Person:Archibald Rosser (1)

Watchers
Archibald Richard Francis Rosser
d.20 Apr 1846 London, England
m. 27 May 1786
  1. Archibald Richard Francis Rosser1789 - 1846
  2. Francis William Robert Rosser1792 -
  3. Mary Ann Susannah Rosser1796 - 1882
  4. Helen Rosser1797 - 1838
  5. George Frederick Rosser1799 - 1862
  6. Frances Maria Pyke Rosser1801 - 1881
  • HArchibald Richard Francis Rosser1789 - 1846
  • W.  Charlotte Howard (add)
m. 14 Aug 1840
  1. Sarah Matilda Rosser, adoptedEst 1828 -
  2. Gertrude Rosser1831 - 1868
  3. George Rosser1838 -
Facts and Events
Name Archibald Richard Francis Rosser
Gender Male
Birth[1][4] 5 Aug 1789 St. George Bloomsbury, Middlesex, Englandprobably
Christening[1] 9 Sep 1789 St. George Bloomsbury, Middlesex, England
Marriage 14 Aug 1840 Westminster St. Clement Danes, Middlesex, Englandto Charlotte Howard (add)
Will[2] London, England
Death? 20 Apr 1846 London, England
Burial? 28 Apr 1846 Camden, Middlesex, EnglandSt. Martin in the Fields Burying Ground
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 London Metropolitan Archives; London, England, in Church of England, and Ancestry.com (comp.). London, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812 [database]. (Provo, Utah: Ancestry.com Operations, 2010)
    Reference Number: P82/GEO1/002.

    Parish of St. George Bloomsbury, Middlesex, England
    born 5 Aug 1789, bapt 9 Sep 1789
    Archibald Richard Francis Rosser, son of of Richard Rosser and Mary Ann

  2. Church of England. Prerogative Court of Canterbury, and Ancestry.com (comp.). England & Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384-1858 [database]. (Provo, Utah, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, 2013)
    [1].

    Lincolns Inn Middle Temple Barrister at Law
    Wife Charlotte

  3.   UK, Articles of Clerkship, 1756-1874
    [2].
  4. There is no indication in the parish register as to where the child was born. It is assumed therefore that the child was born in the parish in which he was baptized. St. George Bloomsbury is now in the London Borough of Camden, but before 1900 it was simply a parish in Middlesex, close to London.
  5.   The parish of St. Martin in the Fields was in Westminster, but the burial ground may well have been further north in a parish where space for a cemetery was not an issue.