See also
Husband:
Daniel Garnault (1737-1786)
Wife:
Sarah Langhorn (c. 1744-1797)
Children:
Marriage:
5 Dec 1769
St Mary, Whitechapel, Middlesex
Name:
Daniel Garnault
Sex:
Male
Father:
Mother:
Birth:
6 Nov 1737
London
Occupation:
4 Jan 1753 (age 15)
Apprenticed to Joseph Webb, silk thrower
Death:
22 Jan 1786 (age 48)
Enfield, Middlesex
Name:
Sarah Langhorn
Sex:
Female
Father:
-
Mother:
-
Birth:
c. 1744
Death:
16 Feb 1797 (age 52-53)
Name:
Sarah Garnault
Sex:
Female
Birth:
4 Sep 1770
Death:
Oct 1771 (age 1)
Name:
Ann Garnault
Sex:
Female
Spouse:
Henry Carington Bowles (1763-1830)
Children:
Anne Sarah Bowles (1800-1856)
Henry Carrington Bowles (1801-1852)
Jane Mary Bowles (1802-1863)
Francisca Bowles (1805-1859)
John Bowles (1808-1853)
Garnault Bowles (1812-1819)
Note:
A London goldsmith and member of the House of Commons, Hugh Myddelton, while sitting on a Commons committee looking at the problem of the water shortage in London, offered to undertake a scheme to bring water from Amwell Springs 38 miles away in Hertfordshire through Enfield to Islington. Work began on the New River in 1609 and was completed in 1613. King James I, despite falling into the water during an inspection of the work, knighted Myddelton in 1622. A lot of investors in the New River Company did very well with the success of this project including the Garnaults, who owned Bowling Green House along the path of the New River at Enfield in Hertfordshire. When Daniel Garnault died in 1809, the ownership of the property went to his sister, Anne, and thus to Henry Carrington Bowles. They decided to knock down the old Bowling Green House and built a new home beside it. Myddelton House, named in honor of Sir Hugh Myddelton, was completed in 1818.
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bowlesfamily/NewRiverCompany.htm
Birth:
1771
Tottenham, Middlesex
Baptism:
6 Jan 1772 (age 0-1)
St Mary, Whitechapel, Middlesex
Death:
27 Jul 1812 (age 40-41)
Name:
Daniel Garnault
Sex:
Male
Birth:
24 Apr 1773
Death:
14 May 1809 (age 36)
A London goldsmith and member of the House of Commons, Hugh Myddelton, while sitting on a Commons committee looking at the problem of the water shortage in London, offered to undertake a scheme to bring water from Amwell Springs 38 miles away in Hertfordshire through Enfield to Islington. Work began on the New River in 1609 and was completed in 1613. King James I, despite falling into the water during an inspection of the work, knighted Myddelton in 1622. A lot of investors in the New River Company did very well with the success of this project including the Garnaults, who owned Bowling Green House along the path of the New River at Enfield in Hertfordshire. When Daniel Garnault died in 1809, the ownership of the property went to his sister, Anne, and thus to Henry Carrington Bowles. They decided to knock down the old Bowling Green House and built a new home beside it. Myddelton House, named in honor of Sir Hugh Myddelton, was completed in 1818.
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bowlesfamily/NewRiverCompany.htm