William Scarburgh1,2

M, ID# 7621, (c 1580 - b 10 Sep 1614)
Father:Henry Skarburghe I (c 1536 - 8 Jan 1606)
Mother:Elizabeth (Unknown) (a 1542 - )
     William Scarburgh was born c 1580. He was the son of Henry Skarburghe I and Elizabeth (Unknown). William Scarburgh died b 10 Sep 1614.

Citations

  1. [S460] Henry Scarburgh Will.
  2. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Anne or Agness Scarburgh1,2

F, ID# 7623, (c 1582 - )
Father:Henry Skarburghe I (c 1536 - 8 Jan 1606)
Mother:Elizabeth (Unknown) (a 1542 - )
     Anne or Agness Scarburgh was born c 1582. She was the daughter of Henry Skarburghe I and Elizabeth (Unknown).

Citations

  1. [S460] Henry Scarburgh Will.
  2. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Mary Scarburgh1,2

F, ID# 7624, (c 1572 - )
Father:Henry Skarburghe I (c 1536 - 8 Jan 1606)
Mother:Elizabeth (Unknown) (a 1542 - )
     Mary Scarburgh was born c 1572. She was the daughter of Henry Skarburghe I and Elizabeth (Unknown). Mary Scarburgh married Theophilus Harvye a 1592.

Citations

  1. [S460] Henry Scarburgh Will.
  2. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Elizabeth Scarburgh1,2

F, ID# 7625, (c 1576 - )
Father:Henry Skarburghe I (c 1536 - 8 Jan 1606)
Mother:Elizabeth (Unknown) (a 1542 - )
     Elizabeth Scarburgh was born c 1576. She was the daughter of Henry Skarburghe I and Elizabeth (Unknown). Elizabeth Scarburgh married Unknown Harvy a 1596.

Citations

  1. [S460] Henry Scarburgh Will.
  2. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Susan Scarburgh1,2

F, ID# 7626, (c 1578 - )
Father:Henry Skarburghe I (c 1536 - 8 Jan 1606)
Mother:Elizabeth (Unknown) (a 1542 - )
     Susan Scarburgh was born c 1578. She was the daughter of Henry Skarburghe I and Elizabeth (Unknown). Susan Scarburgh married Unknown Pycroft a 1598.

Citations

  1. [S460] Henry Scarburgh Will.
  2. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Unknown Pycroft1

M, ID# 7627, (a 1573 - )
     Unknown Pycroft was born a 1573. He married Susan Scarburgh, daughter of Henry Skarburghe I and Elizabeth (Unknown), a 1598.

Citations

  1. [S460] Henry Scarburgh Will.

Unknown Harvy1

M, ID# 7628, (a 1571 - )
     Unknown Harvy was born a 1571. He married Elizabeth Scarburgh, daughter of Henry Skarburghe I and Elizabeth (Unknown), a 1596.

Citations

  1. [S460] Henry Scarburgh Will.

Theophilus Harvye1

M, ID# 7629, (a 1567 - )
     Theophilus Harvye was born a 1567. He married Mary Scarburgh, daughter of Henry Skarburghe I and Elizabeth (Unknown), a 1592.

Citations

  1. [S460] Henry Scarburgh Will.

Sir Charles Scarburgh

M, ID# 7630, (19 Dec 1615 - 26 Feb 1694)
Father:CPT Edmund Scarburgh I (Burgess) (1584 - b 19 Feb 1634)
Mother:Hannah Smith (c 1594 - a 19 Feb 1634/35)
     Sir Charles Scarburgh was born on 19 Dec 1615 at England. He was the son of CPT Edmund Scarburgh I (Burgess) and Hannah Smith. Sir Charles Scarburgh was christened on 29 Dec 1615 at Saint Martin in the Fields, London, England. He married Mary Daniel c 1650. Sir Charles Scarburgh died on 26 Feb 1694 at London, Middlesex, England, at age 78. He was buried in 1694 at Cranford, Middlesex, England.
      Sir Charles Scarburgh was physician in ordinary to Kings Charles II, James II, and William III and was knighted 14 Aug 1669. Charles, physician and natural philosopher, son of Edmund Scarburgh, gentleman, of the parish of St Martin-in-the-Fields, and Hannah Butler(sic), was sent to St Paul's School. He entered Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, as a sizar on 4 March 1633 and graduated with a BA in 1637 and MA in 1640, at which time he was elected a fellow and concentrated on medicine and mathematics. He studied the latter with Seth Ward, then at Emmanuel College. They chose William Oughtred's Clavis mathematica as their text, and Oughtred was pleased by their visiting him at Albury in Surrey to ask an explanation of difficulties they had encountered with his text.

