
Terry, William (b. 1854, d. -)
Note: Christened - 03 Dec 1854 - St Martins' Aldington Kent
Source - Kent Archives - Parish Register/Baptisms1680-1978/p2546
Census: Date: 1901
Place: Duoard's Place Borden Milton Faversham Kent, living at home with her parents
Note: Christened - 26 May 1819 - St George's Deal Kent
Source - Kent Archives - Parish Register/Baptisms 1781-1822/p5821
Occupation: Labourer
Census: Date: 1861
Place: 79 Middle Street Deal Kent, lodging with his sister and her family
Note: Christened - 05 May 1813 - St George's Deal Kent
Source - Kent Archives - Parish Register/Baptisms 1781-1822/p4600
Census: Date: 1841
Place: Middle Street Deal Kent
Note: Richard was living with his father
Note: From Rev. Thomas Warren p50 1st son (4th child) of Richard Warren and Priscilla Fenner "Samuel, b. 1728, d. at St. James, Santee, South Carolina, U.S.A., m. Eliza Perdrieux - issue, Samuel, Benjamin and a daughter."
http://genforum.genealogy.com/warren/messages/9745.html http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?
htx=message&r=rw&p=surnames.warren&m=4124
Some WARREN marriages in NC & SC Author: Jane Date: 19 Feb 2006 4:45 AM GMT Surnames: WARREN, Elizabeth / Frances / James / Samuel F. Classification: Marriage FYI only. I have no other data in my files. I hope it might break someone's brickwall out there........ WARREN, Elizabeth & Flowers MICHILL, 1784, Orangeburg Co. SC WARREN, Frances & Chesley HERNDON,13 Sept. 1849, Orange Co. NC WARREN, James & Mary CHERRY, 21 June 1788, Bertie Co. NC WARREN, Samuel F. (Rev.) & Lydia PERDRIAU, October 1784, Charleston, SC http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/WZVBAIB/4124.1 Re: Some WARREN marriages in NC & SC Author: Norma Kirchhofer Date: 20 Feb 2006 3:08 PM GMT Classification: Query In Reply to: Some WARREN marriages in NC & SC by: Jane
Hello Jane You may have the location wrong on Rev, Samuel Fenner Warren he was married November 21, 1784 in St James, Santee, South Carolina He was born December 04, 1728 in Suffolk, England and died 1789 he is the s/o Richard Warren + Priscilla Fenner. Norma Kirchhofer http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=message&r=rw&p=surnames.warren&m=4124.1.1 Re:
Some WARREN marriages in NC & SC Author: Jane Date: 22 Feb 2006 4:17 PM GMT Classification: Query In Reply to: Re: Some WARREN marriages in NC & SC by: Norma Kirchhofer The information on the WARREN marriages in NC and SC came from a book I found at the library entitled "North and South Carolina Marriage Records From the Earliest Colonial Days to the Civil War" by William Montgomery Clemens and first published in 1927. Mr. Clemens, according to the book, was the Editor of Genealogy Magazine and the book was published by Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc. It does not contain anything but marriages so there are no descendants listed and I have no further information.
French Huguenots
A List of Emigrant Ministers to America Page 62 Warren, Samuel Fenner, South Carolina, January 18, 1758.--Money Book, 46-62. married Elizabeth Perdreau July 19, 1759 & Lydia Perdreau June 30, 1768 in South Carolina Warren, Thomas, Musquito Shore, June 30, 1768.--Money Book, 51-79.
The McCarthys in Early American History, Page 121 St. James, Santee, kept by Rev. Samuel Fenner Warren, published in South Carolina
http://www.jmadden.info/StJames.htm Photos: St. James Santee Parish Church near Hampton Plantation in South Carolina The following information is quoted from the sign posted outside the church. "Erected in 1768, this edifice, officially known as Wambaw Church, was situated on the Kin's Highway. It is the fourth church to serve St. James Santee Parish. The parish, founded in 1706 at the request of French Huguenot settlers, was the second oldest in the colony. The Rev. Samuel Fenner Warren served as parish rector from 1758 until his death in 1789." The following is a quote from the Hopsewee Plantation site (http://www.hopsewee.com/BrickChurch.htm) that talks about the St. James Church: "Although this beautiful old brick Church now stands alone on the old King's highway among the oaks and pines of the forest, it was once the center of a busy and prosperous community. North and south along the Santee river were rich rice plantations, shipping rice in large casks from their wharves to Charleston to be sent on to England, Holland, Portugal or France. Carolina rice became famous all over the world as being the very finest. The prosperity of the planters is reflected in the beauty and proportions of the St. James Santee Parish Church. The body of the church is built of brick imported from England but the columns of the portico pews are made of hand pegged cypress. The flagstone floor has withstood the ravages of two wars. The vaulted ceiling still retains the original plaster work. The church is tucked away in the woods near Hampton Plantation and not that many people may take the time to discover it. Obviously well-cared for, the gravestones in the church yard provide interesting reading and an insight into another time. The following are some links with additional information on the church." St. James Parish - the census of 1790 http://www.rootsweb.com/~scbchs/stjamessantee.htm Better pictures of the interior of the church can be found at: http://www.hopsewee.com/BrickChurch2002.htm Thomas Lynch, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence was a resident of this parish. For teachers interested in connecting the information about this church to the early plantation cultures, we'd like to suggest that you look at the links at this site as follows: The Rice Project VR's showing Hampton Plantation and Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation Photos of Hampton Plantation Photos of Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation List of resources for the Rice Project, including links to the National Park Service unit of study called "When Rice Was King."
French Huguenots
A List of Emigrant Ministers to America Page 62 "Warren, Samuel Fenner, South Carolina, January 18, 1758.--Money Book, 46-62." What is this book that you call Money Book? !!!!!!!!!!!!What does the date of Jan 18, 1758 relate to?!!!!!!!!!!! Is it the date SFW arrived in South Carolina? !!!!!!!!!!!"married Elizabeth Perdreau July 19, 1759" Do you have a whereabouts for this wedding?!!!!!!!!! Was it also in South Carolina?!!!!!!!!!! Do you know the location any more precisely?!!!!!!!!!!!! "& Lydia Perdreau June 30, 1768 in South Carolina" I guess Lydia was Elizabeth's sister. Is there any evidence that this was the case?!!!!! "Warren, Thomas, Musquito Shore, June 30, 1768.--Money Book, 51-79." Is this the date and place of birth of a Thomas Warren?!!!!! Or is it a date of arrival of another Huguenot minister with the surname Warren?!!!! This is the same date as the marriage of Lydia and SFW. Is this just a co-incidence or is it a recording error?!!!!! Is there a record of offspring of SFW by his first or second wife?!!!! The book suggests there was a Samuel, a Benjamin and a daughter. Interesting to see he was a Huguenot minister although he was not French, and came from England from an Anglican church family.
Thanks Alicia http://mccarthy.montana.com/Articles/EarlyAmericanHistoryNotes.html Notes for the book: "The McCarthys In Early American History" Reference for Chap IV, Footnote No 43, Parish Register of St. James, Santee, kept by Rev. Samuel Fenner Warren, published in South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine, Vol. 1 http://www.rootsweb.com/~scbchs/stjamessantee.htm St. James Parish, Santee 1790 Census
In the discussion of the early settlement of Jamestown and the struggle between the English and French Huguenots for control of the Church, we learned that many of these people moved up into what became St. Stephen's Parish, over into St. John's, Berkeley, into St. Matthews and the up-country as the tide of migration moved. The following list from the 1790 Census shows who was there then. By 1790 St. James Santee Parish was no longer in Craven County. These persons are listed as being in Charleston District, St. James Santee Parish: ... Peter Perdrieau, ... Sam Warren, .... Of the one hundred and twenty-three heads of household listed only thirty-six did not own slaves. Those owning more than two hundred were John Bowman, Frances Middleton, Harriott Horry, Thos. Horry, Elias Horry (Est.). Those owning between one hundred and two hundred were Thos. Pinckney, Wm. Douxsaint, John Gaillard. Thirty eight owned ten or less. It should be mentioned that Harriott Horry owned three hundred and forty. At that time the Parish went down to the Atlantic Ocean, but it would be practically impossible to separate those living within the present lines of Berkeley County. Information and Article from "Historic Ramblin's Through Berkeley" written by and used with permission of Mr. J. Russell Cross Books about American Hugenot history that may be useful: The Annals and Parish Register of St. Thomas and St. Denis Parish, in South Carolina, from 1680 to 1884, by Robert F. Clute The Huguenots of Colonial South Carolina, by Arthur Henry Hirsch List of French and Swiss Who Settled in Charleston, on the Santee, and at the Orange Quarter in Carolina, by Daniel Ravenel
http://www.genealogy.com/genealogy/57_marthe.html Huguenot time line - nice and concise http://genealogyforum.rootsweb.com/gfaol/resource/Huguenot/hug0006.h
Note: From Rev Thomas Warren p. 51 5th child (2nd son) of Richard and Priscilla
Right Rev. John Warren, D.D., Bishop of Bangor "This eminient divine was fifth son of the Rev. Richard Warren, Archdeacon of Suffolk. He was b. in 1730, d. in London January 1800, and was buried in the north transept, Westminister Abbey, where two beautiful monuments, by Westmacott, have been erected to the memory of the bishop and his wife Elizabeth, with inscriptions.
"He was a Fellow of Caius College, Cambridge, A.B. 1750, M.A. 1754, S.T.P. and D.D. 1772, was also F.R.S. and A.Soc. His church preferments were - Rector of Elm and Leverington in the Island of Ely, and of Emworth in Norfolk, Rector of Feversham, and Rector of Snailwell, Prebendary of Ely; consecrated BIshop of St. David's 1779, transferred to Bangor 1782. (He held with this See the Archdeaconry of Anglesey and Bangor.) He was a man of learning, deeply versed in ecclesiastical law, and much confided in, upon that subject, by Lord Chancellor Thurlow. "He married in 1777 Elizabeth, daughter and co-heiress of Henry Southwell of Wisbech, Cambridge, and had no issue. She died 29th March, 1816, aged 82. National Portrait gallery has portrait of John Warren (1730-1800), Bishop of Bangor.
http://www.lambethpalacelibrary.org/news/Annualreport2004/accessions_printed_warrentrial.html Annual report of the Library Committee for 2004
Accessions of printed books: Proceedings of the trial of John Warren, Bishop of Bangor, concerning a riot in 1796 When John Moore became Archbishop of Canterbury he was succeeded as Bishop of Bangor by a strict high-churchman by the name of John Warren. The Dictionary of National Biography honours him as a gifted and determined administrator of undoubted integrity, but makes no mention of a curious incident in 1796 when he was tried at the Shrewsbury Assizes for causing a riot. The Friends have presented the proceedings, The trial of the cause of the King versus the Bishop of Bangor …(London, 1796). The case arose when Bishop Warren attempted to sack the Deputy Registrar of the diocese, Samuel Grindley, the keeper of the archives. The Principal Registrar could himself take no action for the extraordinary reason that he was under age, having been given the post by his uncle, Bishop Warren, whilst still a minor. The Bishop accordingly took matters into his own hands, and ordered the Registrar’s office, adjacent to the Cathedral, to be broken open and the locks changed. Grindley however would not go gracefully. He counter-attacked, regained possession of the office, and with his clerks he proceeded to defend it with loaded pistols. The Bishop then arrived in a towering rage, stamping his feet, clenching his fists, mopping his brow and declaring ‘fine work, fine work!’. He was accompanied by Archdeacon, Chaplain and all, and sundry new arrivals soon brought the total to forty, including a magistrate, a constable, and various tearful women. Adding to the melodrama the Chaplain offered to be shot in place of the Bishop, whilst Mrs. Warren strove to drag her irate husband from the scene. An hour-long tussle for possession ensued before tempers were cooled. This was no more than a storm in a Welsh teacup, and Bishop Warren was eventually acquitted. The incident did him little credit, but archivists will treasure his words at the height of the drama, ‘the public records are here; they are of importance to the country, and it is unfit that they should be in improper hands’.
http://www.archivesnetworkwales.info/cgi-bin/anw/fulldesc_nofr?inst_id=39&coll_id=11003&expand= Circa 1793 a dispute arose involving John Warren (1730-1800), the bishop of Bangor and rector of Amlwch, the churchwardens of Amlwch and the Parys and Mona Mine companies relating to the demolition and rebuilding of Amlwch parish church. The bishop alleged that the mining companies were reneging on a promise to rebuild the church; Thomas Williams denied that any such agreement had ever been made, however his co owner, the Earl of Uxbridge did offer to contribute towards the cost of rebuilding or repair.
Note: Richard is buried in a vault, with monumental inscription, at Kennington Church. "He was a Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge, B.A. 1752, M.A. 1755, M.D. 1762. In early life he was physician to Princess Amelia, daughter of George II., and on the resignation of Peter Shaw, M.D., Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians; in 1761 he became physician to George III. and the Prince of Wales.
