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Attwick and Burges Families Attwick family origins Ironmonger John Attwick arrives in Gosport from Portsmouth, early in the eighteenth century. In 1722 he wins a contract to supply the Royal Naval Dockyard at Portsmouth. This contract will remain with the business under its various owners into the nineteenth century.
Some of these items are made at a forge in Gosport, but most are bought elsewhere, notably the West Midlands.
Attwick family details John is married twice, fathering twelve children in all. Of these, four are named John, showing that three have died in infancy. The youngest John survives his father by less than a year. Only two other sons survive their father. Jeremiah, the elder, is cut out of John's will, which leaves the business to William when he reaches the age of 21 in 1751. John's daughter Ann marries lawyer Thomas Haysham. They have six children, but only Ann the eldest and Elizabeth the youngest make it through to posterity. Ann marries John Becher in 1761. Elizabeth becomes Henry Cort's second wife in 1768. John's daughter Susanna marries ship's surgeon William Wood. They have one child. Her second marriage is to George Hamilton, her third to Henry March.
Burges family fortunes John Attwick's daughter Joanna marries Thomas Burges (described later as a watchmaker in the will of John's widow Mary) in 1745. Three children are baptised in Gosport between 1751 and 1755. The family have close links with the Ives and Missings of Titchfield. When daughter Joanna marries James Watson there in August 1777, Edward Ives and John Missing sign as witnesses. (It is probably a different, but closely related, John Missing who will join the service of the East India army, arriving in Bengal in September 1782.) By 1797, when Thomas makes his will, he is in India. It is clear from this document, however, that he is well ensconced there by the time his daughter arrives with her husband James Watson in 1796. Among Burges associates are surgeon Michael Cheese and East India army officer Thomas Dowell, both of whom are witnesses to Edward Burges's will in 1800. |
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The pages on this site are copied from the original site of Eric Alexander (henrycort.net) with his allowance. |