WikiTree profile Leake-56 created through the import of PennyCocker Family Tree.ged on Jul 18, 2011 by Penny Cocker. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Penny and others.
Source: S64 Author: Ancestry.com Title: 1851 England Census Publication: Name: The Generations Network, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2005; Repository: #R1 NOTECensus Returns of England and Wales, 1851, Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives of the UK (TNA): Public Record Office (PRO), 1851
Source: S67 Author: FreeBMD Title: England & Wales, FreeBMD Death Index: 1837-1915 Publication: Name: The Generations Network, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006; Repository: #R1 NOTEGeneral Register Office, England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes, London, England: General Register Office
Notes
Note N4113Birth
SARAH ANN LEAKE Pedigree
Female
Event(s):
Birth:
06 NOV 1813
Christening:
12 AUG 1818 Fish Street Independent, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire, England**
Death:
Burial:
Parents:
Father: AMROSE LEAKE Family
Mother: SARAH
IGI (FamilySearch)
Marriage
JAMES STORY Pedigree
Male Family
Event(s):
Birth:
Christening:
Death:
Burial:
Marriages:
Spouse: SARAH LEAK Family
Marriage:
23 AUG 1832 Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire, England
** Congregationalists
About 1650, John Canne, a writer and preacher of the more advanced type, came to Hull, and he succeeded, literally, in "dividing" the church, for it was to accommodate the Parliamentary garrison (with whom he was a favourite preacher) that the arches between the body of Holy Trinity Church and the chancel were walled up, one part being allotted to the Independents and the other to the Presbyterians, and the church continued thus divided until the Restoration. The Independents met until 1698, for worship, in Prince Street. In this year, a church was built in Dagger Lane, on ground presented to the congregation by one John Watson. This chapel throve till 1767, when ten influential members (including three deacons) left the church, and built a chapel off Blanket Row, which was opened in 1769. In 1773 the chapel had to be enlarged, and in 1782 the congregation had so increased that a new site was bought in Fish Street, upon which the still existing chapel was erected. This chapel was enlarged in 1802, and in 1862 it was renovated and the front stuccoed.
From: A History of Kingston on Hull from Bulmer's Gazetteer (1892)