Person Sheet


Name Ann Matthews, M320, F
Undefined Date 1714
Undefined Memo Death of spouse Col. Philip /Hoskins/
Death Date abt 1718
Death Memo After Phillip Hoskins, husband
Father Dr. Thomas Mathews, M (1622-1676)
Mother Jane Cockshoot, F
Spouses
1 Thomas Mudd143, Here is what Donnelly has on Sarah and Thomas Mudd:, "Sarah Boarman married first Thomas Mathews Jr. the brother of her, step-mother (Mary MathewsBoarman) and the son of Thomas Mathews, Sr. , and his first wife Hester. They resided on 450 acres called "Hall's ,5, Volume II, page 120, 121, Charles County, Maryland , 12 Oct 1696, 11 Mar 1696-7, To wife Ann, Hall's Place during life. To son Thomas, sd. plantation , at decease of wife and land in dispute bet. testator and Maj. , Boreman; also 650 A., Brierwood. To son Henry, "Boreman's Reserve." , M300, M
Birth Date 1646/1647144
Birth Place England
Death Date 1696/1697 Age: 50
Death Place Charles County, Maryland
Marriage Date aft 1685
Marriage Memo Jerry L. Clark, clark4@itsnet.com, Dr. Richard Mudd's book, birthdate of Henry Mudd ab would place , Thomas Mudd's third wife after 1685 as Henry's mother was Sarah , Boarman.
Children George, M (~1683-1715)
Ann, F (>1685-)
John, M (~1690-)
Jane, F (~1693-)
2 Col. Philip Hoskins, H252, M
Birth Date 1663
Death Date 1714 Age: 51
Death Place Charles County, Maryland
Death Memo M, Jerry L. Clark" <clark4@itsnet.com>, http://users.cougar.net/~susan1/Mudd.htm
Death Date 1714 Age: 51
Death Place Charles County, Maryland
Death Memo M, Jerry L. Clark" <clark4@itsnet.com>, http://users.cougar.net/, ~susan1/Mudd.htm
Marriage Date BET AFT 1696 AND 1697
Marriage Memo Jerry L. Clark" <clark4@itsnet.com>, http://users.cougar.net/~susan1/Mudd.htm
Notes for Ann Matthews
Jerry L. Clark, clark4@itsnet.com
http://users.cougar.net/~susan1/Mudd.htm
Antigua Notes for Thomas (Spouse 1)
In 1667, a Thomas Mudd is mentioned where a "Lieut-Colonel Bestian Boyer claim[ed] 500 acres by grant and purchase in St. John's Division . . . 728 acres in Popeshead, also 140 acres . . [where] the 500 acres in St. John's Division by grant from Governor Austin, also 18 acres from . . . also 40 acres bought of Thomas Mudd, deceased, granted by Governor Buncle."145 146

On May 2, 1668, "Captain Harvey Keynell . . . entered a claim to the plantation of Thomas Mudd at Crabb Valley, and the petition to William, Lord Willoughby of Parham, was on 11 May 1668 referred to the Lieut-General Henry Willoughby, Esq. Governor, and was read 19 May."147 As reported, "[t]he claim was not allowed [because] 'it was not timely made.'"147
England
Notes from family state may have come brom Bath, Bristol, England


Levanham Mudds

Subject: Re: Levanham Church - Need help!!
Date: Tue, 5 Jun 2001 09:42:35 +0100
From: "Giles Colchester" <gsc@mydsq.freeserve.co.uk>
To: "Charles Mudd" <clmjr@abanet.org>
CC: <SUFFOLK-L@rootsweb.com>

Davy lists the Mudd family of Lavenham as having an escutcheon of "Ermine,
on a pile Vert six escallops Or". You can see Davy's document at the
British Museum (Add: MSS 19,158 dated 1848). The easiest book to look this
up in is A Dictionary of Suffolk Arms by Joan Corder, published by the
Suffolk Records Society in 1965 before ISBN numbers were invented. I would
be interested in knowing whether there were any connections to the list of
Mudds which I sent you previously.

