Francis Marsh – aged 55/56 – elder brother of Milbourne, Mary and George
Milbourne Marsh – aged 54/55
Elizabeth Marsh (ne Evans)
James Crisp Esq – sometime merchant
Eliza Marsh (later Crisp) – aged 28/29
Burrish Crisp – aged 0/1
Francis Milbourne Marsh – aged 25/26 – son of Milbourne and Elizabeth
John Marsh – aged 16/17 – son of Milbourne and Elizabeth
Mary Duval (ne Marsh) – aged 49/50 – Sister of George and Milbourne
John Duval – husband of Mary Duval
Elizabeth Duval – age 11/12
George Marsh – aged 41/42
Ann Marsh (ne Long) – aged 43/44
George Marsh – aged 14/15
William Marsh – aged 8/9
Anne Marsh – aged 3/4
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Statement of the Services and principal Events in the life of the late George Marsh Esq.
A Commissioner of His Majesty’s Navy.
On the 13 August 1764 Lord Egmont quitted the Admiralty having previously appointed Mr.Marsh a Commissioner of the Victualling Board and Comptroller of the Receiver’s Office of the (opening, spening?) Duty; his Lordship also assured Mr.Marsh that he had recommended him to the King to be removed on the first vacancy to the Navy Board and that His Majesty had been pleased to make a memorandum of his recommendation.
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10 April 1764
Took a lease of a house at Camberwell Green for 14 years.
13th May 1764
Set out with Lord Egmont, Lord Howe [Admiral Richard Howe, 1st Viscount Howe, 1726-1799] and Lord Carysford [John Proby, 1st Baron Carysfort, 1720-1772] with Mr Stephens to visit the Dockyards.
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In the first year after Mr.Ommanney was taken into the House, the Interest of the Stock and Gain in the business was £1406..5..0 which has been annually encreasing ever since, and Mr.Marsh was so much Mr.Ommanney’s friend that he took him without any Premium which he was offered by others.
He now represents as a (salve?) for his ingratitude that the trouble of the whole business has been on him, a trouble he most eagerly and thankfully embraced, as many others would gladly have done.