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St Andrews, West Stafford, Dorset

 

"This monument is erected to the memory of John Gould of Milborn st Andrew in the County of Dorset esq who died the 14th day of March 1727 aged 70. Pursuant to his last will and testament by James Gould and Herbert Vharles Floyer Gent executors of such will."

"Instructions from the Executors of the late Mr. BARNABAS FELTHAM, to SELL by AUCTION, on Thursday, July 19 th, at Six o'clock in the Evening, at the Norfolk Hotel, the following Property, situate in the City of Norwich.

Lot 1. – A Brick Tower WINDMILL, (formerly known as Spratt’s Mill,) with four patent sails, drives three pairs of 4ft. 6in. stones, two flour mills and jumper; also a stable cart-house and piggery adjoining. – The Mill is occupied by Mr. Mark Feltham, stand well for wind, in a very populous district, near the Victoria Railway Station, and possession may be had at Michaelmas.

Norfolk Chronicle - 23th June 1855

 

To be SOLD by Private Contract,

ALL that capital Brick TOWER WINDMILL, situate at Lakenham, near the Victoria Railway Station, and formerly known as “Spratt’s Mill,” with four patent sails and driving three pairs of 4 feet 6 inch stones, two flour mills, and a jumper; with a stable cart-house, and piggery adjoining, now in the occupation of Mr. Mark Feltham.

Also two newly-built Dwelling-houses, adjoining the mill, with gardens, each house containing a parlour, kitchen, wash-house, and three sleeping-rooms.

For further particulars apply to Messrs. Brightwell and Son, Surrey-street, Norwich, or to John Feltham, of Saxlingham.

Norfolk Chronicle - 19th January 1856

 

The mill had 4 sails of 100 feet diameter until 1915 when they came off. The mill stands 80 feet high on 8 floors.

 

The last millar was Charles Edward Woodrow. Flour production ceased in 1870 and went over to grist milling. The mill was damaged by fire in 1914. From 1922 flour was milled by electricity. It closed in the 1960's on Woodrow's amalgamation with Read City Flour Mills.

Will of Samuel Parker, Grocer, Draper and Tailor of Wymondham, Norforlk, dated 12th October 1885. His business was carried out at Browick, Wymondham and all Businesses carried out in the name of Parker and Sons also belong to him. He has no shares in the Fancy Boot and Shoe Business in the names of Parker and sons or as Parker’s Fancy Stores except as a Creditor, they belong to his son James.

 

He names his wife, Caroline Parker and Solicitor Edward Boyce Pomeroy of Wymondham as Executors. He names his children as James Sparkhall Parker (also to be a Trustee), Caroline Laura Parker, Leonard Samuel Parker (also a Trustee and named Leonard James Parker elsewhere in the document) and Jessie Limmer Parker.

 

Samuel Parker born 1814 at Wymondham was the son of James and Sophia, nee Scarlett, Parker he married Caroline Sparkhall 11th August 1846 at Wymondham. Caroline was the daughter of John Sparkhall and Elizabeth Limmer and was born in 1824 at Wymondham.

 

Later documents deal with the Bankruptcy of the Company in the early 1900’s. The Parker Family of Wymondham Documents.

 

More little version of baby Star Destroyer to be at scale at the Executor.

Letter dated 11th September 1897 from E.F. Buxton, Director Barclay & Co. Gurneys Bank, Norwich to Edward Pomeroy, Solicitor, re account of Samuel Parker and sons.

 

Samuel Parker born 1814 at Wymondham was the son of James and Sophia, nee Scarlett, Parker he married Caroline Sparkhall 11th August 1846 at Wymondham. Caroline was the daughter of John Sparkhall and Elizabeth Limmer and was born in 1824 at Wymondham.

 

Later documents deal with the Bankruptcy of the Company in the early 1900’s. The Parker Family of Wymondham Documents.

 

Duneira house and gardens at Mount Macedon.

 

(Extract from Macedon Ranges cultural heritage and landscape study/Trevor Budge and Associates. 4 v. 1994.).

Henry Suetonius Officer reputedly aquired the Duneira site from

1872-1877 (Blocks 4,5,10,11,14) paying some £84 for 38 acres but

rate listings give Robert Officer as the owner. .

.

Suetonius Henry Officer (1830-1883).

Officer was born in Hullgreen, New Norfolk, Tasmania 1830, the

son of Sir Robert & Lady Officer. He was educated in Edinburgh

with his brother, Charles, and returned to the colonies, seeking

gold in Victoria but eventually settling for pastoralism in

company with his brothers and Charles Miles{ ibid.}. They managed

stations in the Wimmera and the Riverina, James marrying in 1866

and commencing construction of a 20 room homestead at Murray

Downs & Willakool, two adjoining properties fronting the Murray

River. After experimentation with irrigation, via steam pumps and

windmills, he was able to develop extensive orchards and crops. He was also, like his brother, interested in

acclimatisation, having developed an ostrich farm on his property

(Charles was a council member of the Zoological & Acclimatisation

Society for 10 years, president in 1887). .

.

Blighted by illness, Suetonius reputedly moved to Leighwood,

Toorak (Melbourne) in 1881, having erected the first stage of

Duneira at Mount Macedon, but died two years later. However his son, Henry jnr. was

born at South Yarra in 1869 and his next child, Jessie, was born

at Macedon in 1877, indicating that he was in residence at both

places prior to the dates previously supposed..

.

Suetonius probably commissioned the first stage of Duneira to be

erected as a summer house between c1874-6. The architect Levi

Powell is thought to have designed a house for him there around

that date. The first improvements listed on the site were

stables in 1874 when Robert Officer was rated as owning the site. The house was reputedly not occupied regularly

until c1881 when Suetonius moved to Toorak.

However it appears he and his family were in residence at Duneira

by 1877..

.

When Suetonius died in 1883 his wife, Mary Lillias Rigg Officer

(nee Cairns), of Glenbervie, Glenferrie Road, Toorak was the

co-executor of the estate, with merchant Robert Harper; she is

the rate occupier in 1888. Mrs Officer was the

sister of Mrs Robert Harper (Huntly Burn) and Mrs John C lloyd

(Montpelier, later Timsbury): all three houses were reputedly

built in the same period... .

.

