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Buckle Name Study

Privacy Level: Open (White)

Surnames/tags: Buckle Buckel Buckell
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Contents

How to Join

Please contact the project leader Hilary Gadsby or post a comment at the foot of the page. If you have any questions, just ask. Thanks!

Goals

This is a One Name Study to collect together in one place everything about one surname and the variants of that name. The hope is that other researchers like you will join our study to help make it a valuable reference point for people studying lines that cross or intersect. Current varriants included Buckell

Task List

Currently adding profiles to the Study and setting up categories.

Resources





Collaboration
  • Login to edit this profile and add images.
  • Private Messages: Contact the Profile Managers privately: Hilary Gadsby and One Name Studies WikiTree. (Best when privacy is an issue.)
  • Public Comments: Login to post. (Best for messages specifically directed to those editing this profile. Limit 20 per day.)


Comments: 6

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Hi Hilary,

While I was researching the Wateridge branch of my family I discovered a connection to the Buckle family. Henrietta Wild (Wild-3348) married into the Wateridge family in 1773 and her mother was Henrietta Buckle (Buckle-1201) who was born about 1714. I know very little about Henrietta and was hoping you may be able to provide some background.

Cheers, Alan.

posted by Alan Purchase
Not my line that I know of but I am interested in anyone who may connect to my family in Hampshire. Having a seaman as the earliest known ancestor makes it difficult to move forward.
posted by Hilary (Buckle) Gadsby
Greetings Julie

Please be informed I have added many of my wife Buckle family members to the "Buckle Name Study". This branch was started when Thomas Buckle was sent to the VOC refreshment station at the Cape of Good Hope as a Horticulturalist. He established farms in the Swartland district to the north of Cape Town; the area these days is known as Malmesbury. He is therefore the progenitor of the South African Buckles; I also took the liberty of creating a category titled "South African Buckles" to avoid muddling them with your English Buckles. best wishes Paul Snook

posted by Paul Snook Esq
If you wanted Julie to get notified you need to reply to her.

I lead this study and my family is also English. Having a category for each country is great but if you find someone who emigrated you need to add them to both so the link to their origins is established.

posted by Hilary (Buckle) Gadsby
I have another BUCKLE FAMILY too (and on ancestry some twat/imbecile has managed to create a nonsensical family tree perpetuated in mythdom by many others, that combine the South Western English BUCKLES with Mid-North Eastern english BUCKLES, with the most ridiculous path of non-genealogical records now to mankind! *sigh*

Anyway... my ancestors on that line start with Thomas BUCKLE (6th gt. grandfather) who was buried in All Saint's Churchyard in Great Oakley, Essex, in 1768, having married more than once, in the same parish. I'm not so worried about the DNA Matching of Descendants on that line, as we do have an unbroken line of parish records to support the family (NPEs notwithstanding).

posted by Julie Collins
You've already seen my cousin's listing for John or Joseph BUCKLE bp Malmesbury, Wiltshire, England, but I desperately need DNA evidence... it's the only family of 4th gt. grandparents that I've confidently researched (I've got some other brick walls) that I don't have proven DNA matched descendants for. *sigh* I do, however, have lots of records of his supposed descendants (if I can prove the link), along with some private family trees of siblings and etc. There is a lot of difficulty with the variant spellings of the surname... and I haven't done a lot on his siblings lines.... until I can prove they're my lines. The problem is that there is no supporting baptism of my ancestress to him. Just lots and lots of circumstantial evidence. A DNA match would seal the deal.
posted by Julie Collins