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Wednesday, July 2, 2014

MARGARET PASTON NEE MAUTEBY (MAWBEY)

A British television series called 'Medieval Lives', currently showing on Sydney television station SBS, highlighted correspondence by a medieval Mawbey woman, Margaret Paston, in its program on medievel childbirth.
The former Margaret Mauteby, later Margaret Mauteby Paston (1423-1484), is described as 'an exemplary pattern for wives and mothers' by the Rev. William Betham's in his commentary on the pedigree of Sir Joseph Mawbey of Botley, Surry of which Margaret was a part.
She was of the 12th generation on the family tree and Sir Joseph, the 21st.
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When Margaret Paston was pregnant with her first child, she sent a letter to her husband who was living and working as a lawyer in the Inner Temple in London, accompanied by a ring of St Margaret for him.
In medieval pre-Henry VIII times, St Margaret was revered as the patron saint of mothers in Catholic England.
This was St Margaret of Antioch (Asia Minor), a young Christian shepherdess, who was tortured and imprisoned when she refused to marry a Roman senior official.
While in gaol, the story goes, she was devoured by Satan the devil in the form of a dragon which, after she made the sign of the cross, split open and released her.
Her emerging unhurt from inside the dragon was likened to a form of birth, and thus the association with pregnant women.
Prior to being devoured by the dragon, Margaret's rejected suitor attempted unsuccessfully to boil her in a cauldron.
He finally had his way by beheading her.
*
The British Museum has over 1,000 documents written between 1422-1509 spanning three generations of the Paston family.
Of these, 104 were written by Margaret Paston.
These 'Paston Letters', the earliest record of private correspondence to survive in Britain, represent the library's best medieval collection.
*
Margaret Mauteby married John Paston in 1441 during the reign of King Henry VI (1421-1471).
The nuptial agreement was arranged by his clever lawyer father, Sir William Paston, resulting in the Mauteby and East Tuddenham manors passing to the Paston family.
There had been nobility in Margaret's family for generations whereas John Paston's grandfather had been a yeoman (farmer), unable to own land.
Somehow he had managed to educate his son William, John's father, who had turned out to be a brilliant lawyer, thereby elevating the socioeconomic status of the Paston family.
On the death of Margaret's father, John de Mauteby, Esquire, eldest son of Sir Robert de Mauteby, she inherited all of his estate. 
*
When Queen Margaret of Anjou (1430-1482), the French wife of King Henry VI who ruled in his place during the Wars of the Roses because of his bouts of insanity, visited Norfolk, she stayed with Margaret Paston for two days.
Shortly after this visit, Margaret wrote to her husband in London, requesting he buy her a necklace suitable for any future similar occasion.
Her own necklaces had not been good enough and she had been forced to borrow one from her cousin, Elizabeth Clere.
*
Margaret Paston had seven children including two sons named John.
John the elder died of plague leaving an illegitimate daughter.
John the younger, knighted in 1487, had a son William (c.1479-1554) who was knighted by King Henry VIII (1491-1547).
The younger John's eldest son was named Erasmus (1502-1540) after the Dutch Catholic scholar, Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus (1466-1536), or Erasmus of Rotterdam.
This name was to become popular in the Mawbey family.
A descendant of Erasmus Paston's son William, also named William (1652-1732), married a 'natural' (illegitimate) daughter of King Charles II (1630-1685).
*
Margaret Paston died on 4 November 1484, in the second last year of the reign of King Richard III (1452-1458) aged 61.
King Richard's death in battle signalled the end of the War of the Roses.
Margaret's husband, John Paston, had died in 1466, a short time after being released from The Fleet prison in London.
He had become caught up in legal disputes with his enemies over his land holdings after he was made the chief beneficiary of a oral will that others sought to challenge.
Margaret's will, proved on 18 December 1484, requested that her body be buried in the aisle of the church of Mawtby (St Peter and St Paul), Norfolk.
She was buried in the church's south aisle.
Margaret's grandson, Sir Robert Paston, was granted a knighthood by King Charles II in 1673.

See: Full text of Paston Letters

Postscript:
In May 1532, King Henry VIII transferred the power of the Church of England (then Roman Catholic) to the monarch.
Since 1527 he had been seeking a divorce from his wife, Catherine of Aragon, so he could marry Anne Bolyn which Pope Clement VII had refused.
The Pope excommunicated Henry in 1533.

