Person:Hanna Peterkin (1)

Watchers
  • F.  George Peterkin (add)
m. Bef 1775
  1. Elizabeth Peterkin1775 -
  2. Hanna Peterkin1777 - 1826
  • HHenry Lyle1776 - 1860
  • WHanna Peterkin1777 - 1826
m. 11 Nov 1797
  1. William Lyle1798 - Abt 1807
  2. George Lyle1802 - 1872
  3. Elizabeth Lyle1804 - 1846
  4. Henry LyleAbt 1807 - Abt 1852
  5. John Lyle1809 - 1809
  6. Hannah Lyle1812 - Bef 1847
  7. Mary Lyle1815 - 1899
  8. Rachel Lyle1818 - Est 1884
Facts and Events
Name Hanna Peterkin
Alt Name Mary Peterkin
Married Name Hannah Lyle
Alt Name Hannah Mary Peterkin
Alt Name Hannah Peeterkin
Gender Female
Birth? Knapton Near Malton, Yorkshire, England
Christening[1] 20 Jun 1777 Wintringham, Yorkshire, EnglandKnapton chapel
Marriage 11 Nov 1797 Appleton Le Street, North Riding of Yorkshire, Englandto Henry Lyle
Death? Mar 1826 Swinton (near Malton), North Riding of Yorkshire, England
Burial[2] 9 Mar 1826 Appleton-le-Street, Yorkshire, England
References
  1. Yorkshire, England. Church of England Parish Records, 1538-1873
    Wintringham parish, 1558-1812.

    Name: Hannah Peeterkin
    Gender: Female
    Record Type: Baptism
    Baptism Date: 20 Jun 1777
    Baptism Place: Wintringham, East Riding of Yorkshire
    Father: George Peeterkin, Knapton

    Found in FindMyPast. The register has been printed from the manuscript entries, probably sometime in the early 20th century (perhaps 19th).
    Elizabeth and Hannah were the only Peterkin entries found in the Wintringham register.

  2. Burial record, in Church of England. Parish Church of Appleton-le-Street (Yorkshire). Bishop's transcripts for Appleton-le-Street, 1600-1853. (Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1977)
    Burial numbered 209 in register.

    Mar 9 1826, Hannah Lyle of Swinton, age 48

    The villages of Swinton and Amotherby are parts of the parish of Appleton-le-Street in the North Riding of Yorkshire. They are all situated on a road heading WNW out of the town of Malton. Swinton is closest to Malton, followed by Amotherby, followed by Appleton.
    If the church at Appleton ever had a graveyard, it is no more. Parking for worshippers in the 21st century is of greater importance. Some gravestones are arranged around the wall. Amotherby has a church (described as a "chapel of ease" in records) and a considerable graveyard. Leading from the graveyard is a footpath marked "Swinton, 1 mile". There does not appear ever to have been a Church of England in Swinton. This makes me assume that burials for Swinton took place in Amotherby. Although I took a very good look around the graveyard there in 2001, I did not find any Lyle gravestones.

    Bishops Transcripts were copies of parish records made annually and gathered together at the cathedral (Church of England). In most cases the original parish records are the documents searched, but sometimes they were damaged by fire or flood before they were microfilmed in the 20th century. I have looked at microfilms of both the parish registers and the Bishops Transcripts for Appleton le Street and the Bishops Transcripts are much easier to read.
    BTs for Appleton can be found at the Society of Genealogists in London. Its Parish Records are at the Borthwick Institute in York. The Borthwick has moved from the centre of the city to the York University Campus since I visited it.