_____________________
|
_____________________|_____________________
|
______________________|
| |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_____________________|_____________________
|
_Jeremiah Daniel ALCORN ___________________|
| (1872 - 1946) m 1903 |
| | _____________________
| | |
| | _____________________|_____________________
| | |
| |______________________|
| |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_____________________|_____________________
|
_Franklin R. ALCORN _|
| (1916 - 1986) m 1936|
| | _Andreas GEIST ______+
| | | (1801 - 1878)
| | _Elias H. GEIST _____|_Magdalena HEPLER ___
| | | (1823 - 1899) (1803 - 1869)
| | _Elias H. (Jr) GEIST _|
| | | (1856 - 1935) m 1879 |
| | | | _Philip REED ________
| | | | | (1795 - 1869)
| | | |_Catherine REED _____|_Elizabeth VAN KIRK _
| | | (1828 - 1892) (1797 - 1860)
| |_Maggie Alice GEIST _______________________|
| (1881 - 1967) m 1903 |
| | _____________________
| | |
| | _____________________|_____________________
| | |
| |_Sarah SHAFFER _______|
| (1862 - 1924) m 1879 |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_____________________|_____________________
|
|
|--Margaret Joan ALCORN
|
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|_____________________
| |
| ______________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|_____________________
| |
| _William Ervin HIMES ______________________|
| | (1867 - 1954) m 1893 |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | | _____________________|_____________________
| | | |
| | |______________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|_____________________
| |
|_Ivy Berdalle HIMES _|
(1917 - 1993) m 1936|
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|_____________________
| |
| ______________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|_____________________
| |
|_Margaret Elizabeth ('Maggie') DOVERSPIKE _|
(1876 - 1958) m 1893 |
| _____________________
| |
| _____________________|_____________________
| |
|______________________|
|
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|_____________________
[13642] living - details excluded
[31671] Ann is daughter of John Audley (b. 1602 in England, d. 18 Dec 1685 in Boston, Suffolk Co., MA) and wife Margaret _____ (b. 1610, d. 11 Jan 1685 in Boston, m. 1640 in Newport, RI).
_John BLACK ______________
| (.... - 1751) m 1748
_Henry BLACK ________|_Mary Elizabeth MCCOLLOM _
| (1739 - 1817) m 1765 (.... - 1775)
_James F. BLACK ___________|
| (1770 - 1843) m 1793 |
| | __________________________
| | |
| |_Sarah STOWERS ______|__________________________
| (1744 - 1816) m 1765
_George Washington BLACK _|
| (1804 - 1871) |
| | __________________________
| | |
| | _John BROWN _________|__________________________
| | |
| |_Rebecca BROWN ____________|
| (1768 - 1858) m 1793 |
| | _Colonel James GILMORE ___+
| | |
| |_Mary GILMORE _______|__________________________
| (1774 - ....)
_George Washington (Jr.) BLACK _|
| (1836 - 1916) m 1856 |
| | _David DUNBAR ____________+
| | | (1704 - ....) m 1729
| | _David (Sr.) DUNBAR _|_Bathsheba STODDER _______
| | | (1734 - 1824) m 1756 (1711 - 1736)
| | _David (Jr.) DUNBAR _______|
| | | (1756 - 1841) m 1793 |
| | | | _David BENNETT ___________
| | | | | (1709 - ....)
