The Anlabys were a family who took their name from the manor of Anlaby
in the parish of Kirk Ella, 5 miles west of Hull. Though the manor
passed to the Legard family thru an heiress in the 12th century, male
line Anlabys continued in the Kirk Ella parish. By the beginning on
the 16th century they had acquired the manor of Etton (or at least
part of it) in the East Riding wapentake of Harthill, 4 miles NW. of
Beverley. They made Etton their chief seat throughout the 16th
century and remained a minor gentry (sometimes called "squirearchy",
holding one or two manors, and property worth anything from £20 to
£100 a year) family, marrying with similar local East Riding
families. Thomas Anlaby of Etton took for his 2nd wife, in 1601, a
West Riding lady, Sarah Cressy of Birkin, in the wapentake of Barkston
Ash, 7 miles from Pontefract. He lived with her right after their
marriage in Saxton, in the same wapentake, 11 miles from Pontefract.
It was their eldest daughter, Sarah Anlaby (baptized at Saxton 23
December 1602) who was the first of the family to marry into the
bloodline of Edward III when she became the fifth wife of Sir John
Hotham, 1st Baronet, of Scorborough, on 7 May 1635. Hotham was
governor of Hull, and the marriage no doubt helped Sarah's only
brother John Anlaby (baptized at Saxton 30 January 1614), who had been
admitted to Gray's Inn 28 June 1631. Shortly after his sister's
marriage, John married into the Edward III bloodline when he took
Susan Beckwith (baptized at Tanfield 26 June 1614), daughter of Roger
Beckwith of Aldborough, for his wife, in about 1636 or so. John
inherited Etton and the other family lands on the death of his father
Thomas in 1641, and he and his wife had a daughter (Susan) and a son
(Thomas) before Susan's death, which occurred sometime prior to 1645.
Though Hotham came to disaster in the civil wars, John seemed to
weather them fine. His second wife was both younger and higher on the
social scale than his first. Dorothy Boynton (born September 1623)
was the eldest daughter of Sir Matthew Boynton, 1st Baronet, of
Barmston, who was a M.P., High Sheriff of Yorkshire, and parliamentary
officer. Neither marriage of John Anlaby is in the IGI index, so we
don't know exactly when Susan Beckwith died, or when he married
Dorothy Boynton, but it was probably in the mid-1640s. By Dorothy,
Anlaby had another son Matthew and another daughter
'Elutherea' (Alathea) who survived infancy. Anlaby's career peaked
when he was elected M.P. for Beverley in 1659, but his republican and
radical religious views left him unpopular. He died on 10 December
1661, having never been knighted. I haven't to date discovered when
Dorothy Boynton died.
The Anlabys soon fell into obscurity. Whether or not John's daughters
Susan and Alathea married, I haven't been able to determine. Son and
heir Thomas Anlaby inherited Etton, and appeared at Dugdale's
Visitation in 1666, when he was age 28. I haven't found when Thomas
died, but he took a Kent woman as a wife, so he may have spent time in
London. His only child was a daughter Susan Anlaby (born March 1666,
died at Guildford, Surrey 10 June 1715), who married 1st, at St.
Margaret, Westminster 17 February 1680, Arnold Colwall of Woodford,
Essex, and 2nd, on 2 February 1688, Foot Onslow (1655-1710), by whom
she was ancestress of the Earls of Onslow. Etton, though, would have
passed to Susan's son by her first husband. Matthew Anlaby, the only
son of John and Dorothy Boynton, became a cornet in Sir Richard
Osbaldeston's troop of horse in 1685, and removed to Lebberston Hall
in the parish of Filey, up in the North Riding, where he married, had
four daughters, and was living there as late as 1700. One of his
daughters married a Mr. Shepherd, and their descendants were living at
Lebberston Hall as late as the 1820s. So the male line Anlaby
descendants of Edward III died out after one generation.
Susan Anlaby Colwall Onslow has a probable descent from Joan Beaufort
thru her grandmother Susan Beckwith. I'll be able to confirm (or not)
Generations A8 and A9 once I see Surtees's pedigree of Brackenbury of
Sellaby. The two lines of descent from Joan Beaufort for Matthew
Anlaby of Lebberston Hall are given in Lines B and C.
Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmorland (c.1379-1440) had a son (B1)
and a daughter (A1).
A1) Elizabeth Ferrers, Lady Greystoke (1393-1434), who had
A2) Anne Greystoke (d. 1477) m. Sir Ralph Bigod of Settrington
(1410-1461), and had (with B3 below)
A3) Anne Bigod (d. 1531) m. William Conyers of Sockburn (d. 1490), and
had
A4) Anne Conyers (d. before 1522) m. abt 1492 Sir William Mauleverer
of Wothersome (d. 1551), and had
A5) James Mauleverer of Wothersome (by 1495-1524) m. 1510 Anne
Wycliffe, and had
A6) Jane Mauleverer (c.1511-aft. 1551) m. 2) c.1537 Peter Slingsby of
Marton (in Boroughbridge), Yorks. (d. 1570), and had
A7) Anne Slingsby (c.1540-1625) m. 2) by 1567 Henry Brakenbury of
Sellaby (1528-1602), and had
A8) Francis Brakenbury of Sellaby (1577-aft. 1630), who had
A9) Susanna Brakenbury (aft. 1601-1670) m. Roger Beckwith of
Aldborough (d. 1635), and had
A10) Susan Beckwith (1614-by 1645) m. c.1636 John Anlaby of Etton,
Yorks. (1614-1661), M.P. 1659, and had
A11) Thomas Anlaby of Etton (1638-16--) m. by 1665 Susan Parker, and
had
A12) Susan Anlaby of Etton (1664-1715), ancestress of the Earls of
Onslow
B3) Sir John Bigod of Settrington (d. 1461) m. Elizabeth le Scrope (d.
1503), and had
B4) Sir Ralph Bigod of Settrington (c.1457-1515) m. 1)by 1482 Margaret
Constable, and had
B5) Anne Bigod (d. 1532/35) m. Sir John Bulmer of Wilton (see C4
below), and had
B6) Anne Bulmer m. 1522 Matthew Boynton of Barmston, Yorks. (c.
1504-1541), and had
B7) Sir Thomas Boynton of Barmston (1523-1582) m. 2)Frances Frobisher,
and had
B8) Sir Francis Boynton of Barmston (d. 1617) m. Dorothy Place, and
had
B9) Sir Matthew Boynton, 1st Baronet, of Barmston (1591-1646) m.
1)1614 Frances Griffith (1598-1634), and had
B10) Dorothy Boynton (1623-16--) m. c.1645 John Anlaby of Etton,
Yorks. (1614-1661), M.P. 1659, and had
B11) Matthew Anlaby of Lebberston Hall (liv. 1700)
C1) William Nevill, Earl of Kent (d. 1463), and had
C2) Alice Nevill (c.1437-14--) m. Sir John Conyers of Hornby (c.