The house bricks for the first stage were said to have come from

the Macedon Brick Kiln (once near the Macedon railway station,

set up in c1888-9?) with external walls built in 14" Flemish bond

from slop-moulded bricks (9 inch by 2.1/2). The bricks were reputedly carted

from Macedon by Cogger. The footings were of bluestone

and reputedly dressed sandstone blocks also survive, suggesting

that the first stage was face brick with stone quoins and the

next renovation c1888 added wings and a cement coating to the

whole complex. Floor frames were reputedly supported on stone

dwarf walls and joists were 6x2.1/2 inch jarrah, with flooring

being 6 inch pine}. Seaweed was apparently used for

ceiling insulation..

.

The servants' wing verandah was skillion in form with timber

posts with classical capitals. The main verandah had coupled

posts (rebuilt with single posts) a panelled frieze and slimmer

capitals set just under the frieze rail}. The

balustrade may have been of single cast-iron balusters..

.

Just prior to the sale to the speculator, James Smith Reid in

1890, and during the occupation of Edward Dyer, major additions

were made to the house complex and a reputedly a caretaker's

lodge was placed at the gate (survives, altered c1920s) but this

appears to have been added by Reid in the early 1890s. .

.

The added rooms were reputedly: billiard (32'x24') and dining

rooms, kitchen, servants bathroom, service block with 5 rooms

(engine room, dairy, pantry, store, boiler room, built of

Northcote machine made 9" brickwork). Damp proof coursing was

used in these additions compared to the slate of the first stage

and acetylene gas (engine room) was thought used for lighting

from this period, as reticulated in 1.1.2" mains and 1/2 inch

branches to internal and some external verandah lights.

Cast-iron elaborately detailed water radiators were also used,

with hot water pumped from the boiler room, and later a duplicate

boiler allowed hot water to be reticulated taps in the house{

ibid.}..

.

The description in rate books expands to villa and cottages (on

37 acres) for the first time under Reid in c1893 but the annual

valuation had already peeked in 1888 at £200 in the occupation of

Edward Dyer. An Edward Dyer was listed at that time as a fruiterer in

Burwood Road, Hawthorn..

.

The water supply is from a concrete tank fed by a spring.

Outbuildings include timber clad stables, storerooms,

blacksmith's shop, coachman's room, milking bails, hay shed and a

green house. The stables (extended) were described as having had

a shingled gabled roof (rear skillion) with loft entered via an

external stair at the north end. It had a blacksmith's

shop (altered for garage c1941), carriage and coachman's rooms,

two stores and vertically boarded main doors{ ibid.,p24}. The

milking and hay sheds had hipped roof forms and timber cladding

and frame. The interior was white-washed. The greenhouse

in the secret hedged garden is of a later date, with a timber

frame built up on 11" cavity brickwork walls, with a brick floor

and heated water pipes under each shelf. The boiler is near the

entry..

.

The `Gisborne Gazette' reported on Duneira in 1903 under the

heading of `A Popular Health Resort':.

`Duneira certainly merits a few remarks though beautiful

residences and grounds are by no means rare in that locality..

(when Reid purchased it, it was `little better than a wilderness'

and he had spared no expense to restore it).. After passing the

lodge at the main entrance, a broad serpentine drive leads up to

the house and from there the grounds are laid out in broad

sloping lawns surmounted with choice borders and fringed with

trees which however do not interfere to any great extent with the

view. There is of course no lack of flowers which grow

luxuriantly on the mount but the great feature of Duneira is the

lawns, those open green expanses which delight the eye at all

times of the year. the secret of this perennial verdure is to be

found in the copious water supply with which Macedon is blessed

(spring at rear of house, tapped by tunnelling 40m into the hill,

ie. grass grows up to base of Monterey pines)..

.

During Reid's time there, the valuation increased marginally in

1899-1900 and again soon after, with Reid's address being given

as care of Rosstrevor Magill, South Australia, in c1909-10. JS Reid died in 1922, leaving

the property to the management of JS Reid jun..

.

The main garden elements are: sweeping lawns, box hedges, weeping beech and cherry, extensive hedges (holly, laurel), a hedged

`secret garden' with green house, mature firs, elm and chestnut ì

avenues. There is also a fountain and a wide spreading weeping elm to the rear of the house, near the tennis court..

.

Significant Trees:.

`Ulmus x hollandica'.

`Prunus' "shirotae".

`Albies procera'.

`Ilex kingiana'.

Brass figures of a pet dog with belled collar & lion sit at the feet of Thomas de Cruwe / Crewe 1418 & 1st wife Juliana 1411 www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/1M72b4 in the south chantry chapel he built after her death. The shield is that of Juliana's step son William Clopton, his executor and residual legatee. The severed foot is the Cruwe badge

In the two decades following World War 2, Acton, which lies just north-east of Sudbury, was a medium-sized village with a population of around 550. Since the mid-60s, however, several building programmes have seen whole estates spring up where once there was just farmland; the population has almost quadrupled to about 1,900.

 

Standing remote on a small hill at the end of a long lane in the north-west of the village, All Saints seems somewhat aloof from all this modern development. Although nowhere near as grand as the parish churches of neighbouring Long Melford or Lavenham, the towers of which can both be seen from here, All Saints is not a small church. There are aisles on both north and south sides: the former extending eastwards flush with the east chancel wall, the latter even further by the Jennens mausoleum. The Jennens being an influencial local family.

 

William Jennens, known as the "Acton Miser", made his money loaning money to gamblers and was Britain's richest commoner at the time of his death in 1798 at the age of 99, though he outlived his nominated executors and beneficiaries under his will. The case was litigated throughout the early 19th century until the whole estate (worth c. £2 million) had disappeared in legal fees. The case of Jennens v Jennens formed part of the inspiration for the Jarndyce v Jarndyce case at the centre of the plot of Bleak House by Charles Dickens.

 

The original church was built around 1250 in Decorated style and the canopied tomb on the north side of the chancel is probably the founders tomb. In the 15th Century the South aisle and the porch were added with the Jennens family vault below. In the late 19th Century the top of the heavily buttressed tower was pulled down and was rebuilt in 1923 with the bells rehung in 1926. The chancel opens to the De Bures Chapel on the north side, with a fine 13th century canopied arch and cusping. The church has some fine brasses; the most famous being that of Robert de Bures (died 1302). The brass of Dame Alyce de Bryene has a figure under a triple canopy. There is also a brass of Henry Bures (died 1528). There is a monument to Robert Jennens (died 1732) who was adjutant to the Duke of Marlborough.

