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Family Subtree Diagram : de St. Croix

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m.1934 Marriage (a child) m.1950 Marriage (two children) m.1925 Marriage (a child) m.1950 Marriage (three children) m.1951 Marriage (a child) Divorce (two children) m.1976 Marriage (two children) m.1994 Marriage (three children) Marriage m.1918 Marriage m.1919 Marriage (two children) m.1912 Marriage (four children) m.1934 Marriage (three children) m.1940 Marriage (two children) m.1923 Marriage (two children) m.1917 Marriage (three children) m.1939? Marriage (two children) m.1957 Marriage (two children) m.1921 Marriage m.1950? Issue Marriage m.1954. Issue Marriage (two children) m.1940 Marriage (three children) Marriage (two children) m.1915 Marriage m.1884 Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Divorce (a child) m.1963 Marriage (three children) m.1964 Marriage (three children) m.1970 Marriage (three children) Divorce (two children) Marriage (three children) m.1892 Divorce 1974 Marriage (a child) Marriage Marriage Marriage Marriage (three children) Marriage Marriage (three children) Marriage (three children) m.1788 Marriage (four children) Marriage (a child) 3/10/1876 Marriage (a child) 27/9/1859 Marriage (a child) Divorce (two children) m.1974 Marriage (two children) m.1965 Marriage (three children) m.1995 Marriage m.1999 Marriage (two children) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) 5/06/1858 Marriage (three children) m.25/06/1760 Mahier de Ste. Croix Jersey. Circa 1584.

Note by O.H. de St. Croix. According to Patronymica Britannica, the Engish branch of the de St. Croix family left Normandy after 1685 and settled in Jersey, whence they subsequently transferred themselves to England - the first of these latter was Nicholas de St. Croix, son of Charles de St. Croix and Francoise Neele.
Jean de Ste. Croix Marie Briard 1687 Jean de Ste. Croix 1689 - 1757 Nicolas de Ste. Croix 68 68 1693 Edouard de Ste. Croix 1697 Charles de Ste. Croix 1693 Marie Mallet 1723 - 1759 Charles de Ste Croix 36 36 Both died relatively young in Jersey 1759 and their only son was sent to England 1727 - 1780 Françoise Neel 53 53 Their only son was sent to England 1751 - 1816 Nicholas de St. Croix 65 65 Note by O.H. de St. Croix. Note on Nicholas de St Croix (b 1751) provided by the librarian of Windsor Castle on the 8/8/1934, from the "Gentleman's Magazine" for August 1816 in the form of an orbituary notice: "Born in  Jersey of respectable parents, both of whom he lost in youth.  At 8 years old (1759), he was sent to England for education and imbibed in this country a steady attachment to its constitution, which he constantly evinced in conversation and, more recently, in active cooperation as an office of the Volunteers, who had united in its defence.  His conduct as a parent was regulated by a high sense of duty.  He was an hospitable friend and a cheerful companion.  As a member of the Church of England, his religion was free from enthusiasm and his piety from  moroseness and ostentation.  His charities were bounded only by his means, the necessary limits of which he was at all times ready to extend by his advice and personal exertions.  More would have been said had not the writer of this paragraph feared to injure the memory of a friend he highly esteemed.......The late Mr de St Croix (of Ivy House, Hackney or Upper Homerton) was of a good family in the Isle of Jersey and only child of Charles and Francoise (Neele) de St Croix".

Nicholas and Sarah lived at Ivy House, Homerton, then a village now a suburb of London. In the early days they went to Court.

Note by O.H. de St. Croix. According to Patronymica Britannica, the Engish branch of the de St. Croix family left Normandy after 1685 and settled in Jersey, whence they subsequently transferred themselves to England - the first of these latter was Nicholas de St. Croix, son of Charles de St. Croix and Francoise Neele.

1761 - 1821 Sarah Gay 59 59 According to Sarah de St. Croix: She had been brought up by Mr and Mrs Coussmaker who she called in her letters her dear friends. She had some money and was left the lease of Ivy House where she and Nicholas lived at Homerton, then a village now a suburb of London. In the early days they went to Court.

From miniature portraits of the couple, Sarah comments that they must have been very small, the wife with an abundance of red hair.

On the day of her marriage she is registered as living in Chigwell (London Metropolitan Archives, Saint John At Hackney, Hackney, Register of marriages, P79/JN1, Item 050).
1787 - 1843 William de St. Croix 56 56 Note by O.H. de St. Croix.- During the period of King George III's insanity, 1814-1820, he appears in the Court and City Register as Clerk to the Office of Groom of the Stole, who was the head administrative official of the King's Household. His memorial tablet in the cloister of St. George's Chapel, Windsor, was erected by his numerous friends. He had rooms over the gateway leading into Castle Yard, Windsor Castle, and on the death of Gearge III enjoyed a pension of £200 per annum and became Clerk to the Dean & Chapter. 1795 - 1871 Walpole de St. Croix 76 76 lived at Highgate with a married woman and his daughter called Adele Smith.(On the 1861 census he is visiting Adela and her husband Edward Smith.

