Contents
Edward Marion Chadwick's Guelph Chadwicks
Chadwick of Chadwick in Lancashire
GLOSSARY OF HERALDIC TERMS OCCURRING IN THIS WORK.
Entertaining the King of Prussia
ADDENDUM WALES & CORNWALL – 1916/2015
WALES AND CORNWALL - DEVON BRANCH
Edward Marion Chadwick's Guelph Chadwicks
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'Tis a long way to Tipperary.
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PRIVATELY PRINTED, FOR FAMILY USE ONLY
CONTAINS MUCH THAT IF OF INTEREST TO THE
FAMILY ONLY, AND NOT INTENDED FOR,
NOR SUITABLE FOR, ANY WORK
PRINTED FOR PUBLICATION
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30th NOVEMBER 1914
TORONTO
DAVIS & HENDERSON LIMITED
1914
Note:
This document was copied from an original held by Carolyn (Chadwick) Porter,
daughter of Frederick Stewart Chadwick. The original page numbers are given
in brackets. It is however printed as fits the modern page size.
Line drawn coats of arms are included, but the few photographs in the
original are not. Unfortunately, the limitations of the system (or my
knowledge) prevented showing more of the Fonts used in the original.
A. Maitland 22 November 2001
Note: A digital copy is available on Archive.org (1/11/2015).
Page
Chart index 5
Chadwicks of Lancashire and Yorkshire 9
Armorials, etc. 13-17-19
Chadwicks in Ireland 21
Ballinard family, Main line 22
Tipperary family, "Big Billy" 33
Richard-Barclay branch 34
Michael, etc Wales and Michigan. 37
"Parson Dick" family 39
Major James, son of "Parson Dick" 41
Barnascounce, Thomas of 42
James, son of Richard & Rebecca 44
Littleton, Frederick of 45
Names in Army lists (and a few others) not identified 46
Topographical Notes 48
Family Names 52
Canadian Family 56
" John Craven, Junior 57
" Frederick Jasper 59
" Edward Marion 61
" Austin Cooper 66
Bell Family 67
" Royal descent 72
" Saxon 74
" Irish (ancient) 75
" Scottish (Stewart, Gordon, Barclay) 78
" English 81
Addendum; Catherine Fry's letter 82
INDEX OF CERTAIN SPECIAL ITEMS
Page Page Page
Armorials 13 Cooper-Chadwick 31 Liveries 16
Ballinard Mansion 48 DeLastre or DeLatre 12 Macdonald 43
Barclay 80 DeRochdale 12 Margaret of Scotland 75
Bourchier 35 Dorsetshire family 41 Orte of Martlets 11
Boyd 44 Fordyce 44 Rishdall 12
Buxton 67 Head 68 Rochdale 9
Chadwick, name 9-l1 Joan of Kent 77 Turner (& Nelles) 67
" Manor or Hall 10 Lismacue 49 Wakefield 67
(2)
ABOUT forty years ago Mrs. Letitia Chadwick, of Dunmore, County Waterford,
who had been for some years getting information regarding the family put in
pedigree form, placed the results of her work at my disposal, and I issued
an account of the family. Since then much more information has become
available, and some errors and inaccuracies discovered; I have therefore
decided to issue the present work.
If anyone should feel disposed to continue this work in the future, he
should make such searches as he might require from the beginning of the
Nineteenth Century, subsequent to which time I have made no searches of
wills and settlements and the like, for although these are public records
and may be examined by anyone, I have felt that my doing so might seem like
prying into other people's affairs, and in any case I would not have cared
to print information thus obtained, making it needlessly public, to the
possible annoyance of living persons. I have not been able to make much use
of parochial records for I have not found the Irish clergy (some at least)
much disposed to assist such searches. When such Registers are in the
Record Office in Dublin they may be searched easily and at no great
expense. When beginning this work, requiring some searches to be made, I
was advised in Ulster's Office to engage the services of Mr. Philip
Crossle, whom I found to be a very competent and careful searcher, and
whose fees I considered very moderate, so much so that I continued the
searches much beyond what I had intended, with very satisfactory results.
(I may observe that Mr. Crossle claims a sort of cousinship, through the
Cardens.) The information since the beginning of the Nineteenth Century which I
have obtained is derived chiefly from personal recollections of those who had
been born about that time, and well knew many of the previous generation. My own
personal knowledge of the family in Ireland reaches back to 1845, and includes
six generations.
E.M. CHADWICK.
(4)
Chart Index
WILLIAM CHADWICK RICHARD CHADWICK
Of Gortnekilleen of Ballinard
m. Elizabeth Gabbett m. Mary Baker, d.s.p.
|
WILLIAM
d. 1748, m. Jane Greene
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| | | |
RICHARD William, of Tipperary Rudolphus Michael
d. in 1770 "Big Billy" m. Anna Maria Connor
m. (1) Rebecca Ellard m. 2) Jane Sadleir m. Mary Lockwood |
| | | | | | | | | Lackey
-------------------------------------------- Michael Richard |
| | | | | m. Mgt Dwyer (Barclay) Despard
| | | | |
WILLIAM Richard Capt. Richard Thomas, d.s.p.
"Billy Snug" "Parson Dick" (Wales etc.) Michael - 'Major"
m. (1) Christian Carden m. (2)Sophia Carden Thomas of Nicholas, "Big Nick"
| No issue Barnascounce Nicholas Benjamin
| James m. Anne Sadlier Rodolph
| Frederick ane Adams
| of Littleton ELizabeth Neligan
| For these
| separately
| See below
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | |
JOHN CRAVEN Rebecca Beere Clarinda Collins Elizabeth Power Charlotte Bourchier Harriet, d. unm Isabella, d. inf.
m. Elizabeth Cooper
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
WILLIAM Samuel Cooper Austin Cooper JOHN CRAVEN Richard. d. unm. Frances, m. Seymour
m. (1) Willma. Seymour, (2) Charlotte Bourchier m. Letitia Hall m. Anne Millett of Guelph, Canada ---- ----
| (no issue) d.s.p. (left issue) Frederick, m. Christiana, m. Forsayeth
| and left issue ----
----------------------------- ---- Elizabeth. m. Bryan
| | Edward Butler ----
CATHERINE Frances d. unm. Caroline Damer
m. Richard Austin m. Armstrong
Cooper Chadwick
|
WILLIAM, LT. COL.
m. Anna R.H.M. Langley
|
--------------------------------------
| |
FRANCES VIOLET KATHLEEN LILLIAN
m. Allen Baker
RICHARD THOMAS FREDERICK
"Parson Dick" of Barnascounce of Littleton, &c.
m.Margaret Sadleir m. Sarah Lockwood m. Susannah Minchin
( Richard, murdered Richard, Capt. Richard, m. Cornwall
Richard, Capt.( Rebecca, unm. Thomas, Col. Catherine Ellard
( Alicia Massey William, Capt. Rebecca Boyle
*James, Major Michael, m. Mary Anne Dickson Clarinda Homan
William, Major Rebecca Harper Letitia Bagwell
Thomas, d.1808 *Jane Macdonald
Nicholas. d.s.p. Elizabeth Blackhall
Anne Braddish §Arahella Boyd
(Kissane Sophia Bell
Elizabeth ( (Casement
(Armstrong Sarah (Graham
Rebecca Cooper ( | Phoebe, Lady Fordyce
Alicia Sadleir
Ellen Scott Adelaide
Margaret d. unm. ----
----
*Ancs. of Macdonald of Peterhorough
and Toronto
*Grandfather of Col. Edward Frederick, §Ancs. of Boyd of Bobcaygeon
Dorsetshire
Josephine, Toronto
Margaret, Toronto
and others
De Lastre De Rochdale De Chaddewyck
Chadwick of Chadwick in Lancashire
IN East Lancashire, not far from the borders of Yorkshire, is situate the
important town of Rochdale. A short distance from Rochdale there was a wick or
hamlet anciently called Ceadda's Wyck or St. Chad's Wick (Chaddewyck). The
parish church of Rochdale, a fine old church of the Twelfth Century partly
rebuilt and largely added to, bears the name of St. Chad's. Although there is
no positive evidence of the fact, it is probable that the church was built on or
near the site of an earlier small church. There would seem to have been some
close connection between St. Chad's Church and St. Chad's Wick. In the early
endowment of the church there was included one acre at Chaddewyck. St. Chad was
a missionary to the Saxons of Mercia, which comprised a large eastern and middle
part of England, who became Bishop of York and afterwards of Lichfield. There
are many churches And other places in the midland and northern counties of
England which bear his name. Chadwick, originally Chaddewyck, no doubt derived
its name from the church, and manifestly the family, anciently DeChaddewyck, in
more modern form Chadwick, derived their name from Chaddewyck.
The early history of the family is obscure but there is abundant evidence
that they were extensive land owners in Spotland in the Thirteenth Century
(Fishwick's History of the Parish of Rochdale). The parish of Rochdale is
large, including a number of Townships of which that in which Chadwick is
situated is Spotland, anciently Spoddenland, named from a River Spod. Foster's
Feudal Coats of Arms mentions
9
Sir John Chidiock, Ed.. III. Roll, and Sir J. Chadwick of Chadwick and Healey,
Hen. VI. Roll, both bearing Cules, an inescutcheon within an orle of martlets
argent; also Sir John Chideoke, Ed. II. Roll, bearing a different and no doubt
derivative coat.
In the Ancestor, No. II, page III, there is mention of William Fitzwarine,
Governor of Montgomery Castle, said to have been summoned (i.e., to the House of
Lords) as a Baron, who died leaving a son and heir, Ives Fitzwarine, who died
s.p.m. 1414, leaving a daughter and heir, Eleanor, married, as second wife to
Sir John Chedeoke, whose two daughters, co-heirs, carried the representation of
his line and of the Barony, if any ever existed, to the Arundels and Stourtons.
As the two latter are names of some distinction this may be worth noting.
From the Fifteenth Century there are records of many transactions in the
acquisition and disposal of lands by Chadwicks. The ancient Wick subsequently
became the Manor House of Chadwick, and as such was long in the possession of
the family. It was pulled down and rebuilt by Oliver Chadwick in 1610, which
date is cut in the stone lintel over the front door. Chadwick Hall, as it is now
called, was a low rambling structure quite in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
Century style of Lancashire houses. It consisted of a central part with gabled
transverse wing on the east and a similar but larger wing on the west. The
house, as it now stands consists of the east wing and about one-half of the main
part, and is used as a farm house. Near the house on the west side is now a
large stone barn. It is quite likely that this barn is actually the west wing of
the Manor House, cut off from the house by the intermediate part of it having
been taken down, and altered to its present condition. The main line of the
family, known as Chadwick of Chadwick during their occupancy of the Manor, died
out in 1722, terminating in a sole heiress, Sarah Chadwick, who died in that
year and disposed of her property by will in favour of strangers. The
representation of this principal or best known branch of the family devolved
upon Chadwick of Healey. Mavesyn Ridware, etc., the head of whom is now Sir
Charles Chadwick-Healey. The Healeys or Helye of Helye were an ancient and
important Lancashire family. There was in 1889, and probably still is, a large
silver "dish" (offertory plate?) in St. Chad's
10
given by Sarah Chadwick, as is stated in an inscription engraved on the back of
it. There is a window in the church, one of twelve in the Clerestory of the
Choir representing the Twelve Apostles, to the Memory of George Chadwick,
Nineteenth Century.
From the Fourteenth Century, and perhaps earlier, down to comparatively
recent times, Chadwicks were very numerous in the parish of Rochdale and
especially in Spotland. In records of the period down from the Fourteenth to the
Seventeenth Century the name constantly appears. In 1672 the Speaker of the
House of Commons ordered that people should be required to sign a certain
"Protestacion" of loyalty to King etc. This "Protestacion" was signed by 2,079
male inhabitants of the parish of Rochdale, "none refusing," a list of whom is
printed in Fenwick's History. Of these there were 59 Chadwicks, 27 in Spotland
and 32 in other townships. Since then, however, they seem to have drifted away
into adjoining counties and into wider fields, and indeed seem to have been
always of a roving disposition, and are probably now to be found wherever the
English language is spoken. In Rochdale itself, the writer, who visited that
town in 1910, could only find or hear of one person of the name. A few years ago
Chadwick Hall was occupied by a Mr. Chadwick but only as a tenant and not for
long. His son, Kenneth Chadwick, C.E., came to Canada and lived for some time in
Toronto and then went to Vancouver.
The names of English families of long continuance usually show changes in
form. The name of Chadwick has had quite a number of variations. Omitting the
original De, there have been Ceaddewyck, Cheddewyk, Chaddewyc, Chadwyk,
Chadweke, Schadweke, Chadwek, Chadwik, Chadwic, Chadwyke, Chadwycke, Chadwike,
Chadioke; Chidiock, Chideock, Chadock, Chadoke and perhaps Chidwick. The name
has also been transformed to Sedgewick, which is usually, and properly, of quite
different derivation; but Burke's Armory gives one of this name as bearing an
inescutcheon and orle of martlets.
The early history of the family is, as already mentioned, quite obscure, and
it is curious that the only light so far known to have been thrown upon it is
heraldic in connection with the orle of martlets, a bearing, which has been
something of a puzzle for archaeologists and
11
armorists; which seems to remain altogether unsolved. The orle of martlets,
usually with an inescutcheon for which other charges are sometimes substituted,
is of exceptional character, being quite unlike any other heraldic composition
of the same early period. The arms are believed to have been in the first
instance borne by the family of De-Rochdale, who took their name from the town
of Rochdale, and by the Borough of Rochdale, anciently and until about the
middle of the Nineteenth Century, when they were hideously modernized, and are
now borne in the unsightly form then adopted. The arms of Chadwick are the same
as DeRochdale with a difference of tincture. The writer upon a study of the arms
came to the conclusion that the arms of Chadwick or DeChaddewyck were a
derivative from the arms of Rochdale or DeRochdale, indicating either a close
relationship or close feudal connection. Colonel Fishwick, the historian of
Rochdale, seems to doubt the existence of the family of DeRochdale, but he is
evidently too skeptical. The family certainly existed in Lancashire and
elsewhere, with variations of the name, but always the same arms, and do in fact
still exist under the names of Rashdall or Rishdall. The writer further formed
the opinion that the arms of DeRochdale were not an original coat but a
derivative from an earlier one which he considered would, if ever discovered,
probably be found in France, and that the tinctures would be, Argent, an one of
eight martlets sable. Some time after the writer had come to this conclusion he,
in quite an accidental manner, met with the original coat exactly in the form he
expected it to be in, borne by Colonel DeLatre, a gentleman of French family
anciently DeLastre, from the neighbourhood of Tours, who was in the military
service of England from 1795 for many years, and who afterwards came to Canada
in 1833 and lived at Lundy's Lane and at Niagara and died in 1848. Among his
descendants now living are Lady Falconbridge, wife of Sir Glenhome Falcontridge,
and Lady Moss, widow of the late Sir Charles Moss, and Mrs. Moss, widow of Chief
Justice Thomas Moss. The arms of DeLatre are engraved on an old seal in the
possession of Lady Falconbridge which does not show the tinctures, but they are
probably Argent with an orle of eight martlets sable. Those of DeRochdale are
the reverse, Sable and an orle of eight martlets argent, with an ines-
12
cutcheon of the last. Those of Chadwick of Chadwick are gules with an orle of
martlets and inescutcheon argent.
Derivatives from the original coat are borne by about forty Families in
England. One borne by a family named Erpingham is precisely the same as Rochdale
with a change of tincture. Among those who have borne the arms there was a
family of great distinction, closely connected with royalty, named DeValence.
Two of this family are buried in Westminster Abbey, and one of them has a tomb
which is very well known to archaeologists; it has on it a full-sized effigy in
armour with a shield which still retains its original colours. In St. Alban's
Cathedral in Hertfordshire among a number of carved shields there is one of
Valoynes, a name which seems to be identical with DeValence; and Foster's Feudal
Coat of Arms gives another for the same name; both of these arms are sub-
derivatives from some one or other of the derivatives of Rochdale.
Chadwick, Yorkshire and Co. Tipperary
The arms borne by the Tipperary Chadwicks are varied from those of Chadwick
of Chadwick by the addition of a cross gules, according to an old drawing of
apparently the Seventeenth Century still preserved at Ballinard in 1910, on
which these arms are stated to be those of a Yorkshire branch of the family.
The same arms with the same crest, namely, a martlet argent, were borne by a
family of Chadock or Chedocke of Ormskirk in West Lancashire, and also with a
slight variation of the crest are attributed by Burke to Chadwick of Cornwall.
Both of these would appear to be derivatives from those borne in Yorkshire.
The crests of the different branches of the name are generally either a white
lily stemmed and leaved proper, or a silver martlet, and in some instances a
combination of both. Chadwick of Chadwick had
13
the lily, and Chadwick of Healey the same, while the Yorkshire branch bore the
silver martlet, as also the Ormskirk branch and that of Cornwall, but the latter
added a crest coronet. The Ballinard branch has also the silver martlet but the
crest now borne with the differenced coat mentioned above includes the white
lily also; carried by the martlet feseways, i.e., horizontally. Of the two
crests of the Cooper-Chadwicks, now obsolete, one was a sable martlet bearing
the lily erect. The lily of the Chadwicks is said to be a white flag, but it
seems to be invariably drawn as an Easter lily. It is frequently drawn with
five petals but that is not correct as there should be six.
The motto of the Chadwicks generally is In Candore decus, which has a double
meaning and may be rendered Beauty in whiteness, presumably with reference to
the white lily, or in a secondary sense Honour in uprightness. The Latin Candor
may be translated whiteness, purity or uprightness; and Decus means beauty,
grace or honour. Truly a motto well worth trying to "live up to," as is also
the second motto of the Ballinard branch, Toujours pret, Always ready. The
motto of the Chadwicks of Healey is another good one, Stans cum Rege, Standing
with (i.e., loyally supporting) the King. This was used by Richard Cooper-
Chadwick, but not properly, as it is a motto adopted by the Chadwicks of Healey
from a family allied to them, but not to our branch. Richard Chadwick, Barclay
branch, used on his seal as a motto, "Juxta Salopiam," but that is rather a
statement of the locality in which he resided.
On the marriage in 1855 of Catherine, eldest daughter of William Chadwick of
Ballinard, to Richard Austin Cooper, who by Royal license assumed the name of
Chadwick, a new grant of arms was made, that being required by Irish heraldic
rule in such cases. When this was done it does not seem that there was any
evidence of the arms borne by either family produced to Ulster King of Arms and
consequently the arms as then granted were varied unduly from those previously
borne. This grant of arms was to Richard and Catherine and the descendants of
their marriage, and consequently are now borne only by Frances Violet Baker, and
her husband in her right, and Kathleen Lillian Cooper-Chadwick, and the two
crests granted at the same time are obsolete. The
14
descendants of Richard Austin Cooper-Chadwick's second marriage are entitled to
the arms of Cooper only (unless they have obtained a confirmation or new grant).
The arms of Cooper Chadwick so granted are:
Cooper-Chadwick
Quarterly, I and 4, Gold, an inescutcheon gules charged with a lily leaved and
slipped proper, within an orle of martlets sable, for Chadwick; 2 and 3, per
pale indented silver and sable, three bulls passant counterchanged, a canton
azure, for Cooper. Crests: 1st, a martlet sable charged on the breast with a
silver crescent holding in the bill a lily stemmed and leaved proper, for
Chadwick; 2nd, on a mount vert, a bull passant per pale silver and sable gorged
with a collar dancettee azure, for Cooper.
There was at Ballinard (now at Lismacue) a silver salver on which are
engraved the arms of Chadwick, partially and incorrectly tinctured, impaling
Azure, two swords in saltire points upwards, which the writer has been unable to
identify. This impaled coat is attributed by Papworth to the name of Gabb, and
also to the Scottish family of Bonar. The same coat is on an old monument in
Muckross Abbey, Killarney, and is said to be a coat granted to McCarthy More on
his being created an Earl by Queen Elizabeth. But we have no record of any
alliance with any of these families.
In consequence of the grant having been made to Cooper-Chadwick, and in order
to prevent further misapprehension regarding the ancient arms, application was
made to Ulster and a confirmation of the ancient arms taken out, on behalf of ll
descendants of John Craven Chadwick of Ballinard other than the Cooper-
Chadwicks. The arms so confirmed
15
are slightly and very satisfactorily differenced from the Yorkshire coat. All of
the Ballinard branch of the family not descended from the above John Craven
Chadwick are entitled to the Yorkshire coat.
The children of the writer are, according to a dictum of the Lyon King of
Arms, entitled to quarter the arms of Fisher in accordance with and subject to
Scottish rules, which differ materially from English and Irish, the eldest son
or male heir only being so entitled as of course, any other desiring to do so
being required to "matriculate," that is, to show his right by birth or descent,
and have the arms duly assigned to him.
