The impetus was the release of the 1901 census, and my mum's desire to find out whether the stories she had been told as a child were true.
She was told that her Marsh ancestors were descendants of George Marsh, born at Deane outside Bolton, and who was burned at the stake in 1555, becoming St. George the Martyr..
There was supposedly a George in each generation in his honour. I have found only three so far.
Records for the first half of the 16th century are few and far between, so I have not managed to trace a link to any of his children.
Needless to say, that has not stopped others speculating. Ancestry has trees with children born at random places round the UK, such as "Somerset, Cornwall, England". One online tree has George dying in Suffolk rather than just outside Chester. His 'brother' William apparently married, aged 71, in 1591 to a time-travelling woman who, born in 1520, had already given birth to George in 1515, and, despite having died in 1552, went on to have children as late as 1858.
