The Williams / Harris Line, A Narrative — Two

This is Chapter Two of twelve, in which we continue with the Reeves family line in Somersetshire, England. This generation of our family begins with the birth of Robert Cullon Jr. in East Pennard Somerset, England.

Quitting The Parish of East Pennard

As such, it is to this day a small parish known for being the home of the hamlets of Stone, Parbrook, and Huxham. In the present day, only 348 people live there. We write this bit of information, because it appears that it wasn’t very long before our ancestors decided to quit East Pennard and move somewhat north to the bright lights of Shepton Mallet.

Christening record for Robert Cullen Jr. East Pennard Parish,
Somerset, for February 12, 1771.

We have observed that these maps look busy with so many little communities identified on them. This tends to make destinations look further apart than they actually are — things are actually much closer. For example… Why did they move about 3-4* miles north? We will never know with certainty, but it doesn’t really matter, because it may have had something to do with having more economic opportunities in the neighboring community. (1)
*This equals about 5.5 to 6.5 kilometers. This distance could be walked in two hours or less with the wind at your back. (This, they probably did).

Enlarged detail from, Map of 24 miles round the City of Bath. Most humbly dedicated …,
by C. H. Masters, circa 1800. (Image courtesy of The National Library of Scotland).

Shepton Mallet, A Market Town

We do not know what the Robert Cullen Jr. family did to earn their income. We already know that his father was a highly respected Master Butcher. Perhaps Robert Jr. had this profession too? The move to Shepton Mallet was likely due to the fact that it was an ancient and well respected market town. The local economy was driven by the propagation of animal husbandry with sheep. This pursuit supplied the local populace with protein, (hence, local meat products) and more importantly, it supplied wool to the many, many cloth factories that populated the Shepton Mallet area.

The Barren Down is located just north of the town center.
(Image courtesy of rareoldprints.com).

Ancient Times Through the Roman Period
“The name Shepton derives from the Old English scoep and tun, meaning sheep farm; the Domesday Book of 1086 records a settlement known as Sceaptun in the hundred of Whitstone. The current spelling is recorded at least as far back as 1496, in a letter from Henry VII. The second part of the name derives from that of the Norman family of Malet. Gilbert Malet, son of William Malet, Honour of Eye, held a lease from Glastonbury Abbey around 1100.

Examples of prehistoric and Roman era artifacts found in the Somerset area.
(Various sources, see footnotes).

Archaeological investigations have found evidence of prehistoric activity in the Shepton Mallet area, with large amounts of Neolithic flint and some pottery fragments of the late Neolithic period. Two barrows on Barren Down, to the north of the town centre, contained cremation burials from the Bronze Age; another Bronze Age burial site contained a skeleton and some pottery. Shepton Mallet is about halfway between the Roman towns of Bath and Ilchester on the Fosse Way. Although there are no visible remains apart from the line of the Roman road, there is archaeological evidence for early military and later civilian settlement lasting into the 5th century.

A Tuck & Sons postcard from 1903 features Picturesque Somerset, Glastonbury Abbey,
by Artist Unknown. (Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons).

The Saxon and Norman Periods, and the Early Middle Ages
A charter of King Ine of Wessex, from 706, witnessed by nine bishops including the Archbishop of Canterbury, records that the area where Shepton Mallet now stands was passed to Abbot Berwald of Glastonbury Abbey.” (Wikipedia) The Middle Ages were an especially fraught time for the area. The Black Plague would seem like enough to deal with — but like a relentless tide washing in-and-out, the ownership and governance of the area changed with the centuries depending upon who was in power.

Five Kings of England — Left to right: King John, 1199 – 1216. Edward III, 1327- 1377.
Henry VI, 1422 – 1461 and 1470 – 1471. Henry VI, 1461 – 1470. Edward IV, 1509 – 1547.
(All images courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, see footnotes).

“…around 1100, the land passed to the Malets, a Norman family whose name was added to that of the settlement. The Malets retained the estate until the reign of King John, when on the death of William Malet (fl. 1192–1215) and the payment by his sons-in-law of a fine of 2000 marks for participating in a rebellion against the king, it passed through his daughter Mabel to her husband Hugh de Vivonne. Some generations later, the part of the estate containing Shepton Mallet was sold to a relative, Sir Thomas Gournay. His son, also Thomas, took part in the murder of Edward II. His estates were confiscated by Edward III in 1337, but returned some years later.