Walpole edited the original manuscript of 'The Elements and Practice of Agriculture, by Arthur Young, F.R.S., and secretary to the Board of Agriculture from 1852 to '55' (source http://www.soilandhealth.org)
1795 - 1850 Jasper de St. Croix 55 55 crushed his leg as a little boy and it was amputated. Wore a wooden leg. Had a house in  Hans Place and drove a Brougham. Pall Mall. Well read and fond of poetry.

He and some other patriotic individuals presented a series of paintings of Admiral Nelson to Greenwich Hospital in 1849. The paintings were by West,  Westall an Lemuel Abbott.
1799 - 1881 Nicholas de St. Croix 82 82 unmarried.
From the notes of Oliver de St. Croix:
He twice made and lost a fortune through the treachery of a trusted friend: he then made a third and left £26,800.  He went to sea at the age of 13, in the merchant service, and for many years was in command of ships trading with the East.  In 1840 he retired with a pension, bought a ship-the John Laird-and in 1842 sailed for China with seven boys on board, the sons of relations and friends, among who was his nephew, George de St Croix.  The boys were trained as sailors but 5 of them stayed in China.  Nicholas became consular agent at Macao and found jobs for 3 of the boys in business in Hong Kong and Canton. He sold his ship and remained in China until 1851, when he returned to London and spent much time with his great friend, Mr Dent (China merchant), in Fitzroy Square.  He was an active committee man of the National Lifeboat Institution and of the training ship Worcester.  He is described as "eccentric, liberal, economical to a fault in his own expenses, rarely showing any tenderness, found fault without scruple or cause".

HMS Worcester (from http://www.greenhithe.co.uk/history/history-3.htm): In the middle of the nineteenth century it was felt that there was a shortage of properly trained officers for merchant ships. William Munton Mullivant, a London merchant, and Richard Green, a Blackwall shipbuilder had the idea of a training vessel on the Thames. The Worcester Committee was set up in 1861. Its first members Richard Green, Lord Alfred Paget, Sir George Chambers and Captain De St Croix instituted a subscription list and raised over £1000 within 6 months from shipowners, underwriters and merchants who had the foresight to invest in the future of their trade. The Admiralty loaned the HMS Worcester a 50 gun frigate of 1500 tons. In 1862 the Thames Marine Officer Training School was opened. She was to find her eventual home at Greenhithe in 1871 after temporary berths at Blackwall, Erith and Southend. To mark the occasion of mooring off Ingress Abbey the cadets fired a salute from the ships 18 pounder muzzle loading guns which caused the windows of a large number of houses in Greenhithe to break. As the college grew a larger ship was needed, and the Admiralty loaned the college the Frederick William a second rate line of battleship with 74 guns. She was renamed the Worcester and refitted in the Victoria Docks before being bought to Greenhithe in 1876. It was about this time the name of the school was changed to the Thames Nautical Training College, HMS Worcester. In 1938 the Cutty Sark was acquired by the college and berthed along side the Worcester. In 1939 during the war the cadets moved to Foots Cray Place near Sidcup, and the Worcester handed back to the Admiralty. The third Worcester arrived at Greenhithe on 15 January 1946. The official opening ceremony was held on Sat 2nd February. A letter of welcome on behalf of the village was sent by Mr W. S. Everard. The third Worcester was previously the Exmouth built in 1905 as the first specially commissioned training ship by the navy. At 314ft. in length, 53ft. beam and 181" mean draft with the upper portion of the hull mild steel and the lower half iron to prevent corrosion she represented all that was best of the old "wooden walls" and many of the improvements of the newer ships. In 1954 the Cutty Sark left Greenhithe to be docked permanently at Greenwich. In 1968 the Thames Nautical Training College became part of the Merchant Navy College at Greenhithe. The Worcester became redundant and was sold to be broken up in 1978.
1792 Thomas de St. Croix 1796 Margaret de St. Croix 1802 - 1816 Edward de St. Croix 14 14 1793 - 1828 Mary Ann de St. Croix 35 35 She was mentioned in books by Shelley.  She was once involved with Thomas Love Peacock and turned down his marriage proposal. 1801 - 1848 Margaretta de St. Croix 47 47 1785 Sarah de St. Croix Christened at St. John, Hackney on 18th March 1875. (source-http://www.familysearch.org/ 1803 - 1816 Septima Louisa de St. Croix 13 13 1787 - 1846 Henrietta de St. Croix 59 59 unmarried.  In the last few years of her life, she was living at a little house at Wormley in Hertfordshire near Hodderdon and is buried there. 1796 - 1816 Arabella de St. Croix 20 20 1798 - 1869 George Allfrey 71 71 of Friston Place, Westdean, Sussex. Lloyds and Stamford Hill. After Mary Ann died a few years after they were married, Mr Allfrey married Miss Eliza Richmond and had 10 more children. The Allfreys have some land in Seaford.

