Antony genealogy heraldry and family history resources

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Description

Antony or West Antony, a parish in Cornwall. It is also called Anthony St Jacob. It lies on Lynher Creek and the Hamoaze, 4 miles west of Devonport station on tho G.W.R., and 6 SE of St Germans, and has a post office, of the name of Antony, under Devonport. Acreage, 3290 of land and 882 of water; population of the civil parish, 3684; of the ecclesiastical parish of East Antony, 1259. Antony House is a large square edifice of Pentnan stone, built in 1721 by Gibbs, and contains an interesting collection of old pictures. Torpoint, in the parish, is a pleasant place, and, owing to its proximity to Devonport and Plymouth, is a favourite residence of officers connected with the dockyards and the navy at these towns. Antony Passage, at East Antony, has a ferry to Trematon. Beggar's Island, below the passage, was named after Bamfyeld Moore Carew, commonly called King of the Beggars. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Truro; net value, £195. The church was built in 1420, but has a tower of the previous century, and it contains monuments of Lady Margery Arundel, Richard Carew, who wrote the “Survey of Cornwall," and Captain Graves, R.N., who figured in the time of George II. The curacy of Merifield is united with the vicarage, and the perpetual curacy of Torpoint is a separate incumbency. There is a Wesleyan chapel. The workhouse of St Germans is in this parish.

Transcribed from The Comprehensive Gazetteer of England and Wales, 1894-5


Census

Below are links to all of the Antony census returns available online, with the dates the census' were taken
1841
6th June 1841
30th March 1851
7th April 1861
2nd April 1871
3rd April 1881
5th April 1891
31st March 1901