The Lyon King of Arms also accords to the eldest male descendant of the
writer the right to use the crest of Fisher, a lion rampant azure (probably the
lion of Clan Ross) holding a maple leaf vert, an addition made to it by Lyon to
distinguish. the Canadian family, and the motto, Hope wins success, which is an
echo or antithesis of the Clan Ross motto which may be rendered in English as
Success encourages hope.
In connection with armorials it may not be out of place to refer to
liveries. The writer was informed by his aunt, Letitia Chadwick, that the
servants at Ballinard used formerly to wear a livery of drab and scarlet or
crimson, but how disposed is not known. Scarlet being now regarded as reserved
for the use of Royalty, the writer is of opinion that the descendants of John
Craven Chadwick of Ballinard should use a coat of claret colour with buff
facings, and black breeches, and all others a coat of claret colour with buff
breeches. The former might very well use for waistcoat the racing colour used
in the early part of the Nineteenth. Century (query, if previously?), namely,
blue, yellow and white, composed in a tartan pattern of nine equal stripes,
Strong blue, light blue, strong yellow, light yellow and white, with the first
four repeated in reversed order.
16
GLOSSARY OF HERALDIC TERMS OCCURRING IN THIS WORK.
Colours: Gold and Silver; usually termed Or and Argent, but the writer prefers
to describe them in English, following the example set in recent years by
some eminent Armorists in England; Gules, red; Azure, blue; Vert, green;
Sable, black; Ermine describes a surface of silver on which are scattered
black spots and tails. Any object in its natural colour is described as
proper.
The divisions of the surface of a shield requiring explanation are:-
Chief, the upper third of the shield; objects placed in this part of a shield
are described as "in chief."
Fess, the middle third horizontally of the shield; fesseways, is horizontally
placed.
Bar, is similar, but narrower, and not necessarily in the middle.
Pale, the middle third perpendicularly of the shield; objects placed one
directly above the other are described as "in pale"; Paly is a shield divided
into several parts by perpendicular lines.
Bend, is a band drawn across the shield usually from the "dexter" upper corner
to the "sinister" base, but occasionally from the sinister upper corner to
the dexter base. Dexter is the right hand of a person standing behind a
shield, and sinister is his left. Bendy is a surface divided by a number of
lines drawn bendways.
Saltire, is a cross formed by two bends; a St. Andrew's or St. Patrick's Cross.
Chevron, is the lower parts of two bends drawn from both sides of the base of
the shield until they join.
Bordure, is a border around the outer edges of the shield. When described as
compony it is divided into nominally equal parts of alternate colour; this is
used in Scottish armory to distinguish a junior branch of a family from the
elder.
Orle, is a narrow inside border around the shield, not touching the edges;
objects placed in this position are described as "in orle," or as "an orle
of, etc."
Treasure is similar to the orle, but narrower.
17
Quarter, is the fourth of a shield. Quarterly primarily denotes a shield divided
in four nominally equal parts by perpendicular and horizontal lines; but the
term may comprise more divisions of similar form.
Canton, is similar to a quarter but smaller.
Chequy, describes a surface divided into small squares or "panes" of alternate
colour.
Inescutcheon, is a small shield placed in a target one.
Indented, describes a partition or dividing line formed like the teeth of a saw.
Wavy, a line in waved form.
Nebulee, a line deeply waved.
Engrailed, means with scolloped edges.
Masoned, describes a surface divided by lines resembling masonry.
Semee, indicates small objects scattered over a surface.
Animals are described as to their attitudes by various terms; thus rampant is
standing in a threatening attitude upon one hind leg; passant is walking or
passing by; trippant means the same, referring to animals of the deer kind.
Displayed, describes a bird of prey affixed with his back to the shield and with
wings and legs spread out.
Naiant, swimming
Couped, is cut off with a smooth edge.
Erased, is torn off with a jagged edge.
Pitched, applied to a cross, signifies, that. the foot is pointed.
Cross-crosslet, describes a cross with the head and each arm crossed.
Gorged, is wearing a collar; Ducally gorged is wearing a collar in the form of a
Duke's coronet.
"Heraldic" objects are innumerable.. The following which occur in this work
require explanation:-.
Martlet, is a mythical bird, part pigeon and part swallow, with no feet, the
legs terminating in feathers.
Griffin, is a mythical beast, part eagle and part lion.
Pheon, is a broad arrow head, point downwards.
18.
Mascle, is a lozenge with the middle part "voided," allowing the field on which
it is placed to be seen through it.
Cinquefoil, is a flower of five petals, all showing equally.
Fleur-de-Lis; a lily, conventionally represented. Flory describes an Object or
figure ornamented with fleurs-de-lis.
Mullet, is a star of five points straight edged. When a mullet is pierced it is
more correctly a mollette or spur-rowel.
Cross patee, is what is usually known as a Maltese cross.
Lymphad, is an ancient ship of one mast.
Carb, is a wheat sheaf
The description with colours of the arms shown in outline only in the
illustrations in this work is as follows, in terms not too technical for the
usual reader:-
Barclay, Azure, a chevron and in chief three crosses pattee all silver.
Battersby, Gold, a saltire paly of twelve ermine and gules, in chief a crescent
sable.
Beatty, Azure, a silver fess, embattled, masoned sable; between three Golden
pheons.
Beaufort, Quarterly; 1 and 4 gules, three golden lions passant gardant;
2 and 3, Azure, three golden fleur-de-lis; all within a bordure compony
silver and azure.
Ermine, on a chief azure an escallop shell between two church bells all silver.
Carden, Silver, a mascle gules between three pheons sable.
Cooper, Sable, a chevron wavy ermine between three golden lions rampant.
Craven, Silver, a fess between six crosses-crosslet fitched all gules.
Eade, Azure, a chevron engrailed between three leopard's faces, all silver.
Edmund of Woodstock, Gules, three golden lions passant gardant within a silver
bordure. It is a little curious that the sons of the second marriage of
Edward I bore these arms, being England with a bordure for cadency, but the
sons of his first marriage bore France Ancient and England quarterly with due
marks of cadency. No doubt the explanation of this is that the second wife.
was a French
19
Princess, and the assumption of the arms of France by Edward I being a claim
to sovereignty over France, the withholding from the sons of that marriage of
the quarter for France would be in consequence of some point of etiquette or
agreement.
Ellard, Sable, on a bend ermine three hearts gules.
Fisher, Azure, three silver fishes naiant in pale, on a golden chief a king-
fisher proper between two cinquefoils gules.
Gabbett, Gules, a golden griffin rampant holding erect a flag staff, bendy
silver and sable, with a white banner charged with a two-headed eagle
displayed sable.
Cordon, Azure, three golden boar's heads couped.
Greene, Azure, three golden stags trippant.
Holland, Azure, semee of silver fleurs-de-lis, and a lion rampant silver.
Nicholson, Azure, two bars ermine, and in chief three suns "in splendour" (i.e.,
with rays) gold.
Sadleir, Cold, a lion rampant, per less azure and gules.
Stewart (Guelph), Gold, a fess chequy azure and silver between three lions
rampant gules. Another somewhat complicated coat is shown in Ontarian
Families, but the writer is advised by Ulster King of Arms to use the simpler
coat as preferable to the other one.
Stewart of Athole, Quarterly; I and 4, Gold, a fess cbequy azure and argent; 2
and 3, Silver, a lymphad sable.
Stuart, Gold, a lion rampant gules within a double tressure fiory and
counterflory also gules.
Vaur, Gold, a fess chequy gules and gold between three garbs gules.
20
BRANCHES of English families who settled in Ireland in the Seventeenth Century
have generally been careless about preserving a record of their connection with
the English families from which they sprung, and such connection is now
generally very difficult to ascertain or establish, "as is well known to experts
in Genealogy" (so says Mr J. Horace Round, an eminent Genealogist, The Ancestor,
No.5, page 53).
The evidence of the connection of our family with the English parent stem is
only the statement in the old drawing of arms previously mentioned that we came
"of an ancient and worthy family out of Yorkshire." Chadwicks in Yorkshire,
offshoots from Lancashire, have been numerous, as appears from recorded wills
since the beginning of the Fifteenth Century (Temp. Henry IV). The writer had
two or three of such wills searched but without finding any connection. There
are two wills, however, which seem suggestive. The will of William Chadwyck, of
Screeby, Yorkshire, who died in 1557. There is no mention in this will of any
widow or children; he left his house and land to his nephew, Richard Chadywicke,
son of his brother, Nycolas Chadwycke; he also refers to a brother, Richard
Chadwycke; and gave his goods to be divided among the children of his brother
and sisters. These people seem to have been of good social position as the will
referred to is witnessed by a Sir Edward Wyngrea (Wyngrove?). Then the will in
1558 of Richard Chadwike of the parish of West Markham, who was evidently a man
of some position as he directs that he should be buried in the church. He
refers to his brothers Nicolas and Roger Chadwicke. His wife's name was Joan,
and he left a daughter Rachel, under age, no other children being mentioned.
The first of our family in Ireland seem to have been two brothers, Richard,
of Ballinard, County Tipperary, and William, of Gortnekilleen, Counties
Tipperary and Limerick.
RICHARD CHADWICK, of Ballinard, was, about the middle or latter part of the
Seventeenth Century, in possession of Ballinard and Ballin-
21
glanna, which have been always held together and are included herin under the
one name Ballinard. The extent of this estate was 434 acres Irish plantation
measure, equal to about 700 acres English. By his will, dated 18th February,
1720/21, proved 1722, he left Ballinard and other lands to his nephew William
(styled "Senior"), of Gortukilleen; for life, then to his eldest son Richard in
tail, with successive remainders to his sons, William, Rodolph (or Rudolphus)
and Michael. He left to his wife a legacy of £590 and his plate and other
articles; and a legacy of £10 to his niece. Grace Sadleir, and £60 to her
children; and £30 to Pires Baron and his daughter Elizabeth. Also he gave a
farm to his nephew, Richard Ballard1. He died S.P. He married Mary Baker, who
survived him, and lived with her brother, Walter Baker, of Ballywire2. By her
will, proved 3rd January, 1729, she left, besides other legacies, a legacy to
her piece Mary, daughter of Barnaby (?) Baker, provided she married with consent
of William Baker of Lismacue, and a legacy and also the residue to Walter Baker,
son of William Baker of Lismacue.
WILLIAM CHADWICK, of Gortnekilleen, brother of Richard above named, will
dated 1715, proved 1717. Was living in Gortnekilleen in 1665. He purchased, on
17th January, 1684, by lease for lives renewable for 300 years (a tenure usual
in Ireland and similar to ancient feudal custom in England, but quite unknown in
Canada) Gortnekilleen and the East Stanges alias Stangesmore, 150 acres, I.P.M.
(about equal to 243 English), part of the Manor of Cullen in the parishes of
Ulla and Cullen in Coies Tipperary and Limerick. Gortnekilleen and East Stanges
or Stangesmore were always united as one holding as long as the Chadwicks held
them, and Stangesmore will herein be understood as included wherever
Gortnekilleen is mentioned. He married Elizabeth, daughter of William Gabbett,
of Caherline, County Limerick (he died 1693), and Alicia, his wife, daughter of
Richard England,3 of Lifford, County Clare, and had issue, viz:-
1 A Richard Ballard was living in Ballinard previous to 1665. He died in 1666
2 Or Ballywyre.. Names of places are spelled in deeds and wills with a good
deal of variation. The writer usually adopts the modern spelling.
3 The late Bishop Fuller was a descendant of Richard England.
22
Gabbett
William, of Gortnekilleen, the above named "Senior," of whom below.
Grace, married, firstly, 1692, to Richard Ballard and had a son Richard, and
secondly, to Clement Sadleir, who died 1715, leaving sons, John Clement,
William, Oliver, Nicholas, and Ambrose.
Elizabeth, married to Hamersley, and had two sons, John and Richard.
(?) Another daughter married to Pires or Pierce Barron, who had a daughter
Elizabeth.
Greene
WILLIAM CHADWICK, of Gortnekilleen and Ballinard, son of William above named,
married, October, 1713, Jane, daughter of Rodolphus Greene, of Kilmanahan,
County Waterford, and his wife Mary, daughter of Michael Carey; with a portion
of £300; she died September, 1779. By his will, dated 1748, proved 1750, he left
his widow £300 4, with plate,
4 A specified sum of money at that date, and long after, represented a much
greater measure of wealth than the same figure would represent now. Even as
comparatively recently as the middle of the 19th Century the writer recollects a
manservant in his uncle's house whose year's wages were very little more than
is now paid for a month's wages to a maidservant in Toronto.
23
jewels and numerous. articles. of value, and "her chaise and best chaise horse"
and an annuity of £50. He bequeathed to his son Rodolphus £100; to his son,
Michael £10, he being "already provided for"; to his grand-daughter, Jane
Chadwick, £300; and to his daughters, Ann Blood, Grace Bunbury,* and Catherine
Hunt, each £10 "to buy mourning." He had issue, viz:-
Richard, of whom below.
William, of Tipperary, "Big Billy."
Rudolphus. In a former account of the family his name appears with the
simple note "of whom nothing is known," but we now know something of him,
assuming the very unusual name to be evidence of his identity with
Rudolphus Chadwick, who appears to have settled in Cork and to have been
a merchant there, and to have married, in 1739, Prudence Healy, of the
parish of St. Mary Shandon5. The following persons whose names occur in
Cork records are probably their descendants, and they seem to have gone
down rather in the social scale. Charles Chadwick in 1765 had an interest
in Rathmore, a small property in the suburbs of Cork. His eldest son,
William, married Mary Rebecca White in 1776. And there were the
following marriages also; 1767, Mary, of St. Mary Shandon, to Joseph
Merrick; 1778, Mary Elizabeth to Thomas Cooke; 1797, Mary, of Cork, to
Henry Duggan, son of John Duggan, with an annuity if left a widow of £50
charged on certain lands. The following also appear: Edward Chadwick, of
32nd Regiment, married, in 1780, Mary Ray, of Youghal, and Edward
Chadwick, of Leitrim, revenue officer, perhaps the same man, married, in
1809, Margaret Homan. The Cork Directory of 1914 gives two or three
persons of the name, of whom the writer has not obtained any
particulars6.
* Earl Roberts, who has just recently died at the seat of war in France,
was descended maternally from the Tipperary Bunburys, but whether from Grace
Chadwick or not the writer cannot say.
5 It is to be hoped that she was a belle of Shandon, and that she had rung in
her honour the famous "Bells of Shandon that sound so grand on the pleasant
waters of the River Lee," according to a local poet - if they were then in
existence.
6 If desired, a good deal of information regarding this family could be
obtained from the parochial registers of St. Ann's, Shandon, in the Record
Office, Dublin, and from the Register of St. Mary's, which is in the possession
of the Rector of that parish.
24
Michael, a Quarter Master in 1743, married Anna Maria, daughter of William
Connor, of Clonmel, who survived him; he died between 1752 and 1757; had a
daughter Jane, married, 1759, to Francis, eldest son of George Davies, of
Bunreagh, County Clare; and a daughter Mary, married to John Lackey, of
Clonmmel and of Kilkenny, who had issue, viz: (besides others) a daughter
Maria, married to Francis Despard, of Fethard, eldest son of William Despard,
of Killaghy Castle, County Tipperary7.
Catherine, married Vere Hunt, of Curragh, County Limerick, and had issue one son
who died inf. Vere Hunt's eldest son of a second marriage was created a
baronet.
Grace, married to Bunbury.
Ann, married in 1748 to William Blood, of Roxton, County Clare, some time High
Sheriff. She had a marriage portion of £1,000 and an annuity of £100 a year
if left a widow.
RICHARD CHADWICK, of Ballinard, eldest son of William last named, married,
firstly, February, 1738, Rebecca, eldest daughter of James Ellard, of Newtown,
County Limerick. She had a settlement secured
Ellard
Sadlier
on Ballinard, Gortnekilleen and three other estates. Richard married secondly,
February, 1768, Jane, second daughter of Nicholas Sadleir of Golden Garden,
County Tipperary. She had a jointure of £1,000 if left a widow. She survived
him and was married, secondly, in 1772, to Anthony Armstrong, of Emly, and had
several children. Richard
7 It is not certain that Jane and Mary were the only children of Michael and
Anna Maria. It appears that there was (in 1759), in the office of William
Connor, attorney-at-law in Dublin, apparently a relative of Anna Maria, a
William Chadwick, very probably a son of Michael and Anna Maria. Also it is
possible that Surgeon Michael Chadwick, 69th Regt., who has not been identified,
may have been of this family.
25
died 1770 or 1771. By his will he gave to his son Thomas £1,000; to his son
Frederick, the lands of Gortnebarna and Ballyhenry; to his son, Capt. James,
£5,000, having already advanced him £2,000. Gave Gortnekilleen to his son
Michael, with remainder to his son Nicholas. Directed certain lands to be sold
for the benefit of his wife, and he left her his household effects "except plate
and family pictures." He had issue, viz:-
Of the first marriage:-
William, "Billy Snug."
Richard, "Parson Dick," see infra.
Thomas, of Barnascounce, see infra.
James, see infra.
Frederick, of Littleton, see infra.
Alice, married December, 1765, to John Minchin, of Busherstown;
and had issue, Richard, Captain of Dragoons, died unmarried;
George; Rebecca, married to William Minchin, of Greenhills.8
And of the second marriage:-
Michael, see infra (Wales, etc.).
Nicholas, nicknamed "Posy," born 1771, died January, 1854, was sometime a
merchant in Cork, and was living in Mitchelstown in 1749. Married in
1792 Anne Sadleir, who died May, 1826 (Marriage Settlement £1,200), and
had issue, Clement, died 1809; Richard, bpt. 1798; Nicholas, bpt. 1802;
Michael, bpt. 1804, died 1885; William, bpt. 1806; Nathaniel, bpt. 1808.
None of these left issue, so far as the writer has been able to
ascertain. Jane, bpt. 1797, d.v.p.
WILLIAM CHADWICK, of Ballinard, "Billy Snug," born 1741, died March, 1825.
Married firstly, November, 1767, Christiana Carden (sister of Sir John Craven
Carden, Baronet), second daughter of John Carden, of Templemore, County
Tipperary, and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Rev. Robert Craven and his wife
Rose Otway9. She had a marriage portion of £2,500 secured on Ballinard,
Illanemeene and
9 There is some confusion about the Minchin marriages. The pedigrees of
that family furnished to Burke, and printed in the Landed Gentry (eds. 1895
and 1912), are confused and plainly incomplete and inaccurate. The statements
made here are therefore not certain.
26
another estate. She died February, 1782. He married, secondly, in 1793, Sophia
Carden, only daughter of John Carden, of Barnane, and
Craven Carden
his wife, Anna Sophia Roe, a cousin of his first wife; she survived her husband
and died September 1825, aged 82 10. She had a marriage portion of £1,000 and
an annuity of £80 a year as a widow. William had issue of the first marriage
only, viz:-
Richard, who seems to have died quite young as William describes John Craven
in his Marriage Settlement as his "only son." He probably died under two
years of age because his name does not appear in the Cullen Register now
existing which dates from 1770 only, those prior to that date having long
ago disappeared.
John Craven, born 1778 (query if accurate; he is styled "esquire" in 1796 as
a witness to his sister's settlement). See infra.
Elizabeth, married 15th November, 1796, to Edmond Power, eldest son of John
Power of Tipperary, and his wife, Mary Middleton, and had issue Catherine
(married to her cousin and had issue), Elizabeth, Madeline.
Rebecca, married April, 1807, to Ussher Beere, of Dublin, son of Thomas
Beere, of Liskevoon, County Tipperary; died s.p.
Clarinda, married 1828 to John Collins, Major in the Army.
9There are two silver cups at Ballinard bearing the arms of Rose Craven
(Otway) arranged as those of a widow. Her portrait, painted by Sir Peter
Lely, a portrait painter of note, was given by William Chadwick of Ballinard to
his brother to John Craven Chadwick (Canada) and is now in the possession
of the writer.
10 The writer has Sophia's ring, containing hair of "Billy Snug," which was
sent to him from Ireland by Elizabeth M. C. Barnes, his first cousin, named
infra.
27
Charlotte, married 10th August, 1797, to John Bourchier, eldest son of John
James Bourchier, 11 of Baggotstown, County Limerick, and his wife Mary,
daughter of Joseph Gubbins, of Killrush, and had issue: their daughter
Charlotte was married to William Chadwick (infra), and a grand-daughter,
also Charlotte, was married to Richard Cooper-Chadwick. (infra).
Harriet, died March, 1782.
Isabella, born February, 1782, and died shortly afterwards.
William, "Billy Snug," probably on his son John Craven becoming of age, left
Ballinard, and in 1799 was residing in Limerick. In 1807 he was living at
Willmount, County Tipperary. He seems to have maintained a greater measure of
social dignity than any of those who came after him have been disposed to do.
JOHN CRAVEN CHADWICK, of Ballinard, born 1778 (?), died March, 1851. Married,
March, 1799, Elizabeth, only daughter of Samuel
Cooper
Cooper, then of Cashel, afterwards of Killenure Castle, County Tipperary, and
his wife Frances, daughter of David Butler, of Garranleagh, County Tipperary.
She had a marriage portion of £3,000 and an annuity if left a widow of £250
secured on the mansion and 158 I.P.M. (or about 280) acres, of Ballinard, with
Ballinglanna 45 acres. He had issue as follows:-
11 The name of Bourchier is pronounced Boucher and has been frequently so
written, but incorrectly. The Bourchiers are an ancient English family who
appear to have come originally from Bourcieres in France. The Bourchiers of
Baggotstown bear for arms, Sable, three lions passant of silver. The
other family, with whom John Barclay Bourchier Chadwick is connected, and also
Col. Edward Frederick Chadwick of Dorsetshire, bear arms quite different.
28
William, born 1800, see below.
Samuel Cooper, of Dunmore, County Waterford, born January, 1801, married
Letitia, daughter of Thomas Hall, of Tipperary, son of Rev. Leak Hall, of
Trim. She died 1886. Samuel Cooper died 15th June, 1890, s.p.
Austin Cooper, of Damerville, County Tipperary, an attorney, married 1829,
Anna Matilda, only daughter of Edward Millett, M.D., of Cove Queenstown),
County Cork. He died April, 1846, leaving his widow surviving, having
had issue, namely:- 1. Frederick William, born 1830, settled in Australia
and had issue. 2. John Craven, born 1834, went to Australia. 3 Edward
Thomas Millett, born 1833, went to Australia. 4. Austin Cooper, born
1836, formerly in Australia, afterwards of Colman and Damerville, County
Tipperary, was married twice, the second marriage being to a German named
Alberta; had issue one daughter Muriel. 5. Samuel Richard, born 1841,
died inf. 6. Henry Carden, born 1844, of Damerville. 7. Anna Maria, born
1834, married 29th November, 1855, to Robert Pratt, of Gawsworth, County
Cork, and had issue five sons and eight daughters; see Burke's Landed G.,
ed. 1912. 8. Elizabeth Wilhelmina, born 1837, married to Thomas in
Australia, afterwards living in England. 9. Fanny Matilda, born 1839.
John Craven, born 6th April, 1811, settled in Canada.
Richard, baptised 8th April, 1813, died unmarried.
Frederick, baptised 16th February, 1815, of Foxhoro', near Moneygall, Kings
County. Married Julia, daughter of Patrick Quinlisk, of Clonamohan,
Kings County, and had issue :- 1. Edward, went to Australia; died,
leaving issue, William, Mary. 2. John, of Foxhoro, married Mary Jane
Mooney, and has issue, John Frederick; Charlotte Mary; Frances Victoria;
Emily; Florence; Christina. 3. William, dec. 4. Charlotte, dec. 5. Maria
Bessie, married to Ralph Hayes, and has issue, John, Frederick, Ralph. 6.
Caroline, dec.
29
Edward Butler, a barrister-at-law, baptised 24th October, 1817; died
unmarried 13th April, 1859.
Frances, married 1833 to Rev. John Seymour (brother of Wilhelmina, wife of
William, infra) [Arms: gules, a pair of golden wings conjoined in lure;
i.e., displayed with points downward and joined in the form of a hawk's
lure], of Clonloughan, near Clonghjordan, County Tipperary, died 1879,
leaving issue: John Hobart, dec.; William, dec.; Edward, dec.; Frances
Elizabeth Susan, living in 1914; Catherine Mina, dec.; Rosa, dec.
Christiana (or Catherine) Carden, married 30th June, 1832, to Richard Martin
Forsayeth, M.D., and died 1871, leaving issue. 12 Richard William, M.D.,
Surgeon Colonel in the Army, married Harriet Margaret Baird and had
issue; Elizabeth, married to Patrick, in Holy Orders, of Mocollop
Rectory, Lismore, in 1898, and had issue:- 1. William, District Inspector
Royal Constabulary, in 1898. 2. Livingstone, C.E. 3. Thomas. 4. Another
son in King's Royal Rifles, 1897. 5. Eunice. 6. Christiana. 7. John,
had issue. 8. Jane, married to Robert Tynan Huston, M.D. [Arms of
Forsayeth: Silver, a chevron azure between three griffins rampant vert.]
Elizabeth Cooper, married 3rd July, 1827, to William Bryan, in Holy Orders,
of Gurteen, near Clonmel, County Tipperary, son of Thomas Bryan and his
wife Elizabeth Aldwell, and had issue:- Thomas, died 15th June, 1880;
Elizabeth Mary Christiana (died December, 1905), married 8th April, 1874,
to John Barnes, of Ballyglasheen, County Tipperary; Mary Louisa; John
Craven, died 12th December, 1869; Basil William, died March, 1873; Samuel
Cooper; Caroline Damer, married 1868 to Patrick Barnes, of Graigue,
County Tipperary; Edward Butler, in Australia; Rosa Josephine, married to
John William Hughes, of Annsgift, County Tipperary, died October, 1887;
Frederick Austin, of Gurteen; Arthur, of Priestown, County Tipperary,
married October, 1889, Anne Kathleen, daughter of Benjamin Barton, of
Kilkerran; Charlotte.
12 Some of these particulars are from the "Memorial book of the Forsyth Family
by Vicomte Forsyth de Fronsac," which is not always reliable for accuracy.
30
(Note by A Maitland: inserted facing EMC page 31 photographs of Frances Violet
Baker and Kathleen Lillian Cooper-Chadwick)
Caroline Damer, baptised 29th June, 1809; married 1838 to Joseph Cooke
Armstrong, in Holy Orders, of Ballyporeen, County Tipperary, and d.s.p.
about New Year's, 1856. Her husband died not long after.
WILLIAM Chadwick; of Ballinard, born 1800, married firstly, 1832, Wilhelmina,
daughter of John Seymour, in Holy Orders, Rector of Shronell (son of John
Seymour, in Holy Orders, Rector of Palace, County Limerick, a descendant of Sir
Henry Seymour, High Admiral of England, brother of King Henry VIII's Queen Jane)
and his wife Catharine, widow of Jacob, sister of Dr. Millett, of Cove, County
Cork. On the marriage of William and Wilhelmina there was a settlement made of
Ballinard, Ballinglanna and Illameene, in all 518 acres Irish measure or 840
acres English measure. She died December, 1836. William married secondly,
Charlotte (died 1874), daughter of John Bourchier, of Baggotstown, and Charlotte
Chadwick (see supra), his wife.
He had issue of the first marriage only, namely:-
Catherine, see below.
Elizabeth, baptised 3Jst August, 1834, died April, 1839.
Fanny, baptised 3rd July, 1836, died January, 1885, unmarried.
CATHERINE CHADWICK, baptised 1st February, 1833, died 12th December, 1855.
She was married 6th February, 1855, to Richard Austin, son of Samuel Cooper, of
Killenure Castle, and his wife, Louisa Salisbury daughter of Richard Long, of
Longfield, County Tipperary. Richard Austin Cooper assumed by Royal License the
additional surname of Chadwick. They had issue:-
WILLIAM COOPER-CHADWICK, born 14th November, 1855, died 24th November, 1895.
Honorary Colonel Tipperary Artillery. Married, February, 1880, Anna Maria
Robertina Hephzibah, daughter of John Langley, of Knockanure, County Tipperary,
J.P., and his wife, Sarah Elizabeth Neville. (Arms of Langley: Silver a fess
sable, in chief three roundles azure.) She died November, 1911, leaving issue:-
Frances Violet, married 7th July, 1910, to Allen Baker, of Lismacue, Member
of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, eldest son of Charles
Conyers Massy Baker and his wife, Harriet Booth, daughter of George
Allen, of Oakdale, Oakley, County
31
Surrey, England, and has issue, William, Mary. (Arms of Baker: Azure,
three swan's heads of silver ducally gorged gold.)
Kathleen Lillian.
Richard Austin Cooper-Chadwick married, secondly, Charlotte Sophia, daughter
of John Bourchier, of Baggotstown (brother of Charlotte, wife of William
Chadwick above named), and Sarah Eyre, his wife; he died 19th January, 1893,
leaving issue of the second marriage of whom particulars are set out in Burke's
Landed Gentry of Ireland, ed. 1912.
32
TIPPERARY, OR "BIG BILLY" FAMILY.
WILLIAM CHADWICK, of Tipperary ("Big Billy"), was second son of William; of
Ballinard, and his wife, Jane Greene. He married, 1754, Mary youngest daughter
of Richard Lockwood, of Cashel, who survived him. She had a marriage portion of
£1,500 and an annuity of £150 if left a widow. By his will, dated 1799, proved
1804, he leaves to his widow all his plate, furniture, etc.; gives nothing to
his eldest son, "he being already well provided for"; appoints £1,000 from his
marriage settlement to be divided between his daughters Elizabeth Neligan and
Jane Adams and his sons, Lieut. Michael and Thomas; and leaves to his son,
Benjamin Lockwood, five shillings "to dispose of as he thinks proper" ; 13 and
bequeaths certain articles to Surgeon Michael Chadwick of 69th Regiment (whom
the writer has been unable to identify). He had issue, namely:-
Richard, barrister-at-law, see infra.
Michael, "Major," Lieut. Tipperary Militia and 1st Royal Veteran Battalion;
married February, 1800, Mary Ann McCausland, of Rush Hall, County
Londonderry; she had a fortune of £1,000; from his will it would seem
that he survived his wife, and d.s.p. about 1819.
Thomas, died May, 1826, s.p.
Nicholas, called "Big Nick."
Benjamin Lockwood, a Sergeant in the 7th Dragoon Guards in 1799; married
1816, Catherine Hughes.
Rudolph, killed in Ballinard lawn by a fall from his horse.
Jane, called "the Beautiful," married, firstly, 1783, Henry Adams, of Cork
(who died before 1799), and had issue:- 1. William, of Tipperary. 2.
Henry, of Tipperary, who married Alicia
13 "Big Billy" seems to indulge in a little satire at the expense of his
Serjeant son. But on his behalf it may be pointed out that a commissioned
officer might be a very objectionable man and so long as he scrambled through
his duties and avoided being found out in any serious mischief, nobody cared.
And a private might be a bad man but if he appeared clean on parade and did his
proper share of sentry go and aid not get drunk too often, he might pass
muster; but a Serjeant must of necessity be steady, well conducted and capable.
Among the host of Chadwicks past and present whose names this little work
records, there have, no doubt, been, and may perhaps be now, some whom we would
be less willing to recognize as cousins than a Serjeant in the 7th Dragoon
Guards.
33
Murray and had issue, Henry, William, Godfrey. 3 Eliza, married to --
O'Donnell, and had issue, John, Jane, married to Bartlett, and others.
Jane (Adams) married, secondly, 1801, Philip Corbett, of High Park and
Tipperary (whom she survived), and had issue (besides two daughters, Jane
and Anna Maria, who married and had issue), Philip, of Shrewsbury,
Shropshire, and of Bittern, Southampton, described as "only surviving
son" in 1834, who married Caroline -- and had issue viz:- 1. Roland, in
the Royal Navy. 2. Cyril, in the Royal Navy. 3. Bertie, in the P. & 0.
Service. 4. Edith, married to - Taylor, of the Abbey, Shrewsbury. 5.
Pauline, married to - Seaton, of Southampton. 6. Fanny, went to South
America. 7. Dora, married to - Brook, of Bittern. 8. Mary, married to -
Usborne, of Bittern. Elizabeth, called "Beautiful Betty," married 1781 to
Frederick Neligan, in Holy Orders; she was a widow in 1834; and had
issue:- 1. William Chadwick, in Holy Orders, D.D., of Landscape, County
Cork. 2. Catherine. 3. Charlotte.
RICHARD OR BARCLAY BRANCH.
RICHARD CHADWICK, barrister-at-law, eldest son of William Chadwick, of
Tipperary ("Big Billy"), sometime of Limerick, of Dublin in 1823, of London in
1824, afterwards of Berwick Hall, Shropshire, and in 1830 of Belvidere Place,
County Surrey. Married December, 1784 (or January, 1785), Bridget, 14 eldest
daughter of Thomas Barclay,* of Ballyartney, County Clare (then deceased) and
Anne, his wife. She had a marriage portion of £1,000. She died before 1830.
Had (besides a daughter Anne, married to Griffith, who was a widow living at
Bangor in Carnarvonshire, in 1830) one son:-
14 Her sister Anne was married to Col. Muttlebury, of a family some of whom
resided in Guelph when it was a village. Some also in Toronto at a later date.
* Possibly a descendant of John Barclay, son of David Barclay, of Urie
(see Bell, infra), who settled in Ireland.
34
WILLIAM BARCLAY CHADWICK, born about 1790, died in London, 1861; of Brighton
in 1823 and of 15 Connaught Square, Hyde Park, London, in 1844. Was Captain in
2nd Royal Surrey Militia. Married Ludee Elizabeth, daughter of Dr. Sharpe, who
was an explorer and visited islands in the South Seas named Ludee and Alba Thule
and others, and wrote a book of his travels; he was a friend of Sir Bartle
Frere, noted in South African history. He had issue a daughter Fanny, who died
young, and one son:-
RICHARD WELLER CHADWICK, born 1812, died in London, November, 1864. When a
young man he saved a son of Lord Brougham from drowning at Boulogne, and through
Lord Brougham's influence obtained a commission in the army, which, however, he
did not long retain; he served in the Spanish army in the Carlist Rebellion; was
Manager of the Eastern Counties Railway, and Afterwards of the Eastern Bengal
Railway in India; married in 1851 Georgiana Anne, daughter of the Rev. Charles
Spencer Bourchier, Rector of Great Hallingbury, County Essex, and Vicar of
Sandridge, County Hertford, and his wife Eliza, daughter of Samuel Harman, and
had issue (besides a daughter Georgiana Ludee Frere, married to Robert
Balderston Mackay, son of James Mackay, of Blair Castle, but d.s.p. 12th April,
1891) one son:-
JOHN BARCLAY BOURCHIER CHADWICK, of Hollywood, California, born August 5th,
1853; was sometime of the Civil Service and local Military Service in Jamaica,
and is a Captain in the Reserve of Officers of that island; married 2nd
September, 1898, at Trinity Church, New York, Helen Sophia, daughter of James
Porter, of Sarnia, Canada, widow of Henry Morgan.
The Rev. Charles Spencer Bourchier was a descendant of Charles Bourchier of
"the Regiment of Horse commanded by the Lord Windsor," M..P. for Dungarvan
between 1692 and 1699, and for Armagh in 1715, and his wife, Barbara Harrison, a
descendant of Thomas of Brotherton, son of King Edward I (see Foster's Royal
Lineages, p.603, etc., in which, however, there is an error in the name of Col.
Edward Frederick Chadwick being there wrongly placed, but it is correctly given
at p. 609 of the same work).
35
William Bourchier and John O'Brien Bourchier, sons of Capt. John Bourchier,
R.N., came to Canada and settled in Georgina, near Lake Simoce; and two others,
Admiral Bourchier and General Bourchier were also some time in Canada, but did
not remain.
Helen Sophia Porter, wife of John Barclay Bourchier Chadwick, is the great
grand-daughter of Benedict Arnold, General in the American Army, a descendant of
a Welsh family of importance and of ancient British or Welsh royal descent. He
was the son of Capt. Benedict Arnold, of Norwich, Connecticut, and his wife,
Hannah, widow of Absalom King. and daughter of John Waterman (who according to a
pedigree in possession of the widow was a descendant of King Alfred the Great
through the family of Lucy of Charlecote) and great Grandson of Benedict Arnold,
Governor of Rhode Island, 1657-1658. During the progress of the Revolutionary
War General Arnold became of the opinion that he had done wrong in joining the
Revolutionary party and he returned to his allegiance, for which the Americans
have overwhelmed him with unreasoning, bitter and merciless vituperation. This
was unjust because if one should be misguided and induced to take up arms
against his lawful sovereign, hut should return to his allegiance, he is not
deserving of such condemnation as was accorded to General Arnold by the
Americans. It has been said that there were many who changed sides during the
Revolutionary War who have not been mentioned in history, but General Arnold was
a man of importance and therefore was not let off so easily. After the war he
went to England and the Americans confiscated his property, for which he
received an indemnity from the British Government. He was married twice; of his
sons (four) of the second marriage all were officers in the British Army, two of
whom attained high rank; and his only daughter of that marriage married a
colonel in the army. (See Burke's L. G. ed 1853.) His first marriage was on the
22nd February, 1767, to Margaret, daughter of Samuel Mansfield, High Sheriff, of
New Haven, Connecticut, of which marriage he had three sons, Benedict, who died
unmarried; Henry, who had one daughter, married to Henry Sill; and Richard, born
22nd April, 1769, died 1847, who came to Canada a United Empire Loyalist; he
married Margaret Weatherhead, of Augusta, Canada. Their daughter, Ellen
36
Amelia, born 1819, died 1906, was married to James Porter, of Sarnia in Ontario;
their daughter is Helen Sophia above mentioned.
The arms of Arnold are, Gules, three silver pheons, on a chief also silver a
bar nebulee azure.
WALES AND MICHIGAN.
(NB This section is reprinted with many changes as an addendum dated 1916 – AM
12/2015)
MICHAEL CHADWICK, son of Richard Chadwick, of Ballinard, and his wife, Jane
Sadleir, born 1769, married Margaret (Amelia Margaret), daughter of Jeremiah
Dwyer, of Tipperary, attorney-at-law, and his wife, Alice Potter. The marriage
was secret without the consent of parents or guardians, both Michael and
Margaret being about fifteen years of age when married, and a bill in Chancery
afterwards filed by Michael against his guardian for an account tells a pitiful
tale of the straightened circumstances of himself and wife and children for some
years although his father had left him well provided for and Margaret was "an
heiress" entitled to an estate of her own. On their coming of age, however, in
1790 Margaret had, besides her own property, a settlement secured on
Gortnekilleen, which came to Michael under the will of his father; it was sold
in Michael's lifetime. 15 Margaret (if Amelia Margaret) died April, 1800.
Michael lived some time in Jersey, and was living in Bangor in Northeast Wales
in 1802. He had issue, Richard, baptised August, 1786; Jeremiah, died young; and
Nicholas, died young.
Richard, the eldest son, was a Captain in the Regiment of Shropshire Militia;
be is stated by his descendants to have been engaged in raising recruits for the
army (at this time constantly engaged in the Napoleonic and other wars of the
period) and particularly for the Welsh Fusiliers. He is stated to have married,
firstly, a daughter of "Sir John Moore Knighton, physician to George IV," but
there is some error as to this, the physician to George IV was Sir W. Knighton.
John Moore Knighton was of Greenofen House, Devon, and seems to have died
15 Lost through extravagance and mismanagement and the reckless style of living
so prevalent among the Irish gentry at this period, to the ruin of many
families.
37
s.p.m., leaving daughters co-heiresses, one of whom, Maria Saltern Knighton, was
married 13th February, 1810, to Capt. George Drake. Capt. Richard had issue of
the first marriage; one of whom, John Moore Knighton Chadwick, went to South
Africa; Capt Richard married, secondly, Anne Roberts, who survived him and died
about 1860, having had issue (besides three daughters, Sarah, d.s.p.; Harriet,
married to Jones and had issue; and Mary, died young) four sons:-
William, Agent for Estates of Lord Dudley, died about 1889, unmarried.
Frederick, M.D., settled at Perrysburg in Indiana, died about 1867,
unmarried.
Edward, C.E., of London, died about 1878, unmarried.
Thomas, died about 1907, aged 90, leaving a son who died about 1913, and a
daughter living in Wales.
Michael Richard, M.D., went to the United States in 1840, settling firstly
at Detroit and after some changes of residence settled in 1867 at Hart,
Oceana County. Moved to Florida in 1885, and died there about 1901. He
married Caroline Goden, who died 19th April, 1905, daughter of Richard
Seth Goden, and had issue, viz:- Ira Brown, M.D. born 18th April, 1851, of
Carr, Colhoun County, Florida, is married and has one son. Harvey Jenner,
M.D., born February, 1857, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, married, firstly,
14th October, 1885, Laura Estelle, daughter of James M. Teeple, and his
wife, Harriet Wixon; she died 8th April, 1900; and secondly, 6th May,
1914, Rocina Hemkiss; and has issue of the first marriage:- Jenner Harvey,
born 26th February, 1894; Eva Harriet, married to Fred Caro, of Grand
Rapids, and has issue, Laura Lona, born 1909, Leonora and Nora May; Zela,
married to James Hatch, living in Detroit.
