Notes
Note N1652
Index
Hugh was a knight of Hamatethy in St Breward, of Rillaton, Trevegan in Egloshayle, Cornwall. He was the Prince's bachelor to Edward the Black Prince, Prince of Wales.
Notes
Note N1653
Index
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http://www.ww2roll.gov.au/Veteran.aspx?ServiceId=A&VeteranId=170091
Service Record
Name BAYLY, JOHN LAWRENCE
Service Australian Army
Service Number NX52791
Date of Birth 18 Mar 1911
Place of Birth COOLAH, NSW
Date of Enlistment 4 Jul 1940
Locality on Enlistment PURLEWAUGH, NSW
Place of Enlistment PADDINGTON, NSW
Next of Kin BAYLY, JOHN
Date of Discharge 22 Nov 1943
Rank Private
Posting at Discharge 2/12 Field Ambulance
WW2 Honours and Gallantry None for display
Prisoner of War No
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Notes
Note N1654
Index
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NSW BDM - Birth: 22635/1887 - BUCKLEY, MARY E - JAMES W - ANN T - GUNNEDAH
NSW BDM - Marriage: 4846/1908 - BAYLY, JOHN N - BUCKLEY, MARY E - GUNNEDAH
NSW BDM - Death: 3287/1918 - WALKER - MARY A - JAMES - ANN - GUNNEDAH
or
NSW BDM - Death: 14668/1965 - BAYLY - MARY ELLEN - JAMES PATRICK - ANNIE - PARRAMATTA
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MyHeritage message 2012-06-09
My name is Moya Bayly. My grandmother was Mary Ellen Buckley, she married my grandfather John Nicholas Bayly . Grandma died in a road accident in 1965, the same year as her sister, our common relative, Sarah Ann Prior . I would love to know any info. on the rest of the brothers and sisters, if you know what happened to them? I do hope to hear from you.
Regards Moya Bayly.
Notes
Note N1655
Index
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Ena Hardy
Birth: unknown
Death: Apr. 25, 2003
Inscription:
Aged 88 years.
Note: w/Allan Thomas; mother
Burial:
Glen Innes General Cemetery
Glen Innes
New South Wales, Australia
Plot: Pbn D
Created by: Rebecca Ewing Peterson
Record added: Feb 22, 2012
Find A Grave Memorial# 85394247
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Notes
Note N1656
Index
http://www.stradling.org.uk/docs/Origins.htm
The earliest records suggest that the first Stradling came over from Switzerland in the latter part of the 13th century, in the train of Sir Otto de Grandison, who himself was in the train of Edward I, returning from his crusade to take up the English crown.
It is thought that Sir John Stradling and his son Peter came from Strattligen, near Thun, on the north-west shore of Lake Thun. Sir Otto came from Grandison on the western end of Lake Neuchatel and was known to be close to the Stradling family - a sister of his was married to a Stradling. Another fact to support this close family relationship is the comparison of the coats of arms which are so similar as to suggest a blood relation.
Even back in England, Sir Otto chose Sir Peter Stradling to be his deputy in Ireland when sent off on other duties for Edward I.
Sir John, Peter's father, was found marrying before 1290 and settling in Warwickshire. He died before Maud, his wife, and the large estate went to the heir of the next marriage - the second of three husbands Sir Peter therefore had to find his own future. The last record of Sir John is postumously, when his debt of 200L was paid to his bankers, from Lucca, by Edward I in recognition of the good service he had given.
Sir Peter is first found in the records in charge of Neath Castle, Glamorgan. It was in Glamorgan that he found an heiress, Joan de Hawey, to marry and from he acquired estates in Glamorgan based around what is now called St Donat's Castle. He also acquired estates in Somerset and Dorset.
The old Welsh name for St Donats is Saint Dunwyd, thought to have been the person to have brought Christianity back again to Wales after the disasterous years of Viking invasions.
St Donats is on the south coast of Wales, over looking the Bristol Channel, near to Nash Point. Once set in vast park lands, it has beautiful views for miles around and over to Somerset on clear days where other lands were held by the family.
Notes
Note N1657
Index
==========
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_John_Stradling,_1st_Baronet
Sir John Stradling, 1st Baronet (1563 - 9 September 1637), was a British politician.
He was born the son of Francis Stradling of St. George, Bristol and adopted by a relative, Sir Edward Stradling. He inherited the family estate at St Donat's on the death of Sir Edward in 1609.
Educated at Oxford (BA 1584), he was Sheriff of Glamorgan for 1608 and 1620. He was knighted in 1608 and created Baronet, of St Donats in the County of Glamorgan in 1611. He was then Member of Parliament for St. Germans, Cornwall, (1623-1624), Old Sarum (1625), and Glamorgan (1625-1626).
He founded Cowbridge Grammar School.
He was author or translator of A Direction for travailers taken out of Epistola de Peregrinatione Italica … for the behoofe of the … Earl of Bedford, 1592 ; Two bookes of constancie … Englished by J.S., … 1595 ; De vita et morte contemnenda libri duo, 1597 ; J. Stradlingi epigrammatum libri quatuor … 1607; Beati Pacifici; a divine poem … 1623 ; and Divine Poems, 1625
He married Elizabeth, daughter of Edward Gage; they had a son and heir Edward.
==========
Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 55 - by Daniel Lleufer Thomas
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Stradling,_John_(DNB00)
STRADLING, Sir JOHN (1563-1637), scholar and poet, was the son of Francis and Elizabeth Stradling of St. George's, near Bristol, where he was born in 1563. His great-uncle, Sir Edward Stradling [q. v.], being childless, adopted John and bequeathed him his estate. Stradling was educated under Edward Green, a canon of Bristol, and at Oxford, where he matriculated from Brasenose College on 18 July 1580, and graduated B.A. from Magdalen Hall on 7 Feb. 1583-4, being then accounted ‘a miracle for his forwardness in learning and pregnancy of parts’ (Wood). He studied for a time at one of the inns of court, and then travelled abroad. He was sheriff of Glamorganshire for 1607 and 1620, and was knighted on 15 May 1608, being then described as of Shropshire (Nichols, Progresses of James I, ii. 196, 422). In 1609 he succeeded to the castle and estate of St. Donat's in Glamorganshire, and was created a baronet on 22 May 1611, standing fifth on the first list of baronets. He was elected M.P. for St. Germans, Cornwall, on 15 Jan. 1624-5, for Old Sarum on 23 April 1625, his colleague there being Michael Oldisworth [q. v.], who married one of his daughters (Preface to George Stradling's Sermons, 1692), and for Glamorganshire on 6 Feb. 1625-6, in which year he was also a commissioner for raising a crown loan in that county. Stradling appears to have enjoyed a great reputation for learning, and ‘was courted and admired’ by Camden, who quotes him as ‘vir doctissimus’ in his ‘Britannia’ (ed. 1607, p. 498), by Sir John Harington, Thomas Leyson, and Ioan David Rhys, to all of whom he wrote epigrams (James Harrington in his Preface to George Stradling's Sermons). To carry out the wishes of his predecessor in the title, he built, equipped, and endowed a grammar school at Cowbridge, but the endowment seems to have subsequently lapsed until the school was refounded by Sir Leoline Jenkins [q. v.] (Arch. Cambr. 2nd ser. v. 182-6). He died in 1637.
Stradling was the author of: 1. ‘A Direction for Trauailers. Taken out of Ivstvs Lipsius, and enlarged for the behoofe of the Right Honorable Lord, the yong Earle of Bedford, being now ready to trauell,’ London, 1592, 4to; a translation of Lipsius's ‘Epistola de Peregrinatione Italica.’ 2. ‘Two Bookes of Constancie; written in Latine by Iustus Lipsius; containing, principallie, a comfortable Conference in common Calamities,’ London, 1595, 4to; a translation of Lipsius's ‘De Constantia libri duo,’ which had been published at Antwerp in 1584. Stradling also mentions Lipsius's ‘Politickes’ among those ‘bookes wherein I had done mine endeuor by translating to pleasure you,’ but this does not appear to have been published, possibly because another translation of the work by one William Jones appeared in the same year. 3. ‘De Vita et Morte contemnenda libri duo,’ Frankfort, 1597, 8vo (Bodleian Libr. Cat.; cf. Wood, Athenæ Oxon. ii. 397; Stradling, Epigrams, p. 26). 4. ‘Epigrammatum libri quatuor,’ London, 1607, 8vo. 5. ‘Beati Pacifici: a Divine Poem written to the Kings Most Excellent Maiestie … Perused by his Maiesty, and printed by Authority’ (London, 1623, 4to), with a portrait of James I engraved by R. Vaughan. 6. ‘Divine Poems: in seven severall Classes, written to his Most Excellent Maiestie, Charles [the First] …’ London, 1625, 4to. The poetry is of a didactic character; the work was described by Theophilus Field [q. v.], bishop of Llandaff, in commendatory verses, as ‘A Sustaeme Theologicall, a paraphrase upon the holy Bible’ (cf. Robert Hayman, Quodlibets … from Newfoundland, London, 1628, p. 62). A ‘Poetical Description of Glamorganshire’ by Stradling is also mentioned (Notes and Queries, 3rd ser. iii. 448), but of this nothing is known.
Stradling married Elizabeth, daughter of Edward Gage of Firle, Sussex. By her he had eight sons, two of whom are noticed below, and one, Sir Henry [q. v.], is noticed separately, and three daughters, of whom the eldest, Jane, married William Thomas of Wenvoe, and had a daughter Elizabeth, who became wife of Edmund Ludlow, the regicide [q. v.]
The eldest son, Edward Stradling (1601-1644), the second baronet, born in 1601, matriculated from Brasenose College, Oxford, on 16 June 1615, and was elected M.P. for Glamorganshire in 1640. He was concerned in several important business undertakings; he was a shareholder in a soap-making monopoly (Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1635, p. 474), and was summoned on 14 Oct. 1641 before the House of Commons to account for some of its acts (Commons' Journals, ii. 299). On 15 June 1637 he and Sir Lewis Dives and another were summoned before the Star-chamber ‘for transporting gold and silver out of the kingdom’ (Cal. State Papers, s.a. p. 218), but they subsequently received a full pardon (ib. under 23 March 1638-9). Stradling was also the chief promoter of a scheme for bringing a supply of water to London from Hoddesdon, which engaged much public attention between 1630 and 1640 (ib. under 11 Feb. 1631 p. 555, for 1638-9 pp. 304, 314, 1639 p. 481; Commons' Journals, ii. 585; the deed between Charles I and the promoters is printed in Rymer's Fœdera, vol. viii. pt. iii. p. 157).
At the outbreak of the civil war Stradling was the leading royalist in Glamorganshire, and led a regiment of foot to Edgehill in October 1642, where he was taken prisoner (Clarendon, Hist. vi. 94) and sent to Warwick Castle; but the king obtained his release on an exchange of prisoners (Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1644, p. 117), and, proceeding to Oxford, Stradling died there in June 1644, and was buried on 21 June in the chapel of Jesus College (Wood, Athenæ Oxon. ii. 51, Coll. and Halls, ed. Gutch, p. 590). He married Mary, only daughter (by the second wife) of Sir Thomas Mansel of Margam, who survived him. In July 1645 she extended hospitable protection to Bishop Ussher, who stayed almost a year at St. Donat's (Parr, Life of Ussher, pp. 58-63). Of his sons, Edward, the eldest, succeeded as third baronet; John and Thomas served on the royalist side throughout the civil war, both being implicated in the Glamorganshire risings in 1647 and 1648; John died in prison at Windsor Castle in 1648. The title became extinct by the death, unmarried, of Sir Thomas Stradling, the sixth baronet, who was killed in a duel at Montpelier on 27 Sept. 1738. His disposition of the property gave rise to prolonged litigation, which was finally closed and the partition of the estates confirmed under an act of parliament (cf. Notes and Queries, 3rd ser. xi. 153).
Sir John's eighth but fourth surviving son, George Stradling, (1621-1688), after travelling in France and Italy, matriculated from Jesus College, Oxford, on 27 April 1638, graduated B.A. 16 Nov. 1640, M.A. 26 Jan. 1646-7, and D.D. 6 Nov. 1661. In 1642, as ‘founder's kinsman,’ he was elected fellow of All Souls'. He served on the royalist side during the civil war, but the influence of Oldisworth and Ludlow prevented his ejection from his fellowship. In December 1660 he was made canon of St. Paul's and chaplain to Bishop (afterwards Archbishop) Gilbert Sheldon [q. v.] He declined election as president of Jesus on the resignation of Francis Mansel [q. v.] in March 1660-1, but became rector of Hanwell (1662-4), vicar of Cliffe-at-Hoo (1663), of Sutton-at-Hone (1666), both in Kent; of St. Bride's, London (1673), canon of Westminster (1663), chantor (1671) and dean of Chichester (1672). He died 18 April 1688, and was buried with his wife Margaret (d. 1681), daughter of Sir William Salter of Iver, Buckinghamshire, in Westminster Abbey. A volume of Stradling's ‘Sermons’ was edited (London, 1692, 8vo) by James Harrington [q. v.], who prefixed an account of Stradling's life (Wood, Athenæ Oxon. iv. 237, Fasti, ii. 33, 91; Reg. of Visit. of Oxford Univ. pp. 42, 475; Neale, Westminster Abbey, ii. 244; Chester, Westminster Abbey Reg. pp. 70, 203, 220-1).
[Authorities quoted in the text; Wood's Athenæ Oxon. ii. 395-7; Foster's Alumni Oxon.; Brit. Mus. Cat.; Traherne's Stradling Correspondence; James Harrington's Preface to Dr. George Stradling's Sermons (1692); Williams's Eminent Welshmen, p. 475, and W. R. Williams's Parl. Hist. of Wales, p. 97, cf. also p. 108. The genealogical particulars are based upon Collins's Baronetage, ed. 1720, pp. 32 et seq., and G. T. Clark's Limbus Patrum Morganiæ, p. 439.]