Mould
b. 1824. d. 1862. Age 38.
m. Phoebe Campbell (Part Cherokee)
Notes from Genealogy.com: “Two Yankees, Nim McIntosh and Hen Kilburn waylaid George at his home on Barge’s
There was a London-based Mole family living in the Stepney area (next to Aldgate) in the late seventeenth and early Branch, Breathitt Co., KY and when he came out they shot and killed him. His brother Lossen Noble was killed about eighteenth centuries. A Christopher Mole from this family was secretary of the East India company in the 1730s at the the same time on John Little’s Creek. George went to Missouri in 1844 and came back to Kentucky and married Phoebe same time as a Joshua Vanneck was chairman. Christopher’s brother Thomas Mole was a congregational minister. The
Campbell, daughter of Lewis Campbell, and he named his first daughter Missouri for the state. George was a farmer.”
East India Company acted as a kind of club, with members marrying each other’s sisters or daughters. This would all fit in well with the possibility of John Moule coming from a non-conformist background, as suggested earlier. However Caleb Jacob Lovejoy Noble
extensive research into this family (many of whom left wills) has failed so far to reveal any link. Interestingly there is b. 1859, KY. d. 1928. KY Age 78.
(was ?) a French Huguenot church in Wheler St, Spitalfields, where John Moule lived 1766-9. In his book, “Memories of m. Sarah Jane Noble b. 1878. d. 1954. Daughter of James Noble and Rachel Napier
a Vicarage”, (1913), Bishop Handley Moule describes the forefathers of his grandfather George Moule as being “French Ambrose Noble
by origin”, but gives no indication of how he knew this. —freeserve.co.uk
b. circa 1896. d. 1963. Age 67.
This excerpt from a Mould family history is interesting for a number of reasons. First of course, Peter Fugate, and Peter m. Omega Noble
was a Huguenot, and Fugates are recorded in the church in St. Spitalfields. This may indicate that Peter was able to find another Huguenot in Maryland and marry here.
Vesta Noble
Also here can be easily seen the difficulty in tracing names: Mould was also Mole, Moule (which means “mussel” in French), b. 1921. d. 2003 Age 83.
Maull (in another section of this passage). It’s not hard to suspect that some scholar might want to explore for dissertation: “The m. Edward Fugate (1912-1964)
Huguenot Subcultures of Colonial Maryland.”
Inez Fugate
John Mould
b. 1948
b. 1643, Baltimore Co., MD
m. Robert Liftig. 1971. b. 1947
d. ?
Anya Liftig