 

Abstract of Title Trustees of Will of John F Clark to Lewknor Cottage, Picton Road, Ramsgate Kent, 1904. List several previous Indentures etc.plus value of any houses and what and what cannot be built on the Land. First 19th & 25th March 1799 redemption of Land Tax by John Garrett.

 

Amongst many others:

28th August 1866 Indenture between Sir Robert Garrett, George Young, Edward Newman, Robert Beckford Johnstone, John Francis Bontenis.

 

7th July 1876 John Frederick Clark died. His wife Mary Ann Clark and son-in-law Birches Frost Wills are named as Executors and Trustees

 

2nd December 1878 Agreement between John Frederick Clark and Jennings Butler for £100.

 

28th December 1896 Jennings Butler died and by his Will of 1895 Thomas Newman, Alfred Thomas Brewer and his Niece Isabella Butler Long made Trustees and Executors of his Will.

 

5th March 1898 Isabella Butler Long died.

 

15th September 1902 Indenture of Mortgage between Mary Ann Clark, Widow of Ramsgate, Birches Frost Wills, Carpenter, Ramsgate, Sarah Kingdom Klug of 112 Clifton Hill, St Johns Wood, London, Widow.

 

John Frederick Clark born circa 1821 at Ramsgate was a Carpenter/Builder. He married twice: Elizabeth Hooper Moses 30th June 1844 at Ramsgate and Mary Ann Bobey 23rd October 1871 at St. Lawrence, Kent.

 

Una parte de mi pequeña colección de Pokémon:

-Rihorn

-Rydon

-Pikachu

-Raichu

-Execute

-Executor

-Arbok

-Bellosom

-Staryu

-Slowking

4th October – 9th December 1902 details of the meetings re the renunciation of Leonard S Parker and James Parker as Trustee of their father Samuel Parker’s Will due to Bankruptcy.

 

Leonard and James Parker were the son’s of Samuel Parker and Caroline Sparkhall. Along with their mother Caroline and sisters Caroline Laura Parker and Jessie Limmer Parker inherited under the Will with Property held in Trust.

 

The daughter Jessie Limmer Parker married Alfred Guiver on 31st January 1894 at Wymondham, Norfolk, England. The other daughter Caroline Laura Parker married James Brummage, 17th March 1894 at Wymondham, Norfolk, England.

 

October 2, 1911

Broadway, Los Angeles

Draft Will of Philip Bowgen, Painter & Plumber, Glazier, Wymondham, Norfolk. Dated 28th August 1879. Solicitor White, Renard & Pomeroy, Wymondham.

 

Named son Philip Bowgen, Samuel Peter Bush of Thurston, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, Builder & Edward Boyce Pomeroy, Solicitor as Executors and Trustees. Names his wife, Sarah Ward Bush Bowgen and leaves bequest to his other Children.

 

Philip Bowgen born 1818 Wymondham, Norfolk was the son of Philip Bowgen and Ann Bush (married 6th October 1816 at Wymondham). He married Sarah Ward Bush at Suffolk in 1852. Sarah was born 28th February 1829 at Thurston, Suffolk the daughter of Peter and Susannah Bush.

 

The 1871 census shows them living at Damgate Street Wymondham. He died 1st October 1879 at Wymondham.

 

Draft revised Will of Agnes Petley, Nash Court, Margate, Margate, Kent, 24th December, 1888. Address in 1886 was 2 Newton Place, Newton Road, Faversham.

 

Executor, brother, Frederick Petley, in 1886 was sister Sybella Petley. Beneficiaries, Fredrick Petley, Sybella Petly and Clara Petley, crossed out in 1888 changes.

 

Letter from Lydia Cook, cousin of Charity (Rowland) Claydon regarding the death of his wife Charity (cousin to Lydia). James would be dead by the time this letter arrived in Greenfield, so the executor would probably have received it and passed it along to Claydon heirs. Nephew Henry Claydon and family would arrive in 1880. Descendants of Henry's daughter, Nora Claydon Bentley, would inherit the documents.

 

Sunbury, March 27, 1876

 

My dear Cousins

 

Dear Cousin Claydon,

 

I read a letter from Harriet last week saying dear cousin Charity was dead & that you was confined to your bed. So she heard she saw she or Ben were both sick at the time or they would tried to get there to the funeral. I feel to sympathize with you in your bereavement yet I know our Father in Heaven will sustain you in your affliction & take you softly to the mansion he has prepared for you. You & I won't tarry long behind. When I last bade you good bye I did not think I should see this day. But the Lord has let me live on his foot-stool [end of page]

 

now than 4 years since. If God had permitted I should have been happy to be with you & C during your sickness and attended to your wants. But that was not to be. Our Heavenly Father has blest me with better health the past winter than usual, bless the Lord o my soul & forget not all his benefits I would like to know the particulars of dear C [Charity] sickness & death. Did she die happy in her Saviour & rejoice that she was going home? She was a good kind christian woman & I believe she is happy. May the Lord bless you & restore you to health if it is his will.

 

I cannot refrain from expressing my gratitude to you for your kindness to me & mine when we last visited you & Charity. Finally you have been kind for which I must express my gratitude here I may never have another opportunity.

 

May our good Lord bless & keep you for his own glory.

 

- Lydia Cook

 

Spencer joins with me in love to you

 

NOTES:

 

Harriet Cook Edwards: daughter of Lydia and an heir of James Claydon.

Letter re the Estate of William Blomfield of Sparham Hall Farm, Necton, Norfolk who died 18th September 1886. His wife Olivia Jane, nee Whistler, Blomfield remarried in 1890 at the Strand Registration District, London to Edward Lewis. Edward Lewis born circa 1849, Farmer and Miller at Gayton, Norfolk was also one of the Executors of William Blomfield’s Will. She needed to fill in forms to record her change of name to Lewis by marriage to ensure the dividend from her husband’s estate continued to be paid to her.

 

Letter from Whites, Solicitors, 28 Budge Row, Cannon Street, London sent to Whites and Pomeroy, Solicitor, Wymondham, Norfolk.

 

Draft preparations for Summons & details of People to be sued for non-payment of Medical services by Dr. Morton. 1903, Aylsham, Norfolk to be Summoned by Thomas Purdey, Solicitor executor of Dr. Richard John Morton deceased Aylsham, Norfolk, who died 20th October 1902. For up to 4 years after his death payments were still being made and collected by his Solicitors and his wife and recorded. 1903.

