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1601 Richard Gildersleeve was born about 1601, based on his reported age of 76 stated in a deposition in 1677. [1] [2]

1636 Richard Gildersleeve had immigrated to New England and was living in Wethersfield, Connecticut, by September 1. On that date, the court held at Wethersfield (at that time called Watertown) ordered "Mr. Jo: Plum' [Plumb] & Rich. Gildersleeue together wth the constable shall survey the saide Inventory [of Mr. John Oldham] and prfect the same before the next Corte." [3] Adams and Stiles list Richard Gildersleeve among "the names of additional settlers" in Wethersfield "nearly all from places other than Watertown; some directly from England; most came between 1636 and 1640, none later than 1645." [4]

1639 Richard Gildersleeve was one of seventy freemen of New Haven on a list written by clerk Thomas Fugill. [5] The list immediately proceeds Fugill's record stating that on the "4th day of the 4th moneth called June 1639, all the free planters assembled together in a ge[neral] meetinge to consult about settling ciuill gouernmt according to God, and about the nominatio' of persons thatt might be founde by consent of all fittest in all respects for the foundaco' worke of a church w[hich] was intend to be gathered in Quinipieck."

1639 Richard Gildersleeve and Jacob Waterhouse sued each other for debts at a Particular Court held at Hartford on November 7. "Richard Gildersley contra Jacob Waterhouse, in an action of debt. Jury find for plf 14l. 8s. 9d. Costs and damages 6s. Jacob Waterhouse contra Ric. Gildersleeue, in an action of debt. The Jury find for the plf. For a hog, 2l. 0s. 0d. Damages 1l. 17s. 4d. Costs of suite, 0l. 6s. 0d." [6]

1640 At a General Court at Hartford on June 11th, "Richard Gyldersly was conuented before the Courte for casteing out prnitious speeches, tending to the detriment & dishonnor of this Com[m]onwelth, and was fyned to pay to the Country forty shillings, and was bownd to his good behauior, in a Recognizance of 20l. to apeare at the next Generall Courte, to the wch he submitted himselfe. [7][8]

1640 Richard Gildersleeve, and many others, left the church at Wethersfield with Rev. Richard Denton and started the process of removing to Stamford which was under the jurisdiction of New Haven. Stamford was called Toquams in 1640 and then called Rippowams before being renamed as Stamford in 1642. [9]

1641 A General Court held at Hartford on April 9 ordered, "Rich: Gyldersly his fyne of 40s. is to be forborne vntill the Generall Court in September." [10]

1641 Richard Gildersleeve, John Gibbs, and John Livermore, who had been neighbors living on the west side of High Street in Wethersfield, were among settlers to New Haven from Wethersfield. Adams states that "it is probable that these persons removed to New Haven later than 1638; some as late as 1640-1." [11]

1641 A group of twenty men including Richard Gildersleeve agreed to move to Rippowams to start a plantation there. [12]

men whose names are underwriten haue bound thems[elues] under the paine of forfiture of 5lb a man to goe or sende to Ripp[owams] to begin and psecute the designe of a plantation there … Mr Ri. Denton to Remoue his familie thethr by ye 16th of May next, the rest, theire familyes thither by ye last of Nouember 12 monthe

Ri. Denton Tho. Weekes
Ma. Mitchell Jon. Wood H
Thur. Rainer Jer. Jaggar
Robt. Coe Jo. Jissopp
And. Ward Jo. Seaman
Ri. Gildersleue Sam Sherman
Edm Wood Hen Smith
Jon. Wood Vincint Simkins
Jer. Wood Dan ffinch
Sam Clarke Jo Northens

1641 Richard Gildersleeve sold a 225 acre lot in Wethersfield, perhaps on Frog Brook, to John Talcott. [13]

Richard Gildersleeve was allotted 13 acres of marsh and upland in Stamford. [14]

1642 On 7 January, Richard Gildersleve was listed on a rate list for Stamford, Connecticut. [15]

1643 "Captaine John Vnderhill and Richard Geldersleeve" were the deputies from Stamford to the New Haven Legislature (General Court) in April and "Rich: Gildersleeve" and "John Whitmore" were the deputies from Stamford to the General Court at New Haven in October. [16] [17] [18]

