was the cook at the Rectory, West Grinstead, Sussex. In 1901 she was a housekeeper, unmarried in Hanover Square, Belgravia at the house of Stanley Leighton MP. In 1891 in Dumb Court Sophia Hodges, now 50 lived with just Frederick, still unmarried at 27. She appears on the 1901 census visiting her daughter Harriet in London. Sophia died in 1901 aged 62. Frederick married Harriett Lane from Dorset - next.
22a2A) Frederick W. Hodges b. 1864 (Jun Q 5c/639 Wells) Butleigh, saddler and harness maker 71-83, 81-104, 91-122, 01-144
Married: 1891 (Dec Q 5a/521 Sturminster, Dorset) Harriet Alice Lane b. 1863 (Dec Q 5a/242 Sturminster) Lydlinch, Dorset 01-144 #
Frederick married Harriet in 1891 which must have been shortly after she arrived in Butleigh to be the cook at Corvyle, the home of Robert Neville-Grenville, where she had appeared on census night 1891. In 1911 they ran the 'Half Moon Inn' Malplash, Beaminster, Dorset but never had children.
23) William Hodges [Chr. 14 Jul 1776 Butleigh s.o. William Hogges and NN of Wootton?] [bur 11 Feb 1800 Butleigh ?]
Married: Butleigh 8 Nov 1796 Catherine Hodges Chr. 5 Apr 1779 Butleigh illegit. d.o. Ann bur. 10 Aug 1806 Butleigh
Children:
1) William Hodges Chr. 24 Dec 1797 Butleigh (23a)
Catherine Hodges and children given 8/- assistance by the OOP in Dec 1799. In Jan 1800 they were given 8/- again and 6/- in February – nfi.
23a) William Hodges Chr. 24 Dec 1797 Butleigh, labourer, s.o. William Hodges, bur. 11 Nov 1879 (Dec Q 5c/354 Wells) Butleigh 41-5, 51-35, 61-56, 71-78
Married: Butleigh 18 Jun 1844 (Jun Q 10/863 Wells) Mary Birch b. 1797 Greinton, d.o. William Anger, bur. 18 May 1883 (Jun Q 5c/391 Wells) Butleigh 51-35, 61-56, 71-78, 81-101
This may be the William who fathered the illegitimate child William Harvey born in 1828 to Amy Harvey for which he had to pay bastardy pay from August 1828.
William lived with Mary Hodges (1) in 1841 (his grandmother?) and after her death, as a bachelor, married the widow Mary Birch and they lived in Silver Street in 1851 with grandchildren Edwin and Tom Castle. # In 1861 William (63) with his wife Mary (65) still had Edwin (25) and Tom Castle (17) lodging with them. Nfi on Edwin and Tom appears only when he died in 1887 (Sep Q 5c/310 Wells) aged 43.In 1871 William and Mary were at 31, High Street 'Hodges' part of Selley's Row. William died in 1879 aged 85. In 1881 Mary lived with lodgers and died in 1883 aged 86. Tom and Edwin Castle were the children of Cornelius and Eliza Castle (the illegitimate daughter of Mary Exon). They were the grandchildren of Mary, the widow of James Birch , # who must have a Castle or Exon # link. She was probably the Mary Exon [Anger?], the mother of the illegitimate Eliza - probably before her marriage to James Birch. The surname Exon/Axon/Anger is uncertain in the PR.
DD/S/BT/23/7/34 Ralph Neville Grenville's agreement to allow William Hodges of Butleigh labourer and his wife Mary to reside in houses recently purchased in Butleigh 1870
24) Thomas Hodges [Chr. 27 Dec 1741 Butleigh, s.o. Thomas and Jane or Chr. 8 Nov 1740 Butleigh s.o. William and Jane or Chr. 4 May 1754 Butleigh s.o. Henry & Mary?]
Married: Butleigh 8 Jun 1770 Anne Withers Chr. 12 Feb 1745 d.o. Elizabeth [bur. 7 Feb 1802 Butleigh?]
Children:
1) Richard Chr. 8 Jan 1777 Butleigh
2) Jane Chr. 16 Aug 1779 Butleigh
3) Elizabeth Chr. 20 Aug 1781 Butleigh
4) James Chr. 27 Dec 1782 Butleigh (mother Mary?)
5) Sarah Chr. 25 Dec 1784 Butleigh
6) John Chr. 25 Dec 1786 Butleigh (24a)
7) Maria Chr. 14 Feb 1790 Butleigh
Child: Betsy Chr. 17 Aug 1817 Butleigh [fathered by Septimus Tucker]
Child: Mary Jane Chr. 10 Nov 1850 Butleigh [fathered by ]
A Thomas received assistance from the OOP from Jan 1801. In Feb 1801 his son was bought a 'round frock'. Thoms still receiving assistance in 1818. Maria was the mother of the illegitimate Betsy. Septimus Tucker began paying bastardy pay for Mary's child in September 1816. Betsy in turn had the illegitimate child Mary Jane. Richard Hodges, Pensioner, was listed as married and lived at the Greenwich Hospital, Kent in 1841 and 1851, d. 1854 (Jun Q 1d/375 Greenwich).
In March 1804 the OOP paid James Hodges the Bounty allowed him by act of parliament relating to the Militia law.
24a) John Hodges Chr. 25 Dec 1786 Butleigh, labourer, bur.22 May 1854 (Jun Q 5c/387 Wells) Baltonsborough or 1855 Sep Q 5c/301 Wells
Married: Butleigh 30 Jan 1815 Sarah Underwood b. 1787 Coxley, [Chr. 8 Nov 1792 Butleigh d.o. John and Susanna Underwood] bur. 2 Jun 1876 (Jun Q 5c/399 Wells) Baltonsborough 71-84
Children:
1) Thomas Chr. 6 Oct 1815 Butleigh
2) Judith Chr. 15 Aug 1819 Butleigh
3) Anne Chr. 15 Aug 1819 Butleigh
4) Richard Tugwell Chr. 3 Dec 1821 Butleigh
5) William Chr. 22 Feb 1824 Butleigh
6) William Chr. 16 Aug 1824 Butleigh (24a1)
7) James Chr. 25 Feb 1827 Butleigh (24a2)?
8) Susan Chr. 30 Jul 1831 Butleigh
A child Elizabeth b. 1816 bur. 14 Mar 1821 Butleigh probably belonged to this couple. In Feb 1813 a John Hogdons (probably Hodges) was paid 2 guineas for the 'local' (serving in the militia?).
John lived in Northwood, Baltonsborough with his wife Sarah (b. 1790 Coxley) in 1851. Sarah was the mother of Susan who married James Wooley the carpenter (b. 1833 Shepton Mallet) # and she lived with them firstly in Baltonsborough in 1861 as a widow and secondly in Dumb Lane in 1871. Susan had been a servant at Gape Lane, Street in 1851 and she married James Wooley in 1857 (Jun Q 5c/1002 Wells). In 1861 they had both lived in Baltonsborough with her mother, their children William (2), daughter Judith (2) and Judith Hodges (8) boarding. Sarah died in 1876 aged 90 and the family had returned to Baltonsborough by 1881, where they lived at 4, Tuckers Lane. Susan Woolley died in 1917 (Mar Q 5c/713 Wells) aged 85.
Anne married Charles Bush (35) and in 1861 lived in Baltonsborough. A Charles Bush married an Ann Hodges in 1857 (Mar Q 5c/919 Wells) - the same?
24a1) William Hodges Chr. 16 Aug 1824 Butleigh, labourer, died 1898 (Dec Q 5c/293 Wells)
Married: 1850 (Jun Q 10/853 Wells) Anna Rawles Chr. 30 Jan 1831 Baltonsborough, d.o. George & Mary
Child: 1) Mary b. 1850 (Sep Q 10/512 Wells) West Bradley
William lived with wife and daughter Mary in 1851 at the house of George and Mary Rawles in Plot St., West Bradley. In 1861 the family lived in Baltonsborough and that was then given as pob for both William and daughter Mary. In 1881 William and Anna lived at Cross Roads, Baltonsborough. William appeared in 1891 next to the "Greyhound Inn", Baltonsborough with wife Hannah b. 1830 Baltonsborough and grandson Edwin Franklin (12).
24a2) James Hodges Chr. 25 Feb 1827 Butleigh, drainer
James lodged in Long Newnton, Wilts., in 1851. A James Hodges (b. 1832 Butleigh) is probably the same person who in 1861 was a miller in Ratlinghope, Shrops. - married to Martha (née Evans) (b. 1835 Ratlingshope) with child Sarah Ann (2) plus father-in-law John Evans, miller. In 1871 they were still at Ratlinghope, but with 5 children. In 1881 (and dob 1826) he was the miller at Walk Mills, Woolstaston, Shrops. with wife Martha and five children. In 1891 they were still there with four children and in 1901 with just two.
25) Edward William Boucher Hodges b. 1845 (Jun Q 8/59 Dorchester) Maiden Newton, Dorset, clerk, s.o. Jesse and Ann Hodges, bur. 24 Jul 1915 (Sep Q 5c/475 Wells) Butleigh 91-115, 01-134 PHOTO
Married: Brentwood, Middlesex 14 Mar 1872 Maria Crooks died Secunderabad 1882
Children:
1) Edward William b. 12 Jan 1873 England, bur. 23 Sep 1902 Butleigh (Sep Q 5c/271 Wells)
2) Florence b. 2 Oct 1878, Bolarum, Secunderabad, India 91-115
Married II: 1882 Bangalore Sarah Jane Dunning b. 1862 Bangalore, India, d. 7 Sep, bur. 9 Sep 1902 (Sep Q 5c/270 Wells) Butleigh 91-115, 01-134
Children:
1) Minnie b. 1885 (Sep Q 2a/795 Canterbury) Canterbury 91-115
2) Julia b. 15 May, Chr. 22 Jul 1888 (Sep Q 5c/602 Wells) Butleigh 91-115, 01-134
3) Annie b. 24 Dec 1889, Chr. 20 Jan 1890 (Mar Q 5c/496 Wells) Butleigh 91-115, 01-134
4) Reginald [Gerald] George b. 17 Mar, Chr. 24 May 1891 (Jun Q 5c/512 Wells) Butleigh 91-115, 01-134 PHOTO
5) Gladys Emily b. 7 Dec 1892, Chr. 8 Jan 1893 (Mar Q 5c/480 Wells) Butleigh 01-134 PHOTO
6) Ivy Amy b. 3 Dec 1895, Chr. 2 Feb 1896 (Mar Q 5c/451 Wells) Butleigh 01-134 PHOTO
7) Daisy Irene b. 17 Jun, Chr. 1 Aug 1900 (Sep Q 5c/428 Wells) Butleigh 01-134
8) Cecil Edward b. 18 Jul, Chr. 13 Sep 1902 (Sep Q 5c/426 Wells) Butleigh
Married III: 1912 (Jun Q 5c/1192 Bath) Lily Bronwen Jones b. 1887 Bath
In 1861 Edward, (16) a watch maker, lived with his mother Ann and her second husband (23 years younger!), Henry Strickland Gerrard, a cabinet maker, at Tower hamlets, Shoreditch, St. Leonards. In 1871 he was at Aldershot Military and in 1873 married for the first time. He served in India (troop sergeant major in His Majesty's 12th Lancers) where his second child was born, first wife died and he married a second time. By 1885 he and his family were back in England. Three years later they were in Butleigh and Julia was born there in 1888, Annie in 1890 and Reginald George in 1891 - called Gerald on 1891 census.
In 1891 Edward Hodges, clerk, born Maiden Newton, the son of Jesse Hodges, a cabinet maker and postmaster lived with his family in Farm Lodge.
In 1901 Edward was now called 'Clerk & time keeper' and his wife Jane still had their children Julia, Annie and Reginald with them plus three new children, Gladys, Amy and Daisy. He was bailiff to Robert Neville-Grenville.
As was the case for most young girls, Florence was put out to work, as a draper's assistant in Wimbledon, Surrey. She married in 1902 in Wandsworth. Minnie was likewise apprenticed as a milliner, to a draper in Penge, Surrey. In 1906 Reginald [see photo] played several parts in the Butleigh Revel and his father and two sisters also had parts.
In 1911 the widowed Edward lived in Butleigh with his spinster sister Emily (b. 1850 Maiden Newton) and daughters Gladys, Amy, Daisy and son Cecil. He married Lily Jones in 1912. In 1911 Julia was a telegraphist working at the Girls Friendly Society Church St., Birmingham - Julia died 20 Aug 1941.
Annie married William Wilson Cruikshank in 1909 (Jun Q 5c/941 Wells)? yet in 1911 appeared as a spinster draper working in Union St., Bath.- she died 17 Nov 1961,
Reginald died 1958, Gladys died 1972, Ivy Amy died 11 Apr 1969, Cecil died 1954 Bournemouth. In his Will, Edward William Boucher left £1300 – probate to Emily and Julia.
26) George Hodges b. 1865 Baltonsborough, coachman, s.o. William and Anna Hodges 91-122
Married: 1889? (Dec Q 5c/811 Wincanton) Ellen Andrews b. 1865 Bruton, d.o. William and Elizabeth Andrews 91-122
Children:
1) Lily b. 3 Dec 1891, Chr. 14 Feb 1892 (Mar Q 5c/473 Wells) Butleigh
2) William b. 1896 Hadspen
3) Charles John b. 1900 Hadspen
In 1881 George lived with his parents at Cross Roads, Baltonsborough, his father was a gardener. After their marriage, George and Ellen lived in three rooms in 'Sub Road' in 1891. The couple had moved to Carer Stables, Hadspen House, Pitcombe by 1901. Their daughter Lily was born in Butleigh in 1892 but their next child William was born in Hadspen in 1896. They were still in Hadspen in 1911 and Lily was a housemaid living at home.
27) Elizabeth Hodges b. 1832 Butleigh, servant in Northload Street, Glastonbury 1851 - nfi.
28) Frank Hodges b. 1878 [1875 Dec Q 5c/517 Wells?] Butleigh, private in the Somerset Light Infantry 91W-117
Frank was a patient in the Royal Victoria Hospital, Hound, Southampton in 1901. Probably the same Frank Hodges who lodged with Elizabeth Drane in Butleigh Wootton in 1891 and who gave his pob as Wells Union (Workhouse). In 1881 he was in the workhouse (p.o.b. Butleigh) with his mother Kitty (b. 1855 Wells) – a domestic servant. No father's name was given at his marriage which took place in Butleigh on 19 Sep 1904 (Sep Q 5c/840 Wells) to Jessie Vickery (b. 1879) the daughter of James Vickery, dairyman. The witnesses were both Vickerys. No trace of either on the 1911 census under Hodges. See also under Vickery.
29) Edward G. Hodges b. 1845 Baltonsborough, cowboy 61W-64
Edward worked on Charles Croom's farm in Wootton in 1861 – nfi and baptism not listed in Baltonsborough.
30) Samuel Hodges b. 1835 North Parrett, labourer, s.o. John Hodges, bur. 28 Apr 1894 (Jun Q 5c/317 Wells) Butleigh 61W-63, 71W-85, 91W-117
Married: 1861 (Sep Q 5c/924 Wells) Elizabeth Turner b. 1835 Butleigh, d.o. John and Mary Turner, died 1914 (Mar Q 5c/541 Wells) 71W-85, 81W-106, 91W-117, 01W-141 #
Samuel appeared in Wootton in 1861 as a labourer lodging with Joshua Andow. Elizabeth was a nursemaid at the home of Henry Hawkins in Butleigh Wootton in 1851 and a dairymaid at Rowley Farm in 1861. After their marriage in 1861 he and Elizabeth appeared in 1871 next door to the Blacksmith's Shop in Wootton. In 1881 Elizabeth was a washerwoman living alone in Wootton Street and her husband was absent - almost certainly the Samuel Hodges who was a prisoner at the County Prison, Taunton in 1881. Samuel and Elizabeth were together again in 1891 living in three rooms at No. 15 Butleigh Wootton. Samuel died in 1894 aged 60. Elizabeth lived in four rooms, working as a domestic help. In 1911 she had two rooms at 26 Butleigh (aged77) and she died in 1914 aged '75'.
