ALSTON Family Background [26914]
General Notes:
Mary Terbrack an Alston descendant, genealogist, amorist and analyst, has suggested a "Time Line" of Alston references down through the centuries. In a somewhat unusual approach an individual file is used, for the often random data collected on the family for that century.
The Alstons sprang not from any " Battle Abbey" or Norman baronial stirp, but as Guppy puts it from that "great body of freeholders the yeomanry of the middle ages, a body which in antiquity of possession and purity of extraction was probably superior to the classes that looked down upon it as ignoble." It would be interesting however to know how Guppy carries the antiquity of possession through the centuries when feudalism prevailed, and what exactly he means by purity of extraction in connection with that " thorough bred mongrel " an Englishman. Lionel Cresswell Stemmatta Alstoniana Pg 351
According to Lionel Cresswell in Stemmata Alstoniana a John Alston of Newton in Suffolk is the most remote ancestor in the direct connected line. But of him there is little known except that he is stated to have been descended from a William of Stisted in Essex, in the time of Edward I (1272-1307).
EARLIEST ANCESTOR OF JOHN OF STISTED IN ESSEX HUNDRED OF BABERGH Newton or Niwetona The author of Magna Britannia makes this Lordship to have been anciently vested in William de Butvillein ; probably Newton Hall manor, which now belongs to Earl Howe ; and Buxton's a freehold farm to which a manor was formerly attached, is the property of the Rev. Henry Thomas Causton, of Highgate, in Middlesex. Saxham (Sayham, or Siam) Hall, in this parish, was for many ages the estate and residence of the Alstons, a family upon record so early as the time of Edward I. ; when Willam Alston, of Stisted, in Essex, for want of warranty of Brockscroft, in Stisted, granted and confirmed to John de Carpenter, of Naylinghurst, in Braintree, so much of the better land in Stisted except his mansion house there. John Alston, of Newton, descended from the above mentioned William, of Stisted, and was father of William Alston, of Newton ; who by Anne his wife, daughter of Thomas Symons, had a son and heir, Edward (or Edmund) Alston, of Saxham Hall, in Newton ; who married Elizabeth, daughter of John Coleman, and had two sons : William, his heir ; and Thomas, of Edwardston. William, the elder son and heir, was born at Newton, in 1537, and married Mary, daughter and co-heir of . . . . . Holmsted, Esq., of Maplested, in Essex ; by whom he had issue several children, whose descendants became settled at Marlesford, Polstead, Lavenham, and various other places in this and adjoining counties. Thomas Alston, baptized at Newton in 1713, buried there in 1787, appears to be the last of the family who resided here. Edward, his son, married Frances, daughter and heir of Daniel Constable, of Manningtree, in Essex, and became settled there ; whose son, Edward Daniel Alston, Esq., lately deceased at Palgrave, in this county. The Rev. Edward Constable Alston, of Cransford Hall and vicar of that parish, his only son, is the present representative of this branch of the family. Siam Hall is now the estate of Thomas Layzell Tiffen, Esq., who resides there ; but the Alstons still retain property in this parish. The church, dedicated to All Saints, was formerly in the patronage of the Alston family, but now of St. Peter's College, Cambridge. A law rector, George Borlase, B.D., was Casuistical Professor, and Registrar of that University, and for many years Fellow and Tutor of the said College.He was son of the Rev William Borlase author of The Natural History of Cornwall etc; and deceased Nov 5 1809. Charles Smith, B.D. is the present incumbant. Charities: The rent charge doles here, amounting to £1 16s 8d, the gifts of William Alston, in 1564, Edward Alston, in 1591, and others are collected once in seven years and distributed in money amongst the poor persons of the parish. Supplement to Suffolk Traveller, Augustine Page, 1844; Pg 956
In 1870-72, John Goring's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described Newton like this: NEWTON-NEAR-SUDBURY, a parish in Sudbury district, Suffolk; 3.25 miles E of Sudbury r. station. Post-town, Sudbury. Acres, 2, 197. Real property, L3, 561. Pop., 529. Houses, 102. The manor of Newton Hall belongs to Earl Howe; and the manor of Botelers, to the Rev. T. H. Causton. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Ely. Value, L597.* Patron, St. Peter's College Cambridge. The church is ancient; retains a Norman arch, which was formerly a doorway; and comprises nave and chancel, with S porch and a tower. There are a Primitive Methodist chapel and a national school.
An Alston is mentioned as a Freeman in the Manor of Eye Suffolk, at the time of Edward the Confessor 1042-1066. At the time of the Norman Survey and Alston was a Freeman of Great Bealings Ref: The Manors of Suffolk.
The English Baronets - a genealogical and historical account of their families. Thomas Wooton 1741 page 309 Sayham-Hall, in Newton, was anciently the seat of the Alstons for many hundred years, from whence that family hath spread itself into several counties. It's certainly a family of great antiquity, and said to be of Saxon extraction, though the origin of them cannot be traced at this time of day. We find them mentioned so early as Edward the first's reign (1272-1307) when William Alston, of Stisted, in Essex, for want of Warranty of Brockscroft, in Stisted, did grant and confirm to John de carpenter of Naylinghurst, so much of his better land in Stisted, except his mansion-house there. In Edward the third's time, Hugh Alston did bear for Arms, Azure, ten Stars, , 4., 3, 2, x. which was long before coatarmour was granted by patents. After some descents from the abovesaid William Alflon, of Stisted, the lineal descendant of this family was John Alston, of Newton, in Suffolk, to whom Henry VII. granted a fair house, called the Green-Gate, in Lime-street Ward, London. He was father of William, who by the daughter of --- Symons, had issue Edward, of Sayham-hall, in Newton, who took to wife a daughter of Mr. Colman, by whom he had two sons, I. William, of Sayham, of whom hereafter; 2. Thomas, of Edwardston, in Suffolk, who married, first, Dorothy, one of the daughters and co-heirs of Holmsted, of Maplefied, in Essex, by whom he had Edward Alston, of Edwardston, Esq; His second wife was , by whom he had Thomas Alston, of Newton, who married Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas West, of London, and had issue, Thomas Alston, of Newton. Edward Alston, of Edwardsion, aforesaid, married Margaret, daughter of Arthur Penning, of Kettleborouh in Suffolk, Esq; by whom he had Sir Edward Alston, of London, Knt. Doctor in Physick, and President of the College of Physicians, Joseph Alston, of Chelsea, Esq; ancestor to the present Sir Evelyn Alston, Bart. of whom in the third volume, and Penning Alston, of London. Sir Edward, married Susan, daughter of Christopher Hudson, of Norwich, by whom he had two daughters, I. Mary, married to Sir James Langham, Ref: http://books.google.co.nz/books?id=l2QUAAAAYAAJ&q=Alston#v=snippet&q=Alston&f=false
The Norman Survey of Suffolk Manors shows a freeman Alston holding lands in demesne of Hervey of Bourges in Great Bealings. *
Research Notes:
Note. Stemmatta Alstoniana see Books Section on this website contains many snippets of information on the Alston Family collected by Lionel Cresswell, and is a must browse by any Alston researcher.
See below for Transcriptions from Parish Registers: Alston St Gregory Sudbury SFK Alston St Peter Sudbury SFK Alston All Saints Sudbury SFK.
Lionel Cresswell Stemmata Alstoniana Prefatory Chapter (1905) The early Alstons, that is to say, those of whom we catch occasional and stray glimpses prior to 1564, appear to have belonged to, "that great body of Freeholders, the yeomanry of the Middle Ages, a body which, in antiquity of possession and purity of extraction, was probably superior to the classes that looked down upon it as ignoble." 1 The English yeomen in the past were a stay-at-home people, passing uneventful lives on their own acres, which frequently remained in the hands of the same family for five or six generations, and were handed on from father to son with a regularity that betokened long life and but natural decay. Each died as a rule well stricken in years, piously bequeathing in his last will and testament his soul to God, his body to the earth from whence it came, and his lands to his descendants. In nearly every county there are yet to be found several families of yeomen living in the same quiet remote parishes in which their ancestors resided two centuries or more ago. Each family is represented in the Church Register by an uninterrupted succession of entries of births, marriages, .and deaths, in which the same Christian names occur over and over again in genealogist. a manner very confusing to the These Registers, however, do not usually commence at an earlier date than the sixteenth century, and as a rule, therefore, are not of much service in throwing light on the origin of a family.
"From the wills of the yeomen of 250 or 300 years ago we can extract much that throws an interesting light on their ways of life, and a little, too, that in the musty parchment still preserves its pathos, and may supply us often with the only information we possess of many an unhistoric line, and these somewhat monotonous characters are eminently suggestive of peaceful and contented lives. The usual bequests to the Church and to the Poor, .and the promise of twelve or twenty pence to the ringers for the ringing of their knells, indicate the simple faith and religious practice of our yeomen ancestors. The well-to-do yeoman bequeathed to his eldest son his principal belongings, his house, his acres, his "waynes and plough geare," his live stock, and a few hundred pounds; to his wife a house, a feather-bed furnished and 10 pounds a year, 30 shillings to be paid quarterly.; to his other sons two kine apiece ; to his daughters a silver spoon and a cow apiece, to be delivered into their own hands, and not into their husband's ; to his grandchildren a sheep apiece ; to a favourite niece a black heifer or a white ewe ; 20 shillings to the poor, and 20 shillings to the Church, and "20 pence to the ringers for the ringing of my knell."
"Usually these ancient yeomen were but little affected by the wars and political factions of their times. were not troubled with ambition, and few cared to wander far from the vicinity of their birth-place. From the stationary conditions of their lives and from the nature of their pursuits and surroundings, they acquired a solid mediocrity of character to which the long persistence of families in the same locality and in the same station is mainly due. England in truth owes much to their lack of aspiration, and to their home loving ways. It is, however, remarkable that the rise of a family into a condition of opulence is, as a rule, shortly followed by its dispersal, until, within a generation or two, the home of the name for centuries knows it no more."2
Of the origin of the name Alston as a surname it is difficult to speak with certitude. It is probable that the first permanent surnames were the appellations of the place of birth, or residence, or of a favourite ancestor. Surnames were not in use in England and Scotland before the Norman Conquest, and they are first to be found in the Domesday Book. Many surnames such as Mortimer, Warren, Mowbray, Clifford, Arundel, and the like which are " accounted great names of antiquity " (according to Camden), were first assumed at the time of the Conquest. The employment of a second name, a custom introduced by the Normans, who themselves had not long before adopted it became in course of time a mark of gentle blood, and it was deemed a disgrace for a gentleman to have but one single name, as the meaner sort had." It was not, however, until the reign of Edward II. that the practice had become general amongst the common people. " Coming to the origin of surnames, we have it from Camden that those most ancient and of best account were derived from places in Normandy, or in the neighbouring parts of France, and that, in fact, there was no village in Normandy that gave not its name to some family in England. However, a far greater number of family names originated from places, there being, as Camden observes, scarcely a town, village, hamlet, or place in England which has not afforded names to families. The ancient manors gave their names to their lords, and the numberless small estates similarly gave their names to their possessors. In the great majority of cases, as Camden well remarks, the place bore its name before the family did its surname, and the old antiquary becomes a little wrathful with those men who "think their ancestors gave names to places."3 Now there are several places in England bearing the name Alston, to which I shall advert more fully, and near one of them, Alston in Lancashire, there are to be found persons having the name as a surname. Nevertheless, the close connection between Alston and the Saxon personal name Alstan or Ealhstan, cannot be lightly passed over in favour of the place name theory. It has been a subject of discussion whether the Anglo-Saxons did not use surnames. There is no question that they frequently distinguished themselves by appellations added to their original or Christian name to indicate some personal peculiarity office, trade, affinity, or possession.4 One Saxon M.S. seems clearly 1 Stubb's Constitutional History of England, 1884, iii., 569. 2 Guppy's Homes of Family Names in Great Britain, p. 1-3, Lond., 1890. 3 Guppy's Homes of Family Names in Great Britain, p,p., 15-16. 4 Turner's History of the Anglo-Saxons, Vol. 3, ch. vii, p. 8.
(Page ii) to express an actual surname, that of Hatte a whole family bearing it.5 Granting the occasional assumption of surnames by the Anglo-Saxons, and bearing in mind that one probable source of surnames was the desire to exhibit descent from or kinship with some prominent person, it is possible that the surname Alston is the direct lineal representative of the Saxon name Alstan. An argument in favour of this also is that the position and possessions of the family in East Anglia, so far back as any account can be unearthed, were of a nature to render less probable the idea of the migration thither of the founder of the family from any of the places Alston in times subsequent to the general adoption of surnames. The growth and ramification over a county of a family of importance was necessarily a slower process in ancient days, ridden as the country was with tortuous feudal restrictions, forbidding the free passage of either land from man to man, or man from land to land, than in these days of millionaires and motors. Whatever doubt there may be as to the derivation of the surname from the place name there can be little or none as to the substantial agreement of both in meaning. The situations of the places denominated Alston, on the stony slopes of barren moors and fells indicate the relevancy of the appellation, and the weakness of ancient Anglo-Saxon parents for indulging their vanity by dubbing their children with fantastic and lofty names was as pronounced as it is in the case of the modern Anglo-Saxons their children " Gulf-wolf, and Stan-stone, were things possessing qualities they desired to cultivate in their offsprings, hence both were frequently compounded with adjectives for use as proper names. Of names with stan as a termination there are many instances: Dunstan - the mountain stone, Aethelstan - the noble stone, Alfstan - the elf stone, Hebstan, Werstan, &c., besides Ealhstan or Alstan. Verstegan in his Restitution of Decayed Intelligence, thought the meaning of Alston was " most noble" or " excellent." The termination of the name apparently escaped him altogether, A punning allusion to the meaning seems to have supplied the family mottoes, "Immobilis" and "Immotus" and another more obscure analogy seems to account for stars being chosen for the armorial bearings. Turning to the places called Alston we find there are four. The most important of these is Alston in Cumberland, the next Alston in Lancashire, the third Alstonfield (or Alstonefield) on the borders of Derbyshire and Staffordshire, then Alston on the borders of Gloucestershire and Worcestershire. There is also a town called Beer Alston in Devonshire. I have seen Alciston in county Devon written Al'ston. With one of these only, Alston in Lancashire is the surname now-a-days to be found in any way connected. Supposing the surname to have been adopted from the place, it would thus appear that Alston in Lancashire has the first claim to be considered the cunabula gentis, but I will make no pretence at a decision. It may not however be amiss to consider briefly the topography of these different places. Each has its possibilities as the home of the race and is therefore of interest. Alston in Lancashire is a township in the ecclesiastical district of Longridge, on the western side of Longridge Fell, forming a part of that village in the hundred of Amounderness, six and a half miles north-east from Preston, and near to the Longridge Station, on the Preston and Longridge Railway. Longridge Church is in the township. The area is 1,989 acres, chiefly applied to pasture and meadow; its rateable value is L7,800, and the population in 1881 was 1,589. The earliest historical trace we have of inhabitants in Lancashire is by the names of the rivers, of which the Lune, or Alauna, the Seteia, and Belisarna, afford evidence that that this was known to, or occupied by, the Iberians, like the other Western portions of the Island. Whether it was included in the Belgian occupation is unknown, but the Romans found there the great Celtic tribe of the Brigantes; this was overcome by Agricola, and the district was brought within the Roman Province of Maxima Caesariensis. By the Romans, it was as thickly settled as the rest of the island, but of this occupation only the ancient names of a few stations remain, although there are many names given by the Early English inhabitants which bear witness to the Roman occupation. The Roman Road, Watling Street, passed from Manchester north-west through Blackburn to Ribchester ; other roads were south-east from Manchester and south-west into Cheshire ; one westward in the direction of Warrington, and from Pendleton near Manchester roads diverge north-west to Blackrod near Chorley, and north-east into Yorkshire. On the decline of the Romans the district was occupied by the Welsh, and commonly formed part of the Kingdom of Cambria, which was occasionally independent, and occasionally under the supremacy of the English Commonwealth of North Cambria. About 680 King Egfrid overcame part of the shire, but although gradually and regularly occupied by the English, it did not wholly fall into their power till the time of King Edward the Elder, about 921. The topography is very deficient in the names of the great English clans which mark the epoch of early invasion ; and the names of places derived from persons belong chiefly to a much later date. The county is mountainous in the north and east, level in the south and west. In some parts are peaty and boggy stretches called Mosses, the result of the growth of a kind of moss called "Spaghagnum" but most of these peaty lands are now drained and yield excellent crops. Specimens of the stone tools which were used by the earliest human inhabitants of our island have not occurred very plentifully in Lancashire, objects of a large and conspicuous nature only having been found. Alston in Cumberland is comparatively a much larger and more important place than Alston in Lancashire, although itself only a small market and union town with a terminal parish on the road from Penrith to Newcastle. It is the head of a County Court district, with a station on a branch from Haltwhistle of the North-Eastern Railway; fifty miles from Newcastle by rail, and nineteen north-east from Penrith by road. The town is somewhat irregularly built, situated in a mountainous district between the rivers South Tyne and Nent ; rising from nine hundred to a thousand feet above the level of the sea, and surrounded by mountains rising to nearly three thousand feet. The Church has been thrice built, first in 1154, on the same site in 1768, and again in 1869 -70. There is a Town Hall, a handsome Gothic building of stone. The Market Cross in the centre of the Market-place is a square covered building open on all sides, having in the centre a stone column rising to the roof. It is the reproduction of a former Cross built in 1765 by the Right Honourable Sir William Stephenson, Bart., Lord Mayor of London, a native of the district. There are various Institutes and Clubs. A weekly Market is held on Saturdays, and Fairs for horses and cattle several times a year. Silver is always found in the lead ore. Copper and " Black Jack," or native sulphide of zinc, and umber are found. "Crow Coal" a peculiar variety having very little flame, burning slowly with an intense heat, and used principally for lime burning, is found on Alston Moor. There are limestone 5 Cott. M.S. Lib. B. 6.