Mary Ann is buried in Seaford. 
1792 - 1858 Mary Katherine Green 66 66 1819 - 1877 William (Revd.) de St. Croix 57 57 Born at Windsor Castle. Christened on 27th June 1819 in St. George's Chapel.

Educated at Eton and St John's College Cambridge.  reached the 6th form and played cricket v Harrow at Lord's at 1837;also played for Cambridge University v Oxford.  1839-42 was a rather fast round arm bowler.  Tutor at Harrow 1842.  Ordained deacon in December 1843 at Peterborough.  Curate at Wooton Northants.  Ordained Deacon Peterborough 1843, ordained priest Sept 1844 and appointed vicar of Glynde in that year.  Married Martha Evans at Wootton, Northants on 20th May 1845

In 1874, the Duke of Devonshire funded William to scour the then outline of the Long Man of Wilmington and make it visible with yellow bricks.

Died and buried at Glynde March 1877
1829 - 1894 George de St. Croix 65 65 born Windsor 1831 - 1879 Henry Charles (Revd.) de St. Croix 48 48 Adm. pens. at CORPUS CHRISTI, July 4, 1850. Of Berkshire. Matric. Michs. 1850; B.A. 1855; M.A. 1858. Ord. deacon (Exeter) 1854; priest, 1855; C. of N. Molton, Devon. C. of Chantry, Somerset. C. of Longbridge-Deverill, Wilts. (no dates of curacies given). V. of Figheldean, Wilts., 1871-9. Disappears from Crockford, 1880.  (information from Cambridge University alumni on ancestry.com) 1833 - 1858 Louis de St. Croix 24 24 died at Bath 1820 - 1821 Elizabeth de St. Croix 11m 11m 1822 - 1828 Mary de St. Croix 5 5 1824 - 1839 Catherine de St. Croix 15 15 1834 - 1892 Emma Simpson 58 58 1857 - 1928 Henry Miles de St. Croix 71 71   1858 - 1899 Sarah de St. Croix 41 41 Governess. Unmarried. born Chantry, Somerset. 1860 - 1907 Emma de St. Croix 46 46 1864 Charles de St. Croix 1862 Rose de St. Croix 1867 - 1928 Sidney de St. Croix 61 61 Schoolmaster, St Edmunds, Canterbury. Unmarried. born Crockerton, Wiltshire 1869 Edward (Revd.) de St. Croix born Longbridge Deverill, Wiltshire 1823 - 1892 Martha Evans 68 68 Elder daughter of J. S. Evans Esq. of Wootton, Northants. 1846 - 1926 Mary Emily de St. Croix 79 79 1848 - 1897 William de St. Croix 49 49 unmarried 1849 - 1914 Elizabeth Honor de St. Croix 64 64 1850 - 1928 Caroline Agnes de St. Croix 78 78 1851 - 1927 Amy Catherine de St. Croix 75 75 unmarried 1853 - 1934 Emma Martha de St. Croix 80 80 unmarried, born Glynde 1854 - 1907 George Clement de St. Croix 52 52 1857 - 1896 Arthur de St. Croix 38 38 1860 - 1861 Charles de St. Croix 1 1 1862 - 1921 Frederick Alexander de St. Croix 59 59 Born Glynde. Married Lucy Elizabeth Tuck on 30th July 1902 1864 - 1940 Ethel Augusta de St. Croix 76 76 D. 1917 Robert Henry Russell no issue D. 1914 Arthur John (Revd.) Richardson MA Rector of East Blatchington, Youngest son of W  T Richardson of Highgate 1878 - 1959 Frances Elizabeth Richardson 81 81 unmarried 1879 - 1938 Arthur William Richardson 59 59 Royal Sussex Regt. 1926-19.
MC
1882 - 1912 Edward Parrish Richardson 30 30 unmarried 1826 - 1901 Sarah de St. Croix 75 75 Sarah was the author of the History of the de St Croix family on which much of the information contained on this site is based. 1836 - 1893 John Clay Lucas 57 57 In 1873 Glyndebourne Farm, now of 465 acres, was leased to George Newington, John Clay Lucas and Caleb Rickman Kemp of Lewes, lime merchants at £580 a year. The three partners were also leasing the chalk pits in Glynde and Beddingham and Newington took up residence at Glyndebourne Farm. D. 1884 Edith Longcroft 1881 - 1945 Clement de St. Croix 64 64 unmarried D. 1884 Ruby Edith de St. Croix died in infancy 1860 - 1917 Clare Macnamara 57 57 1891 - 1950 Marjorie Clare de St. Croix 59 59 unmarried 1893 - 1917 Aubrey de St. Croix 23 23 Unmarried 1901 Beryl Faith de St. Croix unmarried 1903 George Noel de St. Croix MBE Ada Mary Parry Eve de St. Croix born in South Africa born in South Africa 1877 - 1914 Lucy Elizabeth Tuck 37 37 1903 - 1965 Bernard Jasper de St. Croix 61 61 HMS Tanatside:
Type 3 Hunt class destroyer. 1,050 tons, 27 knots, 4-4in/2tt, 170 crew, 1942/43.
Part of the Fire Support Group - Force "O" at Omaha Beach, D-Day, June 1944.  From United States Naval Administrative History of World War II #147-E: "The assault sections of both the 116th and 16th regiments were held up on the beaches by enemy mortar, light artillery, automatic weapons, and small arms fire. This fire was being delivered from strong points located at the top of the cliffs and bluffs, overlooking the beaches and from mortars a little further inland. Although Shore Fire Control Parties were landed at H plus 30 minutes, they were in many cases unable to set up their equipment because of casualties and enemy fire.
At this juncture the destroyers Carmick, Doyle, Mccook, Thompson, Frankford, Harding, Emmons, and Baldwin, and the three British Hunts, Melbreak, Talybont and Tanatside, closed the beach and took under fire many of the enemy positions. Their fire was directed in part from the ships and in part from Shore Fire Control Parties which managed to set up communications. Two much credit cannot be given the destroyers which participated in this bombardment. Lacking complete knowledge of their own troops' positions, and hard pressed to pick out enemy positions, they closed in some cases to within 800 yards of the beach. Position after position was taken under enemy fire. It is certain that they destroyed many of the enemy positions, and it is probable that without their assistance the casualties on the beach would have been considerably higher. Heavier ships joined in the fire but for the most part fired with airspot at targets designated by the S.F.C.P.s or planes".
The Toronto Globe and Mail, 7th June 1944: Most of the German coastal batteries in the invasion area have been silenced by 10.000 tons of bombs and by shelling from 640 naval guns, shelling so intense that HMS Tanatside, a British destroyer had exhausted all its ammunition by 8 o'clock this morning.