WAS BOTLEY'S A MEDIEVAL MAWBEY FAMILY SEAT?

When Sir Joseph Mawbey I bought the Botleys estate in Surry in 1763, he was purchasing the place where his ancestors appear to have lived in the 13th and 14th centuries.
I had not seen this 'discovered' or documented anywhere before I stumbled across it recently.
*
Sir Walter de Mauteby was born 1223 in Mautby, Norfolk and married Petronilla who was born in Botleys, Surrey, in 1245.
His ancestors starting with his namesake, Sir Walter de Mauteby, born 1194, were all born in Mauteby, Norfolk.
By the start of the 13th century, the family had moved to Botleys, Surrey.
*
Sir Walter de Mauteby was born in Botleys, Surrey in 1246 and married Alice there in 1268.
Sir John de Mauteby was born in Botleys, Surrey in 1269 and married Avelina de Crenon there in 1292.
Sir John de Mauteby was born in Botleys, Surrey in 1317 and married Agnes there in 1340.
Sir Robert de Mauteby was born in Botleys, Surrey in 1341 and married Eleanor there in 1368.
[Source: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com]
 

Saturday, June 14, 2014

MAWBEYS OF SUSSEX

This information comes from records of FamilySearch, the family history online resource of the Latter Day Saints based at Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

VARIANT SPELLINGS OF 'MAWBEY' IN SUSSEX
Manbery
Maubey
Mauby
Maughby
Mawbe
Miby
Mouby
Mowby
Moybie
Muhby
 

MAWBEYS OF NORFOLK

These records are from FamilySearch, the family history online resource of the Latter Day Saints based at Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
*
Parents: William Mawby and Susanna Welton:
Susanna Mawby, b. 27 March 1796; bap 28 Marc 1796, St Nicholas, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk.
*
Parents: James Mawby and Ann
Isaac Mawby, bap 20 August 1767, St Michael, Fincham, Norfolk
*
Parents James Mawby and Jane:
Thomas Mawby, bap 7 February 1785, Terrington St Clement, Norfolk
*
Parents John Charles Mawby and Sarah Mawby
John Mawby, bap. 14 October 1752, Wells, Norfolk; bur. 16 May 1790, Terrington St Clement, Norfolk

MAWBEYS OF YORKSHIRE

This information is based on records from FamilySearch, the family history online resource of the Latter Day Saints based at Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

VARIANT SPELLINGS OF 'MAWBEY' IN YORKSHIRE
Mabbey
Maudby
Mawdby
Maweby
Mawtby
Moaby
Mobby
Moiby


 

MAWBEYS OF SHENTON, LEICESTER

These records are from FamilySearch, the family history online resource of the Latter Day Saints based at Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
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MAWBEY BAPTISMS AT SHENTON
Joseph Mauby, bap 4 October 1676; f. Erasmus Mauby, m. Elianor
Stephen Mauby, bap 27 December 1680; f. Erasmus Mauby, m. Eleanor
Richard Mauby, bap 11 June 1693, f. Richard Mauby, m. Mary
Abraham Mauby, bap 3 February 1694 (twin); f. Isaac, m. Elizabeth
Isaac Mawby, bap 3 February 1694 (twin); f. Isaac, m. Elizabeth
Mary Mauby, bap 17 January 1696; f. Isaac, m. Elizabeth
Ross Mawby, bap 14 April 1696; f. Richard, m. Mary
*
MAWBEY MARRIAGES AT SHENTON
Erasmus Mauby + Mary Cox, 11 April 1680
Eleanor Mauby + Thomas Brown, 19 October 1696
Erasmus Mauby + Frances Cooper, April 1724
Elizabeth Mauby + Thomas Messinger, 26 February 1744

