Elizabeth Pellor

     Elizabeth Pellor married Nicholas Arundell, son of Ralph Arundell and Jane Trerice. Burke's Commoners identifies Nicholas's wife as Jane, daughter of Peller, Lord of Peller. BE1883 identifies her as ...Elizabeth Pellocer (daughter of John Pellocer). Elizabeth Pellor was born in England. She was the daughter of John Pellocer.

Child of Elizabeth Pellor and Nicholas Arundell

Bridget Pemberton

( - January 1765)
     Bridget Pemberton was born. She was the daughter of John Pemberton of Liverpool..
Bridget Pemberton married Richard Milnes, son of Robert Milnes and Hannah Poole, on 20 February 1717/18 in Liverpool, Lancashire, England.
     Bridget died in January 1765.

Children of Bridget Pemberton and Richard Milnes

Handy Pemberton

(before 1750 - )
     Handy Pemberton was born before 1750 in Ireland. Born about 1740 in the IGI. He was the eldest son.. He was the son of John Pemberton and Sarah Handy.
     Handy was educated from from 11 September 1757 at the Quaker School, Ballitore, Kildare.
Handy Pemberton was apprenticed in 1766.
John Wilson, Edenderry to Thomas Greer, Dungannon 19 Jan 1766. I have not been able to pay in Handy's apprentice fee of £136.10.0 as the tenants have not yet paid me. I delivered your daughter's letter and enclose one from her, also one for Handy..
John Wilson, Edenderry on 18 April 1767 to Thomas Greer, Dungannon. I am sorry Handy has not behaved well. If you could keep him at least until the next half year meeting, maybe he will have improved by then if not we will see what can be done with him.
Thomas Greer?] Dungannon on 1 Jun 1767 to John Wilson. Handy shows no sign of reforming, or even sorrow for his bad behaviour. I cannot keep him here as he might be a bad influence on others. Will you decide, with your sister, what is the best thing to do with him..
[Thomas Greer?] Dungannon replied to to John Willson 28 Jun 1767. In regard to your request that we should keep Handy at least until November, I do not feel it would be fair to my family or the other apprentices to do so. He says his "genious does not answer" to business, and from this I take it he has no inclination towards it..
Lettr from John Wilson, Edenderry to Thomas Greer, Dungannon on 9 Jul 1767. Cousin Molly Pemberton has consulted John Pim and other friends about Handy. I agreed to abide by what they say. She will write to you "to have him sent up before the time thee mentioned". Send him either by stage or by hiring horses which ever you think best..
Letter from John Wilson dated 9 July 1767 to Thomas Greer. Receipt for £68.5.0 being half of the apprenticeship fee given with Handy Pemberton and now returned on the termination of said apprenticeship .
Handy Pemberton was mentioned on 2 September 1769.
He left the Society of Friends, opting for the life-style of the rich bucks of Georgian Dublin. Described by a contemporary as "a sort of buffoon and idiot", he once started a riot against the Duke of Rutland in the Dublin playhouse. Burke incorrectly states that he married Jane Piggott....
     Handy matriculated Arts at Trinity College, Dublin, in 1771.
Handy Pemberton married Jane Sutton circa 18 January 1772. She was the daughter of William Sutton of Horetown, co. Wexford, by his wife Hester, a sister of Wiliam Piott of Slevoy, co. Wexford and of the Rev Thomas Pigott.. Handy was admitted to the Irish bar in 1775.
Handy Pemberton, (affirmed) Barrister-at-Law, lately arrived from Dublin - according to the Act of 5 Dec 1778.
     Handy resided at Hakin, Hubberstown, Pembrokeshire, Wales, 1787.

Children of Handy Pemberton and Jane Sutton

Henry Pemberton

(circa 1746 - )
     Henry Pemberton was born circa 1746. He was the son of John Pemberton and Sarah Handy.
     Henry was educated from from 10 May 1764 at the Quaker School, Ballitore, Kildare.

