Taken From: HERE: Source: Lineage Papers of Robert Forsyth Little, Jr. for the Society of the Colonial Wars.
The first ancestor of the name in the United States, was Richard Platt.
"Richard Piatt, son of Joseph Piatt, was baptized Sept. 28, 1603." This is claimed as an extract from the parish records of Bovingdon, a village near Hertford, England.
The Platt progenitor, Richard Platt left England in 1638, and landed at New Haven
Richard Piatt had eighty-four acres of land in and around New Haven. His name is on the list of free-planters made out in 1646 ; he was chosen a deacon in the first church in Milford in 1669.
It is recorded that his wife, Mary, died in January, 1676. He made his will in 1683.
Okay .. so Mary Wood Platt from my written notes:10 Nov. 1605 - 24 Mar 1676(70)
Possible:
F: John Wood (#1) : 13 Apr 1566 - 7 Dec 1635(69) - both Roydon, Essex, England
M: Jane (unknown)
Possible:
F: John Wood (#2) : 1578-1605(27)
M: Isabel Wood : 1582-1649(67)
both born and died in : Roydon, Essex, England
John Wood (#2) parents : F: Edmund Wood SR. 6 Mar 1546 - 1614(18)
M: Janet Hurst : 1550-1583 ......................... m: 4 Apr 1573
NOTE ON EDMUND AND JANET
This one was taken from HERE
Edmond WOOD [Parents] 1 was born on 6 Mar 1546 in Northorum, Yorkshire, England. He was christened on 6 Mar 1546 in Sowerby, Halifax, Yorkshire, England. He died in 1614/1618. He married Janet HURST on 4 Apr 1573 in Shelf(n Oram), Halifax, Yorkshire, England.
Janet HURST [Parents] 1 was born about 1550 in Of, Northorem, Yorkshire, England. She was christened on 4 May 1545 in , Dewsbury, Yorkshire, England. She died in 1583 in Hamlet Of Shelf, Halifax Parish, Yorkshire, Eng.. She married Edmond WOOD on 4 Apr 1573 in Shelf(n Oram), Halifax, Yorkshire, England.
They had the following children:
- M i Humphry WOOD 1 was born on 19 Sep 1574 in Hamlet Of Shelf, Halifax Parish, Yorkshire, Eng.. He was christened on 19 Sep 1574 in Northorem, Yorkshire, England.
- M ii Richard WOOD
- M iii Edmund WOOD
- M iv John WOOD 1 was born on 25 Dec 1580 in Hamlet Of Shelf, Halifax Parish, Yorkshire, Eng.. He was christened on 25 Dec 1580 in Northorem, Yorkshire, England.
- F v Grace WOOD 1 was born on 9 Sep 1581 in Hamlet Of Shelf, Halifax Parish, Yorkshire, Eng.. She was christened on 9 Dec 1581 in Northorem, Yorkshire, England.
- M vi John WOOD
- M vii Thomas WOOD 1 was born in 1586 in Hamlet Of Shelf, Halifax Parish, Yorkshire, Eng.. He was christened on 29 Jan 1586 in Northorem, Yorkshire, England.
- M viii Robert WOOD 1 was christened on 29 Jan 1586 in Northorem, Yorkshire, England.
- F ix Susan WOOD 1 was born in <1588> in <Northorem, Yorkshire, England>.
I am going to continue down from Janet/Judith Hurst on another blog......
From HERE and HERE *notice Richard Wood JR was married twice*
Wood, Richard, Jr
b. 1510
Sowerby Yorkshire UK
m. Longbotham, Elizabeth
30 Sep 1600
m. Ambler, Margaret
26 Jul 1540
d. 06 Dec 1549
Estimate of birth from the last will of his farther Richard Wood born about 1480.
Richard Wood, Jr.
