The Mapleys of Lathbury

There was one Mapley family in Loughton, according to the Censuses 1840's-1860's. John Mapley, born in Little Linford to Thomas Mapley and Ann Frost, married Mary Timms in Loughton in 1811 and settled there.

Loughton is an ancient village and modern district in the civil parish of Loughton and Great Holm in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, England. Loughton is situated on the Roman Road of Watling Street, the prinicpal turnpike road which crossed Buckingham County in the Middle Ages, and extended from Dover and London through St Albans to Wroxeter in Shropshire. A Turnpike at Loughton (and elsewhere) was established by an Act of Parliament on 4 March 1707 in order to provide a return on the investment required to once more pave this important road.

The village name is an Old English language word, and means 'Luhha's estate'. In the Domesday Book of 1086 the village was recorded as Lochintone.

All Saints Church is the oldest surviving building in Loughton – the chancel and nave probably date from the first years of the 13th century

Go to Loughton Censuses 1841-1911 ==>
Go to Buckinghamshire ==>

1st. Loughton Generation

John Mapley (1786 - ) m. Mary Timms (1786 - ) in 1811

  • Ann Mapley (1819 -)
  • Susannah Mapley (1822 -)
  • Thomas Mapley (1824)

2nd Loughton Generation

Ann Mapley (1819 - ) m.

  • John Mapley (1856 -)