| | | |_Margaret BENNETT ___|__________________________
| | | (1734 - 1809) m 1756
| |_Joan DUNBAR _____________|
| (1809 - 1888) |
| | __________________________
| | |
| | _Elisha HORNE _______|__________________________
| | | m 1757
| |_Elizabeth ("Betsy") HORN _|
| (1770 - 1855) m 1793 |
| | __________________________
| | |
| |_Tamesin RANDAL _____|__________________________
| (1738 - ....) m 1757
|
|--Fannie E. BLACK
| (1861 - 1936)
| __________________________
| |
| _____________________|__________________________
| |
| ___________________________|
| | |
| | | __________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|__________________________
| |
| _Jeremiah SHACKFORD ______|
| | (1804 - 1887) |
| | | __________________________
| | | |
| | | _____________________|__________________________
| | | |
| | |___________________________|
| | |
| | | __________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|__________________________
| |
|_Sarah W. SHACKFORD ____________|
(1832 - 1875) m 1856 |
| __________________________
| |
| _____________________|__________________________
| |
| _Increase M. JORDAN _______|
| | (1796 - 1866) m 1816 |
| | | __________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|__________________________
| |
|_Sarah G. JORDAN _________|
(1820 - 1903) |
| __________________________
| |
| _____________________|__________________________
| |
|_Emma H. KINGMAN __________|
(1793 - 1865) m 1816 |
| __________________________
| |
|_____________________|__________________________
[21241] "The Bangor Daily News [Bangor, Maine]," 8 January 1936, p. 5: "Otis, Jan. 7 - The death of Mrs. Fannle Young, 68, occurred here sunday after a long illness. Mrs. Young was born in Cooper, daughter of George and Sarah Black. She taught school, later becoming the wife of Arden Young of this town, deceased twenty years ago Mrs. Young was very highly esteemed by a host of friends who will miss her very much. She was a charter and very active nember of Mariaville Grange, serving as master several years and chaplain the past two years. She was also a member of the Otis Baplist church and Sunday many years serving as superintendent and teacher of the adult class. She had been treasurer of the Sunshine club since it was organized 16 years ago, all money passing through her hands during the building of the Otis church. Mrs. Young joined the Mariaville Farm Bureau when it was first organized in Hancock county and had served as chairman or a project leader every year since. Her sons and daughters are Daniel Young of Ellsworth, Ethel Leach of Castine, Lora Watts and Tressie Moore of Otis. She also leaves grandchildren, Norman, Jessie, Joyce, and Arden Young, Beatrice Leach, Alice, Maxine and Evelyn Watts and one brother, George Black of Bangor."
[33722] This line is from the unverified Stowe tree in Ancestry.com in 2012 which states Robert is son of John Common (b. ca. 1740) and Isabel Wandlas (b. ca. 1740).
_William COMYN _______________________________+
| (1163 - 1233)
_Richard COMYN ____________________________|_Sarah FITZHUGH ______________________________
| (.... - 1244) (.... - 1204)
_Sir John COMYN ___________________________|
| (.... - 1277) |
| | ______________________________________________
| | |
| |___________________________________________|______________________________________________
|
_Sir John COMYN ___________________________|
| (.... - 1302) |
| | ______________________________________________
| | |
| | ___________________________________________|______________________________________________
| | |
| |___________________________________________|
| |
| | ______________________________________________
| | |
| |___________________________________________|______________________________________________
|
_John COMYN _________|
| (.... - 1306) |
| | _Eustace DE BALIOL ___________________________
| | | (.... - 1210)
| | _Hugh DE BALIOL ___________________________|_Petronille Fitz PIERS _______________________
| | | (.... - 1229) m 1200
| | _John DE BALIOL ___________________________|
| | | (.... - 1269) m 1233 |
| | | | _Aleaume DE FONTAINES ________________________+
| | | | | (.... - 1205)
| | | |_Cecily DE FONTAINES ______________________|_Laurette DE SAINT-VALéRY ___________________
| | | m 1200
