Gibbs Family Tree

Cyril Gurney

Male 1868 - 1926  (57 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Cyril Gurney was born on 20 Mar 1868 in London (son of Rev. Alfred Gurney and Alice Blanche Gibbs); died on 2 Mar 1926 in Westminster, London; was buried on 6 Mar 1926 in Henlow, Bedfordshire.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 31 1901, Sholden, Kent; Relation to Head of House: Head
    • Baptism: 15 Apr 1868, England
    • Residence: 2 Apr 1871, Wraxall, Somerset; Relation to Head of House: Grandson
    • Residence: 1881, Mortlake, Surrey
    • Residence: 5 Apr 1891, London; Relation to Head of House: Son
    • Departure: Mar 1897, South Africa
    • Arrival: 11 May 1897, England
    • Residence: 1901, Sholden, Kent; Age: 33; Relation to Head of House: Head
    • Residence: 2 1911, Henlow Grange, Henlow, Bedfordshire

    Notes:

    Educated at Winchester College, 1882-3; matric. at Oxford (Christ Church) 1887, BA and 3 Cl. History 1891. Died at his flat in London 2nd and was buried 6 March 1926 at Henlow, Bedfordshire where was his residence (Henlow Grange) since 1908. Memorial Inscription in Henlow churchyard. Will dated 15 March 1924, proved 23 July 1926.

    Partner in Thomson Hankey and Co. merchants in the City of London, 1896-1926, and head of the firm for some years up to his death.

    Director of the Indemnity Assurance Corporation, 1900-26 (chairman 1925-26). He had two sons and a daughter; his eldest son Christopher William Gurney was a partner in Thomson Hankey & Co. until his death. Christopher married Joan Doris Grenfell (see Burke's Peerage}, who was active in Women's Institutes and W.R.V.S. during World War II.

    They had two sons and a daughter; their eldest son Timothy was a Director of Thomson Hankey & Co. from 1947-76; their second son Jeremy was an Underwriting Agent in Price Forbes, Insurance Brokers; and their daughter Gillian married and emigrated with her husband to Ontario, Canadain 1948 (living 1980). Both sons are married and living.

    Cyril Gurney's daughter Alice was active in Women's Institute and Village Produce Association and died unmarried in 1969; his second son, John, was a student Land Agent when he died (1924).

    Cyril married Margaret Evelyn Trotter in 1894 in St. Peter's, Eaton Square, Westminster, London. Margaret (daughter of William Trotter and Mary Isabel Davies) was born in Apr 1869 in St George Hanover Square, London; died on 4 Jan 1958 in 41 Sydney Building, Bath, Somerset. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Alice Ciceley Gurney was born in Oct 1895 in Chelsea, London; died in Jun 1969 in Bishop Stortford, Hertfordshire; was buried in Hormead, Hertfordshire.
    2. Christopher William Gurney was born in Apr 1898 in Chelsea, London; died on 31 Aug 1939 in Hatfield, Hertfordshire.
    3. John Hampden Gurney was born in Jan 1901 in Chelsea, London; died on 28 Jul 1924 in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Rev. Alfred Gurney was born on 14 Nov 1843 in Lutterworth, Leicestershire (son of Rev. John Hampden Gurney and Mary Grey); died on 28 Nov 1898 in Roehampton, Surrey; was buried on 2 Dec 1898 in Surrey.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1851, St Marylebone, London
    • Residence: 1861, St Marylebone, London
    • Residence: 5 Apr 1891, London; Relation to Head of House: Head

    Notes:

    Son of Rev. Hampden Gurney (sometime Prebendary of St. Paul's Cathedral and Rector of St. Mary's, Bryanston Square, St. Marylebone), by Mary, 1st daughter of Henry Grey, a minister of St. Mary's, Edinburgh. Educated at King's College, London: matric. Oxford (Exeter College) 11 June 1862, BA 1866, MA1869. Of the Inner Temple 1867. Buried in Putney Vale Cemetery near Roehampton, Wandsworth. Memorial Inscription there. Will dated 17 August 1896, proved 16 January 1899.

