Er ist verheiratet mit Elizabeth Fylbrigg (Mannings).
Sie haben geheiratet.
Kind(er):
Robert Edward Fylbrigg is your 12th great grandfather.
You
‰ ᆒ Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Francis "Fannie" Pernerviane Welborn
his mother ·Üí Primma M. Davis
her mother ·Üí Sarah Autra Pridgen
her mother ·Üí Sophia Lk-lo-ha-wah Pitchlynn, Iksa Hachotukni
her mother ·Üí Ebenezer Folsom
her father ·Üí Isreal Folsom, Sr. of Prince William Co, Va
his father ·Üí Rachel (Berry) Folsom
his mother ·Üí Elizabeth Berry
her mother ·Üí Lieutenant James Philbrick
her father ·Üí Thomas Brook Philbrick, II
his father ·Üí Thomas Philbrick Fylbrigg, I
his father ·Üí Robert Edward Fylbrigg
his father
https://www.geni.com/people/Robert-Fylbrigg/6000000008691078784
Robert Edward Fylbrigg
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1506
Bures, Suffolk, England
Death:
July 08, 1571 (61-69)
Bures, Suffolk, England
Place of Burial:
Bures, , Suffolk, England
Immediate Family:
Son of Nycholas Fyllebrigge and Cyslie Fylbrigge
Husband of Elizabeth Mannings Fylbrigg
Father of Thomas Philbrick Fylbrigg, I; William Flybrigg; Nicholas Flybrigg; Robert Flybrigg and Anna Lansley
Brother of William Fylbrigg; Nicholas Fylbrigg; Anne Fylbrigg and Richard Flybrigg
Notes from http://www.cyberancestors.com/cummings/pafg84.htm#4683 The primary reference for Philbrick/Philbrook researchers has always been Jacob Chapman's "Genealogy of the Philbrick and Philbrook Families" which was published in 1886. Chapman remarks about the origins of the Philbrick/Philbrook families as saying that Thomas the Emigrant "is said to have been a mariner in early life, and to have been a master of a vessel before he emigrated from Lincolnshire in England." This statement is in question considering the evidence that was found in England by Mary Philbrook in the early 1930's. Mary Philbrook, the first woman to pass the Bar Exam in New Jersey, determined that the origins of the Philbrick/Philbrook name could be traced back to the geographical location of Felbrigge, near Comer, in Norfolk County, England. The following is based upon her article, "Ancestry Chasing" and "The English Connections of Thomas Felbrigge or Philbrick of Hampton, N.H." by G. Andrews Moriarty (based on Mary Philbrook's notes.) The family of Felbrigge is descended from Simon le Bigod and Maud Felbrigge whose son, Roger Bigod de Felbrigge, is seen in 14 Edward I or 1286/87 A.D. Maud is daughter and heiress of Richard de Felbrigge of Felbrigge and their descendants took on the Felbrigge or Gylbrigge name from their manor. On February 3, 1390 a Felbrigg is recorded in a request for an old license of a passport. "At the request of the King's uncle, the Duke of Gloucester. For William Arundell, knight; Simon Felbrigg, knight; and Robert Teye, who proposes to visit and see the world in divers places. To pass beyond the sea from London, Dover, Sandwich or elsewhere, with their men and twelve horses, and to change 300 pounds money and expenses." In the early part of the 15th century a John Filbrigge is listed in the court records of Earls Colne, a town in Essex County, west of Colchester. Through out the 1400's the Felbrigge name is spelled many different ways in the court rolls Filbrigge, Fylbrygge, Filbrigg, Fylbrygg, Fylbrigge, and Felbrygge. The family variant of these many spellings appear througtout the court records of Earls colne and of Bures, a small town six miles north in Suffolk county. However, it isn't til one examines the baptismal records of St. Mary's Church in Bures that the family takes on a distinct lineage. Another family name is also listed among the baptismal records and that is the surname of Knopp, or Knapp aast it became in New England. This is important to the validity of the origin of Thomas the Emigrant's home in England as being Bures St Mary's and not Lincolnshire as Jacob Chapman's book suggests. We find in these records the same names in both the Philbrick and Knapp families that are later found in the early records of New England. It may also provide a clue as to when Thomas and his family may have come to America from England.
THE FYLBRIGGE / PHILBRICK FAMILY- http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nvjack/fylbrigg/andersonjb.htm
Robert Edward Fylbrigg (Philbrick) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elizabeth Fylbrigg (Mannings) |
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