 

Richard John Morton was born in 1849 the son of Richard Kay, also a Surgeon and Eliza Mary Needham Morton. He married Mary Ann (Marion) Magar 5th May 1872 at Holy Trinity, Lambeth. Morton of Aylsham Family Papers.

 

Dentro una tapa de plástico con el logo de Star Wars.

Draft Will of George Burges, Classical Scholar of 28 Hardres Street, Ramsgate, Kent dated 24th October 1861.

 

George Burges born 1786 Murshidabad, West Bengal, India, he was educated at Cambridge. He was a noted Scholar and author. Named in his father’s will, Thomas Burges of Calcutta, India, dated 1798 along with Elizabeth Burges as his natural children. He left 60,000 rupees for their keep.

 

George Burges named his wife Jane Burges and his four daughters; Maria Burges, Anne Burges, Fanny Burges and Jane, nee Burges, Hill the wife of Charles Thomas Hill as beneficiaries. The Reverend Henry Richards Luard and Charles John Hill as Executors. He states that he makes no mention of his three sons in Australia as he has already done the best he can for them. George died 11th January 1864.

 

Description: Micalago "Lion Tamer," No. 980, A.H.H.B. Bred by the Executors of the late Hon. A. Ryrie, M.L.C.

 

Location: New South Wales, Australia

 

Date: 1920

 

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Description: Micalago "Monte Carlo 3rd," No. 732, A.H.H.B. Bred by the Executors of the late Hon. A. Ryrie, M.L.C.

 

Location: New South Wales, Australia

 

Date: 1920

 

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Description: Micalago "Neptune.

 

Location: New South Wales, Australia

 

Date: 1920

 

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Description: Micalago "Lion Leaf.

 

Location: New South Wales, Australia

 

Date: 1920

 

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Our Catalogue Reference: Part of CO 1069/611.

 

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Chancel mostly rebuilt in 19c - on the floor are gravestones, their brasses lost, to Sir John Spring 1547, lord of the manor & Rev William Cooke 1522 who requested burial here in his will in which he directed that "I will have a gravestone of marble to be bought by myn executors of the priced of six pounis, threten shillins and four pens ( £6 3s 4d) and lade there upon me" - Church of All Saints , Hitcham Suffolk

This was a unique dance. It is called "Henry" and is about the 6 wives of King Henry VIII (It has executors, guillotines and everything!)

(Brasília - DF, 05/08/2020) Presidente do Senado Federal, Davi Alcolumbre conversa com a imprensa.

Foto: Isac Nóbrega/PR

THE MANCHESTER JEWELS WERE TO STAY WITH THE FAMILY NOT TO BE SOLD. AS WE'RE ALL THE PROPERTY'S FOR THE USE OF THE FAMILY. ANY REWRITTEN WILL IS OBSOLETE. NO NON FAMILY MEMBERS WERE ALLOWED TO LIVE IN THE PROPERTY'S. ANYONE NOT TOLD OF A READING OF WILL AND TRUST IS ALSO UNDER SERIOUS ISSUE. EACH DUKE AND DUCHESS SHOULD BE GIVEN HIS OWN FAMILY ESTATE AND FAMILY WILL AND TRUST AS SAID IN THE DOCUMENTS ARE FOR THE DUKE AND DUCHESS OF MANCHESTER TO LIVE AS SUCH. READ IT. HOW IS IT THAT MANY SEEM TO KNOW THE CASH FLOW OF THE DUKE AND DUCHESS FAMILY, THE PROPERTY DEEDS, IT'S ALL IN THE TAX DOCUMENTS DO YOU ALL HAVE THAT? DO YOU HAVE OUR ACCOUNTING AND HOW DID YOU GET THIS INFORMATION YOU SO CLEARLY WRITE ABOUT. PLEASE DO TELL.

 

of

the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Proceedings of Harry B. Hollins, John L. Cadwalader and Frederick Ogden Beach, as Executors of the Last Will and Testament of Consuelo, Dowager Duchess Of Manchester, deceased.

 

Page 65

A. PERRY OSBORN, Special Guardian for Ernesto Yznaga and Others,

Respondent, 14 Wall Street, Borough of Manhattan New York City. RUSH

TAGGERT, Attorney for Duke and Duchess of Manchester, Respondents, /4*

UNANIMOUS' / /-£ ...

Page 67

... verified July 15, 1912 8 Objections <:f Mabel, Countess Zichy, to American

Executors' Supplemental Account 1" Stipulation 1- Will and Codicil of Consuelo,

Dowager Duchess of Manchester, dated 7th of January, 1909, and 28th of

October, ...

Page 1

In the Matter of the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Proceedings of Harry B.

Hollins, John L. Cadwalader and Frederick Ogden Beach, as Executors of the

Last Will and Testament of Consuelo, Dowager Duchess of Manchester,

deceased.

Page 2

In the Matter of the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Proceedings of Harry B.

Rollins, John L. Cadwalader and Frederick Ogden Beach, as Executors of the

Last Will and Testament of Consuklo, Dowager Duchess of Manchester,

deceased.

The said testatrix at the time of her death had property of large amount located in the State of New York and elsewhere in the United States, winch consists entirely of personalty. She also left real estate in Cuba. All such property is directed by the will to be administered by the American executors. Certain legacies and annuities, including that to the Countess Zichy, are directed to be paid out of said American assets, and the residuary American estate is to be held in trust by the said executors, as trustees under the said will, and the said property is not to be remitted to England or subjected to administration therein.

40 Stipulation

3. A suit was brought in the High Court of Justice iu England, Chancery Division, by the executors appointed in England, viz., Vere Brabazon, Viscount Duncannon, and Thomas Rawle, against the present Duke of Manchester, the Duchess of Manchester and their children, and the American executors who are accounting herein. The proceedings were subsequently discontinued against the said American executors, who had not been served Jo of the said summons, with the directions endorsed thereon which were made with respect to the relief therein sought, is hereto annexed.

4. The assets and securities committed to the administration of the executors in England, other than a leasehold in the Grosvenor Square residence, and the contents thereof and heirlooms, pictures, works of art and jewelry, were insufficient to pay the entire amount of the death duties due in England with respect to the estate of the testatrix, and the deficit amounted to approximately the sum of £20,000. The premises in Grosvenor Square consisting of a leasehold as aforesaid and the contents thereof, were part of the residuary estate directed to be held upon a trust by the English executors in trust.

