PLYMOUTH Devonshire


& its Merchants


 The Merchants House Plymouth 

New Lands , New Fortunes

In 1497 John Cabot discovered Newfoundland with its rich stocks of fish. From then on fishermen from Plymouth fished off the coast of Newfoundland, crossing thew stormy Atlantic in their small fishing boats every spring & returning in the autumn .


Plymouth was the port of origin of many of the explorations undertaken at that time. An Expedition to Newfoundland was led by Sir Humphrey Gilbert  of Compton Castle, with  Captain William Wynter, Robert Davis the navigator of Sandridge Barton nr Stoke Gabriel , Edward Hayes, Richard Clarke, William Cox, Captain Cade, Thomas Edmondes, Thomas Aldworth, Gilbert Staplehill. 

Although brilliant & creative Gilbert was also arrogant ,unpredictable and a poor leader . He failed to establish the first permanent English colony in North America. In 1578 Queen Elizabeth  granted him a six-year charter to settle “heathen lands not actually possessed of any Christian prince or people.” Sailing from Plymouth on June 11, 1583, he arrived  at St Johns Newfoundland  on  August 3  and claimed  St Johns, Newfoundland & the lands 600 miles around it in Elizabeth I name. Three fo the ships sailed on, southwards but the  largest of them was lost on August 29 and two days later Gilbert turned homeward. Gilbert was last seen during a great storm in the Atlantic, shouting to his companion vessel, “We are as near heaven by sea as by land.” His ship was then swallowed by the sea.

The Barbican Plymouth

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The History of Plymouth in Devonshire  extends back to the Bronze Age, when the first settlement began at Mount Batten the peninsula in Plymouth Sound facing onto the English Channel.

It continued as both a fishing and continental tin trading port through the late Iron Age into the Early Medieval period, until the more prosperous Saxon settlement of Sutton, later renamed Plymouth, surpassed it. With its natural harbour and open access to the Atlantic, the town found wealth and a national strategic importance during the establishment of British naval dominance in the colonisation of the New World.

 In 1620 the Pilgrim Fathers departed from Plymouth to establish the second English colony in America.


 During the English Civil War the town was besieged between 1642 and 1646 by the Royalists, but after the Restoration a Dockyard was established in the nearby town of Devonport (later amalgamated with Plymouth). 


Throughout the Industrial Revolution Plymouth grew as a major mercantile shipping industry, including imports and passengers from the US.

Wikipedia


 

Devonport grew as a naval base and ship construction town, building battleships for the Royal Navy –


The presence of the Naval Dockyard  led to  the partial destruction  of the city during World War II . The  air-raids known were known as the Plymouth Blitz.

 
After the war was over, the city centre was completely rebuilt to a new plan.


 

WWII The city of Plymouth, with its important Naval Dockyard, was heavily bombed during WWII causing  1,174  civilians deaths  and  much of the city obliterated . 

 In 1624 Leonard Pomeroy, Mayor and the Aldermen of Plymouth,   received a legacy of £20 bequeathed by Edmund Lunis late of Plymouth, to the poor people of the newly erected Hospital of the Orphans Aid.

After WWII & the extensive bombing Plymouth endured there are still remnants of the  orphanage  to be found in Basket Street in the Barbican

Leonard Pomeroy, Merchant Adventurer, became one of the benefactor's of the Hospital and Workhouse in Plymouth. A Coat of Arms installed in the meeting room of the Workhouse, circa 1630, of the Benefactors included an "undifferenced" coat of Pomeroy, of Berry Pomeroy.

The New World Awaited

First Expedition to Roanoke in 1585 led by Sir Walter Raleigh, Philip Amadas, William Grenville, John Wood, Richard Hakluyt, Henry Greene, William Sanderson, Josias Calmady, John Dee, Thomas Harriot, John Sparke.
Ultimately the project  was a failure and Roanoke is one of the enduring mysteries of early colonisation.

In Plymouth fishing was the most important industry.  However many other goods were imported into Plymouth such as wine, fruit, sugar and paper from France and Spain.