31) John Hodges b. May 1855 Wells Union Workhouse, bur. 17 Oct 1855 (Dec Q 5c/362 Wells) Butleigh - nfi
32) Caroline Hodges b. 1846, bur. 18 Feb 1870 (Mar Q 5c/489 Wells) Butleigh
Caroline died aged 24 - possibly the young wife of one of the above or in service?
33) William J. Hodges
Married: 1937 (Dec Q 5c/971 Wincanton) Leila Dunkerton b. 9 May, Chr. 26 May 1888 (Jun Q 5c/529 Wells) Butleigh d.o. Frank and Fanny Dunkerton, bur. 14 Jan 1957 Butleigh.
Leila died at Rose Cottage, West Bradley.
Hodgkin
1) Rose Hodgkin b. 1859 Tonbridge, Kent, d.o. John and Caroline Hodgkin 81-94
Rose was a servant at Butleigh Court in 1881. In 1861, called Rosetta, she had lived with her parents at Hilden Cottage, Tunbridge, where her father was farm bailiff. She probably married before 1891.
Hogg
1) James Hogg
In the 1827 and 1828 poor relief assessments James Hogg was listed as quite a substantial ratepayer.
Holbrook
1) Henry Holbrook b. 1848, West Cranmore, general labourer, bur. 12 Nov 1936 Butleigh
Married: 1879/ 6 Mar 1883 (Mar Q 5c/794 Shepton Mallet) at the Weslyan Chapel, Shepton Mallet Elizabeth Ann Luff Chr. 12 Dec 1858 (Dec Q 5c/584 Wells) Butleigh, d.o. Theophilus and Susan Luff, bur. 29 Jan 1938 Butleigh
In 1911 this couple lived at 2 Addlewell Lane, Yeovil. They had had three children, all alive in 1911. Elizabeth had had an illegitimate child before marriage, in 1874 and another with her husband in 1881 – the actual marriage not taking place until 1883.
Hole/Holle
1) John Hole bur. 12 Nov 1595 Butleigh
2) Edmund Holle
Married: Joanne Talbot Chr. 27 Dec 1641 Butleigh d.o. Robert and Lucy (née Wilton) Talbot
Children:
1) Joanne Chr. 20 May 1666 Butleigh
2) Mary Chr. 28 Nov 1670 Butleigh
In 1673 Edmund was an overseer to the poor. He appears in the list of commoners in 1672 and paid rates from 1673 – 1683.
DD/S/BT/5/6/2 - 1] Robert Talbot of Butleigh, yeoman 2] Edmund Hole of Butleigh, yeoman Mortgage of Blackthorne (1.5a) in Butleigh, part of Peckham lease (1556) belonging to Robert's wife Lucy Wilton, to provide for Robert's daughter Joan wife of Edmund Hole. Rent 2s. Date range: 1665 - 1666.
DD/S/BT/5/6/31 - 1] Robert Talbot and Edmund Hole 3] Henry Squier of Somerton, blacksmith Assignment of Blackthorne (1.5a) in Butleigh. Rent 2s. [Tied together with DD/S/BT/5/6/2 and 5/6/4]. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1671.
3) George Hole b. 1822 Sampford Brett, labourer, journeyman miller, s.o. James Hole, died 1864 (Jun Q 5c/407 Taunton)?
Married I: 1847 (Jun Q 10/773 Taunton) Hannah Hiles b. 1826 North Petherton
Children:
1) Henry George b. 1848 Norton Fitzwarren
2) Alfred William b. 1850 Norton Fitzwarren
3) Sarah Ann b. 1852 Norton Fitzwarren
Married II: Butleigh 23 Feb 1857 (Mar Q 5c/923 Wells) Hannah Newport b. 1826 North Petherton, d.o. Francis Newport, died 1892 (Mar Q 5c/276 Taunton)
Children;
4) Frederick H, b. 1857 Norton Fitzwarren
5) Albert b. 1859 Norton Fitzwarren
6) Walter b. 1863
After their marriage in 1857 this couple lived in Norton Fitzwarren in 1861 with five children, three of which were from George's first marriage.
4) Sarah Hole from Street
On 20th December 1867 a child was baptised in Butleigh but no name was given to the child and the mother, Sarah Hole, isn't further identified other than that she came from Street. In 1871 at the Keeper's lodge in Street lived William (b. 1817 Westbury) and Sarah Hole (b. 1827 Street) and it can only be she who attended the baptism in 1867. The child presumably died since their youngest child in 1871 was Thomas b. 1865. The only contender for the child is Eliza Jane Hole who died in 1868 (Sep Q 5c/354 Wells) aged 0.
Holland
1) Elizabeth Ann Holland b. 1854, died 26 Dec, bur 28 Dec 1935 Butleigh
Elizabeth was living at the 'Schoolhouse' when she died on Christmas day 1935.
Hollingshead
1) James Reuben Hollingshead b. 1862 Grantham, Lincs, coachman, s.o. James and Mary Hollingshead
Partner: Susan 'Hollingshead' b. 1865 Butleigh d. 1950 (Mar Q 6b/74 Basingstoke)
Children:
1) Reuben James b. 1891 (Sep Q 3b/380 Woburn) Todington, Beds.
2) Herbert Dennis b. 1893 (Dec Q 1a/411 St. Geo. Hanover Squ)? Putney London
3) John b. 1897 (Jun Q 1d/7 St. Saviour, Southwark)? Putney London
4) George b. 1901 (Sep Q 2b/634 Lymington) New Forest, Hants
5) Evelyn Louisa b. 1904 (Sep Q 2c/227 Basingstoke) Pamber, Hants
Susan was the 'wife' of coachman James and they lived in Brockenhurst Hamps. in 1901. Probably Susan Higgins (b. 1865 d.o. Samuel) but no marriage traced – only a birth certificate of one of her children may give her maiden name
In 1911 (b. 1869) Susan was a Laundry Hand and lived with three children in Pamber, Hants, husband absent, and 'married' 22 years.. Reuben was a groom working at Truggust Lane, Berkswell, Coventry in 1911. In fact it now seems that Reuben was a bigamist and had abandoned his original wife and children between 1881 and 1891. He had married Ada Jane Grummit (b. 1855 Aslackby) in 1876 and had three children with her. In 1881 Reuben Hollingshead (b. 1859 Grantham) was a married groom aged 22 working at Loddington, Leicestershire – his wife still in Aslackby with their latest child born that year. His parents were James and Mary Hollingshead. No marriage therefore took place between Susan and Reuben. They had had the five children shown above. Reuben died in 1938 (Mar Q 2c/317 Basingstoke).
Holly
1) Annie Elizabeth Holly b. 1873 Pimlico, London, housemaid [b. 1869 Jun Q 1a/321 St. George Hanover Sq.?]
In 1911 Annie was head housemaid at Wootton House. Probably the housemaid at 69, Eccleston Sq., St. Georges, Honover Sq., in 1901. nfi
Holman/Homan
Holmans were farmers in Butleigh since the early 1600's but the last baptised was John, s.o. Stephen & Elizabeth in 1763. His brother Richard Chr. 28 Apr 1755 Butleigh married the wealthy Sarah Smithfield in Butleigh on 18 May 1785.
1) William Holman leased land from the manor in 1556.
DD/S/BT/27/5/1-3 - 1] Sir Edmund Peckham 2] William Holman of Dorchester, yeoman, servant to Sir Edmund Abstract of lease for 299 years of a messuage and 1.5a, a cottage called Parkes, 2-a close, Bagge (5a), Blackthorne (3 yds), Brod Close (4a) in Cowhorses, 13a in two closes, Date: 1557.
2) Michael Homan 'the elder' bur. 16 Dec 1663 Butleigh
Married: Lucy
Children:
1) Lucy Chr. 4 Feb 1635 Butleigh
2) William Chr. 12 Jan 1639 Butleigh (2a)
3) John Chr. 9 May 1641 Butleigh
2a) William Holman
Married: Sara ? bur. 1680
Children:
1) John Chr. 16 Oct 1664 Butleigh
2) Sarah Chr. 15 Jan 1668 Butleigh
3) Saraha Chr. 14 Jul 1669 Butleigh
4) Richard Chr. 12 Dec 1671 Butleigh
5) Michael Chr. 10 Oct 1674 Butleigh
A Sara Holman received relief in her sickness in 1680 [This was most likely the wife of William] and for her child but died and was buried, the child was cared for by Constance Hebditch [a boy according to the OOP when she was paid for knitting a pair of stockings for him). William paid rates in 1673 and again in 1675 but in 1676 was taking in the Grimes orphans and paid by the overseers to do so. A sign of his descent into poverty? Nfi
3) John Homan?
Married: Butleigh 26 Oct 1625 Emma Talbot
4) Agnes Homan bur. 10 Feb 1642 Butleigh
5) Ann Homan married Butleigh 27 Apr 1672 Stephen Clapp #
6) Richard Hamon (?)
Children:
1) Richard Chr. 16 Nov 1664 Butleigh
7) John Homan – bur. 1684 Butleigh (OOP)
Married: Butleigh 11 May 1672 Mary Willat
Possibly the John Homan in the churchwarden's account in 1677 as overseer – the John on the commoners list of 1672.He was Overseer of the Poor in 1678 and paid rates from 1673-1679. The overseers paid for his burial in 1684/5. Probable father of Richard since he succeeded him as ratepayer.
8) Richard Homan d. 1696?
Married: Butleigh 6 Aug 1676 Mary Gane d. 1700?
Children:
1) Mary Chr. x Feb 1677 Butleigh
2) Richard? (8a)
3) Henry?
There seem to be two Richards who were contemporaries – one rich, one poor. These accounts from the Overseers of the Poor may be a conflation of records of father and son?
A) The richer - The Richard Holman on the list of commoners in 1672 may be this person. Richard appears in the churchwarden's accounts in 1689 and was churchwarden in 1692. He started paying rates in 1682 (unless he received an inheritance, he is unlikely to be (B). He paid rates from 1683 – 94 (when paid jointly with Ganes), 95 and 96 then was replaced by Mary Holman 1697-99 and then from 1700 by Richard Holman – presumably their son who paid the rates until 1736 followed by his wife Elizabeth in 1737 (9a).
B) The poorer – In 1680 and 81 this Richard was on relief (and shoes, clothes bought for him) and he lived with John Sheate – an older, earlier Richard? In 1680 a Mary did the washing for Thomas Gane and seems related to Richard (appears next to him in the overseers accounts). In 1683 Richard (the same?) was paid for looking after the incapacitated Thomas Gane while also receiving relief and clothing himself. Henry may have been a son of Richard [or even an unrelated old man] – he was receiving care at the hands of Bridget Hebditch from 1683-5 when he died (and was buried at the charge of the Overseers). In 1684 Richard was paid for looking after Thomas Gane. In 1689 Mary was paid for looking after Edward Davis' children. In 1690 Richard received relief for his wife and children then the 'wife' of a Richard Holman' was buried in 1699 Butleigh (OOP) – this may be the Richard next – son of Richard. The children are referred to as 'the youngest & eldest maid'. In 1708 - 1710 Richard received both Rocke and Symcockes bequest money (intended for the poor, not ratepayers). In 1712 Richard's house rent was paid and in 1713 he also received in addition to rent 1s 6d from the Katherine Webb fine. A Joane Holman (wife or daughter) received 6d from the Webb fine also in 1713 – she also received money from the overseers for the treatment and curing of her eyes. Holman's house rent was paid again in 1714.
8a) Richard Holman b.c. 1677, bur. 5 May 1737 Butleigh
Married: Elizabeth bur. 10 Mar 1753
Children:
a) Richard? (8a1)
1) William Chr. 26 Mar 1704 Butleigh
2) Stephen Chr. 29 Dec 1714 Butleigh (8a2?)
3) John bur. 27 Dec 1721 Butleigh
4) Thomas Chr. 28 Sep 1721 Butleigh (8a3)?
Probably several earlier children were born in the 1677-1714 PR gap. See previous – Richard paid rates from 1700 – 1736 and Elizabeth 'widow' from 1737-1753 ('the late Elizabeth in 1754') and Stephen paid from 1753-56. Richard also paid rates on part of Mr. Coward's land in South Moor from 1715 (sometimes with John Kelway) – 1724. From 1728 a second property in Butleigh [previously belonging to Slades] was paid rates on [could be the son].This Richard who was Overseer in 1734?
DD/S/BT/8/7/20 - 1] Richard and Stephen Holman of Butleigh Wootton sons of Richard decd 2] Edward Talbot of Butleigh yeoman and John Stock of Butleigh tailor, executors of John Colmer decd 3] Ann Hodges of Butleigh Assignment of 3a in Southmoor, Henly (3a) and Darksham Date: 1746.
8a1) Richard Holman s.o. latter? bur.10 Apr 1775 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 8 Oct 1730 Mary Chapple #bur. 4 Jun 1781 Butleigh (?)
Richard was Overseer in 1757 Richard Holman paid rates in Butleigh 'for Rowley', and for Thomas Holman from 1750 – 1775. From 1775 occupiers or widow Mary Holman paid the rates until 1781. From 1764 Richard paid rates for land in Southmoor Ground and this was adopted by his brother Stephen from 1775. In 1753/54 paid by the OOP for highway stones. He was paid in 1763 for work done in 1761 on highway repair on Wootton Way. He was paid in 1764/65 for carrying the stones to re-pave Cross Drove and a drove at Wootton. In the 1772 John Rocke apprentice scheme he is listed for his own estate, Rowley and Thomas Holman's estate, Stocks Common and Roods – he was to take George Barber as apprentice. A Richard was churchwarden 1755-1757, 1770-1772 and Overseer 1745, 1757, 1772. Mary was Overseer in 1781.
DD/S/BT/8/7/22 - 1] Thomas Taunton of West Lydford 2] James Withers of Butleigh, yeoman and wife Elizabeth daughter of Ann Hodges decd 3] Richard Holman of Butleigh, yeoman Copy assignment of the Common (3a), 2a in West wood, Little Langley (3a), Butleigh.. [Somerset Date: 1761.
DD/S/BT/9/1/6-7 - 1] Edward Talbot the elder of Butleigh, yeoman, devisee of his uncle Edward Talbot decd 2] Richard Holman of Butleigh Wootton, farmer and grazier 3] Solomon Reynolds of Butleigh, yeoman Assignment of mortgage of Hayes grounds (11a), Butleigh.. [Somerset Date: 1774.
DD/S/BT/9/1/8-11 - 1] Stephen Holman of Butleigh Wootton, brother of Richard decd 2] Mary Holman widow of Richard 3] Edward Talbot of Butleigh, yeoman 4] John Peddle the elder of Charlton Mackrell, yeoman Assignment of mortgage of Hayes grounds (11a), Butleigh. With bonds.. Date: 1775.
DD/S/BT/5/4/23 - 1] Mary Holman of Butleigh Wootton 2] Edward Talbot the elder of Butleigh 3] Edward son of Edward Talbot 4] James Grenville Assignment of Biggs closes (9a) in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1779.
DD/S/BT/8/7/23 - Copy will (1780) of Mary Holman of Butleigh, proved 1781.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1781.
8a2) Stephen Holman [brother of Richard] died 1790
Married: Butleigh 22 Apr 1754 Elizabeth Halch (Balch?)
