AIGS/FHC Member's - Family Trees

William MOUNSTEVEN

Male Abt 1773 - 1830  (~ 57 years)


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  • Name William MOUNSTEVEN 
    Birth Abt 1773  Little Petherick, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Baptism 11 Dec 1773  Little Petherick, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Residence 3 Apr 1824  St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Death 2 Jun 1830  St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Burial 5 Jun 1830  St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I408  FHC006 - White Tree
    Last Modified 9 Jan 2021 

    Father Hender MOUNSTEVEN,   b. Abt 1728, Bodmin, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Feb 1801 (Age ~ 73 years) 
    Mother Mary HOSKIN,   b. Abt 1745   d. 30 Aug 1831, Trencreek, St Columb Minor, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age ~ 86 years) 
    Marriage Abt 1773 
    Family ID F692  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Fanny Hicks SMITH,   b. Abt 1769, Flushing, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 23 Mar 1852, Mawgan in Pydar, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age ~ 83 years) 
    Marriage 10 Oct 1799  St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. William Smith MOUNSTEVEN,   b. 31 Jul 1800, St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 15 Oct 1867, Ball, Mawgan in Pydar, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 67 years)
     2. Frances MOUNSTEVEN,   b. 26 Dec 1801, St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. May 1803, St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 1 year)
     3. Mary Strange MOUNSTEVEN,   b. 11 Oct 1804, St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 11 Oct 1885, Rosevale, Allansford, Victoria, Australia Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 81 years)
     4. Eliza MOUNSTEVEN,   b. 2 Dec 1805, St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this location
     5. John MOUNSTEVEN,   b. 2 Oct 1807, St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 4 Jun 1893, Warrnambool Hospital, Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 85 years)
     6. Hender MOUNSTEVEN,   b. 31 May 1810, St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 12 Sep 1883, Simcoe County, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 73 years)
     7. George Hicks MOUNSTEVEN,   b. Abt 1814, St Columb Major, Cornwall, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Bef 1841 (Age ~ 26 years)
    Family ID F730  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 1 Mar 2021 

  • Notes 
    • On 10th November 1810, their three children - Eliza, John and Hender - were baptised at the same time at St Just in Roseland. The parish register entry gives their dates of birth also - Eliza was nearly 5, John was 3 and Hender almost 6 months of age. They may have still been living in St Columb Major as the parish register entry reads "William Mounsteven of St Columb, Surgeon and Frances his wife."

      Will, 30 October 1800:
      I Hender Mounsteven of the Parish of Little Petherick, in the County of Cornwall, Clerk, being weak in body but sound of mind and memory and understanding do make and ordain this my Will and Testament in form and manner following. Viz. I resign my Soul to that Almighty Being who gave it me hoping to be saved thro’ the merits of Our Saviour Jesus Christ and I desire that my Body may be Buried in a decent but private manner. As to my worldly goods I dispose of them in the following manner.
      Imprimis. I give and bequeath to my eldest son William the sum of five pounds.
      Item. I give to my second son John the sum of fifty pounds.
      Item. I give to my youngest son Hender the sum of fifty pounds to be paid him annually in such parts as my Executrix hereafter mentioned shall think proper.
      Item. I give and bequeath to my eldest daughter Elizabeth the sum of five pounds.
      Item. I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Mary Mounsteven the interest arising from the sum and sums of money which I die possessed of now laid out in mortgages, bonds and other securities, during the term of her natural life for the maintenance of herself and my four younger children hereinafter mentioned, and I do will and ordain that the said sum and sums of money which I die possessed of (shall after the death of my said wife) be equally divided share and share alike between my four younger children Viz. Hender my youngest son and Mary, Catherine and Ann my youngest daughters. Nevertheless if any or either of my younger children should marry during the life time of my wife, I do ordain that he or she shall receive one hundred pounds at the time of his or her marriage in part of their portion which they are entitles to after the decease of their mother.
      I do likewise give and bequeath to my said younger daughters Viz. Mary, Catherine and Ann the plate which i had given me by my sister Saumarez, Viz. two silver candle sticks, two silver salvers and one dozen of silver table spoons to be equally divided between them share and share alike.
      And I do constitute and appoint my aforesaid wife Mary Mounsteven the sole Executrix of this my Will and Testament hereby charging her with the payment of all my just debts and dues and the legacy heretofore mentioned.
      And I do likewise appoint the Revd. Charles Prideaux Brune, the Revd. William Sanders and Thomas Rawlings Esq. as Trustees over my said younger children.
      I declare this to be my last Will and Testament whereunto I now set my hand and seal the 30th day of October 1800.
      Signed Hender Mounsteven L. L.