1435-1469), and had
C3) Margery Conyers (1460/65-1524) m. Sir William Bulmer of Wilton,
Yorks. (1465-1531), and had
C4) Sir John Bulmer of Wilton (by 1490-1537) m. 1) Anne Bigod (see B5
above)
Cheers, -------Brad
Descents From Edward III For Susan and Matthew Anlaby
Moderator: MOD_nyhetsgrupper
-
John Higgins
Re: Descents From Edward III For Susan and Matthew Anlaby
I show an additional descent from Joan Beaufort for Matthew Anlaby, as
follows:
D1, Joan Beafort
D2. Richard Nevill, Earl of Salisbury; m. Alice Montagu
D3. Alice Nevill; m. Henry FitzHugh, 5th Lord FitzHugh
D4. Elizabeth FitzHugh; m. (2) (his 1st) Nicholas Vaux, 1st Baron Vaux of
Harrowden
D5. Catherine Vaux; m. Sir George Throckmorton of Coughton
D6. Sir Robert Throckmorton of Coughlin; m. (1) Muriel Berkeley
D7. Thomas Throckmorton of Coughton; m. Margaret Whorwood
D8. Elizabeth Throckmorton; m. Sir Henry Griffith of Wichnor and Burton
Agnes
D9. Frances Griffith; m. (his 1st) Sir Matthew Boynton, 1st Baronet, of
Barmston [B9 below]
Also, with respect to Matthew Anlaby's offspring, Clay's edition of
Dugdale's visitation of Yorkshire has a footnote to the Anlaby pedigree
indicating that Foster's Alumni Oxonienses lists a John, son of Matthew
Anlaby of Leverston [sic] who matriculated at Oriel College 1 Jan 1695/6 and
received a B.A. in 1699. Clay says John is probably son of the Matthew in
the Anlaby pedigree and also indicates two possible sisters for John: Mary,
d. 13 Feb 1719, bur. at Beverley Minster, and Elizabeth, wife of NN Eyres,
d. Apr 1717 aged 39 and bur. at St. Mary's Hull.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Brad Verity" <royaldescent@hotmail.com>
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
To: <gen-medieval@rootsweb.com>
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2007 1:27 AM
Subject: Descents From Edward III For Susan and Matthew Anlaby
The Anlabys were a family who took their name from the manor of Anlaby
in the parish of Kirk Ella, 5 miles west of Hull. Though the manor
passed to the Legard family thru an heiress in the 12th century, male
line Anlabys continued in the Kirk Ella parish. By the beginning on
the 16th century they had acquired the manor of Etton (or at least
part of it) in the East Riding wapentake of Harthill, 4 miles NW. of
Beverley. They made Etton their chief seat throughout the 16th
century and remained a minor gentry (sometimes called "squirearchy",
holding one or two manors, and property worth anything from £20 to
£100 a year) family, marrying with similar local East Riding
families. Thomas Anlaby of Etton took for his 2nd wife, in 1601, a
West Riding lady, Sarah Cressy of Birkin, in the wapentake of Barkston
Ash, 7 miles from Pontefract. He lived with her right after their
marriage in Saxton, in the same wapentake, 11 miles from Pontefract.
It was their eldest daughter, Sarah Anlaby (baptized at Saxton 23
December 1602) who was the first of the family to marry into the
bloodline of Edward III when she became the fifth wife of Sir John
Hotham, 1st Baronet, of Scorborough, on 7 May 1635. Hotham was
governor of Hull, and the marriage no doubt helped Sarah's only
brother John Anlaby (baptized at Saxton 30 January 1614), who had been
admitted to Gray's Inn 28 June 1631. Shortly after his sister's
marriage, John married into the Edward III bloodline when he took
Susan Beckwith (baptized at Tanfield 26 June 1614), daughter of Roger
Beckwith of Aldborough, for his wife, in about 1636 or so. John
inherited Etton and the other family lands on the death of his father
Thomas in 1641, and he and his wife had a daughter (Susan) and a son
(Thomas) before Susan's death, which occurred sometime prior to 1645.
Though Hotham came to disaster in the civil wars, John seemed to
weather them fine. His second wife was both younger and higher on the
social scale than his first. Dorothy Boynton (born September 1623)
was the eldest daughter of Sir Matthew Boynton, 1st Baronet, of
Barmston, who was a M.P., High Sheriff of Yorkshire, and parliamentary
officer. Neither marriage of John Anlaby is in the IGI index, so we
don't know exactly when Susan Beckwith died, or when he married
Dorothy Boynton, but it was probably in the mid-1640s. By Dorothy,
Anlaby had another son Matthew and another daughter
'Elutherea' (Alathea) who survived infancy. Anlaby's career peaked
when he was elected M.P. for Beverley in 1659, but his republican and
radical religious views left him unpopular. He died on 10 December
1661, having never been knighted. I haven't to date discovered when
Dorothy Boynton died.
The Anlabys soon fell into obscurity. Whether or not John's daughters
Susan and Alathea married, I haven't been able to determine. Son and
heir Thomas Anlaby inherited Etton, and appeared at Dugdale's
Visitation in 1666, when he was age 28. I haven't found when Thomas
died, but he took a Kent woman as a wife, so he may have spent time in
London. His only child was a daughter Susan Anlaby (born March 1666,
died at Guildford, Surrey 10 June 1715), who married 1st, at St.
