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I found this while sifting through census records.. thought it may help someone, I can not read the son and daughters names
1910 census, new Hampshire, Cheshire County, Chesterfield, ED 31, Ancestry.Com slide # 7 line 18
Carpenter, Andrew H age 53 head Born VT
Lilla B age 48 Wife Born Mass
Son age 18 born NH
Daughter age 11 Born NH
i am looking for ellen medford's parents info. i.e. birth/marriage/death
info.
ellen was born 28 jan 1941 in lansing mi.
she died in mt.pleasant mi. on 27 dec. 1994.
interned in kelly cemetary,oil city, midland county mi.
i know from her obit. her dad was charles carpenter and her mom was nettie
lee
b:1916 d:1968. interned in kelly cemetary, oil city, midland co. mi. her dad
i know very very little of. any help would be appreciated
thanks
steve
Hello List,
Below is a Map Link to places in England.
Do you wish to know where "The Homme" is is England?
Go to the following web page and type "The Homme" in the search box.
http://www.multimap.com/map/home.cgi?client=public&overviewmap=ap
You will find it just south of Dilwyn, Hereford, England.
Cool Web Page!
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
Hello List,
I found this web page and found some interesting cites regarding
Carpenters Homme, and Tyrconnel.
If anyone develops more on these please let me know.
John R. Carpenter
La Mesa, CA
http://www.r-alston.dircon.co.uk/country_house_database.htm
THE COUNTRY HOUSE DATABASE
Last Updated 31-05-99
http://www.r-alston.dircon.co.uk/ch_house.htm
Homme House MUCH MARCLE eng hef
http://www.r-alston.dircon.co.uk/family.htm
Kyrle Homme House MUCH MARCLE eng hef
Money Homme House MUCH MARCLE eng hef
Coke Hall Court MUCH MARCLE eng hef
Carpenter Moditonham House SALTASH eng cnw
MUCH MARCLE hef Homme House
Kyrle - Money 1600+
Large library by 19 cent. P. Reid, Guide to Country Houses, II, 1980.
J.B. Burke, Visitation, 2nd Series, I, 1854, 216.
http://www.r-alston.dircon.co.uk/ch_ire.htm
MERRION dbl Merrion Castle
Fitzwilliam med
Owned by Oliver Fitzwilliam, created Earl of Tyrconnel (d. 1667). Fell
into dceay ca. 1720.
The Fitzwilliams moved to Mount Merrion.
http://www.r-alston.dircon.co.uk/ch_eng.htm
SALTASH cnw Moditonham House
Waddon - Batt - Carpenter 1689
John Waddon (1689); Rev. W. Batt ca. 1700. Rebuilt ca. 1760.
Owned by Charles Carpenter from ca. 1800. - J.P. Neale's Views, vol. I,
1818.
C.S. Gilbert, An Historical Survey of ... Cornwall, Plymouth-Dock, 1820.
Vol. II. S. Jones, Views, 1829.
CATTERICK yor Kiplin Hall
Calvert - Crowe - Carpenter 1625
Built by George Calvert, Lord Baltimore, des. Inigo Jones.
Passed to Christopher Crowe 1722. Robert Crowe 1809.
Passed to George D. Carpenter, Earl of Tyrconnel. VCH Yorkshire North
Riding.
G.B. Wood, Historic Homes of Yorkshire, 1957, 78.
http://www.r-alston.dircon.co.uk/private.htm
Carpenter, Thomas, of All Souls 1577 Inventory. Jayne, 1983, p. 121.
SEE: A)
A) NOTE: The 1577 was probably the year his will was probated. If so ...
Thomas Carpenter (per IGI)
Will: 24 JAN 1577 <Churchestoke, Hereford, England>
Film Number 170402 Page Number: 295 Reference Number 12124
William1 Carpenter (b. ca. 1676)--of whom there is no record in New
England--may have died on the Bevis or he may have returned to England. But
there's absolutely no evidence to favor either of these suppositions over the
more likely one, that he died in New England, probably before or shortly
after William2 and his family settled at Weymouth, Mass. (The earliest
record of their presence there is that of daughter Hannah's birth, on 3 April
1640.) Also unrecorded is the New England birth, probably in 1638, of
William2's surviving son Samuel (a previous Samuel had died in England).
