

The village assembled on Lustleigh church steps
for the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1887. Great grandfather Thomas
is wearing the white hat on the right of the picture. To celebrate the
jubilee he donated the granite for the new church steps. My grandfather
and his older brother William are also in the picture.
One of the old elm trees, now no longer a feature
of the English countryside due to Dutch Elm disease, can clearly be seen.

My grandfather Percy Nosworthy WILLS was born at
Eastwrey in 1878 and died in Bournemouth in1955.
He was 10 years old when his mother died and 13
when his father Thomas died. The family nanny was Clara DISCOMBE.
After his father died he was educated at Blundells
School.
He married Mary TOMS and worked most of his life
as a farm bailiff in Devon and Somerset. He owned Stippaden farm in South
Brent where he lived when his family were young.




Dick Wills of Narracombe, who died in 2003 at the age of 80, wrote his first letter inquiring about family history when he was aged 16. Over the years he gained a great understanding of the local branches of the Lustleigh Wills family. I was fortunate to work on the family history with him over his last 15 to 20 years. Dick was greatly helped by Bill Amery who was at the same time researching his Amery family and who documented a great deal of information on property ownership and extracts from the registers etc. In more recent years, thanks to the Internet, I have worked with 5th cousin Greg Ramstadt in Utah and together we have gained considerable information on those lines that strayed away from Lustleigh and also on the early Wills family before they moved to Lustleigh.