Children of John Hynckleye and Johane Bills born in Harrietsham:
Daughter Hynckleye born about 1555.
Daughter Hynckleye born about 1557.
Margaret Hynckleye baptized February 28, 1559.
Annys Hynckleye born about 1561.
Henry Hynckleye baptized December 28, 1562.
Thomas Hinckley baptized December 28, 1562.
Diamina Hynckleye baptized November 12, 1564.
Or Death in 1591
John Hinckleye (176451891)
Suggested edit: Good afternoon
I gained access to Kent County Council records which have this listing at Johannes (I believe this is the latin for John) and the burial date is listed as February 1591. This doesn't help much and I'm not sure how correct this is compared to where your information comes from.
I have had access to the plot records of St John The Baptist in an effort to find the plot for any of the Hinckley family but unfortunately none of the stones seem to have survived. Having said that there are a handful of stones that have worn away but these seem to be more from the 1700's - the likelihood is that the plots have been reused or moved. The Kent records show a potential 10,000 burials in the churches history and Find A Grave hasn't topped 700 yet.
Kindest
Mark
Contributor: Mark Emerson
Children of John Hynckleye and Johane Bills born in Harrietsham:
Daughter Hynckleye born about 1555.
Daughter Hynckleye born about 1557.
Margaret Hynckleye baptized February 28, 1559.
Annys Hynckleye born about 1561.
Henry Hynckleye baptized December 28, 1562.
Thomas Hinckley baptized December 28, 1562.
Diamina Hynckleye baptized November 12, 1564.
Or Death in 1591
John Hinckleye (176451891)
Suggested edit: Good afternoon
I gained access to Kent County Council records which have this listing at Johannes (I believe this is the latin for John) and the burial date is listed as February 1591. This doesn't help much and I'm not sure how correct this is compared to where your information comes from.
I have had access to the plot records of St John The Baptist in an effort to find the plot for any of the Hinckley family but unfortunately none of the stones seem to have survived. Having said that there are a handful of stones that have worn away but these seem to be more from the 1700's - the likelihood is that the plots have been reused or moved. The Kent records show a potential 10,000 burials in the churches history and Find A Grave hasn't topped 700 yet.
Kindest
Mark
Contributor: Mark Emerson
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