Pedigree Catalog
The Gurney direct male line, era-banded and linked to fact sheets, research notes, and places.
Library / Pedigree Catalog
The Gurney direct male line from Allen Gurney, Portland, Oregon including some select related ancestors. Click an ancestor to see more details. For even more detail, explore the fact sheets, research notes, case files, places, and/or biographies all researched and drafted by Allen Gurney.
Known generations37
Related records7
Places78
Research notes37
Modern America
20th–21st centuries
G1
Allen Lawrence GurneyThis Genealogist
Living
Marion, Indiana, USA; Portland, Oregon, USA; St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Occupation: IT; B.S. in Chemical Engineering, Washington Univ., St. Louis
G2
Lester Hayes Gurney
1945–2025
Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA; Marion, Indiana, USA; Port Washington, New York, USA
Third-generation power engineer (entire career at Indiana & Michigan Electric (AEP)), and the last of the line born in the New York metropolitan area before the family settled into Indiana. Master Mason in a five-generation Masonic continuity reaching back to G6.
G3
Lester Sawyer Gurney III
1923-2011
New York metropolitan area, USA
Wellesley Hills-born power engineer and wartime Army/Air Service Command officer; father of Lester Hayes Gurney (G2). Family notes place him with the Air Service Command at Robins Field when he married Edith Walberg Scott and with the 536th Signal Heavy Construction Company at Manila when G2 was born.
Gilded Age & Civil War — New York
19th century
G4
Lester Sawyer Gurney Jr.
1888–1958
New York metropolitan area, USA
Patchogue-raised civil engineer who came of age inside Long Island's theatrical-colony world, then helped build the Cape Cod Canal and ran his own engineering practice opposite the Buzzards Bay station.
G5
Lester Sawyer Gurney
1856–1899
New York metropolitan area, USA
Assistant Secretary of the Actors' Fund of America in Gilded-Age New York, husband to actress Helene Ransome, master of his father's Civil War Masonic lodge, and a familiar figure in Patchogue summer society — dead at forty-three.
G6
Brigadier General William Gurney
1821–1879
15 Avenue C; 155 Henry Street; 177 West 48th Street; +5 more
Wholesale merchant, Civil War colonel, commandant of Charleston 1865.
Early Republic — Flushing, Queens, New York
late 18th–mid 19th centuries
G7
Willis Gurney
c. 1796–98 — before 1870
Dawes Cemetery; Flushing, Queens, New York, USA
The hinge between the Massachusetts farming generations and the New York chapter: a Cummington-born tailor who, by 1830, had moved his family to Flushing, Queens — opening the New York century that would last to G2.
Massachusetts Farming Generations — Cummington & Plymouth County
17th–19th centuries
G8
Amos Gurney
1770 — before 1850
Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; Dawes Cemetery
Cummington, Massachusetts farmer of the western-frontier generation; born in 1770 — the very year his father Benjamin sold Abington land and bought into "Town No. 5" with Silas Reed, transplanting the family from old Plymouth County to the Hampshire hills.
G9
Benjamin Gurney
bpt. 30 May 1730 — d. 28 Sept. 1805
Abington, Massachusetts, USA; Little Comfort / Abington-Bridgewater line, Massachusetts, USA; Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; +2 more
Plymouth County farmer born of an unmarried liaison and reportedly raised by his maternal aunt; in 1770 he sold his Abington land and bought into the new frontier town of Cummington with Silas Reed, opening the family's western Massachusetts chapter.
G10
Benjamin Gurney
c. 1704 — before 1772
Abington, Massachusetts, USA; Little Comfort / Abington-Bridgewater line, Massachusetts, USA; Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; +3 more
Plymouth County farmer whose 1730 liaison with Jane Harden produced the direct-line son Benjamin (G9) one year before his 1731 marriage to Sarah Morse — a half-brother split that runs the Cummington line and the Rochester homestead in two directions for the next century.
G11
Benjamin Gurney
c. 1676 — d. 1738/9
Abington, Massachusetts, USA; Little Comfort / Abington-Bridgewater line, Massachusetts, USA; Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; +3 more
Plymouth County landholder of the Abington–Bridgewater line; his wife Rebecca Staples gave her name to "Granny Gurney's Swamp" after a fire incident — the kind of hyper-local place-name that ties a family memorably to a stretch of New England land.
G12
Richard Gurney
c. 1630 England — d. Oct. 1691
Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; Great Pond
Brought to Massachusetts as a small child by his emigrant father John Gurney-1; one of the early proprietors of Weymouth from before 1642; lost a son at the Mendon massacre in the opening violence of King Philip's War, 1675.
The Emigrant — Colonial Massachusetts
17th century
G13
John GurneyProbable
b. c. 1609-12 — d. 1662/3
Braintree, Massachusetts, USA; East Dereham Parish Church; Mendon, Massachusetts, USA; +1 more
Tailor. First Gurney in North America. Estate: £55.14.6.
Tudor England — City of London & Norfolk
late 15th–mid 17th centuries
G14
Francis Gurney
13 Sept. 1581 — d. 9 Jan. 1646/7
St Benet Fink; East Dereham Parish Church; St James's Chapel ruins; +1 more
A younger son of West Barsham gentry sent down to London, admitted to the Merchant Taylors' Company in 1606, and twenty-eight years a financial agent — "a sort of agent, or banker" — to the Lestranges of Hunstanton. Probable father of the Massachusetts emigrant John Gurney-1.
G15
Henry Gurnay
21 Jan. 1548/9 (OS) — d. 1615/16 (will proved 1623)
Attleborough, Norfolk, England; Great Ellingham, Norfolk, England; Harpley, Norfolk, England; +3 more
The last Gurney born a Roman Catholic, with Lady Catherine Howard as godmother — and an Elizabethan poet rediscovered by literary scholarship in 2005, whose 600-poem commonplace book and library catalogue survive as Bodleian MS Tanner 175. Father of twelve.
G16
Francis Gurney
20 Aug. 1521 — d. before 4 Jan. 1555/6 (vita patris)
Great Ellingham, Norfolk, England; Irstead, Norfolk, England; West Barsham Hall
Heir-apparent of the Norfolk Gurney estates who never inherited — died young and *vita patris* before his father Anthony (G17), so the great Mortimer-of-Attleborough portfolio fell to his seven-year-old son Henry (G15) as boy lord.
G17
Anthony Gurney
b. c. 1499 — d. 4 Jan. 1555/6
Great Ellingham, Norfolk, England; Hingham, Norfolk, England; Irstead, Norfolk, England; +1 more
Boy lord of West Barsham (inherited aged about nine) and second cousin of Queen Anne Boleyn through his Heydon mother — and, on 7 January 1546/7, foreman of the Norfolk grand jury whose indictment of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, sent the poet to Tower Hill twelve days later, with the king himself dead nine days after that.
G18
William Gurney V
c. 1465 – died vita patris before father (exact date unknown; before 16 Feb. 1507/8)
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Hingham, Norfolk, England; Irstead, Norfolk, England; +2 more
Heir-apparent who died before his father, leaving a nine-year-old boy as eventual heir. By marrying Anne Heydon of Baconsthorpe Castle "shortly after 28 May 1484," he carried into the Gurneys the Heydon-Boleyn-Howard cousinage of late-medieval Norfolk — and made his son Anthony G17 the second cousin of Queen Anne Boleyn.
Medieval Norfolk Gurneys — West Barsham & Great Ellingham
c. 1300–1499
G19
William Gurney IV
b. c. 1440–1450 — d. 16 Feb. 1507/8
Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk, England; West Barsham Hall
Yorkist Norfolk gentleman whose 1507 will required 700 sheep to remain at West Barsham after his death — "a considerable flock in those days." Escheator for Norfolk under Edward IV and of council to John Howard, Duke of Norfolk, in 1477; died at Burnham Thorpe (later Lord Nelson's birthplace) in 1508.
G20
Thomas Gournay II
fl. c. 1430 — d. 1471
Harpley, Norfolk, England; West Barsham Hall
The earliest Gurney will to survive in full personal detail — dated at West Barsham, proved 27 July 1471 (twelve weeks after Tewkesbury) — names three simultaneous family residences and leaves all the household's wool and linen to his wife Margaret Jerningham as "her own work and that of her servants."
G21
Thomas Gournay I
fl. c. 1408 — d. c. 1450
Harpley, Norfolk, England; West Barsham Hall
A younger son's son who never expected to inherit. When his uncle Sir John Gurney V — Sheriff of Norfolk, Coventry MP 1404, and the most distinguished Gurney of the 14th century — died on 4 December 1408 and his ten-year-old heir followed him to the grave, Thomas became, by collateral succession, lord of West Barsham.
G22
Robert Gournay
fl. c. 1370–1420
Norfolk, England
The elusive direct-line ancestor through whom every subsequent Gurney descends — and yet so undocumented that Daniel Gurney himself wrote only that Edmund had "a second son, whom we believe was named Robert."
G23
Edmund Gournay
d. 1387
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England; St James's Chapel ruins; +1 more
Norfolk lawyer of county-wide reputation who, for fifteen years until his death, served as steward of John of Gaunt's East Anglian estates — and through marriage to Katherine de Wauncy acquired West Barsham, the seat the family would hold for the next three centuries.
Junior Norfolk Branch — Harpley & Hardingham
c. 1140–1387
G24
John de Gournay IV
fl. c. 1330–1370
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England
Lord of Harpley who held his first manorial court there on Friday the vigil of St. Laurence, 28 Edward III — 9 August 1354. The last of the family seated primarily at Harpley before his son Edmund married the West Barsham heiress and shifted the family seat.
G25
John de Gournay III
fl. c. 1300–1353
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England
The generation that restored continuity. When his clerical uncle John, Rector of Harpley, died in 1332 — having held the family estates for nearly four decades after John's father had transferred them to him for an annuity in 1294 — John III stepped forward as nephew and heir, returning Harpley to the direct male line.
G26
Sir William de Gournay III, Knt.
fl. c. 1260–1300
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England
The first member of the family to seal a surviving document with the engrailed cross — and the lord who, in 1294, conveyed every one of his Norfolk manors to his clerical brother John, Rector of Harpley, in exchange for a lifetime annuity. A genuinely unusual act.
G27
Sir John de Gournay I, Knt.
fl. c. 1240–1280
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England; Lewes, Sussex, England
Rebel baron at Lewes (1264) and Evesham (1265) — forfeited South Wootton manor for siding with Simon de Montfort against Henry III — yet within five years had a royal pardon and accompanied Prince Edward to the Holy Land in 1270. Established the family's coat of arms, *argent, a cross engrailed gules*, that descendants bore for centuries.
