The Douglas Archives Genealogy Pages

Discovering our Douglas Ancestors and their Relatives

Share Print Bookmark

Notes


Matches 24,201 to 24,250 of 29,006

      «Prev «1 ... 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 ... 581» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
24201 Some sources presume her to be the mother of John and Susannah but this seems unlikely as she appears to have died in childbirth after just 18 months of her marriage. Moray, Nicolas (I9483)
 
24202 Some sources say 13 April 1768 Bloomfield, Lt.-Gen. Benjamin (1st Baron Bloomfield of Oakhampton And Redwood) (I132270)
 
24203 Some sources say born 1378 Stafford, Edmund (5th Earl of Stafford) (I114621)
 
24204 Some sources say her father was Sir Andrew Sibblad of Balgony Sibbald, Isabel (I111625)
 
24205 Some sources say Peeke Peek, Gwendolen (I77067)
 
24206 Some sources say Peeke Peek, Sir Cuthbert (2nd Baronet) (I77068)
 
24207 Some sources say that she was married to James Lockart, father of William. William is stated to have been 15 when his uncle, George douglas died in 1635/36.

Robert Douglas, in his Peerage of scotland, states: James Douglas, (George's brother) married, and had an only son, who died also without issue. His daughter, Margaret, was married to Sir James Lockhart of Lee, of whom the Lockharts of Lee, Carnwath, and Castlehill, are descended. 
Douglas, Martha (I103598)
 
24208 Some sources show as Mary Jane, including on her death certificate. This also shows her age as 59, giving a date of birth of 1824. I previously was showing it as 1814. Her death certificate says she was born in Canada. Her 'profession' was 'Farmer's wife'. Hodgins, Maryjane (I11909)
 
24209 Some sources show her as daughter of Malcolm 5th Earl of Lennox but giventhe dates I have gone with the suggestion of Jim Weber below.

Post-em from Jim Weber

"Even though you have sources, for the parents of "Miss" Lennox, by myreckoning she was born too late to be daughter of Malcolm, the 5th Earl(d. 19 Jul 1333). I estimate her birth year to be 1370-90.

My current favorite, as a candidate is Margaret Lennox, 2nd daughter ofDuncan, the 8th Earl. According to CP VII:593, she m. bef. 25 July 1392Robert Menteith of Rusky, who was dead in 1411. CP doesn't mention anysubsequent husband, but she died "bef 1456", which leaves a lot of roomfor a 2nd marriage. My estimated date of Alisdair's daughter who m.James Stewart is 1411-15, which would fit nicely with Menteith's death as1st husband in 1411." 
Lennox, Margaret of (I119541)
 
24210 Some sources show her as daughter of William Drummond, 2nd Laird of Hawthornden Drummond, Rebekah (I77721)
 
24211 Some sources show her as marrying, before 19 May, 1632, William Douglas, of Bonjedward, when she is styled as his spouse in a Discharge by George Douglas of Bonjedward to William Douglas of Cavers. Drummond, Elizabeth (I132752)
 
24212 Some sources show her name as Corrie

Margaret Corne was the daughter of Captain Peter Corne and a granddaughter of Dr. James Henderson. The royal grant was passed down to Margaret who was the first of Dr. Henderson's heirs to take an interest in the lands up in the Mohawk Valley. With her husband George Douglas, she had some land cleared and surveyed, then had a twenty-four room summer Cottage built in 1787.
Margaret and George Douglas had five children: Margaret (1787), Harriett (1790), George (1793), William (1795), and Elizabeth Mary (1799). George died of yellow fever at his wife's home at King's Ferry on the Hudson River. 
Corne, Margaret (Peggy) (I95184)
 
24213 Some sources show him as a grandson of Archibald Douglas, Sir William "Long Legs" (3rd of) Knight (I119688)
 
24214 Some sources show his name as Corrie

Over the years, the Kennedy House in Montrose house also has been known by the names of the successive families that owned it. It has been called the Henry House, the Tate House, the Mackey House and the Johnson House.

It should properly have been called the Corne House, having been built for Peter Corne, openly a loyalist during the Revolution, probably in the 1750's. The Corne name was pronounced locally as "Cor-ney" and sometimes written with an accented final letter--the French accent aigu (?).

