The Loftus 1 Line
The
genealogy of a family of Farndales, descended from William Farndale and Hannah
Toes
Return to the Home Page of the Farndale Family
Website |
The story of one family’s journey through two
thousand years of British History |
The 84 family lines into which the family is divided.
Meet the whole family and how the wider family is related |
Members of the historical family ordered by date of
birth |
Links to other pages with historical research and
related material |
The story of the Bakers of Highfields, the Chapmans,
and other related families |
This webpage comprises the genealogical family tree of the Loftus 1
Line and then summarises the deeper ancestry of this line of the Farndales.
William Farndale, born in 1739 and married Hannah Toes in Lythe in
1761. They had a family of five. John became Constable of Loftus.
The family
tree is colour coded to show the flow of relationships between individuals. You
can also follow the hyperlinks in brown text to link directly to other related family lines
and the hyperlink in blue text to reach the webpage of each individual, where
you can read about their lives in more detail.
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William
Farndale 3 January 1739 to 19 June
1813 Married Hannah Toes A constable in Loftus and a
freeholder, sharing for some time with his youngest brother Loftus, Whitby (Lythe) |
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Mary
Farndale 28 January 1763 to 7
October 1764 Whitby (Lythe), Barnby Died at age one |
Mary
Farndale January 1765 Married Thomas Rowland Loftus, Whitby (Lythe) |
Hannah
Farndale 14 September 1767 to May
1839 Married Henry Smith Loftus, Darlington |
William
Farndale 12 August 1770 to 24
September 1771 Loftus Died at age one |
John
Farndale Married Jane Pybus 27 October 1772 to 5 July
1833 Brotton, Loftus, Whitby |
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If you are
subscribed to Ancestry you can also visit the
Farndale Family Tree on Ancestry, which links the whole family together.
The
Deeper Ancestry of the Loftus 1 Line
The matrix
below will transport descendants of the Loftus 1 Line into a personal
journey into their deep ancestry. It is an extract of the Farndale Story
which is bespoke for the Loftus 1 Line descendants. It will take you back to
the earliest history of our ancestors and each box will transport you to a more
detailed narrative to unlock your history.
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A
Time Machine to a different era of geological time in the heart of our
ancestral home |
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The Iron Age, Bronze Age, Neolithic, and Mesolithic
evidence of the people of the immediate vicinity to Farndale |
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Isurium Brigantum (Aldborough) The
Roman Regional Capital of the lands around Kirkdale |
A
Roman Villa on palatial scale just south of Kirkdale |
A
Roman Villa only 2km from Kirkdale in the heart of our ancestral lands |
71 CE to 580 CE The lands which would become the lands of Kirkdale
and Chirchebi in Roman and Pagan times |
A Roman arm purse which can be seen in the British
Museum in London today, found in about the second century CE by a cairn
overlooking Farndale, which will transport you back 2,000 years |
The
Roman Capital of northern England where Constantine was proclaimed Emperor |
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560 CE to 793 CE Kirkdale and the Chirchebi Estate in the
Anglo Saxon Period |
Kirkdale from its founding in about 685 CE to the
beginning of the Scandinavian period in about 800 CE |
Deirian and Northumbrian York, a political, cultural and educational
Hub on the European stage The people who dominated our ancestral lands |
Alcuin and the birth of modern education The world of Ecgbert and Aethelbert, successors to
Bede, and their pupil Alcuin, who took York’s powerhouse of knowledge to the
court of Charlemagne to pioneer the European educational system |
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The
powerful figure at the heart of the aristocracy, who rebuilt Kirkdale and put
our ancestral lands firmly onto the national political stage |
793 CE to 1066 Kirkdale and the Chirchebi Estate in the
Scandinavian Period |
Anglo-Saxon-Scandinavian Kirkdale Kirkdale in the Anglo-Saxon-Scandinavian period from
about 800 CE to 1066, with a brief summary of its history through to 1500 |
The Scandinavian centre of northern England |
A unique treasure whose secrets
transport us into the world of the eleventh century upon which you can stare
today, imagining direct ancestors who did the same a thousand years ago |
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Regime
Change |
1066 to 1200 The People of the Kirkbymoorside (“Chirchebi”)
Estate after the Norman Conquest |
This
history of the Cistercian monastery of Rievaulx, in whose Chartulary the name
Farndale was first recorded in 1154 |
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Our Pioneer ancestors who left Farndale but took
its name to settle in new places |
Tales of a surprisingly large number of our
forebears who were poachers in Pickering Forest. Their archery skills would
foretell the legends of Robin Hood and the English army at Agincourt |
Rural
lifestyles from the Norman Conquest |
A model which
relies on extensive medieval evidence, to suggest the most probable family
tree of the earliest ancestors of the Farndales |
Thirteenth
Century Farndale Clearing the dale to build our new home |
The
story of the dale of Farndale to 1500, to accompany the family story |
Tales of archers and men at arms who fought with
Richard II, Henry IV and Henry V and an observation post in the home of the
Nevilles and Richard III from which to view the Wars of the Roses |
The
history of the village of Campsall north of Doncaster, where we find our
ancestors in the sixteenth century |
The History of Doncaster to 1500 The
History of pre industrial Doncaster from its Roman inception as Danum
to the end of the sixteenth century |
The Family of William Farndale, the Fourteenth
Century Vicar of Doncaster |
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Arrival in the old Bruce lands around Skelton Castle The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Families of
Kirkleatham, Skelton, Moorsholm and Liverton in Cleveland |
A history of Kirkleatham and Wilton, the place where
our family first settled in Cleveland |
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The First Hub The story of the Kilton Farndales, a family who
dominated a village, since lost to time, over two centuries |
The
story of the lost village of Kilton and its sylvan landscape A journey around modern Kilton, of farms, a ruined
castle and a small village of Kilton Thorpe to capture the essence of the two
century home of Farndales |
Stories
of smugglers, led by my great x3 grandfather known as the King of the
Smugglers, and the undoubted involvement of our forebears |
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The Loftus 1 Line |
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