Of was born about 1280, the son of Warren [Hill] de Neenton, of Hoghwyk and Matilda. The place is not known.
His wife is not known. They were married, but the date and place have not been found. Their only known child was Adam (c1300-?).
| Event | Date | Details | Source | Multimedia | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Birth | ABT 1280 |
Note 1
!Source: The National Archives' catalogue https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/6b915353-9958-47c3-9144-4133089b1a4b
55 - Lancashire Archives
DDHE - HESKETH of RUFFORD
DDHE 25 - LONGTON
Catalogue description Quitclaim : Henry of the Hall of Longeton to Alice of the How and John of the [?How.] --...
Reference: DDHE 25/33
Description:
Quitclaim : Henry of the Hall of Longeton to Alice of the How and John of the [?How.] -- a messuage and curtilage and 2½ac. land in Longeton, had from Adam son of Simon of the How -- Witn: Sir Robert lord of Shirburn, William of Farinton, William of Hoghwik, Thomas of Noteshagh, Robert Busshel, Adam the Clerk of Longeton, Adam the Clerk of Penwortham, and others. Given at Longeton, Sun. in Feast of St. Giles, 5 Ed. III.
Date: [1 Sep. 1331.]
Held by: Lancashire Archives, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Note: “The How” sounds to me like an abbreviation for Hoghwyk. If so, then Simon is likely a later born son of Warren, born around 1280. John would likely be Adam’s known son born about 1290. Adam the Clerk of Longeton, is probably Adam Clerk born about 1295.