Born in the English port city of Hull in 1722, Corne, already "a master mariner," came to New York as a young man and entered into partnership with merchants Anthony and Isaac Van Dam. Not content with the dull routines of commerce, Corne sailed the company's ships to the West African coast. Here he bought slaves and transported them to the island of St. Eustatius in the Dutch Antilles, a center for contraband. High mortality among the workers on sugar plantations made slaves a desirable cargo. Emptied of their human freight, his ships then loaded Caribbean sugar and rum for transport to the North American colonies.

Between 1740 and 1748, during the American phase of Britain's War of the Austrian Succession, with a commission from the colony of New York, Corne became part owner of several privateers. Armed with eight cannon, his brig Nebuchadnezzar wreaked havoc on Dutch and French merchant vessels.

Peter Corne was soon wealthy. He owned town houses in New York City, a summer mansion north of the city that he called Greenwich House (it lent its name to the neighborhood) and homes on Long Island and near the King's Ferry, where he had a farm and a gristmill near Peekskill.

In 1751, he married Elizabeth Henderson, affluent in her own right. Her mother, Thysie Benson, was the daughter of Derrick Benson, a well-to-do New Jersey landowner. Her Scottish-born father, wealthy physician and merchant Dr. James Henderson, owned houses and land in New York City and extensive acreage in the Mohawk Valley.

Peter and Elizabeth Henderson Corne had three daughters. Without her father's consent, on Sunday, June 23, 1773, Letitia, the eldest, married Dennis Kennedy, "a gentleman of New York," in Manhattan's Lutheran Church. Built in 1729 on Broadway at Rector Street, the church would be gutted in the disastrous fire that consumed a third of New York after American troops evacuated he city in 1776. As the father of States Morris Dyckman's wife, Dennis Kennedy is an important figure in the Dyckman family history and the Boscobel story.

The second Corne daughter, Elizabeth, married a lieutenant of artillery and deputy quartermaster general of Hessian troops with an imposing name: Baron Charles August de Girancourt de Vourecourt. Peter Corne roundly disliked the groom. The third, Margaret, married successful New York merchant George Douglas.

A stubborn, die-hard Tory, Peter Corne's name appears frequently in records during the Revolution. British headquarters files, conspiracy committee minutes and newspapers all contain references to him, including three jail sentences served because of his "passionate allegiance to George III in the faces of Rebel committeemen."

Family legend has it that Peter Corne once took the Kennedy children to the cellar of his home. Opening a curtain covering a portrait of British King George III, he commanded them, "Down on your knees to your Master!"

His wife Elizabeth Henderson Corne died in Bushwick, Long Island, on August 30, 1780. Five years later, Peter Corne married his partner Isaac Van Dam's widow, Sara. The relationship soon soured. Toward the end of his life he promised Sara anything in return for a legal separation. Peter Corne died in New York City on July 18, 1807. 
Corne, Capt Peter (I95185)
 
24215 Some sources show just on George between John, 2nd laird, and William of Bonjedward and Andrew of Timpendean Douglas, George (4th of Bonjedward) (I67819)
 
24216 Some sources show William Douglas' wife was Elizabeth Maitland Maitland, Margaret (I155249)
 
24217 Some think him the 4th earl. Dalzell, James (3rd Earl of Carnwarth) (I154210)
 
24218 Some time in 1916, James fell sick and was invalided home on 9th November 1916. He died at his home in Chester of tubercular meningitis on 18th December 1916. The Parish Magazine of January 1917 records his death: Douglas, Lieutenant Commander James Sholto (I104681)
 
24219 Some times shown as son of Christina (of Carrick) Bruce, sister of RobertI (The Bruce) King of Scotland, & Christopher Seton

See Stirnet Genealogy at
http://www.stirnet.com/HTML/genie/british/ss4as/seton01.htm
Main sources:
(1) TSP (Winton), BP1934 (Eglinton).
(2) BLG1850 (Seton of Carish). This not only contains specificinformation about the very early generations that is disputed orconsidered uncertain by TSP & BP1934 but also contains information aboutthe generations around the early Lords that contradicts those othersources, which are thought to be more reliable.
(3) www.setonfamily.com 
De Seton, Alexander (Sir) (I116855)
 
