Individual Page


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Henry Morse: Birth: 14 MAY 1826 in Bridgwater, Somerset, England. Death: 1888 in Swansea, Glamorgan, Wales

  2. Mary Ann Morse: Birth: 6 SEP 1829 in Bridgwater, Somerset, England.

  3. Hannah Morse: Birth: 17 JUN 1832 in Bridgwater, Somerset, England.

  4. Elizabeth Morse: Birth: ABT 1834 in Bridgwater, Somerset, England. Death: ABT 1904

  5. John Morse: Birth: BET JUL AND SEP 1837 in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.

  6. T W Mosse: Birth: ABT 1838 in Bristol.

  7. William James Morse: Birth: 25 APR 1840 in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England. Death: BET APR AND JUN 1915 in Swansea, Glamorgan, Wales


Sources
1. Title:   1851 England Census
Page:   Class: HO107; Piece: 1945; Folio: 414; Page: 46; GSU roll: 221105
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2005;

Notes
a. Note:   "CREWKERNE, a parish and market town in the hundred of Crewkerne, in the county of Somerset, 18 miles S.E. of Bridgwater, and 8½ S. W. of Yeovillage It is a station on the Yeovil and Exeter branch of the London and South Western railway. It is mentioned in the Saxon will of King Alfred, under the name of Crocern, or Cruaern, and at the time of the Domesday Survey was a royal manor. The town is pleasantly situated in a well wooded valley, near the river Parrot. It consists of about 750 houses, with market-house, two banks, and several factories for the weaving of sail-cloth, in which about 500 looms are employed. A stuff called dowlas and hosiery are also manufactured to a small extent. The living is a perpetual curacy* in the diocese of Bath and Wells, value with the curacy of Christ Church, £158, in the patronage of the Dean and Chapter of Winchester. The church, dedicated to St. Bartholomew, is a handsome cruciform structure of stone, in the decorated English style, consisting of nave, transepts, chancel, and aisles, with lofty embattled tower, and angular turrets. The charities amount to £524 per annum, including the endowment of two almshouses. The Baptists, Wesleyans, Unitarians, and Plymouth Brethren have each a chapel. There is an endowed grammar school with an annual income of £460, formed by John de Coombe in 1449; also National and infant schools. Earl Poulett is lord of the manor. A market is held weekly on Saturday, and a fair annually on the 4th of September." From The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland (1868)


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