File - Michael`s Family History and Genealogy Pages

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The Bigod Family
Hannah Bowyer of Knypersley (b. ca 1616)1 and William Glegg of Caldey Grange (b.1589)2 were the 11th great grandparents of
Michael Gregory. Hannah’s pedigree can be traced back for seven generations to Baron Henry FitzHugh and Alice de Neville
(b.1460; d.1503). Alice was the great grand-daughter of John de Neville, 3rd Baron Raby (d. 13 Oct 1388)3 who married Maud
Percy in July 1352. Maud’s lineage can be traced back through the fascinating Percy family of the north of England. She was
Michael Gregory’s 21st great grandmother.
It Was Maud’s grandfather, Henry Lord Percy4 who married into the Clifford family. He married Idonea Clifford. This pair
were the 23 great grandparents of Michael Gregory. Idonea was born ca 1300. She married Henry in 1314. She died on 24
August 1365 and was buried in Beverley Minster. Her father was Robert Clifford (b. ca 1273). He was engaged in the Scottish
wars. In 1297, he was appointed justice of all the King’s forests north of Trent. In 27 Edw I, he was the King’s Lieutenant and
Captain-General in the Counties of Cumberland, Westmorland and Lancaster, and throughout all Annadale and the Marches of
Scotland. He was summoned to Parliament in 28 Edw I, also 30, 33 and Edw I and in 1 Edw 2. He was also appointed Earl
Marshal of England and Governor of Nottingham Castle. He obtained a grant of Skipton castle. He was slain at the Battle of
Bannockburn in 1314. His wife and the mother of Idonea, was Matilda, the daughter and co-heir of Thomas de Clare, second son
of Richard de Clare, the Earl of Gloucester, Lord of the Honours of Ireland. Idonea had two brothers, Roger and Robert.
The father of Robert was Roger Clifford, who was the 25th great grandfather of Michael Gregory. He was born ca 1245, and died
before his father in 1282 in a skirmish with the Welsh. Roger married Isabella de Vipont, a ward of his father and who was the
daughter of Robert de Vipont. Isabella was the direct ancestor of Michael Gregory. She was born ca 1254. Her mother was
Isabel FitzJohn, whose mother was Isabel Bigod. Isabel Bigod had first married Gilbert de Lacy (d.1230) and they had three
children: Margery, Maud and Walter. Secondly, she married Sir John FitzGeoffrey, the ancestor of Michael Gregory. He was
the son of Geoffrey FitzPiers, Earl of Essex. Sir John FitzGeoffrey was Justiciar of Scotland 1245-1256. He died on 23
November 1258. Isabel and Sir John had the following children:






Isabel FitzJohn (the ancestor of Michael Gregory)
Sir John FitzJohn
Richard 1st Lord FitzJohn
Maud
Aveline who married Walter de Burgh
John FitzJohn
Isabel’s father was Hugh Bigod (b.1182). He was one of the 25 sureties of the Magna Carta. Hugh succeeded to his father’s
estates in 1221 but he enjoyed the title of Earl of Norfolk for only a few years as he died in 1225. Hugh married Maud Marshall,
daughter of Sir William Marshall5, Earl of England and Isabel Clare, Countess of Pembroke. Hugh and Maud had the following
children:





Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk (b.1212)
Hugh Bigod, Justiciar of England
Isabel de Bigod
Sir Ralph Bigod
William Bigod
Hugh died in 12256. He was the owner of Framlingham castle in Suffolk. After Hugh died, his wife remarried to William de
Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey. The father of Hugh was Roger Bigod (b. ca 1144; d.1221), 2 nd Earl of Norfolk and his wife Juliana
de Vere. Juliana was the daughter of Gilbert FitzRichard de Clare. Her nephew was Magna Carta surety Robert de Vere7.
Although his father died in 1176 or 1177 in the Holy Land, Roger did not succeed to the earldom of Norfolk until 1189 for his
claim had been disputed by his stepmother for her sons by Earl Hugh in the reign of Henry II. Richard I confirmed him in his
Earldom and other honours, and also sent him as an ambassador to France in the same year. Roger inherited his father’s office as
royal steward. He took part in the negotiations for the release of Richard from prison, and after the King’s return to England
became a Justiciar.
See: Gregory, M.P., (2008), “The Bowyer Family of Knypersley”, Personal Family History Report.
