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Topics - clayton bradley

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1
Yorkshire (West Riding) Lookup Requests / Hipperholme 15th century
« on: Saturday 18 March 23 09:19 GMT (UK)  »
I have found every reference I can to Broadleys from 1362, when the first of the line, John Brodeleghe, was Constable of Ovenden, to the 1650s when our direct ancestor had left Yorkshire for Darwen in Lancashire. My cousin and I have bought wills, disputes, manorial records for Shelf, articles from HAS, YAHS, books, and read every reference online. (And aalt, for which many thanks.) I have put together every family I can but am stuck on William and Richard Bro(a)dley who had children in Northowram/Shelf mid 1500s but may have been born in Lightcliffe in Hipperholme. Unfortunately it seems there are no surviving manorial records for Hipperholme. Does anyone have any tips or tricks to help with the 1400s? The Y-DNA project proves we can get back to 1362.

2
Yorkshire (West Riding) / 1508 Hipperholme property
« on: Saturday 12 November 22 13:43 GMT (UK)  »
In 1508 in Hipperhome, Robert, son of John Brodelegh, gave a messuage and 16 acres to Thomas Brodelegh, John brother of Thomas Brodelegh, Richard son of Thomas Haldworth and Gilbert son of Robert Otes; ingress 9s.
Later in the century Mr Clement Oglethorpe's rentals include certain lands in Hipperholme holden of the manor of Halifax in the tenure of Robert Brighouse Edward Brodley Thomas Northend.
This second, later group are three first cousins. Edward's two paternal aunts are the mothers of Robert Brighouse and Thomas Northend.
The 1508 group I think shows an uncle, Robert, son of John Brodelegh, handing property to his two nephews Thomas and John brother of Thomas. Is it likely that the other two people named are also his nephews, via his sisters?

3
Yorkshire (West Riding) Lookup Requests / Obituary Lawrence Laycock
« on: Saturday 13 August 22 11:31 BST (UK)  »
Can anyone tell me if Keighley Library hold copies of newspapers from the turn of the century? I emailed them weeks ago and got no reply. I am looking for an obituary for Lawrence Laycock, a professional wrestler, who died in Keighley in 2000. Thanks for any help.

4
Yorkshire (West Riding) / Entail in Halifax 16th century
« on: Thursday 01 October 20 18:59 BST (UK)  »
Nicholas Broadley had a messuage in Halifax in 1495. He had 3 sons. The eldest, William, died before 1538 but his widow and eldest son between them paid tax on £5 of property in the Lay Subsidy of 1545. William's brother Edward, paid tax on £1. The other son, John, left a will in 1521. He had a wife and two children, John jr and Jennet. John jr's only surviving son, Edward, died in Northowram in 1584 and his will mentions a large number of Stancliffes, his maternal relatives, who benefit from a lease. Ancestry has added rentals for Halifax and it appears Edward had a cousin and heir, William, who inherited the actual property. I can't be certain whether John or Edward was the youngest of Nicholas's sons. If there is an entail, would it be William's sons who inherited? Thank you, cb

5
Handwriting Deciphering & Recognition / Mediaeval Latin
« on: Monday 27 July 20 10:14 BST (UK)  »
William le Mercer is paying to be supported by Whalley Abbey. I am doing fairly well with the help of Latham but in the following sentence, what does mibar mean?
"Item duo corpora bovina precii octo solid' et quatuor porcos ejusdem precii, tres petras buttiri et tres petras casei ac dimid' mibar allectis conventualis percipiendos ...."
Two carcasses of beef at 8 shillings and four pigs at the same price, three stone of butter and three stone of cheese and half a ??
It is from a printed book.
Thanks for any help, cb

6
Yorkshire (West Riding) / Documents in aalt
« on: Friday 12 June 20 21:24 BST (UK)  »
http://aalt.law.uh.edu/AALT1/H7/CP40no971/bCP40no971dorses/IMG_0579.htm

http://aalt.law.uh.edu/AALT1/H7/CP40no971/bCP40no971dorses/IMG_0774.htm

The first document above is in Latin, date 1505 and is about Thomas Brodlee of Huddersfield lending £40 to John Brodlee of Bradford and, apparently, not being repaid. The second one begins in Latin, as a reply by John but then suddenly is in English and concerns a marriage between John and Jennet, daughter of Thomas.
I have seen entails being broken by fictitious legal actions. Is this something similar? I wondered if it was a strange way of handing over a dowry. Thanks for any help.

