Antony (or Anthony) Ingoldsby is said in his biography in Alumni Oxonienses to be "of Bucks". Genealogists Donald Lines Jacobus, and Clarence Almon Torrey present logical reasons to attribute the origins of Antony Ingoldsby to the Ingoldsbys who were originally of Lancashire, and resided at Lenthenborough (or Lenborough) in Buckinghamshire, for several generations.[1]
Jacobus and Torey write in 1934 (TAG Vol 11, page 214) "It is believed that Anthony and William were sons of George Ingoldsby, gent., who was buried at Fishtoft on 3 Jan 1591/2." Jacobus and Torrey go on to show that it is likely that George was the second son of Richard and Winifred (Greenway) Ingoldsby (of Lenthenborough in Buckinghamshire, England).[1]
Graduated Oxford
"Ingoldsbye, Antony, of Bucks, Pleb. Christ Church, matric. 20 Nov. 1580, aged 20, B.A. 22 Jan. 1582-3, M.A. 4 June 1586, rector of Fishtoft, co. Lincoln"[2]
Rector of Fishtoft
Rev. Antony Ingoldsby, Rector of Fishtoft, Lincolnshire from 1586 to1627, "was ordained a priest 26 March 1586". [3]
Marriages
Antony Ingoldsby married first Ellen ____, she was buried 25 Aug. 1592.
They had three children, who all died young.
Antony Ingoldsby married second Jane ____, she was buried 16 April 1597. They had two sons, Anthony and Thomas.
Anthony Ingoldsby, bapt. 20 Oct. 1594, buried 23 Feb. 1632/3, Rector of Fishtoft 1627 - 1633. Married Esther Towneraw, dau. of Ralph Towneraw of Ashby, Linc.
Thomas Ingoldsby, bapt. 6 March 1596, living 1633
Antony Ingoldsby married Dorcas Bulkeley (his 3rd wife), by license dated 10 December 1598.[4] "They had three sons, William, Edward, and John, and two daughters, Olive and Annis (or Ann)." [5]
William Ingoldsby, bapt. 31 Jan 1599/1600, living, m. 1627, prob. father of Martha, Mary, possibly Anthony
Olive (Ingoldsby) James, bapt. 24 June 1602, m. at Fishtofte 20 April 1620 Rev. Thomas James
Annis (or Ann) Ingoldsby, bapt. 3 May 1604, buried 20 June 1605
Antony (spelled without the 'h' in his will and signature) Ingoldsby named his relatives and their relationship to him, in his will, as follows: [6]
grandchildren - Antony, Martha & Mary Ingoldsby, and Thomas & John James
son - William (and his wife)
daughter-in-law - Rebecka Carlton
god-son Antony Clay and his sister Rebecka
son - Antony Peppar
son - Edward Ingoldsby
son - John
his wife Rebecka
Antony Ingoldsby owned more than one house, and had numerous farm animals: horses, cattle, sheep and pigs. He also farmed his own and rented acres for corn, white wheat, barley and beans.[6]
Death place in datafields prior to 10 July 2020 was "Lincolnshire, England (Saint Gulac Churchyard)", which is where he was buried.
Sources
↑ 1.01.1James, Mellowes and Ingoldsby Family Connections, by Donald Lines Jacobus, in collaboration with Clarence Almon Torrey, TAG Vol 11 (1934), page 214 - 216
↑ Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, ed. Joseph Foster (Oxford, 1891), pp. 785-792, British History Online] [accessed 21 May 2017]
↑Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families
↑James, Mellowes and Ingoldsby Family Connections, by Donald Lines Jacobus, in collaboration with Clarence Almon Torrey, TAG Vol 11 (1934), page 144
↑Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families
↑ 6.06.16.2James, Mellowes and Ingoldsby Family Connections, by Donald Lines Jacobus, in collaboration with Clarence Almon Torrey, TAG Vol 11 (1934), page 210 - 211
↑Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. II page 9
The American Genealogist. New Haven, CT: D. L. Jacobus, 1937-. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2009 - .) Compiled by Donald Lines Jacobus, in collaboration with Clarence Almon Torrey, James, Mellowes and Ingoldsby Family Connections, vol 11 (1934), pp 26-30, 98-101, 143-145, 208-216 see page 144. Also see Origins of Ingoldsby Family vol 11, page 214
Richardson, Douglas. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, Royal Ancestry series, 2nd edition, 4 vols., ed. Kimball G. Everingham, (Salt Lake City, Utah: the author, 2011), volume I, page 347, Anthony Ingoldsby.
'Ibbetson-Izod', in Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, ed. Joseph Foster (Oxford, 1891), pp. 785-792. British History Online [accessed 21 May 2017]. "Ingoldsby, Antony, of Bucks. plebe..."
Lincolnshire pedigrees, by Arthur Roland Maddison, and Arthur Staunton Larken, originally published London, 1902, digital publication by Internet Archive. Vol 51, page 539
Thank you to Sheldon Sickler for creating WikiTree profile Ingoldsby-66 through the import of Sickler Family Tree(2).ged on Nov 5, 2013. Click to the Changes page for the details of edits by Sheldon and others.
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What is the thinking behind not attaching his purported father and marking him uncertain as mentioned in his bio: Jacobus and Torey write in 1934 (TAG Vol 11, page 214) "It is believed that Anthony and William were sons of George Ingoldsby, gent., who was buried at Fishtoft on 3 Jan 1591/2."
Ingoldsby-66 and Ingoldsby-12 appear to represent the same person because: Anthony Ingoldsby-66 could not have died on Long Island in 1620 because it wasn't settled by the English until 1640, however his grandson, Thomas Ingoldsby, died on Long Island in 1696. They were both preachers. Possibly confusion crept into the tree. It would be helpful to merge these two in favor of the documented and sourced data on Ingoldsby-12. Thank you for your consideration. April Dauenhauer