| |_Eleanor DE BALIOL ________________________|
| |
| | _Roland, Lord of GALLOWAY ____________________+
| | | (1164 - 1200)
| | _Alan MacDonal, Lord of GALLOWAY __________|_Elena (or Ela) DE MORVILLE __________________
| | | (1185 - 1234) m 1209 (.... - 1217)
| |_Devorguilla of GALLOWAY __________________|
| (1220 - 1290) m 1233 |
| | _David, Earl of HUNTINGDON ___________________+
| | | (.... - 1219) m 1190
| |_Margaret of HUNTINGDON ___________________|_Maud "MATILDA" of Chester____________________
| (.... - 1229) m 1209 (1171 - 1233)
|
|--Joan COMYN
|
| _Hugues de Lusignan, Co-Seigneur DE LUSIGNAN _+
| | (.... - 1169)
| _Hugh IX ("the Brown"), Count of La MARCH _|______________________________________________
| | (.... - 1219)
| _Hugh (X) of Lusignan, Count of La MARCHE _|
| | (.... - 1249) m 1217 |
| | | _Vulgrin III, Count of ANGOULEME _____________+
| | | | (.... - 1181)
| | |_Mathilde of (Angouleme) TAILLEFER ________|_Amable DE CHATELLERAULT _____________________
| | (.... - 1233)
| _Sir William de Valence, Earl of PEMBROKE _|
| | m 1247 |
| | | _William IV, Count of ANGOULEME ______________+
| | | | (.... - 1178)
| | | _Aymer de Valence, Count of ANGOULêME ____|_Marguerite DE TURENNE _______________________
| | | | (.... - 1218) m 1180
| | |_Isabella of ANGOULêME ___________________|
| | (1188 - 1246) m 1217 |
| | | _Peter of FRANCE _____________________________+
| | | | (.... - 1183) m 1150
| | |_Alice DE COURTENAY _______________________|_Elizabeth DE COURTENAY ______________________
| | (1218 - 1216) m 1180 (1127 - 1205)
|_Joan DE VALENCE ____|
|
| _Warin DE MUNCHENSEY _________________________+
| |
| _William DE MUNCHENSEY ____________________|______________________________________________
| | (.... - 1204)
| _Warin DE MUNCHENSI _______________________|
| | |
| | | _Roger DE CLARE ______________________________+
| | | | (1124 - 1173)
| | |_Aveline CLARE ____________________________|_Maud (Matilda) ST. HILARY ___________________
| | (.... - 1225) (1132 - 1193)
|_Joan DE MUNCHENSI ________________________|
m 1247 |
| _John MARSHALL _______________________________+
| | (.... - 1165)
| _Sir William the MARSHAL __________________|_Sibyl DE SALISBURY __________________________
| | (1146 - 1219) m 1189
|_Joan MARSHALL ____________________________|
|
| _Richard ("Strongbow") DE CLARE ______________+
| | (1130 - 1176) m 1170
|_Isabel DE CLARE __________________________|_Eva MacMurrough, Countess of IRELAND ________
(1173 - 1220) m 1189 (1145 - 1188)
[32956] This line is from the unverified information on http://www.celtic-casimir.com in 2012.
_Reuben (Sr.) GRAY __+
| (1743 - 1832) m 1763
_Adam GRAY ________________|_Abigail BLACK ______
| (1778 - 1857) (1743 - 1820)
_Adam GRAY __________|
| (1808 - ....) m 1827|
| | _Samuel GRAY ________+
| | | (1750 - 1843)
| |_Mercy GRAY _______________|_Mercy WATSON _______
| (1777 - 1832) (.... - 1828)
_Harrison Herman GRAY _|
| (1832 - 1896) m 1852 |
| | _Joshua GRINDLE _____+
| | | (.... - 1819) m 1789
| | _Eliphalet Lowell GRINDLE _|_Anna LOWELL ________
| | | (1769 - 1843) m 1789 (1746 - 1819)
| |_Charlotte GRINDLE __|
| (1797 - 1886) m 1827|
| | _Reuben (Sr.) GRAY __+
| | | (1743 - 1832) m 1763
| |_Nancy Anne GRAY __________|_Abigail BLACK ______
| (1773 - 1823) m 1789 (1743 - 1820)
_Wilbur L. GRAY _____|
| m 1894 |
| | _Reuben (Sr.) GRAY __+
| | | (1743 - 1832) m 1763
| | _Adam GRAY ________________|_Abigail BLACK ______
| | | (1778 - 1857) (1743 - 1820)
| | _Sylvanus GRAY ______|
| | | (1810 - 1883) m 1831|
| | | | _Samuel GRAY ________+
| | | | | (1750 - 1843)
| | | |_Mercy GRAY _______________|_Mercy WATSON _______
| | | (1777 - 1832) (.... - 1828)
| |_Mariah Frances GRAY __|
| (1835 - 1913) m 1852 |
| | _James MCCAUSLAND ___+
| | |
| | _Alexander MCCASLIN _______|_Mary Jane POOR _____
| | | (1763 - 1853) m 1788 (1724 - 1824)
| |_Nancy MCCASLIN _____|
| (1809 - 1891) m 1831|
| | _Reuben (Sr.) GRAY __+
| | | (1743 - 1832) m 1763
| |_Abigail GRAY _____________|_Abigail BLACK ______
| (1768 - ....) m 1788 (1743 - 1820)
|
|--Dora Gertrude GRAY
| (1898 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
| ___________________________|_____________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |___________________________|_____________________
| |
