Individual Details
Thomas Ragland
(1575 - Abt 1640)
---- == Biography == Thomas was born about 1575. Thomas Ragland ... He passed away about 1640. Entered by Don Harris, Jun 17, 2011In 1870-72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described Rhaglan like this: RAGLAN, or Ragland, a village, a parish, and a hundred, in Monmouthshire. The village stands on a smallaffluent of the river Usk, 1¼ mile W S W of Raglan-Foot-path r. station, and 7 W S W of Monmouth; gives the title of Baron to the Duke of Beaufort; and has a post-office‡ under Newport, Monmouth. The parish is in Monmouth district, and comprises 4,083 acres. Real property, £5, 796. Pop., 905. Houses, 195. The property is divided among a few. Raglan Castle stands on a rising ground, ½ a mile N N E of the village; was built, in the time of Henry V., by the Herberts; occupies the site of a previons castle of the Morleys; passed to the Somersets; was the residence of the Earls of Worcester; was garrisoned in 1642, by the Marquis of Worcester, indefence of Charles I.; gave shelter, for some time, to thatmonarch; made successful resistance in his cause till verynear the end of the war; surrendered to Fairfax in Aug., 1646; was subsequently dismantled; is now one of the finest baronial ruins in England; exhibits the latestforms of the feudal castle, passing into the modern styleof fortification; covers a space of about one-third of a mile in circuit; includes a terrace 260 feet long, a greatmachicolated gateway with hexagonal towers, a stonecourt 100 feet by 60, a fountain court, a hall 62 feet by 28, a great kitchen, Charles I.'s tower, the hexagonalyellow tower 193 feet in circuit, and other parts and features; belongs now to the Duke of Beaufort; and is the head-quarters of the Monmouthshire Archery club, and a favourite resort of picnic parties. ... The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Llandaff. Value, £270.* Patron, the Duke of Beaufort. The church is early perpendicular, with an embattled tower; was recently restoredat a cost of £2, 500; and contains monuments of the Somersets. There are a Baptist chapel, and charities £6. The hundred contains also 20 other parishes, and parts of 3 others; and is cut into two divisions, higher and lower. Acres, 27,090 and 16, 543. Pop. in 1851, 5,032 and 2, 751; in 1861, 8,024. Houses, 1, 718. [Ragland-212]''No more info is currently available for Thomas Ragland. Can you add to his biography?'' == Sources == * [[Harris-1819 | Don Harris]], firsthand knowledge. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Ragland-128 Changes page] for the details of edits by Don and others. ---- == Biography == ''No more info is currently available. Can you add to this biography?'' == Sources == * WikiTree profile Ragland-138 created through the import of Our Gittinger - Hickman Family History.GED on Jun 21, 2011 by [[Gittinger-1 | Linda Gittinger]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Ragland-138 Changes page] for the details of edits by Linda and others. ---- == Biography == ''No biography yet.Ragland-353 was created by [[Alsford-1 | Dawn Griffis]] through the import of Griffis Ragland Alsford Wrighton Family Tree_2014-01-29.ged on Jan 29, 2014. ''This comment and citation should be deleted after a short biography has been added and primary sources have been cited.'' Can you add information or sources?'' == Sources ==
Events
| Birth | 1575 | St. Decuman's Parish, Somerset, England | |||
| Death | Abt 1640 | St. Decuman's Parish, Somerset, Wales | |||
| Title (Nobility) | Sir |
Families
| Father | John Lewis Ragland (1545 - 1605) |
| Mother | Alice Kingsonn (1543 - 1640) |
| Sibling | Sir Thomas Ragland Sr. (1575 - 1648) |
| Sibling | William Ragland (1569 - 1641) |
| Sibling | Joan Ragland (1572 - 1605) |
| Sibling | John Ragland (1579 - 1650) |