Children:
1) Richard Chr. 28 Apr 1755 Butleigh (8a2A)
2) Elizabeth Chr. 19 Mar 1761 Butleigh
3) John Chr. 12 Jan 1763 Butleigh
Stephen was Overseer in 1760 and 1784, 86. He was churchwarden 1773-1775. From 1750/51 - 1790 he paid rates on part of late John Hill's property. From 1775 he started paying rates on 'late Roods' in succession to Richard [in Southmoor] – up to 1790. In 1791/2 the rates on Stephen's properties was then paid by his son John. He paid until sometime post 1827 when the records end.
In 1761 the OOP paid him for 8 sheaves for John Gills house. In Nov 1763 Amy Difford was paid for providing his maid with a room. He supplied wheat to the Look family in Jan 1766. In Apr 1781 he was paid for providing 15 reed sheaves.
Elizabeth Holman married Edward Eades in Butleigh on 2 Oct 1779. In 1779 a list of men to serve as Tythingmen included Stephen (OOP). In 1772 the John Rocke scheme for apprentices listed him as ratepayer and his group was to take William Paulet (Pollett) as apprentice.
DD/S/BT/17/6/12 - 1] Thomas Hodges of Butleigh, yeoman, grandson and devisee of Richard Toghill decd and Stephen Holman of Butleigh, farmer and grazier brother and heir of Richard decd 2] Solomon Reynolds of Butleigh, yeoman Mortgage of Southmoor (3a) and Newditch (2a), Date: 1777.
Will exists of 1790 in the Grenville papers BUTLEIGH deeds DD\BR\ho/15, Copy will, Stephen Holman of Butleigh, yeo., 1790.. 1835 BUTLEIGH deed DD\BR\ho/28 - copy of Will of John . In 1764 Stephen exchanged land with James Grenville who was consolidating his landholdings.
8a2A) Richard Holman Chr. 28 Apr 1755 Butleigh, bur. 20 Jan 1831 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 18 May 1785 Sarah Smithfield (witness John Holman) b. 1740, bur. 20 Oct 1819 Butleigh
Probably the Richard on the list of commoners to serve as Tythingmen, in rotation, in 1779 – for 'Jacklets'. The Richard Gent who started paying rates in 1785 for his wife's 'darksham'. He was churchwarden in 1785 and Overseer 1791/2, 1798 and 1803. In Sep 1800 the OOP paid hi for 44 bushels of potatoes, 20 bushels of barley and the carriage of the same.
DD/S/BT/9/1/6-7 - Land conveyed to Richard Holman by John Holman of Glastobury. 1774 1] Richard Holman of Butleigh Wootton, farmer and grazier.
DD/S/BT/15/1/22 - 1] Richard Holman of Butleigh, yeoman 2] Richard Hoare of Barn Elms, Surrey Covenant to produce deeds with schedule.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1783.
PROB 11/1791B - Will of Richard Holman Gentleman Butleigh , Somerset Date: 1831. Holman conveyed land to Richard Grenville in 1835.
8a3) Thomas Holman bur. 5 Oct 1775 Butleigh
Married: Mary bur. 31 Jan 1769 Butleigh
Children:
1) Mary Holman Chr. 17 Feb 1749 Butleigh
A Mary Homan married John Newport in Butleigh on 28 May 1772. A property 'late David Masters' had rates paid by Thomas Holman and Elizabeth Masters from 1747 until 1750 when it became Thomas Holman and John Wheller (for part of Gathrens). Thomas listed as ratepayer in the 1772 John Rocke Scheme. In 1775 this became John Newport and John Wheller.
9) Henry Holman Chr. 26 Jan 1720 Butleigh illegit s.o. Elizabeth Holman, bur. 7 May 1720 Butleigh [the Elizabeth bur. 4 Sep 1722 Butleigh?]
10) Ann Holman married John Masters in Butleigh in 1727
A property owned by William and/or David Masters until 1745 was owned in 1745/46 by Henry Holman and Elizabeth Masters [see (15) below).
11) William Holman
Married: Butleigh 25 Apr 1728 Mary Abbot, # widow, bur. 27 Apr 1747 Butleigh
Children:
1) John Chr. 15 Aug 1730 Butleigh, bur. 5 Dec 1731 Butleigh
Possibly the William Holman, labourer, who worked on the re-building of the church roof in 1750-51. A William paid for 24 days work repairing the highways in 1762 (OOP 1763).
12) Richard Holman bur. 3 Aug 1751 Butleigh
Married: Mary? [the Mary bur. 30 Jan 1743 Butleigh ? - BUT SEE 16]
The OOP paid widow Periam for the coffin of Mary Holman in 1743. In 1743 - 1750/51 the OOP paid Richard Holman's house rent (the poor one). In 1741 Richard's wife, Mary, received OOP assistance in her necessity and 28 weeks relief at 1/6d per week. Richard received 3 months relief.
A Richard was Churchwarden in 1743 and Overseer in 1742, 1745. From c. 1730 Richard Holman paid rates on George Hamiltons Southmoor Ground (in succession to his father?), in some part together with John and later Ann Kelway. Richard Holman paid rates on Southmoor with Thomas Periam for George Hamilton from 1747 – 1751.
13) William Holman bur. 27 Sep 1776 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 1 Sep 1747 Elizabeth Callow bur. 16 Mar 1753 Butleigh? #
A William was paid for reeds by the OOP in 1764/65
DD/S/BT/6/7/6 - 1] William Eades of Butleigh, yeoman, and wife Mary [Callow] and Thomas Cooke aged 16 2] William Holman of Butleigh, yeoman Partition of an estate by assignment of a house, High Croft (4a), Breach (20a), Heal (16a) and Wheatland (3.5a) to William and Mary Date: 1773.
14) Richard Holman b. 2 Mar 1801, Chr. 14 Jan 1802 Glastonbury, grazier, farmer, s.o. John and Ann Holman, died 1884 (Dec Q 5c/372 Wells) 41-4
Richard appeared in 1841 as a grazier living with two servants at Holman Farm. He was still there in 1844 when the tithe map was made. He married Jemima Roach in 1847 (Jun Q 10/813 Wells) and by 1851 they had moved to Glastonbury (Avalon House) where Richard was a farmer with 138 acres. They had a son Richard b. 1854 (Dec Q 5c/572 Wells) but he died in 1877 (Dec Q 5c/379 Wells) aged just 22. Jemima died at Coombe House, Glastonbury, aged 86 on July 25th 1899 (Sep Q 5c/306 Wells).
15) William Holman b. 1860 Bletchingley, Surrey, butler, s.o. Edward and Rosanna Holman
Married: Butleigh 28 Apr 1900 (Jun Q 5c/933 Wells) Ada Sarah Duffill b. 1865 (Sep Q 5c/584 Wells) Butleigh [Wookey Hole on 1911 census], d.o. George Duffill #
Children:
1) Edward Ashley b. 1902 Downton
2) Rachel Mary b. 1907 Downton
In 1861 William had lived with his parents in Middle Row, Bletchingley where his father was a cordwainer employing two men. In 1881 he was footman to William Pleydell-Bouverie at 8, Ennismore Gardens, Westminster, London. In 1891 William was personal valet to the Earl of Radnor's son at Longford Castle, Britford, Wilts. At the time of his marriage he was a butler residing in Bishopstrow near Warminster. In 1901 and 1911 William was innkeeper at "the Bull", Salisbury Road, Downton, Salisbury, Wilts.
Holmes
1) George Holmes b. 1833 Stonileigh, Warwicks, gamekeeper, innkeeper, died 1903 (Sep Q 5b/31 St. Thomas, Devon) 71-78
Married: 1859 (Sep Q 8b/735 West Derby) Elizabeth Green b. 1839 Woolton, Lancs., d.o. James and Elizabeth Green 71-78
Children:
1) Annie b. 1861 Kirkby, Lancs 71-78
2) George b. 1863 Simmons Wood, Lancs 71-78
3) Harriet b. 1864 Simmons Wood, Lancs 71-78
4) William b. 1866 Arrowe, Cheshire 71-78
5) Elizabeth b. 1867 Barton, Stafford, Chr. 11 Aug 1867 Butleigh 71-78
6) Arthur Albert Chr. 18 Jul 1869 Butleigh, bur. 12 May 1870 (Jun Q 5c/422 Wells - Arthur Herbert) Butleigh
7) Albert [Arthur] Herbert b. Feb, Chr. 10 Apr 1871 (Mar Q 5c/599 Wells) Butleigh 71-78
8) Ada Henrietta Chr. 23 Mar 1873 (Mar Q 5c/585 Wells) Butleigh
9) Percival b. 1876 Buckland Brewer
10) Alban b. 1879 Buckland Brewer
11) Claud b. Dec 1880 Buckland Brewer
George was a gamekeeper and his occupation was somewhat peripatetic as is seen from his children's birthplaces. On the 1861 census they appeared at Kirkby, Lancs, living in 'Rough Lane'. In 1871 they lived at Bakers Grave and must have arrived after 1867 in time for Arthurs's birth. They left Butleigh sometime after the birth of Ada in 1873 and by 1876 they lived at Gatons, Buckland Brewer, Devon where they appeared on the 1881 census. By 1891 the parents were at Newton Tracey, Devon where they remained in 1901 but with George now the landlord of the "Hunters Inn".
Herbert is absent after 1881 but Ada married a blacksmith, William Symons in 1896 (Jun Q 5b/973 Barnstaple) and they lived at Westonway, Newton Tracey in 1901 with their three children.
2) Thomas Holmes b. 1822, d. 31 May, bur. 5 Jun 1867 (Jun Q 5c/388 Wells) Butleigh
In 1841 a Thomas and George Holmes of the correct ages were two of the sons of Mary Holmes living in St. George's Birmingham. Thomas was probably the brother of George (above) - they most likely arrived together but Thomas died in Butleigh just before George's daughter Elizabeth was Christened.
3) Elizabeth Holmes b. 1845 bur. 15 Jul 1932 Butleigh
Elizabeth died at Harrietsham, Kent. Almost certainly Elizabeth Knight Chr. 20 Jul 1845 (Sep Q 10/433 Wells) Butleigh Wootton d.o. James and Caroline Knight who married Stephen Holmes n 1866 (Sep Q 1a/1020 Marylebone). This couple lived first in Horncastle, Lincolnshire, where Stephen was a joiner (1871). They moved to Pancras (1881) then Hornsey (1891) where they had a son Francis. By 1901 Elizabeth was a florist living alone in Chichester.
Holt
1) Edward Holt b. 1878 Devizes, Wilts, gamekeeper 01-140
Edward lodged with Emily Witcombe in Quarry Lane in 1901 as an under gamekeeper. Nfi
Homan (see Holman)
Homas
1) John Homas
Married: Anne
Children:
1) John Chr. 18 Aug 1817 Butleigh
2) Priscilla Chr. 18 Aug 1817 Butleigh
The surname Homas does exist but this family may have been Holmes or Thomas? Nfi in Somerset.
Honey
1) John Honey b. 1884 Duloe, Cornwall, groom, s.o. Richard and Mary Honey 01-145
John worked for Robert Neville-Grenville at Corvyle in 1901. In 1891 he lived in Duloe with his parents - his father was a woodman.
Honniball
1) Robert Honniball b. 1839 (Dec Q 10/439 Wellington Som) West Buckland, Som., farm servant 61-55.
Robert was a farm servant on the farm of Henry Hoddinott in 1861. Nfi
Hood
1) Samuel Hood b. 1689, Chr. 6 Jan 1690 Butleigh, vicar, s.o. Alexander Hood and Elizabeth Beech or 'Beach' [mar. 5 Jul 1664 Thornbury], d. 28 Jun, bur. 5 Aug 1777 Butleigh
Married: 11 Mar 1719 Yetminster Mary Hoskyns b. 1697 Beaminster, Dorset, d.o. Richard Hoskins, d. 10 Oct, bur. 12 Oct 1766 Butleigh
Children:
1) Ann Chr. 2 Jun 1721 Beaminster, Dorset, bur. 12 Apr 1796 Butleigh
2) Elizabeth b.c. 1723 Dorset, married Edward Walker in Butleigh on 5 Dec 1755 witness Ann Hood.
3) Samuel b. 12 Dec 1724, Chr. 24 Jan 1725 Butleigh, d. 27 Jan 1816 at 5, Queen's Square, Bath (Admiral Lord Hood)
4) Alexander b. 2 Dec 1726, Chr. 29 Jan 1727 Butleigh, d. May 2 1814 (Admiral Lord Bridport)
5) Arthur William (vicar) b. 11 Dec 1730, Chr. 6 Jan 1731 Butleigh, d. 23 Nov, bur. 25 Nov 1769 Butleigh
6) Richard b. 6 Oct, Chr. 13 Nov 1733 Butleigh, bur. 4 May 1746 Butleigh
7) John b. 17 Sep, Chr. 8 Oct 1736 Butleigh bur. 29 Jun 1749 Butleigh
8) Mary b. 13 Feb, Chr. 13 Mar 1739 Butleigh, bur. 7 Jun 1742 Butleigh
Samuel Hood's father Alexander, was born in Mosterton, Dorset, the son of Tremor Hood (1611 - 1691). Samuel was the headmaster of Tucker's Free School 1715-1724 at Beaminster leaving in 1723/4 to become vicar of Butleigh. He became the prebendary of Wells Cathedral and vicar of Butleigh and on 7 Apr 1761 became vicar of Thorncombe in Devon. Samuel had two famous sons who became admirals, Alexander (1727 - 1814), Lord Bridport, who died without issue and Samuel Lord Hood (1724 - 1816) to whom the 'Butleigh monument' was erected [see below]. The eldest child Ann never married and lived in Dumb Court [St. James' Sq.] from 1777 until her death. One of the youngest sons, Richard, died by drowning in the Brue, Arthur mentioned in the CW accounts in 1744 when he killed 3 dozen sparrows and received 6d for their heads.
A third son who succeeded Samuel as the vicar of Butleigh was Arthur William who achieved a BA Cambridge in 1750, MA in 1754 and was ordained 29 Feb 1755. He entered the Navy on 2 Dec 1755 as a chaplain and served on the Trident, Montague, and Hercules before becoming chaplain to the garrison at Embden on 30 Jul 1760. In March 1761 he took sick leave and returned home to take over his father's parish of Butleigh on 13the Apr 1761. He became prebendary of Holcombe at Wells Cathedral from 14 Sep 1763 and died in 1769 aged only 38.
The rates were paid by Samuel Hood until his death in 1777 and from 1777 – 1796 by Miss Ann Hood. From 1764 Samuel paid rates in addition to the vicarage on a property 'late Mrs. Davies'. In 1796 the rates began to be paid by Ann's married sister Elizabeth, Mrs. Walker. In 1800 the property rated Mr. Walker occupier Mr. Nourse, and this lasted until 1805/6. In 1806 the property had been acquired by General Grenville.
Alexander appears in 1796 paying rates on commons on the Kings Sedgemoor Ground and Mrs. Hood also paid rates on ground there from 1800. In 1804 only Mrs. Hood was the ratepayer on Hood properties there. In 1800 Alexander Hood began paying rates in Butleigh and his properties were listed as; his estate, late Hanns, part of late William Talbotts, part Mr. Pratts, part Geo. Reynolds, Mrs. Mitchells, part Cooks East End, part Thomas Goodsons and late Hawkers. He later acquired Rood, late Bells but in 1806 the ratepayer became Mrs. Elizabeth Hood. This was his nephew's widow. John Cannon called him 'a cunning insinuating priest' but then Hood had played a part in dismissing Cannon from a potentially lucrative post (Money p. 175).
Samuel Hood's Will of 15 April 1774, proved Aug 1777 he asks that: "my mortal part to be interred within the Communion Rails of Butleigh Chancel as near as can be to my dear wife and four children Mary Richard John and Arthur William" (deceased) and mentions "my daughter Ann" and "my sons Captain Samuel and Captain Alexander ... their sister Walker".