In 1641 a writer said that Plymouth was 'chiefly dependent on the fish trade'. In the early 16th century Plymouth probably had a population of about 3,500. By the time of the Spanish Armada (1588) the population had risen to about 5,000. 

By the time of the civil war in 1642 its population probably surpassed 7,000. By the standards of the time Plymouth was quite a large town.
There was also a coastal trade. Ships brought goods from other parts of England to Plymouth. Coal was brought by ship from Newcastle and grain from Eastern England. Hemp for rope making was imported from the Baltic. Hops were imported from Holland. Wool and tin were exported through Plymouth.


Leonard & Abraham were Merchants  of Plymouth & financed the beginnings of a fishing plantation on Richmond's Island in Maine where Leonard later owned land .    

    More Here

In 1590 Sir Francis Drake built a conduit , a leat, to bring water off Dartmoor and into Plymouth. 

1590 Walterus Pepperel merchant: " This yere on the *1 daye of December Sr Fraunces Drake kneight, beganne to bringe the Ryur (River) Meue to the towne of Plymmouthe wch greate care and diligence effected pfrmed   and brought the Riur into the towne the xxiiijth day of Aprill the next after psentlie after he sett in hand to Build sixe greast (grist or corn) milles, two at wythy in Eckbuckland pish, (Eggbuckland Parish) thother  by the towne the two att wythy and the two next to the towne he fullie fynisshed befor michelmas next after and grounde corne wth theym Also in this yere diuers conveyaunces were made wt>hin the said towne for convayeng the forsaid Ryur elong

Built to last -Drake's Leat today

Black Book of Plymouth

1603-04 James Mayne

Itm paide to John Woulcombe towardes the amendinge of new bridge which the leate brake down 3 pounds, six shillings and eight pence.
This Mr Drake must paye
This marginal note indicates that there was some agreement that the maintenance of this bridge would be a Drake responsibility. Perhaps the bridge was on Drake property and may have been included on Sir Francis Drake's original or subsequent transactions 

Itm paide for a dynner for Sr John Hele Mr Crymes and Mr Drake when they were here about the water Course - £5 
William Crymes owned the manor of Crapstone Barton. His land bordered Buckland. Crymes and Sir Francis seemed to have coexisted in harmony. However, Crymes and Thomas seemed to have been in subsequent continuous dispute over land tenure and the leat.]


Plymouth, like all towns at that time,  suffered from outbreaks of plague, which killed a large part of the population each time it struck.  In 1627 there was a particularly severe outbreak

In 1620 The Mayflower and the Speedwell set sail for the New world carrying the Pilgrim Fathers


On the whole I leave the genealogy of American Pomeroys  to others &  in particular the history of the colonist  

  You can find  research from fellow Pomeroy researcher  AML  here & here


Having embarked from Southampton the Pilgrim Fathers put in to Dartmouth's Bayard's Cove,   before stopping at Plymouth, their last landfall, before  the New World.

 They stopped off at Plymouth because their ship was taking in water but after many delay the Mayflower and the Speedwell set off on their journey on 20 August 1620. 

They were about 300 miles west of Land's End When they realised Speedwell was unseaworthy. The ship returned to Plymouth and the Mayflower departed alone taking 120 very ill prepared and ill equipped pilgrims on their 65 day voyage to America.
The Mayflower completed the crossing to Cape Cod which became Dartmouth's sister city - Dartmouth, Massachusetts & today  Plimouth Plantation is a recreation of an English C17 village

During the Civil Wars  1642 to 1655  Plymouth, like most urban centres was for Parliament . The rural areas of the south west in particular Cornwall just across the river Tamar where generally for the King, Royalists.
In Plymouth this resulted in  it  being  besieged . 1643 Prince Maurice laid siege to the town and this was followed by a period of Royalist occupation.  Then in 1646 Sir Thomas Fairfax captured the town for the Parliamentarians.

It was a bloody and gruesome time with rampant disease weak & incompetent leaders, courageous engagements  and nasty skirmishes. ...........


  more Here   

"Sir Richard Grenville amassed a formidable force in the last major attempt to break the resistance. Thousands of soldiers surged towards Plymouth and its badly armed defenders. The Plymothians displayed astonishing bravery and by the end of the fighting it was the blood of Grenville’s men that was shed.  Plymouth stood firm for nearly four years and with the King finally defeated, they found themselves on the winning side. Their triumph however was short lived. The monarchy was restored in 1660  and the new King, Charles II exacted revenge for Plymouth’s resistance. Many of its heroes were imprisoned on Drake’s Island, some until their deaths " ( BBC Inside Out ) 


AJP NOTES on LEONARD Pomeroy 

Leonard Pomeroy was Mayor-of-Plymouth with Abraham Colmer, Nicolas Sherwill - They were  successful Plymouth merchants who may have instigated & certainly contributed to the founding of the colony in Maine in around 1620

Leonard was a Merchant Adventurer, one of the benefactor's of the Hospital and Workhouse in Plymouth, his ( Pomeroy) coat of Arms was installed in the meeting room of the Workhouse, circa 1630, This is recorded as an- undifferentiated from the armorial line;  suggesting a senior branch -  

There were two Leonard Pomeroys; and we have not been able to connect the senior (Mayor) to the armorial Pomeroy tree despite extensively researching .

One  Leonard Pomeroy  was Bb1599 & dead by 1629. John Blytheman, mayor of Plymouth and another , forwarded on September 1598 to the Council ..' Pomeroy's demand for his bark ( small ship ) sent hence to discover the enemy ' The amount asked was !164.13s 8d but the bark had not been successful ( State papers Domestic Eliz 1598 -16-1)


From  Archives 
862/24  1597  Contents:  Lease, Saltram, Plymouth: consideration, £80, rent 40s per year; 1) Sir John Gilbert of Greenway, Devon 2) Leonard Pomeroy of Plymouth, merchant.
Sir John , son of Otto , was older brother of adventurer Sir Humphrey Gilbert  & his brothers  Adrian Gilbert, half-brothers to Carew Raleigh and Sir Walter Raleigh.

LEONARD POMERIE marriage to AGNES BARONE  17 APR 1625 Saint Andrew, Plym ? 2nd marriage ?

A son LEONARD PUMMERYE - son of WILLIAM PUMMERYE Bb: 10 DEC 1633 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

Plymouth HISTORY in Brief  
It began like many places as a fishing village that belonged to the Prior of Plympton.   In those days there were very few shops so if you wanted to buy or sell goods you had to go to a market. 

By the early 13th century  the village had grown into a town and by 1254 was  chartered & had a market . This   attracted  merchants and craftsmen  to settle, live and work in Plymouth the town grew steadily, with wine from France and Spain being a major import .

Plymouth  also benefited from a law of 1390, which said that pilgrims who traveled abroad must leave from either Plymouth or Dover.


Medieval Plymouth was attacked by the French several times the worst on August 1403 when  French ships sailed up the estuary and landed north of the town. They marched into Plymouth and occupied the area around Exeter Street. The English fought back but were unable to dislodge the French, who stayed overnight.

After burning much of the town the French sailed away the next day.  Afterwards that part of the town was called Breton Side. Plymouth was soon rebuilt and began to flourish once more.


PLYMOUTH IN THE 16th CENTURY

After John Cabot's discovery of abundant fish of  Newfoundland in 1497  fishing became the important industry in Tudor Plymouth . There wine, fruit, sugar, and paper was being imported from France and Spain; hops were imported from Holland; coal was brought by ship from Newcastle and grain from eastern England. 

By  1641  Plymouth was ‘chiefly dependent on the fish trade’ and exports  of English wool and tin from Dartmoor 


In the early 16th century Plymouth probably had a population of about 3,500. By the time of the Spanish Armada (1588), the population had risen to about 5,000. By the time of the civil war in 1642, its population probably surpassed 7,000. By the standards of the time, Plymouth was quite a large town.


