The only mention of the name in the Dictionary of Brazilian Families is
this:
"Família estabelecida na Bahia, à qual pertence Eduardo Carlos Munford, Despachante Geral da Alfândega da Bahia [Salvador], em 1881. Residente em Rio Vermelho" which means:
"Family established in Bahia, to which belongs Eduardo Carlos Munford, General Dispatcher of the Customs of Bahia (City of Salvador), in 1881. Resident in Rio Vermelho (Red River)."
Courtesy of Ricardo D. Garcia
I suspect that Eduardo Carlos Munford may be Edward Mumford, born about 1848 in Bahia to an English merchant, George Mumford. (see below) George seems to have sent most of his children to be educated in England and Edward can be found in the 1861 census as a scholar. However, we can find no further record of Edward in either the census or marriage records in England, which could be explained if he returned to Bahia. Edward had at least six siblings viz : Henry, Jane, William, Joseph, George & John Born between 1846 and 1858 and a half-brother Maria Amalia Mumford.
Courtesy of Stephen Humphrey
"Here
in Brazil, I had a friend with the name of ARCHIMEDES CARLOS MUNFORD, he
was Captain of the São Paulo Fire Department. Unhappily he
died in 1997 the victim of a disease of the brain, he left many friends.
He was here a much loved person and they have named a station of the São
Paulo Fire Department in São Paulo City, after him called Munford
Station. He was born in Brazil
in the city of Limeira inside the Sao Paulo State. I thought you
would like to know that also in Brazil it possessed a relative, and that
this relative was a very wanted and dear person."
George
Mumford, a successful British merchant, had a long-term liaison with two
Brazilian women simultaneously without apparent damage to his social position in
the community.
When British merchant George Mumford died in February 1862, his probate inventory made reference to his long time companion Maria Constanca Ebbe and their eight children, five of whom were being educated in Europe at that moment. The testament written five days before his death states that he had fathered eight illegitimate, all of whom he had formally recognized. In fact, five of them were being educated in Europe at the time of his death. Furthermore, Mumford had fathered a child by another unmarried Brazilian woman, Balbina, and in the will he recognized the child as his own. Mumford's estate included ten slaves, three houses in and around town, and stock in the Bahia & Sao Francisco Railway and Banco de Bahia companies. This would have been enough to establish him amongst the more successful of Bahia's British merchants. Mumford entrusted the custody of all his minor children to his business partner Francis White Mackay and his British wife. George Mumford was buried on 16 February 1862 by Reverend Nicolay at the British Cemetery of Bahia
Courtesy of
Louise H Guenther. British Merchants in nineteenth century Brazil: business, culture and identity in Brazil, 1808 - 50.Oxford Centre for Brazilian Studies,
One story of how the Munfords came to Brazil is related by Adriane
Munford as follows My granny told me that her grandfather was Henrique
Munford. He came from France to Brazil where he met a slave named Antônia
do Espírito Santo. He got many children with her. The father
of my grandmother was one of his sons. He was named Henrique Álvaro
Munford who got married with Maria Antônia Santiago. Henrique Álvaro
Munford had many children with different women, so I think there are many
Munfords in a Brazil city named "Santo Amaro da Purificação"
where that history has began.
Whilst Eliane
Munford reports that her grandfather was born in Salvador, Bahia but
the she knows that the family arrived in Brazil from "Guiana Inglesa" (British
Guiana 1796-1966).
MATHEUS REIS DE SOUZA MUNFORD's result are mentioned in Universidade
Federal da Bahia.
This website
refers to a book "Arte e técnica" written by Lewis Munford.
This
website on
the history of architecture in São Paulo Brazil makes reference to the work Willian Munford
- Depois, no ano de 1976, na EMURB - São Paulo, atua no projeto
de organização da Praça da Sé.
This article
on Biological Anthropology and Human Evolution makes reference to Munford
D.; Zanini M.C. & Neves,W.A. (1995) Human cranial variation in South
America: Implications for the settlement of the New World. Brazilian Journal
of Genetics, 18:673-688.
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