Margaret, Westminster 17 February 1680, Arnold Colwall of Woodford,
Essex, and 2nd, on 2 February 1688, Foot Onslow (1655-1710), by whom
she was ancestress of the Earls of Onslow. Etton, though, would have
passed to Susan's son by her first husband. Matthew Anlaby, the only
son of John and Dorothy Boynton, became a cornet in Sir Richard
Osbaldeston's troop of horse in 1685, and removed to Lebberston Hall
in the parish of Filey, up in the North Riding, where he married, had
four daughters, and was living there as late as 1700. One of his
daughters married a Mr. Shepherd, and their descendants were living at
Lebberston Hall as late as the 1820s. So the male line Anlaby
descendants of Edward III died out after one generation.
Susan Anlaby Colwall Onslow has a probable descent from Joan Beaufort
thru her grandmother Susan Beckwith. I'll be able to confirm (or not)
Generations A8 and A9 once I see Surtees's pedigree of Brackenbury of
Sellaby. The two lines of descent from Joan Beaufort for Matthew
Anlaby of Lebberston Hall are given in Lines B and C.
Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmorland (c.1379-1440) had a son (B1)
and a daughter (A1).
A1) Elizabeth Ferrers, Lady Greystoke (1393-1434), who had
A2) Anne Greystoke (d. 1477) m. Sir Ralph Bigod of Settrington
(1410-1461), and had (with B3 below)
A3) Anne Bigod (d. 1531) m. William Conyers of Sockburn (d. 1490), and
had
A4) Anne Conyers (d. before 1522) m. abt 1492 Sir William Mauleverer
of Wothersome (d. 1551), and had
A5) James Mauleverer of Wothersome (by 1495-1524) m. 1510 Anne
Wycliffe, and had
A6) Jane Mauleverer (c.1511-aft. 1551) m. 2) c.1537 Peter Slingsby of
Marton (in Boroughbridge), Yorks. (d. 1570), and had
A7) Anne Slingsby (c.1540-1625) m. 2) by 1567 Henry Brakenbury of
Sellaby (1528-1602), and had
A8) Francis Brakenbury of Sellaby (1577-aft. 1630), who had
A9) Susanna Brakenbury (aft. 1601-1670) m. Roger Beckwith of
Aldborough (d. 1635), and had
A10) Susan Beckwith (1614-by 1645) m. c.1636 John Anlaby of Etton,
Yorks. (1614-1661), M.P. 1659, and had
A11) Thomas Anlaby of Etton (1638-16--) m. by 1665 Susan Parker, and
had
A12) Susan Anlaby of Etton (1664-1715), ancestress of the Earls of
Onslow
B3) Sir John Bigod of Settrington (d. 1461) m. Elizabeth le Scrope (d.
1503), and had
B4) Sir Ralph Bigod of Settrington (c.1457-1515) m. 1)by 1482 Margaret
Constable, and had
B5) Anne Bigod (d. 1532/35) m. Sir John Bulmer of Wilton (see C4
below), and had
B6) Anne Bulmer m. 1522 Matthew Boynton of Barmston, Yorks. (c.
1504-1541), and had
B7) Sir Thomas Boynton of Barmston (1523-1582) m. 2)Frances Frobisher,
and had
B8) Sir Francis Boynton of Barmston (d. 1617) m. Dorothy Place, and
had
B9) Sir Matthew Boynton, 1st Baronet, of Barmston (1591-1646) m.
1)1614 Frances Griffith (1598-1634), and had
B10) Dorothy Boynton (1623-16--) m. c.1645 John Anlaby of Etton,
Yorks. (1614-1661), M.P. 1659, and had
B11) Matthew Anlaby of Lebberston Hall (liv. 1700)
C1) William Nevill, Earl of Kent (d. 1463), and had
C2) Alice Nevill (c.1437-14--) m. Sir John Conyers of Hornby (c.
