Isaac Tullie

Male Abt 1626 - Yes, date unknown


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Isaac Tullie was born about 1626 (son of George Tullye, Gentleman and Thomazin Hechstetter); and died.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 531B5CDCBEF44EBDBE483661907B59DD415F
    • Occupation: 1644 1645, Carlisle, Cumberland County, England; Writer of the Narrative of th Siege of Carlisle, 1644-45
    • Occupation: Bef 1654, Carlisle, Cumberland County, England; Apprentice to John Langhorn
    • Occupation: 19 Apr 1754; admitted to Merchant's Guild
    • Occupation: Abt 1847, Carlisle, Cumberland County, England; Author, 'The Narrative of the Seige of Carlisle, 1644-45)

    Notes:

    Occupation:
    1644-45 Invasion by Scottisharmy under General Leslie acting on behalf of the English parliament.

    Occupation:
    Isaak Tullye ye sonne of George Tully of ye Citty of Carlisle, gentleman, late apprentice to Mr. John Langhorn, is admitted a brother of this trade by ye generall consent og this occupation and has paid for his entrie, 6, 8d.

    Occupation:
    The city was invaded by a Scottish army under General Leslie acting on behalf of the English parliament. It is said that "posterity is inebted to Isaac Tullie for whatever is known about the incidents of the seige". He was at the time only a youth of 18 years.

    Buried:
    First name(s)?tab?Isaac
    Last name?tab?Tullie
    Birth year?tab?-
    Parish?tab?Newcastle/st. Nicholas
    Death year?tab?1712
    Burial year?tab?1712
    Burial date?tab?23 Sep 1712
    Relative's first name(s)?tab?Tim (merchant)
    Relationship?tab?Son
    County?tab?Northumberland
    Country?tab?England
    Record set?tab?Northumberland And Durham Burials
    Category?tab?Birth, Marriage & Death (Parish Registers)
    Subcategory?tab?Parish Burials
    Collections from?tab?England, United Kingdom
    Northumberland & Durham Family History Society

    Transcriptions ? Northumberland & Durham Family History Society

    First name(s)?tab?Isaac
    Last name?tab?Tullie
    Birth year?tab?-
    Death year?tab?1712
    Burial year?tab?1712
    Burial date?tab?23 Sep 1712
    Church?tab?St Nicholas
    Denomination?tab?Anglican
    Place?tab?Newcastle upon Tyne
    County?tab?Northumberland
    Country?tab?England
    Record set?tab?National Burial Index For England & Wales
    Category?tab?Birth, Marriage & Death (Parish Registers)
    Subcategory?tab?Parish Burials
    Collections from?tab?United Kingdom, England
    Northumberland & Durham Family History Society

    Transcriptions ? Northumberland & Durham Family History Society

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Thomas Tullie died on 18 Jan 1725/26 in St Mary's, Carlisle, Cumberland County, England.
    2. George Tullie was born about Sep 1652; was christened on 5 Sep 1652 in St Mary's, Carlisle, Cumberland County, England; died on 24 Apr 1695 in Gateshead, Durham, England; was buried in Gateshead, Durham, England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  George Tullye, Gentleman was born in Carlisle, Cumberland County, England (son of Thomas Tullye).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FamilySearch ID: MHH9-GB2
    • _UID: ECAF24E10EA949D68DE07FDE1B662828119F
    • Land & Property: 1619, Carlisle, Cumberland County, England; deeds, Corporationof Carlisle

    Notes:

    FamilySearch ID:
    https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/MHH9-GB2

    George married Thomazin Hechstetter on 22 Apr 1613 in Crosthwaite Church, Keswick, England. Thomazin (daughter of Emanuel Hechstetter and Thomazine) was born about 1596 in Keswick, Cumberland, England; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Thomazin Hechstetter was born about 1596 in Keswick, Cumberland, England (daughter of Emanuel Hechstetter and Thomazine); and died.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FamilySearch ID: MHH9-G1S
    • _UID: 7E23BEB0592C41D7859A6E8A8B0FDDBBF5DC

    Notes:

    FamilySearch ID:
    https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/MHH9-G1S

    Notes:

    Married:
    Thomazin Hecstetter & George Tullye
    Marriage:?tab?Apr 22 1613
    Crosthwaite, Cumberland, England
    Wife:?tab?Thomazin Hecstetter
    Husband:?tab?George Tullye
    Indexing Project (Batch) Number:?tab?M00301-1
    System Origin:?tab?England-ODM
    GS Film number:?tab?0924744 IT 2, 0926148 IT 8, 0962148 IT 7, 90604, 90605

