Descendants of Robert HATLEY
First
Generation
1. Robert
HATLEY was born circa 1625, died on 9
Oct 1674 aged about 49, and was buried on 11 Oct 1674 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
General Notes:
TitleQuitclaim
Description1. Thomas Hiorne of Thrupp, Northants.,
gent. (eldest son of Edward Hiorne of BNW, gent. deceased)
2. Richard Major of BNW, gent. and wife Susan
Property: Messuage on Parkgate Street, adjoining the
churchyard, in occupation of Robert Hatley, gent., an alderman of BNW.
Date30/Mar/1670
RepositoryOxfordshire Record Office
LevelIndividual document
ReferenceBOR4/2/D1/34D/11
Former ReferenceGarrett's House I
TitleDeclaration of Robert Hatley of New Woodstock,
gent.,
Descriptionrepudiating the oath of the Solemn League
and Covenant
(item found in document BOR4/4/A1/7)
Date29/Sep/1673
RepositoryOxfordshire Record Office
LevelIndividual document
ReferenceBOR4/11/A1/8
The Solemn League and Covenant was an agreement
between the Scottish Covenanters and the leaders of the English
Parliamentarians in 1643 during the First English Civil War. On 17 August 1643
the Church of Scotland accepted it and on 25 September 1643 so did the English
Parliament and the Westminster Assembly.
So I understand this to confirm Robert as a Catholic?
Noted events in his life were:
• Admon: 4 Aug
1675, in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Robert married Joane. Joane was buried on 11
Jan 1685 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Children from this marriage were:
2 F i. Joana HATLEY was born in 1653 and
was buried on 4 Mar 1666 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
3 M ii. Simon HATLEY was christened on 10
Oct 1653 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 7 Nov 1712 in Woodstock
Oxfordshire.
4 M iii. Robert HATLEY was born in 1660 and
was buried on 5 Feb 1708 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Second
Generation
2. Joana HATLEY (Robert 1) was born in 1653 and was
buried on 4 Mar 1666 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
3. Simon HATLEY (Robert 1) was christened on 10 Oct
1653 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 7 Nov 1712 in Woodstock
Oxfordshire.
General Notes: Nos. 6-8 High Street Woodstock
The site was bought in 1682 by Robert and Simon
Hatley, haberdashers of hats. In 1708
Simon, alderman and maltster, was building the house which bears on the
rainwater head his initials and those of his wife Mary and the date 1710. The
house was alleged to have been built with stone taken from the Blenheim
works, and may have been designed by one
of the Blenheim masons. In 1812, after the bankruptcy of Thomas Hatley, hatter,
the building, by then divided, was acquired by the Duke of Marlborough.
TitleExtract from Final Concord.
Description1) Simon Hatley and Mary his wife,
Edward Wilsden, plaintiffs.
2) William Metcalfe and Mary,
deforciants.
Property:
Five messuages and five gardens in New
Woodstock.
Date1686
RepositoryOxfordshire Record Office
LevelIndividual document
ReferenceE215/4/D/3
He was Mayor of Woodstock c 1709
In the name of God Amen
I Simon Hatley of the Borough of Woodstock in the
County of Oxfordshire , being in perfect health and understanding, calling to
mind the uncertain state of this life ,
so make my last will and testament in the manner following, revoking all
previous will or wills by me made or ordained, and first I surrender my soul to
God Almighty and my body to the earth for God's mercy and be Christianly
buried, by my Executors.
As for my worldly estate for which it hath pleased God to bless me
withall I give and bequeath the same in writing and form following that is to
say first I give unto my son SIMON and his heirs forward my three houses in the
borough of New Woodstock aforesaid in
the possession of Mrs. JAMES, the widow
BENNETT and Thomas CHASMAN or their heirs. To hold the same with the
appurtences there to belonging after the
decease of my loving wife unto my said son SIMON and his heirs.
Item I give unto my said son SIMON twenty shillings
Item I give unto my daughter MARY twenty shillings
Item I give and bequeath unto my dear and loving wife
MARY for the rest of her natural life
all that my goods within the house I am now building with all the
appurtences that being in situate, lying
and belonging to this borough of New Woodstock aforesaid behind the houses of
George IZARD and his widow and after the decease of my said wife I give my said …. house and
my new house and all other premises with the apputrences unto my son WILLIAM so
after and his heirs forever
Item I give unto my said wife all my plate of
whatsoever.