When Mathew de Gournay died childless in 1406, the estate reverted to the Crown and [it] was then granted to Sir John de Tiptoft. It was again confiscated from his son by Henry VI during the Wars of the Roses, when the family sided with Edward IV, but [then] restored to Sir John’s grandson, Edward Tiptoft, when Edward IV regained the throne. He died without issue, and there followed a succession of grants and reversions until Glastonbury Abbey was dissolved by Henry VIII, and its lands, including Shepton Mallet, were granted to the Duchy of Cornwall in 1536.” (Wikipedia)

At left: The Dance of Death, circa 1493, by Michael Wolgemut.
At right: Der Doctor Schnabel von Rom (aka The Plague Doctor), by Paul Fürst.
(Both images courtesy of Wikimedia Commons).

The Black Death and The Late Middle Period
“Charters for markets and fairs were granted in 1235, but revoked in 1260 and 1318 after objections by the Bishop of Wells to the competition it represented to the market in his city. This shows that the town was developing and prospering in the 13th and early 14th centuries. The Black Death struck in 1348, reducing the population to about 300.

In the late 14th and early 15th centuries, the population and economy were boosted by craftsmen and merchants arriving from France and the Low Countries, who were escaping wars and religious persecution. They introduced cloth-making, which together with the local wool trade, became a major industry in Shepton and other Somerset and Wiltshire towns.” (Wikipedia) As a consequence, “… before long, West County cloth was considered the best in the country.” (Shepton Mallett Nub News)

England’s story has been called
‘an interwoven pattern of history and legend’, and
the history of Somerset is a good example of this.

The short dark history of Somerset
by Mike Dean, via The History Press

The 18th and 19th Century Textile Industries
“Many of the workers in the mills were children, some as young as five years old. They had some of the most awful jobs, including cleaning the wool cloth by trampling it in vats of fuller earth and urine… then came the Agricultural and Industrial revolutions — with fewer people needed to do the same amount of work, and once again, it meant more profits for businesses and land-owners, and more local people unemployed and made homeless. The Spinning Jenny was invented by James Hargreaves in 1764. It could spin eight threads at once and there were claims that new machines could do the job of twenty workers.” (Shepton Mallett Nub News)

A Spinning Jenny weaving machine, by Artist Unknown.
(Image courtesy of Shepton Mallett Nub News).

Fluctuating Fortunes
“In 1790 Shepton Mallet was flourishing once again. Unfortunately, its fortunes were to change once more. Advancements in spinning machinery left many workers feeling insecure and riots [again] broke out. These were violent and on a large scale. Local factory owners subsequently failed to install the new machinery available and Shepton Mallet struggled to compete in the market place. Factories closed and hundreds of families suffered. The subsequent manufacture of silk and velvet employed some, but the market suffered. As a result potential new transportation links were abandoned. The 1851 census lists the population for Shepton Mallet as 3,885 and the number of inhabited houses at 825.” (The Cross at Croscombe)

We believe that it was around this point that our ancestors decided to immigrate to America. However, before we sail across the Atlantic Ocean, we still need to cover what happened with this generation of our family (and the next) here in England. (2)

A Tuck & Sons postcard from 1903 features Picturesque Somerset. Shepton Mallet, Market Cross,
by Artist Unknown. (Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons).

The Parish of Stoke St. Michael, or Stoke Lane

Robert Cullen Jr. and his family likely lived just north of Shepton Mallet, in the village and parish of Stoke St. Michael. (Which is also known as Stoke Lane). We know this because both his marriage and the baptisms of his children were recorded there. On May 6, 1787, Robert Cullen Jr. married (this is not a typo) Phillis Phillis at Stoke St. Michael Parish in Somerset. The Phillis surname then gave way to the Cullen name.

Enlarged detail from, Map of 24 miles round the City of Bath. Most humbly dedicated …,
by C. H. Masters, circa 1800. (Image courtesy of The National Library of Scotland).

This “village became a centre for cloth manufacture with fulling mills being established on the River Frome to the north of the village. Henry Fussell established paper mills in 1803, and his family, who came from the village, including James Fussell established their iron works and edge-tool business in Mells.” (Wikipedia)

The reason they chose to live in this area, may have been influenced by where his wife’s family was living. Certainly, their proximity to the market town of Shelton Mallett was also important.

Banns of Marriage record for Robert Cullen Jr. and Phillis Phillis,
at Stoke St Michael Parish, Somerset, for May 28, 1787.