 When  in 1642 the English Civil War civil the citizens of Plymouth , like most urban areas, supported parliament However most of the surrounding rural hinterland   supported the king.

When the citizens of Plymouth accepted that  they could soon be attacked  they dug a ditch outside the town walls. An earth rampart with a wooden palisade on top strengthened at intervals by forts. 

The Parliament sent reinforcements until there were 9,000 soldiers stationed . The Royalists laid siege to Plymouth in August 1643 but failed to take Plymouth. There was an attempt  to starve the population out but that too failed because the citizens could fish. At the close of January 1646  the royalists withdrew. The Commonwealth period followed  when Parliament, the Puritans  and Oliver Cromwell ruled the country.

In 1653 a yarn market was built to sell raw wool, spun yarn and woollen cloth; in  1658 a new meat market was built with a leather hall above it, where all important leather could be bought and sold.  Like the wool merchants leather merchants flourished, everyone needed  shoes, boots, as well as  saddles for  horses as well as harnesses for carts & carriages, and a vast assortment of other items all required  leather . It was in the same year, 1658, that a new grammar school ,to teach Latin Grammar, was built.


In 1660  England invited King Charles to  return , the Monarchy was reinstated and in 1664 church of Charles the Martyr was built .


In the 17th-century trade developed with the colonies in the West Indies and North America. Sugar and tobacco were imported and wool and manufactured goods were exported. There still a coastal trade. Coal from other parts of Britain was brought to Plymouth by sea. In 1669 a foreign writer said that Plymouth was ‘Among the best cities of England.’


In 1689 it was decided to build a dockyard at Devonport and by 1693 a dry dock had been built .

The Admiralty  built a storehouse, quarters for officers, and  by 1698, a rope house where ropes were made.


 Lady travel writer Celia Fiennes who  explored England on horseback in the late 17th century  keeping a journal of her travels described Plymouth: ‘The streets are good and clean. There are a great many though some are but narrow. They are mostly inhabited by seamen and those which have affairs of the sea’. 

She also wrote: ‘The mouth of the river is a very good harbour for ships, the dockyards are about 2 miles from the town. It’s one of the best in England, a great many good ships are built there’.




PLYMOUTH IN THE 18th CENTURY

In the 1720s Daniel Defoe wrote: ‘Plymouth is a town of consideration and of great importance to the public. It is situated between 2 very large inlets of the sea and at the bottom of a large bay, which is very remarkable’.


William Pomeroy 1580 Will

Pomeroy William Plymouth DEV 1580 W ab EPRE MUR1 Vol. 25  

Pomeroy, William. Plymouth 1580.

Will dated 13 August 1580. Principal Registry B. of Exeter.

Proved 21 Jan 1580-1

To be buried in the Churchyard of St. Andrews Plymouth

To the mawdlyn of Plymouth xijd. ( 22pence to the leper House)

To my son WILLIAM POMEROY a horse, and all thereunto belonging, and xxs.

To my daughter TAMSIN Pomeroy iiijl. amd my best myddel penne of brasse.

To my wife JANE to have the house which I do hold by lease of the deyme of Chapter (etc) and after her death to my sonnes William and LYNNARD. (Leonard.)

To Elizabeth, wife of John Rowe sx.

The rest to my wife Jone Pomeroy. sole exectrix.

Nicholas Kanne and Thomas Pomeroy my dear friends to be my overseers.