| _______________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | | ___________________________|_____________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |___________________________|_____________________
| |
|_Ella Rose CARTER ___|
(1876 - ....) m 1894|
| _____________________
| |
| ___________________________|_____________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |___________________________|_____________________
| |
|_______________________|
|
| _____________________
| |
| ___________________________|_____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| _____________________
| |
|___________________________|_____________________
_George Thomas GRAY _________+
| (.... - 1693) m 1672
_Robert GRAY ________|_Sarah, wife of George GRAY _
| (1680 - 1748) m 1706
_John GRAY __________|
| (1707 - 1778) |
| | _James FREETHY ______________+
| | | (1651 - ....) m 1675
| |_Elizabeth FREETHY __|_Mary MILLBURY ______________
| (1686 - ....) m 1706 (1651 - 1735)
_John GRAY ______________|
| (1742 - 1825) m 1769 |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| | _____________________|_____________________________
| | |
| |_Elizabeth WINSLOW __|
| (1704 - 1749) |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| |_____________________|_____________________________
|
_John GRAY __________|
| (.... - 1832) m 1793|
| | _Robert ROUNDY ______________+
| | | (1652 - 1715)
| | _John ROUNDY ________|_Deborah PLUMB ______________
| | | (1681 - 1770) (1655 - 1740)
| | _Abraham ROUNDY _____|
| | | (1730 - 1767) |
| | | | _____________________________
| | | | |
| | | |_Elizabeth SAVERY ___|_____________________________
| | | (1699 - 1770)
| |_Elizabeth Skeel ROUNDY _|
| (1750 - 1840) m 1769 |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| | _____________________|_____________________________
| | |
| |_Content BASSETT ____|
| (1730 - 1799) |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| |_____________________|_____________________________
|
|
|--Joseph GRAY
|
| _____________________________
| |
| _____________________|_____________________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|_____________________________
| |
| _________________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________________
| | | |
| | | _____________________|_____________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|_____________________________
| |
|_Mary BURTON ________|
(1776 - 1854) m 1793|
| _____________________________
| |
| _____________________|_____________________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________|_____________________________
| |
|_________________________|
|
| _____________________________
| |
| _____________________|_____________________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| _____________________________
| |
|_____________________|_____________________________
[49559] For this family and descendants, see the unverified file L4MP-BG3 in familyserarch.org which offers: "When Joseph Gray was born about 1806, in Harmony, Somerset, Maine, United States, his father, John Sheldon Gray, was 37 and his mother, Mary Burton, was 31. He married Abagail Jones on 24 January 1830, in Brighton, Somerset, Maine, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 4 daughters. He lived in Wesley, Washington, Maine, United States for about 10 years and Norwood Park, Chicago, Cook, Illinois, United States in 1870. He was buried in Wesley, Washington, Maine, United States."
_____________________________
|
_______________________|_____________________________
|
_Bodilon DE TREVES ________|
| |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| |_______________________|_____________________________
|
_Guerin DE POITIERS _|
| |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| | _______________________|_____________________________
| | |
| |_Sigrada of SOISSONS ______|
| (.... - 0678) |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| |_______________________|_____________________________
|
_Lambert DE HESBAYE _|
| |
| | _Bodegeisel II of AQUITAINE _+
| | | (.... - 0588)
| | _Saint Arnulf of METZ _|_Oda the SUEVIAN ____________
| | | (0582 - 0640)
| | _Clodoule, Bishop of METZ _|
| | | |
| | | | _____________________________
| | | | |
| | | |_Dodo of SAXONY _______|_____________________________
| | | (0581 - ....)
