Se: Anor | Noteringar
1 Louisa Scutt, född omkring augusti 1858, Wallop, Hampshire, död i januari 1862, Chute Forest, Wiltshire, begravd den 29 januari 1862, Chute, Wiltshire (livslängd: kanske 3 år). Föräldrar: 2 och 3. [Notering 1].
2 George Roberts Scutt, född, Affpuddle, Dorset, döpt den 15 januari 1826, Affpuddle, Dorset, död den 23 april 1898, Pewsey, Wiltshire, begravd den 28 april 1898, Chute Forset, Wiltshire (livslängd: kanske 72 år), (1871) farm bailiff. Föräldrar: 4 och 5. [Notering 2].
... gift den 24 april 1848, Warmwell, Dorset, med...
3 Mary Chilcott, född [in (year)] 1830, Cerne Abbas, Dorset, död i november 1906, Chute Forest, Wiltshire, begravd den 19 november 1906, Chute Forest, Wiltshire (livslängd: 76 år). [Notering 3].
... barn:
4 John Scutt, född omkring augusti 1789, Moreton, Dorset, döpt [in (year)] 1789, Affpuddle/Moreton, Dorset, död den 4 februari 1849, Hurst Farm, Affpuddle, Dorset, begravd den 9 februari 1849, Moreton, Dorset (livslängd: kanske 59 år), (1814-1826) blacksmith of Pallington. [Notering 4].
... gift den 13 januari 1812, Affpuddle, Dorset, med...
5 Mary Roberts, född omkring oktober 1783, död den 25 april 1844, Hurst Farm, Moreton, Dorset, begravd den 1 maj 1844, Moreton, Dorset (livslängd: kanske 60 år). [Notering 5].
... ([witnesses]: William Runyard †, Elizabeth Ingram †), barn:
L S 3yr. |
[Salisbury and Winchester Journal - Saturday 03 September 1859. George Sexton and Charles Sexton (brothers) were charged with stealing some potatoes from a garden belonging to George Scutt, at Chute, on the morning of Sunday, the 14th ult. The defendants, who said they were very sorry, were sentenced to be imprisoned for 21 days each. (During the hearing of this case, T. E. Fowle, Esq., whoso brother, the Rev. H. Fowle, is the owner of the above land, left the Bench.)] [G R S 72yr.] |
M S - 77yr. |
M J S - 70yr., unmarried. |
[Reading Mercury Sat 13 Dec 1902. Estates, will be Sold by Auction by .... . Catalogues may be obtained of the Bailiff, Mr. G Scutt, Thorpe Lee Farm, and of the Auctioneers, Egham, Surrey.] [G R S - 74yr., lived at Heathcote Farm, Newtown. To Harriet Victoria Scutt (widow).] |
Thomas Scutt; 3 days; Warmwell. |
Census 1861 Wiltshire-81-1901 Hampshire. K F - 57yr. |
Census 1861-71-81-1901 Wiltshire. |
Census 1861-71 Wiltshire-1881 Hampshire. J E S - 67yr. |
H S - 76yr. |
Census 1901 Wiltshire. W G - 68yr. |
Census 1871-81 Wiltshire-1901-11 Hampshire. R A H - 80yr. |
[Census 1881-1901 Wiltshire.] [Morning Post, Wednesday 02 June 1886. Accountant, A Young Man seeks a Situation as above; well up in farm and estate accounts. A. Scutt, Chute Lodge, Andover, Hants.] [Reading Mercury Sat 30 Oct 1897. Scutt-Baker, On the 27th inst., at the parish church, Andlem, Cheshire, by the Rev. S. Cotton, vicar, Arthur Edward, youngest son of Mr. George Scutt, of Chute Lodge, Andover, to Mary, second daughter of the late George Baker, Esq., solicitor, Andlem, Cheshire.] [Reading Mercury Sat 30 Oct 1897. Aldermaston. Presentation - Mr. Arthur E. Scutt, honorary secretary of the Junior Cricket Ciub, has been the recipient of a valuable barometer from the members of the Club on the occasion of his marriage. The presentation took place on Saturday at Aldermaston Court, the interesting ceremony being performed by Mr. C. E. Keyser, the president of the club. The barometer bore a suitable inscription and was accompanied by an address signed by Mr. C. E. Keyser, president, Lionel Hoddinott, captain, and 23 other members of the club.] [Reading Mercury, Sat 17 Mar 1900, Berkshire. Horses, Live Stock, Poultry, Scutt. Padworth, Reading. Eggs for Hatching.] [Reading Mercury, Sat 20 Oct 1900, Berkshire. Pure Milk Warranty. Important to Farmers. A case of considerable importance to farmers came before the Kensington Justices, sitting at the Town Hall, Kensington, on Tuesday. Mr. Arthur E. Scutt, farmer of Lodge Farm, Padworth, Berks, was summoned by the Hammersmith Vestry, for having given false warranty with milk supplied to Mr. B. J. Vincent, a milk-seller, of 136 Shepherd's Bush Road, W. Mr. Watson appeared for the Vestry, and Mr. Reckitts defended. The facts of the case are as follows: Some weeks ago Inspector Oatley, who is in the service of the vestry, obtained a pint of milk from a lad who was in charge of one of Mr. Vincent's barrows. The milk was divided in the usual way, and the portion sent to the public analyst by the Vestry authorities was returned by that official, together with a certificate stating that it contained 11-3 percent