Wittnesses John Raw Will Peryman  Robert Coyming                         


The Plymouth Black Book, Includes Freemen of the boroughRecords 1519-1905 Archive reference W1/46

1591 John Bonython; Will Edgecumbe; John Fford. Poss. William Pomeroy & Roger Pomroy

1603 Henrie Pomeroye with Leonard as Mayor 1623 Thomas Pomeroy & Owen Pomeroy

MAYORS

1615 Abraham Colman merchant Mayor

1618 Nicholas Sherwill merchant Mayor

1620 Robert Rawlyn merchant Mayor

1621 John Bownder merchant Mayor

1622 John Martyn merchant Mayor

1623 Leonard Pomeroy merchant Mayor

1624 Thomas Ceely Merchant Mayor

1625 Nicholas Blake merchant Mayor

1626 Thomas Sherwill merchant Mayor

1627 Robert Trelawny merchant Mayor

1628 Abraham Comer merchant Mayor

1628 Nicholas Sherwill merchant Mayor

1627 William Hele merchant Mayor


The name of this Pomeroy is to be found in a list of 1611 , of those merchants trading with France .

In 1620 Leonard Pomeroy was one of 13 Masters of the Corporation of Plymouth. Leonard Pomeroy Mayor of Plymouth 1623-24 Died 1629.

LEONARD POMEROY  Mayor of Plymouth 1623-24  we know this Leonard Pomeroy had a Coat of Arms which supports the idea that he was one of  armorial Pomeroys.
 He was one of three Merchants from Plymouth who financed the beginnings of a fishing plantation on Richmond's Island in Maine and owned LAND in Maine.


2014 we are now of the opinion that Leonard was youngest son of William who was youngest son of Sir Edward Pomeroy and his wife Joan Sapcote daughter of Sir John Sapcot  youngest brother of Sir Thomas ( the Foolish) who sold the barony to Seymour  in 1547 and Hugh of Tregony



WILLIAM POMEROY Master of a sailing vessel out of Stonehouse in Plymouth in 1625 sailing with letters of marque.

I found another ref to a William Pomeroy in as an officer on a ship ? during the Civil Wars of 1643 to 1651 on a naval website that I need to retrieve /revisit.

Abraham Pomeroy East Stonehouse Plymouth died at sea on the frigate Northamptonshire, his Will proved at Lambeth 1658
 

FMP Rates books

Leonard Pomeroy Archive ref 1-181 / Plymouth & West Devon Rate Books 1598- 1933

Address Trevill Street which was  close to St Charles Church near Barbican in Plymouth

Same address in Rate books for 1610 to 1633

Old Plymouth here

RECORDS BMDS 

PLYMOUTH POMEROYS IN PARISH RECORDS OF PLYMOUTH

JANE POMERY -  dau of CHRISTOPHER POMERY Christening: 16 NOV 1595 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

ELIZABETH POMERY - dau of CHRISTOPHER POMERY Christening: 14 FEB 1600 Saint Andrew, Plymouth,

CHRISTOPHER POMERY - son of CHRISTOPHER POMERY Christening: 24 JUL 1603 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon.

THOMAS POMERIE -son of  CHRISTOPHER POMERIE Christening: 03 SEP 1606 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon

GRACE POMERY -dau of  CHRISTOPHER POMERY Christening: 11 JUN 1609 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

ANDREW POMERIE - son of  CHRISTOPHER PUMROY Christening: 01 JAN 1626 Saint Andrew, Plymouth,

JOAN POMERYE  dau of  CHRISTOPHER POMERYE Christening: 04 OCT 1626 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

GEORGE PUMROY - son of CHRISTOPHER PUMROY Christening: 08 NOV 1629 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

JOHN PUMROY - son of   CHRISTOPHER PUMROYChristening: 20 APR 1632 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 

 Looks like at least two families of William Pomeroy  unless it was two marriages for the same chap…

JOHN PUMERY -son of WILLIAM PUMERY Christening: 02 MAY 1588 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon

JAMES POMERY -son of  WILLIAM POMERY Christening: 27 APR 1590 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon

ANNE PUMERY -  dau of  WILLIAM PUMERY Christening: 06 JAN 1586 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon

 

Marriage WILLIAM POMERY -to JOAN LUSCOMBE Marriage: 01 DEC 1594 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

WILLIAM POMERY -son of  WILLIAM POMERY Christening: 09 FEB 1595 

MARGERY POMERY - dau of WILLIAM POMERY Christening: 01 NOV 1596  

JOHN POMERYE -son of WILLIAM POMERYE Christening: 24 SEP 1600 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

