Matthew Randall (I26003)
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Personal Facts and Details
| Birth | 3 July 1600 29 30 Bath Abbey, Bath (Somerset) England |
| Death of mother | 19 February 1627 (Age 26) Agnes Cullen (I44138) (Age 57) - [Relationship Chart] |
| Death | 16 January 1639 (Age 38) Bath Abbey, Bath (Somerset) England |
| Universal Identifier | 2398CBA643A3E243A27B6A6978A87A22E3D8 |
| Burial | Church of Sts Peter and Paul in Bath Abbey, England |
| Last Change | 1 August 2006 - 04:17:18 |
Notes
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1600, July 3: Matthew "the first" Randall was christened at Bath Abbey, Church of Sts Peter and Paul in Bath (Somerset) England."Bath Abbey CMB 1569-1800" from a letter from Society of Genealogists, London SW, England to Everett H. Randall, September 5, 1969 (Randall Archives)Note: Matthew Randall, the Clerk was appointed Vicar of St. Mellion and then assigned to as Rector to High Ham Parish in Somerset from late 1648 to 1662. [Research of Thomas Randall] (Randall Archives)Note: A biography of Matthew Randall is found and states he was a "Puritan minister. "Calamy Revised; being a revision of Edmund Calamy's Account of the ministers and others ejected and silenced, 1660-2" by Arnold Gwynne Matthews, M.A.; The Clarendon Press;ford, England; 1934 (274.2 M43C ACPL)Note: "It is clear that you are well aware of the religious turmoil in England at this time, a hangover from the Henrician Reformation, the Marian Gouter Reformation and the Elizabethan Settlement. In a way England during the civil war period was somewhat like Afghanistan today with the extreme Taleban in control. The puritans, for whom the reformation hadn't gone far enough, seized their chance to push on with their agenda and I need not tell you how the clergy who were Royalist in sympathy and used the book of common prayer suffered. I think you must have all this from Matthews. Over a third of the clergy were deprived and their livings sequestered. It is obvious that your kinsman was a puritan who took over two sequestered livings - High Ham and Bath. Masters and Kingman were among the men who were deprived. And of course this may account for the emigration of his son John to America. Religion lay behind a great deal of emigration starting with the Pilgrim Fathers. (Letter, Thomas Randall, February 25, 2002) (Randall Archives)"Comments of Jack Bates, Professor" Staffordshire University, Staffordshire, England; November 9, 2001 |
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Family with Parents - [View Family (F18997)] |
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Family with Margaret Trevisa - [View Family (F10276)] |
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