 

7. On June 7, 1912, the American executors remitted to the English executors the equivalent of £20,000 in order that the deficit in such death duties might be provided for without sale of the heirlooms, personal effects or the family residence in Grosvenor Square, or its contents, as aforesaid. Thereupon, and by order, dated June 18, 1912, of the court, in the suit referred to in paragraph 3 of this stipulation, a copy of which order is hereto annexed, the sale of the said residence and stables used therewith was stayed.

TRUST SUIT GROSOVER SQUARE NOT 20k

 

3. A suit was brought in the High Court of Justice iu England, Chancery Division, by the executors appointed in England, viz., Vere Brabazon, Viscount Duncannon, and Thomas Rawle, against the present Duke of Manchester, the Duchess of Manchester and their children, and the American executors who are accounting herein. The proceedings were subsequently discontinued against the said American executors, who had not been served

. 1 with process or appeared therein. Mabel, Countess Zichy, was not a party to the said suit. An order was made in such suit on the 20th day of February, 1912, a true copy of which is hereto annexed. Thereafter, in the execution ofthe said order and judgment, it was directed by the Master to whom the matter was referred on a summons issued by the plaintiffs' solicitors that the plaintiffs might be directed to sell the family residence at Number 5 Grosvenor Square, London, and the contents, to satisfy a deficit in death duties unless the American executors should remit the sum of £20,000. A copy

Jo of the said summons, with the directions endorsed thereon which were made with respect to the relief therein sought, is hereto annexed.

4. The assets and securities committed to the administration of the executors in England, other than a leasehold in the Grosvenor Square residence, and the contents thereof and heirlooms, pictures, works of art and jewelry, were insufficient to pay the entire amount of the death duties due in England with respect to the estate of the testatrix, and the deficit amounted to approximately the sum of £20,000. The premises in Grosvenor Square consisting of a leasehold as aforesaid and the contents thereof, were part of the residuary estate directed to be held upon a trust by the English executors in London.

  

£470,400

Sold 5th Aug 2011

5 Grosvenor Square, London W1K 4AF

  

The Empire Strikes Back Poster Magazine #2, 1980

A clear screenshot of Executor running.

Churchman and civilian - the inscription lost and unrecorded. However the civilian is believed to be William Frith, a London fishmonger who asked for burial here and established a chantry under his July 1386 will. Under its terms 2 chaplains were to say masses in perpetuity for the benefit of Frith's soul and those of his parents, kinsmen and the faithful departed. No details of the tomb over his remains were given, perhaps he had already commissioned it , but he asked that each year on the anniversary of his death 2 candles were to burn next to his tomb, one at the head and one at the foot. No mention is made of the priest by his side but one of his executors was John Bradwell first warden of the college established by Sir William Trussel, perhaps a relative .

The brass lies in the centre of the chancel . That on the left is a priest in vestments clothed in a stole, maniple, and bordure of the alb are ornamented by devices almost peculiar to effigies of the fourteenth century, which are squares, containing crosses-cramponee alternating with quatrefoils. The shoes are pointed. William Frith wears a tunic, close fitting and buttoned up the front, reaching to the calves. From the middle a short sword depends from a girdle; a mantle is worn over the tunic, fastened by 3 buttons on the right shoulder and falling over the left arm. On the legs are hose, with pointed shoes.

- Shottesbrooke church Berkshire

1903 details of meetings concerning Mrs. Caroline Parker, mortgages and repairs on property

 

28th March – 15th October 1903 details of meetings concerning Mrs. Caroline Parker, the mortgages and repairs on property including the Browick Property held in trust under Samuel Parker’s Will: Giving details of meetings with family and others.

 

Samuel Parker born 1814 at Wymondham was the son of James and Sophia, nee Scarlett, Parker he married Caroline Sparkhall 11th August 1846 at Wymondham. Caroline was the daughter of John Sparkhall and Elizabeth Limmer and was born in 1824 at Wymondham.

 

The Parker Family of Wymondham Documents.

 

Draft Will of George Burges, Classical Scholar of 28 Hardres Street, Ramsgate, Kent dated 24th October 1861.

 

George Burges born 1786 Murshidabad, West Bengal, India, he was educated at Cambridge. He was a noted Scholar and author. Named in his father’s will, Thomas Burges of Calcutta, India, dated 1798 along with Elizabeth Burges as his natural children. He left 60,000 rupees for their keep.

 

George Burges named his wife Jane Burges and his four daughters; Maria Burges, Anne Burges, Fanny Burges and Jane, nee Burges, Hill the wife of Charles Thomas Hill as beneficiaries. The Reverend Henry Richards Luard and Charles John Hill as Executors. He states that he makes no mention of his three sons in Australia as he has already done the best he can for them. George died 11th January 1864.

 

Church of St. Mary,

 

Monument to Mrs Everilda Thornhill †1743, and members of her family. Marble, above north arcading of central aisle. Commissioned by the executors of her will on her orders.

 

The inscription is illegible, but clarified in the photographs. Everilda Thornhill was a spinster from Burnham, who died aged 44. The other members of her family included in the inscription, and buried in a vault nearby, were: her mother, Ann Thornhill †1724; her uncle Thomas Harris †1726; and her brother John Thornhill †1741.

 

The inscription, under an angel head is set under a broken pediment, with (presumably) the now illegible family coat of arms. It is framed by dark, doubled, Corinthian piers, above gadrooning and a double curved apron. The elegant monument is not signed (or if it had been the signature is now lost) but close to, but more complex than, contemporary monuments by Norwich sculptors, notably John Ivory’s monument to Mary Slater †1748 at Hingham.

 

detail of the top of the monument with angel head

 

1980 BMW 635CSi auto.

 

Supplied by Sorensons of King's Lynn (BMW).

Last MoT test expired in August 2012.

Anglia Car Auctions, King's Lynn -

 

"Offered on behalf of the executors, this 87,515 mile example was supplied new by Sorensons of King's Lynn, now Listers. Obviously cherished by it's four owners, the car has not been used since, we believe, around 2012 and will require a degree of straight-forward mechanical recommissioning. The brakes are sticking and a fuel line has split rendering it impossible for us to start the car. However, the engine turns freely and attempts to fire. Complete with full original tool-kit, torch and service wallet.

 

Chassis number: WBA53420005585364

 

Result inc Premium: £10,070."