PROB 11/1275 Hood Anne Will of Anne Hood Spinster Butleigh , Somerset Date: 1796.Proved May 1796 Refers to: "my two Brothers the Right honourable Admiral Lord Hood and Admiral Sir Alexander Hood", "my sister Elizabeth Walker ... her husband Edward Walker", "my nephew the honourable Henry Hood", "my nephew William Hood Walker", "my cousin Anne Hoskins".
Samuel Hood, 1st Viscount Hood (courtesy of Wikipedia; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Hood,_1st_Viscount_Hood) P
The son of Samuel Hood, vicar of Butleigh in Somerset, and prebendary of Wells entered the Royal Navy on 6 May 1741. He served part of his time as midshipman with George Brydges Rodney on the Ludlow, and became a lieutenant in 1746. He was fortunate in serving under active officers, and had opportunities to see service in the North Sea during the War of the Austrian Succescion. In 1754, he was made commander of the sloop Jamaica and served in her on the North American station. In July 1756, while still on the North American station, he took command of the sloop HMS Lively. At the outbreak of the Seven Years War in 1756, the navy was rapidly expanded which benefited Hood. Later that year Hood was promoted to Post Captain and given command of HMS Grafton. In 1757, while in temporary command of Antelope (50 guns), he drove a French ship ashore in Audierne Bay, and captured two privateers. His zeal attracted the favourable notice of the Admiralty and he was appointed to a ship of his own. On Aug 21 1758, aged 31 he married the 54 year old heiress Molly West.
In 1759, when captain of the Vestal (32 guns), he captured the French Bellone (32 guns) after a sharp action. During the war, his services were wholly in the Channel, and he was engaged under Rodney in 1759 in destroying the vessels collected by the French to serve as transports in the proposed invasion of England. In 1778, he accepted a command which in the ordinary course would have terminated his active career, becoming Commissioner of the dockyard at Portsmouth and governor of the Naval Academy. These posts were generally given to officers who were retiring from the sea. In 1778, on the occasion of the King's visit to Portsmouth, Hood was made a baronet.
The American War if Independence was deeply unpopular with much of the British public and navy. Many admirals had declined to serve under Lord Sandwich, the First Lord of the Admiralty. Admiral Rodney, who then commanded in the West Indies, had complained of a lack of proper support from his subordinates, whom he accused of disaffection. The Admiralty, anxious to secure the services of trustworthy flag officers, promoted Hood to rear-admiral on 26 September 1780, and sent him to the West Indies to act as second in command under Rodney, who knew him personally. He joined Rodney in January 1781 in his flagship Barfleur, and remained in the West Indies or on the coast of North America until the close of the War of American Independence.
The expectation that he would work harmoniously with Rodney was not entirely justified. Their correspondence shows that they were not on friendly terms; but Hood always did his duty, and he was so able that no question of removing him from the station ever arose. The unfortunate turn for the British taken by the campaign of 1781 was largely due to Rodney's neglect of Hood's advice. If he had been allowed to choose his own position, he could have prevented the Comte de Grasse from reaching Fort Royal with the reinforcements from France in April.
Battle of the Chesapeake - When Rodney decided to return to Britain for the sake of his health in the autumn of 1781, Hood was ordered to take the bulk of the fleet to the North American coast during the hurricane months. Hood joined Admiral Thomas Graves in the unsuccessful effort to relieve the army at Yorktown, when the British fleet was driven off by the French Admiral, the Comte de Grasse, at the Battle of the Chesapeake. When he returned to the West Indies, he was for a time in independent command owing to Rodney's absence in England. De Grasse attacked the British islands of St Kitts and Nevis with a force much superior to Hood's squadron.Hood made an unsuccessful attempt in January 1782 to save them from capture, with 22 ships to 29, and the series of bold movements by which he first turned the French out of their anchorage at Basseterre of St Kitts and then beat off their attacks, were one of the most better accomplishments of any British admiral during the war.
Battle of the Saintes - In 1782 Hood took part in a British fleet under Rodney which defeated a combined French and Spanish fleet which was planning an invasion of Jamaica. The French commander De Grasse, who had been responsible for the victory at Chesapeake was captured and taken back to Britain as a prisoner. Hood was deeply criticial of Rodney for nor pushing home his victory against the retreating enemy fleet. Had they pursued, he suggested, the British might have taken additional prizes and destroyed the French naval presence in the Carribean. Eventually Hood was ordered to chase, and he captured two ships on April 17.
While serving in the Carribean Hood became acquainted with, and later became a mentor to Horatio Nelson who was a young frigate commander. Hood had been a friend of Nelson's uncle Maurice Suckling. In 1782 Hood introduced Nelson to the future King William, Duke of Clarence who was then a serving naval officer in New York.
Hood was made an Irish peer for his share in the defeat of the Comte de Grasse on 9 April and 12 April near Dominica.During the peace, he entered Parliament as Member for Westminster in the election of 1784 where he was a supporter of the government of William Pitt the Younger. He was promoted to vice-admiral in 1787, and in July 1788, was appointed to the Board of Admiralty under the Second Earl of Chatham, brother of the Prime Minister.
The French Revolution and the Defence of Toulon - On the outbreak of the French Revolutiony War in 1793, he was sent to the Mediterranean Sea as Commander-in-Chief. His period of command, which lasted from May 1793 to October 1794, was very busy. In August 1793 French royalists and other opponents of the revolution took over the town and invited Hood, whose fleet was blockading the city, to occupy the town. Hood, without time to request for instructions from the Admiralty in London, moved swiftly to take command of the port. There were two main reasons for the British move. It was hoped that Toulon could be a centre of French resistance to Paris, and also to take possession of the French Mediteranian fleet of fifty eight warships, which lay in the harbour. It was hoped that depriving the French revolutionaries of their maritime resources would cripple the revolution.
He occupied Toulon on the invitation of the French royalists, in co-operation with the Spaniards. In December of the same year, the allies, who did not work harmoniously together, were driven out, mainly by the generalship of Napoleon. Hood ordered the French fleet burned to prevent them falling back into the hands of the revolutionaries, a task carried out by Captain Sydney Smith. Afterwards Hood and his British force withdrew to maintain their blockade of the coast.
Anglo-Corsican Kingdom - Hood then turned to the occupation of Corsica, which he had been invited to take in the name of the King of Britain by Paoli. The island was for a short time added to the dominions of George III, chiefly by the exertions of the fleet and the co-operation of Pascal Paoli, who ruled the Kingdom of Corsica. While the occupation of Corsica was being effected, the French at Toulon had so far recovered that they were able to send a fleet to sea. In June, Hood sailed in the hope of bringing it to action. The plan which he laid to attack it in the Golfe Jouan in June may possibly have served to some extent as an inspiration, if not as a model, to Nelson (who has been recorded as saying that Hood was "the greatest sea officer I ever knew.") for the Battle of the Nile, but the wind was unfavourable, and the attack could not be carried out. In October, he was recalled to England in consequence of some misunderstanding with the admiralty or the ministry, which has never been explained.
He attained the rank of full Admiral in April 1794. However, he held no further command at sea. In 1796, he was named governor of Greenwich Hospital, which he held until his death. A peerage of Great Britain was conferred on his wife, Susanna, as Baroness Hood of Catherington in 1795, and he was himself created Viscount Hood of Whitley in 1796. The titles descended to his son, Henry (1753–1836), the ancestor of the present Viscount Hood.
There are several portraits of Lord Hood by Abbot in the Guildhall and in the National Portrait Gallery. He was also painted by Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Gainsborough.
Legacy
A biographical notice of Hood by McArthur, his secretary during the Mediterranean command, appeared in the Naval Chronicle, vol. ii. Charnock's Biogr. Nay. vi., Ralfe, Nav. Biog. i., may also be consulted. His correspondence during his command in America was published by the Navy Record Society.
The history of his campaigns will be found in the historians of the wars in which he served: for the earlier years, Beatson's Naval and Military Memoirs; for the later, James's Naval History, vol. i., for the English side, and for the French, Troudes, Batailles navales de la France, ii. and iii., and Chevalier's Histoire de la marine française pendant Ia guerre de l'indépendance américaine and Pendant Ia République.
In 1792, Lieutenant William Broughton, sailing with the expedition of George Vancouver to the Northwest Coast of North America, named Mount Hood in present-day Oregon, and Hood's Canal in present-day Washington, after Hood. Two US Naval ships were named after Mount Hood, which could be considered mildly ironic as Hood had served against the United States during the American War of Independence.
Two of the three ships of the Royal Navy named HMS Hood were named after him as well, including HMS Hood (51), sunk by the Bismarck in 1941 during World War II.
Alexander Hood, 1st Viscount Bridport (courtesy of Wikipedia; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Hood,_1st_Viscount_Bridport) P
Admiral Alexander Hood, 1st Viscount Bridport, KB (December 2, 1726 – May 2, 1814) was an officer of the British Royal Navy during the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars, and the brother of Admiral Samuel Hood, 1st Viscount Hood. He entered the navy in January 1741, and was appointed Lieutenant of HMS Bridgewater in 1746, and in that rank served for ten years in various ships. He was promoted to Commander in 1756 and served as flag captain for Rear Admiral Sir Charles Saunders, first in Prince in the Mediterranean (the flag-ship of Rear-Admiral Saunders, under whom Hood had served as a lieutenant), then in Minerva frigate. In the Seven Years' War he fought at the Battle of Quiberon Bay on 20 November 1759, and in 1761 Minerva recaptured after a long struggle, the 60-gun Warwick of equal force, which had been captured by the French ship Atlante in 1756. For the remainder of the war, from 1761 to 1763 Hood was captain of Africa in the Mediterranean.From this time forward he was in continuous employment afloat and ashore. In 1778 he was appointed to Robust and fought at the First Battle of Ushant on July 22. In the court-martial of Admiral Augustus Keppel that followed the battle, although adverse popular feeling was aroused by the course which he took in Keppel's defence, his conduct does not seem to have injured his professional career.
In 1780 he was promoted to Rear Admiral of the White, and succeeded Kempenfeldt as one of Howe's flag-officers. In the American Revolutionary War, in HMS Queen, he took part in Howe's relief of Gibraltar in 1782.
He served in the House of Commons for a time. Promoted vice-admiral in 1787, he became K.B. in the following year, and on the occasion of the Spanish armament in 1790 flew his flag again for a short time. On the outbreak of war with France in 1793 he went to sea again. In the War of the First Coalition, on June 1, 1794, in HMS Royal George, he was third in command to Admiral Lord Howe at the battle of the Glorious First of June. For his exploits in this battle he was elevated to the Irish peerage as Baron Bridport. MEDAL
Henceforth Bridport was practically in independent command. On 23 June 1795, with his flag in Queen Charlotte (100), he fought the inconclusive Battle of Groix against the French under Rear Admiral Louis Thomas Villaret de Joyeuse off the Île de Groix and captured three ships. He was much criticized in the navy for his failure to win a more decisive victory. However the British public considered the battle a great victory and Hood's peerage was made English and he was promoted to Vice Admiral of England.
From 1795 until his retirement in 1800, he was commander of the Channel Fleet. In 1796 and 1797 he directed the war from London, rarely hoisting his flag afloat save at such critical times as that of the Irish expedition in 1797. He was about to put to sea when the Spithead fleet mutinied. He succeeded at first in pacifying the crew of his flag-ship, who had no personal grudge against their admiral, but a few days later the mutiny broke out afresh, and this time was uncontrollable. For a whole week the mutineers were supreme, and it was only by the greatest exertions of the old Lord Howe that order was then restored and the men returned to duty. After the mutiny had been suppressed, Hood took the fleet to sea as commander-in-chief in name as well as in fact, and from 1798 he personally directed the blockade of Brest which grew stricter and stricter as time went on. In 1800 he was relieved by John Jervis, 1st Earl of St Vincent.
In reward for his fine record his peerage was made a viscounty. He spent the remaining years of his life in retirement. He died on May 2nd 1814. The viscountcy in the English peerage died with him; the Irish barony passed to the younger branch of his brother's family, for whom the viscountcy was re-created in 1868.
2) Alexander Hood b. 23 Apr 1758 Netherbury, Chr. 27 Apr Mosterton, Dorset, son of Samuel Hood (14 Aug 1715- 31 Oct 1805) and Anne Bere, died 21 Apr 1798 on the H.M.S. Mars [killed in action] buried 7 May 1798 Butleigh. Picture
Married: Butleigh 11 Jul 1792 Elizabeth Periam b. 31 Jan, Chr. 12 Feb. 1770 Butleigh d.o. John and Agnes Periam, died 9 Jan, bur. 16 Jan 1855 (Mar Q 5c/535 Wells) Butleigh 41W-16, 51W-39 #
Children:
1) (Sir) Alexander Hood b. 5 Jul 1793 Tidlake, Chr. 1 Jan 1794 Butleigh (2a)
2) John Periam bur. 6 Apr 1796 Butleigh
3) Elizabeth Periam b. 16 Jan 1797 Tidlake, Chr. 24 Apr 1797 Butleigh, d. 19 Jun, bur. 20 Jun 1867 (Jun Q 5c/389 Wells) Butleigh 41W-16, 51W-39, 61W-63
Alexander was the grandson of Alexander Hood (b.c. 1675 Mosterton, d. 24 Feb 1756 Netherbury) who was the brother of Samuel Hood, the vicar of Butleigh. Alexander's father Samuel had joined the Navy as a purser or Paymaster at the ripe age of 46 and served aboard 'HMS Druid' and was still serving in the navy aged 57. Alexander had a brother Arthur who also served in the navy but was lost aboard the “Pomona” when sunk with all hands on 8 Sep 1776 in a storm. Alexander joined the navy in 1767 and served first on 'HMS Rodney' under his 2nd cousin Captain Samuel Hood. In 1790 he commanded the frigate 'HMS Hebe' assigned to the Channel Fleet. Between 1794 and 1797 he was unable to command a ship due to poor health but returned to duty and commanded the 'HMS Mars' in 1797. During battle with the French ship 'Hercule' he was shot in the thigh and died just as the French ship surrendered.
Alexander appears in 1796 paying rates on commons on the Kings Sedgemoor Ground but was the 'Late Alexander Hood Esq.' in 1798. He paid rates in Butleigh from 1792/93 on 'Late Hanns', 'Wm Talbotts', 'Mr. Pratts', 'pt George Reynolds', 'Mrs. Mitchels', 'part of Symmonds', 'Cooks East End', 'pt Mr. Thomas Goodsons' and 'late Hawkers'.
Mrs. Hood also paid rates on ground there from 1800 and was sole ratepayer from 1804. Elizabeth, Mrs. Hood was ratepayer in Butleigh Wootton from 1806 as heir of her uncle Alexander Hood, Lord Bridport and she also paid rates on Southmoor Ground from 1806. In 1824/5 Elizabeth paid rates on four properties belonging to her son which, from 1825 are listed separately in his name.