1644 Richard Gildersleeve moved from Stamford, Connecticut to Newtown, Long Island with several others. [19]

1647 The first division of land for Hempstead, Queens County in 1647 named Richard Gildersleeve, among the freeholders. [20] [21]

1649 On 26 February, Richard Gildersleeve and others wrote a letter to Governor Peter Stuyvesant. [22]

1652 Richard Gildersleeve, Daniel Coe, and Daniel Whitehead were magistrates of Hempstead. [23]

1656 On 21 December, John Seaman and Richard Gildersleeve were appointed magistrates of Hempstead. [24]

1657 On 17 March, Adam Mott, ffrancis weeckes, richard brutnall, richard vallingtyne, and robard beadille were chosen by the town of Hempstead as "townsmen" for a one year appointment. On 16 April, the magistrates, R Gildersleeve [Gildersleve] and John Seaman, of Hempstead engaged themselves to stand by and bear out the named townsmen in all acts and orders as shall conduce for ye good and benefit of this town of Hempstead. [25]

1657 An account of calves given in to be kept 1657 listed Sargant Gildersleeve [gillderslieve] with 9. [26]

1657 Hempstead town records included rules about fencing and management of cattle. Mr. Gildersleeve [gillderslieves] had six cattle reported in a listing of cattle ownership. [27]

1657 On 11 June, an account of the number of cattle turned to the neck recorded Mr. Gildersleeve [gillderslievs] hath one mare and one colt. [28]

1657 On 4 July, representatives of several Indian groups confirmed that the land of Hempstead, Long Island had been sold in 1643. Richard Gildersleeve, John Seaman, and John Hicks were witnesses. [29] [30]

1657 Richard Gildersleeve [gillderslieves] was paid five shillings by the town of Hempstead for "one book bought for the use of the towne". [31]

1658 On 28 March, Mr. Richard Gildersleeve and others were ordered to go with Chekanow to lay out the general bounds of town lands, as authorized by the Montauk Sachem. [32]

1658 On 18 April, Mr. Richard Gildersleeve, Magistrate, and others held court at Hempstead concerning two women who absented themselves from public worship and went to a "conventicle in the woods where were two Quakers". [33]

1658 On the last of April, a list of the number of gates [fences?] kept at the neck [Hempstead] reported that Mr. Gildersleeve [gilderslieve] had seven gates. [34] [35]

1658 On 10 July, From the Town Book of Hempstead, July 10, 1658: "Ordered and Agreed at Generall Town Meeting that Richard Gildersleeve is to goe to Manhattan to agree with the Government concerning the tythes & it is ordered they are not to exceede 100 schepels of wheate. ... The Chardges of his journey is to be defrayde by the Towne." [36]

c 1658 [no date recorded] An accounting of the acres of meadow given out in allotments to inhabitants of Hempstead reported Mr. Gilderslieve hath 55 acres. [37]

1658 On 27 November, Richard Gildersleeve and Robert Foreman were nominated, and then appointed, magistrates of Hempstead. [38]

1659 Both Rich'd Gildersleeve and Mr. Gildersleeve were listed among "persons that are to fense and Inclose Rockoway w'th ye Nomb'r of their gates donn at A full town-meeting the 17th of Aprill 1659." [39]

1658/59 John Smith Nants, Mr. Gildersleeve, and Samuel Gildersleeve were among those compensated by the town of Hempstead on February 3 for goods or services rendered to the town during 1658. [40] [41]

February ye third Anno 1659 The Publick debts and chardge of the towne for the year Last past Anno 1658 brought in by ye persons vndernamed.
£-s-d …
John Smith Nants 1 dayes Journey in Layeing out ye towne bounds 0-4-0

for ye exchange of one kettell by Mr Gildersleve to the s'd vse [to ye Indians use the value for Exchange] 1-1-4
Vnto him for himself and his horss in Laying out ye towne-boundes 0-18-0
More to Mr Gildersleve for one Journey to ye dutch concerning the tenths 0-15-0