Wishing you every success in your researches

Giles Colchester, researching family COLCHESTER anyplace, anytime.
Misc. Notes
Possibly in Antigua circa 1666-7. See England Mudds. The sources
"Captain Harvey Keynell on 2 May 1668 entered a claim to the
plantation of Thomas Mudd at Crabb Valley, and the petition to
William, Lord Willoughby of Parham, was on 11 May 1668 referred to
the Lieut-General Henry Willoughby, Esq. Governor, and was read 19
May. The claim was not allowed: "it was not timely made." Volume I,
page 22; Also: "Lieut-Colonel Bestian Boyer, 500 acres by grant and
purchase. In St. John's Division 728 acres and in Popeshead 140
acresl total 868. The 500 acres in St. John's granted by Governor
Austin . . . also 40 acres bought of Thomas Mudd, deceased, granted
by Governor Buncle" Volume 3, page 289; "1667. St. John's Division.
Lieut-Colonel Bastian Beijer [Boyare] claims 500 acres by grant and
purchase in St. John's Division. 728 acres in Popeshead, also 140
acres. The 500 acres in St. John's division by grant from Governor
Austin, also . . . 40 acres bought of Tho. Mudd deceased granted by
Governor Buncle." Volume 2, p. 124.
____________
First came to Virginia, then Maryland
Deeds, L.51, f.110 Charles County Maryland
Ct and Land Records L. D2, f.45 Charles County Maryland

For possible leads as to mariner activities, see Jane Mudd who
married the son of Captain Brent.

_________________________
Tue, 22 Dec 1998 13:59:16 -0900
Bill Mudd <wmudd@mlode.com>


Hi Charles,

What a surprise to hear from a Mudd cousin. Forgive my delay in
returning your email. As you may notice I have a new email address so
your email went to an old email account I have at California State
University in Hayward where I was taking classes last year. I only
check for email on that account about once a month.

My dad, who passed away several years ago, was interested in the Mudd
Family history. It's never been a particular interest of mine but
during the Christmas break last year, some spirit moved me to see how
far back I could trace my branch of the family tree. I've inherited
the two volumes of "The Mudd Family of the United States". Are you
familiar with these? These volumes had already done most of the work
for me but the trace stopped at the shores of Maryland with Thomas
Mudd who is believed to be the progenitor of most of the Mudds in the
US. There was no mention of where in
England he might have come from except this small but intriguing
reference, "Thomas Mudd departed from Bristol, England on Aug. 14,
1665, bound to Anthony Noakes for three years in Va.". He next shows
up in records in Maryland where he lived out the rest of his life. I
didn't realize what a nearly impossible task it is to try and trace
one individual who lived so long ago from such meager evidence.
Geneology isn't my hobby but I took up the challenge.

I subscribed to a couple of genealogy List and News Groups for about
three months in hopes of finding information about the roots of
Thomas Mudd in England. But I realized in the course of using the two
volumes and the internet to search for Thomas Mudd in England that I
would only get so far. After that I'd need to go to England and
search the records in those areas that seemed the most promising. I
learned a little British History along the way too. When Thomas Mudd
left England, it was during a time of great persecution for
Catholics. They were often hunted down and thrown in jail or worse.
No doubt this is why he left England and settled in the Catholic
sanctuary set up in the Colonies called Maryland. Many of the
Catholics in England at that time were in hiding and were also
vigorously destroying any evidence that they were Catholic. This
would include birth and marriage records. Not a good sign when you're
trying to find out where someone was born.

I didn't have the time or the means to travel to England so my search
came to a stop. I did correspond with a few genealogists in England
and researched the web sites of some county records in England. My
hunch based on what I found was that if I ever visit England the two
places I would search for Thomas Mudd among parish records would be
first in Yorkshire County and then next in Suffolk County. I didn't
find any conclusive evidence but I found several references to Thomas
Mudd in Yorkshire around
the time he was born. And there are a large number of Mudds in that
county. My hunch about Suffolk comes from his close connection to his
neighbor and in-laws in Maryland whose family came from Suffolk
County. There is apparently some evidence that the Mudd family and
the family of his neighbor in Maryland had close family ties going
back several generations in England.

