Identity area
Type of entity
Authorized form of name
Parallel form(s) of name
Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules
Other form(s) of name
Identifiers for corporate bodies
Description area
Dates of existence
History
On 28 February 1673, John Bache was apprenticed to William Harrison by his father Thomas Bache, a yeoman from Avery Salop. Bache finished his service on 5 March 1680. His first son, also named John, was baptized 5 June 1681. His wife and the mother of his son John, Margarett (no previous surname given), was buried 11 September 1682 at St Mary Woolnoth. Bache was then married 28 June 1683 in the same parish to Suzanna Moore with whom he had three sons and four daughters. Bache entered a joint mark with William Denny (who was also apprenticed by William Harrison) which was undated and estimated by Arthur Grimwade to be in April 1697 at Dove Court, Lombard Street. On 11 August 1697, Bache is noted to have signed a petition 'against the work of "aliens and foreigners"'. His second mark was entered without Denny on 1 November 1700 and his third 20 June 1720. Two unregistered marks have also been attributed to Bache for a communion patten plate and trencher salts. The spelling of his name ranges from Bache, Backe and Batch in church registers. This biographical information is available in Grimwade's London Goldsmiths on pp. 427-8 and his marks on p. 20 (mark for 1700), p. 42 (mark for 1697), p. 88 (mark for 1720) and p. 248-9 (two unregistered marks for 1711/1713 and an unknown date).
Places
St Mary Woolnoth (1688-1701) and Dove Court, Lombard Street (1700-1729)
Legal status
Functions, occupations and activities
largeworker
Mandates/sources of authority
London Goldsmiths 1697-1837: Their Marks and Lives from the Original Registers at Goldsmiths' Hall and Other Sources by Arthur G. Grimwade (London: Faber and Faber, 1976).