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

MAWBEYS OF GILMORTON, LEICESTER

These records are from FamilySearch, the family history online resource of the Latter Day Saints based at Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
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MAWBEY BAPTISMS AT GILMORTON, LEICESTER, ENGLAND
Sarah Mawbey, bap 8 May 1768
William Mawbey, bap 5 November 1769
Thomas Mawbey, bap 30 December 1770
John Mawbey, bap 29 March 1772
Susanna Mawbey, bap 13 March 1774
Samuel Mawbey, bap 5 November 1775
Thomas Mawbey, bap 5 March 1777
George Mawbey, bap 7 November 1779
Richard Mawbey, bap 7 July 1782 (twin?)
Sarah Mawbey, bap 7 July 1782 (twin?)
Richard Mawbey, bap 1 June 1788
Richard Mawbey, bap 20 July 1794
William Mawbey, bap 15 February 1795
Oliver Mawbey, bap 28 June 1795
Mary Mawbey, bap 25 September 1796
Ann Mawbey, bap 4 December 1796
Mary Mawbey, bap 23 July 1797
William Mawbey, bap 18 January 1799
John Mawbey, bap 3 April 1799
Mary Mawbey, bap 7 April 1799
Lucy Mawbey, bap 25 December 1880
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MAWBEY MARRIAGES AT GILMORTON, LEICESTER
John Mawby + Sarah Bell, 1 May 1769
*
MAWBEY BURIALS AT GILMORTON, LEICESTER
Richard Mawby, bur 10 October 1782
William Mawby, bur. 21 August 1795
Mary Mawby, bur. 7 May 1798
George Mawby, bur. 20 January 1803
Sarah Mawby, bur. 11 December 1782

MAWBEYS OF SOUTH KILWORTH, LEICESTER

These records are from FamilySearch, the family history online resource of the Latter Day Saints based at Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

MAWBEY BAPTISMS AT SOUTH KILWORTH, LEICESTER
17th Century
Johannes Mawby, bap 7 September 1606; death 18 March 1607; f. Willimi Mawby
Erasmus Mawbey, bap 7 March 1616; f. Richardi Mawby
Elizabetha Mawby, bap 8 August 1619; f. Richardi Mawby
Margareta Mawby, bap 16 April 1626; f. Richardi Mawby
Thomas Mawbye, bap 20 January 1685; f. Gulielmi Mawbye
18th Century
John Mawbey, bap 18 March 1746; death 21 March 1746
Thomas Mawbey, b. 14 October 1793; bap 19 April 1795; death 29 July 1806

MAWBEY MARRIAGES AT SOUTH KILWORTH
Dorotham Mawby, m. 10 November 1621, sp. Gerogius Naysby

Monday, June 9, 2014

MAWBEYS OF CRICK, NORTHAMPTONSHIRE

These records are from FamilySearch, the family history online resource of the Latter Day Saints based at Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

MAWBEYS OF CRICK, NORTHAMPTONSHIRE
George Mawbey, born 1797; 1861 census head of household at Hackney, Leicestershire

MAWBEYS OF LUTTERWORTH, LEICESTER

These records are from FamilySearch, the family history online resource of the Latter Day Saints based at Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

MAWBEY BAPTISMS AT LUTTERWORTH, LEICESTER, ENGLAND
Sally Mawbey, bap 15 November 1760
Thomas Mawbey, bap 20 April 1781
John Mawbey, bap 30 May 1785; death 9 June 1785
Rhoda Mawbey, bap 11 September 1794; death 25 October 1795
William Mawbey, bap 17 October 1794

Saturday, June 7, 2014

MAWBEY FAMILY STRONGHOLDS IN ENGLAND

The Mawbey family of England descended from Simon de Mauteby who had an interest of 16 acres of land at the village of Mawtby, Norfolk in 1199, the last year of the reign of King Richard I (Richard the Lionheart).
His descendants then established themselves at Mawtby following grants of land from various monarchs before moving to Botleys in Surrey.

The name is associated with the following places:

Norfolk - Mawtby, Sparham, Bassingham, West Becham, Matlask and Burston
Leicester - South Kilworth, Raunston, Shenton
Northumberland - Kettering
Surrey - Botleys

South Kilworth
A village near boundary of Leicester with Northampton, not far from the town of Rugby in Warwickshire.

Raunston
A village near boundary of Leicester with Northampton.

