The Gladding book: being an historical record and genealogical chart of the Gladdding family, with accounts of the family reunions of 1890 and 1900, at Bristol, RI., the Gladdings' American ancestral home . ration, and their youngest daughter, Patty,number 29. (ith generation, who was my wifes mother, to whom I amindebted for much of my information concerning the family. The affair may now properh belong to the maternal side sinceall the (iladdings we know of are the direct descendants of UzellWardell, now spelt Wardwell. and this family claims very similarherald, and the two families have bee


The Gladding book: being an historical record and genealogical chart of the Gladdding family, with accounts of the family reunions of 1890 and 1900, at Bristol, RI., the Gladdings' American ancestral home . ration, and their youngest daughter, Patty,number 29. (ith generation, who was my wifes mother, to whom I amindebted for much of my information concerning the family. The affair may now properh belong to the maternal side sinceall the (iladdings we know of are the direct descendants of UzellWardell, now spelt Wardwell. and this family claims very similarherald, and the two families have been considerably mixed. IlENKY C. GLADDING. LATER INFORMATION. We think vtirious members of the American Gladding family, whoare interested in heraldic researches, will not only find pleasure butbenefit by a careful study of the following, inasmuch as it proves ourright to the Cavendish family coat of arms. The following matter was copied from Burkes Peerage, p. 400. DESCRIPTION OF ARMS. Arms: vSa, lliree l)ucks heads, cabc^shed, , a serpent, nowed, i), two bucks, ppr. each wreathei] around the neck with a cliaplet of roses, alternately arg. and , Cavendo tutus. ^^VONSHjp^. GLADDING In our copy we begin with that matter relating to Sir John Caven-dish. Be it not supposed, that their remote ancestors were obscure. Whether the first of the name who enjoyed the lordship of Caven-dish, in Suffolk, was, or was not the son of the baronial family ofGermon, whom genealogists have stated to have owned that estate,it is clearly ascertained that Sir .John Cavendish, who ac(iuired thelordship of Cavendish Overhall, by his marriage with Alice, daugh- ter of and heiress of John de Od^ynorscles, was chief justice of theCourt of the Kings Bench in 1366-1373-i377. in the 4th Richard II.(His lordship was elected chancellor of the university of Cambridge,and next year commissioned, with Robert de Hall, treasurer of Eng-land, they to suppress a rebellion headed by Wat Ta


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublisherprovi, bookyear1901