24220 Some Unique History:
"The Blair Surname
The BLAIR surname, unlike many others, has a fairly well establishedorigin. Although there is some question as to who was the "FirstBlair", it is generally accepted that he was an heir of Jean Francois,a Norman, granted Barony of Blare by King William, between 1165 and1200."
"There were two principal Blair families in Scotland; the Blairs ofBlair in Ayrshire and the Blairs of Balthyock in Fife and Perthshire.The ancestor of the Blairs of Blair in Ayrshire was William de Blair,who was mentioned in a contract dated 1205. William is believed to bethe son or grandson of Jean Francois. The ancestor of the Blairs ofBalthyock was Alexander de Blair, who received a charter of landsabout 1214. There are some who believe that Alexander is a directdescendant of Jean Francois, either a brother or nephew of William deBlair (Blairs of Blair in Ayrshire). Others believe that thesefamilies were not related.
These may have been the "Original" Blairs but the Blair name wasadopted by many others with no blood connection throughout history.Every Blair that adopted the name started a new line.
http://www.ortlauserfamilies.org/clark_notes.htm
http://blairgenealogy.com/dna/" [Transcribed 02 August 2006, SLJuhl,compiler]

"HISTORY OF BLAIR
http://home.clara.net/douglaswmartin/Olddalry/historyblair.htm
OBTAINED: 02 August 2006"
"The Barony of Blair was granted by King William of the Scots,surnamed the Lion, in the middle of the 12th century to one JeanFran?ois, a man of Norman descent. Jean?s son changed his name toBlair and he appears to have married a daughter of King John ofEngland. He was called William and held the Barony in 1260. Hissuccessor, Sir Bryce de Blair was an adherent of Sir William Wallaceand was executed by the English at the Barns of Ayr in 1296. Sir Brycewas succeeded by his brother David, whose son, Roger, was knighted byKing Robert the Bruce for his services before and at Bannockburn.There is a stone on the old Keep which reads "Roger de Blair and MarieMair, his spouse". This lady come from Rowallan and spelt her nameeither Muir or Mair. Her sister married King David II, a son of Robertthe Bruce. From the fourteenth century onwards the Blairs continued toprosper at Blair and the estate descended in a direct line until 1752.
The house is difficult to date exactly. The oldest part is thequadroom tower, which was probably built before 1200. The next poletower or keep was built in or about 1202. There are battlements underthe high-pitched roof, over the two oldest towers but it is not knownwhen the high roof was added: probably in the late 17th or early 18thcentury.
During the reign of Mary, Queen of Scots, John Blair was faithful tothe Queen. He died during the reign of James VI. His grandson, Bryce,succeeded in 1610 and died in 1639. He and his son, William, were bothadherents of Charles I and both were knighted.
William married Margaret, daughter of the 2nd Duke of Hamilton andthey left Blair when Cromwell came to Scotland to deal with those ofthe Scots nobility and people who were loyal to the House of Stuart.They returned early in the 1660s and built the south wing of thehouse, whose gables show the lily of France and the initials W B and LM H. William Blair declared for King William and was captured by theEarl of Dundee; he died a prisoner on Skye. Her ladyship did notapprove of her husband's disloyalty to the Stuarts. Their son,William, succeeded his father and was in Government service; hemarried a Campbell. Their daughter succeeded in due course and marriedWilliam Scott who changed his name to Blair on marriage. The lady diedat the birth of their son, who died unmarried before his father, whohad married again and produced several sons, the eldest of whomsucceeded to Blair: Hamilton Blair was a major in the Royal ScotsGreys and carried out many improvements on the estate. His son,William, was MP for Ayrshire and planted many of the old trees stillto be seen. He opposed the Reform Bill of 1832 and subsequently losthis seat. His son, William Fordyce Blair was a captain in the RoyalNavy, and married a Miss Sprot from the Borders. The park and policiesare due to this William: he it was who opened the policies to thepeople of Dalry. He built the Town Hall and subscribed largely to therebuilding of St. Margaret?s Church in the 1860s. He died in 1888 andwas succeeded by the only surviving son, Colonel Fredrick GordonBlair, the father of Miss Blair. Colonel Blair married Miss Mary Bairdof Rosemount (near Ayr). Colonel and Mrs Blair modernised the house in1893 and built a large addition to the west of the 1668 wing."[Transcribed 02 August 2006, SLJuhl, compiler]

"The Wars of the Roses were a series of civil wars fought in medievalEngland from 1455 to 1487 between the House of Lancaster and the Houseof York. The name Wars of the Roses is based on the badges used by thetwo sides, the red rose for the Lancastrians and the white rose forthe Yorkists. Major causes of the conflict include: 1) both houseswere direct descendents of king Edward III; 2) the ruling Lancastrianking, Henry VI, surrounded himself with unpopular nobles; 3) the civilunrest of much of the population; 4) the availability of many powerfullords with their own private armies; and 5) the untimely episodes ofmental illness by king Henry VI."
"The Act of Accord and the events of Wakefield left the 18-year-oldEdward, Earl of March, York's eldest son, as Duke of York and heir tothe throne. Salisbury's death left Warwick, his heir, as the biggestlandowner in England. Margaret travelled to Scotland to negotiate forScottish assistance. Mary of Gueldres, Queen of Scotland agreed togive Margaret an army on condition that she cede the town of Berwickto Scotland and Mary's daughter be betrothed to Prince Edward.Margaret agreed, although she had no funds to pay her army and couldonly promise booty from the riches of southern England, as long as nolooting took place north of the River Trent. She took her army toHull, recruiting more men as she went."

SOURCE: INFOPEDIA 2.0, FUNK & WAGNALLS ENCYCLOPEDIA; 1996 SoftkeyMultimedia, Inc. CD
"ROSES, WARS OF THE,
series of dynastic civil wars in England fought by the rival houses ofLancaster and York between 1455 and 1485 ( see Lancaster, House of ;York, House of ). The struggle was so named because the badge of thehouse of Lancaster was a red rose and that of the house of York awhite rose. The initial opponents were the Lancastrian king of EnglandHenry VI, aided by his queen, Margaret of Anjou, and RichardPlantagenet, 3d duke of York (1411-60). Because of the insanity of theking and military losses in France during the last phase of theHundred Years' War, the authority of the house of Lancaster was badlyshaken. York asserted his claim to the throne in 1460, after havingdefeated the Lancastrian armies at St. Albans in 1455 and atNorthampton in 1460. In the latter year York was defeated and killedat Wakefield. In 1461, however, his son was proclaimed king as EdwardIV and shortly thereafter he decisively defeated Henry and Margaret,who then fled from England. In 1465 Henry was captured and imprisonedin the Tower of London.
The war was revived because of division within the Yorkist faction.Richard Neville, earl of Warwick, aided by George Plantagenet, duke ofClarence, younger brother of Edward, made an alliance with Margaretand led an invasion from France in 1470. Edward was driven into exileand Henry restored to the throne. In 1471, however, Edward returnedand, aided by Clarence, defeated and killed Warwick at the Battle ofBarnet. Shortly thereafter, the Lancastrians were totally defeated atthe Battle of Tewkesbury, and Henry was murdered in the Tower.
After the death of Edward in 1483, his brother Richard usurped thethrone, becoming king as Richard III, and the Lancastrians turned forleadership to Henry Tudor, earl of Richmond, who later became KingHenry VII, founder of the Tudor dynasty. In 1485 the forces of Richardand Henry fought the decisive Battle of Bosworth Field, the last majorencounter of the war. After Richard's death in battle, Henry ascendedthe throne and married Edward's daughter, thus uniting the houses. Thechief result of the war was an increase in the power of the Crown.Battle and execution all but destroyed the old nobility, and thefinancial resources of the monarchy were strengthened by theconfiscation of estates." [Transcribed 22 February 2008, SLJuhl,compiler]

SOURCE: Family Tree Maker, CD276 Scotch-Irish Settlers in America,1500s-1800s, Scotch Irish Pioneers in Ulster and America, VI, HomeTowns of Ulster Families 1691-1718, MyFamily.com, Inc., February 21,2008; Appendix VI, Home Towns of Ulster Families, 1691-1718.
Presbytery Records-Census; printed c.1820.
**Blair, Bryce, R E (Ruling Elder) 1705, 8, 9, 15, C (Commissioner)1708, Belfast, Antrim (father of James)
**James, R E (Ruling Elder) 1703, Donegore, Antrim" [Transcribed 22February 2008, SLJuhl, compiler]

OTHER POSSIBLE RELATIVES:
SOURCE: BOOK--SCOTS-IRISH LINKS 1575-1725 PART ONE AND PART TWO, byDavid Dobson; Originally published St. Andrews, Fife, Scotland, 1994;Re-printed, two books in one, for Clearfield Company, Inc. byGenealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, Maryland. Excerpts:
"The Plantation of Ulster, particularly by the Scots, during theseventeenth century was the period of maximum settlement there....identifying the original immigrants and their places of origin inScotland, ... The descendants of these early Scottish settlersbecame, in due course, the single most important ethnic group tosettle in America during the eighteenth century - the Scotch-Irish.This fully referenced booklet has been compiled overwhelmingly fromprimary source material located in Scotland ..."PART ONE-Page 3:
"Blair, James, son of Robert Blair, minister in Bangor, Ireland, 1635(SRO.RS24. {Edinburgh} 23.355/RS24. {Edinburgh} 24.152).
Blair, James, mariner in Donachadie, 1684. (SRO.RD4.63.621)
Blair, James, minister at Dumbo, cnf 1687 Edinburgh
Blair, William, in Bellebreiton, parish of Achadowie, Londonderry,formerly in Kirkland, 1677. (SRO.RD2.43.680)"

SOURCE: Family Tree Maker, CD276 Scotch-Irish Settlers in America,1500s-1800s, Scots-Irish Links 1575-1725 Part II, Surnames, A-B,MyFamily.com, Inc., February 21, 2008; Page 2.
Blair, Robert, born in Irvine, Ayshire, 1593 son of John Blair ofWindyedge, educated at Glasgow University ca1612, minister of Bangor1623-1637, died in Aberdour, Fif, 1666. [F.7.527]
Blair, Robert. Lease by Lord Kirkcudbright to Robert Blair in Dunboeparish, County Londonderry, of townlands of Bellyderickbeg, Dunboeparish, for 11 years, 2.7.1655. [SRO.RH15.91.59]

Please Note: No personal information will ever be given out without
permission. Please feel free to contact the compiler at any time pere-mail or mail @ sljuhl1234@yahoo.com; 3810 - 10th Avenue Place,Moline, Illinois 61265. As with all family genealogy projects this isa continuing work, and updates may be forthcoming periodically. Ifyou find errors in the work, please let the compiler know as soon aspossible so that the errors may be corrected. 
Blair, *Elder Bryce Or James Commissioner (I88987)
 
24221 Some versions show him as son of Joh Douglas, b1558 Douglas, John (I109105)
 
24222 Some web sites (eg 'Mathematical') show Joanna as mother of Piers butothers (including various within Rootsweb) show Agnes as his mother.There are others still that indicate that she was a wife of Piers but thedates lead us to prefer to show her of this generation with a preference(but no real reason) to indicate that Agnes was mother of Piers simplybecause the (perhaps unreliable) dates indicate that her first husbanddied about 1150/2 so she may have promptly married Adam and producedPiers. On the other hand, of course, the dates could also support theview that Adam took another wife soon after Joanna had died soon aftergiving birth to Piers. This matter will be reviewed further in duecourse."
From Stirnet Genealogy (October 2003) athttp://www.stirnet.com/HTML/genie/british/bb4fz/bruce01.htm#agnes2 
De Bruce, Adam (Lord Skelton) (I171796)
 
24223 Some web sites show that Elizabeth also married 2ndly (1653) Robert Fergusson of Craigdarroch Grierson, Elizabeth (I95131)
 
24224 Some would suggest that Margaret Douglas was Patrick's mother, but other sources say that his mother is unknown. He was probably illegitimate

Note: Title: Bailie of Morton Castle
(Source: Adams history of the Douglases of Morton)

(Source: Adams history of the Douglases of Morton) showing Patrick as the Bailie of Morton Castle, the ruins of which lie not far from Drumlanrig. The Drumlanrig Douglases were the owners of Morton.
From him are descended the Douglases of Morton, in Dumfriesshire, the Douglases of Fingland, Kirkcudbright, of Salwarpe, Worcestershire and others. I have still some way to go with recording these details.

Elsewhere in the Douglas Archives, I record that he was, in fact, Baillie of Morton, Dalkeith. See: http://www.blae.net/douglas/patrickdouglas.htm It would be good to have this clarified!

William Douglas

Alt Birth: Abt 1527 Drumlanrig, Dumfries, Scotland 
Douglas, Patrick (Bailie of Morton Castle) (I7336)
 
24225 Something seems a bit odd here - either the date of death is wrong, or the marriage date. Grierson, Sir Roger (I160112)
 
24226 Something seems a bit odd here - either the date of death is wrong, or the marriage date. Family: Sir Roger Grierson / Helen (of Drumlanrig) Douglas (F44178)
 
24227 Something wrong here! Cainn appears to have been born 30 years after his father's death! Macmillan, Dougall (I159672)
 
24228 Something wrong here! Cainn appears to have been born 30 years after his father's death! Macmillan, Cainn (I159673)
 
24229 sometime 17th Light Dragoons
a.d.c. to his cousin Major General Thomas Dundas, when he died in West Indies, 1794 
Maitland, Charles (younger of Rankeillour) (I192401)
 
24230 Sometime between 1882 and 1884 Myron and Lizzy moved their family to the Bozeman, MT area where Myron was granted a 160 acre Homestead around 1884. Myron was a successful farmer in the Bozeman area for many years. Allen, Myron Henry (I191993)
 
24231 Sometime British Minister and then Ambassador and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Republic of Portugal in 1925, was the second son of the 9th Earl of Southesk, and the eldest son by his second marriage (1860) to Lady Susan Murray (died 1915), eldest daughter of Alexander Murray, 6th Earl of Dunmore. His matrilineal great-uncle was the diplomat and statesman Sidney Herbert, Lord Herbert of Lea.
In 1924 he was appointed to the Privy Council, entitling him to the style "The Right Honourable".

Carnegie was married in 1890 to Marion Alice de Gournay Barclay, (1868-23 August 1961,[2] died aged 93), daughter of Henry Ford Barclay. According to their granddaughter Lady John Kerr, Marion lost her hearing at the age of 30, but this did not stop her leading a full life. Lady Carnegie was the daughter of Henry Ford Barclay by his first wife Richenda Louisa Gurney (d. 1888) the youngest daughter of Samuel Gurney, of Ham House, Upton Park, himself of the landed family Gurney of Walsingham Abbey, Norfolk. [3]
The Carnegies had three children
James Murray Carnegie (1909-1985), who married 1939, Diana Winifred Mary Renshaw, daughter of Henry Arthur Renshaw. They had issue five daughters, including twins (the two youngest), but two daughters died very young.
Mariota Susan Carnegie (1892-) later Lady Gurney, married 1911, Sir Hugh Gurney, KCMG, MVO, (1878-?), sometime British Ambassador to Brazil, and to Denmark in 1933, and in 1947, the chief secretary of the British Palestine government in 1947.[4], son of John Gurney and his wife Isabel Blake-Humfrey (later wife of the 2nd Baron Talbot de Malahide); they had issue three sons and three daughters, of whom the second married Lord John Kerr, younger brother of the 12th Marquess of Lothian and the third (Susan) Richenda (b. 1937) married 2ndly the 2nd Lord Elton.[5]
Dorothea Helena Carnegie (1906-1985) later Countess of Mansfield & Mansfield; married 1928, Mungo David Malcolm Murray, 7th Earl of Mansfield (1900-1971), then Viscount Stormont. They had issue one son (the present Earl) and two daughters (including the present Countess of Moray). 
Carnegie, Sir Lancelot Douglas (I67989)
 
24232 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Douglas, Alastair Anderson Bremner (I72454)
 
24233 sometime head of that Scots gentry family of Tote, Isle of Skye Macdonald, Col Kenneth Lachlan (of Tote & Skeabost) DSO JP (I131239)
 
24234 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Douglas, Joanna Patricia Margaret (I87558)
 
24235 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Johnstone, Dr Robert Douglas (I8057)
 
24236 Sometimes Bouline.

He was formerly of the 37th regiment, and latterly commander of ndependent Company of Invalids at Portsmouth 
Douglas, J. Boleyn (I113918)
 
24237 sometimes known as Francis Marsham, was a senior officer in the British Army and an English amateur cricketer who played one first-class cricket match for Kent County Cricket Club and one for Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), both in 1905. Part of the Marsham family that were involved with Kent County Cricket Club. He was born in Bicester and died in Maidstone.
He was an aide-de-camp to three British monarchs, George V, Edward VII and George VI from 1935 to 1938 
Bullock-Marsham, Brig. Francis William DSO, MC (I188553)
 
24238 Sometimes recorded a Worms.
Mary Worms was of mixed Irish and German ancestry. I think originally from St. Ann's parish. 
Whorms, Mary Mathilda (I190743)
 
24239 Sometimes shown as daughter of James (1st of Belfinlay) MacDonald & Mary(of Kinlochmoidart) Macdonald. As in Burkes Landed Gentry under "Macneilof Barra" shown as brother of Angus Macdonald of Belfinlay who marriedPenelope MacNeill daughter of 38th Chief.


"Flora Macdonald rescued Prince Charles Edward Stuart after the battle of
Culloden, 1745. He was called the "young Pretender" in the "Rebellion of
the "45". She hid him in the Island of Skye until he escaped to France.
Her statue is at Inverness."
ancestry.com contact claire@grant.screaming.net>
http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:a28586&id=I067
This site shows her parents as Marion & Ranald Macdonald
and siblings as
Angus MACDONALD b: BEF. 1722 in Milton, South Uist, Scotland
? MACDONALD b: BEF. 1722 in Milton, South Uist, Scotland



Flora of the '45 MACDONALD of Milton athttp://www.macdonald50.freeserve.co.uk/genealogy/d0002/g0000074.html#I3693
at Roddy Macdonald's Home Page
Home of the Clan Donald Genealogy Database
http://www.macdonald50.freeserve.co.uk/
Clan Donald Database Index of Persons
http://www.macdonald50.freeserve.co.uk/genealogy/persons.html



From source who wishes to remain annonymous
"The information I gave you on Alexander MacLeod who married AnneMacDonald, Flora's daughter, was taken from the book "The Life of FloraMacDonald" by Rev. Alexander MacGregor.
And its genealogical value is widely accepted. Here is a paragraph

Anne who married Major Alexander MacLeod of Lochbay, Isle of Skye and ofGlendale, Moore County U.S.A.. He fought through the American War ofIndependence; subsequently distinguished himself in the European Wars,and rose to the rank of Major General in the British Army.

His wife Anne, daughter of Flora MacDonald survived him and died at thehouse of their daughter Mary, at the village of Stein, Isle of Skye, in1834.
The issue of this marriage was Norman, killed by Glengarry in a dual,after a quarrel at a Northern Meeting Ball at Inverness. 2& 3 sons, oneof whom married in India (4) Flora who married Mr MacKay from Forres,Moray, with issue (5) Mary, who died, unmarried, in Stein, Isle of Skye."

From the same source
"From Rev. Alexander MacGregor's book The Life of Flora MacDonald ( andothers)

Flora MacDonald (1722) was the daughter of Ranald MacDonald, younger ofMilton in South UiSt He was the son of Angus, younger, of Milton. Ranaldwas a Cadet of the family of Clanranald and not very distantly related.Flora's mother was Marion, daughter of The Rev. Angus MacDonald, for someyears the parish minister of the Island of Gigha.

He was known as Angus son of Hugh of Griminish in the Island of NorthUiSt His wife was a daughter of MacDonald of Largie in Kintyre. Flora'syounger brother Angus succeeded his father at Milton, while his mother,in 1728, married Hugh MacDonald of Armadale, in Skye, a Captain in theMilitia in the Long Island during the Prince's wanderings there Notedfrom other books etc. Marion and Hugh had other children Annabella,Florence and James, not necessarily in that order. I think they hadanother two sons, however, they died at an early age.

Alexander MacGregor was a very highly respected source of information onFlora and quite frequently quoted in other books." 
Macdonald, Flora (The Heroine) (I131131)
 
24240 Sometimes shown as wife of Alan Fitz Flaad. The is said to be a mistake,in the book "The Forgotten Monarchy of Scotland" HRH Prince Michael ofAlbany, 2000. Element Books Ltd.. Shaftesbury, Dorest & Boston. Page 40,chapter 4. It saws "Her status is confirmed in Cartulary of St George,Hesdin." De Hesden, Aveline\Ava (of Picardy) (I114027)
 
24241 Sometimes spelt 'Gorinberrie' Scott, Anna (I90334)
 
24242 Sometimes spelt 'Gorinberrie' Scott, Francis (of Gorrenby) (I90335)
 
24243 Sometimes spelt Brydon Bryden, Margaret (I2337)
 
24244 Somewhere along the line the second "s" was dropped from the name
She died two weeks after her sister May
She lived in New Haven Connecticut USA at the time of her death 
Douglass, Joyce Evelyn (I94711)
 
24245 Son 'Gav' Don, Three sons (I105886)
 
24246 son and heir
the next heir was also Thomas Folliott-Baugh
a son of this second Thomas was Job Walker-Baugh of the Stonehouse Stokesay, Ludlow.
Job Walker Baugh had sons Rear Admiral Thomas Folliott baugh and Captain Henry Baugh
Captain Henry married Catherine Johnstone descendant of the armigerous Johnstones of Annandale, she was granddaughter of Charlotte Vanden-Bempde Johnstone.
 