    Ordained Deacon, 1873, Priest, 1875. Curate of St. Paul's, Brighton, 1873-79; Vicar of St. Barnabas, Pimlico, Westminster, 1879-98. Author of Vision of the Eucharist and Other Poems (1885); Our Catholic Inheritance (1888); A Ramble through the United States, priv. printed, 1886.

    Birth:
    BMD DECEMBER 1843 VOL 15 PAGE 162 LUTTERWORTH, LEICESTERSHIRE, ENGLAND

    Alfred married Alice Blanche Gibbs on 16 Aug 1866 in Wraxall, Somerset. Alice (daughter of William Gibbs, of Tyntesfield and Matilda Blanche Crawley-Boevey) was born on 27 Oct 1843 in Paddington, London; died on 12 Mar 1871 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 17 Mar 1871 in Wraxall, Somerset. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Alice Blanche GibbsAlice Blanche Gibbs was born on 27 Oct 1843 in Paddington, London (daughter of William Gibbs, of Tyntesfield and Matilda Blanche Crawley-Boevey); died on 12 Mar 1871 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 17 Mar 1871 in Wraxall, Somerset.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 24 Nov 1843, Paddington, London
    • Residence: 1851, Paddington, London
    • Residence: 7 1861, Paddington, London

    Notes:

    Baptised 24 November 1843 at St. John's Church, Paddington. Died at Tyntesfield 12th and was buried 17th March 1871 at Wraxall. Memorial Inscription in the church and outside the vestry and in Tyntesfield chapel.

    Portraits: Drawing (with her son Cyril)
    by E. U. Eddis, a drawing by W. Richmond, and a bust by Munro. Min. by Sir Wm. Ross, was last in possession of Lord Wraxall in 1930.

    Birth:
    13 Hyde Park Street

    Children:
    1. 1. Cyril Gurney was born on 20 Mar 1868 in London; died on 2 Mar 1926 in Westminster, London; was buried on 6 Mar 1926 in Henlow, Bedfordshire.
    2. William Hampden Gurney was born on 8 Feb 1870 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; died on 11 Mar 1903 in London.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Rev. John Hampden Gurney was born on 15 Aug 1802 in London (son of John Gurney and Maria); died on 8 Mar 1862 in London.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: London

    John married Mary Grey on 24 Oct 1839 in St Cuthbert's, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland. Mary was born on 25 Mar 1810 in Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland; died in Jul 1857 in Marylebone, London; was buried on 23 Jul 1857. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary Grey was born on 25 Mar 1810 in Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland; died in Jul 1857 in Marylebone, London; was buried on 23 Jul 1857.
    Children:
    1. 2. Rev. Alfred Gurney was born on 14 Nov 1843 in Lutterworth, Leicestershire; died on 28 Nov 1898 in Roehampton, Surrey; was buried on 2 Dec 1898 in Surrey.

  3. 6.  William Gibbs, of TyntesfieldWilliam Gibbs, of Tyntesfield was born on 22 May 1790 in Calle de Cantarranas, Madrid, Spain (son of Antony Gibbs and Dorothea Barnetta Hucks); died on 3 Apr 1875 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried in Wraxall, Somerset.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: Head of Antony Gibbs & Sons
    • Baptism: 21 Jul 1790, British Embassy, Madrid, Spain
    • Residence: 1861, Paddington, London; Relationship: Head
    • Residence: 1871, Wraxall, Somerset; Relation to Head of House: Head

    Notes:

    His baptism in Madrid is recorded in the Register of St. Mary Major, Exeter, see Additions of 1927 in the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, p.XVI (4).

    He was employed in Cadiz, Lisbon and England in his father's business 1802-5; in his uncle George's (George Gibbs of Redland) business (Gibbs Richards and Gibbs) in Bristol, 1806-8; in London under his father in the Portuguese Commission 1808-9; in London in Antony Gibbs and Son 1809-12. Partner in Antony Gibbs & Sons 1813-75; resident in Cadiz in charge of their House there 1813-22: head of A. Gibbs & Sons 1843-75 and sole partner 1843-7. During his headship the South American business prospered exceedingly. Member of Lloyds 1812-75.