Item I give and bequeath all the rest of my goods,
chattels and Estate whatsoever unto my said wife and my son WILIAM they paying
off all my debts and funeral expenses and do hereby make my said wife and son
WILLIAM joint executors of this my last
will and testament In witness I now
hereby set my hand and seal 4th day November in the eighth reign of Our
Sovereign Lady Anne by the might of God Almighty of Great Britain 1709
SIMON HATLEY ## signed sealed and
delivered in the presence of Hester ??
Goode, John Sow, George Livsey.
Probatum
Marie HATLEY Gulieumi Hatley (1712)
Noted events in his life were:
• He had a
residence in 1684 in New Woodstock Oxfordshire.
• He worked as
an Alderman & Maltster.
• He had a
residence in 6 - 8 High Street Woodstock Oxfordshire.
• He signed a
will in 1708 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Simon married Mary HERBERT, daughter of Matthew
HERBERT, on 29 May 1684 in Bladon
Oxfordshire. Mary was christened on 19 Mar 1665 in Chipping Norton Oxfordshire
and was buried on 3 Jun 1716 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Marriage Notes: by licence, both of Woodstock
Noted events in her life were:
• She had a
residence in 1684 in New Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Children from this marriage were:
5 M i. Captain Simon HATLEY was christened
on 27 Mar 1685 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and died in 1723 aged 38.
6 M ii. Matthew HATLEY was christened on 20
Jan 1687 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 17 Jan 1699 in Woodstock
Oxfordshire.
7 F iii. Mary HATLEY was christened on 18
Nov 1688 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
8 M iv. William HATLEY was christened on 12 Nov 1690 in
Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 28 Apr 1763 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
4. Robert
HATLEY (Robert 1)
was born in 1660 and was buried on 5 Feb 1708 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
General Notes: TitleDeclaration of Robert Hatley of
New Woodstock, gent.,
Descriptionrepudiating the oath of the Solemn League
and Covenant (item found in document BOR4/4/A1/7)
Date29/Sep/1673
RepositoryOxfordshire Record Office
LevelIndividual document
ReferenceBOR4/11/A1/8
Chaucer's House.
Robert Hatley, haberdasher of hats, was owner 1696-1716, and his tenant
in the early 18th century was Henry Beeston, the town's recorder.
Nos. 6-8 High Street, Woodstock
The site was bought in 1682 by Robert and Simon
Hatley, haberdashers of hats. In 1708
Simon, alderman and maltster, was building the house which bears on the
rainwater head his initials and those of his wife Mary and the date 1710. The house was alleged to have been built with
stone taken from the Blenheim works, and
may have been designed by one of the Blenheim masons. In 1812, after the
bankruptcy of Thomas Hatley, hatter, the building, by then divided, was
acquired by the duke of Marlborough. It
was let as two houses until sold in 1913.
The imposing three storeyed building, of limestone ashlar, retains on
the first floor its original sash windows in segmental arched architraves with
large keystones; the interior retains fine early 18th-century stairs and a
stone bolection-moulded fireplace. The second floor was refenestrated in the
19th century; a bow window was added to no. 8 in the early 19th century and a
canted bay to no. 6 in the late 19th.
From: 'Woodstock: Buildings', A History of the County
of Oxford: Volume 12: Wootton Hundred (South) including Woodstock (1990), pp.
342-360. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=5538. Date
accessed: 16 November 2008.
Trustee to the will of John Franklyn 1685
The will of Simon Broadway (1698) mentions Robert:
To Benjamin Johnson of Woodstock Mercer and Robert
Hatley of
Woodstock Malster and their heirs "All my
messuages lands tenements
estate and hereditaments lying & being in
Tiddington in Oxon"
to sell these for the best price they can get to pay
the principal sum
of Two hundred and fifty pounds for which the said
premises are
mortgaged unto Francis Grove of Grove in Berks Gent
and all interest
due for the same
The residue to pay funerall expenses and all debts and
all interest of
the same and also from the mortgage
"To my brother Richard £50
To my brother John's eldest son £100 when he is 18
years old
To my Mother Elizabeth Rogers £20
To Benjamin Johnson & Robert Hatley £5 each
"All the rest of the proceeds of the premises to
my nephew Simon Broadwater
"To my neice Elizabeth £50
4th January 1698 (Signed) Simon Broadwater
L.S.