    Children:
    1. Timothie Tullye was born about Mar 1614 in Crosthwaite, Cumberland, England; was christened on 20 Mar 1613/14 in Crosthwaite Church, Keswick, England; and died.
    2. Dorothy Tullye was born in 1615 1630; and died.
    3. Thomas Tullie, D. D. was born on 22 Jul 1620 in St. Martin's Parish, Carlisle, Cumberland, England; was christened in St Mary's, Carlisle, Cumberland County, England; died on 14 Jan 1674/75 in Grittleton, Wiltshire, England; was buried on 18 Jan 1674/75 in Grittleton, Wiltshire, England.
    4. 1. Isaac Tullie was born about 1626; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Thomas Tullye was born in Jan 1560 in Gisleham, Suffolk, England; was christened on 3 Jan 1560 in Gisleham, Suffolk, England; and died.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: Blindcrake, parish of Isel, England; near Cockermouth,
    • _UID: F3E52BC2D16948DB88BE8AA6B27DEF48FEF2

    Notes:

    Birth:
    Gender:?tab?Male
    Christening:?tab?Jan 3 1560
    Gisleham, Suffolk, England
    Residence:?tab? Gisleham, Suffolk, England
    Father:?tab?Tullye
    Indexing Project (Batch) Number:?tab?I03669-2
    System Origin:?tab?England-EASy
    GS Film number:?tab?1471185
    Reference ID:?tab?p 1

    Residence:
    Cockermouth is an ancient market town and civil parish in the Borough of Allerdale in Cumbria, England, so named because it is at the confluence of the River Cocker as it flows into the River Derwent. Historically a part of Cumberland, Cockermouth is situated outside the English Lake District on its northwest fringe.

    Children:
    1. 2. George Tullye, Gentleman was born in Carlisle, Cumberland County, England.
    2. William Tullye was born about 1600; and died.

  2. 6.  Emanuel Hechstetter (son of Daniel Hechstetter); died on 13 Aug 1614; was buried in Crosthwaite Church, Keswick, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 37103DDBA5694A9AA85F2490D4F5657BB557

    Emanuel married Thomazine. Thomazine died on 22 Mar 1611/12; was buried in Crosthwaite Church, Keswick, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 7.  Thomazine died on 22 Mar 1611/12; was buried in Crosthwaite Church, Keswick, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: E5673FB531E24C13A3FD1CA6DDFDDD915C40

    Children:
    1. Daniel Hechstetter was born about 1592; was christened about 1592 in Crosthwaith; died about 1686 in Bolton, Lancastershire, England.
    2. Joseph Hechstetter was born about 1593; died about 1656; was buried in Crosthwaite Church, Keswick, England.
    3. Ambrose Hechstetter was born about 1594; and died.
    4. Samuel Hechstetter was born about 1595; died about 1595.
    5. 3. Thomazin Hechstetter was born about 1596 in Keswick, Cumberland, England; and died.
    6. Jerome Hechstetter was born about 1599; and died.
    7. Susanna Hechstetter was born about 1602; and died.
    8. Barbara Hechstetter was born about 1604; and died.
    9. Jane Hechstetter was born about 1608; and died.
    10. Jonathan Hechstetter was born about 1612; and died.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Daniel Hechstetter died about 1581.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: Keswick, England; Miner
    • Occupation: Keswick, England; Miner: One of the German miners brought to England by Elizabeth I
    • _UID: 9BA7BE39E31C4BF7BFC14CE1CA3F0384B712
    • Residence: 1572, Keswick, England; Took up residence in Keswick

    Notes:

    Occupation:
    2 ELIZABETHAN KESWICK
    of native gold and silver, and one-tenth of gold and |
    silver ore holding 8 lbs. weight in the cwt. ; of every
    cwt. of copper, 2s., or one-twentieth during the first
    five years, and afterwards 2s. 6d. or one-fifteenth ; and
    too have the preferment in bying of all Pretious stones
    or pearl (!) to be found in the woorking of these mines ;
    also rights over tin and lead.
    Daniel Hechstetter was acting as agent for David
    Haug, Hans Langnauer Co., of Augsburg, already great
    dealers in silks, cloths, and draperies, in groceries and
    the spices of the East Indies, and like other wealthy
    business men of the time, in banking and bill discounting.
    They had widespread branches, reaching from Venice
    to Antwerp and from Cracow to Lyons ; and though
    not originally interested in mines, they had recently
    taken over from the successor of the famous Augsburg
    house of the Fuggers the control of the copper mines
    of Neusohl in Northern Hungary. One of their branches
    was at Schwatz, in Tyrol, near Innsbruck, a celebrated
    mining centre, where silver, copper, and iron were produced
    ; and we find by these account books that it was
    from Schwatz that some of the first miners were sent
    by them to England. For their earlier history see Dr.
    Meilingers work, named in the Bibliography above.
    The English records tell us that Hechstetter (July,
    1565) offered to form a company and to give shares to
    Sir William Cecil, to the Earls of Pembroke and Leicester,
    Mr. Tamworth, and Alderman Duckett ; the actual
    assignment of the 24 shares can be gathered from the
    account books, with the dates at which the shareholders
    entered the Company.* For the sake of convenience I
    have set out these statements in the following table : -
    * The expenses of 1564-5 (see p. 5) were charged to the first nine shareholders,
    who must therefore have joined the Company as from its formation.

    Title:?tab?Elizabetan Keswick, The settlement of the German miners, original accounts from Ausburg, translated, Tract series, no. 8, 1882
    Description:?tab?Description based on: no. 9, Issued by: the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, 16
    Volume:?tab?no. 8
    Publication date:?tab?1882
    Publisher:?tab?Kendal [Westmorland] : T. Wilson
    Author:?tab?Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Arch?ological Society. cn
    Sponsor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
    Tags:?tab?allen_county, americana
    Notes:?tab?Photocopied book. Photocopy marks., Irregular page numbering
    Contributor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center

    4 ELIZABETHAN KESWICK
    George Needham

    Occupation:

    2 ELIZABETHAN KESWICK
    of native gold and silver, and one-tenth of gold and silver ore holding 8 lbs. weight in the cwt. ; of every cwt. of copper, 2s., or one-twentieth during the first five years, and afterwards 2s. 6d. or one-fifteenth ; and too have the preferment in bying of all Pretious stones or pearl (!) to be found in the working of these mines ; also rights over tin and lead.
    Daniel Hechstetter was acting as agent for David Haug, Hans Langnauer Co., of Augsburg, already great dealers in silks, cloths, and draperies, in groceries and the spices of the East Indies, and like other wealthy business men of the time, in banking and bill discounting. They had widespread branches, reaching from Venice to Antwerp and from Cracow to Lyons ; and though not originally interested in mines, they had recently taken over from the successor of the famous Augsburg house of the Fuggers the control of the copper mines
    of Neusohl in Northern Hungary. One of their branches was at Schwatz, in Tyrol, near Innsbruck, a celebrated mining centre, where silver, copper, and iron were produced; and we find by these account books that it was from Schwatz that some of the first miners were sent by them to England. For their earlier history see Dr. Meilingers work, named in the Bibliography above.
    The English records tell us that Hechstetter (July, 1565) offered to form a company and to give shares to Sir William Cecil, to the Earls of Pembroke and Leicester, Mr. Tamworth, and Alderman Duckett ; the actual assignment of the 24 shares can be gathered from the account books, with the dates at which the shareholders entered the Company.* For the sake of convenience I have set out these statements in the following table : -
    * The expenses of 1564-5 (see p. 5) were charged to the first nine shareholders, who must therefore have joined the Company as from its formation.

    ?i?Title:?tab?Elizabetan Keswick, The settlement of the German miners, original accounts from Ausburg, translated, Tract series, no. 8, 1882
    Description:?tab?Description based on: no. 9, Issued by: the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, 16
    Volume:?tab?no. 8
    Publication date:?tab?1882
    Publisher:?tab?Kendal [Westmorland] : T. Wilson
    Author:?tab?Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Arch?ological Society. cn
    Sponsor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
    Tags:?tab?allen_county, americana
    Notes:?tab?Photocopied book. Photocopy marks., Irregular page numbering
    Contributor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
    ?/i?
    4 ELIZABETHAN KESWICK
    George Needham; Patten | ; Sir L. Duckett i ; Tamworth | ; Field J ; Anthony Duckett. I ; William Burd, treasurer to the Company, | ; Customer Smyth, I ;
    Lord Pembroke, i ; Richard Barnes, | ; Nicholas Culverwell, I; Thomas Revet, i ; Anthony Gamage, I. And in 15S0, when the company was reconstructed by Customer Smyth, the English shareholders were Lords Burghley, Pembroke, Leicester, and Mount joy ; Spinola and Tamworth; Aldermen Duckett, Gamage, Barnes, and Springham ; Customer Smyth, T. Revet, W. Patten,
    N. Culverwell, W. Winter, J. Dudley, W. Burd, Jeffrey Duckett, Anthony Duckett, M. Field, and G. Needham.
    That is to say, nearly all the English shareholders kept their places in the Company, while the German shares (10 out of 24) were in the hands of Daniel Hechstetter for the strangers. Mr. W. R. Scott (see the Bibliography given above) points out that the average price realised was ?1200 a share, which meant no more than the right to participate in the monopoly; and that beside this initial outlay, shareholders were liable to calls for prospecting and for development of their properties. From these accounts I gather that most of the English shareholders did not respond to these calls. The first of the detailed account books begins with 1569, but scattered through the volumes there are some notices which give general returns of expenses for the first four years, as well as a few particulars regarding the journeys of the miners to England and the implements and materials supplied from Germany. For the sake of clearness and brevity I have tabulated the figures representing the initial outlay, giving from 1566 to 1568 the sums in pounds only (most of the accounts being kept in English money), and where the odd shillings and pence of the original reach more than los. the amount is represented by the next higher figure in pounds (/19 gs. 6d. is stated as ?19, while ?19 los. 6d. is given as ?20), though ...
    ?i?Legacy Family Tree?/i?
    ?i?Title:?tab?Elizabetan Keswick, The settlement of the German miners, original accounts from Ausburg, translated, Tract series, no. 8, 1882
    Description:?tab?Description based on: no. 9, Issued by: the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, 16
    Volume:?tab?no. 8
    Publication date:?tab?1882
    Publisher:?tab?Kendal [Westmorland] : T. Wilson
    Author:?tab?Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Arch?ological Society. cn
    Sponsor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
    Tags:?tab?allen_county, americana
    Notes:?tab?Photocopied book. Photocopy marks., Irregular page numbering
    Contributor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
    ?/i?
    14 ELIZABETHAN KESWICK
    and groves, which had for ages shaded the shores and promontories of that lovely lake - Where the rude axe with heaved stroke
    Was never heard the nymphs to daunt.
    Or fright them from their hallowed haunt.
    But the accounts for Charcoal, Peat, and Carnage of Ore show the rise of actual smelting at the new buildings and the complete devastation of the woods, far and wide.
    This work was done almost entirely by an army of local farmers (pauern), though, as we shall see, skilled workmen for charcoal-burning were imported from the Midlands. But the sum of over ?1600 distributed in the neighbourhood in two and a half years, in addition to all that found its way by employment, purveying, and indirectly into local pockets, must have assured
    the Keswick folk that their early hostility to the Germans had been a great mistake.
    Carriage usually meant fetching goods from London or Newcastle by the ordinary carriers. In the middle of 1567 the Company began keeping its own carts and horses, for building and for carriage of special articles close to Keswick ; but this did not supersede the use of English packhorses for charcoal, peat, ore, and a Httle later for stone-coal. As the work developed, other accounts were opened. Most of these will be found represented ; though I have omitted all under the heading of Interest, because their value for our present purpose is small in comparison with the many which claim a place.
    1564.
    For 1564 I find only one entry, recording a payment on June 21st to Daniel Hechstetter, Ludwig Haug, and Hans Loner for travelling (from Augsburg to England) and for men hired from Castein (Gastein in Tyrol,...

    ?i?Title:?tab?Elizabetan Keswick, The settlement of the German miners, original accounts from Ausburg, translated, Tract series, no. 8, 1882
    Description:?tab?Description based on: no. 9, Issued by: the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, 16
    Volume:?tab?no. 8
    Publication date:?tab?1882
    Publisher:?tab?Kendal [Westmorland] : T. Wilson
    Author:?tab?Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Arch?ological Society. cn
    Sponsor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
    Tags:?tab?allen_county, americana
    Notes:?tab?Photocopied book. Photocopy marks., Irregular page numbering
    Contributor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center?/i?

    24
    ELIZABETHAN KESWICK
    of English sliareholders, who were never to be less than sixteen.
    The first letter calendared among the English State Papers for 1568 is from Daniel Ulstatt or Ulstet, who had come to reside in Keswick as representative of the German firm, in the place of Junker Ludwig Haug, as he is called in the accounts. Daniel Hechstetter was still travelling frequently between Germany- and England, and did not come into permanent residence until 1572. This letter reads rather curiously when wc remember that Mr. Ulstet was the father of an illegitimate child at Keswick ; and if the special provision of fish on Fridays
    for him be taken as an indication of his religion, it is odd that he should have applied to Queen Elizabeth's minister for a German preacher. The miners from Tyrol, and especially from Styria (whence some by their names must have come), were probably Lutherans, though most Bavarians were Roman Catholics; at least, this was the case shortly afterwards, and all the colony seem to have gone without protest to the English church.* There is no trace in the accounts of the appointment of a German clergyman, though a chapel is mentioned (p. 32) ; the two Becks, clergy of that period, were pretty certainly English. And Ulstatt was soon on good terms with Lady Radcliffe.

