. The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster;. Natural history. A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE Aim's charter was alleged in a dispute in 1Z92 between Hugh son of Hugh de Mitton and Roger de Wcdacre, when Richard son and heir of William son of Abn de Tarnacre was called to warrant. The Prior of the Hospitallers had granted ihe land to Maud daughter of Hugh de Mitton ; she married Roger de Wedacre and bore him a son -Robert, whose estate was in his father's The Cockersand lands" were after the Dissolution purchased by John Braddyll,85 and the Hospitallers' lands by the
. The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster;. Natural history. A HISTORY OF LANCASHIRE Aim's charter was alleged in a dispute in 1Z92 between Hugh son of Hugh de Mitton and Roger de Wcdacre, when Richard son and heir of William son of Abn de Tarnacre was called to warrant. The Prior of the Hospitallers had granted ihe land to Maud daughter of Hugh de Mitton ; she married Roger de Wedacre and bore him a son -Robert, whose estate was in his father's The Cockersand lands" were after the Dissolution purchased by John Braddyll,85 and the Hospitallers' lands by the The pleadings afford some details of the mediaeval tenements H ; the inquisitions also preserve the names of landowners ; In the 18th century and later the house called Turnover Hall was held successively by Shuttleworth " and Stockenbridge was owned by a family named Blackburne. Richard Blackburne of Eccleston and Tarnacre, holding in the latter place of the king, died in 1641, and had for heir a son John, aged Richard and Edward Blackburne, re- cusants, in 1654. sought to compound for the seques- trated portions of their A later Richard Blackburne, described as of Stockenbridge, yeoman, in 1717 registered his estate as a ' Papist.' He died about 172 j.*1 John Blackburne of Field Plumpton, who had a son Thomas, made a settlement in 1727 of the capital messuage called Stockenbridge, lately in the possession of Richard son of (the said) John Blackburne, who had died leaving a daughter Margaret wife of Thomas Eccles of ; From a deed of 1748 it appears that another daughter, Ellen, had married William Hathornthwaite, and their son John had ; The estate afterwards passed by marriage to Leckonby of Great Eccleston and to ; Tarnacre Hall, now St. Michael's Hall, near the church, was owned by the Longworth family, who re- corded a pedigree in 1664. Isabella Longworth had it in 1770 ; next
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