(Page iii) quarries, limestone breaking and umber works, a knit hosiery factory, two corn mills, a saw mill, and a small colliery near Ayleburn. There are many natural beauties and curiosities in the neighbourhood. Nent Force is a romantic cascade of considerable height, and just below it the river Nent joins the South Tyne. Large caverns are met with in the lead mines, and being formed of variegated spar in numberless forms of crystallization, present a very beautiful and even splendid appearance. The Roman road called the "Maiden Way" crossed the west side of the parish, where its remains are very distinct in several places. An inscribed altar has been found here ; at Hall Hill are the remains of a Roman Camp, in which silver denarii have been met with, and two bronze vessels. At Ganigill is a field called "Chesters." Upon Hall Hill, a little below Tyne Bridge, and opposite the confluence of the Nent and South Tyne, are the foundations of an ancient fortress once surrounded by a moat. Tutman's Hole is a large cavern in Gildersdale Forest of unknown length, but said to have been explored for more than a mile from its mouth. Small Trout abound in the rivers and grouse upon the moor, where grow clustered brambles like cranberries, commonly called "cloudberries." The country-side dwellers therein and their manners have been well described in a recently published volume of tales. Of the aborigines of Cumberland nothing is said to be known, but some of the geographical names are supposed to attest Iberian occupation, as the Tyne, Tees, and Nent. The Celts succeeded the Iberians, but the Belgae do not seem to have reached so far. Of supposed Drurdical remains there are many in the hills. At the time of the Roman invasion, the great Celtic tribes of the Brigantes had possession, and were beaten A.D. 1220 or 1221 by the Romans. Hadrian then caused the wall known by his name to be built from frith to frith across the island. Various Roman roads and stations are still to be traced besides the great Roman wall. The Scots and Picts harassed the county in the latter part of the Roman time and long after. The Welsh inhabitants constituted a kind of state, which has been called Cumbrian, extending from the Mersey to the Clyde. The English gradually pressed on the border and exterminated the Welsh, or drove them as exiles into Wales. Cumberland was then held as a dependency of the English in Northumbria or the Scotch lowlands. In 945 it was held by Malcolm, King of Scotland, and from time to time by other Scots Kings until 1237 when it was finally annexed to England. Being on the borders of Scotland it was the seat of frequent wars and forays, and also suffered severely in the Parliamentary war, and in the advances of the Old and Young Pretenders. The natural beauties of the county in the shape of the mountains and waters of the Lake country are well-known. The climate on account of these hills is among the wettest in England. At Keswick the yearly fall sometimes reaches 70 inches of water, and snow lodges on the mountain tops every winter. Many traces of prehistoric man have been found. Only three instances it is said are known of celts or axe heads having been found in England with the wooden handles still attached, and two of these were found in Cumberland. Rude stone circles, and the remains of what appear to be stone-pit dwellings occur among the mountains. Alstonfield (or Alstonefield) is a village or parish of well built houses, in a picturesquerposition above the western declivity of Dove Dale on the borders of Derbyshire. The scenery of the parish traversed, as it is, by the meandering streams of the Dove and Manifold is wild and picturesque : on the hill side at Welton is a large natural hollow, called "Thor's Cave" above the glen rises the tree-girt church of Grindon ; below this, near Welton Mill the Manifold sinks underground and only rises again at Ilam just before its confluence with the Dove, the rocks of this locality are of considerable height, and the mountain streams afford excellent sport to the angler. The Church of St. Peter is a building of stone with a few Norman remains, but is chiefly of late perpendicular date. In the churchyard are an ancient stone font and stone coffin, as well as portions of several early crosses. The register dates from the year 1538. The area of the parish is rather over more than twenty-three thousand acres. The soil is loam subsoil, limestone, gritstone, and clay. The land is chiefly in pasture. The population is about 3,500. The entire district was first held by the Iberians, perhaps by the Silures who were driven out by the Welsh. At the time of the Roman conquest the tribes in possession were the Coritani and Cornavii, and the country was made part of the province of Flavia Caesariensis. Many remains of circles, cairns, and barrows are to be found on the uplands. The land was afterwards taken by the middle English, and shared the lot of the great kingdom of Mercia. Most of the local names in the neighbourhood are English, and there are a few referring to the religion of Woden. In the time of Ethelred I, the Northmen overran the country and long held it. It was part of the great federation of the Five Burghs.
Alston in Gloucestershire is a hamlet belonging to the parish of Overbury in Worcestershire, and was formerly in the latter county, but was transferred by Act of Parliament early in this century. The soil is chiefly clay, subsoil clay. There is a chapel of ease. The area is rather over a thousand acres, and the population is about seventy. This part of Gloucestershire and Worcestershire was first occupied by the Iberians who long lingered here, their last chief tribe the Silures, offering a stubborn resistance to the Belgae and Celts. By the Romans it was included in the province of Flavia Caesariensis. After their abandonment of Britain it was seized by the Celts, and then by the middle English, with whom it formed part of their kingdom of Mercia.
Beer Alston is a town of about 1,000 inhabitants, about two miles north of the village of Beer Ferrars in co. Devon. It was formerly a parliamentary borough, but was disfranchised by the Reform Act of 1832. There is a chapel of ease (Holy Trinity), erected in 1848 Large quantities of fruit are grown locally, especially blackberries, called locally "mazards." There is a school for girls and infants founded by Mr. John Maynard, Sergeant-at-law, one of the prosecutors of Strafford and Laud. He was M.P. for Beer Alston in 1661, and died October 9th, 1690. So much for the possible cradles of the families of Alston. There is plenty of room for search in the archives of the Public Record Office and in the rolls of the various manorial courts respecting the association of persons bearing the name of Alston with these places, and the possible derivation of the surname from them. I regret I cannot myself give the time to it. We will now turn from places of the name to persons who have borne it. First, we may remark its comparative rarity. In Kelly's 1905 Post Office London Directory (Court section), the name occurs sixteen times, and includes repetitions of some mentioned in the County Directories. In the Commercial section the name occurs eighteen times, and includes some reckoned in the Court section. In Slater's (Page iv) 1893 Directory of Scotland it occurs twice in Edinburgh, and very occasionally in the counties. In Slater's Irish Directory (1893), it is not to be found in Dublin at all. Among Kelly's Provincial Directories (Court Sections) it occurs in that of Kent (1903) six times, including repetitions of some in the London Directory, the owners following their profession or other vocation in London, and residing out of town. In Surrey (1903) it occurs seven times, in Sussex (1903) three, in Essex (1902), a seat of the East Anglia family, three times there are also two farmers of the name), in Herts three times, and in Middlesex three times only. In the Cumberland, Derbyshire, and Staffordshire Directories it is not to be found in the Court sections, nor traceable, so far as I have gone, in any of the other sections. In Gloucestershire (1902) it occurs three times. The infrequency of the name in these counties in light of the existence of the place name is curious, especially as in Kellys Directory of the county of Lancaster are to be found three Alstons in the Court Section, two publicans, two followers of the craft of St. Crispin, two cloggers, two drapers, five farmers, and two shopkeepers. The frequency of the name in Lancashire lends some colour to the theory that Alston near Ribchester may be the place whence the family originally sprang. The genius of the family seems ever to have been that for the middle course. Not by any sudden meteor flight did it reach a dazzling and giddy height, tumbling thence precipitately like so many. No Alston appears to have sought the dangerous atmosphere of the Court, when it was the fashion for knight or squire so to do. Even in the parlous times of the Commonwealth and Rebellion, when the downs of to-day were the ups of yesterday, it steered its way carefully step by step. A few, it is true, suffered the amercement of a tithe of their possessions under Oliver Cromwell's celebrated ordinance, and Viscount Castlemaine, the regicide,who married Frances Alston, was deprived of all his honours and degraded at the Restoration of Charles II. for the part he had played in the Commonwealth ; along with Sir Henry Mildmay and Sir Robert Wallop, he was sentenced to be drawn on a sledge with a rope about his neck from the Tower to Tyburn and back again, and to be imprisoned in the Tower for life. Of his end I have learned nothing. Several Alstons have sat in Parliament at different times, and some have been soldiers and sailors, but generally it may be said they have not been "The State's whole thunder born to wield And shake alike the Senate and the Field:" The care and administration of lands and estates, the learned professions, the courts of law, the service of the Church, and the hospital have been their fields of action, and in these they have never failed to achieve success justifying their rank and station. In the faculty of physic the family achieved considerable renown in the person of Sir Edward Alston, Knt., President of the College of Physicians. Born of wealthy parents, he went through the usual University training of the gentleman of the time, successively taking his degrees of Bachelor and Master of Arts, and then obtaining the M.D. degree and a Fellowship of the College of Physicians. Presumably he was proficient in the practice of his profession, for he died very rich at his house in Great St. Helens, Bishopgate. But over and above his medical skill he possessed address in affairs, foresight, and administrative capacity of no mean order. The practice of medicine was much less restricted then than now. Like most early institutions trying to regulate a profession, the College of Physicians had great difficulty in restraining unqualified practitioners. Many of these were no doubt quite as able as their duly licensed brethren for the science of Medicine was not then the exact science it is now, and the question was rather a political one of the expediency of enforcing submission to a central controlling body. At length an opportunity arose to win over the better class of the unlicensed, and deal a death blow to the pretensions of unscrupulous men who sought not to cure, but to take advantage of the ills that human, flesh is heir to. During the desertion of the city consequent on the visitation of the plague in 1665, thieves broke into the treasury of the College and stole the funds. This was a grievous predicament for the association to be in, and the Fellows were at a loss to know what to do, when Sir Edward Alston came forward with a proposal which eventually found acceptance. Briefly it was that admission to the Fellowship of the Society should be accorded to the unlicensed practitioners of the Rebellion on payment of certain fees. The plan worked well. Seventy new Fellowships were created, the moneys paid for the diploma fee fattened the lean chests of the treasury, and the new Fellows, jealous of the privileges they had acquired, helped the College in establishing its authority over the faculty. Two better birds were never killed by one stone. Another blow awaited the College. No sooner had it got over the difficulty of the thieves than the Great Fire, of 1666 destroyed the whole of the buildings. Again Sir Edward Alston was to the front, promising the wherewithal out of his great store of inherited and accumulated wealth for the purpose of rebuilding. At this point a quarrel arose among the Fellows about the site. A new election for the Presidency came along and Sir Edward was thrown. Disgusted at the treatment he had suffered, he withdrew his promise and never afterwards renewed it. If the quarrel was wholly and solely about the site, the action of the Fellows would appear to be rather hypercritical. Any site with a College is better than a particular site without a College. Sir Edward left no male heirs. His brother Sir Joseph was already rich and on the highway to the baronetcy he obtained in 1681. So the great medical fortune was left to his two daughters, one of whom became an ancestress of the later extinct Earls of Warrington, and of the present Earl of Stamford's family. The younger, Sarah, was thrice married, first to George Grimston, the son of the then Master of the Rolls, Sir Harbottle Grimston ; secondly to John Seymour, afterwards fourth Duke of Somerset ; and lastly to Henry Hare, Lord Coleraine. She died without issue, and was buried in Westminster Abbey. The Duchess gave a notable instance of her regard for the family of Somerset, having by her Will, dated May 17th, 1686, settled in the strictest terms of the law the manors of Powsey and Tilcombe-cum-Oxenwood, and Harding Farm with their appurtenances, in Wiltshire, on the successive Dukes of Somerset, descendants of Edward Seymour, the first Duke. She likewise founded the noble almhouse at Froxfield in the said county for thirty widows not having L20 a year, one half the widows of clergymen, the other of laymen,6 and several other charities existing in great activity to-day, including the well-known Somerset School at Tottenham. A handsome monument of the Duchess Sarah is in Westminster Abbey, where 6 Collin's Peerage (Lond., 1812), Vol. i, p. 183.
(Page v) it is visited yearly by a deputation of the scholars of Tottenham School, who lay on it a simple tribute of flowers to the memory of their foundress and benefactress. "The actions of the just Smell sweet and blossom in the dust." In 1642 a baronetcy was conferred on the Bedfordshire branch of the East Anglian family in the person of Sir Thomas Alston, and in 1681 another baronetcy was conferred on Sir Joseph Alston, of Chelsea. Unfortunately the fate that overtakes most honours sooner or later the want of a male heir has overtaken both dignities. In 1790 the last Odell Baronet died leaving no surviving relative in the male line, Odell Castle and estates having already been alienated by the will of the penultimate baronet. In 1819 the last Chelsea Baronet died, his only son having predeceased him in 1802, leaving three daughters but no male heirs. Claimants to both baronetcies "soi-disant" baronets as "G.E.C." calls them have not been wanting. Admittedly in the case of the Chelsea title there are one or two male descents from the first baronet capable of further exploration. But it is hardly possible that the title is in abeyance. In any case intending claimants are reminded that the honour would be now a very barren one, the Chelsea Alstons having lost most of their territorial consequence a century before the supposed extinction of the title. How it happened that so level headed and prudential folk bred a spendthrift like Sir Evelyn Alston is unaccountable. Circumstances may perhaps explain it, the early deaths of the third and fourth Baronets possibly throwing the estates free from any restrictions of settlements and entails into the hands of the fifth Baronet. But against him and his character too much must not be alleged, for little is known. In Burke's Extinct Baronetage it is recorded that he had sold his properties before 1721 to Sir Peter, afterwards Lord King, but Burke falls into the strange error of confusing him with his son of the same name who died without issue in 1783, After disposing of the bulk of his estates he settled at Reigate and built himself a mansion there, but this he seems also to have parted with. Of him thereafter until his death in 1750 nothing is known except what concerns his intemperance of conduct. Perhaps in his early years dazzled by the sole ownership of a fine estate, and courted for the sake of it, and being of an open-handed and generous disposition, he yielded too much to the fascinations and allurements which beset the youth of the early Georgian era who was born with a silver spoon in his mouth. Another member of the family who attained a certain distinction was Archdeacon Alston, some time Treasurer and Prebendary of St. Paul's. He was a Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge, and successively Archdeacon of Middlesex and Essex. A distinguished descendant of the Chelsea baronets was the late Augustus J. C. Hare, the well-known author of the "Memorials of a Quiet Life," "Walks in Rome," and other interesting literary works. It was in his possession that I made the interesting discovery of the " Character Bible " of old Sir Joseph the founder, who mentions it and describes it in his will as being " writt by myne cwne hand." I have traced no connexion between the East Anglian Alstons, those in Scotland, and those in Lancashire although the Scottish Alstons bear the same arms as the East Anglian duly differenced. Not merely in England have the Alstons justified themselves. There have been migrations to the various new lands east and west, affected by the self-reliant and colonising Briton during the past three hundred years, and many a name figuring in my brief record as a name and nothing more, is in all probability that of a forefather of our Alston namesakes and cousins beyond the sea. Reference must here be made to Joseph Alston, the Governor of South Carolina, statesman and millionaire, who married Theodosia, the daughter of Aaron Burr, one of the Vice-Presidents of the United States. He and his wife were conspicuous figures in Burr's romantic schemes, and had it not been for that perverse destiny which makes the best laid schemes of mice and men gang aft agley, the throne of Mexico might have been occupied by descendants of the ancient and knightly house of the Alstons of Great Britain. Burr it will be remembered by those acquainted with this period of American history, had the misfortune to kill his political rival and censor, Alexander Hamilton, in a duel. He was deposed from the vice-presidency and overwhelmed with obloquy, had literally to fly for his life to the west. Meeting there with a rich Englishman named Blennerhassett, he concocted with him the romantic and daring project of seizing the throne of Mexico. As Aaron I. he was to reign over the land of the Aztecs. From the British Government he hoped for concurrence and help. Funds were to be raised from relations and supporters, troops from the adventurous youth of Pennsylvania, South Caroline, Ohio, New York and other neighbouring states. Influenced perhaps by his wife Theodosia, Joseph Alston became a party to his father-in-law's filibustering designs. Theodosia was to be chief lady of the court and rank as an imperial princess, and their son, Aaron Burr Alston was appointed heir presumptive to all his grandfather's chateaux en Espagne. But Burr's rebellious and audacious hopes were dissipated into thin air by the defection of his intended commander-in-chief-General Wilkinson. He had to fly disguised, and was captured, and being put upon his trial at Richmond in 1807 narrowly escaped condemnation. Even when liberated he had to remain in close hiding on account of his unpopularity until he could get away secretly to England. In England he obtained the patronage of the leaders of society and literature by his winning personality, becoming a frequent guest at Holland House and making the acquaintance of Scott in Edinburgh. Subsequently he fell into poverty, and became an object of suspicion to European Governments, and was ostracised by his fellow Americans in Paris. Trouble after trouble came upon him. His grandson Alston the idol of his imperial dreams, his favourite "Gampillo," as he affectionately called him, sickened and died. Worse still, his daughter, bitterly bereaved by the death of her only child and eager to meet her father, after untold effort succeeded in raising the wherewithal to recross the Atlantic, sailed for New York on a Charleston steamer which never found its port. That it was boarded by pirates and that poor Theodosia with other passengers was compelled "to walk the plank" is the tale not verified though widely believed. The uncertainty which clung about her fate caused her father more suffering than if actual details had reached him. Until her father's disgrace Theodosia Alston was a leader of society both in Charleston and New York, renowned as much for the shining qualities of her intellect as for the marked elegance of her manners. With her father's history after her death I have no concern here, but it may not be amiss to (Page vi) mention that resuming the practice of the law he lived down the scandals of his earlier years, and, after recouping his fortune by marrying a rich widow, died respected and honoured at the patriarchal age of four score.7 Another American Alston who achieved renown was Washington Allston, the Royal Academican. Born at Waccamaw in South Carolina in 1779, he graduated at Harvard College in 1800, and entered the schools of the Royal Academy in London soon after. His first work of importance, "The Dead Man Revived," gained a prize of Two Hundred Guineas from the British Institute, and was purchased by the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts. In 1818 he returned to his native country and spent the remainder of his life there. In 1831 he published a poem, "The Sylphs of the Season" and a little later two others. His romance of "Monaldi" which followed these attracted some attention in the literary world and has been dramatised. "With the name of this painter"8 says Tuckerman, speaking of American Art "painting reaching its acme of excellence among us. In genius, character, life, and feeling, he emulated the Italian masters, partook of their spirit, and caught the mellow richness of their tints." Another writer says,9 "the method of Alston was to suppress all the coarser beauties which make up the substance of common pictures. He avoided bright eyes, curls and contours, glancing lights, strong contrasts, and colours too crude for harmony. He reduced his beauty to elements so that an inner beauty might play through her features." Washington Alston died in 1843. He was remarkable also for the use he first made of asphaltum in painting.10
Of the Alstons in Scotland, whom I imagine to be really an off-shoot of the East Anglian family, I can glean but little. Charles Alston, 1663 - 1760, a scientific writer, was born at Eddlewood, and educated at Glasgow. On his father's death the Duchess of Hamilton took him under patronage and wished him to study law, but he preferred to turn his attention to medicine. He went to Leyden to study under Boerhaave, where he made the acquaintance of Dr. Alexander Monro. On the return of the two to Edinburgh they revived the medical lectures in the University, Alston being appointed lecturer in Botany and Materia Medica, and also (1716) superintendent of the Botanical Gardens ; these posts be held until his death, 22nd November, 1760. He was the author of various medical papers., as well as of an index of the plants in the Edinburgh Garden (1740), which is preceded by a Latin introduction to Botany, and of the "Tirocinium Botanicurn Edinburgense" (1753) in which he attacked the Linnaean system of classification. His lectures on Materia Medica were prepared for publication after his death by his friend and successor, Dr. J, H. Hope, and appeared in 4 volumes in 1770. Robert Brown dedicated to him the apocyneous gems, "Alstonia." See also Pulteney's sketches of Progress of Botany (1790), ii, 9-16; also Rees' Cyclopaedia. Edward Richard Alston (1844 - 1881), the eminent zoologist, was born at Stockbriggs, near Lesmahagow, on the 1st December, 1845, and being delicate in youth was chiefly self educated at home. He very early contributed to the Zoologist and various Scottish Magazines, and ultimately became an acknowledged authority on Mammalia and birds. His principal papers on the proceedings of the Zoological Society (1874 - 1880) are upon rodents, especially American Squirrels (1870 and 1879),. The division in Mammalia in Salvin and Godman's " Biologla Centraliwas Americana," was written by him though its publication was incomplete at his death. In 1880 he was elected Zoological Secretary of the Linnaean Society, which office he held till his death from acute phthisis on 7th March, 1881. In 1874 he largely assisted Prof. T. Bell in the second edition of "British Quadrupeds." All his papers are valuable and remarkable for conciseness and lucidity. G. T. Bellamy Obituary notice. Proc. Linn . Sac., 1880-81, 9. 16.