G28
Sir William de Gournay II, Knt.
fl. c. 1210–1250
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England
Knight of Harpley in the troubled middle decades of Henry III, attested in two independent Norfolk records (1234 and 1243). Father of the rebel-Crusader Sir John I — whose career suggests Gournay political sympathies that William may have shared but never acted on publicly.
G29
Sir Matthew de Gournay, Knt.
fl. c. 1180 — living 1217
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England; Runhall, Norfolk, England
Knight whose marriage to Rose de Burnham was personally arranged c. 1183 by Hameline Plantagenet, Earl Warren — half-brother of Henry II — bringing Harpley manor into the Gournay family for the next two centuries.
G30
Sir William de Gournay I, Knt.
fl. c. 1150–1180
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Montigny-sur-Andelle, Normandy, France; Runhall, Norfolk, England
The genealogical keystone of the entire junior Norfolk branch. Holding Montigny-sur-Andelle in Normandy *in parage* (a tenure available only to blood relatives of the senior lord) constituted, in Daniel Gurney's words, "incontestable proof of his descent in blood from the Barons of Gournay."
G31
Walter de Gournay
fl. c. 1108–1154
Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Norfolk, England; Suffolk, England
The junction point. Walter's elder brother Hugh IV inherited the great Norman barony; Walter received a younger son's share of the English estates — and from that single partition descend the West Barsham Gurneys, the Quaker banking Gurneys of Norwich, and through Francis Gurney the American Gurneys.
Norman Barons of England — Post-Conquest Settlement
c. 1066–1214
G32
Gerard de Gournay
c. 1040 — d. before 1104, Palestine
Caister-on-Sea, Norfolk, England; Cantley, Norfolk, England; Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France; +2 more
Crusader who survived the First Crusade — Nicaea, "Burnt Phrygia," the fall of Jerusalem in July 1099 — returned home, then set out again for the Holy Land with his wife Edith de Warenne and died *en route*: *Hierosolymam petens in ipso itinere mortuus est*.
G33
Hugh de Gournay III
c. 1020 — d. 1110
Ardleigh, Essex, England; Église Saint-Michel de Bosc-Hyons; Essex, England; +5 more
At the Battle of Hastings in 1066, Domesday landholder in Essex (Liston, Fordham, Ardleigh), personal friend of St Anselm of Canterbury, witness to the foundation charters of the two great Caen abbeys. Entered the Abbey of Bec as a monk in 1080, became Prior of Saint-Nicaise de Meulan in 1092, and died at Bec in 1110 — a thirty-year monastic career after some sixty years as a Norman lord.
G34
Hugh de Gournay II
c. 985 — d. c. 1074
Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France
*"Le vieil Hue de Gornai"* — "the old Hue of Gournay," as Wace's *Roman de Rou* names him at Hastings. The Norman poets gave him a four-name epithet stack: *L'Ancien*, *Le Vieux*, *Senex*, *Le Vieil Huon*. One of three commanders William the Conqueror chose for the Battle of Mortemer (1054), the ducal victory that secured William's grip on Normandy a dozen years before Hastings.
G35
Renaud de Gournay
c. 970 — dates uncertain
Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France; La Ferté-en-Bray / La Ferté-Saint-Samson, Normandy, France
The first ancestor in the line confirmed by a contemporary primary-source document — a charter of 989–996 founding the priory of La Ferté-en-Bray, naming Renaud and his wife Alberade alongside Duke Richard I, his son Richard II, and Robert Archbishop of Rouen.
G36
Hugh de Gournay ILimited Historical Record
c. 920–940 — dates uncertain
Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France
First of the line born in Normandy, contemporary with Duke William Longsword. Builder of the citadel and "La Tour Hue" (Hugh's Tower) at Gournay-en-Bray — a fortification that stood for approximately eight hundred years before its final demolition in the early-to-mid-18th century.
Viking Origin — Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy
late 9th–early 10th centuries
G37
Eudes (Odon) de GournayMinimal historical record
c. 860 — d. after 911, before c. 932
Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France; Scandinavia
Origin of the line. A Viking warrior in Rollo's war-band who, at the Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte in 911, received Gournay-en-Bray and the Pays de Bray as his portion — beginning a documented property-holding lineage that runs ~37 generations and ~1,160 years to Allen Gurney.
End of Known Record — The Wall of History
before c. 860
G~38+
Unknown Scandinavian ancestorsEnd of Record
Before c. 860
Scandinavia
WALL OF KNOWABLE HISTORY. Eudes's Norse ancestry entirely unrecorded.
| Gen. | Name and dates | Era | Geography | Summary | Notables | Places and holdings | Links |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G0 | Soren and Ebba GurneyRelated | Modern America | Dexter, Michigan, USA | Related G0 descendants; Ken Gurney's children. | |||
| G1 | Allen Lawrence GurneyThis GenealogistLiving | Modern America | Marion, Indiana, USA; Portland, Oregon, USA; St. Louis, Missouri, USA | Occupation: IT; B.S. in Chemical Engineering, Washington Univ., St. Louis | Portland, OR | ||
| G1 | Ken Gurney (Allen's Brother)Related1974-2013 | Modern America | Dexter, Michigan, USA; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Marion, Indiana, USA | Allen's brother. | |||
| G2 | Lester Hayes Gurney1945–2025 | Modern America | Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA; Marion, Indiana, USA; Port Washington, New York, USA | Third-generation power engineer (entire career at Indiana & Michigan Electric (AEP)), and the last of the line born in the New York metropolitan area before the family settled into Indiana. Master Mason in a five-generation Masonic continuity reaching back to G6. | B.S. Electrical Engineering, Valparaiso University, where he met Dana Ault (m. 22 June 1968, Fulton IN); together fifty-seven years until her predeceasing him. Master Mason of McCulloch Lodge No. 737 (Marion, IN), Scottish Rite, and Salaam Shriners — the Masonic thread runs back to G6 William Gurney, founding "Father" of Continental Lodge No. 287 (NYC). Twenty-five-year Kiwanian (incl. Secretary), Habitat for Humanity volunteer, BSA Troop 433 Treasurer, IEEE member 50+ years. Westminster Presbyterian, Marion, and later First Presbyterian, Fort Wayne. Died 16 Dec. 2025 at age 80; Celebration of Life 17 Jan. 2026 at The Towne House Chapel, Fort Wayne; memorials to the Parkinson's Foundation. | ||
| G3 | Lester Sawyer Gurney III1923-2011 | Modern America | New York metropolitan area, USA | Wellesley Hills-born power engineer and wartime Army/Air Service Command officer; father of Lester Hayes Gurney (G2). Family notes place him with the Air Service Command at Robins Field when he married Edith Walberg Scott and with the 536th Signal Heavy Construction Company at Manila when G2 was born. | Born 10 June 1923 at Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts; died 19 December 2011. Married Edith Walberg Scott on 23 November 1942 in New York City; later married Dorothy Lillian Haben/Haden on 6 June 1965. Dana Gurney's notes identify him as a lieutenant, commissioned June or July 1944, formerly Norwich University class of 1945, and stationed at Manila with the 536th Signal Heavy Construction Company when Lester Hayes Gurney was born at St. Vincent's Hospital, New York City, on 16 November 1945. Family evidence also remembers his long McGraw Edison power-engineering career in New Jersey. | ||
| G4 | Lester Sawyer Gurney Jr.1888–1958 | Gilded Age & Civil War | New York metropolitan area, USA | Patchogue-raised civil engineer who came of age inside Long Island's theatrical-colony world, then helped build the Cape Cod Canal and ran his own engineering practice opposite the Buzzards Bay station. | Boy actor in the 1898 Patchogue production of *May Blossom*, alongside his father (G5). Civil engineer documented with Cape Cod Canal work by 1910 and the Cape Cod Construction Company by 1911; advertised property surveys, municipal engineering, roads, and architectural drafting from the Linnell Building, Buzzards Bay (Cape Cod Magazine). At his 1911 wedding to Nettie Levada Smith, the bride and groom slipped out the back gate by automobile to escape rice-throwing friends, bound for an Atlantic City honeymoon. Three marriages: Smith (1911), Ethel June Hayes (1921, Springfield MA — mother of G3), and Grace Wilhelmina MacInnis (1952). Settled at 133 Abbott Road, Wellesley Hills MA from 1942. Died Bristol RI 1958; buried Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn. | ||
| G5 | Lester Sawyer Gurney1856–1899 | Gilded Age & Civil War | New York metropolitan area, USA | Assistant Secretary of the Actors' Fund of America in Gilded-Age New York, husband to actress Helene Ransome, master of his father's Civil War Masonic lodge, and a familiar figure in Patchogue summer society — dead at forty-three. | Worked his way from a Manhattan cigar-store trade household (1880, 462 Sixth Ave.) to U.S. postal clerk (1887) to Assistant Secretary of the Actors' Fund of America (1892, 12 W. 28th Street); newspaper accounts show him personally fielding telegrams about distress cases as the Fund's working contact point. Eight-year secretary of the Actors' Order of Friendship. Master of Continental Lodge No. 287, F. & A. M. — the same NYC lodge his father G6 William Gurney had helped organize and was remembered as the "Father" of. Married Helen Hill (21 Nov. 1881, Manhattan), publicly known on the stage as Helene Ransome — credited 1895 with Margaret Mather's company. Kept a Bay Avenue summer home at Patchogue, Long Island; in 1898 appeared on stage there in *May Blossom* alongside his ten-year-old son G4. Died 22 Oct. 1899 at 248 W. 38th Street, Manhattan, age 43; buried Green-Wood Cemetery. | ||
| G6 | Brigadier General William Gurney1821–1879 | Gilded Age & Civil War | 15 Avenue C; 155 Henry Street; 177 West 48th Street; +5 more | Wholesale merchant, Civil War colonel, commandant of Charleston 1865. | Civil War commander, 127th NY Vols. then 142nd USCT; Bvt. Brig. General. Wholesale merchant (Gurney & Underhill). Originator Five Points Mission c.1848. Quaker background. Masonic (Knights Templar). Married (1) Caroline E.; (2) Mary Jane Fisk. | Commercial premises, Manhattan (Gurney & Underhill wholesale firm at 79 Dey St.). | |
