I decided to explore the possibility that the Thomas baptised at St Peter's on 31 Mar 1745, son of Robert, might be our man. If that is the case his father might be the Robert who married Rachel Kekwick in a Quaker ceremony at Penketh in 1738. The marriage was noted at the Hardshaw East Monthly Meeting. There was an Isabel Rushton (possibly Robert's sister, and described as the daughter of another Robert Rushton) who married a Daniel Kekwick (possibly Rachel's brother) in a Quaker ceremony at Marsden two years earlier. The widowed Rachel Rushton's funeral in 1788 was in the Quaker meeting hall at Marsden. Is it likely that a man from the Liverpool area (possibly Aintree/Walton on the Hill) would be marrying a woman from Penketh, and perhaps originally from Marsden? And more importantly I guess, how much intermarrying would there have been between, say, Anglicans and Quakers? I initially thought it unlikely that a brewer would have a Quaker mother but I gather 18th century Quakers drank alcohol because it was safer than water. They just didn't drink to excess. Again, any thoughts greatly appreciated. Geoff