World of HYDE

Discovering our Ancestors and their descendants to all parts of the world. Last updated 23rd Feb 2024

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751 Great Great Grandfather of Syd Johnson Christiansen, Anders (I57777)
 
752 Green River, Sweetwater, WyomingGreen River, Sweetwater, Wyoming Hyde, Orson Joseph (I3184)
 
753 Gregor "of the Golden Bridles" MacGregor of Glenorchy, 1st Chief of Clan MacGregor Birthdate: circa 1330 Birthplace: Scotland, United Kingdom Death: circa April 19, 1390 (51-68) Scotland Place of Burial: Dysart, Fife, Scotland, United Kingdom Immediate Family: Son of Donnchadh "Beg" MacGregor of Glenorchy and N.N. Father of Iain "Cam" MacGregor of Glenorchy, 2nd Chief of Clan Gregor Brother of John MacGregor MacGregor Of Glenorcy, Grego 1st Chief Of Clan Macgregor (I145826)
 
754 Gunnels födelsedag kan vara 1812-12-24. Hon döptes 1813-01-03 Hkansdotter, Gunnel (I58025)
 
755 Guy Street (For 42 years) Locke, Louisa (I58817)
 
756 h our records Help and guidance Certificates and copies Our charges News and features 1871 MCPHAIL, JAMES (Census 652/2 21/ 8) Page 8 of 14 Source (S1607)
 
757 h our records Help and guidance Certificates and copies Our charges News and features 1871 MCPHAIL, JAMES (Census 652/2 21/ 8) Page 8 of 14 Source (S1610)
 
758 h our records Help and guidance Certificates and copies Our charges News and features 1871 MCPHAIL, JAMES (Census 652/2 21/ 8) Page 8 of 14 Source (S1614)
 
759 HAIR dark WEIGHT>130lb HEIGHT>5' 4'' DESCRIPTION Olive complexion.  Woodcroft, Marion Fox (I57915)
 
760 Hamilton, Massachusetts dison, New York, United StatesHamilton, Massachusetts dison, New York, United States Hyde, Daniel (I1973)
 
761 Hampton Quarterly Court - Daniell Ela, in behalf of the country vs. John Godfrey. For wilful firing and burning of the dwelling house of Matthias Button, which was the cause of the death of said Button's wife. John Godfrey upon examination answered, "Why Button, Matthias Sr (I125043)
 
762 Hannah & siblings Ann (1), David (2), Lydia (4), Ebenezer (9), John (13), Meyrick (15, Coal Miner-Colliery Labourer), Massachusetts ry (18, General Servant) & mother Anne (36) & father Edward (36, Engine Driver-Engine Man @ Colliery). Jenkins, Hannah (I118020)
 
763 Har alla dessa barn verkligen samma föräldrar?? Svensson, Måns (I58914)
 
764 Harford Montgomery Hyde was born in Belfast, Ireland, in 1907. His parents were James Johnstone Hyde, a linen merchant, and Isobel G. Montgomery, a distant cousin of Henry James. Hyde attended Sedbergh School at Queen's University, Belfast, Massachusetts gdalen College, and Oxford where he read history and law. He began his practice of law as a barrister in London and on the North-Eastern Circuit in 1934. He and his wife Dorothy, a member of the World War II Fire Service, were married in April 1939. Later that year, Hyde joined the British Army Intelligence Corps. He became a Lieutenant-Colonel in the service and traveled to many countries including America, Denmark, Finland, France, Italy, Sweden, and Russia.
Beginning in 1947, Hyde spent two years as the legal advisor for the British Lion Film Corp. He served as a member of Parliament from the Belfast North Division in the House of Commons from 1950-59. He played a prominent role in the fight to abolish the death penalty for murder and became involved in efforts to bring about legal and social reform in the areas of censorship, pornography, and civil rights for homosexuals. Hyde also acted as a United Kingdom delegate for the Council of Europe Consultative Assembly in Strasbourg, France, from 1952-55. From 1959 to 1961 he was a professor of history and political science at Punjab University
The Rise of Castlereagh,Hyde's first published work, appeared in 1933. He published more than 40 books on various topics, including several volumes in the Notable Trial Series. As a scholar of trends in criminal law and social history, he focused particularly on pornography and scandal and wrote numerous works on Oscar Wilde, Alfred Douglas, Henry James, Roger Casement, and Judge Jefferys. Some of his titles include: Air Defense and the Civil Population (1937), Mexican Empire (1946), Privacy and the Press (1947), The Trial of Oscar Wilde (1948), The Trial of Craig and Bentley (1954), Trial of Sir Roger Casement (1960), Oscar Wilde: The Aftermath (1963), A History of Pornography (1964), Henry James at Home (1969), The Love that Dared Not Speak Its Name (1970), Oscar Wilde: A Biography (1975), Crime Has Its Heros (1976), The Annotated Oscar Wilde (1982), and Secret Intelligence Agent (1982), an autobiographical account of Hyde's activities during World War II. Hyde died in the summer of 1989, just after completing the introduction to his final work, The Lady Chaerley's Lover Trial, published in 1990. 
Hyde, Harford Montgomery (I132266)
 
765 Has been home to the Spencer family since it was built in 1508. The house was originally a "classically beautiful" red brick Tudor building, but its appearance was radically altered in the 18th century when mathematical tiles were added to the exterior e Spencer, Sir William Second Baron Of Wormleighton Kb Mp (I177643)
 
766 having descended from the O'Moores of Ireland. The Muirs of Polkelly may have been the senior Muir line. MacSomerled, Raghnaill Lord Of The Isles (I187752)
 
767 Having no heir of his own, upon learning Edward still lived, Edward the Confessor convinced him to return to London to be his Heir Apparent. Edward Ætheling Of England (I142559)
 
768 He and Sophia Caroline had 12 children, 3 of which did not survive beyond the age of 5. Kyling, Christian Frederick (I58420)
 
769 He built the "Silver Centenary" biplane with friend Tom Shackles Ford, Selby Avon (I75663)
 
770 He constructed the first crystal wireless receiver in Beverley Ford, Selby Avon (I75663)
 
771 He is best known for struggles with the English Parliament and his aempts to create religious liberty for English Roman Catholics and Protestant nonconformists against the wishes of the Anglican establishment, Suart, King James VII Of Scotland And II England Ireland Duke Of York (I15)
 
772 He then took part in the Epiphany Rising, a rebellion led by a number of Barons aimed at restoring Richard to the throne by assassinating King Henry IV; this quickly failed when the conspirators were betrayed by Edward of Norwich, 2nd Duke of York to Henry. After fleeing to the western counties, a number of the Epiphany Rising conspirators were captured and killed by mobs of townspeople loyal to the king; Despenser was captured by a mob and beheaded at Bristol on 13 January 1400. Le Despencer, Thomas 1st Earl Gloucester (I152025)
 
773 He was a Woolcomber. Throup, Jonas (I58428)
 
774 He was appointed ambassador to the court of Henry III of France in 1580. He was appointed to the Privy Council in 1585. He was among the chief officials of the trial of deposed Scottish monarch Mary, Queen of Scots, in 1586. Stanley, Sir Henry 4th Earl Of Derby Lord Strange (I76046)
 
775 He was called back into service as commander of HMS Lancaster, and accidentally drowned while in Portsmouth harbour Hamilton, Captain John (I185767)
 
776 He was constituted Captain-General and Lieutenant to the King, for the Counties of Nottingham and Derby. De Furnival, Sir Thomas (I192452)
 
777 He was dead by Marion's birth. Erwin, Robert (I168653)
 
778 He was made a Woburn freeman in 1643 (Being a freeman carried with it the right to vote, and only freemen could vote) Winn, Edward (I99149)
 
779 He was the stepfather of William the Conqueror, and the father of Odo, Bishop of Bayeux and Earl of Kent, and Robert, Count of Mortagne, both of whom became prominent during William's reign. There was also a daughter, Adelaide who married Lambert, Count de Lens (their issue: Judith de Lens, who herself married Waltheof, Earl of Northampton and Huntingdon). As per "Burke's Guide to the Royal Family," p. 310 (bottom, right-hand column), c. 6 feb. 1976. Herluin Viscount Of Conteville (I101900)
 
780 He ws reported as dying in the Battle of Floddwn Field, but his death date indicates he may have survived. Keith, Lord Robert Master Of Keith (I186857)
 
781 Heart Aack while at work Prior, Roy (I59562)
 
782 Heart failure whilst droving sheep between Uranawy and Merri Merrigal stations down the Lachlan bound for Carrathool, Bygalorie stations. His son was with him. Hyde, George Robert (I146721)
 
783 Heinriche Johan Zackrisson 1877,Albert Johan Zackreson 1881-1960, Elsie Zackrisson, Johan (I57346)
 
784 heiress of brother Thomas D'Oyley, Joan (I53289)
 
785 Henriette-Marie de France; Анриет Мари, кралица на Англия и Шотландия, Reine d'Angleterre, child @12 years, Queen Consort of England, Queen of England/Princess of France, Scotland & Ireland, Princess of France De Bourbon Princess Of France, Henrietta Maria (I19184)
 
786 Henry became a merchant and consul, based for many years in Turkey. During the Interregnum, he was selected by Charles II (who would flee into exile in 1651), to act as an envoy to the Turkish empire and solicit their support for his cause.
The official Parliamentarian (Roundhead) ambassador, Sir Thomas Bendishim back to England. The Third English Civil War was raging at this time
Sir Henry Hyde was imprisoned in the Tower, charged with treason, and tried by a court made up from the House of Commons. The court found him guilty and sentenced him to death. He was beheaded, after kissing the executioner's axe, outside the Old Exchange in Cornhill, London, on 4 March 1650.[1] His remains were interred in Salisbury Cathedral where his epitaph is inscribed on a marble tablet. 
Hyde, Sir Henry (I70)
 
787 Henry De Bohun was in reality the first Earl of Hereford of this familyffice of Lord High Constable of England he inherited as he took prominent part with the barons against King John. His lands were seqyestered but he received them again at the granting of the Magna Charta. He was elected one of the 25 Sureties. Having been ex-communicated by the Pope with other barons, he did not return to his allegiance on the decrease of King Johnbut was one of the commandersin the army of Louis, the Dauphin at the Bale of Lincoln and was taken prisoner by William Marshall. After the defeat, he joined Saher de Quincy and other Magna Charta barons on the pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1220 and died on the passage, 1 June 1220. His body was returned home and buried in the Chapter House at Lanthony Abbey in Cloucestershire, England.


