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Queensland, Australia [va Pixabay] |
- Thomas James Barton b. 27 May 1917 in Queensland, Australia
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Queensland, Australia [va Pixabay] |
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St Mary, High Road, South Woodford - East end Photo available for reuse under this Creative Commons licence. |
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The India Gate War Memorial, New Delhi, India Photo: Vikram Siingh Via Pixabay |
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St Mary the Virgin, Chigwell cc-by-sa/2.0 - © Bikeboy - geograph.org.uk/p/4190925 |
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St Mary, Chigwell cc-by-sa/2.0 - © John Salmon - geograph.org.uk/p/4177347 |
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St Mary, High Road, South Woodford cc-by-sa/2.0 - © John Salmon - geograph.org.uk/p/2975293 |
Robert Fuller (b. ~1785), reportedly son of Thomas Fuller and Mary Farrant, married Elizabeth Bass on 28 Nov 1807 at St Mary's Church, Woodford. It should be noted however that, as the current church wasn't built until 1816, their marriage will have taken place in the previous medieval church that had stood in this location. They may well have seen this building going up.
Seven children of this couple were baptised in Woodford, Essex:
Robert Fuller died, aged 60, in 1846 M Quarter in WEST HAM UNION Volume 12 Page 194, and was buried in Woodford on 22 Feb 1846.
Elizabeth Fuller died, aged 65, in 1851 M Quarter in WEST HAM UNION Volume 12 Page 219, and was buried on 12 Jan 1851, also in Woodford.
(These are my earliest ancestors [so far] in this branch. Both Robert and Elizabeth were born around 1785, but I've not been able to identify baptisms for either of them. There are also potentially two further children, but I'm not convinced enough that they belong to this family to include them. Being younger (only 10 and 12), they should have been on the 1841 census - unless they had died as infants and I've not found deaths or burials to confirm that. In any case, the naming pattern does not seem right for the family.)
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St Mary, High Road, South Woodford - East end cc-by-sa/2.0 - © John Salmon - geograph.org.uk/p/2975185 |
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Ye Olde King's Head, Chigwell cc-by-sa/2.0 - © Stephen McKay - geograph.org.uk/p/7349355 The main part of this set of buildings is the Olde Kings Head, a former coaching inn on Chigwell's High Road opposite the church. It is grade II* listed and probably dates from the 17th century, although some sources give a very specific date of 1547. Closer to the camera are the grade II listed King's Head Cottages built in the 18th century. The inn is said to have been the model for the Maypole in Charles Dickens' novel Barnaby Rudge. |