Elizabeth Periam Hood appears on both the 1841 and 1851 censuses with her daughter Elizabeth Periam Lunn at Wootton House. Her daughter had married the vicar of Butleigh Francis Lunn (b. 1795 Butleigh, s.o. Griggs Lunn) # on 27 Dec 1837 (Dec Q 10/701 Wells) Butleigh, but he had died on 4 Aug, bur 15 Aug 1839 (Sep Q 10/291 Wells) Butleigh. After her mother's death in 1855, Elizabeth Lunn continued to live at Wootton House until her own death in 1867. In 1851 besides Elizabeth Hood and her daughter Elizabeth Lunn there were the following staying at Wootton House:
a) Amelia Ann Hood, daughter-in-law and two of her children, Alexander (2a1) and Sophia.
b) Emily Periam Somerville, Elizabeth's granddaughter, and her daughter Frances Fownes Somerville. #
2a) Sir Alexander Hood b. 5 Jul 1793 Tidlake, Surrey, Chr. 1 Jan 1794 Butleigh, died 7 Mar 1851 Wimpole Street, London (Mar Q 1/119 Marylebone), bur. 19 Mar 1851 Butleigh
Married: St. Gregory's, Dawlish, Devon 3 Aug 1815 Amelia Ann Bateman b. 1790 Ham Hall, Derbyshire d.o. Sir Hugh Bateman of Hartlington Hall, Derbyshire and Temperance Gisbourne, died 31 Jan 1883 Dunster Castle, died 31 Jan, buried 7 Feb 1883 (Mar Q 5c/233 Wells) Butleigh 51W-39, 61W-63
Children:
1) Samuel Bateman Periam Hood b. 24 Sep 1816, d. 18 Feb 1817, bur. 24 Feb 1817 Butleigh
2) Emily Periam b. 4 Feb 1818 Tidlake, Chr. 24 Jun 1819 Butleigh, d. 1 Jan 1900
3) Alexander Bateman Periam Acland-Hood b. 20 Apr 1819 (2a1)
4) Arthur William Acland b. 14 Jul 1824 (2a2)
5) Ann Elizabeth Periam b. 1832, Chr. 27 Aug 1829 Butleigh, d. 2 Dec 1917
6) Sophia Mary b. 16 Nov 1820, Chr. 28 Jun 1821 Butleigh, d. 31 Mar, bur. 6 Jun 1857 (Jun Q 5c/394 Wells) Butleigh 51W-39
In 1861 Amelia lived at Wootton House as 'Head' in place of her absent husband while her sister-in-law Elizabeth Lunn and brother-in-law Arthur William Acland Hood also resided there, the latter with his wife Fanny and two daughters. On census night 1871 Wootton House was empty apart from the servants.
Sir Alexander Hood doesn't appear at Wootton House on any of the censuses, only his wife Amelia in 1851/61 and three of their children. Sir Alexander was at Compton Castle, Compton Pauncefoot in 1841 with his children Emily and Ann - but his wife and Sophia were also listed there plus Temperance Bateman (70). Alexander was MP for Somerset 1847 - 51. He died before the 1851 census.
Their first child had died in infancy and the second Emily married James Curtis Somerville (d. 13 Jun 1876) in Butleigh on 23 Jun 1846 (Jun Q 10/802 Wells). #
Their son Alexander married in 1849 (1a1) and Arthur in 1855 (2a2).
The fifth child Ann Elizabeth married George Fownes Luttrell (d. 24 May 1910) on 26 Aug 1852 (Sep Q 5c/521 Williton).#
The sixth child, Sophia married the Rev. John Geo. Hickley [b. Portsmouth 1817, Rector of Street and Walton] in Butleigh on 21 Apr 1853 (Jun Q 5c/1058 Wells) but she died four years later. The Rev. Hickley married again - to Helen Wood from Cheshire, in 1860, a young lady 20 years his junior, and he remained the vicar of Walton for over 30 more years. #
In 1881 Amelia Ann Hood appeared at "Pinewood", Tormohan Devon with her widowed daughter Emily P. Somerville. She died in 1883.
2a1) Alexander Bateman Periam Acland-Hood b. 20 Apr 1819 Bath, Chr. 24 Jun 1819 Butleigh, died 29 Apr 1892 (Jun Q 5c/205 Williton), buried St. Audries 51W-39
Married: Stogursey 11 Sep 1849 (Sep Q 10/741 Williton) Isabel Harriet Fuller-Palmer-Acland b. 1832, d.o. Sir F. F. Fuller-Palmer-Acland and Fanny Leader, died 2 Dec 1903 (Dec Q 1a/293 St. George Hanover Square) buried St. Audries
Children:
1) Fanny b. 23 Jul 1852, d. 1 Sep 1941
2) Sir Alexander Fuller-Acland-Hood b. 26 Sep 1853 (Dec Q 5c/337 Williton) West Quantoxhead, d. 4 Jun 1917 1st Baron St. Audries (2a1A)
3) Ethel b. 11 Feb 1856, d. 16 Aug 1943
4) Lt.-Col. Arthur Acland Hood b. 24 Dec 1859/1860 (Mar Q 5c/405 Williton) West Quantoxhead, d. 24 Apr 1929
5) Isabel b. 1862, d. 19 Jan 1933
6) Henry b. 12 Dec 1863, d. 26 Jan 1923
7) Robert b. 7 Sep 1866, d. 23 Apr 1912
8) William b. 15 Jul 1868, d. 26 Oct 1933
9) Margaret b. 1870, d. 6 Jan 1957
Alexander had appeared alone in 1851 at Wootton House and in 1861 he appeared at St. Audries with his wife and four children, plus father-in-law. In March 1871 Alexander, his wife Isabel and their nine children appear on the census at Fairfield House, Stogursey, the home of his father-in-law Peregrine Acland. Both gentlemen were magistrates and deputy Lieutenants of the county. In 1881 the Acland-Hoods were back at St. Audries and still there in 1891, though latterly with three unmarried daughters and Robert, a son in Holy Orders. After the death of Alexander his widow Isabel was head of household at St. Audries for the 1901 census, living with three of her grandchildren, and a spinster daughter, Fanny.
After the death of Arthur William, Lord Hood of Avalon (2a2) in 1901, Wootton House was refurbished, improved and let out for over fifty years (e.g. to the Patons #) before being occupied in 1953 by Arthur John Palmer Fuller-Acland-Hood (2a1Ai) below, a grandson of Alexander Bateman Periam Acland-Hood.
2a1A) Alexander Fuller Acland Hood 1st Baron St. Audries b. 26 Sep 1853 Scotland, bur. 7 Jun 1917 St. Audries, Som.
Married: Mildred Rose Eveleigh de Moleyns b. 4 Aug 1865 Burnham, Dingle Ireland, d. 11 Oct 1949 bur. St. Audries
Children:
1) Audrey Mildred b. 30 Apr 1889 London
2) Maud Isabel b. 22 Nov 1892 London
3) Lord Alexander Peregrine [Baron St. Audries] b. 24 Dec 1893 St. Audries, d.16 Dec 1971 bur. St. Audries [Barony became extinct thereafter]
4) Arthur John Palmer b. 11 Feb 1906 (2a1Ai)
2a1Ai) Arthur John Palmer Fuller-Acland-Hood b. 11 Feb 1906 (Mar Q 1a/429 St. George Hanover Sq) London, d. 2 Nov 1964 Butleigh
2a2) Arthur William Acland Hood b. 14 Jul 1824, Chr. 16 Jul Bath, Chr. 22 Sep 1825 Butleigh, died 16 Nov, bur. 23 Nov 1901 (Dec Q 5c/314 Wells) Butleigh 61W-63, 91W-117, 01W-140 Picture
Married: 2 Oct 1855 (Dec Q 3a/947 Bicester) Caversfield House, Oxon Fanny Henrietta McLean b. 1835 Kirkby, Yorkshire, d.o. Sir Charles Fitzroy MacLean and Emily Eleanor Marsham, died 29 Aug 1919 61W-63, 91W-117, 01W-140
Children:
1) Emily Isabel Chr. 19 Jun 1859 (Jun Q 5c/650 Wells) Butleigh Wootton died 18 May 1934 61W-63
2) Fanny Sophia b. 1861 (Mar Q 5c/623 Wells) Butleigh Wootton, bur. 21 Jun 1945 Butleigh (Allen) 61W-63, 91W-117, 01W-140
Arthur joined the Royal Navy in 1836 and was on the coast of Syria at the capture of Acre. He was promoted to lieutenant of the "President", on the Cape Station, from which he was paid off in 1849, then appointed to the "Arethusa" in 1850 and promoted to commander in 1854. In 1856 Arthur went to China in command of the brig "Acorn". He was engaged at Foshan on 1 June 1857, and at the capture of Canton (Guangzhou) on 27–28 December 1857, for which he was promoted captain on 26 February 1858.
In 1861 Arthur, described as 'Captain Royal Navy on half Pay' and magistrate, resided with his family at Wootton House, Butleigh Wootton.
After nearly five years on shore he was appointed in December 1862 to the "Pylades", for the North American station, from which in the autumn of 1866 he was ordered home to take command of the "Excellent" and the Royal Naval College, Portsmouth. The Excellent was the school of gunnery, and after three years there Hood was appointed director of naval ordnance where he remained for five years.
In May 1871 Arthur was made a CB; and in 1874 was appointed to the "Monarch" in the Channel Fleet. In March 1876 he became rear-admiral, and from January 1877 to December 1879 was naval lord of the Admiralty and for much of 1879 the effective senior naval lord. He was then appointed to command the Channel Fleet, where he remained until April 1882, becoming vice-admiral in July 1880. In June 1885 he was appointed first naval lord in succession to Sir Astley Cooper Key, being promoted admiral on 1 July 1885, and nominated KCB in December 1885.
On 11 July 1889, having attained the age limit of sixty-five, Arthur was placed on the retired list, and resigned his seat at the Admiralty. In September 1889 he was appointed GCB, and in February 1892 was created Baron Hood of Avalon. He resided at 19 Queen's Gate Place, South Kensington, London.
He rented Wootton House from his brother Alexander and appeared there for the censuses of 1891 as 'Retired Royal Navy'. Living with him were his wife and unmarried daughter and also his eldest daughter Emily, her husband Francis Alexander Mackinnon (d. 27 Feb 1947) who she had married on 19 Apr 1888 (Jun Q 1a/806 St. George Hanover Square) and their little daughter Aline. # The MacKinnons went to live in South Africa where they had a son, Arthur, born in 1894 but returned to live in Minehead by 1901. In 1901 at Wootton House Arthur Acland Hood lived with his wife and daughter but died there later that year on 16 November 1901, and his peerage became extinct. He was buried at Butleigh on 23 November 1901. His daughter Fanny married Harry Allen in 1902 (Jun Q 2b/1302 Christchurch), son of James and Elizabeth Allen (of Butleigh), and they lived in Looks Farm/South Wootton House.
In 1911 Fanny (senior) lived at Wootton House with her grandson Arthur Woodville Allen (10) and three servants (one of whom, Loiusa Ba---- aged 36 was housemaid – name uncertain).Part of the house was let to William Colbourne Higgins.#
[parts extracted from the DNB]
Hoodson – see Hudson
Hook
1) Thomas Hoop
Child: 1) Henry Chr. 27 Jul 1616 Butleigh, bur. 12 Aug 1616 Butleigh
2) Samuel Hook
Children:
1) Henry Chr. 26 Oct 1617 Butleigh
2) Frances Chr. 9 Sep 1625 Butleigh, bur. 25 Sep 1625 Butleigh
3) Thomas Hooke – Edward Abbots' wife was carried to Thomas Hooke's house in 1676 (OOP)
Hooper
1) Thomas Hooper of Tilham Street, Baltonsborough s.o. Thomas and Agnes (nee Maby) Hooper, bur. 26 Aug 1699 Baltonsborough
Married: Butleigh 12 Jun 1662 Joan Rocke d.o. John Rocke, bur. 20 May 1703 Baltonsborough (as widow)
Children:
1) Thomas
2) John
3) Richard Chr. 10 Sep 1667 Baltonsborough
4) James Chr. 11 Mar 1669 Baltonsborough bur. 26 Jun 1670 Balt.
5) Ann m. John Dew
6) Joan Chr. Sep 1671 Baltonsborough m. I: Richard Gottery, m.II John Whitehead
7) Sara Chr. 26 Aug 1673 Baltonsborough
8) James Chr. 11 May 1675 Baltonsborough
Thomas was the uncle of John Cannon, the diarist. Thomas's sister Elizabeth was Cannon's mother.
2) George Hooper
Married I: Joan bur. 2 Feb 1664 Butleigh
Child: 1) John Chr. 2 Feb 1664 Butleigh
Married II: Butleigh 3 Apr 1665 Joan Talbot bur. 13 Sep 1666 Butleigh
Child: 1) Thomas Chr. 13 Sep 1666 Butleigh
Married III: Elizabeth (?) bur. 26 Apr 1668 Butleig
Child: 1) George Chr. 25 Apr 1668 Butleigh (2a?)
George appears on the list of commoners in 1672 and was churchwarden in 1679, 1695-6 and 1702. He was OOP in 1663, 1696, 1712. He paid rates on South Moor Grounds 1673-79 , 83-6, 1695-1710. Looking at the Butleigh rates – he paid from 1673 – 1680 but in the OOP accounts for 1680 it refers to aid given to 'Thomas Hobbes, late George Hooper's man' which might suggest that George had died. A George paid the rate from 1680-94/5 and then in '94 we have John Hooper paying rate in South Moor but not George. In 1695 George is churchwarden and pays rates in Southmoor again but this time not John (who thereafter isn't mentioned). In 1696 there is a note before the OOP accounts George Hooper now serves for ye estate hee now live in Butleigh' and he is churchwarden again. In addition to his usual property in Butleigh and South Moor, there are George Hooper for Looke and a George Hooper (second time) taking over from John Hooper and a second mention of George in the place of John in South Moor (+ a third, George Hooper for Brookes). This last George must be the successor (and son/nephew?) of John. In 1679/80 a George Hooper made a contribution towards the building of ST. Paul's in London.
This situation continues to 1699 when 'George Hooper for Looks' disappears from Butleigh and appears in South Moor. Then in 1700 the first (and earlier) George Hooper disappears from Butleigh leaving the George who was successor to John plus the two mentions of George in South Moor. Then, to confuse the issue further, in 1701 we get three George Hoopers in Butleigh and just one in South Moor! In 1702 it is George Hooper and Joane Looke (in the place of the first George) plus the George s.o. John in Butleigh and the latter in South Moor – and a George Hooper is churchwarden again [and the OOP records his journeys to Bridgwater and Somerton on OOP business]. In 1693 there are two Georges listed in Butleigh and two in South Moor. It was the same in 1704 but only one George in South Moor in 1705, but 2 in each place in '06', '07, 08, '09 and 1710. In 1711 the George 's.o. John' disappears and no George pays rates in South Moor. The same applies to 1712 but in 1713 George 's.o. John' re-appears in Butleigh – but still no rates paid in South Moor from now. In 1714/15 the 'earlier' George is now 'late George Hooper' and his property occupied by Thomas Look and John Higdon. In 1713 the OOP paid George Hooper for a licence to marry Thomas Abbott according to the order of Mr. Webb (!?).
DD/S/BT/18/2/13 1] Richard Tomlens of London, stationer and Gawen Lawry of London, merchant 2] George Hopper of Butleigh Wootton, yeoman Lease for 21 years of 10a in Southmoor. Rent £12.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1676.
DD/S/BT/4/5/28 - 1] James Webb, Anna Webb and Katherine Alleine 2] George Hooper of Butleigh, yeoman Lease for lives of Moorehill (4a), Pilpates (5a) by Street brook, 6a in Wootton West field, Butleigh. Rent 3s.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1679.
DD/S/BT/7/3/5 1] George Hoopper the elder of Butleigh, yeoman and Thomas Looke of Butleigh, yeoman 2] Henry Pope the elder Lease for 2,000 years of 2a behind Copley in Butleigh West field.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date range: 1720 - 1721.
2a?) George Hooper
Married: Jane bur. 22 Jun 1715 Butleigh
Children:
1) Mary Chr. 22 Jun 1715 Butleigh
A George Hooper (probably a boy) killed a polecat in 1682/3 and again in 1683/4 for which the CW paid him 4d. George was churchwarden in 1701.
3) John Hooper
John Hooper in 1687/8 paid 5s and bought a seat in the church 'for life'. He was Overseer of the Poor in 1689. He paid rates on South Moor grounds 1687-94 and Butleigh 1686-95. Other probably related Hoopers appear in the churchwarden's accounts: Daniel (1684 – killed a polecat) William (1710/11, 1714/15 – killed a polecat) (CW)
4) John Hooper (of Butleigh) married Mary Taylor of West Monckton in Taunton St. James on 24 Dec 1719 (Phill.)
