The marriage in 1672 of George Scrivener to Dorothy Curry was recorded at St Dunstan in the West.
Five christening records of the children of George and Dorothy Scrivener at that church in 1675-84 show their address as White Alley from where Dorothy, thought to have been in 1697, had entered a maker’s mark at Goldsmiths Hall.
It seems safe to say, although Grimwade argues against, that Dorothy was George’s widow and that she entered the mark in 1694 following the burial of her husband at St Dunstan in that year.
Dorothy married Thomas Petty at St Dunstan in 1701.
SCRIVENER George and Dorothy (Grimwade p.654)
Moderators: buckler, MCB, silverly
Re: SCRIVENER George and Dorothy (Grimwade p.654)
31 March 1698, free, Georgius son of Georg Scrivener goldsmith Chancery Lane.
5 April 1717 Charles Wren London freedom of the city admission paper signed. He was the son of Robert Wren late of Cantebury in the County of Kent gent deceased and was apprenticed to George Scrivener cutler of London for seven years from 20 January 1698.
5 April 1717 Charles Wren London freedom of the city admission paper signed. He was the son of Robert Wren late of Cantebury in the County of Kent gent deceased and was apprenticed to George Scrivener cutler of London for seven years from 20 January 1698.