of added water. Proceedings were taken against Mr. Vincent, who successfully defended himself by calling witnesses to prove that he sold the the milk as he received it from Mr. Scutt, and by producing the warranty given by that gentleman. The Bench dismissed the summons against Mr. Vincent; the Vestry then instituted proceedings against the present defendant. The case was heard on Tuesday. Mr. Vincent's witnesses having been called by Mr. Watson on behalf of Hammersmith Vestry. Ernest Nash, a cowman in the employ of defendant, living at Padworth was examined. Witness, who was present at the milking, said he would swear that the milk was not tampered with. Mr. Scutt, the defendant, was also called, and gave evidence to the same effect. He had, he said, been in the business eleven years, and had never had a complaint of any kind before. He sealed the churn in question up himself and delivered it to the authorities at Aldermaston Station a few minutes before the train started. He suggested that his liability in the matter ceased at Aldermaston Station. Certainly he was not responsible assuming that any of the railway officials tampered with the milk. After a short consultation, the Chairman said the Bench were of opinion the defendant honestly believed the milk to be pure when he wrote the warranty. The summons would therefore be dismissed.] [Reading Mercury Sat 03 Aug 1901 Berkshire. County Magistrates Office, Reading Saturday, July 27. (Before Captain Cobham, Chairman; G. W. Tyser, Esq., C. W. Marriott, Esq., M.D., Colonel Ward, C.I.E., and General Waddington.) Drunkenness - William and Emma Jennings, of Padworth. failed to answer a summons charging them with being drunk and disorderly on the highway at Padworth on the 17th July. Mr. A. E. Scutt, of The Lodge Farm, Padworth said that he heard a disturbance on the road outside his house on the night in question, and on going out found the defendants (who are man and wife) quarreling. He ordered them away. They went a short distance, and then both fell down drunk. Each defendant was ordered to pay 10s., including costs, or go to prison for seven days.] [A E S 77yr.] |
Census 1871-81 Wiltshire-91 Hampshire-1901 Wiltshire. |
[Salisbury and Winchester Journal, Wiltshire, Monday 23 February 1829. A black hackney mare, 14 hands high, was on Thursday night stolen from the stable of Mr. John Scutt, at Waddock, in the parish of Affpuddle, Dorset.] [Salisbury & Winchester Journal, Wiltshire, Saturday 04 November 1843. As Mr. John Scutt, yeoman, of Hurst Farm, near Moreton, was returning from Dorchester Fair, Wednesday evening last, in company with his two sons and brother, the horse on which he was riding, being a spirited one, shied and threw him, and pitching the back of his head, fractured his skull, and otherwise bruised him. Medical attendance being at hand, he was conveyed to the Three Mariners Inn where every attention was paid him, but still lies in a very precarious state.] [J S - 59yr.] |
Sherborne Mercury - Saturday 04 May 1844. April 25, at Hurst Farm, near Moreton, Mary, wife of Mr. John Scutt, yeoman, aged 57 years. |
[Bath Chronicle & Weekly Gazette Thu 19 Sep 1844. AGRICULTURE. A Huge Potatoe. Mr. Richard Scutt, of Chamberlaine's Mills, near Bere Regis, Dorset, dug up in his garden, a few days since, a single potatoe, solid and of fine quality, of the unprecedented weight of 7lbs., of the sort called the White Bloom.] [Census 1841-61-71-81 Dorset.] [R R S - 72yr.] |
father:J S - blacksmith. E W - 76yr. (this death need to be verified). |
[Father:John Scutt, blacksmith in Pallington. (1817 May 23?)] [M A B 59yr.] |
father J S - blacksmith of Pallington. Census 1851-61-71-81-91 Dorset. C C - 73yr. |
W S - 52yr. 1872 Jun 12 also noted. |
L R S b:Poole, Dorset - Census 1881 Herefordshire. L S - 63yr., never legally married? (Weobley spans the boundaries of the counties of Herefordshire and Worcester). |
[Father:J S - blacksmith of Pallington.] [Sat 18 Apr 1846, Sherborne Mercury, Dorset. April 1 at Moreton, near Dorchester, Mr. George Chilcott, of Warmwell, to Jane, fourth daughter of Mr. John Scutt, yeoman, of Hurst Farm, in that county.] |
J E S - 18yr. |
[25-Nov-1850; Frederick OLIVER Bachelor Cabinet Maker & Mary Anne Coleman, Spinster, both of full age. Son of James Oliver, Land Surveyor; Daughter of Charles Coleman, Farmer. Witnessed by: Maria COLEMAN, Henry Scutt.] [T H S 64yr., farmer. To Emma Scutt, widow, effects:£361 17s.] |
Rosanna, daughter of John & Mary Scutt of Hurst a farmer No.140. R C - 40yr. |