Less than two years later, Phillis gave birth to a daughter named Sarah Cullen, born on March 25, 1789. They likely had more children, but we can only verify Sarah and her brother Thomas Hobbs Cullen, who was born on August 29, 1810. For us, Sarah’s birth is important, because it is from her that the family line continues.

Daughter Sarah Cullen’s birth record at Stoke St Michael Parish, Somerset,
for March 25, 1789, and baptism record for September 6, 1789.
One of the two death records for Robert Cullen Jr., from the Church of England
Burial Records for Shepton Mallet, Somerset, in 1841.

We do not know what became of Phillis (Phillis) Cullen, but we have found two records that indicate Robert Cullen Jr. passed away in 1841. One record indicates February 1841, and another, March 1841. (3)

Phillis and Demophoön, by John William Waterhouse, 1905.
(Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons).

Phillis Was Transformed Into An Almond Tree, Who Knew?

We’ve never before had an ancestor (that we know of) with the truly fabulous name of Phillis Phillis (!), and one cannot help but think it sounds a bit like a modern day showgirl, which we are sure Phillis was not. So we looked up her name and learned a few things. “Phillis is a feminine given name of Greek origin meaning foliage. Phillis is a minor figure in Greek mythology who killed herself in despair when Demophoön of Athens did not return to her and who was transformed into an almond tree by the gods. The name has been in modern use since the 17th century when it was used by English poets John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, and Matthew Prior, probably taken from the supposed mistress of Aristotle, or other classical examples.” (Wikipedia)

A traditional family tree is how many people think of genealogy (family roots, branches, etc.) We guess that not many people have an ancestor who was named after someone who (allegedly) literally grew into a tree. Our history continues with the eventual marriage of Phillis’s daughter Sarah Cullen, to James Williams Jr. (4)

Following are the footnotes for the Primary Source Materials,
Notes, and Observations

Quitting The Parish of East Pennard

(1) — two records

Robt Cullen
in the Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812
East Pennard > 1747-1812
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60856/records/1822099
Digital page: 101/171, Second entry after the heading “Christenings in the year 1771”
Note 1: His christening date is February 12, 1771.
Note 2: His parents names are Robert and Alice (Reeves) Cullen. Observe that the recorder originally wrote the name John, and then tried to correct that by overwriting with (what is likely) the name of Robert.

East Pennard
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Pennard
Note: For the text.

Shepton Mallet, A Market Town

(2) — twenty records

The National Library of Scotland
Map of 24 miles round the City of Bath. Most humbly dedicated …
by C. H. Masters, circa 1800
https://maps.nls.uk/counties/rec/13617
Note: Enlarged for detail to show the Somerset villages of East Pennard and Shepton Mallet.

Rare Old Prints.com
Shepton Mallett from Barren Down
from Twenty Four Views of Spepton Mallett & Neighborhood
by Kershaw & Son and J. S. & Co., 1812
http://www.rareoldprints.com/p/7184
Note: For the artwork.

Shepton Mallet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shepton_Mallet 
Note: For the text.

The Shepton Mallet Silver Amulet
by Stephen Minnitt and Matthew Ponting
https://sanhs.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/2-Minnitt-and-Ponting.pdf
Note: For the Shepton Mallett Silver Amulet photograph found on page 2/8.

Britain Express
The Somerset Military Museum
The Low Ham Mosaic
https://www.britainexpress.com/attractions.htm?attraction=2390
Note: For the mosaic image.
“This magnificent mosaic floor is one of the finest Roman artefacts in Britain. The mosaic depicts the tragic love story of Dido and Aeneas, as it was related in the poems by Virgil around 25 BC. The mosaic was discovered in the bath complex of a Roman villa at Low Ham, near Langport, where it formed part of an entry to a cold plunge pool. The mosaic was made of over 120,000 individual coloured tiles, or tesserae, made from local limestone and clay. The mosaic was created around AD 350.”

BBC News
Roman cemetery found at Somerton new school site
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-somerset-51018178
Note: For the image of a Roman burial pot.

BBC News
Hoard of Roman silver coins bought by council
by Inaya Mohmood
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-south-yorkshire-65244111
Note: For the image of the coins. “Septimius Severus was Roman emperor from 193 to 211 AD”

Prehistoric Britain, The Trilogy That Changed History
Minerals found in Prehistoric and Roman Quarries
https://prehistoric-britain.co.uk/minerals-found-in-prehistoric-and-roman-quarries#14_Flint
Note: For the peat excavation and flint arrowhead images.

Another Tuck & Sons postcard from Somerset featuring the nearby city of Bath.
(Found at:https://www.ebay.co.uk/b/bn_3326125).

