Hugh William Lester

Male 1884 - 1972  (87 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Hugh William Lester was born on 07 Jun 1884 in Fulham (son of John Beaumont Lester and Rose Freyberg); died on 17 Apr 1972 in Mornington, Victoria.

    Notes:

    Was in World War 1 (received medals), Captain West Riding Regiment, later Captain, Acting Major in 3rd Duke of Wellington's. (This was a reserve battalion and remained in UK throughout the war)

    Left Liverpool for Melbourne 10/01/1919 with his wife on SS Osterley. At this time was still using the rank of Captain in the army. Settled at Mansfield, Victoria and was a grazier. He appears in the electoral lists up to 1954 which is as far as are available.

    In the Melbourne Argus of 30/08/1928 he is referred to as having been involved in the sale of Bullocks.

    Hugh married Marjorie Elizabeth Ritchie on 24 Jul 1918 in London. Marjorie (daughter of Living and Living) was born between 25 Jul 1892 and 24 Jul 1893 in Port Fairy, Victoria, Australia; died on 26 Dec 1945 in Mansfield, Victoria. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    It is not known whether there were any children.

    Children:
    1. Dr John Ritchie Lester was born on 21 Apr 1919 in Mansfield, Victoria, Australia; died on 29 Sep 1999 in Aurora, Oregon.
    2. Jean Marjorie Lester was born on 30 Nov 1920 in Shanghai; died on 2 May 2016 in Melbourne, Australia.
    3. Geoffrey Hugh Lester was born on 26 Sep 1922 in Shanghai; died on 17 Apr 1943 in New South Wales, Australia.
    4. Richard William Lester was born on 7 Feb 1925 in Shanghai; died on 16 Sep 2012 in Melbourne, Australia.

    Hugh married Living [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Beaumont Lester was born on 30 Dec 1851 in Liverpool (son of Rev John William Lester and Jane Campbell Johnston); died on 10 Jul 1894 in Whitechapel; was buried on 14 Jul 1894 in South Metropolitan Cemetery, Norwood.

    Notes:

    On census day 1881 was living with his wife and with his brother in law, Herbert Freyberg and wife Laura, at 200 Earl's Court Road together with another brother in law and sister in law and three servants.
    Committed suicide by shooting himself in the head and died at the London Hospital on 10/07/1894. Inquest was held on 13/07/1894.
    Address at time of death was given as 26 Halford Road, Richmond. This address was not listed in the 1891 census. His address in the 1891 census was 31 Halford Road. Sons, John Beaumont and Eric Stanley were born at 26 Halford Road.
    Wife's death certificate gives his occupation as private secretary.
    The term 'secretary' probably indicates that he was a clerk and the 1891 census records him as a warehouseman. The implication is that he was living somewhat above his means, having a house in Richmond and working in Whitechapel.
    Probate record:
    Director and secretary of a public company. Died at Albert Street, Shadwell, Middlesex. Effects worth £953 18s 2d

    John married Rose Freyberg on 24 Jul 1880 in Earls Court. Rose (daughter of James Freyberg and Jane Wood) was born between 01 Jan and 31 Mar 1853 in Belgravia, Middlesex; died on 27 Apr 1931 in Kensington. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Rose Freyberg was born between 01 Jan and 31 Mar 1853 in Belgravia, Middlesex (daughter of James Freyberg and Jane Wood); died on 27 Apr 1931 in Kensington.

    Notes:

    At time of marriage living at 200 Earls Court Road, London.
    Death registered by daughter, M. M. Patton - Bethune of 88a Lexham Gardens, Kensington.
    living at 51 Brondesbury Villas, Kilburn in 1915 (son's address on death in WW1)
    Probate record: Effects £626 14s 9d

    Notes:

    May have been other children born at Fulham between 1884 and 1893 who died before 1891 (there are several Lester births and deaths at Fulham in this period).

    Children:
    1. John Beaumont Lester was born on 09 May 1893 in Richmond, Surrey; died on 15 Sep 1916 in France.
    2. Eric Stanley Lester was born on 03 Mar 1895 in Richmond, Surrey; died on 13 Oct 1915 in Cambrin, France.
    3. Mary Monica Lester was born on 28 Apr 1881 in Kensington; died between 01 Apr and 30 Jun 1968 in Newbury Registration District.
    4. 1. Hugh William Lester was born on 07 Jun 1884 in Fulham; died on 17 Apr 1972 in Mornington, Victoria.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Rev John William Lester was born on 10 Feb 1826 in Fulham, London (son of John Lester and Elizabeth Coulson); died on 24 Feb 1870 in Norwood, Surrey.

