Descendants of William MURRAY
1 William MURRAY[1] +Margaret MURRAY[2]
..... 2 William MURRAY [3]d: 1655 +Catherine BRUCE[4] d: Aft. 22 May 1651 m: Bef. 1636
......... 3 Elizabeth MURRAY[5] d: 04 Jun 1698 +John MAITLAND[6]
......... *2nd Husband of Elizabeth MURRAY: +Lionel TOLLEMACHE[7] b: Abt. 1624 d: Mar 1668/69 m: Abt. 22 May 1651
.............. 4 Lionel TOLLEMACHE[8] b: 30 Jan 1647/48 d: 23 Feb 1726/27 +Grace WILBRAHAM[9] m: 30 Sep 1680
.................. 5 Lionel TOLLEMACHE[10] b: 06 Jun 1682 d: 26 Jul 1712 +Henrietta CAVENDISH[11] m: 06 Dec 1706
...................... 6 Lionel TOLLEMACHE[12] b: 01 May 1708 d: 1770 +Grace CARTERET b: 08 Jul 1715 m: 22 Jul 1729
...................... 6 Henrietta TOLLEMACHE[13] d: 08 Dec 1772 +Thomas CLUTTERBUCK[14] b: in of St. Martins in the Field, Middlesex, England m: 04 May 1731
.................. 5 Elizabeth TOLLEMACHE[15] d: 16 Aug 1745 +Robert Salusbury COTTON[16] b: Bef. 1704 d: 27 Aug 1748
.................. 5 Catherine TOLLEMACHE[17] d: 17 Jan 1754 +John BRYDGES[18] b: 1703 d: 1727 m: 01 Sep 1724
.................. 5 Mary TOLLEMACHE[19] d: 02 Dec 1715
.................. 5 Grace TOLLEMACHE[20] d: 27 May 1719
.............. 4 Thomas TOLLEMACHE[21] b: Abt. 1651 d: Abt. Jun 1694 in Plymouth, England
.............. 4 William TOLLEMACHE[22] b: in of Cottingham d: 25 May 1691 in West Indies +Elizabeth BACON[23] m: 1686
.................. 5 Nicholas TOLLEMACHE[24] b: Abt. 1687 +Mary RALPH[25] m: 19 Dec 1707 in Springleton
...................... 6 Elizabeth TOLLEMACHE[26] b: 1708
...................... 6 John TOLLEMACHE[27] b: 1710 d: 19 May 1777 in "New Place", Ipswitch, England +Mary UNNAMED
........................... 7 William TOLLEMACHE[28]
............................... 8 Mary TOLLEMACHE[29]
........................... 7 Elizabeth TOLLEMACHE[30] b: 1756 +William Joseph PARKE[31] b: Abt. 27 Nov 1742 in Stoke by Nayland d: 03 Sep 1821 in Saffron Walden m: in Stoke by Nayland
............................... 8 Margarett PARKE[32] b: Abt. 1774 in Stoke by Nayland, Suffolk, England
............................... 8 Samuel Fenning PARKE[33] b: Abt. 1776 in Stoke by Nayland, Suffolk, England
............................... 8 Elizabeth Tollemarsh PARKE[34] b: Abt. Dec 1777 in Stoke by Nayland, Suffolk, England +John Simmonds PILCHER[35] b: Abt. 1774 m: 13 Jan 1805 in Saffron Walden Parish, Essex, England
............................... 8 Joseph PARKE[36] b: Abt. Oct 1780 in Stoke by Nayland, Suffolk, England +Unnamed
.................................... 9 Unnamed PARKE[37] +Unnamed KING[38]
........................................ 10 Matilda KING[39]
........................................ 10 Edward KING[40] d: Abt. 1880
............................... 8 Anna Maria PARKE[41] b: 1788 in Saffron Walden, Essex, England d: in probably South Africa +William KIDSON[42] b: in of Staindrop, Durham d: in probably South Africa m: Abt. 1807 in St. Pauls, Shadwell, London
............................... 8 William Tollemache PARKE [43]b: 1790 in Saffron Walden, Essex, England d: in Capetown, South Africa +Elizabeth BUSHE[44] b: 11 Dec 1790 in Saffron Walden, Essex, England d: 15 Dec 1880 in Capetown, South Africa m: 29 Jan 1813 in Parish of Saffron Waldon
.................................... 9 Anne Buncher PARKE[45] . +Henry WILSON[46]
.................................... 9 Elizabeth Talmache PARKE[47] b: 1813 in Saffron Walden, Essex +John TYARS[48]
.................................... 9 Mary Bush PARKE[49] +James SEDGEWICK[50] b: 13 May 1811 d: 03 Oct 1872 in Cape Town, South Africa m: 22 Jan 1839 in Cape Town, South Africa
........................................ 10 James Thomas SEDGEWICK[51] b: 1840 in Cape Town, South Africa d: 1907 +E. NITCHEN[52] m: 1879
........................................ 10 Lydia Mary SEDGEWICK[53] b: 1843 in Cape Town, South Africa d: 1920 +A. SPILHAUS[54]
........................................ 10 Edward William SEDGEWICK[55] b: 1845 in Cape Town, South Africa d: 1918 +Amelia GREY[56] m: 1887
........................................ 10 Charles Frederick SEDGEWICK[57] b: 1847 in Cape Town, South Africa d: 1907 +Mary Grey
........................................ 10 Alfred Montague Tollemache SEDGEWICK[58] b: 1849 in Cape Town, South Africa d: 1936 +E. THOMAS[59]
........................................ 10 Amy Alice SEDGEWICK[60] b: 1863 in Cape Town, South Africa d: 1929 +R. MULLER
........................................ 10 Annie Elizabeth SEDGEWICK[61] b: 1865 in Cape Town, South Africa d: 1893 +R ELLIS
.................................... 9 Eliza Lake [or Legge] PARKE[62] b: Abt. 1824 d: Aft. 1909 +William Walker BALL[63] d: in of Cape Town, Cape Province, Republic of South Africa
........................................ 10 Anne Elizabeth BALL[64] b: 27 Jul 1846 in New Ross, Wexford, Ireland d: 13 May 1922 +Alexander Russell ATKINSON[65]
........................................ *2nd Husband of Anne Elizabeth BALL: +Archibald Ernest ARBUTHNOT[66] b: 05 Jan 1841 in Madras, Tamil Nadu, India d: 11 May 1923 m: 14 Nov 1872 in St. Paul's Cathedral, Calcutta, West Bengal, India
........................................ 10 Emily Lydia BALL[67] d: 14 Dec 1941 . +Charles Francis Henry Spencer
........................................ 10 Lydia Hurst BALL[68]
........................................ 10 Joseph BALL[69]