Tuck & Sons 1903 Postcard
Picturesque Somerset, Glastonbury Abbey
by Artist Unknown
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Picturesque_Somerset._Glastonbury_Abbey_(NBY_439956).jpg
Note: For the image of the Glastonbury Abbey ruins.

John, King of England
Effigy of King John on his monument in Worcester Cathedral
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John,_King_of_England#/media/File:Jan_tomb.jpg

Edward III
File:Edward III of England (Order of the Garter).jpg
An illuminated manuscript miniature, c.1430-1440,
of Edward III of England

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Edward_III_of_England_(Order_of_the_Garter).jpg

Henry VI of England
File:Henry VI of England, Shrewsbury book.jpg
Illuminated miniature of Henry VI of England —
between 1444 and 1445
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Henry_VI_of_England,_Shrewsbury_book.jpg

Edward IV
File:Edward IV Plantagenet.jpg
Edward IV York (1442-1483), circa 1520 –
posthumous portrait from original circa 1470-1475
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Edward_IV_Plantagenet.jpg

Henry VIII
File:1491 Henry VIII.jpg
Portrait by Joos van Cleve —
between circa 1530 and circa 1535
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1491_Henry_VIII.jpg

The Dance of Death
by Michael Wolgemut, c. 1493
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nuremberg_chronicles_-_Dance_of_Death_(CCLXIIIIv).jpg
Note: For the illustration from the Nuremberg Chronicle of Hartmann Schedel

Paul Fürst
Der Doctor Schnabel von Rom (coloured version).png
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paul_Fürst,_Der_Doctor_Schnabel_von_Rom_(coloured_version).png
Note: For the colored Black Plague doctor image.

The History Press
The short dark history of Somerset
by Mike Dean
https://thehistorypress.co.uk/article/the-dark-history-of-somerset/
Note: For the pull-quote.

Shepton Mallett Nub News
The Shepton Riots
by Laura Linham
https://sheptonmallet.nub.news/news/local-news/the-shepton-riots-252234
Notes: For various texts, and the Spinning Jenny illustration.

From A Potted History of Shepton Mallet, titled
“How Croscombe (and my premises) used to look.”

The Cross at Croscombe
A Potted History of Shepton Mallet
https://www.cross-croscombe.co.uk/blog/potted-history-shepton-mallet/
Note: For the text.

The Parish of Stoke St. Michael, or Stoke Lane

(3) — eight records

Shepton Mallet, Market Cross postcard back from:
https://www.tuckdbpostcards.org/items/64387-shepton-mallet-market-cross

Tuck & Sons 1903 Postcard
Picturesque Somerset. Shepton Mallet, Market Cross
by Raphael Tuck & Sons
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Picturesque_Somerset._Shepton_Mallet,_Market_Cross_(NBY_440238).jpg
Note: For the illustration of the market.

Stoke St Michael
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoke_St_Michael
Note: For the text.

Robert Cullen
in the Somerset, England, Marriage Registers, Bonds and Allegations, 1754-1914 > Marriage Registers > Stoke St Michael > 1754-1808
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60858/records/184825
Digital page: 35/53 , Entry No. 9, right page top.
Note 1:  Their marriage date is May 28, 1787.
Note 2: One of the witnesses to his wedding is John Cullen, who is likely a relative.

Sarah Cullen
in the Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812
Stoke St Michael > 1783-1812
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60856/records/181224?tid=&pid=&queryId=a6c8ff92-7620-4472-ab5d-22274c117c74&_phsrc=OwZ3&_phstart=successSource
Digital page: 11/64, Entry 22 on the right page.
Note: Sarah’s birthdate is March 25, 1789, and her baptism was on September 6, 1789.

Robert Cullen
in the Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812
Shepton Mallet > 1791-1812
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60856/records/150264637
Book page: 222 Digital page: 114/213
Note: Thomas Hobbs Cullen’s birth date is August 29, 1810, and his baptism date is nearly a year later, on July 20, 1811.

Robert Culler [Robert Cullen]
in the Somerset, England, Church of England Burials, 1813-1914
Shepton Mallet > 1839-1863
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60859/records/242299
Book page: 34, Digital page: 20/153, Entry No. 269 on the left page.
Note: His estimated birth year is 1762.
Note: His burial record.

Robert Cullen
in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837-1915
1841 > Q1-Jan-Feb-Mar > C
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/8914/records/8179784
Book page: 144, Digital page: 47/60, Right page, second entry at the top.
Note: His civil registration death index.