Kettering

Mauteby's Hall
Avelina de Mauteby was the lady of this manor in 9th year of reign of King Edward II and Robert de Mauteby in the same monarch's 35th year.
The property then passed on to John Paston Esq, husband of Margaret, daughter and heir of John Mauteby, son of the aforementioned Robert de Mauteby.
[Source: British History Online]

THOMAS MAWBEY, BUCKINGHAMSHIRE

In mid-1844, a family of 10 Mawbeys was seeking to emigrate from the parish of Loughton, Buckinghamshire, to Australia with the assistance of the Newport Pagnell Poor Law Union.
Males:
Thomas Mawbey, carpenter
Christopher Woodward Mawbey, labourer, also noted as an orphan
Joseph Mawbey, labourer
George Mawbey
Females:
Mary Mawbey
Betsy Mawbey
Susannah Mawbey
Charlotte Mawbey
[Margham Mawbey]
Sarah Mawbey
[Source: UK National Archives, Kew, Ref MH 12/489/145 date 13 May 1844]

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

ERASMUS MAWBEY

According to the pedigree of Sir Joseph Mawbey of Botleys Surrey, several of his ancestors were named Erasmus Mawbey.
They were named after the Dutch Catholic scholar, possibly to inspire them to similarly follow the path of higher learning.
Information about all the Erasmus Mawbeys I have found so far is on a separate 'page' on this blog.

WHAT HAPPENED TO BOTLEYS PARK?

Botley's Park mansion [Source: Wikipedia]
Botleys Park, the home and estate of Sir Joseph Mawbey I remained in the family for five years after the death of his son Sir Joseph Mawbey II in 1817.
In 1928, one hundred and one years later, it was purchased by Surrey County Council for a hospital for mentally handicapped patients.
Villas were built to house the patients, as well as other buildings like a large brick administrative block.
Botleys Park mansion itself was adapted for use as a nurses' home.
The facility opened in 1939, just before the start of World War II.
Its original purpose was disrupted when part of it was used as an emergency hospital for war victims.
In 1990, the site which was still being used as a home for the mentally handicapped was renamed Botleys Park Resource Centre.
In 1997, most of it was closed after a fire caused a great deal of damage.
What remained was renamed Bournewood Hospital.
Since 2010 the mansion has been used as a weddings and receptions venue.
See more at Botleys Park today
 

SIR JOSEPH MAWBEY TIMELINE

work in progress

Sir Joseph Mawbey (1) - father of nine children to Dame Elizabeth Mawbey (nee Pratt)
1730 - born at Ravenstone, on border of Derbyshire-Leicestershire
? baptism
c. 1740 - educated in Surry by his uncle, Joseph Pratt, Esq, of Vauxhall
1847 - joined malt distillery business at Vauxhall which made spirits and vinegar, owned primarily by his uncle
1760 - married aged 30 to Elizabeth Pratt, aged 15, daughter of his cousin, Richard Pratt.
1761 - chosen parliamentary representative for the borough of Southwark; sat until 1868 and then again from 1868-1874
1763 - purchased the estate of Botleys in Chertsey, Surrey where he built a large house, Botley Park
1765 - creation of baronetcy for Sir Joseph (1), 30 July
?? birth of son Joseph (2)
1770 - Sir Joseph Mawbey (1) bought Epsom Manor, September (may have been 1771)
1773? - birth of son Joseph (2) - 'If sacred worth demands Britannia's care, Britons rejoice, your Mawbey has an heir!' start of poem dated 25 June 1773 and probably written by Sir Joseph (1) which appeared in The Morning Chronicle and London Advertiser on 28 June 1773.
1773 - baptism of Joseph 22 July
birth of son Onslow? (Sir Joseph's good friend was the Right Honourable Arthur Onslow, Esq. Speaker of the House of Commons)
1766 - burial of son Onslow 24 December at Lambeth (ref. family search, Joseph Mawbey, Surrey)
?? birth Catherine
?? birth Mary
?? birth Emily
1798 - death 16 June at Botleys; buried family vault St Peter's, Chertsey with his wife and some of his children

Sir Joseph Mawbey (2)
c. 1773 - born
1773 - baptised 22 July
1796 - married Charlotte Caroline-Maria Henchman 9 August (descendant of a protector of King Charles II)
1799 - birth of Emily, 27 January
1801 - birth of Anna Maria, 25 March
1805 - birth of Joseph (3) 12 December at Chertsey, Surrey
1805 - baptism of Joseph (3) 12 December (same day as born)
1805 - burial Joseph (3) 16 December
? - birth of Charlotte
1817 - death Sir Joseph Mawbey (2) 28 August as consequence of a fall from his horse
1817 - daughter Emily inherited Epsom Manor
1819 - death of Emily, 24 March, aged 20
1819 - daughter Anna Maria Mawbey becomes sole heiress to Mawbey estate
1819 - marriage of Anna Maria, aged 18, to John Ivatt Briscoe, aged 28, on 25 September, St James, Westminister
1822 - Anna Maria turns 21, 25 March.
1822 - Botley estate, 575 acres, sold, July
 ? - John Briscoe became Epsom lord of the manor by right of his wife
 