    After marriage his successive residences in London were 13 Hyde Park Street (number since changed) 1840-8, Gloucester Square 1849, Sussex Square 1850, 16 Hyde Park Gardens 1851-75, all in Paddington. He bought the estate and house of Tyntesfield, Wraxall, north Somerset in April 1844 from Reverend George Turner Seymour, at various times (notably 1862-4) greatly altered the house (John Norton one of the architects) and at the end of his life built the beautiful chapel to it (Sir A. W. Blomfield, architect). He added to his property in 1865 the adjoining estate and house called Charlton (in Wraxall parish) buying it from the Kingston family, and in 1870 he reunited Belmont and Tyntesfield, buying Belmont from his nephew George L. M. Gibbs. In Devon he bought back Pytte the ancient home of our family in Clyst St. George from the executors of General Doveton, in 1859, made other purchases in that parish, rebuilt cottages, and amongst other benefactions to the village and church gave a memorial window (1860) to his grandfather (George Abraham Gibbs of Pytte). He also bought from Lord Devon in 1873 an estate in Alphington, nr. Exeter (which extended into Whitestone). At Littlemore, Oxon, he bought in 1872 the house of his cousin and former partner Charles Crawley.

    The village school and school-master's house at Clifton Hampden, Oxon, in 1847, and the Church at Flaxley, in Gloucestershire, in 1856 were both built at his cost (the architect being G. Gilbert Scott): so also in 1861 were St. Michael and All Angels Church in Star Street, Paddington, and its vicarage (architect Rhode Hawkins). In Devon, he built in 1868 the Chapel-of-Ease of St. Antony at Cowley in memory of his parents and of his own life there, and at the same time and with the same architect (R. Hawkins) the Church of St. Michael and All Angels and its vicarage in the parish of St. David, Exeter; and in 1872 he enlarged the church at Exwick and in 1874 built its vicarage on the site of the grounds of his father's one time residence Exwick House. Moreover, he contributed largely to the restoration of Exeter and Bristol Cathedrals. The endowments of the livings of Exwick, St. Michael's Exeter, and St. Michael's Paddington, were also gifts from him. He acquired the advowsons of Clyst St. George (1857), Exwick, St. Michael's in Paddington, Stowe-nine-churches, North Newton in Somerset, and Otterbourne in Hampshire (the latter because of its connection with Rev. John Keble). He founded in 1859 at Brixham, Devon, a Mission to Seamen of ships sheltering in Torbay, and in 1860 there the British Seamen's Orphan Boys' Home for the Western Counties, his interest in that parish being due to his temporary tenancy of Berryhead House there, the home of Rev. John Hogg.

    Of all his gifts the most famous was the chapel of Keble College Oxford. He offered it to the College in 1872 (on the suggestion of his friend Sir John Taylor Coleridge), and himself laid the foundation stone on St. Mark's Day (25 April) 1873. He died in 1875, and his son Antony formally presented it at the opening service on St. Mark's Day 1876, conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury. The same day Lord Salisbury (Chancellor of the University) laid the foundation stone of the block of buildings given to the College by William's sons Antony and Martin. W. Butterfield was architect both of chapel and block, as of the rest of the College.

    William was an original (1832) member of the City of London Club and a member of the Athenaeum Club. Memorial Inscription in Wraxall church and churchyard at Tyntesfield chapel, Barrow Court chapel, Flaxley church, St. Michael's Paddington (rose window erected by the parish in his memory), St. Michael's Exeter, Keble College Chapel, Cowley chapel, Exwick chapel and St. Martin's Brighton.

    For his life in detail up to 1824 and for some particulars as to his later years see book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J. A. Gibbs. See also a booklet 'In memory of William Gibbs' (privileged printing Rivingtons, 1875) containing (inter alia) an article on his life and character by E.M.Goulburn, Dean of Norwich, reprinted from The Guardian newspaper.