| |_Kunza DE METZ ______|
| |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| | _______________________|_____________________________
| | |
| |___________________________|
| |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| |_______________________|_____________________________
|
|
|--Sigramine, Count of HASBANIA
|
| _____________________________
| |
| _______________________|_____________________________
| |
| ___________________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________________
| | | |
| | |_______________________|_____________________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________________
| | | |
| | | _______________________|_____________________________
| | | |
| | |___________________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________________
| | | |
| | |_______________________|_____________________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| _____________________________
| |
| _______________________|_____________________________
| |
| ___________________________|
| | |
| | | _____________________________
| | | |
| | |_______________________|_____________________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| _____________________________
| |
| _______________________|_____________________________
| |
|___________________________|
|
| _____________________________
| |
|_______________________|_____________________________
[3823] AKA Sigrand (Sigramus) (Count) de Hesbaya.
See notes for son, the Rev. John Mayo. Jean Mayo-Lakatos" (jmayolak@tampabay.rr.com) shared in 2003: The people believed to be the parents of Rev. John Mayo, John Mayo and Katherine (maiden name unknown), who moved to Thorpe Mandeville, Northamptonshire England from the nearby town of Farthinghoe sometime between 1601 and 1603, were buried in the church yard of St. John the Baptist Church in Thorpe Mandeville in 1629/30 and 1633 respectively. Here is some information about the town of Thorpe Mandeville and about the church itself: 1. History of St. John the Baptist Church in Thorpe Mandeville: "The parish is situated in the Hundred of Kings Sutton in the rural deanery of Brackley and the diocese of Peterborough. There has been a church in the parish from very early times. Records indicate the existence of a church in about 1163-1179. It is believed that the church as it now stands, dates from the 13th century. In 1259 Richard De Amundeville, Lord of Thorp released rights of the church to the Priory of Daventry. In 1525, the church was consigned to Cardinal Wolsey towards the endowment of his college at Oxford and in 1532 after the demise of the Cardinal, it was transferred to the foundation of King Henry Vlll's college, Oxford, but on its dissolution in May 1545 it was resumed by the Crown." 2. Exterior and General information about the church: "The church is built of stone with a Welsh slate roof. There is a chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and pinnacled west tower containing 3 bells. A stone mural figure on the east side of the tower depicts St. John the Baptist, the patron saint of the church. The tower has a plain parapet with 4 crocketed pinnacles and a gargoyle at each angle. The south door to the chancel has been sealed off. There was a public foot path through the church yard, but it was removed when the church yard was enlarged and levelled in 1854. It contains a yew tree that is of exceptional size. It is one of the finest in the country being considerably over 1,000 years old. Its girth in 1993 was almost 21 feet at 4 feet above ground level. The parish registers date from 1559 and some records are in Latin. The records reflect the rural livelihoods over past centuries, being mainly laborers and farmers. There are also references to masons, blacksmiths, waggoners, and more rarely, butler and gentleman. One of the interesting entries is a baptism, ' Richard, a black boy, aged 9 years born in Ye East Indies, 28th July 1751'." 3.NAVE: "Prior to the 1850's there was a gallery at the west end of the nave, an old pulpit, reading desk and high pews. The church was reroofed and repewed in 1857." 4. BELFRY: "The Belfry is probably the oldest part of the church; note the immense thickness of the walls. There are 3 bells and the bells are dated 1827, 1790, and 1636; the latter being inscribed 'Henry Bagle made mee 1636, God Save King Charles'." 5. VESTRY: "A new vestry was built on the site of a dilapidated one in 1880. The old vestry was not above 6 feet at its highest point. The vestry contains the church's oldest dated stone slab, dated 1687. There is a brick vault under the vestry." 