      ROYAL CORNWALL GAZETTE, 2 August 1817
      TO HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS The Prince of Wales, REGENT Of the United Kingdoms of Great Britain & Ireland. We, the undersigned NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN. CLERGY, FREEHOLDERS, and other INHABITANTS of the COUNTY of CORNWALL, feel it to be our Duty to repeat to your ROYAL HIGHNESS the assurances of our loyal and unalterable Attachment; and to express our Indignation at, and Abhorrence of, the late treasonable Attack upon the Sacred Person of your Royal Highness. As faithful Subjects, strongly attached to our PRINCE ; as Englishmen, proud in the possession of a glorious CONSTITUTION: we are as eager to shield the one from Insult and Violence, as we are to protect the other from Innovation or Subversion. At the present momentous Crisis of Public Affairs, we feel ourselves imperiously railed upon by what we owe to our Country, and our Prince, to enter a solemn Protest against the whole Tenor and Substance of an address purporting to be an Address of the “Gentry, Clergy, Freeholders, and other Inhabitants of the County of Cornwall," which appears by the Public Prints to have been resolved upon at a Meeting held at Bodmin, on the eleventh day of March last, by the Individuals then and there assembled. We are anxious to repel from ourselves the charge of Discontent and Insubordination, to which the spirit of its language must necessarily expose us; and to condemn as groundless and absurd, and to disavow with warmth, that wild and feverish sentiment which declares the temporary and short Suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act, to be "a part of a Systematic Conspiracy to overthrow the existing Laws and Constitution, and to establish in their stead, and on their ruins, a despotic and military Government." We have witnessed with sorrow, and contemplated with alarm, a spirit of Disaffection and Treason, pervading many parts of the British Empire, owing its birth to the temporary difficulties and distresses which have oppressed the Agriculture, Manufactures, and Commerce of the Kingdom, and its growth and dissemination, to the artful efforts of designing Traitors, deluded Patriots, and mistaken Reformers. We regard the unanimous Testimony of the Committees of the Lords and Commons as to the existence of these traitorous Conspiracies, as affording to us more than an adequate Proof of their reality, which has been but too well con- firmed by the rash attempts of the Conspirators themselves. Relying, as we do, on the Wisdom and Integrity of the Parliament of this happily united Kingdom, we can neither question the policy, or doubt the necessity, of those measures, which in full and solemn Council, it has thought expedient to adopt ; and which, by a temporary suspension of a part, is intended to ensure the permanent Security of the whole of that fundamental System of Laws, which has so long blessed this happy Land with prosperity, its Government with stability, and its Individuals with a full measure of rational liberty.
      Names and Residence.
      Francis Paynter, St Columb Major
      John P. Paynter, R.N., St Columb Major
      Charles H. Paynter, St Columb Major
      William Mounsteven, Surgeon, St Columb Major

      "Bennets of Tresillian"
      Mr Mounsteven is mentioned several times in 1819 in St Columb connected with Francis Paynter, solicitor.
      Also in 1822 as a doctor attending a sick newly-born baby belonging to Elizabeth Paynter (Bennet) and Francis Camborne Paynter.