Jane Pemberton

(before 1752 - )
     Jane Pemberton was born before 1752 in Ireland. She was the daughter of John Pemberton and Sarah Handy.
     In Mary Handy's will dated 13 May 1765 in Dublin, Jane Pemberton was named as heir.

John Pemberton

(2 November 1714 - before 11 April 1760)
     John Pemberton was born on 2 November 1714 in Dublin, Ireland. He was the son of Henry Pemberton whose will was dated 16 Feb 1746 and proved 8 August? (8th month) 1747: He mentions his son John (married to Sarah Handy). John was a merchant in Meath St, Dublin.
     A marriage settlement between John Pemberton and Sarah Handy was made on 13 April 1744. Lease and release dated 12 & 13 April 1744 between 1) Henry Pemberton of the city of Dublin, merchant, 2) Samuel Handy of Kilbegg, Westmeath, gent & Thomas Strangman, Dublin, merchant & others. Deeds of lease between Thomas Handy of the city of Dublin merchant, Samuel Handy & Thomas Strangman. Release between 1) the said Henry Pemberton & Elizabeth his wife, 2) Thomas Handy & Mary his wife & Sarah one of the daughters of the said Thomas & Mary, 3) & John Pemberton the eldest son of the said Henry Pemberton and Elizabeth, 4) Samuel Handy & Thomas Strangman & 5) John Pim of the city of Dublin, merchant & John Clibborn of Moat, Westmeath. Deed of release the said Henry Pemberton for the consideration therein mentioned did grant release & confirm unto 4 (SH) & their heirs the townlands of Ballynbarney otherwise Ballynabarna otherwise Big Ballynabarna & Killcumria? otherwise Killcumera, barony of Moycashel, Westmeath & town and lands of Ballynabarna or Little Ballynabarna otherwise Springbrook, Westmeath also townlands of Ballinlugg, Moycashel, Westmeath for the lives of the said John Pemberton, Henry Pemberton ye younger, Thos Strangman ... the said Thomas Handy for consideration did grant release & confirm to the said Samuel Handy & Thomas Strangman the lands of the 3 Bulgon in Barony of Bantry, Wexford c. 332 acres now in possession of [others].
John Pemberton married Sarah Handy, daughter of Thomas Handy and Mary Hillary, on 15 April 1744 in Ireland. Sunday last: Mr Henry Pemberton, an eminent Quaker merchant, was married to Miss Sally Handy, daugher of Mr Thomas Handy, of Meath St, merchant. The Quaker records show his parents as Henry & Elizabeth of Dublin and hers as Thomas & Mary of Dublin.
His father's will mentions them: Pemberton, Henry, Dublin, merchant. My wife Elizabeth Pemberton. To my daughter Elizabeth Pemberton £600 on day of marriage. To my son John (married to Sarah Handy) residue. Nephew Robert Lecky, son of my sister Jane. To nephew Henry Pemberton £10. My sister Elizabeth Vickers £80 yearly from holding in Dolphins Barn. Executors John Pemberton (son), Elizabeth Pemberton (daughter). Dated 16 Feb. 1746. Proved in Prerogative Court 8th of 8th month 1747. Witnesses: William Dixon, Henry Stearne, Chris. Dalton, public notary.
     John resided at Cole Alley, Dublin, 1752.
     John died before 11 April 1760 in Dublin, Ireland. He was buried on 11 April 1760 in Dublin.