Birth: | 1515 Sowerby, Halifax Parish, Yorkshire, England |
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Death: | 1549 (34) Halifax, West Riding, Yorkshire, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Richard Wood, Sr. and Christabell Washburn
Husband of Margaret Wood and Annie Joanna Roper Father of John Ambler Wood; Isabelle Ambler Wood; Thomas Ambler Wood; Richard Wood;Edmund Wood, Sr. and 4 others |
Annie Joanna Roper
Birth: | circa 1523 |
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Death: | December 6, 1549 (26) |
Immediate Family: |
Wife of Richard Wood, Jr.
|
Ambler, Margaret
b. 1517
Halifax
d. 06 Dec 1549
Halifax
m. Wood, Richard
26 Jul 1540
Margaret Anne Wood (Ambler)
Birth: | circa 1523 Northowram, , Yorkshire, England |
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Death: | circa 1600 (77) Sowerby, Halifax, Yorkshire, England |
Immediate Family: |
Daughter of William Ambler and Isabel Ambler
Wife of Richard Wood, Jr. Mother of John Ambler Wood; Isabelle Ambler Wood; Thomas Ambler Wood; Richard Wood;Edmund Wood, Sr. and 4 others Sister of Joan Nycoll; Isabel Sutcliff; Elizabeth Northend and William Ambler |
I'm going to continue Margaret's on another blog ....
Notes for RICHARD WOOD SR. From HERE and linked off there after
Richard Wood, Sr.
Birth: | circa 1480 Sowerby,Halifax,Yorkshire,England |
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Death: | July 8, 1553 (73) Sowerby,Halifax,Yorkshire,England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Christopher Wood and Margaret C. Wood
Husband of Christabell Washburn Father of Richard Wood, Jr. |
Wood, Richard, Sr
b. 1484
Sowerby Yorkshire UK
d. 18 Mar 1552
Sowerby Yorkshire UK
m. Not Found2, Christabel
1508
About Wood, Richard, Sr
This Richard Wood was a handloom weaver of woollen goods.His Will. March 14 1552 Richard Woode of Souerbye in the countie of Yorke,clother.I ordayne and make Christabell my wif,and Margaret,Anges,Thomas,and Rycharde,my children,myne executors to resayve suche thinges as be owynge to me and also to paye my dettes,whiche dettes beyonge paid,Igiue the residue of all my goodes to my said wif and children;and that this my will maye the better be accompleshed I desire my brother John Wood,and Thomas Fournes to be ouersears of the same.Thes wittenesses,John Woode,Edmunde Wood,Sir John Hilton,preist.Pr.Jul.8.1553,by Xpabell.mrelict,Margaret and Agnes,daughters,power being reserved to Thomas and Richard,children." (Sourse:Halifax Parish Wills P, 82.Note the will has been copied with the spelling as found in the original soure.)
WOOD (Yorkshire)
Richard Wood (1480-1553) married Christable. He and his younger brothers John and Edmund were cloth weavers in Sowerby, Halifax, Yorkshire, "on the bleak, treeless moorlands of the Pennine Hills, where fertile soil was at a minimum."
. 1. Margaret Wood (c.1509)
. 2. Agnes Wood (c.1511)
. 3. Thomas Wood (c.1513)
. 4. Richard Wood (c1515) married Margaret Annes Ambler
WOOD (Yorkshire)
Richard Wood (1480-1553) married Christable. He and his younger brothers John and Edmund were cloth weavers in Sowerby, Halifax, Yorkshire, "on the bleak, treeless moorlands of the Pennine Hills, where fertile soil was at a minimum."