Witnesses Paul Wells
Mary
Francklin
John
Francklin
George Ryves (all signed)
Probate 11th January 1698
Codicill to be annexed to my last will & testament
Revokes the £100 to my brothers son John & gives
one shilling only
To brother John the sum of £100
To Richard my brother & Elizabeth my neece £50
each more than what is
given to them before
6th January 1698 (signed) Simon Broadwater
Witnesses
Mary Francklin
John Francklin
Richard Dodwell
Noted events in his life were:
• He worked as
a Haberdasher of Hats.
• He worked as
a Mayor circa 1690 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
• He had a
residence in 1696 in Chaucer's House Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Robert married Philadelphia HORTON in 1683 in
Woodstock Oxfordshire. Philadelphia was buried on 14 Nov 1697 in Woodstock
Oxfordshire.
Marriage Notes: by licence
Children from this marriage were:
9 F i. Ann HATLEY was christened on 31 Oct
1683 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
10 F ii. Grace HATLEY was christened on 31
Dec 1685 and was buried on 11 Aug 1757 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
11 F iii. Philadelphia HATLEY was christened
on 11 May 1688 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
12 F iv. Elizabeth HATLEY was christened on
4 Nov 1689 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 31 Aug 1691 in Woodstock
Oxfordshire.
13 M v. Robert HATLEY was christened on 21 Feb 1692 in Woodstock
Oxfordshire.
14 M vi. William HATLEY was christened on 22 Mar 1693 in
Woodstock Oxfordshire.
15 F vii. Mary HATLEY was christened on 10
Aug 1696 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 12 Aug 1696 in Woodstock
Oxfordshire.
Third
Generation
5. Captain
Simon HATLEY (Simon 2,
Robert 1)
was christened on 27 Mar 1685 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and died in 1723 aged
38.
General Notes: George Shelvocke's account in 1759 in
his Voyages, which described an albatross soaring around the ship, following it
"as if he had lost himself" and making "our display with sail,
reef and rudder" seem "clumsy and inept." His ship, the Speedwell,
was battling to round Cape Horn in terrible weather, and one sailor had already
been lost overboard in the icy sea. Second in command was Simon Hatley, who in
a fit of "melancholy," shot the albatross in September 1719, and was
blamed for the ship's continued bad luck. Hatley was taken prisoner by the
Spaniards and punished for privateering by being "hanged until he was
almost strangled and then cut down," a torture reminiscent of the heavy
albatross around the Ancient Mariner's neck.
For centuries, to catch an albatross was the sailor 's
favourite sport. After bringing it to deck, the beautiful bird was freed,
because as the legend said these albatross incarnated the souls of the dead
sailors at sea; the reason why it was always considered a sign of bad luck to
kill one of these birds. The subject was immortalised by Samuel Taylor
Coleridge in 1798 in his poem, "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner",
published in his book " Lyrical Ballads". In this classic of the
English literature, the author recalls his sorrow because Simon HATLEY, Chief
Officer on board the "Success", killed an albatross by shooting it
after navigating the Le Maire Strait.
These events seem to be legends, perhaps, rather that
true, the name of the ship is not constant, "Speedwell" or "Success".
The man behind the Ancient Mariner, the unsettling
character who holds a wedding guest spellbound with his "glittering
eye" in Coleridge's poem, has been unearthed by a writer from Shropshire.
Robert Fowke has traced the sailor and privateer whose
story inspired the poet back to his birthplace in the Oxfordshire town of
Woodstock.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge is thought to have come up
with the idea of writing about a sailor who is becalmed at sea after shooting
an albatross in 1797, while he was out walking with his friend William
Wordsworth in the hills above his home in Nether Stowey, Somerset.
A statue of the mariner stands in the harbour of the
nearby town of Watchet, marking the place where Coleridge is supposed to have
stared out across the sea, imagining the plot of his poem.
"Scholars have always known what gave Coleridge
the idea for the poem, because Wordsworth said they had talked together about a
book by Captain George Shelvocke during their walk, but nobody has ever taken
up the story," said Fowke this weekend.