7
Yorkshire (West Riding) / William Bradley of Bingley ?1611-1691
« on: Thursday 02 August 18 11:43 BST (UK)  »
Many people on Ancestry have trees which try to combine William Bradley of Coventry and William Bradley of Bingley. How do I phrase the following more succinctly and cogently? Thanks, cb

If we take it that William Bradley and Francis Bradley were not related (at least, not closely) but just ended up in the same place in America, both their trees make sense.

Francis Bradley of Fairfield,  was born  1620-30, died 1689 and had a brother John who lived in Holborn 1623-1697.

They are supposed to have been the sons of Francis Bradley junior of Coventry. We know from the Visitation of Warwickshire that he was born in 1595, son of

Francis Bradley senior, born about 1565, married to Franciska Watkin of Monmouth, and son of

William Bradley of Coventry born about 1535 who married Agnes Margetts born about 1543.

The Visitation in 1619 gives three sons for William and Agnes. We know they were married in 1563, (TNA document C2/Eliz/B3/49) therefore it is likely Francis was born about 1565, the second son Thomas about 1570 and the third son William about 1575. S. found a baptism in Holy Trinity, Coventry for William Bradley, son of William 1 may 1574 and that ties up perfectly. He also found a baptism for Antony in 1581, but presumably Antony died before the Visitation in 1619.

According to the Visitation the father of William Bradley of Coventry was William Bradley of Sheriff Hutton, County York, probably born about 1500.

Meanwhile in Bingley;

William Bradley/Broadley was born about 1611. He ought to be the oldest son of Daniel Broadley because Daniel's father was named William and, as T. pointed out, William was very well off as he acquired land after he came to America. The eldest son is normally the wealthiest. He is connected to the second family of his father, because they also emigrated, with William's stepmother.

Daniel Broadley was baptized at Bingley 26 jan 1588/9. We know he was the second son of William Bradley because William Bradley of New Close left a will 22 December 1598, naming his surviving children as Michael, Daniel, Matthew and Sara. Michael, unmarried and childless, left Daniel £40 in his will 29 April 1613. Daniel had a legacy from his father and a legacy from his brother.

Michael was baptized at St John the Baptist, Halifax 21 August 1586 as the son of William Brodley of Hipperholme. William of Hipperholme was baptized at St John the Baptist, Halifax 8 August 1560 son of Robert Brodley and Margaret Roper.

Robert left a will 22 December 1560, mentioning his father Richard, still alive, wife Margaret and children Isabell, Sybil, Robert and William. The eldest child John had died soon after birth. A daughter Alice also died young. Sibyl died 1563. I have found no documents relating to Robert junior as an adult and believe he died young.

William Brodley's mother was Margaret Roper and the guardian chosen for Michael, eldest son of William Brodley, was Thomas Roper of Halifax Bank. This shows the connection of William of New Close, Bradford  to the Ropers and to Halifax. Thomas Roper also had a son Michael. It was at that date a popular name in the locality of Halifax.

Richard Brodley, father of Robert, married Elizabeth Firth abt 1512. Richard paid tax on £10 in the Lay Subsidy of 1545. He died in 1562/3. He was born about 1485.

 I still have no idea who Isaac Bradley was. William Brodley, 1560-1598 clearly had no close Broadley relations remaining or he would have named them in his will as guardians of his children. Therefore, either Isaac is the son/grandson of Matthew, brother of Michael and Daniel or he is a more distant relation, clearly with the same Y-DNA. The Lane End Broadleys of Hipperholme included several Isaacs and were certainly the same family but since Isaac and the family of William (?1611-91) would be by that date be 4th or 5th cousins I am surprised that they would know they were cousins. Most people can't remember past their grandparents.

8
Family History Beginners Board / "son and heir" 15th century
« on: Sunday 04 March 18 21:37 GMT (UK)  »
Does the phrase "son and heir" as used in a property document of the 15th century mean that the person must be the eldest son of his father, or can it have a more general meaning, such as any son of the father? cb

9
The Common Room / Indenture leading to a recovery 14 aug 1599
« on: Monday 16 October 17 21:40 BST (UK)  »
Between Thomas Thorpe of Yewtrees, John Thorpe of Yewtrees his son, Edward Broadley of Shelf and Samuel Hoile of Hoilehouse fee simple to be invested in John Thorpe and his heirs for ever.

This looks like a dowry, but Edward's daughter Alice Broadley didn't marry John Thorpe. She married Peter Thorpe at Halifax in 1602.
I don't understand the phrase "leading to a recovery". Please could someone explain it simply? thanks, cb

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