Children of John Pemberton and Sarah Handy

Mary Pemberton

(before July 1750 - )
     Mary Pemberton was also known as Molly in records. She was born before July 1750 in Ireland. She was the daughter of John Pemberton and Sarah Handy.
Letter in 1769 among the Quaker correspondence in PRONI show her worries about her brother Handy Pemberton.
Letter from Mary Pemberton, Ballitore to Thomas Greer, Dungannon on 2 Sep 1769. I am sorry to have kept your daughter so much longer than you permitted. I shall leave her to Edenderry as soon as the Chaise returns. It has been sent to Jacob Goffs at Horetown, for my brother Handy who took a fever while on a visit there..
Mary Pemberton married John Helton on 17 December 1780 in Dublin. Michelle Kahler of Qld states: She was his third wife. Their two known children were:
1. John HELTON b.c1781, Mountmellick, Co.Queens. He married a fellow Quaker, Anne ALEXANDER. Nothing more is known of John, Anne, or their descendants.
2. William HELTON b.c1783, Mountmellick, Co.Queens. William died 21 Jan 1789 in Bristol..

Mary Pemberton

     Mary Pemberton was the daughter of Handy Pemberton and Jane Sutton.

Robert Pemberton

(1756 - before 7 January 1757)
     Robert Pemberton was born in 1756. He was the son of John Pemberton and Sarah Handy.
     Robert died before 7 January 1757. He was buried on 7 January 1757.

William Pemberton

(3 January 1773 - 10 March 1854)
     William Pemberton was born on 3 January 1773 in England. He was the son of Handy Pemberton and Jane Sutton. William Pemberton was christened on 28 January 1773 in St Mary, Lambeth, Surrey. On October 1788 his name was legally changed to Pemberton Pigott. He was High Sheriff of Wexford in 1794.
     William died on 10 March 1854 in 'Slevoy Castle', Slevoy, Wexford, aged 81.

Dorothy Alice Pengelly

( - 1996)
     Dorothy Alice Pengelly married George Alexander Hughes Field, son of William Hughes Field and Isabel Jane Hodgkins, on 2 October 1939 in New Zealand.
     Dorothy died in 1996 in New Zealand.

Child of Dorothy Alice Pengelly and George Alexander Hughes Field

Thomas Penninge

     Thomas Penninge married Susan Cocksedge, daughter of George Cocksedge and Mary Unknown, on 5 October 1684 in Buxhall, Suffolk.

Rose Pennocke

(before 1570 - )
     Rose Pennocke was born before 1570 in Hadleigh, Suffolk.
Rose Pennocke married John Bland on 9 May 1586 in Hadleigh, Suffolk.
Rose Pennocke married John Mould as her second husband, on 5 September 1602 in Hadleigh, Suffolk..

Children of Rose Pennocke and John Bland

Elizabeth Penny

(circa 1851 - )
     Elizabeth Penny was born circa 1851 in Firbeck, Yorkshire.
Elizabeth Penny married Edward Rich, son of Joseph Rich and Elizabeth Taylor, before 1 July 1872 in Worksop, Nottinghamshire.
     Elizabeth Penny and Edward Rich were recorded on the 1881 census in 'Osberton Lodge', Worksop, Nottinghamshire. Edward Rich, mar, 46, born Blyth, Nottingham, Head, Joiner; Elizabeth Rich, 39, born Firbeck, Yks, wife, House Wife; John J P Rich, 5, born Worksop, son, Scholar; Arthur E A Rich, 6, born Scofton (Worksop), Son, Scholar; Jane M M Rich, 4, b. Scofton (Worksop), daughter; George W E Rich, 3 m, Scofton (Worksop), son; James J Leslie, unmarried, 20, born Appleby, Westmorland, boarder; clerk.
     Elizabeth Penny and Edward Rich were recorded on the 1891 census in Worksop, Nottinghamshire. Edward Rich, mar, 54, born Blyth, Nottingham, Head, Joiner; Elizabeth Rich, 49, born Firbeck, Yks, wife; John J Vivian Rich, 18, joner's apprentice, born Worksop, son; A E Algernon Rich, 16, born Osberton, gardener's apprentice; C W Evelyn Rich, son, scholar, born Osberton; Catherine Clarke, visitor 63, born Dby, and Martha Penny, sister in law, 46, dressmaker, born Worksop.

