. The journal of American history. abeth toLady Elizabeth Hobbie. In the British Museum there is a manuscript ofthe travels and life of Sir Thomas Hobbie, knight, written by himself from1547 to 1564. This has been recently been transcribed by Edgar Powell,the English genealogist, for the Royal Historical Society, and a copy sentto me. These researches in the British Museum and the English statepapers have frequently crossed the lines of the Tracys of Hailes Abbey,whose lineage was established in The Journal of American History,Volume I, Number 3, under the title Progeny of Saxon Kings in Ameri


. The journal of American history. abeth toLady Elizabeth Hobbie. In the British Museum there is a manuscript ofthe travels and life of Sir Thomas Hobbie, knight, written by himself from1547 to 1564. This has been recently been transcribed by Edgar Powell,the English genealogist, for the Royal Historical Society, and a copy sentto me. These researches in the British Museum and the English statepapers have frequently crossed the lines of the Tracys of Hailes Abbey,whose lineage was established in The Journal of American History,Volume I, Number 3, under the title Progeny of Saxon Kings in America,of which I speak in the Genealogical Department of this Number, provingthe royal affiliations of these early Americans. I have had transcribed atBridgetown, Barbadoes, the earliest records, which serve as a connectinglink between the British and the American lines. I have also found severaleminent researchers in America who have valuable data, and I am convincedthat sufficient evidence exists to uphold American claims.—Editor. V 1


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