36 />//' ttii'l Letters of Francis Gallon 



The Buttons are descended from an old Glamorganshire family, 

 and there are several distinguished men of this name. Robert Button, 

 who married Edith Batt, was a near relative of Admiral Sir Thomas 

 Button, probably first cousin or first cousin once removed, but the 

 evidence is traditional and I have as yet no proper pedigree worked 

 out. Sir Thomas Button, however, was clearly a stubborn old fighter, 

 much of Robert Button's type. He was one of the earliest to seek for 

 a North-west passage in 1612, and although he did not discover it, he 

 for the first time, amid great hardships in the ship Resolution with the 

 pinnace Discovery, explored the coasts of Hudson's Bay. Button's 

 Bay and Isle, Resolution Island and Nelson River (called after the 

 master of his ship who died there) still remind us of Button's voyage. 

 Later he was Admiral of the Irish seas, busily engaged in repressing 

 the numerous pirates of those days. As in the case of most strenuous 

 men, he succeeded in quarrelling with officialdom, but the charges 

 raised against him were absurd, were easily disproven, and probably only 

 raised to avoid paying his salary, which remained unsettled at his death. 



When Robert Button married on his release from gaol Edith Batt 

 in 1672, he is described as of Taunton, Somersetshire, and by trade he 

 was a grocer. They had eleven children, of whom no less than eight 

 died in infancy. The youngest, Robert, born 1693, married twice, first 

 (March 1716) Mary Ellis, and second Martha Vickris 1 (October 1719). 

 Both died within ten years of their marriages. Ellis, the child of the 

 first, married a cousin, another Mary Ellis, but does not appear to have 

 had any children ; he died aged 40. His father, the second Robert, 

 died aged 33 in 1726. 



Those who survived were Elizabeth (1689 -1754) and Sarah 

 (1 682 1754), who married John Galton of Yatton in 1703. Elizabeth 

 married (1723) Joseph Gifford, of Wellington, who settled at Taunton. 

 Three daughters died as infants, one son only, Joseph Gifford (b. 1724), 

 survived, but did not marry and died in 1801, suspicious of all his 

 relatives. His father died in 1730. 



The mortality of the Buttons 2 is remai'kable, and doubtless points 



1 A well-known Quaker name. 



3 Edith Button (ne Batt) was 42 years old at the death of her husband. In the 

 following year she married Matthew Perin, the companion in Ilchester gaol of her father 

 Jaspar Batt. Perin was then 60 years of age, and died three years after. His widow 

 married a third time a year later Edward Watts, fifteen years her junior. There was 

 no issue of either of these marriages. 