See: Gregory, M.P., (2008), “The Glegg(e) Family of Cheshire”, Personal Family History Report.
3
See: Gregory, M.P., (2008), “The Neville Family of Raby, the Montagu Family, the Beaumont Family and Various Lines
Leading to European Royal Families including Harold II, Last of the Anglo-Saxon Kings of England.
4
See: Gregory, M.P., (2009), “The Percy Family”, Personal Family History report.
5
Michael Gregory has a line of descent from each of the earl Marshall’s daughters. See: Gregory, M.P., ((2008),
“William and the Earls of Pembroke”, Personal Family History Report.
6
Morris, M., (2005), “The Bigod Earls of Norfolk in the Thirteenth Century”, Woodbridge.
7
This Robert de Vere was also an ancestor of Michael Gregoy. See: Gregory, M.P., (2008), “The de Vere Family,
First earls of Oxford”, Personal family History Report.
1
2
2
In most of the years of the reign of King John, the Earl was frequently with the King or on royal business. Yet Roger was to be
one of the leaders of the Baronial party which obtained John’s assent to Magna Carta, and his name and that of his son, Hugh II
appear among the 25 Barons who were to ensure the King’s adherence to the terms of that document. The pair were
excommunicated by the Pope in December 1215, and did not make peace with the regents of John’s son Henry III until 1217.
Around Christmas, 1181, Roger married Ida, apparently Ida de Toesny, and by her had a number of children including:






Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk who married a daughter of William Marshall
William Bigod
Ralph Bigod
Roger Bigod
Margery, married William de Hastings
Mary who married Ralph FitzRobert
The father of Roger was Hugh de Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk. Hugh was born ca 1095 at Belvoir Castle, Leicestershire. He died
in the Holy Land in 1177 while serving with Philip of Flanders. Hugh was Constable of Norwich Castle and Governor of the
City of Norwich in 1122. He was excommunicated in 1169, and must have been quite an old man when he died. Hugh was a
controversial figure in history, known for his frequent switching of loyalties and hasty reactions towards measures of authority.
Hugh inherited large estates in East Anglia on the death of his brother William, who perished without issue in the sinking of the
White Ship on 26 November 1120. He succeeded his aunt Albreda – and by extension her elder brother Berengar – as heir both
to Berengar’s entancy-in-chief in Lincolnshire and the Norman lands of Robert de Tosny of Belvoirwas. At first a supporter of
Stephen of Blois during this King’s struggle with the Empress Matilda. His initiation in history was on the death of Henry I in
1135, when Maud expected to succeed to the throne of England, but her cousin, Stephen of Blois usurped the throne, breaking an
oath he had previously made to defend her rights. It was Bigod who claimed that Henry I (Maud’s father and Stephen’s uncle)
intended for Spephen to become King at the expense of the Empress. Civil war resulted in 1139 when Maud could command the
military strength necessary to challenge Stephen within his own realm. Maud’s greatest triumph came in February 1141 when
her forces defeated and captured King Stephen; he was made a prisoner and effectively deposed. Her advantage lasted only until
July of that year, and she released Stephen in December. In 1147, Maud was finally forced to return to France, following the
death of Robert of Gloucester, her strongest supporter and half-brother.
King Stephen had initially kept his followers together, but in 1136 Stephen was stricken with sickness. A lethargy fastened on
him, and the report of his death was quickly spread abroad. A rising of turbulent barons followed, and Bigod was the first to take
up arms. He seized and held Norwich; but Stephen, recovering quickly, laid siege to the city and Hugh was forced to surrender.
Acting with unusual clemency, Stephen spared the Baron who for a short time remained faithful. In 1140 the Earl is said to have
declared for the Empress, yet early in the next year he is in the ranks of Stephen’s army fighting in the disastrous First battle of
Lincoln, after which the Earl deserted him and assumed a position of neutrality during the civil war, sometimes called ‘General
Anarchy’. Later the disagreement between King Stephen and Archbishop Theobold in 1148 created yet another scenario for
Hugh Bigod to come forward; this time, he sided with the archbishop and received him in his castle at Framlingham, but joined
with others in achieving a reconciliation.
