Margaret Houd1

ID#17326, (say 1690 - )
| Charts | Paternal ancestors of Lorna WIGHT |
| Relationship | 6th great-grandmother of Lorna Henderson. |
Margaret Houd was born say 1690 ?Midlam, Par. of Bowden, ROX, SCT.2
Margaret Houd married James Wight on 18 Mar 1712 at Bowden, ROX, SCT, 'both in this paroch.3'
Margaret Houd was also known as Margaret Howd.
It always pays to review past research. With my recent (Apr 2009) activity on the WIGHT familes (having started a WIGHT Surname DNA Project), I have to admit that looking at this family again after a long gap that I appear to have claimed the incorrect James as father of the James who married Isobel Wood. The James who married Jennet Sword, old enough to have married Isobel, was the first of two James in the family. I have to assume that he died if a second, younger James was also baptised, and this latter one is too young to have married in 1743.
My attention has therefore switched to the next most eligible James in Bowden, the one marrying Margeret Howd or Houd in 1712 and having a son James baptised in 1721. Wights are two a penny in the area, and probably all fairly closely related!4
Family | James Wight (say 1685 - aft. 1743) |
| Children |
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| Last Edited | 4 Apr 2009 |
Citations
- BDM/CEN: Scots Origins, online at http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/index.php, Bap. 2 Jul 1721 James s/o James WIGHT & Margaret HOUD, in Midlem, Bowden OPR Par. 783/0010 0077, copy d/loaded Apr 2009.
- Cash book and Kirk Sessions Baptisms: Bowden, ROX, SCT, Film 1067932.
- Cash book and Kirk Sessions Baptisms: Bowden, ROX, SCT, Extracted Jul 2003, Film 1067932.
- "Lorna's Family History Musings", Apr 2009.
- Letter, Harry D WATSON (15319) to L Henderson, Mar. 1743 James WIGHT Isobel WOOD, from Maxton Proclamations 1722+, rcvd Oct 2003.
- Cash book and Kirk Sessions Baptisms: Bowden, ROX, SCT, Birth 27 Aug 1728 Bap 1 Sep 1728 William s/o James WIGHT (of Midlam) & Margaret HOUD, extacted Jul 2003, Film 1067932.
E. & O. E. Some/most parish records are rather hard to read and names, places hard to interpret, particularly if you are unfamiliar with an area.
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