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Topic: St Mary Aldermary


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  History in Focus: Medical History (Epidemic Disease)
In 1593 the first parish to show increased mortality was again St Botolph but this was very early in the year, during the week beginning 15 April, and this must be considered extraordinarily early for bubonic plague.
St Botolph was again the first parish to show signs of increasing mortality in 1625 but this was even earlier than before, during the week beginning 11 March.
St Katharine by the Tower had increased burials at the end of April but it was not until the week beginning 13 August that deaths began to increase in St Stephen Walbrook in the city centre.
www.history.ac.uk /ihr/Focus/Medical/epitwig.html   (3984 words)

  
  D. Scott Scheibe's Collected Ancestory Thirteenth Generation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Elizabeth LEAKE was born 1594 in St. Mary Parish, Aldermary, London, England and was christened in St. Mary Parish, Aldermary, London, England.
Mary Peppit/ PEPPER was christened 25 Mar 1630 in St. Mary Parish, Aldermary, London, England.
Marie WIGHT was born 2 Sep 1610 in Hareby, Lincolnshire, England.
home.earthlink.net /~dsscheibe/gmain/aqwg21.htm   (1809 words)

  
 D. Scott Scheibe's Collected Ancestory Twelfth Generation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Mary CLARK was born 26 Mar 1649 in Dedham, Norfolk, Massachusetts.
Mary HINSDALE was born 14 Feb 1643/1644 in Dedham, Norfolk, Massachusetts and was christened 25 Feb 1643/1644 in Dedham, Norfolk, Massachusetts.
Mary MORSE was born 28 Feb 1650 in Dedham, Norfolk, Massachusetts and was christened 29 Sep 1650 in Dedham, Norfolk, Massachusetts.
home.earthlink.net /~dsscheibe/gmain/aqwg18.htm   (3274 words)

  
 St Mary le Bow Church, London - The Crypt
The 1087 building was apparently one of the earliest stone churches in London, and the tower of that church was crowned by five lanterns, four at the corners of the tower and the fifth held aloft on flying buttresses.
In the eleventh century St Mary-le-Bow was known as St Mary Newchurch to distinguish it from its near neighbour St Mary Aldermary (Older Mary) which is located at the end of Bow Lane, about two hundred yards to the south of St Mary-le-Bow.
Arising from its close relationship with the See of Canterbury, St Mary’s served as the meeting place of the medieval Court of Arches, though a Daily Telegraph pamphlet produced in 1964 to mark the re-consecration of the church notes that 'the Court was later moved to the Sanctuary of Westminster where its successors now meet'.
www.stmarylebow.co.uk /?History:The_Crypt   (330 words)

  
 St Mary le Bow Church, London - Celebrated Rectors
Having served as Rector of St Mary-le-Bow, Fotherby became Prebendery and Archdeacon of Canterbury in 1596 and Dean in 1615.
(St Antholin Budge Row was demolished in the 1870s and the parish was joined to that of St Mary Aldermary).
He was buried in St Paul’s and a monument - where 'Religion and Science, in sculpture, by Thomas Banks, deplore his loss, and beneath are lines by the 'ingenious Mrs Carter'' - was erected to him by his widow in St Mary-le-Bow.
www.stmarylebow.co.uk /?History:Celebrated_Rectors   (2082 words)

  
 St. Mary Aldermary, London - Archdale, Combs &c.
Mary the Virgin Aldermary), survived the Great Fire, and was rebuilt by Wren in 1682.
Thomas the Apostle were ultimately all united with St. Mary Aldermary (not to be confused with St. Mary the Virgin Aldermanbury).
The earliest Combs in the parish records of St. Mary Aldermary is in 1751, and continue well into the 1800s.
www.combs-families.org /combs/records/england/lnd/stmaryaldermary.htm   (488 words)

  
 St Mary Aldermary, City of London - London - UK Attraction
The Church of St Mary Aldermary has existed in some form on the site for over 900 years.
The name ‘Aldermary’ is usually thought to mean that it is the oldest of the churches of St Mary in the area.
St Mary Aldermary is the only Wren church built in the Gothic style to have survived in the City area.
www.ukattraction.com /london/st-mary-aldermary.htm   (233 words)

  
 Archive:John Whitney's English Ancestry - WRG   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
John Whitney of St. Mary Aldermary, London, is identified as a "taylore" at the baptism of his daughter Mary, 29 Dec 1629.
A recently-discovered clue is the baptism of a certain Thomas, son of Robert WHETNEY, on 14 Jul 1560 in the parish of St.
Mary Aldermary indicate that he lived there - in "Bowe lanne," near Bow church, where hang the famous bells - for several years, during which time Mary died, and his son Thomas was baptized.
wiki.whitneygen.org /wrg/index.php?title=Archive:John_Whitney's_English_Ancestry&redirect=no   (1604 words)