In the course of the four hundred pages that comprise my work many interesting glimpses are to be obtained of the personalities of those who figure therein, of their characters and doings, and of the household life and domestic and local customs of bygone times. The Wills and Chancery Suits are especially rich mines. Of one of the patriarchs of the family, Thomas Alston, we are told that he was commonly known as the "blew devil," because he was "wont to goe cladd in blew cloth" and had a very red face. Of his temper nothing is said, but we can imagine something. Another Thomas is described as "le unthrift," and was imprisoned in the Fleet. Our interest is aroused by the legacies left by Sir Edward Alston, the "Kinge's Phisitian," to the old spectacle woman by Crosby House gate and to the bricklayer who bricked up the vault that preserved the President's goods through the Great Fire. What were the ins and outs, the rights and wrongs of the differences between the last Sir Thomas Alston of Odell and his wife which brought about the end of that family? Old Sir Joseph. the merchant baronet of Chelsea, provided and kept his own coffin in his dwelling house. He transcribed the Bible in character, that is, shorthand, What we are told makes us feel we should like to know more of him and of his first wife, the Dutch woman. One of his daughters married a Clayton of La Vache, a well-known estate in the county of Buckingham. This property was derived by the Claytons from the Fleetwoods, and passed through the Alstons to the Hares. Thus there was a link with Oliver Cromwell, he being a kinsman of the Fleetwoods. Sir Evelyn Alston the elder must have been an interesting character in spite of his faults and failings. We are told by the local chronicler of his chosen place of residence, Reigate, that he used to drive around in a coach and six, preceded by a band! What were the objections of Penning Alston to Edward Skynner as a suitor for his daughter's hand? Were there two Anne Strattons ? Who was Thomas Alston of Chelsea? Was Katherine, the wife of Peter Alston of Bramford, the lady whose maiden name was the malodorous one of Buggs, really so extravagant as her enemies alleged? "Twenty gowns of wrought velvet, tufftaffeta, satin damask, and other stuffs, and petticoats suitable to them all laid very thick with gold and silver lace " certainly sound unfit for her degree, and must have made a sad hole in her husband's money bags. Are we to believe what one deponent said, that Joseph Alston of Loughton feigned madness because he had no money or credit wherewith he might maintain himself ? How long did he abide with Galliard, the (person noted for curing lunatics) ? The suit Wynn v. Alston on page 201 gives us an idea of what it meant being a ward of Chancery in those days. 7 An interesting account of the Burrs and Alstons by Edgar Fawcett with portraits and illustrations, including one of Theodosia Alston, appeared in the Cosmopolitan Magazine for October, 1897, under the title "A Romantic Wrong Doer." 8 Tuckerman's Book of Artists. 9 Alston's Heads, Atlantic Monthly, February, 1865. 10 "The Life and Letters of Washington Allston," by Dr. Flagg. (Bentley, London.)
(page vii) How slack a man of business was Sir Joseph Alston of Bradwell Abbey his law proceedings with his coachmaker show. Was it for this debt that he, the Sheriff of his County, was committed to the Fleet prison? Possibly he began the wastage of the family estate that was completed by his son Sir Evelyn. What exactly were the occupations pharmacopola and pannicularius referred to on page 220, and what a sinister note is that appended in Latin to the burial entry of Elizabeth Alston, May 8, 1609, "Gravida ante nuptias" Alas! frail woman! The interest of such a compilation as mine is of necessity confined principally to those who belong to or are connected with the various Alston families whose pedigrees are set forth in it, and even among those many will probably consider there is a large amount of chaff and little grain. But for myself I confess so consuming a desire to know who and what my ancestors were and how they lived their lives that every fact, however trivial, is of value in my eyes. This account of the Alstons, begun originally to clear away the mistakes and to fill the gaps in the printed pedigrees, has far outgrown its contemplated dimensions. But the task - and the labour has involved the sacrifice of hundreds of leisure hours - has not been without its delights and rewards as it went along. Pleasant friendships have arisen from it, and if those who bear the name Alston, or are descended from Alstons, find in it something inspiring them, from a shame of being worse than their elders were, to strive all their power so that they may become better in some habits, nay, may increase their virtues, my labour will not have been in vain. Finally, I have to thank all my correspondents and helpers in all ranks of life and in all parts of the world, without whose goodwill and assistance the accomplishment of my end would have been impossible. As these pages are about to go to press, Vol. IV. of G. E. C.'s "Complete Baronetage" reaches me. I cannot cite any better testimonial to the thoroughness and accuracy of my researches than Clarenceux's acceptance of my pedigree of the Alston baronets of Chelsea, associated as it is with a note of acknowledgement of my assistance. In an earlier volume (Vol. II), Clarenceux also refers in kind terms to the information supplied by me concerning the Alston baronets of Odell. The Royal Descent of the Chelsea Alstons from Edward I. was also accepted and included by "J. R. S. G. " in bis "Portfolio of Royal Descents," published in 1902. LIONEL CRESSWELL.
My recollection is that the Alstons of Thinacre Milne Lanarkshire were supposed to have gone there from England about the 14th century but I never saw any records which dated further back than the 16th ; this was in a book of county families in the neighbourhood of Glasgow. Our crest is an eagle, our motto "In Altum." I have seen coats of arms with what looked like 10 stars in them in my uncle's house. Extract from the Rev. Hy. Monteth Alston's letter, 15 March, 1898 (House of the Resurrection, Mirfield) Alstoniana Pg 374
Manuscript Notes of Professor Charles Alston, born 1685. Library of Edinburgh University, Scotland The surname "Alston" is generally believed to be an abbreviation of "Athelstane" , a name well known in Anglo-Saxon History as, Athelstane-ford, Athelstane-muir, now called "Alston ford," "Alston muir", &c. Athel means noble or strong. Alston was of old a proper name among the Saxons, for in 845 there was a Bishop of Sherborne called Alston, who then and some years after, particularly in 853, made a considerable figure. (Vide Rapin Vol v.pp.85,86). The tradition is that the Scotch Alstons came first from England and (as Lord Basil Hamilton says) along with the Hamilton who was the founder of that noble family in Clydesdale, having been his second (in a duel) which obliged them both to leave the English Court. But be in this what will, the oldest family of Alston's I know of in Scotland was that of Cander in the parish of Dalserf and sheriffdom of Lanark. Concerning which the learned antiquary Mr. George Crawford, favourd me with the following memorial, written and subscribed by his own hand, which I have by me. It is entitled: "Memorials of the surname and family of Alston of Cander in Larnarkshire." where of follows "The Alstons were a very ancient and considerable family. They possessed the Estate time out of memory. But that was not all their estate. They had part of the lands and Barony of Cambusbarron, Co. Stirling. There is a Charter the writer of this Memorial has seen, in the custody of the Earls of Wigton, granted by King Robbert III (1399) granting half of the Barony of Cambusbarron to Hugo de Alston, among other witnesses are David, Duke of Rothesay. There is another Hugo de Alston, dominus de Cander who I conjecture was the son of the former Hugh, who died about 1425. For there is a Charter of Mortification granted by Thomas Somervile of Carnwich, of annuity of 20 marks out of his lands of Manuel in Co. Stirling, to sustain a Chaplain in the Church of St. Macutius, i.e. the Priory of Lesmahago "pro animo quondam Hugonis Alston de Cander". It is dated 1425 and confirmed by Charter of King James (1426) in the register of the great seal, in the public archives. He left only 1 daughter, his sole heir, named Margaret. This Margaret was married to John Hamilton of Whistleberry, 2nd son of Sir John Cadzow and brother of James, first Lord of the family of Hamilton. He died in 1454. The author of the "Liber de Culross" takes notice of his death. There is an investiture taken of the Estate of Hamilton by James, 1st Lord Hamilton, in favour of himself and heirs male of his body, and failing those and certain others, to those of the aforesaid John Hamilton of Cander. This Charter is in 1455, in the public registers of the Great Seal. The Hamiltons of Cander came afterwards to change their title to Milburn. A male branch of the old family of Alstons of Cander settled in the Barony of Cadzow and had a small estate there, which they held from the Family of Hamilton." (Thus Mr. Crawford.) Ref: Susan Perrett Tree
SURNAMES OF THE UNITED KINGDOM A CONCISE ETYMOLOGICAL DICTIONARY BY HENRY HARRISON 1912 ALSTON (Eng.) l Bel. to Alston [the second element is the common O.E. tun, estate, farm, &c.; the first represents an A.-Sax. pers. name such as JfLelle, JEgel- Mthel-, JElf-, &r., in the genit. case] Alston in Staffs was, e.g., A.-Sax. Mlfw(eardes-tun. 2 confused with Alstone, q.v. ALSTON E (Eng.) i Bel. to Alstone [the second element is the O.E. stdn, a stone, rock, stone castle; the first represents an A.-Sax. pers. name such as Mile, Mgel-, Mthel-, Mlf; &c., in the genit. case] Alstone in Staffs was, e.g., A.-Sax. Mlfredes-stdn. 2 The A.-Sax. pers. name Mlfstdn = ELF-STONE ; E)Alhstdrt = TEMPLE-STONE ; or JEihelsidn- NOBLE STONE 3 confused with Alston, q.v.
Bloomefield Vol. 10 p. 26 Patesley. King William on his conquest granted this town to Peter de Valoines, &c. Alestan a freeman was owner of it in King Edward's reign when it was accounted a manor.
Fifield - The lands in this parish belonged in Edward the Confessor's reign to Brictmar, Alnuin (3) Turic and Alestan.
Bures or Buers, Gifford. A few miles from Billericay Essex. The lands of this parish were in several hands before and after the conquest namely St. Peter's Westminster, in Alestan a freeman, &c.
Mistley with Manningtree.-This parish belonged in Edward the Confessor's reign to Alric or Aluric and Alestan
Manor of Dikeley Munningtree.-Dikeley Hall is about a mile and a half from the Church. The owner of it in Edward the Confessor's reign was Alestan.
Parish Westham. The owners of this parish in Edward the Confessor's reign were Alestan and Leured-two freemen.
Shnarehill House (now called Thetford Lodge) belonged to Alestan an Englishman in the Conqueror's time.
Henricus Alstan 1351. By will requested to be buried in S. Mary's Churchyard Thetford. (See History of Thetford)
Alstoniana Pg 364/5
Cresswell in 1905 listed the following persons in possession of Alston Portraits: Portrait of Sir Rowland Alston, 2 Bart. Col. Cockburn, Norwich. Portrait of Mrs. Mead. Colonel Lynn, Wickham Market. Portrait of Lady (Gertrude?) Alston, by Gainsborough. Mrs. Craven, of Brighton, or Charles Craven, Esq. Portrait of Mr. Isaac Alston, 3rd son of Sir Joseph I Bart. of Chelsea. Rev. F. S. Alston (purchased at sale of Mr. Strutt's pictures, at Ipswich, Oct. 3rd, 1869). Miniature of Edward Alston. Mrs. Hannah Katherine Leeder, of Woodton, Norfolk. Miniature of Sir Rowland Alston. Mrs. Ann Alston (Brooch), Miniature of Lady Alston. Mrs. Ann Alston (from Lord Hatherley's collection). Portrart of Charles Alston, D.D. (supposed). Richard Aumack, Esq., Solicitor, Long Melford. Portrait of Sarah (Alston), Duchess of Somerset. St. John's College, Cambridge (Engravings after it by Vertue). Portrait of Sarah (Alston) Duchess of Somerset. Rev. E, Constable Alston (from house at Tottenham formerly belonging to Lord Coleraine, her last husband. Miniature of Daniel Alston. Mrs. Ann Alston (Locket), Miniature of Mrs. Daniel Alston (Eliza Freeborn). Mrs. Ann Alston. Portrait of Rev. E. Constable Alston. Mrs. Ann Alston. Portrait of Sir Joseph Alston, 1st Bart, of Chelsea (supposed replica). William Alston Head, Esq., East Grinstead Portrait of Sir Edward Alston, Kt., President of College of Physicians. Augustus J. C. Hare, Esq., St. Leonards. Alstoniana Pg 301.
Medical Notes:
Other Records
1. Mark Alliston: Research into early Alliston/Alston families, 2013. MARK ALLISTON - 2013 Has contributed this Collection of Medieval References to the Alston Family. Presented in no particular order.
Image MSS of Feet of Fines dated 1224 (Henry III). Purchase (or sale) of 30 acres by John son of Adam de Alliston from Rupert de Ernestedel at Stanfield SFK
This is the earliest recorded use of the surname in Suffolk, the 1224 Feet of Fines, when John son of Adam de Alliston sold land at Stanfeld. Note a discrepancy, the image says that John son of Adam purchased the land whereas the full transcript from another document records that he sold it ?
In summary it appears there are links between: Alestan and Stambourne from Domesday Book and The Law by Robin Fleming. Cambridge University Press. ii 100b (0-33) Annexations (invasiones) against the King; Stambourne: TRE Aethelstan, a freeman, and twelve other freemen held forty acres of land in Stambourne. They still have it. Alestan of Stambourne (1086) and Alestan of West Ham (1086) via Ranulph De Peverel. Ranulph Peveral was granted Alestans land at West Ham by William I
The Peveral family were granted Stambourne by Henry III http://www.stambourne.com/StambourneParishHistory/Chapter3.html Alliston of Stanfeld (1224) and Alestan of Stambourne (1086) via the place name Stanfeld and Alestan Bec Road West Ham (postcode E16) . De Vere and Alestan of West Ham via a writ of Henry I (1129) http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=63940
Gernon and West Ham via the Domesday Book , (Alestans land was split between Ralph Peveral and Robert Gernon ) Robert De Veres daughter Eleanor and Sir Ralph Gernon by marriage (about 1220). A/Elliston and De Vere via the wills of John De Vere (13th Earl of Oxford ) and John De Vere (16th Earl of Oxford)
www.oxford-shakespeare.com/Probate/PROB_11-17_ff_82-90.pdfy www.oxford-shakespeare.com/EssexRecordOffice/D-AMR_3-281.pdf <
A/Elliston and De Vere by the records of Earls Colne (1600s) https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/195838> Hugh Austyn (Allstyn) and De Vere via the Medieval Soldiers Muster Role of 1415. http://www.medievalsoldier.org/search_musterdb.php
Alliston and Stanfeld via a feet of fines record in 1224 indicating that the Allistons already held land there. http://archive.org/details/acalendarfeetfi00histgoog
Alestan and Aethelstan via the land holding at West Ham which was originally granted to an Aethelstan in 958 by King Edgar. This could be Bishop Aethelstan or Ealdorman Aethelstan. 958 was the year that King Edgar was looking for support from his foster Father Ealdorman Aethelstan of East Anglia (Half King). Name and land are consistant with inheritance. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=42741
Richard De Clare ( Lord of Stanfeld) and Aethelstan Earldorman of East Anglia via Bec Abbey and their holdings near Wallingford. http://www.st-botolphs-swyncombe.info/history/
Richard De Clare and Ealdorman Aethelstan via St Neots, Cambridgeshire. Richard re-founds the priory at St Neots which was originally founded by Leofric the grandson of Aethelstan via his son Aethelweard. http://www.st-botolphs-swyncombe.info/history/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Neots_Priory Hart (1973) = Cyril Hart, "Athelstan 'Half King' and his family", Anglo-Saxon England 2 (1973): 115-144.
