Bland

b. 1890

d. 1984 Age 93.

m. Granville Pearl Fugate

Cheapside is the former site of one of the principal in London, cheap, broadly meaning “market” in medieval English.

Many of the streets feeding into the main thoroughfare are named after the produce that was once sold in those areas of Edward James Fugate

the market, including Honey Lane, Milk Street, and . In medieval times, the royal processional route from the to the would b. 1912. d. 1964. Age 52.

include Cheapside. During state occasions such as the first entry of (second wife of ), into London in September 1299, the m. Vesta Noble (1921-2003) Age 83.

conduits of Cheapside customarily flowed with wine.

Inez Fugate Liftig

b. 1948

Roger Bland.

m. Robert Liftig, 1971. b. 1947

Known children of Roger Bland include:

Anya Liftig

i. Adam Bland, m. Joan Atkyns.

b. 1977

Adam Bland (Roger1); m. Joan Atkyns, daughter of William Atkyns.

m. Noel Hartman, 2011

He was a skinner. He resided at London, England.

Dorothy Liftig

John Bland (Adam2, Roger1);

b. 1981

baptized 28 Sep 1572 at St. Gregory

m. David Martin, 2009

by St Paul, London, England; m. Susan Dublere circa 1606; d. 1632;

bur. 5 May 1632 at St. Antholin, London, England.

He was a member of the Grocer’s Company. He resided at Cheapside,

London, England. He resided at Plaistow, Essex, England. He left a

will on 24 Sep 1627. Susan Dublere was born in 1590 at Hamburg, Germany. She died on 1

Feb 1664/65.

Theodorick Bland

(January 16, 1629 – April 23, 1671), also known as Theodorick Bland of Westover

Born in , he served as his family’s business agent in and the in his early twenties. He moved to the colony of Virginia in 1653, to replace his brother Edward, who had died. He represented in the 1660 session, serving as . In this role, he presided over the House during the transition from the Cromwell Protectorate to the restored government of . He served on the Governor’s Council 1664–71.

Richard Bland (Burgess)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard Bland (August 11, 1665 – April 1720), sometimes known as Richard Bland of Jordan’s Point, was a member of the , the father of , the son of , and the grandson of , an elected Governor of the during the English Commonwealth period. Bland was also a , a to , and is noted in the church records as a member of the Vestry of in Williamsburg Virginia which authorized in 1710 the building of the present Church structure. When his father died in 1671, Bland’s brother, inherited and joined with Richard in its ownership. The brothers eventually 1,200 acres of the property to in 1688 for 300L and 10,000 pounds of tobacco and cask.

Bland was the second of three sons born to Theodorick Bland of Westover and Anna Bennett, the daughter of Governor Richard Bennett. His brothers were the Theodorick Bland and John Bland, who was the great-grandfather of Chancellor of Maryland. Bland married Mary Swan and had seven children who all died in their infancy. His first wife died in September, 1700, and on February 11, 1701, he married Elizabeth Randolph, the daughter of , and had five children:

• Mary Bland (born August 21, 1704) married and had four children, including who was the father of and the grandfather of .

• Elizabeth Bland (born May 29, 1706) married Colonel William Beverley, the son of [], and had four children.

• Anna Bland married twice. She had three children with her first husband, Robert Munford, and had two children with her second husband, George Currie.

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