Phillis Was Transformed Into An Almond Tree, Who Knew?

(4) — two records

Phyllis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phyllis
Note: For the text.

Phyllis and Demophoön
by John William Waterhouse, 1905
File:John William Waterhouse – Phyllis and Demophoon.jpg
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:John_William_Waterhouse_-_Phyllis_and_Demophoon.jpg
Note: For the painting, via Wikimedia Commons.

The Williams / Harris Line, A Narrative — One

This is Chapter One of twelve — these chapters for the Williams / Harris line will take us back into the past centuries of England and Wales, and then eventually they lead us to America, through family migrations. There are three family lines involved: two lines are from Wales, and one family line is from England. A significant adoption between family lines opened up new and compelling avenues of exploration for us to investigate.

Detail of a vintage Storkgram card by the Western Union Telegraph Company.
(Image courtesy of the Smithsonian National Museum of American History).

Two Different Windows Into The Past

In the past few years there has been a tremendous boom in people’s interest in genetic ancestry. However, there is much more to genealogy than the blueprints of genetics. As explained by the 24 Genetics Academy, “Genealogy connects us with the recent history of our families, gives us names and dates, and allows us to piece together an intimate and direct account, attempting to identify specific people in our family tree. Genetics, on the other hand, offers us a broader, long-term perspective, inviting us to look back not only as individuals, but as part of a collective history… and [our] genetic legacy.”

Without getting too complicated, human genetics are driven through inheritance, based upon on the structure of the DNA molecule. “Cells are the fundamental structural units of all living things; DNA is the information molecule housed within those units.” (Medline Plus)

What is the nature of the DNA double helix?
(Image courtesy of BrainKart.com).

DNA’s structure consists of two molecular strands which wrap around each other as a double helix. This provides an apt analogy for this family history. Like an intertwined, golden braid — one strand is genetics; the other, genealogy. In working together, each family bestows a unique contribution. Both histories enlighten, helping us understand not only the families we are born into, but also the families we create.

This is the Williams family line pedigree flow chart.
Just as DNA progresses with a spiral stand, this family history eventually unfolds in two parallel time lines near in time, but physically disconnected from each other.

Staring with this chapter, we will be looking at aspects of the Williams family in Somerset, England, and then in America for the next five generations — chapters One through Six. At that point, we will be introducing members of the Harris Line. (1)

The top map is known as The Severn or Channell of Bristoll, by Captain Greenville Collins,
as published in The British Coasting Pilot, c. 1693. The bottom map is Britain, also known as
Britain as it was divided in the tyme of the Englifhe Saxons efpecially during their heptarchy,
by John Speed, 1623-27. (Both images are courtesy of Antique Maps Online).

Along The Severn, or The Channel of Bristol

As the southern edge of Wales comes together with the southwest corner of England, we encounter an area known as The Severn, or The Bristol Channel. This location is where this family history commences. Below the channel is Somerset, or Somersetshire, England where the ancestors of the Williams Line resided. Above the channel is the country of Wales. The district known as Monmouth, or Monmouthshire, Wales is where the ancestors for the Harris Line are found. These two families were located very close to each other in the United Kingdom, yet despite that, they did not come together until nearly 200 years after this narrative begins. (2)

The Domesday Book was a comprehensive survey and record of all the landowners, property, tenants and serfs of medieval Norman England. It was compiled in 1086-7 under the orders of William the Conqueror (r. 1066-87).

The Domesday Book

There were then, and are still to this day, many ancient parishes, villages and towns in Somerset. Our family has lived there for more generations than there are existing records.

Oxford Reference defines the Domesday Book as “A survey of property in England conducted in 1086. Conceived by William I, but probably to some extent based on pre-Conquest administrative records. It was the most comprehensive assessment of property and land ever undertaken in medieval Europe. Its purpose was to maximize the revenues from the land tax…”

Two locations which have come up in the early surviving records are Doulting and East Pennard. Doulting is so old that it is mentioned in the Domesday Book, in the Folio Somerset X (Ten).

Excerpted text from the Domesday Book, Doulting, Somerset folio 10.

The Open Domesday website notes these statistics from nearly 1,000 years ago: “It had a recorded population of 20 households in 1086: 18 villagers, 12 smallholders, 4 cottagers, 6 slaves. Additionally, there were: 20 ploughlands, 3 lord’s plough teams, 8 men’s plough teams, 12.0 lord’s lands, Meadow — 53 acres, Pasture — 70 acres, Woodland — 90 acres, 1 mill, value 7 pence, 1 cob [a stocky, sturdy riding horse], 4 cattle, 15 pigs, 340 sheep.”