Aethelstan Ealdorman of East Anglia and Eadric his brother http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%86thelstan_Half-King Eadric and Aethelweard the historian http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%86thelweard_%28historian%29 Aethelweard the historian and Aethelred I of Wessex http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%86thelred_of_Wessex
Obviously these are just links but it does pose the question is the reason the Motto of the Alstons Immotus because they were not moved after the invasion by William I ?
The stars could be a play on the stars of De Vere who was probably their chosen feudal Lord, Stistead is very close to Castle Hedingham base of De Vere
The name Hugh could derive from Hugh De Vere 4th Earl of Oxford. The Allistons may have moved from Stanfeld to Stistead to join him in 1224 switching their allegience from De Clare to De Vere. More complex notes below: Kind regards Mark
Most historians think that names ending in ton are place derived names from a farmstead or Manor, in our case though it could be the ending is ston derived from Stone.
This is the final concord, made in the court of our Lord the King at Westminster in the Octave of Saint Martin in the ninth year of the reign of king Henry the son of John [11 Nov 1224]. Before Martin de Pateshill1, Thomas de Muleton, Thomas de Hardham, Robert de Lexin[g]ton [and] Geoffrey Savage, Justiciars, and other faithful subjects of our Lord the King then and there present. Between John the son of Adam de Alliston, complainant and Robert de Ernestedel defendant, concerning thirty acres of land, with the appurtenances in Stanfeld. In respect whereof there was a plea between them in the aforesaid land, with the appurtenances, to the right of the same Robert. To have and to hold to the same Robert and his heirs, of the aforesaid John and his heirs for ever. Yielding annually in respect thereof six shillings, at two terms of the year, that is to say,one half at Easter and the other half at the Feast of Saint Micheal, for all service and exaction. And for this recognizance, fine and agreement, the aforesaid Robert has given to the same John twenty four shillings sterling. And it is to be known that the aforesaid Robert and his heirs will acquit the same land against the chief lords of the fee in that place of the services which pertain to them in respect thereof.
1 Martin de Pateshill stood in for the King when Henry III was a minor (to young to rule) Henry III declared himself of age in 1227.
There was a place called Alston in Suffolk near Trimley St Martin, although originally in the Domesday Book it was called Alteinestuna, it is in the hundred of Colne. Alston Hall still exists.It consisted of an Alliston Church and Alliston street, now long gone but the cemetry was found in the 1700s. The church was consolidated to Trimley St Martin in 1362. This is about the time when English replaced French as the official language of England. Alteines is a Gallic word meaning stone of fire and is associated with sorcery. books.google.co.uk/books?isbn=076614979X http://books.google.co.uk/books?isbn=076614979X
Stansfeld had two Tenants in Chief in 1086, Richard son of Count Gilbert (De Clares) and The Abbey of Bury St Edmunds. Stansfeld and Clare (from whence Richard De Clare takes his name) are just North of Stambourne where an Anglo Saxon called Alestan had his manor in 1086.
From Domesday Book and The Law by Robin Fleming. Cambridge University Press. ii 100b (0-33) Annexations (invasiones) against the King; Stambourne: TRE Aethelstan, a freeman, and twelve other freemen held forty acres of land in Stambourne. They still have it. Alestan is the middle English version of Aethelstan which means noble stone.
The Stambourne parish website (http://www.stambourne.com/StambourneParishHistory/Chapter3.html) gives the hypothesis that Stambourne ( originally stanbourne) was named after Alestan, who held a manor there, it was called Stanburn in early feet of fines. Alestan was Lord in 1066 and still held tenancy in 1088. The family of Alestan seemed to have stayed in the manor until the time of Henry III (Stambourne Website http://www.stambourne.com/StambourneParishHistory/Chapter3.html).
It was at this time that the surname Alliston appears at Stansfield not far from Stambourne and if Stambourne was derived from Alestan then it seems quite plausible that Stansfield was as well. The website also mentions that this Alestan may have been the same one who held West Ham which was given to Peverel and Gernon. An Alestan is mentioned as Lord of the Manor in Ham London in 1066. If you look at the place names in Newham (which is the currrent name for that location) there is a road called Alestan Beck, beck being an old Germanic word for stream. It adjoins Stansfeld road and is not far from Sudbury road. The fact that the Peverel family also later held both Stambourne in North Essex and the Ham manor near London suggests they were part of the same Estate. The place names seem to confirm this and link it to Alestan, with Alliston also being associated with Stansfeld. Alestan Beck road was created in the 1900s but where a stream used to flow, so originally it probably did refer to the stream. A Map of Alestans Manor in Newham can be found here http://www.newhamstory.com/node/724
From the Calendar of Royal Documents Henry I 91. Writ of H I, ordering Aubrey de Vere, sheriff of Essex, to convene the shire court concerning the dispute between the abp. of Canterbury and the abbot of Westminster concerning the land of Alestan [in West Ham]; to cause a verdict to be delivered on who has the better title, and to put him lawfully in seisin. Westminster [1129, ante Nov.] http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=63940
Cal: Regesta II, no. 1539. Date: Attested by Nigel d'Aubigny, who d. in Normandy in Nov. 1129 (Charters of the Honour of Mowbray, xviii and n. 2). Aubrey de Vere is recorded in office in 1130, and succeeded his predecessor after 1128 (Sheriffs, 43). Note: Alestan held a manor of eight hides, thirty acres in West Ham TRE, and this was given by W I to Rannulf Peverel and Robert Gernon (DB II, ff. 64, 72b). Westminster Abbey seem to have acquired the land by 1144. see the book Westminster Abbey and Its People, C.1050-c.1216 By Emma Mason Robert de Vere (c. 1164 - before 25 October 1221) had a daughter Eleanor, who married Sir Ralph Gernon of Easthorpe, Essex. In Richard I'sts time a Daughter of Alstan was recorded in Dunwich. (Feet of Fines: 20 Belesent daughter of Alstan v. Reginald son of Robert in Dunwioh ) The last firstname Alstan mentioned in the feet of Fines is in the time of King John when Geoffrey son of Alstan bought land from William Son of Alstan at Westhall, Suffolk.
A Feet of Fines in the time of Henry III; Thomas Alleston Clerk and Others vs. John Castre of London and Margaret his wife in Cantebrigg (Cambridge).
144 - John son of Adam de Alliston v. Robert deErnestedel in Stanfeld From http://www.ellipsis.cx/~liana/names/english/raw/suffolkfines Another early listing in the time of Edward II: Pg 119 25 William Alston of Ixnyng and Margaret his wife v. Henry Alston of Ixnyng in Ixnyng (Exning near Newmarket) pg157 11 Williem son of Alan Alston and Margaret his wife and John his son v. Thomas Skeppe of Ixnyng chaplain in Ixnyng http://archive.org/stream/acalendarfeetfi00histgoog#page/n34/mode/2up Suffolk Feet of Fines 1189 - 1485
Mark Alliston 21 August 2013
2. Parish Register Transcriptions: Alston St Gregory Sudbury SFK.
3. Parish Register Transcriptions: Alston St Peter Sudbury SFK.
4. Parish Register Transcriptions: Alston All Saints Sudbury SFK.
5. Documents held by the Essex Record Office: mentioning Alston, Various dates. Ref: www.essexcc.gov.uk <http://www.essexcc.gov.uk>/heritage/ero Forrest King 2017
1 Q/SO 1/220 Stistead: Alston Whereas Henry Alston of Stistead in this County, gent[leman], and John Brockwell of same place, yeoman, being overseo[r]s for the poore of the said p[ar]ish for the yeare ending att Easter last, the parishone[r]s of the said parish in Easter weeke aforesaid did nominate Robert Aylette, John Baysey and Isaack Medcalfe to bee overseors for the poore of the said parish for this p[re]sent yeare, who wer confirmed by two of the Justices of the peace of this County according to Law, as was proved openly in Court, But the said warrant of Confirmac[i]on comeing to the handes of the said Henry Alston and by him deteyned from the p[re]sent overseors, hee the said Henry Alston afterward procured himself to bee continued in this office w[i]thout the knowledge or consent of the said parishon[er]s And whereas John Alston gent[leman], father of the said Henry, being convicted for swearing severall oathes, Dionisius Wakering Esq[uire], one of the Justices of the peace of this County, before whom the said Convicc[i]on was, directed his warrant to the Constables, Churchwardens and overseors of the poore of the said parish for the levying the Twenty Shillings of the goods of the said John Alston for his said offence, which said warrant the said Rob[er]t Aylett and Isaac Medcalfe as overseors for the poore of the said parish, w[i]th the Constables and Churchwardens thereof did endeavour to execute, but did forbeare to doe anything therein in regard the said John Alston p[re]tended the said Twenty shillings was formerly paid to Henry Alston his sonn, [f.78v.] which said matter hereby adjudge and declare that the said Robert Aylett, John Baysey and Isaack Medcalfe were legally nominated and confirmed overseo[r]s for the poore fo the said parish att the time of the Convic[i]on of the said John Alston as aforesaid, [and] att the time endevouringe to take the side distresse were and still are overseors for the poore of the said parish. 2 D/DGs/F5 Birth Certificate of Agnes Hall, 1875; Marriage CErtificate of Agnes Hall and John Robert Alston, both of Corringham, 1903; Birth Certificate of rob. Malet Alston.s. of John and Agnes alston,1905; Birth Certificate of Beatrice Doreen Alston, dau. of John and Agnes Alston, 1916; Memorial of Baptism of Beatrice Doreen Alston at St Mary's church, Corringham, 1916 1875-1916 3 D/DU 181/35 Elizabeth Everitt's discharge to Edward and Sarah Alston (executors of Thomas Alston of Manningtree) upon payment of her moiety of the effects of Thomas Alston. 1796 4 Q/SO 1/13 Alston Whereas upon the Petic[i]on of John Alston of Stysed and Henry Alson of the Same, gent[lemen], p[re]sented unto this Courte at Easter Sessions last, settinge forth that they were much oppressed by beinge overated to the Poore, Constables rates and other rates in the saide, Parrish, It was ordered that [th]e matter of Complainte should bee referred to the two next Justices who were desired to call before them all p[ar]ties concerned, and to examine the equallity of the Rates, and order therin as they should see cause, Now this Courte beinge this Day informed by the saide John Alston and Henry Alston that nothinge hath beene done for rectifyeinge the inequallity of the saide rates, and complayninge that new rates have beene since made for other sum[me]s wherein they are overated as before, & desiring [th]e further order of this Courte for their releife herein, This Courte doth order that the matter of compl[ain]te be referred to S[ir] Tho[mas] Honywood k[nigh]t, Dionis Wakeringe W[illia]m Harlackenden & Dudly Templar Esq[uire]s or any 3 of them, who are disired to call before them all p[ar]ties concerned, and to examine the equallity of the saide Rates, and order therin as they should see cause, Now this Courte beings this Day informed by the said John Alston and Henry Alston that notinge hath beene done for rectifyinge the inequallity of the saide rates, and complaynings that new rates have beene since made for other sum[me]s wherein they are coverated as before, & desiring the[e] further order of this Courte for their releife herein, This court doth order that the matter of Compl[ain] tte be reffered to S[ir] Tho[mas] Hoywood k[nigh]t, Dionis Wakeringe, W[illia]m Harlackenden & Dudly Templar Esq[uire]s or any 3 of them, who are disired to call before them all p[arties therein concerned & to examine the equallity of th[e] s[ai]d rates [f.4r.] and to make such Order therein as they shall see cause for puttinge an end to the said diffeence, the saide John mAlstone and Henry Alston promising in open Courte to play to all rates such p[ro]porc[i]on as the said JUstice shall soe Order them to pay 5 T/A 418/144/22 Indictment of William Lamberd, George Hurill and William Smyth, all of Stisted yeoman, there riotously assmebled and broke an iron chain worth 10d. and a wooden gate worth 8s., belonging to John Alston. Witnesses: John Alston, Lestrange Alston, Anne Alston, John Grigg. [ASS 35/95/2/22] 1654 6 D/P 192/2/10 Curate's licence of Harold Edward Alston Horn 1931 7 D/DC/20/5 Conveyance (Lease & Release) of Equity of Redemption Rich. Alston, to Nath, Hurall, both of West Bergholt, brickmakers Twenty rods of ground, with a messuage thereon, now divided in to two tenements, in W. Bergholtm late in occupation of Richard Alston, and Jn. Cooke, now of Richard Alston, & Joseph Norfolk. [Recites: Mortagage, 28 December 1780, of the above property.] 1789 8 Q/SR 469/61 Indictment of Alston (as in 60) kept an alehouse without licence. 9 Q/SBb 494/94 Note saying that the Clerk of the Peace produced to the Court a draft of contract between Mr Edward Alston and Mr Daniel constable Alston and the Clerk of the Peace for a piece of land situated in St. James Parish Colchester for a House of Correction secured and settled by Mr Duval. The court orders that when the Tithe of the land is made out; it shall be conveyed. Upon the conveyance being made, the Treasurer of the County wil pay the sum of£300 to Edward Alston and Daniel constable 10 D/DGs/F61 Papers and documents relating to administration of will of Israel Alston of Corringham, farmer (d. 13 March 1917) Incl. (i) probate, 30 May 1917, with copy of will (made 14 March 1916)annexed of Israel Alston of number 1 Alston Villas, Corringham; (ii) abstract of title of Francis Henry Douglas Charton Whitmore of Orsett Hall,Orsett, to his estates in Essex, 1896, reciting from 1826; (iii) sale catalogues (9 plans), of 1896, of the outlying portions (total 1,675a.) of the Orsett Estate in Orsett,Fobbing,Corringham,Horndon-on-the- Hill,Bulphan,Rawreth,Rayleigh,Hockley,Ramsden Crays,N.Benfleet, Bowers Gifford, Lt.Waltham and Great Totham, for sale by Francis Hen Douglas Charton Whitmore of Orsett Hall (contract copy of Fredk. Frs. Ramuz of 68 Cheapside, City of London, purchaser of Pump Farm in corringham-in sum of £620);(iv) deeds of Pump Farm and part of Hall Farm (total 87a.)in Corringham, 1896-c.1925, incl, conveyance, 8 December 1896, Francis Henry Douglas Charton Whitmore of Orsett Hall, Orsett, esq., to Israel Alston of Corringham,baker;(v) sale catalogue of Pump Farm (68a.) and pair of semi-detached cottages called Primrose Cottages, situate in the village, all in Corringham, for sale by personal representatives of Agnes Alston,decd,1928;(iv)MS. notes by depositor about other members of the family during period 1917- 1958, complied 1965 Registered by depositor as bundle no.3172 Not to be produced to students before 1995 1896-1965