His name is mentioned in history in connection with the question of the Regency. He was a celebrated physician in London (Gents Magazine A.D. 1797, states, that "he received in one day's fees 99 guineas, and died worth 150,000 pounds. He made 8000 pounds a year since the Regency.) during thirty years, so as to rank in medical fame with Mead or Hadcliff. He was the author of two essays, published by the College of Physicians, and an elegant Latin Harveian Oration. "He married Elizabeth, daughter of Peter Shaw, M.D., above named, and by her had issue (13 children, 10 sons and 3 daughters)." National portrait Gallery has portrait of Richard Warren (1731-1797), Physician by Gaetano Stefano Bartolozzi, published by T. Cadell & W. Davies, after William Evans, after Gilbert Stuart stipple engraving,published 27 July 1810
http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?search=ss&sText=Warren&LinkID=mp63884 http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/
University of Glasgow holds letter by Richard Warren to Dr W Cullen and another from Dr W Cullen to Dr Richard Warren. Name: Richard Warren Dates: 1731-1797 Notes: Physician, St George's Hospital, London. [See: D.N.B.] Richard Warren 1731-1797 4 entries
Transcript of letter from W. Pitcairn to W. Cullen, St. Bartholomew's 1 Oct. 1789. Introducing Dr. Richard Warren Call Number: MS Cullen 227 Role: subject
Transcript of letter from Richard Warren to W. Cullen, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 18 Oct. 1789, thanking Dr. Cullen for his polite attention during the visit of Warren and his family to Edinburgh Call Number: MS Cullen 228 Role: author
Transcript of letter from W. Cullen to Richard Warren, Edinburgh, Oct. 1789. Re. Cullen's drinking habits Call Number: MS Cullen 229 Role: recipient
Transcript of two letters [MS Cullen 41] from Rev. Dr. John Walker, Moffat, 22 Febr. 1763, 7 Febr. 1778, to William Cullen (Thomson II, 729, 730) Call Number: MS Cullen 41a Role: author
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra/searches/pidocs.asp?P=P29828 The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey,
Warren, Richard (1731-1797) Physician 2 records noted: Scope 1761-76: letters to the Duke and Duchess of Newcastle Repository British Library, Manuscript Collections Record Reference Add MSS 32919-33083 passim Scope 1777-1796: letters (10) to Countess Spencer Repository British Library, Manuscript Collections Record Reference p5 NRA catalogue reference NRA 10410 Spencer Where reference is made to an NRA number, a catalogue is filed in the National Register of Archives and you can consult it at The National Archives.
http://www.mdx.ac.uk/www/study/mhhtim.htm#1788 Wedneday 5.11.1788 Newspaper article revealed that George 3rd, who was ill, had been "delirius". That evening, the King's personal physician, Sir George Baker, found him "under an entire alienation of mind".
Other physicians called in to advise included: William Heberden, Richard Warren , Henry Revell Reynolds and Lucas Pepys. Most of the doctors had experience in the Royal College of Physicians' Commission for Visiting Madhouses, but they were not specialists in mental disorder. At the end of November, Dr Anthony Addington, a society doctor who had treated William Pitt the elder's disorder and had once run a private madhouse, was called in to advise. The King was removed from Windsor to Kew, for a more therapeutic confinement and to be closer to London doctors, and was there (Friday 5.12.1788) introduced to Rev. Dr Francis Willis, the owner of a private madhouse in Lincolnshire, who took control of the King's treatment. 10.12.1788: The House of Commons published a Committee report containing the evidence of Royal Physicians on the state of the King's mind. 23.4.1789 Services of thanksgiving throughout the country to celebrate the recovery of King George 3rd from insanity. "Britons Rejoice. Your King's Restored" insanity The king's behaviour (which we know about now) was what the layperson would call insane. The doctors argued that it was delirium - deranged behaviour produced by fever, and, therefore, not insanity. I suspect the public just thought the king had been very ill. It would be interesting to know when, and to what extent, a public perception formed of the king as having been mad. Even on his death, in 1820, one has to read the long obituary in the Annual Register very carefully to glean that his illness included any serious disturbance to his mental faculties.