Scarburgh, a royalist, was ejected from his Cambridge fellowship about 1644 during the civil war and entered Merton College, Oxford, where he probably intended to serve in a royalist regiment. At Merton he befriended another Caius alumnus, William Harvey, who was then Merton's warden. According to John Aubrey, Harvey told Scarburgh: ‘Prithee leave off thy gunning and stay here … I will bring thee into [medical] practice’ (J. Aubrey, Brief Lives, 1.299). By June 1645 Scarburgh was assisting Harvey in writing his De generatione animalium. Supported by letters from Harvey, Scarburgh was created MD by the chancellor of Oxford University on 23 June 1646, one day before Sir Thomas Glenham surrendered Oxford to General Fairfax and parliament. (In 1660 Scarburgh's MD was incorporated at Cambridge.)

Scarburgh was one of the original Fellows of the Royal Society, a learned society for science, and possibly the oldest such society still in existence. Founded in Nov 1660, it was granted a Royal Charter by King Charles II as "The Royal Society."

About 1647 he moved to London, joined a group of natural philosophers organized by John Wallis known as the ‘1645 Group’, and was admitted as a candidate by the College of Physicians on 25 January 1648. He maintained ties with his Oxford colleagues, arranging in 1649 with the ejected Savilian professor of astronomy, John Greaves, for Seth Ward, his mathematical friend from Cambridge, to be appointed Greaves's successor despite Ward's high-church and royalist convictions. On 8 October 1649 Scarburgh was elected anatomical reader at Surgeons' Hall, where he engaged Christopher Wren, then between Westminster School and matriculating at Oxford, as his assistant in demonstrating and making anatomical experiments. Scarburgh's association with William Oughtred and John Wallis, a founder of the Royal Society, included a shared interest in placing astrology on a solid mathematical footing, a desire that reflects the lack of a definite boundary between astrology and mainline natural philosophy and medicine in seventeenth-century England.

Scarburgh was elected a fellow of the College of Physicians on 26 September 1650 and served as censor in 1655, 1664, and 1665; elect in 1677 (in place of Francis Glisson); and consiliarius in 1684, 1685, 1686, 1688, and 1689. In 1656 Harvey chose him as his successor as Lumleian lecturer in the college. Harvey bequeathed ‘my velvet gowne to my lovinge frined, Mr. Dr. Scarburgh’, as well as ‘all my little silver instruments of surgerie’ (Munk, Roll). When Harvey's friend and patient Henry Pierrepont, first marquess of Dorchester and a virtuoso of natural philosophy, was admitted as a fellow of the college in 1658 Scarburgh introduced him with a well-received Latin speech. Scarburgh delivered the Harveian oration in 1662. On 28 February 1663 Samuel Pepys recorded that he went with Scarburgh to the dissection of a seaman hanged for robbery. Scarburgh also read the anatomy lectures ‘with great applause’ (Munk, Roll) at the Barber–Surgeons' Hall for many years. Early in the Restoration Charles II appointed him first physician, and knighted him on 15 August 1669. He attended the king in his final illness and left an account in manuscript (S. Antiquaries, Lond., MS 206), which was transcribed and translated in Raymond Crawfurd's Last Days of Charles II (1909). He also served as physician to James II, before and after his accession, to the Tower of London, to Prince George of Denmark, and to William and Mary. He was Member of Parliament for Camelford, Cornwall, from 1685 to 1687.