1905 - 1976 Oliver Hobson de St. Croix 70 70 Unmarried. Went to Kings School, Canterbury. Spent  his latter days in Spain. 1868 - 1939 Francis de St. Croix 70 70 1869 Ada Francesca, Mary Pilditch 1901 Francis William de St. Croix MBE. Unmarried. 1902 - 1950 Godfrey John, Nicholas de St. Croix 48 48 1907 - 1992 Victor Clement de St. Croix 85 85 Mary Magdalene Flood 1934 - 1934 Nicholas Francis de St. Croix 5m 5m D. 2009 Leslie Oswald- Smith 1936 - 2020 John de St. Croix 83 83 1937 Tim de St. Croix 1913 - 1997 Sandra Rhoda May Rabagliati 84 84 1951 Paul de St. Croix 1896 - 1969 Helenora Margaret Stehn 72 72 Born Marylebone.
Listed in The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal Being A Complete Table of All the Descendents Now Living of Edward III, King of England. London, England: T.C. & E. C. Jack, 1905-1911.
1926 Elizabeth Rosemary de St. Croix 1921 - 2009 Hugh Selmes Jackson 88 88 1951 - 2007 Christopher Selmes Jackson 55 55 1929 - 2019 Arthur Michael John de St. Croix 90 90 1931 Jane Tyndall Fleming 1952 Nicholas Robert de St. Croix 1956 Lucy Jane de St. Croix 1963 Thomas Michael de St. Croix 1952 Patricia Jane Chapman Burgess 1982 Luke Michael de St. Croix 1954 Nigel Moore 1982 Rosie Moore 1984 Emily Moore 1964 Angus Flett 1965 Ann Thomas 1998 Emilia de St. Croix 2001 James Thomas de St. Croix 1995 Benjamin Michael Flett twin of Matthew 1995 Matthew Robert Flett twin of Ben 2000 - 2000 Sophie de St. Croix 1d 1d Nancy Yolande Bosanquet no issue 1877 - 1921 Margaret Agnes Lucas 44 44 1878 Caroline Mary Lucas unmarried 1880 Elizabeth Jessie Lucas 1881 - 1946 John Clay Lucas 65 65 Ty;/ Major RGA 1914-18
badly wounded (OHdSC)

