Heiress to Petherton Park near Bridgwater and a hansome fortune.
Died without male issue so the title became extinct.
Sir Thomas Dyke Acland 3rd Bart
M.P. for Devon 1746-7, and Somerset 28 Jan 1767.
Her "dowry included the three large Somerset estates of Pixton near Dulverton, Tetton near Taunton, and Holnicote near Minehead; in token of this brilliant match her surname was added to her husband's and it has remained in use by the main line of the family ever since." Killerton House, The National Trust; History of Killerton by Anne Acland, pp 43.
Elizabeth Dyke of Tetton, near Taunton, was sole heiress to her father and uncle, both of whom had accumulated large estates from the Blackford and Dyke families. A Devon Family: The Story of the Aclands by Anne Acland, pp 15.
Of New Lodge, Berkhampstead
Captain Nicholas Tettersell - trading from the Sussex coast he agreed to take King Charles II to France for £60 but then upped the price to £200 when he realised who his passenger was. When Charles was restored to his throne he awarded Tettersell and his family a pension of £100 a year for 99 years. He became landlord of the Old Ship Inn, High Constable and is buried in St Nicholas’s Churchyard.
1881 Census: Married
Occupation: Vicar of Colwich
Dwelling: Hinton Admiral
Census Place: Christchurch, Hampshire, EnglandEducated at Wadham College, Oxford (BA 1831, MA 1833), Harland took Holy Orders and served as Curate of Newborough (1833-6) and Sandon (1836-51); Vicar of Colwich, Staffordshire (1851); and Prebendary in Lichfield Cathedral (1873). His works include:
- Church Psalter and Hymnal, 1855, 1863, 1865, 1876
- Index Sermonum, 1858Source: http://www.cyberhymnal.org/bio/h/a/r/harland_e.htm