I am researching a branch of the Ambler Family and have been reading the book "The Ambler Family" available for searching in the ancestry card catalogue.
In the early decades of the 18th century a number of Amblers were baptized at the Nonconformist Heywoods Chapel in Northowram, Yorkshire, England and in the book the phrase "baptized by Oliver Heywood" is used several times after the death of Oliver Heywood (at least the only one I can find died in 1702).
Does anybody know if this was a common phrase used because the Meeting House was named after Oliver Heywood, Heywoods Chapel, or was there another Oliver Heywood in Northowram at the time?
In the early decades of the 18th century a number of Amblers were baptized at the Nonconformist Heywoods Chapel in Northowram, Yorkshire, England and in the book the phrase "baptized by Oliver Heywood" is used several times after the death of Oliver Heywood (at least the only one I can find died in 1702).
Does anybody know if this was a common phrase used because the Meeting House was named after Oliver Heywood, Heywoods Chapel, or was there another Oliver Heywood in Northowram at the time?
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