Thanks. I’m so glad to hear from you. I wondered …

Comment on Stallenge Thorne Farm by makincer@yahoo.com.

Thanks. I’m so glad to hear from you. I wondered about the silage. My father had a dairy and kept his silage in a silo. I wish I had known about your friends. I can imagine my ancestors living there. It’s rather like the farm I grew up on in Kentucky. I’d certainly like to know the history. Take care. Mary Ann

makincer@yahoo.com Also Commented

Stallenge Thorne Farm
Hi, So good to hear from you. This is all new to me, but it certainly seems like there would be a connection to my Stallings family. Thornes Farm and Stallenge Thorne Farm sound too much alike to not be associated in some way. I’ll look into it and see what I can find. If you learn anything new, please let me know. Thanks for giving me this information. Take care, Mary Ann Stallings Kincer


Stallenge Thorne Farm
Hi, Misti, So you’re a descendant of Odo FitzGamelin! Gamelin is a hard person to locate. Do you have any information about him? I’d love to share it if you do. Keep in touch. Regards, Mary Ann


Stallenge Thorne Farm
Hey, we may be related. I’d love to have any information you have on Odo. He’s hard to nail down. I’d especially like to know about Gamelin, his father. There are several Gamel’s mentioned in the Domesday Book, but I can’t figure out his family exactly. My maiden name is Stallings, and I thought since Odo was at Stallenge Thorney farm in Devonshire that the name originated from there. Do you have any connections to the Stallings name? Keep in touch. Mary Ann


Recent Comments by makincer@yahoo.com

Kenn
Hi, Emma, I found somewhere that his name was William. There’s a William Stallings who was comptroller of Plymouth (England) port, but he would have been more Nicholas’s age. If you find out anything about him, would you please let me know. Bye, Mary Ann


Kenn
I too have been interested in this place. If you find out anything, please let me know. Regards, Mary Ann Stallings Kincer


Kenn
Hi, it’s so good to hear from you. Sorry I’ve taken so long to answer, but I’ve got a temporary job, and it’s taking all my time. I’m sorry to say but I don’t have any information for a Nicholas for those dates. Apparently there are a lot of Nicholas Stallings’s, and it’s hard to figure them out. It must be a family name because it keeps repeating with each new generation. If you look on my website for the Nicholas buried at Kenn, England, you’ll see where his father was John and his brother was Florence’s father making her his niece. That’s a strange story and may not be exactly right. I think this is the Nicholas who had a granddaughter who met her husband at her grandfather’s house. Florence had been married before and had two daughters so it stands to reason that Nicholas had been married before too. Nicholas died at the beginning of the 1600’s so your Nicholas born in 1604 could not have been his son. I’d be most interested in seeing what work you have done on the Stallings family. We must be kin since I’m pretty sure all the Stallings’s in England are part of the same family. If it’s on the internet somewhere, let me know so I can check it out. Keep in touch. Cousin Mary Ann


Kenn
Hi, glad to hear from you. Have you done any research on your family? We may be kin! I’d be interested in knowing how it got changed to Starling. Please keep in touch. Regards, Mary Ann Stallings Kincer


Montgomery Castle
So interesting. Thanks for getting in touch. Has your wife traced her family back to the Fitzhardings? When I take my next trip, I plan on going back to England and doing more searching in the Hereford area. My Richard Stallings, who came to Calvert County, Maryland, in 1657, is hard to nail down; but I’m pretty sure he came from the Hereford and Richard’s Castle areas. If you know any more about the families, I’d love to hear about it. Did you visit my website, stallingsfamilysearch.com? Til later, Mary Ann Kincer


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