Thomas Who?

Schnurrbart

Well-Known Member
I'm not sure if his name was an afterthought but, in the attached, how do I read the bit from Thomas on to deceased And? Is that a full stop after the line and most importantly what is the word before deceased? I thought that it might be a surname ending in "eale" and I've tried on Anc using A through to Z as the initial letter, with no joy.
Any ideas would be most welcome. The date is 1742, the place Somerset.
 

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The word Thomas appears in different ink and handwriting to the rest of the document and therefore the line ____ could be the rest of a 'blank' to be completed after the original document was written. This would mean that the next word would be at the beginning of a new sentence..... If you see what I mean.

However, what that word is..... o_O

@burt is good at reading old documents, wills etc. ;)
 
I think the mystery word is the surname Veale; since he was deceased, my guess is that they couldn't remember his first name, or had only known him as 'Old Veale' etc, so they left a gap to be filled in when they found out what it was. What looks like a full stop is probably just a drop of ink that got there by mistake.
 
Absolutely agree with Arthur in his analysis. Veale occurs
across the Mendips area!
 
Just out of interest there are Veales in Essex, spelled various ways one of them Vale(s), which has reminded me I need to give Samuel Vales another look.
 
The name I came cross yesterday in various parts of Essex was spelled Vale, Veale, Vail and Vile, Vial all of those variants at times had an s tacked on the end.
 
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