WFT Volume 4 Tree 1267 
De Bohun, First Earl of Hereford Sir Henry First Earl Of Hereford (I230)
 
788 Henry III King of England granted custody of "Willelmum filium et heredum Eustachii de Vescy" to "Margarete que fuit uxor Eustachii de Vescy" Family: Eustace Vesci / Princess Margaret Dunkeld, Of Scotland (F27855)
 
789 Her parents were John Gilliam (no middle name recorded) who died before July of 1673 in Charles City Co, Virginia, and Margery Henshaw who died in May 1688, Surry Co, VA. Elizabeth's siblings John, Charles & Henshia left tracks in Virginia - they seem to Gilliam, Elizabeth (I186389)
 
790 HERITAGE CITATION REPORT FOR CITY OF BENDIGO Mount Camel Homestead Hermes No 33043 Place Citation 29-Dec-2009 03:24 PM Report

History of House, 770 Heathcote-Rochester Road, Mount Camel Margaret Hyde selected 320 acres at Mount Camel as part of a preemptive right under the 1847 Land Act, that enabled tenants of pastoral runs to freehold areas of up to 640 acres. The license for the Mount Camel run was granted to William Keith in 1842, though it was then known as Calbinibbin Creek. Keith did not undertake substantial development of the land, and it was not until later in the 1840s, under the ownership of Margaret Hyde, that it was established it as a sheep station.[8] Margaret Hyde was the widow of George Hyde, who had arrived in Melbourne aboard the Ariadne on the 8th January 1841. Prior to their arrival, the Hydes had lived in Honduras, where George had worked as a magistrate.[9] The Hydes' bought Greenhills Station from John Hunter Patterson and lived there until after George Hyde's death in 1844. Margaret Hyde employed John Hays as her overseer when she purchased Mount Camel Station from Keith circa 1848.[10] On the 2nd June 1853, Robert L. Paterson wrote on the behalf of Margaret Hyde in application to purchase 320 acres under pre-emptive right, which was to include the 'homestead and valuable improvements' at Mount Camel.[11] After a series of disputes over land and the boundaries of Margaret Hyde's parcel of land, Mount Camel Station was sold to James Daniel Robertson and Hugh Taylor Robertson, brothers from Launceston, Tasmania, in 1861.[12] Following the death of his brother in 1864, Hugh Robertson sold Mount Camel to William Degraves in 1865. The following year the pastoral lease for Mount Camel was transferred to Robert William Nutt and Robert Willan, Melbourne solicitors, who represented Degraves' banking interests.[13] Degraves sold the station to his nephew, Charles P. Davis, though the place continued to be run by George Oliver, who had been employed as overseer by the Robertson Brothers. Much improvement of the station was undertaken during the late 1860s, as the station gradually shifted from a grazing sheep to paddocks. John Begg was employed first as the overseer of Mount Camel, then later as the manager. By the early 1900s he had been overtaken in this position by Arthur Begg, his son.[14] Charles P. Davis George Oliver, who had been employed as overseer by the Robertson Brothers. Much improvement of the station was undertaken during the late 1860s, as the station gradually shifted from a grazing sheep to paddocks. John Begg was employed first as the overseer of Mount Camel, then later as the manager. By the early 1900s he had been overtaken in this position by Arthur Begg, his son.[14] Charles P. Davis owned the station until it was acquired by the Victorian Government in 1921 as land for soldier settlement. The 12,300 acres of Mount Camel Station was divided into twenty blocks of varying sizes and distributed amongst returned servicemen from the First World War over the subsequent years. A block of 415 acres including the Mount Camel homestead was granted to Major Frederick George Code, a veteran of the Boer and First World Wars.[15] This property has been in the Safstrom name from 1944 when it was purchased from Major Code's estate.[16]

[1] Randell, J. O. (1985). McIvor: A History of the Shire and the Township of Heathcote, Shire of McIvor, p. 1.

[2] Randell, J. O. (1985), p. 31.

[3] Randell, J. O. (1985), p. 31.

[4] Randell, J. O. (1985), p. 21.

[5] Randell, J. O. (1985), p. 195.

[6] Heritage Victoria, (n.d), Eppalock Weir, Hermes entry 6482

[7] Spreadborough, Robert and Anderson, Hugh (1983). Victorian Squatters, Red Rooster Press, Ascot Vale, p. 173

[8] Randell, J. O. (1982), Pastoral settlement in northern Victoria, Vol. 2: The Campaspe District, Chandos, Burwood, Victoria, p. 462.

[9] Randell, J. O. (1982), p. 467.

[10] Randell, J. O. (1982), p. 468.

[11] Randell, J. O. (1982), p. 472. Page 3 of 6

History of Mount Camel Mount Camel was a 40,000 acre sheep run licensed to Margaret Hyde on the 4th October 1848. The station was originally known as Mount Campbell, but by the 1870s its name had changed to Mount Camel.[6] She sold the license to J. D. and H. T. Robertson in 1861, but by 1863 High Taylor Robertson was the sole owner of the license. In 1865, Robert William Nutt and Robert Willan were the owners of the license, and they sold it to Charles Degraves of Hobart in 1869. CharlesParry Davis acquired Mount Camel in 1875.[7] It was later part of a grant of 470 acres to Thomas Henry Dickenson on the 30th March 1949 through the Soldier Settlement Scheme, comprising Allotments 13, 13A and 13B of Section 23.[8] A vast tract of the former Mount Camel sheep run had been donated to the Soldier Settlement Board by Charles Percy Davis and his son, Edwards Degraves Davis, in 1921, and much of this land was subdivided and sold to returned servicemen for £6/4/6 per acre.[9] Mount Camel Station was taken up by William Keith in 1842 and originally known as Mount Campbell Station.[10] Margaret Hyde bought the place from Keith in an the former Mount Camel sheep run had been donated to the Soldier Settlement Board by Charles Percy Davis and his son, Edwards Degraves Davis, in 1921, and much of this land was subdivided and sold to returned servicemen for £6/4/6 per acre.[9] Mount Camel Station was taken up by William Keith in 1842 and originally known as Mount Campbell Station.[10] Margaret Hyde bought the place from Keith in an auction in 1847, and thereafter held the lease from the Government over the 40,000 acre property, including its 2,200 sheep.[11] Davis took over Mount Camel Station in 1875, and made substantial improvements to both the land and the quality of his livestock.[12]

1858 George Hyde Jr was managing his mother Margaret's station. 
Collier, Margaret (I146720)
 
791 Heritage Consulting. <i>The Millennium File</i>. Salt Lake City, UT, USA: Heritage Consulting. Source (S1874)
 
792 Hicksville, Defiance, Ohio, United StatesHicksville, Defiance, Ohio, United States Hyde, Silas Stearns (I3055)
 
793 His 1st wife's name in not known, his 2nd wife was Ealdgyth, daughter of Earl Ælfgar of Mercia; the 2 women should not be confused.

While many different leaders in Wales claimed the title of 'King of Wales', the country was only truly united once: under the rule of Gruffydd ap Llywelyn from 1055 to 1063. 
ap Llewelyn, Gruffydd King of Wales (I152188)
 
794 His birth date is thought to be shortly after his brother (of the same name) died in Oct 1768. Info at: http://www.thepoeries.org/allpoers/1009.htm ........ John and his brother William were among the best and most successful poers at the end of the eighteenth century and early part of the nineteenth century. After the death of their father John in 1786 they became among the best poers of the day, equalling in many respects Josiah Wedgwood himself. In jasper ware, Egyptian black, and other finer ware there is lile choice between Turner and Wedgwood, although the composition of each firm`s bodies was not the same and had been obtained by different processes. In 1800, Messrs. Turner took out a patent for a new method of manufacturing porcelain and earthenware by the introduction of `Tabberners Mine Rock `(`Little Mine Rock` or `New Rock`). The works were closed in about 1805. The mark used by the Turners was simply the name TURNER, impressed on the jasper and other bodies. On their blue- bordered and printed ware they sometimes used the Prince of Wales` feathers, with the name `Turner` beneath. On rare ware, often with Japan-style paerns produced under the 1800 patent, the wrien mark `Turner`s Patent` occurs. From about 1803 to 1805 or 1806 the style was Turner & Co. They were bankrupt in 1806 mainly due to losses in the French War. John lost his beloved family home, Lightwood Lodge. From church christening records it appears they still lived around Lane End if not still in Lightwood Lodge until about 1815. They had moved into Brewood Hall by 1824. Turner, John (I196404)
 
795 His brother, William (who was murdered) was taken from Hezekiah’s house for the funeral to West Tce. Cemetery. Hyde, Hezikiah William (I91302)
 
796 His father forfeited his tiles and Michael was able to regain the title of Earl of Suffolk on petition to Richard II in 1398 De la Pole, Sir Michael 2nd Earl Of Suffork (I55139)
 
797 his heart was buried at Newenham Abbey, Devon De Mohun, Sir John I. Of Dunster (I52355)
 
798 his mother = Jean Landles, his father = Donald McPhail her mother = Margaret Ross, her father = James Hamilton Witnesses = James and Janet McPhail (my g Family: Donald McPhail / Maggie Hamilton (F57519)
 
799 his mother = Jean Landles, his father = Donald McPhail her mother = Margaret Ross, her father = James Hamilton Witnesses = James and Janet McPhail (my great grandparents) Church = Episcopalian Family: Donald McPhail / Maggie Hamilton (F57519)
 
800 Hjalmar (FARFAR) arbejdede i 1918 på Krystalisværket på Finsensvej der var ejet af Carlsberg og Tuborg i fællesskab. De fremstillede isblokke til datidens "køleskabe" især til Værtshuse, hoteller og ismejerier ect.
1 April 1919 bryggeriarbejder Carlsberg.
Studiereje til Prag 1929.
Han trak frinummer ved militæret i 1907. 
Christensen, Bryggeriarbejder Hjalmar Carlsberg (I58684)
 
801 Hjerteslag Christensen, Bryggeriarbejder Hjalmar Carlsberg (I58684)
 
802 http://academic-genealogy.com/ancientgenealogyjudah.htm#144 Hyde, John (I4457)
 
803 http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/FLAVEL/2001-10/1004581374 Flavell, Mary (I58539)
 
804 http://donegalgenealogy.com/chapter_one.htm Source (S1817)
 
805 http://donegalgenealogy.com/chapter_two.htm Source (S1818)
 
806 http://homepage.eircom.net/~napeadair/Na%20Peadair.htm Source (S1841)
 
807 http://homepage.eircom.net/~napeadair/Na%20Peadair.htm Source (S1843)
 
808 http://homepage.eircom.net/~napeadair/Na%20Peadair.htm Source (S1844)
 
809 http://hydefamilyhistory.com/hyde-of-scotland/
Hyde Family in Scotland

HYDE FAMILY CONNECTIONS IN SCOTLAND

In the spring of 2010, Jamie Hyde (son of Eric Hyde; grandson of Walter Court Hyde) sent me some intriguing information about a possible connection to the Hyde family in Scotland. The story began with a man called John Hyde Christie (1836-1926) who was well known in Scotland as the General Manager of a company called The United Turkey Red Co. Ltd. In his time, it was the largest firm engaged in the business of bleaching, finishing, dyeing, and printing in Scotland.

John Hyde Christie was a son of William Henry McLean Christie and his wife, Helen Hyde (born ~1810). J.H. Christie was married to Jessie Fulton (1842- ) and they had five children: Henry William Christie (1874- ), Jane Christie (1875- ), John Fulton Christie (1878- ), George James Hyde Christie (1879- ) and Helen Hyde Christie (II) (1883- ). Although no records have been found to connect Helen Hyde to James Hyde’s family, Jamie noted that his father (Eric J.W. Hyde) and grandfather (Walter Court Hyde) had visited George J. H. Christie’s home, “Ross Priory” in Dunbartonshire, Scotland, during the Second World War (George was a decorated First World War veteran – he had been awarded the D.S.O.). Jamie also has a 1960 Christmas card from “George & Jane” with the Ross Priory address on it. Eric Hyde recalled his visit to Ross Priory and confirmed that there was a family connection to the Christies, but he did not know the details.

