Hingston Newsletter No 2
Issued June 2011
This newsletter has been sent by email to everyone who I know of who
has contacted me about the Hingston
One-Name study, and has also been posted on the web.
If you found this newsletter on the web and didn't receive a copy by
email (by the end of June 2011) it means I don't have your email address.
Please contact me so that I can add your email address for future mailings.
I promise not to send you emails more than twice a year and I will not
pass your email address to other people unless I am certain that you are
closely related.
If you were sent a copy of this newsletter by email and do not wish
to hear from me again, please contact me asking to remove your name from
my address list.
Introduction
This is the second of an occasional series of Newsletters that I will issue
when there have been major changes to the Hingston study pages. I
have spent some time updating many pages on the web site. I originally
planned to issue it in the Autumn of 2010 but suffered a disk crash which
meant that I lost a lot of information, and have only recently found time
to reinstate things. Newsletter
No 1 is still available.
Wonwell Court Farm
In the summer of 2010 I visited Wonwell Court Farm,
near the village of Kingston in the South Hams of Devon. It is very
close to Hingston Farm, and we know that there were Hingstons there in
the second half of the 15th Century. I was kindly shown around by
Mrs Eve White, who farms there. The building has been remodelled
many times, but part of it probably dates to the time when the Hingstons
were there. The farm is less than one mile from the sea, but in common
with most farms in the area is in a little dell so cannot be seen from
the sea - apparently this was as a protection from raids by Barbary Pirates
who were active off the Devon coast as late as the 17th Century.
Also in the summer of 2010 we holidayed in Ireland, which allowed me
to look in the National Library of Ireland for records and to visit places
associated with the Hingstons.
Aglish Lineage
In the National Library in Ireland there is a leather bound pocket book,
probably carried by an army officer, entitled "Lineage
of the families of Bernard, Hingston and Perceval of Co. Cork", which
was probably written in the middle of the 19th Century and gives a fairly
detailed lineage of the descendants of the Major Hingston who fought in
the English Civil War for Cromwell and appears to have been the founder
of the Hingstons at Aglish (Tree HNA). It is probably
a copy of another document, but adds weight to our understanding of that
line.
Aglish
We visited Aglish village which is some 20 miles west of the city of Cork,
in what appears to be the very fertile valley of the River Lee. We
found the entrance to Aglish House, but no one could tell us where Aglish
church was - I have discovered subsequently that it is now in ruins and
that we were very close to it! We will have to go back another year.
Cloyne Cathedral
We visited Cloyne
Cathedral, which is a few miles to the east of Cork, and were given
access by the caretaker. It is a large building, but as a Protestant
Church in a largely Catholic area appears to be little used. It is
almost devoid of seating, and the very extensive graveyard had been cleared
of vegetation by spraying the whole place with weedkiller. We did
though see the two memorials in the church to two James Hingstons (HN#18
and HN#31) from which we extracted some information
to fill in gaps in those trees.
Whitehall and Cunamore
Whitehall is a large house on a peninsula that sticks out into Roaringwater
Bay - aptly named since it faces south west and is exposed to the full
force of the Atlantic gales. The land is thin, with many rock outcrops,
and appears to be significantly less fertile than the area around Aglish.
Cunamore is the tip of that peninsula. The old maps do not show many
buildings near Whitehall, other than the big house itself, which appears
to have been occupied by the Townsend family, not the Hingstons.
William Edward Hingston's Study
We have known for some time that WEH carried out
a study of the Hingstons, of which the Vine Tree
formed a part. We now have a letter he write in
1905 to Hingstons in Tasmania, shortly before he died, explaining how
he got involved in the study and giving some lines of descent. But
we are still lacking many of the details.
In that letter he describes a different line of descent in Tree
HD between 1. Andrew and 12.
James from that given by Allen and Dymond, but
we do not know on what evidence it is based.
Quebec Bapism of Dorothea Hingston
The Quebec baptismal record of Dorothy
Hingston and her husband John Abbott, who had emigrated from Ireland, provides
documentary evidence for the existence of Dorothy's father, 30.
Edward Hingston in Tree HN.