Children of Elizabeth Penny and Edward Rich

John Penrose

     John Penrose married Anne or Agnes Killigrew, daughter of John Killigrew and Jane or Joan or Maude Petit, before 1567. She was named in the will of her brother James in 1567..

Samuel Penwell

(circa 1836 - )
     Samuel Penwell was born circa 1836 in Ashburton, Devon. He was the son of John Penwill and Susanna Ruby.
The marriage of Samuel Penwell and Mary Ann Webber was registered in Newton Abbot RD, Devon, in the March 1858 quarter.
     Samuel Penwell and Mary Ann Webber were recorded on the 1861 census in Tormohan, Devon. Samuel Penwell 24 , chimney swweep, born Ashburton; his wife Mary Ann Penwell 24, born Chittlehampton?, Mary Ann Penwell 2, born Cockington, Susanna Penwell 8 Months, born Torquay; James Webber 72, father in law; with lodgers George Kendall 23, Elizabeth Kendall 29.

Child of Samuel Penwell and Mary Ann Webber

Susannah Penwell

(1860 - )
     Susannah Penwell was born in 1860 in Torquay, Devon. She was the daughter of Samuel Penwell and Mary Ann Webber.
The marriage of Susannah Penwell and Robert Parnell was registered in Newton Abbot RD, Devon, in the December 1880 quarter.
     Susannah Penwell and Robert Parnell were recorded on the 1891 census in Cross St, Moretonhampstead, Devon. Robert Parnell 34 , farm labourer, born Paignton, Devon, his wife Susan A Parnell 30 . born Torquay, Samuel I Parnell 11 , born Torquay, Earnest E Parnell 9, born Paignton, Emily A Parnell 6, born at Moreton Hamostead, Laura E Parnell 0 born Moreton Hampstead.

Child of Susannah Penwell and Robert Parnell

John Penwill

(circa 1804 - )
     John Penwill was born circa 1804 in Totnes, Devon, England. As of 21 May 1829, John Penwill was also known as Penwell in records.
John Penwill married Susanna Ruby, daughter of William Ruby and Mary Rendle, on 21 May 1829 in Ashburton, Devon.
     John Penwill and Susanna Ruby were recorded on the 1851 census in Old Mill, Ashburton, Devon. John Penwell 47, born Totnes; his wife Susanna Penwell 46, born Widecombe in the Moor, Mary Penwell 4 born Ashburton.

Child of John Penwill and Susanna Ruby

Ann Pepper

     Ann Pepper was born in Water Newton, Huntingdonshire.
Ann Pepper married George Bowker in 1766 in Water Newton, Huntingdonshire.

Roger Pepys

(3 May 1617 - before 4 October 1688)
     Roger Pepys was born on 3 May 1617 in Impington, Cambridgeshire. He was the son of Talbot Pepys (1583-1668) & Beatrice Castell.. He was christened on 13 May 1617 in Heydon, Norfolk. Roger was a lawyer of the Middle Temple on 4 November 1634, London. In 1719 Joseph Banks described him as Roger Pepys of Impington near Cambridge.

153. (Talbot , John , William , William , Robert , Thomas ) Roger was admitted to Middle Temple on 4 Nov 1634. He was employed as Recorder 1660 - 1688 in Cambridge, England. He was employed as M.P. 1661-1678 in Cambridge, England. He was administrator of the estate of his son Talbot on 15 Dec 1681. He signed a will 26, 27 on 31 Aug 1688.

