Hi
I have found several 'interesting' characters (not all in the direct line, but related all the same):
a ‘
Catholic’ monk

who was at Croxden Abbey at the dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII (1538).
a Hebrew scholar who corresponded with John Wesley in the 1760s.
an agricultural labourer who was sentenced to transportation to Australia in 1820, but didn’t leave the country!!!
his brother born 1780, who was transported to Australia (for 7 years) in 1821 after being convicted of stealing wheat (this was thought to have been a set up by other members of his family).
another who was transported to Australia (for life) in 1830 for the theft of 3cwt of cheese (it was thought that he had been involved in a violent robbery where a priest had been bludgeoned and left to die, this was never proved).
another born 1811 who joined the Mormons and who sailed to New Orleans on April 16th 1860 with his family and travelled to Salt Lake City, Utah, by wagon train.
a poet.
pioneers in Australia who are mentioned in a book decribing the history of the town
a soldier who took part in the Charge of the Light Brigade and survived.
another born 1813, who was a celebrated Victorian clown known as the ‘Queen’s jester’ (appeared in front of Victoria and Albert in Windsor in 1844).
his niece who was known as ‘The Great Zazell’ and was the first woman to be fired from a cannon (she was fired onto a trapeze where she then carried on with her act).
Finally another born 1871 who was a prolific author of books (mainly school textbooks), first secretary of the Economic History Society at the L.S.E. (founded 1926) and an eminent teacher.
Just an ordinary family, really

Tofgem