1435-1469), and had
C3) Margery Conyers (1460/65-1524) m. Sir William Bulmer of Wilton,
Yorks. (1465-1531), and had
C4) Sir John Bulmer of Wilton (by 1490-1537) m. 1) Anne Bigod (see B5
above)
Cheers, -------Brad
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quotes in the subject and the body of the message
follows:
D1, Joan Beafort
D2. Richard Nevill, Earl of Salisbury; m. Alice Montagu
D3. Alice Nevill; m. Henry FitzHugh, 5th Lord FitzHugh
D4. Elizabeth FitzHugh; m. (2) (his 1st) Nicholas Vaux, 1st Baron Vaux of
Harrowden
D5. Catherine Vaux; m. Sir George Throckmorton of Coughton
D6. Sir Robert Throckmorton of Coughlin; m. (1) Muriel Berkeley
D7. Thomas Throckmorton of Coughton; m. Margaret Whorwood
D8. Elizabeth Throckmorton; m. Sir Henry Griffith of Wichnor and Burton
Agnes
D9. Frances Griffith; m. (his 1st) Sir Matthew Boynton, 1st Baronet, of
Barmston [B9 below]
Also, with respect to Matthew Anlaby's offspring, Clay's edition of
Dugdale's visitation of Yorkshire has a footnote to the Anlaby pedigree
indicating that Foster's Alumni Oxonienses lists a John, son of Matthew
Anlaby of Leverston [sic] who matriculated at Oriel College 1 Jan 1695/6 and
received a B.A. in 1699. Clay says John is probably son of the Matthew in
the Anlaby pedigree and also indicates two possible sisters for John: Mary,
d. 13 Feb 1719, bur. at Beverley Minster, and Elizabeth, wife of NN Eyres,
d. Apr 1717 aged 39 and bur. at St. Mary's Hull.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Brad Verity" <royaldescent@hotmail.com>
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
To: <gen-medieval@rootsweb.com>
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2007 1:27 AM
Subject: Descents From Edward III For Susan and Matthew Anlaby
The Anlabys were a family who took their name from the manor of Anlaby
in the parish of Kirk Ella, 5 miles west of Hull. Though the manor
passed to the Legard family thru an heiress in the 12th century, male
line Anlabys continued in the Kirk Ella parish. By the beginning on
the 16th century they had acquired the manor of Etton (or at least
part of it) in the East Riding wapentake of Harthill, 4 miles NW. of
Beverley. They made Etton their chief seat throughout the 16th
century and remained a minor gentry (sometimes called "squirearchy",
holding one or two manors, and property worth anything from £20 to
£100 a year) family, marrying with similar local East Riding
families. Thomas Anlaby of Etton took for his 2nd wife, in 1601, a
West Riding lady, Sarah Cressy of Birkin, in the wapentake of Barkston
Ash, 7 miles from Pontefract. He lived with her right after their
marriage in Saxton, in the same wapentake, 11 miles from Pontefract.
It was their eldest daughter, Sarah Anlaby (baptized at Saxton 23
December 1602) who was the first of the family to marry into the
bloodline of Edward III when she became the fifth wife of Sir John
Hotham, 1st Baronet, of Scorborough, on 7 May 1635. Hotham was
governor of Hull, and the marriage no doubt helped Sarah's only
brother John Anlaby (baptized at Saxton 30 January 1614), who had been
admitted to Gray's Inn 28 June 1631. Shortly after his sister's
marriage, John married into the Edward III bloodline when he took
Susan Beckwith (baptized at Tanfield 26 June 1614), daughter of Roger
Beckwith of Aldborough, for his wife, in about 1636 or so. John
inherited Etton and the other family lands on the death of his father
Thomas in 1641, and he and his wife had a daughter (Susan) and a son
(Thomas) before Susan's death, which occurred sometime prior to 1645.
