Bugby Hole

Estate Details


Associated People (2)

The dates listed below have different categories as denoted by the letters in the brackets following each date. Here is a key to explain those letter codes:

  • SD - Association Start Date
  • SY - Association Start Year
  • EA - Earliest Known Association
  • ED - Association End Date
  • EY - Association End Year
  • LA - Latest Known Association
- 1826 [EY] → Owner
1798 [SY] - 1798 [EY] → Not known

In 1798 Thomas Oliver of London conveyed Bugby Hole to Henry Dyett.


Associated Claims (1)

£894 18S 8D

Estate Information (4)

What is this?

1817
[Name] [no name given]  
 

Return of Thomas Hill Esquire, owner; returned by his attorney William Shiell. The 590 enslaved listed are attached to four estates that are not identified in this volume but are identified in later registers as Reeds Hill and Spring; Amersham's; Farrels and Bugbyhole; and Dubery's. For further details see the entry for Reeds Hill and Spring Estates.

 
T 71/447 240-259
1821
[Name] [no name given]  
 

Returned by Thomas Hill, owner; The 578 enslaved people given are attached to several estates including: Reeds Hill and Spring; Amersham's; Farrels and Bugbyhole; and Dubery's. For further details see the entry for Reeds Hill and Spring Estates.

 
T 71/448 246-262
1828
[Number of enslaved people] 54(Tot)  
[Name] Bugbyhole  
 

Return of Thomas Hill, deceased, owner; returned by Thomas Henry Percy and Robert Dobridge attorneys to Kensington and Paine, mortgagees. Farrels and Bugbyhole Estates are returned together with a total of 150 enslaved people (174 on the previous return) [total given does not match the number of enslaved people listed]; total of enslaved does not include one enslaved 'woman named Sally Evans now absent and supposed to be dead'.

 
T 71/450 167-172
1831
[Number of enslaved people] 53(Tot)  
[Name] Bugbyhole  
 

Return of Thomas Hill, deceased, owner; returned by John Dobridge, attorney of Kensington and Payne, mortgagees of Hill's Farrels and Bugbyhole estates. The estates are returned together with a total of 156 enslaved people (150 on the previous return).

 
T 71/451 76-80