Five years later, in 1153, when Henry, Duke of Normandy, soon to be King Henry II, landed in England to assert his claim to the
throne, Bigod vested his interests with the rising power, and held out in Ipswich against Stephen’s forces, while Henry II on the
other side, laid seige to Stamford. Both places fell. In the critical state of his fortunes Stephen was in no position to punish the
rebel. Negotiations were also going on between the two parties and Hugh again eluded retaliation. On Henry II’s accession in
December 1154, Bigod at once received confirmation of the possession of his Earldom and stewardship by charter issued
apparently in January of the next year. The first years of the new reign were spent in restoring order to the shattered kingdom,
and in breaking the power of the independent barons, which had grown out of control during King Stephen’s reign. It was not
before long that Bigod became agitated under the rule of law initiated by Henry. He grew restless with such measures as scutage,
a fee paid by vassals in lieu of military service, which became the central feature of Henry II’s military system of operation by
1159. The Earl showed signs of resistance but was at once put down. In 1157 Henry II marched into the eastern counties and
received the Earl’s submission. After this incident Hugh Bigod makes no significant appearances in the chronicles for some
time. He is named as one of those who had been excommunicated by Beckett, in consequence of his retention of lands belonging
to the monastery of Pentney in Norfolk.
In 1173 the young crowned Prince Henry (also known as Henry the Young King), raised a revolt against his father Henry II.
This gave Hugh Bigod yet another chance for rebellion, along with the league of English barons with the Kings of France and
Scotland in his favour. He at once became a leader in the cause, perhaps eager to revive the feudal power which henry II had
curtailed. In addition to the fact that the inevitable conflict, as far as England was concerned, centred around his possessions, the
custody of Norwich castle was promised by the young prince as his reward. The King’s energy and good fortune were equal to
the occasion. While he held in check his rebel vassals in France, the loyal barons in England defeated his enemies there. Robert
de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Leicester (d.1190) landed at Walton in Suffolk on 29 September 1173 and marched to Framlingham,
joining forces with Hugh. Together they besieged and took the castle of Hagenet in Suffolk on 13 October, held by Randal de
Broc for the crown. But the earl of Leicester was defeated and taken prisoner setting out from Framlingham at Fornham, St
Genevieve, near Bury by the Justiciar, Richard de Luci and other barons. These then turned their arms against Earl Hugh. Not
strong enough to fight, he opened negotiations against his assailants. It is said that he bought them off, and at the same time
3
secured a safe passage home for the Flemings in his service. Though defeated and compelled to surrender his castles, Bigod kept
his lands and his earldom, and lived at peace with Henry II until his death, reportedly in 1177 in Palestine.
Hugh married twice: firstly to Juliana de Vere, from which union came Roger Bigod. From his second wife, Gundreda of
Warwick (daughter of Roger de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Warwick) came two other children: Hugh Bigod (b.1156) and William
Hugh Bigod (b.1168).
Hugh was the second son of Roger de Bigod. It was Roger and his wife Adeliza de Grentesmesnil who were Michael Gregory’s
ancestors. They had the following children:





William de Bigod (perished in the wreck of the White Ship)
Hugh de Bigod
Maud de Bigod
Cicely de Bigod
2 other daughters unidentified
Hugh’s father was Robert de Bigot, a poor knight, who gained the favour of William, Duke of Normandy, by informing him of
the treachery of William Werlence, Count of Mortain. Robert held the lands of Malitot, Loges and Chanon in Normandy and
served Duke William as one of his seneschals. He is described at the Battle of Hastings as “small of stature, but brave and bold;
he assaulted the English gallantly”.
It is thought the Bigod family originated in Maletot,
Bygod. The family may have been descended from
Cerusy Abbey in 1042 and who in 1050 witnessed a
sister of Turstin Goz, father of Richard d’Avranches.
the Battle of Hastings in 1066.
near Caen, France. The original name of the family was Wiggott, Wigitt,
Wigort de St Denis, one of the nobles of Normandy, who made grants to
charter of Duke William at the head of the Norman barons. He married a
This pair may thus possibly have been the parents of Robert who fought at
Date of Report: 10 March, 2009
4
Ancestry of Isabel de Bigod
Roger de Bigod
A Knight
Fought at Hastings (1066)
Adelaide
Gunnor
William de Bigod
d. 26 Nov 1120
on the wreck of the
White Ship
=
= [?]