5) Mary Hooper bur. 30 Aug 1739 Butleigh
6) Simon Hooper died 1744?
Married: Christian bur. 30 Oct 1746 Butleigh
Children:
1) Thomas Chr. 4 Sep 1714 Butleigh bur. 20 Apr 1769 Butleigh
2) William Chr. 30 Jan 1716 Butleigh, bur. 29 Jun 1730 Butleigh
3) Simon Chr. 14 Mar 1717 Butleigh
4) Stephen Chr. 31 Jan 1719 Butleigh, bur. 8 Feb 1719 Butleigh
5) Joan Chr. 27 Jun 1721 Butleigh, bur. 25 Aug 1721 Butleigh
6) Sarah Chr. 7 Jul 1722 Butleigh
7) Jane Chr. 16 Nov 1727 Butleigh
8) Anne Chr. 8 Aug 1732 Butleigh
Simon appeared in the churchwarden's accounts in 1713 as a carrier. He was a churchwarden in 1714 and Overseer in 1731. In 1735/36 he was paid for hauling a load of large steps for the church stairs. He was Churchwarden 1715, 1716. In 1738 the Vestry allowed Simon £1 10s 4d for serving as Tythingman for an extraordinary year. He paid rates from 1718 -1744 and was followed by Thomas Hooper in 1745. Thomas was Overseer in 1765. Thomas paid rates until 1768/9 after which he was the 'late Thomas Hooper'. In the John Rooke apprentice scheme of 1772 'Thomas Hoopers' listed as ratepayer. Edward Strode acquired the Hooper property by 1774
Jane Hooper married John Comb Butleigh 15 Nov 1748 # In 1720 Alice Grimes, a tenant of Simon's died and was buried at the expense of the Overseers. Thomas Hooper carried deal (wood) from Bridgwater during the re-building of the church roof in 1750-1. His bill for carrying stones to repair the highways paid by the OOP in 1763. In May 1763 he was paid for carrying wood to Eliz. Davis.
DD/S/BT/12/1/45 - 2] Edward Strode of Butleigh, yeoman, William Merrick of Moorlinch, yeoman, John Coombs of Butleigh and wife Jane. Edward, William and Jane are executors and legatees of Thomas Hooper of Butleigh, yeoman, decd 3 James Grenville Assignment of 14.5 a mortgaged arable in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1769.
DD/S/BT/24/4/5 Extract form a mortgage of Thomas Hooper's estate in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1769.
7) John Hooper of Baltonsborough [bur. 10 Apr 1788 Baltonsborough?]
Married: Butleigh 21 Feb 1721 Ann Brice of West Lydford [bur. 28 Mar 1773 Baltonsborough?]
8) Ann Hooper bur. 31 May 1746 Butleigh
9) Hannah Hooper married Edward Strode 2 May 1734 Butleigh
10) Jane Hooper
Jane was 'examined' in March 1767 (as to the father of her child?).
11) Mary Hooper married John Strode Curtis 28 Dec 1769 Butleigh
12) Christian Hooper bur. 27 Nov 1800 Butleigh [son/dau. of Simon?]
13) Herbert [Harry] Albert Hooper b. 1900 Highbridge, baker, s.o. William and Edith Hooper
Married: 1920 (Sep Q 5c/823 Langport) Daisy May Pitt b. 1893 (Sep Q 5c/360 Langport)?
Child:
1) Joan bur 12 Apr 1921 (11 days old?) (June Q 5c/498 Wells) Butleigh
2) Annie May b. 14 Sep 1921 (Sep Q 5c/720 Wells) Butleigh
Harry rented No. 26, Butleigh at £13 p.a. at sale of the Estate in Feb. 1947. Water obtained by pump from well.. This couple arrived in Butleigh around 1912 and Harry was called up during WWI. They recorded their reminiscences in 1976 for Somerset Voices.org.
Hopkins
1) William Hopkins died c. 1708/9
Married: Ann Hopkins buried 1711/2 - burial cost 6s 3d
William paid rates from 1696 – 1708 and Ann paid from 1709 – 12. William was Overseer in 1702 and churchwarden in 1704. Ann paid 6s 8d in 1710 to have the 'ground broken' in the church to bury her husband and in 1711/12 James Fisher paid 6s 3d to have her also buried there.
DD/S/BT/5/7/4/ - 1] John Hiett of Butleigh, yeoman and wife Mary 2] William Hopkins of Butleigh yeoman Assignment of Casway Close (2a) in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1698. William was churchwarden in 1705 and last appears in 1707.
DD/S/BT/11/2/5 - Probate of will (1712) of Richard Abbott of Butleigh, yeoman, executor of Anne Hopkins of Butleigh, decd.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date range: 1712-1713.
2) James Hopkins – paid rates in 1719 - 1724
3) Elizabeth Hopkins bur. 16 Jul 1739 Butleigh
Horler
1) Agnes Horler married Butleigh 22 Apr 1596 Philip Bayley #
2) Samuel Horler bur. 18 Feb 1672 Butleigh
Married: Hester
Children:
1) Samuel bur. 10 Sep 1654 Butleigh
2) Samuel Chr. 18 Feb 1655 Butleigh
3) Susanna Chr. 20 Jul 1658 Butleigh
4) Ann Chr. 22 Jun 1662 Butleigh
5) John bur. 21 Nov 1664 Butleigh (adult or son of Samuel?)
3) Elizabeth Horler Chr. 16 Apr 1847 Lypeate, Som. 61-49
Elizabeth was the niece of William Collins and his wife Anna (née Horler) who lived at Gardener's Cottage in 1861 and was a visitor on census night. She was the daughter of Elisha Horler and Mercy Hancox (married 25 Dec 1845 Kilmersdon).
Hornett
1) Jane Hornett b. 1869 Rotherhithe, Surrey, d.o. Alfred and Maria Hornett 91-115
Jane lived with her parents in Datchworth, Herts. in 1881 where her father was a shoemaker. She was a kitchen maid at Butleigh Court in 1891. Nfi
Horner
1) John Horner widower of Castle Cary
Married: Butleigh 25 Nov 1771 Ann Hodges Withies (Withers) d.o. James and Elizabeth Withers
DD/S/BT/6/9/27-8 1] Margaret Mines of Yeovil 2] William Hodges Withers of Butleigh yeoman, only son of James Withers of Butleigh, yeoman decd 3] John Rocke of Butleigh, gent 4] John Horner of Castle Cary, yeoman Lease and release of Bloudsley (2a) and assignment of Gardners Date: 1778.
DD/S/BT/10/7/5 1] John Horner of Castle Cary and wife Ann, Elizabeth Horner, Jane Withers, sisters and coheirs of William Hodges Withers decd 2] James Grenville Feoffment of Bolster (2a) in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1786.
DD/S/BT/6/5/38-40 1] John Moor of West Coker, executor of Henry Moor decd administrator of Henry Talbot of Butleigh decd 2] John Horner of Castle Cary, yeoman and wife Ann, Jane Withers and Elizabeth Horner of Ansford, three sisters and coheirs of William Hodges Withers of Butleigh decd by Elizabeth Hodges decd 3] John Strode Curtiss of Butleigh, yeoman Assignment in trust of Guppies farm, Butleigh. Enclosed 17th-century survey of cottages in Butleigh and draft assignment by Curtiss's executors to Lord Glastonbury in 1803 Date: 1787.
DD/S/BT/10/9/1 1] Ann Horner of Castle Cary, baker and Henry White of Castle Cary plasterer and wife Mary 2] John Sealy of Butleigh, cordwainer Lease for 1,000 years of two garden plots in Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1801.
2) William Horner of Ansford d. before 1783?
Married: Butleigh 4 Feb 1779 Elizabeth Withers Chr. 13 Jan 1757 Butleigh d.o. James and Elizabeth Withers
Child:
1) Mary Chr. 4 Feb 1779 Butleigh
2) Elizabeth Horner Chr. 16 Jan 1783 Butleigh illegit. d.o. Elizabeth Horner
In August 1782 Elizabeth Horner and Edward Vagg were summonsed to Somerton for examination and then to East Pennard before the justice. In September '82 the OOP paid to carry Elizabeth to Castle Cary. In October '82 Mr. Rocke went to Castle Cary to fetch her. In April 1783 Elizabeth Horner was taken to Evercreech for examination. [see James Horner below]
DD/S/BT/9/2/18-21 Maurice Lloyd of Dillington and wife Elizabeth executrix of Ann Raymond decd, John Donne of Puckington trustee of Ann Raymond, George Prowse of Yeovil cousin and heir of Ann Raymond 2] John Horner of Castle Cary and wife Ann, Jane Withers and Elizabeth Horner of Ansford, sisters and coheirs of William Hodges Withers son and heir of James Withers and wife Elizabeth Hodges 3] Thomas Looke of Marylebone, Msex 4] William Francis of Somerton Lease and release of a messuage and 4a known as Guppies farmhouse, Butleigh. Enclosed fine and will (1779) of Ann Raymond of Sock, Mudford, proved 1780. Date: 1787. Also DD/S/BT/6/9/29-30
3) James Horner
In 1782/83 the OOP paid Mr. Melliar's charge from Castly Cary for James Horner's bastard. (2 guineas). In April 1783 payment made to James Horner's bastard and regularly from then on. In Jul 1785 the OOP paid assistance to James Horner's child. The mother referred to as either Elizabeth/Betty Withers or Elizabeth Horner. First note of her problem came in October 1782 when the OOP sought to have her remanded back to Castle Cary. Sep 1784 OOP paid charges of going to Castle Cary to collect the charge of James Horner's bastard. Payments continued or a warrant would be issued against James – until April 1792. In the early references Edward Vagg was also remanded but in bastardy payments later the father is always James Horner. In May 1792 the pay made to just Eliz Horner and money in distress to Betty Withers/Betty Horner. Payments continued In March 1793 Elizabeth Horner looked after Stephen Hockey's family in their sickness.
4) Jane Horner
An OOP payment was made to Jane Horner in March 1795. In Feb 1805 the OOP bought her son a pair of shoes. In April 1813 she received 6 yards of calico. In June 1817 her son was ill and in March 1818 Jane received relief.
Horsell
1) George Horsell b. 1864 Shirley, Hants., baker, s.o. Eli and Jane Horsell
Married: 1 Nov 1888 (Dec Q 5c/912 Wells) Butleigh Caroline Bessie Vigour b. 1860 (Dec Q 5c/508 Wincanton) Charlton Horethorne, died 1891 (Mar Q 5c/332 Langport) #
Caroline and her brother John had arrived in Butleigh in the 1880's. George was a baker in Baltonsborough. In 1881 he had lived with his parents in Shrewton, Wilts. By 1891 George lived, as a baker, in Charlton Mackrell with his daughter Alice (2 months) and sister-in-law Alice Vigour (aged 26) as housekeeper. Caroline had died before the census, shortly after the birth of baby Alice.
Hoskins
1) Anne Hoskins bur. 24 Nov 1756 Butleigh
2) Ann Hoskins b. 1741, bur. 2 Dec 1829 Butleigh
The Miss Hoskins listed as a cottager on the poor rate assessments of 1827/28 is this person.
PROB 11/1768 - Will of Ann Hoskins Spinster Butleigh , Somerset Date: 1830.
Hounsel
1) Joseph Hounsel sojourner, bur. 26 Jan 1772 Butleigh
Married: Butleigh 23 May 1753 Elizabeth Davis
Children:
1) Ann bur. 28 May 1755 Butleigh (? daughter)
2) Anna Chr. 20 Apr 1759 Butleigh
3) Ann Chr. 26 Jul 1767 Butleigh, bur. 26 Jul 1767 Butleigh
Joseph was paid by the OOP for keeping 'Burton's child' from August 1770 until his death (the OOP paid for his coffin and burial in Feb 1772) then Elizabeth kept the child until March 1773. During this time of widowhood Elizabeth received asistance on her own behalf and this continued.
2) Mary Hounsel bur. 17 Nov 1776 Butleigh (uncertain relationship – clerk's error for Elizabeth?)
House
1) Rosina House b. 1873 Stoke St. Gregory, d.o. James and Sarah House 01-138
Rosina was a visitor at Higher Rockes Farm in 1901. Nfi
Housman
1) Laurence Housman b. 18 Jul 1865 Perry Hall, Bromsgrove, Worcs, d. 20 Feb 1959 Butleigh Hospital
Writer, artist, and book illustrator. Sixth of seven children and brother of A. E. Housman, the poet author of 'A Shropshire Lad']. Laurence was much influenced by Rossetti and Morris He and his sister Clemence worked strenuously for women's emancipation. The two moved to Street in 1924 to be near their friends Roger and Sarah Bancroft Clark and built their house “Longmeadow”, Burleigh Lane, there. Clemence died on 6 Dec 1955 [from dementia]
Howard
1) John Howard died Aug/Sep 1767 (gap in register)
John appears in the OOP accounts receiving 8/- cash in assistance in June 1767. In July he received another 8/- and 6/- in August then the OOP bought his shroud and coffin in September 1767.
2) John Howard b. 1806 Bruton, carpenter, d. 13 Sep, bur. 18 Sep 1875 (Sep Q 5c/342 Wells) Butleigh 51-29, 61-54, 71-76
Married: Elizabeth b. 1806 Charlton Witham, bur. 16 Feb 1900 (Mar Q 5c/425 Wells) Butleigh 51-29, 61-54, 71-77, 81-97, 91-125
Children:
1) Elizabeth b. 1833
2) Albion b. 1837 Barton St. David 51-29
3) Mary Ann b. 1840, bur. 20 Apr. 1844 (Jun Q 10/349 Wells) Butleigh
4) Seth b. 1842 (Dec Q 10/415 Langport) Barton St. David 51-29, 61-54, 71-77, 81-97, 91-125
John Howard and family had lived in Barton St. David in 1841 (with an Amy Higgins b. 1773 - mother-in-Law?). In 1851 they had lived in Hoods Cottages on Butleigh Hill with just their two sons. Albion left Butleigh and disappeared until 1873 (Mar Q 6a/190 Gloucester) when he died in Gloucester aged 38. In 1861 John, Elizabeth and Seth were still on Butleigh Hill and also in 1871 though now John was a painter. Seth was a labourer and he and his parents lived with granddaughter Mary Ann Ward (8) and John Mines (49) a 'friend'. The latter appears in the previous two censuses lodging on Butleigh Hill with different people, and on the 1881 census with this family. # John Howard died in 1875.
In 1881 Elizabeth lived with Seth and John Mines (who died in 1887). In 1891 Elizabeth (86), was a widow on Parochial relief living with her son Seth (50) an unmarried labourer. Seth died in 1891 (Dec Q 5c/392 Wells) aged 50 and his mother in 1900 aged 95.
3) Susan Howard b. 1826 London, died 1893 (Sep Q 5c/332 Wells) 51-25, 71-72
Susan was a servant lodging with Charles Davis in the High Street in 1851. In 1871 Susan (dob 1833) was a servant to her aunt Mary Cannon, (66) the postmistress at the Post Office in the High Street. In 1881 (dob 1830) she was in Wells Union Workhouse, Glastonbury Rd., charwoman, unmarried and died in 1893 (dob 1825). p332
4) Emma Howard b. 1871 Newton St. Faiths, Norfolk 91-115
Emma was the daughter of William Howard and Ann Woodcock. The latter was the widowed mother of Walter Woodcock the coachman living at Court Lodge in 1891 whom she visited on census night. Walter's wife had died in 1889 and she was probably helping care for the three children. Walter married again in 1892.