    For portraits and scultpures of him see Gibbs Pedigree (1904) p.16 and list in 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, p.435. In the latter G. Richmond as artist of the posthumous portrait at Keble College is an error for Sir William B. Richmond, R.A. This portrait is wrongly stated to be after Boxall in 'Catalogue of Portraits in Oxford Colleges' by Mrs. Poole, Vol. III, part II, 1925. The portrait in the list in the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs by 'artist unkown' in possession of John A. Gibbs was by E. Gill and has since been destroyed. Portraits not in the lists are, one by Edward Opie, which was in possession of Lord Wraxall, and a copy in A. Gibbs and Sons' possession of the one of the Portraits by Boxall which is engraved by Cousins.



    More information available at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gibbs_(businessman)

    Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - William Gibbs https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/89656

    William married Matilda Blanche Crawley-Boevey on 1 Aug 1839 in Flaxley, Gloucestershire. Matilda (daughter of Sir Thomas Crawley-Boevey, 3rd Bart. of Flaxley and Mary Albinia Page) was born on 17 Dec 1817 in Eastgate street, Gloucester; died on 22 Sep 1887 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Matilda Blanche Crawley-BoeveyMatilda Blanche Crawley-Boevey was born on 17 Dec 1817 in Eastgate street, Gloucester (daughter of Sir Thomas Crawley-Boevey, 3rd Bart. of Flaxley and Mary Albinia Page); died on 22 Sep 1887 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 16 Jan 1818, St Michael, Gloucester, Gloucestershire
    • Residence: 1881, Paddington, London

    Notes:

    During her widowhood Tyntesfield and 16 Hyde Park Gardens continued to be her residences. She built (1876-8) and endowed St. Michael's Home for Consumptives in the parish of Cheddar, Somerset in memory of her husband, redecorated the chancel of St. Michael's, Exeter, which he built, and improved Exwick church. She endowed Keble College, Oxford (1881) with a fund of an annual value of £800 for Scholarships and for other grants to students. She built and maintained (as also did her son Antony after her) a Cottage Convalescent Home ("St. John's Lodge") at Wraxall afsd. and also built there in 1885 the large village club and in 1887 seven almshouses ("The Jubilee Cottages"): also the Battle Axes Inn, establishing it in her own name and on the principle of temperance as opposed to teetotalism. She gave the site (the site was left to her by her husband, she left money to the Home in her will) for the Convalescent and Incurable Home at Woking, Surrey, founded in connection with the Sisterhood of St. Peter's Kilburn, which manages St. Michael's Home afsd. A ward in Weston-super-Mare Convalescent Home, where she undertook the cost of 33 beds, bore her name.

    Memorial Inscription in Wraxall churchyard and church; Tyntesfield chapel; Barrow Gurney chapel (to which she game some windows); Flaxley church (organ remade in her memory); the chapel of Keble College; and M. windows in Barrow Court chapel.

    Refer to the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, especially pp. 33-5, 439 and 445-6 for her relations, ancestry, and 'Royal Descent', and for notes of printed books which refer to them; see also entry for her father Rev. Charles Crawley. A good memoir of her by "C.M.Y." (her friend and cousin Charlotte M. Yonge, the authoress) appeared in The Guardian newspaper at her death. For lists of Portraits and Sculpture see Gibbs Pedigree (1904) and the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, p. 435, and add to them a drawing (1873) by C.W.S (was in possession of Martin A Gibbs).

    Children:
    1. Dorothea Harriett Gibbs was born on 12 Jun 1840 in 13 Hyde Park Street, Paddington, London; died on 20 Sep 1914 in 77 Crystal Palace Park, Sydenham, London; was buried on 24 Sep 1914 in Barrow Gurney, Somerset .
    2. Antony Gibbs, of Tyntesfield was born on 10 Dec 1841 in London; died on 24 Apr 1907 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 29 Apr 1907 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    3. 3. Alice Blanche Gibbs was born on 27 Oct 1843 in Paddington, London; died on 12 Mar 1871 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 17 Mar 1871 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    4. William Gibbs was born on 14 Jan 1846 in Paddington, London; died on 11 Jun 1869 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 16 Jun 1869 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    5. George Abraham Gibbs was born on 25 Mar 1848 in Paddington, London; died on 23 Feb 1870 in Kingston, Jamaica; was buried on 22 Jul 1870 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    6. Henry Martin Gibbs, High Sheriff, Somerset was born on 30 May 1850 in Paddington, London; died on 22 Apr 1928 in Barrow Gurney, Somerset; was buried on 25 Apr 1928 in Barrow Gurney, Somerset.
    7. Albinia Ann Gibbs was born on 7 Jun 1853 in Paddington, London; died on 17 Apr 1874 in Paddington, London; was buried on 25 Apr 1874 in Wraxall, Somerset.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John Gurney was born in 1780.