38
"PARSON DICK" FAMILY.
RICHARD CHADWICK, in Holy Orders, second son of Richard, of Ballinard, and
Rebecca Ellard; (nicknamed "Parson Dick"). Seems to have had several charges at
different dates, among others the rectorship of Emly, Doon, and Kilvernon, and
was later of Chadville, County Tipperary. Born 1751. Ordained deacon 1772,
priest 1773; died May, 1817. He married; 1770, Margaret, daughter of Nicholas
Sadleir, and had issue:-
Richard, of whom below.
William, Lieutenant 59th Regt., 1805, Captain 34th Regt. in 1812, Battalion
disbanded in 1814. Born 1782, died June, 1855.
James, see infra.
Nicholas, Ensign 59th Regt. in 1808, Lieutenant in 1811, Captain 1814, and
was at Waterloo; Captain 13th Regt., 1826. Died s.p. 1838.
Thomas, born 1788, died December, 1S08.
Anne, married 1791 to Joseph Braddish, of Kilkenny, eldest son of William
Braddish, and had issue, Joseph, William.
Elizabeth, married firstly, 1802, to Willian Kissane, of Ballykeen, County
Tipperary, and had one son William, who married Aphra Haly; and secondly,
to Robert Armstrong, in Holy Orders, of Clonoulty, and had issue, viz:-
1. Anthony, in Holy Orders. 2. Jane, married to Austin Cooper. 3.
Elizabeth, unmarried.
Rebecca, married in 1798 to William Cooper, of Killenure, only son of Samuel
Cooper, of Cashel. By her marriage settlement she had an annuity of
£200. The said William and Rebecca were grandparents of Richard Austin
Cooper-Chadwick, previously named herein.
Alicia, married in 1803 to William Sadleir, of Sadleir's Wells, and died in
1835, s.p..
Eleanor Elmina, married 1812 to John Scott, in Holy Orders, of Pallas, and
had issue:- 1. John, in Holy Orders. 2. William, in Holy Orders. 3.
Richard. 4. Samuel. 5. Margaret. 6. Ma-
39.
tilda, married to - Bryan and had issue. 7. Anne. 8. Ellen, married to
--Winter. 9. Nicholas. (There is some uncertainty as to the husband and
children of Eleanor Elmira, records being partly illegible.)
Margaret, died unmarried May, 1850, aged 55.
And, as the writer has been informed, others, of whom no particulars have
been obtained.
Richard, above named, of Chadville (or Barnadarrigh) and of Perryville and of
Ballynatt, was born 1774, died July, 1836. He commanded. a company of volunteers
in 1798. He married in 1796 Margaret, daughter of John Odell, then deceased,
who had a settlement of £2,000, and had issue, namely:-
Richard, who was murdered at Holy Cross, June, 1829.
John, an attorney in Dublin, died 30th December, 1855, married 1826, Mary
Anne Briscoe and had issue, Charles, M.D., of Broadwater, County Down,
and another son and three or four daughters.
Samuel, in Spanish military service, died in Spain, unmarried.
Thomas, born 1812, died unmarried February, 1838.
William, of Arravale, died 1874, married and had issue:- 1. Edward, bpt.
1850, in 7th Dragoon Guards, 1869; Captain 16th Lancers, 1879; Major,
1889; Adjutant Suffolk Yeomanry Cavalry, 1880 to 1885; Colonel commanding
Imperial Yeomanry in the Boer War, and was mentioned in dispatches; was
married and had one daughter. 2. Charles William, bpt. 1855, of
Arravale, died unmarried (?).
Nicholas, who settled in Australia and died unmarried.
James, of Cashel, High Constable of County Tipperary, died 1875, married
1846 Wilhelmina White, of Springmount (?) who died 1910, and had issue,
James Joseph, born 10th July, 1852.
Margaret, married 1828 to William Taylor Peter Short, Lieutenant 17th
Regiment, and had issue:- 1. Stewart. 2. Anne. 3. Catharine. 4. Jane.
Catharine, married 28th April, 1824, to James Roe, of Roesborough, County
Tipperary, M.P.; she had a jointure of £100 a year if
40
left a widow; and had issue:- 1. George 2, Kate, and another
daughter.
Rebecca, unmarried.
Alicia, died 22nd June, 1874, married 1832 to John Massy, of Kingswell,
County Tipperary, son of Charles Massy, and had issue:- Richard, of
Listowel, County Kerry; Frances Elizabeth, married, firstly, to Hugh
Baker, of Lismacue (uncle of Allen Baker who married Frances Violet
Cooper-Chadwick as previously stated herein), and secondly, to Ralph
Hall Bunbury; Millie; and others.
MAJOR JAMES BRANCH.
JAMES CHADWICK, second son of Rev. Richard, "Parson Dick", born 15th May,
1790, Lieutenant 59th (East Lancashire) Regiment; Captain 86th in 1815, retired
ith rank of Major, 1839. Married firstly, Josephine Chapuis, believed to be the
only one who escaped of a French family all others of whom were put to death in
the French Revolution, and had issue, one son who died young; and secondly, Anne
Isabella, daughter of George Markham, in Holy Orders, Dean of York, and grand-
daughter of the Right Rev. William Markham; Archbishop of York, 1777, 16 and had
issue:-
1. Edward Frederick, born 3rd March, 1829, Ensign 59th, 1845, Lieutenant
1849, Captain 1854, Major 1866, Lieutenant-Colonel 1875, transferred to 33rd
(Duke of Wellington's) Regiment, retired with rank of Colonel 1878; late of
Chesnole, now of Westfield, Dorchester, Dorsetshire; married in 1882, Amy,
daughter of Charles Torkington 17 in Holy Orders, and Ellen Eliza Cookson, his
wife, and has issue:-
16 The Marcons of Guelph, originally Markham, are of the same family as
Archbishop Markham, see Burke's Ld. G;., ed. 1853.
17 The Rev. Charles Torkington was the son of James Torkington and his wife
Elizabeth, dau of Charles Bourchier, descendant of Charles Bourchier, M.P.
(see "Big Billy" family, ante), and thus a descendant of Thomas of Brotherton a
son of King Edward I. (Foster's Royal Lineages, p.609).
41
Frederick James, born 1883, Captain 104th Wellesley Rifles, Bombay. Is
serving (1914) in British-Indian, force in the Persian Gulf.
Edward William, born 1884, Captain 101st Company, R. C. A.
Richard Markham, born 1894, Lieutenant K. A.
Josephine, resident in Toronto.
Ellen.
Amy Margaret, resident in Toronto,
Norah Alicia.
2. Richard, wife Rachel, had issue:-
James Markham, born 14th July, 1863, Captain Royal Munster Fusiliers in
1882, died unmarried.
Redmond Arthur, living in U. S. A.
Annie Isabella, married Arthur Babington Cartwright, in Holy Orders,
Archdeaeon of Malta.
3. Isabella, died unmarried.
4. Josephine Adelaide, died unmarried.
5. Alicia, married to William Moyle Rogers, in Hely Orders, and has issue,
Frederick, in Holy Orders in South Africa; Mary, unmarried.
6. Margaret Emma, married to Philip Sheppard, and had issue, Neville;
Edward, died unmarried; Samuel Townsend, a journalist; Mary; Margery;
Cecilia, married to Arthur Burney, in Holy Orders, and has issue.
7. Ellen, married George Hayton in Holy Orders, died, leaving issue.
BARNASCOUNCE.
THOMAS CHADWICK, of the 18th Dragoons in 1779, and of Barnascounce, and also
of Pegsborough, County Tipperary, son of Richard, of Ballinard, and, Rebecca
Ellard, born 1752, died July, 1812, married June, 1779, Sarah Lockwood, of
Cashel, and had issue, viz:-
Richard, baptised 1780; in the. Army; died in India, unmarried.
42.
Thomas, baptised 1788; Colonel Bengal Engineers; married and had one
daughter, Susan, married to her cousin, Thomas Chadwick Graham.
William, was an officer in the Navy and saw much service, afterwards 1810 to
1821 in the Army, Captain of Pensioners at Chelsea, 1852 to 1868;
married, firstly, and had issue, two sons, and secondly, and had issue
one daughter, who was married, firstly, to Charles Ernest Mills, Bengal
Artillery, and secondly, to Capt. Hopkins, and had issue.
Michael, killed by a fall from his horse.
Mary Ann (? Anna Maria, baptised 1781}, married 1802 to Francis Richard
Dickson, Captain R. N. (who was drowned), and had issue, viz -1. Thomas,
Colonel in the Bombay Army, and of Rahoon, County Galway, d.s.p. 2. John,
Colonel in the Bengal Army, died 15th July, 1872, unmarried. 3. Richard
Chadwick, of Dungarvan. 4. Sarah, married to Dr. R. Brown, Bengal Army,
and had issue.
Rebecca, married 3rd January, 1804, to William Harper, Surgeon 25th Regiment,
and of Manchester.
Jane, baptised October, 1791, married to Major Macdonald, 35th Regiment and
of Holy Island by Beal, County Northumberland, and had issue, viz:-1.
Frances. 2. Arabella Jane. 3. Sarah Flora, married 1844 to Raleigh
Trevelyan.
Elizabeth, baptised 1794, married to Robert Blackhall, Colonel Bengal Army,
and had issue, viz :-1. Robert, Colonel Indian Army. 2. Andrew, in the
Bengal Civil Service. 3. A daughter, married to James Graham, Colonel
Bengal Army. 4. Sophia, married to Nightingale, in the Madras Army. 5. A
daughter, married to James Graham, in the Bengal Civil Service (nephew
of above Colonel Graham).
Arabella, baptised 1796, married to Gardiner Boyd, Capt Hon. East India
Company Service, and had issue, Mossom, who came to Canada and settled at
Bobcaygeon, County Victoria; and Anne, married to Lieutenant-General John
Macdonald, Indian Army, afterwards of Peterborough, Canada (see Ontarian
Families
43
tit. Boyd), and had issue (besides others) Donald Macdonald, now of
Toronto, who married Florence Bleecker Nichols, 18 and has issue, Donald
Claude; Marjorie Cecily, married to Edward Stembrugge, of New York; and
Carolyn Danvers.
Sophia, baptised 1800, married to - Bell.
Sarah, baptised 1802, married, firstly, to Major George Casement; secondly,
to James Graham, Surgeon in the Bengal Army, and had issue, viz :-1.
William Stewart, died inf. 1832. 2. William Stewart, Captain of Cavalry,
Bengal Army. 3. James, in a Regiment of Horse, Bengal Army, killed in
action at Lucknow, 1857; he had two infant daughters also killed at
Lucknow. 4. Thomas Chadwick, married to his cousin Susan, above named. 5.
George, died inf. 6. Phoebe, married 1847 (as third wife) to Lieutenant-
General Sir John Fordyce, K.C.B., Bengal Artillery, who died in 1877, and
had issue six sons and two daughters (see Family Records, by Alexander
Dingwall Fordyce, of Fergus, Ontario).
Adelaide.
The Tipperary Register gives the following additional names of daughters of
Thomas and Sarah, viz:-Alice and Eliza, twins, 1784; Sarah, 1786, died
1798; Bellinda, died 1799; another Sarah, 1802; these probably all died
young.
JAMES, SON OF RICHARD AND REBECCA.
JAMES CHADWICK, son of Richard, of Ballinard, and Rebecca Ellard, was an
officer in the Army, married the daughter of a Pennsylvanian planter, and had
issue, namely:-
Peter, nicknamed "the Beggarman," who had a son Peter, who may have been the
Peter Chadwick of Cashel, who married in June, 1810, Julia Vaughan, of
the parish of St. Mark, Dublin.
18 Dau. of Alonzo Danvers Nichols and his wife Katharine Achorn, who was md.
2ndly. to Robert Murray, whose dau. Jessie Dorothea is md. to Lt.-Col. William
Craven Vaux Chadwick (see infra.).
44
Richard, of Birr or Parsonstown, Kings County, married Maria. daughter of
Falkiner Minchin, of Annagh, and his wife, Maria, daughter of William
Gabbett, of Caherline, County Limerick; and had issue.
Robert, nicknamed "Fivepenny," d.s.p.
Thomas, of Birr, married 1819, Sophia Massy, and had issue.
William, enlisted in the Army under an assumed name.
Lucy, married 1809 to Christopher Bettesworth Waglin, 19 of Cashel.
LITTLETON.
FREDERICK CHADWICK, of Littleton and of Newtown and Cullen, son of Richard,
of Ballinard, and Rebecca Ellard, married 1789, Susannah Minchin, and had
issue:-
Richard Frederick, married, July, 1801, Sarah, daughter of John Cornwall, of
Borrisokane, and had issue, Mary Anne, baptised 1802; Susannah, baptised
1805; Catherine, baptised 1808; and sons of whom little is known, but
apparently one was John Cornwall, of Kinsale, County Cork, in 1846.
Catherine, baptised November, 1782, married 1803 to Thomas Ellard, and d.s.p.
Rebecca, married, in 1807, to Alexander Boyle, Lieutenant Tyrone Militia.
Clarinda, married, 1822, to Edwin Homan, of Ardinwood, County Dublin; she had
a marriage portion of £700; and had issue, one daughter.
Alicia, baptised 1800, died 1880; married in 1821 to John Armstrong Ragwell,
in Holy Orders, and had issue, two or three sons, one of whom fell at
Waterloo, another, M.D., resided at Pau, and a daughter married to -
Pellew.
19 It is recorded that Christopher Bettesworth Waglin (query, if the same
person?) md. in 1845 Elizabeth Chadwick whom the writer has been unable to
identify.
45
THE following officers appearing in Army Lists, 1809 to 1841, seem, some at
least, likely to be of our family, but are not identified:-
Thomas Chadwick, Captain 22nd Light Dragoons, 17th June, 1805.,
John Chadwick, Lieutenant 9th Foot, 22nd. September, 1800.
Michael Chadwick, Lieutenant 40th Foot, 25th March, 1800 (in List 1815).
Thomas Chadwick, Lieutenant 7th West India Regiment Foot, 12th November,
1812.
Disbanded and reduced in 1814, James Chadwick (Lieutenant, 15th July,
1813), from 2nd Dragoons.
On the Irish half pay, Ensign Thomas Chadwick (Ensign 3rd November,
1808), List 1815.
Permanent Quarter Master General on the Staff of the Army, Captain James
Chadwick, Captain of Cavalry (assisting in the Riding School), 25th
February, 1821 (Army Lists, 1822 and 1823); Riding Master, Royal Military
College, 1st August, 1825 (Army Lists, 1826 to 1833).
Richard Chadwick, Lieutenant 28th Foot 16th May, 1811, 7th Foot in Army
Lists, 1822 to 1840; stated in Army List of 1841 to have died. He married in
October, 1818, Esther Browne, of Portobello, parish of St Peter, Dublin.
Thomas Chadwick, Lieutenant 7th West India Regiment, 12th November, 1812.
Placed on English half pay 25th April, 1816. Lieutenant 45th Foot, 25th
March, 1825. Placed on British half pay 9th July, 1829 (Army Lists, 1822 to
1832). Deaths since last publication, "Lieut. Chadwick, unattached," Army
List, 1833.
Thomas Chadwick, Ensign, 3rd November, 1800, 5th Foot in List of 1809,
7th Garrison Battalion in Lists 1826 to 1831 ; placed on Irish half pay
25th March, 1810, on British half pay 1826; not referred to in the List for
1832.
In Officers of the late St. Helena Regiment who have local rank at St.
Helena and eastward of the Cape of Good Hope, G. S. Chadwick, Ensign 20th
December, 1832 (Army Lists, 1845 to 1855).
46
Thomas Massey Chadwick, born 19th November, 1828. Served in the ranks 92 days
when under age and eight years and 306 days. Quarter Master 3rd Regiment,
British German Legion, 20th September, 1855. Half pay same Regiment, 1st
January, 1857. Quarter Master 8th Foot, 17th November, 1857. Quarter Master
Brigade Depot, 16th December, 1876. Quarter Master 4th Battalion Liverpool
Regiment (Duke of Lancaster's Own Militia), 1st April, 1878, from which he
retired with honorary rank of Major, 19th November, 1886, having been made an
Honorary Captain 1st July, 1881. Probably of an English family.
George Minchin Chadwick, Ensign 9th Foot, 11th May, 1855; Lieutenant, 23rd
July, 1858; Captain, 1st April, 1870. Placed on half pay 9th August, 1870. He
died at 54 F. Kussowlie, 2nd August, 1875, aged 42.
John Chadwick, born 21st August, 1843, Cornet 4th Dragoon Guards, 12th April,
1864; Lieutenant, 17th April, 1867; Captain, 4th June, 1873; Major 1st July,
1881. Retired with gratuity from 4th Dragoon Guards, 10th June, 1882; and
placed on the Reserve of Officers.
Richard Augustus Chadwick (Madras Staff Corps), Major, 5th N.I. Ensign, 12th
December, 1849; Lieutenant, 11th September, 1853; Brevet Captain, 12th December,
1861; Captain, 1st August, 1864; Major, 12th December, 1869. Died at Seonee, 7th
June, 1872, aged 39.
NOTE.- There was, in 1711, a Thomas Chadwick, styled "Esq.," merchant and
alderman, possessed of house property in Cashel, which he conveyed in 1715 to
his eldest son, George Chadwick, who sold it in 1723. Not known if any relation
to our family or not.
There are also the following persons who have not been identified:-
Michael Chadwick, Surgeon, 69th Regiment, to whom William, "Big Billy," left
a legacy. It has been suggested that he may have been a son of Michael, the
Quarter Master, and Anna Maria Connor, but this is merely a conjecture.
There was connected with the family of Michael and Anna Maria a William
Chadwick, a law student in Dublin; perhaps a son.
Alicia Chadwick, married in 1805 to John Currie, Captain 47th Regiment.
Marriage bond signed by Thomas Chadwick, of Tipperary, "Esq."
47
SOME TOPOGRAPHICAL NOTES.
Cullen, is "the land of the holly trees."
Oola, anciently Ulla, or more correctly Ubhla, means an orchard. The name comes
from the word Abhall, which is nearly identical with the English word Apple, and
is also a distant relation, so to speak, of the Latin Pomum and its French
derivative Pomme.
Ballinard, formerly called Ballynard and previously Ballynahardy (proably merely
bad spelling), is "the town land on the high ground," no doubt so named with
reference to the not far distant broad valley of the Arra; which is on a much
lower level. Ballinard "Mansion" is a large house in the very plain style of
the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. The front, or "new part" as it used
to be called, was built about the middle of the Eighteenth Century. Attached to
it is a paved courtyard of, I think, some two or three acres in area, almost
surrounded by buildings, stables and offices of various kinds, and entered by
aft arched gateway. The house projects from a corner of the square. It has not
been much modernized, though of recent years some minor improvements have been
made, especially the refitting of the kitchen by "Mrs. Willie" with fine cooking
ranges and floor of encaustic tiles, making it almost the "show part" of the
house.
Ballinglanna, is "the town land of the glen," but there is no glen there, and in
fact it is on rather higher ground than Ballinard. Possibly the name may have
travelled, a process with which we in Canada are familiar.
ClanWilliam, the Barony in which Ballinard and places adjacent are situated,
bears the name of the Clann or descendants of William Burke; query, who was
he? 20
20 No doubt an ancestor of William "the last Chieftain" of the Burkes, whose
wife was a virago and brought about a deadly quarrel between her husband and
his brother Richard, to whom he had previously been much attached, in which
William was stain. He had a us, or fortified dwelling, not far from where
Lismacue is now, which after his death was demolished, but the site of it
retained until a recent date, and perhaps does still, the name of the Hill
of the last Chieftain.
48
Gortnekilleen, or Gurthakilleen, is probably "the tilled field of Cullen."
"Killeen" is a better Anglicization of the Irish Coillin than "Cullen" is. It
is situated in the parish of that name and about a quarter of a mile from the
village. The word Gort, Garth, or Gurth, a tilled piece of land, is the same
word as the Scottish and Northern English Garth and near akin to the English
words Garden and Yard, the French Jardin, and also more distantly to the
Latin Hortus. This estate went to the sons of Richard Chadwick and his second
wife, Jane Sadleir, and was sold about the beginning of the Nineteenth
Century.
Illamecne, Illaunmeen, Illanameene, or Islandmeen, is "the Island of the
Bog." It was formerly held with the Ballinard estate but was alienated, and
was bought back in recent years by "Mrs. Willie" as she was commonly called,
the widow of Col. William Chadwick.
