. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. BRAUGHING HUNDRED In the same year the manor was sold by his widow Margaret (described as mother of John Wrothe, deceased, heir of William) and her son Edward B3 to William and John Leake in trust for Robert Bird of Staple It descended to his son John Bird, who died in 1732, leaving four co-heirs, the daughters of his brother Robert who predeceased him. Of these Elizabeth Bird conveyed her share in 17+0 to her sister Jane Bird, who also acquired the share of her sister Martha, wife of George In 1744 Jane marrie
. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. BRAUGHING HUNDRED In the same year the manor was sold by his widow Margaret (described as mother of John Wrothe, deceased, heir of William) and her son Edward B3 to William and John Leake in trust for Robert Bird of Staple It descended to his son John Bird, who died in 1732, leaving four co-heirs, the daughters of his brother Robert who predeceased him. Of these Elizabeth Bird conveyed her share in 17+0 to her sister Jane Bird, who also acquired the share of her sister Martha, wife of George In 1744 Jane married David Poole, serjeant-at-law, and a settlement of the three undivided fourth parts was made on David for life, with remainder to Jane and their children. In 1745 David Poole bought the remaining fourth from the assignees of his wife's fourth sister Abigail, wife of Marmaduke Lilley, who died about The manor then descended with Youngs (), and now belongs to Mr. C. B. Giles-Puller. STANDON son James Henry Leigh conveyed the site in 1790 to David Barclay, and it thus became reunited with the The manor-house lies near the North Road, a little to the north of High Cross. It is an early 17th-century building, originally L-shaped, with a fragment of moat remaining. It has two stories, and is timber-framed with plastered walls and tiled roof. Two of the original chimney stacks remain. In the kitchen is the large original fireplace. Sutes Wood and Great and Little Southey Woods lie little > the The manor of YOUNGS took its name from a family of Juvene or Young, who held lands in Standon in the 13th and 14th In 1426 Youngs is called a manor, and was released by John Oke to Henry Barton, William Crowmer and Thomas Hole- well, who held it of the gift of Thomas In 1472 Nicholas Ellerbek died seised of it,03 and it descended with Sutes () to William Sutes Ma nor-house, Standon The site of Sutes Manor was held separately from th
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnatural, bookyear1902