    John married Maria. Maria was born in 1780 in London. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Maria was born in 1780 in London.
    Children:
    1. 4. Rev. John Hampden Gurney was born on 15 Aug 1802 in London; died on 8 Mar 1862 in London.

  3. 12.  Antony GibbsAntony Gibbs was born on 3 Mar 1756 in Exeter, Devon (son of George Abraham Gibbs, of Pytte and Anne Vicary, of Dunkeswell); died on 10 Dec 1815 in 2 Powis Place, Holborn, London; was buried in Dec 1815 in St Mary the Virgin, Hayes, Kent.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Education: Educated at Exeter Grammar School
    • Memorial: Hayes, Middlesex; Monument inscription MI in churchyard at Hayes
    • Occupation: Founder of the House of Antony Gibbs & Son of London
    • Residence: 14 Dec 1773, Exeter, Devon
    • Will: 16 Mar 1816; Will proved in C.P.C.

    Notes:

    After an apprenticeship in a Spanish business in Exeter he was from 1778 to 1789 a merchant there exporting woollen cloth to Spain and elsewhere; also from 1785 to 1789 a partner in a firm styled Gibbs Granger & Banfill, working a cloth factory at Exwick in the outskirts of Exeter. His father financed him and was also in the Exwick partnership. He was a member 1778 - 1789 of the Incorporation of Tuckers Hall, Exeter; head warden 1782, master 1783.

    Bankrupt in 1789 (alike with his father), he went to Madrid and for the next 18 years was engaged in business which centred in Spain. Mainly working as agent for British manufacturers he was at times (from 1783) also exporting Spanish produce as partner in a firm at Malaga styled Juan Pomar Gibbs y Compania. Driven out of Spain by war in 1797 he conducted his business from 1798 to 1801 in Lisbon, but in 1802 became regularly established in Cadiz as a merchant there, till war again forced him away. His last visit to Spain was in 1807.

    In 1808 he became one of the Commissioners in London for dealing with Portuguese property sent to England in the war, and in September that year founded, in partnership with his son George Henry, the firm of Antony Gibbs & Son, London, with a branch in Cadiz. The firm became Antony Gibbs & Sons in 1813 on admission of his second son William to the partnership.

    He was author of a pamphlet signed "A Merchant," An Appeal to Common Sense on the Bullion Question, published 1810.

    After his marriage he and his wife lived in Exeter 1784-6, at Exwick House 1786-9, in Madrid 1789-92. From 1792 to 1808 their home was in Exeter or its neighbourhood (at Cowley 1803-8), but in that period he made ten trips to the Peninsula of an average duration of 12 months each. The family moved to London in 1808 and lived in Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, 1808-9; Denmark Hill, Camberwell, 1809-10; Dulwich Common, 1810-12; 2 Powis Place in the parish of St George the Martyr, Bloomsbury, 1812 onwards.