So, we are left with the understanding that there is a connection between the Christie and Hyde families, but the question of course is what exactly is the connection? We can only speculate that Helen could have been a sister of James Hyde. She was born in Glasgow in 1810, which is close to James’ birth in 1814.

Some further investigation revealed that according to the 1861 Scotland census, a woman called Rachel Hyde was living with the family of Helen (Hyde) Christie, in Glasgow. At that time she was 74 years old, and was identified as “Grandmother”. In 1861, Helen would have been 51 years oldd if the speculation above were correct, then Rachel would be James’ mother.

Further research indicated that Rachel had been born in Ireland, and had been married to Richard Hyde on the 7th June 1807 in Barony, Renfrewshire, Scotland (interestingly, it appears that Rachel’s maiden name was also Hyde).

Now, if Rachel was James’ mother, then this information about her husband Richard conflicts with some information that Aunt Isobel left us with: Isobel mentioned in her interview with Laurie that James’ father was Robert Hyde… Was Isobel mistaken? That would seem unlikely because she had a remarkable memory for facts. Nevertheless, it does seem significant to me that James named his first son Richard: As Isobel said herself, it was customary at that time to name sons and daughters after their parents and grandparents. James did not give the name Robert to any of his own children – – nor did Helen (John gave the name Robert to his second son, and James’ eldest son, Richard, named his youngest son Robert John Manly). James and Helen both gave the name Helen to one of their own daughters, and Helen and John each gave the name Rachel to one of their own daughters.

Further research into the Hyde & Christie families in Scotland has turned up a few other bits of interesting information that are worth noting:

We begin with this reference – http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2971157 – which relates to Christie Park, and includes this reference to J.H. Christie’s obituary: “John Hyde Christie was first employed by his cousin’s firm, Hay & Hyde at Port Dundas“.
According to the Glasgow Post Office Directory 1853-54, ‘Hay & Hyde’ was a firm of ‘Silk Throwsters and Patent Silk Spinners, Sawmillfield, Port Dundas’. The same directory also has a listing for “John Hyde of Hay & Hyde, 275 St. Georges Road”. In 1853-54, John Hyde Christie would have been about 18, and likely at his first job. This indicates to me that John Hyde (of Hay & Hyde) is very likely the “cousin” referred to above, and he must have been related via J.H. Christie’s mother, Helen Hyde. (At this point it is also worth taking note of another fact in the Post Office Directory: a “Mrs. Hyde, Grocer”, was living and/or working next door, at 277 St. Georges Road. In the 1861 Scotland census, Rachel Hyde was described as “Retired Grocer”).
According to the 1851 Scotland Census, Massachusetts ry Hyde, 33 years old, lived at 275 St. Georges Road (John Hyde’s location in the 1853 GPO directory, above) with her children Mary (aged 11), Robert (8), Rachel (6) and John (3). She is listed as “Wife”. There is no mention of John Hyde, but Mary is not listed as a widow (It could well be that Census-takers only recorded who was home when they called, to prevent double-counting).
According to the 1861 Scotland Census (ten years later), John Hyde, 53 years old and Mary Hyde 43 years old, live at 29 Scotia Street with their children Mary W. (aged 21), James (aged 30 – a typo, I’m sure this should have been 20), Robert M. (18), Rachel N. (16), Melville (9), William W. (7) and John G.B. (2). John’s occupation is listed as “Silk Garn Agent”. Mary’s birthplace is listed as “Cupar, fifeshire” in both 1851 & 1861 censuses. Other info is consistent as well, including the names and ages of children Mary, Robert and Rachel (maybe young John died between 1851 and 1861). I can’t explain why the son James was not listed in the 1851 Census (he would have been 10), but the rest of the info is very consistent, though.
Now I am going to try to relate some of what I know about these various family members in the years that followed, and how certain information seems to connect with what we know about the family of James Hyde & Agnes Clark:
In the 1861 Scotland Census (as above), James Hyde (aged 20) and his brother Robert M. (18), were both described as Post Office Clerks. They are the sons of John and Mary Hyde, and are still living at home in Glasgow.
In the 1871 England census, James W. Hyde (aged 30) and Robert M. Hyde (aged 28), who were both born in Paisley, Scotland, are lodgers at an address in London, and are described as clerks at the General Post Office in London.
In the 1881 Scotland census, James Hyde (aged 41), born in Paisley, Scotttland, is described as a Superintendent at the Edinburgh Post Office.
The same information is consistent in the 1891 and 1901 Scotland censuses. In the 1901 census, James W. Hyde is described as the Controller of the Edinburgh Post Office.
The Controller of the Edinburgh post office, at that time, was James Wilson Hyde: I know this for several reasons, including the fact that he was the author of several books about the history of the Royal Mail, including: “The Royal Mail, it’s Curiosities & Romance” and “A Hundred Yettars by Post“.
So, what is the significance of all this??!! It is this: All of this demonstrates that James Wilson Hyde is almost certainly the son of John Hyde and his wife Mary. He was their eldest son, and I am convinced that he got the name Wilson because it was his mother’s maiden name.
And now, we finally come to the point of all this: I have wondered about the significance of names that James Hyde & Agnes Clark gave to their children: Jean Mackenzie and Helen Rennie for example. While we know that people routinely named their children after close relatives, I still don’t know where the names ‘Mackenzie’ and ‘Rennie’ originated from. Butamed their second daughter Mary Wilson Hyde (1846-1851). I think it is reasonable to conclude that she was named after John Hyde’s wife*.
Even though this is a strong indicator of a connection between the families of John Hyde, Helen Hyde, and our James, none of it demonstrates definitively what the connection is. Until the right documentation is discovered, the relationships remain to be determined.

* I have a correspondent in Scotland (who I connected with through Ancestry.ca) whose Great grandmother, Massachusetts ry Wilson, was married to a John Hyde in Glasgow. Her understanding of their family (children, names, dates etc.) is very consistent with mine. Still, though, there is no documentary evidence to connect them directly to our James Hyde.

What follows is a list of ancestors of Richard and Rachel Hyde – – whose children may have included our James:

HYDE FAMILY REGISTER (SCOTLAND)

Richard Hyde (1785- ~1840) Born in Scotland. Married Rachel Hyde (apparently her maiden name) in Barony, Lanarkshire on June 7, 1807. Died sometime before 1841.
Rachel Hyde (1787-1868) Born in Ireland ~1787. Died at 17 George Street
John Hyde (1808- )
Helen Hyde (1810- )
Rachel Hyde (1821- )
Mary Hyde (1829- )
James Hyde?? (1814-1861) Our speculation is that James was born into this family.
John Hyde (1808- ) Son of Richard & Rachel; born in Glasgow, Scotland
Mary Wilson (1818- ) Born in Cupar, Fifeshire, Scotland.
Mary Wade Hyde
James Wilson Hyde
Robert M. Hyde
Rachel M. Hyde
Melville Hyde
William W. Hyde
John J.B. Hyde
Helen Hyde (1810- ) Daughter of Richard & Rachel; born in Glasgow, Scotland
William Henry McLean Christie (1810- ) Born in Barrhead, Renfrewshire, Scotland.
John Hyde Christie
Rachel Christie
William Christie
Frederick Christie
Rachel Hyde (1821- ) Daughter of Richard & Rachel; born in Glasgow, Scotttland.
Mary Hyde (1829- ) Daughter of Richard & Rachel; born in Glasgow, Scotland.
Mary Wade Hyde (1840- ) Daughter of John Hyde & Mary Wilson; born in Paisley, Glasgow, Scotland.
Walter James Dalgleish (1841-1907) Johnstone, Dumfrieshire, Scotland. Died in Essex, England on Sept. 17, 1907.
Mary Hyde Dalgleish
John J. Dalgleish
Elizabeth Nicol Dalgleish
Walter Edward Dalgleish
William Service Dalgleish
James Wilson Hyde (1841- ) Son of John Hyde & Mary Wilson; born in Glasgow, Scotland. He had a long career in the Post Office, eventually becaming Controller of the Edinburgh General Post Office. He was also the author of several books about the history of the Royal Mail, including: “The Royal Mail, it’s Curiosities & Romance” and “A Hundred Years by Post“.
Joanna Stuart (1853- )
Martha Helena Eveline Hyde
Robert M. Hyde (1843- ) Son of John Hyde & Mary Wilson; born in Glasgow
Rachel N. Hyde (1845- ) Daughter of John Hyde & Mary Wilson; born in Glasgow, Scotland
Melville Hyde (1852-1937) Daughter of John Hyde & Mary Wilson; born in Glasgow, Scotland
William Larmour Service (1856-1931)
Robert Larmour Service
William Dudley Service
Juanita Melville Service
Daisy Service
Olive Muriel Service
Eleanor Service
Thomas Bernard Service
Clarence Hyde Service
William W. Hyde (1854- ) Son of John Hyde & Mary Wilson; born in Glasgow, Scotland
John G.B. Hyde (1859- ) Son of John Hyde & Mary Wilson; born in Glasgow
John Hyde Christie (1836-1926) Son of Helen Hyde & William Henry McLean Christie; born in Glasgow, Scotland
Jessie Fulton (1842-1924) Born in Kibarchan, Renfrewshire, Scotland .
Henry William Christie
Jane Park Christie
John Fulton Christie
George James Hyde Christie
Helen Hyde Christie
Rachel Christie (1839- ) Daughter of Helen Hyde & William Henry McLean Christie; born in
William Christie (1843-) Son of Helen Hyde & William Henry McLean Christie; born in
Frederick Christie (1850- ~1860) Son of Helen Hyde & William Henry McLean Christie; born in
Mary Hyde Dalgleish (1868- ) Daughter of Mary Wade Hyde & Walter James Dalgleish.
Henry Charles Sawyer (1870- )
Doris Mary Sawyer
Charles W. Sawyer
Elizabeth Winifred Sawyer
John J. Dalgleish (1870-1955) Son of Mary Wade Hyde & Walter James Dalgleish.
Elizabeth Nicol Dalgleish (1872-1940) Daughter of Mary Wade Hyde & Walter James Dalgleish.
William Sydney Smith (1871- )
Marjorie Blanche Smith
Walter Edward Dalgleish (1875-1938) Son of Mary Wade Hyde & Walter James Dalgleish.
Blanche Ethel Martin (1875-1931)
Ronald James Edward Dalgleish
Stella Mary Elizabeth Dalgleish
Violet Wagg (1894-1957)
William Service Dalgleish (1879-1918) Son of Mary Wade Hyde & Walter James Dalgleish.
Martha Helena Eveline Hyde (1878- ) Daughter of James Wilson Hyde & Joanna Stuart.
Robert Larmour Service (1878- ) Son of Melville Hyde & William Larmour Service.
Elizabeth Harriet Stokes ()
William Larmour Hyde Service
William Dudley Service (1883- ) Son of Melville Hyde & William Larmour Service.
Juanita Melville Service (1885-1956) Daughter of Melville Hyde & William Larmour Service.
Olive Muriel Service (1887-1967) Daughter of Melville Hyde & William Larmour Service.
Frederick William Chele (1866- )
Daisy Service (1887- ) Daughter of Melville Hyde & William Larmour Service.
Thomas Bernard Service (1889- ) Son of Melville Hyde & William Larmour Service.
Eleanor Service (1889- ) Daughter of Melville Hyde & William Larmour Service.
Clarence Hyde Service (1891- ) Son of Melville Hyde & William Larmour Service.
Henry William Christie (1873- ) Son John Hyde Christie & Jessie Fulton
Jane Park Christie (1874- ) Daughter John Hyde Christie & Jessie Fulton
John Fulton Christie (1877-1959) Son John Hyde Christie & Jessie Fulton
Jessie Christina MacDonald (1893-1972)
Iain Colin Christie
George James Hyde Christie (1879- ) Son John Hyde Christie & Jessie Fulton
Helen Hyde Christie (1883- ) Daughter John Hyde Christie & Jessie Fulton
Doris Mary Sawyer (1895- )
Charles W. Sawyer (1897- )
Elizabeth Winifred Sawyer (1900- )
Marjorie Blanche Smith (1906-1981)
Edwin Azariah Ferraro Vine (1906-1951)
Ronald James Edward Dalgleish (1902- ) Son of Walter Edward Dalgleish & Blanche Ethel Martin.
Elizabeth Clapham (1913-1986)
Ronald J. Dalgleish
Daphne Dorothy Dalgleish
Stella Mary Elizabeth Dalgleish (1908-1997) Daughter of Walter Edward Dalgleish & Blanche Ethel Martin.
William Larmour Hyde Service (1900-1989) Son of Robert Larmour Service & Elizabeth Harriet Stokes.
Iain Colin Christie (1930-1991) Son of John Fulton Christie & Jessie Christina MacDonald
Ronald J. Dalgleish (1932-2004) Son of Ronald James Dalgleish & Elizabeth Clapham.
Daphne Dorothy Dalgleish (1938-1978) Daughter of Ronald James Dalgleish & Elizabeth Clapham.