T/Z 25/2489 (Mrs E. Alston b. 1906 (service, Edwins Hall, Woodham Ferrers) 12 D/DC/20/4 Conveyance (Lease & Release) of Equity of Redemption Rich. Alston, to Nath, Hurall, both of West Bergholt, brickmakers Twenty rods of ground, with a messuage thereon, now divided in to two tenements, in W. Bergholtm late in occupation of Richard Alston, and Jn. Cooke, now of Richard Alston, & Joseph Norfolk. [Recites: Mortagage, 28 December 1780, of the above property.] 1789 13 D/DU 206/4 Demise by letters patent for reversionary term of 22 and a half years at rent of £10. George III to Thomas Harridge, Thomas Lee, John Durrevel Kemp, Henry Fisher, David Harridge, junior and George King Parcel of ground covered with water being the soil or bed of creek called Leigh Swatch near Leigh, abutting north on Chalkwell Ouze and south on Canvey Spitt and Popling or Popperell Land, extending in length 3 miles from mouth of Swatch at the south-east to the north-west end, and in breadth 154 yards from the low water mark on the north-east side to the low water mark on the south-west side Recites that the premises are parcel of Crown possessions intended for an oyster fishery for the supply of the London markets, and granted by letters patent, 17 June 1762, to Edward Davis, Richard Tidy, John Taylor and Thomas Handley, to hold for 31 years at £10 per annum Consideration, fine of £100. Seal of Court of Exchequer Endorsement with exhibition in Chancery, William Alston V. Eastern Counties Railway Company, 1855 and in the matter of the estate of William Alston, 1856. 1785 14 D/DU 1711/3 Deed to lead the uses of a fine and a recovery (i) John Collin of Chickney, gent (ii) John Alston of Stevenage, Hertfordshire, gent (iii) James Allen of London, victualler Messuage called Sibleys alias Lees including closes called: the Store 8a, Barneley 22a, Pursfeild 9a, Gately 9a, Grove 8a, Stonyfeild 18a, Dellfield 17a, Brittene garden 2 1\\\\2 acres, the little hoppett 1a, great mead 13a, Newland 15a, in Chickney; 6 closes called Mairisse in Debden 35a, 3 roods of pasture in Debden Fine to be levied on 1 messuage, 1 garden, 68a land, 13a meadow, 70a pasture, 5a wood to the use of (i). Writ to be issued by (iii) against (ii) for a common recovery Seal of John Alston 1677 15 D/DGn/301 Probate of Will of Elizabeth Freeborn of Great Maplestead, wid. [Letters of probate missing.] Legacies to executors in trust for son John Freeborn for life then to be divided amongst grandchildren (children of son John, and Edw. Constable, Eliza and Emma Sarah Alston, children of deceased dau. Eliza (late wife of Edward Daniel Alston of Diss (co. Norfolk), brewer.) Executors: son John Freeborn and (son-in-law) Edward Daniel Alston. Wtn: Mary Ann Gaywood (servant to Mrs. Freeborn), Edmund Stedman, solicitor, of Subbury (co. Suff.) 1829-1834 16 D/P 119/25/103 Bond in£30 from Joseph Smith of Taylworth Wratten (co. Suff.) grocer, to Joseph Shipp, and John Alston and Edward Stammers, vicar and churchwardens of Wethersfield. Recites a deed of bargain and sale between said Joseph S. and w. Susan, and Mark Mott senior and jun., Joseph Shipp, Thomas Trott sen. and jun., John Browne, John Leake, John Alston, Rich.Choute, Edw. Baker, Nath.Straight, Edward Stammers and Francis Strutt, of tenement and garden [no details]. 1688 17 D/DU 1711/5 Exemplification of a Common Recovery James Allen John Alston 1 messuage, 1 garden, 68 acres land, 13 acres meadow, 70 acres pasture, 15 acres wood in Chickney and Debden Vouchee: John Collin 1677 18 D/DU 1711/4 Fine John Alston, gentleman, plaintiff John Collin, gentleman, defendant 1 messuage, 1 dovecot, 68 acres land, 13 acres meadow land, 70 acres pasture, 5 acres wood, in Chickney and Debden for £120 1677-1678 19 D/DVz/94 Deed of lead the uses of a Fine; Final Concord Joseph Alston of Bures St. Mary (co. Suff.), surgeon, and w. Susan to Samuel Alston of Gunthorpe (co. Norf.), clerk Farms called Trubbucks alias Home Farm and Hobbe Atwood in Halstead and Stisted 1755 20 D/DH/VF27 Grant [and copy] by John de Boys of Tolleshunt Tregoz, William Hanyngfeld, John Ewell, Walter Gawtron, Robert Warner, Roger Rye, and William Tasseburgh, parson of Raylegh, to Robert Alston, son of John Alston of Messyng,of lands, etc., called Legattes in Messyng. 1412
21 T/A 418/144/23 Indictment of Rob.Aylett, Robert Wood, John Wood, William Lambard, Thomas harris, George Hurrell, all of Stisted yeoman, John Smith of Bocking, John Wodle and Isaac Medroppe of Stisted yeoman riotously assembled at Stisted and broke a wooden gate worth 8s.6d. belonging to John Alston. Witnesses: John Lestrange, Anne alston. [ASS 35/95/2/23] 1654 22 T/A 418/179/60 Indictment of Mark Last Toppesfield Labourer, 20 February 27 ChaS. ii, THERE STOLE A SMOCK WORTH 2S., BELONGING TO mARY aLSTON SPR. as above. Witness: John Alston. [Ass 35/116/1/60] 23 D/DHt/T295/37 37.Deed to declare uses of a Fine Richard Choate, of Wethersfield, yeoman William Alston, of Sible Hedingham, gentleman and Solomon Alston, his son `Cooks Crofts' (14 ac.), Wethersfield [3 sig. seals, one arm. a chevron between 3 lions rampant] 1678 24 D/DHt/T295/19 19.Fine William Alston and Solomon Alston, pll. Richard Choate, def. An Acre of land, and 14 ac. of pasture with appurts in Wethersfield 1678 This document concerns John Alston of Wethersfield and Nth Carolina USA 25 D/DHt/T111/1 Lease Sir Edward Alston, of London, Kt. Penninge Alston, of London, grocer, his brother and Judith, his wife The manor of Frinton Hall with the patronage of the Church, etc., Frinton 1661 26 Q/SR 421/78 Recognizance of Abraham aham Alston of Stanway and Vincent Handler of Lexden yeomen; Alston to answer John Wade of the same county" for misdemeanour. Not paid. 1669 27 Q/SR 385/34 Recognizance of Abraham aham Alston of Fordham bailiff, Ralph Bullock husbandman and Thomas Rummit tailor, both of aldham; Alston to keep the peace to Ann, wife of William Plamtin of Aldham husbandman. Defaulted. 1660 28 Q/SR 341/18 INdictment of Roger Breadday of Stisted Cordwainer at Halstead, assaulted Henry Alston gentleman Witnesses: Alston, Robert SIdey. Confessed, fined 2s.6d. 1649 29 D/DS 310/1 Petition in Court of Chancery of James Harmer Alston of no.7 The Lawn, S. Lambeth (co. Surrey), lieutenant in H.M. Army (born 28 Feb. 1847), son of David Tho.Alston (died 27 November 1855) and grandson of Wm Alston (died c.1823) relating to sum of£300 as compensation for moiety of lands (total 10a.) in Leigh and Prittlewell taken under compulsory purchase orders by London, Tilbury and Southend Railway Company in 1855 and invested in£3 per cent annuities in name of infant petitioner 1868 30 Q/SR 317/40 Presentment Mr. John Alston was chosen surveyor, and the constables and churchwardens have not appointed the 6 days for the amendment of the highways which ought to be appointed the Sunday after Easter. Signature of: John Alston. Added ina different hand:This presentment was tendered to me by the surveyor of Stisted the day abovesaid. Signature of : James Heron. 1642
1 D/DR/T42/50 Indenture of lease from William Towse of Takeley, & William his s. & h., to Thomas Alston of Newton, Suff., of the same premises [2 seals. One armorial]. 2 D/DC/41/461 Admission of John Alston of Widdington on surrender of Wm. Lacye Messuage called Pages and land (1a.) in Widdington, copyhold of manor of Widdington Veizes Court of Edward Turner, esq.; Steward: Thomas Cole, gent. 3 T/Z 25/2489 (Mrs E. Alston b. 1906 (service, Edwins Hall, Woodham Ferrers) 4 D/DGs RECORDS RELATING TO SOUTH-EAST ESSEX Akerman family of Southend and Billericay, publicans, c.1890,1898 F33,76 Alston family of Corringham, farmers, and in particular Israel Alston (d. 1917), 1827-1965 T78-82 E6,7,F5,G1 Jas. Banyard of Shreburyness, estate agent (d. 1938), 1879- 1945 B167-215 F 73 Blyth family of Downham and Standford-le-Hope, farmers and brewers, and in particular Thomas Worrin Blyth of Downham (d. 01902), 1820-1922 T89-94,220 B5-8 E9-13 F75 P4 Bosanquet family of Alnwick (co. Northumberland), chiefly relating to the Thundersley estate, 1631-1934 M49-57, 82-112 T47 F2, 4 P1,2 J.R.Brightwell Ltd. of Southend, linendrapers, furnishers, tailors, etc., 1885-1925 B268-286 Walter Wm.Brown of City of London and Brentwood, solicitor, 1810-1892 B287-310 Browne family of S.Benfleet, and in particular Joseph Augustus Browne of Reeds Hill (d. 1920), 1738-1939 T84-88, 204-204a E8, 152 F6 L10 Brunwin family of Wickford, Rayne and Great Bardfield, farmers, 1762-c. 1950 F62-67 Clark family of Stanford-le-Hope, farmers, mainly relating to urban estate development on Canvey Island in the late 19th and carly 20th centuries by Arthur Mayhew Clark of Stanford-le-Hope and Frederick Hester of Southend , estate agent, 1686-1960 E125, 126 F68-70 Clarke family of S.Ockendon, farmers and victuallers, 1692- 1902 T226-231 A84 E127-130 F77 Wm. Clover of Boreham, brick and tile-maker (d. 1900) and the Hambro Hill Brickworks, Rayleigh, 1895-1904 E112-114 Tho. Dowsett of Southend (d. 1906) and the Southend-on-Sea Estates Company, 1895-1928 T 60, 62 67. 70 74, 76, 169 Fitzwilliam Sparling Dunnett of Southchurch, gent., and urban development on the Southchurch Corner Estate in Southchurch, 1899-1938 T144-152 B72 F27-30 Emerson family of Billericay, drapers, 1719-1910 T212-218 Finch family, 1632-1917 [For details of this family and its estates in Essex, see F.G.Emmison (ed.), Guide to the Essex Record Office, 1969, p. 149] M35-40 T13 John G. Freeman of Southend, electrical engineer (d. 1959), 1833-1959 A72-83 B345-353 C1, 2 F87-108 Z12-18 Fredk. Garon of Southend, ironmonger (d. 1899) and H. Garon Ltd. of Southend, butchers, fishmongers, caterers, restauranteurs, fruiterers, greengrocers, bakers, ice manufacturers, etc., 1880-1924 T125, 126 B46, 125-166 E24 F26 Gibson family of Saffron Walden, bankers, 1872, 1875 E133, 134 Goodchild family of Billericay, farmers and corn merchants, 1831-1934 T261, 262 F62 Sam. Eugene Harwar of Southend (d. 1929), clerk to George Wood of Rochford, solicitor, 1863-1929 T222-225 B 354 E142-150 F78- 82 Hood family of Southend, and in particular Thomas Hood, solicitor (d. 1900), 1870-1932 T52, 158 221, 221A, B394 Howard family of Pitsea, Leigh and Prittlewell, dairy farmers, and in particular Harold George Howard, 1909-1963 T118-121, 219, 219A E20-23 F22-25 Jas. Colbert Ingram of Southend, estate agent, c. 1905 T163 Keyes family of London, merchants, 1823-1902 E153, 154 F71, 72 Committee for management of Leigh Conduit, 1825-1888 Q1 Markwell family of Billericay, 1741-1870 F74, 257-260 Jos. Marriage of Lambourne Hall in Canewdon, farmer, 1919- 1926 T107-110 A3-5 E18 Mead family of Great Burstead, farmers, 1706-1880 T205-211 Dan. Miller of Royal Hotel, Southend, hotelier, 1804, 1825 B108, 115 Hen. Joseph Padfield of Rayleigh and Brentwood, farmer, 1918- 1951 T111-117 B10-15 E19 Ramuz family of City of London and Southend, land agents and property developers, and the Land Company, relating to urban estate development in SE. Essex, 1897-1936 T49-51, 54, 61, 64, 69, 161, 166, 289, 290, 308, 318, 333, 344, 347, 351, B95, 374 A.M. and H. Rankin Ltd. Stambridge, farmers and millers, 1898- 1954 T127-143 B47-71 E25-34 L12, 13 Jas. Scott of Southend, builder, hotelier, property speculator and developer (d. 1882), 1864-1922 B216-267 Scratton family of Prittlewell and Ogwell (co. Devon) landed gentry, 1717, c. 1780-c. 1920 M144-203 T173-175 B105-108 111- 113, 115, 117, 357-372 E36-111 F35-54 A6-30 L15-17, 19 P6, 10 The Shrubbery, Southend, 1877-1919 A31-71 E115-124 Somerset Garden Estates Company Ltd. of WEstcliff, 1936- 1943 B125 Southend Local Board, including Pier and development of Victoria Avenue, 1882-1891 P15-17 20-25, 29 Stallibrass family of Downham, and in particular Allen Stallibrass, farmer (d. 1948), 1693-1960 M34, 62, 64-73, 113- 143 T104, 105 E14-16 F7, 8 Robert Surman, deputy cashier of the South Sea Company, 1720 01 Thorne family of Bethnal Green (co. Middx) and Southend, 1877- 1926 F212 John Toner of 11 Montague Street, Russell Square and Furnivals Inn (co. Middx), architect (d. 1909), 1789-1926 T153-156 E131, 132 F31 L14 Trigg family of Southend, licensed victuallers, 1882- 1945 B311-320 Dr. W.D.WAtson of Leigh, medical practitioner, 1913- 1956 T232-250 B321-344 Wood family of Hadleigh and S.Benfleet, farmers, and in particular Jonathan Wood of Hadleigh (d. 1860), Henry Nash Wood (d. 1869) and the King family of Leigh, 1720-1937 T95-103, 106, 171, 251-256 B9, 355, 356 E135-137 F9-21, 55-60 Woodard family of Billericay, and in particular Edward Woodard, solicitor, 1826-1875 E138-141 Note. For records of (i) Canvey Island Commission, 1792-1962, (ii) Southend Local Board of Health relating to Pier, 1817-1892, (iii) Southend Local Board of Health and Southend Borough Council relating to development of Victoria Avenue, 1861-1899, which originally formed part of Accessions 43 (Chelmsford Accession 884) and 1256, but which were catalogued separately for the convenience of students, see respectively (i) D/SZ 3-5, 21-58, (ii) D/Hs 73-115, (iii) D/BC 1/1/12/1-105 Introductory note Much of this accession comprises MSS. accumulated by the firm of Thorne, Owles and Neale of Southend-on-Sea, which merged with the firm of Gregson and Golding c. 1967 to form the firm of Gregson, Golding and Owles. During cataloguing brief notes giving information about the origins of Messrs. Thorne, Owles and Neale were taken at random, and these are set out below. It will be noticed that the firm had its origins in Billericay and London, whereas Messrs. Gregson's origins were at Rochford, where William Gregson (b. 1811) joined Michael Comport, c.1536, being taken into partnership in 1837 (see TS 325/1). 1830 Edward Woodard, Clerk to Mr. Shaw of Billericay 1844-1855 Edward Woodard of Billericay 1855-1879 Edward Woodard of Billericay and 106 Fenchurch Street, City of London 1873, 1874 Thomas Hood, Clerk to Mr. Edward Woodard of Billericay 1878 Thomas Hood, Clerk to Mr. Edward Woodard of 2 Ingram Court, Fenchurch Street, City of London 1883-1897 Messrs. Edward Woodard and Thomas Hood, 6 Billiter Street, City of London 1889 Messrs. Woodard, Hood and Wells, 6 Billiter Street 1893-1896 Messrs. Woodard and Hood of 6 Billiter Street, City of London, Billericay and Southend 1890 Arthur Thorne, 13 Cambridge Road, Mile End (co. Middx.) (private address), solicitor's clerk 1897-1906 Messrs. Woodard, Hood and Thorne of 6 Billiter Street, City of London, Billericay and Southend 1910 Messrs. Thorne, Mockridge, Limner and Wood, Southend 1926 Messrs. Thorne, Owles and Limner, 10 Nelson Street, Southend 1928-1930 Messrs. Thorne, Owles and Rawstorn, 5 Nelson Street, Southend 5 Q/SBb 494/94 Note saying that the Clerk of the Peace produced to the Court a draft of contract between Mr Edward Alston and Mr Daniel constable Alston and the Clerk of the Peace for a piece of land situated in St. James Parish Colchester for a House of Correction secured and settled by Mr Duval. The court orders that when the Tithe of the land is made out; it shall be conveyed. Upon the conveyance being made, the Treasurer of the County wil pay the sum of£300 to Edward Alston and Daniel constable 6 Q/SR 356/21 Indictment of Abraham aham Alston of Castle Hedingham innholder, before and since 4 April, in his house being a common inn, did suffer divers persons whose names are unknown to the jurors to remain excessively drinking and tippling and disorderly living, and 4 April did forcibly theraten, abuse, misuse and illtreat John Unwyn one of the constables thereof. Acknowledgeth and is fined 40s. 7 Q/SR 356- CALENDAR of all such prisoners as are in the custody of Nicholas Roberts, Keeper of the Sheriff's ward in Colchester Castle, which are appointed for the present Court, made 19 April. Abr. Alston was committed by Mr. Kemp and Mr. Gentleman for abusing the constable of castle Hedingham in executing his office. Edw. Elton was committed by Mr. Paschall, for stealing a silver bowl of Elizabeth Hayward of Writtle widow which he hath confessed. 