National Trustees Executors & Agency Co. of Aust. Ltd

93-95 Queen Street

Melbourne VIC

Australia

 

More info at www.walkingmelbourne.com/building213_national-trustees-ex...

Lots more EXECUTOR research shots. Ignore at your leisure.

(Brasília - DF, 05/08/2020) Palavras do Secretário de Energia Elétrica do Ministério de Minas e Energia, Rodrigo Limp.

Foto: Isac Nóbrega/PR

WILLIS J. MILNER, THE GENERAL MANAGER OF THE ELYTON LAND COMPANY.

 

The execution of a policy laid out by a great corporation, whose plans are never beneath its ability to conceive and support, must always fall upon one responsible head. Wisdom in council consists not alone in devising schemes and voting the means, but also in finding the single executor for their practical inauguration and continued prosperity in operation. Executive tact, which is courageous enough to accept an original outline from the projector of its plans, and honest enough to make them its own, is the indispensable element of corporate strength. It is the motive power which determines all questions of utility of agents and economy of means. It is the helm to direct the course of the ship which other hands have built and laden with resources.

 

Among the first steps toward organization made by the Elyton Land Company was the appointment of the subject of this sketch to be its Secretary and Treasurer. He has held that office continuously since, and is now its General Manager. The history of the company is a material art of the biography of the Secretary and Treasurer.

 

Major Milner is a native of Pike County, Georgia, where he was born May 3, 1842, of Georgia-born parents. He is the youngest of six children born to Willis J. and Mary A. Milner, nee Turner. Subsequently the father and mother moved to Greenville, Butler County, one of the lower tier of counties of Alabama, where first the father died in 1864, the mother following, in Birmingham, in 1879.

 

The father had led a life of enterprise. In Georgia he had been a railroad contractor and gold miner. The son had been placed at Mercer University, Georgia, and had entered into the course of the junior class when the enthusiasm of the revolution of 1861 swept over the South with resistless and matchess fervor. The college walls were deserted as if by some inspired call from without. Young Milner, like the best students in all Southern colleges, abandoned his studies for the field. His military record began as first lieutenant of a company stationed in Escambia County, Florida. There was no apparent opportunity open to this part of the army for active service, and the college student had gone in for war on a principle. War meant to him the battles which would bring quick and certain results. To gratify his purpose he must escape from Escambia County. Thus resolved, he resigned his commission and repaired to Pensacola, enlisted as a private in the Clinch Rifles, a company of the 5th Georgia infantry then stationed there. There was room in this zeal for the office of future general manager of the most famous and influential corporation of the whole reconstructed Confederacy.

 

After two years of the duty of private soldier in the field, marching and fightkig on corn cakes, or roasting-ears, or rationless, as circumstances prevailed of a favorable or unfavorable turn in the army commissary, our subject was sent up to Company K., 33rd Alabama Infantry, as first lieutenant commanding. A slight wound at Murfreesboro, and a more serious one at Chickamauga, prepared the way for promotion. Adjutant Moore, of the 33rd Alabama, fell at Chickamauga, and young Milner was appointed to succeed him. His executive ability attracted attention, and he was again promoted to the staff of Lowery's brigade of Cleburne's division, the most famous in the army of Tennessee. Cleburne's division was thanked by resolution of the Confederate Congress for saving Bragg's army from annihilation at Missionary Ridge, an honor never conferred on any single division of an army at any time before or since. Cleburne fell in the bloodiest battle of the war at Franklin, Tennessee.

 

Upon the consolidation of the 16th and 33rd Alabama regiments of infantry, Captain Milner was elected major of the new organization. At the time of the surrender of the Confederate armies he was in command of his regiment, because of the capture or fall of the colonel and lieutenant-colonel.

 

Major Milner was paroled with the remnant of his command, and of the armies of the Confederacy, not to fight against the Union until duly exchanged.

 

Along with the remnant of the hosts who had engaged to support a principle which had been overcome, he turned his attention to the restoration and rehabiliment of his despoiled country. Penniless he made his way to the home of his brother-in-law. Dr. Henry M. Caldwell, a paroled Confederate surgeon, who had saved something from the wreck prevailing. First as Dr. Caldwell's partner in a drugstore in Greenville, and subsequently in various other responsible positions, he continued in business in that town until his removal to Birmingham.

 

In October, 1865, Major Milner was married to Miss Gustrine C. Key, only child of the late Dr. James F. Key, of Lowndes County. To this happy union the husband attributes whatever of success may have attended his efforts in fife. Though long an invalid and a great sufferer, Mrs. Milner has been a true and faithful wife and ever a noble example of womanhood. Her opinions are always sought, and her counsel and advice in matters of grave importance valued far above those of any other living mortal. Her judgment is rarely at fault and her intuitive insight into character remarkable.

 

In 1871 Major Milner came to Birmingham as an employe of the South & North Alabama Railroad Company, but soon after was made secretary and treasurer of the Elyton Land Company, Colonel James R. Powell being then president. When Dr. Caldwell succeeded to the presidency of the Land Company Major Milner was retained in his office, and, in addition, was made superintendent of the water works.

 

The business enterprise of Major Milner has by no means been limited to the arduous duties assigned him by the Elyton Land Company. Some view of the compass of these duties may be reached by recurring to a few of them. The secretary and treasurer, being a practical civil engineer, built the original waterworks of the company, costing $100,000. The new water works of the company, involving the most elaborate particulars of the system of supplying water from mountain springs, seven to ten miles distant, by means of reservoirs, aqueducts, filterers, pumps, and distributing channels, is entirely under his control. The street-railway system of the company, covering many miles and including the management of Lakeview Park, is also under his control.

 

Major Milner is in business on his own account, and very successfully engaged. He is owner of valuable real estate, improved and unimproved. He is the senior member of a firm of iron and brass manufacturers.

 

One of the most important and interesting features of his enterprise is the Belt Railroad. This line, now being constructed, is a project of his. It is owned by a company, but is managed by him. Its name implies its object. It encircles the city, and will find employment in switching offloaded freight cars from trains entering the city from distant points, and unloading them at convenient points to consignees of their contents.

 

Major and Mrs. Milner are communicants of the Church of the Advent (Protestant Episcopal), Birmingham. They are the parents of one son and one daughter.

 

At a recent meeting of the directory of the Elyton Land Company the salary of its secretary and treasurer was ordered doubled, and this in the middle of the year, for which the original amount had been fixed and accepted, and without any suggestion from him.

