Sis
Rootles out resources!
The KNOWLDEGE, ladies, the KNOWLEDGE!!!
But since you mention it.............................![]()
The KNOWLDEGE, ladies, the KNOWLEDGE!!!
But since you mention it.............................![]()
•Sons Edward and William are said to have been born in Derbyshire, possibly Draycott, but Elizabeth is christened at St. Nicholas, would any godparents or witnesses be listed in church records?
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[smiley request: crossed eyes!]
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That is my caution/worry too, Flook. I am very afraid of replicating errors since they multiply like microbes, especially on Ancestry.com. This Jill's Ancestry website:http://www.jillsfamilyancestry.co.uk/Starbuck_Gateway/Earliest_Refer.html identifies an even earlier marriage, Robert Starbuck married Agnis Barnes in Wilne, Derbyshire on 11-28-1541 which led me to believe the Barnes and Starbucks knew each other and formed unions over severalFrom looking at the trees on Ancestry I get the impression that one person posted originally and everyone's just copied and pasted and no original research, possibly apart from the first post, was ever done. I find it interesting that there only seems to be one tree that has the 1625 marriage in it. The brief entry I gave you for the 1625 marriage is the complete entry in the register!
Parish registers from this date are seldom 'official looking' documents (I have seen one or two beautiful ones from Norfolk but they are very rare). They are usually just blank pages on which the priest or his curate or church warden wrote such details as they felt necessary. They don't have forms or boxes to fill in and so it depends on the person how much information is entered. Quite often the entry is not much more than a scribble.
I would be very cautious about the information in those trees on Ancestry; people have a habit of seeing a name and then just connecting it to another because it looks right - that sort of 'research' is just a total waste of time.
I'll have a scout around and see if I can find the type of parish register I'm talking about.
I have had a look at the Nottinghamshire FHS Marriage Index for STARBUCK, or variants, marriages and the earliest would appear to be that of a William STARBUCKE to an Agnes BRADSHAW at Attenborough on 12 October 1561 - perhaps candidates for your Edward's parents?? Or perhaps not as this is quickly followed by another marriage at Attenborough on 3 November 1567 for a William STARBUCKE & Ellen ALLCOCKE - did first wife Agnes die, I wonder. Then a marriage at Attenborough on 8 November 1597 for a Jane STARBUCKE and a Thomas COOKE. Judging from the date of this marriage, she could be a daughter of William. As could an Elizabeth STARBUCKE who married a Roger BOOT at Attenborough on 31 July 1597 and an Alice STARBUCKE who married a John PIM at Attenborough on 27 January 1601. A Richard STARBUCKE married Bridget HOGSKINSON at Bramcote on 12 July 1601 (the Phillimore's Marriage Index entry for this marriage states that both were of Bramcote) and this is followed by your Edward STARBUCK's marriage on 8 May 1603 at Nottingham St Nicholas to Anne BARNES and a marriage at Nottingham St Peter on 4 April 1612 of Francis STARBROCKE & Elizabeth ROZELL. Francis may have gone to Leicestershire as there is a baptism at Lockington, Leicestershire in 1614 for a Thomas son of Francis STARBUCK - speculation at this stage but it is not a common combination of names.
The next marriage listed is that of an Edward STARBUCK to Susannae HARDWICK at Nottingham St Mary on 10 April 1621. This latter marriage could be the next generation or perhaps a re-marriage for your Edward.
Unfortunately, as Flook has said above, there is normally very little information shown on parish registers of this date but given the lack of STARBUCK records on the Marriage Index and Phillimore's for this time, it is likely that they were from the same family and that possible father William STARBUCKE was resident at Attenborough.
Richard STARBUCKE appears to return to Attenborough as Ancestry's Select Births & Christenings show baptisms of 5 children to him from 1602 onwards at Attenborough. The same source shows a baptism at Nottingham St Nicholas on 13 August 1608 of Elizabeth daughter of Edward STARBUCK but if this is your Edward STARBUCK how does that fit with a birth in Nantucket of Edward STARBUCK in 1604?
I hope this at least gives you some other avenues to explore and provides a bit more information that may prove of use to you.
Janet
So why the marriage in Leicester in 1603? Isn't that over 100 miles from Draycott? It is my understanding that there were slightly less than 3500 inhabitants in Leicester in 1600 which means, to me, many people knew each other.
The marriage of Edward Starbuck Sr. and Anne Barnes was at St. Nicholas, on 5-8-1603 according to Nottingham Parish Registers Marriages (Google Books 1603 Marriages at St. Nicholas's page 9). I thought it was St Nicholas in Leicester. Is there anothe St. Nicholas?Sorry I don't see where Leicester comes in. Isn't Lockington the only place in Leicestershire that's been mentioned, and that's a village only 5 miles from Draycott/Wilne? [post 24]. Draycott's only about 23 miles north of Leicester.
Edit: These small places can be very confusing, even over here!!
Also, I think, St. Nicholas is the church where Edward Sr. had a daughter, Elizabeth, christened on 8-13-1608 (prior to his death in 1608??).
I knew I was place challenged! My most accurate records by date (births, marriage, birth of sons, possible deaths) list Leicester, Derbyshire and Leicester, Leicestershire as you described before. I had no idea Nottingham did not correspond to Leicester. One hurdle down. Now, where to look for Barnes(es) in Nottingham?This is a painting of St Nic's probably about 1760/1770>
http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaint...-castle-with-st-nicholas-church-and-hous47505
This is it today>
http://southwellchurches.nottingham.ac.uk/nottingham-st-nicholas/hintro.php
I had no idea Nottingham did not correspond to Leicester.
I really like the painting and the picture, Flook. Is the current St Nics on the site of the original one? Is there a brief rationale for the rivalries between the counties? Sports related? Puritans vs. Church of England? Roundheads vs. Cavaliers? Norman invasion? War of the Roses? All of the above? As long as I blundered into a diplomatic faux pas I'm hoping to gain some grasp of the error of my ways. Thanks everyone for keeping this on the "down low".This is a painting of St Nic's probably about 1760/1770>
http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaint...-castle-with-st-nicholas-church-and-hous47505
This is it today>
http://southwellchurches.nottingham.ac.uk/nottingham-st-nicholas/hintro.php
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