. The Doane family:. dant prosperity of his descendants, willerect ere long a titting memorial stone, that future generations mayknow where their Pilgrim ancestor lies buried. Any person who may discover any error iu this genealogy, willconfer a favor on the compiler by immediately notifying him corrections and additions are invited. The compilers presentaddress is not that of a permanent residence, and on any failure toreach him thus, address, -1 JliUside Arc, Mahfen, ^fasft. A limited number of extra copies of this volume have beeu printed, and may be secured while they last. Fo


. The Doane family:. dant prosperity of his descendants, willerect ere long a titting memorial stone, that future generations mayknow where their Pilgrim ancestor lies buried. Any person who may discover any error iu this genealogy, willconfer a favor on the compiler by immediately notifying him corrections and additions are invited. The compilers presentaddress is not that of a permanent residence, and on any failure toreach him thus, address, -1 JliUside Arc, Mahfen, ^fasft. A limited number of extra copies of this volume have beeu printed, and may be secured while they last. For a short time the price will reuKxin unchanged but a little later it will be raised to the regular rate for such works. Alkkeo a. Doane. Boston, Mass., July li\ 11)02. NOTES UPON TIIR DONE FAMILY OFCIlESlllKF, ENGLAND. BY 8AIIA1I CASJl. The old Hall of Utkiiiton, Hituated among the leafy gicon lanes ofthe picture8(iue little hamlet of Utkinton,one mile north of Tarporiey,haw long been known im the home of the ANCIKNT SEAT OF TIIK UONE8. In the Church of Ttirporley are several fine monuments of the Donefamily and it is interesting to note that Ormerod, in his Hislonj ofCheshire, gives considerable space to this particular family andi(K;ality. Pennant also, in the quaint old book, A Journcji to Cheater^not only gives the vicinity and geographical position of Utkinton andTarporiey, but furthermore states after what manner the ancientmastership of the Forest of Delamere had been conveyed to the (ix) THE DONE FAMILY OF CHESHIRE, ENGLAND. Dones, who, according to ancient writings, had been accorded the name of the Earl of Chesters Foresters and who possessed a power littleshort of the Earls Barons themselves ; exercising through their ser-geants a jurisdiction over lifty parishes. It would seem, therefore,that during a long lapse of years, say from 1200 to the seventeenthcentury, a Done, one or another of them, had not failed to makea prominent figure either in a political,


Size: 2014px × 1240px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookiddoanefamily0, bookyear1902