 

Major Milner is a Mason in high standing with his order.

 

- from Jefferson County and Birmingham Alabama: History and Biographical, edited by John Witherspoon Dubose and published in 1887 by Teeple & Smith / Caldwell Printing Works, Birmingham, Alabama

 

Church of St. Mary,

 

Monument to Mrs Everilda Thornhill †1743, and members of her family. Marble, above north arcading of central aisle. Commissioned by the executors of her will on her orders.

 

The inscription is illegible, but clarified in the photographs. Everilda Thornhill was a spinster from Burnham, who died aged 44. The other members of her family included in the inscription, and buried in a vault nearby, were: her mother, Ann Thornhill †1724; her uncle Thomas Harris †1726; and her brother John Thornhill †1741.

 

The inscription, under an angel head is set under a broken pediment, with (presumably) the now illegible family coat of arms. It is framed by dark, doubled, Corinthian piers, above gadrooning and a double curved apron. The elegant monument is not signed (or if it had been the signature is now lost) but close to, but more complex than, contemporary monuments by Norwich sculptors, notably John Ivory’s monument to Mary Slater †1748 at Hingham.

 

detail of the top of the monument

  

Church of St Peter

 

Monument to Jermyn Wyche and Maria Hungerford †1719. Marble. East wall of chancel (south of the altar). Commissioned by their daughter, Maria. Signed: R. Singleton de Bury Fecit

  

Jermyn Wyche had inherited Hockwold Hall from his father, Sir Cyril (1632-1707), who had bought it in 1688. He had died in January 1719 and his wife, Maria in August. Their busts are framed Corinthian columns and piers, the wide opening suggesting a Roman triumphal arch with open segmental pediment. They are set against black marble and are separated by the now empty base of an urn (?), looking away from each other. Above they are greeted by a display of contemporary musical instruments, shown as the tasselled curtains are pulled back. This includes a range of wind instruments, trombone, violin, sheet music, ink stand with quill and a rather idealized medal of Queen Anne. The relief suggests an otherwise unrecorded interest in music. At the sides two putti hold coats of arms (one now lost), enlarged on the decorative cartouche above. The inscription, under the coarse dog tooth, ends with a winged skull, with the artist’s signature.

 

The busts catch the details of sitters’ costumes and appearance better than their blank expressions: his cravat and wig curled over his left shoulder, her strained neck muscles as she looks up. The inscription refers to his knowledge of the law and litigation, prompted by his dispute with a fellow MP. Sir John Pakington claimed property that had belonged to Wyche’s father’s second wife, having married Wyche’s stepsister. In March 1714 the matter came to a head in parliament where Pakington complained: ‘that Wyche’s status as executor of his father’s will made his claim of parliamentary privilege in the case erroneous. After a debate on the matter on the 19th Wyche agreed to waive his privilege, provided Pakington did the same.’

historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1690-1715 by Richard Harrison

 

detail of coat of arms

 

GOD MANCHESTER

 

MANCHESTER. EARLS AND DUKES OF MANCHESTER

The Manchester title, in the English peerage, belongs to a branch of the family of Montagu (q.v.).

The first earl was HENRY Morrnov (c. 1363-1642), grandson of Sir Edward Montagu, chief justice of the king's bench 1539-1545, who was named by King Henry VIII. one of the executors of his will, and governor to his son, Edward VI. Sir Henry Montagu, who was born at Boughton, Northamptonshire, about 1563, was educated at Christ's College, Cambridge, and, having been called to the bar,was elected recorder of London in 1603, and in 1616 was made chief justice of the king's bench, in which office it fell to him to pass sentence on Sir Walter Raleigh in October 1618. In 1620 he was appointed lord high treasurer, being raised to the peerage as Baron Montagu of Kimbolton, Huntingdonsbire, and Viscount Mandeville. He became president of the council in 1621, in which office he was continued by Charles 1., who created him earl of Manchester in 1626. In 1628 he became lord privy seal, and in 1635 a commiasioner of the treasury. Although from the beginning of his public life in 1601, when he first entered parliament, Manchester had inclined to the popular side in politics, he managed to retain to the end the favour of the king. He was a judge of the Star Chamber, and one of the most trusted councillors of Charles I. His loyalty, ability and honesty were warmly praised by Clarendon. In conjunction with Coventry, the lord keeper, he pronounced an opinion in favour of the legality of ship-money in 1634. He died on the 7th of November 1642. Manchester was

married three times. One of his sons by his third wife wasfathcr of Charles Montagu, created earl of Halifax in 1699

Euwluw MoNncU, and ear] of Manchester (16o2-1671),eldest son of the rst earl by his first wife, Catherine Spencer, granddaughter of Sir John Spencer of Althorpe, was born in 160:, and was educated at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge.

 

He was member of parliament for Huntingdonshire 1623-1626, and in the latter year was raised to the peerage in his father's lifetime as Baron Montagu of Kimbolton, but was known generally by his courtesy title of Viscount Mandeville. ‘His first wife, who was related to the duke of Buckingham, having died in 1625 after two years of marriage, Mandeville married in 1626 Anne, daughter of the and earl of Warwick. The influence of his father-in-lnw, who was afterwards admiral on the side‘ of the parliament, drew Mandeville to the popular side in the questions in dispute with the crown, and at the beginning of the Long Parliament he was one of the recognized leaders of the popular party in the upper House, his name being joined with those of the five members of the House of Commons impeached by the king in 1642. At the outbreak of the Civil War, having succeeded his father in the earldom in November 1642, Manchester commanded a regiment in the army of the earl of Essex, and in August 1643 he was appointed major-general of the parliamentary forces in the eastern counties, with Cromwell as his second in command. Having become a member of the “ committee of both kingdoms " in 1644, he was in supreme command at Marston Moor (july 1, 1644); but in the subsequent operations his lack of energy brought him into disagreement with Cromwell, and in November 1644 he strongly expressed his disapproval of continuing the war (see Cnotrwztt, 01.1v12n). Cromwell brought the shortcomin'gs of Manchester before parliament in the autumn of 1644; and early‘ in the following year, anticipating the self-denying ordinance, Manchester resigned his command. He took a leading part in the frequent negotiations for an arrangement with Charles, was custodian with Lcnthall of the great seal 1646-1648, and frequently presided in the House of Lords. He opposed the trial of the king, and retired from public life during the Commonwealth; but after the Restoration, which he actively assisted, he was loaded with honoursby CharlesII. In 1667 he was madea general, and hedicd on the 5th of May 1671. Manchester was madea KG. in 1661, and became F.R.S. in 1667. Men of such divergent sympathies as Baxter, Bumet and Clarendon agreed in describing Manchester as a lovable and virtuous man, who loved peace and moderation both in politics and religion. He was five times married, leaving children by two of his wives, and was succeeded in the title by his eldest son, Robert, 3rd earl of Manchester (1634-1683).