Weymouth's earliest vital records were created retrospectively in 1644, to
comply with a directive from Bay Colony authorities that Suffolk County towns
submit them to the county court that year. Such records tend to include only
those families who were still present in these towns in 1644 and only those
vital events pertaining to them that had occurred while they lived there.
William2 had been the clerk at the Weymouth meetings of Seekonk (Rehoboth)
proprietors in 1643, and had actually settled there probably by early spring
1644. One or more of these factors may explain the absence from Weymouth
records of pre-1640 vital events involving the Carpenters. (Since William2
was Rehoboth town clerk until 1649, he almost certainly would have recorded
his father's death if it had occurred there.)
While the Bevis passenger list indicates that both the elder and the younger
William Carpenter had represented themselves as carpenters, the high degree
of education demonstrated by
the latter at Weymouth and Rehoboth strongly suggests less modest
backgrounds for both of them.
Abigail (Briant), of course, was not the elder William's wife but his
daughter-in-law.
Amos B. Carpenter's claim of a London background for these men was
effectively refuted by Herbert F. Seversmith (Colonial Families of Long
Island, New York and Connecticut, 5 vols. [Washington, D.C., 1939-58],
2:567-70). It is further discredited by the parish records of Shalbourne,
Wiltshire/Berkshire, indicating that William2 lived there from at least 1625
(when he was about 20) to 1637 (perhaps early 1638) and suggesting that
William1 had joined his son there sometime between 1634 and 1636/7 (see TAG
70[1995]:194). The baptismal record of his fifth child (the first Samuel), 1
March 1636[/7], refers to William2 as "Junior."
Finally, none of William1's other children's identities is known.
Gene Z.
> << I recently read that the William Carpenter who came over in the Bevis and
>
> went back to England (or died on the way) was a carpenter by trade.
> "Genealogical and Family History of Western New York", Lewis, 1912, Pages
> 1252-53: ...was born in England in 1576. He came to America with his wife
> and son William, in the ship "Bevis," in 1638, and returned in the same
> ship
> to England. He was a resident of London. Page 1318: ...third son of
> William Carpenter, born 1576, was a carpenter by trade and resided in
> London. He rented tenements and gardens in Houndsditch." If I am correct
>
> Houndsditch is a neighborhood of London. >>
Recieved this querry wodered if anyone has further info ?
I don't think William Carpenter was one of the settlers at Jamestowne but a
William Carpenter is listed as an "adventurer" which can mean a number of
things. One of them is that he was in a London Guild and the Guild
contributed to sponsoring Virginia settlement. Therefore, anyone who can
trace his/her ancestry back to one of the people listed is eligible for the
Jamestowne Society.
I recently read that the William Carpenter who came over in the Bevis and
went back to England (or died on the way) was a carpenter by trade.
"Genealogical and Family History of Western New York", Lewis, 1912, Pages
1252-53: ...was born in England in 1576. He came to America with his wife
and son William, in the ship "Bevis," in 1638, and returned in the same ship
to England. He was a resident of London. Page 1318: ...third son of
William Carpenter, born 1576, was a carpenter by trade and resided in
London. He rented tenements and gardens in Houndsditch." If I am correct
Houndsditch is a neighborhood of London.
I am not very familiar with the Merchant Guilds in London, nor do I know if
a tradesman HAD to belong to get work. If this were the case, it could be
our William Carpenter. There also was a William Carpenter and his wife
(Alice, I think) who was in Jamestowne very early.
This is the way for you to see the list of "adventurers" as they were
called.
Go into "Jamestowne Society"
Click on "Qualifying for Membership"
Click on "Stockholders" (written in blue)
Click on "Adventurers" (written in purple)
There are other names besides Carpenter in that list which are familiar,
including Bennet (Bennett) and Peak(e). If you think there are
possibilities here please let me know.
Thanks, and again, hope your New Year is a happy one.
Jennie
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Information
This is the Carpenter Cousins Rootsweb. Since many Zimmermans became Carpenters, Both are discussed here along with related DNA information.