    Rev married Jane Campbell Johnston on 01 Apr 1849 in Irvine, Scotland. Jane (daughter of James Johnston and Jane Campbell Crichton) was born on 09 Jul 1825 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 03 May 1878 in Hampstead Registration District. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Jane Campbell Johnston was born on 09 Jul 1825 in Irvine, Ayrshire (daughter of James Johnston and Jane Campbell Crichton); died on 03 May 1878 in Hampstead Registration District.
    Children:
    1. Ada Hamilton Lester was born about 05 Jul 1859 in Norwood, Surrey; died on 18 May 1885 in Paris.
    2. Annette Curtis Lester was born on 16 Sep 1861 in Norwood, Surrey; died on 23 Feb 1944 in Darlington.
    3. Herbert Walter Robert Lester was born on 12 Nov 1865 in Norwood, Surrey; died on 14 Jun 1935 in York, Ontario; was buried on 17 Jun 1935 in Mount Hope, Toronto.
    4. Elizabeth Helen Lester was born on 13 Oct 1856 in Ashton Hayes, Cheshire; died on 25 Dec 1939 in Montmorency, Paris; was buried on 28 Dec 1939 in Issy-les-Moulineaux, Paris 1.
    5. Jeanie Crichton Lester was born in Jun 1850 in Kirbymoorside, Yorkshire.
    6. 2. John Beaumont Lester was born on 30 Dec 1851 in Liverpool; died on 10 Jul 1894 in Whitechapel; was buried on 14 Jul 1894 in South Metropolitan Cemetery, Norwood.
    7. James Johnston Lester was born on 21 Oct 1854 in Ashton Hayes, Cheshire; died on 09 Sep 1919 in Guernsey; was buried on 12 Sep 1919 in Plot K29, Foulon Cemetery, Guernsey.

  3. 6.  James Freyberg was born in 1827 in St. James, Westminster (son of Peter Freyberg and Ann Elkins Milton); died in 1914 in Wellington, New Zealand.

    Notes:

    Birthplace given on 1891 census as St. James.
    1891 census has date of birth 1834/5.
    Emigrated to New Zealand 15/10/1891 to take up a position as a surveyor in the public service. Sailed on 'Aorangi' from London to Wellington.

    James married Jane Wood between 01 Jan and 31 Mar 1852 in St. James, Westminster Registration District. Jane was born between Apr 1826 and Apr 1827 in Marylebone; died between 01 Apr and 30 Jun 1877 in St. George, Hanover Square Registration District. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Jane Wood was born between Apr 1826 and Apr 1827 in Marylebone; died between 01 Apr and 30 Jun 1877 in St. George, Hanover Square Registration District.

    Notes:

    Family appears to have emigrated to New Zealand sometime before 1897.

    Children:
    1. Herbert Freyberg was born between 1855 and 1856 in Westminster, Middlesex; died on 25 Feb 1924 in Holborn Registration District.
    2. Percy Freyberg was born between 1859 and 1860 in Westminster, Middlesex; died on 12 Jan 1931 in Ealing.
    3. 3. Rose Freyberg was born between 01 Jan and 31 Mar 1853 in Belgravia, Middlesex; died on 27 Apr 1931 in Kensington.
    4. Jessie Freyberg was born between 1853 and 1854 in Westminster, Middlesex; died on 04 Nov 1927 in Holsworthy Registration District.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John Lester was born on 20 Sep 1807 in Newcastle under Lyme, Staffordshire (son of Thomas Major Lester and Rebecca Upton); died on 21 Jun 1870 in Mile End.

    John married Elizabeth Coulson on 06 Feb 1825 in Hornsey, Middlesex. Elizabeth (daughter of Robert Coulson and Elizabeth Wilson) was born between 10 Dec 1804 and 11 Dec 1805 in Hoxton, Middlesex; died on 12 Nov 1873 in Mile End. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Elizabeth Coulson was born between 10 Dec 1804 and 11 Dec 1805 in Hoxton, Middlesex (daughter of Robert Coulson and Elizabeth Wilson); died on 12 Nov 1873 in Mile End.

