Hart Family - Ourfolk
Agnes (Hatch) B: Jun 1413-Jun 1417
Agnes was born on Jun 1413-Jun 1417 .
Agnes was married to John Hatch .
John was born on ABT 1415 in Sellindge, Kent, England and died on AFT 15 NOV 1464 in Sellindge, Kent, England .
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- The Hatch family has lived for at least six centuries in the county of Kent,
England. The family name is derived from the Anglo-Saxon noun HAEC, Middle
English HACCHE, later HATCH meaning gate or wicket. The surname appears in
the hundred of Calehill, Co. Kent, as early as 1327/8, the form during the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries being ATTE HACCHE. It is clear that the name
was originally assumed by a man who dwelt near or at some gate or wicket, such,
for instance, as might have been found at the entrance to the village churchyard or
to the grounds of the manor house.
The ancient family took its name from the place of its habitation in the parish of
South Moulton, Devonshire, England. The earliest record of the name is found in
the doomsday book of A.D. 1086 under the form Hacke in 1273. The name
Richard de la Hacke appears in the rolls of Wiltshire and that of John Atte Hache
in those of Oxfordshire.
England. The family name is derived from the Anglo-Saxon noun HAEC, Middle
English HACCHE, later HATCH meaning gate or wicket. The surname appears in
the hundred of Calehill, Co. Kent, as early as 1327/8, the form during the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries being ATTE HACCHE. It is clear that the name
was originally assumed by a man who dwelt near or at some gate or wicket, such,
for instance, as might have been found at the entrance to the village churchyard or
to the grounds of the manor house.
The ancient family took its name from the place of its habitation in the parish of
South Moulton, Devonshire, England. The earliest record of the name is found in
the doomsday book of A.D. 1086 under the form Hacke in 1273. The name
Richard de la Hacke appears in the rolls of Wiltshire and that of John Atte Hache
in those of Oxfordshire.
Last change (on this page): 15 OCT 2018