Folliot-Baugh, Thomas (I61725)
 
24247 Son and heir of Sir Robert Hamilton of Presmennan, a Lord of Session under the style of Lord Presmennan (by his wife Marion Denholm, dau. of John Denholm of Muirhouse), 3rd son of James Hamilton of Barncleuch (by his wife Margaret Hamilton, dau. and hrss. of Robert Hamilton of Barncleuch), 2nd son of John Hamilton of Udston (by his wife Margaret Muirhead, dau. of James Muirhead of Lauchope), brother of Margaret Hamilton, wife of Sir James Hamilton of Broomhill, 1st Bt., and mother of John [Hamilton], 1st Lord Belhaven and Stenton Hamilton, John (2nd Lord Belhaven and Stenton) (I77639)
 
24248 Son George Wallis Present At Death Lord, Ann (I74863)
 
24249 son of a Wesleyan preacher
elder brother was a doctor in Canada
Medical Superintendent of the Quarantine Station on Grosse Ile, St Lawrence River 
Douglas, Dr George (I116980)
 
24250 Son of Aaron A. & Ardilla Ardellie Hart Graham. He married
Oma Doyne Grimes on 12 Mar. 1919 in Putnam County, Indiana. They hadthree children: Carroll Kenston, Everett Lyle Doug Jr., Zona DoyneGraham. [21 April 2008, SLJuhl, Compiler - 3810 - 10th Avenue Place,Moline, Illinois 61265 - sljuhl1234@yahoo.com]

NOTE: Was able to find this family in the census records throughtheir son Carroll. Please note how Everett had been spelled.

SOURCE: "Montgomery County, Indiana Farmer Directory, 1920
Farmer: "Graham, Everett L."
Wife: "Grimes, Oma"
Children: Carroll K.
Township: Brown
Section: 32
Status: Owner
Acres Owned: 170
Resident in County Since: 1919
Ancestry.com. Montgomery County, Indiana Farmer Directory, 1920[database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc.,1999." [Transcribed 21 March 2008, SLJuhl, Compiler]

"4-5 February 1920 United States Federal Census
Name: Oma D Graham
Home in 1920: Brown, Montgomery, Indiana
Age: 20 years
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1900
Birthplace: Indiana
Relation to Head of House: Wife
Spouse's Name: Everette
Father's Birth Place: Indiana
Mother's Birth Place: Indiana
Marital Status: F
Race: White
Sex: Female
Able to read: Yes
Able to Write: Yes
Image: 1079
Household Members: Name Age
Everette Graham 21 head, IN, Owns Farm
Oma D Graham 20 wife, IN
Floyd Graham 19 nephew, IN, Laborer on Farm
Source Citation: Year: 1920;Census Place: Brown, Montgomery, Indiana;Roll: T625_456; Page: 13A; Enumeration District: 159; Image: 1079;Dwelling 319/323; Super. 9; Enum. 159; Sheet 13A.
Ancestry.com. 1920 United States Federal Census [database on-line].Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2005." [Transcribed21 March 2008, SLJuhl, Compiler]

SOURCE: "08 April 1930 United States Federal Census
Name: Carroll K Graham
Home in 1930: Brown, Montgomery, Indiana
Age: 10
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1920
Relation to Head of House: Son
Father's Name: Evereett
Mother's Name: Oma D
Household Members: Name Age
Evereett Graham 31 head, IN, IN, IN, Farmer, General Farm
Oma D Graham 30 wife, IN, IN, IN
Carroll K Graham 10 son, IN, IN, IN
Evereett J Graham 8 son, IN, IN, IN
Zona Graham 4 2/12 daughter, IN, IN, IN
Source Citation: Year: 1930; Census Place: Brown, Montgomery, Indiana;Roll: 620; Page: 2A; Enumeration District: 3; Image: 27.0; Dwelling40/40; Super. 6; Enum. 54-3; Sheet 2A. Ancestry.com. 1930 UnitedStates Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: TheGenerations Network, Inc., 2002." [Transcribed 21 March 2008, SLJuhl,Compiler] 
Graham, Everett Lyle Sr. (I64496)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 ... 581» Next»


This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding v. 14.0.4, written by Darrin Lythgoe © 2001-2024.

Maintained by William Douglas. | Data Protection Policy.