Lattin, on the same ridge as Shronell, seems to be "the small place of Tombs."
Between Lattin and Shronell is Damerville, for many years the residence of
Austin Cooper Chadwick and of his family after his death. It bears the name
of the family of Damer, principal landlords of the locality. The head of that
family commenced about 1845 the erection of what was to have been a large and
handsome mansion between Shronell and Damerville, but it was never completed,
and was taken down, and the stones, some handsomely carved, have been carried
away. Joseph Damer was raised to the peerage in 1753 as Baron Milton of
Shronehill, afterwards Viscount Milton and Earl of Dorchester; the family is
now Dawson-Damer, Earls of Portarlington.
Shronell, Scronell, or as it has been sometimes written Shronehill, means the
edge or end (or nose, Irish Sron) of a hill or ridge.
Lismacue, Lisnacum. (pronounced Coo), is "the Fort of the Valley." It is
situated at the end of a valley of the Galtees, from which, however, it is in
fact separated by the intervening bansha or level ground, in which the Galtee
Mountain streams of the Arra and the Aherlow
49
unite, and in which the village of Bansha is situated. Lismacue is a large
handsome house built about the beginning of the Nineteenth Century on ground
near the elder house, which was removed but the site of it is still plainly
visible, The drawing rooms of Lismacue were hung with wall paper so
marvelously preserved that in 1910, after being in place for a hundred years
or more, it was almost good enough for further service. There is a grand
avenue of great length with a line of venerable lime trees on each side,
leading to the house.
Bansha is flat ground at the foot of a mountain.
Barna, very common in Irish place names, is a mountain pass or gap.
Stangesmore is "the great, or larger, parcel of land."
Tipperary, in Irish Tiobraid-Araan or Tubrid-Auran, is "the well of the Ara."
The well does not now exist, but the River Ara or Arra still flows past as it
has done for thousands of years. Tipperary is a town of great antiquity.
Cullen was the family parish church at first, and continued so until the
early part of the Nineteenth Century, when they changed to Shronell, being
nearer to Ballinard and the family having become intimately connected with two
Rectors of Shronell. The Cullen Registers prior to 1770 have disappeared, and
with them of course entries regarding the family up to that date. Cullen church
was an ugly plain building. The writer visited it in 1872. The church was there
then but has disappeared since. The family vault was at that time easily to he
found, and was covered with a slab with an inscription on it of which the writer
made a drawing, a copy of which is here printed. The letters were in relief and
placed between parallel lines also in relief. There was no year stated in it. In
1910 the church yard was in the greatest state of disorder and neglect and the
writer could find no trace of the covering of the vault. The whole ground,
besides being in the utmost disorder, was overgrown with thick rank grass,
making it most difficult to move about or find anything.
50
Shronell parish church was also a similar ugly building, and has now
disappeared, but the church yard continues in use as a cemetery.
HERE LYETH THE BODY OF
Wm CHADWICK WHO DYED
THE --- DAY --------YE
HE. WmCH
Style of lettering
Cover of burial vault at Cullen
51
FAMILY NAMES.
The particular or most usual names in our family have always been and still
are, William and Richard. Those next in order as most frequent are Edward and
Frederick. The name of Michael was formerly much used, but seems to have died
out.
The unusual name of Rodolphus, Rudolphus or Rudolf came from the Greenes. It
only occurs twice.
James seems to have come from the Ellards, and Nicholas from the Sadleirs.
There is no instance of the very common name John being used until it came,
with Craven, from the Cardens.
Austin comes from the Coopers, having been borne by the first settler in
Ireland of that family, by whom it has been used ever since.
Caroline and Damer have come from Lady Caroline Damer, a friend of
Elizabeth, wife of the first John Craven Chadwick, but not a relation.
A FEW HINTS ON GIVING NAMES TO CHILDREN MAY NOT
BE OUT OF PLACE.
Single names should never be given, unless perhaps a very unusual one, for
such names cause difficulties and uncertainties of identification of individuals
in a subsequent generation, as has indeed occurred, with most annoying results,
to express it mildly, in our family. In our family single names have been
repeated from father to son and to grandson, and among cousins near and cousins
remote; so that the placing of the different members of the family is very
difficult, though to some extent remedied by the Irish custom of nicknames. The
writer in his legal experience has met with cases where such giving of a single
name has been the cause of much difficulty; and it cannot be doubted that there
have been cases where estates or moneys have been lost to their proper owners on
account of the impossibility of identifying individuals with only single names,
and those not uncommon. It should he a positive rule in all cases to have a
second name for the purpose of identification and to avoid mistakes and
confusion.
52
The same confusion might be caused by the giving of the same double names
to different individuals, therefore such names should not be given without some
marked change or the giving of a third distinctive name.
Family names should always be preserved and frequently used. They afford
valuable assistance to the genealogist and the legal practitioner.
It is advisable to give to some children the mother's surname as a
Christian name. The writer recollects the case of a London lawyer who, after
some experience with difficult matters of title, laid it down as a rule that
every child should have his or her mother's surname as a Christian name; but
that would be carrying the suggestion too far.
The giving of fancy or high-sounding names, not in any way connected with
the family, such as Douglas, Percy, Howard, or similar names of great families,
is very wrong for three reasons, firstly, because it is decidedly snobbish;
secondly, it is misleading and untruthful for it is practically laying claim to
a relationship which does not exist; and thirdly, a man's name is his own
property and no person has the right to take it without a proper and correct
reason for doing so; to appropriate a man's name without right or proper reason
is an indefensible invasion of that man's rights.
There appears to have been a custom in Ireland formerly of a married woman
retaining for certain purposes her maiden name, which is a genera{ custom in
Scotland even to the present time. This is quite a useful practice. For
instance, "Mary Chadwick" borders on the indefinite, but "Mary Chadwick alias
Baker" is a person readily identified. The Irish custom appears to have been to
put the maiden surname last, while the Scottish practice is to place it before
the surname, thus the writer's wife is recorded in the Lyon Court in Edinburgh
as "Mistress Maria Martha Fisher or Chadwick."
53
SOME NOTES ON THE ORIGIN OF SURNAMES MAY BE
INTERESTING.
Most surnames are derived from: 1. Locality of origin of the family.
2. Occupation of an ancestor. 3. Personal name of an ancestor. 4. Adjective,
some characteristic of an ancestor.
It is not always possible to determine the origin or the meaning of a
name with certainty. Those given here therefore may not all be certain as
stated.
Many English surnames are derived from places in Normandy, Flanders, and
parts adjacent.
NAMES FROM LOCALITY
Barclay, from Berkeley (? meadow of the birch trees) in Gloucestershire.
Battersby, place in Yorkshire. Bourchier, from Bourchieres in Normandy. Bryan,
the mansion. Carden, from Cawarden in Cheshire. Craven, from a district in
Yorkshire so named. Cowley, the cow meadow; several places in England so named.
Darcy, variously guessed at and unsatisfactorily interpreted, and frequently
written D'Arcy but not properly for it is more than likely to come from a little
village in the present seat of war in France named Darci. Forsayeth, a place in
Scotland. Gordon, place in Scotland. Greene. Sandilands, the Sandy lands in
Lanarkshire. Vaux, the Vallies; more than one place so named in Normandy, etc.
Murray, from Moray in Scotland. Pakenham, a place in Suffolk.
NAMES FROM OCCUPATION; PRESUMABLY BUT NOT
ALWAYS CERTAIN.
Baker. Butler, anciently LeBoteler. Cooper is not one who makes barrels,
but a keeper of cows. Ellard, from Aylward, the ale ward (?). Fisher. Sadleir.
Stewart or Stuart (in Gaelic Stiubhart), the first of this name was High Steward
of Scotland, Twelfth Century.
PATRONYMIC NAMES.
Beatty,. from Bartholomew. Nicholson.
54
ADJECTIVE NAMES.
Bell, probably LeBel, the handsome man. Eade (Saxon), happy. Mockler
(French), Mauclerc, a bad scholar (?).
OTHERS.
Gabbett, said to be Gare le bete, beware of the beast. Seymour, an alias for
St Maur; who was he? MacCorquodale is curious. It is one of several names
derived from places bearing the name of the ancient Saxon deity Thor. It is
Thor's Kettle, referring no doubt to some round valley or hollow, such as in
Ireland is called a devil's punchbowl. An equivalent English name is Thurkell
or Thurtell, the latter a name which has been well known in Guelph. Names
following the Gaelic prefix Mac are aspirated, and frequently inflected also,
thus MacParson, the son of the parson, becomes Macphairson or Macpherson. When
the name already begins with an aspirate it is doubly aspirated, with an effect
imperceptible to an English ear and unpronounceable by an English tongue, and
the aspiration then wholly disappears, thus MacPhilip becomes MacKillop.
Furthermore, there is frequently a further aspirate introduced into the name.
So MacThorketel becomes MacCorquodell, the quo being an aspirated and inflected
equivalent of the ke.
55
JOHN CRAVAN CHADWICK,. born 6th April, 1811, died 10th November, 1889,
came to Canada in 1836 and settled in Ancaster, County Wentworth, at at place
which he named Cravendale, being the north half of the same lot as that on which
at the south end is now situated the railway station of Jerseyville. Served as
a volunteer trooper on the Niagara frontier in 1837-8; was gazetted Lieutenant
in the first Regiment of Gore Militia, 27th November, 1838. Removed to Guelph,
County Wellington, in 1849. Was J. P.; was several times member of the Diocesan
Synod of Toronto, and some time a member of the Corporation of Trinity College,
Toronto, as representative of the Diocese of Niagara. Married, firstly, 3rd
January, 1836, Louisa, died 24th April, 1845, daughter of Jonathan Bell, of
Kensington, Eng. (see Bell); secondly, 15th December, 1847, Caroline, died 5th
September, 1874, daughter of Joseph Eade, of Newington, County Middlesex, and
Hitchin, County Hertford, Eng., and his wife Eliza, daughter of Edward Vaux
Vaux Bell
(see Bell); and thirdly, 4th May, 1876, Elizabeth (who survives him), daughter
of James Beatty, of Toronto, descendant of Capt. William Beatty, an officer in
the garrison of Londonderry during the siege in 1688. (See Ontarian Families.)
He had issue of the first marriage only, viz:-
1. John Craven.
2. Frederick Jasper.
3. Edward Marion.
4. Austin Cooper.
56
Facing Page 56 a photograph of John Craven Chadwick of Guelph.
Eade Beatty Battesby
JOHN CRAVEN CHADWICK, eldest son of above John Craven Chadwick. Resided for
some time in the Township of Arthur and afterwards near Farnham in the Township
of Puslinch. Born 12th February, 1837, died 8th April, 1890. Lieutenant, County
Wellington Militia. 21 Married, firstly, 21st June, 1860, Elinor Tonee, died 9th
January, 1868, daughter of Leslie Battersby, of Guelph, sometime a Lieutenant,
Royal Navy (son of Leslie Battershy, in Holy Orders, of Skreene, County Sligo,
Ireland, who married Anna Maria, daughter of Patrick Palmer), and his wife,
Catherine Jones; and secondly, Sybella Annie, died 22nd February, 1891, aged 46,
daughter of William Mockler, 22 of Durham, County Grey, in Holy Orders, who came
to Canada from Fermoy, County Cork, Ireland, about 1850, and his wife, Anne
Atkinson, of Huddersfield, County York, England. (William Mockler, born 1810,
was the son of James Mockler, in Holy Orders, Rector of Castle Hyde
21 The Reserve Militia, prior to 1867, practically a force on paper only, not
being embodied, its organization being of officers only, all men of arms-bearing
age being liable to be called up, but it was expected to assemble, without arms,
once a year, on the Queen's Birthday, 24th May, and did so sometimes, usually
just a few of the men. The writer recollects going with his brother to one of
such musters. There were two officers, the Captain whose name was Thompson,
and the above Lieutenant John Craven Chadwick. About twenty or thirty men
appeared and were drawn up in a line on one side of the road opposite a tavern.
The writer being under age stood aside, and represented a crowd looking on. The
Captain walked down the line and looked at the men, and back again, and the
Lieutenant walked down the line and looked at the men, and back again. The
Captain then did not seem to know quite what to do next, but with commendable
presence of mind he gave the order: "Boys, come and have a drink," and started
for the tavern across the road, and all the men after him.
22 The writer has been unable to ascertain the arms of Mockler. The crest is
a greyhound's head couped, ducally gorged.
57
Dio. Cloyne, and his wife, Sybella Baker, of Lismacue, and grandson of James
Mockder, in Holy Orders, Archdeacon of Cloyne.) He had issue, viz:-
Of the first marriage:-
1. Craven Bell, formerly of Galt, County Waterloo, now of Melville,
Saskatchewan. Born 2nd April, 1863. Married Florence Jennie, daughter of
Robert Hinds (who was previously married to Alexander Carroll, who died
29th August, 1884, leaving issue one daughter, Isabella Margaret, who is
married to Wheatley, of Saskatoon), and has had issue, viz:-Alexander
Joseph, born 12th November, 1886; died 30th December, 1887. William
Francis, of Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan; born 9th January, 1889; married 6th
August, 1912; Gertrude Helen (who died in 1913), daughter of George
Oliver Webster, of Vancouver, and his wife, Sarah Charlotte Coulter, and
had issue, George Craven Francis, who died in infancy. John Craven, born
15th September, 1902. Edward Thomas, born 21st March, 1905. Marion
Adelaide, born 24th March, 1898. Florence Beatrice, born 9th March, 1901.
2. Leslie Charles Edward, born 8th January, 1865; died 27th September, 1865.
3. Francis Henry, born 11th August, 1866; some time of Lakeport,
California, now of Globe, Arizona. Married 12th September, 1895, Rose
Catherine (born 30th March, 1867; died 19th April, 1906, accidentally
burnt by the explosion of a gasoline stove), daughter of William Dwight
Fiske, son of Henry Fiske, of Fiskedale, Worcester County, Massachusetts
(descendant of Fiske, of Stadhough, County Suffolk, Eng. 23), and his
wife, Maria Elizabeth Hamlin, and has issue:-Theodore Ray, born 23rd
July, 1896. Winnie Rose, born 14th February, 1901. Dorothy Dott, born
12th January, 1903.
1. Catharine Caroline, born 5th June, 1861; died 4th March, 1868.
23 Arms: Chequy, Silver and gules, on a pale sable three golden mullets, pierced.
58
And of the second marriage:-
4. William Herbert Austin, born 27th January, 1871; died at Tewksbury, in
Massachusetts, 25th April, 1901; unmarried.
5. Richard Frederick, born 18th August, 1874.
6. Ethelred James Mockler, born 15th October, 1875.
7. Edwin Percy, born 18th August, 1880; died 9th December, 1880.
8. Reginald Beatty Atkinson, born 1883.
2. Sybella Eade Nicola, born 19th September, 1872, residing in Durham.
3. Norah Annie, born 2nd January, 1878; married Justus Roedding, late of
Ayton, County Grey, now of Berlin, Ontario, son of Justus John Roedding
and his wife, Elizabeth Hayrock, and has issue:-Gerald Harold, born 28th
February, 1905. Mildred Sybella, born 18th April, 1906. Aileen Marion,
born 20th August, 1911.
FREDERICK JASPER CHADWICK, second son of John Craven Chadwick (Senior);
born 19th November, 1838; died 20th June, 1891; Captain Wellington Militia;
was a Provincial Land Surveyor and was for some time proprietor of the Guelph
Herald newspaper; was several times a member of the County Council, County
Wellington, and of the Town Council of Guelph, of which he was Mayor in 1877;
married 3rd September, 1861, Elisabeth (died 3rd August, 1894), daughter of
Edward Michael Stewart; in Holy Orders, of Guelph and afterwards of Clooney,
County Derry, Ireland, 24 and his wife, Jane Renwick Jeffrey, daughter of John
Jeffrey, of Allerbeck, County Dumfries, Scotland, and had issue, viz:-
1a. Jasper William, born 10th November, 1866, of the Bank of Toronto;
married 26th November, 1896, Alexandrina Agatha, (an accomplished
pianist), daughter of Samuel John Cowley,
24 See Burke's Landed Gentry; also Ontarian Families. Henry Stewart and the
Hon. Elisabeth Pakenham, dau. of Edward Michael, Baron of Longford, sister of
the first Duchess of Wellington. An embroidered underskirt worked by the
Duchess was given by her to Elisabeth Pakenham, by whom it was worn at her
wedding, as it was also at their weddings by Jane Renwick Jeffrey, Elisabeth
Stewart, and Kathleen Chadwick (Pepler).
59
of Toronto, originally of County Devon, England, and his wife, Agatha
Stevenson [Arms: Silver; a bull passant gules within a bordure sable
bezantee], and has had issue, William, died inf.; William Gustavus, born
11th May, 1900.
2a. Edward Ernest Vaux, born 27th February, 1868; died 4th September, 1868.
3a. Frederick Austin Pakenham, born 9th June, 1873, M.A., in Holy Orders;
ordained deacon, 1896; priest, 1897; Incumbent of Arthur, 1896;
Dunnville, 1902; Rector All Saints, Windsor, Ontario, 1903; removed to
British Columbia on the invitation of Bishop DePencier, 1910, and was
Rector of St. Paul's; Vancouver; is now Rector of St. John's, Victoria,
B.C Married, 22nd October, 1898, Alberta Louise, daughter of Samuel
Dice, of Milton, Ontario; she died 16th January, 1902; and, secondly,
Creina Russell, daughter of Ernest George Henderson, of Windsor,
Ontario, and has issue of the first marriage, John Pakenham Dice, born
14th May, 1899; Frederick Stewart, born 31st August, 1900.
4a. John Craven Eade, born 22nd June, 1875, sometime of the Canadian Bank of
Commerce, now of Vancouver, B.C.; served as Lieutenant 21st Essex
Fusiliers; unmarried.
1a. Louisa Caroline Stewart, died unmarried.
2a. Charlotte Rose, unmarried.
3a. Kathleen Christiana Maria, married 12th June, 1895, to William Herbert
Pepler, M.D., son of James Pepler and his wife, Emma Eyres [Arms:
Silver, on a bend sable, between two bendlets dancettee gules, three
silver eagles displayed] (see Ontarian Families), and has issue :
Stewart Herbert, born 30th August, 1896. William Arthur Eyres, born 2nd
January, 1899. Kathleen Gwladys, born 21st February, 1901. Doris
Louise, born 27th June, 1905.
60
EDWARD MARION CHADWICK, third son of the above named John Craven Chadwick
(Senior), born September 22nd, 1840; barrister-at-law, K.C. 1910. (An honour to
which he was professionally entitled long before that and could have had if he
bad applied for it, which he declined to do, as he was unwilling to have it
unless it came to him unsolicited, which it did. He had long previously been
recommended for the honour to the Government, but did not receive it then,
possibly by an oversight, but more likely because he was a political opponent of
the Ministers then in power.) Commenced practice in partnership with William
Henry Beatty, in February, 1863, and after a number of changes of firm, and the
said William Henry Beatty having died in 1912, celebrated the fiftieth
anniversary of the firm in February, 1913, by an entertainment in his house
to the partners of the firm with their wives and the students and male clerks,
26 persons, besides the family, and a very few intimate friends, and, the house
not being large enough to accommodate all, the women clerks, 18 in number, were
separately entertained at a dinner in a downtown restaurant. On this occasion
his partners in the firm presented him with his portrait, painted by Wyly Grier.
