Difference between revisions of "Molleson, Gilbert"

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|Location=London
 
|Location=London
 
|Vocation=Draper
 
|Vocation=Draper
 +
|Place of Birth=Aberdeen
 
|Marriage=Margery (?) and Sara Curtis (1715)
 
|Marriage=Margery (?) and Sara Curtis (1715)
 
|Issue=Margaret
 
|Issue=Margaret
|Place of birth=Aberdeen
 
 
|Source=TNA PROB 11/637/301
 
|Source=TNA PROB 11/637/301
 +
|Place of birth=Aberdeen
 
}}
 
}}
 
Born in Aberdeen in 1659, the son of Gilbert Molleson and Margaret Smith. Margaret was an early convert to Quakerism in Aberdeen, while her husband was a merchant who served on the town council and persecuted Quakers. Gilbert was made a freeman of the Drapers Company in London by 1690. Brother-in-law of Robert Barclay, the Apologist. Identified as a trustee and one of the 'correspondents inhabiting at London for the services of the truth in Scotland' in Elizabeth Dickson's 1701 bequest.
 
Born in Aberdeen in 1659, the son of Gilbert Molleson and Margaret Smith. Margaret was an early convert to Quakerism in Aberdeen, while her husband was a merchant who served on the town council and persecuted Quakers. Gilbert was made a freeman of the Drapers Company in London by 1690. Brother-in-law of Robert Barclay, the Apologist. Identified as a trustee and one of the 'correspondents inhabiting at London for the services of the truth in Scotland' in Elizabeth Dickson's 1701 bequest.

Revision as of 12:45, 3 July 2013

Dates 1659 – 1730
Location London
Vocation Draper
Place of Birth Aberdeen
Marriage Margery (?) and Sara Curtis (1715)
Issue Margaret
Place of birth Aberdeen Source TNA PROB 11/637/301

Born in Aberdeen in 1659, the son of Gilbert Molleson and Margaret Smith. Margaret was an early convert to Quakerism in Aberdeen, while her husband was a merchant who served on the town council and persecuted Quakers. Gilbert was made a freeman of the Drapers Company in London by 1690. Brother-in-law of Robert Barclay, the Apologist. Identified as a trustee and one of the 'correspondents inhabiting at London for the services of the truth in Scotland' in Elizabeth Dickson's 1701 bequest.