There are records for Roger Pepys and Barbara Bacon, Roger Peaps/Peapes/Pepis and Barbery/Barbary Bacon. Birthplace is shown as St Stephens, Norwich, Norfolk or Impington Cambridge. WCP says he was baptised at Heydon Norfolk and says that Barbara Bacon is buried in St.Stephens Norwich. The various children's birth dates that appear under these references do not conflict. However some are shown as Norfolk births and some as Cambridge. WCP shows children of Impington but the IGI has a number of Norfolk births. There are also a number of Norfolk references in the previous two generations. Presumably the family had Norfolk and Cambridge connections and that is how Roger and Barbara met and why some of the children were born and/or lived in Norfolk. It would appear that he lived in Norfolk for the first two childrens births, Elizabeth 1643 and Barbara 1645, next child Talbot born in 1647 in Chancery Lane London later children in Impington Cambridge; and then returned to Norfolk for the births and/or christenings of John in 1655 and Robert in 1656, Barbara died and/or buried in 1657 in Norfolk.
IGI shows birth on 12th.
The following probably applies to this Roger:
Historic auction AN historic document relating to Diss during the reign of Chalrles II goes under the hammer next month. Auctioneers Mullock & Madeley will sell the document in Ludlow, Shropshire next Friday. It dates from 1670 and relates to Roger Pepys, owner of the market and tolls of Diss. It states that he has received 'at the courst of his Majesty at Westminster, from the hands of Sir Robert Long, one measure of brass containing one bushel sizes and seals by his Majesty's measures and standards for the common wealth profit and case of all people' "This is a very early and scarce example of weights and measures legislation being applied to markets," said the auctioneers' head of documents Richard Westwood-Brookes. The Diss document is estimated to fetch £60-90. Further information from:P Richard Westwood-Brookes on 01568 770803 or from the auctioneers on 01694 771771. The newspaper was Wymondham and Attleborough Mercury, dated Friday, March 7 2003.
Roger Pepys married Ann Banks, daughter of Luke Banks and Hester Bellingham. They were childless, but he had issue by his second wife Barbara Bacon.
     More information about Roger Pepys may be found at http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1660-1690/member/pepys-roger-1617-88
He was Commissioner for assessment, Norf. Jan. 1660, Cambridge Univ. Aug. 1660-1, Cambs. 1661-80, Cambridge 1661-3, 1664-9, Cambridge Univ. and Norf. 1677-80; j.p. Norf. Mar.-July 1660, Cambs. Mar. 1660-80; recorder, Cambridge May 1660-79; commr. for pontage, Cambridge, 1663, 1673; bencher, M. Temple 1664; commr. for recusants, Cambs. 1675.2.
His cousin Samuel Pepys, the diarist, wrote on 3 August 1661: at Cambridge . . . at night I took horse and rode with Roger Pepys and his two brothers to Impington. 14th August 1661: Lord's Day. Got up and by and by walked into the orchard with my cousin Roger and there plucked some fruit. To church and had a good plain sermon. My uncle Talbot went with us, and at our coming in, the country people all rose with much reference, and when the parson begins he begins 'Right Worshipful and dearly beloved etc' to us.
A lease dated 1670 shows: 1. Roger Pepys of Impington, Camb. 2. Richard Quarry of Botesdale, Suffolk. Messuage called Park House in Diss.
     Roger died before 4 October 1688. He was buried on 4 October 1688 in Impington, Cambridgeshire.
     His will was proved on 13 October 1688 at Ely, Cambridgeshire. Schedule of money to be paid by Roger Pepys for the settlement of the manor of Diss WILL: 1688 Aug. 31. Roger Pepys of Impington, Cambs. [ACBIA]. To be buried at Impington near my father. To my grandson Talbot Pepys when 21. Proved Ely 13 Oct. 1688 by Charles Long his son-in-law.

Robert de Perci

     Robert de Perci was the son of Walter de Perci and Avice or Amice de Romelli or Meschin.

Walter de Perci

      Of Rugemond..
Walter de Perci married Avice or Amice de Romelli or Meschin, daughter of William de Meschin Lord of Copeland and Cecily de Romelli, before 1153.

Samuel Percival

     Samuel Percival married Ann Colbert on 14 September 1742 in Habrough, Lincolnshire, England.

