Difference between revisions of "Rendezvous Bay (Q492225)"

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(‎Created a new Item: #quickstatements; batch #354 by User:Alicia Sheill)
 
(‎Added reference to claim: modern country code (P9): AG, #quickstatements; batch #1043 by User:Alicia Sheill)
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
aliases / en / 0aliases / en / 0
 
LBS-PLA-EST-e455
Property / hasName: Rendezvous Bay / reference
 
Property / locatedIn
 
Property / locatedIn: North America / rank
Normal rank
 
Property / modern country code: AG / reference
 
Property / hasPlaceType: Other Place Type / reference
 
Property / hasDescription: An estate 'in Rendezvous Bay' was left by William Henry Doig of Antigua and Cookstown N.B. [sic] in his will proved in 1768 to his daughter Ann for life, then to his brother John and his heirs, then to the son of his brother James. The estate appears to have been the Rendezvous estate owned by William Henry Doig of Antigua and Cookstown's great-nephew John Hurst Doig, although if it was the same e / reference
 
Property / hasDescription: state it was substantially smaller by the 1820s with some 40 enslaved people on it against 207 when Ann Doig, the daughter of William Henry Doig of Antigua and Cookstown, conveyed the estate in 1784. / reference
 

Latest revision as of 21:01, 21 December 2022

LBS-PLA-EST-00873
  • LBS-PLA-EST-00873
  • LBS-PLA-EST-e455
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Rendezvous Bay
LBS-PLA-EST-00873
  • LBS-PLA-EST-00873
  • LBS-PLA-EST-e455

Statements

0 references
Rendezvous Bay
An estate 'in Rendezvous Bay' was left by William Henry Doig of Antigua and Cookstown N.B. [sic] in his will proved in 1768 to his daughter Ann for life, then to his brother John and his heirs, then to the son of his brother James. The estate appears to have been the Rendezvous estate owned by William Henry Doig of Antigua and Cookstown's great-nephew John Hurst Doig, although if it was the same e
state it was substantially smaller by the 1820s with some 40 enslaved people on it against 207 when Ann Doig, the daughter of William Henry Doig of Antigua and Cookstown, conveyed the estate in 1784.