| G7 | Willis Gurneyc. 1796–98 — before 1870 | Early Republic | Dawes Cemetery; Flushing, Queens, New York, USA | The hinge between the Massachusetts farming generations and the New York chapter: a Cummington-born tailor who, by 1830, had moved his family to Flushing, Queens — opening the New York century that would last to G2. | Tailor — same trade as the colonial emigrant John Gurney (G13) of Weymouth, six generations earlier — making both Gurney arrivals in America and the family's second migration from Massachusetts to New York occur via tailors named Gurney. Listed at Flushing in the 1830, 1840, and 1850 federal censuses. Married Elizabeth "Eliza" A. Lawrence (b. NY); Eliza was a communicant of St. George's Episcopal Church, Flushing, but Willis himself did not attend church. Eight known children, eldest of whom — William Gurney (b. 21 Aug. 1821, Flushing) — became the Civil War colonel of the 127th NY, Bvt. Brigadier General, and commandant of Charleston in 1865 (G6). Whether Willis owned or rented his Flushing premises is undetermined; Queens County deed records 1830–1870 not yet searched. | Unknown whether owned or rented Flushing premises. Queens County deed records (city register's office, 1830–1870) not yet searched. No property transaction documented in sources consulted. | |
| G8 | Amos Gurney1770 — before 1850 | Massachusetts Farming Generations | Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; Dawes Cemetery | Cummington, Massachusetts farmer of the western-frontier generation; born in 1770 — the very year his father Benjamin sold Abington land and bought into "Town No. 5" with Silas Reed, transplanting the family from old Plymouth County to the Hampshire hills. | Married Ruth Gilbert at Cummington, 29 Dec. 1790 (Cummington Vital Records). 1800 federal census: head of household, structure 10010/20010 — a young farmer with several small children. Six children of Amos and Ruth recorded in the Cummington VR; only the eldest, Willis (G7), is documented in detail. Family-tradition material has Amos leaving Cummington after 1802; destination undocumented. By 1850 his widow Ruth is found in the Flushing, Queens household of son Willis — the only firm later record of the household. Whether Amos accompanied that move and died in New York, or died earlier in Massachusetts and Ruth followed Willis afterward, is unresolved. | Farm land in Cummington, Hampshire Co., MA — specific parcel not documented. Family likely held modest farmstead consistent with 1800 census household size (10010/20010). | |
| G9 | Benjamin Gurneybpt. 30 May 1730 — d. 28 Sept. 1805 | Massachusetts Farming Generations | Abington, Massachusetts, USA; Little Comfort / Abington-Bridgewater line, Massachusetts, USA; Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; +2 more | Plymouth County farmer born of an unmarried liaison and reportedly raised by his maternal aunt; in 1770 he sold his Abington land and bought into the new frontier town of Cummington with Silas Reed, opening the family's western Massachusetts chapter. | Baptized at Abington 30 May 1730 in the Harden/Hardin entries as Benjamin, son of Jean; C.R.1 identifies the church source as First Church of Abington. John Harden's 1751 Plymouth County will names daughter Jane Spear and separately gives twenty shillings to "my grandson Benjamin Gurney," confirming Benjamin's Harden-side kinship. Elizabeth Harden appears in the will as a witness, not as a daughter or heir, resolving the older Elizabeth-conflict in favor of Jane/Jean Harden Spear as the best-supported maternal candidate. The tradition that Benjamin was raised by his mother's sister remains plausible but unproved; Sarah Harden Gurney is the strongest aunt-household candidate, not a confirmed caregiver. Sold Abington land June 1770; on 5 Nov. 1770 purchased land in Town No. 5 (Cummington) with Silas Reed. 1787 farm exchange with Philip Shaw at Cummington (Foster & Streeter, *"Only One Cummington,"* 1974, p. 390). 1790 census: head of a six-person Cummington household (3-0-3). Two marriages: Elizabeth Harden, then Mercy Noyes. Buried Dawes Cemetery, Cummington. | Land in Abington, MA (sold June 1770 upon move to Cummington). Springfield, MA records: purchased land in Town #5 (Cummington) with Silas Reed, 5 Nov. 1770. In 1787 exchanged farms with Philip Shaw ('Only One Cummington,' Foster & Streeter 1974, p.390). | |
| G10 | Benjamin Gurneyc. 1704 — before 1772 | Massachusetts Farming Generations | Abington, Massachusetts, USA; Little Comfort / Abington-Bridgewater line, Massachusetts, USA; Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; +3 more | Plymouth County farmer whose 1730 liaison with Jane Harden produced the direct-line son Benjamin (G9) one year before his 1731 marriage to Sarah Morse — a half-brother split that runs the Cummington line and the Rochester homestead in two directions for the next century. | The Abington baptismal record for Benjamin G9 names only the mother, Jean, and records a baptism on 30 May 1730; it does not name the father. The identification of this Benjamin as son of Benjamin Gurney G10 and Jane/Jean Harden is supported by secondary compiled genealogy and strengthened by John Harden's 1751 will, which names "my grandson Benjamin Gurney" and daughter Jane Spear. G10 married Sarah Morse at Middleborough on 14 June 1731, about a year after the Abington baptism. Three traceable Plymouth County land transactions: with his father (G11) bought from Samuel Tinkham, Middleboro, 28 Oct. 1730 (Plym. Reg. 39:79), 3 lots upland + ~2 acres meadow, sold 3 May 1749; bought 8 acres at Middleboro from Sam Eddy Jr., 7 Nov. 1731 (Plym. Reg.); held a Rochester homestead farm later divided among sons Lemuel, Benjamin, and Levi by deed 1 Jan. 1800 (Plym. Co. 95:139, GS film 559,140). The 1800 division and secondary genealogy preserve the two-Benjamin problem: G9, baptized in 1730 as son of Jean/Jane Harden, is distinct from the later Benjamin in the Sarah Morse child set. Died at Rochester before December 1772. | • With father (Gen.11), bought land from Samuel Tinkham, Middleboro, 28 Oct. 1730 — 3 lots of upland + 1 lot meadow ~2 acres (Plym. Reg. 39:79). Sold 3 May 1749 after father's death. • 8 acres Middleboro from Sam Eddy Jr., 7 Nov. 1731 (Plym. Reg.). • Homestead farm, Rochester, MA — sons Lemuel, Benjamin & Levi divided it 1 Jan. 1800 (Plym. Co. land deed 95:139, GS film 559,140). | |
| G11 | Benjamin Gurneyc. 1676 — d. 1738/9 | Massachusetts Farming Generations | Abington, Massachusetts, USA; Little Comfort / Abington-Bridgewater line, Massachusetts, USA; Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; +3 more | Plymouth County landholder of the Abington–Bridgewater line; his wife Rebecca Staples gave her name to "Granny Gurney's Swamp" after a fire incident — the kind of hyper-local place-name that ties a family memorably to a stretch of New England land. | Born Weymouth c. 1676; son of Richard Gurney (G12) and Rebecca Taylor. Married Rebecca Staples 30 Dec. 1701 at the First Church of Braintree — anchoring him in the Massachusetts Bay congregational record system. Three documented Plymouth County land transactions: bought the Richard Williams farm from Samuel Staples of Scituate, 8 Sept. 1726 (Plym. Deeds 25:79); sold same to Abraham Pierce 20 Oct. 1730 upon moving to Middleboro (Plym. Reg. 31:69, 70); inherited land bequeathed by Joseph Richards. Will proved 1739 (Plym. Probate 8:98). The "Granny Gurney's Swamp" story — independently confirmed in two local-history accounts — is a low-ground place-name memorial of an early-eighteenth-century moment in Rebecca's life rather than a property the family owned. | • Richard Williams farm on Abington-Bridgewater line — purchased 8 Sept. 1726 from Samuel Staples of Scituate (Plym. Deeds 25:79). • Sold to Abraham Pierce 20 Oct. 1730 upon move to Middleboro (Plym. Reg. 31:69, 70). • Land from Joseph Richards (bequeathed in will to son Benjamin). • Granny Gurney's Swamp — low ground near Abington-Bridgewater line, named after Rebecca's fire incident — not owned but named for the family. | |
| G12 | Richard Gurneyc. 1630 England — d. Oct. 1691 | Massachusetts Farming Generations | Bridgewater, Massachusetts, USA; Great Pond | Brought to Massachusetts as a small child by his emigrant father John Gurney-1; one of the early proprietors of Weymouth from before 1642; lost a son at the Mendon massacre in the opening violence of King Philip's War, 1675. | Held Weymouth lands from before 1642–44 — "in the East field," "in the mill field," and "on the east side of Great Pond" (*History of Weymouth*) — and in 1683 the town meeting voted him 6 acres on the west side of Great Pond "to build a house & fence" (Hist. of Weymouth, p. 251). Admitted Freeman of Massachusetts Bay, 1681 — requiring formal church membership, with the franchise it conferred. Married Rebecca Taylor (named in her father's will, proved 1688). Son John Gurney Jr. killed at the Mendon massacre, 14 July 1675 — the opening violence of King Philip's War. Son Zachariah served in a King Philip's War relief company. Died intestate Oct. 1691, Weymouth. The Plymouth County land that anchored his grandson Benjamin G11 on the Abington–Bridgewater line was likely an inherited piece of John Gurney-1's New England estate, channelled through Richard. | • Lands granted in Weymouth before 1642–44: 'in the East field,' 'in the mill field,' 'on the east side of Great Pond' (Hist. of Weymouth). • Town Common grant: 6 acres west side of the Pond voted by Weymouth town meeting, 1683, to 'build a house & fence' (Hist. of Weymouth, p.251). • Land at Braintree on Abington-Bridgewater line passed to son Benjamin (Gen.11) — likely inherited from John Gurney-1. | |
| G13 | John GurneyProbableb. c. 1609-12 — d. 1662/3 | The Emigrant | Braintree, Massachusetts, USA; East Dereham Parish Church; Mendon, Massachusetts, USA; +1 more | Tailor. First Gurney in North America. Estate: £55.14.6. | Tailor. FIRST GURNEY IN NORTH AMERICA. First record: June 1641, Weymouth. Married (1) Mary (surname unknown) (c.1630–1632, England — d. 20 Sept. 1661); (2) Grissell Fletcher (12 Nov. 1661). Estate: £55.14.6. Probable arrival: 1636–1641. Grissell was a Mendon proprietor (received 20-acre allotment, Dec. 1663). | • East field, mill field, east side of Great Pond — Weymouth (granted retrospectively c. 3 Feb. 1651-52; properties later granted to others as John did not permanently settle there). • 48 acres at Braintree 'in the possession of John Gurney' — Tyng inventory 25 May 1653 (NEHGR 30:432). Tenant, not owner. • Sold land in Braintree 12 Feb. 1661 (deed witnessed by son John Jr.). • Grissell applied for John's Mendon lot after his death (NEHGR 22:44). | |