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One thought on “Hyde Family in Scotland”

christine Elshaw
August 2, 2015 at 7:52 am
hi, my grandfather was john james dalgliesh, son of walter james and mary wade dalgliesh. he married a Florence ethel read who had one son, named walter james dalgliesh, my father. please note the spelling of dalgliesh. my dad insists it is ie not ei, there was also no mention of Arthur William born 1878 or deseased child named Melville Beatrice who was only a baby. I love all our family history that you have wrien. so this makes us related in some way. would love to hear from you. Christine Elshaw nee dalgliesh

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Hyde, Richard (I75737)
 
810 http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com.au/2013/11/purdysburn-house.html

FRIDAY, 30 OCTOBER 2015

Purdysburn House

THE BA FAMILY WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY DOWN, WITH 12,010 ACRES

This family, originally from Cornwall, was founded in Ireland by an officer in CROMWELL's army, who acquired considerable property in County Wexford.

THOMAS BA (d 1741), of Ozier Hill, Massachusetts rried, in 1713, Jane, daughter of Thomas Devereux, and was succeeded by his eldest son,

SAMUEL BA (1734-65), father of Major Thomas Ba, Royal Fencible American Regiment, who was killed in the American war, when the property devolved upon his youngest brother,

CAPTAIN ROBERT BA (1728-83), of Ozier Hill, County Wexford, an officer in the 18th Regiment who, in 1765, Massachusetts rried Hannah Hyde.

Captain Ba was succeeded by his eldest son,

NARCISSUS BA (1761-1840), of Purdysburn, County Down, and Ozier Hill, County Wexford, who wedded Miss Margaret Greg in 1793.
Mr Ba was a founder of the Belfast Bank, the son of Captain Robert Ba of the 18th Royal Irish Regiment of Osier Hill, Co. Wexford and Belfast. He lived at Donegall Square North, in Donegall House, later the Royal Hotel.
Mr Ba was succeeded by his son,

ROBERT BA JP DL (1795-1864), of Purdysburn and Ozier Hill, who married Miss Charlotte Wood in 1841.

His eldest son,

ROBERT NARCISSUS BA JP DL (1844-91), of Purdysburn, Massachusetts rried, in 1866, Marion Emily, eldest daughter of Sir Edward Samuel Walker, of Berry Hill

The youngest son,

THOMAS BA, of Rathmullan, County Donegal, Massachusetts rried firstly, Elizabeth, daughter of Robert Waddell, of Island Deny, County Down, and by her had issue,
THOMAS, of whom presently;
Elizabeth, m Caesar George Otway.
He married secondly, Sarah, daughter of Samuel Lyle, of The Oaks.

Mr Ba died in 1857, and was succeeded by his only son,

THOMAS BA JP DL (1816-97), of Rathmullan, High Sheriff, 1844, who married, in 1852, Charlotte, daughter of the Ven Edmond Hesketh Dalrymple Knox, late Archdeacon of Killaloe, and had issue,
THOMAS EDMOND, of whom we treat;
Alfred Acheson, b 1856;
Edmond Hesketh (1857-82);
Arthur Robert (1859-91);
CHARLES LYONS, jointly of Rathmullan;
Gerard Otway, b 1862;
Robert Devereux, b 1863;
Octavius, b 1865;
Frederick Shelley (1869-76);
Agnes Charlotte, m 1877, Archibald H. Duthie (dsp 1883);
ALICE ELIZABETH, jointly of Rathmullan;
MABEL MACKENZIE, jointly of Rathmullan.
The eldest son,

COLONEL THOMAS EDMOND BA JP (1854-1908), of Rathmullan House, Lieutenant-Colonel and Honorary Colonel commanding Donegal Artillery, was succeeded jointly by his brother and sisters, Charles, Alice, and Mabel, as above mentioned.

****************

THE REV NARCISSUS BA wrote of his family,

[from Ulster Journal of Archaeology, Second Series, Vol. II, No. 2, January 1896]

DONEGALL PLACE, now full of shops, was, half-a-century ago [1840s], a quiet street of private houses. Some of them had gardens and trees in the rere, and there was quite a grove at the corner of the square where Robinson & Cleaver now have their establishment.

The residents were either merchants of the town, or country gentlemen who came to Belfast for society in winter, as fashionable people now go to London for the season.

At the beginning of this century the country had hardly seled after the Insurrection, and distant journeys were tedious and costly.

My father, Samuel Hyde Ba, has been a week in coming from England, and my Uncle William, when in Trinity College, used to ride to Dublin, with a groom behind carrying his luggage...

...There were four members of our family domiciled in Donegall Place. My father, Samuel Hyde Ba, lived at No. 6 (now Cuming Bros.'), where I was born. His brother, Narcissus, lived where the Royal Hotel is now till his new house at Purdysburn was finished.

Thomas, afterwards of Rathmullan, lived at No. 4. Thomas Greg Ba, son of Narcissus, was a director in the Belfast Bank.

The Rev William Ba lived near Fountain Street, where he died, long after the rest were gone. Our house had belonged to my grandfather, Captain Ba, who came from County Wexford in 1760.

The other inhabitants were,
Hugh Montgomery, of Benvarden and Ballydrain (a director in the Northern Bank); James Orr, of the Northern Bank ; William Clark, J.P., father of the late director of the Belfast Bank; James Douglas, of Mount Ida; Sir Stephen May, Mrs. May, John and William Sinclaire, Henry J. Tomb; Captain Elsemere, R.N.; Henry William Shaw; James Crawford, wine merchant; John S. Ferguson and Thomas F. Ferguson, linen merchants; and Dr. John MacDonnell, one of the MacDonnells of the Glens of Antrim, whose bust is in the Museum. ...The Cotton-spinning industry did not flourish in Ireland, nor did calico-printing, which my father aempted at Hydepark (so called after my mother, Anne Hyde). The firm was Ba, Ewing & Co.
The Ba mausoleum at Drumbo Parish Church reads:
To the memory of Robert Ba, son of Thomas Ba of Ozior Hill in the County of Wexford, who died on the 26th of October 1783 aged 55 years. He was for several years a captain in the 18th Royal Irish Regiment and married in 1765 Hannah daughter of Samuel Hyde Esquire who died on the 24th of April 1816 aged 79 years.

Here lies the body of Narcissus Ba, of Purdysburn, Esquire, who died on the 27th January 1840 in the 79th year of his age. He was the oldest son of Robert Ba of Ozier Hill in County of Wexford here is also placed the body of Margaret his wife daughter of Thomas Gregg Esquire who died on the 29th September.

Here also lies the body of Elizabeth Ba daughter of Narcissus Ba of Purdysburn Esq. who died on the 27th March 1854 aged 52 years. Here is also placed the body of Robert Ba Esq. of Purdysburn born 23rd June 1795 died 27th July 1864.
NARCISSUS BA, along with his partners David Gordon, John Houston and Hugh Crawford, founded the Belfast Bank (now the Northern Bank).

This bank originally began business at a private house on the corner of Callender Street, Belfast, almost directly opposite the White Linen Hall



PURDYSBURN HOUSE, Newtownbreda, County Down, was built ca 1825 after a design by Hopper, in the Tudor-Gothic style. It was demolished ca 1965.

The Purdysburn estate had belonged to the Hill-Wilson family and was, at one time, the residence of the Lord Bishop of Down.

In 1812, it became the property of the Ba family, who built large additions to the house.

When two of the Ba daughters were to inherit the estate they both decided they did not want to live there, so Narcissus Ba decided that his property was to go to the Hospital Commissioners.

The commissioners then decided that Purdysburn should be opened as an asylum for the “lunatic poor”.

The opening took place in 1895. The part of the estate nearest the River Lagan was later used for a new hospital.

Part of the demesne was occupied with the extensive buildings of the Infectious Diseases Hospital, which were in what was once known as the "Fort Field," where there was a very perfect old fort, with trees planted at regular intervals round the moat.

In the centre of the fort,
...there is a most curious tree, said to be about eight hundred years old. Perhaps the fort may be opened at some future time; and it would doubtless well repay the trouble of excavation to find a souterrain and unexpected treasure still securely hidden under the ancient holy tree which has guarded the secret for so many long years.
The grounds belonging to Purdysburn were stated to have been more beautiful and picturesque than in any other place about Belfast.



The pleasure grounds were laid out in the form of a Union Flag, and the design was carried out with all the borders planted with the colours red

The wonderful yew-tree hedges were apparently unequalled in Northern Ireland.

Robert Narcissus Ba (1844-91), who succeeded to the estate on the death of his father in 1864, was a “hearty and genial sportsman” who kept “stud race-horses and … had many successes at race courses both in England and at the Maze and Downpatrick.”

He married Charlotte Wood in 1841; was father of 4 daughters & High Sheriff, 1846; gave the land free to build Ballymaghery RC church in Clonduff parish in 1850; a deputy lieutenant of County Down in 1852; a magistrate in 1852 & 1862.

He leased a mountain of 31 acres in Stang in 1863 from Lord Downshire; owned Ballynanny, Ballyaughian, Leitrim & Ballymaghery townlands in 1863. of Purdysburn.

At the time of the insurrection of 1641, the four townlands of Clonduff-Leitrim, Ballymaghery, Ballyaughian and Ballynanny were held by Lady Mary Crosby.

At her death, these four passed into the hands of the Waring family and were held until 1834, when the Rev Holt Waring sold his interest to Narcissus Ba for £33,000.

Finally, in 1912, Mrs Essel, grand-daughter of Ba, disposed of the Ba Estate to tenants under the land purchase Acts.

Ba’s Wall in the Mourne Mountains was built by Narcissus Ba, who had bought the Leitrim Estate in 1834.