Examining both Captain Shelvocke's A Voyage round the
World by way of the Great South Sea (1726), and another seafaring volume by
William Bettagh, Fowke has pieced together the life of the sailor, Simon
Hatley, who is said to have shot down "a black albatross" while on
board a ship called the Speedwell. "The more I discovered, the more
exciting it was," said Fowke. "I knew Hatley was lost at sea and had
then been picked up by a Spanish ship and taken to Lima, where I suspected he
had become caught up in the Inquisition."
Finding an account that suggested Hatley was tortured
in South America, Fowke travelled to Madrid to search through the Inquisition's
official records. "Under the heading 'Spontaneous Conversion' I found at
Number 11 a 'Simon Hatey' who was from 'Judstoch'. I thought that could be
Woodstock, so I went to Oxfordshire and, sure enough, I found the birth of
Simon Hatley in the local register for 1685."
Hatley sailed to the Pacific on two of the most
dangerous voyages of the early 18th century. But perhaps the most amazing fact
uncovered by Fowke is that, at one point, he was on a ship not only with
Alexander Selkirk, the marooned sailor whose story inspired Daniel Defoe's
Robinson Crusoe, but also with William Dampier, an adventurer and writer on
whose work Jonathan Swift drew for Gulliver's Travels.
Hatley was on the crew of the Duke, which set out for
South America on a voyage proposed by Dampier accompanied by a sister ship, the
Duchess. At one point on this voyage of 1709, while Selkirk and Dampier were
both together on board the Duchess, Hatley joined them. "Because these
privateers were incredibly bureaucratic and suspicious and wrote down
everything about their loot," explains Fowke, "they appointed Hatley
as the 'plunder manager', to check that the two ships' crews were being honest
with each other. So for one period they were all on board the same ship."
Hatley was finally released from prison in 1723 and
made his way back to England. Unlike the prior voyage, there would be no share
of the profits awaiting him. Plunder had either been divided up among the crew
on the spot or, as some suspected, secretly kept by Shelvocke. Little is known
of Hatley following his return from Lima. With the threat of a further trial
for piracy hanging over him, he left England soon after for Jamaica where he
probably found employment as a sailor. The date, location and circumstances of
his death are unknown.
The Real Ancient Mariner, by Robert Fowke, is
published by Travelbrief at £15.99.
A Voyage round the World by way of the Great South Sea
by Captain George Shelvocke, published in 1726, contains a passage that is
likely to have given Coleridge the idea for his poem about the Ancient Mariner.
The Speedwell is rounding the Horn and has reached a latitude of about 61
degrees south:
"We all observed that we had not had the sight of
one fish of any kind since we came into the southward of the streights of le
Maire, nor one sea-bird, except a disconsolate black Albatross, who accompanied
us for several days, hovering about us as if he had lost himself, till Hatley,
my second Captain, observing in one of his melancholy fits, that this bird
which was always hovering near us, imagined, from his colour, that it might be
some ill omen .... he, after some fruitless attempts, at length shot the
Albatross, not doubting (perhaps) that we should have a fair wind after it
..."
Noted events in his life were:
• He worked as
a Sailor and Privateer.
6. Matthew
HATLEY (Simon 2,
Robert 1)
was christened on 20 Jan 1687 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 17 Jan
1699 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
7. Mary HATLEY (Simon 2, Robert 1)
was christened on 18 Nov 1688 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Mary married GREGORY.
The child from this marriage was:
F i. Eleanor
Louisa GREGORY.
Eleanor married JONES.
8. William
HATLEY (Simon 2,
Robert 1)
was christened on 12 Nov 1690 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 28 Apr
1763 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
General Notes: He was Mayor of Woodstock c. 1731
TitleLease for 11 Years
Description1. M&C of BNW
2. William Hatley of BNW, hatter.
Property: Meadow in Lepooles [boundaries described],
BNW
Rent: £6 10s.
