thrale & thrall family history

Notes


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501 James and Eliza had eight children. Family: James Wright / Eliza Crawley (F313)
 
502 James and Sarah had three children Family: James Wright / Sarah Aldridge (F310)
 
503 Jane married her late-sister Mary's widow (James Wilson), four years after her sister's death. Family: James Wilson, M.D. / Jane Thrale Pott (F800)
 
504 Jane was either Irish of of Irish descent Staples, Jane Henrietta (I1547)
 
505 Janet is the eldest of all John's natural children Daley, Janet (I1943)
 
506 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Goslin Oswald Daley / G? (F938)
 
507 Jean Richardson was Elsie Utting's adopted sister. She once told me that she actually saw 3 queens... Victoria, Queen Mum (Elizabeth Bowes Lyon) and King George was it and our queen now (Elizabeth II). Also she waved off the Titanic as she had an aunt on there. Richardson, Sarah Jane (I1222)
 
508 Joan was aged 3 years when her father died. William Arden of Haverings was later guardian to this little girl. Thrale, Joan (I1180)
 
509 Joan was their only child Family: Louis Frederick Charlwood / Elizabeth Sales (F601)
 
510 John and Abigail had three children and this branch of the family emmigrated to South Africa in 1820 as Cape Settlers. Family: John Grindon / Abigail Thrale (F116)
 
511 John Hosford and his brother-in-law Timothy Thrall, were apparently close friends and supported each other in town and church affairs. Philippa bore ten children, four of whom married grandchildren of original Colony members, and son John married Deborah, daughter of Peter Brown of Plymouth.

John Hosford was a member of a troop of 37 horsemen, first in the Colony, organized by the General Court and commanded by Capt. John Mason. John is mentioned in the records of Old Windsor as a carpenter, a master work-man at building houses.

John Hosford's will shows: To his son, William, 225 pounds, John, 121 pounds, daus. Hester, Mary and Sarah, 100 pounds each, and to Obadiah, 122 pounds (Col.Rec.).

John Hosford was given by William Thrall, the fifty acres granted the older man for his services in the first Pequod War. John Hosford was the son of Elder Wm. Hosford, who also came on the "Mary and John". Elder Hosford left his land and house to his son John Hosford upon returning to England. John Hosford and his brother-in-Law Timothy Thrall, were apparently close friends and supported each other in town and church affairs. 
Hosford, John (I110)
 
512 John inherited the baronetcy at his birth on the following August 1 after the death of his father (Gent. Mag. xxix. 194; lxxii. 376). He was made the ward of his uncle Henry Thrale 1724-1781 and fulfilled Dr. Johnson's worst predictions, becoming one of the notorious rakes of the Prince of Wales's circle, going through his own fortune and his mother's, which he inherited in 1802, and landing in King's Bench prison in 1813, whence Lady Keith (Queeney Thrale) tried to rescue him by appealing, in vain, to his former patron, the Prince Regent. Bowood Papers. Johnson sent the verses to Mrs. Thrale on August 8. Both the covering note and the verses are now in the Huntington Library. The verses were first published entire in Mrs. Piozzi's British Synonymy (1794) but the fourth stanza appeared in her Anecdotes (p. 281).

One of Henry Thrale?s sisters was Lady Mary Lade (1733-1802), who married Baronet Sir John Lade on 27 May 1756. They had a son, also called John who inherited his father?s fortune and Baronetcy. Sir John Lade the junior was made ward of Henry Thrale, but when freed of this he took Samuel Johnson's advice and became a notorious rake.

See: http://www.thrale.com/sir_john_lade 
Lade, Baronet Sir John (I604)
 
513 John is listed as a Thrall, John IV (I204)
 
514 John is not believed to have had a son John Thrall VII Thrall, John Henry VI (I186)
 
515 John Salusbury's Patron was Lord Halifax, Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland and President of the Board of Trade in October 1748 (a title for a ministerial post in the British Government).

