Il est marié avec Elizabeth Winnington.
Ils se sont mariés.
Enfant(s):
[David Oliver Smith.ged]
The Warburtons of Tabley & Warburton
The Warburtons trace their family history back a very long way and are one of the oldest established families in Cheshire and Staffordshire. Warburton Village in Lancashire is where the Warburton family is said to have originated, nine hundred years ago. They owned the manor of Glazebrook and in 1384 Geoffrey de Warburton ceded the manor to Hamon Mascy (Lord of the Manor at Rixton.) This led to the combining of the two areas and became known as Rixton-with-Glazebrook. Later, one William Warburton (1615-1673) was born and died in Warburton, the estate and later the village having been taken after the family name. William had married Jane Burgess in 1641 in Rostherne where she was born. Later there was intermarriage with the Egerton family to become the Egerton-Warburton family on the inheritance of Rowland Egerton, 7th son of Philip Egerton of Oulton Park. He had married Mary Brooke of Norton Priory and rebuilt Arley in the 1840s as well as having created the present Budworth village.
By 1766 members of the Warburton family were prominent trustees of Cobridge School in Staffordshire, as well as being cofounders of Lymm Grammar School in Cheshire. In fact, the Warburton family crest is still incorporated in the Lymm Grammar School school coat of arms.
The Warburtons were, like most old Cheshire families, a staunch Catholic family and originally rented lands from the Biddulph family on the Grange estate in north Staffordshire. At Grange in the early 18th century John Warburton built a Potworks for the manufacture of white stoneware which he exported, most profitably by all accounts, to Holland. By the time he died in 1752 he had amassed a considerable property which included the Tabley estate in Cheshire for which he paid £1,000.
Piers Warburton | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elizabeth Winnington |
Date of Import: 25 Dec 2013/ RootsWeb's WorldConnect