I have just discovered this site and your queries about Wiliam PEGG and his wives. My take on it, developed with a cousin is as follows:
William PEGG
b St Ives, Huntingdon/Swavesey, Cambridge, 1806
m St Ives, Huntingdon, 1827/8
June 1840, St Ives 14 264
March 1853, St Ives 3b 432
d September 1874, St Ives 3b 158
William’s date of birth is uncertain - 1806 1795 and 1803. His place of birth is also uncertain: Swavesey or St Ives.
William married, first, Susan ? (d 1839, St Ives, Huntingdon). They had seven children: William, Charles, Mary, Susan, Eliza, Levi and Ann. Wlliam remarried within the year. His bride was Mary ALLSOP (b 1811, St Ives, Huntingdon), the widow of Thomas? ALLSOP and daughter of ? and Sarah ROBERSON. Mary brought a child to the marriage and the couple went on to have one child themselves, Edith. William was widowed again in 1846, when we find his mother-in-law, Sarah ROBERSON, keeping house for him, two of his children and Mary’s daughter, Ann.
Following the death of Mary, William married a third time. Sarah TEET (1817-1876, b/d St Ives, Huntingdon) was the widow of James TEET (1816-1851) and the daughter of Samuel COOK. William and Sarah had two children: Stephen and John.
William died in 1874, aged 74.
(1) Susan ?
b
m St Ives, Huntingdon, 1827/28
d St Ives, Huntingdon, 3rd quarter 1839 September 1839, St Ives 14 124
Susan and William had seven children: William, Charles, Mary, Susan, Eliza, Levi and Ann.
(2) Mary ALLSOP (née ROBERSON)
b St Ives, Huntingdon, 1811
m St Ives, Huntingdon, 2nd quarter 1840 June 1840, St Ives 14 264
d St Ives, Huntingdon, 4th quarter 1846 December 1846, St Ives 14 264
Mary ROBERSON, daughter of ? and Sarah ROBERSON, and widow of Thomas? ALLSOP (d 1837, St Ives, Huntingdon), married William in 1840. There was one child, Edith. Mary died in 1846.
(3) Sarah TEET (née COOK)
b St Ives, Huntingdon, 1817
m St Ives, Huntingdon, 27 March 1853 March 1853, St Ives 3b 432
d St Ives, Huntingdon, 3rd quarter 1876 September 1876, St Ives 3b 165
Sarah and William had two children, Stephen and John.
From a cursory reading of the mails, I shall need to make some alterations! In the meantime I look forward to your comments.
Met