........................................ 10 Jessie BALL[70]
.................................... 9 Lydia Hurst PARKE[71] b: in Of Capetown, South Africa d: 21 Mar 1886 +John Philipson STOWE[72] b: 23 Sep 1830 d: 1920 m: 01 Dec 1856
........................................ 10 George STOWE[73] b: 14 Aug 1859 +Alexandria Sinclair FANNER[74] b: in of Port Elizabeth, South Africa
........................................ 10 John STOWE[75] b: Abt. 1860 in of Tarkastad, Cape Colony, South Africa +Margaret MANN[76] m: 04 Jan 1894
.................................... 9 Sarah Shrieve PARKE [77]b: 1817 in Of Capetown, South Africa d: 10 Sep 1879 in Yokohama, Japan +George Julius DARE[78] b: 1807 d: 1856 in Upper Clapham, Dorset, England m: 22 Jan 1839 in Rondebosch Church (St. Paul's) Cape of Good Hope, South Africa
........................................ 10 George Mildmay DARE[79] b: 18 Mar 1840 in at sea or at Peckham, England d: 15 Dec 1907 in At his residence, "The Lake", Singapore +Annie Dorothea Caroline EARNSHAW[80] b: 23 Jan 1857 in Of Knaresborough, Yorkshire, England d: 28 Jan 1927 in at home at The Lake, Singapore m: Jun 1877 in England
........................................ 10 John Julius DARE[81] b: 19 Sep 1841 in South west corner of North Bridge Road and Middle Road”, Singapore d: 05 Sep 1879 in Yokohama, Japan
........................................ 10 Blanche Emily DARE[82] b: 24 Sep 1843 +William Ramsay SCOTT[83] b: 1838 in Java, East Indies d: 1908 in Probably England m: 27 Nov 1863 in Singapore
........................................ 10 Louisa Caroline DARE[84] b: Abt. 1845 +Charles James BOLTON[85] b: 1839 in Singapore m: 23 Feb 1864 in 2
........................................ 10 Sarah Elizabeth DARE[86] b: 17 Apr 1847 in Bombay +John Catto ABELL[87] b: Abt. 1841 in Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, Scotland d: 1903 in Kobe m: 19 Apr 1879 in H. B.M.'s Legation, Tokyo, Japan
........................................ 10 Anna Maria DARE[88] b: 02 Jul 1849 d: 1931 +Whitworth ALLEN[89] b: Abt. 1835 in 0 d: Abt. 1899 in England
........................................ 10 Amelia Lydia DARE[90] b: Abt. 1851 in Singapore d: 10 Apr 1944 in Herringfleet Hall, Lowestoft, Suffolk, England +Thomas JACKSON[91] b: 04 Jun 1841 in Aughavilla, Carrigallen, Co. Leitrim d: 21 Dec 1915 in Bank of Hong Kong, 9 Gracechurch Street, London m: 19 Sep 1871 in H.M.B. Legation, Yokohama, Japan
........................................ 10 Alfred Henry DARE[92] b: 26 May 1853 in Singapore d: 1924 in England +Lena Mary FIELDEN[93] b: in Melbourne, Australia d: 1906 in Japan m: 03 Oct 1885 in Christ Church, Yokohama
........................................ 10 Florence Gertrude DARE[94] b: 09 Jan 1855 d: 28 Jun 1938 in Oatlands Park Hotel, Weybridge, Surrey, England +William HARTIGAN[95] b: Abt. 1852 in Co. Limerick, Ireland d: 11 Sep 1936 in Oatlands, Weybridge, Surrey, England m: Abt. 1881 in Probably Japan
.................................... 9 Joseph PARKE[96]
...................... 6 Mary TOLLEMACHE[97] b: 1713
.............. 4 Catherine TOLLEMACHE[98] d: Sep 1658
.............. 4 Elizabeth TOLLEMACHE[99] b: 10 Jul 1659 d: 09 May 1735 in Campbeltown, Argylshire, Scotland
................ +Archibald CAMPBELL m: 12 Mar 1677/78 in Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
.............. 4 Catherine TOLLEMACHE [100]b: 1661 d: 1703 +James STUART[101]
.............. *2nd Husband of Catherine TOLLEMACHE: +John GORDON[102]
......... 3 Margaret MURRAY[103] +William MAYNARD[104]
......... 3 Catherine MURRAY[105] d: 10 Feb 1669/70
......... 3 Anne MURRAY[106] d: Apr 1679
[1] William MURRAY Source: http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm
[2] Margaret MURRAY
[3] William MURRAY .
Charles's whipping boy was his close friend William Murray, so recorded in 1715 by Gilbert Burnet in History of his own time:
· Perhaps the beatings paid off. After all, in 1626, William MURRAY moved into the palatial Ham House, and then King Charles created the title of Earl of Dysart (pronounced "Die-z't") for him. Before then, he had represented Fowey and East Looe in the English House of Commons. William was made Lord Huntingtower at the same time, also in the Peerage of Scotland. He was succeeded by his daughter, Elizabeth, the second Countess. In 1670 she resigned the peerage and received a new grant thereof by patent with precedency of her father, and with remainder to her heirs of the body, failing which to her heirs whatsoever., SOURCE: Wiki, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_of_Dysart
· The family name associated with the Title Earl of Dysart began with Murray later Tollemache later Talmash later Tollemache later Lindsay-Tollemache-Scott later Greaves Arms: Azure an Imperial Crown proper between three Mullets Argent within a Double Tressure flory counterflory Or. Supporters: On either side a Lion Gules gorged with a Collar Azure charged with three Mullets Argent. http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm .,
·
There are many more documents at
the National Archives: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=176-tollemache&cid=0#0
DESCRIPTION: Manors of Ham and Petersham: these manors were demised by the
Crown to William Murray, only son of William Murray, minister of Dysart, Fife.
