“. . . from Gatton, Surrey, just north of the Sussex border. His is the last of the four wills made on the “Welcome” that we possess; its date is September 26. Unmarried, he left £10 to each of the three children - Adam, Miriam, and Anne - of his deceased sister, Miriam Short. He also left them all the goods he had with him on hte “Welcome”. This certainly implied that they were on the ship with him, for what good would household possessions and food in Pennsylvania be to three young people in England? Miriam was certainly on board the “Welcome”, for she married another passenger, Goerge Thompson, a few months after the ship arrived. Ingram’s is the most interesting and the most informative of the four wills. As was usual, he left money to his executors (in the case £10 to John Songhurst and £5 to Thomas Wynne). He also left £2 to David Ogden, one of the witnesses. Even more interesting was his gift of £5 to Jane Batchelor, a young woman of Penn’s household in Sussex and herself the owner of 500 acres of land.pp. 12-13