    Notes:

    John Lester's wife is believed to be Elizabeth Coulson for the following reasons:
    1. The only marriage found for John Lester to an Elizabeth is to Elizabeth Coulson at Hornsey. The date fits in with the birth of their children. However, a witness was Elizabeth Lester. Was this his aunt?
    2. John and Elizabeth Lester were living with her mother Elizabeth in 1851 and 1861 although the latter's surname is given as Wilson in one case and Harwood in the other. (Wilson was her father's name - he was living with them in 1851, and it is likely that Harwood was her mother's name). In 1841 a John Wilson was living with an apparent daughter Elizabeth Coulson and an apparent granddaughter Matilda Coulson.
    3. There was a marriage on 10/08/1802 at St. George the Martyr, Southwark between Robert Coulson and Elizabeth Wilson. This tallies with Elizabeth Lester's quoted age and the baptism of an Elizabeth Coulson, daughter of Robert and Elizabeth Coulson on 23/06/1805 at St. Mary Whitechapel, Stepney. (1861 census says she was born at Hoxton, though).
    4. In 1841, 1851 and 1861, various 'servants' of the name Coulson were living with the Lesters. Some of these appear to be children of Robert and Elizabeth Coulson. One of them was Matilda - see 1841 census.

    [A baptism of Elizabeth Harwood (daughter of Thomas Harwood and Elizabeth) took place at St. Andrew's, Holborn on 05/10/1806.]

    Said to be descended from Dr. Richard Baxter (1615-1691). The only evidence for this at the moment is that a son of Robert and Elizabeth Coulson was named Robert Baxter Coulson (baptised 29/08/1821 at St. Leonard's, Shoreditch).

    (IGI has baptism of Richard Baxter, son of Lorence and Anne Baxter at Gnosall, Staffordshire 30/11/1615 although the biography given below states that he was born at Rowton in Shropshire). He was a Presbyterian divine, ordained in 1633 and a military chaplain during the Civil War. He was a prolific writer of devotional literature. Baxter disliked the growth of sectarianism in the Commonwealth and contributed to the change of feeling that led to the Restoration. He accepted the position of royal chaplain and refused a bishopric but the uncompromising conscience that had led him into Presbyterianism and then to criticism of it now brought him trouble. As a nonconformist he endured petty persecution; this became severe under James II - he was sentenced to imprisonment in 1685 and vilified by Judge Jeffreys. He enjoyed some peaceful years under the rule of William and Mary. Baxter's best - known works are "The Saint's Everlasting Rest" (1651), "A Call to the Unconverted" (1658), and his moving and intimate tribute to his beloved wife who died in 1681, "A Breviate of the Life of Margaret Baxter" (1681). His own account of his turbulent life, "Reliquiae Baxterianae" was published in 1696.
    There is a house adjacent to St. Leonard's Church at Bridgnorth which was occupied by Richard Baxter from 1640 to 1641 when he was the curate there.

    She died at 122 Roman Road, Mile End. Death registered by H. Lester (?) of 15 Manchester Road, Cubitt Town.

    1851 Kelly's Directory lists a Mrs. Elizabeth Lester at The School, Norfolk House, Stepney Green.

    Alternative date of birth is between 04/1806 and 04/1807 (1871 census gives age 64).
    1841 census implies birth 04/1805 to 04/1806.
    Death certificate implies birth 11/1804 to 11/1805.

    In 1871 Census, house in which she was living was shared with Charles Manzi, a picture frame maker. This census says that she was born in Yorkshire which contradicts all the other censuses.

    Was a resident of Hornsey at the time of her marriage (see banns)

    Richard Baxter 1615 - 1691

    While many have celebrated the music of Mozart (1756-91) and the ministry of John Wesley (1703- 91), our time should not be allowed to pass without recalling the life and labours of Richard Baxter (1615-91). While few would question a Wesley celebration, many might need persuading where Baxter is concerned. However, there are equally compelling reasons to remember Baxter as well as Wesley. Quite simply, as a saintly, energetic, dedicated, brilliant and large-hearted servant of Christ, Richard Baxter is arguably the greatest of all the Puritans - a giant among giants! He is probably the most effective pastor-evangelist this country has ever known. Certainly, what Spurgeon was to the 19th, and Wesley (together with Whitefield!) was to the 18th, Baxter was to 17th century England. His pen-productions proved just as famous as his pulpit ministry at Kidderminster. Indeed, Baxter's writings are still being published 300 years on; his style remains surprisingly lucid and lively when some of his contemporaries are obviously dated. Baxter's "Saints Everlasting Rest" (1649), "Reformed Pastor" (1656) and "Call to the Unconverted" (1658) still retain their power to grip and edify the late 20th century reader.