Roger de Bigod
d.1107
Possibly fought
With his father at
Hastings (1066)
=
Adeliza de Toeni Aubrey de Vere
Justiciar of England
Hugh Bigod
=
1st Earl of Norfolk
b. 1095 (Belvoir Castle)
d.1177 (Holy Land)
Roger de Bigod
2nd Earl of Norfolk
Hugh Bigod
Justiciar of England
Sir Ralph Bigod
=
2) Ida de Toesni
m.1181
See Clifford
Family History
Report
Sir Roger Clifford
Justiciar of Forests
b.1248
d. 6 Nov 1282 (Wales)
=
=
(2) John
FitzGeoffrey
Justiciar of Ireland
d. 23 Nov 1258
Son of Geoffrey
FitzPiers, Earl of
Essex
Robert de Vipont
Lord of Westmorland
b.1239
d. 7 Jun 1264
=
Alice de Clare
dau of Gilbert
FitzRichard de Clare
1) Juliana de Vere
= 2) Gundreda de Warwick
b.1135; d.1200 dau of Roger de Beaumont
1) Hugh Bigod
b.1182
Surety of the
Magna Charta
William Bigod
Roger Bigod
b.1212
Earl of Norfolk
=
Isabel FitzJohn
b. ca 1230
(Farnbridge, Surrey)
Hugh Bigod
b.1156
Maud Marshall
dau of Wm
Marshall
Earl of England
=
William Bigod
b.1168
=
Isabel de Bigod
2) Wm de Warenne
Earl of Surrey
= 1) Gilbert de Lacy
d.1250
Margery Maud Walter
Isabel de Vipont
b. ca 1254
d. 14 May 1292
5
Line of Descent from Isabel de Vipont
See Pedigree of Isabel de Vipont
Sir Roger Clifford
Justiciar of Forests
b.1248
d. 6 Nov 1282 (Wales
Robert Clifford
b. ca 1273
Ennobled (1299)
Earl Marshal of England
(1307)
d. Killed in the Battle of
Bannockburn, 1314
=
Isabel de Vipont
=
Maud de Clare
b. 1279 (Thormond,
Ireland)
dau of the Earl of
Warwick
Idonea Clifford
=
B ca 1300
b.1299
m.1314
d. 24 Aug 1365
Bur. Beverley, Yorks
Thomas Percy
Bishop of Norwich
Richard Percy
Lord of Semar
d.1335
See Percy Family History Report
Henry IV, 9th Baron Percy
& Lord Percy of Alnwick
Commanded at the Victory of
Neville’s Cross (1346)
d.1353
Sir William Percy
d.1355
John Neville, 3rd Baron Raby
Henry Percy
3rd Baron
b. ca 1319
d. 17 Jun 1368
=
Maud Percy
See Below
Henry Plantagenet, 3rd Earl of Lancaster
Son of Edmund Crouchback &
Blanche of Artois
=
=
Maud Chaworth
m. ca 1297
(1) Mary Plantagenet
d.1362
= (2) Joan of Orreby
Robert Umfrande =
Lord FitzWalter
=
William de Aton
=
Margaret
Eleanor
Isobel
Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland
Henry “Hotspur”
6
LINE OF DESCENT FROM MAUD PERCY
John de Neville
3rd Baron Raby
d. 17 Oct 1388
bur. Neville’s Chantry
Durham cathedral
Admiral of the Fleet
Governor of Acquitaine
See Neville Family
History Report
Richard Neville
5th Earl of Salisbury
b.1400
Ld Chancellor under King
Richard II (1455)
d. 31 Dec 1460 (Beheaded
after the Battle of
Wakefield
Warden of the Western
Marches of Scotland
Bur. Bisham Abbey
Henry de
=
Cecily
Sir John Neville
Beauchamp
Thomas Neville 1st Marques Montagu
1st Duke of
b.1443
George Neville
Warwick
d.1460
b.1432
Thomas
=
Eleanor
d.1478
Stanley
Archbishop of York
1st Earl of
& Chancellor of England
Derby
William FitzAlan =Joan Neville
16th Earl of Arundel
John de Vere = Margaret
13th earl of Oxford
(1) Wm Bonville = Katherine
(2) Wm Hastings = b.1442; d.1503
=
(1) Maud Percy of Raby
m. July 1352
=
(2) Elizabeth Latimer,
