. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE wife Anne," to whom it had apparently passed from Francis and Dorothy Southwell. The whole having thus come into the possession of Wyiherall, the manor descended with Sutes to David Poole, who built the present house of Youngsbury.⢠After his death in 175S his widow Jane and son Josiah sold the manor in 1769 to David Barclay,*8 who improved and enlarged the house. In 1793 it was bought by William CunliiFe Shawe, a mortgagee, who sold it in 1796 to Daniel Giles of London,'0 whose family came orig


. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE wife Anne," to whom it had apparently passed from Francis and Dorothy Southwell. The whole having thus come into the possession of Wyiherall, the manor descended with Sutes to David Poole, who built the present house of Youngsbury.⢠After his death in 175S his widow Jane and son Josiah sold the manor in 1769 to David Barclay,*8 who improved and enlarged the house. In 1793 it was bought by William CunliiFe Shawe, a mortgagee, who sold it in 1796 to Daniel Giles of London,'0 whose family came originally from Caen in Normandy. He was governor of the Bank of England in 1 796 and died in 1800. Youngs descended to his son Daniel Giles, for St. Albans in 1809 and Sheriff of Hertfordshire in 1816. He died in 1831. His sister Mary married Joseph King of Taplow, and the manor went to her son Benjamin Giles King, who was succeeded in 1840 by his sister Louisa, widow of Sir Christopher Puller, kt., Chief Justice of Bengal in 1823. She died in [857, when the manor passed to her son Christopher William, who in that year had licence to add the name Giles before his own surname, the licence extending to such of his descendants as should hold Youngsbury. He died in 1864, the manor descending to his son Arthur Giles Giles- Puller. The latter died without issue in 1885 and was succeeded by his brother [he Rev. Charles Giles- 1'uller, at one time vicar of Standon, whose son. Elizabeth his wife and Thomas their son, and i'jo of the reversion of 1 50 acres on the death of Richard !e Somenour, which they acquired at the same ' There was also a John Marshall, dead before 1338,"* and a John Marshall, his son, with a wife Margaret, both dead before 1353," who held land in Standon. By 147+ the 'tenements called Marshalli' were in the possession of Nicholas Ellerbek and descended with Sutes and Youngs to Wiliiam Tend- ing, then with Youngs to Richard Wyiherall, and with bo


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnatural, bookyear1902