8 Q/SR 363/7 JURY LIST to enquire upon their oaths whether Henry Alston of Stisted son., gent., be guilty of a certain trespass and assault on Robert Woodhen, one of the contables of Stisted, as he Standeth indicted of. 9 Q/SR 367/93 PETITION of the inhabitants of Toppesfield reciting that Katherine Boreham the late wife of Glement Boreham lived with her said husband about 19 or 20 years in as honest life and good conversation and was reputed of amonget the best Christans in the parish and alos carrued hereself well in the time of her widowhood, and one Henry Gower being a sutior to her and they believe was married to her by minister in Cambridge at Midsummer Fair 1654, and it is true they were then at the said fair and as soon ans they came home commonly reported that they were married according to the laws now established, before the same was accomplished her said husband was enforced to run away for debt and about 4 months since she had a child to her great grief and sorrow as hath plainly appeared by her pensive carriage ever since, they humbly entreat your worships to be favourable unto her in regared she hath formerly carried herself very honestly and they believe in this very act she did not know but that marriage was lawful. In a different hand: To our best observation the bearer hereof Katherine has carried herself very honestly in the time of her former husband and widowhood. Signatures (or names) of: John Deekes, John Green, William Boreham, Barnard Sible, Jane Hart widow, Thomas Tiffin, William Phillips, Francis Wyatt, John Alston, William Butcher, William Edwards, James Smyth, John Edwards, Matth. Edwards, John Scott, Thomas Bo(?d) ham, Edw. Tailor, Steven Brend, Thomas Cornell, Thomas Borrom. 10 Q/SR 383/46 Presentments by Hundreds of Uttlesford, Freshwell, Clavering and Dunmow. Tho. Croxon of Wimbish husbandman, for drawing and selling of beer without licence. The inhabitants of "Saffron Waldon", for not repairing the highwaye therein leading from "Colne end" in the parish of Wimbish to "Waldon", which wave formerly been repaired by the inhabitants of "Waldon." Tho. Greene of Ashdon yeoman, for fencing and hedging in of half an acre of land called "Overhall Greene" in Ashdon, being the highway from Ashdon to "Saffron Waldon." John Pegge of Lindsell gent., for erecting a cottage on his own land (without laying four acres of freehold land) in "Much Aiston", containing 10 rods in length. (Blank) Rowley of "Duton hill in Much Aiston" widow, for erecting on a rood of land there a cottage (and not laying four acres of freehold land.) (Blank) Haydon of "Duton Hill" widow, for erecting a new cottage on a rood of land there (without laying four acres). Henry Coleman of "Much Alston" clerk, for entertaining of inmates in a cottage of his in "Duton hill", formerly a farmhouse and for taking the lands therefrom to and for his own use. Signatures of the jurors. 11 Q/SR 398/14 Halstead. Return of all such persons as have refused to work in the highways of Halstead this year 1663. Edw. Ingrim gent., Daniel Bonett, John Beckworth, John French gent., Thomas Alston, Hannah Isaac widow, George Ostler, "Wemes" Clark, John Smith, Thor. Arnold, Anthony Hardy, William Death, Thomas Mane (?Manes), William Bunting, Abraham aham Pratt, William Browne, William Abbott, Samuel Richardson, Robert Scrivener, Albert Warren gent., Jonas Wright, William Rayner, John Balls, John Berry, Robert Homes. Rob. Cornwell, William Barnord, surveyors. Added: Delivered to me by the said surveyors. Signature of: Samuel Tryon. 12 Q/SR 469/59-60 Indictment of Browne (as in 58) and Robert Alston of Halstead alehousekeeper, before and since 7 July, kept disorderly alehouses. 13 Q/SR 469/61 Indictment of Alston (as in 60) kept an alehouse without licence. 14 Q/SO 1/13 Alston Whereas upon the Petic[i]on of John Alston of Stysed and Henry Alson of the Same, gent[lemen], p[re]sented unto this Courte at Easter Sessions last, settinge forth that they were much oppressed by beinge overated to the Poore, Constables rates and other rates in the saide, Parrish, It was ordered that [th]e matter of Complainte should bee referred to the two next Justices who were desired to call before them all p[ar]ties concerned, and to examine the equallity of the Rates, and order therin as they should see cause, Now this Courte beinge this Day informed by the saide John Alston and Henry Alston that nothinge hath beene done for rectifyeinge the inequallity of the saide rates, and complayninge that new rates have beene since made for other sum[me]s wherein they are overated as before, & desiring [th]e further order of this Courte for their releife herein, This Courte doth order that the matter of compl[ain]te be referred to S[ir] Tho[mas] Honywood k[nigh]t, Dionis Wakeringe W[illia]m Harlackenden & Dudly Templar Esq[uire]s or any 3 of them, who are disired to call before them all p[ar]ties concerned, and to examine the equallity of the saide Rates, and order therin as they should see cause, Now this Courte beings this Day informed by the said John Alston and Henry Alston that notinge hath beene done for rectifyinge the inequallity of the saide rates, and complaynings that new rates have beene since made for other sum[me]s wherein they are coverated as before, & desiring the[e] further order of this Courte for their releife herein, This court doth order that the matter of Compl[ain] tte be reffered to S[ir] Tho[mas] Hoywood k[nigh]t, Dionis Wakeringe, W[illia]m Harlackenden & Dudly Templar Esq[uire]s or any 3 of them, who are disired to call before them all p[arties therein concerned & to examine the equallity of th[e] s[ai]d rates [f.4r.] and to make such Order therein as they shall see cause for puttinge an end to the said diffeence, the saide John mAlstone and Henry Alston promising in open Courte to play to all rates such p[ro]porc[i]on as the said JUstice shall soe Order them to pay 15 Q/SO 1/220 Stistead: Alston Whereas Henry Alston of Stistead in this County, gent[leman], and John Brockwell of same place, yeoman, being overseo[r]s for the poore of the said p[ar]ish for the yeare ending att Easter last, the parishone[r]s of the said parish in Easter weeke aforesaid did nominate Robert Aylette, John Baysey and Isaack Medcalfe to bee overseors for the poore of the said parish for this p[re]sent yeare, who wer confirmed by two of the Justices of the peace of this County according to Law, as was proved openly in Court, But the said warrant of Confirmac[i]on comeing to the handes of the said Henry Alston and by him deteyned from the p[re]sent overseors, hee the said Henry Alston afterward procured himself to bee continued in this office w[i]thout the knowledge or consent of the said parishon[er]s And whereas John Alston gent[leman], father of the said Henry, being convicted for swearing severall oathes, Dionisius Wakering Esq[uire], one of the Justices of the peace of this County, before whom the said Convicc[i]on was, directed his warrant to the Constables, Churchwardens and overseors of the poore of the said parish for the levying the Twenty Shillings of the goods of the said John Alston for his said offence, which said warrant the said Rob[er]t Aylett and Isaac Medcalfe as overseors for the poore of the said parish, w[i]th the Constables and Churchwardens thereof did endeavour to execute, but did forbeare to doe anything therein in regard the said John Alston p[re]tended the said Twenty shillings was formerly paid to Henry Alston his sonn, [f.78v.] which said matter hereby adjudge and declare that the said Robert Aylett, John Baysey and Isaack Medcalfe were legally nominated and confirmed overseo[r]s for the poore fo the said parish att the time of the Convic[i]on of the said John Alston as aforesaid, [and] att the time endevouringe to take the side distresse were and still are overseors for the poore of the said parish. 16 T/A 418/179/60 Indictment of Mark Last Toppesfield Labourer, 20 February 27 ChaS. ii, THERE STOLE A SMOCK WORTH 2S., BELONGING TO mARY aLSTON SPR. as above. Witness: John Alston. [Ass 35/116/1/60] 17 SA 25/1/1/3 Transcript of interview with Kenneth Alston, former assistant chief constable with Essex Police 18 D/DH/26A Grant [and copy] by Thomas Baynard of Messyng to John Alston, of Legattes in Messyng. 1370 19 D/DH/VF26 Grant [and copy] by Thomas Baynard of Messyng to John Alston, of Legattes in Messyng. 1370 20 D/DH/VB46 Lease by Richard Baynard of Messyng to John Rowland and Agnes his wife, sometime wife of John Alston of Messyng, two parts of a tenement called Alstones in Messyng. 1402 21 D/DH/VF28 Appointment by John de Boys of Tolleshunt Tregoz and others, of John Alston of Messyng, lands called Legattes in Messyng. 1412 22 D/DH/VF27 Grant [and copy] by John de Boys of Tolleshunt Tregoz, William Hanyngfeld, John Ewell, Walter Gawtron, Robert Warner, Roger Rye, and William Tasseburgh, parson of Raylegh, to Robert Alston, son of John Alston of Messyng,of lands, etc., called Legattes in Messyng. 1412 23 D/DH/VD33A Grant by Richard Baynard of Messyng and Johanna his wife to Robert Alston, of a piece of land, parcel of a croft late of Robert Bitham. 1416 24 D/DH/VD7 Grant by Richard Baynard of Messyng to Robert Alston of Messyng, John Bygood, Bernereve, Henry Dameon, and John Salmon, of a messuage and garden with appurtenances in Messyng, to hold of the Manor of Hardeberghes. 1417 25 D/DH/VF29 Grant by John Bygood, Berne reve, John Smyth of Messyng, and John Baylle of Aldham, to Simon, parson of Esthorp, Henry Danyon, Henry Prentys, Henry Pynamet, and Thomas Sowder, of lands called Legattes in Messyng, which they lately had of the feoffment of Robert Alston, son of John Alston of Messyng. 1418 26 D/DPb/T2/7 Feoffment in Exchange [Sir] William Waldergrave, knt., to [Sir] John Wentworth, knt. Two gardens. three pieces of land and a grove of woodland, with hedges and ditches (5a. 3r. 22p.), being parcel of land and tenements called Gants formerly belonging to Edmund Gant, decd., in Wiston [Wissington], co. Suff., comprising: two gardens and two pieces of land (with an intervening streth of lane) (4a. 1r 17p.), lying together and abutting on a lane leading to a customary tenement of the manor of wiston in tenure of John Prentise in right of his w. Joan on W., customary land of the said manor in occ. of John Prentise on E., and the said land and soil of the said tenement on N.: the third piece of land (3r. 32p.) abutting on land of John Wentworth belonging to his messuage called Aldhams on W. and S.,the aforesaid lane on E. and another lane adjoining a parcel of Gants still in Waldegrave's possession on N., and grove of woodland (2r. 12p.) abutting on customary land of the said manor in tenure of John Prentise on W. and S., customary woodland of the said manor in tenure of John Prentise on E. and parcel of Gants still in Waldegrave's possession on N. In permanent exchange for land, pasture and alder wood (5a. 3r. 22p.) parcel of the manor of wiston conveyed to william Waldergrave by John Wentworth by feoffment (D/DPb T2/8). Reserves annual rent of 22d. and fealty and relief in socage in respect of the residue of Gants remaining in Waldergrave's hands, as they shall fall due to wentworth and his heirs and assigns as lords of the manor of Wiston, with right of distraint in default Signature of William Waldegrave Seals: (i) ? an eagle displayed [? Waldergrave] (ii) ? a leopard passant [Wentworth] Endorsed with memorandum of livery of Seisin in presence of William Lytilbury of Dedham, clothier, William Alston of Middleton, William Hoye, John Veno [ur], Geoffrey Sidey, Richard Reynold and others Attached: memorandum of appointment of William Sidey, gent., as attorney to receive seisin, bearing signature of John Wentworth Fragile; not to be produced 1552 27 D/DPb/T2/8 Feoffment in exchange [Sir] John Wentworth, knt., to [Sir] William Waldegrave, knt. Four pieces of land, pasture and alder wood, with hedges and ditches, (5a. 3r. 22p.), being parcel of the manor of Wiston in Wiston [Wissington], co. Suff., comprising two pieces of arable land (4a. 12p.) lying together, the first piece abutting on land of George Hoye on S., the second of the two said pieces and another piece of land and pasture included in the present feoffment on N., land of John Wentworth belonging to the manor of Wiston and land of George Hoye on E. and land of John Wentworth parcel of his messuage called Aldhams on W., the second piece of land abg. on the first of the two said pieces and land of william Waldegrave parcel of land and tenements called Gants on E., land belonging to the messuage called Aldhams on W. and N. and the first of the two said pieces of land on S.; the third piece of land or pasture (1a. 2p), having an outlying corner on S. side abg. on the aforesaid second piece of land and land of William Waldegrave parcel of Gants on w., land of the manor of Wiston in John Wentworth's possession and land formerly parcel of the said manor and alienated by the present feoffment on E., the aforesaid first piece of land on S. and parcel of lands called Gants with a certain pond on N., and the fourth piece of land and alder wood (3r. 7p.) abutting on the said pond and soil of the said William Waldegrave parcel of Gants and the aforesaid third piece of land on W., land and alder wood of the manor of Wiston in John Wentworth's possession on E. and land of the manor of Wiston in John Wentworth's possession on S. and land formerly of Robert Cowper parcel of his manor called Le Graunge on N. In permanent exchange for garden, land and wood (5a. 3r. 22p.), parcel of lands and tenements called Gants in Wiston [Wassington] conveyed to John Wentworth by William Waldegrave by feoffment (D/DPb T2/7) Signature of William Waldegrave Seal: ? an eagle displayed [? Waldegrave] Endorsed with memorandum of livery of seisin in presence of William Lytilbury of Dedham, clothier, William Alston of Middelton, William Hoye, John Veno[ur], Henry Haymo[ur], Geoffrey Sidney, Richard Reynold and others Fragile; not to be produced 1552 28 D/DHt/T1/83 Grant from John Darnell, of Manningtree gent., to Robert Veysys of Hadleigh, Suff., clothier, of all the tenements, etc. in Mistley, in the occupation of Andrew Auston, and letter of attorney to William. Veysye to deliver seisin of the same. Witnesses: Andrew Alston; Edward Bocher. 1557 29 D/DMh/T159 Deed of messuage called Hamondes in Little Waldingfield, Suffolk lying between kings highway leading from Lt. Waldingfield to Edwardstone on N., and tenement of Thomas Johnson in part and lands of Thomas Collman in part on S., 1 head abutting on kings highway leading from Byldeston to Sudbury on W., other head abutting on tenement of Thomas Alston on E. 1592 30 Q/SR 155/38,38a Indictments of John Cole of Dovercourt, yeoman, John Backe of "Beanes" in the parish of Dovercourt, yeoman, Robert Hayle, of the same, husbandman, John Alston, Anthony Foster, William Cooper and Thomas Keepe of the same, labourers, for breaking into the close of Henry Payne called "Coppins" at Dovercourt afersaid, and destroying the hedges and ditches there; and for breaking into the close of the said Henry called "Fylmans land" at the same, and destroying the hedges and ditches there. Endorsed, witness Hancock. 1601 31 D/DGd/T61 Deeds of mansion on house called Cusee Hall, with dove-house, barns, stables, yards, orchards, gardens and land (85a.) [field-names], 1615-1707; deeds, 1641-1700, including messuage called Colemans with land (43a) [field-names]; manor house called Hosyes alias Houses, with buildings, yards, gardens, orchards and land (157a.) [field-names], 1617-1709; deed, 1676, including cottage with windmill, stable, yards, gardens and ground (1a); messuage called Crophall, with outhouses, yards, gardens,backsides and land (3a.) abg. on King's highway from Cusshall to parish church, Toppesfield, 1684-1707; land (42a.) [field-names] copyhold of Manor of Barwicks and Sootneys, 1678-1703; and 3 pieces of land (4a.) copyhold of manor of Stoke-juxta-Clare, 1706-1722 Incl. valuation, 1768, of farms called Abbots and Gurtens in Haverhill; near contemporary copy of Probate copy, 1586, of will, 1586, of William Bigge of Toppesfield, yeo.; and attested copy, 17th cent., of attested copy [n.d.] of will, 1653, of John Alston of Stisted, gent. 1615-1768 32 D/DR/T42/49 Grant by Peter Poole of Broxted yeoman and George Poole of Takeley, Yeoman, and Margaret his wife, to Thomas Alston of Newton, suffolk, of the same premiese for £620. [3 seals] [Note of Humph. Smyth attorning tenant.] 