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Dorcas Dyneley

Female - 1782


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Dorcas Dyneley (daughter of Robert Dyneley and Elizabeth Dixon); died in Nov. 1782; was buried in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.

    Dorcas married John Dyneley on 24 April 1718 in Otley, Yorkshire, England. John (son of John Dyneley and Charity Walker) was christened on 24 April 1693 in Otley, Yorkshire, England; was buried on 13 Oct. 1721 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. John Dyneley

    Dorcas married Thomas Newsome on 27 Sept. 1740 in Otley, Yorkshire, England. Thomas died on 2 March 1762. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Robert Dyneley (son of Robert Dyneley and Dorcas Mauleverer); was buried on 19 May 1728 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • Probate: York, Yorkshire, England
    • Residence: Castley, Yorkshire, England
    • Will: 30 April 1728

    Robert married Elizabeth Dixon. Elizabeth (daughter of unknown Dixon) was buried on 10 March 1736 in Otley, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth Dixon (daughter of unknown Dixon); was buried on 10 March 1736 in Otley, Yorkshire, England.
    Children:
    1. 1. Dorcas Dyneley died in Nov. 1782; was buried in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.
    2. John Dyneley died after 6 June 1721.
    3. Edward Dyneley died in in Skipton, Yorkshire, England; was buried on 29 May 1747 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.
    4. Robert Dyneley
    5. Jane Dyneley died after 5 May 1736.
    6. Lawrence Dyneley was christened on 9 Feb. 1703 in Leathley, Yorkshire, England.
    7. Lawrence Dyneley was christened on 29 April 1708 in Leathley, Yorkshire, England; was buried on 2 May 1709 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.
    8. Elizabeth Dyneley was christened on 19 Sept. 1709 in Leathley, Yorkshire, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Robert DyneleyRobert Dyneley was christened on 5 April 1632 in Otley, Yorkshire, England (son of Robert Dyneley and Margaret Stanhope); was buried on 27 Oct. 1699 in Otley, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • Residence: Bramhope, Yorkshire, England

    Robert married Dorcas Mauleverer. Dorcas (daughter of John Mauleverer) died on 15 May 1709; was buried on 17 May 1709 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Dorcas Mauleverer (daughter of John Mauleverer); died on 15 May 1709; was buried on 17 May 1709 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.
    Children:
    1. John Dyneley was christened on 4 Feb. 1662 in Otley, Yorkshire, England; died on 25 March 1714; was buried on 28 March 1714 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.
    2. Robert Dyneley was buried on 13 Feb. 1695 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.
    3. 2. Robert Dyneley was buried on 19 May 1728 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.
    4. William Dyneley was buried on 23 Feb. 1701 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.
    5. Elizabeth Dyneley died after 1736.
    6. Jane Dyneley died after 1736.

  3. 6.  unknown Dixon

    Other Events:

    • Residence: Skipton in Craven, Yorkshire, England

    Children:
    1. 3. Elizabeth Dixon was buried on 10 March 1736 in Otley, Yorkshire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Robert DyneleyRobert Dyneley was christened on 20 Aug. 1607 in Otley, Yorkshire, England (son of Sir Robert Dyneley and Olive Stapylton); died on 11 Nov. 1688; was buried on 14 Nov. 1688 in Otley, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • Residence: Bramhope, Yorkshire, England

    Notes:

    He built, in conjunction with other freeholders, the chapel at Bramhope, under a deed dated 1649.

    "Robert Dyneley, Esquire, lord of the manor of Bramhope," was noted as "a zealous Puritan," and was responsible for the erection of the Puritan chapel there. (Bryan Dale, M.A., "Bramhope Chapel," in "The Bradford Antiquary, The Journal of the Bradford Historical and Antiquarian Society," New Series, Vol. I. (1900), p. 326.)

    From Bryan Dale, loc. cit.:

    "The old chapel, which stands near Bramhope Hall, three miles from Otley, was built about 250 years ago. It is noteworthy, not for its antiquity or beauty, but on account of its being one of the few religious edifices erected in England during the Puritan Revolution of the middle of the seventeenth century. There was at that time no lack of religious edifices; but there was a serious difference among Englishmen concerning their proper use, and still more concerning the proper limits of Royal and Episcopal authority, which plunged the nation into disastrous civil war. From the calling of the Long Parliament in 1640 to the Restoration in 1660, men had other matters to think about more important than even the building of churches.
    "The year 1649, when the chapel was founded, was a notable one. The Parliamentary army had triumphed; on the 30th of January in that year the King was executed; and on the 19th of May England was proclaimed a Commonwealth. Already Episcopacy had been abolished, the Book of Common Prayer removed from the parish churches, and service conducted therein according to the Presbyterian manner. But the government of the National Church remained in an unsettled condition. It was at such a time that Robert Dyneley, Esquire, lord of the manor of Bramhope, being a zealous Puritan, and desirous of promoting the spiritual welfare of his neighbours, erected this chapel on his own ground, and with the co-operation of others endowed it was lands for the maintenance of its minister.
    "He was "a branch of a considerable and worthy family," whose pedigree is given by Thoresby, and at greater length by Whitaker. The first of the name was Adam de Dyneley, of Clitheroe, living in the time of Edward II., and holding lands in Dyneley, Lancashire. After several generations William Dyneley, of Bramhope, purchased the manor from Henry, Earl of Cumberland, 38 Henry VIII. His grandson, Robert, was knighted by James I. on his coming from Scotland in 1603; and he married Olave, daughter of Sir Robert Stapleton, of Wighill, who was said to be in Queen Elizabeth's days "the finest gentleman in England next to Sir Philip Sydney." Three or four years after he received the honour of knighthood, his son, Robert Dyneley, with whom we are here more especially concerned, was born at Bramhope; and soon after attaining his majority he married Margaret, the eldest daughter of Sir John Stanhope, of Melford, Kent. Thoresby says: "She was one of the twenty-two children of Sir John and his lady had before either of them was forty years of age." She was herself the mother of three sons and eight daughters, and "lived about sixty years in the happy state of matrimony." Her husband seems to have been a man who loved peace and quietness, and took no active part in the civil strife of the time. He lived on good terms with his neighbours, and was well esteemed for his piety and sound judgment in practical matters. When Parliament granted Lord Fairfax the seigniory of the Isle of Man in 1651 he appointed Robert Dyneley as a commissioner, along with James Chaloner, M.P., and Joshua Witton, M.A. (the learned Puritan Rector of Thornhill) to settle the affairs of the island. His eldest daughter, Margaret, was married to Robert Leaver, of Bolham, in Northumberland, a minister of great sincerity and ability, and like Witton, a Non-conformist. One of Mr. Dyneley's sons died in infancy (1642). Another, William, died of consumption at Bramhope, in 1666. He himself attained a good old age; saw four generations of the neighbouring gentry; outlived the Stuart dynasty; and died the year in which William of Orange was proclaimed.
    "Bramhope Hall occupies an elevated position, commanding extensive prospects of the surrounding country, and affording on a clear day a distant view of York Minster. But only the western portion of the old Hall in which Robert Dyneley resided now remains. Having made up his mind to build a chapel near the Hall he was desirous of providing an endowment for it by enclosing a part of the common or waste land of the manor, and sought the assistance of the freeholders for this purpose. Some of these were at first much opposed to the project, but "with pains and patience all consented at last." . . ." [There follow some details of Robert Dyneley's affairs in relation to the chapel and non-conformist preaching.]

    College of Arms MS. Norfolk 4 and Joseph Foster, Pedigrees of the County Families of Yorkshire (1874), both state that Robert Dyneley and Margaret Stanhope had a daughter named Elizabeth, baptized 1669, and that she married William Pearson. William Pearson was in fact the husband of Margaret Dyneley (another daughter of Robert Dyneley and Margaret Stanhope). Elizabeth's putative baptism had been conflated with that of her niece, Elizabeth, the daughter of Robert Dyneley and Dorcas Mauleverer. There is no record of an Elizabeth having been baptized at Otley in the 1630s and 1640s. There is no primary evidence that Robert Dyneley and Margaret Stanhope had a daughter named Elizabeth, and she has accordingly been omitted from this genealogy.

    Robert married Margaret Stanhope on 24 Jan. 1628/29 in Hooton Pagnell, Yorkshire, England. Margaret (daughter of Sir John Stanhope) was christened on 25 March 1607. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Margaret Stanhope was christened on 25 March 1607 (daughter of Sir John Stanhope).

    Notes:

    College of Arms MS. Norfolk 4 and Joseph Foster, Pedigrees of the County Families of Yorkshire (1874), both state that Robert Dyneley and Margaret Stanhope had a daughter named Elizabeth, baptized 1669, and that she married William Pearson. William Pearson was in fact the husband of Margaret Dyneley (another daughter of Robert Dyneley and Margaret Stanhope). Elizabeth's putative baptism had been conflated with that of her niece, Elizabeth, the daughter of Robert Dyneley and Dorcas Mauleverer. There is no record of an Elizabeth having been baptized at Otley in the 1630s and 1640s. There is no primary evidence that Robert Dyneley and Margaret Stanhope had a daughter named Elizabeth, and she has accordingly been omitted from this genealogy.

    Children:
    1. John Dyneley was buried on 30 Sept. 1642 in Otley, Yorkshire, England.
    2. 4. Robert Dyneley was christened on 5 April 1632 in Otley, Yorkshire, England; was buried on 27 Oct. 1699 in Otley, Yorkshire, England.
    3. Margaret Dyneley was christened on 8 May 1634 in Otley, Yorkshire, England.
    4. Anne Dyneley was buried on 11 Nov. 1636 in Otley, Yorkshire, England.
    5. Isabel Dyneley was christened on 3 Jan. 1636/37 in Otley, Yorkshire, England; was buried on 11 Feb. 1672.
    6. William Dyneley
    7. Mary Dyneley
    8. Mary Dyneley

  3. 10.  John Mauleverer

    Other Events:

    • Residence: Letwell, Yorkshire, England

    Children:
    1. 5. Dorcas Mauleverer died on 15 May 1709; was buried on 17 May 1709 in Bramhope, Yorkshire, England.



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