Though Hotham came to disaster in the civil wars, John seemed to
weather them fine. His second wife was both younger and higher on the
social scale than his first. Dorothy Boynton (born September 1623)
was the eldest daughter of Sir Matthew Boynton, 1st Baronet, of
Barmston, who was a M.P., High Sheriff of Yorkshire, and parliamentary
officer. Neither marriage of John Anlaby is in the IGI index, so we
don't know exactly when Susan Beckwith died, or when he married
Dorothy Boynton, but it was probably in the mid-1640s. By Dorothy,
Anlaby had another son Matthew and another daughter
'Elutherea' (Alathea) who survived infancy. Anlaby's career peaked
when he was elected M.P. for Beverley in 1659, but his republican and
radical religious views left him unpopular. He died on 10 December
1661, having never been knighted. I haven't to date discovered when
Dorothy Boynton died.
The Anlabys soon fell into obscurity. Whether or not John's daughters
Susan and Alathea married, I haven't been able to determine. Son and
heir Thomas Anlaby inherited Etton, and appeared at Dugdale's
Visitation in 1666, when he was age 28. I haven't found when Thomas
died, but he took a Kent woman as a wife, so he may have spent time in
London. His only child was a daughter Susan Anlaby (born March 1666,
died at Guildford, Surrey 10 June 1715), who married 1st, at St.
Margaret, Westminster 17 February 1680, Arnold Colwall of Woodford,
Essex, and 2nd, on 2 February 1688, Foot Onslow (1655-1710), by whom
she was ancestress of the Earls of Onslow. Etton, though, would have
passed to Susan's son by her first husband. Matthew Anlaby, the only
son of John and Dorothy Boynton, became a cornet in Sir Richard
Osbaldeston's troop of horse in 1685, and removed to Lebberston Hall
in the parish of Filey, up in the North Riding, where he married, had
four daughters, and was living there as late as 1700. One of his
daughters married a Mr. Shepherd, and their descendants were living at
Lebberston Hall as late as the 1820s. So the male line Anlaby
descendants of Edward III died out after one generation.
Susan Anlaby Colwall Onslow has a probable descent from Joan Beaufort
thru her grandmother Susan Beckwith. I'll be able to confirm (or not)
Generations A8 and A9 once I see Surtees's pedigree of Brackenbury of
Sellaby. The two lines of descent from Joan Beaufort for Matthew
Anlaby of Lebberston Hall are given in Lines B and C.
Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmorland (c.1379-1440) had a son (B1)
and a daughter (A1).
A1) Elizabeth Ferrers, Lady Greystoke (1393-1434), who had
A2) Anne Greystoke (d. 1477) m. Sir Ralph Bigod of Settrington
(1410-1461), and had (with B3 below)
A3) Anne Bigod (d. 1531) m. William Conyers of Sockburn (d. 1490), and
had
A4) Anne Conyers (d. before 1522) m. abt 1492 Sir William Mauleverer
of Wothersome (d. 1551), and had
A5) James Mauleverer of Wothersome (by 1495-1524) m. 1510 Anne
Wycliffe, and had
A6) Jane Mauleverer (c.1511-aft. 1551) m. 2) c.1537 Peter Slingsby of
Marton (in Boroughbridge), Yorks. (d. 1570), and had
A7) Anne Slingsby (c.1540-1625) m. 2) by 1567 Henry Brakenbury of
Sellaby (1528-1602), and had
A8) Francis Brakenbury of Sellaby (1577-aft. 1630), who had
A9) Susanna Brakenbury (aft. 1601-1670) m. Roger Beckwith of
Aldborough (d. 1635), and had
A10) Susan Beckwith (1614-by 1645) m. c.1636 John Anlaby of Etton,
Yorks. (1614-1661), M.P. 1659, and had
A11) Thomas Anlaby of Etton (1638-16--) m. by 1665 Susan Parker, and
had
A12) Susan Anlaby of Etton (1664-1715), ancestress of the Earls of
Onslow
B3) Sir John Bigod of Settrington (d. 1461) m. Elizabeth le Scrope (d.
1503), and had
B4) Sir Ralph Bigod of Settrington (c.1457-1515) m. 1)by 1482 Margaret
Constable, and had
B5) Anne Bigod (d. 1532/35) m. Sir John Bulmer of Wilton (see C4
below), and had
B6) Anne Bulmer m. 1522 Matthew Boynton of Barmston, Yorks. (c.