Scarburgh published a treatise on anatomy and human dissection, "Syllabus musculorum" (1676), which was a textbook for many years at Cambridge. He was also a member of the earl of Roscommon's ‘literary academy’ and wrote an elegy on the poet Abraham Cowley, who had been a member of Harvey's circle at Oxford; he stood bail of £1000 for Cowley in 1656. Scarburgh left materials for an English edition of Euclid, the most prominent mathematician of Greco-Roman antiquity best known for his treatise on geometry, which his son Charles published in folio in 1705. Scarburgh also accumulated a valuable library concentrated on mathematical texts. According to John Evelyn's Diary for 10 March 1695, the earl of Sunderland showed me his library, now again improved by many books bought at the sale of Sir Charles Scarburgh, an eminent physician, which was the very best collection, especially of mathematical books, that was, I believe, in Europe; once designed for the King's library at St James's; but the Queen dying, who was a great patroness of that design, it was let fall, and the books were miserably dissipated. A catalogue of Scarburgh's mathematical library was issued in 1695. For further information see Munk's Roll; Venn's Biog. Hist. of Caius College; Wood's Ath. Oxon; and the Dictionary of National Biography (Col. John Wise, His Ancestors and Descendants).

Rev Edmund Smith I1,2

M, ID# 7631, (1564 - 1617)
Father:Robert Smith (c 1540 - )
Charts:Margaret Custis Russell * lineage
     Rev Edmund Smith I was born in 1564 at Harrow, (London), Middlesex, England. He was the son of Robert Smith. Rev Edmund Smith I married Alice Barry, daughter of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording, on 23 Jul 1593 at Saint Lawrence Pountney, London, England. Rev Edmund Smith I died in 1617 at Tenby, Pembrokeshire, Wales.
      The Biographical History of Gonville and Caius College shows Edmund Smythe of Harrow on the Hill, the son of Robert Smythe, mediocris fortunae. At age 15 he attended Harrow three years and Northolt (Northall) one year. Edmund was admitted sizar on 17 Nov 1579 and was tutored by Mr. Rabbet, fellow. B.A. in 1583-4 and M.A. in 1588. He was incorporated at Oxford on 10 Jul 1593 and became a scholor to L. Day in 1587. Edmund was under-master of Merchant Taylors' School in 1588 and headmaster from 1592 until 1599. Edmund then obtained a benefice and petitioned for a contribution for the first-fruits. He became rector of Stackpole Elidyr, Pembrokeshire, Wales, and the was rector of Tenby.

There are many Edmund Smythes so it is not possible at present to further define the life of our ancestor. There are two Edmunds, both sons of Robert Smythes, born in 1562 in London and 1563 in Warwick, far from London. There are several Edmunde Smythes born in 1564, but they are not noted as having a father named Robert. There are less than 20 Edmund Smythes born in the early 1560s for whom there are birth records in ancestry.com in 2015 but none listed in Harrow, Middlesex.


Moody Miles detailed sources:

[S2434] Christopher Handy correspondence to M.K. Miles.
[S2434] Christopher Handy, to M.K. Miles, Biographical History of Gonville and Caius College, 1349-1897, p. 104 (Mich 1579 - Mich 1580) (for son Edmund Smythe).
[S2434] Christopher Handy, to M.K. Miles, monograph by Cecil L'Estrange Ewen, printed 1938, entitled "Lording Barry, Poet and Pirate."
[S802] Ancestry.com web page, Ancestry.com, England, Select Marriages, 1538-1973 for Edmond Smith & Alice Barrye.

Children of Rev Edmund Smith I and Alice Barry

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S513] Edmund Smith Records.

Alice Barry1,2,3

F, ID# 7632, (c 1575 - )
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
Charts:Margaret Custis Russell * lineage
     Alice Barry was christened c 1575 at Saint Laurence Pountney, London, England. She was born c 1575 at England. She was the daughter of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording. Alice Barry married Rev Edmund Smith I, son of Robert Smith, on 23 Jul 1593 at Saint Lawrence Pountney, London, England.
      Detailed sources for Alice Barry by Moody Miles:


[S2434] Christopher Handy, to M.K. Miles.
[S2434] Christopher Handy, to M.K. Miles, monograph by Cecil L'Estrange Ewen, printed 1938, entitled "Lording Barry, Poet and Pirate."
[S802] Ancestry.com web page, Ancestry.com, England, Select Marriages, 1538-1973 for Edmond Smith & Alice Barrye.

Children of Alice Barry and Rev Edmund Smith I

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.
  3. [S513] Edmund Smith Records.

Robert Smith1

M, ID# 7633, (c 1540 - )
Charts:Margaret Custis Russell * lineage
     Robert Smith was born c 1540.

