mermaidcamp
Keeping current in wellness, in and out of the water
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My great grandfather, William Ellison Taylor, was a farmer and a preacher in the Church of Christ in Texas after the Civil War. He had beautiful handwriting which I have in the form of his Confederate pension application. He was shot in the knee at Second Manassas, but still had to get back to Selma, Alabama. He survived to marry Lucinda Jane Armer, who ironically is a descendant of the Plantagenets. They moved to Texas along with Lucinda’s parents after the war.
The place and time Lucinda and William lived was an echo of the dramas of their ancestors who had Bible issues of biblical proportion back in their homeland of England. Lucinda’s family was playing music in the court of Henry VIII when he killed some wives and made himself the head of the new Church of England. Other members of her family were Plantagenets, being royal.
So cool that you can trace your roots back that far. I’m sure there are lots of wonderful stories waiting to be unearthed.
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Thanks, Marc, you know I am so into it. The stake burning somehow is very personal….and twice!! Never would I have imagined martyrs in the closet.
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I am very interested in this line myself. I have read that Henry Holland (1485-1561) had no legitimate male offspring (Encyclopedia. Britannica). Do you know of any records that establishes this? I am also also descended from Francis Gabriel Holland.
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Hi again. Feel free to remove my previous question if you’d like. I found, through a little more research, the tradition of the two illegitimate sons of Henry Holland, Duke of Exeter, and how the line proceeds from there. Thank you for providing the information on this page.
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Hi Olav, I am not professional, but very enthusiastic. I have found errors in my tree, so I know there is some false info circulating. I will check on Francis Gabriel and see if I find a male child. Thanks a lot for your interest, cousin..
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I have John Holland as the son, and not the only one:
John Holland of Namsemond is the first ancestor of the present Holland family of Nansemond (Holland area of Suffolk), VA. He was a headright of Lt. Col. Blake and Edward Isom who patented 2500 acres in Nansemond, Feb 20, 1664, for the transportation of 60 persons, among whom was John Holland (C.P. 444)
On April 20, 1682, John Holland patented 760 acres in the Upper Parish of Nansemond at the miles end of Walter Bagley; and on April 16, 1683, he patented 200 acres in the same parish at a place called Kinsale (?Kingsdale). Another patent was granated him April 20, 1694, for 500 acres on the east side of the Cape. A Henry Holland also patented 427 acres Oct 29, 1696, on back swamp of Summerton Creek.
The actual date of death of John Holland is not shown; but from circumstantial evidence it appears that he had four sons: HENRY, JAMES, JOSEPH, AND JOHN HOLLAND, JR. See following deeds from Isle of Wight Deed Book:
P.B. 10-358
P.B. – 358
Hathaway 11-444
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[…] was in cahoots with royal Henrys VII as well as VIII, the tables of fortune turned on his son, Rowland, who was burned at the stake. Royal and loyal did not always work out for my ancestors. The […]
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[…] of Canterbury. She is the ancestor of Margaret Tyndale, whose husband was burned at the stake for reading the bible in English. Although they spend several generations as the official bottlers to the royal Brits (a much more […]
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