In 1873 Glyndebourne Farm, now of 465 acres, was leased to George Newington, John Clay Lucas and Caleb Rickman Kemp of Lewes, lime merchants at £580 a year. The three partners were also leasing the chalk pits in Glynde and Beddingham and Newington took up residence at Glyndebourne Farm.
1883 Katherine Martha Lucas 1885 William de St. Croix Lucas Known as Tim 1888 - 1916 Wilfred Lucas 28 28 Ty/Lt RFA Arthur Hill No issue.
He married again after Margaret died.
D. 1916 Dr Joseph Barnicot of Hitchin 1913 Ann Barnicot 1915 Ursula Barnicot Anthony Metcalfe- Gibson Arthur Metcalfe- Gibson 1934 Ann Metcalfe- Gibson 1938 Tilly Metcalfe- Gibson Anthony Metcalfe- Gibson Christopher Metcalfe- Gibson 1941 Richard Metcalfe- Gibson Michael Metcalfe- Gibson Caroline Ann Metcalfe- Gibson Charlotte Nancy Jesson 1924 John Wilfrid Lucas unmarried 1925 Richard C (Revd.) Lucas unmarried 1888 Oswald Duncan Pearce Ty. /Capt Royal Sussex Regt. 1914-18. His father was the vicar of Sayers Common. 1918 Eugenie Katherine Pearce 1925 - 1995 Duncan Alexander Pearce 70 70 Hinnell? Susan Hinnell? Hinnell? Hinnell? Jane? 1958 Amanda Jane Pearce Pearce Marjorie Sanderson in Australia 1925 Cicely Lucas 1927 Philippa Robert Macleod of South Australia 1910 Joan Harrison Born Dublin. Anglo-Irish. 1942 Jane de St. Croix 1944 Michael de St. Croix 1859 - 1948 Maria Getting Lempriere 89 89 1889 - 1915 Arthur Nicholas de St. Croix 26 26 Corporal G/273 “D” Company 7th (Service) Battalion, The Royal Sussex Regiment. Killed in action, France & Flanders 23rd October 1915. Born Stoke Newington, Middlesex, enlisted London. Son of the Rev. H. M. de Ste Croix and Mrs. De Ste Croix, of St Saviour’s Rectory, Guernsey. No known grave. Commemorated on the LOOS Memorial, France. Panel 69-73. The following is taken from page 40 of: ‘The History of the Seventh (Service) Battalion The Royal Sussex Regiment’ …About 10.15 p.m., without the slightest warning, a shower of bombs began to fall at the end of the trench near a barricade, and, although it was difficult to tell form which direction they came, our bombers at once retaliated, while Captain Jay opened a heavy fire with his machine-guns. For some fifteen minutes a stiff bomb fight ensued, eventually dying down as suddenly as it had begun, without a single German having succeeded in gaining a footing in the trench. The operation cost us 3 killed, including Corporal A. N. De St. Croix, of “D” Company…….. Arthur, was killed in action at Essex Sap, Hulluch Road.  de St. Croix 1891 - 1949 Percy Miles de St. Croix 57 57 Listed as Gunner in Royal Field Artilery in WW1 1892 May Agnes Ward 1855 Revd. Vere Francis Willson 1902 de St. Croix 1916 de St. Croix Maria Srebnicki 1941 Harold John Haden Father: Harold Stanley Haden of Kingswinford, Staffs.

Mother: Eunice Escott-Wood of Wrexham.
1967 Rachel Frances Haden 1970 Philippa Jane Haden 1974 Rupert Edward Haden 1950 Alison Parker From Beckenham 1974 Mark George, Slade de St. Croix 1977 Nicola Mary de St. Croix Julia Child 1976 Benjamin Selmes Jackson 1977 Simon Selmes Jackson 1979 Helen Charlotte Jackson Nicola Baeemul 2004 Olivia May Jackson 1862 - 1941 Helenora Catherine Heron-Maxwell 78 78 Born in Minto, Roxburghshire. Died at 24, King's Road, Swanage. 1859 George Stehn living at 72 Oakley Street, London
born Sydenham, Kent
1952 Jane Rintoul 1899 - 1993 Dorothy Franklin 94 94 1897 - 1974 Robert Tyndall Fleming 76 76 Elizabeth la Gallois? This branch is a bit suspect, see http://www.wayneandersen.com/genealogy/pafg26.htm
Don't think this relates to same Charles
1726 - 1776 Elizabeth de Ste. Croix 50 50 information taken from ancestry.com millenium file. Edward Gibout? 1826 - 1896 Arthur John Young 69 69 born in Bradfield Combust, Suffolk.Bradfield Hall was the seat of Arthur Young, the celebrated writer on agriculture, who was born at this village in 1741. It is now the residence of Arthur John Young, who, in 1857, erected the present noble mansion on the site of the old hall. It contains some excellent paintings, and a select library of 5,000 vols.
 
