20 camperdown terrace exmouth market
Dick's summary of the results of his work and other extracts from his book are included in this page. These extracts cover the main introductions detailing some of his findings and The Redways in Devon, Canada and New 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market. Not included are Somerset House chronological entries, unidentified Redways or variations in Redway spelling 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market The Redway Name contains Dick's thoughts on spellings.
Also included are some details of wills and a Coat of Arms. Finally the original recipients of Dick's book are listed, many of whom had supplied details of their branch of the Redway Family. Several hundreds of Redways are listed and shown on the various family trees. There is also a list of over names from onwards who could not be grouped.
John is believed to be descended from John Redway born and his father John born but these links are not proven. Our group and the Adelaide group have Joseph Redway as a common ancestor.
These extracts are taken verbatim from Dick Redway's pages with only some of the more mundane details left out. Minor spelling and punctuation errors have been corrected - and maybe a few new ones introduced! For each of Dick's nine groups there was a register of names within that group with basic details and a family tree.
These details which take up pages are not included but specific details can be supplied on request. The main change to Dick's words is to replace his Group and branch numbers, tailored to fit each part of family trees on foolscap size sheets, to 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market letters.
Men are not qualified To look forward to posterity Who never look backwards To their ancestors. I do not know why I am writing this book or rather, compiling it. Perhaps it is because I had so often heard people say that the Redway name is dying out. Perhaps it is because my father had so often expressed an interest 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market our forbears but had not the time nor wherewithal to carry out the research and some of his enthusiasm may have brushed off on me nearly a lifetime ago.
Whatever the reason I do not feel that I have brought 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market work to the conclusion I would have liked. But time moves on and unless I put together that which I have collected and write down the conclusions I have reached, all the work could be in vain when some successor, not so interested as myself consigns it to the rubbish tip when I have gone.
But looking back I think I have been reasonably successful in getting back to a direct line of descent to the middle of the eighteenth century when Richard Redway was born about Much of my success has been due to the painstaking research done by Mrs Elizabeth Oliver nee Elizabeth Redway 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market Family Group No 1 and for the many letters she has written to me. I have tried to list all the information I have been able to get on the family 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market the hope that some gleam of light might come out of some of it to lead to further information in the event of later research being made.
I think I have laid it out in such a manner in the confines of typewritten sheets for any member of 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market family, no matter what branch, to be able to draft out his or her own personal tree for his posterity. At the same time any budding historian or genealogist should have a fair background on which to carry out tracing back to his forebears. There is much information in the pages which follow obtained from Somerset House and even further back from a few Devonshire Parish registers - although there are plenty more to research - that anyone wishing to carry on with the work should be able to start with relative ease now that the foundation has been laid.
Incidentally there is no copyright on my research and it may be used freely should anyone so desire. This does not apply to extracts from books or journals quoted where copyright is held over their work. I was extremely disappointed that I was not able to find out more about a Coat of Arms.
For nearly three years I have been endeavouring to obtain information from the College of Arms only for them to come up with information I already had or had given them to aid in their research. Granted that they have countless volumes of records in Old English, Old French and Latin pertaining to a great many coats of arms in the very early days but I feel that a little more might have forthcoming for the steep charges they make.
In his book on Devonshire wills, Charles Worthy refers to a coat of arms belonging to Nicholas Redway. In view of the variety of way the name was spelled in the early days due probably to the broadness of the Devonian tongue, I cannot help feeling that the Richard 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market who married Sarah Gale in at Highwick, Devon, could have been related to the Reddaway of Lancaster who holds an extensive recorded pedigree mentioned by the College of Arms and has been given a grant of arms by the College similar to that mentioned by Charles Worthy and it could be that the whole story has not been told.
This could of course be the same person living in Lancaster. I had hoped to find more about the family in some of W C Hoskin's books on Devon. Only in Devon and its People was any mention made and this was related to the Reddaway. It said Devon was also a county where the old type of farmer, known as the yeoman, was very common. Some of these yeoman-farmers had owned their farm for many generations. In the parish of Sampford Courtenay there is a farm called Reddaway.
As long ago asand probably well before that, it was being farmed by a family called Reddaway, who took their name from the farm. The Reddaways still farm at Reddaway; they have been there for well over seven hundred years.
I had hoped to obtain a copy of Devonshire Clockmakers but it was out of print. I thought it may be able to throw some light on the 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market of the grandfather clock held by the family at Toronto. I trust that someone nearer the seat of research will continue the work in later years and with that hope I am including a list of the addresses to whom this work has been forwarded so that further information can be updated in their copies.
There is little more that I can do at my stage of life but while I am here I would appreciate any further information that come to hand from any source what-so-ever. I have not gone into the history of the American Redways in the early days before it became the United States. There are over thirty pages of interesting reading on the Redway family from the time James Redway settled in Hingham, Mass. It tells of property held, wills and inventories, births and deaths and marriages and involvement in Indian wars and the American Revolution war against England.
The book seems to have been supplied to many American libraries and copies can be found in the Toronto University Library and in the British Museum Library. I am deeply indebted to Mr Willes Arnold Broughton for a copy of his book Arnold Redway and Earle Families and for Xerox copies of the title page of Corpus Redway's bible stating that he was born the ninth day December in the year and God grant him grace herein to look, and search the scriptures in this book, and daily run the Christian race, that heaven may be his dwelling place.