| G14 | Francis Gurney13 Sept. 1581 — d. 9 Jan. 1646/7 | Tudor England | St Benet Fink; East Dereham Parish Church; St James's Chapel ruins; +1 more | A younger son of West Barsham gentry sent down to London, admitted to the Merchant Taylors' Company in 1606, and twenty-eight years a financial agent — "a sort of agent, or banker" — to the Lestranges of Hunstanton. Probable father of the Massachusetts emigrant John Gurney-1. | Sixth son of Henry Gurney (G15) and Ellen Blennerhasset; twin of Anthony. Apprenticed to Henry Tryme, admitted to the freedom of the Merchant Taylors' Company 16 June 1606. Married (1) Margaret Rybett, 23 Sept. 1611 at St Martin at Palace, Norwich (NRO PD 12/1; primary-source discovery March 2026); (2) Anne Browning c. 1617, daughter of William Browning, merchant of Norwich and later Maldon, Essex. Twenty-four years' financial agency to the Lestranges of Hunstanton, 1612–1636 — the kinship route ran through his great-great-grandmother Anne Heydon (G18's wife), whose sister Amy had married Sir Roger Lestrange. Failed King's Lynn textile venture c. 1622–25 inside the desecrated St James's Chapel; Sir Hamon Lestrange paid Francis's £100 bond. Sold all Norfolk and Suffolk lands for £1,000 in 1634. Brother of the Cambridge-educated Puritan divine Edmund Gurney (Rector of Harpley 1620–1648). Buried St Botolph Bishopsgate, London, 9 January 1646/7. The financial contraction of his later years is the most plausible material context for an elder son such as John seeing little inheritance ahead in England — and emigrating to Weymouth, Massachusetts. | • Parish of St. Benet Fink, City of London — commercial premises (leased; church demolished 1844, site now Bank of England east wing). • Attempted textile manufacture: desecrated St. James's Church, King's Lynn, Norfolk — leased from Lynn corporation (failed enterprise; Sir Hamon Lestrange paid his £100 bond c.1625). • Occasional residence at Norwich and King's Lynn noted (Pennyghael genealogy). • No land holdings documented — Daniel Gurney states both Francis wills 'unable to be discovered' suggesting little or no property to bequeath. | |
| G14 | Edmund Gurney (Puritan Divine)Related - brother of G14 Francis Gurney1577-1648 | Tudor England | Harpley, Norfolk, England | Collateral G14 figure, not a direct ancestor. Edmund Gurney was the third son of Henry Gurney (G15) and Ellen Blennerhasset, and brother of Francis Gurney (G14), the Merchant Taylor. | Cambridge-educated Puritan divine; Queens' College and Corpus Christi College, Cambridge; B.D. 1609; Rector of Edgefield 1614-1620 and Harpley 1620-1648. Author of anti-Catholic and anti-image works including Corpus Christi (1619), The Romish Chain (1624), and Toward the Vindication of the Second Commandment (1639). Sir Nicholas L'Estrange's anecdote collection preserves Edmund's dry definition of a mathematician as someone who goes to market to buy an axe to break an egg. | Not a direct-line landholding figure in this project. Ecclesiastical geography: Rector of Edgefield and Harpley, Norfolk; buried at St Peter Mancroft, Norwich. | |
| G15 | Henry Gurnay21 Jan. 1548/9 (OS) — d. 1615/16 (will proved 1623) | Tudor England | Attleborough, Norfolk, England; Great Ellingham, Norfolk, England; Harpley, Norfolk, England; +3 more | The last Gurney born a Roman Catholic, with Lady Catherine Howard as godmother — and an Elizabethan poet rediscovered by literary scholarship in 2005, whose 600-poem commonplace book and library catalogue survive as Bodleian MS Tanner 175. Father of twelve. | Inherited at age 21 as grandson and heir to Anthony Gurney G17, who died 4 January 1555/6 — three weeks into Mary I's restored Catholicism. Confirmed by Francis Blomefield's parish surveys (1572) as lord of West Barsham (held by one knight's fee of Castleacre), Great Ellingham (held of the heirs of Lord Bardolph), Irstead (held of the Bishop of Norwich), and Gurney's manor in Hingham (held of the heirs of Henry Lord Morley) — the Hingham manor house substantially survives as Grade II listed Gurney's Manor, whose c. 1600 rear wing was built in his lifetime. In 1587 he repurchased Harpley — the medieval Gurney seat his ancestors had held c. 1183 to the 14th century — and presented to its living in 1588 and 1602. His 600-poem commonplace book (Bodleian MS Tanner 175) preserves an inventory of his library and his verse "censures" of more than twenty borrowed books, including Spenser's *Faerie Queene*, John Foxe, Robert Southwell, and Richard Hakluyt. His correspondence circle is, per Steven W. May (*Spenser Studies* 20, 2005), "the most extensive coterie of named individuals identified to date in the Tudor and early-Stuart period." Three of his twelve surviving children shaped onward history: Thomas III (heir, d. 1614 vita patris); Edmund (Cambridge-educated Puritan divine, Rector of Edgefield 1614 then Harpley 1620–1648, with his own *Dictionary of National Biography* entry); and Francis (G14), apprenticed to a London Merchant Taylor and the bridge to the family's American descent. Will of 1614 directed burial "next to my wife there" at All Saints, West Barsham (corroborating Pease/Pennyghael's record of Ellen Blennerhasset's burial there) and warned his sons against holding "fantasticall or erroneous opinions, so adjudged by our Bishop or civill Lawes." | • West Barsham manor, Norfolk (primary family seat; hall burned 1815, 16th-c. north wing survives Grade II listed). • Great Ellingham manor (held from Bishop of Norwich). • Harpley manor, Norfolk (purchased 1587; presented to church 1588, 1602). • Irsted manor (held of Bishop of Norwich; sold to Sir Peter Gleane before 1632 by son/grandson). • Gurney's manor, Hingham (held of Henry Lord Morley). • West Barsham rectory (purchased from Thomas Fermor, Esq. for £100, 1595 — deed at Hunstanton Hall). • Advowson, third part of Attleborough church (presented 1581). | |
| G16 | Francis Gurney20 Aug. 1521 — d. before 4 Jan. 1555/6 (vita patris) | Tudor England | Great Ellingham, Norfolk, England; Irstead, Norfolk, England; West Barsham Hall | Heir-apparent of the Norfolk Gurney estates who never inherited — died young and *vita patris* before his father Anthony (G17), so the great Mortimer-of-Attleborough portfolio fell to his seven-year-old son Henry (G15) as boy lord. | Eldest son of Anthony Gurney (G17) and Margaret Lovell — coheir of the Lovell-Mortimer-of-Attleborough barony. Born 20 August 1521 (per Pease/Pennyghael). Married Helen Holdich, daughter of Robert Holdich, Esq., of Ranworth, Norfolk, on 6 August 1543; the marriage is independently confirmed by Francis Blomefield, *History of Norfolk*, vol. vii (1807), pp. 42–47 (West Barsham parish entry). Identified in Daniel Gurney's pedigree as "of Irstead" — though the principal Irstead manor had passed to Sir Richard Southwell by 1540, suggesting the residence may have been a smaller tenement; the Irstead connection runs through his Heydon grandmother Anne (Sir Henry Heydon had received the Irstead manor by conditional bequest from John Groos's 1487 will, per Blomefield vol. xi). Died before his father, who died 4 January 1555/6. Two consecutive *vita patris* deaths in this family — Francis here, and his own son's son William V (G18) two generations earlier — produced an extraordinary chain of grandson-heir successions through the Norfolk Gurney line. | • West Barsham Hall, Norfolk — primary residence (inherited from Anthony, Gen.17). • Great Ellingham manor, Norfolk. • Irsted manor, Norfolk. • Associated Norfolk advowsons and holdings as listed in Daniel Gurney's Record under the West Barsham Gurney family pedigree. | |
| G17 | Anthony Gurneyb. c. 1499 — d. 4 Jan. 1555/6 | Tudor England | Great Ellingham, Norfolk, England; Hingham, Norfolk, England; Irstead, Norfolk, England; +1 more | Boy lord of West Barsham (inherited aged about nine) and second cousin of Queen Anne Boleyn through his Heydon mother — and, on 7 January 1546/7, foreman of the Norfolk grand jury whose indictment of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, sent the poet to Tower Hill twelve days later, with the king himself dead nine days after that. | Both Anthony and Queen Anne Boleyn were great-grandchildren of Sir Geoffrey Boleyn, Lord Mayor of London 1457–58 — Anthony through Sir Geoffrey's daughter Anne Boleyn the elder of Blickling (his maternal grandmother), Queen Anne Boleyn through Sir Geoffrey's son Sir William Boleyn. Married c. 1519 Margaret Lovell, daughter and coheir of Sir Robert Lovell — "cousin and coheir of Sir Thomas Lovell, privy counsellor to King Henry VII and Henry VIII and Knight of the Garter" (Blomefield, vol. vii). The marriage brought into the Gurneys the manor of Great Ellingham, after Henry Spelman the elder of "Mickle Elyngham" died without issue in 1525 (Blomefield, vol. i). Margaret's mother Ela Conyers was sister of Anne Conyers, mother of the antiquary Sir Henry Spelman of Congham — making Anthony's children first cousins once removed of Spelman. Through the Heydon sisters, also linked to the Pastons of Caister, the Cobhams (and so to Sir Thomas Wyatt the poet via Elizabeth Brooke), and the Lestranges of Hunstanton — the kinship later activated when Francis Gurney (G14) became financial agent to the Lestranges from 1612. Norwich town house "Gurney's Place" in St Julian's parish (the parish of the Lady Julian anchorite cell). Documented in the Lestrange of Hunstanton household and privy purse accounts (Daniel Gurney, *Archaeologia* vol. 25, 1832). Died 4 January 1555/6 (Blomefield's precise day, vol. vii); his eldest son Francis (G16) had predeceased him, so his grandson Henry (G15) succeeded. 17th great-grandfather of Allen Gurney. | • Great Ellingham manor, Norfolk — acquired via marriage to Margaret Lovell (she and her sister co-heiresses of Sir Robert Lovell; through her mother of families Conyers of Finningham and Fitz-Ralf). • West Barsham manor, Norfolk (primary seat). • Irsted manor, Norfolk. • Manor of Hingham-Gurneys (ancient holding from Henry II period, held of heirs of Lords Bardolf). | |
| G17 | Queen Anne BoleynRelated - second cousin, 16 times removedc. 1501-19 May 1536 | Tudor England | Tower of London | Collateral Boleyn cousin, not a direct ancestor. Queen Anne Boleyn was Anthony Gurney's second cousin through their shared great-grandparents Sir Geoffrey Boleyn and Anne Hoo. | Second wife of Henry VIII and mother of Elizabeth I. In this project she belongs at G17 as a same-generation second cousin of Anthony Gurney, not in the direct ancestor spine. The connection runs through Anthony's mother Anne Heydon: Anne Heydon was daughter of Anne Boleyn the elder of Blickling, sister of Sir William Boleyn, Queen Anne's paternal grandfather. | Not a Gurney landholding figure. Royal/court context: Tower of London execution and burial site. | |