To Mr Gildersleve for ^ A bushell of Indian corn to Eamoreck, an Indian for killing an wolfe 0-2-6
To him for 2 dayes laying out ye bounds 0-8-0
To him for Entertainment of ye Indians 2-0-0
To him for 2 dayes worck in Laying out ye Medowes 0-6-0

To Samuell Guildersleve for himselfe & horss in goeing to ye neck by ye Townesmens ordre 0-5-0

1664 On May 12, Richard Gildersleeve, Sr. and Jr., and others, "Inhabitants of Hempstead made freemen of Connecticut." [42]

1665 Richard Gildersleeve was foreman of a jury in Long Island for a case John Richbell brought against the inhabitants of Huntington regarding Richbell's land in Horse Neck. [43]

1668 March 6, "Confirmation Patent for the town of Hempsteed on Long Island from Gov Nicolls to John Hicks, John Seaman, Richard Gildersleeve, and others freeholders of said town." [44]

1669 April 9, Mr. Gildersleeve was appointed to go to New York to negotiate with Captain Niccols about the Hempstead patent.

Mr. Gildersleeve is chosen to go to New York to fetch the patent, and to speak with Capt. Nicolls to know what the town is indebted to him for the patent, and what he demands more than ho hath already had. Mr. G. is to engage, in the town's behalf, to see him paid. — B., 177.

1670 On 18 July, "we Mr. Richard Gildersleeve, and Lieutenant Adam Mott, both of Hempsteed in the North Riding of New Yorshire, have exchanged a Parcell or Parcells of Meadow, the said Mr. Gildersleeve having a Parcell of Meadow lying at a Neck comonly called the great Neck" ... "And I the abovesaid Lieutenant Adam Mott Senior, having a certaine Parcell or Parcells of Meadow lying at a Neck comonly called Mercock or Merock" [45]

1673 Richard Gildersly was named as an inhabitant of Hempstead, Long Island. [46]

1677 On 22 July, Mr and Mrs Gildersleeve, aged 76 and 76, made depositions. [47]

1677, July 22.— Mr. Gildersleeve, aged seventy-six, says that Tackapousha and some of his Indians came to my house, twenty years ago, to receive pay for their land, and Mr. Hicks and myself delivered to them the whole pay for the whole tracts of land. Some things were paid them more than they had agreed for. It was in several sorts of pay — great and small kettles, Wampum, hoes, hatchets, knives, trading cloths and (I think) powder and lead. They went away, for any thing I knew, very well satisfied. They only reserved their old planting land at Meruck; and the Montauk sachem went with us to lay out the bounds.

Mrs. Gildersleeve, aged seventy-six, says that the sachem and other Indians being at our house, about twenty-one years ago, I saw several sorts of goods delivered to them, as a great heap of wampum, coats, powder, lead, hoes, hatchets, knives and kettles. The Indians had a great desire to have some bigger kettles, and we let them have one great kettle and Mr. Jackson another* and the sachem would have some shirts to gratify his Indians.— Eng. MSS., xxvi., 70, 73.
* The extra cost of exchanging these two kettles was 21s. each.

Research Notes:

1679 "Rich Gillderslive" and "Rich gillderslive Juner" (perhaps the son and grandson of this Richard Gildersleeve or perhaps two grandsons?) were in a list of names above the words: "Att A Generall Towne Meetting helld att hempsted y'e 24 of June : 1679 itt was Voatted and Agreed apon tthatt those persons above named shall have libertty." [48]

1682 On May 24, a Richard Gildersleeve [Gilderslive] S[enior] was on a list who agreed to live under the ministry of Jeremy Hubard and to pay [taxes] in "corn or cattell". [49]

1683 On 11 October, a Richard Gildersleeve [Guildersleiff] Senior was named on a rates list for Hempstead with 2 heads, 50 [acres or morgens?] land and meadows, 8 oxen, 7 cows, 4 hogs, 13 sheep, and 3 horses. [50] [51]