William de Percy

( - between 1174 and 1175)
     Sibyl de Valognes married secondly William de Percy circa 1166.
     William died between 1174 and 1175.

Lady Elizabeth Percy

     Lady Elizabeth Percy married Henry le Scrope 6th Lord Scrope of Bolton. He married, 1stly (before 20 April 1494), Alice (aged 12 and more 23 April 1493), suo jure Baroness Scrope (of Masham), only daughter and heir of Thomas (le Scrope), 6th Lord Scrope (of Masham), by Elizabeth, daughter and coheir of John (Neville), Marquess of Montagu. She died s.p.m. about 1510.
He married, 2ndly, Mabel, daughter of Thomas (Dacre), 2nd Lord Dacre (of Gilsland), by Elizabeth, according to modern doctrine suo jure Baroness Greystoke, daughter and sole heir of Sir Robert Greystoke.".

Henry Percy

(1160 - before 1205)
     Henry Percy married Isabel Brus, daughter of Adam Brus and Jueta de Arches. Henry Percy was born in 1160. He was the son of Josceline de Lorraine and Agnes de Percy who was born 1134.
     Henry died before 1205.

Margaret Percy

     Margaret Percy married Robert de Umfraville, son of Gilbert de Umfraville 3rd Earl of Angus and Maud Lucy. They had no issue. Robert pre-deceased his father.. Margaret Percy was born. She was the daughter of Henry, Lord Percy..

Lady Margaret Percy

     Lady Margaret Percy was born. She was the daughter of Henry Percy, 3rd Earl of Northumberland, who was born 25 Jul 1421, Leconfield.
Lady Margaret Percy married Sir William Gascoigne, son of William Gascoigne and Jane Nevil.

Children of Lady Margaret Percy and Sir William Gascoigne

Maude or Matilda Percy

(circa 1489 - between 1528 and 1543)
     Maude or Matilda Percy was born circa 1489. The case for her birth and parentage as daughter of Henry Percy, 4th Earl of Northumbelrand and his wife Maud Herbert, was made by Brad Verity in Feb 2010
(Option 6) Maud, legitimate daughter of Henry Percy, 4th Earl of Northumberland and his wife Maud Herbert. At first glance, this possibility seems easily ruled out. CP states the couple was married "about 1476", but they were actually married by Michaelmas (October) 1472 (see Michael Hicks, "Dynastic Change and Northern Society: The Career of the Fourth Earl of Northumberland, 1470-89" in 'Northern History', xiv (1978), pp. 83-84). Per the Percy pedigree in the
Visitation of the North circa 1480-1500, their children were "Henricus Percy, Anna, Elizabeth Percy obijt iuuencula, and
Aleonora." Per the will of the 4th Earl, dated 27 July 1485 as he was mustering to fight for Richard III at Bosworth, his children were sons Henry, William, Alan and Jocelin, and daughters Eleanor and Anne. No daughter Maud. Eleanor (named for paternal grandmother Eleanor, Countess of Northumberland), the eldest surviving daughter and no doubt born before her brother Henry the 5th Earl, was bequested 3,000 marks as her marriage portion by her father, and was contracted in marriage in 1490, the year following her father's murder, to Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham. Anne Percy (named for maternal grandmother Anne, Countess of Pembroke), bequested 2,000 marks as a marriage portion by her father, did not marry William, son and heir of the Earl of Arundel, until February 1511, when she was well over age 25 and possibly (if older than her brother the 5th Earl) over age 30. Why there was such a delay in her marrying is not clear. Per CP, Maud Herbert, wife of the 4th Earl, died before July 1485, when her husband made his will. So it would appear there is no room for another daughter Maud, wife of Sir Ralph Ryther.

