Henry Price
(1672-)
Susannah Awson
(1676-1721)
Thomas Pollard
(Cir 1665-)
Sarah
(Abt 1665-)
Henry Price
(1700-1783)
Mary Pollard
(1704-)
Ann Price
(1728-)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. Richard Henson

Ann Price

  • Born: Gotham, Nottinghamshire England
  • Christened: 5th May 1728, Gotham, Nottinghamshire England
  • Marriage (1): Richard Henson
  • Buried: Ruddington, Nottinghamshire England

  General Notes:

on Barbrara Cain family tree genes reunited.com
Living in Ruddington when Daughter Mary was born.
Ann is Buried in Ruddington cemetary and Barbara Cain states that her husband and her father are buried with her.

By 1801 the population of Ruddington had reached 868, and over the next hundred years it grew to 2500. The rapid population growth in the 19th century was largely due to the influx of framework knitters, who rapidly outnumbered the indigenous population. In 1805 a Workhouse was built, and by 1832 it served thirteen surrounding villages. The existing Wesleyan Methodist Church was twice enlarged and a Primitive Methodist Chapel and a Baptist Chapel built. Both subsequently required larger premises. In 1826 a large Vicarage was built in Red Lion Street, which then became known as Vicarage Lane. The Parish Church was rebuilt in 1888. Terraces of small houses were built to accommodate the framework knitters and several large houses were also erected: The Grange in 1832 for Charles Paget, South Manor in 1852 for Thomas George Augustus Parkyns to the design of T. C. Hine, and Ruddington Hall in the 1850s for Thomas Cross, Banker. The James Peacock School was rebuilt in 1874 as a Boys' School, in memory of Charles Paget and his wife who were drowned at Filey. The Infants' and Girls' School, now St. Peter's Rooms, was built in 1852 by Thomas George Augustus Parkyns in memory of his parents and his grandmother, Dame Jane Parkyns. The Co-operative Society was founded in 1860 and an increasing number of shops were opened. The number of Public Houses rose from two, the Red Heart and the Red Lion, to seven. The first Post Office was established in 1844, and the first Carrier began business in 1864, to be followed by a regular horse-bus service. Gas reached the village in 1864. When the first Parish Council was elected in 1895 Ruddington was the largest village in Nottinghamshire south of the Trent

From Barbara Cain 11th August 2006
Richard Henson then married Ann Price. My brother had searched all the Phillimore marriage indexes for Nottinghamshire and could not find a marriage for these two. Maybe there was no marriage.
Their children were
1752 Ann Baptised Bunny No death record found
1755 Sarah Baptised Bunny
Elizabeth No baptismal record found
1757 Richard Baptised Ruddington
1759 John Baptised Ruddington
1761 James Baptised Ruddington
1764 Henry Baptised Ruddington
1764 Ann Baptised Ruddington
1768 Mary Baptised Ruddington

In 1758 A deed of settlement ( Of which I now have a copy) was drawn up for Richard Henson, his wife Ann and children Elizabeth, Sarah and Richard in Ruddington from their previous dwelling in Beeston Nottingham.

I can’t find a record of the death of Ann nor a birth of Elizabeth so I wonder if she was born in Nottm and not registered. I suppose it is possible they lived in Nottm and had the children baptised in Bunny, it being the traditional home of the Hensons. However the rest of the children were born in Ruddington.

Baptism on W Buchanan PR transcript states name as Annette Lucille


Ann married Richard Henson. (Richard Henson was born in 1768 in Ruddington, Nottinghamshire England.)


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