  
 John Whitney's English Ancestry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Mary Aldermary, London, is identified as a "taylore" at the baptism of his daughter Mary, 29 Dec 1629.
A recently-discovered clue is the baptism of a certain Thomas, son of Robert WHETNEY, on 14 Jul 1560 in the parish of St.
Mary Aldermary indicate that he lived there - in "Bowe lanne," near Bow church, where hang the famous bells - for several years, during which time Mary died, and his son Thomas was baptized.
www.whitneygen.org /families/johnw/ancestry.html   (1623 words)

  
 Eleventh Generation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Robert PEPPER was born in 1590 in St. Mary, Aldermary, London, England.
Robert PEPPER and Elizabeth LEAKE were married on 8 Jun 1615 in St. Mary, Aldermary, London, England.
Elizabeth LEAKE was born in 1594 in St. Mary, Aldermary, London, England.
www.toten.info /~roger/root/b257.htm   (67 words)

  
 Ancestors of Elizabeth Stevens - pafg32 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Mary Hobart was born 1574 in Barnham, Norfolk, England and was christened about 1574 in Barnham, Norfolk, England.
Elizabeth Leake was born 1594 in London, London, England and was christened 18 Aug 1594 in St.Mary, Aldermary, London, England.
Margaret Mary Wetherall was born 1539 in St.Mary, Woolnoth, London, England.
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~svane/pafg32.htm   (629 words)

  
 St. Mary Aldermary, London   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The tower of St. Mary Aldermary is all that remains of a church built around 1510.
The name 'Aldermary' is believed to be old English for 'older Mary', because the original church was said to be older than any other St. Mary church in The City.
Widely regarded as Wren's most Gothic church, St. Mary's is the only surviving City of London church built in the Gothic style and is regarded as being the earliest Gothic Revival church in London.
www.emporis.com /en/wm/bu/?id=139783   (222 words)

  
 FROM SPIRE TO SPIRE IN YULETIDE LONDON - New York Times
The present cathedral, the fourth or fifth to stand on the site, came to be a symbol of survival for London and the nation during the Blitz, defying even the smoke and flames of the raid of Dec. 29, 1940, when the City and the docks were engulfed by fire.
Turn left at the first intersection to St. Bride, which is of interest for two reasons: its wedding-cake steeple, with four octagons stacked one atop the other, at 226 feet loftier than any other Wren creation; and the list of its onetime parishioners.
The church, designed as elongated rectangle with a projecting apse and two tiers of windows, was burned out in 1941; the square tower is a relic of the medieval church, to which Wren added a second stage with a cornice and balustrade, decorated with enormous vases.
query.nytimes.com /gst/fullpage.html?res=9E00E3D61538F933A15751C1A967948260&sec=travel&pagewanted=all   (3971 words)

  
 John Man   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Mary Balchen was born in 1721 in London, the third daughter of Richard and Martha (Hitchcock) Balchen, and was baptized on 26 April 1721 at St. Mary Aldermary, London.
Mary died in October 1798 at the home of her son James in Walworth Common, St Mary Newington, Surrey, but she was buried on 23 October at St. Mary Matfellon, Whitechapel, Middlesex.
By 1774, wife Mary [at least] and family were back in the London area living on Mile End, Middlesex [according to Clementine Black's "The Cumberland Letters"].
www.manfamily.org /John_Man1718_1783.htm   (382 words)

  
 Juergs London Guide - City of London
At the junction of Gresham St. and Aldersgate St. is the church of St. Anne and St. Agnes, rebuilt by Wren in 1676.
On Lombard St. is the church of St. Edmund the King and Martyr, the church was rebuilt by Wren in 1670.
At the junction of St. Mary Axe is the church of St. Andrew Undershaft.
www.juerg.ch /london/city/index.shtml   (1700 words)

  
 Relighting a Wren Church in the City of London   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
St Mary Aldermary is a Grade I listed building.
St Mary Aldermary was lit by ten wrought iron chandeliers either side of the nave.
The relighting of St Mary Aldermary has been the crowning glory to the painstaking renovation that has taken place over the last six years.
www.constructionbusinessnet.com /electricalexplorer/news/313.html   (657 words)

  
 St Mary Aldermary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St Mary Aldermay in Bow Lane was greatly damaged in London's Great Fire of 1666.
While parts of its foundation, walls and tower survived, it was mostly rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren in a Gothic style.
According to Pevsner, it is "the chief surviving monument of the 17th century Gothic revival in the City and -- with Warwick -- the most important late 17th century Gothic church in England." As of April, 2005, the priest in charge of the church was Father John Mothersole.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/St_Mary_Aldermary   (245 words)

  
 City Events - City Churches News - May 2005
Antholin (a corruption of St. Anthony) was dedicated to St. Anthony of Egypt, who lived as a hermit in the desert, dying in 356AD, aged 105.
From Elizabethan times, St. Antholin’s was known as a hotbed of Puritanism and the radical Antholin lectures became famous, continuing until the 1970s at St. Mary Aldermary.
The 17th century reredos was transferred in 1874 to the new church of St. Anthony in Nunhead and again, recently, to the nearby church of St. Anthony with St. Silas, built in 2003.
www.cityevents.fsnet.co.uk /city_churches_may05.htm   (412 words)