Is an amateur armorist and genealogist; Honorary Secretary for Canada of the
Society of Genealogists of London (Eng.); a member of the Convention
Internationale d'Heraldique (Switzerland, etc.); presented the Provincial
Government of Ontario with an Ordinary of Arms, M.S., containing particulars of
nearly 400 coats-of-arms borne in Ontario. Also executed a work in three volumes
of such arms drawn and painted by himself. Is Honorary Genealogist to the United
Empire Loyalists Association. Author of "Ontarian Families," containing
Genealogies of United Empire Loyalist and other pioneer families of Upper
Canada, and "The People of the Longhouse," a work on the Iroquois or Six
Nations, and has been contributor of articles on heraldic subjects to magazines,
etc. Composed an "Ecu Complet" of 56 quarters for the British Empire, his
drawing of which was accorded a prominent place in the Genealogical Magazine
(London, Eng.), and of which a more extended version in 96 quarters, drawn and
coloured by him, was presented to and accepted by Queen Victoria; also
illuminated a book (large folio) M.S. of the title deeds of St. Alban's
Cathedral, which is preserved in the Cathedral. Was
61
invited in 1914 to become a member of the Authors' Club; of London, England, but
felt unable to accept the honour. Was gazetted Ensign in the Queen's Own Rifles,
then a volunteer regiment (now the 2nd Regiment, Queen's Own Rifles of Canada),
3rd November, 1866; Lieutenant, 31st July, 1868; Captain, 4th June, 1870; Major,
29th January, 1876, and retired with the rank of Major (Honorary) in 1882. Has
been a delegate to Diocesan and Provincial Synods. Is a Lay Canon and
Treasurer 25 of the Cathedral of St. Alban the Martyr, Toronto, to which
Cathedral Church he had rendered thirty years' service (voluntary, without
remuneration), having previously given ten years' service of a similar nature to
St. George's Church, Toronto. Is a member of the Royal Colonial Institute, the
Empire Club, and other patriotic associations. Is by adoption of the Chiefs in
Council, an honorary Chief of the Six Nations, of the Anowara or Turtle Clan of
the Kanienga or Mohawks, by the name of Shagotyohgwisaks (meaning One who
gathers the people into bands, having reference to a proposal made by him in
Conjunction with Lieut.-Col. William Hamilton Merritt, to raise a Six Nations
Regiment). Married, firstly, 28th June, 1864, Ellen Byrne (who died February,
1865), daughter of James Beatty, of Toronto (see p. 56); and
Fisher
secondly, February, 1868, Maria Martha, daughter of Alexander Fisher, of
Toronto, and Mary his wife, daughter of William Brogdin, of Port Hope, and his
wife, Elizabeth Wallace (the said Alexander Fisher was the eldest son of John
Fisher, an Estate Factor, who came to Canada from Taim in Rosshire, Scotland, in
1833 and settled in the Township of Haldimand; County Northumberland, Ontario).
The said Maria
25 By the Cathedral Statutes, the Treasurer is a "Principal Dignitary," ranking
as such with the four Residentiary Canons.
62
Martha was adopted into the Oskenonton or Deer Clan of the Mobawks by the name
of Kajijonhawe (the Bouquet carrier); and has had issue, viz:-
1. William Craven Vaux, born 6th December, 1868. Architect. Gazetted
Lieutenant 36th Peel Regiment, 31st May, 1890; subsequently transferred
to 10th Royal Grenadiers, and again to 36th Regiment, of which he was for
some years Adjutant; was selected to reorganize and command the 9th
Toronto Light Horse, now 9th Mississauga Horse, with rank of Major, March
5th, 1907; promoted Lieut-Colonel, November 15th, 1907; retired in 1913
on completion of his term of command and an extended term. That regiment
when he took over the command had become reduced in strength and
efficiency in consequence of the long illness of the officer previously
in command, but he speedily brought it into such a state of smartness and
efficiency as to win the approbation of the Militia Council, and gain
popularity with the public. He handed the regiment over to his successor
with a full establishment. Is now in command of a Regiment of Mounted
Rifles being organized for war service. Was Brigade Major of the 4th
Infantry Brigade, and of the 6th Infantry Brigade at Quebec on the
occasion of the visit there of the Prince of Wales, now King George the
Fifth. Has been Vice-President Canadian Cavalry Association and of the
Canadian Military Institute, and a director of the Canadian National
Horse Show Association. Is a member of the Toronto Hunt, and has been
acting Master on many occasions. Married, 29th December, 1898, Jessie
Dorothea, daughter of Robert Murray, merchant in New York, 26 and his
wife Katharine, nee Achorn, widow of
26 This Robert Murray (who d. 1882) was the grandson of Mary Murray who was md.
to John Cunningham, whose son Robert (B. 1787, 4. 1859) assumed the name of
Murray by Act of the Legislature of the State of Massachusetts. Robert Murray
(grandpere) was a descendant of an officer in the garrison of Londonderry in
1688. A pedigree (not fully complete) of this family is deposited in the office
of Ulster King of Arms in Dublin, and the writer has been officially informed
that upon an application being made the arms of Murray and Cunningham, duly
differenced and properly marshaled with reference to the marriage of Mary
Murray and John Cunnningham, will be assigned to Jessie Dorothea Chadwick and
Her brother Herbert Murray.
63
Alonzo Danvers Nichols, M.D.; and had issue, Patricia Katharine, who died
in infancy.
2. Edward Alister Eade, born 13th February, 1871, of Toronto. Served for
some time as Lieutenant 25th (St. Thomas) Regt. Married Florence Edith,
daughter of Thomas Campbell Kemp [Arms: Gules two cubit arms issuing from
either side, holding a broken sword erect] and his second wife, Blanche
Potter (widow of Loud), and has issue, viz -Edward Norman Loud, born 7th
April, 1899; was permitted by his uncle above named to join the Cadet
Corps (mounted) of the 9th Mississauga Horse at the age of 13, and was
(perhaps) the youngest and smallest trooper in His Majesty's service:
Austin Ralph, born 16th July, 1901. Edith Marion (birth registered in
Montreal as Joan Marion), born 16th March, 1906.
3. George D'Arcy Austin, of Toronto Island, born 22nd February, 1880. Is an
artist (not by profession) of great skill in the execution of fine and
delicate work, a talent inherited from his grandmother, Louisa Bell. Has
been a champion hockey player, being described as "the fastest man on
ice. Married 3rd July, 1907, Bessie Carlisle, daughter of Capt. John
Edward MacCorquodale, then deceased, son of MacCorquodale of
MacCorquodell in Argyleshire, and his wife Bessie Carlisle [Arms: Silver,
a demi-stag gules, issuing from a less wreathed gules and silver], and
his wife, Theresa Amelia Porter, and has issue:-John D'Arcy, born 26th
April, 1912; Mary Theresa, born 22nd April, 1914.
4. Richard Ellard Carden, born 16th February, 1885. Civil engineer and
contractor. Before taking up this profession he was a Lieutenant in the
36th Peel Regiment Active Militia. Entered upon a course of instruction
in the School of Science, University of Toronto, graduating in 1906. Was
Assistant Engineer in charge of Bridges and Docks for the City of
Toronto, during which time he designed and built the Wilton Avenue bridge
Over the River Don. Also designed the Queen Street East bridge over the
Don. After remaining in the service of the City of Toronto
64
for about two years he became connected with the Foundation Company, of
New York, engineers and contractors carrying on large operations in the
United States and Canada. While in the employ of that company he was in
charge of the construction of the foundations of the Woolworth Building;
transferred to the Foundation Company, Limited, of Montreal, and was
placed in charge of various works of that company in Canada at a number
of places extending from New Brunswick to the Rocky Mountains. Was for a
time in charge of all their construction works east of Winnipeg, and is
now engineer of their business for all Canada. Is resident in Montreal.
Married, 12th April, 1913, Josephine Potter, daughter of William Joseph
Davis, then deceased, and his wife, Sidney Potter, and has issue, William
Sidney and Mary Carden, twins, born 16th July, 1914.
5. Bryan Damer Seymour, born 24th June, 1888. Architect. When at school was
member of a cadet corps and met with an accident which made him unable to
take up military service, and he has therefore been active in promoting
the Boy Scout organization.
1. Fanny Marion, born 10th January, 1873. Married to James Grayson Smith,
of Toronto, barrister-at-law, son of James Grayson Smith, formerly of
Stratford, Ontario, barrister-at-law, who came to Canada from near
Whitehaven, Cumberland, England, and his wife Ellen, daughter of James
Henderson. [Arms: Sable, on a fess engrailed gold, between three
Squirrels of silver sejant, each holding a marigold slipped proper, as
Many roundles barry of six silver and azure.] She was a clever amateur
actress and musician and was for about thirteen years a chantress
(voluntary) in St. Alban's Cathedral. She died 13th January, 1905,
leaving one son, Hugh Henderson Grayson, born 16th May, 1900.
2. Louisa Mary Caroline, born 7th December, 1876, unmarried.
65
AUSTIN COOPER CHADWICK, fourth son of John Craven Chadwick (the elder),
born 18th November, 1842. Called to the Bar, Easter Term, 1864; was appointed
Junior Judge of the County Court of County Wellington, January 10th, 1873; local
Judge of the High Court of Justice, March 14th, 1882. Became Senior Judge of
the County Court, December 8th, 1891, and Judge of the Surrogate Court, County
Wellington; retired as Judge of the County Court in 1914; on length of service,
Being then the oldest Judge by length of service in Ontario and probably in the
Dominion, retaining, however, the Judgeship of the Surrogate Court: appointed a
member of the Board of County Judges, April, 1905. Married, December, 1867,
Caroline Christie, daughter of Ralph Charles Nicholson, of Toronto, and
Elizabeth Roy, his wife, and has issue:-
Nicholson
1. Henry Austin, born 15th April, 1883, barrister-at-law, some time
practicing in Perth, Ontario, and now in Calgary, Alberta. Married, 30th
September, 1908, Mary Helena, daughter of George William Sandilands, of
Guelph, and his wife, Annie Grant, and grand-daughter of Thomas
Sandilands, of Guelph, and has issue, Caroline Isabel.
2. Caroline Gladys May, unmarried.
Opposite this page 66, a photograph of silhouette of Louisa Ball
66
DANIEL BELL, of Stamford, Middlesex (son of Daniel Bell), died 29th October,
1802, aged 76. Married, February, 1760, Catherine Barclay (q.v.), born June,
1727, died October, 1784, having had issue, viz:-
Daniel Bell, of Wandle House, Wandsworth, born 11th August, 1753, died 4th
December, 1834. Married, 16th April, 1789, Elinor, daughter of John Turner (a), of London. She died 8th January, 1836, leaving issue (b).
Jonathan, of Hornsey, of whom below.
Priscilla, married to Edward Wakefield and had issue, one of whom was Edward
Gibbon Wakefield, founder of the Colony of New Zealand; and another,
Arthur Wakefield, Commander R. N., was in the expedition in 1813 under
General Ross (Ross-of-Bladensburg) which, after having defeated a
defending force of twice their strength (in which action Wakefield
captured a standard), took Washington, and burnt all public stores and
buildings, almost in presence of an American army of more than four times
their strength, and then withdrew in good order.
Katherine, married to John Gurney, of Earlham, County Norfolk, and was mother
of Elizabeth Fry, the philanthropist also of Hannah, wife of Sir Thomas
Fowell Buxton, Baronet, and grandmother of Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton,
lately Governor of South Australia, and of the Rt. Hon. Sydney Charles
Buxton, lately raised to the peerage as Baron Buxton, and now Governor-
General of South Africa.
Elizabeth, married to John Hanbury.
Charlotte, married to Capel Hanbury.
(a) Of the same family as the Turners (and Nelleses) of Guelph.
(b) Mary Bell, a granddau. of Daniel and Elinor Bell was md. to John G. Kotze,
Chief Justice of the Transvaal before the war of 1900, who was dismissed
from office by Kruger for giving a judgment according to law but contrary to
Kruger's orders, in an action before him. This case was that of one Brown,
an American, for whom the law firm of which E. M. Chadwick was a partner
were subsequently solicitors, and Mr. Galt, of that firm, went to S. Africa
and remained there for some time endeavouring to procure a settlement the
matter further became the subject of diplomatic correspondence between the
British, American, and Transvaal Governments, but the war occurred and Brown
died, and so it ended fruitlessly.
67
Rebecca, married to Abel Chapman (c).
Christiana, married, first, to N. Springall, and secondly, to Thomas Hankin.
Caroline, married to John Plead (4).
JONATHAN BELL, above named, of Hornsey and Kensington, born 9th November,
1769; died 9th May, 1855; married 3rd November, 1794, Maria, daughter of Edward Vaux, in Holy Orders, of London. She died 28th January, 1852, having had four sons and seven daughters, viz:-
1. Edward Matthew (Bell), Vice-Consul at Bordeaux, born 1st November, 1796;
died 24th October, 1864; married June, 1817, Fanny, daughter of Rev. J. Matthews, of Cirencester. She died 19th January, 1870, having had six sons and five daughters
(ia) Edward William Wilbraham (Bell), born 13th September, 1820; died
April, 1854; married and had two daughters.
(2a) Henry Angelo, born 16th August, 1821; died 8th March, 1842.
(3a) Sir Francis Dillon (Bell), K.C.M.G. 1881, C.B. 1886, Agent-General
for New Zealand, Commissioner to England from the Colony 1870,
Knighted on his appointment as Speaker of House of Representatives,
New Zealand, 1871-6, Minister for Native Affairs, Treasurer, etc.,
in various ministries, 1854-81; Member of Legislative Council, 1876-
8; born 8th October, 1822; married 2nd April, 1849, Margaret,
daughter of A. Hort, and has had six sons and two daughters:-
(ib) Francis Henry Dillon (Bell), of St; John's Coll., Camb.,
admitted to the Middle Temple, 8th November, 1871, called to
the bar 6th June, 1876; born 31st March, 1851; married April,
1877, Caroline, daughter of William Robinson, and has issue:-
Francis, Margaret, Iris.
(c) One of this family was the Rev. Edward Michael Bland of Ingersoll and
Hamilton, who md. Marie Augusta dau. of Auguste Erbs and his wife Marie Magdalen
Hespelor.
(d) Supposed to be of the same family as Sir Francis Bond Head, Lieut.-Governor
of Upper Canada, 1837, and Sir Edmund Walker Head, Governor-General of Canada,
1854, but the compiler of this genealogy has been unable to trace the
connection..
68
(2b) Alfred, born 8th December, 1852.
(3b) Edward, born 26th July, 1854.
(4b) Arthur Wilbraham, born 5th April, 1856.
(5b) Ernest, born 26th June, 1857.
(6b) Frank, born 20th March, 1860.
(7b) Jessy Adela, married 28th June, 1876, to Mackay John Scobie
Mackenzie, and has issue:-Alexander (Mackenzie), Frank, Sheila,
Mary.
(8b) Ethel, died 19th January, 1860.
(2a) Alfred (Bell), born 7th September, 1828; married 12th August, 1886,
Jessie, third daughter of Joseph Wells, of Chelmsford.
(3a) Frederick FitzEdward, horn 24th September, 1830; died 1832.
(4a) Ferdinand, born 14th December, 1833; died 4th October, 1854.
(5a) Frances Katharine Eschanzier, died young 1826.
(6a) Marie Adele, married to Michael George Mitchell (or Michele),
Director of the Indian Mails, Marseilles; he died in Paris, 23rd
July, 1880, having had two sons and two daughters, viz:-
(lb) Francis George (Mitchell or Michele), born 2nd April, 1853; in
the French military service and was killed in Franco-Prussian
War, 19th January, 1871.
(2b) Harry Gustavus, born 30th December, 1854; died 10th April, 1871.
(3b) Matilda Georgina, born 16th November, 1858; d. mi.
(4b) Clarissa Maria, married 11th July, 1881, to Paul Jean, of
Marseilles.
(7a) Wilhelmina Isabel, died unmarried 1876, aged 53.
(8a) Julia Brenda and (9a) Ida Elizabeth, nuns.
2.Jonathan, born November, 1863; died young.
3. Jonathan, born 11th November, 1805; died February, 1831.
4. Jasper Higginson (Bell), Colonel Madras Engineers, Secretary to Board of
Revenue F. W. D., Mint Master Madras, officiating Mint Master Calcutta,
Chief Engineer F. W. D. Madras; born
69
9th July, 1809; married 27th July, 1843, Elizabeth, daughter of William
Castell Damant, of Lammas, Norfolk; d.s.p.
5. Katharine, born 1st November, 1795; died 18th February, 1841; married 25th
April, 1821, to Joseph Dillon, of Finchley (son of Capt. Joseph Dillon,
R.N., and his wife Joanna, daughter of Gerrit van Horne), and had issue
three sons and four daughters, viz:-
(1a) Edward (Dillon), born 16th December, 1822; married -- Barbage and had
a daughter Katherine, who died unmarried 1882.
(2a) Wentworth Joseph (Dillon), born 3rd August, 1829; died June, 1850.
(3a) Logan Robert, born 5th October, 1831; died in Australia, 1860.
(4a) Anna Maria, born 30th November, 1824; married to Dr. George Buist, who
died at Calcutta, having had a son and two daughters.
(1b) George (Buist), died in infancy.
(2b) Katherine Anna.
(3b) Margaret Jefferson.
(5a) Katherine Augusta (Dillon), born 6th March; 1827; died October, 1844.
(6a) Rose Elizabeth, born 5th August, 1834; married as second wife to
George Chancellor Collyer, of Hill House, Norfolk, Colonel retired
from (Madras) R. E., sometime Secretary to the Revenue Board P. W. D.
Served in the Indian Mutiny.
(7a) Louisa Ellen, born 29th August, 1837; died 11th June, 1869; married
19th October, 1864, to Edwin Bostock, of Stone, Stafford, and had a
son and three daughters,. viz:-
Edwin Dillon (Bostock), born 7th December, 1865.
Joanna Dorothea, born 2nd April, 1867; died 5th April, 1868.
Hilda Louisa, born 2nd June, 1868.
Rose Collyer, born 5th May, 1869.
6. Maria (Bell), born 1st July, 1798 died unmarried 23rd June, 1873.
70
7. Eliza, born 13th June, 1800; died 25th September, 1867; married to Thomas
Bolton, Agent in Ireland for the Earl of Derby, resident at Baltykisteen,
between Cullen and Tipperary; he died 1852, having had two sons and three
daughters, viz:-
(1a) William (Bolton), died unmarried.
(2a) Jasper (Bolton), married 1862, the widow of William Jonathan de
Pledge, of Tynemouth, daughter of John Grey. She re-married to
Frederick Thomas, of Elmbridge Farm, Bristol.
(3a) Emily, married October, 1852, as first wife, to Charles Grey, Receiver
to Greenwich Hospital Northern Estates, and Chief Valuer to Irish Land
Commission, and had six children, of whom four died unmarried (before
1887).
(4a) Elizabeth, married 22nd April, 1867, to Thomas Henry Mathews, of
Tipperary, Master of Erastus Smith School there; he died 25th
December, 1874 (after which she went to the State of Iowa), having had
two sons and four daughters, viz:- Thomas Henry William Bolton
(Matthews), born 17th. January, 1869, died 13th February following;
Henry de Vaux, born 14th March, 1874; Emily Mary Bolton; Stella
Kathleen Bolton; Dorothea; Elizabeth, died 19th July, 1872.
(5a) Frances (Bolton), married 14th August, 1874, to William Henry Massy
Bennett, of Glenefy, County Limerick, and had issue, viz :George
Latham (Bennett), born 1st January, 1876; William Francis, born 22nd
June, 1877; Hugh Francis Massy, born 11th September, 1883; Brenda.
8. Emma, married 3rd January, 1828, to David Gray, whom she survived, and
died s.p.
9. Louisa, married 3rd January, 1836, as first wife to John Craven Chadwick,
of Cravendale, Ancaster, County Wentworth, Canada, afterwards of Guelph.
The foregoing is chiefly taken from Foster's Families of Royal Lineage,
published 1887, with some additional particulars, and there are no doubt other
changes not known to the present compiler.
71
SOME GENEALOGIES OF NO PRACTICAL VALUE, BUT
PRINTED BECAUSE THEY ARE CURIOUS AND
INTERESTING.
ROYAL DESCENT" will seem to be a very big thing to those to whom the expression
is not familiar, but genealogists place little value on it, for they know that
most of the middle class families of England are in fact descendants of the
Angevin and Plantagenet kings, though it is only those whose lineage happens to
have been preserved who can trace the descent. That we can do so is due to the
scrupulous care with which births, marriages and deaths were recorded by the
principal Quaker families of England, at a period when most others were careless
in such matters. Our maternal ancestors, the Barclays, were Quakers in the
Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, just the period which is often one of
despair to genealogists.
Descent from the Angevin and Plantagenet kings enables those who care to do
so, to carry lines of descent back into the dim past in a manner truly
surprising, as will be seen in the following pages.
72
DESCENT of Louisa, wife of John Craven Chadwick, from several Royal
personages and from other persons less notable. [From the Genealogical Magazine
I. 164, and from Posters Royal Lineages, pp. 671, etc.]
CHARLES MARTELL, who defeated the Saracens' or Mahommedan attempt to overrun
Western Europe, died 741.
|
|
Pepin, King of the Franks.
|
|
Charlemagne, The Great Emperor of the West.
|
|
Louis the Debonair, Emperor.
|
|
Charles the Bald, Emperor, married Richelda, daughter of Bovinus,
Count Aldemar Waldi.
|
|
Judith, married to Baudoin Bras de Fer, Count of Flanders.
|
|
Baudoin, Count of Flanders and Artois, married Elfreda, daughter Of Alfred the
Great, King of England.
|
|
Arnulph le Vieux, Count of Flanders, etc., married Elisa, daughter of
Herbert, Count of Vermandois.
|
|
Baudoin, Count of Flanders, married Mechtild, daughter of Hermand
Billund, Duke of Saxony.
|
|
Arnulph, Count of Flanders, etc., married Rosala, daughter of Berenger,
King of Italy, etc.
|
|
Baudoin Fairbeard, Count of Flanders, etc.
|
|
Baudoin de L'Isle, Count of Flanders, etc., married Alisa, daughter of
Robert I, King of France, son of Hugh Capet.
|
73
Matilda, married to William the Conqueror, King of England.
|
|
Henry I, King of England, married Edith or Matilda, daughter of Malcolm Cean
Mohr, King of Scotland.
|
|
[From Genealogical Magazine V.1, 501; II, 557, and Burke's Peerage.]