But CP is incorrect in its statement about Maud Herbert's death. A full reading of the 4th Earl's will shows that she was alive when he wrote it. He goes into great detail about his funeral arrangements, and prayers for the soul of himself and his parents, without any indication that his wife had died. And later he clearly states, "Also I will that William Rilston [an executor and one of his most trusted retainers] have fourtie markes yerlie during his lyve, t'abide wt my wyff and wt myne heir." So, how did CP get confused?
Because a codicil to the will, added by the 4th Earl "at Newburgh, ye xxiiij day of Fev'yer, wt my hand" adds the following, "Also I wol ther be mortest as moch land to Beverlay, wher my wife lyes, and I entend shal lye..." So at some point after Bosworth, Countess Maud died. The 4th Earl was imprisoned after the battle but released by December 1485, so the February 24th codicil could have been written in 1486/87/88 or 89. Countess Maud was a young woman in the late 1480s, in her early 30s at the most - could her death have been in childbirth? A daughter Maud, born in 1486/88, would be of the perfect age for marriage in October 1510.
After the 4th Earl's children were orphaned in April 1489, the two eldest, Eleanor and Henry, in their preteens, were taken in by the Court and soon married, probably under the watchful eyes of the King's mother and her good friend their maternal aunt Anne (Herbert), Lady Powis. Anne, the next daughter, probably close in age, may have
been taken into the Court as well. But the younger sons, all under age 10, would have been given to the care of their father's executors, as per the instructions in his will, until they reached the age of 18.
And little Maud would have been a mere infant, perhaps sent to the household of one of her paternal aunts, Dame Margaret Gascoigne or Elizabeth, Lady Scrope of Bolton? Each of which ladies would see a granddaughter and daughter, respectively, married to a son of Sir Ralph Ryther before October 1510. And it would be perfectly natural for the brother who would oversee Maud's interests in her marriage to Sir Ralph, to not be her eldest brother the 5th Earl, raised far away from her at Court, but her next eldest brother Sir William, himself approaching age 30 in 1510, who was her oldest sibling while they were raised in the North.
It is not clear when Maud Percy, Dame Ryther, died. She was alive when her stepson Thomas Ryther made his will in 1527 and dead by the time her son Henry Ryther made his will in 1543. Perhaps she is mentioned in the wills of Eleanor, Duchess of Buckingham (1528), Joscelin Percy (1532), or Anne, Countess of Arundel (1552), and her identification as their sister can be confirmed.
At this point, her identification as a daughter of the 4th Earl of Northumberland seems very solid on chronological and other evidence (she named her son 'Henry'), and the possibility of her being a daughter by his wife Maud Herbert seems promising as well. Maud Percy's daughter Elizabeth Ryther married, at some point after 1527, William Aclam of Moreby, Yorkshire, and died before her brother Henry, who died without issue 5 January 1544, when his nephew William Aclam (d. 1567) was found to be one of his co-heirs, and the latter carried the line of his grandmother Maud Percy further forward.
.
     Maude or Matilda Percy married Sir Ralph Ryther as his second wife, circa 1510. His second wife was Maud daughter of Henry Percy 4th Earl of Northumberland, who survived him (her stepson's inquisition).
     Maude or Matilda Percy was mentioned in the will of Thomas Ryther dated 1 July 1527.
     Maude died between 1528 and 1543.
     Maude or Matilda Percy was mentioned in the will of Sir Henry Ryther dated 23 January 1542/43.

Children of Maude or Matilda Percy and Sir Ralph Ryther

Mary Perkehus

(circa 1730? - before 7 September 1758)
     Mary Perkehus was born circa 1730?.
Mary Perkehus married Richard Popplewell, son of Humphrey Popplewell and Mary Whitaker, on 13 December 1739 in St Benet, Paul's Wharf, London. First wife was Mary PERKEHUS (possibly foreign - part of the Dutch contingent in Axholme?) but may be English PARKHOUSE..
     Mary died before 7 September 1758 in Epworth, Lincolnshire. She was buried on 7 September 1758 in Epworth, Lincolnshire. Mary Poplewell, wife of Richard.

Children of Mary Perkehus and Richard Popplewell