dau of William Latimer,
King’s Chamberlain
Ralph Neville
1st Earl of Westmorland
b.1364
d. 12 Oct 1425
Created Earl of Richmond
Earl Marshal of England
=
=
Cecily
= Richard, Duke of York Lady Katherine
“The Rose
d.1466
Lady Eleanor
of Raby”
Parents of King Edward IV Robert Neville
Bishop of Durham
William Neville
1st Earl of Kent
Edward Neville
See pedigree of maternal ancestry of
3rd Baron Bergaveney
Alice de Neville: Montagu and Holland Lines
Alice Montacu
b.1407
d.1462
m.1420
bur. Bisham Abbey
(2) Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmorland
dau of John of Gaunt and Katherine Swynford (de Roet)
= (1) Margaret Stafford, dau of Hugh Stafford
[9 children]
Richard Neville = Anne de Beauchamp
16th Earl of Warwick
“The Kingmaker”
b.22 Nov 1428
d.14 Nov 1471
Alice de Neville = Baron Henry FitzHugh
b. ca 1460
d. 1503
Elizabeth FitzHugh
b.1507
=
Sir William Parr of Kendal
See Parr Line of Descent Below
7
LINE OF DESCENT TO MICHAEL GREGORY FROM SIR WILLIAM PARR OF KENDAL
Sir William Parr of Kendal
Sheriff of Cumberland (1473)
MP for Westmorland
Monument at Park Chapel,
Kendal Parish Church
See Parr Family
History Report
Sir William Parr
Lord Parr of Horton
d. 10 Sep 1546
bur. Horton
See Tresham Family
History Report
Sir Thomas Tresham =
High Sheriff 2 Edw VI
Lord Prior of St John
of Jerusalem
d. Mar 1589
Monument at All
Saints, Rushton
Thomas Catesby
b. ca 1526 (Whiston)
=
=
Elizabeth FitzHugh
d.1507
Lady Mary Salisbury
dau of Sir William Salisbury
out of Elizabeth Wylde,
the dau of Sir Thomas Wylde
d. 10 Jul 1555
bur. Horton
=
Anne Parr
Isabel Tresham
See Yelverton and
Catesby family
History Report
Sir Christopher Yelverton
b. 1537 (Easton Maudit)
d. ca 1607-12
Justice of the King’s Bench
Speaker of the House
of Commons
(1597)
See Bowyer Family
History Report and
Genealogy Chart No 13
Sir John Bowyer of Knypersley = Catherine Yelverton
b. ca 1572 (Easton Maudit, Northant’s)
William Glegg of Gayton
b. 1589
d. 15 Dec 1614
=
=
Mary Catesby
b. 1543 (Whiston, Northant’s)
m. ca 1573
d. 1611
Hannah Bowyer
b. ca 1600
d. 20 Sep 1670
See GLEGG(E) PEDIGREE
8
GLEGGE PEDIGREE
WILLIAM GLEGG of Caldey = HANNAH, daughter of Sir John
Grange, esq. aged upwards
Bowyer of Knipersley, co.
of 24 years at the Visitation
Stafford, [married in or about
th
of 1613, died 15 Dec.
Nov 14 Jac. 1.,] died 20th
1644, aged 57 years, buried
Sept. 1670, buried at West
at West Kirby.
Kirby, aged 70 years.
HESTER
GLEGG.
HANNAH, only daugh. = JOHN GLEGG of
Obiit Sept 19, 1729,
Tranmore, gent.
Bur. At West Kirby,
3d son, living
a aet. 41 Had iss.
1703
ROGER = MARTHA,
GLEGG. daughter
of ….
Moss,
Obiit Sept.
2, 1697
ANNE, only = EDWARD GLEGG = MARGARET, dau.
daughter of
of Caldey
William Glegg
Roger
Grange, esq.
of Gayton, esq by
Lowndes of
aged 42 at the
Cicely, daughter
Overton
Visitation of
to Robert Sephton
co. Cest.
1664, born 1622,
of Mollington,
Obiit June
married Anne,
[gent., not]
5, 1675
dau. of …
esq., sister and coaged 51
Thelwall, esq.
heir to Thomas
years.
3d. wife, who
Sephton. 1st wife
died s.p.