. 1. Margaret Wood (c.1509)
. 2. Agnes Wood (c.1511)
. 3. Thomas Wood (c.1513)
. 4. Richard Wood (c1515) married Margaret Annes Ambler
Christabell Washburn (Umn)
Birth: | circa 1485 Sowerby,Halifax,Yorkshire,England |
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Death: | circa 1598 (113) Sowerby,Halifax,Yorkshire,England |
Immediate Family: |
Christopher Wood
Birth: | circa 1459 Halifax, West Riding, York, England |
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Immediate Family: |
Son of John Atte Wode and Isabelle Atte Wode
Husband of Margaret C. Wood Father of Richard Wood, Sr. Half brother of Thomas Wood,; John Atwood;Anne Atwood and John Wode, 1425 |
Margaret C. Wood (Umn)
Birth: | circa 1457 |
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Immediate Family: |
John Atte Atte Wode
Birth: | circa April 4, 1400 Sanderstead, Surrey, England |
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Death: | 1459 (59) Sanderstead, Surrey, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of John Atte Wode; Peter Atte Wode andPetronilla Atte Wode
Husband of Isabella Atwood; Isabelle Atte Wode and Isabella ? Father of Thomas Wood,; John Atwood; Anne Atwood; Christopher Wood and John Wode, 1425 Brother of John Wode; Alice Gower; Geoffrey Atte Wode and Peter Atte Wode |
Isabella Atwood (Mulys)
Birth: | circa 1405 Sanderstead, Surrey, , England |
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Death: | 1499 (94) Sanderstead, Surrey, , England |
Immediate Family: |
Daughter of James de Mules and Margaret Upton
Wife of John Atte Wode Mother of Thomas Wood,; John Atwood andAnne Atwood Half sister of Thomas Upton |
Isabelle Atte Wode (DeMules)
Birth: | 1405 |
---|---|
Death: | 1499 (94) South Croydon, Greater London, UK |
Immediate Family: |
I will continue down from Isabelle in another blog....
John Atte Wode
Birth: | circa 1360 Sanderstead, Surrey, England |
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Death: | 1404 (44) Surrey, , England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Peter Atte Wode and Anisia Atte Wode
Husband of Petronilla Atte Wode Father of John Atte Wode; Alice Gower;Geoffrey Atte Wode and Peter Atte Wode Brother of Laurencia Atte Wode-Atwood / Quetche and Peter Atte Wode Half brother of Peter Atte Wode |
Sanderstead Court was a country house most often associated with the Atwood family of Sanderstead, Surrey, England. It was located next to the All Saint’s Parish Church (c. 1230) in Sanderstead. This manor house evolved over the centuries to become a significant country house and the seat of power of the Atwood family.
The first mention of the Atwood family in Sanderstead is in 1346 when Justice Peter Atte Wood (Atte Wode) and his wife Laurencia purchased land there (Lewis 1894, p. 338). The Atte Wode’s had originally lived nearby in Coulsdon, first at Hooley House and then at Wood Place. Some time in the 15th century they moved to Sanderstead and began improving the property there. By the time John Atwood died in 1525, the family seems to have made the transition to Sanderstead, and he mentions Sanderstead manor in his will (Atwood 1928).
The Atwood family were benefactors to the Sanderstead Parish Church which was adjacent to their home, and John Atwood (Atwodde) and his wife, Denys, have a brass plaque in the church dated 1525. John’s grand son, Nicholas Wood, who died in 1565, is identified as “of Sandersted Corte who served quene Elizabeth sens the second yearr of her rayne” on his brass in the church (Stephanson 1919).
Several secondary sources repeat the tradition that Queen Elizabeth I once spent the night at Sanderstead Court while Nicholas Wood was the owner. His service to the queen included being a Sergeant of the Queen's Carriages. There has been no independent corroboration of the Queen's presence at Sanderstead Court, however, so the story remains an undocumented tradition.
Nicholas Wood lost a portion Sanderstead to Sir John Gresham, Lord Mayor of London, when King Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries in 1536 and conveyed their property to some of his favorites.
After a series of complicated transactions and inheritances, the Atwood’s regained control of Sanderstead Court, and Nicholas Wood's son, Harman Atwood, Jr., transformed Sanderstead into a significant country house in the 1670’s.
Harman Atwood was finished his renovations to Sanderstead Court in 1675. The completed house was a three story, red brick mansion comprised of a central core with two large wings at either end which were adorned with decorated chimneys. The central portion of the house had a great room, two stories in height, supported by fluted columns with Corinthian capitals; this great room was probably originally constructed by an earlier Atwood in the 16th century. Many of the rooms in Sanderstead Court were panelled with wood. The Atwood shield with a lion rampant between three acorns, the initials “H.A.” (Harman Atwood) and the date “1675” were once were carved in stone over the main entry to Sanderstead Court.