Date15/Apr/1737
RepositoryOxfordshire Record Office
LevelIndividual document
ReferenceBOR4/2/D1/11D/11
Former ReferenceB59/1/17
The will of
William HATLEY
In the Name of God Amen , I William Hatley one of the
Aldermen of the
Borough of New Woodstock in the co of Oxford , hatter,
being in health of
body and of sound and disposing mind memory and
understanding do make and
ordain this to be my last will and testament in manner
following and first I
will that all my just debts and funeral expenses be
paid and discharged and
I desire to be decently buried at the discretion of my
executor of the same
as follow ......Item I give and devise all my
messuages lands and
tenements with the appurtenancs in New Woodstock
aforesaid unto my son Simon
for the term of his natural life and after his death I
give and devise the
same premises unto my two friends Samuel Heath and
Henry Medcalfe both of
New Woodstock aforesaid and their heirs during the
life of my said son Simon to
the intent and to preserve and support the contingent
uses and remainders
herein after limited but nevertheless In Trust to
permit my said son Simon
to receive the rents and profits thereof during his
life and from and after
the decease of my said son Simon then to the first son
of the body of my son
Simon and the heirs of the body of the such first son
lawfully issuing and
in default of such issue then to the use and behoof of
the second third
fourth fifth sixth and all and every other son and
sons of the body of my
said son Simon lawfully begotten in tail Male and for
default of such issue
then to the use and behoof of all and every the
daughters of the body of my
said son Simon lawfully begotten and the heirs of the
body of such daughter
and daughters as tenants in Common and not joint
tenants and for default of
such issue then In Trust for my son William for the
term of his natural life
and after the determination of that estate then to the
use and behoof of the
said Samuel Heath and Henry Medcalfe and their heirs
during the life of my
said son William and In Trust for him and to the
intent to support and
preserve the contingent uses and estates after
mentioned and after his
decease to the issue of the body of my son William In
Tail in such manner as
I have limited the issue to my son Simon and in
default of such issue then
In Trust for my daughter Ann wife of Mr Orrek for the
term of her natural
life for her sole and separate use without any control
of her
husbands and not subject or liable to his debts and
from and after the
determination of that estate then to the use and
behoof of the said Samuel
Heath and Henry Mecalfe and their heirs during her
life In Trust for her
Issue in Tail in such manner as I have limited the
same to my sons Simon and
William and in default of such issue then I give the
same premises unto
Eleanor Jones daughter of my sister Mary Gregory and
her heirs for ever and
my will and meaning further is that either of my sons
as shall be in the
actual enjoyment of the aforesaid premises shall and
may assure limit and
appoint by any deed in........... under his hand and
seal all or any part of the
aforesaid premises as he shall think fit unto or for a
jointure for a wife
far and during her natural life Item I give and
bequeath unto my son William
£100 Item I give and bequeath unto my said daughter
Ann the yearly Rent
charge of £5 to be paid her half yearly for the term
of her natural life and
for her own separate use and so that the said sum
shall in no way be subject
or liable to her husband or his debts but shall be
paid to her and a receipt
under her hand shall be a sufficient discharge for the
same as much as if
she was not married and I do hereby make the said sum
of £100 and the said
annuity of £5 chargeable upon the aforesaid premises
and to be paid by the
person who shall be first in enjoyment thereof
........Item I give and
bequeath all the rest of my estate both real and
personal unto my said son
Simon his heirs and assigns and I do hereby nominate
constitute and appoint
my said son Simon sole executor of this my last will
and testament hereby
revoking all and every other former will or wills by
me made In Witness
whereof I the said William Hatley have to this my last
will and testament
set my hand and seal this 21st day of Feb 1747
............signed sealed and
published and declared by the said William Hatley ,
the testator and for his
last will and testament in the presence of us who in
his presence and in the
presence of each other subscribed our names as
witnesses hereto Edwd Ryves
junr , Charles Cross, James Carter .
This will was proved at London on the 2nd May 1763
before the worshipful
William Wynne Dr of Laws and surrogate of the Rt
worshipful Sir Edward
Simpson .......by the oath of Simon Hatley the son of
the said testator
deceased and sole executor named in the
will...........
Noted events in his life were:
• He worked as
a Hatter.
• He worked as
an Alderman.
• He had a
residence in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
• He signed a
will in 1747.
William married Anne WILLS on 2 Apr 1714 in
Daventry Northamptonshire.
Noted events in her life were:
• She had a
residence about 1714 in Desborough Northamptonshire.
