Samuel Willoughby
Samuel Willoughby (1842-1915), mechanical engineer
1842 Born in East Stonehouse, Devon[1], son of William Willoughby (1805-1879)
1851 William Willoughby 46, smith, employer of 15 man and ..boys, lived in Plymouth with Mary Willoughby 40, William Willoughby 21, John Willoughby 17, Mary Willoughby 14, Joseph Willoughby 12, Samuel Willoughby 8, Eliza Willoughby 6, Emma Willoughby 4, Sophia Willoughby 1[2]
1871 Samuel Willoughby 28, engineer and iron founder, employing 14 men and 12 boys, lived in Redruth with Mary A Willoughby 28, Fredrick S Willoughby 8, Ada A O Willoughby 6, Douglas C O Willoughby 4, Marian M Willoughby 2, Mabel Willoughby 8 months[3]
1881 Samuel Willoughby 39, Engineer And Ironfounder, lived in Plymouth with Mary Ann Willoughby 38, Frederick Samuel Willoughby 18, Ada Ann Oborn Willoughby 16, Douglas Charles Oborn Willoughby 14, Mabel Willoughby 10, Thomas Symons Oborn Willoughby 5[4]
1894 of Chiswick, engineer, patented "Improvements in or connected with Destructor Furnaces for the Treatment of Town Refuse"
1900 of Notting Hill, consulting engineer, with Henry Hoyne Fox FRIBA, consulting engineer, patented "Improvements in or connected with Crematorium Furnaces"
1901 Samuel Willoughby 58, mechanical engineer, and Mabel Willoughby 30 were visiting, James J Stokes and his wife Marion, a daughter of Samuel, in Chiswick[5]
1906 Samuel Willoughby of Kew, engineer, with John Robert Anslow of Fulham patented "Improvements in or connected with Folding Bedsteads"
1907 of Kew, engineer, patented "Improvements in or connected with the Tyres of Wheels for Vehicles Intended to Run on Common Roads"
1910 of Clerkenwell, engineer, with Gerrit Jan Mooy of Finsbury, wood carver, patented "Improvements in or connected with the Tyres of Wheels for Vehicles Intended to Run on Common Roads"
1911 of Clerkenwell, engineer, with Gerrit Jan Mooy of Finsbury, wood carver, "Improvements in or connected with the Manufacture of Tyres for the Wheels of Vehicles intended to Run on Common Roads"
1915 Died in Islington[6]