    Who then was Richard Baxter? He Was born at Rowton Shropshire in 1615. His parents were godly folk yet lacking the means to educate an obviously gifted son. Young Richard was deeply influenced by the writings of puritan authors like William Perkins and Richard Sibbes. Following an early conversion, he had an immense thirst for knowledge. Although he never attended university, he probably mastered more information through the years than many a college professor! A private education led to ordination by the Bishop of Worcester in 1638 and a brief curacy at Bridgenorth. For all his zeal, his parishioners were a "hardhearted" people. A loyal son of the Church of England with nonconformist sympathies, Baxter's attachment to puritanism was heightened by the "Romanizing" measures of Archbishop Laud.

    Baxter accepted an invitation to a living at Kidderminster where he was to exercise an extraordinary ministry for nearly twenty years. With the advent of the Civil War, he supported the Parliamentary cause. His life being threatened by the Royalists of Worcestershire, he withdrew to Coventry where he became a chaplain. After the decisive Battle of Naseby (1645), Baxter served in Colonel Whalley's regiment. His experience of religious sectarianism during these years disturbed him deeply. His special dread was the alarming growth of antinomianism - a stress on the doctrines of grace at the expense of practical godliness. These developments profoundly influenced Baxter's conception of the Christian life.

    On leaving the army in 1647, Baxter was seriously ill. While convalescing at the home of Sir Thomas Rouse at Worcester, he conceived his first two books - "Aphorisms of Justification" and the "Saints' Everlasting Rest". They were published in 1649 soon after resuming his parish ministry. Baxter never enjoyed robust health. He says, "In my labours at Kidderminster after my return I did all under languishing weakness, being seldom an hour free from pain....." But how God blest the prayers and preaching of Richard Baxter! Although the parish church was large, Five galleries were added before long. The town witnessed an astonishing spiritual and moral reformation. In Baxter's words, "On the Lord's Days there was no disorder to be seen in the streets, but you might hear an hundred families singing psalms and repeating sermons as you passed through the streets. In a word, when I came thither at first there was about one family in a street that worshipped God and when I came away, there were some streets where there was not passed one family.....that did not......."

    There was a heavenly unction and fervour about Baxter's preaching. None could hear him without being deeply affected. Burdened for souls while gripped with persistent pain and weakness, he tells us that he preached, "as a dying man to dying men....." When Baxter preached of Christ, faith, repentance, holiness, heaven and hell, his vivid and impassioned eloquence left none doubting their reality. Not surprisingly, Baxter deplored lifeless preaching: "Nothing is more indecent than a dead preacher, speaking to dead hearers the living truths of the living God!"

    Baxter was not only famous for his evangelistic and pastoral work. Grieved at the sectarian fragmentation of the times, he is also remembered for his attempts to unite Protestant Christians. Believers of all denominations regularly worshipped at Kidderminster parish church and his 'Worcester Association' successfully united ministers on essential gospel truths. What then was Richard Baxter's churchmanship? As a conservative Puritan, he believed the Church of England needed further reformation and he spoke warmly of the Westminster Assembly of Divines. However, he thought some of the Presbyterians - with whom he had most sympathy - too 'hierarchical'. Independents and Baptists he thought too 'ultra' in many things. They encouraged fragmentation and pride. However, Baxter loved all true godly men, whatever their views about church order and baptism. He liked to call himself a 'catholic Christian' and a 'mere nonconformist' who would as soon be a 'martyr for love as any article of the creed'.

    Richard Baxter also proposed a solution to the major theological division of the day, the Calvinist - Arminian debate. While he believed Arminians were in error at many points, he believed that many Calvinists were guilty of an 'ultra-orthodox' overreaction. As the Huguenot theologian Amyraut had argued in France, so Baxter argued in England that a biblical balance was to be observed between the paradox of God's hidden purposes and His revealed promises. While Baxter urged the truth of sovereign divide election, he also maintained a designed sufficiency in the death of Christ for all mankind. In arguing his case from plain texts in the Bible, Baxter pointed out that John Calvin and several members of the Westminster Assembly also taught universal atonement.

