
WEIGHT: 63 kg
Bust: 2
1 HOUR:70$
NIGHT: +60$
Services: Gangbang / Orgy, Fetish, Hand Relief, Facials, Deep Throat
The monument of Mrs Margery Wright, late wife to Gilb. Here she died August 11 The earliest information we have about Margery Wright is from the registers of the church of St Clement Dane in London, in This tells us that Margery was a widow. Her previous husband had been buried at St Clement Danes on 23rd October She married Gilbert Wright just 2 months later.
St Clement Danes, As an aside, it's interesting to note the fluidity of spelling in these documents. In the marriage register, Margery's surname is "Gogyn," in the marriage licence it's "Goodgin" and in Robart's burial record it's "Goodgyn.
Discrepancies like this make the historical researcher's job slightly more challenging! Extrapolating from what William Lilly writes in his book, if Margery was around 70 years old in , she must have been born around Parish registers were formally introduced in England and Wales in when Thomas Cromwell, chief minister to Henry VIII, issued an injunction requiring that in each parish of the Church of England registers of all baptisms, marriages, and burials be kept.
It may have been her husband or a relative or perhaps she commissioned it herself. The monument is of wood and we believe it was made by Hugh Hall, who was active in Ashby between around and the late s.
We see Margery in a white ruff and blue bodice, though the present decoration of the monument is by no means original. It has been cleaned and repainted regularly, most recently in the s, when it was repainted after the whole church was steam cleaned! Trustees collected rents from tenants at half yearly intervals. The money was used variously to secure apprenticeships for poor boys with local tradesmen and to buy cloth to make gowns for the poor.