The wall was probably constructed during the famine years, and remains in remarkable condition considering that it was built some eighty years before the Mourne Wall itself was completed.

It joins the Mourne Wall at the top of Slieve Muck.

Leitrim Lodge was also built by Ba for use as a hunting lodge ca 1834.

The Bas also owned Rathmullan House - now a hotel - in County Donegal.

The hotel's website states that
Rathmullan House was built around 1820 ... The house and estate was sold in 1837 to Thomas Ba, a member of a prominent Belfast family, founders of the Belfast Bank.
First published in May, 2010.
Posted by Timothy Belmont at 07:35
Labels: County Down Landowners, Heritage 
Batt, Captain Robert (I2826)
 
811 http://ma-vitalrecords.org/MA/Middlesex/Watertown/Images/WatertownV1_036.shtml Source (S1398)
 
812 http://www.academic-genealogy.com/ancientgenealogyjudah.htm#137
Will of valentine Pyne 13 Jan 1691

Wills of Somersetshire, England, old FHL #92375, 54 Fane,
"In the name of God Amen, I Valentine Pyne of Bethnall Green [Bethnal Green]
in the parish of Stebonheathats Stepney [Stepney History: Stebenhede, and in later
documents Stebenhythe and Stebonheath.] in the county of Middle= Mariner now
outwards bound upon a voyage to East India in and with the good shipp the New
Berkley Castle whereof I the said Valentine Pyne am commander doe make and
ordaine this my last Will & testament in writing in manner and form following that
is to say first I comend my soul into the hands of almighty God my body after this
life ende I commi unto the earth or seas in hopes of any joyfull Resurrection at the
last day and as for my worldly estate whatsoever and wheresoever after payment
and satisfaction of all such debts as at the time of my decease shall be from me due
and owing to any person or persons whatsoever I give bequeath and dispose thereof
as followeth that is to say-Impzid: I give and bequeath unto my very loving wife
Anne Pyne [marriage allegation 25 June 1689 to the widd: Widow Anne Hide of
Bednall Greene] in case she shall happen to survive me all and singular my goods
chaells--merchandizes adventures ready money plate rings housholdstuff and all
other my personall estate and substance whatsoever and wheresoever my just debts
and funeralls (if any such there be) and the charge of proveing this my Will being first
thereout paid and deducted And in case the said Anne my wife shall happen to survive
me Then I doe hereby make ordaine & constitute & appoint her full and sole Executrix
of this my last Will and Testament But in case my said wife shall happen to dye before
me then and in such case and not otherwise I give and bequeath unto my son-in-law
Jonathan Hide the sum of five hundred pounds of lawful money of England to be paid
unto him by my Executrix hereafter named within six months next after my decease
and in case of my said wifes death before me then also I give and bequeath unto my
cozen William Fitcher of Pertham in the County of Surrey-Gent. five pounds of like
money and also in case of my said wife's death before me and not otherwise all the
rest and residue of all such estate and substance whatsoever or wheresoever as shall
be then in any wise belonging unto me my debts and funeralls and the charge of
proving this my Will being first thereout paid and deducted I wholly give and bequeath
the same and every part thereof unto my daughter Mary Pyne whom in case of the death
of my wife dying as aforesaid I do hereby make and ordain full and sole Executrix of
this my last Will and Testament and doe hereby constitute and appoint my said cozen
William Fitcher . . . aid . . . said daughter in the geing in recovery and management
of my said Estate . . . in case my said son-in-law Jonathan Hide or my said daughter
Mary Pyne shall happen to dye . . . into my said son-in-law or daughter . . . seale this
13 Jan 1691 A D . . . Valent Pyne in presence of . . . Nathaniel Smith, Thomas Ange,
Phillip Parsons. (&c . . . Probation) . . ." 
Pyne, Capt Valentine (I4458)
 
813 http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1901/Antrim/Ballymena_and_Town_and_Urban_District_of_Ballymena/Queen_Street/927186/ Source (S1792)
 
814 http://www.corkpastandpresent.ie/places/northcorkcounty/grovewhitenotes/caherduggantocastlehyde/gw2_88_102.pdf

"Mr. Arthur Hyde was in England when the Rebellion of 1598 took place, but his wife and children were at his castle of Carrignedy, or Castle Hyde.
On the day that Owen MacRory and the rest entered Munster, the country people rose "instantly before noon" and began plundering all round. Hyde's own cale and these of his English tenants were taken at once, but his wife and children escaped to Cork with Lorld Barry's help, and his 18 men held the castle for six weeks.

Hyde landed at Youghal, but could do nothing, and his garrison seeing that there was no chance of relief, yielded on promise of life and wearing apparel. They were stripped naked, but not killed, by Lord Roche's tenants before they had gone a mile. The Sugane Earl of Desmond, who was present in per- son with an overwhelming force, appointed Piers Lacy, Seneschal of Imo- killy, and the castle was surrendered to an Irishman who claimed it. " Forty persons depending on Hyde were left destitute.

He sought to form a company : 64 muskets and other arms, with much ammunition, had been provided, and it is probable that things would have gone differ- ently had Hyde been himself at home., (Bagwell iii., 306).
Mr. Graan Flood gives 17th October, 1598, as the date Carrignedy Castle was captured.

Some of the lands mentioned in above-mentioned grants appear to have been the property of David, Viscount Fermoy, especially Cregg, for King James I. granted to David Lord Roche, Viscount Fermoy, all his property on his surrendering the same. Amongst the lands, we find : " Cregg 4! plowlands, viz., the Castle and town of Cregg, i | plowland, Cregg Olimpry 1 plowland, Cnock Innannig J plowland, Templenoa \ plowland, Skartleet- tinegh \ plowland, & Clowagh J plowland with the advowsons, etc., of the parish church of Cregg, called Teample Ioganne," etc. (16 Deer., 9 James I., 1611).

In 1659, the Townland of Carrignedy (Castle Hyde) was occupied by Tituladoes—Arthur Hide, Esq., and Ellen Hide; 4 English and 62 Irish. (Pey).
The Subsidy Rolls, A.D., 1665, gives: "Hide, of Carrigmedy, value in goods, £12 7s. 6d." (P. R. O. Irld.) Richard Conron writing to Robert Southwell from Burton (near Bue- vant) 19th June, 1669, states :—" Cahere, the mason, is not in this country ; he has taken a great task about some iron works that is seing up about Carrignedy, and has taken the workmen of these parts with him.' (Egmont MSS., ii., 20).

Smith (pub. 1750), writes:—"To the West of Fermoy is Castle Hyde, a good old house with large improvements, of Arthur Hyde, Esq., whose ancestor, Sir Arthur Hyde, was made a knight banneret, by Queen Elizabeth, for his gallant behaviour and raising a regiment in England, at the CASTLE HYDE (CARRIGNEDY). 9 1 time of the Invasion by the Invincible Armada;
Her Majesty afterwards granted him nearly 6,000 acres of land in this country, which came to the crown by the aainder of Gerald Earl of Desmond. He married the daughter of Poer, baron of Curraghmore.

This place was formerly named Carrignedy, i.e., 'the rock of the shielder grounds and sides of the Blackwater are here finely planted with numerous groves of spruce, Scotch fir, and other timber trees, which, from the opposite side of that river, Massachusetts ke a fine appearance. The offices are new and well disposed, and to the south -of the house is a large deerpark.

Near Castle Hyde stands the parish church, in good repair, and adorned with a clock. The lands in this neighbour hood are covered with excellent limestone, the soil being naturally a stiff clay. In this country considerable quantities of lime are burned; and, it is observable, that if the upper stratum be used, it swells so greatly upon burning, that it frequently bursts the kiln. There is also a dark kind of limestone in some places, which being flinty, cracks and flies in the fire, but is, nevertheless, burned by an intense heat; furze kilns are generally used in this part of the country."
==============================
This Arthur was the first member of the family to sele in the Kingdom of Ireland and is considered the founder of the line. 
Hyde, Arthur (I466)
 
815 http://www.ddss.nu/ddss/birthResult?foddID=363400 Johnssen, Berndt (I57017)
 
816 http://www.histparl.ac.uk/volume/1509-1558/member/essex-sir-william-1470-1548#footnote3_lhd1dqq

Family and Education
b. c. 1470, s. of Thomas Essex of Walham Green, Mdx. by Elizabeth, da. and h. of William Babthorpe of Ellistown, Leics. m. settlement 2 Feb. 1487, Elizabeth, da. and h. of Thomas Rogers of Benham Valence, Berks., 1s. 1da. suc. fa. c.1500. Kntd. 25 Sept. 1513.1
Offices Held