6. MONUMENT: "There is a Kirton monument near the church, erected to the memory of Thomas Kirton and his wife, Maria, depicting them and their 12 children. The Kirton family occupied the former manor house west of the church from 1554 to 1685. Thomas Kirton was Common Sergeant to the City of London and died in 1601. His wife, Maria Dunch, was a first cousin of Oliver Cromwell. There is a lepers window in the church, historically for the benefit of sick persons during the time of plaque or disease, such as leprosy, which the afflicted persons could look through into the church, but were unable to infect the people inside the church. There is an almery in the north wall of the sanctuary being the little cupboard provided at the side of the altar to lock away sacred vessels. Almeries were originally receptacles to hold donations for the poor. This almery is unusual as it probably has its original door. There is a piscina in the south wall of the sanctuary being the shallow stone basin for drainage of water used by the priest to wash his hands or vessels. The wooden shelf above acts as a credence table to hold sacred vessels. There is a large vault under the sanctuary. There is a sealed off doorway on the south wall." History of The Parish of Thorpe Mandeville, Northamptonshire, England: "Thorpe Mandeville is a rural parish in the south-west corner of Northamptonshire approximately 6 miles north-east of Banbury in Oxfordshire, England. It comprises about 1030 acres. The population was 137 in 1801; 140 in 1896; and it has not grown greatly since. It is one of the many early Danish settlements in the county. The earliest authentic parish record is obtained from the Domesday Book of 1086 where it is styled 'Thorp", the Saxon generic name for village. In the register of Daventry Priory it was called Suthorp or South Thorp to distinquish it from Thorp near Daventry. Thorp was the freehold of Osmond the Dane prior to the 11th century. It was held by Inglerann as tenant under the Norman, Ghilo De Picquigney (Anglicized as Pinkeney). The manor passed from the Pinkeneys to the Amundeville family in about 1243. The parish then acquired the family name which was corrupted to Mundeville and it was not until the 17th century that the village was regularly called Mandeville. In 1253 Richard De Mundeville died without issue; his estate passed to his brother Robert and from him to Richard, his son, who in 1290 sold the manor to Richard de Whitacre who had previously purchased land in the parish from Thomas de Capes. The manor passed through a number of hands and in 1554 it was acquired by the Kirton family who held it until after the Restoration. Thomas Kirton had married Maria Dunch, first cousin of Oliver Cromwell. During the civil war the old manor house standing in a park of considerable size, was garrisoned by the Parliamentarians and it is said that it was stormed by Royalists in 1644 coming from Edgcote and Cropredy. The main approach to the manor was from the direction of Townsend Lane. The old manor house still existed in the early 1700's and it was probably pulled down when the new manor house was built in about 1790. It stands to the east of the church. It was a preparatory school for boys for Eaton from 1854 until 1882. The original entrance of the manor house was on the south side facing the small lane known as Bulls Lane. The former rectory, now the Court, on the other side of Bulls Lane, was associated with the church over 400 years ago. It has pastures for grazing. The name of the adjoining field, Doctors Close, is derived from Rev. Nathaniel Humphrey's living held by a Dr. Deacle who farmed the land including the little field in the corner by Bulls Lane known as Calves Close. In the 13th century a large market and fair was held in the field known as the Ox Yard adjoining the church. Thorpe Feast took place on the Sunday following 6th July. Thorpe Feast has not been held for many years, but a street fair is held every 2 years for village funds. The Three Conies, a 17th century inn, has been a favorite spot for huntsmen and had sub-kennels attached to the inn. Prior to 1850, magistrates held meetings at the inn, before transferring to an inn in Middleton Cheney. Additionally there was a large stone house owned by the Humphrey family. Townsend Lane is opposite the Three Conies, and until 1988, there was a duck pond along the lane, but it has since been filled in. Lower Thorpe, at the bottom of the hill on the lane to Culworth, has the name Duck End. In the past it had stocks for local punishment. A large stone barn and other outbuildings stood by the road, opposite the farm . The stream passing under the road by the farm, meanders to the River Cherwell which eventually runs into the River Thames. There are a number of natural springs in the area. The now dismantled Banbury branch line of the Great Central Railway ran across the north west of the parish. In the north east of the parish, by the road junction to Sulgrave, stands the Magpie farm buildings which formerly included a public house. Algernon Humfrey, at the end of his notes about Thorpe Mandeville, refers to 'the introduction of the telephone to our little parish in January of 1896.' (Source: "A Brief Guide to the St. John the Baptist Church in Thorpe Mandeville, Northamptonshire, near Banbury, Oxfordshire...a Brief History of the Parish", by Algernon G. Humfrey, MA....Dec. 1896...along with notes taken up to the present day on the subject.)