Harman Atwood, Jr. (1608-1676) was an attorney (solicitor) in London and Sanderstead was at the center of his vast holdings of real estate. Harman appears to have been a patron of the arts and had a friendship with John Oldham (poet). Oldham's poem, Pindarique, was written "to the memory of Harman Atwood upon his death." According to Charles Atwood "in a short biography of John Oldham prefixed to his poems...Harman Atwood was his liberal patron, that he died in 1676, that he was of Sanderstead, in Surrey County, England, where the name and family had been of long duration in a lineal descent"(Atwood 1888).
Harman Atwood died childless in 1676 and left Sanderstead Court to his sister Dame Olivia Atwood (1614-1681). Olivia also died childless, and the house passed through a succession of distant Atwood relations until it passed out of the family line entirely in 1759. Later owners included members of the Wigsell family.
John Preston Neal provides a description of Sanderstead Court's grounds as they existed in 1818:
"The site of the Court House is on an eminence, having in front a spacious lawn, skirted by a shrubbery of rich and varied foliage, separated from the adjoining pleasure grounds by a light range of iron palisades. The Park was enlarged by the addition of an Estate, called Place House; and the whole now forms quite a sequestered residence; the grounds, which are extensive, admit the most beautiful prospects: on one side are seen the counties of Buckinghamshire and Berkshire; and on the other, a fine open coutnry for many miles, over all Bansted Downs" (Neal 1818).
In the early 20th century, Sanderstead Court was converted to a hotel and renamed “Selsdon Court.” During World War II it was used by the Royal Air Force. Sadly, Sanderstead Court burned, leaving only the outside walls in 1944. As of 1947 the mansion was still standing but reduced to ruins, probably never to be repaired, left in the edge of a little village in what is now the outskirts of London.
Petronilla Atte Wode (atte-wode)
Birth: | circa 1364 Sanderstead, Surrey, England |
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Death: | 1459 (95) England |
Immediate Family: |
Wife of Peter Atte Wode and John Atte Wode
Mother of John Atte Wode; John Wode; Alice Gower; Geoffrey Atte Wode and Peter Atte Wode |
Peter Att Atte Wode (atte-wode)
Birth: | 1360 Sanderstead Surrey England |
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Death: | 1404 (44) Surrey, UK |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Peter Atte Wode; Anisia Atte Wode andLaurencia Atte Wode
Husband of Petronilla Atte Wode Father of John Atte Wode and John Wode Brother of John Atte Wode and Laurencia Atte Wode-Atwood / Quetche |
Peter Atte Wode
Birth: | circa 1321 Woods Place, Surrey, England |
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Death: | November 30, 1382 (61) Sanderstead, Surrey, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Geoffrey Atte Wode and Yvonne Atte Wode
Husband of Laurencia Atte Wode and Anisia Atte Wode Father of Peter Atte Wode; John Atte Wode andLaurencia Atte Wode-Atwood / Quetche |
Laurencia Atte Wode (?)
Birth: | 1324 Surrey, England, United Kingdom |
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Death: | 1419 (95) Surrey, England, United Kingdom |
Immediate Family: |
Anisia Atte Wode
Birth: | estimated between 1285 and 1323 |
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Immediate Family: |
Wife of Peter Atte Wode
Mother of John Atte Wode; Laurencia Atte Wode-Atwood / Quetche and Peter Atte Wode |
Geoffrey Richard Atte Wode
Birth: | 1297 The Woods, Colsdon, Surrey, England |
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Death: | August 26, 1346 (49) Crécy-en-Ponthieu, Picardie, France |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Sir William Geoffrey Atte Wode andJuliana Atte Wode
Husband of Yvonne Atte Wode Father of Peter Atte Wode Brother of Anisia Atte Wode |
Assumed to be eldest son because of his connection with Hooley House as possessor of the estate. A Sergeant of Arms to the King.
-------------------- GEOFFREY ATTE WODE(1) was born about 1297 in COULSDON, SURREY, ENGLAND. He died on 26 Aug 1346 in COULSDON, SURREY, ENGLAND. HIS ESTATE WAS HOOLEY HOUSE, WHICH IN 1360 WAS FINED 46 POUNDS IN ADDITION TO A REGULAR TAX ON ONE 40TH OF A KNIGHT'S PAY, BECAUSE IT WAS PURCHASED WITHOUT CONSENT OF THE KING (A SORT OF EX POST FACTO SCHEME OF THE KING TO RAISE MONEY), IN 1346, IN THE YEAR OF THE REIGN OF EDWARD THE THIRD, "INQUISTIO POSST MORTEM GALFRIDUS (GEOFFREY) ATTE WODE" ...... LAND IN MANOR OF "GULLESDEN" (COULSDON). THE LATIN MEANS THAT THE FINE WAS PAID AFTER THE DEATH OF GEOFFREY ATTE WODE, PROBABLY IN 1360 AS STATED ABOVE.