J.p. Berks. 1502-d., Wilts. 1525-d.; sheriff, Oxon. and Berks. 1509-10, 1518-19, 1524-5, 1540-1; esquire of the body 1509; corotar. subsidy, Berks. 1512, 1514, 1515, 1523, 1524, 1544, 1546, tenths of spiritualities, Berks., Wilts. and Salisbury 1535, musters, Wilts. 1539; other commissions 1513-43; councillor ‘for matter in law’ 1526; steward, Massachusetts nor of Newbury, Berks. by 1534; custos rot. Berks. by 1547.2
Biography
The Essex family is said to have flourished in the county of that name soon after the Conquest but to have been rescued from decay by the Member’s grandfather, William Essex of Walham Green. This elder William rose to become under treasurer in the reign of Edward IV and his only son Thomas was a regular member of the Middlesex bench under Henry VII until 1500, the presumed year of his death. Thomas Essex laid the foundation of his son William’s career by arranging his marriage to the only child of Thomas Rogers of Berkshire, who in addition to a cluster of manors in that county, held one in Hertfordshire, two in Staffordshire, two in Sussex and one in Wiltshire. Rogers was dead by 16 June 1488, when the inquisition already called his 12 year-old daughter Essex’s wife, although a grant of her wardship and marriage to Thomas Essex on 10 July implies that she was as yet only betrothed. It was not until 10 July 1505 that the couple were licensed to enter on Thomas Rogers’s lands.3
Berkshire was from the outset Essex’s adopted county. His wife’s grandfather Thomas Rogers, and her great-grandfather John, had been sheriffs and knights of the shire there under Henry VI and Edward IV. His own start at court was inauspicious: appearing as an esquire at Henry VII’s funeral, he somehow disgraced himself, to be pardoned and freed from prison two years later. He served as a captain in the French campaigns of 1512 and 1513, being knighted at the fall of Tournai. He was now a fully-fledged courtier, attending the marriage of Princess Mary to Louis XII as well as the Field of Cloth of Gold and the meeting at Gravelines in 1520.4
When Baron Sandys was warned by Wolsey in March 1528 that unemployed clothworkers were gathering at Westbury, he replied that he would journeyemonstrators. In 1532 the two were trustees of Aldermaston manor, Berkshire, for Humphrey Forster, who married Sandys’s second daughter Elizabeth, and by February 1536 the third daughter Margaret had married Essex’s only son Thomas. In Sandys’s will of 1540 both Essex and his son were left robes. It was through Sandys that Essex was connected with Sir Richard Weston, his fellow-knight for Berkshire in 1529. Essex’s election in 1529 answered both to his position in the county and his experience; it was probably not his first return to Parliament, but in the absence of election indentures for the early part of the century this is not certain.5
Like Sandys, Essex was uneasy about the religious changes of the 1530s. He served Anne Boleyn in Westminster Hall on her coronation day and acted as her steward at Newbury, but neither the King nor Cromwell was deceived. While the Parliament of 1529 was in session Essex frequently ate at the Queen’s Head in the company of other Members not happy with the turn of events and it was there that he heard of Sir George Throckmorton’s advice to Henry VIII not to marry Anne Boleyn. With several of his fellow-diners his name appears on the list drawn up by Cromwell early in 1533 thought to be of those opposed to the bill in restraint of appeals, and also on that of the following year believed to be of those with a particular, but unknown, connexion with the treasons bill. Presumably Essex was reelected in 1536 in compliance with the general directive for the return of the previous Members. While in London for the first session of the Parliament of 1542 he witnessed the will of one of the knights for Hampshire, Sir Thomas Lisle. He may have sat again for Berkshire in 1545, when the names of the knights of the shire are lost. In 1531 he received the wardship of Sir Edward Darrell’s grandson Edward (whom Essex’s granddaughter Elizabeth was later to marry), together with the custody of the Darrell properties including Great Bedwyn. The manor was not regranted until 1544, when it went to the Earl of Hertford, so that Sir William may have influenced the by-election there of Thomas Polsted during 1532-3 and the elections for the borough in 1536 1539 and 1542 for which the returns are missing.6
In the autumn of 1536 Essex met Sir George Throckmorton in London and borrowed from him a copy of the demands of the northern rebels. After glancing ‘lightly’ at it, he put it aside, but had a copy made. Soon afterwards, Throckmorton rode into Berkshire for a meeting with Sir Anthony Hungerford at Essex’s house and on the way was dismayed to see ‘one Fachell’, probably Thomas Vachell I, hastening to report to the government the spread of seditious rumours. At Reading Throckmorton burned his own copy, but after passing the night with his brother-in-law Sir Thomas Englefield he met a sleepless Essex, who said that one of his servants had displayed Aske’s manifesto, which was now being circulated. Throckmorton advised Essex to despatch his son to London with the culprit, who had been summoned before the Council, and assured his host that ‘the King and Council knew his truth’. Whatever was known brought Essex and Throckmorton to the Tower by 18 Dec., and a month later it was said that their lives were in danger, but both were freed by 25 Jan. 1537. For Essex this seems to have been the end of the affair: in the same month he was renamed to the Wiltshire bench and in the autumn he attended the christening of Prince Edward.7
After this episode it is not very creditable to Essex to find him investigating rumours at Reading about the King’s death. He was probably eager to prove his loyalty, for he joined in submitting the commission’s report on 24 Dec. 1537 and on 1 Jan. had custody of a rumour-monger who was awaiting punishment. Two years later, after receiving Anne of Cleves at Blackheath, he examined a clerk who was accused of praising the pope. In 1543 he was on a special commission to try the Windsor Martyrs for offences against the Six Articles, although he and the one other judge left at the end of the trial allowed the odium of passing sentence to fall on the most junior, Thomas Vachell. In the 1540s it was not the conservative Essex but Cromwell’s protégé Vachell who needed to prove himself by severity.8
His marriage had made Essex a large landowner, and he heads a list of Berkshire gentlemen, who were to supply men for the war in 1543, with an assessment of 50 foot soldiers. His own inheritance was probably smaller and certainly caused more trouble, although he may have had an ally in Ralph Swillington, his mother’s second husband. Swillington became treasurer of the Inner Temple, where Thomas Essex was admitted in 1521 and Essex himself assigned a chamber to share with his son in 1524. The next year, a London tailor named William Hall complained that Essex’s grandfather, the under treasurer, had defrauded the Halls of property in Kensington, which they had been trying to regain ever since; to this Essex merely replied that he could not produce the deeds, as they were held by Swillington, although he was sure that the land had been paid for. His mother lived on, at least until 1539, to sue a tenant for non-payment of rent and enclosing lands inherited from her father in Leicestershire, but Essex’s will of 27 Jan. 1547 stated that her testament had not yet been performed, so that her claim had to be resurrected by his son. Essex had himself acquired some minor properties in Berkshire. He was also a tenant of 20 acres at Westminster, exchanged by the abbey with the King in July 1536, and probably had a house at St. Clement Danes, since various articles of his were stolen in that parish in 1540. He sold four of his wife’s manors in Berkshire and Sussex to the King in November 1542, but he and his son were compensated by a grant in July 1543 of ex-monastic lands chiefly in Berkshire: whether or not this exchange had been forced, the family now had an interest in the redistribution of monastic lands.9
Essex’s will of 27 Jan. 1548 acknowledged the King to be ‘in earth supreme Head of the Church of England and Ireland’. His daughter Winifred had married Sir Richard Edgecombe, and most of the inheritance went to his son Thomas, who was aged 40 or more, although there were bequests to churches, almshouses and poor scholars at Oxford, as well as to his great-grandson William Darrell†, whose other great-grandfather Sir Edward Darrell had made Essex a supervisor of his own will in 1528. Essex died on 13 Aug. 1548 at Fulham and there is no trace of any monument to him in Lambourn parish church, where he had asked to be laid.10
Ref Volumes: 1509-1558 
Essex, William (I525)
 
817 http://www.igp-web.com/armagh/records/Births.htm Davidson, Willaim Robert (I59389)
 
818 http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/BSA/1840CharlesKerr.htm Whitbread, Isaac (I4132)
 
819 http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/BSA/1840CharlesKerr.htm Mills, Emma (I4133)
 
820 https://aislannrnaf.wixsite.com/aislannranafast/history-of-ranafast Source (S1842)
 
821 https://aislannrnaf.wixsite.com/aislannranafast/history-of-ranafast Source (S1845)
 
822 https://churchmonumentssociety.org/2020/07/12/an-african-slaves-epitaph

Dr Jaime Awe, Director of the Institute of Archaeology in Belize, reported in 2011 that Eve Broaster had been a slave in Jamaica, becoming free when she moved to the British settlement on the Mosquito Coast of today’s Nicaragua; no source for this is cited. The freedom is disputable: Ariadne’s father is now known to have been John Broster (sic), who died on the Mosquito Shore of Nicaragua in 1779. In his 1779 Will he describes Eve as “my negro woman” and leaves his estate to Ariadne (nicknamed Adney) and her brother, and Eve in Adney’s care, even though the latter was only some six to eight years of age (born 1771-1773; Hyde 2018). This is perhaps because Adney was free-born, unlike her mother. Whether Eve Broaster took her surname from her slave-owner, or whether some kind of marriage occurred, is not known. She would have been between fifteen and seventeen when Ariadne was born. 
Eve (I145172)
 
823 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/birth_returns/births_1874/03126/2146262.pdf Source (S1540)
 
824 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/birth_returns/births_1874/03126/2146262.pdf Source (S1544)
 
825 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/birth_returns/births_1882/02785/2022303.pdf Source (S1798)
 
826 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/birth_returns/births_1885/02650/1976953.pdf Source (S1801)
 
827 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/birth_returns/births_1887/02552/1944075.pdf Source (S1747)
 
828 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/birth_returns/births_1889/02466/1915822.pdf Source (S1796)
 
829 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/birth_returns/births_1891/02371/1885119.pdf Source (S1802)
 
830 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/birth_returns/births_1894/02253/1847409.pdf Source (S1804)
 
831 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/birth_returns/births_1897/02109/1802623.pdf Source (S1797)
 
832 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/deaths_returns/deaths_1902/05689/4603368.pdf Source (S1805)
 
833 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/deaths_returns/deaths_1929/04943/4343533.pdf Source (S1819)
 
834 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1864/11626/8280318.pdf Source (S1546)
 
835 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1864/11626/8280318.pdf Source (S1547)
 
836 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1864/11626/8280318.pdf Source (S1548)
 
837 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1864/11626/8280318.pdf Source (S1816)
 
838 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1864/11626/8280318.pdf Source (S1820)
 
839 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1864/11626/8280318.pdf Source (S1846)
 
840 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1879/11071/8050870.pdf Source (S1791)
 
841 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1879/11071/8050870.pdf Source (S1795)
 
842 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1879/11071/8050870.pdf Source (S1810)
 
843 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1893/10606/5864092.pdf Source (S1542)
 
844 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1893/10606/5864092.pdf Source (S1543)
 
845 https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1893/10606/5864092.pdf Source (S1545)
 
846 https://deeppoliticsforum.com/forums/showthread.php?14267-EXCELLENT-Research-on-LHO-amp-Ruth-Hyde-Paine-and-family-Linda-Minor#.WQ50nFJg0UE

William Fletcher Hyde and Martha Smith


W.F. Hyde, who had been 20 when his family moved west, had not had the benefit of a formal college education, but he did well in business. He married Martha Constance Smith in 1900, and they proceeded to have three children--William Avery, Theodore, and Sylvia Alden Hyde, all born before 1910. In that year the census shows them living at 959 Bryant (also known as 301 Addison) in the Professorville section of Palo Alto, while W.F. managed the Stanford bookstore. Martha's mother, Elizabeth Avery Smith, widow of yet another clergyman, Rev. William Augustus Smith who died in 1887, lived in the same house.


It is not known how William Fletcher Hyde and Martha Smith met. Her family tree, surprisingly, also traces back to colonial Connecticut, her first American ancestor being Christopher Avery who arrived from Devon, England, to New London, Conn. in 1630 with his wife Margery Stephens of Exeter. The wife of John Foster Dulles (Janet Pomeroy Avery) was a member of that same Groton Avery clan, although the nearest common ancestor she shared with Martha was born around 1650, Massachusetts king them extremely distant cousins.


Nevetheless, there is another link through Martha's father which almost connects her to this other Groton branch. Her father's brother, Augustus Ledyard Smith (born 1833) was given the maiden name of his grandmother, Catherine Ledyard Childs, daughter of Benjamin Ledyard. Benjamin moved to the area now known as Aurora, New York from Groton, Connecticut in 1793, becoming one of its founders, and, intriguingly, his mother, Massachusetts ry Avery Ledyard, descended from the same Avery line as Janet Pomeroy Avery Dulles, mentioned earlier.


Martha's maternal grandfather, Addison Avery married Sylvia Moseley in 1834 in Wilbraham, Massachusetts, where his father, Abraham Avery, a dedicated Methodist, had helped in founding the Wesleyan Academy. Abraham also was instrumental in the establishment of Wesleyan University at Middletown, Conn., where he served as a trustee. A dealer in leather goods as a tanner and saddle maker, he taught this skill to his grandson, Addison Avery, Jr., who operated a leather shop in Denver in 1892, according to a listing in a Denver directory of that year.