William (the son) was introduced to court by his uncle Thomas, tutor to Charles
I while Prince of Wales and afterwards his secretary. Shortly after Charles I's
accession William Murray was appointed one of the Gentlemen of the Bedchamber
(Manning & Bray, History of Surrey 1804, vol 1, p304). The grant of the
manors of Ham and Petersham in 1636/7 was a further mark of royal favour which
culminated in 1643 in the creation of the Earldom of Dysart and Barony of
Huntingtower in Scotland. Since, however, the warrant was not passed under the
Great Seal during Charles' lifetime, the title was never used officially by
William Murray. He was succeeded c.1654 by his elder daughter Elizabeth who
had married c.1647 Sir Lionel Tollemache, 3rd bart, of Helmingham, Suffolk. Sir
Lionel died 1668/9 and his wife, Countess of Dysart in her own right, in 1698,
when she was succeeded by their eldest son Lionel, 4th bart and 3rd Earl (The
Complete Peerage). Thence the earldom of Dysart and the lordship of the manors
of Ham and Petersham descended together in the Tollemache family until the
twentieth century.) died 1655.
· http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm This site records his death being before 22 May 1651.). He married CATHERINE BRUCE Bef. 1636,
[4] Catherine BRUCE Source: http://www.thepeerage.com/p1880.htm#i18799 .) daughter of COL. NORMAN BRUCE. She died Aft. 22 May 1651
[5] Elizabeth MURRAY
· Lady Dysart married John Maitland, firstly. And Sir Lionel TOLLEMACHE secondly. She died 04 Jun 1698. SOURCE: Wiki, and http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm
·
Helmingham and
the Tollemache family have been together for many hundreds of years. The Hall
and the old oak trees that you see today have seen much of the history of
England pass before them, and many generations of this family. The Tollemache
family has lived in Suffolk from shortly after the Norman Conquest to the
present day. Their home for the first 400 years was at Bentley, near lpswich,
and although there was a proud boast, Before the Normans into England came,
Bentley was my seat and Tollemache my name, it seems now certain that the
family came over from Avranches on the Normandy coast. Their name was spelt
Talemache, meaning 'purse bearer', and it is recorded that Hugh Tollemache was
Purse Bearer to Henry 1. They remained at Bentley as squires and knights
throughout the turbulent years of those early centuries, fighting for both
Henry II against the Welsh and Edward I against the Scots and quite often
against their neighbours to retain their lands, Two Tollemache knights from
Bentley fought at the Battle of Crécy against the French in 1346. However, in
1487, John Tollemache married Elizabeth Joyce, the heiress of Helmingham, and
his son Lionel also married a Joyce. further cementing the union, and so they
moved to Helmingham where the Joyce family home of Creke Hall stood. John
Tollemache and his wife proceeded to pull this down and build Helmingham,
completed in 1510, as it stands today. surrounded by its deep moat, serene gardens
and deer park. It must have been some years after my family moved to
Helmingham that they started work on the gardens, but old maps and drawings
show that the original shape of the main walled garden predates the house by
many years; it was most probably of Saxon origin and constructed to protect
stock from marauders. There was a wooden palisade to protect the garden from
the deer until the present garden wall was built in 1745.
SOURCE: (http://www.helmingham.com/introduction.htm
[6] John MAITLAND 1st Duke of Lauderdale. SOURCE: http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm
[7] Lionel TOLLEMACHE Baptism: 25 Apr 1624; Burial: 25 Mar 1669
· The Lionel TOLLEMACHE who married into this line in the third generation goes back to Henry CROMWELL (1538-1592) and his father Gregory CROMWELL, who married Elizabeth SEYMOUR, sister to Jane SEYMOUR, wife of Henry VIII. It is all entered in my Rootsweb Tree Also SEE: http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/CROMWELL.htm#Gregory%20CROMWELL%20%282%C2%B0%20B.%20Cromwell%29
· Buried at Helmington, Suffolk, England http://www.geni.com/people/Sir-Lionel-TOLLEMACHE-2nd-Baron-Tollemache/6000000007023680325
· Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Earl of Dysart succeeded to the title of 4th Baronet Tollemache in 1669. He held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.) (Tory) for Suffolk between 1698 and 1707.2 He succeeded to the title of 3rd Earl of Dysart, co. Fife [S., 1643] on 4 June 1698.He succeeded to the title of 3rd Lord Huntingtower, co. Perth [S., 1643] on 4 June 1698. In 1702 he declined an English barony when Queen Anne was crowned., www.thepeerage.com
·
Lionel
Tollemache, 3rd Earl of Dysart (30 January 1649 – 23 February 1727 n.s.),
styled Lord Huntingtower from 1651 to 1698, was a British Tory Member of
Parliament and nobleman. Dysart was the son of Sir Lionel Tollemache, 3rd
Baronet, and Elizabeth, 2nd Countess of Dysart. Educated at Queens' College,
Cambridge, Lionel succeeded to his father's baronetcy in 1669. The encumbrance
of his paternal estate by debt bred in him a habit of frugality which was not
shed in later years. In 1673, he contested Suffolk as a Tory; defeated by Sir
Samuel Barnardiston, 1st Baronet, he had the return falsified by the sheriff,
Sir William Soame, and took his seat in Parliament. An election committee
declared Barnardiston elected, and he obtained 1,000 pounds damages from
Huntingtower in a suit before the King's Bench, but the verdict was overturned
by the Court of Exchequer Chamber. Huntingtower was made a freeman of Eye in
1675. He briefly served as Member of Parliament for Orford in 1679 as a member
of the Habeas Corpus Parliament. In 1685, he was again returned for that
borough and made portman of Orford, an office he held until about 1709. On 30
September 1680, he married Grace Wilbraham, the daughter and coheir of Sir
Thomas Wilbraham, 3rd Baronet. They had five children.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lionel_Tollemache,_3rd_Earl_of_Dysart
· Huntingtower went out of Parliament again upon the fall of James II. However, he was returned for Suffolk in 1698, and generally supported Tory principles. In that year, he succeeded his mother to become Earl of Dysart. In 1702, he was appointed Vice-Admiral of Suffolk and became (until 1716) a freeman of Dunwich, and in 1703, he was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Suffolk. He was also named High Steward of Ipswich that year, an office he held until his death. As Lord Lieutenant, he purged moderate Churchmen from lieutenancy offices. He was Mayor of Orford during the summer of 1704. His support for the "Tack" of the Occasional Conformity Bill led to his removal from his county offices in 1705. Campaigning on the basis of his support for the Tack, he was returned for Suffolk again in 1705. As a Scottish peer, he was forced to leave the House of Commons by the Acts of Union 1707. He was offered a barony in the Peerage of Great Britain by Queen Anne upon her accession, but declined.[ Predeceased by his only son in 1712, Dysart remained a Tory, and was considered a possible Jacobite, until his death in 1727. He was succeeded by his grandson Lionel Tollemache, 4th Earl of Dysart.) He married GRACE WILBRAHAM 30 Sep 1680 SOURCE: Wiki, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lionel_Tollemache,_3rd_Earl_of_Dysart .
