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Facts and Events
Name |
John Taber |
Gender |
Male |
Birth[1] |
1721 |
London, England |
Occupation[5][13][14][18] |
1751 |
London, EnglandStaymaker, Dealer in Buckinghamshire Lace |
Other[9] |
15 Sep 1756 |
London, EnglandProceedings of The Old Bailey, John Taber, Plaintiff |
Occupation[3][8][11][15][17] |
From 1756 to 1769 |
London, EnglandVictualler: The Fox & Anchor Public House & Inn, 115 Charterhouse Lane |
Marriage |
5 Oct 1757 |
London, Englandto Deborah Webb |
Other[6] |
13 Sep 1768 |
London, EnglandOld Bailey Sessions Papers |
Other[10][16] |
19 Oct 1768 |
London, EnglandProceedings of The Old Bailey, John Taber, Witness |
Death[1][4] |
21 Dec 1769 |
London, EnglandCharterhouse Lane |
Burial[4][12] |
22 Dec 1769 |
London, EnglandBay Cemetery, St. Sepulchre Parish |
Other[7] |
3 May 1791 |
London, EnglandOld South Sea Annuities, Unclaimed Dividends due to John Taber |
DNA[2] |
12 Mar 2014 |
Manhattan, New York, New York, United StatesThis John Taber line shares a common male ancestor with the Thomas Taber (1778-1842) line. |
Other[2] |
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Speculative parents?: Unknown Taber and Unknown (5) |
Image Gallery
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 A Taber History in Australia
7 May 1984.
Author: A. Neil Forbes-Taber, Wagga Wagga, N.S.W., Australia
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 MyFamilyTreeDNA
12 Mar 2014.
37 Marker Y-DNA Analysis: 4th Cousins from the Thomas Taber (1778-1842) line share a 34/37 match between each other, and a 34/37 match with a probable 6th cousin in this John Taber (1721-1769) line.
- ↑ Will of John Taber, Written: 28 Feb 1763
Proven: 22 Dec 1769 .
Source Information: Ancestry.com, England & Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384 - 1858 [database on-line], Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Parish Records Collection 1838 - 2005 Burials, in FindmypastUK.com.
Address at Death: Charterhouse Lane, Age: 48, Place of Burial: Bay Cemetery, St. Sepulchre Parish
- ↑ Apprenticeship Records.
Apprenticeship Record for son, Thomas Taber
- ↑ Old Bailey Sessions Papers, in Justices' Working Documents.
Source: www.londonlives.org: LMOBPS450120306
- ↑ House of Commons Parliamentary Papers.
Transcription from The General Evening Post: "South Sea Old Annuities 87 1 half Ditto New 88 Ditto 1751 87 3-8ths Three Percent." If the unit of currency is pounds sterling, then 87 1/2 pounds in 1761 = 11,100 pounds in 2014. In American dollars 11,100 pounds = $17,800.00. In simple interest 3% of $17,800.00 = $534.00.
Proprietor of Unclaimed Dividends, P1 P2 P3 P4 2 May 1761, The General Evening Post
- ↑ Victuallers' Returns, London Metropolitan Archives were searched for John Taber, Victualler, Farringdon Without Ward (CLA/047/LR//03/1754/025 - CLA/047/LR/03/1766/001/0258.) None were found. "Unfortunately, the records appear to be more incomplete as time progresses. Although there are complete lists of Victuallers in St Sepulchre's in Farringdon Without in 1754 and 1755, these do not exist in the later files. The records that survive in the later files are petitions for licence and licence returns of the Alderman of various Wards- either they did not reissue the licences each year, or the records of these haven't survived. As regards the Victuallers records we hold, in my opinion it is more likely that the records are incomplete for one reason or another than it is that your ancestor operated without a licence. There seems to be a large variance between the amount and type of records kept from year to year which would imply that not everything has survived. For example, in some years there are lists of each Licenced Victualler in each district, sometimes there are only lists of the monies owed to each Alderman of each ward. Furthermore the numbers of licences granted in each year that exist in the records varies wildly across each year. The Old Bailey was the chief criminal court of the City and the Middlesex area at the time, and so it would seem unlikely to me that a fact recorded in that Court would be unknown to the City, though of course this is before the advanced information exchanges that we have now. My colleague, who has more knowledge of how the City operated at the time, has told me that the City would not have knowingly let a victualler go unlicensed." Opinion of the LMA May 16, 2014
- ↑ Proceedings of The Old Bailey: John Taber, Plaintiff
- ↑ Proceedings of The Old Bailey: John Taber, Witness
- ↑ St. Sepulchre Parish Without & Charterhouse Lane
- ↑ St. Sepulchre Church & Graveyard
- ↑ Staymaking
- ↑ Death Notice, The Public Advertiser
- ↑ Stolen Horse Notice, The London Evening Post
- ↑ Stolen Horse Reward, The London Evening Post
- ↑ Meeting at the Fox & Anchor
- ↑ 10 Oct 1751, London Daily Advertiser
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