John Salusbury appears in the background of Zoffany's painting of his widow. 
Salusbury, John (I425)
 
516 John Thrale's successor to ownership of the "Bore's head tavern in Old Fish Street' was his oldest son John upon his death in 1616.(31) He left a large family and is described as a yoeman of Hoggesdon, Middlesex. Thrale, John (I1192)
 
517 John's christening place may have been Johnston, New York. Thrall, John V (I175)
 
518 Joseph and his father are partners in a large tobacco farm. He attended The Loomis School and graduated from Yale. Joseph is tall, lean and perhaps what we picture as a typical Yankee. He knows the tobacco business and has done well with it, being a large producer of Shade Grown wrapper tobacco. His wife, Marian, takes real interest in both tobacco and cattle and keeps the records. Joseph and Marian have a place in Florida where they spend some time in the winter, but the farm is so beautifully located on the Fannington River, one never needs leave in sunnier. The house overlooks Hoyts Meadow where the first Thrall in America tilled the soil that Joseph is tilling today. The movie "Parrish" depicting the life and growth of Shade Tobacco, was made on the Thrall farm (http://uk.imdb.com/title/tt0055279/?fr=c2l0ZT11a3xteD0yMHxzZz0xfGxtPTIwMHx0dD1vbnxwbj0wfHE9cGFycmlzaHxodG1sPTF8bm09b24_;fc=1;ft=122;fm=1). Thrall, Joseph Benjamin (I2601)
 
519 Joseph Thrall sold house and land in Windsor Conn on 7 December 1736 to Daniel Pinney for 170 pounds [source: Thrall genealogy 1630-1965 D Stephen Thrall] Thrall, Joseph (I324)
 
520 Judge of the Common Pleas Court Rose, Timothy (I550)
 
521 Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in Licking County, Ohio Bancroft, Samuel (I651)
 
522 Julius was a Republican, member of the City Council and socially connected with the Golden Cross Society. Thrall, Julius Strong (I1854)
 
523 Justice of the Peace Thrall, Aaron (I352)
 
524 Justice of the Peace Thrall, Eliphas (I354)
 
525 Justice of the peace Rose, Deacon Lemuel (I551)
 
526 killed at Bottom Bridge Babcock, Martin U (I1981)
 
527 Killed at Dunkirk. The War Graves Commission records his age as being 21. This is incorrect. He died aged 18 because. Louis lied about his age so that he could enlist without obtaining his parents' permission which would otherwise have been required because of his young age.

Louis Bloch Private 5340010 4th Bn., Royal Berkshire Regiment who died on Sunday 26th May 1940. Age 21.
Cemetery: DUNKIRK MEMORIAL, Nord, France.
Grave Reference/Panel Number: Column 111.

Location: The Dunkirk Memorial stands at the entrance to the British War Graves Section of Dunkirk Town Cemetery, which lies at the south-eastern corner of the town of Dunkirk, immediately south of the canal and on the road to Veurne (Furnes) in Belgium.

Historical Information: Dunkirk witnessed the landing of the British Expeditionary Force in September and October 1914. Throughout the First World War, it was a seaplane base and later an American Naval Air Service base. The town was also a French hospital centre and the 8th Canadian Stationary Hospital was there from November 1918 to April 1919. Although an estimated 7,500 shells and bombs fell on the town during the war, ship-building and other port activities continued. During the Second World War, Dunkirk was the scene of the historic evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from France in May 1940. DUNKIRK TOWN CEMETERY contains 450 Commonwealth burials of the First World War, ten of them unidentified. The graves are situated in Plots 1 to 3 in the public part of the cemetery to the right of the main entrance, and in Plots 4 and 5 of the Commonwealth War Graves section adjacent to the Dunkirk Memorial. Of the 800 Second World War burials, more than 200 are unidentified and special memorials are erected to 58 soldiers known to be buried among them. These graves are in Plots 1 and 2 of the section by the Dunkirk Memorial. There are also Czech, Norwegian and Polish war graves within the Commonwealth section, and war graves of other nationalities will be found elsewhere within the cemetery. The DUNKIRK MEMORIAL stands a the entrance to the Commonwealth War Graves section of Dunkirk Town Cemetery. It commemorates more than 4,500 casualties of the British Expeditionary Force who died in the campaign of 1939-40 and who have no known grave. The memorial was designed by Philip Hepworth. The engraved glass panel depicting the evacuation was by John Hutton. 
Block, Louis (I413)
 
528 Killed. Was pilot in USAF Thrall, Gordon Edward (I3338)
 
529 Knighted by King Henry VII after the battle of Blackheath. Salusbury, Sir Thomas (I784)
 
530 Knighted in 1477 Savage, Sir Knt John (I540)
 
531 Kpt a sizable farm on Union Hill near Cuba, New York, which was passed onto his son, Lowell, and then to his grandson, Ralph. Thrall, Brigham N (I1864)
 
532 Leader of "Mary and John" missionaries Wareham, Rev. John (I871)
 
533 Leah's memorial stone reads .... IN HEBREW Here lies Leah, daughter of Mordecai Who died on 7 AV 5744 May she rest in peace. IN ENGLISH In loving memory of Leah (Lily) Block Died Aug 5th 1984 7 AV 5744 Age 80 Deeply mourned by her devoted husband Henry Daughters Shirley and Lindsay, Sons in law Grand children, relatives and friends For ever in our thoughts.