1504-1541), and had
B7) Sir Thomas Boynton of Barmston (1523-1582) m. 2)Frances Frobisher,
and had
B8) Sir Francis Boynton of Barmston (d. 1617) m. Dorothy Place, and
had
B9) Sir Matthew Boynton, 1st Baronet, of Barmston (1591-1646) m.
1)1614 Frances Griffith (1598-1634), and had
B10) Dorothy Boynton (1623-16--) m. c.1645 John Anlaby of Etton,
Yorks. (1614-1661), M.P. 1659, and had
B11) Matthew Anlaby of Lebberston Hall (liv. 1700)
C1) William Nevill, Earl of Kent (d. 1463), and had
C2) Alice Nevill (c.1437-14--) m. Sir John Conyers of Hornby (c.
1435-1469), and had
C3) Margery Conyers (1460/65-1524) m. Sir William Bulmer of Wilton,
Yorks. (1465-1531), and had
C4) Sir John Bulmer of Wilton (by 1490-1537) m. 1) Anne Bigod (see B5
above)
Cheers, -------Brad
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-
Brad Verity
Re: Descents From Edward III For Susan and Matthew Anlaby
On Apr 27, 3:31 pm, "John Higgins" <jthigg...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
Dear John,
Many thanks for this additional descent - I've added it to my
database. Somehow I completely overlooked the three daughters
Elizabeth Fitzhugh had with her second husband Nicholas Vaux.
Thanks for checking Clay's Additions to Dugdale. I only have the
pedigrees that are available online - not too many.
It would appear John Anlaby the witness in the following document from
A2A would be John Anlaby the son of Matthew who became an Oxford
graduate.
DDWR/11/1 - date: 23 Jan 1690
Parties: 1) Matthew Anlaby, Lebberston, esquire 2) Thomas Farside,
Hutton Bushell, gentleman, John Farside, Fylingdales, gentleman
Property: messuage, six oxgangs To uses of his daughters Anne,
Elizabeth, Esther and Mary Anlaby Witnesses: Will Dealtary, Jane
Stouteville, Elizabeth Foster, John Anlaby
So there is a possibility that male-line Anlaby descendants of Edward
III exist today.
Both are definite sisters of John Anlaby, as indicated in the
following 2 A2A documents. It would appear the full name of Elizabeth
Anlaby's husband was Thomas Eyres.
DDWR/11/2 - date: 28 Jan 1714
Parties: 1) Thomas Eyres, Hull, gentleman 2) Mary Anlaby, Hull,
spinster Property: manor house, garth, cottage, closes called Jackson
Garth, Wiles Garth, East Bird Garth, Mattinson Garth, and Sheepefold,
half of Low Bining Garths and 14 oxgangs; messuage, Long Garth, three
Bottome Garths, Upper North Crofts and six oxgangs; messuage with Low
North Crofts, Long Garth, Burton Close, close of meadow and six
oxgangs; tenants named Consideration: £800 Witnesses: Clare Shipton,
Joseph Grimston, John [?] Farside
DDWR/15/8 - date: 15 Nov 1735
Parties: 1) John Groves, Swine, yeoman, wife Susanna 2) Thomas
Eyres, Neswick, gentleman, wife Clare 3) Robert Grimston, Bridlington,
gentleman, Robert Carrick, Benningholme, gentleman Property: bequests
under Will of Mary Anlaby [19 Nov 1718] to her niece Mary and Susannah
Shepheard Witnesses: Henry Waterland, Mary Sherrife
I wrote:
Will Johnson has very correctly pointed out to me the unlikelihood of
Susanna Brackenbury Beckwith becoming a mother at age 12. This means
she in all probability was not the daughter of Francis Brackenbury of
Sellaby and the line fails. I won't be able to get to the library
until the 15th of May, but hopefully Surtees's pedigree of the family
will reveal who Susanna's father was.