| G18 | William Gurney Vc. 1465 – died vita patris before father (exact date unknown; before 16 Feb. 1507/8) | Tudor England | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Hingham, Norfolk, England; Irstead, Norfolk, England; +2 more | Heir-apparent who died before his father, leaving a nine-year-old boy as eventual heir. By marrying Anne Heydon of Baconsthorpe Castle "shortly after 28 May 1484," he carried into the Gurneys the Heydon-Boleyn-Howard cousinage of late-medieval Norfolk — and made his son Anthony G17 the second cousin of Queen Anne Boleyn. | Identified in Daniel Gurney's *Supplement* Note 132 (the Inquisitions Post Mortem 13 Henry VIII, part 1, No. 103) as 'William Gurnay, junior' — the son and heir of William Gurnay senior (= G19, William Gurney IV) who 'dying in the lifetime of his father' caused the inheritance to descend, after his father's death, to his own son Anthony as grandson and heir. The IPM was taken on the elder William, not on this one; G18's own death date is not recorded in the consulted sources beyond 'before his father.' Anne Heydon was daughter of Sir Henry Heydon (Privy Councillor to Henry VII and builder of Baconsthorpe Castle, English Heritage open free near Holt, Norfolk) and Anne Boleyn the elder of Blickling, sister of Sir William Boleyn — paternal grandfather of Queen Anne Boleyn. Anne Heydon's siblings married into the Pastons of Caister, the Cobhams (and so to Sir Thomas Wyatt the poet via Elizabeth Brooke), and the Lestranges of Hunstanton; the Lestrange marriage explains the appointment of his great-great-grandson Francis Gurney (G14) as financial agent to the Lestranges 1612–1636 — they were distant cousins. Marriage to Anne Heydon arranged by indentures dated 28 May 1484 (1 Richard III) between Henry Heydon Esq. and William Gurnay senior (G19). Widow Anne Heydon remarried Sir Lionel Dymoke of Ashby, Lincolnshire (d. 17 Aug. 1519); Anne died c. 1521. Attribution corrected 22 May 2026 from direct page-image reading of DG-Supp Note 132 pp. 817–819 (Internet Archive scan of the 1858 Supplement): the 1485 and 1505 trust-deed manor portfolios and the 16 February 1507/8 death date previously attached to this record belong to G19 William Gurnay senior, the IPM decedent. DG-Supp Note 133 explicitly identifies the IPM decedent as 'William Gurney IV' (= G19). | • Irsted manor, Norfolk (primary documented holding). • Swathings manor in Hardingham, Norfolk — mesne lord under the senior Gournay line (documented from reign of Henry II per Daniel Gurney's Record). • Hingham-Gurneys manor. | |
| G19 | William Gurney IVb. c. 1440–1450 — d. 16 Feb. 1507/8 | Medieval Norfolk Gurneys | Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk, England; West Barsham Hall | Yorkist Norfolk gentleman whose 1507 will required 700 sheep to remain at West Barsham after his death — "a considerable flock in those days." Escheator for Norfolk under Edward IV and of council to John Howard, Duke of Norfolk, in 1477; died at Burnham Thorpe (later Lord Nelson's birthplace) in 1508. | Married Anne Calthorpe, only daughter of Sir William Calthorpe KB of Burnham Thorpe (1410–1494) — Knight of the Bath at Queen Elizabeth Woodville's coronation 1465, High Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1442, 1458, 1469 and 1479, Steward of the household of the Duke of Norfolk in 1479 — by his first wife Elizabeth Grey, daughter of Sir Reginald Grey, 3rd Baron Grey of Ruthyn (so William IV's descendants entered the kinship penumbra of the Lords Grey de Ruthyn, eventual ancestors of Lady Jane Grey). The Anne Calthorpe identification is independently confirmed in eight non-Daniel-Gurney sources (Lee-Warner 1884; Carr-Calthrop 1933; Cotman & Meyrick 1838; the East Anglian; etc.). Independently recorded as "William Gournay, junior" receiving custody of the East Barsham manors of Roger Wood from John Earl of Oxford in 14 Henry VII (1499) (Blomefield, vol. vii, pp. 53–65, East Barsham parish). Adopted the wrestling collar as a personal device — described by the antiquary Sir Henry Spelman from a William Gurney seal of Henry VII's reign — which his descendants bore as a second crest beside the older gurnard fish. Of West Barsham Hall and a town house at Pockthorpe-by-Norwich. Lifetime spanned the entire Wars of the Roses (1455–85) and the first two Tudor decades. Daughter Elizabeth elected Prioress of Thetford in 1518 — twenty years before the Henrician dissolution closed her house. Two cadet branches founded by his sons Walter (Cley-by-the-Sea) and Thomas (Dartmouth, London, and Essex; whose grandson Richard Gurney was Sheriff of London under Elizabeth I). Eldest son William V (G18) had already died vita patris; nine-year-old grandson Anthony succeeded. | • West Barsham manor, Norfolk. • Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk — died here (suggests land interest in this village, birthplace of Admiral Lord Nelson three centuries later). • Full manor holdings not individually documented in sources consulted; inherited the West Barsham and associated Norfolk portfolio from Thomas (Gen.20). | |
| G20 | Thomas Gournay IIfl. c. 1430 — d. 1471 | Medieval Norfolk Gurneys | Harpley, Norfolk, England; West Barsham Hall | The earliest Gurney will to survive in full personal detail — dated at West Barsham, proved 27 July 1471 (twelve weeks after Tewkesbury) — names three simultaneous family residences and leaves all the household's wool and linen to his wife Margaret Jerningham as "her own work and that of her servants." | Son of Thomas Gournay I (G21) and Catherine Kerville. Married Margaret, daughter of Sir Thomas Jerningham, Knt., of Somerleyton, Suffolk — one of Norfolk and Suffolk's most powerful Catholic gentry families (Sir Henry Jerningham of Huntingfield was a principal supporter of Mary I's accession in 1553; the family was still recusant under Elizabeth). The Jerningham marriage anchored the West Barsham Gurneys into a Catholic gentry network that would still be structuring their marriages a century later — when Helen Holditch (G16's widow) married a Jerningham, the connection was being activated for the second time. Three simultaneous gentry residences — West Barsham Hall, a house at Harpley, and a town house in St Gregory's parish, Norwich — Daniel Gurney's textbook illustration of the medieval pattern by which Norfolk gentry "removed with their family to consume the produce of each estate." Will directs burial in the chancel of Harpley if he died at Harpley, or in the church of the Friars Minors (Greyfriars) at Norwich if he died there — independently confirmed by Blomefield, *History of Norfolk*, vol. viii (1808), pp. 452–459. The 1471 will is dated 18 March 1469/70 (9 Edward IV) and proved 27 July 1471. | • West Barsham manor, Norfolk (inherited from John, Gen.21). • Associated Norfolk manors from John's estate: Harpley, Hardingham, Loundhall in Saxthorpe, and the Heylesdon manors. • Specific deeds for Thomas not individually documented in sources consulted. | |
| G21 | Thomas Gournay Ifl. c. 1408 — d. c. 1450 | Medieval Norfolk Gurneys | Harpley, Norfolk, England; West Barsham Hall | A younger son's son who never expected to inherit. When his uncle Sir John Gurney V — Sheriff of Norfolk, Coventry MP 1404, and the most distinguished Gurney of the 14th century — died on 4 December 1408 and his ten-year-old heir followed him to the grave, Thomas became, by collateral succession, lord of West Barsham. | Son of Robert Gournay (G22) by Joan de Norwich. Sir John Gurney V's full inheritance — eight Norfolk manors plus one in Suffolk (per History of Parliament Online) — descended to Thomas as the surviving male-line heir. The portfolio briefly included "La Selde Coronata," a London City warehouse Sir John had brought into the family by marriage to Alice Heylesdon (daughter and sole heir of the wealthy London mercer and former alderman John Heylesdon), along with the Heylesdon manors of Hellesdon and Drayton in Norfolk and the advowsons of two chantries Heylesdon had founded. Married Catherine, daughter of Robert Kerville of Watlington, Norfolk — a sensible diversification into the western-Norfolk Lynn-hinterland gentry. No record of him in Crown office, parliamentary service, sheriffdom, or commission of the peace — a striking silence given his uncle Sir John's extensive record, suggesting a deliberately private gentleman consolidating an unexpected inheritance through the long Lancastrian minority. | • West Barsham manor, Norfolk (inherited through collateral succession from uncle John). • Harpley manor and associated Norfolk holdings. | |
| G22 | Robert Gournayfl. c. 1370–1420 | Medieval Norfolk Gurneys | Norfolk, England | The elusive direct-line ancestor through whom every subsequent Gurney descends — and yet so undocumented that Daniel Gurney himself wrote only that Edmund had "a second son, whom we believe was named Robert." | Born into the most prosperous and well-connected household the family had yet produced — father Edmund (G23) was steward of John of Gaunt's East Anglian estates and counsel to Norwich and Bishop's Lynn; elder brother Sir John heading toward sheriffdom and a parliamentary career; mother Katherine de Wauncy the heiress of West Barsham. As a younger son Robert lived obscurely. No deed in his name, no court appearance, no will, no land transaction has been identified. He exists in the record almost entirely as a relationship — son, brother, husband, father. Yet because his nephew Edmund (Sir John V's only son) died as a minor, Robert's son Thomas I (G21) became, by collateral succession, lord of West Barsham — and through that single moment of dynastic luck, the entire subsequent Gurney line — including the West Barsham Gurneys, the banking Gurneys of Norwich, and through Francis Gurney's son John Gurney-1 the American Gurneys — descends from him. Source: Daniel Gurney, *Record*, Part I, p. 280; *Supplement*, p. 363. | • Specific holdings not individually documented. Inherited share of Edmund's Norfolk estate. | |