1687 On 22 September, a Richard Gildersleeve Sr, of Hempstead, [sold land] to William Jones of Madnan's Neck. [52]

The name of the wife of Richard Gildersleeve has been reported to be Experience. [53]

1688 On December 6, a Richard Gildersleeve of Crab Meadow, Huntingtowne, Suffolk County, and Experience, his wife, sold 44 acres to Elias Doughty, of Flushing. [54]

Richard Gildersleeve's wife has been named as Jo Anna Appleton, born 1601 in Suffolk, England, died about 1677. [http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=ref1&id=I845614&style=TABLE]

1652 Flint states that Richard Gildersleeve, of Hempstead, settled at Newtown. [55]

In 1652, another party came from New England to plant a colony, and were joined by Robert Coe and Mr. Richard Gildersleeve of Heemstede. They established themselves just east of Mespat, in distinction from which the settlement was called the New Town, although it was officially named Middelburgh, in fond remembrance of the capital of Zealand where many of the English Separatists had found a welcome.

They were given the civil and religious rights of Doughty's Patent, electing their own Townsmen. In their hands were all the affairs of the town, save the admission of new inhabitants and the allotment of land. These questions, as of prime importance, were brought before the " General Court," a primary Assembly, or Folk-mote, true survival of the greater Gemotes of the primeval German forests. Failing, however, to receive from Stuyvesant a confirmation of their patent, they bought the land of the sachems Rowerowestco and Pomwaukom, April 19, 1656. Every purchaser paid one shilling an acre, and the list of this "Indian Rate" preserves the names of Newtown [Richard Gildersleeve is listed]

The following people with surname Gildersleeve were included in the Suffolk 1524 Subsidy Return:

Babergh Hundred, Stoke juxta Neylond, Richard Gyldersleeve, £3 1s. 6d. [56]
Bosmere & Clayton Hundred, Blakyngham super Montem, William Gyldenscleve in movablis, £2 1s. 0d.[57]
Bosmer &Clayton Hundred, Mekefeld, Thomas Gyldenscleve in Movablis £8 8s. 0d. [58]
Carlford Hundred, Grondysborow, Robert Geldyngsleffe in goods £3 1s. 6d. [59]
Cosford Hundred, Elmyssett, William Mannhng, William Gyldersleve £6 6s. 0d. [60]
Cosford Hundred, Elmyssett, Thomas Gildersleve (in a list of "laborers and servauntes every of them taxid at 4d"). [61]
Hartismere Hundred, Wethersett cum Brokforde, John Gyldensleve in goodes £6 13s. 4d. [62]
Hartismere Hundred, Thornham Magna, Jeffrey Gyldsleve, ror wages and profett of wages £1. [63]

The following people with surname Gildersleeve were included in the Suffolk 1566 Subsidy Return:

Bosmere and Claydon Hundred, Brisset Magna, William Gildersleve £3 in londes 2s. 8d. [64]
Carlford Hundred, Grundisburghe, Roberte Gildersleve £10 in goodes 8s. 4d. [65]
Hartismere Hundred, Wetheringset cum Brockforde, John Gildersleve £3 in bonis 2s. 6d. [66]
Hoxne Hundred, Brundishe, Roger Gyldersleve £6 in bonis 5s. 0d. [67]
Stowe Hundred, Neuton cum Dagworth, Thomas Gyldensleve £10 in goodes 8s. 4d. [68]


Footnotes:

[1] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 51, [HathiTrust].

[2] Mary Powell Bunker, Long Island Genealogies (Albany: Joel Munsell Sons, 1895), 338, [GoogleBooks].

[3] J. Hammond Trumbull, The public records of the Colony of Connecticut Prior to the Union with New Haven Colony, May, 1665 (Hartford: Brown & Parsons, 1850), 3, [HathiTrust].

[4] Henry R Stiles, The History of Ancient Wethersfield Connecticut, Vol. 1, (NY: Grafton Press, 1904), 30, [HathiTrust].

