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  1. When Thomas Monck was born in 1570, in Ashwater, Devon, England, his father, Anthony Monke, was 20 and his mother, Mary Savery Arscott, was 20. He married Elizabeth Smith on 17 June 1601, in Merton, Devon, England. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 5 daughters. He died on 30 June 1627, in Potheridge, Devon, England, at the age of 57.

  2. Monck’s loyalty to the Cromwellian regime was demonstrated by his prompt action against potential rebels in his own regiment and by his active promotion of a marriage between his niece, Elizabeth Monck, and Thomas Pride, eldest son and namesake of the regicide colonel who had grown wealthy under the Cromwellian regime.13 In 1647 Monck had succeeded to the somewhat modest family patrimony at ...

  3. Biography. The Monck family ranked amongst the oldest in Devon, their roots allegedly stretching back to the Conquest. During the twelfth century they settled at Potheridge, a few miles from Great Torrington. In 1609 Monck was joint plaintiff in a Chancery suit concerning an almshouse founded by his ancestors at nearby Taddiport 300 years earlier.

  4. The origin of this Thomas Monck is not known, but he first married Joanna Broughton, daughter of Col. Thomas Broughton (later Lt. Governor), on January 6, 1732. Monck named his property "Mitton," and it was on part of this property that became the first village known as Monck's Corner.

  5. Biography. Thomas Monck was born on March 4, 1713, in Charleston, South Carolina, a son of Thomas Monck, 1688-1713 and Martha Aiken. [1] On April 22, 1735, Thomas Monck acquired 1,000 acres from James LeBas. Thomas named his property "Mitton," and it was on part of this property that became the first village known as Monck's Corner.

  6. Clavin, Terry. Monck, George (1608–70), 1st duke of Albemarle , army officer, was born 6 December 1608 at his family home of Great Potheridge, Devon, the fourth child of Sir Thomas Monck, landowner, and Elizabeth Smyth of Old Matford, Exeter. By the time he landed at Dublin in January 1642 as a colonel in the forces raised to quell the Irish ...

  7. 19 de fev. de 2023 · The town of Moncks Corner dates back to 1728 and is named for landowner Thomas Monck, a slaveholder who branded his slaves on their chest with his name "T Monck." Windley, Lathan (2014). A Profile of Runaway Slaves in Virginia and South Carolina from 1730 Through 1787. Routledge.