This person was created through the import of GerwingLoueyFamilyTree2009_2011-04-27.ged on 28 April 2011. The following data was included in the gedcom. You may wish to edit it for readability.
Note The Family of William Greiber The International Genealogical Index records a marriage between a William Greiber and Ellner on 19 July 1595 in Camborne, Cornwall. During the same year, according to the burial record of the time, a William Greiber, recorded as a son of William, was buried in Camborne. ®16 Some uncertainty is created by an entry in the Parish of Camborne Burial Register for Gribber/Grieber with the burial in 1626 of Mary wife of William. Is she the same person as Ellner? By calculation William’s [father] date of birth was circa 1575. Was he a member of the Sancreed family, perhaps a brother to Thomas? The Family of William Gribber According to an unsubstantiated entry by a member of the Mormon Church in the International Genealogical Index [IGI] ®2 a William Gribber, arguably the son of William Grieber and Elner, married Amye White on 28 April 1626 in Camborne. Some have argued that this couple are the parents of our William Gribell because William’s estimated birth date [1632] approximates their date of marriage. Others regarded an infant, William, who died in 1629, as our William Gribell’s father. The scarcity of records means that we cannot completely exclude this possibility. Ayme Gribble’s apparent early death in 1636 may help explain the absence of other children to this marriage. There is no record of a son, Thomas, to this couple. So the presence of a Thomas Gribbell [Phillack] or Thomas Greeble [Camborne] is not easily accounted for within this family. The significance of this can be read in the story of William Gribell c 1632. If any of these early people are our ancestors it would be fascinating to witness their amazement upon learning that their descendants are now spread into a New World: then virtually unknown and unimaginable. For them, France, from where newcomers to Cornwall often originated, and Spain, with its threatening armada, was perhaps the extent of foreign land
Have you taken a DNA test? If so, login to add it. If not, see our friends at Ancestry DNA.