 

Sec Lord Clarendon, Hirlory of the Rebellion and Civil War: in England (7 vols., Oxford, 1839) and Li :0 Clarendon (Oxford, 1827); S. R. Gardiner, History 0] the Great iei Wm, 1642-1649. (4 vols, London, 1886-1891); The quarrel between Manchester and Oliver Cromwell , Camden Soc., NS. 12 (Lon on. 1875); Sir Philip Warwick, Memoir: of the Reign of Charles 1. (London, 1701). '

CHARLES MONTAGU), 1st duke of Manchester (c. 1656-1721), son of Robert, 3rd earl of Manchester, was educated at- Trinity College, Cambridge, and succeeded to his father's earldom in 1683. Warmly sympathizing with the Whig revolution of 1688, he attended William and Mary at their coronation, fought under

William at the Boyne, became a privy councillor in 1698, and‘

held various important diplomatic posts between that date and 1714, when he received an appointment in the household of George I , by whom on the 28th of April 1719 he was created duke of Manchester. He died on the 20th of January 1722, and was succeeded successively in the dukedom by his two sons, William 2nd duke of Manchester (1700-1731)), and Robert 3rd duke (c. 1710-1762),who was vice-Chamberlain to Queen Caroline, wife of George II.

GEORGE MONTAGU, 4th duke of Manchester (1737-1788), was the son of Robert, the 3rd duke. He was a supporter of Lord Rockingham, and an active opponent in the House of Lords of Lord North's American policy. In the Rockingham ministry

of 1782 Manchester became lord chamberlain, He died on

September 1788.

 

Whilliam Montagu Manchester, The 5th Duke of Manchester (1768-1843), second son of the preceding, was educated at Harrow, and having become a colonel in the army in 1794, was appointed governor of Jamaica. in r808. Here he remained, except for a visit to England (18rr—18t3) till 1827, administering the colony with ability in a period of considerable difliculty, and doing much to prepare the way for emancipation of the slaves. From 1827 to 1830 he was the longest standing Governor of Jamaica, And postmaster-general in the cabinet of the duke of Wellington, and died in Rome on the 18th of March 1843. His wife was Susan, daughter of the 4th duke of Gordon. He was succeeded by his son George, 6th duke (woo—1855), a captain in the navy; whose son William Drogo, 7th duke (1823-:890), married Louise, daughter of the Comte d’Alten of Hanover, who after his death married Spencer Cavendish, 8th duke of Devonshire. William was succeeded by his son George Victor Drogo, 8th duke of Manchester (r853-1892), on whose death the title devolved on his son, William Angus Drogo, 9th duke of Manchester (b.1877). (R. J. M.)

 

Huntingdon gives its name to a celebrated cheese that variety is now made exclusively in the counties of Lincoln and Leicester; and dairy farming is not now much followed. The milk is now chiefly used for rearing calves. Large numbers of cattle are fattened in the field or the fold-yard, and are sold when rising three years old. They are mostly of the shorthorn breed, large numbers of Irish shorthorns being wintered in the fens. Where there are no upland pastures the farmer usually purchases cattle in the autumn and sells them in the spring. The number of horses in 1879 was 11,057, or an average of 4.2 to every 100 acres under cultivation, as compared with 4.5 for England and 4.1 for the United Kingdom. Of these the number used solely for agricultural purposes was 7583. Most of the farmers breed cart-horses, and the large farmers often rear weight-carrying hunters. The number of sheep in 1879 was 157,790, or an average of 75.3 to every 100 acres under cultivation, as compared with the same average for England and 68.0 for the United Kingdom. Great improvement in the breed has lately taken place, Leicesters and Lincolns being most common; they usually attain eat weights at an early age. Lambs are occasions 1y sold at weaning time, but more frequently they are kept through the winter on the grass lands, being fed also on mangolds and other roots, with an addition of cake and corn. The number of pigs in 1879 was 19 990, or an average of 9.5 toevery 100 acres under cultivation, as compared with 7.2 for England and 6.7 for the United Kingdom. They include Berkshire, Suffolk, and Neapolitan breeds and a number of crosses. Many after having gleane the stubbles are fattened on whey and various preparations of inferior barley; but breeding is also extensively practiced.

According to the owners of lands returned for 1873 the land was divided among 3903 roprietors, holding land the gross annual value of wliich was £444,890. Of the owners 45% per cent. possessed lam than 1 acre, and the average value all over was £1, 19s. 42d. per acre. There were 13 proprietors holding upwards of 3000 acres, viz., Edward Fellowes 15,629; duke of .Manchester, 13,835' William Wells, 5792; mar11;“ of Huntly, 5711 ; iHon. G. W. Fitzwilliam, 5202;

rd Chesham, 3787; earl of Ca sfort, 3654; Ecclesiastical Commissioners, 3559 ; olonel Duncombe, 3407; W. Duberley, 3224; earl of Sandwich, 3219; G. D. Newton, 3209; Richard H. Hussey, 3135.

Office copy of a Summons to George McCullum, Springfield Villa, station Road, Walsham, Norfolk for non-payment of Medical services provided by Dr. Richard John Morton in 1896 and 1898. Summoned by Thomas Purdey, Solicitor executor of Dr. Richard John Morton deceased Aylsham, Norfolk, who died 20th October 1902. For up to 4 years after his death payments were still being made and collected by his Solicitors and his wife and recorded.

 

Richard John Morton was born in 1849 the son of Richard Kay, also a Surgeon and Eliza Mary Needham Morton. He married Mary Ann (Marion) Magar 5th May 1872 at Holy Trinity, Lambeth. Morton of Aylsham Family Papers

 

George McCullum, Gamekeeper born circa 1828 at Felbrig, Norfolk is living with his second wife Eleanor Coleman at Station Road, North Walsham. The surname had various spellings over the years, McCullham (1901), McCullam 1892, Macullum 1891, Macullum 1881.

 

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