| G23 | Edmund Gournayd. 1387 | Medieval Norfolk Gurneys | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England; St James's Chapel ruins; +1 more | Norfolk lawyer of county-wide reputation who, for fifteen years until his death, served as steward of John of Gaunt's East Anglian estates — and through marriage to Katherine de Wauncy acquired West Barsham, the seat the family would hold for the next three centuries. | Counsel to the cities of Norwich and Bishop's Lynn (King's Lynn) simultaneously — the standing council of Norwich, *in the nature of recorder and steward*, alongside Edmund de Clipesby (Daniel Gurney, *Supplement*, p. 359). Justice of the Peace for Norfolk (44 and 49 Edw. III). Royal commissioner across at least fifteen separate Patent and Close Roll entries: customs fraud, arbitration between the prior of Norwich and the prioress of Carrow, special commissioner for Queen Philippa's manor, justice for piracy inquiry, forcible-entry inquiry, and others. Through Katherine de Wauncy — daughter of Sir William de Wauncy of West Barsham, eventually sister and heir of Sir Edmund de Wauncy when Sir Edmund's seven-year-old son also died in 1372 — the entire West Barsham estate (held by the Wauncys since Domesday under Earl Warren) came to him in right of his wife. His arms (engrailed cross argent) impaling the Wauncy coat (gules, three dexter hand-gloves pointed downwards, argent) were visible in a window of "Gurney's Place" in St. Julian's parish, Norwich, and were still visible in a window of Denton church, Norfolk, when Daniel Gurney wrote in 1848. Will dated at West Barsham on Thursday the feast of the Ascension 1387, proved same year (Reg. Harsyke fol. 34); 8s. distributed to the poor on his burial day; buried in the church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin, West Barsham. Will named four executors — Katherine his wife, John his son, Osbert de Mundeford, and Thomas Kemp — and included a restitution clause directing heirs to compensate anyone he had wronged. | • Harpley manor, Norfolk (principal documented holding). • Hardingham manor, Norfolk. • Land interests at Bishop's Lynn (King's Lynn) area — consistent with legal and stewardship role there. • West Barsham arrived in family through John (Gen.21) via his mother — Edmund's wife likely from the Wauncy family or Edmund himself had this connection. • Specific deeds recorded in Blomefield's History of Norfolk. | |
| G23 | Sir John Gurney, Knt. (d.1408) — RelatedRelatedd. 1408 | Medieval Norfolk Gurneys | St Benet Fink; Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England; +4 more | RELATED — not in Allen's direct line. Son of Edmund (G23). Sheriff of Norfolk & Suffolk. His son Edmond died under age; estates passed to nephew Thomas (son of Robert, G22). | HISTORY OF PARLIAMENT. Man of law from 1382. Steward to Richard Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel (one of the Lords Appellant, 1387-88). Returned by Norfolk to Parliament of 1399 that acclaimed Henry IV. Appointed Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk. Owned London warehouse 'La Selde Coronata.' | • West Barsham estate (Wauncy inheritance — brought into Gurney family through John's mother; how West Barsham entered the family). • Harpley manor, Norfolk (inherited from father Edmund, Gen.22). • Hardingham manor, Norfolk (inherited from Gen.22). • 'Loundhall' in Saxthorpe, Norfolk. • Heylesdon manors, Norfolk (from wife Alice Heylesdon, d/o wealthy London mercer/Alderman John Heylesdon). • 'La Selde Coronata' — warehouse/commercial premises, City of London. • Total estate at death: 8 manors in Norfolk + 1 in Suffolk (History of Parliament). | |
| G24 | John de Gournay IVfl. c. 1330–1370 | Junior Norfolk Branch | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England | Lord of Harpley who held his first manorial court there on Friday the vigil of St. Laurence, 28 Edward III — 9 August 1354. The last of the family seated primarily at Harpley before his son Edmund married the West Barsham heiress and shifted the family seat. | First attested 1331 in a deed of his great-uncle John (Rector of Harpley), 6 Edw. III. May have been the presenter to the Harpley church living in 1332 on the Rector's death — Daniel Gurney noted the presenter is named "John de Gurney junior," "more probably this John" rather than his father. First manorial court at Harpley: Friday the vigil of St. Laurence, 28 Edw. III (9 August 1354), documented in BL Add. MSS. 8841, fol. 112 — survives as the one specific day in his life that the documentary record has preserved. Lived through the early decades of the Hundred Years' War, and would have been about eighteen at the worst year of the Black Death in England (1348–49); no record of his personal experience of either survives. His most consequential act was raising his son Edmund (G23) into the legal career that made the Wauncy marriage and the West Barsham acquisition possible. | • Harpley manor, Norfolk (inherited from father John III). • Hardingham manor. | |
| G25 | John de Gournay IIIfl. c. 1300–1353 | Junior Norfolk Branch | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England | The generation that restored continuity. When his clerical uncle John, Rector of Harpley, died in 1332 — having held the family estates for nearly four decades after John's father had transferred them to him for an annuity in 1294 — John III stepped forward as nephew and heir, returning Harpley to the direct male line. | First attested in a 1331 deed of his uncle John (Rector of Harpley), 6 Edw. III. Succeeded as heir to the Rector in 1332 and immediately exercised advowson, presenting the new incumbent to the Harpley living. Married Jane, daughter of Edmund de Lexham, before 1324 — one of the earliest marriage dates in the junior Norfolk branch with a named wife and approximate date, marking the point at which the documentary record begins to thicken. The Lexham family of Lexham in Norfolk are documented from the early 13th century. Living 27 Edw. III (1353). Long life c. 1300–1353+ spanned the early Hundred Years' War, the Black Death of 1348–49 (which killed roughly a third of England's population), and the first great parliamentary crises of Edward III's reign. Source: DG, *Record*, Part I, p. 286. | • Harpley manor, Norfolk (succeeded uncle John, Rector of Harpley, in 1332). • Hardingham manor. • Swathings in Hardingham. | |
| G26 | Sir William de Gournay III, Knt.fl. c. 1260–1300 | Junior Norfolk Branch | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England | The first member of the family to seal a surviving document with the engrailed cross — and the lord who, in 1294, conveyed every one of his Norfolk manors to his clerical brother John, Rector of Harpley, in exchange for a lifetime annuity. A genuinely unusual act. | Knight; attested 14 Edward I (1286) as lord of Gurney's manor in Harpley, Hardingham, and Hingham. The 1294 deed transferring all his estates to his brother John (Rector of Harpley) is, per Daniel Gurney, "the earliest on record of the use of the cross engrailed in a seal or document by any of the family" — though the same arms were borne earlier by his father Sir John I (G27) on a contemporary roll of arms. Why William alienated the entire estate is unrecorded; financial distress is the most common reason for such transactions, but the lifetime annuity arrangement suggests he retained an income stream. The fortunate result: when Rector John died in 1332 without heirs, the estates descended cleanly to William's son John III (G25), bypassing the celibate clergyman's generation and restoring the direct line. Married Katherine, daughter of Edmund Baconsthorpe — resolving the long-running puzzle of the previous generation's "probably a Baconsthorpe" wife. | • Harpley manor (sold to brother John, 1294). • Hardingham manor. • Swathings in Hardingham. | |
| G27 | Sir John de Gournay I, Knt.fl. c. 1240–1280 | Junior Norfolk Branch | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England; Lewes, Sussex, England | Rebel baron at Lewes (1264) and Evesham (1265) — forfeited South Wootton manor for siding with Simon de Montfort against Henry III — yet within five years had a royal pardon and accompanied Prince Edward to the Holy Land in 1270. Established the family's coat of arms, *argent, a cross engrailed gules*, that descendants bore for centuries. | Living 1245. Estate seized by Earl Warren as a rebel after Lewes — DG-Supp Note 112 preserves the full Latin text of the 1264 South Wootton plea, with a livestock inventory of 3 horses, 4 oxen, 14 cows, and 171 sheep seized because John "was in the conflict of Lewes against the Lord King." Presented by jury of Mitford in 1257 for not being knighted — the standard fiscal-evasion offence, periodic compelled-knighthood being a way the Crown raised money. Royal letters of protection for the Crusade survive in the Patent Rolls (DG-Supp Note 114, Rot. Patent 54 Hen. III, 1270): "We have taken into our protection and defence the same John, his men, lands, goods, revenues, and all his possessions" — a routine formula whose issuance to a man who had taken up arms against the crown six years earlier is anything but routine. Rotuli Hundredorum 1274 documents the Harpley tenure chain: King → Earl Warren → Caletorp → Gournay. Heraldic arms: *argent, a cross engrailed gules* — borne by descendants ever since, and the heraldic identity Allen Gurney's lineage carries to the present day. DG (*Record* Supplement, pp. 785–786) speculates the arms may have been adopted at the Crusade, noting Sir Robert de Ufford and Sir John de Ingoldesthorpe — fellow Norfolk lords on the same Crusade — also adopted crosses as their arms. | • Harpley manor, Norfolk. • Hardingham manor. • Swathings in Hardingham. | |
| G28 | Sir William de Gournay II, Knt.fl. c. 1210–1250 | Junior Norfolk Branch | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England | Knight of Harpley in the troubled middle decades of Henry III, attested in two independent Norfolk records (1234 and 1243). Father of the rebel-Crusader Sir John I — whose career suggests Gournay political sympathies that William may have shared but never acted on publicly. | Witnessed a charter of William de Clifford to the Abbey of Dore, Herefordshire, in 1220 (DG-Supp Note 111, from Dodsworth MS. 42, Bodleian Library). Wife Katherine — surname uncertain. DG-I pedigree p. 286 calls her "probably a Baconsthorpe"; DG-Supp Note 113 (1858) proposes she was an Ingoldesthorpe, based on a fine at DG-I p. 325. The two identifications remain unresolved — possibly the same woman (Daniel Gurney's later, more considered opinion) or two different Katherines in successive generations (G28 here and G26's wife two generations later). Three known children: Sir John I (G27), Edmund (held a quarter of a knight's fee in Houghton, 1303), and Thomas (Norfolk fine). Lived through the rise of Simon de Montfort's reform movement; died before the open civil war broke out at Lewes in 1264. | • Harpley manor, Norfolk (inherited from father Matthew). • Hardingham/Swathings. | |