[8] Lionel TOLLEMACHE b. 30 Jan 1647/48; d. 23 Feb 1726/27
[9] Grace WILBRAHAM daughter of THOMAS WILBRAHAM and ELIZABETH MITTON
[10] Lionel TOLLEMACHE http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lionel_Tollemache,_3rd_Earl_of_Dysart
[11] Henrietta CAVENDISH Illigimate daughter of William Cavendish, 2nd Eart of Devonshire.) 06 Dec 1706,. http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm
[12] Lionel TOLLEMACHE
· http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lionel_Tollemache,_4th_Earl_of_Dysart [NOTE: This page was tagged as having several issues of quality of content.] Lionel Tollemache, 4th Earl of Dysart KT (1 May 1708–1770), styled Lord Huntingtower from 1712 to 1727, was a Scottish nobleman. In 1729, he was elected High Steward of Ipswich. He married Lady Grace Carteret, eldest daughter of John Carteret, 1st Earl Granville, by whom he had sixteen children. NOTE: I have not included the children here.
[13] Henrietta TOLLEMACHE http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm
[14] Thomas CLUTTERBUCK A Lord of the Admiralty and Treasurer of the Navy. http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm
[15] Elizabeth TOLLEMACHE
· www.thepeerage.com ., d. 16 Aug 1745
· http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lionel_Tollemache,_3rd_Earl_of_Dysart. ),; m. SIR ROBERT SALUSBURY COTTON
[16] Robert Salusbury COTTON He was one of the founders of the Tarporley Hunt Club in 1762..
[17] Catherine TOLLEMACHE http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lionel_Tollemache,_3rd_Earl_of_Dysart.
[19] Mary TOLLEMACHE
[20] Grace TOLLEMACHE
[21] Thomas TOLLEMACHE b. Abt. 1651; d. Abt. Jun 1694, Plymouth, England Burial: St Mary's, Helmingham, Suffolk
· He died circa June 1694, from a wound received in action. He was buried on 30 June 1694. www.thepeerage.com,
· Lt.-Gen. Thomas Tollemache gained the rank of Lieutenant-General in the service of the Williamite forces in Ireland. He fought in the Expedition against Brest in 1694, as Commander-in-Chief.
· Lt Gen Hon Thomas Tollemache, Governor of Portsmouth 1688 and of the Isle of Wight 1693, Member of Parliament for Malmesbury 1689 and for Chippenham 1691 (b. c. 1651; bur. vp. 30 Jun 1694) http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm
· http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attack_on_Brest There is also a picture of him on this site http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Tollemache
[22] William TOLLEMACHE
· NOTE: Much of material here comes from the notebooks of Amy LLOYD nee JACKSON. The family story is that there was a secret marriage, although official records claim that William died unmarried. There is one version alleging marriage to Elizabeth BACON and another version alleging marriage to Elizabeth BLOMFIELD. Are they the same woman with a fake name to hide true identity? I find all the correspondence confusing.
· He was born in Cottingham, and died 25 May 1691 in West Indies unmarried. Captain William Tollemache gained the rank of Captain in the service of the Royal Navy. He killed Hon. William Carnegie in 1681 at Paris, France, in a duel.. www.thepeerage.com ,
· http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm Died in command of HMS Jersey.
· He married ELIZABETH BACON daughter of SIR NICHOLAS BACON
· I quite believe William married his cousin Elizabeth secretly, daughter of Sir Nicholas Bacon, and had a son Nicholas, who married a Mary someone, and had, with other children John, who was father of the Elizabeth Talmarsh, who was our great-grandmother. It is this Nicholas that was that we are trying to find. I got the register of John and his sister Mary latterly 1710 and 1713 children of Nicholas T. and Mary his wife.) 1686 SOURCE: Amy Lloyd's Family History, "Extract of a letter from Aunt Eliza Ball née Park to her daughter Lizzie Arbuthnot at the age of 85. Erin Cottage February 17, 1909 Wynberg."),
On January 4th 1685 he deposed (c.f. Colonial s.p. vol. IV 33.1.11) before Governor William Stapleton, that a month past he went with others from Barbados on private enterprise in trade, and in sight of "Saltertudas" (a French sloop) ordered them to strike and plundered the vessel - after a few days discharged.
On August 20th 1685 Stede the Deputy Governor of Barbados wrote:
"Mr. W. Tollemache, son of the Duchess of Lauderdale, who killed the purser of H..1.S. Diamond, is here on bail and begs to be brought to trial as soon as possible. I therefore granted. a special commission and summoned two juries. With due respect to his quality and to the justice of the cause. He was found guilty of manslaughter only. He was allowed benefit of clergy and he chose to be burnt in the hand to save him from being appealed. to England."
Colonial State Papers, letters to Lords of Trade and Plantations.
The King granted him a commission as Lieutenant of the "Woolwich" on October 5th 1688. He became Captain of the "Lark" the following December, and of the "Berkeley Castle" in 1689. As Captain of H.M.S. Jersey -8 guns - he went to the West Indies in November 1690. On May 16th 1691 he accompanied the expedition under Admiral Laurence Wright against Guadaloupe. He seems to have been attacked by yellow fever on the way back, and died on May 25th at the age of 28 either at sea or at Antigua. The arrears of pay were paid to Mr. Cox by letter of the Duchess of Lauderdale 1693. SOURCE: Amy Oliver LLOYD.
[23] Elizabeth BACON NOTE: Her presence as a wife is the received wisdom in the family, contained in notes by Amy Oliver LLOYD. She was a daughter of Nicholas BACON.
[24] Nicholas TOLLEMACHE NOTE: The source used here is the notebook of Amy Oliver LLOYD, which she in turn received from Anne Elizabeth “Lizzie” ARBUTHNOT nee BALL.
[25] Mary RALPH NOTE: The source used here is the notebook of Amy Oliver LLOYD, which she in turn received from Anne Elizabeth “Lizzie” ARBUTHNOT nee BALL.
[26] Elizabeth TOLLEMACHE NOTE: The source used here is the notebook of Amy Oliver LLOYD, which she in turn received from Anne Elizabeth “Lizzie” ARBUTHNOT nee BALL.
[27] John TOLLEMACHE NOTE: The source used here is the notebook of Amy Oliver LLOYD, which she in turn received from Anne Elizabeth “Lizzie” ARBUTHNOT nee BALL.
