Thursday, November 18, 2010

St. Mary's Churchyard in Leigh, Kent, England


St Mary's Church in Leigh, Kent, England is where we found the following gravestones of our ancestors.

Gravestone of John Nye (1817) and wife Fanny
Son of Richard and Elizabeth Nye

Transcription of the stone of John Nye (1817) son of Richard and Elizabeth Nye and John's wife Fanny:

IN
LOVING MEMORY
OF JOHN NYE
DIED MARCH 15_____
AGED 68
BLESSED ARE THOSE WHICH______
ALSO OF
FANNY

Gravestone of Richard Nye (1809) son of Richard and Elizabeth.
Transcription of the headstone of Richard Nye (1809) son of Richard and Elizabeth. He never married.

TO
THE MEMORY OF
RICHARD
SON OF
RICHARD AND ELIZABETH NYE
OF THIS PARISH
WHO DIED AUG 25 185__
___ AND PRAY FOR Y____
_HEN THE TIME IS



Michael Bouy searching for Nye headstones.
The architecture of the present building suggests St. Mary's was rebuilt in the 13th century. It is still in use today.

We searched here for Nye graves. Most of the headstones had been destroyed over the many years by lichen and weather, but we were fortunate to find the stone of Richard Nye (1782) and his wife Elizabeth Avis. 




Gravestone of Richard and Elizabeth Nye (1782)
Transcription of the headstone of Richard and Elizabeth Nye:

RICHARD NYE
WHO OF PAR DIED THIS ___
OF ____ 22 _____
AGED _____
ALSO ELIZABETH
WIFE OF THE ABOVE
WHO DIED ________
AGED 76 YEARS

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

John Nye and Charlotte Osborne

Our ancestors John Nye and Charlotte Osborne were parents to seven children:

  • John Nye
  • Emma Nye
  • James Nye
  • Charles Nye
  • Ephraim Hesmer Nye
  • Stephen Nye
  • Osborne Nye (born in Australia)

John Nye (b. 1807) was the son of John Nye (b. 1783) and Anne Randall. He was the oldest brother to Thomas Cotton Nye, Ann Nye, and Sophia Nye.

Charlotte Osborne was the daughter of Reuben Osborne and Charlotte Hesmer. Her sister Frances Osborne later married John Nye's cousin, William Nicholls (son of Grace Nye, who was the sister of John Nye b. 1783).

John and Charlotte Nye and the first six children left England to find a better life in Australia, landing in Portland, Victoria in 1851 after 3 months at sea. Osborne, their seventh child, was born at Mt. Rouse, Victoria where the family worked on a sheep station owned by Matthew Gibb.

During the Australian gold rush, the family leased a home in Warrnambool and a farm in Wangoom, Victoria and began hauling goods from the port to the gold mines in Ballarat and Bendigo, becoming quite prosperous.

Suddenly, in 1858, the family made the momentous decision to sell everything they owned and start walking to Sydney with a goal of migrating to the USA. Halfway to Sydney they became bogged down by the weather and spent the winter in Beechworth, Victoria. Misfortune befell them, the family split up, and some headed for South America while the others made plans to go to California.

Two years later the family was reunited near San Francisco, California, and travelled by wagon train to Utah.

Their extraordinary adventures have been thoroughly researched and compiled in a compelling book. Readers have said they cannot put it down and descendants of the family should not be without their own copy.

Email my son Michael Bouy at michael.bouy@gmail.com for your copy. Many of our family members have bought extra books for their children as meaningful holiday or anniversary gifts, sharing the extraordinary journey of the Nye family from Kent.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Zion Baptist Church - Pembury Road, Tonbridge

We were able to visit the Zion Baptist Church on Pembury Road, Tonbridge during our time in Kent. Ann Nye and Sophia Nye donated the money to have this little Church built in 1867.

Foundation stone of Zion Baptist Church, Tonbridge
The Nye family had apparently been participating in the Baptist church for a number of generations, and as such were considered under British law to be "non-conformists" - that is, they did not conform to the Church of England.

According to Pastor Tim Fields, a new Baptist congregation was started in Tonbridge and did not have a meeting house. In 1867, Winchester Farm - then owned by Sophia and Ann Nye - had an extremely abundant harvest, from which the Nye sisters donated £250 to entirely fund the construction of the Zion Baptist Church on Pembury Road, Tonbridge.

Pastor Tim Field has been pastor of the church for 12 years, and has spent considerable effort and funds to restore and maintain the church during that time. He was thrilled to meet descendants of the Nye family and graciously allowed us to view the interior and took the photo of us together.

Janice Nye Lutz and Michael Bouy at Zion Baptist Church, Tonbridge

Nye family headstones at Borough Green Baptist Church


Janice Nye Lutz with graves (L to R) of sisters Sophia and
Ann Nye, their brother Thomas Cotton Nye,
and their parents John and Ann Nye.
Borough Green Baptist Church, Kent - August 2010
Through a happy chain of circumstances, we were advised by Pastor Tim Fields at the Zion Baptist Church in Tonbridge that the founders of the church, Ann and Sophia Nye, were buried at a place called Borough Green.

On our last day in Kent, we travelled to Borough Green and found the Baptist Church. What a thrill when we came across the gravestones of not only Ann and Sophia, but their brother Thomas Cotton Nye and their parents John and Ann Nye.

Their headstones are for the most part still readable and we were delighted to photograph them and transcribe them in August 2010.

The headstone of John Nye who was christened 26 January 1784 at Leigh, Kent, England and his wife Ann Randall who was christened 1 August 1784 at Penshurst, Kent, England is inscribed as follows:

PEACE
JOHN NYE
WHO DIED MAY 1______

ALSO ANN NYE
WHO DIED MAY 31 1858
AGE 75

The head stone of Thomas Cotton Nye who was christened 4 August 1811 at Penshurst reads as follows:

IN MEMORY OF 
THOMAS COTTON NYE 
OF MAIDSTONE KENT 
YOUNGEST SON OF JOHN AND ANN NYE 
WHO DIED _________(unreadable date)

Ann Nye was Christened 3 October 1813 at Hadlow, Kent and her sister Sophia Nye who was Christened 6 April 1817 have the following inscription on their headstone:

SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF
SOPHIA NYE
OF WINCHESTER FARM HADLOW KENT
YOUNGEST DAUGHTER OF 
JOHN AND ANN NYE
WHO DIED MARCH 20 1876
AGED 59 YEARS

ALSO OF ANN
SISTER OF THE ABOVE SOPHIA NYE
WHO DIED DECEMBER 3 1882
AGED 69 YEARS

SWEETLY SLEEP DEAR SAINT IN JESUS
THOU WITH US SHALT WAKE IN DEATH
HOLD HE CANNOT THOUGH HE SIEZE US
WE HIS POWER DENY BY FAITH





Michael Bouy with the gravestones of his 5th great grandparents and 3 of their children 

Borough Green Baptist Church cemetery

In front of the Nye home

This is the duplex house where the family of John and Ann Randall Nye lived - 92 Higham Lane, Tonbridge, Kent.

The brother, Thomas Nye, lived in the left half of the house at 90 Higham Lane.

The top photo was taken in August 2010, the second one was taken in 2002 and the third one is from an unknown date and was the old original farm house evidently taken from the back of the house. Between 2002 and 2010 the house was remodeled with an addition on the right side of the photograph.

When the Nye family lived here from about 1840 to 1882, it was called Winchester Farm and was considered part of the village of Hadlow.

Click here to see interior photos.

The current owners advised us that the house was formerly surrounded by fields and orchards, and the land was subdivided in the 1970s and incorporated into Tonbridge.

When John and Ann Nye died, the farm passed into the hands of their daughters, Sophia and Ann Nye.





Janice Nye Lutz at the Nye family home, August 2010

Thursday, August 26, 2010

The Nye home in Hadlow, Kent, England







During August 2010 a visit was made to County Kent England. We were able to view the home where John and Ann Randall Nye and their family lived in Hadlow. It is a two family home or what we would term a duplex.

John and Ann lived at #92 Higham Lane and John's brother Thomas Nye and his wife Sarah Bashford lived at #90. Both homes are occupied but we were invited inside to view the older part of the home, which has been built onto. The current owners allowed us to take some photographs also.

Click here for exterior photos.