« Reply #3 on: Thursday 05 March 26 10:13 GMT (UK) »
Hi Liz,
I haven't found that burial, yet. Where did that come from ?
I have found several "Avery" entries but am going thru the records I have carefully as the spelling of the surname varies so much.
The nearest I have found so far is a Walter Terrill bapt. 10-11-1693 Longcot with Fernham, Berks (s/o Walter &Elizabeth)
Alan
The record was a transcript on FindMyPast. Buried 18 dec 1716 at Hagbourne. Will probated 1717, no day / month recorded - gentleman of West Hagbourne. Marriage transcript on FindMyPast says he was a husbandman so might be considered a gentleman.
An Avery Terrall appears on Forfeited Estates Commission: abstracts of estates of Popish recusants records for 1717. Place Nayton? (There are a lot of people from same place. Nayton written at top of column, but it looks as if something has been rubbed out and N substituted.)
Could it be the same one who was buried in Hagbourne in 1717 and his estate was confiscated rather than going to whover was named in the will? Maybe Catholic baptism and not on line. Or it is the one you found and he was older than you thought. If age from marriage licence "25 years and upward" might be quite a bit older than 25
Berks / Oxon: Eltham, Annetts, Wiltshire (surname not county), Hawkins, Pembroke, Partridge
Dorset / Hants: Derham, Stride, Purkiss, Sibley
Yorkshire: Pottage, Carr, Blackburn, Depledge
Sussex: Goodyer, Christopher, Trevatt
Lanark: Scott (soldier went to Jersey CI)
Jersey: Fowler, Huelin, Scott