| G29 | Sir Matthew de Gournay, Knt.fl. c. 1180 — living 1217 | Junior Norfolk Branch | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Harpley, Norfolk, England; Runhall, Norfolk, England | Knight whose marriage to Rose de Burnham was personally arranged c. 1183 by Hameline Plantagenet, Earl Warren — half-brother of Henry II — bringing Harpley manor into the Gournay family for the next two centuries. | Hameline Plantagenet, Earl Warren — illegitimate half-brother of Henry II — gave in marriage his kinswoman Rose, daughter and heir of Reginald de Burnham (Fitz-Philip), c. 1183, because the Burnhams "were said to be a younger branch of the house of Warren" (DG-I, p. 278). Rose was therefore a kinswoman of Edith de Warenne — Matthew's own ancestress five generations back — making the Gournay-Warren tie effectively renewed. Through Rose he acquired Gurney's manor in Harpley, Norfolk — the family's primary seat for nearly two centuries. Independent primary-source attestation: Matthew gave the tithes of Hardingham to the church there (Harleian MSS 970, British Library). Held the manor of Swathings in Hardingham. DG Supplement Note 109 corrects the main text: Matthew was living in 1217 (Fine Roll 2 Henry III), paying 20 marks for a writ of attaint concerning his tenement of Swathings. Lived to see King John lose Normandy to Philip Augustus in 1204 — severing the family's remaining Norman tie (the Montigny-sur-Andelle parage tenure his father had held). After 1204, the junior Norfolk branch was an English family in every practical sense, their Norman heritage preserved only in their name. | • Gurney's manor in Harpley, Norfolk (acquired through marriage to Rose de Burnham c.1183). • Swathings manor in Hardingham. • Runhall. | |
| G30 | Sir William de Gournay I, Knt.fl. c. 1150–1180 | Junior Norfolk Branch | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Montigny-sur-Andelle, Normandy, France; Runhall, Norfolk, England | The genealogical keystone of the entire junior Norfolk branch. Holding Montigny-sur-Andelle in Normandy *in parage* (a tenure available only to blood relatives of the senior lord) constituted, in Daniel Gurney's words, "incontestable proof of his descent in blood from the Barons of Gournay." | Designated "Dominus Willelmus de Gurney" (the standard Latin for a knight) in a Gaywood, Norfolk deed of conveyance, DG-I p. 278. Held both English and Norman estates simultaneously — Runhall and Swathings in Hardingham (a Saxon parish spanning parts of three modern parishes — Hardingham, Letton, and Cranworth) plus Montigny-sur-Andelle in Normandy held in parage. Living 1167. DG-Supp Note 105 records a "William de Gournay" witnessing a charter of Henry II at Notre Dame du Pré, Rouen — DG identifies this "in all probability" as our William. A contemporary namesake — a different William de Gurney, *praepositus Parisiensis* (Provost of Paris) under Louis VII — appears in a rhyme preserved by Walter Map, but Daniel Gurney correctly distinguishes the two. Father-son link to Matthew (G29) established by a plea in DG Appendix LIII between Matthew and Gilbert de Runhall. | • Runhall manor, Norfolk. • Swathings manor in Hardingham, Norfolk. • Montigny-sur-Andelle, Normandy (held in parage from the Dukes of Normandy). | |
| G31 | Walter de Gournayfl. c. 1108–1154 | Junior Norfolk Branch | Hardingham / Low Street / Old Hall context; Norfolk, England; Suffolk, England | The junction point. Walter's elder brother Hugh IV inherited the great Norman barony; Walter received a younger son's share of the English estates — and from that single partition descend the West Barsham Gurneys, the Quaker banking Gurneys of Norwich, and through Francis Gurney the American Gurneys. | Youngest son of Gerard de Gournay (Crusader, G32) and Edith de Warenne. Documented in the *Liber Niger Scaccarii* — the Black Book of the Exchequer, c. 1166 — as holding a quarter knight's fee in Suffolk under Manasser de Dampmartin. Three independent evidentiary chains converge to confirm his Gournay blood-descent: (1) the *Liber Niger* entry; (2) his son William I's parage tenure of Montigny-sur-Andelle in Normandy (parage tenure being available only to blood relatives of the senior lord); (3) a *Les Olim* entry — official records of the French royal court — formally recognising the Swathings Gurneys as legitimate descendants of the Lords of Gournay. Lived during "The Anarchy" (Stephen's reign 1135–1154); no record of him in any political or military event — wisest course for a minor Norfolk landlord in those years. The Norman village of "Bois Gautier" (Gautier = Walter in Norman French) in the Pays de Bray may have been named for him (per the historian De la Mairie). Daniel Gurney suggested he may have been named after his father's kinsman Walter Giffard, Earl of Buckingham, or after Walter de la Ferté. | • Lands in Suffolk held under Manasser de Dampmartin (Liber Niger Scaccarii). • Norfolk manors (Runhall, Swathings in Hardingham) — held as mesne lords under the Barons of Gournay. | |
| G32 | Gerard de Gournayc. 1040 — d. before 1104, Palestine | Norman Barons of England | Caister-on-Sea, Norfolk, England; Cantley, Norfolk, England; Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France; +2 more | Crusader who survived the First Crusade — Nicaea, "Burnt Phrygia," the fall of Jerusalem in July 1099 — returned home, then set out again for the Holy Land with his wife Edith de Warenne and died *en route*: *Hierosolymam petens in ipso itinere mortuus est*. | Married Edith de Warenne, daughter of William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey — the wealthiest Norman baron in England after the king (Domesday holdings in 13 counties). The marriage brought Norfolk manors and the Caister-by-the-Sea barony into the Gournay family. Gerard's own seal — "Signum Girardi de Gornaco" — survives in the Cartulary of La Trinité de Rouen. A formidable lord: when the Count of Évreux tried to claim one of his residences, Gerard's "power and valour made him an unsafe man to meddle with." Sailed September 1096 with Robert Curthose's contingent — Bishop Odo of Bayeux, Stephen de Blois, a host of Norman lords — and wintered in Calabria with Bohemond, who inspected their heraldic badges (one of the earliest documented discussions of nascent armorial heraldry). Daughter Gundred ("la belle Gondrée") married Nigel de Albini in 1119 (the wedding arranged by Henry I himself), introducing Gournay blood into the Mowbray/Norfolk-Howard line; Gundred patronised Byland and Rievaulx Abbeys, whose noble ruins still stand in Yorkshire. JUNCTION POINT: eldest son Hugh IV continued the senior Norman baron line (extinct 1235 in the male line); youngest son Walter (G31) became ancestor of the Norfolk junior branch from which all subsequent English and American Gurneys descend. | • Caister, Norfolk (English holdings documented). • Gournay-en-Bray seigneury and surrounding Pays de Bray, Normandy. • Lessingham Priory, Norfolk — founded, attached to Abbey of Bec. • Cantley, Norfolk — documented holding. • Norfolk manors inherited from Hugh III (Gen.27) then expanded through Edith de Warenne marriage connection. | |
| G32 | Hugh de Gournay IV (Senior Baron Line)Relatedc. 1098 — d. 1180 | Norman Barons of England | Bedfordshire, England; Buckinghamshire, England; Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France; +3 more | SENIOR BARON LINE — not in Allen's direct ancestry. Eldest son of Gerard. The direct line passes through his younger brother Walter. | Raised at court of Henry I. Married (1) Beatrix de Vermandois (Carolingian/Charlemagne royal descent); (2) Melisende de Coucy. Founded Clairruissel Priory. Captured 1173 during Henry the Young King's rebellion. | • Three knights' fees in Norfolk (documented Pipe Rolls). • Manors in Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, and Oxfordshire (Red Book of the Exchequer). • Gournay-en-Bray seigneury, Normandy — the ancestral fortress town. • Clairruissel Priory, Normandy — founded with second wife Melisende de Coucy. | |
| G32 | Hugh de Gournay V (Senior Baron Line)Relatedc. 1148 — d. 25 Oct. 1214, Rouen | Norman Barons of England | Flegg, Norfolk, England; Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France; Normandy, France; +1 more | SENIOR BARON LINE — not in Allen's direct ancestry. Son of Hugh IV. Last of the senior Norman baron line. Main line extinct; junior Norfolk branch continued. | Last of the main Norman baron line. Founded Bellosanne Abbey, Normandy (1198). Vacillated between English and French allegiance when John lost Normandy (1204). Died Rouen Oct. 1214. Main Norman line extinct. Junior Norfolk branch continued. | • Flegg, Norfolk (English manors). • Manors in Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Bedfordshire (documented in Curia Regis Rolls and Testa de Nevill). • Confirmed by Richard I's 1200 charter confirming his holdings. • Norman territory (great fief/honour of Bray, including Gournay-en-Bray fortress) — lost when Philip Augustus expelled the English from Normandy in 1204. • Bellosanne Abbey, Normandy — founded 1198. | |
| G33 | Hugh de Gournay IIIc. 1020 — d. 1110 | Norman Barons of England | Ardleigh, Essex, England; Église Saint-Michel de Bosc-Hyons; Essex, England; +5 more | At the Battle of Hastings in 1066, Domesday landholder in Essex (Liston, Fordham, Ardleigh), personal friend of St Anselm of Canterbury, witness to the foundation charters of the two great Caen abbeys. Entered the Abbey of Bec as a monk in 1080, became Prior of Saint-Nicaise de Meulan in 1092, and died at Bec in 1110 — a thirty-year monastic career after some sixty years as a Norman lord. | Wace's *Roman de Rou* names three Gournays in the 1066 invasion fleet: Hugh III with his father "Old Hugh" (G34) and a collateral (likely Néel/Nigel, founder of the Somerset cadet line). After the Conquest, Hugh held three Essex manors directly of the king (Liston, Fordham, Ardleigh) — confirmed by Domesday 1086 but already documented in a 1076 Bec Abbey charter granting tithes from those parishes. Witnessed William I's foundation charters for Saint-Étienne (Abbaye-aux-Hommes) at Caen in 1077 and La Trinité (Abbaye-aux-Dames) in 1082 — both churches survive intact and can still be visited. Added twenty-four villages to the Gournay lordship (the "Conquêts Hue de Gournai") in the Beauvaisis, creating dual feudal allegiance to both the Duke of Normandy and the King of France. Anselm of Canterbury — later canonised and named a Doctor of the Church, arguably the most important philosopher-theologian between Augustine and Aquinas — wrote of him: "Salute the Lord Hugh de Gournay, *dilectissimum nostrum*, and the Lady Basilia, on my part, as sweetly as you can." Married Basilia Flaitel, daughter of Gerard Flaitel and previously wife of Raoul de Gacé / de Vassy / "Tête-dure" (son of Robert Archbishop of Rouen and Count of Évreux, by his concubine Hélène; grandson of Duke Richard I of Normandy). Caister and Cantley (Norfolk) tithes given to the Saint-Hildevert chapter at Gournay-en-Bray, with Bishop of Norwich confirmation — a documented Channel-spanning ecclesiastical tie. Died at the Abbey of Bec in 1110; partial ruins survive at Le Bec-Hellouin, Eure, today open to visitors. | • Liston, Essex (Domesday 1086 — held directly of the king). • Fordham, Essex (Domesday 1086). • Ardleigh, Essex (Domesday 1086). • Norfolk manors (granted post-Conquest, specific parcels documented in Daniel Gurney's Record as chiefly in Norfolk and Suffolk). • Gournay-en-Bray fortress town and the Norman honour of Bray. • Abbey of Bec, Normandy — endowed and buried here. | |
| G34 | Hugh de Gournay IIc. 985 — d. c. 1074 | Norman Barons of England | Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France | *"Le vieil Hue de Gornai"* — "the old Hue of Gournay," as Wace's *Roman de Rou* names him at Hastings. The Norman poets gave him a four-name epithet stack: *L'Ancien*, *Le Vieux*, *Senex*, *Le Vieil Huon*. One of three commanders William the Conqueror chose for the Battle of Mortemer (1054), the ducal victory that secured William's grip on Normandy a dozen years before Hastings. | Sailed to England in 1035 with Prince Edward (future Confessor) and the captains named in the chronicles (Walter Giffard Count of Longueville, Néel Vicomte of the Cotentin, Robert Count of Mortain "Taillefer" or — per the *Histoire et Chronique de Normandie* — "Taillefer the duke's brother by his mother," the lord of Guérarville, the lord of Gournay) on a failed attempt to claim the throne after Cnut's death. At Mortemer (1054), after the Norman dawn assault routed the French northern column, William sent Rodolf de Toeny through the night near the king's camp to cry: "*Franceiz, Franceiz, levez, levez! Allez vos amis enterrer ki sunt occiz a Mortemer!*" — *Frenchmen, arise, go bury your friends killed at Mortemer!* The royal army broke up before dawn. Witnessed pre-1066 charter granting Bernières to Odo of Bayeux (Bayeux Cathedral *Liber niger* No. 5); Vaudreuil charter of April 1067 (D. Martene, *Thesaurus Anecdotorum* t. i c. 196). William of Poitou's *Gesta Guillelmi* attests Hugues Gornacensis joining forces with Robert d'Eu after 1053. After the Siege of Gerberoy (1079), one of four barons chosen to broker the reconciliation between William and his rebellious son Robert Curthose — alongside Roger Earl of Shrewsbury, Hugh de Grandmesnil, and Roger de Beaumont. Wace's *Roman de Rou* names him at Hastings: *"Et li vieil Hue de Gornai / Ensemble o li sa gent de Brai"* — "And the old Hue of Gournay, together with him his men of Bray." If born c. 985, Hugh was about 80 at Hastings; Hannay supposed he may have been present in an advisory or ceremonial capacity. A local manuscript tradition says he was wounded in a "battle of Cardiff" and died in Normandy shortly after, but Daniel Gurney himself suspected "Cardiff" was a scribal corruption for Norwich or Caistor; FMG MedLands flatly states *"the historical basis of the account is uncertain."* The historical kernel is most likely a 1074–75 East Anglian engagement during the Earls' Revolt (Ralph de Gaël). Hannay considered him "one of the greatest" Norman potentates of the mid-eleventh century. Per Pattou's *Racines Histoire*, Hugh II also fathered Néel/Nigel de Gournay, founder of the Somerset cadet line at Barrow-Gurney and Inglishcombe (held of the Bishop of Coutances; Domesday 1086). | • Gournay-en-Bray seigneury — the walled fortress town and surrounding Pays de Bray territory. • 'The Fortifier': built triple wall, double ditch, and tower at Gournay — major investment in the property as a defensive stronghold on the eastern Norman frontier. • No English holdings — pre-Conquest. | |
| G35 | Renaud de Gournayc. 970 — dates uncertain | Norman Barons of England | Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France; La Ferté-en-Bray / La Ferté-Saint-Samson, Normandy, France | The first ancestor in the line confirmed by a contemporary primary-source document — a charter of 989–996 founding the priory of La Ferté-en-Bray, naming Renaud and his wife Alberade alongside Duke Richard I, his son Richard II, and Robert Archbishop of Rouen. | The La Ferté charter of 989–996 was issued by Renaud's son Gautier "*imperante fratre meo Hugone*" — at the command of my brother Hugh — and witnessed by Duke Richard I (Sans-Peur, d. 996), his son Richard II, and Robert Archbishop of Rouen (Robert acquired his see in 989), giving a firm date window. Hannay observed of the donations: "very considerable, and show that the house was great." Two sons, two legacies: Gautier de la Ferté founded the priory; Hugh II inherited the Gournay lordship and went on to command at Mortemer in 1054 and witness charters of Duke William of Normandy — who would conquer England twelve years later. Hannay placed Renaud "just into the transition time — the stage in which the Norman gentleman was developing out of the Norse sea-king." Wife "Alberade" (Alberarda) is the first named woman in the Gurney line. The Pays de Bray in Renaud's era was being transformed from frontier wildland into cultivated orchards and vineyards. | • Gournay-en-Bray seigneury, Pays de Bray, Normandy. • La Ferté-en-Bray priory — endowed by son Gautier citing father Renaud. | |
| G36 | Hugh de Gournay ILimited Historical Recordc. 920–940 — dates uncertain | Norman Barons of England | Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France | First of the line born in Normandy, contemporary with Duke William Longsword. Builder of the citadel and "La Tour Hue" (Hugh's Tower) at Gournay-en-Bray — a fortification that stood for approximately eight hundred years before its final demolition in the early-to-mid-18th century. | Built a citadel near the future church of Saint-Hildevert, surrounded it with a triple wall and double ditch, and topped it with a tower that took his own name: "La Tour Hue" (*Hue* being the Old French form of Hugh). The 13th-century court poet William Brito (*Philippide*, c. 1224, lib. xi) described Gournay as fortified with "*triplice muro … inexpugnabilis*" — triple wall, impregnable even without defenders inside. Pierre Potin de la Mairie (1842, p. 76) records the tower as still standing "au commencement du siècle dernier" — early 1700s; Daniel Gurney's 1858 *Supplement* records it as still standing "a century ago" — placing the final demolition around the 1750s. Lived through Duke William Longsword's reign and assassination (942) on an island in the Somme — Hannay imagined "Hugh de Gournay's horror, in that rude but pious time, when the news reached him amidst his architectural and other labours." Hannay also noted his name was "convertible with Eudes or Eude" in the chronicles, suggesting both names derive from a common Norse root. Pattou *Racines Histoire* tentatively names ? Bathilde de Gerberoy (+1059) as wife at this generation, with `?` markers (research-tier candidate, not adopted as fact). Lineage status remains *Limited Historical Record* — known by tradition and by the tower eponym, but not yet by contemporary charter document in his own name (his son Renaud is the earliest contemporary-document ancestor at G35). Painchault 2012 frames Gournay-La Ferté-Gaillefontaine as a coordinated Pays-de-Bray fortification triad at the head of the Bresle valley. | • Gournay-en-Bray seigneury — inherited from Eudes. | |
| G37 | Eudes (Odon) de GournayMinimal historical recordc. 860 — d. after 911, before c. 932 | Viking Origin | Gournay-en-Bray, Normandy, France; Scandinavia | Origin of the line. A Viking warrior in Rollo's war-band who, at the Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte in 911, received Gournay-en-Bray and the Pays de Bray as his portion — beginning a documented property-holding lineage that runs ~37 generations and ~1,160 years to Allen Gurney. | Daniel Gurney himself acknowledged: "the existence of Eudes... is a matter of tradition" — no contemporary document survives. But James Hannay (1867) defended the tradition as credible precisely because it was modest: "no supernatural feats of heroism are attributed to him; he does not scatter whole armies in the doubtful moments of great battles" — he is simply made what hundreds of Norman family founders were, "a follower of Rollo, sharing in his chieftain's fortunes." A French local tradition styles him *"le chevalier à l'écu noir"* — the knight with the black shield — consistent with the later Gournay arms (*pure sable*, a plain black shield), among the simplest and most ancient heraldic designs in Norman genealogy. The town of Gournay-en-Bray (Seine-Maritime, pop. ~6,500) survives today ~50 km east of Rouen, celebrated for Neufchâtel cheese — the Pays de Bray was once called Normandy's "butter capital." The 12th-century Collégiale Saint-Hildevert, near where Eudes's grandson Hugh I built his tower, still stands. Léopold Delisle, the leading 19th-century Norman charter scholar, challenged Daniel Gurney's early genealogy, and the lineage status here remains *Minimal historical record* — but the founding land grant initiated a landholding tradition that has now run more than 1,100 years — from the Pays de Bray under Rollo, through the medieval Norfolk seats, and on into England, America, and beyond. | • Gournay-en-Bray and the Pays de Bray, Normandy — granted by Rollo c.911-912 as the founding land grant of the entire Gurney family story. • The town of Gournay-en-Bray survives today in Seine-Maritime, Normandy (~50 miles east of Rouen). 12th-century Collegiate Church of Saint-Hildevert still stands. • This single Norman land grant began a Gurney landholding tradition that has run more than 1,100 years — from the Pays de Bray under Rollo, through the medieval Norfolk seats at West Barsham, Harpley, and Hardingham, into modern landholding by descendants in England, America, and beyond. | |
| G~38+ | Unknown Scandinavian ancestorsEnd of RecordBefore c. 860 | End of Known Record | Scandinavia | WALL OF KNOWABLE HISTORY. Eudes's Norse ancestry entirely unrecorded. | WALL OF KNOWABLE HISTORY. Eudes ancestory may parallel that of Rollo given that Eudes was reportedly a companion of Rollo with Norse ancestry (Norse earls of Møre, Norway). Eudes's own parentage and Norse clan are entirely unrecorded. The Gurney male line disappears into the unrecorded Norse world of the 9th century. | • Unknown. No Scandinavian land records attributable to Eudes's ancestors survive. |
Data source: generated from data/ancestors v26.json, data/places.json, data/places_detail.json, root fact-sheet Markdown, and root research note Markdown.