    While Baxter was sympathetic with the Parliamentary cause, he was unhappy with many features of Oliver Cromwell's Protectorate. In his view, the excessive liberty of the new order was no just alternative to the tyranny of the old. Baxter's essential conservatism blinded him to the scheming duplicity of Charles I, so after the Lord Protector's death, he welcomed the prospect of the Restoration. But when Charles II promised to grant religious liberty, many, including Baxter, were utterly deceived. Once it became clear that the Church of England was to be restored with all its strictness, Baxter soon realised his duty. Although the king offered him the bishopric of Hereford, Baxter refused. Shortly before the infamous Act of Uniformity came into effect on 24 August 1662 - which led to the ejection of around 2,000 sound, godly, evangelical ministers - Baxter bid farewell to the Church of England in a sermon at Blackfriars. He was to become the leading figure among the ejected clergy.

    In September 1662 Baxter married Margaret Charlton, a young woman whom he had led to Christ at Kidderminster. He was 47 and she only 23. Many tongues wagged and eyebrows were raised, for Baxter had criticised clergy who had married. However, it was a marriage made in heaven. The couple were ideally suited and Margaret was to prove a great comfort and encouragement to Richard until her early death in 1681.

    Baxter was living with his wife and mother-in-law at Acton in Middlesex when the terrible plague sent many to an early grave during the hot summer of 1665. However, Baxter and his family were preserved. The great fire of London occurred the following year, 'one judgement on the back of another' as one historian wrote. Notwithstanding these events Baxter preached and pastored when he could. He was also busy with his books. "The Divine Life" was published in 1664 and "Reasons for the Christian Religion" appeared in 1667.

    Baxter shared in the cruel persecution and sufferings of the Nonconformists. He was imprisoned for a week at Clerkenwell in 1669, and for nearly two years at Southwark in 1684 - 6, aged 70! This second term of imprisonment is associated with his trial at the hands of the notorious Judge Jeffreys, occasioned by the publication of Baxters "Paraphrase on the New Testament" (1685). Because of his textual comments, the author was accused of libelling the Church of England. The trial was a forgone conclusion. The Lord Chief Justice wasn't very interested in truth or justice. The sick and aged Baxter was repeatedly shouted down when attempting to speak. Scurrility knew no bounds when Jeffreys abused the saintly Baxter. "This is an old rogue" cried the judge, "and hath poisoned the world with his Kidderminster doctrine!" Baxter was reviled as "an old schismatical knave. a hypocritical villain!" When further attempting to explain his views, the Lord Chief Justice burst forth, "Richard, Richard, dost thou think we'll hear thee poison the court? Richard, thou art an old fellow, an old knave; thou hast written books enough to load a cart, every one as full of sedition, I might say treason, as an egg is full of meat. Hast thou been whipped out of thy writing trade forty years ago, it had been happy..." Such is how Christ's enemies treat his faithful servants!

    Baxter was released from prison on 24 November 1686. The Lord's aged warrior still had plenty of fight left in him, so he moved to Charterhouse Yard to assist the ministry of his friend Matthew Sylvester. More theological and devotional books flowed from his pen. Indeed, Baxter had written enough books 'to load a cart' - 141 in all. His final offering was "The Certainty of the World of Spirits" a work typical of the other-worldliness of one who lived and laboured that others might enjoy 'everlasting rest'.

    Baxter lived to see better days. With the 'Glorious Revolution' of 1688, Protestant William and Mary ascended the throne. Baxter continued preaching until the end. After his last sermon, he crept home to his bed, utterly exhausted. There was a glory about Baxter's last hours. To his friends Dr William Bates and Dr Edmund Calamy he declared in a whisper, "I bless God I have a well grounded assurance of my eternal happiness, and great peace and comfort within." When reminded of the good his books had done, the dying saint repliedy, "I was but a pen in the hand of God; and what praise is due to a pen!" As his agonies intensified, he admitted, "I have pain, there is no arguing against sense, but I have peace, I have peace." Baxter's final words were spoken to Matthew' Sylvester: "The Lord teach you to die." And so, on 8 December 1691, Richard Baxter entered that rest which remains for the people of God.

    (Reproduced by kind permission of Dr Alan C. Clifford,
    Director Norwich & Norfolk School of reformed Theology)

    Notes:

    Marriage not in any Fulham registers or in St. Mary Abbott, Kensington.
    Marriage not in the Shropshire Marriage Index or in the Staffordshire Marriage Index.