An interesting article on the Saxon kings in the Genealogical Magazine V1,
501, traces descent of Alfred the Great by seventeen named generations from the
semi-mythical deified Saxon King Odin or Woden (whose memory survives to the
present time in the name of the fourth day of the week, Woden's day, Anglice
Wednesday), which each person may accept with as much or as little confidence as
he pleases. The most notable person in this line of descent was
Egbert, one of the greatest of the Saxon kings, whose son, Ethelwulf, married
Osburga, daughter of Oslac, and had four sons, Ethelbald, Ethelbert, Ethelred
and Alfred. He married secondly, Judith, daughter of Charles III. The last
named son was
ALFRED THE GREAT, King of England, 871 to 901; married Elswitha, daughter of
Ethelred, a Mercian Earl; she died 904; from whom as follows:-
Edward the Elder, King, died 924, married Edgiva (third wife), daughter of Earl Sigeline.
|
|
Edmund, King, murdered 924, married Elgiva.
|
|
Edgar, King, 957, married (second wife) Elfrida, widow o£ Ethelword and daughter
of Ongar. Earl Domaner of Devonshire.
|
|
Ethelred the Unready, King, died, 1016, married (first wife) Elgiva.
|
|
Edmund Ironside, murdered 1018, married Edith, widow of Sigeferth,
a Danish Thane.
----------------------------------------
| |
Edgar Atheling Margaret
74
Edgar Atheling 1 Margaret (died 1093 2), married 1068-9 to the above
named Malcolm Cean Molir, King of Scotland.
|
Editha, or Matilda as she was re-named on her marriage, married to Henry I, King
of England.
Matilda, Queen of Henry I, was also a descendant of Nial of the Nine
Hostages, King of Ireland, A.D. 376, from whom was descended Fergus Mar
MacEarcha, first King of Scotland of the Milesian race, from whom was descended
Kenneth MacAlpin, 850 to 860, from whom Malcolm Cean Mohr (Gen. Mag. II, 264,
and III, 116; and Peerage). 3
Another line of descent from CHARLEMAGNE to Henry II is given in Gen. Mag.
II, 506. See also Gen. Mag. III, 270, 318.
Another very curious and interesting line of descent is as follows:-
Frederic I, Barbarossa, Emperor Isaac Angelos, Emperor of the
of the West (German), died East (Byzantine), 1186, great
1190; married Beatrice, daug- grandson of the Emperor Alex-
ter of Renaud III, Count of ius I Comnenus; his daughter
Burgundy; his son |
| |
Philip of Suabia, Holy Roman Irene (alias Mary, alias Cecilia,
Married
Emperor of the West, widow of Roger, King of Sicily).
1 Strickland's Queens of England gives the details of descent slightly different
at this point, inserting another generation, Edward Atheling, who md. Agatha
dau. of Henry II., Emperor of Germany, as the father of Edgar Atheling and
his sister Margaret.
2 A woman of estimable character and great piety, highly educated and beautiful,
and so beloved by her people that after her death they named her "Saint
Margaret," and her memory was so venerated that at the Reformation her tomb was
desecrated, and her head removed. This was preserved at the Scots' College at
Donay in France, where it was seen in 1785, still perfect, with long tresses of
beautiful fair hair. This account of Queen Margaret's head was first found by
the writer in Strickland's Queens of England, and seemed to him to be so
interesting that he made further enquiries, thinking that possibly the head
might be still in existence, and with the aid of a friend, Mr. Angus Claude
Macdonell, M.P., and the courtesy of the Rev. Alexander Macdonell, priest
(R.C.) of Ladysmith in British Columbia, obtained the complete account. If
the head, so marvellously preserved for nearly seven hundred years, had remained
a century and a quarter longer, it would have been possible to have obtained a
photograph of a person who had been dead for more than eight hundred years!
That the saintly Queen is not forgotten is evidenced by the fact of there
being an Anglican Church in a Western Canadian Diocese dedicated to "Saint
Margaret of Scotland."
75
|
Mary of Suabia, married to Henry II, Duke of Lothier and Brabant, and King of
Thessalonica.
|
Henry III, Duke of Lothier and Brabant, etc., died 1260; married Aleyde or
Alice, daughter of Hugh IV, Duke of Burgundy
|
Mary of Brabant, died 1321; married to Philip III, King of France, died 1285.
|
Margaret of France, second wife of Edward I, King of England.
|
Edmund of Woodstock.
|
Joan, the Fair Maid of Kent, see infra.
[From Gen. Mag VII, 246; also see p. 261.]
|
Henry I, King of England, married Edith or Matilda, daughter of
Malcolm Cean Mohr, above named.
|
Matilda or Maude (also named Adelais), married (firstly) to Henry V; Emperor of
Germany, who d.s.p.; and secondly, to Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou
(descendant also of Charlemagne, see Gen. Mag. II, 506).
|
Henry II, King of England, died 1189, married Eleanor, daughter of William, Duke
of Aquitaine.
|
--------------------------------------
| |
Richard I., d.s.p. John, King, married Isabel, daughter of Aylmer,
Count of Angouleme.
3 It is believed by some that the Kings of England were descended from King
David (Judea) through the eldest daughter of King Zedekiah who, with her
younger sister, fled from Jerusalem in charge of the prophet Jeremiah, then a
very old man, and was married to Heremon King of Ulster. A pedigree of this
(supposed) descent is preserved at Windsor.
Query: Upon what evidence is this founded?
N.B.- How does Herernon connect with the line of descent through Malcolm
Ceann Mohr of Scotland, or otherwise, with Edward I.?
76
Henry III, died 1272; married Eleanor, daughter of Raymond, Count of Provence
(grandson of King Alphonso, of Arragon, Spain).
|
Edward I, died 1307. ---------------------Edward I married, secondly,
Married, first, Eleanor, daugh- Margaret, daughter of Philip III,
ter of Ferdinand III, King of King of France.
Castile in Spain. |
| |
Edward II, died 1327 (mur- Edmond, of Woodstock, Earl of
dered) ; married Isabel, daugh- Kent, born 1301, died 1329.
ter of Philip IV, King of Beheaded because of loyalty to
France, and his wife, Jane, the King, his half-brother. Mar-
Queen of Navarre. ried Margaret, daughter of John,
Lord Wake of Liddell. |
| |
Edward III, died 1327; married |
Philippa, daughter of William, Joan, "the fair maid of Kent,"
Count of Hainault. married to Thomas Holland,
| one of the founders of the Gar-
1. Edward, Prince of Wales, the ter, Earl of Kent, commanded
Black Prince, married his cousin the van of the army of the Black
Joan, widow of Thomas Hol- Prince at Cressy. He died 1360.
land, Earl of Kent. Joan was reputed to be the most
| beautiful woman of the age in
2. Richard II, d.s.p. which she lived.
Edmund P. Holland
77
Thomas Holland, second Earl of Kent and Baron Wake; married Alice, second
daughter of Richard FitzAlan, K.G., Earl of Arundel (and his second wife,
Eleanor, daughter of Henry, third Earl of Lancaster) ; she died 17th March,
1417, having had, with other issue,
Stuart Beaufort
Margaret Holland (third daughter), died 31st December, 1440; married first to
Sir John Beaufort (eldest son of John of Gaunt), Earl of Somerset and Marquis of
Dorset, who died 21st April, 1410; and secondly, to Thomas, Duke of Clarence,
son of Henry IV. Of the first marriage she had, with other issue, a daughter.
Joane, Queen of Scots; died 1445; married, firstly, February, 1423-4, to
James Stuart I, King of Scotland (who was murdered by the faction of Walter,
Earl of Athole, his uncle), and had, besides a son, James II, King of Scotland,
a daughter
Stewart of Athole Gordon
Princess Annabella, or Arabella; married as first wife to George, Earl of
Huntly, who died 8th June, 1501, leaving, with other issue, a son.
Alexander, Gordon third Earl of Huntly, who married his cousin (of the half-
blood) Janet, daughter of Sir John Stewart, Earl of Athole, of whom presently.
78
| The said Joane, Dowager Queen of Scots, married, secondly, 1439, to Sir
| James Stewart, the Black Knight of Lorn (third son of Sir John Stewart, of
| Lorn and Innermeath), and had, with other issue, a son,
| Sir John Stewart, of Balveny, created Earl of Athole, who married, first,
| Margaret (dowager of William, eighth Earl of Douglas), only daughter of
| Archibald, fifth Earl of Douglas, Duke of Touraine; he married, secondly,
| Eleanora, daughter of William Sinclair, Earl of Orkney and Caithness, and had
| issue; of his first marriage he had two daughters, of whom the elder was the
above named
Janet Stewart, married 1474, as first wife to Alexander Gordon, third Earl of
Huntly, named above. He commanded the left wing of the Scottish army with Lord
Home at the battle of Flodden, 9th September, 1513; died 16th January, 1523-4,
having had, with other issue, a son,
John, Lord Gordon, died in his father's lifetime, 5th December, 1517, married
Margaret, natural daughter of James IV (she re-married to Sir John Drummond, of
Innerpeffry), and had two sons, viz: George, fourth Earl of Huntly, and
Alexander Gordon, Titular Archbishop of Athens 1547, Bishop of the Isles and
Abbot of Inchaffray and Icolmkill 1553, Bishop of Galloway 1558, relinquished
his Episcopacy; died 11th November, 1575; married Barbara Logie, life renter of
the lands of Kessogton in Swanwick, daughter of the Laird of Logie, and had six
sons and a daughter, of whom the eldest son,
John Gordon, had the revenues of the Bishopric of Galloway resigned in his
favour, mentioned as Bishop of Galloway 1583, does not appear to have been
consecrated, demitted before 8th July, 1586, "became one of the gentlemen of the
bedchamber to Charles IX, Henry III and Henry IV." Dean of Salisbury 1603,
created D.D. Oxon, 13th August, 1605 "because he was to dispute before the King
his kinsman," died 3rd September, 1619, aged 75. He married, first, 1576,
Antoinette de Maroles, by whom he obtained the lordship of Longormes, in France;
and secondly, 1594, Genevieve Betaw, daughter of Gideon Betaw, lord of Maulet,
first president of the parliament of Brittany; she died 6th December, 1643, aged
83, leaving an only daughter,
79
Louisa Gordon, born 20th December, 1597; married 16th February, 1613, to Sir
Robert Gordon, of Gordonstoun, the historian of his family (son of Alexander,
eleventh Earl of Sutherland), gentleman of the bedchamber to King James, 1606,
knighted 1609, gentleman of the bedchamber to Charles I, who created him baronet
of Nova Scotia, 28th May, 1625, being the first of that order, sheriff principal
of Invernessshire 1629, vice-chamberlain 1630, P.C. Scotland 1634; he died 1656,
aged 76, haying had, with five sons, four daughters, of whom the second,
Catherine Gordon, born 11th January, 1621, died March, 1663, married 26th
January, 1648, to Col. David Barclay, 4 of Urie, County
Barclay
Kincardine, who had been a volunteer in the Swedish army under Gustavus
Adolphus, and attained the rank of Major, returned to Scotland, and was Colonel
of a Regiment of horse; dislodged and routed Montrose 1646, relieved Inverness,
made governor of Strathbogie; after the battle of Preston he was deprived of all
employments by Cromwell; represented Forfarshire and Kincardineshire (Angus and
Mearns) 1654-6, 1656-8; imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle about 1664, joined the
Society of Friends, or Quakers, in 1666, imprisoned in Aberdeen 21st March,
1676, "for going to worship contrary to law," and again the year following; died
October, 1686, aged 76, having had three sons and two daughters, of whom the
second son, Robert, of Perth Amboy, in the Colony of New Jersey, was Governor of
East Jersey, and the eldest was
4 A pedigree of the Barclay family is printed in Foster's Families of Royal
Lineage, p.161. One of this family, Capt. Robert Barclay, who lived in the early
part of the 19th Century, was a man of extraordinary athletic power and a famous
pedestrian; among other notable feats, he undertook to walk 1,000 miles in 1,000
hours, which he successfully accomplished.
80
Robert Barclay, of Urie, a noted writer on Quaker tenets, Governor of East or
New Jersey for life 1682 born 23rd December, 1648, died August, 1690; married
1st February, 1670, Christian, daughter of Gilbert Molyson, Baillie of Aberdeen;
she died 14th December, 1722-3, aged 76, having had with five daughters, four
sons, of whom the third son was
David Barclay, a merchant in London; entertained at his house in Cheapside,
Queen Anne, George I, George II and George III when they visited the city on
Lord Mayor's day. 5 Born 17th July, 1682; died 18th March, 1769; married, first,
12th April, 1707, Anne, daughter of James Taylor, of London; she died in 1720,
aged 31, having had four sons and five daughters, and secondly, 8th June, 1723,
Priscilla, daughter of John Freame, of London; she died 9th October, 1769,
having had two sons and six daughters, 6 of whom the second daughter was
Catherine Barclay, born April, 1727; died 19th October, 1784; married 17th
February, 1750, to Daniel Bell, of Stamford Hill, London; he died 19th October,
1802, aged 76, having had two sons and eight daughters, of whom the third son
was
Jonathan Bell, of Hornsey and Kensington, born 9th November, 1769 (see Bell).
5 A picture representing one of these occasions was printed in the Leisure
Hour for 1888, p.69.
6 The 6th dau. Christiana was md. 1stly to Joseph Gurney of Norwich, 2ndl.
to John Freame of London; and 3rdly to Sir William Watson, F.R.S., M.D., a
Trustee of the British Museum.
Entertaining the King of Prussia
The following letter, which came to the writer through Mrs. Desbarres; the
wife of a clergyman who lived some time in Toronto, is so interesting and so
graphically describes life among the great bankers and merchants of London, and
class of "Empire Builders," in the early half of the Nineteenth Century that it
is well worth preserving in print.
From Katherine Fry to F. and R F. Cresswell. 7
Upton Lane,
Tuesday, February 1st, 1842.
All is well over - the King has been and we are like people awaking from a
dream, and truly grieved are we, my dearest Frank and Rachel, that you and all
your children were not here, though Frank Joseph was to represent you. The King
asked his surname and where his father and mother lived. With your exception and
Raymond, who was detained in London, all the children and grandchildren were
present. I wrote to you on Sunday night and mentioned the intimation we had
received of the intended honour - for truly an honour do we feel it. I can
hardly tell you what a weight it was on Monday morning. Lady Pelly, Sophia and I
worked just like housemaids. We went from room to room arranging and placing and
doing and ordering, first one thing and then another. We had the hall, stone
steps and gravel at the entrance laid in Indian matting. The porch was
beautifully dressed with hot house flowers, lilacs, etc., in full bloom. We
cleared the hall of all furniture, and in the front of the stair case opposite
the entrance were glorious camelias and other flowers--quite a parterre--the
drawing-room was cleared of all tables but one and all secondary ornaments; a
new carpet had been down the week before; most rare and lovely flowers, both out
as a nose-gay on the table and in a basket in pots, were in the room. Still at
one o'clock we felt all behind; the tables in the dining-room not fully laid, no
messenger from London, nor any tidings of the guests or the dinner, or luncheon
or whatever it was to be called. When Gurney arrived from town with the certain
information that the King intended to be here
7 See particulars of persons named in this letter, page 88.
82
punctually at two. Crowds began to assemble in groups in the lane, and it was
droll to see from the windows many a familiar face fixed firmly for a front
view.
Lady Pelly went home to dress, Sophia and I upstairs, which it was a real
difficulty to accomplish, but we did dress. Sophia in salmon coloured water
silk elegantly trimmed with good lace and a lace cardinal. I in my green velvet
and pale pink and white gauze cap. Buxtons, Hoares, began to arrive, and were
without scruple sent on to Ham House. When I went down the change was magical,
from the real bustle and movement, all was still and finished-the servants all
in the hall, and the family arriving in rapid succession, really elegantly
dressed, which was wonderful considering the deep winter season and that there
was no time to have anything made up for the occasion. Brothers and sisters,
our Uncle and Aunt Buxton, Uncle and Aunt Gurney, Sir Henry and Lady Pelly, Aunt
Elizabeth Fry and Mr. Hankinson, who came as he said to represent our Uncle
Hoare (we were most happy to see him, though it gave us a momentary sensation of
difficulty), and our Frank, were in the drawing-room, all children and nurses in
the bow window room, and the Gurneys and the other cousins "ladies" at my
bedroom and dressing-room windows. Gentlemen cousins on the lawn in front
of the house. Every corner of the house was (to our mortification) filled by
degrees with one crowd of people. Out of doors such a scene our quiet lane never
shewed before, whilst every corner of the yard and servants' entrance,
particularly the steps of the area, were filled and crowded with those ladies
and gentlemen of the neighbourhood who could frame the least excuse to come in -
whilst to peep through the shrubs of the flower garden was granted by the
gardener as a great favour to ladies and children who were strangers to us. The
police came on in considerable numbers both in and outside the gates. Eight
men cooks; a head cook, and a maitre d'hotel as they call him, arrived in a
van and a cab, and took entire possession of our kitchen and were so
businesslike and respectable in their appearance that my mind was assured on
that point. Our father emerged dressed from his apartments, and an hour and a
half of most tedious waiting commenced. Our mother was gone to Newgate, and as
time crept on some began to think we
83
should surely be disappointed; we talked and speculated on possibilities. Some
looked out at the windows at the crowd which covered the road all the way to
West Ham. Carriages also, were drawn up all along and mounted police, up and
down to keep a clear road. The bells were ringing and flags displayed in West
Ham. We heard that the charity children were all ranged along the wall of the
churchyard, and that the crowds were really considerable both there and at
Stratford. Still this was but an apology for passing the time pleasantly. When
some mounted police galloped into the gate and passing under the windows said
"the King is in West Ham," some of the party previously said they heard
shouting there. My father and his sons, eight in number, immediately went down
the steps on to the gravel where it was matted. There were John, William,
Joseph, Gurney and Henry, Foster, [probably Foster Reynolds, a brother-in-law],
Champion [probably William Champion Streatfield, a brother-in-law] and Frank
Joseph. The servants stood along the sides of the hall, twelve in number lining
it completely;, seven in our brothers' livery drab and scarlet and five out of
livery. We ladies all ranged ourselves in the outer drawing-room; but it was
after all only the Lady Mayoress, our mother and the two sheriffs in the Lord
Mayor's coach. We gathered nothing but that the King was changing for post
horses at the Stone's End. Mamma hurried up to take off her bonnet and shawl and
soon came down. In about five minutes an outrider rode in and was instantly
followed by the Royal carriage and four. I did not see what passed, but those
in, the upper windows describe the scene as perfectly beautiful, the sons
standing there, and the father and mother at the bottom of the steps. Lord
Hardwick, Mons. Bunsen, and the Count de Stolberg got out first. When the King
was on the carriage steps, he took off his hat and every-body bowed; when on
the ground he made a profound bow to the brothers, which they returned in kind
of course, and taking our father and mother, one in each hand ascended the steps
saying with energy three times, "Thank God, I am here at last." He wore plain
clothes and the blue riband. under his coat. When he entered the drawing-room
he bowed again. I crept behind the door; I thought I should have wept.
84
The simultaneous curtsey of the sisters was beautiful. Before he passed on
leading our mother he paused and every sister was named by her individually. The
King said, "'All your children?" When Sophia's name came, he said her father
was known and loved in Prussia. The "gentlemen followed in and were
individually presented. The King then retired for a few minutes to our father's
dressing-room, and having brushed his hair with one of papa's hat brushes, said,
"There, I think I look better now." He also washed his hands; and then returned
to the drawing-room. Meanwhile all the grandchildren had been brought down, and
arranged amphitheatre fashion, little in front and large behind and the nurses
with the babies in their arms at the back at the end of the room. When our
father said with a loud voice, "The King"', all the company formed on either
side instantaneously, but he was already in the midst of the group looking at
the children. Our mother said they were all her grandchildren. His Majesty
lifted up both his hands, and giving a sort of "Oh!" half scream, half crow,
said, "So many!" or "How many! How many!" Frank was reluctantly drawn forth and
it was there his name was told and regrets for your absence expressed. Luncheon
was now announced. The King led our mother. They sat in the two great arm chairs
at the head of the table. Our father followed with the Lady Mayoress.