[5] Charles J. Hoadly, ed., Records of the Colony and plantation of New Haven, From 1638 to 1649 (Hartford: Case, Tiffany and Company, 1857), 10, [HathiTrust], [HathiTrust], [InternetArchive].

[6] J. Hammond Trumbull, The public records of the Colony of Connecticut Prior to the Union with New Haven Colony, May, 1665 (Hartford: Brown & Parsons, 1850), 40, [HathiTrust].

[7] J. Hammond Trumbull, The public records of the Colony of Connecticut Prior to the Union with New Haven Colony, May, 1665 (Hartford: Brown & Parsons, 1850), 51, [HathiTrust].

[8] Henry R Stiles, The History of Ancient Wethersfield Connecticut, Vol. 1, (NY: Grafton Press, 1904), 75, [HathiTrust].

[9] Henry R Stiles, The History of Ancient Wethersfield Connecticut, Vol. 1, (NY: Grafton Press, 1904), 142-43, [HathiTrust].

[10] J. Hammond Trumbull, The public records of the Colony of Connecticut Prior to the Union with New Haven Colony, May, 1665 (Hartford: Brown & Parsons, 1850), 65, [HathiTrust].

[11] Henry R Stiles, The History of Ancient Wethersfield Connecticut, Vol. 1, (NY: Grafton Press, 1904), 140, [HathiTrust].

[12] "Stamford (Conn.) Town Records Volume 1," The American Genealogist 10 (1933), 40-45, 110-118, at 40, [AmericanAncestors].

[13] Henry R Stiles, The History of Ancient Wethersfield Connecticut, Vol. 1, (NY: Grafton Press, 1904), 190 and 274, [HathiTrust].

[14] "Stamford (Conn.) Town Records Volume 1," The American Genealogist 10 (1933), 40-45, 110-118, at 41, [AmericanAncestors].

[15] "Stamford (Conn.) Town Records Volume 1," The American Genealogist 10 (1933), 40-45, 110-118, at 43, citing Stamford town records, 15, [AmericanAncestors].

[16] Donald Lines Jacobus, compiler, "List of Officials in Connecticut and New Haven Colonies 1636-1665," Families of Ancient New Haven, vol. 4 (Rome, NY: 1927), 961-1010, at 981, [AmericanAncestors].

[17] Charles J. Hoadly, ed., Records of the Colony and plantation of New Haven, From 1638 to 1649 (Hartford: Case, Tiffany and Company, 1857), 85, [HathiTrust], [HathiTrust], [InternetArchive].

[18] Charles J. Hoadly, ed., Records of the Colony and plantation of New Haven, From 1638 to 1649 (Hartford: Case, Tiffany and Company, 1857), 112, [HathiTrust], [HathiTrust], [InternetArchive].

[19] Mary Powell Bunker, Long Island Genealogies (Albany: Joel Munsell Sons, 1895), 338, [GoogleBooks].

[20] Orra Eugene Monnette, First Settlers of ye Plantations of Piscataway and Woodbridge, Olde East New Jersey, Part One (Los Angeles: Leroy Carman Press, 1930), 162, citing Thompson, Vol 3, p 109, [GoogleBooks], [GoogleBooks].

[21] Charles Werner and Benjamin F. Thompson, History of Long Island, 3rd edition, Vol. 3 (1918), 109, [InternetArchive].

[22] B. Fernow, Documents relating to the History of the Early Colonial Settlements principally on Long Island (Albany, 1883), 110, [GoogleBooks].

[23] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 16, [HathiTrust].

[24] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 16, [HathiTrust].

[25] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 16, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[26] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 21, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[27] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 18, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[28] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 28, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[29] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 46, of 45-46, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[30] B. Fernow, Documents relating to the History of the Early Colonial Settlements principally on Long Island (Albany, 1883), 416, [GoogleBooks].

[31] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 19, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[32] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 20, left column, [HathiTrust].

[33] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 18, left column, [HathiTrust].

[34] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 38, [HathiTrust].

[35] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 21, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[36] Martha Bockée Flint, Early Long Island, a colonial study, 131, [HathiTrust].