    For a brief summary of the firm Antony Gibbs and Sons see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antony_Gibbs_%26_Sons

    Antony married Dorothea Barnetta Hucks on 3 Oct 1784 in Littleham, Devon. Dorothea (daughter of William Hucks and Eleanor Barnett) was born in Dec 1760 in Knaresborough, Yorkshire; died on 24 Feb 1820 in Redland, Gloucestershire; was buried on 10 Mar 1820 in St Mary the Virgin, Hayes, Kent. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  Dorothea Barnetta HucksDorothea Barnetta Hucks was born in Dec 1760 in Knaresborough, Yorkshire (daughter of William Hucks and Eleanor Barnett); died on 24 Feb 1820 in Redland, Gloucestershire; was buried on 10 Mar 1820 in St Mary the Virgin, Hayes, Kent.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: Saint George Martin, Middlesex, England
    • Baptism: 9 Jan 1761, Knaresborough, Yorkshire

    Notes:

    For the full history of her life, see the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J. A. Gibbs (also for history and portraits of the Hucks family, from whom her son, George Henry Gibbs, derived his properties, and for references to pedigrees (which contain also references to their wills). The Hucks family became extinct in the male line at the death of her brother John in 1836. She was a beneficiary under the will of Henry Townley Ward (d. 1816) the husband of her elder sister Eleanor (d.1800). As a widow her home was with her daughter Harriett at Redland 1816-17, with her son George Henry at 2 Powis Place in London 1817-19, and again with Harriett July 1819, till her death. For note of portraits, see 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, p. 434. For her descent from King Henry III see Ellacombe's 'Clyst St. George'(1864), and Burke's 'Royal Descents' (1858).

    Children:
    1. George Henry Gibbs was born on 24 Aug 1785 in Exeter, Devon; died on 21 Aug 1842 in Venice, Venezia, Veneto, Italy; was buried on 27 Dec 1842 in Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire.
    2. Harriett Gibbs was born on 8 Oct 1786 in Exeter, Devon; died on 15 Oct 1865 in Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 20 Oct 1865 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    3. George Abraham Gibbs was born on 20 Jan 1788 in St. Thomas', Exeter, England; died on 3 Mar 1789 in Layton, Essex.
    4. 6. William Gibbs, of Tyntesfield was born on 22 May 1790 in Calle de Cantarranas, Madrid, Spain; died on 3 Apr 1875 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried in Wraxall, Somerset.
    5. Francis Gibbs was born on 7 Jul 1794 in Exeter, Devon; died on 16 Apr 1795 in Exwick House, Exwick, Devon; was buried on 19 Apr 1795 in St. Thomas, Devon.
    6. Anne Gibbs was born on 29 May 1797 in Lower Cleave, nr Exeter, England; died on 6 Oct 1852 in Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 13 Oct 1852 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    7. Rev. Joseph Gibbs was born on 23 Jul 1801 in St Davids Hill, Exeter; died on 22 Mar 1864 in Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire; was buried on 26 Mar 1864 in Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire.

  5. 14.  Sir Thomas Crawley-Boevey, 3rd Bart. of FlaxleySir Thomas Crawley-Boevey, 3rd Bart. of Flaxley was born on 26 Nov 1769 in Flaxley, Gloucestershire (son of Sir Thomas Crawley-Boevey, 2nd Baronet of Highgrove and Anne Savage); died on 10 Jan 1847 in Flaxley Abbey, Flaxley, Gloucestershire; was buried on 16 Jan 1847 in Flaxley, Gloucestershire.

    Thomas married Mary Albinia Page on 28 Oct 1807 in St Marylebone, London. Mary (daughter of Thomas Hyde Page, Sir and Mary Albinia Woodward) was born on 22 Sep 1784 in Bettshanger Park, Kent; died on 16 Feb 1835 in Flaxley Abbey, Gloucester, Gloucestershire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 15.  Mary Albinia PageMary Albinia Page was born on 22 Sep 1784 in Bettshanger Park, Kent (daughter of Thomas Hyde Page, Sir and Mary Albinia Woodward); died on 16 Feb 1835 in Flaxley Abbey, Gloucester, Gloucestershire.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Christening: 30 Sep 1784, Bishopsbourne, Kent

    Children:
    1. Martin Hyde Crawley-Boevey, 4th Bt. was born on 25 May 1812 in Gloucestershire; died on 14 Oct 1862 in Flaxley, Gloucestershire; was buried in Flaxley, Gloucestershire.
    2. 7. Matilda Blanche Crawley-Boevey was born on 17 Dec 1817 in Eastgate street, Gloucester; died on 22 Sep 1887 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset.