Betty Hunt

Brief Life History of Betty

When Betty Hunt was born in 1787, in Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom, her father, Thomas Hunt, was 24 and her mother, Mrs. Hunt, was 21. She married Enoch Mason on 6 February 1825, in Bisley, Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom. She lived in Bisley, Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom in 1841. She died in June 1849, in Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom, at the age of 62, and was buried in Oakridge, Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom.

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Family Time Line

Enoch Mason
1800–1873
Betty Hunt
1787–1849
Marriage: 6 February 1825

Sources (5)

  • Betty Mason in household of Enoch Mason, "England and Wales Census, 1841"
  • Betty Hunt, "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975"
  • Marriage of Betty Hunt to Enoch Mason

Spouse and Children

Parents and Siblings

World Events (6)

1801 · The Act of Union

The Act of Union was a legislative agreement which united England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland under the name of the United Kingdom on January 1, 1801.

1808 · The British West Africa Squadron

The British West Africa Squadron was formed in 1808 to suppress illegal slave trading on the African coastline. The British West Africa Squadron had freed approximately 150,000 people by 1865.

1815

The defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo marks the end of the Napoleonic Wars. Napoleon defeated and exiled to St. Helena.

Name Meaning

English (southwestern): occupational name for a hunter, from Middle English hunte ‘hunter, huntsman’ (Old English hunta). The term was used not only of the hunting on horseback of game such as stags and wild boars, which in the Middle Ages was a pursuit restricted to the ranks of the nobility, but also to much humbler forms of pursuit such as bird catching and poaching for food. The word seems also to have been used as an Old English personal name and to have survived into the Middle Ages as an occasional personal name. Compare Huntington and Huntley .

Irish: adopted for various Irish surnames containing or thought to contain the Gaelic element fiadhach ‘hunt’; for example Ó Fiaich (see Fee ) and Ó Fiachna (see Fenton ).

Possibly an Americanized form of German Hundt .

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

Possible Related Names

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