Results for 'buttall AND wrexham' across our collections
… THE WREXHAMIAN. 13 A HISTORY OF GROVE PARK SCHOOL. ^^-ROVE Park School was formerly a private ww^K house. It was built by a Mr.…
… THE WREXHAMIAN. 13 A HISTORY OF GROVE PARK SCHOOL. ^^-ROVE Park School was formerly a private ww^K house. It was built by a Mr. James Buttall, V^ who was a wealthy ironmonger of the Strand, London. On retiring from business he re¬ turned to his native town of Wrexham to look for a place suitable for building a house. He fixed upon Chester Road, and bought the fields which stretched from the…
…. What then became of the younger Buttall I am unable to say with any degree of authority, but from the similarity of name, trade,…
…. What then became of the younger Buttall I am unable to say with any degree of authority, but from the similarity of name, trade, and date, I think there can be little doubt as to his identity with the Jonathan Buttall mentioned by your correspondent as having settled at Wrexham towards the close of the last century. Richmond, Surrey. Frederick Cooper. # # Druid, Bard, or Ovate (vii.—480).—The…
…, daughter of Randall Buttall, a Wrexham blacksmith. Martha died in 1670 and, according to Jenkins, Wynne married on 20 July 1676 Elizabeth Maude of…
…, daughter of Randall Buttall, a Wrexham blacksmith. Martha died in 1670 and, according to Jenkins, Wynne married on 20 July 1676 Elizabeth Maude of Rainhill, Lancashire, widow of Joshua Ward of Wakefield. The 'Quaker Biography', however, gives the name of his second wife as Elizabeth Rowden, a widow, and states that he married a third time Elizabeth (Parr) Maule, but does not give a date for this marriage…
….6 John ap John first established a foothold in Wrexham, and it is significant that, in 1655, Thomas Wynne married a Quaker, Martha Buttall, daughter…
….6 John ap John first established a foothold in Wrexham, and it is significant that, in 1655, Thomas Wynne married a Quaker, Martha Buttall, daughter of Randle Buttall, a Wrexham blacksmith.7 Either before or after his marriage, Wynne experienced a pulsating conversion. His account of his dramatic regeneration is the most startling confession known to me by a seventeenth-century Welsh Friend. The…
… 158 WREXHAM RECORDER. A LIST OP THE CLERGY, MERCHANTS, TRABESMEN, &c, IN THE TOWN OF WREXHAM, 60 YEARS AGO. Continued from page 121. Chester-Street.…
… 158 WREXHAM RECORDER. A LIST OP THE CLERGY, MERCHANTS, TRABESMEN, &c, IN THE TOWN OF WREXHAM, 60 YEARS AGO. Continued from page 121. Chester-Street. Rev. Mr. Jenkins J. Buttall, Esq. Mr, Edward Lloyd, Attorney Mr. Richard Lloyd, Merchant Mr. Thomas Poole, Plasterer Mr. Nath. Bishop, Painter Mrs. Wynne Mr. John Treen, Red Lion Mr. J. Edishury, Seven Stars Mrs. Hughes, Boarding School Mr. Cooper…
… published last month, a correspondent of Notes and Queries asks whether Jonathan Buttall, the son of a retired ironmonger, who settled at Wrexham in…
… published last month, a correspondent of Notes and Queries asks whether Jonathan Buttall, the son of a retired ironmonger, who settled at Wrexham in the last century, may not be the original of the picture. * * A notice of a celebrated Welsh pirate may be found in the Memoirs of Remarkable Persons, by James Caulfield, published in 1813, and illustrated by rare portraits. In volume iii., page 226, it is…
… have been much interested in the information given by Mr Edward Griffith, Dolgelley, and Mr Alfred Neobard Palmer, Wrexham. I have seen the account…
… have been much interested in the information given by Mr Edward Griffith, Dolgelley, and Mr Alfred Neobard Palmer, Wrexham. I have seen the account prepared by James J. Levick, M.D., that Mr Griffith speaks of. There are one or two errors that need correcting. The exact place of birth of Thomas Wynne is un¬ known. About the year 1655-57 he married his first wife, Martha Buttall, it is…
… doubly infuriated by the refusal of their victims to resist their blows. Thomas Wynne was one of those, according to the testimony of John…
… doubly infuriated by the refusal of their victims to resist their blows. Thomas Wynne was one of those, according to the testimony of John Humphreys, who chose 'to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season'.23 He seems to have involved himself in the first place with Denbighshire Quakers in his wife's home-town. Wrexham had earned itself a reputation among…
… history of peace studies in Wales, for he was the first Welshman to write a pacifist essay for the benefit of his countrymen. 40…
… history of peace studies in Wales, for he was the first Welshman to write a pacifist essay for the benefit of his countrymen. 40 A native of Bron Fadog in the parish of Ysgeifiog, Wynne abandoned the Anglican faith, spurned the blandishments of orthodox Puritans and, sometime during the mid-1650s, found himself drawn towards the teachings of George Fox. He married Martha Buttall, the Quaker daughter of…
… supplies to identify Gainsborough's Blue Boy with Jonathan Buttall, whose name ap¬ pears on the Wrexham rate books for 1789. We have said enough…
… supplies to identify Gainsborough's Blue Boy with Jonathan Buttall, whose name ap¬ pears on the Wrexham rate books for 1789. We have said enough perhaps to send some of our readers to Mr Palmer's pages, where they will find so much that is interesting in connection with the local history of Wrexham and the wider history of Nonconformity in England and Wales. JCTLY 10, 1889. NOTES. TOMMY THE DOCTOR (June…
… with Mr Howard W. Lloyd of Philadelphia con¬ cerning the Dr Thomas Wynne of Caerwys, as to whom information is sought. The initial "…
… with Mr Howard W. Lloyd of Philadelphia con¬ cerning the Dr Thomas Wynne of Caerwys, as to whom information is sought. The initial " M " on the penny refers to Dr Wynne's first wife, Martha Buttall. He afterwards emigrated to America, and was Speaker of the first Provincial Assembly held in Philadelphia, and lies buried in the Friends' graveyard there. I have not been able to discover who Dr Wynne's…