JANE, daughter of John Scorer = EDWARD GLEGG of Irby,
Of Westminster, gent. Buried
esq. 2d son, obiit Dec
at Thurstanston, Mar 7, 1720
15, 1703, a aetat. 45;
a aet 46
buried at Thurstanston
PRUDENCE,
SILENCE,
Died young
ROGER, died
unmarried
Decem. 7,
1777
ANNE, wife of the
Rev John Urmson
of Neston, ob. Feb.
6, 1769, aged 61
JOHN GLEGG of = FRANCES, eldest dau
Irby, esq. Eldest
of Henry Birkenhead
son and heir, ob.
Of Backford, and coMay 14, 1768
heiress of her uncle
Vide Backford
Thomas Birkenhead
GLEGGS of
Backford
DEBORAH, 2d dau. And coheiress = WILLIAM GLEGG of Grange, esq
of Henry Birkenhead of Backford
baptized at West Kirby, Dec 28,
Esq re-married to Lt Colonel
1704, died Dec 21, 1739, without
Charles Crosbie, o.s.p.
surviving issue
FRANCES, daugh. of = WILLIAM GLEGG, esq. only son = SIDNEY, dau of …
Thomas Jennings,
and heir, who sold the estate
Lloyd, living at Parkgate,
1st wife
1814
HANNAH
GLEGG, bur.
at West
Kirkby
Aug. 2
1663.
A daughter,
and four
younger
sons
WILLIAM GLEGG of = ?….
Grange, esq. son
dau of
and heir, aged 11
….
years 1664.
EDWARD GLEGG of = ELIZ, dau
Caldey Grange, esq.
and heiress
obiit Aug 4, 1714,
of John
aged 33 years, buried
Kent of
at West Kirby
Tranmore
EDWARD GLEGG,
baptized at West
Kirby, July 1706,
o.s.p.
MARY.
FRANCES.
MARGARET
GLEGG
MARGARET,
wife of …
Becket,
buried at
Haselwall,
1715
JOHN GLEGG = MARY, dau
of Grange, esq.
… Carr of
born 1712, ob.
Liverpool
April 23, 1749
ob. Feb 28,
1758, aet 39
MARGARET, obiit
Nov. 2, 1749
ABIGAIL,
bapt. 1708
SILENCE
bapt. 1710
CATHERINE,
obiit, March 1746
See below
9
The Glegge Family (Ancestors of Michael Gregory)
Sidney Lloyd
b. 1752/53
m. 1774
d. 27 Mar 1822
bur Neston
Admon. 1822
=
William Glegge
b. ca 1750
d. 1785
=
Frances Jennings
Emily
b. 1775
d. 20 Feb 1843 (Cheshire)
Thomas Glegge
b. ca 1775
Mariner (1800)
Mariner (1806)
d. 4 Feb 1818
=
Catherine Davies
Francis Glegge
dau of Wm Davies
d. By 1851?
(Ropemaker)
b. 1777 (St John’s Liverpool)
m. Nov 1793
d. 4 Nov 1859
Living at Elm Terrace
Tranmere (1851) Proprietor of Houses
Thomas Glegge
b. 1800 (Liverpool)
Master Mariner
d. 18 Aug 1848
=
Mary Miller
b. 1808 (Liverpool)
Living 5 Osborne
Terrace Liverpool
(1851)
William Glegge
Emily
b. 1838 (Liverpool)
b. 1834 (Liverpool)
Living at 5 Osborne
Living at 5 Osborne
Terrace, Liverpool (1851) Terrace, Liverpool
(1851)
Mary Glegge =
b. 22 May 1806
m. 3 Jan 1828
d. 7 Jan 1885
Frances
William
Humphrey Thomas
b. 1 Jan 1807
m. 3 Jan 1828
d. 13 Jan 1877
Thomas Glegge Thomas
architect
b. 11 Jun 1829
Tranmere, Cheshire
d. 18 Nov 1881
Tranmere (age 52)
=
[-?-]
[-?-]
William
b. 12 July 1803
d. By 1836?