• She had a
residence in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Children from this marriage were:
M i. Simon
HATLEY was christened on 18 Mar 1714 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was
buried on 20 Feb 1794 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
General Notes: Woodstock Parliamentary History:
Leading councillors included William Hatley, 'a
beggar', anxious to trade his vote for a settlement of his debts.
The following Subscribed to 'Poems on Several
Occasions'. By John Bennet, a journeyman shoemaker, 1774, BENNET, John. London,
Oxford, Woodstock, Oxon. William Hatley,
Simon Hatley,
F ii. Ann
HATLEY was christened on 24 Nov 1717 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Ann married William ORROCK on 10 Sep 1739 in St
Benet Pauls Wharf London.
M iii. William
HATLEY was christened on 10 Apr 1719 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was
buried on 29 May 1780 in Shutford Oxfordshire.
General Notes: Oxford Journal 28 August 1762 carries
an advert for a sale of land in Shetford, tenanted by William, farmhouse and
land called Silver Close.
Will of William HATLEY 23 May 1780
In the name of God Amen I William Hatley of Shutford
in the County of Oxford, Husbandman being weak in body but of sound mind and
perfect memory and understanding, praise be to God for the same and calling to
mind ……………of life. DO make and devise
this my last will and testament and following that to say I place my soul in
the hands of almighty God to obtain
pardon and forgiveness for all my sins………………………………………………….
That is to say firstly give, devise and bequeath to my
daughter Elizabeth SMITH all that house or dwelling together with the garden
backside and all further tenancies here
to belonging to hold to her heirs and assigns forever verily I bequeath to give
payment of the Legacy a sum of eight guineas to her new daughter Elizabeth when
she attains the age of fore and twenty years. I give and bequeath unto my granddaughter
Hannah GRIFFIN the sum of one guinea. I give and bequeath to my daughter, the
wife of Robert GRIFFIN the like sum of
one guinea, I give and bequeath to my son John HATLEY for his care in the
management of my business the sum of five guineas and I bequeath to my
housekeeper Francis (sic) LEADBEATER the
sum of five guineas in lieu of her wages which will become due to her at
Michaelmas next. I give and bequeath
unto my son William HATLEY a coat and waistcoat. I also give and bequeath unto my daughter Sarah ……… her mother's
wearing apparel the same to be at my son
John's discretion. I give and bequeath unto my grandson Horatio son of my son John HATLEY the sum of two guineas. I
give all the residue and remainder of all my goods, chattels, implements of the
household, implements of husbandry, stock of cattle and crops of corn, chaff
and ready money and securities, money from debts due and dues being duly paid
on my estate and funeral expenses and the Legacies above being paid and valued
I give and bequeath the same to my son John HATLEY knowing I do sincerely
appreciate ……………… I do appoint and testament
hereby revoking all former and other wills and declare this to be my
last will and testament…………………………………23 rd
day of May in the year of our lord one thousand seven hundred and
eighty.
William HATLEY signed sealed
Witness:
Richard MATTHEWS Temperence
MATTHEWS Richard GODSON
Proved at Oxford 5 June 1780 by Rev. John COX clerk
Bachelor of Law after being advised duly to administer.
William married Elizabeth. Elizabeth was buried
on 5 May 1778 in Shutford Oxfordshire.
9. Ann HATLEY (Robert 2, Robert 1)
was christened on 31 Oct 1683 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
Ann married Ralph COOK on 5 Sep 1669 in Lewknor
Oxfordshire.
10. Grace
HATLEY (Robert 2,
Robert 1)
was christened on 31 Dec 1685 and was buried on 11 Aug 1757 in Woodstock
Oxfordshire.
11.
Philadelphia HATLEY (Robert 2,
Robert 1)
was christened on 11 May 1688 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
12. Elizabeth
HATLEY (Robert 2,
Robert 1)
was christened on 4 Nov 1689 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 31 Aug
1691 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
13. Robert
HATLEY (Robert 2,
Robert 1)
was christened on 21 Feb 1692 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
14. William
HATLEY (Robert 2,
Robert 1)
was christened on 22 Mar 1693 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
15. Mary HATLEY (Robert 2, Robert 1)
was christened on 10 Aug 1696 in Woodstock Oxfordshire and was buried on 12 Aug
1696 in Woodstock Oxfordshire.
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