Augustus William Smith was, like Abraham Avery, one of a handful of the men involved in the creation of Wesleyan University in 1831. One of sonsizabeth Avery, in 1862 in Philadelphia. The newlyweds soon departed for the wilds of Illinois, where Rev. W.A. Smith died in 1887. About her father-in-law we learn as follows:


Augustus William Smith was born in Newport, New York on May 12, 1802. He aended Hamilton College, from which he graduated in 1825, and went on to teach at Oneida Conference Seminary in Cazenovia (located southeast of Syracuse). In 1831, Smith was among the founding faculty of Wesleyan University. He taught astronomy and mathematics at Wesleyan for twenty years before his selection as Fifth President of the university in 1851. After eight years at the helm of Wesleyan, Smith accepted a position as Professor of Natural Philosophy at the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis. He remained in this post until his death on March 26, 1866.
Smith was an accomplished scholar. In 1860 he was selected by the U. S. government to be one of the corps of astronomers sent to Labrador to observe the annular eclipse of the sun. He was reputed to be an excellent mathematician, and authored of several textbooks, including an An Elementary Treatise on Mechanics (New York, 1846). He married Catherine Rachel Childs, by whom he had several children including a daughter, Katherine Louisa. A convert to the Methodist-Episcopal Church, Smith also held a life-long interest in denominational affairs and was active in that capacity.
Addison's sister, Massachusetts rtha's Aunt Julia Avery, Massachusetts rried Rev. John Roper in Boston in 1842. After only four years of marriage, Rev. Roper died in Ohio, and Julia returned to Massachuses, where she married George Curtis Rand, owner and operator of a large printing firm in Boston. Addison Avery, who had been educated first to be a minister and then a lawyer, gave up both professions to become a partner with his brother-in-law, creating Rand & Avery. Rand died in 1878, and Addison Avery in 1893. Five years afterRev. Smith's death, Ann Elizabeth Avery Smith obtained a passport for herself and Martha to travel abroad. Martha's biography at Northwestern states she studied in Berlin and Paris that year, then did graduate work at the University Chicago in 1894 while she also taught Latin and English. In 1898 she aended Stanford, followed by a year at UC Berkeley, before marrying W.F. Hyde in 1900.


Martha Constance Smith Hyde, described more fully in the previous segment, arrived in Palo Alto, California, in 1898 from Chicago. Although she had a Ph.D. and did additional graduate study at the University of California at Berkeley and at Stanford, she seems to have sacrificed all those years of education when she married William F. Hyde in 1900. Only a year after they married William Avery Hyde was born, and before long, another son, Theodore, undoubtedly named for President Theodore Rooseveltorn in 1907.


Although W.F. Hyde seems to have tried to become a miner in 1896, it was short-lived, since he never completed an engineering degree. Instead, he relocated to Palo Alto, evidenced by a leer wrien to Mrs. Leland Stanford in 1898, as manager of the Stanford bookstore. He held a similar position at University of the Pacific before his aempt at mining. His move to Palo Alto occurred three years after future U.S. President Herbert Hoover had been in Stanford's first graduating class (1894).


W.P. Hyde moved to Lincoln Ave. residence in 1899.


Census records of William Fletcher Hyde family in Palo Alto: 1900, 1910 
Hyde, William Fletcher (I3125)
 
847 https://deeppoliticsforum.com/forums/showthread.php?14267-EXCELLENT-Research-on-LHO-amp-Ruth-Hyde-Paine-and-family-Linda-Minor#.WQ50nFJg0UE

William Penn Hyde in California


William Penn (W.P.) Hyde, suffering ill health from which he hoped to recover in California, retired from his Methodist ministry which had sent him to Rhode Island after a variety of pastorates in Massachuses and Connecticut. In 1859 he had married Seraphine Smith Carr with whom he had eleven children, and in 1881 the family moved to Santa Clara County, California, about 50 miles south of San Francisco.


Leland Stanford was also a transplant to California, having previously been in business in Albany before moving to California after the 1849 gold rush. As a supporter of Abraham Lincoln in the Republican convention in 1860, he aended the new President's inauguration and supported his plans for the transcontinental railroad. That same year he was elected governor of California, and in 1863 president of the Central Pacific Railroad, subsequently renamed the Southern Pacific. Made land-rich by the federal grants made to finance the construction of the railroad, by 1881 Stanford owned thousands of acres of land in Santa Clara County where William Penn Hyde seled that year with his large family.




334 Lincoln - Hyde residence
Stanford's teenage son, Leland, Jr. died of typhoid fever in 1884, and his father, former governor and future Senator, as a memorial to his only child, began creating a university--and a new town to house it--out of his acreage. Even before construction was complete, the Hyde family moved within the same county, seling permanently in Palo Alto.


Herbert Hoover, 1894
When Leland Stanford, Jr. University opened its doors in 1891, future president Herbert Hoover was among the ten or so students who would study geology and graduate in the class of 1894. The first campus bookstore was managed by William Fletcher (W.F.) Hyde, eldest son of W. P. Hyde, who would remain in that position for sixteen years. His sister, Bessie Hyde, had married in 1891 to a minister named William A. Kennedy, and moved to Denver. Rev. Kennedy did not live long, and Bessie and her daughter Laura eventually moved back to Palo Alto to live in the stately Lincoln Avenue residence with her maiden sisters, which they operated as a boarding house after W.P. died in 1919.


The Hydes lived in a three-story home at 334 Lincoln Avenue in the now historic area known as Professorville, where William Avery Hyde's uncle, James McDonald Hyde--thirteen years younger than W.F.--had grown up and where he lived while aending Stanford in the same class as Herbert Hoover's older brother Theodore, both of whom studied geology. James McD. Hyde later became a Stanford professor of metallurgy. Their sister,Mary Hyde, studied back east and became assistant librarian at Stanford, living with Lillian, a teacher, and Laura, who ran the boarding house. Their brother Edward L. Hyde, operated a stationery store at 160 University Avenue and lived with his wife, the former Lauretta Coe, at 381 Lincoln. 
Hyde, William Penn (I1655)
 
848 https://search.findmypast.com/record?id=s2%2fgbprs%2fwarwickshire%2fpr-nonexc%2fcoventryholytrinity%2fdr0581-02-00097&parentid=gbprs%2fwarwickshire%2fmar%2f000185461%2f2 Neale, John (I59956)
 
849 https://sharonoddiebrown.blogspot.com/2019/07/hydes-coffee-shop.html#comment-form Hyde, Robert Loftus (I153709)
 
850 https://translate.google.com.au/translate?hl=en&sl=sv&u=http://diginpast.se/bmregister/databas/we/pc38226d0.html&prev=search Persson, Gunnar (I57774)
 
851 https://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?depth=1&hl=en&prev=search&rurl=translate.google.com.au&sl=sv&sp=nmt4&u=http://diginpast.se/bmregister/databas/we/p9c32bd59.html&usg=ALkJrhjd1rtS2OgThooYncCBZlAcJpM26g Labett, Per (I59737)
 
852 https://www.ancestry.co.uk/mediaui-viewer/tree/74432375/person/270057310370/media/bac52cff-7239-4866-9080-3ed069646c75?destTreeId=165620766&destPersonId=102156543840&_phsrc=wJO2943&_phstart=default Source (S1650)
 
853 https://www.ancestry.co.uk/mediaui-viewer/tree/74432375/person/270057310370/media/bac52cff-7239-4866-9080-3ed069646c75?destTreeId=165620766&destPersonId=102156543840&_phsrc=wJO2943&_phstart=default Source (S1651)
 
854 https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/berks/vol4/pp280-284#p16

The original estate of the Hyde family, from which they took their name, was a hide of land in the manor of Circourt generally called 'La Hyde de Southcote.' (fn. 73) To this they seem to have added by purchasing land in the north of the parish, so that the manor of HYDE was said in 1397 to be at North Denchworth. (fn. 74) They probably held their lands of the manors of Circourt and South Denchworth till they themselves acquired those manors; afterwards they are generally said to hold all their lands of the Abbot of Abingdon. (fn. 75)

The Hyde family claimed in the 17th century to have been established here since the days of Canute, but the first Hyde who is known to have held land in South Denchworth is Warin, who lived in the middle of the 13th century. (fn. 76) He had two sons, Peter and John, of whom the former released to his brother and his heirs all right in his father's lands at 'La Hyde.' (fn. 77) Evidently this is the John de la Hyde who is described as a freeman within the manor of Circourt in 1305. (fn. 78) He held I hide for a seventh part of a knight's fee of Walter de L'Orti and Maud. (fn. 79) His son William (fn. 80) succeeded him and recovered in 1327 a messuage and 4 virgates in Circourt against Robert de Mountford, (fn. 81) who also held of the De L'Ortis. (fn. 82) William's successor was known as William Heygarston de la Hyde. (fn. 83) He had a wife Parnel, and the two purchased about 1346 from Mary Yve and William Pavy land in South Denchworth, which was released to them by the Corbets (fn. 84) and the family of la Zouche. (fn. 85) John Hyde, William's son and successor, conveyed the 'manor of Hyde' to feoffees in 1399. (fn. 86) It was reconveyed to his son John and Graciana his wife in 1420. (fn. 87) The younger John died in 1447, (fn. 88) and was succeeded by a son of the same name on whose heirs the manor was settled in the next year, (fn. 89) with remainder to his bastard brother Baldwin Hyde. John had a son John, (fn. 90) who was succeeded in 1487 by his son Oliver. (fn. 91) Oliver died in 1516, leaving a son William, who succeeded him. (fn. 92) William's son and grandson, who followed, bore the same name as himself. (fn. 93) The latter was succeeded in 1598 by his son George, (fn. 94) who sold the manor to the Cokaynes in 1617. (fn. 95) It passed with South Denchworth (q.v.) to the Geerings, (fn. 96) and must have been sold by them to the family of Moyer. (fn. 97) Lydia Moyer, daughter and heiress of Benjamin Moyer, married John Heathcote of Connington Castle, (fn. 98) and their daughter, another Lydia, inherited the manor. She married William Dawnay, afterwards sixth Viscount Downe, (fn. 99) whose daughter the Hon. Lydia Dawnay held it in 1875. (fn. 100) Miss Dawnay of Beningbrough Hall, Yorkshire, is the present owner. 
De la Hyde, William Heygarston (I1174)
 
855 https://www.genealogy.com/ftm/l/i/l/Elsie-S-Lilburn/GENE15-0001.html Brantley, Edward (I178260)
 
856 https://www.geni.com/people/Robert-FitzHamon-Sieur-de-Creully-Lord-of-Gloucester-Glamorgan/6000000000796862686?through=6000000005936962165 Fitzhamon, Lord Robert Of Gloucester And Glamorgan (I178684)
 
857 https://www.geni.com/people/Sir-Robert-de-Redclyffe-Kt/6000000004641202289?through=6000000004058500953 De Radcliffe, Sir Robert (I190678)
 
858 https://www.libraryireland.com/Pedigrees2/de-la-hoyde.php

In 1228 the King granted letters of protection for Roger de la Hida, gone to Ireland in the service of William Marshall, Earl of Pembroke. 
Marshall, William 2nd Earl Of Pembroke (I50432)
 
859 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?page=1&search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=M%2Ar%2Ash%2Al%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1710&to_year=1730&parent_names=Al%2Ax%2A&parent_names_so=wild&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sort=asc&order=Parish&field=district&sid=86115385 Source (S1706)
 
860 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?page=1&search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=M%2Ar%2Ash%2Al%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1710&to_year=1730&parent_names=Al%2Ax%2A&parent_names_so=wild&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sort=asc&order=Parish&field=district&sid=86115385 Source (S1707)
 
861 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?page=1&search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=M%2Ar%2Ash%2Al%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1710&to_year=1730&parent_names=Al%2Ax%2A&parent_names_so=wild&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sort=asc&order=Parish&field=district&sid=86115385 Source (S1708)
 
862 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?page=1&search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=M%2Ar%2Ash%2Al%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1710&to_year=1730&parent_names=Al%2Ax%2A&parent_names_so=wild&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sort=asc&order=Parish&field=district&sid=86115385 Source (S1709)
 
