New Jersey is in United States of America.
Around 1645 George Carteret 1st Baronet [aged 35] renamed New Netherlands to New Jersey.
In August 1939 Gerald Leslie Brockhurst [aged 48] and Kathleen Woodward [aged 27] moved to America. They lived at Franklin Lakes New Jersey.
On 4th May 1978 Gerald Leslie Brockhurst [aged 87] died at Franklin Lakes New Jersey.
On 30th December 1783 Hamilton Douglas [aged 20] died of exposure while commanding the barge of Assistance being caught in a snowstorm while looking for deserters and wrecked at Sandy Hook, Middletown Township, Monmouth County, New Jersey.
On 8th December 1758 General Thomas Gage [aged 39] and Margaret Kemble [aged 24] were married at her father's plantation Mount Kemble Plantation, New Jersey. They had eleven children.
On 6th January 1718 William Gage 2nd Viscount Gage was born to Thomas Gage 1st Viscount Gage [aged 17] and Benedicta Maria Theresa Hall Viscountess Gage in New Brunswick New Jersey.
On 10th March 1719 General Thomas Gage was born to Thomas Gage 1st Viscount Gage [aged 18] and Benedicta Maria Theresa Hall Viscountess Gage in New Brunswick New Jersey. He married 8th December 1758 Margaret Kemble.
In 1734 Margaret Kemble was born to Peter Kemble at New Brunswick New Jersey. She married 8th December 1758 General Thomas Gage, son of Thomas Gage 1st Viscount Gage and Benedicta Maria Theresa Hall Viscountess Gage.
On 8th May 1821 William Henry Vanderbilt was born to Cornelius "Commodore" Vanderbilt [aged 26] and Sophia Johnson at New Brunswick New Jersey. Coefficient of inbreeding 3.12%. He married 1841 Maria Louisa Kissam and had issue.
On 19th April 1700 Timothy Shelley was born to John Shelley [aged 34] and Helen Bysshe [aged 33] in Newark, New Jersey. He married 1728 Johanna Plume and had issue.
Abbot John Whethamstede’s Chronicle of the Abbey of St Albans
Abbot John Whethamstede's Register aka Chronicle of his second term at the Abbey of St Albans, 1451-1461, is a remarkable text that describes his first-hand experience of the beginning of the Wars of the Roses including the First and Second Battles of St Albans, 1455 and 1461, respectively, their cause, and their consequences, not least on the Abbey itself. His text also includes Loveday, Blore Heath, Northampton, the Act of Accord, Wakefield, and Towton, and ends with the Coronation of King Edward IV. In addition to the events of the Wars of the Roses, Abbot John, or his scribes who wrote the Chronicle, include details in the life of the Abbey such as charters, letters, land exchanges, visits by legates, and disputes, which provide a rich insight into the day-to-day life of the Abbey, and the challenges faced by its Abbot.
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On 21st June 1731 Bysshe Shelley 1st Baronet was born to Timothy Shelley [aged 31] and Johanna Plume [aged 27] in Newark, New Jersey. He married 1. 30th June 1752 Mary Catherine Michell and had issue 2. 17th August 1769 Elizabeth Jane Perry and had issue.
1911 Encyclopædia Britannica. SHELLEY, PERCY BYSSHE (1792–1822), English poet, was born on the 4th of August 1792 was born at Field Place, near Horsham, Sussex. He was the eldest child of Timothy Shelley (1753–1844) [aged 38], M.P. for Shoreham, by his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Charles Pilfold, of Effingham, Surrey. His father was the son and heir of Sir Bysshe Shelley [aged 61], Bart. (d. 1815), whose baronetcy (1806) was a reward from the Whig party for political services. Sir Bysshe's father Timothy had emigrated to America, and he himself had been born in Newark, New Jersey; but he came back to England, and did well for himself by marrying successively two heiresses, the first, the mother of Timothy, being Mary Catherine, daughter of the Rev. Theobald Michell of Horsham. He was a handsome man of enterprising and remarkable character, accumulated a vast fortune, built Castle Goring, and lived in sullen and penurious retirement in his closing years. None of his talent seems to have descended to his son Timothy, who, except for being of a rather oddly self-assertive character, was indistinguishable from the ordinary run of commonplace country squires. The mother of the poet is described as beautiful, and a woman of good abilities, but not with any literary turn; she was an agreeable letter-writer. The branch of the Shelley family to which the poet Percy Bysshe belonged traces its pedigree to Henry Shelley, of Worminghurst, Sussex, who died in 1623. These Worminghurst or Castle Goring Shelleys are of the same stock as the Michelgrove Shelleys, who trace up to Sir William Shelley, judge of the common pleas under Henry VII., thence to a member of parliament in 1415, and to the reign of Edward I., or even to the epoch of the Norman Conquest. The Worminghurst branch was a family of credit, but not of special distinction, until its fortunes culminated under the above-named Sir Bysshe.
In 1697 Elizabeth Carteret [aged 43] died at Somerset New Jersey.
In December 1682 Philip Carteret [aged 43] died at Elizabethtown, Essex County West Jersey New Jersey.