ABRAHAM POMERYE - son of WILLIAM POMERYE Christening: 20 FEB 1603  

EDMOND POMERY - son of WILLIAM POMERY Christening: 28 APR 1605  

A GAP OF 14 years  so  three separate families

A marriage around 1620 to produce this family wife possibly named Jane

JANE POMERYE - dau of WILLIAM POMERYE Christening: 08 AUG 1621 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

ARMYNELL POMERYE -  dau of WILLIAM POMERYE Christening: 05 NOV 1623 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon.

JOAN POMERIE -  dau of  WILLIAM POMERIE Christening: 03 DEC 1626 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

THOMASIN POMROY - dau of WILLIAM  POMROY Christening: 28 JUL 1629 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 WILLIAM PUMERIE -son of  WILLIAM PUMERIE  Christening: 20 JUL 1632 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 WILLIAM POMEROY - son of WILLIAM POMEROY  Christening: 15 MAY 1633 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

He doest fit into this family group

LEONARD PUMMERYE - son of WILLIAM PUMMERYE Christening: 10 DEC 1633 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

Marriage  WILLIAM POMERY - to SARAH WATSON  Marriage: 19 MAY 1667 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 

Again either two families or two marriages

HUGH POMERYE - son of THOMAS POMERYE Christening: 15 JUL 1590 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

THOMAS POMERY -son of  THOMAS POMERY  Christening: 05 MAR 1584 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

JOAN POMERYE -  dau of  THOMAS POMERYE Christening: 15 JUL 1590 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 

Marriage THOMAS PAMERYE -to  REBECCA PEERS Marriage: 24 SEP 1593 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

MARGERY POMERIE -  dau of THOMAS POMERIE Christening: 27 JAN 1621 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

JOHN POMERYE - son of  THOMAS POMERYE Christening: 13 OCT 1624 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

MARY POMERYE -dau of THOMAS POMERYE  Christening: 14 DEC 1623 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 EMBBYN POMERY -dau of THOMAS POMERY  Christening: 24 JUN 1602 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

WILLIAM POMERYE - son of THOMAS POMERYE  Christening: 10 AUG 1600 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

THOMAS POMERYE -son of  THOMAS POMERYE Christening: 23 MAR 1604 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

THOMAS POMERYE -son of  THOMAS POMERYE Christening: 24 FEB 1607 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 THOMAS POMERYE -son of THOMAS POMERYE Christening: 12 JUL 1618 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 THOMAS POMERYE -son of THOMAS POMERYE Christening: 26 NOV 1620 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

FLORENCE POMERIE -  dau of THOMAS POMERIE Christening: 31 AUG 1611 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 GUNNET POMERY - dau of THOMAS POMERYChristening: 20 DEC 1608 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 HUMPHRY POMERY - son of  JOHN POMERY  Christening: 06 OCT 1596 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

JOSEPH POMERY - son of THOMAS POMERY Christening: 22 DEC 1598 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

JOSEPH POMERIE - son of THOMAS POMERIE Christening: 27 JAN 1621 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 

JOAN PUMERY - dau of  NICHOLAS PUMERY Christening: 24 OCT 1586 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

 OWEN PUMERY - son of  NICHOLAS PUMERY hristening: 25 FEB 1582 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

WILLIAM POMERY - son of  NICHOLAS POMERY Christening: 19 DEC 1588 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

 MARGERY POMERYE - dau of  NICHOLAS POMERYE Christening: 01 SEP 1591 Saint Andrew, Plymouth,  

 

 

MARRIAGES

HENRY POMERY –to  MARGERY DABLE Marriage:  06 AUG 1599  Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

BEATON PUMEROYE –(f)  to  EDWARD DAMBRELL Marriage: 05 FEB 1638 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

CHRISTIAN POMERY – (f) to        HENRY SALMON  Marriage: 13 NOV 1587 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