Child of Robert Smith

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Dr Edmund Smith II1

M, ID# 7634, (1599 - 16 Feb 1654)
Father:Rev Edmund Smith I (1564 - 1617)
Mother:Alice Barry (c 1575 - )
     Dr Edmund Smith II was born in 1599 at London, England. He was the son of Rev Edmund Smith I and Alice Barry. Dr Edmund Smith II died on 16 Feb 1654 at Westminster, London, England. His estate was probated on 1 Mar 1654 at London.
      Dr Edmund Smith attended Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge; BA 1618, MA 1623, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, 1632; physician-in-ordinary to Charles I during the Civil War--an office later executed by his nephew Sir Charles Scarburgh for Charles II. Edmund was a close personal friend of William Harvey (who encouraged Charles Scarburgh to "leave off thy gunning" and come to Cambridge), and is named by a biographer of Harvey as Scarburgh's uncle.

The Biographical History of Gonville and Caius College, 1614 shows him as Edmund Smith of London (baptized at St. Lawrence Pountney): son of Edmund Smith (p. 104), minister. At school (Merchant Taylors') in London, under Mr. Haynes. Age 16. Admitted pensioner, May 1, 1614. Surety, Mr. Brown. B.A. 1617-8: M.A. 1621. Incorporated at Oxford, July 12, 1623. M.D. 1627. Scholar, Mich 1615 to L. Day 1618. Junior fellow, Mida 1621 to L. Day 1627. Appointed by royal mandate, dated Dec 18, 1620. Fellow of the College of Physicians, 1632. Of St. Andrew's, Holborn, July 21, 1646; when he was fined £35 as a delinquent: "being a physician in ordinary to the king he went to Oxford in attendance on him" (Cal. of Com. for Compounding). He only survived for fortnight the opening of the Harveian Museum of which he had been an active promoter: "Sussau et cura Franc. Prujeani Presidis, et. Edmundi Smith, inchoata et perfecta est haec fabrica" (Munk's Roll).
Died of pleurisy in his house in Shoe Lane, Feb 16, 1653-4. Will proved at Westminster, March 1, 1653-4.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Nicholas Barry II1,2

M, ID# 7635, (c 1550 - 1607)
Father:Nicholas Barry I (c 1525 - 1567)
Charts:Margaret Custis Russell * lineage
     Nicholas Barry II was born c 1550 at London, England. He was the son of Nicholas Barry I. Nicholas Barry II married Anne Lording, daughter of George Lording I and Alice Smith, on 5 Oct 1572 at Saint Magnus the Martyr, London, England. Nicholas Barry II died in 1607 at England.
      Nicholas Barry II was a fishmonger from St Laurence Pountney, London.

Moody Miles detailed sources:

[S2434] Christopher Handy, to M.K. Miles.
[S2434] Christopher Handy, to M.K. Miles, monograph by Cecil L'Estrange Ewen, printed 1938, entitled "Lording Barry, Poet and Pirate."
[S802] Ancestry.com web page, Ancestry.com, London Metropolitan Archives, St Magnus the Martyr, Composite register: baptisms 1560/1 - 1719/20, marriages 1557/8 - 1712, burials 1560/1-1720/1, P69/MAG/A/001/MS011361.
[S802] Ancestry.com web page, Ancestry.com, London Metropolitan Archives, St Lawrence Pountney, Composite register: baptisms 1538 - 1739, marriages 1538 - 1666, burials 1538 - 1739, P69/LAW2/A/001/MS07670.

Children of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.

Anne Lording1,2

F, ID# 7636, (c 1555 - 1631)
Father:George Lording I (c 1510 - 1578)
Mother:Alice Smith (c 1510 - )
Charts:Margaret Custis Russell * lineage
     Anne Lording was born c 1555 at London, England. She was the daughter of George Lording I and Alice Smith. Anne Lording married Nicholas Barry II, son of Nicholas Barry I, on 5 Oct 1572 at Saint Magnus the Martyr, London, England. Anne Lording died in 1631 at Walkern, Hertfordshire, England.

Children of Anne Lording and Nicholas Barry II

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.