· From Amy Lloyd's Family History, Baptised at Therestead. and died 19 May 1777 in "New Place", Ipswitch, England
· email from Heather MacAlister July 24, 2004.,
· Amy Lloyd's Family History, "Extract of a letter from Aunt Eliza Ball née Park to her daughter Lizzie Arbuthnot at the age of 85. Erin Cottage February 17, 1909 Wynberg." Buried at Stoke.). He married Mary UNNAMED
[28] William TOLLEMACHE Source: Amy Lloyd's Family History, "Extract of a letter from Aunt Eliza Ball née Park to her daughter Lizzie Arbuthnot at the age of 85. Erin Cottage February 17, 1909 Wynberg.".
[29] Mary TOLLEMACHE Source: Amy Lloyd's Family History, "Extract of a letter from Aunt Eliza Ball née Park to her daughter Lizzie Arbuthnot at the age of 85. Erin Cottage February 17, 1909 Wynberg.".
[30] Elizabeth TOLLEMACHE She was also referred to as Great Grandmother of A.L. Jackson .Source: Amy Lloyd's Family History, "Extract of a letter from Aunt Eliza Ball née Park to her daughter Lizzie Arbuthnot at the age of 85. Erin Cottage February 17, 1909 Wynberg.".
[31] William Joseph PARKE son of JOSEPH PARKE and MARGARET FENNING. He was born Abt. 27 Nov 1742 in Stoke by Nayland.
· Source: email from Heather MacAlister July 24, 2004
· Source: Edward Walthew email Oct 4 2007, IGI Source
[32] Margarett PARKE
[33] Samuel Fenning PARKE
[34] Elizabeth Tollemarsh PARKE The court case against her bigamous husband can be seen at http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/html_units/1810s/t18120408-76.html
[35] John Simmonds PILCHER He was still married to Sarah Elizabeth LANGHAM at the time that he married Elizabeth Tollemache PARKE. He was convicted of bigamy and transported for seven years. He apparently ran a pub in Stepney SOURCE: 2007 Oct 23 email from Edward WALTHEW. http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/html_units/1810s/t18120408-76.html
[36] Joseph PARKE SOURCE: "Extract of a letter from Aunt Eliza Ball née Park to her daughter Lizzie Arbuthnot at the age of 85. Erin Cottage February 17, 1909 Wynberg." His child’s and grandchildren’s information came from members of the King family, as recorded by Amy Olive LLOYD. She married UNNAMED KING (Source: Amy Lloyd's Family History, "Extract of a letter from Aunt Eliza Ball née Park to her daughter Lizzie Arbuthnot at the age of 85. Erin Cottage February 17, 1909 Wynberg." "I fancy the Kings were large builders. The mother was daughter of Grandpa’s brother Joseph Parke of Ipswich, who I hear married a girl with £8000 and was considered a swell relation of our grandparents. Only two of a large family grew up. Mrs. King and a son Edward who was a clergyman the Rector of Blakely near Manchester. He married late in life an Isle of Man lady and died sometime in the 80s. His family were left badly off and went to Canada and have been lost sight of. He firmly believed the family story and called his eldest son Talmash. Miss King said when her grandfather died at Ipswich he came and took away heaps of papers etc.
[37] Unnamed PARKE NOTE: See info under Joseph PARKE.
[38] Unnamed KING NOTE: See info under Joseph PARKE.
[39] Matilda KING NOTE: See info under Joseph PARKE.
[40] Edward KING NOTE: See info under Joseph PARKE.
[41] Anna Maria PARKE
· Oct 23 email from Edward Walthew, Anna Maria PARKE was William Parke’s (b. 1790) sister born at Saffron Walden in 1788. She married William KIDSON of Staindrop, Durham, at St Pauls, Shadwell London about 1807. Then she and their family emigrated to south Africa in 1819 with the WILSON Party, settling at Bathurst in the Cape province. they were later joined by her younger brother William ... One of their daughters has Tollemache" as her second name. There are also a number of other interesting second names given to their children which I suspect is more likely to have come via the PARKE family
[42] William KIDSON See entry under his wife, Anna Maria PARKE.
[43] William Tollemache PARKE
· Amy Lloyd's Family History, In the Saffron Walden baptisms, he is listed as a carpenter.,
· 2007 Oct 23 email from Edward Walthew, It is interesting that: Samuel Parke is listed as a Brandy and wine merchant William Parke establishes a hotel in Cape Town William Kidson is listed as a Wine merchant as well as a farmer in the Cape Elizabeth Parke married John Pilcher who appears to have been running a pub in Stepney.
· Heather McAllister email: he and his wife became the owners of Parkes Hotel which eventually became the famous Grand Hotel in Cape Town
· PARKE William Parke was the son of Joseph Parke, born 27.11.1742 Stoke by Nayland, and died 3.9.1821 Saffron Walden. Reg. Parish Churches; and of his wife Elizabeth daughter of John Talmash of New Place (formerly Gyppeswick Hall) Ipswich, who died 19.5.1777 aged 66. Reg. Parish Church Stoke by Nayland.
·
William Parke and his wife had,
besides Mary Bush who married Captain James Sedgwick, five other daughters:
Elizabeth - John Tyars, whose descendants live in the Union. Anne Buncher -
Captain Henry Wilson of the Mercantile Marine. Sarah Shrive - Captain Dare of
the Honbl. East India Company. As far as I know there are no descendants in the
Union. Their daughter married Sir Thomas Jackson, Baronet, General Manager of
the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank. Eliza Lake - Captain William Walker Ball of
the Honbl. East India Company. A pleasant account of her and of Captain Ball
may be read in the Memoirs and Reminiscences of Sir John Kotze. Many of their
descendants remain in the Union. Two of their daughters married overseas: Anne
Elizabeth to Major Archibald Arbuthnot son of Sir William Arbuthnot, Bt., and
of his wife Gertrude Sophia daughter of Viscount Gough. And Emily Lydia to
Charles Francis Henry Spencer, grandson of Viscount Churchill. Lydia Hurst -
John Philipson Stowe (uncle of the first baronet, who also married a
Capetonian, Florence Henchman). They have descendants in the Union. William
Parke and Elizabeth also had an only son, Joseph. He ran away, it was surmised
to sea, and was not again heard of. When William Parke brought his family
back to the Cape after the disaster at Grahamstown he had intended to take ship
for England, his small capital having been expended. He was, however, persuaded
to stay, and in order to make a livelihood he and his wife took in paying
guests. This venture developed into their launching forth into the hotel trade,
and they opened Parke's Hotel at the corner of Strand Street. This hotel became
known in course of time as the Grand Hotel, which still exists.
