Maria Charlotte CARBONELL

Father: John CARBONELL

Family 1: Rev. Henry Samuel EYRE
  1. Henry Samuel EYRE
  2. Walpole Edwin EYRE
  3. Frederick John EYRE
  4. Mary Elizabeth Frances RICHARDSON-EYRE
  5. Alethea Fanny EYRE

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 _John CARBONELL _|
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|--Maria Charlotte CARBONELL 
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|_________________|
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INDEX

Notes

!SOURCE: BURKE'S GENEALOGICAL AND HERALDIC HISTORY OF THE LANDED GENTRY, INCLUDING AMERICAN FAMILIES WITH BRITISH DESCENT, Burke's Peerage Limited, London, 1939, p. 729.

!SOURCE: BURKE'S GENEALOGICAL AND HERALDIC HISTORY OF THE LANDED GENTRY, Eighteenth Edition, Vol. I, Burke's Peerage Limited, London, 1965, p. 248. 2nd dau. of John Carbonell.

!SOURCE: Mary Elizabeth Frances Richardson-Eyre, A HISTORY OF THE WILTSHIRE FAMILY OF EYRE, Mitchell and Hughes, London, 1897, pp. 10-11. A sermon preached at All Saints' the Sunday after her death, January 30, 1887, by the Rev. A. Fulkes, Vicar of Steventon, Berks, thus describes her life and character: "The life of some lies in public paths, of others in private, some, especially Christian women, let their light shine more at home than out in the world; the Christian woman at home as wife adn mother, beloved by her husband and children, is always a shining example of devotion to the double duty -- her duty to God -- her duty towards man. Such an example was our Vicar's late wife Mrs. Eyre, whom we laid to her rest yesterday as being one of the Blessed Dead who have died in the Lord. From her earliest years, I understand, she has borne the same unchanging beautiful character of simple piety and kindness of heart, love of peacemaking, sympathy with the poor in every parish she has lived. Before the flowers have quite faded on the grave, this is the time to speak of the departed. This is not the place for undue flattery, none of us would like to be praised beyond our deserts after our death, but this is the time and plae for the simple and ungarnished truth, and I feel sure that all who knew Mrs. Eyre best, all who ever lived with her, all who have at any time been broughyt into contact with her cheerful eagerness for the happiness and peace of every one in her path and sphere of life, all today would testify that what has been said in her praise here this morning falls short of, rather than goes beyond, the fats of her amiable and truly Christian life."


Created by Sparrowhawk 1.0 (4/17/1996) on Sun Mar 11 17:58:57 2001