The grave was consecrated on 2 June 1986 
Abrahams (Lily), Leah (I372)
 
534 Learned the art of printing in the office of the Ohio State Journal and stayed there for 18 years, from apprentice to foreman. He left to go to the Columbus Gazette as half-owner. Thrall, Lucien G (I473)
 
535 Learned the trade of a finisher, and took charge of the fimishing room in a mill in Stafford Springs. Later went to Coventry where his uncle D. B. Bacon had charge of a mill. In 1857 he entered the shuttle business, getting out the square blocks of timber his arm came into contact with the saw, inflicting an injury which cripplrd him. He returned to farming at his father's home, and later went into the livery business. Thrall, Julius Strong (I1854)
 
536 Leipsig and Paris Thrall, Rev. Joseph Brainerd (I1804)
 
537 LEONARD for some years, was connected with the banking business in Independence, Kansas, and Hamilton, Kansas. Later he moved to Tulsa Oklahoma where he is with a large department store. Thrall, Leonard Noble (I2700)
 
538 Licking Land Company Thrall, Samuel (I351)
 
539 Like all the rest of the family since Esther SMITH, his mother, he was short, about five feet four inches, weight about 135, blue yes, brown hair. Wore a beard most of his life. Thrall, James Murdock (I2028)
 
540 Like his father William B learnt the printing trade before he left Vermont. It is possible that he worked with his father in Circleville, Ohio in 1819 in the printing business. Later he formed a partnership and produced a newspaper called the Circleville Herald. He move to Columbus Ohio and became publisher of the ohio State Journal. He was a thirty-third degree Mason and Grand master of Ohio. He served as treasurer of the state of Ohio for several years. He was a tall robust man with a dominating personality.

Had nine children with Maria Rockwell, five of whom died young.

See http://www.freemason.com/PGM/william_thrall.htm 
Thrall, William Barlow (I418)
 
541 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Bell, Jayne Christine (I45915)
 
542 Lived at home for some time and took about 5 pupils aged 6-11 years for a little pocket money.

Looked after both my parents until their death and was left what little money there was also furniture, etc. 
Robards, Elizabeth (I33)
 
543 Living on 25 Mar 2005. Wilsher, Gill (I1570)
 
544 Living on 25 Mar 2005. Wilsher, Derek (I1572)
 
545 Living on 25 March 2005. Wood, Doreen (I1574)
 
546 Living on 25 March 2005. Wilsher, Graham (I1575)
 
547 Lloyd graduated from the medical school at the University of vermont. He interned at Mary Fletcher Hospital in Hanover, N.H. and did a tour of duty as an army medical officer in Germany where they spent their early married life. Soon after he returned to the States, he went to the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn. Lloyd is now on the Mayo staff. Bartholomew, Lloyd G M.D. (I2734)
 
548 Lost right arm in Battle Corinth Thrall, John Eberly (I1723)
 
549 Louisa Cooper's mother was in a lunatic asylum so she was brought up by her mother's sister Matilda England who married Henry Yates a Victualler. Cooper, Louise (I1023)
 
550 Luther had a fine sense of humor and priceless smile. He was a strict and respected father.

Luther and Elsie devoted their time to stimulating their children's ambitions. When the boys were in their teens, they decided they would like to raise chickens. Instead of giving the boys the initial investment, Luther took them to the bank and the transaction was handled in a business- like manner. Because the boys were minors, Luther endorsed their note, but the boys paid it all back in a year and a half, as they sold chickens and eggs.

Luther was always busy at something. He became interested in automobiles when they were new and kept abreast, all his life. He was a skilled mechanical engineer and was foreman of A.Y.Gray Company in Poultney, manufacturers of Ruggles engines. The plant burned down just after World War I. Luther then turned to selling Pierce Arrow automobiles, and he was still in the automobile business when he died. He was always fixing automobiles and his son recalls that before garages were common, the back yard was always full of cars which he fixed for his friends.

When he was in his late fifties, he developed a great interest in the old family homestead and farm which at that time was owned by his son, Durward Stephen. Although Elsie would not go there to live. Luther took over the direction of the farm and it is one of the few times that the farm made money.

Luther and Elsie both coordinated well and liked sports and dancing. They lived in Poultney, Vermont until about 1920 when they moved to Rutland, Vermont. Luther was a Mason, and Warden of the Episcopal vestry in both places. 
Thrall, Luther Gardner (I2177)
 

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