Cheers, --------Brad
I show an additional descent from Joan Beaufort for Matthew Anlaby, as
follows:
Dear John,
Many thanks for this additional descent - I've added it to my
database. Somehow I completely overlooked the three daughters
Elizabeth Fitzhugh had with her second husband Nicholas Vaux.
Also, with respect to Matthew Anlaby's offspring, Clay's edition of
Dugdale's visitation of Yorkshire has a footnote to the Anlaby pedigree
indicating that Foster's Alumni Oxonienses lists a John, son of Matthew
Anlaby of Leverston [sic] who matriculated at Oriel College 1 Jan 1695/6 and
received a B.A. in 1699. Clay says John is probably son of the Matthew in
the Anlaby pedigree
Thanks for checking Clay's Additions to Dugdale. I only have the
pedigrees that are available online - not too many.
It would appear John Anlaby the witness in the following document from
A2A would be John Anlaby the son of Matthew who became an Oxford
graduate.
DDWR/11/1 - date: 23 Jan 1690
Parties: 1) Matthew Anlaby, Lebberston, esquire 2) Thomas Farside,
Hutton Bushell, gentleman, John Farside, Fylingdales, gentleman
Property: messuage, six oxgangs To uses of his daughters Anne,
Elizabeth, Esther and Mary Anlaby Witnesses: Will Dealtary, Jane
Stouteville, Elizabeth Foster, John Anlaby
So there is a possibility that male-line Anlaby descendants of Edward
III exist today.
and also indicates two possible sisters for John: Mary,
d. 13 Feb 1719, bur. at Beverley Minster, and Elizabeth, wife of NN Eyres,
d. Apr 1717 aged 39 and bur. at St. Mary's Hull.
Both are definite sisters of John Anlaby, as indicated in the
following 2 A2A documents. It would appear the full name of Elizabeth
Anlaby's husband was Thomas Eyres.
DDWR/11/2 - date: 28 Jan 1714
Parties: 1) Thomas Eyres, Hull, gentleman 2) Mary Anlaby, Hull,
spinster Property: manor house, garth, cottage, closes called Jackson
Garth, Wiles Garth, East Bird Garth, Mattinson Garth, and Sheepefold,
half of Low Bining Garths and 14 oxgangs; messuage, Long Garth, three
Bottome Garths, Upper North Crofts and six oxgangs; messuage with Low
North Crofts, Long Garth, Burton Close, close of meadow and six
oxgangs; tenants named Consideration: £800 Witnesses: Clare Shipton,
Joseph Grimston, John [?] Farside
DDWR/15/8 - date: 15 Nov 1735
Parties: 1) John Groves, Swine, yeoman, wife Susanna 2) Thomas
Eyres, Neswick, gentleman, wife Clare 3) Robert Grimston, Bridlington,
gentleman, Robert Carrick, Benningholme, gentleman Property: bequests
under Will of Mary Anlaby [19 Nov 1718] to her niece Mary and Susannah
Shepheard Witnesses: Henry Waterland, Mary Sherrife
I wrote:
Susan Anlaby Colwall Onslow has a probable descent from Joan Beaufort
thru her grandmother Susan Beckwith. I'll be able to confirm (or not)
Generations A8 and A9 once I see Surtees's pedigree of Brackenbury of
Sellaby.
A7) Anne Slingsby (c.1540-1625) m. 2) by 1567 Henry Brakenbury of
Sellaby (1528-1602), and had
A8) Francis Brakenbury of Sellaby (1577-aft. 1630), who had
A9) Susanna Brakenbury (aft. 1601-1670) m. Roger Beckwith of
Aldborough (d. 1635), and had
A10) Susan Beckwith (1614-by 1645) m. c.1636 John Anlaby of Etton,
Yorks. (1614-1661), M.P. 1659, and had
Will Johnson has very correctly pointed out to me the unlikelihood of
Susanna Brackenbury Beckwith becoming a mother at age 12. This means
she in all probability was not the daughter of Francis Brackenbury of
Sellaby and the line fails. I won't be able to get to the library
until the 15th of May, but hopefully Surtees's pedigree of the family
will reveal who Susanna's father was.
Cheers, --------Brad