Jean also wrote: "I traced what I believe to be Rev. John Mayo's ancestry back to Thorpe Mandeville and Farthinghoe and POSSIBLY Marston St. Lawrence in Northamptonshire, England. The early records of Marston St. Lawrence burned in a fire, so I cannot prove the connection for sure. But Rev. Charles Chauncy, vicar of Marston St. Lawrence who came to America around the same time that Rev. John Mayo did in 1638, stated that he was friends of Rev. John Mayo's father, who had died in nearby Thorpe Mandeville. Rev. John Mayo's believed parents, John and Katherine Mayo, were living in Farthinghoe for the births of most of their children, and Farthinghoe was right next door to Marston St. Lawrence. I talked to a Mayo researcher who lived in Brackley...not far from all of these towns...and the Mayo's who lived in these towns of Marston St. Lawrence, Farthinghoe, Thorpe Mandeville, and Middleton Cheney, had originated in Marston St. Lawrence. They had come to Marston St. Lawrence from the county of Cornwall in England in the first half of the 1500's. Originally, this line of Mayo's, he said, had come to Cornwall, England from France during the Norman Invasion or Conquest in the 12th century or 1100's. They lived in Cornwall until the early 1500's, until a bunch of them moved to Marston St. Lawrence, and then spread out around the surrounding towns. It is my guess that the birth, baptism, and marriage records for John and Katherine Mayo, believed parents of Rev. John Mayo, would have been found in Marston St. Lawrence, if it were not for that darn fire. I have not been able to locate these records anywhere else. Now....there was a Mayo family or line in Middleton Cheney, which is half way between Farthinghoe and Thorpe Mandeville...and I sort of have been able to piece them altogether and they all appear related to each other in that town. I STRONGLY suspect that they are related to John and Katherine Mayo...I just have not been able to link them together. But these aren't even towns...they are tiny rustic villages out in the countryside that all lie very close to each other. It wouldn't be too much of a stretch to think that all of these Mayo's were related to each other in some form or another. But I did find a link to the Spencer family of Althorp in Great Brington, Northamptonshire, England with the Middleton Cheney Mayo's. They sort of had their feet in both towns at the same time. Most of the people in town in those days worked on the Spencer estate of Althorp in Great Brington. I have been in touch with the St. Mary's Church rector, where all of the Spencers in the area are buried in vaults, and the rector was kind enough to send me information on the early Mayos there."
Cf. http://www.murrah.com/gen/mayo.htm
Ancestry.com offers: "Mayo Name Meaning - English and Irish: variant of Mayhew. Variant of French Mailhot."
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_Clair A. MILLER ____|
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| | _Andreas GEIST _______________+
| | | (1755 - 1849)
| | _Andreas GEIST ______|_Maria Catharina SCHNEIDER ___
| | | (1801 - 1878) (1778 - 1859)
| | _Andrew GEIST _______|
| | | (1839 - 1913) m 1868|
| | | | _Christopher HEPLER __________+
| | | | | (1777 - 1847) m 1799
| | | |_Magdalena HEPLER ___|_Catherine WAGNER ____________
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| |_Ellen GEIST ________|
| (1881 - ....) m 1902|
| | _Henry LATSHA ________________+
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| | _Michael LATCHA _____|_Catharine Elizabeth EMERICH _
| | | (1813 - 1868) (1785 - 1861)
| |_Mary P. LATSHA _____|
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| |_Sarah WOLFE ________|_Margaret KNISS ______________
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[43048] Carl is son of Byrd H. Parker & Mary Georgia Lilly.
[42171] This person is from an unverified file in Ancestry.com in 2017.