THERE IS A NOTE THAT STATES GEOFFREY MIGHT HAVE BEEN KILLED OR FELL AT THE BATTLE OF CRECY. FELL ? DOES THIS MEAN WOUNDED AND THEN DIED LATER ON, ON DATE THAT IS NOTED. BATTLE OF CRECY TOOK PLACE IN FRANCE AROUND 1345, WHEN THE KING INVADED FRANCE. Parents: SIR WILLIAM ATTE WODE and JULIANA.
Yvonne Anisia Atte Wode (Livingstone)
Birth: | 1299 Woods Place, Coulsdon, Surrey, England |
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Death: | circa 1328 (29) South Croydon, Greater London, England, United Kingdom |
Immediate Family: |
William Geoffrey Atte Wode, Sir
Birth: | circa 1270 Hooley House, Colsdon, Surrey, England |
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Death: | 1345 (75) Woods Place, Surrey, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Peter Atte Wode and Alice Atte Wode
Husband of Juliana Atte Wode Father of Geoffrey Atte Wode and Anisia Atte Wode Brother of Geoffrey Atte Wode and Richard Atte Wode |
Sir William Atte Wode (bef. 1270 – c. 1346) was Captain of the King's Guard at the Palace of Westminster under King Edward III of England.
He was probably born sometime before 1300 in Coulsdon, Surrey, England. He was the son of Peter Atte Wode and Alice, who owned both Hooley House and Wood Place in Surrey. Sir William married a woman named Juliana, and they had at least three children: Geoffrey Atte Wode, Richard Atte Wode, and William Atte Wode.
While we do not know when he was knighted, it was at least by 1341, because by that time he is referred to as Sir William and is Captain of the King's Guard at the Palace of Westminster, the King's royal residence in London; members of parliament also met at Westminster Palace at this time. As a Sergeant at Arms, Sir William was part of the royal body guard that was composed of about thirty men at that time. It is not known what events occurred to bring William to King Edward III's attention for this position, but he must have had some connection through either friendship or family relations to the royal family.
An interesting anecdote about Sir William's life is recorded in John Heneage Jesse's Memorials of London (1341):
"In the 14th year of the reign of Edward III, John de Stratford, Archbishop of Canterbury, with a great number of London bishops, clergy, soldiers, came to the gate of Westminster Palace and demanded admittance to the chamber where Parliament was assembled. He was forbidden to enter in the King's name by Sir William Atwood, Captain of the King's Guard. The Archbishop was stopped because the followers were not members. The Archbishop was a member, but the King commended Sir William."
The Atte Wode lineage can be traced back to about 1204 when Peter de Wyckhurst (an older form of the name Atte Wode) purchased 'Hooley House' from the Bertan Marten, the Abbot of Chertsey Abbey. Over the next hundred years, the family added to its land holdings in Surrey and his father, Peter Atte Wode, purchased the 220-acre (0.89 km2) estate known as 'Wood Place' in 1279. The Atte Wode's emerged as one of the new influential class of yeomen who were becoming substantial land owners in England. In 1318 Sir William and Juliana added to the family's fortune by purchasing another estate known as 'Beckenham' in Kent.
Two of Sir William's sons, Geoffrey and Richard, also became Sergeants at Arms to the King. Richard is mentioned in the London Letter Books for his role in moving the fleet being assembled at London down the Thames to invade France during the 1346 campaign in the Hundred Years' War.
E. F. Atwood asserts that Sir William and both of his sons accompanied the army on their invasion of France, however, his source for this information is not given. It does seem likely, however, given their positions as body guards to King Edward. Based on subsequent land transactions in England, it appears possible that both Sir William and his son Geoffrey were killed in the French campaign in 1346, (possibly at the Battle of Crecy), however, this is not certain.