Eliza Catherine George
b. 9 Sep 1826
m. 25 Sep 1851
Walton on the Hill
Lancashire
See Below
10
Line of Descent from Thomas Glegge Thomas to Michael Gregory
THOMAS GLEGGE THOMAS
b. 11 Jun 1829
Architect
RALPH ABRAHAM BLAKE
Shopkeeper
b. 1854
= MARY CATHERINE THOMAS
b. 30 Oct 1853 Tranmere
bp. 13 Jul 1854
St Nicholas’ Church, Liverpool
m. 11 May 1878
See Blake Family History
Report and Genealogy Chart
No 8
=
GEORGE THOMAS
b. 1 Nov 1855 Tranmere
ALFRED THOMAS
b. ca 1856
TYSILIO THOMAS
b. ca 1857-60
WILLIAM ARTHUR
THOMAS
b. ca 1858
ELISA CATHERINE GEORGE
b. 9 Sep 1828
m. 25 Sep 1851
Walton-on-the-Hill
Lancashire
HENRY THOMAS
ELIZA
GLEGGE THOMAS
b. 14 Apr 1865
b. 1 Nov 1855 (Tranmere)
MARTHA EMILY
Tranmere
b. ca 1862
WILLIAM ARTHUR THOMAS
Tranmere
b. 20 Jan 1871
Tranmere
WALTER AUBREY THOMAS = MAUD PARIS
b. 14 Dec 1863
b. ca 1868 (Chester)
Architect (1881)
d. aged 75 (?) in 1934
FREDERICK JOHN HALL GREGORY
b. 29 Oct 1884
Glen Parva Barracks, Leicester
=
FREDERICK WILLIAM GREGORY
Colchester
b. 25 Dec 1906 Colchester
d. 1 March 1975 Blackburn
=
ANNIE BLAKE
b. 8 Apr 1886 in Mold, Clwyd
m. 5 Nov 1906 St James RC
Church, Colchester
MARGARET MARY O’NEILL
m. 26 December 1929, St Chad’s Church,
Cheetham Hill, Manchester
d. 10 July 1989 in Wigan
DORRIT M
b. ca 1890 (Neston)
HUMPHREY THOMAS
b. ca 1897 (Neston)
LOUISA E THOMAS
b. ca 1888 (Neston)
WINSOME
b. ca 1890
AUBREY
b. after 1881
d. 30 Nov 1945
EDWARD THOMAS
b. ca 1892 (Neston)
OLIVER G THOMAS
b. ca 1895 (Neston)
WALTER G THOMAS
b. ca 1887 (Birkenhead)
WINIFRED C THOMAS
b. ca 1894 (Neston)
GLEGGE THOMAS
b. after 1881
See O’Neill Family
History Report and Genealogy Chart No 3
MALCOLM PETER GREGORY
b. 26 February 1935
Hayfield, Manchester
Blackburn
d. 2001 Blackburn
MICHAEL PETER GREGORY
b. 25 Jun 1957 (Blackburn)
=
BERNADETTE CAFFREY
b. 13 April 1934, Blackburn
m. 21 July 1956, St Peter’s RC Church,
d. 2001 Blackburn
See Caffrey Family History Report and Genealogy Chart No 2
See Gregory Family History Report and Genealogy Chart No 1
11
Pedigree of Isabel de Vipont
Hugh I de Morville
Lord of Cunningham
And Lauderdale
Hugh II de Morville
d.1202
Lord of Westmorland
One of the assassins of
Thomas Beckett,
Archbishop of Canterbury
=
Beatrice, dau of
Robert de Beauchamp who was
the son of Hugh de Beauchamp of Bedford
Richard de Morville = [?]
Maud
Joan = Richard,
son of Ralph
Gernon of
Bakewell,
Derbyshire
William de Vipont
= Maud de Morville
Geoffrey FitzPiers = Aveline
Heir of Hugh II, her uncle 4th Earl of Essex
de Clare
b. Bef 1163
Robert de Vipont = [---?---]
d. 14 Oct 1213
d.1227
Thomas of Greystoke = Christian
John de Vipont
b.1210
d. 25 Jun 1241
=
[dau] de Ferrers John
= Isabel de Bigod
4th Earl of Derby FitzGeoffrey
by Agnes
de Keveliok
See de Bigod
Lady of Chartley
Pedigree
Robert de Vipont
Lord of Westmorland
b.1239
d. 7 Jun 1264
See Clifford
Family History
Report
Sir Roger Clifford
Justiciar of Forests
b.1248
d. 6 Nov 1282 (Wales)
=
=
Isabel FitzJohn
b. ca 1230
(Farnbridge, Surrey)
Isabel de Vipont
b. ca 1254
d. 14 May 1292
12
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