Page:Protestant Exiles from France Agnew vol 2.djvu/142

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
128
historical introduction.

Children of Captain Daniel Corneille and Elizabeth, baptized in St. Anne’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin:—

1804, July 25, Susannah.

1806, April 21, Charles Sackville.

Children of Henry Schevenelle and Anne, baptized in St. Anne’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin:—

1804, August 1, Elizabeth.

1808, December 12, Denis.

Children of Peter Julius Caesar Chevalier and Elizabeth, baptized in St. Anne’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin:—

1805, March 13, Ellen Victoria.

1806, April 27, George Hartford.

Children of John Pittar and Eliza [1st wife], baptized in St. Anne’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin :—

1805, May 18, Elizabeth.

1807, June 2, John.

Children of the Hon. Peter Boyle Blacquière and Eliza, baptized in St. Anne’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin:—

1805, October 3, Peter Townsend.

1806, October 30, George.

1807, December 11, Eliza Cecelia.

1809, February 19, Anna Maria.

1810, July 1, William.

1811, July 9, Eleanor.

1812, July 9, John.

Children of Peter La Touche, junr., and the Hon. Charlotte, baptized in St. Anne’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin:—

1807, October 10, Peter David.

1809, February 25, Cornwallis.

1808, St Anne’s, Dublin, January 28, Edith, daughter of General Vallancy and Edith.

Children of Charles La Grange and Mary, baptized in St. Anne’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin :—

1809, April 16, Charles.

1810, September 2, Charles.

1812, September 13, Eleanor.

1818, March 8, Daniel (born January 16th).

1811, St. Anne’s, Dublin, April 5, Sarah, daughter of Henry Ducros and Eliza.

1812, St. Anne’s, Dublin, June 7, Penelope, daughter of Matthew Lathonge and Mary.

Children of John Pittar and Elizabeth [Holmes], baptized in St. Anne’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin:—

1812, November 26, Thomas John.

1814, April 21, Anne Phipps (born January 23).

1815, December 13, William Holmes (born July 20).

1813, St. Anne’s, Dublin, February 2, Selina Benigne, daughter of John Corneille and Anne.

1813, St. Anne’s, Dublin, privately, June 28, publicly, July 1, Anne Rosalie Olivia, daughter of Louis William, Vicomte de Chabot, Lieut.-Colonel in his Britannic Majesty’s Army, and of the Right Hon. Lady Elizabeth Charlotte Fitz-Gerald, his wife, sister to the present Duke of Leinster. Sponsors — Her grandfather, the Right Hon. Charles Rosalie de Rohan Chabot,[1] formerly a Lieut.-Colonel in the Royal Army of France. The Right Hon. William Wentworth Fitz-Gerald, Anne Eliza Chandos, Marchioness of Buckingham, Olivia, Baroness Kinnaird, sister of the Duke of Leinster.

1819, St. Anne’s, Dublin, June 17, William George, son of Edward Garde and Anne (born 14th).

DEATHS.

Died at Thorp-le-Soken, Essex, 29th April 1685, Isaac de Sevre dit la Chaboissiere, aged about seventy-three.

Died in 1687, and buried in Westminster Abbey, 13th December, Mrs. Mary De l’Angle [wife of the Prebendary].

Died at Thorp-le-Soken, Essex, 9th April 1688, Jean Roquier, Sieur de Puischegut.

Died at Thorp-le-Soken, Essex, 4th September 1688, Mr. Samuel Beauchamp, aged seventy-eight.

Died at Thorp-le-Soken, Essex, 22d January 1689 (n.s.), Henry Vareilles, Sieur de Champredon.

Died at Canterbury, “1689, Mars 15, Mourut M. Paul Gorgier, nostre fidel pasteur, aiant servy nostre Eglise 4½ ans.”[2]

Died in June 1689, and buried on the 7th in the church of St. Dionis Backchurch, Elizabeth, daughter of Joseph Ducasse, merchant.

Buried at Greenwich, 28th July 1689, the Marquis of Ruvignie [Register of Burials belonging to the Parish Church of Greenwich].

Died in Canterbury, in 1692, Peter (buried 4th May), and Danniell (buried 10th August), sons of [Rev.] Peter Trouillart, clerk. (Cathedral register.)

  1. This entry, although not properly belonging to Huguenot Refugee biography, is inserted here as commemorative of the marriage of the daughter and heiress of the great Due de Rohan with the Marquis de Chabot, which I had to mention in my chapter on the first Marquis de Ruvigny. The union of the two families was brought about in the interest of the Roman Catholic party; it is, therefore, singular that it should reappear in a Protestant connection.
  2. There is a puzzle here as to the figures, which seem to mean “four years and a half;” but Mr. J. S. Burn reads them as “between forty-one and forty-two years;” and on the basis of this reading, when compiling a list of French Pasteurs of Canterbury, he gives 1648 as the date of M. Gorgier’s admission to the pastoral charge. His conjectures have occasionally been inaccurate; in this case I copy the entry from the register, and must leave the interpretation to others.