Sir William's grandson, Peter Atte Wode, continued to expand both the family’s land holdings and its influence by being appointed a Justice in Eyre; Peter's association with William of Wykeham who became the Bishop of Winchester and the Chancellor of England undoubtedly also helped to increase the family's influence.
The Atte Wode family name underwent a number of changes through the centuries with numerous variations in spelling: in the earliest records they are known as de Wyckhurst, by about 1300 they were commonly known as Atte Wode, a name that evolved into the modern version, Atwood, and finally, some (though not all) family members adopted the surname Wood in the 1500s.
Juliana Juliana Atte Atte Wode (William)
Birth: | 1274 Woods Place, Sanderstead, Cour., England |
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Death: | 1302 (28) Coulsden, Surrey, England |
Immediate Family: |
Peter Atte Atte Wode
Birth: | circa 1245 Hooley House, Coulsdon, Surrey, England |
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Death: | circa 1313 (68) Hooley House, Coulsdon, Surrey, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of William Wyckhurst and Alice Wyckhurst (Fosse)
Husband of Alice Atte Wode Father of Sir William Geoffrey Atte Wode;Geoffrey Atte Wode and Richard Atte Wode Half brother of Alice De Tyldenne |
Alice Atte Wode
Birth: | circa 1254 Coulsdon, Greater London, England, United Kingdom |
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Death: | 1313 (59) Stevington,,Bedfordshire,England |
Immediate Family: |
Wife of Peter Atte Wode
Mother of Sir William Geoffrey Atte Wode;Geoffrey Atte Wode and Richard Atte Wode |
William Wyckhurst (Atte Wode)
Birth: | circa 1220 Hooley House,Coulsdon,Surrey,England |
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Death: | circa 1278 (58) Coulsden, , Surrey, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Peter de Wyckhurst and Lady de Wyckhurst
Husband of Alice Atte Wode and Alice Wyckhurst (Fosse) Father of Alice De Tyldenne and Peter Atte Wode |
Wyckhurst means "house of Wood", and in later years the the owners of "The Hooley House" were "Atte Wodes". Bought Hooley House, Conlsdon, surrey in 1204. A 40 Acre estate. Wyck means dwelling on wooded knoll.
Alice Wyckhurst (Fosse)
Birth: 1224
Coulsdon, Surrey, England
Death: 1245 (21)
England (Complications of child birth)
Immediate Family:
Birth: | 1224 Coulsdon, Surrey, England |
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Death: | 1245 (21) England (Complications of child birth) |
Immediate Family: |
Alice Atte Wode (Umn)
Birth: | 1235 |
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Immediate Family: |
Peter de Wyckhurst (DeWyckhurst)
Birth: | circa 1180 Hooley House, Coulsdon, Surrey, England |
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Death: | Coulsden,,Surrey,England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Peter de Wyckhurst and Alice Atte Wode
Husband of Lady de Wyckhurst Father of William Wyckhurst Brother of William de Wyckhurst |
Unknown de Wyckhurst
Birth: | 1184 Coulsdon, Surrey, England |
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Death: | England |
Immediate Family: |
Peter de Wyckhurst
Birth: | circa 1180 Hooley House,Coulsdon,Surrey,England |
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Death: | 1203 (23) Coulsden, Surrey, , England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of Atte Wode and Unknown Atte Wode
Husband of Alice Atte Wode Father of Peter de Wyckhurst and William de Wyckhurst |
Alice Atte Wode (unknown)
Birth: | 1184 Hooley House,Coulsdon,Surrey,England |
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Death: | 1203 (19) England |
Immediate Family: |
Atte Wode
Birth: | 1160 England |
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Immediate Family: |
Unknown Atte Wode
Birth: | estimated between 1122 and 1180 |
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Immediate Family: |
There are suppose to be mentions of John Wood (Mary Wood's Father)
Source: Lineage Papers of Robert Forsyth Little, Jr. for the Society of the Colonial Wars.
Will be continuing on other blogs!!!
Wow! What an amazing research achievement! Fascinating to read. Natalie Wood :)
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