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Ahnentafel № 4139 · The compiler's 10× great-grandparent

*SARAH MICHELLE BRAMMAN

1629–1660 · of St. Dunstan, London, London, England

Paternal — Grandfather's lineprobableCitation needed

Birth

1629
St. Dunstan, London, London, England

Death

1660
Rappahannock, Virginia, USA

Biography

From the Hyten family archive; subject is Sarah Michelle Bramman (1629–1660), a tenth great-grandmother of the compiler on the paternal-grandfather (PP) line. This entry covers her London origins, parentage, marriage to George Frances Haslock, surviving daughter Johanna, and transatlantic migration to colonial Virginia. Notable: early colonial Chesapeake settler whose surname remains an unverified Ancestry hint and is flagged accordingly.

Sarah Michelle Bramman (1629–1660) entered the Hyten family record as a tenth great-grandmother of the compiler along the paternal-grandfather line. Her surname is preceded in this register by an asterisk, indicating that the Bramman attribution rests upon an unverified Ancestry hint rather than a primary source; the reader is asked to weigh her parentage accordingly while further documentation is sought.

Sarah was born in 1629 in the parish of St. Dunstan, London, in the heart of an English capital then under the reign of Charles I and approaching the upheavals of civil war. She was the daughter of George Bramham, who died in 1648, and Alice Marchell Lowesley, who preceded her husband in death in 1639, when Sarah was a child of about ten. The loss of her mother in girlhood, followed by the loss of her father in early womanhood, framed her coming of age against a backdrop of personal grief and national turbulence, the years of the Long Parliament and the wars between Crown and Commons.

Sarah married George Frances Haslock, and of this union the register preserves one daughter: Johanna, familiarly called Joan, Haselock, born in 1649 and living to 1728. Through Joan the Bramman–Haslock line carried forward into the generations afterward gathered into the Hyten record.

Sarah's life closed in 1660 in Rappahannock, Virginia, marking her among the earlier English settlers to cross the Atlantic into the tidewater colony. The Rappahannock region in the mid-seventeenth century was a frontier of tobacco plantations and scattered parishes along the river, settled chiefly by English families drawn from London and the southern shires. Sarah died at roughly thirty-one years of age, in the same year that the English monarchy was restored under Charles II — an ocean away from the London parish of her birth.

Sarah was the compiler's tenth great-grandmother on the paternal-paternal line, her identification with the Bramman family flagged as provisional pending further verification.

Family

Children

Sources

Source citations and original documents will appear here as research progresses. Currently sourced from Ancestry tree hints — to be verified.

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