Hundreds of years later, Wikipedia writes, “The parish of Doulting was part of the Whitstone Hundred. Doulting village dates from the 8th century when King Ine of Wessex gave the local estate to Glastonbury Abbey after his nephew St Aldhelm died in the village in 709. In his honor the local spring which is the source of the River Sheppey, is called St Aldhelm’s Well.” (3)

Illustration of St. Aldhelm’s Well as published in
Shepton Mallet: Notes On Its History, by John E. Farbrother.

Let’s Begin in The Hundred of Doulting

In a somewhat young country like the United States, people are very used to understanding that areas are generally organized to function along these lines: town-village / townships / cities / counties / states / country. That is pretty straightforward, but not as easy to understand in a much older country like England.

Wells Cathedral, Somerset, by John Syer. This famous cathedral is located not far from the parishes of Doulting and East Pennard in Somerset. (Image courtesy ArtUK, via The Cheltenham Trust and Cheltenham Borough Council).

This becomes confusing when trying to ascertain locations for record verification. There is a lot of jurisdictional overlap in the way locations are noted on documents — so the assessment of records must be very carefully vetted. For example, two or three different locations could be noted for the same event, depending upon the record, who was writing things down, and when.

Historically, the English terms are different in both scale and meaning. Roughly, they are: hamlet / parish / village / town-township / hundred / district, or county, or shire / city / region / kingdom, or country. Even though America imported some of this thinking from the United Kingdom, some of the older organizational designations were just eventually phased out. One such designation is called a hundred.

From Wikipedia, “In southern and western England, a hundred was the division of a shire [like a county] for military and judicial purposes under the common law, which could have varying extent of common feudal ownership… Until the introduction of districts by the Local Government Act 1894, hundreds were the only widely used assessment unit intermediate in size between the parish… and the county, with its formal ceremonial functions.” So, a hundred was an amorphous thing — bigger than a parish, but not as big as a county? (4)

Map of Somerset by John Cary. Published in Britannia by William Camden, c. 1789.
The very small villages are marked with ovals as follows: Doulting – the upper blue oval,
and East Pennard — the lower red oval. (Image courtesy of Antique Maps Online).
Inset detail map: Enlarged from, Map of 24 miles round the City of Bath. Most humbly dedicated …,
by C. H. Masters, circa 1800. (Image courtesy of The National Library of Scotland).

The Phippin and Reeves Families

We begin with a man named William Phippin, who was married to a woman named Maria Ivyleafe. They were from the Doulting, Somerset, England area, and on May 29, 1695, they baptized their daughter Presilla Phippin.

She went on to marry a man named John Reeves, on September 7, 1713, also in Doulting. With this marriage the Phippin surname gave way to the Reeves surname.

As was typical for that era, they likely had many children. We are able to verify six of them through records. Luckily for us, the one we needed to verify is the most important one for this history — their youngest daughter, Alice Reeves.

  • Edith Reeves, born June 1721
  • William Reeves, born September 27, 1726
  • Priscilla Reeves, born December 29, 1729
  • Thomas Reeves, born April 8, 1734
  • John Reeves, born August 17, 1736
  • Alice Reeves, born April 11, 1739, Alice carries the family line forward.

We found the burial record for their mother Presilla (Phippen) Reeves. She lived about 74 years — until June 10, 1769 (which is her burial date).

Observation: We have noted that there are several Reeves family generations (delineated in online family trees) which venture back to circa 1580. The consistent problem with many of them is that specific dates and locations are indicated, yet there is a lack of documentation provided. When this happens, we choose not to include information that we cannot verify.

Alice Reeves and Robert Cullen Sr.
We have been able to learn some things about this family, despite scant records. We do know that Alice Reeves married Robert Cullen Sr. on March 31, 1766, in East Pennard, Somerset. She was about 27 years old. Conversely, we do not know when either of these ancestors passed on, nor exactly how many children they had. With this marriage, the Reeves surname gave way to the Cullen surname.

Marriage record for Robert Cullen Sr. and Alice Reeves, on March 31, 1766.

