
The following was extracted from the 1893 edition of "The Genealogical History of the Gallup Family in the United States" by John D. Gallup. Later editions have added the results of additional research or new contentions which are shown in double brackets. There are minor differences, such as the spelling of Gallup, between the text as it appears in the 1893 genealogy compared to the 2009 genealogy. This suggests that
there is more than one primary source for the findings of the Visitation Of Dorset in 1623.
(To see a chart which shows the descent from John Gallop to Winfield Gallup click here ===>
)
GOLLOP.
[From Records of Harlean Society, British Museum 1166, folio 72.]
VISITATION OF DORSET, 1623.
JOHN GOLLOP --- Came out of the north A. 5, Ed 1465. (Fifth year of reign of Edward IV.)
Married Alice, daughter and heir of William Temple, County of Dorset
JOHN GOLLOP, of North Bowood, and Temple, in County Dorset, died 25, H.8, 1533. (Twenty-fifth year of the reign of Henry VIII.). Married Joan, daughter of ..?.. Collins, of Snails Croft, County of Dorset
[[JOHN GOLLOP, of Bowood and Strode, Netherbury, Dorsetshire was born abt. 1500.
Married Elizabeth ....
This contended ancestor of John Gallop of Mosterne first appeared in the 1987 edition of the Gallup Genealogy, having not appeared in either the 1893 or 1966 editions. No source for the contention was given. In the 2009 edition this ancestor has disappeared and with exactly the same degree of
fanfare as his appearance in 1987. This, we are left to presume, is our Gallup Stealth Ancestor]]
THOMAS GOLLOP, of North Bowood, son and heir, [[b. 1530]] died April 8, 1610. Jacob.
(Reign of James I.)
Married Agneta [[Agnes]]daughter of Humphrey [[and Catherine]] Watkins, of Holwell, in County Dorset
1. Egedins Gollop, first son, died without issue. Went to Rome and became a priest.
2. Humphrey Gollop, second son, died without issue.
3. John
Gollop, third son of Thomas and Agneta [[Agnes]] Watkins.
Married [[Mary]], daughter of ..?.. Crab [[Crabbe]].
1. John Gallop, of Mosterne (a parish
in Dorset), came to America, 1630, in ship
Mary and John. Married Christobel [[Brushett]]
4. Thomas Gollop, fourth son, and made heir of North Bowood and Strode, died 1622, in the
month of December.
Married Francesca, daughter of George Pawlett, of Melplash, County of Dorset.
1. Catharine, married
Thomas Game, of Colley, County of Dorset.
2. Anne, second daughter, married Robert Marsh, of Chillington, County of Somerset.
3. Elizabeth, aged 18 at time of visitation in 1623.
4. William, 2 (probably second son).
5. Henry, married Judith, daughter of James Hitt, of Lyme Regis.
6. Roger, aged 18, 1623, probably twin of Elizabeth.
7. Thomas Gollop, of North Bowood, son of Thomas and Francesca Pawlett and heir of
Strode, County of Dorset.
Married [[25 Dec 1616]] Martha, daughter of Ralph Ironside, of Long Bredy, in
County Dorset. Thomas Gollop, son and heir of Thomas and Martha Ironside, was 6
years old at time of visitation, 1623. Martha Gollop, daughter, was 3 years old at time
of visitation, 1623.
5. George Gollop, of Southampton Married .... ....
1. Humphrey Gollop, son of George of Southampton, died without issue.
6. Richard Gollop, of Bowood, sixth son of Thomas and Agneta Watkins, married [[Mary]] a
daughter of .... Davy, of Saunford, in County Devon.
1. John Gollop, Egedins Gollop, and other children.
[Gollopp, 1166; fol. 59.]
[unconnected]
WILLIAM GOLLOPP of [sic.]. married ....
ROGER GOLLOP, of Bowood, in County Dorset, justice of Peace, living in 1623.
Married Mary, daugher of .... of Kerton, relict of Richard Gollop
Grace, daughter; Roger, son and heir, aged 11 in 1623; Amye, second daughter; Joan, third daughter.
[Copied at Astor Library, New York, April 29, 1891.]
[John D. Gallup writes] "There seem to be two heirs alive in 1623, but one is of North Bowood and heir of Strode (Thomas, aged 6), and the other (Roger, son and heir, aged 11), from folio 59. The latter is of Bowood only. The English family is still at Strode.
PEDIGREE.
Visitation of Gollop, of Strode, and Bowood. Taken in the year 1623, by Henry St. George (Richmond Herald), and Sampson Lennard (Blue Mantle Pursuivant), marshalls and deputies to William Campden Clarenceax, King of Arms.
Richmond Herald-A superior officer, "one of the six heralds of the English heralds college," an office created by Henry VII. in memory of his previous title of Earl of Richmond.
Blue Mantle Pursuivant -The title of one of the English pursuivants at arms. The office was created either by Edward III. or by Henry V., and named in allusion to the robes of the Garter, or as some suppose to the colors of the arms of France.
ARMS.
Gules, on a bend; Or, a lion passant; guardant, sable.
Crest, a demi-lion barry, Or, and sable, holding in his
dexter paw a broken arrow, gules.
Motto -- " Be bolde. Be wyse.
***