1979 Anna Katharine de St. Croix 1824 - 1887 George Allfrey 63 63 Underwriter At Lloyds in 1881 census. He had no children. 1825 - 1861 Margaret Allfrey 36 36 1796 Alex Green lived at Clapham 1826 Horace Green 1826 Frederick Green 1827 Edmund Green 1774 - 1841 William Brown Darwin 67 67 William is Charles Darwin's first cousin. (William's father was William Alvey Darwin (1726-1783) who was the  brother of Charles Darwin's father, Robert Waring Darwin).  D. 1882 Lucy Watts Christer Jan Mansson From Olofstrom, S Sweden. 2000 Sanna Lily Mansson 2002 Noah Jake Mansson Elizabeth Watson D. 1799 Nathaniel Green Nathaniel's nephew was Commander Thomas Hayward (1767-1798?) was a British sailor who was present during the Mutiny on the Bounty.

Hayward's oldest sister, Ann, was a close friend of Betsy Betham, who married William Bligh. Through Betsy, Hayward managed to obtain a position as senior midshipman on the Bounty. His service on the Bounty seems to have been lacklustre, but he remained loyal to Bligh and a staunch opponent of Fletcher Christian, who disliked him immensely. He was the second person ordered into the boat carrying the loyalists, the first being Bligh himself.

Upon returning to England with Bligh, Hayward set out as third lieutenant under Captain Edward Edwards on HMS Pandora. Although they succeeded in finding some of the mutineers, and Hayward evidently performed well, it was an unfortunate voyage, ending with Pandora shipwrecked, and for the second time Hayward found himself without a ship in an open boat making for safety. He eventually returned to England with other survivors from the Pandora, after which his career is uncertain.

It has been suggested, based mainly on nearly illegible papers, that Hayward served on board HM Sloop Swift If so, he drowned when the ship was lost with all hands in a typhoon in 1798.
1804 - 1860 Honor Harris 56 56 1790 John Stanton Evans Farmer in the 1841 census. 1848 - 1922 Elizabeth Sarah Mauby 74 74 1837 - 1886 Buckmaster Joseph Tuck 49 49 Born Lewisham
1881 census has them living at Hurdis House, Broad St , Seaford.

Hurdis House is named after James Hurdis who was a clergyman and a poet. He was born in Bishopstone, East Sussex in 1763. Local shepherds at this time used to catch birds in small cage traps to sell as songbirds. It is said that Hurdis used to free the trapped birds but used to leave a few coins in their place to compensate the shepherds.

He was the vicar for the West Sussex village of Burpham and it was here he wrote "The Village Curate". In 1793 he was appointed a Professor of Poetry at Oxford University.