They were living in a nearby village, also located in the Whitstone Hundred, named East Pennard. “The village takes its name from the Brythonic family of Celtic languages: penn-ardd meaning high hill. The estate was granted by King Edred to Aelfgyth, a nun of Wilton and she transferred it to Glastonbury Abbey which retained it until the Dissolution of the monasteries in 1539. It was then given to William Paulet and eventually to his descendants the Napiers of Tintinhull.” (Wikipedia)

Observation: We have observed that this family signed their respective names with their Mark, which was typically an X. This means that they had to rely on the kindness of others to record information for them. Hence, sometimes their family surname is spelled an e (Cullen), or an o (Cullon).

Rob Cullen, in the March 1776 UK Register of Duties Paid for Apprentices’ Indentures, page 43.

Robert Cullen Sr. (sometimes recorded as Rob), didn’t earn his living as a farmer, as many of his neighbors did. He was a tradesman. Specifically, he was a Master Butcher, as the above records indicates, when he was compensated for mentoring an apprentice named John Hoskins. According to Google, “Being a Master Butcher in Somerset, England, in 1776 was a physically demanding yet highly respected skilled trade that placed a person at the heart of their local community’s economy. It was a period where butchers were valued for their deep knowledge of animal anatomy and food safety, with some even viewed as holding a superior knowledge similar to practitioners in medical fields.”

The Village Butcher, by John Cranch, circa 1785-1800.
(Image courtesy of the Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery Collections).

About five years after their marriage, the family welcomed a baby boy, who they named Robert Jr. in honor of his father. Robert Jr. carries the family line forward into the next chapter. (5)

Following are the footnotes for the Primary Source Materials,
Notes, and Observations

Two Different Windows Into The Past

(1) — five records

Smithsonian National Museum of American History
Western Union Telegraph Company Records
Storkgram telegram blank, c. 1950
https://americanhistory.si.edu/ko/collections/archival-item/sova-nmah-ac-0205-ref11320
Note: For the image.

24 Genetics Academy
Differences Between Genealogy and Genetic Ancestry
https://academy.24genetics.com/topics/differences-between-genealogy-and-genetic-ancestry/
Note: For the text.

Medline Plus
Help Me Understand Genetics
Cells and DNA
https://medlineplus.gov/download/genetics/understanding/basics.pdf
Note: For the data.

What is the nature of the DNA double helix?
BrainKart.com
Note: For the DNA double helix illustration.

Genetic Ancestry Doesn’t Tell Your Whole Story
by Carles Lalueza-Fox
The MIT Press Reader
https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/dna-and-its-discontents/
Note: For reference.

Along The Severn, or The Channel of Bristol

(2) — three records

Antique Maps Online
The Severn or Channell of Bristoll
by Capt. Greenville Collins
https://www.antique-maps-online.co.uk/bristol-channel-collins-4191.html
Note: For the map image, as published in The British Coasting Pilot, c. 1693

Antique Maps Online
Britain, also known as Britain as it was divided in the tyme of the Englifhe Saxons efpecially during their heptarchy
by John Speed, 1623-27
https://www.antique-maps-online.co.uk/britain-speed-3646.html
Note: For the Somerset map image, as published by Sudbury and Humble in The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine

The National Library of Scotland
Map of 24 miles round the City of Bath. Most humbly dedicated …
by C. H. Masters, circa 1800
https://maps.nls.uk/counties/rec/13617
Note: Inset map for detail to show the Somerset villages of East Pennard and Shepton Mallet.

The Domesday Book

(3) — three records

The Domesday Book (as illustrated) by William Andrews, circa 1900, from “Historic Byways and Highways of Old England” (Image courtesy of Wikipedia.org).

World History Encyclopedia
Domesday Book
by Mark Cartwright
https://www.worldhistory.org/Domesday_Book/
Note: For the text and image.

Open Domesday
by Anna Powell-Smith
https://opendomesday.org
and
Somerset, page 10, Left column, middle.
https://opendomesday.org/book/somerset/10/

Shepton Mallet: Notes On Its History
by John E. Farbrother
https://archive.org/details/sheptonmalletnot00farbuoft/mode/1up
Note: For the illustration of St. Aldhelm’s Well.

Let’s Begin in The Hundred of Doulting

(4) — three records

Hundred (county division)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hundred_(county_division)#:~:text=In%20southern%20and%20western%20England,on%20the%20number%20of%20hides

Wells Cathedral, Somerset
by John Syer
https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/wells-cathedral-somerset-62060
Note: The image is provided via The Cheltenham Trust and Cheltenham Borough Council.

Doulting
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doulting
Note: For the text.