An amusing story is told of William Parke, amusing at this long distance of
time, but it gives some idea of the terror that prevailed in Grahamstown. His
daughters were handsome young women, or rather girls, and it was brought to his
ears that the Kaffir Chief then besieging the town had made it known that he
would have his choice among them when he got into the town. William Parke
ordered his six daughters to accompany him to the powder magazine where he made
them kneel down in a row and swear to accompany him there again to be blown up
with the magazine should the Kaffirs succeed in entering the town. Fortunately
this histrionic effort proved to be unnecessary. SOURCE: Heather McALLISTER email
· The DARE family have a slightly different version of the story of the PARKE family under siege than the one from Heather McAllister - but the core of it is the same. The father feared for the safety of his daughters and would rather see them dead than abused at the hands of assailants. The DARE family version is that a gun was given to the eldest daughter and should they be overrun, that she was to shoot her sisters and then herself rather than be at the (less than mercy) of their assailants. At the time, they were on the other side of the river from the relative safety of the white settlement, possibly outside Elizabethville. William PARKE was injured while escaping and went down to Capetown and bought property outside Capetown. SOURCE: Pamela DARE 2009 Feb 16
[44] Elizabeth BUSHE "Extract of a letter from Aunt Eliza Ball née Park to her daughter Lizzie Arbuthnot at the age of 85. Erin Cottage February 17, 1909 Wynberg."
[45] Anne Buncher PARKE
[46] Henry WILSON According to an email from Edward Walthew, the WILSONs and PARKEs both emigrated in 1819. Of the Mercantile Marine
[47] Elizabeth Talmache PARKE
[48] John TYARS
[49] Mary Bush PARKE. She was married the same day as her sister, Sarah Shrieve PARKE.
[50] James SEDGEWICK
· James began his career as a mid-shipman in the Honourable East India Company and commanded his first ship in 1833. At the time of his marriage he is described as of the ship Addingham and an additional reference to a Captain Sedgwick of the three masted schooner The Osprey may relate to him. His last command was of the Lady Valiant in 1856. The merchant service of the East India Company ceased in 1834 so it must be assumed that James worked in another capacity. He was the author of two books - "Golden Hints to Young Mariners" and "The True Principle of the Law of Storms" both used at 'Greenwich Nautical College'. He settled in Cape Town and in 1859 he founded James Sedgwick and Company which traded in wines and spirits. In 1851 Mary and the children are living in Bootle, Lancashire
· Of Sedgwicks Wholesale Wine and Spirit Merchants. One can still today buy Sedgwicks Old Brown Sherry. Captain James Sedgwick, father of Arnold Wilhelm Spilhaus's wife, and founder of the Cape family of Sedgwick, was descended from the Sedgwick's of Dent in the West Riding of Yorkshire, where the family had been identified with the district for several centuries. An account of the family will be found in the Life and Letters of Professor Adam Sedgwick, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Professor Adam was also of Dent, and cousin to Captain James. Professor Adam Sedgwick, junior, nephew of Professor Adam, senior, visited the Cape in the last generation, bent upon scientific enquiry. The son of Professor Adam, junior, Mr. Romney Sedgwick, recently held office as Deputy High Commissioner in the Union of South Africa for His Majesty's Government.
· Captain James was one of a large number of brothers and sisters. Three of his brothers also made some mark. Thomas, in the service of the Honourable East India Company, died in Bombay at the age of 28, "but not before he had earned the thanks of the Honourable Company for his services in promoting the growth of mulberry trees, and thus encouraging the production of silk." Charles went to Boston, U.S.A., where his descendants still live, and became prominent in the journalistic world. William entered the medical profession, and was a medical student at the then new University College Hospital where, by the particular desire of the great surgeon Lister, he was appointed Lister's dresser, and as such assisted him at the first operation in London performed under anaesthetics, December 21st, 1846. As a result of impaired health he made several voyages to the East, via the Cape, as surgeon to the troops. It gave him the opportunity of studying cholera in its worst forms, and when in 1854 London was visited by an epidemic of cholera he gave distinguished service. He made a number of important contributions to the medical literature of his day. After Captain James Sedwick had retired from sea and settled in Cape Town he founded the firm of James Sedgwick and Company, wholesale wine and spirit merchants. He was the author of The True Principle of the Laws of Storms and of Hints to Young Mariners. SOURCE: Heather McALLISTER.
[51] James Thomas SEDGEWICK SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[52] E. NITCHEN SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[53] Lydia Mary SEDGEWICK SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[54] A. SPILHAUS SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[55] Edward William SEDGEWICK SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[56] Amelia GREY SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[57] Charles Frederick SEDGEWICK SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[58] Alfred Montague Tollemache SEDGEWICK SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[59] E. THOMAS SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[60] Amy Alice SEDGEWICK SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[61] Annie Elizabeth SEDGEWICK SOURCE: www.sedgewickuk.org
[62] Eliza Lake [or Legge] PARKE. Date of birth imputed from "Extract of a letter from Aunt Eliza Ball née Park to her daughter Lizzie Arbuthnot at the age of 85. Erin Cottage February 17, 1909 Wynberg." On the other hand, another letter has her at age 10 arriving at The Cape in 1832, hence born in 1822.
[63] William Walker BALL Eliza Lake - Captain William Walker Ball of the Honbl. East India Company. A pleasant account of her and of Captain Ball may be read in the Memoirs and Reminiscences of Sir John Kotze. NOTE: I have not yet been able to get this book.
[64] Anne Elizabeth BALL. She worked on family history and some of her letters were transcribed by Amy Oliver LLOYD. She was known as `Lizzie` Arbuthnot.
[65] Alexander Russell ATKINSON Surgeon-Major . He died some time before his wife`s marriage to Archibald ARBUTHOT
Alexander Russell Atkinson, M.D., Bengal Army SOURCE: Memories of the Arbuthnots
[66] Archibald Ernest ARBUTHNOT Hayling Island, 8th Madras Light Cavalry, born 5th January, 1841, married (14th November, 1872) Anne Elizabeth, widow of Surgeon-Major Alexander Russell Atkinson, M.D., Bengal Army, and daughter of William Walker Ball of Capetown, SOURCE: Memories of the Arbuthnots
and has issue
[67] Emily Lydia BALL
[68] Lydia Hurst BALL
[69] Joseph BALL
[70] Jessie BALL In a letter from Lizzie Arbuthnot "My sister Jessie is in England ..." NOTE: We know nothing more about her
[71] Lydia Hurst PARKE
[72]
John Philipson STOWE son of GEORGE STOWE and
SARAH BARTLETT. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~corpusnobiliorum/philstow.