Springfield Mar 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market for a copy of what was his last letter to his children written in Armada, Michigan. It seems incredible that just across the lake from Adams another branch of the Redways lived for so long at Toronto. They probably never heard of each other. It is interesting to note that the Redways in America in the early days ran into the same problem of how to spell their name as those in Devon.
Finally I 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market to apologise for the occasional spelling mistakes and for the considerable number of overtypes.
Had I had to resort to 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market correcting fluid 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market time an alteration was needed I would never have got through the work. As it is I feel I have made a reasonably passable job considering most of the typing was done with two fingers and some with only one 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market my left hand went out of action.
I will conclude by quoting from an epitaph on a tombstone in an English churchyard. This is a story of the Redway Family or more correctly, a story of the various families under the name of Redway. In endeavouring to discover where my own family originated and how far back in time I could trace my ancestors I discovered several families of Redways existing today who probably came from the same original stock.
For instance it 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market not hard to imagine that some of the Redways in London who have been traced back to Dorset and Wiltshire came originally from Devon, each new generation taking up land as they worked eastwards until, forced by economic circumstances or attracted by work directly or indirectly created by the industrial revolution they found themselves city dwellers in the Great Metropolis.
In nearly all the families I have met, with the exception of the 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market American group, there seems to be a tradition that their forbears were people of the land and were originally not without consequence in this field. In all probability they were of the landed gentry class as distinct from the aristocracy who also held 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market estates in the West Country.
Some of the families held the view that because of the taking of Commons Land under the 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market Acts of the eighteen hundreds the later generations of their families had been forced to reduce stock and consequently could not manage on the acreage remaining. Some held the view, probably handed down from parent or grand-parent that among the property holders of the earlier generations, jealousies arose until differing opinions forced the families to break up into several units.
This could well have been reflected in the Settlements of Land Courts held at Westminster in the thirteen hundreds. Devon Feet of Fines - British Museum. However many farms could not support the large families people had in those days and sooner or later it was only reasonable that some of the children had to break away. Of course we cannot be sure that the Radewaye and its variations from to the thirteen hundreds is the Redways of the fifteen hundreds and on up to the present day.
Ours, like most names in England in the early days showed considerable variations in spelling with up to a dozen different ways of pronouncing and spelling the two simple syllables of Red and way.
But it is not to be wondered at when it is considered how the scribe's concept of phonetic interpretation was determined by his ignorance, his indifference, his restricted literacy, his unfamiliarity with the speaker's dialect or possibly by the degree of his deafness as was frequently the case in those days. Nor was it to be wondered at when we take into consideration the Devonshire dialect which is spoken in a broad tuneful accent with a tendency for the speaker to slightly raise the tone of his voice at the end of words and sometimes at the end of syllables.
It is not hard to imagine how the name Redway could easily be formed Reddaway or Ruddaway as a Devonshire friend always addresses me here in New Zealand nor into any of the other variations I came across in my 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market.
It was not until or thereabouts when records started to be kept by the Registrar General in London that any real stability came to our name and even after then there have been instances of 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market variations in the official 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market. An idea of the dialect which could have sprung from the original Dumnonii language of the Devonshire people can be gained from a perusal of the following wording copied from a Devonshire greetings card.
Yous a welcum vrum der ol' Deb'n The zunniest place this zide o' Heaven. Vull o' 'istory an' claims tu vame with "Scrumpy", "Dumblins", an' "Clotted Crame". Quaint Thatched Cottages, an' vields zo green The purist scenery yu've zeen. The wild, rollong Moors, zo majestic an' grand wi' deep-wooded valleys, an' zea close an 'and. In Deb'n the furst thing the local volks zay Is "Do 'ee 'ave a dish o' tay" Yu'll cum again in vuture years We're sartin sure o' that, m'dears.
If the present day Redways are descendants of the Radewei mentioned in Domesday book of then we are probably of Celtic or Saxon origin and has our original land on the edge of Exmoor situated on the River Axe near the conjunction of the River Culm. If that is so then William the Conqueror confiscated the land and gave it to Alvred the Breton when he divided up the countryside to his Knights who fought in the battles of The 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market would probably carry on working on 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market rich "red lands" of the Culm and Exe valleys as serfs for the new owners until they could buy their freedom or until the demise of the baronial system or the emancipation of the serfs.
So by the thirteen hundreds the family was well spread but still not far from the original stronghold. And tradition has it that we were agrarian peoples. All this is sheer speculation of course. Nothing can be proved nor anything discounted. Only two English families, the Ardens 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market the Berkelays, now extinct, could trace their ancestry back to before the time of William the ConquerorSir Anthony Wagner in English Genealogy In the eleven hundreds there were Redways in Lincolnshire, Worcestershire and in the twelve hundreds at Worcestershire, Oxfordshire and Somerset.
What do we know about these people? Where do they come into the picture? Candidly I do not know. Did the Devonshire Redways come from further north? A daughter, Janet was left and she married John Hake. John Hake's daughter also Janet married Christopher Cooke and the then Redway coat of arms was quartered into the coat armour of the Cooks family. So we really don't know much about the name of Redway in the Middle Ages. Nothing so far has 20 camperdown terrace exmouth market discovered of the name of Redway or its variations in the fourteen hundreds.
Did most of them die out in the Black Death which started in the Malcombe Regis area of Dorset in and soon spread into Devon decimating the population by about half.
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