[37] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 31, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[38] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 18, right column, [HathiTrust].

[39] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 81, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[40] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 64-67, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[41] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 19, [HathiTrust].

[42] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 44, citing Trumbull's Conn. Rec, i., 429, [HathiTrust].

[43] B. Fernow, Documents relating to the History of the Early Colonial Settlements principally on Long Island (Albany, 1883), 570, [GoogleBooks].

[44] Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan, Calendar of N.Y. Colonial Manuscripts, Indorsed Land Papers; In the Office of the Secretary of State of New York 1643-1803 (Albany, New York: Weed, Parsons & Co, 1864), 4, [GoogleBooks].

[45] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 271, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[46] Charles T Gritman, Historical Miscellany (NY?: 1920?), [AncestryImage].

[47] Henry Onderdonk, The Annals of Hempstead, 1643 to 1832 (Hempstead, NY: Lott Van de Water, 1878), 51, [HathiTrust].

[48] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 325, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[49] Benjamin D. Hicks, Records of the Towns of North and South Hempstead Long Island N.Y., Vol. 1 (1896), 380, [InternetArchive], [HathiTrust].

[50] Christopher Morgan and Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan, The Documentary History of the State of New York, Vol. 2 (1850), 524, [HathiTrust], [HathiTrust].

[51] Charles T Gritman, Historical Miscellany (NY?: 1920?), [AncestryImage].

[52] Charles T Gritman, Historical Miscellany (NY?: 1920?), 1-388, citing QR180, Liber A-41, [AncestryImage].

[53] Mary Powell Bunker, Long Island Genealogies (Albany: Joel Munsell Sons, 1895), 338, [GoogleBooks].

[54] Charles T Gritman, Historical Miscellany (NY?: 1920?), 1_400, citing QR283, Liber B1-149, [AncestryImage].

[55] Martha Bockée Flint, Early Long Island, a colonial study, 166-67, [HathiTrust].

[56] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1524 being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1523, Suffolk Green Books, no. 10 (Woodbridge: George Booth, 1910), 11, [HathiTrust].

[57] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1524 being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1523, Suffolk Green Books, no. 10 (Woodbridge: George Booth, 1910), 127, [HathiTrust].

[58] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1524 being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1523, Suffolk Green Books, no. 10 (Woodbridge: George Booth, 1910), 129, [HathiTrust].

[59] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1524 being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1523, Suffolk Green Books, no. 10 (Woodbridge: George Booth, 1910), 139, [HathiTrust].

[60] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1524 being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1523, Suffolk Green Books, no. 10 (Woodbridge: George Booth, 1910), 163, [HathiTrust].

[61] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1524 being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1523, Suffolk Green Books, no. 10 (Woodbridge: George Booth, 1910), 163, [HathiTrust].

[62] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1524 being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1523, Suffolk Green Books, no. 10 (Woodbridge: George Booth, 1910), 174, [HathiTrust].

[63] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1524 being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1523, Suffolk Green Books, no. 10 (Woodbridge: George Booth, 1910), 177, [HathiTrust].

[64] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1568 Subsidy being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1566 Suffolk Green Books, no. 12 (Bury St Edmunds: Paul & Mather, 1909), 83, [HathiTrust].

[65] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1568 Subsidy being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1566 Suffolk Green Books, no. 12 (Bury St Edmunds: Paul & Mather, 1909), 92, [HathiTrust].

[66] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1568 Subsidy being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1566 Suffolk Green Books, no. 12 (Bury St Edmunds: Paul & Mather, 1909), 127, [HathiTrust].

[67] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1568 Subsidy being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1566 Suffolk Green Books, no. 12 (Bury St Edmunds: Paul & Mather, 1909), 145, [HathiTrust].

[68] Sydenham Henry Augustus Hervey, ed., Suffolk in 1568 Subsidy being the Return for a Subsidy granted in 1566 Suffolk Green Books, no. 12 (Bury St Edmunds: Paul & Mather, 1909), 240, [HathiTrust].