    1568, June 25. Daniel Ulstatt from Keswick to Cecil. Is surprised at the mineral richness of the kingdom. Progress of their works, which are opposed by Lady Radcliffe. A preacher in their own language is much wanted among the workmen.
    June 30. George Lamplugh sends specimens to Cecil.
    Sept. 2. Notes on Needhams letter touching his negotiation with Mr. Curwen for ground at Workington to build a wharf.
    Oct. 12. More about the wharf. Difficulty of procuring
    _________
    * In the Privy Council Acts, June and November, 1574, there is mention of
    one Martin Moisor or Moiscr as apprelicndod with James Dugdale, a priest,
    on matters of religion, This looks like the name Moser or Moiser of our
    colony, but our Martin M. was then only seven or eight years old. Moser,
    from Mosser in Cumberland or Mozergh in Westmorland, was also a local
    English surname.

    ?i?Title:?tab?Elizabetan Keswick, The settlement of the German miners, original accounts from Ausburg, translated, Tract series, no. 8, 1882
    Description:?tab?Description based on: no. 9, Issued by: the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, 16
    Volume:?tab?no. 8
    Publication date:?tab?1882
    Publisher:?tab?Kendal [Westmorland] : T. Wilson
    Author:?tab?Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Arch?ological Society. cn
    Sponsor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
    Tags:?tab?allen_county, americana
    Notes:?tab?Photocopied book. Photocopy marks., Irregular page numbering
    Contributor:?tab?Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center

    ?/i?200 ELIZABETHAN KESWICK
    Although it is not intended in this volume to give a history of the Mining Company the reader who has followed the fortunes of Mr, Daniel and his party so far may reasonably ask for the end of the story, for we leave them at a crisis. From various sources* we gatlier that Hechstetter struggled on for a few years, but by 1578 found it necessary to propose that the shareholders should
    provide ?1000 for working expenses, or else leave him to work the mines with his own partners. He died in 1581. Mr. Scott says that another German firm made an offer, in the belief that they could extract three times
    as much copper from the ore as Hechstetter got ; and we
    find elsewhere that in 1581 George Needham brought
    Joachim Gans to Keswick with proposals for a reform
    at Smelthouses. But this came to nothing. Meanwhile
    Customer Thomas Smytli, one of the sliareholders, took
    a lease of the Companys works, guaranteeing to pay
    the Queens royalties and a dividend to the shareholders.
    The Cornish mines were then opened afresh, and Ulrich
    Frass was sent as manager to Treworth, near Perin Sands.
    We hear of him there in January, 1583-4, as ill in health,
    but verye carfful and dylygent, and as revisiting
    Cimiberland in the summer of 1585. By this time Hans
    Hering had been to Neath in South Wales to report on
    the ores of that district, and in March, 1586, Ulrich Frass
    had lately been sent to Neath and a smelting-house had
    been set up there. Frass, improving on the invention
    of Joachim Gans, found it more profitable to smelt all
    sorts of copper ore together, and according to Sir Hussey
    Vivian {Copper Smelting, 1881), he introduced the process
    employed in South Wales up to modern times.
    Mark Steinberger and Richard Ledes remained at
    Keswick, with Emanuel and the younger Daniel Hechstetter.
    For seven years Customer Smyths enterprise
    * Mr. W. K. Scott, op. cit., Col. Grant-Francis, F.S.A., The smelting of
    copper in the Swansea district (ed. 2, 1881), and local notices.


    Residence:

    24
    ELIZABETHAN KESWICK
    of English sliareholders, who were never to be less than
    sixteen.
    The first letter calendared among the English vState
    Papers for 1568 is from Daniel Ulstatt or Ulstet, who had
    come to reside in Keswick as representative of the German
    firm, in the place of Junker Ludwig Haug, as he is
    called in the accounts. Daniel Hechstetter was still
    travelling frequently between Germany- and England,
    and did not come into permanent residence until 1572.
    This letter reads rather curiously when wc remember
    that Mr. Ulstet was the father of an illegitimate child
    at Keswick ; and if the special provision of fish on Fridays
    for him be taken as an indication of his religion, it is odd
    that he should have applied to Queen Elizabeths minister
    for a German preacher. The miners from Tyrol, and
    especially from Styria (whence some by their names must
    have come), were probably Lutherans, though most
    Bavarians were Roman Catholics ; at least, this was the
    case shortl

    Children:
    1. 6. Emanuel Hechstetter died on 13 Aug 1614; was buried in Crosthwaite Church, Keswick, England.
    2. Daniel Hechstetter




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