Lord Hardwick and Lady Pelly;
Count Stolberg and Sophia, because of her German, for he speaks neither
English nor French;
Mr. Bunsen and Lady Buxton;
Mr. Sheriff Magnay and Rachel Fry;
Mr. Sheriff Rogers and Alice, whom he knew before;
Sir Henry Pelly and Aunt Gurney;
Sir Fowell Buxton and Elizabeth Fry, etc.
The table was in the shape of a T. A few could not sit down, as it was
impossible to crowd, but they did not mind as they stood near the King and saw
and heard far better than those seated near the door. I allowed no hired
ornament on the table; it was the family silver, for instance, four or six wine
coolers with flowers in them alternating with
85
the high red Berlin, glass dishes from Ham House; most richly filled with mixed
fruits and finished with a pineapple. All the centre of the table was one line
of fruit and flowers. The side dishes were preserves, cakes, jellies, etc. Every
hot dish was handed from the sideboard. When the party were seated we had a
solemn pause. The King eat heartily. He had never eaten oyster soup before, and
when he had finished his first plateful it was sent to have it replenished. He
helped himself a second time to one or two dishes, and my mother says made a
really good meal and seemed to enjoy the excellent French cookery presented to
him. It was precisely his usual dinner hour, and having done much since
breakfast, the man was hungry. He looked most beaming and sweet at the head of
the table, our mother by his side. We could hardly believe after all we had
heard of him in his own country that the King of Prussia was really sitting at
dinner at Upton Lane!!!
How little did it enter any of our imaginations when our mother's remarkable
history in Silesia was related to us that the first of all those then told about
whether gentle or simple who would sit down to a meal at Upton Lane would be the
King of Prussia himself! However, so it is. At table our mother told him she was
glad he should see how the people in the middle classes lived. The King said,
"You do not call yourself the middle classes." Our mother answered, "In
education we are quite on an equality with the highest class; but we are not
people of rank; this is private life." Lord Hardwick did not admit it was the
middle rank. Mamma, "It is the most privileged rank." "It is indeed," said
Lord Hardwick. Count Stolberg said at dinner to those about him, "I feel that
the blessing of God rests on this house." After being, about half an hour at
table the King rose, and so did all instantly and another pause, when our mother
said she "believed it was the prayer of every heart present that grace, mercy
and peace might rest on the beloved Sovereign present, on his family, and his
country for the sake of Jesus Christ, our Lord." A voice from the bottom of the
table, I believe Mr. Hankinson, said "Amen." The King also uttered a sort of
prayer or blessing, "That the blessing that rested on this house might
continue." Every one then drew back and the King and our mother passed out. In
the drawing-room were all the Gurneys, Emma Reynolds, Elizabeth
86
Hoare, Richarda Buxton, Edward and Catherine, etc. They were all presented; and
a deputation of Friends were also there to present an address. "This was by the
King"s own appointment; and Lord Hardwick had sent for them, but we did not
know it, so it appeared to us that a mistake was made. They were shown into the
drawing-room, and the King went in to them, whereas had we known we would have
arranged another room for their reception and, then had them come to the King.
However, as he seemed to like the address all was well. "Are those your words,
Allen?" "No, they are addressed to the King for the Society of Friends by a
Committee." The King, "They are divine words." The tears were in his eyes when
he took our mother's hand and expressed his wish and hope to come again here
and bring "my Eliza," meaning the Queen. Our mother turned deadly pale, and her
face quivered as "she said, "If we never meet again on earth, may we meet
hereafter." The King wept aloud, so as to be heard all over the room and stood
holding her hand. There was hardly a dry eye there, and all in silence the most
profound. It was a wonderfully interesting and touching scene. He then turned
quickly round and his eyes streaming with tears went in to the hall. When our
father and William assisted him to put on his great coat, he again took mother's
hand, and hardly able to articulate for agitation, said, "I know not how to part
with you. I pray God we may meet again," and so jumped quickly into the
carriage, and threw himself back - but in a moment or two leant over Lord
Hardwick, and leaning out of the window waved his hand at her several times,
his eyes streaming with tears. But she had turned away overcome, and away they
drove amidst the shouts of the crowd outside. And so that memorable visit was
over. It lasted about an hour but was so extremely full of events it seemed two
hours. The King told our mother he was an hour late in leaving Windsor, owing
to the Queen taking him to see her cottage in the park, or he should have stayed
here another hour. He more than once repeated his regret that he had not this
second hour to remain with us; another quarter of an hour at table would have
been agreeable, and perhaps a little less sense of haste throughout, but I doubt
an hour more having answered, and it is well we are content. Our meal was I
think perfect, and the French cookery first rate. Our table looked really hand-
87
some not just only pretty and neat. In another hour all were gone. It was a most
exhausted feeling afterwards. The servants' hall was not empty till night. All
the police had to dine; first inspectors, waited on by footmen with wine, etc.,
then sergeants in another place, and lastly men.
I am completely, unwell and overdone.
Yours very. affectionately,
(Sgd.) Katherine Fry.
How different from the friendship of his ancestor with Voltaire!
[I think we may add to Katherine's P.S. another - How different from 1914!]
To illustrate the foregoing letter it may be well to add an explanation of
who some of the persons named in it were.
The King was Frederick William IV of Prussia in 1840, in which year his
father died. He was a sentimental and emotional man, and "weeping would be
quite in his line." As the writer is informed. He d.s.p. and therefore the
present Kaiser is not his descendant.
His "Eliza" was Elizabeth, the Queen of Prussia.
The Host and Hostess were Joseph Fry and Elizabeth Fry, the philanthropist,
daughter of John Gurney and Catherine Bell
Katherine Fry was their eldest daughter aged about 40. When Elizabeth Fry
devoted herself to philanthropic work she gave the management of the household
to Katherine.
Rachel Elizabeth Cresswell was a daughter of Elizabeth Fry, and Francis
Cresswell was her husband. Frank Joseph was the eldest son, aged about 20.
Lady Pelly was the wife of Sir John Henry Pelly, Governor of the Hudson
Bay Company. Whether she was a relation or not the writer is not informed, but
there have been several marriages between Frys and Pellys. Miss Annie Evelyn
Pelly, lady in waiting to H.R.H. the Duchess of Connaught in Canada, is a
descendant of the above Sir John Henry and Lady Pelly, being the daughter of Sir
Henry Carstairs Pelly, Bart. In 1913 she was married to Capt Rivers Bulkeley,
A.D.C. to H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, who was lately killed in action in
France.
Sophia, probably the wife of Samuel Gurney Fry, Katherine's brother.
The others named, excepting official persons, were all near relations of the
Gurneys. Elizabeth Fry's family. Some of them are namely in the foregoing Bell
genealogy.
ADDENDUM WALES & CORNWALL – 1916/2015
The
Chadwicks
OF GUELPH AND TORONTO AND THEIR COUSINS
Supplementary
NOTES AND ADDENDA
("WALES AND MICHIGAN" BRANCH, PAGE 37, REPRINTED AS, WALES AND CORNWALL-DEVON BRANCH)
SEPTEMBER, 1916
From a copy at the Society of Genalogists, London, Dec 2015.
ADDENDA
The writer has probably fallen into an
error in naming the head of the main branch of the family (p. 10), having been
misled by a newspaper paragraph, which he did not take the trouble of verifying,
the point being one of but remote intent. The head of that branch of the family
was about 1880, John de Heley Mavesyn Chadwick, J.P. and D.L., of Healey Hall, Lancashire,
Mavesyn, Co. Stafford and New Hall, Co. Warwick. He had three sons, Hugo
Mavesyn, Charles, and John de Heley Mavesyn, and two daughters.
Page 16
The maple leaf described as Vert should be Gules.
Page 26
Nicholas, "Posy," was living in Mitchelstown in 1799, not 1749.
Page 41
Colonel Edward Frederick Chadwick died 6th Feb., 1915.
Page 42
Captain Frederick James Chadwick was killed in action, in the Mesopotamian
Campaign.
Lieutenant Richard Markham Chadwick was killed in action in Flanders.
Josephine Chadwick was married to Lewis Garibaldi Langstaff of Thornhill Springs,
Thornhill, Ontario, and has issue: Ellen Elizabeth b. May, 1916.
The name of the 3rd daughter of Major James Chadwick should be Isabella and not
as printed.
Page 58
William Francis Chadwick is a Lieutenant in 60th Rifles, Canadian Expeditionary
Force; and has been wounded in action in France.
The name of the daughter of Francis Henry Chadwick should be Vinnie Rose and
not as pointed.
Page 60
Wi!liam Gustavus Chadwick is a cadet in the 9th Mississauga Horse.
Stewart Herbert Pepler is a Lieutenant in 124th Overseas Batt.
Page 60
The Rev. F. A. P. Chadwick has a daughter, Elizabeth Agnes, b. 17th August,
1915.
Page 63
Lieutenant.-Col. William Craven Vaux Chadwick, after raising the 4th Mounted
Rifles, was transferred to a staff appointment at Valcartier, where he trained
three newly raised regiments for Overseas Service, after which he was offered
the choice of either one of two Staff positions in Canada or the Command of a
regiment for Overseas Service and choosing the latter, he was commissioned to
raise the 124th Batt. C.E.F., which he accomplished with such success that
within a fortnight from the day he was authorized to call for recruits, the
Regiment was fully completed to strength in excess of establishment, with full complement
of officers and staff, and bands.
Page 65—
William Joseph Davis was the son of Thomas Handforth Davis (of a family of
Devizes, Wiltshire) and Anne Pearce, his wife.
Sidney Davis is the daughter of John Ivester Potter, of Berwyn near
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, (where that family had been resident for over two
hundred years) and his wife, Rebecca Wilkinson, of a family resident originally
in Virginia but since the 17th century in or near Philadelphia.
Richard E. C. Chadwick has a son, Richard Vaux, b. 20th May,
Page 65—
Bryan D. S. Chadwick, although unable to serve in a more active capacity,
obtained an appointment for clerical work in Brigade Staff, entering the 9th
Mississauga Horse in which he was given the rank of Sergeant. Perhaps the only
man who has entered the King's Military Service wearing an artificial leg.
Page 65—
Louisa Mary Caroline Chadwick is engaged in special Red Cross Service in
France.
The section of the book headed "Wales and Michigan” page 37, was written upon information which has been ascertained to be erroneous in an important point; and there were some difficulties as to dates which have been explained; and this section has now been rewritten upon reliable information, as follows:
WALES AND CORNWALL - DEVON BRANCH
Michael Chadwick, son of Richard Chadwick, of Ballinard, and his wife Jane Sadleir, born 1769, d. 5 December, 1839, married Margaret (Amelia Margaret), daughter of Jeremiah Dwyer, of Tipperary, Attorney-at-law, and his wife Alice Potter. The marriage was secret without the consent of parents or guardians, both Michael and Margaret being about fifteen years of age when married, and a bill in Chancery, afterwards filed by Michael against his guardian for an account, tells a pitiful tale of the straightened circumstances of himself and wife and children for some years, although his father had left him well provided for and Margaret was "an heiress” entitled to an estate of her own. On their coming of age, however, in 1790, Margaret had, besides her own property, a settlement secured on Gortnekilleen, which came to Michael under the will of his father; it was sold in Michael's lifetime, lost through extravagance and mismanagement and the reckless style of living so prevalent among the Irish gentry at this period, to the ruin of many families. Margaret (if Amelia Margaret) died April, 1800. Michael lived some time in Jersey, and was living at Coom Cottage near Bangor in Northeast Wales, in 1802. He was a Captain in the Royal Irish Dragoons and served in the Rebellion of 1798, being present at Vinegar Hill where he is said to have saved the life of Col. Sir Watkin Wynne, who settled Coom Cottage upon him for life as a grateful recognition of that service. In Wales, he was called "Michael Richard.” He had issue, Richard, baptised August, 1786; Jeremiah, died young; and Nicholas, died young, being killed by a kick from a horse. [He married secondly as set out infra.]
Richard, the eldest son, was a Captain in the Regiment of Shropshire Militia;
he is stated by his descendants to have been employed with much success in
raising recruits for the army (at this time constantly engaged in the
Napoleonic and other wars of the period) and particularly for the Welsh
Fusiliers. Married Cecilia Frances, younger daughter of John Moore Knighton, of
Greenofen House, Devonshire, and Treleigh Manor, Redruth, Cornwall, who seems
to have died s.p.m., leaving daughters co-heiresses, (one of whom, Maria
Saltern Knighton, was married 13th February, 1810, to Capt. George Drake) and
had issue,
John Moore Knighton Chadwick, (d. 1879),
who had a somewhat adventurous career; he served as an ensign in the Portuguese War of Succession between Queen Dona Maria and her uncle Don Miguel and afterwards in the Spanish War between Queen Isabella and Don Carlos. In the latter war he served as Lieutenant and Captain in the 3rd Westminster Grenadiers of the British Auxiliary Legion under Sir De Lacy Evans; was severely wounded in the battle of the 5th May, 1836; and was decorated with the Cross of St. Ferdinand. He was taken prisoner, but escaped from his captors while being taken to the Carlist camp, where he would have undoubtedly been shot, as the Carlists shot all prisoners of the Legion whenever they fell into their hands. After his return to England he was a Captain in the Royal Cornish and Devon Regiment of Militia. He subsequently settled in Natal, South Africa. He married, in 1840 at Heavitree, Devonshire, Anna Maria, eldest daughter of Commander John Fisher, R.N., and had issue,
1 John Courtenay Chasman Chadwick of Pietermaritzburg, b. 25 Dec, 1846.
Justice of the
Native High Court of Natal. Married 2nd December, 1869, Elizabeth Anne,
daughter of Samuel Webb Bishop, of Bishopstake, Umgeni, Natal, and has had
issue, viz.:
1a. Robert Garden, of Ashton Vale, Donnybrook, Natal,
b. 9th October,
1870. Md. 7th May, 1892, Adah Elizabeth, daughter of John Hutton Atkinson,
Merchant in Durban, and has issue,
1a John Courtenay Clyde, h. 8th Dec., 1894.
2a. Richard Michael Knighton, b. 1st April, 1899.
3a. Roy Quintin, b. 10th Oct., 1906.
1a. Madge Gwendolyn, b. 28th Feb., 1893, md. 24th March, 1913,
to Maurice Anderson Evans, and has issue, Noel, b. 25th Dec, 1915, Lyn Doreene, b. 28th Feb., 1914.
2a. Doris Ruth, b. 8th Nov., 1897.
2. Knighton Howard, of Ixopo, Natal, a Solicitor,
b. 30th August, 1875, md. 1904, Mary Elizabeth Cunningham, daughter of Major George Leslie Cunningham Graham, late of 21st Empress of India's Own Lancers, and has issue: Howard Leslie, b. 22nd April, 1905; William Allan Chasman, b. 18th Oct., 1910.
1. Ella Elizabeth, b. 13th November, 1872, died 14th February, 1914,
md. January, 1899, to Ethelbert James Bligh Hosking, of Byrne, Natal, and had issue: Richard Courtenay, b. 10th Nov., 1899; Roderick Ethelbert Duncan, b. February, 1906.
2. Mabel Ellen,
b. 26th October, 1876, died 1st April, 1892.
3. Norah Maud, b. 17th June, 1884.
4. Marion Emily, b. 7th March, 1888,
md. 26th Oct., 1909, to Lieut. Harry Edward Meade, Royal Fusiliers, and has issue: John Arthur, b. at Portishead, Somersetshire, England, 26th Oct., 1914; Elizabeth, b. 10th Aug., 1910, at Mauritius.
II. Richard Michael Knighton Chadwick, of Beechwood Estcourt, Natal, J.P.,
Advocate, etc.,
b. at Howard's Vale, Umhlali, Victoria County, Natal, 11th March, 1854; md.
27th August, 1879, Annie May, daughter of Frederick William Moor, J.P. of
Braak-fontein, Weenen County, Natal, and has issue, viz.:
1. John Moor Knighton, b.9th August, 1880, md. 30th July, 1907,
Helen Robertson Read, and has had issue: Richard Michael Knighton; (deceased) Patrick Michael Knighton; Helen May Lydia.
2. Richard
Dering, b. 30th April, 1887, d. 20th Sept., 1887.
1 Mary Annie Helen, b. 9th August, 1882, md. to Percy Samuel Bowley,
and has issue: Richard Edward Foster; Harold Dudley; John Derrick; Adrian.
2. Kathleen
May, b. 26th April, 1884, md. to James Gallwey Creagh.
3. Constance Lillian, b. 29th November, 1888,
md. to Dr. George Ashby Hooton, and has issue: Maisie.
4. Evelyn Merle, b. 27th October, 1890.
III. Gordon, resided in Cornwall, married and left issue:
several daughters (particulars uncertain).
IV. Courtenay, V. Frederick, VI. Edmund, all of whom d. s. p.
I. Cecilia Elizabeth Louisa, md. to*
Lieut. Col. Cholmeley Edward Dering, D.L. of Trosley in Kent, (see Baronetages, tit. Dering); she d. 31st March, 1899, leaving one daughter.
II. Maria Frances Knighton, md. to Lieut. Col. Edmund Yates Peel,
85th Regt., and had issue (see Baronetages, tit. Peel of Drayton Manor).
Michael Chadwick (1769-1839) above named (who was called in Wales "Michael
Richard"), md. 2ndly Anne Roberts, d. 1867, and had issue:
1. William, d. 6th April, 1873, unmarried.
Agent for Estates of Lord Dudley.
2. Frederick, M.D. Settled at Perrysburg in Indiana, d. abt. 1867,unma.
3. Thomas, d. abt. 1907, having had issue: John, (lived in Wales), d. abt.
1913; Eliza Ann, md. but d. s. p.; Jane Lloyd, living in Wales.
4. Edward, C.E. of London, d. abt. 1867,
unmd.
5. Michael Richard, M.D. of whom below.
1. Sarah Ann, d. 1878, s.p.
2. Jane, d. young.
3. Mary, d. inf.
4. Harriet, md. to Thomas Jones, of Denbighshire in Wales, and had issue:
la. William (Jones) living in Colorado, md. Adell , and has issue:
Frederick; Harriet Wyatt; Gertrude; Adell; Marie; Maroo.
2a. Richard Michael Chadwick (Jones), md. Emily, and has issue:
Llewellyn Brazier; Thomas Edward; Frances Ellinor.
3a. Edward Chadwick (Jones), md. Mary , and has issue:
Mary; Harriet; Margaret; Gladys.
4a. Frederick
Edwin (Jones), md. (no issue).
5a, Thomas Arthur (Jones), living in Kansas, md. Millie,
and has issue: Franklin Thomas; Edwin; Charles; Mary Ann; Ruth.
6a. John Knighton (Jones), Choir Master at Talyfont in N. Wales,
md. Pollie, and has issue: Knighton, a Lay Reader; Chadwick; James Cecil; Mary Harriet Amelia; Violet Jane.
7a. Harriet Jane (dec), md. to William Henry Cole Brodie (dec),
and had issue: William (Brodie) in India; Edward, in India; Harriet Ellinor (called Lily); Ida.
8a. Sarah Anne, md. to Joseph Davies, living in Topeka, Kansas,
and has issue: Walter Picton, md. Fay Groehong; John Thomas; Lily; Ruby, md. to Perry W. Ward, and has issue, Perry W.
5. Michael Richard, M.D., above named, went to the United States in 1840;
settling firstly at Detroit and after some changes of residence settled in 1867 at Hart, Oceana County. Moved to Florida in 1885 and died there about 1901. He married Caroline Goden, who died 19th April, 1905, daughter of Richard Seth Goden, and had issue, viz.: Ira Brown, M.D., born 18th April, 1851, of Carr, Calhoun County, Florida, is married and has one son. Harvey Jenner, M.D., born February, 1857, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, married firstly 14th October, 1885, Laura Estelle, daughter of James M. Teeple, and his wife Harriet Wixon; she died 8th April, 1900; and secondly, 6th May, 1914, Rocina Hemkiss; and has issue of the first marriage: Jenner Harvey, born 26th February, 1894; Eva Harriet married to Fred Caro, of Grand Rapids, and has issue, Laura Lona, born 1909, Leonora and Nora May; Zela, married to James Hatch, living in Detroit.
The moto of the Mavesyn Chadwicks, Stans cum Rege, and the words Juxta Salopiam
which have been sometimes used as a motto, are taken from the tomb of Sir
Robert Mavesyn slain in 1403 in battle near Shrewsbury, anciently called Salopia,
which states .that he fell "Juxta Salopiam Stans cum Rege," i.e. near
Shrewsbury, "standing with," meaning supporting the cause of the
King.