863 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?page=1&search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=M%2Ar%2Ash%2Al%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1710&to_year=1730&parent_names=Al%2Ax%2A&parent_names_so=wild&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sort=asc&order=Parish&field=district&sid=86115385 Source (S1710)
 
864 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?page=2&search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=Ren%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=starts&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&rd_real_name%5B0%5D=KILSYTH&rd_display_name%5B0%5D=KILSYTH_KILSYTH&rd_label%5B0%5D=KILSYTH&rd_name%5B0%5D=KILSYTH&sort=asc&order=Date&field=year&sid=85954138 Source (S1685)
 
865 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=crbirths_baptism&church_type=Catholic%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=Ki%2Am%2At&surname_so=wild&forename_so=starts&from_year=1830&to_year=1870&parent_names_so=exact&parent_name_two=Horn%2A&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches Source (S1764)
 
866 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=Bro%2An&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1770&to_year=1800&parent_names=Robert&parent_names_so=exact&parent_name_two=Mer%2Aes&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sort=asc&order=Date&field=year Source (S1698)
 
867 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=Graham%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1717&to_year=1735&parent_names=Georg%2A&parent_names_so=wild&parent_name_two=W%2Ase&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sid=85972307 Source (S1663)
 
868 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=Lan%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=starts&parent_names_so=exact&parent_name_two=Stor%2A&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches Source (S1672)
 
869 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=Land%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1820&to_year=1860&parent_names_so=exact&parent_name_two=Renn%2A&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sort=asc&order=Date&field=year Source (S1603)
 
870 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=Ren%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=starts&from_year=1748&to_year=1765&parent_names_so=exact&parent_name_two=marshal%2A&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches Source (S1632)
 
871 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=Renn%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1730&to_year=1775&parent_names=Georg%2A&parent_names_so=wild&parent_name_two=Graham%2A&parent_name_two_so=wild&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sort=asc&order=Date&field=year Source (S1661)
 
872 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/record-results?search_type=people&event=%28B%20OR%20C%20OR%20S%29&record_type%5B0%5D=opr_births&church_type=Old%20Parish%20Registers&dl_cat=church&dl_rec=church-births-baptisms&surname=Syd%2Aserf%2A&surname_so=wild&forename_so=wild&from_year=1680&to_year=1710&parent_names=Rankin&parent_names_so=exact&parent_name_two_so=exact&record=Church%20of%20Scotland%20%28old%20parish%20registers%29%20Roman%20Catholic%20Church%20Other%20churches&sid=85909782 Source (S1678)
 
873 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/11785854?image=8&viewed_images=true Source (S1601)
 
874 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/11785854?image=8&viewed_images=true Source (S1609)
 
875 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/11785854?image=8&viewed_images=true Source (S1615)
 
876 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/14243666?image=24&return_row=5 Source (S1753)
 
877 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/14243666?image=24&return_row=5 Source (S1759)
 
878 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/16284641?image=9&return_row=12 Source (S1754)
 
879 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/16284641?image=9&return_row=12 Source (S1757)
 
880 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/19916394?image=9&viewed_images=true Source (S1562)
 
881 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/19916394?image=9&viewed_images=true Source (S1563)
 
882 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/19916394?image=9&viewed_images=true Source (S1565)
 
883 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/19916394?image=9&viewed_images=true Source (S1567)
 
884 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/20586609?image=15&return_row=2 Source (S1758)
 
885 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/24269010?image=20&viewed_images=true Source (S1755)
 
886 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/24269010?image=20&viewed_images=true Source (S1763)
 
887 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/24269010?image=20&viewed_images=true Source (S1776)
 
888 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/28402206?image=7&return_row=0 Source (S1799)
 
889 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/28402212?image=7&return_row=3 Source (S1748)
 
890 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/28402212?image=7&return_row=3 Source (S1793)
 
891 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/3147525?image=17&viewed_images=true Source (S1599)
 
892 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/3147525?image=17&viewed_images=true Source (S1606)
 
893 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/3147525?image=17&viewed_images=true Source (S1612)
 
894 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/3387596?image=17&viewed_images=true Source (S1580)
 
895 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/3387596?image=17&viewed_images=true Source (S1583)
 
896 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/3387596?image=17&viewed_images=true Source (S1586)
 
897 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/4899638?image=1&viewed_images=true Source (S1597)
 
898 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/4899638?image=1&viewed_images=true Source (S1611)
 
899 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/665491?image=3&return_row=2 Source (S1767)
 
900 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/7648102?image=37&session=115201&return_row=15 Source (S1584)
 
901 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/7648102?image=37&session=115201&return_row=15 Source (S1588)
 
902 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/7648102?image=38&session=115201&return_row=15 Source (S1581)
 
903 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_census/7648102?image=38&session=115201&return_row=15 Source (S1587)
 
904 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10388886?image=301&return_row=2 Source (S1662)
 
905 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10388888?image=95&return_row=0 Source (S1696)
 
906 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10388888?image=95&return_row=0 Source (S1697)
 
907 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10388888?image=95&return_row=0 Source (S1735)
 
908 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10389618?image=55&return_row=8 Source (S1690)
 
909 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10389618?image=55&return_row=8 Source (S1736)
 
910 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10408724?image=272&return_row=1 Source (S1652)
 
911 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10408724?image=272&return_row=1 Source (S1654)
 
912 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10408724?image=272&return_row=1 Source (S1656)
 
913 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10408724?image=272&return_row=1 Source (S1733)
 
914 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10820945?image=263&return_row=10 Source (S1687)
 
915 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/10820945?image=263&return_row=10 Source (S1719)
 
916 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/11526472?image=302&return_row=0 Source (S1692)
 
917 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/11526472?image=302&return_row=0 Source (S1693)
 
918 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/11526472?image=302&return_row=0 Source (S1716)
 
919 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/11647182?image=268&return_row=0 Source (S1704)
 
920 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/11647182?image=268&return_row=0 Source (S1705)
 
921 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/11647182?image=268&return_row=0 Source (S1718)
 
922 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/11665694?image=454&return_row=2 Source (S1669)
 
923 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/11665694?image=454&return_row=2 Source (S1670)
 
924 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/11665694?image=454&return_row=2 Source (S1727)
 
925 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/1411018?image=323&return_row=3 Source (S1634)
 
926 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/1739328?image=7&return_row=15 Source (S1647)
 
927 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/1740052?image=82&return_row=16 Source (S1649)
 
928 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/1793804?image=79&return_row=8 Source (S1684)
 
929 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/278323?image=28&return_row=1 Source (S1691)
 
930 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/279059?image=263&viewed_images=true Source (S1625)
 
931 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/279059?image=263&viewed_images=true Source (S1626)
 
932 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/279059?image=263&viewed_images=true Source (S1627)
 
933 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/279059?image=263&viewed_images=true Source (S1628)
 
934 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/279059?image=263&viewed_images=true Source (S1629)
 
935 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/279059?image=263&viewed_images=true Source (S1630)
 
936 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/280033?image=230&viewed_images=true Source (S1605)
 
937 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/280033?image=230&viewed_images=true Source (S1608)
 
938 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/302272?image=276&return_row=2 Source (S1671)
 
939 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/3791706?image=260&return_row=3 Source (S1689)
 
940 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/3792037?image=105&return_row=0 Source (S1622)
 
941 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/3792037?image=105&return_row=0 Source (S1659)
 
942 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/3792037?image=105&return_row=0 Source (S1660)
 
943 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/3822764?image=130&return_row=1 Source (S1598)
 
944 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/3822835?image=166&viewed_images=true Source (S1665)
 
945 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/3822835?image=166&viewed_images=true Source (S1666)
 
946 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4197300?image=14&return_row=1 Source (S1566)
 
947 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4255604?image=10&return_row=7 Source (S1703)
 
948 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4369226?image=22&return_row=11 Source (S1657)
 
949 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4501544?image=148&return_row=15 Source (S1619)
 
950 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4501544?image=148&return_row=15 Source (S1620)
 
951 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4501544?image=148&return_row=15 Source (S1621)
 
952 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4501544?image=148&return_row=15 Source (S1658)
 
953 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4501544?image=148&return_row=15 Source (S1721)
 
954 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4501658?image=180&return_row=0 Source (S1688)
 
955 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4501732?image=273&return_row=11 Source (S1631)
 
956 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4502483?image=174&return_row=8 Source (S1623)
 
957 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/4502483?image=174&return_row=8 Source (S1624)
 
958 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5206946?image=109&return_row=2 Source (S1673)
 
959 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5206946?image=109&return_row=2 Source (S1674)
 
960 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5206946?image=109&return_row=2 Source (S1680)
 
961 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5206946?image=109&return_row=2 Source (S1681)
 
962 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5206947?image=129&return_row=1 Source (S1653)
 
963 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5206947?image=129&return_row=1 Source (S1655)
 
964 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5640670?image=32&return_row=0 Source (S1648)
 
965 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5640677?image=21&return_row=24 Source (S1694)
 
966 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5823126?image=298&viewed_images=true Source (S1676)
 
967 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5823126?image=298&viewed_images=true Source (S1677)
 
968 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/5967937?image=192&return_row=9 Source (S1675)
 
969 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/6163071?image=202&return_row=5 Source (S1679)
 
970 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/711521?image=642&return_row=5 Source (S1582)
 
971 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/711521?image=642&return_row=5 Source (S1585)
 
972 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8243244?image=391&viewed_images=true Source (S1594)
 
973 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8243244?image=391&viewed_images=true Source (S1720)
 
974 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8243264?image=468&return_row=3 Source (S1668)
 
975 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8257349?image=72&return_row=0 Source (S1633)
 
976 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8257349?image=72&return_row=0 Source (S1635)
 
977 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8257349?image=72&return_row=0 Source (S1731)
 
978 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8257349?image=72&return_row=0 Source (S1732)
 
979 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8516673?image=47&return_row=14 Source (S1682)
 
980 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8516673?image=47&return_row=14 Source (S1683)
 
981 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8516673?image=47&return_row=14 Source (S1717)
 
982 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8516719?image=236&return_row=0 Source (S1579)
 
983 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8516719?image=236&return_row=0 Source (S1590)
 
984 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8516719?image=236&return_row=0 Source (S1728)
 
985 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8742487?image=167&return_row=2 Source (S1667)
 
986 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8742487?image=167&return_row=2 Source (S1695)
 
987 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8742487?image=167&return_row=2 Source (S1715)
 
988 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8939681?image=174&return_row=10 Source (S1711)
 
989 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8939681?image=174&return_row=10 Source (S1712)
 
990 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/8939681?image=174&return_row=10 Source (S1725)
 
991 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/9341329?image=111&viewed_images=true Source (S1617)
 
992 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/9341329?image=111&viewed_images=true Source (S1618)
 
993 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/9341329?image=111&viewed_images=true Source (S1729)
 
994 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_opr_records/9341329?image=111&viewed_images=true Source (S1730)
 
995 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/38761750?return_row=0 Source (S1777)
 
996 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/38761750?return_row=0 Source (S1778)
 
997 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/38761750?return_row=0 Source (S1779)
 
998 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/38838998?return_row=1 Source (S1774)
 
999 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/39331702?return_row=3 Source (S1555)
 
1000 https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/39893131?image=1&viewed_images=true Source (S1760)
 

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