JOHN PUMERY - to ALSE  Marriage: 19 SEP 1582 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

JOHN POMERYE - to FLOWER MANKE Marriage: 25 JAN 1590 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

JOHN PUMRY - to RICHEARD FLORRIE Marriage: 09 OCT 1630 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

JOHN PUMREY - to ELIZ GRINSLEY Marriage: 29 APR 1633 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

 ALCE POMERYE to JOHN KNIGHTE   Marriage: 11 JAN 1591 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

 KATHEREN POMROY -to JONAS JOSEPH Marriage: 02 FEB 1667 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

THOMASINE POMEROY -to WILLIAM HIX ( Hicks) Marriage: 06 APR 1645 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

ANNE POMERYE - to WILLIAM STEWARD Marriage: 28 MAY 1603 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

 RACHELL POMERY -to ROGER CROTIS Marriage: 06 APR 1669 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon


BARBARA POMROY dau of John Pomeroy of Stonehouse OTP married by banns at St Andrews Plymouth to George Ward of London  14 Oct 1654 

 JOAN POMERIE - to WILLIAM ALSOPP  Marriage: 20 APR 1613 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

JOAN POMERYE  to THOMAS LOVE  29 0CT 1599 St Andrews Plymouth

 WILLIAM POMERY -to JOAN LUSCOMBE Marriage: 01 DEC 1594 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

WILLIAM POMERY - to SARAH WATSON  Marriage: 19 MAY 1667 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

 EDWARD PUMEROYE - to JOAN SYMONS  Marriage: 24 JUL 1643 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

 THOMASINE POMERY - to ROBERT COUCH Marriage: 20 DEC 1596 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

THOMASINE POMERYE  to JOHN REDDICOAT 29 Jan 1598 Saint Andrew, Plymouth

THOMASINE POMERYE to NICOLAS JENKING  31 July 1636 Saint Andrew, Plymouth

THOMASINE POMERYE to WILLIAM HIX OR HICKES 6 April 1645 Saint Andrew, Plymouth

 MARGERY PUMERY – to  NICHOLAS MANDER  Marriage: 29 JUN 1584 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon,

ALICE POMEROY to  JOHN POOLY 14 Sept 1595 1584 Saint Andrew, Plymouth Devon

ANNE POMEERYE to  WILLIAM STEWARD 28 March 1603 Saint Andrew, Plymouth Devon

 THOMAS PAMERYE -to  REBECCA PEERS Marriage: 24 SEP 1593 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, 

 THOMAS POMERIE – to JOAN MOUNTIONE Marriage: 13 JAN 1612 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

THOMAS POMERYE - to MARY MALLETT Marriage: 22 OCT 1616 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

THOMAS POMERIE – to ANN COLLESON Marriage: 26 APR 1618 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

JOAN POMERY - to ROBERT CLINNICK  Marriage: 30 DEC 1644 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

JOSEPH POMMERY -to THOMASINE JEFFERY Marriage: 20 APR 1629 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

THOMASINE PUMEROY - to NICHOLAS JENKING Marriage: 31 JUL 1636 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 ELIZ POMERIE -to WILLIAM PARMETER Marriage: 20 FEB 1608 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 LEONARD POMERIE -to AGNES BARONE Marriage: 17 APR 1625 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 ANN PUMEROYE - to WILLIAM BLATCHELLER  Marriage: 11 JAN 1641 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

ORION POMERYE -to CISLIE LOVELL  Marriage: 09 OCT 1614 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 LEWIS PUMERYE - to Eleanor  Marriage: 19 OCT 1589 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

ELIZABETH POMREY - to JONATHAN PENROSE  Marriage: 25 SEP 1655 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 KATHERINE POMERYE -to ROBERT RANDELL Marriage: 23 FEB 1600 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

 MARTHA POMEROY - to SAMUEL STRONGE  Marriage: 01 DEC 1647 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England

FAITH POMERYE - to PETER ANTONYE  Marriage: 30 AUG 1596 Saint Andrew, Plymouth, Devon, England