  
 London In 1731 Page 8
The public buildings in this ward are Butchers' Hall, and the churches of St. Mary Hill, St. Margaret Pattens, and St. George, in Botolph Lane.
The Monument stands on the west side of Fish Street Hill, a little to the northward of the bridge, and was erected by the legislative authority, in memory of the Fire, anno 1666, and was designed by Sir Christopher Wren.
The rooms are large, finely wainscoted and carved, particularly the magnificent screen at the east end of the great hall, which is adorned with two columns, their entablature and pediment; and on acroters are placed the figure of Bacchus between several Fames, with other embellishments; and they have a garden backwards towards the Thames.
www.web-books.com /Classics/Nonfiction/History/London/LondonC2P8.htm   (792 words)

  
 GWT Family Organization - Parks Pedigree - pafg09 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
was born 1590 in St Mary, Aldermary, London, Eng.
was born 1594 in St. Mary, Aldermary, London, Eng and was christened 18 Aug 1594 in St Mary, Aldermary, London, England.
was born 1599/1600 in, Chepstow, Monmouth, Wales and was christened in St Mary's.
www.taggartfamily.org /PedigreeParks/pafg09.htm   (831 words)

  
 Parish Records
Volume 5 - St. Mary le Bowe, All Hallows and St. Pancras, Baptisms and Burials, 1538-1852.
Volume 7 - St. Mary Woolnoth and St. Mary Woolchurch Haw, Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1760.
This covers the Baptisms, Marriages and Burials for St Thomas The Apostle between 1558 and 1754.
www.genealogysupplies.com /product_filter.php?cat_no=64&select_county=London   (1073 words)

  
 CHOTANKERS -- first on WorldServer, Cambridge for BBC
Mary Aldermary, an Anglican Church rebuilt in 1682, is on right side of photograph below showing part of London skyline east of St. Paul's Cathedral.
St. Mary Aldermary is said to be have been rebuilt to the original plans by Christopher Wren, whose father was Dean of Windsor.
A memorial to Topham Foote is in Windsor Parish Church, St. John The Baptist near Windsor Castle.
www.webcom.com /chotank/gindex.html   (3874 words)

  
 Family Tree Maker's Genealogy Site: Genealogy Report: Ancestors of Edward, John, Laura, Emily, and James Brandyberry
Robert Pepper, born 1590 in St. Mary Aldermary, London, Middlesex, England; died June 07, 1685 in St. Mary Aldermary, London, Middlesex, England.
Elizabeth Leake, born 1594 in St. Mary Aldermary, London, Middlesex, England; died June 24, 1642 in St. Mary Aldermary, London, Middlesex, England.
Elizabeth Pepper, born November 07, 1619 in St. Mary Aldermary, London, Middlesex, England; died 1627 in St. Mary Aldermary, London, Middlesex, England.
familytreemaker.genealogy.com /users/b/r/a/Edward-L-Brandyberry/GENE9-0045.html   (1043 words)

  
 London, England - April 2001, England Nutz and Bolts, England Things to see and do, Europe, Europe Nutz and Bolts, ...
At the southern end of Bow Lane is the church of St Mary Aldermary.
St Mary Aldermary was built by Wren in 1682.
St Katherine's Docks was the first of London's docks to be revitalised.
www.bootsnall.com /articles/04-08/london-england-april-2001.html   (1106 words)

  
 ourpasthistory.com: St Mary Aldermary
It was ten to four on a weekday afternoon when I slipped through the door of St Mary, just as its courteous and bow-tied custodian was about to lock it.
Sometime around the turn of the sixteenth century, the Gothic church was built by a grocer mayor named Henry Keble, who donated the not insignificant sum of a thousand pounds for the purpose.
St Mary appears to have had a fairly quiet history.
www.ourpasthistory.com /England/st-mary-aldermary   (518 words)

  
 Florilegium urbanum - Death - Borough probate of wills and testaments
Mary Aldermary, [devised] by Osbert's testament, proved and enrolled in the London husting on 8 May 1284.
John Chalonere, parish priest of St. John Evangelist at one end of Ouse Bridge in the city.
Osbert's testament had made provision for a chantry in St. Mary-le-Bow, although for the benefit of himself and his first wife Joan; his second wife Anne (or Agnes) was then still alive, and was bequeathed Osbert's properties in the two parishes for life, or until she remarried.
www.trytel.com /~tristan/towns/florilegium/lifecycle/lcdth05.html   (3437 words)

  
 Chelsom Lighting - the difference is in the detail
St Mary Aldermary is one of the Guild Churches of London, being on the site close to St Paul`s Cathedral, for over 900 years.
The relighting of St Mary Aldermary has been the crowning glory to the painstaking renovation that has taken place over the last six years, with more to follow.
The renovation of St Mary Aldermary is supported by the "Friends of City Churches" who have provided much of the finance for the work.
www.chelsom.co.uk /project.aspx?projectID=54&img=0&view=1   (509 words)

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