Author Topic: Elizabeth Tudor, birth location  (Read 1718 times)

Offline Southlands23

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Elizabeth Tudor, birth location
« on: Sunday 10 October 04 18:08 BST (UK) »
Can anyone provide me with any details on the following person. Elizabeth Tudor born approximately 1813, three possible birth locations, Weston (Cheshire), Marbury (Cheshire) or Cold Hatton (Shropshire). Married to Thomas Hulstone (Baptised 29/4/1810 Hanmer, Flintshire). His bother William was also baptised 4/4/1813 again in Hanmer. Any information gladly recieved.
Knowles, Hulstone, Green, Davies, Lovatt, Gibson, Allen, Pickford, Oliver, Buck, Morley, Watkinson

Offline Jane Masri

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Re: Elizabeth Tudor, birth location
« Reply #1 on: Monday 11 October 04 18:55 BST (UK) »
Hi Southlands, I couldn't help but notice your posting about Elizabeth Tudor.  AS I was browsing through British History Online,

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=18427&strquery=nuthurst

I noticed the following, concerning Nuthurst in Sussex...interesting, any help?

In 1738 another John Bennett sold Sedgewick to Charles Lennox, duke of Richmond (d. 1750), who perhaps intended to use it as a hunting box. His son and namesake, however, (Footnote 74) sold it in 1760 to Joseph Tudor. (Footnote 75) At his death in 1774 Tudor left it to his nephew William Nelthorpe (d. 1791), who left it to his sister Elizabeth. She died in 1801, leaving Sedgewick to her nephew James Cowne, who took the surnames Tudor and Nelthorpe. (Footnote 76) By the 1840s his estate in Nuthurst and Little Broadwater comprised nearly 900 a. (Footnote 77) In 1862 Sedgewick was sold by his heirs (Footnote 78) to Robert Henderson (d. 1871), whose son Robert, a director of the Bank of England, died in possession in 1895. (Footnote 79) In 1874 the house was let. (Footnote 80) The younger Robert's widow Emma continued to live at Sedgewick after 1895 until her death in 1931. (Footnote 81) In 1907 the very compact estate was roughly bounded by the Horsham–Brighton road on the north, the road through Nuthurst village on the east, Broadwater Lane on the west, and two streams on the south. (Footnote 82) After Mrs. Henderson's death Sedgewick was sold to W. H. Abbey who still had it in 1942. (Footnote 83) In 1947 it was bought by Sir Herbert Cayzer, Lord Rotherwick. After his death in 1958 the estate, which by then comprised c. 2,000 a., (Footnote 84) was split up. (Footnote 85)

From: British History Online
Source: Nuthurst: Manor and other estates. A History of the County of Sussex: Volume VI Part 3, T.P. Hudson (Editor) (1987).
URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=18427&strquery=nuthurst
Date: 11/10/2004
© Copyright 2003 University of London & History of Parliament Trust


Jane
Census information is Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Researching BRABY/BRAVERY in SURREY and SUSSEX

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