The Phippin and Reeves Families

(5) — twenty-one records

Antique Maps Online
Somerset
by John Cary
https://www.antique-maps-online.co.uk/somerset-cary-3980.html
Note: For the map image, as published in Britannia by William Camden, c. 1789

Gulielmus Phippin
Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812
Wedmore > 1663-1727
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60856/records/290723
Digital page: 54/109, Right page, 6th entry from the botttom. 
Note 1: Their marriage date is recorded as January 10, 1692. In that era, the Church utilized the Julian calendar year, which began on March 25 and ended on March 24 each year. Using the modern standard of the Gregorian calendar, their actual marriage date is January 10, 1693.
Note 2: In 17th-century England, scribes frequently translated the name William into its Latinized equivalent, Gulielmus.
Note 3: His wife’s name is actually Maria Ivyleafe. Her maiden name as Mariam (is from the Latin), and Jueleast (is from modern machine reading of the document).
Note: 4: Maria Ivyleafe’s baptism record follows with the next footnote.

Marriage record for William Phippin and Maria Ivyleafe.

Maria Ivyleafe
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/58968748/person/422091224949/facts
Note 1: The linked image is located left of the header for this file titled Maria Ivyleafe. It was provided by another researcher in a Gallery —
https://www.ancestry.com/mediaui-viewer/tree/58968748/person/422091224949/media/1374ff04-5eb2-479d-8a30-3fb9a9678eed
Note 2: The actual notation is found on the lower right page as an entry for January 28, 1673. Applying the same rules for dating as described in the above footnote, her actual baptism date is January 28, 1674.

Baptism record for Maria Ivyleafe.

Priscilla Phippin
in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/9841/records/24912344
Note: Her baptism date is May 29, 1695.
Note: Her father’s name is William Phippin.
Note: The location is Doulting, Somerset, England, which is near Shelton Mallet.
and
William Phippin
in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/9841/records/24912343
Note: For the record.

John Reeves
in the Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812
Doulting > 1685-1733
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60856/records/1699333
Book page: Digital page: 12/36, Right page, near the bottom.
and
John Reeves
in the England, Select Marriages, 1538-1973
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/9852/records/21523531
Notes: The marriage date is September 7, 1713, and his wife is named Presilla Phippen.

We have been able to verify the following Reeves / Phippen children through the Somerset, England  Church Records, 1501-1999, found on Family Search:

Edith Reeves, baptism June 1721
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9N-XG89?lang=en

William Reeves, baptism September 27, 1726
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9N-8KQ1?lang=en

Priscilla Reeves, baptism December 29, 1729
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9N-K3HV?lang=en

Thomas Reeves, baptism April 8, 1734
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9N-XGCR?lang=en

John Reeves, baptism August 16, 1736
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9N-FRDD?lang=en

Alice Reeves, baptism April 11, 1739
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9N-NB27?lang=en

Alice Reeves
in the Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812
East Pennard > 1608-1747
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60856/records/1493779
Digital page: 29/45, Left page, the first entry at the top.
Note: Her baptism date is April 11, 1739.

Priscilla Reeves
Vital – England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D99-31FH?lang=en
Note: Her 1769 burial record.

Alice Reeves
in the Somerset, England, Marriage Registers, Bonds and Allegations, 1754-1914
Marriage Registers > East Pennard > 1755-1800
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60858/records/900764042
Book page: 18, Digital page: 12/43, Left page top.
Note: The marriage date for Robert Cullen and Alice Reeves is March 31, 1766.

An example of a rural English fingerpost sign. Before this time, crossroads were typically marked by long-lived yew trees. Note the name of East Pennard in the lower right corner.
(Image courtesy of the National Survey of Wayside Features by The Milestone Society, https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6051069).

East Pennard
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Pennard
Note: For the text.

Rob Cullen
in the UK, Register of Duties Paid for Apprentices’ Indentures, 1710-1811
Country Registers > 1776 Oct-1779 Feb
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/1851/records/316499
Book page: 43, Digital page: 87/449, Upper portion, 16th line, noted as a Butcher.
Note: This file indicates that he worked as a Master Butcher, and that he was compensated for the training an Apprentice named John Hoskins.

Robert Cullen
in the Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812
East Pennard > 1747-1812
https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/60856/records/1822099
Digital page: 101/171, Second entry after the heading “Christenings in the year 1771”
Note 1: His christening date is February 12, 1771.
Note 2: His parents names are Robert and Alice (Reeves) Cullen. Observe that the recorder originally wrote the name John, and then tried to correct that by overwriting with (what is likely) the name of Robert.