NOTE: He was the uncle of Sir Frederick Samuel Phillipson Stowe (1849-1908),
the diamond magnate, who gained the title of 1st Baronet Philipson-Stow. SOURCE:
http://www.thepeerage.com/p22413.htm#i224123
[74] Alexandria Sinclair FANNER
[75] John STOWE
[76] Margaret MANN
[77] Sarah Shrieve PARKE
· Times Death Notice 8 Nov 1879, 1, On the 5th Sept., 1879, at Yokohama, Japan, JOHN JULIUS DARE, second son of the late George Julius Dare, of Singapore, aged 38 years; also, on the 10th Sept., 1879, at the same place, SARAH SHRIEVE, relict of the late GEORGE JULIUS DARE, of Singapore, aged 62 years; both of cholera.,
· She contracted cholera while nursing her son, John Julius
[78] George Julius DARE
·
Captain George Julius Dare was
a well known Singaporean. He had been a navigating officer, in those days
called the master in the Navy, and married at the Cape when on the Station. His
grandfather, Mr. Julius, then helped him to build a vessel of his own, and he
afterwards built others, trading out to China with three different vessels of
his own. In this year he was passing through Singapore, on his way from Bombay
to China, and left his wife on shore at a boarding house kept by Mrs. Clarke at
the south west corner of North Bridge road and Middle Road, where the baby
Julius, who has been mentioned, was born. About two months afterwards Mrs. Dare
left in the unfortunate Viscount Melbourne for Macao, with the two children, to
join her husband there. Captain Dare sold his vessel for a very handsome price,
remitting home the money at the exchange of about six shillings to a dollar! In
1845 he went home, and returned and settled down in Singapore in February 1848.
These particulars are found in the evidence he gave in favour of Sir James
Brooke, on the famous enquiry related under the year 1854. He commenced
business in Singapore as a shipchandler and commission agent in the Square.
There were then four shipchandlers' firms, namely, W.S. Duncan, John Steel
& Co., Whampoa & Co., and Mr. Dare.
…In 1855 Mr. Dare went to England, leaving a man in charge, whose name there is
no necessity to mention. He was a very plausible man, with a particularly
pleasant manner, but he turned out untrustworthy and ruined the business, as
well as his employer. Mr. Dare died in London, 50 years of age in 1856. He had
a family of nine children, one of his daughters married Mr. William Ramsay
Scott; another Captain C.J. Bolton, very well known and a great favourite in
Singapore, who commanded Jardine Matheson & Co.'s crack opium schooner, and
when steam came, the Glenartney. He is now living in Essex. Another daughter
was married to Mr. Whitworth Allen who was in Singapore and Penang for many
years, now retired from business. Another to Mr. Jackson, now Sir Thomas
Jackson K.C.M.G., of the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank; and another daughter to
Dr. William Hartigan of Hongkong.
SOURCE: An anecdotal History of Old Times in Singapore.
· George Julius Dare married Sarah Shrieve Parke in 1839. He was in the Royal Navy and when his ship was in Capetown, met Sarah Parke of Newlands, Rondebosch. She and her sister were married on the same day, the sister to Captain Sedgwick of the ship "Addingham". Among the visitors present were Sir Harry and Lady Smith. Soon after his marriage, George Julius left the Navy to command a ship in the fleet of his uncles who were trading in the East. He became a partner and his headquarters were in Singapore. When they had two children, his wife went out to join him in the sailing ship "Viscount Melbourne", she was the only woman on board. A few days out from Singapore the ship was wrecked on the Luconia Shoal in the China Sea. Everyone abandoned ship in rive boats. They were attacked by pirates but managed to get away, and after great hardships in an open boat for thirteen days, were picked up and brought to Singapore. The youngest son, Julius, was thought dead and nearly dropped in the sea but the ship came just in time. Years after in Japan she died nursing him of cholera end both were buried in the Cemetary at Yokahama in 1879. The family returned to England from Singapore when Captain Dare was suffering from severe blood poisoning of the hand. They lived at Upper Clapham till he died. His widow then went back to South Africa with seven of her children, leaving George and Julius the two eldest who were at school, with their Aunt Pell. They afterwards went out to Singapore in business , and later to Japan where their mother and remaining unmarried children joined them. SOURCE: Amy LLoyd's notes:
· On a scrap of paper at Jack Stooks, it says George Julius Dare went to Canton in 1841 - roughly the time of the Opium Wars and before Hong Kong was leased.
· Source: Amy Lloyd's Family History, Mother's mother Sarah Park was married on 22 January 1839 - the same day as her sister Mary Bush PARKE - to Lt.George Julius DARE Royal Navy at Rondabosch Church St. Paul's on the same day as he [?] sailed to England from Cape Town in the Addington and sighted an abandoned ship [? ?] Cork Harbour and much salvage money. After the death of her husband Grandmother returned to the Cape with all her children except the two eldest George & Julius who went to Singapore. From a letter by Eliza Ball née Park. Written by mother's cousin Lizzy Arbuthnot née Park.
[79] George Mildmay DARE
· NOTE: He may have been born on the boat home to England, although his obit gives a birth place of Peckham and a date of March 22, 1840.
· He went to Japan in 1864
· For more detail see on The Silver Bowl: Obituary of George Mildmay Dare
[80] Annie Dorothea Caroline EARNSHAW. She married 2ndly G.P. Owen. See on The Silver BOWL: Death of Mrs. G.P. Owen
[81] John Julius DARE
· He was a three month old baby when the ship that he and his older brother and mother were travelling on was first wrecked on a coral reef and then overrun by pirates. Initially, it was thought that he had died, but a Dr. Little was able to revive him.
· Times Death Notice 8 Nov 1879, 1, On the 5th Sept., 1879, at Yokohama, Japan, JOHN JULIUS DARE, second son of the late George Julius Dare, of Singapore, aged 38 years; also, on the 10th Sept., 1879, at the same place, SARAH SHRIEVE, relict of the late GEORGE JULIUS DARE, of Singapore, aged 62 years; both of cholera
[82] Blanche Emily DARE. She and SCOTT had 8 children,
[83] William Ramsay SCOTT
· He was of Scott & Co. Bankok, also W.R. Scott & Co.. Correspondence in Jardine Mattheson Archives. He was sixth son of the late Robert Scott, Esq., Secretary General, Java.