He died in 1801 and there is a memorial to him in Bishopstone Church. The local town hall in Seaford, East Sussex is named Hurdis House in his honour.
1802 - 1868 Buckmaster Joseph Tuck 66 66 William Edward Mauby Ingrid Vera Margareta Forsberg 1977 Thomas de St. Croix 1975 Tania de St. Croix Lyda Paez-Pumar Solovioff 1966 Roderick de St. Croix 1969 John de St. Croix Claire Jones 1995 Oliver de St. Croix 1999 Gabriella de St. Croix 2002 William de St. Croix 1977 Ana Morisson Lida Tablate 1971 Alfredo de St. Croix 1979 Alexandra de St. Croix 1795 - 1856 Joanna 61 61 1832 Adela Wallace de St. Croix 1833 Edward Pitt Bishopp Smith 1859 Edward W Smith 1829 John Evans 1839 Richard Evans 1834 Mary Evans 1739 - 1767 Mary Kingstone 28 28 D. 1765 Thomas Gay 1477 - 1542 Catherine Spencer 65 65 (a child) (a child) m.2008 Marriage (two children) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) 1571 Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) m.1472 Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) (two children) (a child) m.1873 Marriage (two children) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) (a child) Marriage m.2015 Marriage m.2016 (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) m.19/10/1600 (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) D. 1846 Edward Gardiner William Tuck 2005 Tilda Grace Mansson 1977 Sally Louise Mason 2009 Samuel George de St. Croix 2007 Freya Annette Jackson Jonathan Medleycott 2008 Wilfrid Medleycott D. 1798 Alexander Watson Mary Butler 1651 Lilley Butler 1663 Ann Houblon D. 1698 Jacob Houblon Brother of Sir John Houblon, first Governor of the Bank of England. Elizabeth Whincop Thomas Whincop of Ellesworth, Cambridgeshire. Ann Pellett John Pellett Son and hier of Sir Benjamin. 1581 - 1670 Ann West 89 89 1556 - 1602 Thomas West 46 46 Thomas West, 2nd and 11th Baron De La Warr (c. 1556 – 24 March 1601/1602) of Wherwell Abbey, Hampshire, was a member of Elizabeth I's Privy Council and High Sheriff of Hampshire. 1555 - 1608 Ann Knollys 53 53 1511 - 1596 Francis Knollys 85 85 Sir Francis Knollys (c.1511 – 19 July 1596) of Rotherfield Greys, Oxfordshire, KG (c. 1514 – 19 July 1596) was a courtier in the service of Henry VIII, Edward VI and Elizabeth I, and was a member of parliament for a number of constituencies. 1526 - 1568 Catherine Carey 42 42 Catherine Carey, after her marriage Catherine Knollys and later Lady Knollys, pronounced "NOL-les", was chief Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Elizabeth I, who was her first cousin. D. 1529 William Carey William Carey, of Aldenham, in Hertfordshire was a courtier and favourite of King Henry VIII of England. He served the king as a Gentleman of the Privy chamber, and Esquire of the Body to the King. His wife, Mary Boleyn, is known to history as a mistress of King Henry VIII and the sister of Henry's second wife, Anne Boleyn. D. 1543 Mary Boleyn 1477 - 1538 Thomas Boleyn 61 61 Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire gained the title of  1st Earl of Ormond [Ireland] in 1527. He gained the title of  1st Earl of Wiltshire  in 1529. D. 1538 Elizabeth Howard 1443 - 1524 Thomas Howard 81 81 Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk was created  1st Earl of Surrey in 1483. He succeeded to the title of  2nd Duke of Norfolk on 1 February 1514.

Great Grandfather of Elizabeth 1 and grandfather of Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard. 
D. 1497 Elizabeth Tilney Countess of Surrey D. 1505 William Boleyn Sir William Boleyn lived at Blickling, Norfolk. 1465 Margaret Butler 1426 - 1515 Thomas Butler 89 89 7th Earl of Ormonde D. 1485 Anne Hankford 1828 - 1911 Catherine Emily Holt 83 83 1827 - 1827 Stenning Thomas Allfrey 14d 14d Claire Louise Gibbard 2001 Cassie 2003 Ella 1894 - 1918 Arthur E Stehn 24 24 Listed in The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal Being A Complete Table of All the Descendents Now Living of Edward III, King of England. London, England: T.C. & E. C. Jack, 1905-1911. 1965 Sandra Maria de St. Croix 1880 Joseph Bourgein 1881 Marion Willson 1848 Matilda Pink Gyatt 1789 Henry de St. Croix 2010 Delilah Medleycott 1902 Elizabeth Kathleen Stehn Listed in The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal Being A Complete Table of All the Descendents Now Living of Edward III, King of England. London, England: T.C. & E. C. Jack, 1905-1911. 1879 - 1963 George Herbert Hilliard 84 84 1933 - 2003 David George N Hilliard 70 70 1936 - 1990 James Hilliard 54 54 1790 - 1868 Elizabeth de St. Croix 78 78 of the 6 children she had, only 2 lived to be married 1592 - 1682 James Houblon 90 90 Mary du Quesne Peter Houblon Fled from Flanders to preserve his religious doctrines. 1575 - 1612 Jean du Quesne 37 37 Sarah de Francqueville Jean de Francqueville Anne Le Maire Jean du Quesne Well-documented Huguenot refugee from Flanders reported to be from Ath in Hainaut, the son of Jean Du Quesne, native of Valenciennes.
Of noble extraction, du Quesne escaped to England in 1568 during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I following the low country persecutions of Protestants under the Duke of Alva. A historical record of Du Quesne's flight and of the sale of his goods and furniture in 1569, as well as the letting of his 'maison, chambre, estatte et jardin' is contained in the Belgian Archives.
Du Quesne originally settled in Canterbury where he served as an elder of the French Church. He was married to Judith Millon and they had three children: Jean du Quesne, the younger, David and Marie. The family soon migrated to London, settling in Old Jewry. They became active in the French Church on Threadneedle Street.
Judith Millon 1520 - 1595 William West 75 75 1st Baron de la Warr Elizabeth Strange D. 1521 Robert Knollys Sir Robert Knollys (or Knolles) was an English courtier in the service and favour of Henry VII and Henry VIII. Lettice Peniston Robert Knollys Elizabeth Troutbeck 1455 - 1500 Thomas Carey 45 45 1472 - 1536 Margaret Spencer 64 64 1425 - 1485 John Howard 60 60 1st Duke of Norfolk 1426 - 1465 Katherine Moleyns 39 39 1954 Jane Elizabeth Hunt 1986 Leo Staar Robert Spencer of Spencer Combe, Crediton 1408 - 1467 Eleanor Beauchamp 59 59 Baroness de Ros and Duchess of Somerset 1385 - 1439 Margaret Holland 54 54 Duchess of Clarence 1340 - 1399 John of Gaunt 59 59 1st Duke of Lancaster 1314 - 1369 Philippa of Hainaut 55 55 1789 Laetitia Green Miriam Elizabeth Green Jean Neal Margueritte Huggins 1710 - 1793 Ambrose Green 83 83 1717 - 1792 Frances Spurrell 75 75 1762 John Gay Thomas Kingstone Jane D. 1789 Nathaniel Gay 1695 Elie Neel Esther Le Geyt 1660 - 1728 Phillipe Le Geyt 68 68 1663 Marthe Le Moigne 1659 Helier/ Elias Neel 1660 Frances Picquet 1606 Jacques Neel 1575 - 1617 Jacques Neel 42 42 1579 Anne Cabot 1545 - 1605 Jacques Neel 60 60 1515 Jean Neel William Carey Alice Furford 1773 - 1828 Mary Brains 54 54 1766 - 1826 William Harris 59 59 1765 - 1843 Thomas Evans 78 78 1312 - 1377 King Edward III 65 65 1371 - 1409 John de Beaufort 38 38 1st Earl of Somerset.  Illegitimate son of John of Gaunt. In 1397, his illegitmate birth was legitimated by Parliament and Papal decree. 1350 - 1403 Katherine Swynford 53 53 Katherine was the daughter of Paon de Roet, a herald, and later knight, who was "probably christened as Gilles".[5] She had two sisters, Philippa and Isabel (also called Elizabeth) de Roet, and a brother, Walter. Isabel later became Canoness of the convent of St. Waudru's, Mons, c. 1366. Katherine is generally held to have been his youngest child. However, Alison Weir argues that Philippa was the junior and that both were children of a second marriage.[5] Katherine's sister Philippa, a lady in the royal household of Philippa of Hainault, married the poet Geoffrey Chaucer.