Nicholas Barry I1

M, ID# 7637, (c 1525 - 1567)
Charts:Margaret Custis Russell * lineage
     Nicholas Barry I was born c 1525 at Standon, Hertfordshire, England. He died in 1567 at Standon, Hertfordshire.
      Nicholas Barry's will was proved in the Archdeaconry of Middlesex, Essex & Hereford division in 1567. Hertfordshire, England where he was born and died is on the northern border of London.

There are records for Barry families having children in Hertfordshire in the mid 1500s to early 1600s, but no Barry children records were found yet for the first half of the 1500s in that county. Except for Thomas, the names given to Barry children born in Hertfordshire to a Nickolas Barry during 1561 to 1563 and a Nicolas Barry during 1573 to 1577, which could be the same person, match the names given to the known children of Nicholas Barry II born circa 1550 and may be his siblings: John born 6 Jun 1561, Thomas born 5 Apr 1563, Georg born 20 Dec 1573, John born 10 Jun 1576 and Edmonds born 17 Dec 1577. The decade gap in births could be between wives or reflect the known children.

Child of Nicholas Barry I

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

George Lording I1

M, ID# 7638, (c 1510 - 1578)
Charts:Margaret Custis Russell * lineage
     George Lording I was born c 1510. He married Alice Smith in Feb 1540 at Saint Lawrence Pountney, London, England. George Lording I married Anne (Unknown) c 1550. George Lording I died in 1578 at Canturbury, England. His estate was probated on 8 Aug 1578 at Canturbury.
      George Lording was a citizen and merchant tailor of London. His will was proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury by his wife Anne.

Child of George Lording I and Alice Smith

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Alice Smith1

F, ID# 7639, (c 1510 - )
Charts:Margaret Custis Russell * lineage
     Alice Smith was born c 1510. She married George Lording I in Feb 1540 at Saint Lawrence Pountney, London, England.

Child of Alice Smith and George Lording I

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Rev George Barry1,2

M, ID# 7640, (1573 - 1632)
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     Rev George Barry was born in 1573 at London, England. He was the son of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording. Rev George Barry was christened on 20 Dec 1573 at Saint Lawrence Pountney, London, England. He died in 1632 at England.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.

John Barry1,2

M, ID# 7641, (1576 - 1632)
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     John Barry was born in 1576 at London, England. He was the son of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording. John Barry was christened on 10 Jun 1576 at Saint Lawrence Pountney, London, England. He died in 1632 at England.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.

Edmund Barry1,2

M, ID# 7642, (1577 - 1579)
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     Edmund Barry was born in 1577 at England. He was the son of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording. Edmund Barry died in 1579 at England.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.

Lording Barry1,2

M, ID# 7643, (1580 - 1629)
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     Lording Barry was born in 1580 at London, England. He was the son of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording. Lording Barry was christened on 17 Apr 1580 at Saint Lawrence Pountney, London, England. He died in 1629 at England. His estate was probated on 21 Jul 1629 at England.
      The prinicpal source for the information on Edmund Scarburgh's wife Hannah Smith, Lording Barry's niece, is from a monograph by Cecil L'Estrange Ewen printed in 1938 entitled "Lording Barry, Poet and Pirate," which gives a pedigree for several generations of Barry's family and allied lines along with dates of wills. Included is extensive information on the life and career of Barry, whose antecedents had been something of a literary mystery... It was thought, for instance, that "Lording" was some sort of honorific and he was the son or bastard son of a Lord Barry.

Lording was left the sum of approximately £10 in his father's will of 1607 (one-fifth of one-third of the estate); he invested it in a theatre company, the Children of the King's Revels, at Whitefriars, London. Lording is known as the author of at least two plays: "Ram Alley" and "The Family of Love" (previously attributed to John Webster). Barry went heavily into debt over his theatrical venture, and was jailed in the Marshalsea Prison from which he escaped and buying a horse on credit, made his way to Ireland and a career of piracy.

A vessel Lording was aboard, the Fly, was taken by a King's ship on return from a pirating voyage. Barry was among those turned ashore by the Royal Navy officer. Ewen speculates the leniency shown to Barry may have something to do with the fact that a Barry, Viscount Buttevant, was one of the King's Commissioners for piracy, and the arms of Barry's fathe r-- given in "A Visitation of Wales and Part of the Marches" as "barry of six argent and gules, a crescent or for difference" were almost identical to those of the Viscounts Buttevant).