5) Mary Ann Howard Chr. 7 Jul 1847 (Jun Q 10/492 Wells) Butleigh d.o. carpenter John and Mary Howard, bur. 12 Jul 1847 (Sep Q 10/285 Wells) Butleigh
This may be a PR mistake and Mary Ann a short-lived daughter of John No. 1. Nfi
6) William Howard Chr. 23 Aug 1855 (Sep Q 5c/555 Wells) Butleigh, illegitimate s.o. Jane Howard, bur. 11 Sep 1855 (Sep Q 5c/332 Wells) - nfi
Howe
DD/S/BT/3/8/2-4 - Survey book by John Hynde of lands in Butleigh manor titheable to Mrs Howe, with bookplate of R. N. Grenville. Lands numbered according to a map [missing] and classed as pasture, ploughed arable or unploughed arable. First section in numerical order of Date: 1757.
1) William Howe d. bef. 1691
Married:
1) William bur. 20 Feb 1718 Butleigh
2) John bur. 14 Jun 1730 Butleigh
3) Mary
William took in Elner Russell in 1685 to give her relief (OOP). In 1691 Edward Jacklett received relief for Howe's children. In 1692 a William was given relief by the OOP (paid to Edward Jacklett and a William indentured as an apprentice (presumably his son). John Chasey was given the cost of making his apparel, pair of stockings and a coat. William appears in the churchwarden's accounts in 1698 when he was paid for killing a hedgehog. In 1692 John (probably his brother) was also given relief (paid to Edward Jacklett) and clothes. John received further relief in 1693 and '94. A Mary Howe married William Atwell in Butleigh on 4 Feb 1719 – a daughter?
In 1722 further relief was given by the OOP to John Howe at several times and Grace Attwooll paid for washing 'Howe's boy'. A pair of stockings were also made for the boy.
DD/S/BT/5/1/11 1] Thomas Abbot of Butleigh, yeoman 2] William How of Butleigh, husbandman Lease for lives of a cottage in Butleigh. Rent 6d.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1680.
2) William Howe of Shepton Mallet, [bur. 4 Mar 1747 Shepton Mallet]
Married: Catherine
William How Esq. began paying rates on Shore's tenements and 'ye Parsonage' in 1734. In 1739/40 he paid rates on '\looks'. From 1741 he paid rates on land in Southmoor. In 1743 he also paid rates on 'Cooks close and Looks' coppice' By 1747/8 he was 'the late Mr. How' and 'Cooks and Look's' was occupied by a Mr. Robins. It was then simply 'the occupiers of the late William Howe' until 1765/6 when it became 'Madame Howe' or occupiers and by 1767/8 the name Howe disappears. In the 1740/50's a J. Howe approved the OOP accounts.
[A William How married a Catherine Thorne in Wembdon 9 Jun 1748]
DD/S/BT/14/2/2 1] Sir Richard Grobham kt and John Howe 2] Thomas Symcockes of Butleigh Bargain and sale of Whitley hundred. 1617 [see also 14/1/3]
DD/S/BT/16/1/7 1] Catherine Howe of Bath, widow of William Howe 2] James Grenville of Butleigh Copy lease for a year of 17a at Blackgrove, Glastonbury with 20s and 6s 8d chief rents, 5a coppice in Edgarley tithing and the site of a cottage in Cart lane, Glastonbury. 1667 [Mistake for 1767?]
DD/S/BT/17/5/16 Covering slip for deed said to have been bought from Mrs Howe with the rectory [Butleigh]. NO DATE
DD/S/BT/25/4/4-6 Papers in suits for tithe brought by Catherine Howe, lay rector of Butleigh.. [Somerset Archive and Records, BUTLEIGH COURT PAPERS] Date: 1723. [date error?]
DD/S/BT/4/2/18 1] Revd Thomas Keat of Somerton and John Smithfield of Butleigh yeoman 2] William Howe of Shepton Mallet 3] Thomas Periam the elder of Butleigh, blacksmith Assignment of Beare Croft (4a) and 1/2a arable in Sower Down in the West field of Butleigh, part of a mortgaged leasehold estate. 1733
DD/S/BT/7/7/23 1] Revd Thomas Keate of Somerton and John Smithfield of Butleigh yeoman 2] William Howe of Shepton Mallet Assignment of Butleigh rectory, 61a and Hutchins (8a), Westwood (24a) and Churchhouse, Butleigh. 1733
DD/S/BT/11/2/27 1] John Periam of Butleigh, son of James decd 2] William Howe of Shepton Mallet Confirmation deed of Butleigh rectory on repayment of mortgage sum. 1735
DD/S/BT/5/6/19 1] William Howe of Shepton Mallet 2] Henry Talbot of Butleigh Wootton, yeoman Assignment of Horseys (2a), Butleigh. 1738
DD/S/BT/11/1/21 1] Thomas Merriott of Glastonbury and wife Hannah widow of William Moxham, James Clothier of Street and James Salter of Podimore, yeoman, executors of William Moxham decd, yeoman 2] Thomas Looke of Butleigh, yeoman 3] William Howe of Bowlish, barrister 4] Robert Hayward of Freshford Release of 10 a moor and 5a wood in Butleigh. [Above 2 documents tied together] 1739
DD/S/BT/5/4/9 1] Edward Talbot the elder of Butleigh, yeoman 2] Mary Howe of Somerton Mortgage of Langley (9a) in Butleigh. 1741
DD/S/BT/9/1/5 1] Edward Talbot of Butleigh and nephew Edward Talbot 2] Mary Howe of Somerton Bond for payment endorsed with receipts for interest paid to 1769 1741 [probably unrelated to this family]
DD/S/BT/9/4/12 1] James Grenville 2] Catherine Howe of Bath Lease for lives of a 4-a close and garden in Butleigh. Rent 3s. 1750
DD/S/BT/3/8/2-4 Survey book by John Hynde of lands in Butleigh manor titheable to Mrs Howe, with bookplate of R. N. Grenville. Lands numbered according to a map [missing] and classed as pasture, ploughed arable or unploughed arable. First section in numerical order of field, the second in alphabetical order of owner or tenant, the third lists ley lands in the fields and quarries, and the fourth is an index. John Hynde confirms the survey as conforming with his map 1758. Loose at back of volume are a note of lands purchased 1829 and a survey of Holmans farm 1852. 1757
DD/S/BT/22/4/25-38 Papers connected with litigation including Howe v. Strode mainly concerning tithes of Southmoor. Includes a list of Somerset freeholders with comments probably concerning their service on a jury. 1761-1766
DD/S/BT/12/1/35-6 1] Robert Cooper of Salisbury, linen draper and George Cooper of Freshford, clothier, trustees of Robert Hayward decd 2] Catherine Howe of Bath, widow of William Howe of Bowlish decd 2] James Grenville of Butleigh Conveyance of Butleigh rectory, Shoares tenement, Hutchins (8a), 24a at West wood and Churchhouse, Butleigh. Part of a copy of the conveyance. 1767
DD/S/BT/24/3/42-3 Legal bills in Grenville v Howe 1793-1794
DD/S/BT/27/7/4 1] William Howe of Somerton 2] Governors of Queen Anne's Bounty 3] Revd James Brown curate of Cothelstone Copy bargain and sale of arable closes (c 29a) in common fields and Thongs (2a) in Kingsdon. 1795
2) Joseph Howe Chr. 5 Jan 1806 High Ham, s.o. Benjamin and Charlotte Howe, bur. 14 Jun 1836 Butleigh
Married: 21 Jul 1833 High Ham Bridget Look Chr. 1 May 1808 Butleigh, d.o. William & Ursula Look, # m. II 1845 (Dec Q 10/685 Shepton Mallet) William Shears, m. III 1855 (Sep Q 5c/748 Yeovil) James Gully, died 23 Dec 1874 (Dec Q 5c/332 Yeovil) South Petherton
Children:
1) William Joseph Chr. 29 Sep 1833 Butleigh, bur. 28 May 1836 Butleigh
2) Asenath Chr. 11 Jan 1836 High Ham, bur. 14 Jun 1836 Butleigh
3) Joseph William Chr. 11 Dec 1836 Butleigh (2a)
In 1841 both the widow Bridget Howe and William Shears (b. 1813 Bruton) were servants in Ditcheat House. They married in 1845 and he was described then as an Innkeeper. He died very soon thereafter in 1845 (Dec Q 10/685 Shepton Mallet) and then Bridget married widower James Gully (b. 1808 South Petherton) in 1855 and they lived at South Petherton. They were still there in 1871.
2a) Joseph William Howe Chr. 11 Dec 1836 Butleigh 41-4, 51-37
Joseph Howe was the nephew of William and Grace Look and lived with them at No. 3 Quarry Lane in 1841/51. Nfi.
3) John Howe Chr. 14 Jun 1857 (Jun Q 5c/639 Wells) Butleigh, Elementary school master, s.o. George and Eliza[beth] Eleanor Howe
In 1861 John lived with his parents in Eve, Suffolk, next to the Castle Hill Union Workhouse. His father was a schoolteacher (b. 1831 Westminster) and his mother was a schoolmistress (b. 1825 Norwich). He had two brothers, Charles and George. Presumably John's father George was teaching at Butleigh school for a period 1856/7. In 1871 John and his cousin William lived with their Aunt Emma Howe, schoolmistress at Braywick House (School), Bray, Berkshire. In 1881, he was at the School Cottage, Pyecombe, Sussex with his unmarried aunt Emma Howe (60). She was Bristol born. He next surfaces in 1901 at 77, Cathles Rd, Streatham, London with his wife Caroline M. (31) and daughter Ivy (2), and he was still an assistant school master. In 1911 they lived at 23, Vilnay Street, Tooting with their four children.
Howell
1) Alice Elizabeth Howell Chr. 4 Jun 1876 (Jun Q 5c/578 Wells) Butleigh, d.o. George and Ruth Turner, d. 19 Jul, bur 24 Jul 1947 Butleigh
Alice died at Jubilee Road, Street. She was the widow of James Howell, farmer, of Grove Farm, Castle Cary. In 1911 they had Mary Masters (14) of Butleigh as a servant. Her husband had been 59 when they married in 1910 (Dec Q 5c/1007) and she 35.
Howells
1) Daniel Howells b. 1845 Pembrey, Carmarthenshire, carpenter, s.o. James Howells, sawyer
Married: Butleigh 23 Sep 1886 (Sep Q 5c/756 Wells) Emily Sarah Higgins Chr. 30 Sep 1860 (Sep Q 5c/577 Wells) Butleigh d.o. John Higgins #
Children:
1) Harold E. b. 1887 Pembrey
2) Arthur John b. 27 Jun 1888 (Sep Q 11a/867 Llanelly) Pembrey, Chr. 3 Sep Butleigh
3) Thomas N. b. 1890 Pembrey
By 1891 Daniel and Emily lived at 14, Pemberton Avenue, Pembrey, Carmarthenshire with their three sons. In 1911 they lived at 11, Ring St., Bridgwater with 6 of their 9 surviving (of 10) children.
Howles
1) James Howles b. 1829 Wimborne, Dorset, butler 51-30
James was the butler at the Vicarage in 1851. Strangely, a James Howells (b. 1829 Wimborn Dorset), s.o. Ann (a widow) was a servant living at 6, Conduit St., Paddington on the 1851 census and these two are the only people who seem to fits these facts. Possibly the same person registered in two places. Nfi
Hoyle
Hoil, Hoiell
1) Hannah Hoyle
In Jan 1810 Hanna Hvil appears receiving OOP assistance.
2) George Hoil
Married: Hannah?
George received assistance from the OOP in June, July 1810. He received aid again in Jan 1814. In Feb 1821 he again received assistance. In Jan 1824 George's wife received aid in her illness and George received aid in February.
Hubbard
1) Rebecca Charlotte Hubbard b. 1834 Butleigh [Buttley, Wilts in 1901!]
Rebecca married gardener Reuben Hardesty [Ruben Hardisty] in 1864 (Mar Q 9a/95 Ripon) and they then lived at the Gardener's House, Manningham, Yorkshire. In 1881 they lived at Sowerby, Yorkshire. In 1891 they lived at Bradford, Yorkshire. By 1901 they lived at No. 39 Philip's Road, Newmarket. They never had children and Rebecca despite naming her birthplace at Butleigh, Butley or variations after 1871 usually gave the County as Wiltshire. No proven link to Butleigh.
Huching
1) Edward Huching
Married: Agnes bur. 3 Sep 1597 Butleigh
Children:
1) John Chr. 11 Nov 1582 Butleigh
2) Egidas Chr. 8 Dec 1588 Butleigh
3) Katherine Chr. 8 Jun 1592 Butleigh, bur. 1 Sep 1597 Butleigh
2) John Huching bur. x Feb 1597 Butleigh
Married: Katherine bur. 1 Apr 1591 Butleigh
Children:
1) Alexander Chr. 25 Mar 1585 Butleigh
2) Maria Chr. 24 Jun 1595 Butleigh
Hucker
(see Huckeridge next)
1) Henry Hucker
Married: Butleigh 6 May 1725 Mary Bradwall
Henry Hogger and wife receiving OOP assistance in July 1787 may be this couple.
2) Sarah Hucker bur. 4 Apr 1772 Butleigh
3) Henry Hucker Chr. 2 Jan 1811 Middlezoy, carpenter, s.o. John (basket maker) and Hannah Hucker
Married I: Walton 10 Nov 1831 Martha Stower Chr. 2 Oct 1808 Walton, d.o. Stephen and Mary Stower, died 1856 (Jun Q 5c/389 Wells)
Children:
1) William Steven b. 1839 Walton
2) Sarah b. 1841 (Dec Q 10/478 Wells) Walton 61W-64
Married II: Butleigh 24 Dec 1857 (Dec Q 5c/993 Wells) Ann Dauncey b. 1821 Butleigh, d.o. John Craft #
Henry and Ann were both widowed when they married in Butleigh in 1857. Ann was the widow of Thomas Dauncey with whom she appeared in Butleigh in 1851. The couple lived in Walton (1871) after their marriage, with Henry's son William (b. 1839 Walton).
William Hucker married Mary Crate (b. 1832 Street, d.o. Thomas Crate) in Butleigh on 25 Jun 1874 (Jun Q 5c/984 Wells) and they lived in Walton.in 1891 but Mary died in 1891 (Jun Q 5c/370 Wells) aged 59.
Sarah was a nurse at Wootton House in 1861. She married shoemaker William Seymour in 1865 (Dec Q 5c/1099 Wells) and they lived in Street.
Huckeridge
(Hucker, Huckeray)
1) Philip Huckeridge bur. 13 Dec 1766 Somerton [of smallpox]
Married: 5 Dec 1756 Somerton Sarah Scriven bur. 4 Apr 1790 Somerton pauper [two Sarah's b. Somerton; Chr. 1 May 1726 d.o. Thomas and Sarah Scriven, Chr. 15 Feb 1730 d.o. Moses and Ann Scriven]
Children:
1) Mary Chr. 16 Dec 1757 Somerton {Hockridge]
2) Margaret Chr. 6 Aug 1760 Somerton [Hockeridge]
3) John Chr. 5 Jul 1762 Somerton [Hockeridge]
4) Elizabeth Chr. 15 Mar 1765 Somerton [Huckridge] bur. 3 Apr 1765 Somerton
5) Philip Chr. 5 Feb 1766 Somerton [Huckridge] bur. 4 Mar 1818 Somerton
6) Joanna b. 1767/8, bur. 19 Jan 1814 Somerton
Philip Huckerage first appears in the OOP accounts in December 1762 when he received 5 shillings in his distress and 3 shillings in Jan 1763.In April 1766 the OOP paid 5/- to the wife of Phil Huckeray and 9/- in October and 5/- in November. In 1766 the OOP paid for a bedstead and other necessities for a Sarah Hu.... In December '66 Philip Huckerodge received 10/3 'in ye smallpox'. In February 1767 payment was made to 'the widow Huckerage' and 'to Huckerage's family at several times'. In Feb. the OOP made payment for the burial of Hucker. March saw Sarah Huckerage given provisions and '1 holm'. Also in March they paid for a copy of the Alililb(Alibi ?) to examine the settlement of Sarah Huckerage. In March the Vestry also ordered that they should try an appeal against the Parish of Somerton for an order of removal for the widow and four children of the late Philip Huckerage. In April Sarah and family received relief and in May more relief 'before [being] removed. May 15 1767 saw £7 19s 7½d disbursed on the appeal to Somerton order for Huckerages family.