She was probably born in Hainaut in 1349 or 1350. Katherine's birth date may have been 25 November, as that is the feast day of her patron, St. Catherine of Alexandria.[citation needed] The family returned to England in 1351, and it is likely that Katherine stayed there during her father's continued travels. She was educated at Romsey Abbey before being part of the household of Philippa of Hainaut with her sister.

In about 1366, at St Clement Danes Church, Westminster, Katherine, aged sixteen or seventeen, contracted an advantageous marriage with "Hugh" Ottes Swynford, a knight from the manor of Kettlethorpe in Lincolnshire, the son of Thomas Swynford by his marriage to Nicole Druel. She had the following children by him: Blanche (born 1 May 1367), Thomas (21 September 1368 – 1432), and possibly Margaret Swynford (born about 1369), later recorded as a nun of the prestigious Barking Abbey nominated by command of King Richard II.

Katherine became attached to the household of John of Gaunt as governess to his daughters Philippa of Lancaster and Elizabeth of Lancaster. The ailing duchess Blanche had Katherine's daughter Blanche (her namesake) placed within her own daughters' chambers and afforded the same luxuries as her daughters; additionally, John of Gaunt stood as godfather to the child.

Some time after Blanche's death in 1368 and the birth of their first son in 1373, Katherine and John of Gaunt entered into a love affair that would produce four children for the couple, born out of wedlock but legitimized upon their parents' eventual marriage; the adulterous relationship endured until 1381 when it was truncated out of political necessity[5] and ruined Katherine's reputation. On 13 January 1396, two years after the death of the Duke's second wife, Infanta Constance of Castile, Katherine and John of Gaunt married in Lincoln Cathedral. Records of their marriage kept in the Tower and elsewhere list: 'John of Ghaunt, Duke of Lancaster, married Katharine daughter of Guyon King of Armes in the time of K. Edward the 3, and Geffrey Chaucer her sister'. On John of Gaunt's death, Katherine became known as dowager Duchess of Lancaster. She outlived him by four years, dying on 10 May 1403, in her early fifties.
Edmund Beaufort 1st Duke of Somerset 1431 - 1501 Eleanor Beaufort 70 70
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