[The Life of Captain Matthew Flinders by Ernest Scott]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of Captain Matthew Flinders CHAPTER 1 5/14
He believed, also, that his people had some connection with two men named Flinders or Flanders, who fled from Holland during the religious persecutions, and settled, in Queen Elizabeth's reign, in Nottinghamshire as silk stocking weavers.
It would be very interesting if it were clear that there was a link between the family and the origins of the great Nottingham hosiery trade.
A Flinders may in that case have woven silk stockings for the Royal termagant, and Lord Coke's pair, which were darned so often that none of the original fabric remained, may have come from their loom. Matthew Flinders himself wrote the note: "Ruddington near Nottingham (it is four miles south of the town) is the place whence the Flinders came;" and he ascertained that an ancestor was Robert Flinders, a Nottingham stocking-weaver. A family tradition relates that the Lincolnshire Flinders were amongst the people taken over to England by Sir Cornelius Vermuyden, a Dutch engineer of celebrity in his day, who undertook in 1621 to drain 360,000 acres of fen in Norfolk, Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire.
He was financed by English and Dutch capitalists, and took his reward in large grants of land which he made fit for habitation and cultivation.
Vermuyden and his Flemings were not allowed to accomplish their work of reclamation without incurring the enmity of the natives.
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