Alice married William Bate 20 July 1564 in Aston Clunton, Buckinghamshire, England.[1]
Died
bur. 22 Jul 1609 Aston Clinton, Buckinghamshire, England
Children
Winifred Bate
Ellen Bate
Henry Bate bur. 25 Mar 1629 Aston Clinton, Buckinghamshire, England
William Bate chr. 24 Feb 1569/70 Aston Clinton, Buckinghamshire, England
Catherine Bates est 1575 Aston, Clinton, Buckinghamshire, England. bur. 5 Mar 1620/21 Aston Clinton, Buckinghamshire, England
Sources
↑ Alice
Last name Oslyngton
Role Bride
Marriage year 1564
Marriage date 20 Jul 1564
Place Aston Clinton
County Buckinghamshire
Spouse's first name(s) William
Spouse's last name Bate
Country England
Record set Buckinghamshire Marriage Index
Category Life Events (BDMs)
Subcategory Parish Marriages
Collections from England, Great Britain
The American Genealogist 1990, V 65:91,92. “The English Origin of Macuth (or Matthew) Pratt and Edward Bates of Weymouth, Mass. by Frederick J. Nicholson
WikiTree profile Oslington-3 created through the import of BDM7-7-11.ged on Jul 8, 2011 by Brian McCullough. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Brian and others.
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End-of-Line Ancestor: Alice (Oslington?) Bate or Alice (—?—) (Oslington) Bate?
Please refer to Frederick J. Nicholson, “The English Origin of Macuth-1 (or Matthew) Pratt and Edward-1 Bates of Weymouth, Mass.,” The American Genealogist (65[1990]:33-43, 89-96). To summarize:
—Macuth Pratt was the son of Thomas Pratt and [—?—] ([—?—]) Pratt.
—Macuth Pratt was the husband of Elizabeth Kingham.
—Elizabeth (Kingham) Pratt was the daughter of William and Catherine (Bate) Kingham.
—Elizabeth (Kingham) Pratt was the granddaughter of William and Alice (Oslington) Bate.
Verbatim Excerpt from Nicholson:
William-B BATE… married… 20 July 1564 Alice OSLINGTON… Alice may have been a widow at the time of her marriage to William Bate, since in his undated will (proved 23 Sept. 1605), he gave legacies to Jhone and Edward Oslington, who were probably the widow and son of the Thomas Oslington who was buried at Aston Clinton on 1 June 1598. … In either case, the fact that the Oslington legacies appear only in the will of William Bate and not in that of Alice, his widow, suggests that these Oslingtons were collateral relatives of Alice [or William?], rather than her grandchildren. A reasonable (though completely conjectural) hypothesis might be that the Thomas Oslington who was buried on 1 Feb. 1564/5 was Alice’s brother (he was buried after her marriage to William Bate, and could not have been her husband).
Please refer to Frederick J. Nicholson, “The English Origin of Macuth-1 (or Matthew) Pratt and Edward-1 Bates of Weymouth, Mass.,” The American Genealogist (65[1990]:33-43, 89-96). To summarize:
—Macuth Pratt was the son of Thomas Pratt and [—?—] ([—?—]) Pratt. —Macuth Pratt was the husband of Elizabeth Kingham. —Elizabeth (Kingham) Pratt was the daughter of William and Catherine (Bate) Kingham. —Elizabeth (Kingham) Pratt was the granddaughter of William and Alice (Oslington) Bate.
Verbatim Excerpt from Nicholson:
William-B BATE… married… 20 July 1564 Alice OSLINGTON… Alice may have been a widow at the time of her marriage to William Bate, since in his undated will (proved 23 Sept. 1605), he gave legacies to Jhone and Edward Oslington, who were probably the widow and son of the Thomas Oslington who was buried at Aston Clinton on 1 June 1598. … In either case, the fact that the Oslington legacies appear only in the will of William Bate and not in that of Alice, his widow, suggests that these Oslingtons were collateral relatives of Alice [or William?], rather than her grandchildren. A reasonable (though completely conjectural) hypothesis might be that the Thomas Oslington who was buried on 1 Feb. 1564/5 was Alice’s brother (he was buried after her marriage to William Bate, and could not have been her husband).