Notes |
- John Ingram and wife Ellen are proven to John Ingram and wife Joan of Stretton via census record
mentioned below.
A list of families from 1532-1533 in Archdeaconry of Stafford. 942.46B4SC ser. 4, Volume 8
Lists John Engram (wife Ellen) living in Stretton with children Joan, Henry, John, Isabel Smythe, Alice, Ralph, Thomas, Elizabeth. John Engram and his wife Joan are grand-parents of children of John/Ellen.
This survey is not a complete list of inhabitants, and some of the people listed were known to be dead at the time of the compilation. Its purpose is not clear but is possibly a list of those entitled to prayer in return for contributions to the Cathedral funds which would explain why some deceased persons are listed.
It is believed that our Ingram's of Penkridge did not attend the Archdeaconry census taking that occured in 1532-33. There are many families that are not accounted for during this event.
- (Research):John Rydleye, John Ingram, and Ralph Ingram. Next presentation to the parish church of St. Einanus the Bishop, with the chapel annexed called Tydwoll, Bangor dioc. Estamstede, 23 July [29 Hen. VIII.] 1537
Del. Olde Forde, 29 Aug. P.S. Pat. p. 5, m. 15. From: 'Henry VIII: August 1537, 21-31', Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, Volume 12 Part 2: June-December 1537 (1891), pp. 209-228. St. Einanus, Llanfaglan, in Wales>.
Llanfaglan (Llanvaglan) is about 90 miles from Staffordshire.
LLANVAGDALEN, or LLANVAGLAN (LLANVAGLAN), a parish in the hundred of ISGORVAI, county of CARNARVON, NORTH WALES, 2 1/2 miles (W. S. W.) from Carnarvon, containing 156 inhabitants. This parish, which derives its name from the dedication of its church to St. Baglan, is situated on the Menai strait, near its southern extremity, and comprises only a few farms and widely scattered dwellings. The living is a perpetual curacy, annexed to the vicarage of Llanwnda, in the archdeaconry and diocese of Bangor : the great tithes are appropriated to the Principal and Fellows of Jesus' College, Oxford. The church, situated in the centre of a large field, to which there is no public road, is an ancient edifice, consisting of a nave and chancel, with a spacious chapel on the north side : the eastern gable is ornamented with the remains of an ancient cross, curiously sculptured. The average annual expenditure for the support of the poor is £ 68. 13. ( A Topographical Dictionary of Wales by Samuel Lewis, 1833)
Anciently known as Bangor Vawr, situated in Carnarvonshire on the Menai Straits
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