1617 33 Q/SR 219/112 Recognizances of Rob.Smyth, John Alston and "Sranges" Alston, all of Sible Redingham; Smyth to keep the peace towards Walter Pristwood, William Browne and John Tall.(As in 54,91). 1617 34 Q/SR 219/113 Recognizances of rob. Smyth, John Alston and "Strangue" Alston; John to keep the peace towards Pristwood, Browne and Tell (as in 112). 1617 35 D/DMh/T36 Deed of messuage lately sold by Peter Greene to Richard Ward sen. decd., in occupation of [blank] OnterDeboys, Colchester Inc. assignment of judgement from Frances Alston, widow, re property of Peter Greene inc. tenement in Colchester. 1622 36 T/A 418/106/68 Writ of Distringas for Robert Golding of Great Henney, John Alston of Toppesfield and James Harrington of Great Maplestead gents., to answer for trespasses. `Blackwater Bridge et. al. Proclamation Lent 4 Chas.I. 3s.4d. each'. [ASS 35/72/1/68] 1629 37 T/A 418/107/73 Writ of Distringas for Henry Mildmay of Moulsham knt., Gamaliel Capell knt. and William Luckine bart., both of little Waltham, Thomas Titterell of Abberton, Thomas Pinson of Ray;eigh, Robert Gouldinge of Great Henny, John Alston of Toppesfield gentlemen, to answer for trasgressions "for (not mending) Peete bridge and Blackwater bridge". Issues of each, 10s. (ASS 35/72/2/73) 1630 38 T/A 418/108/135 Writ of Venire facias for John Searle of Epping, John Parker of Witham, John Digbye, William Alston gents., John Hammond labourer, all of Epping and Stephen Hore of Colchester yeoman, to answer for contempts and escapes. As above (ASS 35/73/1/135) 1630 39 T/A 418/108/143 Writ of ditringas for Henry Mildmay of Moulsham knt., Gmaliel Capell knt., William Luckins of Little Waltham, Thomas Titterell of Abberton, Thomas Pinson of Rayleigh, Robert Gouldinge of Great Henny, John Alston of Tollesfield, all gents., to answer for transgressions etc. Proclamation made Lnet 2 & 4 Chas.I. Issue, 5s. (ASS 35/73/1/143) 1630 40 T/A 418/109/72 Writ of Capias for John Parker of Witham yeoman, John Dygby, William Alston gents. and John Hamond labourer, all of Bulmer, Stephen Hoy of Colchester, John Crouch, Thomas Francis, John Blisden, Thomas Baker, John (?) Boston, George Gladwine, Barnaby Grimston, Nicholas Scott, John Cordle, Tho.Lofte, all of Chingford, Thomas Turnor of Great Easton, Tho.Polley of Wormingford, William Ruste of Panfield, John Ramsey, Richard Beachampe, Tho.Thimbleby, all of Great Henny, Stephen Rice of Belchamp Walter, Robert Ward of the same, William Bullocke and Roger Furmyn of Foxearth, Wm.Browne of (blank) (blank in MS.) and John Borley of the same yeomen. To answer for contempt. Proclamation made Autumn 6 Chas.I. As above.(ASS 35/74/1/72) 1631 41 T/A 418/109/78 Writ of Distringas for Henry Mildmay of Moulsham, Gamaliel Capell knts., William Luckinge bart., Thomas Titterell of Abberton, Thomas Pinson of Rayleigh, Robert Gouldinge of Great Henny, John alston of Toppesfield, all gents., to answer for transgressions etc. Proclamation made Lent 2 & 4 Chas.I. Issues for each, 13s.4d. (ASS 35/74/1/78) 1631 42 Q/SR 306/19 Indictment of John Wyndle of Bocking yeoman at stisted, stole and drove away 26 sheep worth 28 of Henry Alston. 1639 43 D/DL/T1/762 Lease for 31 years at a pepper-corn rent. Rich. Blackmore of Childerditch, yeoman, to Roger Bird of Stanford-le-Hope, gent. Messuage etc. called Lentropps and 11 ac.land in Wennington in occupation of Roger Lawrence. This indenture shall be void if the said Rich.Blackmore shall pay to Penning Alston, citizen and grocer of London, the sum of £104 in fulfilment of a bond by which the said Roger Bird is bound with Rich.Blackmore dated 27 June 1642. 1642 44 D/DRc/F83/3 Certified copy (1691) of marriage settlement: Edward Alston and Mary Witherell, both of Newton (Suff.) 1642 45 Q/SR 317/40 Presentment Mr. John Alston was chosen surveyor, and the constables and churchwardens have not appointed the 6 days for the amendment of the highways which ought to be appointed the Sunday after Easter. Signature of: John Alston. Added in a different hand: This presentment was tendered to me by the surveyor of Stisted the day above said. Signature of : James Heron. 1642 46 D/DQ 84/116 Feoffment Tho. Chaplyn of Belchamp Otten, Robert Chaplyn and John Chaplyn (all sons of Thomas Chaplyn, sen., of Belchamp Otten, decd.) and Rob. Lech of Belchamp Otten to Oliver Raymond esq., and sons John Raymond and Oliver Raymond, John Scott, sen., and sons John Scott and Benjamin Scott, Robert Newman, sen., and sons Robert Newman and Matthew Newman, all of Belchamp Walter, James Chaplyn (son of Tho. Chaplyn, jun.) Thomas Chaplyn and Robert Chaplyn (sons of Jas. Chaplyn), Robert Lech, junior (son of Robert Lech), William White and Wm. White, jun., William Martin, Thomas Thompson and son Edmund Thompson, Rob. Freeman and Richard French, all of Belchamp Otten Messuage and 2 gardens, called Alstons, with a croft of land (2a.) in a land called Alston's Lane and a pightle of pasture ('bd a.) all lying together between lands formerly of the Earl of Oxford and abutting on land of William Cole on W; croft of land called Ryvenhall (3a.) abutting on land called Muscells, formerly of the Earl of Oxford and land called Whaddon, formerly of Roger Wentworth, now of Thomas Smith; a 'grovet' formerly of Thomas Skepper, deceased now of William Cole and a garden called Lawes, formerly of William Cole, now of Robert Freeman, and a croft called Sawers (1a.) abutting on lands formerly of the Earl of Oxford; a wood called Vaux Wood, a field called Woodfield and the lane towards Short Wood: all the above property being in Belchamp Otten, formerly in occupation of Edw. Radford, now of Samuel Golding To the use of the feoffees for employment of all rents and profits thereform, except those due to the Crown, for the repair of Belchamp Otten Church; 24 new trustees to be enfeoffed when only 4 of the original number remain Recites: Enfeoffment in trust, to uses as above, of parties as above and others now deceased by George Colte of Cavendish (co. Suff.) (son and heir of Henry Colte, the son and heir of Sir George Colte, kt., decd.) for the better performance of of a decree made to John, Bishop Suffragan of Colchester, Thomas Corbett D.D., Wm. Ayloffe of Broxted, Thomas Waldegrave and Christopher Chibone, commissioners under the Great Seal for the reform of charitable trusts in Essex Witnesses to livery of seisin: John Mayhew (mark), Chris. Griggs (mark), Robert Rice (mark), Wm.Brand (mark), John Riggs 1643 47 D/P 96/18/20 Deed Assignment of lease (i) Gilbert Bragge of Halstead, butcher (ii) Nathan Wade of Halstead, yeoman. Shop and house late of William Boyse, butcher (deceased) and before that of Thomas Boyse his grandfather, in Halstead, between churchyard on south and highway or street from Sudbury, Suffolk to Braintree on north, shop belonging to parish church in occupation of Thomas Hurvy butcher on west, and churchyard gate on east Recites: D/P 96/18/15, D/P 96/18/17, D/P 96/18/19 Witnesses: John Bragg, Nicholas Jekyll, Abraham Alston 1644 48 D/P 96/18/21 Deed Bond to enforce assignment of lease (as in D/P 96/18/20) (i) Gilbert Bragge of Halstead, butcher (ii) Nathan Wade of Halstead, yeoman Witnesses: John Bragg, Nicholas Jekyll, Abraham Alston 1644 49 Q/SR 324/118,119 EXAMINATIONS taken at Halstead before Thomas Cooke esq., justice, of "divers parties about the business of Mr. John Alston of Stistead." (The depositions are confused in their subject matter, and of no historical interest except for the passages calendared below; there is nothing else in the original to throw further light on the conjuror.) Martin Hurrell deposes that, between Easter and Michaelmas 1643 being the last summer but one, Mr. Robert Aylett, Mr. Thomas Allett and Mr. James Richardson, Sarah Feltcher, Abraham aham Rich, John Drake, John Dier, all of Stisted, Lambert Smith and "the conjuror that went in black apparell, of a browne haire and a blackish heard", a man of middle size, and another one Henry, the three last came from Sir William maxie, and two maids of the same family, and sometimes William Drake and his wife of Stisted, Ellen Warren, Mary Wardthen of Bocking, now married to Stistead, and Mr. Edward Mott of Bocking, and divers others, had half a dozen meetings at her master's house (etc.). And further she saith that Sir William Maxie's man did conjure by making a circle in her master's hall, and setting up three candles which burned blue and when they put htem out they did it with milk and soot; and saith that they feasted and had fiddlers from Coggeshall and Sir William Maxsie's maid played on the virginals; that she took a bushel of wheat (out) of the malt chamber and gave it to Robert Wibrook for which she was to have 3s., and Elizabeth Waite stole 2 bushels of malt and sent to young Samuel's to be brewed for a merry meeting, and finally saith that they rode in a coach to Sir William Maxie's. (The deposition of Elizabeth Gallant contains nothing of interest.) 1645 50 Q/SR 335/26 Presentments by Hundreds of Hinckford and Witham. The inhabintants of Wethersfield, for not repairing the highway from Toppesfield towards Braintree being against the lands of John Alston gentleman commoly called "Hawkesells" as for as "Cellyers greene" by estimation 100 rods./ The inhabitants of Alphamstone, for not repairing the highway from Lammarsh to Febmarsh and Halstead, the place is called "Wellockes hill'> Mris Clarke of Stebbing widow and William Field yeoman, both of Steebbing, for recusants. John Roylands of Stebbing weaver, for sparating himself from the parish church of Stebbing and frequenting other unlawful meetings whre he himself preseheth to others. Peter Lidgecatt and John Sanders, Richard Casse and John Wilmott, all of Hatfield Several yeoman, for recusants. (blank) Sanders of Ratfield Peverel, for an unlicensed alehousekeeper. Mark of: Robert Warner Foreman of the jury: the rest of the jur consent. 1648
6. Alston Wills in Stemmata Alstoniana. Family Wills & Alston Wills in Stemmata etc * Indicates placed, in the genealogical tables. # Indicates not in Stemmata Alstoniana but on computer Alston surnames not shown Copy. Indicates copy on file with E L Fenn
2006 - List checked against PRO list of 132 Alston wills
Proved Prerogative Court of Canterbury. # Richard of Fornham All Saints proved 1 Oct 1458 # Thomas of Sudbury St Peters prov Sudbury 25 Sept 1469 SRO J545/2 (incomplete) # Nicholas of Cavendysch proved 16 June 1512 Copy. John Payne of Nayland SFK 2 Sep 1526 Page No in Stemmata 87* William of Newton 18 Oct 1563, proved 23 Oct 1567. 88* William of Middleton 1 Feb 1564 proved 16 May 1565. 89* Edward of Newton 10 Jan 1592 proved 26 May 1593. 92 Edward of London 19 Dec 1592 proved 9 Feb 1601/2 92 Editha Potkyn (Alston) Jun 1611 thought to be from West of England. 93* Thomas of Newton 20 Sept 1613 proved 30 June 1614. 98* William of Hedingham Sible died 9 Jan 1617/18 proved 1617/18. 103* Edward of Boxford 20 Jan 1617/18 proved 9 Feb 1617/18. 104* Thomas of Polstead 11 Jan 1619/20 proved 4 Feb 1619/20 105* Anne Alston of Boxford widow. 31 Jan 1622 proved 26 April 1626. 105* Susan Alston of Newton widow. 24 Jan 1625/6 proved 20 April 1626. 106* John of Boxford. Administration granted 30 June 1626. 106* Peter of Bramford 26 Mar 1628 proved 16 May 1629. 106 John of Hedingham. Administration granted 14 July 1630. 107* Dorothy Edwards (Alston). Administration granted 16 Dec 1631. 107* Copy Samuel of Newton 22 April 1631 proved 19 May 1631. 108* William of Seymehall 14 July 1632 proved 17 Feb 1733/4. 109 Gregory of Edwardstone probate granted 13 May 1634. 109* Thomas of Newton 16 Aug 1634 proved 19 Nov 1634. 110* Abraham of Sudbury. Administration granted 8 Jan 1634/5. 110* William of the Inner Temple 2 Mar 1637 proved 8 Mar 1637. 110 Frances Alston spinster proved 23 July 1640. 111* Edmund of Newton 22 July 1640 proved 25 Nov 1640. 111* William of Marlesford 9 June 1641 proved 6 Aug 1641. Copy* Dame Frances Temple Odell 3 Aug 1642 Pvd 11/201 9 Aug 1647 112* William of Belchampwater. Administration granted 15 Aug 1648 112* Edward of Sudbury 3 Feb 1648/9 proved 12 May 1651. 113 John of Melbury Osmond, of the Westcountry proved 22 Jan 1654. 113* John of Stisted 30 June 1653 proved 26 Nov 1656. 114* Elizabeth Alston wife of Bramford 3 June 1656 proved 24 May 1658. 114 Thomas of Smyrna. Administration granted 1658. 114* John of Stisted 8 Sept 1658 proved 24 Nov 1658. 114* Anne Alston widow of Moulton 16 May 1660 proved 30 April 1661. 115* Penning of London 5 Mar 1667 proved 14 May 1668. 116* Sir Edward of London 24 Nov 1669 proved 24 Jan 1669/70. 117* Dame Susan Alston. Administration granted 15 Aug 1670. 117* Samuel of Marlesford 15 Dec 1675 proved 20 June 1676. 117* Thomas grocer of London 18 June 1675 proved 2 July 1678. 118* Sir Thomas of Odell 25 April 1678 proved 19 July 1678 118 William of Dedham proved 9 Nov 1678. 118* Edmund of Newton 13 Sept 1678 proved 14 Nov 1678. 119* L'Estrange of Stisted 20 April 1678 proved 6 May 1681. 119* Sir Edward of Bozeat proved 12 Jan 1682. 119* Judith Alston widow of London 18 Jan 1677/8 proved 2 June 1683. 120* Fryer of Newton 15 Sept 1683 proved 15 Oct 1683. 120* Maria Alston widow of Moulsey 18 Aug 1685 probate 19 Sept 1687 120 Charles of London. Administration granted 28 April 1688. 121* Sir Joseph of Chelsea 17 Mar 1684 proved 12 June 1688. 124 Joseph of Norfolk. Admin granted 1688, only record in index. 124* Isaac of Bradwell Abbey. Administration granted 11 Feb 1688/9. 124* Sir Joseph of Bradwell Abbey 19 Feb 1688 proved June 19 1689. 125* L'Estrange of Stisted & Rotterdam 22 Apr 1689 pvd 3 Mar 1689/90. 125* William of Strixton 22 Aug 1688 proved 23 July 1690. 125* Rev Thomas of Assington 1 May 1690 proved 31 Jan 1690/1. 126 Edward Alston of Boxford 10 April 1694 proved 23 June 1694. Edmund Alston of London. Administration granted 12 Mar 1695. Copy/Pdf*Sir Rowland of Odell 20 Dec 1686 Prob 11/445 6 Apr 1698 Copy#* Capt William Julius 2 Oct 1698 Pvd 5 Oct 1698 Copy# William of Sible Hedingham Gent 5 Jul 1695? Pvd 1699? Joseph of Shadwell R.N. 4 Sept 1693 proved 27 April 1696. 127 John of Tiverton, of the West Country proved 7 May 1696 127*Copy Lady Anne Alston wid Chelsea 19 April 1694 pvd 29 July 1696. 128* Elizabeth Alston spinster of Loughton 26 Aug 1697 pvd 1 June 1698. 128* Edward of Loughton 20 April 1699 proved 9 May 1699. 128* Crewe R.N. of HMS "Essex" Administration granted 15 Mar 1703. 128* Cornelius of Camberwell proved 3 May 1703. Copy#*Pdf John Alston Gent London 26 Jan 1704 11/480 8 Feb 1705 129Copy Thomas R.N. HMS "Montague" 4 Sept 1705 proved 12 Oct 1706 129*Copy Lady Elizabeth Alston of Chelsea 23 Dec 1704 pvd 8 Dec 1709. 129* Rev Edward of Wivenhoe 23 Dec 1701 proved 31 Oct 1710. 129* Maria Alston of Reading 19 Feb 1712 proved 7 May 1714. 130 Zacheus of Clitheroe 16 Mar 1713 proved 28 June 1714. 131* Archdeacon Charles of Northall. Admin granted 31 Aug 1714. 131* Sir Thomas of Odell 9 Dec 1714 proved 3 Mar 1714/15. 131* Sir Joseph of Chelsea & Long Ditton. Admin granted 6 June 1716. 132* Edward of London 23 June 1715 proved 2 Nov 1716. 132 Roger of London. Administration granted 21 Oct 1718. 132* Sir Joseph of Chelsea & Long Ditton Admin granted 3 Dec 1718. 132* Lady Charlotte of Long Ditton 4 Feb 1617/18 pvd 3 Feb 1719/20. 133* Sir Joseph of Chelsea died 1688 (ref 47) Admin 14 April 1720. 