Friday, March 14, 2014

WALTER GILBERT & CHARLES ARTHUR MAWBEY

Brothers Walter and Charles Mawbey emigrated to Australia from England around 1900.
Walter was born at Crick, Northumberland in 1884, to parents George and Ellen Mawbey (nee Mawse [Morse?].
His father was a  wheelwright.
Walter was 16 when he arrived in Australia.
He married Ethel Agnes Bushell at Bankstown, a suburb of Sydney, in 1914 at the age of 31.
The couple had two daughters, Beryl E (b.1916) and Joyce A (b.1919).
Walter died of heart disease on 27 February 1945 at a home at Hurstville, a southern suburb of Sydney, where his brother also lived.
At the time he was a machinist and invalid pensioner aged 61.
Charles married Mona Owena Howker in 1916 at Newtown and died in 1956 at Rockdale.

ARTHUR HENRY MAWBEY

Another early 20th century English emigrant to Australia was Arthur Henry Mawbey, a great grandson of Samuel Sam(p)son Mawbey.
His father was William Samuel Mawbey and his mother Harriet Jane Mawbey.
Arthur married Vera Hannah Little at Granville, near Parramatta west of Sydney, in 1944.
He died in 1957.

PHOEBE & AMELIA MAWBEY OF CLERKWELL, LONDON

On UK Ancestry found entries in a London business directory for sisters Miss Phoebe Mawbey and Miss Amelia Mawbey, both living at 51 Myddleton Street, Clerkwell.
Phoebe was a stay and corset maker and Amelia, a dressmaker.
They were the only two daughters of Samuel Sam(p)son Mawbey and Phoebe Davis, married 24 August 1815.
Phoebe was born 1820 and Amelia, the youngest of five children, 1827.
One of their brothers was Evan John Mawbey born 1824.
He may have been related to John Evan Mawbey, a compositor at The Times of London newspaper, who drowned at Parramatta, west of Sydney, Australia in August 1859.
Samuel Sampson Mawbey was also a compositor on The Times.

Monday, February 17, 2014

ENGLISH EVAN MAWBEYS

On Saturday 13 August 1859, The Sydney Morning Herald reported the death of John Evan Mawbey, 42 (b.c.1817), a compositor on the London Times at the Parramatta River.
It appears no death certificate was lodged for him with what is today NSW Births Deaths Marriages.
Nor is there any record of an inquest.
*
Then last week I was contacted via email by a Mawbey in England who appears to be related to him.
The men in his family were printers at the London Times and John Evan Mawbey may have been their nephew and cousin.
This still needs to be confirmed.
*
This Mawbey in England also knew about a Henry Evan Mawbey, married 1874 at St Saviour, Southwark, London (Surrey), who was his great great uncle.
Coincidentally, this was the name of the father of the first Mawbey in Queensland, Henry Thomas Mawbey, who arrived in 1921 and became a politician and pineapple grower at Nambour.
*
It's so exciting when more pieces of the family history jigsaw come to light!

Update: February 2014
The father of Evan John Mawbey, born 1824, was Samuel Sampson Mawbey.
John Evan Mawbey who drowned was born c. 1817.
His father may have been a brother of Samuel Sampson Mawbey.

Henry Evan Mawbey, born 1851, was a son of Samuel William Mawbey, eldest son of Samuel Sampson Mawbey.
He married Mary Jane Joyce in 1874, and they were the parents the of Henry Thomas Mawbey, arrived Queensland, Australia, in 1921.

A MAWBEY ON THE BRITISH ROYAL HOUSEHOLD STAFF

The UK version of Find My Past reveals that a 'Mawbey' was receiving a quarterly pension of 5 pounds from Her Majesty's Privy Purse from January 1865 to January 1867 for work done at the Windsor Mansion.
The money was sent to the recipient in the form of a cheque.
Source: Royal Archives (C) HM Queen Elizabeth II 2013