Lording later took part in Sir Walter Raleigh's last failed expedition to the Orinoco in 1616-17 and returning to England was eventually in partnership with Edward Bennett, as seen above from his will.

In 1617 Lording had another nearly disatrous privateering adventure as part of Sir Walter Ralegh's gold-mining expedition to Guyana. Back in London, Lording became part-owner of a trading vessel called the Edward of London, whose principal owner was Edwad Bennett, a commissioner of Virginia at the court of England. This ship was, in 1627, granted a letter of marque to take pirates and enemy ships. Lording's career at sea seems to have come full circle. Lording's association with Edward Bennett is mentioned in "The Encyclopedia of English Renaissance Literature", p.51 (viewable via Google Books). The will of Lording Barry, as follows, names him as "Captain and part-owner of the good shippe Edward of London". (See also John Bennett Boddie, "Seventeeth Century Isle of Wight"; mentions grant of a letter of marque to Edward Bennett for the ship Edward, of London on p. 51.) Lording Barry, sometime playwright and partner in the theatre company of the Children of the King's Revels, later pirate, and in later life part-owner of the privateer Edward of London, whose principal owner was Edward Bennett of Bennett's Plantation (uncle of Richard Bennett who was governor of Virginia, and great-uncle of Elizabeth Bennett who married Charles Scarburgh, son of Col. Edmund Scarburgh.)

Lording wrote no other plays and seems not to have married or had children.

Lording made a will on 18 July 1625 at London, England: In the name of God, Amen. I Lordinge Barrye, captaine and part owner of the good shippe called the Edward of London, beeing of perfect minde and memorie thankes be to god doe make and declare this my last will and testament in writing in manner and forme followinge. To Charles, son of Edmond Scarburgh of Saint Martines in the Fields, 3l. to buy him a gold ring. To Mr Robert Overye of Staple Inn, 20s. to buy him a gold ring. To Mr Francis Burnell of the City of London, 20s. to buy him a gold ring. Executors and residuary legatees: Hannah, wife to Edmond Scarburgh of St Martins in the Fields and Edmond, son to said Edmond and Hannah. 18 July, I Chas. (1625). Witnesses: Robert Ball, clerk; Robert Overeye, Richard Overye. Probate 21 July 1629. Grant to Hannah Scarburgh. Inventory, 49s. 8d. (Diocese & Chapter of St Paul's, Reg. D., folio 363).

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.

Matthew Barry1,2

M, ID# 7644, (c 1582 - )
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     Matthew Barry was born c 1582 at England. He was the son of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.

John (2nd son John) Barry1,2

M, ID# 7645, (1583 - )
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     John (2nd son John) Barry was born in 1583 at London, England. He was the son of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording. John (2nd son John) Barry was christened on 1 Dec 1583 at Saint Lawrence Pountney, London, England.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.

William Barry1

M, ID# 7646, (c 1588 - )
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     William Barry was born c 1588 at England. He was the son of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Anne Barry1,2

F, ID# 7647, (1581 - )
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     Anne Barry was born in 1581 at London, England. She was the daughter of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording. Anne Barry was christened on 18 Jun 1581 at Saint Lawrence Pountney, London, England. She married Rev Edmund Mun c 13 Apr 1599 at Saint Olave Hart Street, London, England. Anne Barry married Francis Barnham c 1610.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."
  2. [S461] Barry Family.

Eleanor Barry1

F, ID# 7648, (c 1589 - )
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     Eleanor Barry was born c 1589 at England. She was the daughter of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Gertrude Barry1

F, ID# 7649, (c 1591 - )
Father:Nicholas Barry II (c 1550 - 1607)
Mother:Anne Lording (c 1555 - 1631)
     Gertrude Barry was born c 1591 at England. She was the daughter of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording.
      Rev George Barry was rector of Walkerne, Hertfordshire, England.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."

Rev Edmund Mun1

M, ID# 7650, (c 1575 - )
     Rev Edmund Mun was born c 1575. He married Anne Barry, daughter of Nicholas Barry II and Anne Lording, c 13 Apr 1599 at Saint Olave Hart Street, London, England.
      Rev. Edmund Mun was vicar of Stepney.

Citations

  1. [S2] "Moody Miles Research."