133* Rev Edward of Brantham 3 Oct 1719 proved 13 May 1722. 134 Samuel of London. Administration granted 25 Feb 1723/24. 134* Penelope Hoare (Alston) of Bideford. Admin granted 6 July 1726. 134* Mary Clayton (Alston) widow 21 Sept 1724 proved 19 June 1730. 135* Joseph of Bristol. Administration granted 26 April 1734. 135* Joseph of Newhouse Edwardstone 5 June 1734 proved 22 Oct 1736. 135*Copy William of Pavenham 24 Mar 1735 pvd 11/680 12 Nov 1736. 136 John of St Clement London. Administration granted 14 Mar 1736/7. 136* Sir Joseph of Long Ditton. Administration granted 3 Aug 1737. Philip of Avely. Administration granted 9 Feb 1738/9. 136 Isaac of Ipswich proved 15 Nov 1739 Pdf# Isaac of Ipswich 5 Oct 1738 proved Prob11/699 5 Nov 1739 Pdf# Mary of Ipswich wife Isaac 7 Jul 1740 pvd Prob 11/704. 24 Sep1740 137*Copy Mary Alston wid Edwardstone 31 May 1737 pvd 12 Feb 1740/1. 137* Admin granted for the estate of Mary Alston above 30 June 1789. 137* Elizabeth Alston spin of Ipswich 10 Sept 1736 proved 19 May 1742. 137* Lady Elizabeth Alston of Odell. Administration granted 1 Dec 1742 138 Joseph R.N. of HMS "Boyne". Administration granted 9 Aug 1743. Copy#*Jacobus VANDERZEE 6 Dec 1745 pvd Prob. 11/749. 19 Dec 1746 138 Elizabeth Alston widow of Southwark. Admin granted 22 July 1749. 138 Robert of St Mary Overy proved 27 Aug 1747. 138Copy Robert of London merchant 15 Oct 1749 proved 31 Oct 1749. 138*Copy William of Bramford 10 Mar 1746/7 proved 31 Oct 1749. 139* Samuel of East Bergholt 4 Oct 1752 proved 4 Nov 1752. 139 Copy Thomas of London 24 Feb 1741/2 pvd 11/813 3 Jan 1755. Copy Hannah of Fenchurch St London Widow 8 Sep 1755 pvd 25 Sep 1755 Copy# Thomas of Halstead sailmaker 3 Mar 1750 Pro 11/826 29 Dec 1756 John of London. Administration granted 28 Mar 1757 140* Samuel of Gunthorpe. Administration granted 5 April 1758. William H.S. Alston. Administration granted 17 July 1758. 140* Sir Rowland of Odell 27 May 1758 proved 15 Jan 1759. 141* Elizabeth Alston Spin of Westminster. Admin granted 8 Feb 1759. 141* Jacob of Polstead 12 April 1759 proved 3 July 1760. 142 Rev Philip of Stepney. Administration granted 10 Jan 1761. 142Copy Theodosia Alston widow London 30 May 1761 pvd 16 June 1761. 142 George R.N. of HMS "Lively". Administration granted 3 May 1762. 142 Joseph R.N. of HMS "Royal William". Admin granted 4 April 1764. Copy#*Eliz wife Edw Newton 14 Jul 1770 pvd Prob 11/1010. 31 Aug 1775 143*Copy Sir Thomas of Odell 6 Sept 1766 proved 21 Nov 1776. 143* Lady Catherine Davies Alston widow 4 Aug 1774 pvd 7 April 1778. Copy#* William John JULIUS of St Kitts West Indies 5 Jun 1779 143Copy Elizabeth Alston spinster London 20 Nov 1768 pvd 27 April 1780. 144Copy William of London salesman 8 Mar 1780 11/1064 13 May 1780. 147* Charlotte Naylor (Alston). Administration granted 30 June 1780. 144*Copy Samuel surgeon of Halstead 2 Dec 1774 proved 19 Jan 1781. 144*Copy Elizabeth Alston widow of Newton 6 Oct 1779 pvd 27 Oct 1781. 145* Sir Evelyn of Chelsea 17 April 1781 proved 8 Mar 1783. 146*Copy Lady Eliz Alston wid of Chelsea 13 Mar 1783 pvd 19 Sept 1783. Copy* Margaret Hare 13 Oct 1779 proved 17 Dec 1784 146* Joseph surgeon of Halstead 17 June 1782 proved 26 June 1784. Copy* Robert LIVEING of Harwich 17 April 1785 proved 16 June 1785. Copy* James VANDERZEE of Billericay 29 Mar 1780 proved 7 Nov 1785 147 John, Captain 100th Foot. Administration granted 2 Dec 1786. 147*Copy Rowland of Harrold 31 July 1780 proved 24 May 1787. 147Copy William Capt E India Co Bengal 18 Sep 1786 pvd 28 Nov 1787. 148* Sir Rowland of Odell 22 Mar 1790 proved 13 July 1791. 148* Samuel of Nayland 7 Feb 1795 proved 25 Aug 1796. 148* Evelyn of Bletchingley. Administration granted 25 May 1799. Copy#* Mary Alston (Vanderzee)19 Dec 1800 11/1307 18 Aug 1803 Copy#* Fanny Alston Manningtree 19 Jun 1803 Pro 11/1408 5 May 1804 Pdf#*Philadelphia VANDERZEE of Billericay 16 Jun 1802 Prob11/389 11 Mar 1803 Copy#*Gertrude Alston of Odell 10 Jan 1772 PROB 8 Apr 1807 Copy*John Wasse (John Alston) 25 Aug 1790 Prob 11/1458 11 Apr 1807 Pdf#*Simon FENN of Codd 23 Jul 1806 pvd Prob 11/1457 4 Mar 1807 Copy#* Rev William Jn Julius St Kitts 22 Jun 1810 Pvd 30 Aug 1810 Copy# David of Kentish Town 4 Apr 1813 11/547 2 Aug 1813 Copy#* John Julius of Bathwick 29 May 1812 Pvd 8 Dec 1813 Pdf#*Anna Maria Stoke by Nay 12 Mar 1811 pvd Prob 11/571 7 Aug 1815 Copy#* John Julius of Cavendish Sq 17 Nov 1815 Pvd 29 Nov 1815 Copy* James VANDERZEE of Rochford 2 Dec 1817 proved 15 Feb 1822 Copy# Sarah of Lyndhurst Wid 18 Nov 1822 Pvd 11/1667 26 Aug 1823 Pdf#*Philadelphia VANDERZEE - Billericay 12 Jul 1824 Prob 11/1699 21 May 1825 Pdf* George of Nayland Prob 11/1782 3 Mar 1831 Copy#* Jane Smith Julius spinster 18 Jan 1832 Pvd 23 Mar 1832 Copy*William of Rochester 21 Apr 1833 Prob 11/1818 25 Jul 1833 Pdf*William Spice tanner of Chalkwell Kent Prob 11/1836 27 Oct 1834 Copy#* Judith spinster of Gosfield 6 Dec 1831 11/1847 3 Jun 1835 Pdf#*Harriet LIVEING of Harwich 7 Nov 1836 Prob 11/1874 1 Mar 1837 Pdf#*Thomas LIVEING of Harwich 5 Oct 1833 Prob 11/1874 1 Mar 1837 Pdf#*Geo VANDERZEE of Kentish Town 1 May 1836 Pvd 11/1879. 19 May 1837 Copy Robert FENN of Hadleigh farmer 19 Oct 1824 proved 24 Sept 1838 Pdf# Henry VANDERZEE of Madras 4 Mar 1841 pvd Prob 11/1966. 27 Jul 1842 Pdf#*Edward LIVEING of Nay 30 Jun 1835 pvd Prob 11/1982. 19 Jul 1843 Copy#*Eliza of Palgrave 5 Jul 1843 proved 11/1893. 22 Aug 1843 Copy#* Thomas Rowland London 14 Nov 1840 Pvd 11/2003 21 Aug 1844 Copy*Daniel Constable of Manningtree 16 Sep 1846 PROB 11/2046 11 Dec 1846 Copy# Mary Ann Elizabeth Spin Devon 18 Aug 1846 11/2053 29 Apr 1847 Pdf#*Isabella VANDERZEE 31 Dec 1847 proved Prob 11/2088 3 Feb 1849 Copy#*David of Sheppy 8 Dec 1847 Pvd 11/2120 14 Oct 1850 Copy* Susan Julius (Thorley) 1 May 1850 Pvd 17 Apr 1852 Copy#* Thomas Alston of Odell 4 Mar 1854 Pvd 11/2199 3 Nov 1854 Pdf#*Anne of Nayland wid of Geo 13 Jul 1850 Prob 11/2230 16 Apr 1856 Copy*David Thomas Cheyney Rock 27 Mar 1855 11/2249 1 Apr 1857 Copy* Eliza Tabitha Ling (Alston) of Framlingham (Draft) 1 Jul 1902 Copy#* Dr Edward L FENN of Nayland 13 Jan 1902 Copy* Charles Edward Fenn 4 Apr 1946 Prob 15 Aug 1947 Copy* Adria Margaret Fenn 8 Feb 1979 Copy* D M Hadwen 8 Dec 1975 Prob 29 Oct 1982 Copy* E N A Hadwen 12 Jan 2001
Bury St Edmunds Registry. Pg. Stemmata 149 Richard of Fornham proved 10 Oct 1458. 149 Thomas of Sudbury 30 Aug 1462 proved 25 Sept 1469. 151 Nicholas of Cavendish proved 16 June 1512. 151 Henry of Edwardstone 17 Oct 1558 proved April 1559. 152* William of Newton 18 Oct 1563 proved 23 Oct 1567 (ref 1). 152* Elizabeth Alston wid of Newton 19 May 1564 proved 11 June 1564. 153 John of Edwardstone 31 July 1615 proved 22 Sept 1615. 153 Henry of Polstead 13 July 1615 proved 2 Nov 1615. 154* Abraham of Newton 4 Oct 1624 proved 26 April 1624. 156* Isaac of Edwardstone 20 May 1625 proved 7 Oct 1625. 157 Sarah Alston spin of Edwardstone 24 June 1634 pvd 15 Sept 1634. 157* Thomas of Assington. Administration granted 10 Oct 1611. 157 William of Cavendish. Administration granted 2 Oct 1633. 157 Thomas of Polstead. Administration granted 20 Aug 1638. 157 John Alleston of Acton. Administration granted 23 July 1639. 157* Margaret Alston a minor of Newton. Admin granted 22 Aug 1642. Interregnum 1652 - 1660 all Wills proved PCC 158 Samuel of Edwardstone. Administration granted 2 Dec 1660. 158* Samuel of Newton 24 Feb 1685/6 proved 18 Mar 1686. 158* Elizabeth of Great Ashfield 14 June 1685 proved 2 Dec 1691. 159* Edmund of Newton 20 Nov 1694 probate granted 26 Feb 1695. 159* Jane Alston widow of Newton19 April 1695 proved 26 Feb 1695. 159* Jane Alston of Newton. Administration granted 26 Feb 1695/6. 160 Thomas of Owsden 8 Sept 1696 proved 20 Nov 1696. 160 Ephraim of Ashfield Magna. Administration granted 9 April 1700. 160 Marie Alston (Tyrrell) of Melford. Admin granted 5 May 1707. 160 John of Little Cornard 18 April 1719 proved 15 Oct 1719. 160 Daniel of Preston 25 Feb 1708 proved 2 Dec 1719. 161 Joseph of Boxtead. Administration granted 1 Mar 1727. 161 Elizabeth Alstone of Bury St Edmunds Admin granted 10 Nov 1736. 161 Ann Alston of Groton. Administration granted 1 Jan 1740. 161 Susan Alston of Boxford 22 Dec 1738 proved 16 Dec 1741. 161* Nicholas of Newton 20 Mar 1741 proved 8 June 1742. 162* Elizabeth Alston of Newton24 April 1752 proved 27 Mar 1753. 162* Edward of Lavenham. Administration granted 27 Sept 1753. 162* Samuel of Edwardstone 12 Dec 1751 proved 28 Mar 1754. 163* Jacob of Boxford. Administration granted 5 Dec 1757. 163* Thomas of Boxford 25 Sept 1758 proved 2 Nov 1759. William of Polsted 5 Mar 1753 proved 11 May 1768 164 William of Polstead 30 Sept 1769 proved 28 Oct 1769 164* Edward of Bildeston 8 Oct 1774 proved 2 Mar 1775. 164 Elizabeth Alstone of Kersey widow 18 April 1771 pvd 12 Feb 1776. 164* Edward Alston of Newton 24 Mar 1784 proved 14 Feb 1786. 164* Charlotte Alston spinster of Nayland. Admin granted 24 Sept 1798. Copy#* Daniel of Stanstead 13 Apr 1860 proved 28 Dec 1860 Copy# Daniel of Glemsford 19 Jul 1884 proved 2 Apr 1894 Copy#* Thomas Stanstead 28 Apr 1888 proved 2 Feb 1893 Copy# Rosina Alston of Sudbury 17 Nov 1909 proved 28 Mar 1923 Copy#* William Alfred of Sudbury 15 Mar 1919 proved 30 Oct 1920 Copy#* John Edward of Bury 23 Jul 1925 proved 31 Mar 1926
Essex Record Office
Copy# William Living Sadler of Colchester 1623 Copy# John Living Yeoman of Bulphan Essex 1639 have transcribed. Copy*John Alston of Stisted 30 June 1653 proved 26 Nov 1656 Copy# William Alston of Sible H Jul 5 Jul 1694 Pvd 5 May 1699 Copy# Thomas of Dedham c 1721 (part illegible) Copy# Henry of Gt Henny yeoman. 16 Sept 1728 Copy#* Moses of Lamarsh ESS 1 Aug 1743 proved 19 May 1746 Copy#* Robert LIVEING of Harwich 2 Aug 1786 proved 1 Feb 1787
Ipswich Court of Probate Copy* Alice Alston of Sibton 18 Sept 1694 proved 29 Oct 1705 Copy#* Richard FENN Hemingstone farmer 26 Mar 1845 pvd 1 Sep 1846 Copy* Rev Edward Constable Dennington 26 Feb 1870 pvd 26 May 1871
Consistory and Archdeaconry Courts Norwich. Pg. Stemmata 165* Joseph of Washbrooke 18 Nov 1643 proved 11 Jan 1643/4. 166* Edward of Newton 18 Nov 1680 proved 21 June 1690. 166* John of Seckford 19 Mar 1709/10 no proof registered. 167* Rev William of Newton 11 June 1760 proved 31 Aug 1761. 167 Elizabeth Alston widow of Fieldawling 7 Dec 1782 proved 14 July 1783.
Northampton Registry. Pg. Stemmata 352 William Alston of Pavenham 21 Nov 1707 proved 18 May 1709. 352 Sarah Alston widow of Pavenham 21 June 1714 proved 2 Nov 1714. 352 William Alston of Pavenham 6 July 1713 proved not dated. 352 John Alston. Administration granted 1718. Also. Pg. Stemmata 263* Sarah Alston Dutchess of Somerset 17 May 1686 proved 11 Jan 1703 (old style) Ash 22. 266* William Alston of Bow Lane Durham 24 Dec 1795 proved at York 7 Nov 1799.
New Zealand. Copy* Marjorie H R FENN 28 Mar 1966 proved 15 Jul 1970.
Alston Inquisitions Post Mortem. Pg. Stemmata 258* Thomas Allston Jnr died 29 Sept 1611.Taken at Bungay 7 Nov 1611. 258* Thomas Alston Jnr died 14 July 1604. Taken at Gt Dunmow ESS 29 Sept 1614. 258* William Alston Snr of Newton died 15 Jan 1618. Taken at Bury 20 Aug 1618. 259* Edward Alston Clothier died 22 Jan 1618. Taken at Ipswich 18 April 1618. 259* Thomas Alston died 21 Jan 1620. Taken at Ipswich 11 April 1620. 259* Thomas Alston of Geddinghall. Taken at Ipswich 20 June 1620. 260* Thomas Alston died 6 June 1614#. Taken at Ipswich 5 Oct 1620. 260* Isaac Alston of Edwardstone. Taken at Eye 7 Nov 1625. 260* John Alston died 10 May 1626. Taken at Hadleigh 7 June 1626. 260* Thomas Alston died 6 June 1614#. Taken at Bury 31 Oct 1626. 261* Peter Alston died 3 April 1628. Taken at Ipswich 29 Sept 1628. 261* Samuel Alston died 11 May 1631. Taken at Bury 30 Oct 1633. 261* William Alston Snr died 5 Nov 1633. Taken at Bury 16 April 1634. 261* William Alston died 3 Mar 1638. Taken at Bedford 6 Sept 1638. 262* William Alston died 11 June 1641. Taken at 4 Sept 1641. 262* Joseph Alston 21 Dec 1643. Taken at Ipswich 21 May 1644.
E.L. Fenn 2003.
ALSTON SEARCHES-NORWICH REGISTRY. Episcopal Consistorial Court of Norwich ; Wills 1416-1800 Admons 1666-1800 Norfolk Archdeaconry Court :- Wills 1459-1800 Admons 1541-1618, 16g1-1800 Norwich Archdeaconry Court :- Wills 1469-1800 Admons 1660-1680, 1700-1800 Peculiar Court of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich :- Wills 15.72-1800. Peculiar Jurisdiction of Castle Rising, N. & S. Wootton & Roydon :- Wills 1624-1626, 1639-92, 1703-20. Lvnn Archdeaconrv Book :- Wills 1584-1567. Norwich Peculiars, a bundle 1658-88. Bundle of 17th Century originals, examined. The above is inserted by way of illustration (if any further than this book itself be needed) of the pains the compiler has been at to leave no source of information untried. Negative result it must be borne in mind is the rule, positive result the exception in genealogical research. Scores of documents are examined, few afford material. Lionel Cresswell - Alstoniana pg 299
7. Schedule of Alston Wills held at the Essex Record Office, Feb 2006, Essex. Alston Wills held at Essex Record Office Chelmsford Feb 2006
1576 Alice Alston widow of Middleton [2827] - EF sighted on fiche 2002 not legible. Needs copy from original document. Mod Ref 21BWZ D/A BW2/21
C1556 Augustine Alstone of Coggeshal. Old Ref 144 CR 3 - not placed in tree
1677 Mathew Alston gent of Toppesfield [3125] Mod ref D/ABW 68/178
1697 Ann Alston widow of Stisted. [3123] Old ref 13 AW 2
1713 John Alston blacksmith of Gt Henny. Old Ref 16 MR 9 - not placed in tree
1713 Thomas Allason carpenter of Halstead. Old ref 300 BR 16 - not placed in tree
1727 Joseph Alston blacksmith of Gt Henny [2619] Old ref 175 MR 10
1731 William Alston yeoman of Stifford Old ref 441 BR 20 - not placed in tree
1751 Elizabeth Alston widow of Lamarsh [4759] Old ref 73 BR 24
1753 Joseph Alstone wheelwright of Weeley [355] Old ref 140 BR 24
1755 James Alstone singleman of Weeley [995] Old ref 290 BR 24
1769 Susan Alston widow of Weeley [844] Old ref 91 BR 26
1781 Thomas Alston blacksmith of Gt Henny Old ref 40 MR 13 - not placed in tree
1799 William Alston gent of Asheldham [4706] Old ref 301 ER 35
1803 Sarah Alston spinster of Manningtree [3737] Old ref 566 BR 29
1805 Henry Alston farmer of Bulmer Old ref 16 BR 30 - not placed in tree
1815 John Alston blacksmith of Pebmarsh [4754] Old ref 1 MR 14
1821 Edward Alson merchant of Manningtree [3731] Old ref 90 BR 32
1826 Hannah Alston spinster of Gt Tey Old ref 275 CR 20 - not placed in tree
1830 Richard Alson sen. Brickmaker of W Bergholt [5266] Old ref 367 BR 33
1839 Joseph Allstone wheelwright of W Bergholt Old ref 635 BR 34 - not placed in tree 1852 William Alston gent of Greenstead juxta Colchester [5652] Old ref 763 BR 36
1855 Robt Allston husbandman of W Bergholt Old ref 496 BR 24 - not placed in tree
Essex RO Wills cont. Names discounted as Alston. 1521 Geo Allyson chaplain of Coggeshall 110 CR 2 1543 Joan Alyson widow of Romford 36 ER 5 1591 Richard Allysonne of Coggeshall 393 EW 14 1613 John Allanson tanner of Romford 359 EW 14 1616 Thomas Ellison butcher of Mucking 248 BW 13 1639 William Ellison husb of Gt Burstead 214 BW 55 1649 James Allenson gent of St Osyth 112 BW 59 1653 Thomas Elsdon of Gt Holland 377 CW 15 1663 William Allesun yeo of Stebbing 230 BR 6 1666 Edward Allesson butcher of Stebbing 198 BR 7 1680 Anne Allenson wid of Edmund of Wigmore KEN 480 BR 10 1712 James Allison gent of Leigh 248 BR 16 1712 John Ellison single of Gt Baddow 268 BW 80 1742 Christopher Allison widr of Romford 92 ER 33 1763 William Elsdon husb of Ockendon 224 ER 34 1772 John Ellson shopkeeper of Fyfield 363 ER 34 1791 Thomas Elsden gent of Stanway 250 BR 28 1803 Charles Ellson shopkeeper of High Easter 519 BR 29 1832 Geo Elsdon blacksmith of Bocking 96 AR 2 1837 Sarah Elsdon wid of Bocking 96 AR 2
ALSTON Empty File [26963] [MRIN: 9672].
|