Son Philip married Johanna Pitney in Somerton on 24 Mar 1789 and they had many children there.
Hudson
1) John Hoodson - provided leather used around the church bells in 1721-22.
Huffington
1) Thomas Huffington
Married: Maria
Child: 1) John Chr. 18 Dec 1640 Butleigh, bur. 26 Jan 1641 Butleigh
Hughes
1) Edward A. Hughes b. 1878 Kintbury, Berks., groom 01W-141
Edward worked at Wootton House in 1901. Nfi
Humphries
1) Isaac Humphrey
Married: Butleigh 19 Nov 1723 Elizabeth Nutt
2) Samuel Humphries b. 1750, bur. 12 Nov 1827 Butleigh
Married I: Butleigh 21 Jun 1774 Margaret Martin bur. 8 Dec 1796 Butleigh
Children:
1) Samuel Chr. 23 Feb 1777 Butleigh (2a)
2) William Chr. 14 Dec 1778 Butleigh, bur 20 Mar 1785 Butleigh
3) Eleanor Chr. 4 Jun 1780 Butleigh (mother Mary?)
4) James Chr. 20 Mar 1785 Butleigh (ditto) (2b)
Married II:? Ann b. 1753 died 2 May 1835 Butleigh aged 82
1) William bur. 17 Oct 1802 Butleigh s.o. Samuel & Ann (?)
Samuel may have married twice (though Margaret may have been contracted to Marga and misread as Mary as an explanation of Eleanor and James' mother). Margaret was paid for tending John Martin and wife in Oct 1781. Samuel had his rent paid by the OOP from 1783 and many months in his distress. In Feb 1785 Bridget Look 'cured' his hand and in April a further 5/- for the cure of his hand. In April 1787 Samuel received assistance. Margaret paid in Nov 1788 for tending Joseph Periam's wife. In May 1796 OOP paid Samuel's wife assistance. In Dec name as Margaret and her coffin paid for in January 1797.
In Sep 1800 the OOP paid 1/- to Samuel Humphries daughter. Eleanor is probably the Hellen who married Richard Wheller widower in Butleigh on 24 Jul 1809. In Dec 1807 and early 1808 the OOP paid Elenor assistance. In 1801 Samuel Humphries had his rent paid by the OOP. Samuel had his bill for work done, with his son, on Mary Hodges house paid by the OOP in 1809. From the early 1820's Samuel and Ann Humphries were in receipt of OOP assistance. In 1823 - 1827 the OOP paid his house rent. In Nov 1827 the OOP paid 'the jurymen on the death of Humphries' and in Dec 1827 the OOP paid for Samuel's coffin, burial etc. Ann continued to receive aid alone thereafter. From 1834 until her death Ann Humphries was attended by Betty Davis. In May 1835 the OOP paid for a new bed tie for 'the late Ann Humphries'.
2a) Samuel Humphries Chr. 23 Feb 1777 Butleigh
Married I: Butleigh 30 Jan 1804 Ann Sweet b. 1789, bur. 28 Feb 1813 Butleigh aged 24
Children:
1) Anne Chr. 1 Jan 1809 Butleigh
2) Mary bur. 7 Mar 1813 Butleig
2b) James Humphries Chr. 20 Mar 1785 Butleigh, sawyer, s.o. Samuel and Mary Humphries
Married: Butleigh 25 Dec 1807 Ann [Nancy] Hodges b. 1785 Butleigh
Children:
1) Ann Chr. 1 Jan 1809 Butleigh
2) James b. 1810 (2b1)
2) Samuel Chr. 10 Aug 1814 Butleigh
3) Anne Chr. 17 Aug 1817 Butleigh
4) Elizabeth Chr. 15 Aug 1819 Butleigh
5) Sarah Chr. 18 Aug 1822 Butleigh
6) Mary Chr. 16 Aug 1824 Butleigh
7) Mercy b. 1831
James' father Samuel married Margaret Martin in Butleigh on 21 Jun 1774 and they had two children Samuel (1777) and William (1778) but if I read it correctly, his next two children, Eleanor (1780) and James had Mary as a mother but this may be a misreading since Margaret seems to have died in 1796. James was taken to Somerton in April 1812 to be 'examined'. In May 1812 he was examined again. In Feb 1813 he received a blanket and his wife and children received assistance. In Feb 1816 he was again issued with a summons and was paid two days work to go to Somerton to be examined as to his Parish. The OOP paid him9/- in assistance and paid for bread, cheese and beer during his examination. In March he was further examined and an order made for his removal. The OOP paid for the costs at Somerton and then for a horse and cart to carry him, his wife and two children home to Ston Easton – plus costs of the turnpikes, cheese, bread and beer.
James and Ann lived alone in Southover, Wells in 1851 and 1861. Previously, in 1841, they had had their daughters Mary and Mercy with them. Nfi.
2b1) James Humphries b. 1810 Butleigh, sawyer, died 1892 (Sep Q 5/288 Wells)
Married: August 26 1839 (Sep Q 10/548 Shepton Mallet) Martha Pope b. 1817 Chewton Mendip, strawbonnetmaker, d.o. George (and Jane) Parsons died 1888 (Mar Q 5c/407 Wells)
Children:
1) Samuel Chr. 12 Mar 1841 (Mar Q 10/509 Wells)
2) Alice b. Dec 1842 bur. 12 Nov 1844 Wells
2) Job (James) b. 12 Dec 1844, reg 1845 (Mar Q 10/343 Wells) Wells
3) George b. 1846 (Dec Q 10/513 Wells)
4) Mary b. 12 Sep 1848 Wells
5) Jane b. 11 Nov 1853 (Dec Q 5c/529 Wells)
6) Philip b. 1857
7) Elizabeth b. 1859 (SepQ 5c/582 Wells)
8) Martha b. 1863 (Jun Q 5c/651 Wells)
James and Martha lived in Southover, Wells, in 1841 next door to George and Jane Parsons who seem to have been Martha's parents (maybe Jane Parsons was originally a Pope who remarried?). They lived at 11, St. Cuthbert St. Wells in 1861 and 1871 and in 1881 they were at 13, Priests Row with three children. James' second son Job (sometime-James, b. December 1844 Wells) emigrated to New Zealand with his wife Elizabeth Chard in 1872.
George married Frances Mary Bodenham in 1895 but she died in September 1901. In 1901 he was a gardener living in Union St. Wells with his stepdaughter Annie Bodenham. Mary married wid. William Joseph Rivers 9 Jun 1876 Wells and later moved to Maidstone Kent where she died in the typhoid epidemic in 1897.
3) Mark Humphries b. 1803 Wellow, farmer, died 1876 (Mar Q 5c/410 Frome)
Married: 4 May 1827 Wellow Sarah Dauncey Chr. 16 Aug 1808 Butleigh, d.o.Joseph and Elizabeth Dauncey, died 1897 (Jun Q 5c/299 Frome)
Children:
1) Joseph Chr. 21 Oct 1832 Wellow
2) Jesse b. 1836 Wellow
3) Mark Chr. 31 May 1840 Wellow
4) Sarah Ann Chr. 19 Jun 1842 Wellow
5) William Thorn Chr. 2 Feb 1845 Wellow
6) Mark Chr. 10 May 1846 Wellow
Sarah was the wife of Mark Humphries and lived firstly at Hassage, Wellow then Hemington, Som. She was still there in 1891 aged 83. She died in 1897 aged 88. They had several children born in Wellow.
4) Albert John Humphries b. 1901 (Sep Q 5c/429 Wells) labourer [North Wootton, s.o. George Humphries]
Married: 1921 C. M. O.
Children:
1) R. K. Chr. 12 Nov 1922 Butleigh
2) L. R. b. 1928 (Mar Q 5c/554 Wells)
3) A. R. b. 1933 (Dec Q 5c/471 Wells)
Hunt
1) Elizabeth Hunt married Butleigh 10 Jun 1596 Thomas White
2) James Hunt Chr. 10 Apr 1857 Dundry, farmer, s.o. James and Elizabeth Hunt 91-119, 01-136
Married: 1885 (Mar Q 5c/819 Clutton) Sarah Ann Crossman b. 1861 Hinton Blewett, d.o. Charles and Clementina Crossman 91-119, 01-136
Children:
1) Bertha Louisa b. 1886 (Jun Q 5c/725 Bedminster) Dundry 91-119, 01-136
2) Ethel Elizabeth. b. 1887 (Dec Q 5c/682 Bedminster) Dundry 91-119, 01-136
3) Charles James b. 15 Feb, Chr. 21 Apr 1889 (Mar Q 5c/684 Bedminster) Dundry Butleigh 91-119, 01-136
4) Gerald Crossman b. 7 Mar, Chr. 26 Jun 1891 (Jun Q 5c/511 Wells) Butleigh 91-119
5) Douglas Gibbs b. 14 Mar, Chr. 5 Jun 1892 (Jun Q 5c/469 Wells) Butleigh
6) Lionel Tom b. 5 Dec 1894, Chr. 22 Feb 1894 (Mar Q 5c/475 Wells) Butleigh 01-136
7) Alice Clementine b. 21 Mar, Chr. 29 Jun 1895 (Jun Q 5c/479 Wells) Butleigh 01-136
8) Dorothy Chr. 31 Aug Butleigh, bur. 7 Sep 1896 (Sep Q 5c/295 Wells) Butleigh
9) Harry Roland b. 3 Apr, Chr. 16 Jun 1898 (Jun Q 5c/458 Wells) Butleigh 01-136
10) Arthur Reginald b. 3 Apr, Chr. 27 May 1901 (Jun Q 5c/438 Wells) Butleigh
In 1871 James lived with his parents in Camely, his father farming 130 acres. In 1881 he still lived, unmarried, with his father in Camely. Sarah's father was also a farmer, in Hinton Blewett and she married James in 1884. Until 1889 they lived in Dundry where their first three children were born but in 1891 they are found living in Bridge Farm, Butleigh with a baby just having been born there. This infant was Gerald Crossman Hunt and appears with his younger brother Douglas visiting their grandfather Charles Crossman, a farmer, in Hinton Bluett in 1901.
At Bridge Farm in 1901 James (43) and Sarah (43) were listed with their six surviving children. In 1911 the family lived at Cameley, Temple Cloud, Clutton.
3) William Hunt b. 1866 Wambrook, Som., garden labourer 01-144
Married: 1888 (Dec Q 5c/753 Chard) Elizabeth Pike b. 1865 (Sep Q 5c/484 Chard) White Staunton, d.o. James and Mary 01-144
Children:
1) John b. 1892 Chardstock, Devon 01-144
2) Ethel b. 1893 Chardstock, Devon 01-144
3) Kate b. 1897 Chardstock, Devon 01-144
In 1871 Elizabeth lived with her parents at the Lodge to the Manor House, Whitestaunton where her father was the coachman. She married William Hunt in 1888. The couple were missing from the 1891 census. The family lived in four rooms, probably on 'Sub Road' in 1901 having recently arrived from Devon. Wambrook, Whitestaunton and Chardstock are all very close to Chard.
4) Walter Hunt b. 1878 (Jun Q 5a/286 Wimborne) Sturminster Marshall, Dorset, cowman, s.o. William and Lavinia Hunt.
Married: 1900 (Dec Q 5a/605 Wimborne) Mary Jane Clark b. 1874 Blandford, Dorset
Child:1) Walter William b. 1901 (Dec Q 5a/234 Wimborne) Corfe Mullen, Dorset
In 1911 Walter and family lived in 5 rooms at Rowley Lodge as a cowman. His father was a farmer with 130 acres in 1881, employing 7 men, at Manor Farm, Blandford St. Mary. By 1901 Walter was a publican in Corfe Mullen, married to Mary Jane, and they had a nephew William H. Frizzle living with them.
Huntlye
1) Edward Huntlye
Married: Butleigh 12 May 1663 Elizabeth Adams Chr. 30 Apr 1631 Butleigh, d.o. John and Alice Symcocke #
Hurde
1) William Hurde
Married: Agnes bur. 24 Apr 1598 Butleigh
Children:
1) John Chr. 28 Jul 1580 Butleigh
2) Jacob (James) Chr. 11 Nov 1582 Butleigh
2) Alice Hurde (born circa 1600?) married Edward Abbott Butleigh 6 May 1622 (Dwelly's PR)
3) Maria Hurde married Butleigh 10 Jan 1632 Thomas Chapman #
Hurley
1) Jonathan Hurley b. 1850 (Mar Q 10/438 Langport) Butleigh, harness maker, s.o. Thomas and Sarah Hurley, died 1903 (Dec Q 6a/60 Bristol)
Jonathan's pob varies with each census. In 1851 it is given as Upton when he lived in Long Sutton with his parents. Still with them in 1861 it is given as Long Sutton. In 1871 the family lived at Bedminster, and Long Sutton was still Jonathan's pob. Jonathan lived in 1881 at 5, Upper Culvers Street, St. Augustine, Bristol with his wife Bessie Shepherd Cox (b. 1867 Devon) who he had married in 1873 (Jun Q 6a/7 Bristol) and this time gave Butleigh as his pob. He died in 1903 aged 54.
Hurman
1) Mr. Hurman – paid rates on South Moor grounds 1726 and 27. He was 'late Mr. Hurman' in 1728.
Hutchings
(Hutchens - Hutchin)
1) Elias Hutchings
Elias received assistance from the OOP in Oct 1815. In the same month he was served with a summons in Yeovil and taken to Farrington. The first OOP bastardy payment was in November 1815. Elias paid bastardy pay in March 1816 backdated a year and again from 1817 – 1824. This was for the child Betsy Knowles Chr. 17 Sep 1815 d.o. Rebecca Knowles. [An Eli Hutchings Chr. 23 Oct 1781 West Coker lived at West Coker in 1841, Hardington Mandeville, Yeovil – a canvas weaver, in 1851 - unlikely]
2) Sarah Hutchings b. 1838 East Lydford, servant, d.o. James and Elizabeth Hutchings 51-30
In 1841 Sarah lived with her parents in East Lydford where her father was an agricultural labourer. She worked, aged 13, for John Eades, farmer, on Butleigh Hill in 1851. In 1861 she was back in East Lydford with her parents and in 1881, still unmarried, was caring for her mother, described as 'lunatic' aged 62. She may be the Sarah Hutchings who died in 1888 aged 49 (Jun Q 5c/310 Wincanton).
Hyde
1) Peter Hyde b. 1791 North Cadbury? carpenter, died 1873 (Mar Q 5c/340 Langport) 41W-17
Peter lodged with John Earl in Wootton in 1841. He was a widower and lodged in 1851 in Charlton Adam, in 1861 in Long Sutton and in 1871 in Keinton Mandeville, dying in 1873 aged 82.
Hyett – see Hiett
Hynde
1) John Hynde
DD/S/BT/3/8/2-4 Survey book by John Hynde of lands in Butleigh manor titheable to Mrs Howe, with bookplate of R. N. Grenville. Lands numbered according to a map [missing] and classed as pasture, ploughed arable or unploughed arable. First section in numerical order of field, the second in alphabetical order of owner or tenant, the third lists ley lands in the fields and quarries, and the fourth is an index. John Hynde confirms the survey as conforming with his map 1758. Loose at back of volume are a note of lands purchased 1829 and a survey of Holmans farm 1852. 1757