    Children:
    1. William Upton Lester was born on 28 Jun 1833 in City of London; died on 27 Feb 1899 in Bromley, Poplar.
    2. Elizabeth Lester was born between Apr 1835 and Apr 1836 in City of London; died on 23 Dec 1891 in Bethnal Green.
    3. Alfre t was born between Apr 1837 and Apr 1838 in City of London; died on 18 Nov 1873 in Mile End.
    4. Rev Edward Lester was born on 29 Jun 1831 in London (Middlesex); died on 04 Jan 1905 in Liverpool.
    5. 4. Rev John William Lester was born on 10 Feb 1826 in Fulham, London; died on 24 Feb 1870 in Norwood, Surrey.
    6. Canon Thomas Major Lester was born on 26 Aug 1829 in Fulham, London; died on 03 Nov 1903 in Everton, Liverpool.
    7. William Upton Lester was born about Jul 1830 in London; died on 06 Jun 1831.

  3. 10.  James Johnston was born about 04 Apr 1794 in Ayr (son of John James Johnston and Agnes Murdoch); died on 13 Jan 1853 in Irvine, Ayrshire.

    Notes:

    OPR's give four other possible origins for James Johnston:-
    son of Peter Johnston and Agnes Lusk baptised at Irvine on 22/08/1799
    son of John Johnston and Mary Blair baptised at Irvine on 01/03/1801
    son of William Johnston and Jean Glass born at Irvine on 23/06/1806
    son of James Johnston and Helen Russell baptised at Ayr on 26/08/1803

    At time of marriage was 'of Irvine'.

    Founder member (1826) and past president (1833) of Irvine Burns Club.

    Town Clerk or Irvine for 32 years.

    James married Jane Campbell Crichton on 25 Jul 1824 in Irvine, Ayrshire. Jane (daughter of James Crichton and Jane Campbell) was born about 01 Nov 1797 in Irvine; died on 15 Apr 1865 in Irvine, Ayrshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Jane Campbell Crichton was born about 01 Nov 1797 in Irvine (daughter of James Crichton and Jane Campbell); died on 15 Apr 1865 in Irvine, Ayrshire.

    Notes:

    At time of marriage was 'of Irvine'.
    The 1861 census calls her Jane C Johnston. The C is probably for Campbell (her mother's name was Campbell). The quoted age (63) is consistent with her known date of birth). Howerver, the age given on the death certificate in 1865 is 66.

    Children:
    1. Mary Johnston was born on 21 Jan 1837 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 23 Aug 1896 in Glasgow.
    2. Hamilton Crichton Johnston was born between Apr 1837 and Apr 1838 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 30 Jun 1906 in Lasswade, Edinburgh.
    3. James Crichton Johnston was born between Apr 1842 and Apr 1843 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 08 Sep 1879 in At sea, en route to Rangoon.
    4. Elizabeth Johnston was born between Apr 1839 and Apr 1840 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 21 Jan 1923 in Irvine, Ayrshire.
    5. Helen Murdoch Johnston was born between Apr 1832 and Apr 1833 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 30 Jan 1920 in Edinburgh.
    6. John Johnston was born on 12 Mar 1827 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 22 Feb 1859 in Tacna, Peru.
    7. 5. Jane Campbell Johnston was born on 09 Jul 1825 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 03 May 1878 in Hampstead Registration District.
    8. Agnes Johnston was born in 1830 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 11 Feb 1840 in Irvine, Ayrshire.
    9. Agnes Murdoch Johnston was born in 1828 in Irvine, Ayrshire; died on 31 Dec 1829 in Irvine, Ayrshire.

  5. 12.  Peter Freyberg died before Apr 1841.

    Notes:

    Assumed to be brother of James Freyberg.

    Peter married Ann Elkins Milton in 1817 in London. Ann was born between Apr 1800 and Apr 1801 in Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Ann Elkins Milton was born between Apr 1800 and Apr 1801 in Hampshire.
    Children:
    1. Edward Freyberg was born between Apr 1834 and Apr 1835 in St. James, Westminster.
    2. Peter Freyberg was born between Apr 1824 and Apr 1825 in St. James, Westminster.
    3. Eleanor Freyberg was born between Apr 1831 and Apr 1832 in St. James, Westminster.
    4. 6. James Freyberg was born in 1827 in St. James, Westminster; died in 1914 in Wellington, New Zealand.
    5. Anne Freyberg was born between Apr 1829 and Apr 1830 in St. James, Westminster.