Warren, Richard (1731-1797), physician, born at Cavendish, Suffolk, on 4 December 1731, was the third son of Dr Richard Warren (1681–1748), archdeacon of Suffolk and rector of Cavendish, and his wife, Priscilla (d. 1774), daughter of John Fenner. He was the younger brother of John Warren (1730-1800) bishop of Bangor, and, like him, was educated at Cavendish School in Bury St Edmunds. He entered Jesus College, Cambridge, in 1748, shortly after the death of his father, and graduated BA as fourth wrangler in 1752, obtaining in succeeding years the prizes awarded to middle and senior bachelors for proficiency in Latin prose composition. He proceeded MA in 1755 and MD on 3 July 1762. He was a fellow between 1756 and 1759. Warren was tutor at Jesus College to the only son of Peter Shaw (1694-1763) (/view/article/25264?back=28788), physician-in-ordinary to George II and George III. He gained Shaw's esteem, married his daughter Elizabeth in 1759, and in 1763 succeeded to his father-in-law's practice. He was admitted a candidate of the Royal College of Physicians on 30 September 1762. Shortly after Warren began to practise, Sir Edward Wilmot, physician to the court and son-in-law of Richard Mead, recommended him as a suitable assistant for his attendance on Princess Amelia. When Wilmot retired, Warren continued to act as physician to the princess, and by her influence was appointed physician to George III in 1762, after the resignation of his father-in-law. He was elected a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians on 3 March 1763, and delivered the Goulstonian lectures at the college in 1764 and the Harveian oration in 1768. He acted as censor in 1764, 1776, and 1782. On 9 August 1784 he was named an elect. On 5 August 1756, having at that time a licence ad practicandum from the University of Cambridge, Warren was elected a physician to the Middlesex Hospital, and on 21 January 1760 he became physician to St George's Hospital. The former appointment he resigned in November 1758, the latter in May 1766. In 1787 he was appointed physician to the prince of Wales, and was the most sought-after society doctor of that time; a pre-eminence which he maintained to the last. Warren's annual income was in excess of anything previously accrued from the practice of medicine in Britain. He is said to have earned ¹9000 a year from the time of the onset of George III's insanity in 1788, and he bequeathed to his family upwards of ¹150,000. He had a reputation for exceptional powers of mind and solidity of judgement. Warren published two papers in the Transactions of the Royal College of Physicians. His Oratio ex Harveii instituto was published in 1769.
Warren died at his house in Dover Street, London, on 23 June 1797, leaving a widow, eight sons, and two daughters. He was buried in Kensington church on 30 June 1797.
Elizabeth Inchbald, who had a great admiration for him, produced some mourning verses to his memory, addressed to Mrs Warren. Of his sons, Frederick Warren (1775-1848) became a rear-admiral and Pelham Warren (1778-1835) became a physician.
D'A. Power, rev. Catherine Bergin Sources · · I. Macalpine and R. Hunter, George III and the mad-business (1969) · W. Macmichael, The gold-headed cane, 5th edn, ed. G. C. Peachey (1923) ·Gentleman's Magazine, 1st ser., 67 (1797), 616 · Memoirs of Mrs Inchbald, ed. J. Boaden, 2 vols. (1833), 1.258, 269, 387; 2.13–14 · private information (1899) Archives , letters to the duke and duchess of Newcastle, Add. MSS 32919–33083 · , letters to Countess Spencer, MS Coll. ref: p5 Likenesses J. Jones, mezzotint, 1792 (after T. Gainsborough), Wellcome Library for the History and Understanding of Medicine, London Bibliographic · G. Bartolozzi, stipple, 1810 (after W. Evans; after G. Stuart),British Library, London, Wellcome Library for the History and Understanding of Medicine, London; repro. in The British gallery of contemporary portraits (1810) · T. Gainsborough, oils, ; repro. in A. Aspinall, ed., The correspondence of George, prince of Wales, 3 vols. (1963), vol. 1 Institutions BL British Library, London RCP Lond. Royal College of Physicians of London Wellcome L. Wellcome Library for the History and Understanding of Medicine, London Bibliographic GM Gentleman's Magazine Munk, Roll W. Munk, The roll of the Royal College of Physicians of London, 2 vols. (1861)2nd edn, 3 vols. (1878) Venn, Alum. Cant. J. Venn and J. A. Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses: a biographical list of all known students, graduates, and holders of office at the University of Cambridge, from the earliest times to 1900, 2 pts in 10 vols. (1922–54); repr. in 2 vols. (1974–8)
Wealth at death approx. ¹150,000: Munk, Roll © Oxford University Press 2004 (/oxforddnb/legal/) All rights reserved: see legal notice (/oxforddnb/legal/) D'A. Power, ‘Warren, Richard (1731-1797)’, rev.Catherine Bergin, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [accessed 1 Oct 2004: http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/28788]
Note: D: I022052 Name: Elizabeth Shaw 1 Sex: F Birth: 13 MAR 1737/38 in St Anne Soho, London, England Father: Peter Shaw , M\D. Mother: Frances Hyde Marriage 1 Richard Warren ,M.D.F.A.S Physician to George III b: 4 DEC 1731 in Cavendish, Suffolk, England Married: 15 OCT 1759 in Wimbledon, London, England
Note: F.R.S., surgeon of George III. and Surgeon-General in Army.
Note: d. without issue, buried at Newark.
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