. A genealogical and heraldic history of the commoners of Great Britain and Ireland enjoying territorial possessions or high official rank, but uninvested with heritable honours. re ; and in the counties of Rut-land, Lincoln, and Nottingham. The lateRev. Hugh Wade-Gery succeeded to one-third of the estate of the Gerys of Bush-mead, on the death of his father-in-law, in1802 ; the Rev. T. Milnes and J. Milnes,esq. inherited, in right of their wives, theother two-thirds at the same time, which thepresent Mr. Wade-Gery purchased in 1831. Seat — Bushmead Priory, near EatonSocon, Bedfordshire. 381 T
. A genealogical and heraldic history of the commoners of Great Britain and Ireland enjoying territorial possessions or high official rank, but uninvested with heritable honours. re ; and in the counties of Rut-land, Lincoln, and Nottingham. The lateRev. Hugh Wade-Gery succeeded to one-third of the estate of the Gerys of Bush-mead, on the death of his father-in-law, in1802 ; the Rev. T. Milnes and J. Milnes,esq. inherited, in right of their wives, theother two-thirds at the same time, which thepresent Mr. Wade-Gery purchased in 1831. Seat — Bushmead Priory, near EatonSocon, Bedfordshire. 381 TYLDEN, OF MILSTED. TYLDEN, SIR JOHN-MAXWELL, knt. of Milsted, in the county of Kent, Septemher, 1787, m. June, 1829, Elizabeth, only daughter of the Rev. HenryLomax Walsh, of Grimblesthorpe, in Lincolnshire. This gentleman, who served for twenty years in the army, and was late lieutenant-colonel in command of the 52nd regiment of light infantry, received the honour ofknighthood, in 1812, as proxy for his uncle, Sir Samuel Auchmuty, the installation of the Knights of the Bath in that year. Sir John Tylden s. hisfather 2nd February, The family of Tylden, one of great an-tiquity, has been seated in Kent for severalcenturies. Of the three distinct branchesinto which it separated, the eldest becamepossessed of Milsted, in that county ; thesecopd removed into Sussex, and one of itsmembers emigrating, founded the numerousTiLDENS of America: while the youngestbranch settled at Ifield. The family an-ciently possessed .^ands in the parishes ofBrenchley, Otterdon, Kennington, and Til-manstone ; and so far back as the reign ofEdward III. we fin( William Tylden pay-ing aid for lands in Rent when the BlackPrince was knighted. Of the branch settledin the parish of Worijsell temj). Elizabethwas, William Tylden, who wedded Elizabeth,daughter of James Tonge, of Tunstal, andby her (who died 3rd June, 1625, and wasburied at Wormshill,) had one son andtwo
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