Legal case involving the Estate of John Hingston of Brent (HH#32)
When 32. John Hingston of South Brent in Devon
died, he left most of his estate to a favoured nephew. But he had
earlier made an arrangement with his brother, which remained in legal force
although both regarded it as null and void. However, the arrangement
had included a clause that John's niece, Dorothy Parnell, would receive
£40 and she later sued the estate for that amount, which she won.
The case received publicity and was written up in the press
and
legal journals.
Edward Peron Hingston
Edward Peron Hingston (1823-76) was a theatrical agent for the magician
John Henry Anderson (Wizard of the North), the genial showman, Charles
Farrar Browne (Artemus Ward) and the author Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark
Twain). His brother was James Hingston, a lawyer who practised in
Australia; he published travel books. Their father was John Hingston,
a cabinet maker of London, but WEH refers to both in his letter
of 1905 and there is clearly a Devon connection. We now have
further information and this has now been placed in Tree
HO.
Please check your own link
Please check that the reference to your own connection to the web pages
is correct. Many people have changed their email address since the
pages were first written and the links no longer work.
I get many requests for copies of email addresses, but I rarely give
them out since I wish to respect people's privacy. However, this
means that in many cases cousins cannot get in touch. The best way
to make sure that people know how to contact you is for me to add an entry,
in the appropriate place in the tree, which says something like: "John
Hingston was the grandfather of Jane Smith who can be contacted at jane.smith@somewhere.com".
That does mean your email is visible but also means that cousins can contact
you.
FreeBMD
The project, run by FreeBMD, to
provide a searchable index of Birth, Marriage and Death records for England
and Wales from 1837-1900 is now virtually complete. I have abstracted
all the Hingston data but unfortunately I am not allowed to publish it
here because of copyright. Most of the Hingston lines will use this
data at some point. For the first time, it is now possible to check
precisely how many entries there are. It seems that only about half
of the Hingston entries in FreeBMD have counterparts in the Hingston web
pages, so we still have some way to go! I have updated many entries
to reflect the information that is now becoming available.
Contacting me
I can be contacted by email at Chris Burgoyne <cjb@eng.cam.ac.uk>.
Please put [HING] before the subject so that I can correctly identify these
emails and separate them from my normal emails. I have, at some time,
typed most of the material on this site but I don't recall all the details;
please help me by giving me details about which family you are referring
to, and which individual, on which page. I will try to get back to
you as soon as possible but the day job has to take priority.
Corrections
If there are errors in the web pages please let me know. There are
probably spelling mistakes and possibly some broken links, or links that
work in some browsers but not in others. If you find these I would
like to correct them, so please let me know where they are.
Missing information
There are several places where we know that information should be available.
If anyone is looking for a small project can I suggest the following:-
-
There were Hingstons in Ipswich in Suffolk about
which we know very little
-
There were many Hingstons in the area North
and East of Totnes in Devon
-
There were many Hingstons around South Huish
in Devon which have not been studied
-
There are many Hingstons who were in the coastguard service
-
Can anyone extract entries from the censuses? I may not be able to
place them here as a list for copyright reasons but I could add individual
entries where appropriate.
-
There are many entries on the Odds and Ends
page that could be followed up. Do any relate to your family?
If so, let me know.
-
There is the certainty that a George Hingston
was involved in the slave trade, and Hingstons who lived on a plantation
in Barbados. Are they his descendants
or are they descended from slaves who took his name?
-
There are many inconsistencies in the Irish Hingston tree,
HN, partly due to the loss of official records in Ireland. The
possible links from the Holbeton Hingstons to John the organist and then
on to the Irish tree are very tenuous.
Thank you
Finally, some words of thanks. Most of the Hingston trees have not
been researched by me; all I have done is to assemble them. They
are the result of lots of small pieces of information which have been found
by different people. That information then gets added into these
pages, and often turns out to be the useful key that opens a door for other
people. I try to spot the links between different trees, but I often
miss things. Thank you to everyone who has helped put these pages
together, and thank you in advance for the contributions you will make
in the future.
Chris Burgoyne, Cambridge, 30th May 2011