Well that's all I've got. I don't know if any of this is new
information for you or not. I did have a very brief correspondence with a Mary
Wood who was researching her family's roots in England. She said that
there was a marriage to a Mudd within her family tree and so she was
also interested in tracing Thomas Mudd. The last I understood she was
planning a trip to England to continue her research but I haven't
heard from her since. That was about ten months ago.

*****

Happy holidays to you and all your family and I hope to hear from
you.

Bill Mudd



______________
Research
Need to find where James Noke in Antigua. Crabb Valley - any significance in England? Jarvis?

TIMELINE

1654 Wm. Nokes to Virginia by Humphrey Haggett, Lancaster Co.148

1665 Thomas Mudd bound to Anthony Nokes from Bristol to Virginia

Thomas Mudd and James Noke from Bristol, England to VA. Later both Thomas Mudd and James Noke are found in Antigua, West Indies. 149

1667 Thomas Mudd of Antigua listed as deceased

In 1679, a Captain Henry Mudd is found in Barbados.150 The 1679 Barbados Census lists: Capt. Henry Mudd, Parish of St. Peter, 1 (white) servant, 12 negroes, 12
acres of land.150 (The same record is also to be found in "Barbados and America" by Kent on page 84) (Parish of St. Peters All Saints Barbados - list of Servants, Negros and
Land taken 15th Dec. 1679 CAPT. HENRY MUDD with one servant, 12 negros and 12 acres of land.)




Education

From: "ALUMNI CANTABRIGIENSES, A Biographical List of all known
> Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of
> Cambridge from the earliest time to 1900", compiled by J.A. VENN.
> Part II from 1752-1900, Vol 4, K-O, reprinted at Cambridge Univ Press,
> 1951, p.492:-
>
> MUDD, JOHN HENRY. Admitted pensioner (aged 17) at Pembroke College, 3
> July 1794; Fellow-Commoner 4 Feb 1796. Only son of John Henry MUDD,
> Esq, of Lavenham, Suffolk. Born there, school Eton. Matriculated
> Michaelmas term 1795. Admitted at the Middle Temple [to train for
> Law], 15 Apr 1797. Perhaps the 'John Mudd' who was Ordained Deacon at
> Norwich, 20 Sept 1807. A 'John Mudd' died at Lavenham in 1810.
> (Refs: Eton College Registers; Inns of Court; Gentlemen's Magazine,
> 1810, Pt I, p.492.)
>
> I also have the Eton Registers, more or less the same as above. From:
> "The Eton College Register, 1753-1790", by Richard Arthur
> Austen-Leigh, 1921, p.383:-
>
> MUDD, 1788-93.
> perhaps John Henry, only son of John Henry MUDD, of Lavenham, co.
> Suffolk; born there; admitted pensioner at Pembroke Hall, Cambridge,
> 3 July 1794, aged 17; fellow-commoner 4 Feb 1796; admitted student
> of Middle Temple 15 Apr 1797. A John MUDD died at Lavenham 1810.
> (Refs: Pembroke College, Cambridge, Admissions; Gent's Mag 1810, I,
> 492.)
>
> I also have "Register of Admissions to the Honourable Society of the
> Middle Temple, from the 15th century to the year 1944", by H.A.C.
> Sturgess. In Vol 2, published 1949, p.415:-
>
> 1797, Apr 15: JOHN MUDD, only son of John Mudd, of Lavenham, Suffolk,
> Esq.
>
> That's all there is, I'm afraid. This John MUDD was an only son, born
> about 1777, admitted at the Middle Temple for Law training and also
> went to Cambridge. It rather sounds as if he did not make it in the
> Law and turned to the Church (maybe ordained Deacon in 1807), but very
> soon afterwards had died at Lavenham, where he was born (aged only
> about 33) - that is, if "John Mudd" is the same person for each of
> these different records. The counties of Suffolk (with the town of
> Lavenham), and Norfolk (with the town of Norwich) are next to each
> other in eastern England (East Anglia), so it certainly sounds
> *likely* to be the same person.
Notes for Col. Philip (Spouse 2)
Jerry L. Clark" <clark4@itsnet.com>
http://users.cougar.net/~susan1/Mudd.htm
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