· .In 1858 William Ramsay Scott was a clerk in the firm of William Macdonald & Co. and was partner in 1864. 1866 "There was at this time a fresh water swimming bath which Mr. W.R. Scott allowed the use of to certain subscribers, at Abbotsford; it was the only one in the place, but it was very little used SOURCE An Anecdotal History of Old Times in Singapore. p 234, 311, 373, 567, 732
· See also mention in 1883 June 8 letter on my web site when he announces the birth of George Julius JACKSON.
· See on The Silver Bowl: obituary of William Ramsay Scott, 1908
[84] Louisa Caroline DARE
[85] Charles James BOLTON
· Note, It may be that his father was a Capt. Bolton mentioned in connection with shipping 276 convicts on the Norfolk from Cork. Friday Feb 20, 1835 in the Hobart Town Courier. http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/4181621
· Captain C.J. Bolton, very well known and a great favourite in Singapore, who commanded Jardine Matheson & Co.'s crack opium schooner, and when steam came, the Glenartney An Anecdotal History of Old Times in Singapore. p 374
[86] Sarah Elizabeth DARE
[87] John Catto ABELL
· A bowl and scroll were presented to him and his wife as members of the Kobe Regatta and Athletic Club - probably Feb 1895 SOURCE: Email 2010 Jan 30 Primrose Sarah Brailey nee ABELL,
[88] Anna Maria DARE
[89] Whitworth ALLEN
· Mr. Whitworth Allen was a clerk (William MacDonald & Co.) from 1859 to 1864, after which he went to Penang. Source: An Anecdotal History of Old Times in Singapore. p 567
[90] Amelia Lydia DARE. Jackson married her in Yokohama while manager there in 1871.
[91] Thomas JACKSON
· Sir Thomas Jackson was chief manager of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank and the first elected representative of the Chamber of Commerce in the Legislative Council, Hong Kong. He was knighted 8 July 1899 and created a Baronet 4 August 1902.
· Leitrim Genealogy Centre, There is a record available of his birth in Leitrim in 1841. I have not paid to see it. (Cost=10 Euros)
· From his obituary, the following facts:
Educated at Morgans School, Castleknock and by private tuition.
1860 started banking career in Belfast Branch of the Bank of Ireland*.
1864 accepted appointment with Agra Bank
1866 started work at Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank
1871 married Amelia Lydia
1902 Created a baronet
· The Times Wills - 8 Mar 1916, 11, WILLS AND BEQUESTS. ESTATE OF SIR THOMAS JACKSON. SIR THOMAS JACKSON, Bt., of Stanstead House, Stanstead, Essex, chairman and director and late chief manager of the Hong-kong and Shanghai Bank, Gracechurch-street, E.C., chairman of the Imperial Bank of Persia, and a director of the London County and Westminster Bank, the Union Discount Company of London, and the Royal Exchange Assurance Corporation, who died on December 21 last, aged 74, has left unsettled estate of the gross value of £121,715, the net personality amounting to £74,598. He left his property at Creggan, Louth, Ireland, to his son, Major Sir Thomas Dare Jackson, M.V.O., D.S.O.
· 2006 conversation with his great-nephew, Thomas Jackson at Bangor, The JACKSON crest before Sir Thomas was the bird without the world beneath it. There were 4 rings. David was swimming at Yokohama and lost one; James Jackson lost one in the South China Sea; one went to Thomas Dare Jackson and one was given to Thomas Jackson by his father[Andrew Jackson, brother of Sir Thomas] in 1948. This one is now in the possession of another direct descendent, Jack Stooks.
· On an LDS film, film # 0183543, it was claimed that Thomas Jackson’s mother was a relative of Charles JACKSON – but which Charles JACKSON this refers to, I do not know.
[92] Alfred Henry DARE
· "The last junior to be recruited in the East was A.H. Dare, a relative of Thomas Jackson's wife, and his entire career (with the exception of a year in Amoy in 1883) was spent in Japan, although he received leave to England and was on the Eastern, not the "Local British Staff". He resigned in 1893; the Court subsequently learned that the reason had been health and consequently voted him a gratuity of 1,000 pounds. History of Hongkong Shanghai Bank, Frank H.H. King
· He was buried in Japan next to Selena Fielding Dare âka `Lena`¸ in Kobe. SOURCE: Conversation with Pamela DARE.
[93] Lena Mary FIELDEN. Although she had diabetes, the cause of death given was pneumonia. SOURCE: Conversation with Pamela DARE.
[94] Florence Gertrude DARE
[95] William HARTIGAN
· Royal College of Physicians of Ireland, Dr. Hartigan was a native of Limerick in Ireland. He was educated at the Catholic University School and the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. He was admitted a Licentiate of RCSI in 1876 and, under the terms of the Conjoint Degree, also, automatically, became a Licentiate of our College, which, at the time, was called the King and Queen's College of Physicians in Ireland - hence, LKQCPI. He went to Hong Kong where he was a physician to the Alice Memorial Hospital and an examiner at the Medical College for Chinese. He had three papers published in the Journal of Tropical Medicine. He returned to England on retirement and died at Oatlands, Weybridge on September 11th, 1936, in his 85th year.
· History of Hongkong Shanghai Banking Corporation by Frank HH King: p 243 "Dr. Hartigan of Hong Kong who was (at least in 1890) doctor for the Hongkong Bank - his recommendation that European staff be provided summer accommodation on the Peak is on record."
· p 579 "Dr. William Hartigan, Bank Doctor, Hong Kong then London" but not a member of bank staff
· HKCP Synapse April 2001 article on Dr. Sun Yat Sen mentions Dr. Hartigan as one of his teachers
[96] Joseph PARKE
[97] Mary TOLLEMACHE NOTE: The source used here is the notebook of Amy Oliver LLOYD, which she in turn received from Anne Elizabeth “Lizzie” ARBUTHNOT nee BALL.
[98] Catherine TOLLEMACHE http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643 .
[99] Elizabeth TOLLEMACHE , Elizabeth Tollemache was styled as Duchess of Argyll on 23 June 1701.), b. 10 Jul 1659; d. 09 May 1735, Campbeltown, Argylshire, Scotland; m. ARCHIBALD CAMPBELL.www.thepeerage.com , 1st Duke of Argyll.), 12 Mar 1677/78, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
[100] Catherine TOLLEMACHE http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm
[101] James STUART www.thepeerage.com
[102] John GORDON later SUTHERLAND, 16th Earl of Sutherland. http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/Dysart1643.htm
[103] Margaret MURRAY
[104] William MAYNARD
[105] Catherine MURRAY
[106] Anne MURRAY