excerpt:

August 1997

The Nicolas Tostevin on your chart that you say appears to disapear from Guernsey is a very tempting connection point. In an attempt to approach this rationally, here are reasons for linking Nicholas Toadvine to the Tostevin family of Guernsey, specifically that one Nicolas Tostevin:

  1. His last name, Toadvine, pronounced in English soulds like the name Tostevin as it is pronounced in the Channel Islands.

  2. I don't know what the record book designation is for this yet:
    8 June 1675: William Breton proved his right to 315 acres of land for trasnporting himself, Sarah his wife; William, his son; Nicholas Toadvane; William Gordy, Edward Prime and Mary Neale in the Province to inhabit."

    This supports the claim that Nicholas Toadvine arrived in America in 1675.

  3. A person by the name of 'Toadvine or Todvane' is on the passenger list of a ship called Bachelor, captained by Roger Bagg (writing on form made the 'a' in Bagg ambiguous, but I'm not sure what other letter it could be), which left from England in April (questioned month) of 1675. This is from a Passenger Ship Search & Attestation form from the MacDaid Memorial Library. I don't know where the library is located though.

  4. On your chart, as you pointed out, there is a Nicolas Tostevin born circa 1644 who, by absence in record books, appears to have left Guernsey. Nicholas Toadvine arrived in Maryland in 1675. A match would mean he was about 31 years old. That would allow for sufficient time in Guernsey to learn farming skills needed to make good use of the land he received in Maryland.

  5. Probably Liber IKL, Somerset County Court House: "Nicholas Todvin and Sarah Lowey were mary'd by Mr. William Brereton [possibly Brewington] one of his Lordshipps Justices of ye Peace for ye County of Sommersett ye 15 November 1675."
    This is more evidence to pin down his arrival date and age.

  6. His first name, Nicholas, according to the information you've compiled, was a common name in Guernsey among Tostevins in the 1600's. Nicholas Toadvine named a son Nicholas. He also named a son Thomas -- the Nicolas Tostevin on your chart had a brother named Thomas!

  7. From the book Land Records of Somerset County Maryland by Ruth T. Dryden which organizes the land records by the patent: