Gibbs Family Tree

Penelope Claire Minter Kemp



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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Penelope Claire Minter Kemp

    Penelope married Thomas Seymour Dickins [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Hebe Ann Dickins
    2. Merlin Ralph Seymour Dickins
    3. Oscar Collingwood Dickins
    4. Fingal Louis Dickins

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Major Martin John Minter Kemp was born on 20 Mar 1935 in Windmill House, Wingrave, Buckinghamshire (son of Arthur John Minter Kemp and Beatrice Mary Shaw); died on 15 Feb 2020.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: Army Officer; Royal Welch Fusiliers and SAS. Army Officer; Royal Welch Fusiliers and SAS. Army Officer; Royal Welch Fusiliers and SAS.

    Notes:

    Only son of Major John Arthur Minter-Kemp of Poldawrion, Coverack, Cornwall. Educated at Sutton Valence and Germany.

    Served in the Royal Welch Fusiliers and in the
    Special Air Service Regiment, retiring as Major in 1974.

    1966 member of the crew of the winning yacht, Toria, in the Round Britain Race. 1968 and 1972 competed in the Single Handed Transatlantic Race, being placed 7th on each occasion. Consultant to The Helicat Co. Ltd., St. Helier, Jersey, C.I., helipad catamaran specialists for defence, industry, survey.

    Martin married Jillianne Bridget Gibbs on 18 Apr 1959 in St Mary's, Tamerton Foliott, Devon, and was divorced in 1973. Jillianne (daughter of Lieut. Colonel Denis Lucius Alban Gibbs, DSO* and Lady Hilaria Agnes Edgcumbe) was born on 11 Jul 1935 in Aldenham, Hertfordshire; died on 20 Jan 1994 in Shrewsbury, Shropshire; was buried in Tavistock Cemetery, Devon. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Jillianne Bridget GibbsJillianne Bridget Gibbs was born on 11 Jul 1935 in Aldenham, Hertfordshire (daughter of Lieut. Colonel Denis Lucius Alban Gibbs, DSO* and Lady Hilaria Agnes Edgcumbe); died on 20 Jan 1994 in Shrewsbury, Shropshire; was buried in Tavistock Cemetery, Devon.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Departure: Kure, Hiroshima, Japan
    • Arrival: 21 Jan 1948, Southampton, Hampshire; Age: 12

    Notes:

    Baptised at Aldenham Church, educated at St. Stephen's College, Broadstairs. Married firstly at St. Mary's, Tamerton, Foliot on 18 April 1959, and secondly on 25 April 1974 in Bristol.

    After leaving school obtained Diploma in Cookery and Needlework, followed by a year in France
    studying French for 'A' levels and French History of Art. Secretarial Course at Marlborough Gate Secretarial College, followed by 2 years work with Architects James Cubitt and Partners, and at Marconi House. Returned to Devon for a year's practical work in school for E.S.N. children as a Matron before going on to study Social Science in Bristol.

    Portrait: Crayon by Robert Needham, July 1947, last in possn. of her father Denis L Gibbs.

    Children:
    1. Emma Hilaria Minter Kemp
    2. 1. Penelope Claire Minter Kemp
    3. Robin John Edgcumbe Minter Kemp


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Arthur John Minter Kemp was born on 21 Jun 1902 in Aspley Heath, Bedfordshire; died in Apr 1990 in Marston Moretain, Bedfordshire.

    Arthur married Beatrice Mary Shaw in Sep 1933 in Marylebone, London. Beatrice was born on 29 Sep 1904; died in Jul 1992. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Beatrice Mary Shaw was born on 29 Sep 1904; died in Jul 1992.
    Children:
    1. 2. Major Martin John Minter Kemp was born on 20 Mar 1935 in Windmill House, Wingrave, Buckinghamshire; died on 15 Feb 2020.

  3. 6.  Lieut. Colonel Denis Lucius Alban Gibbs, DSO*Lieut. Colonel Denis Lucius Alban Gibbs, DSO* was born on 15 Oct 1905 in Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire (son of Canon Reginald Gibbs and Lucia McCausland); died on 27 Apr 1984 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 2 Apr 1911, Berkshire; Relation to Head of House: Son

    Notes:

    3rd son of Canon Reginald Gibbs, MA. Baptised at Clifton Hampden 19 November 1905. Educated at Lancing College (Foundation Scholar) 1919-24 and at Royal Military College, Sandhurst, 1924-26. Army Staff College, Camberley, 1939.

    Captain of the School at Lancing and in the school Athletic Team in 1923 and 1924. At Sandhurst in the 1st Association football team; a junior under officer there; passed out 6th. Gazetted to The Queen's Royal Regiment February 1926 and joined 2nd Battalion in Allahabad, India, in March the same year, returning to UK via Sudan with his Regiment in 1928. Adjutant, Regimental Depot 1930. In 1934-35 at London University and in Italy studying Italian under War Office auspices, prior to becoming an Italian military Interpreter. A/Staff Captain 9 Inf. Bde., Portsmouth, 1936. Promoted Captain 1937 and appointed Adjutant 2nd Bn. Queen's Royal Regt. in Isle of Wight. Nominated to vacancy at Staff College, Camberley, January 1939.
    Following outbreak of war in Sept. 1939 was appointed, in November, Staff Captain (A) G.H.Q. BEF France. In February 1940 Brigade Major 144 Inf. Bde. in 48 Divn. and in May, on the German invasion of Holland and Belgium, moved up with the Bde. to outskirts of Waterloo. Took part in the Retreat to Dunkirk and evacuated from Dunkirk beaches on 1st June 1940. (Mentioned in Despatches). 1940-41 on Staff at H.Q. 10 Corps, Catterick, and at H.Q. Eastern Comd. Luton Hoo. March 1942 appointed to command 1/6 Queen's Royal Regiment, serving in Egypt in 8th Army and taking part in battles of Bir el Munassib, Adam Haifa and El Alamein. Whilst serving in Egypt was mentioned in Despatches and awarded the DSO.
    Captured in the Desert in October 1942 and taken by air to Italy. Held in various POW camps 1942-43, from Bari to near Cremona in the valley of the river Po, from whence he escaped from Campo PG49 at Fontanellato in Sept. 1943. Trekked 600 miles down the Apennines before reaching Allied Lines near Naples in November 1943. Details of the escape are recorded in a book, privately published, Apennine Journey, Diary of Travels across Italy after escaping from P.O.W. Camp.

    November 1943-Feb. 1944 sick leave in U.K. June 10 1944 ordered to Normandy Beach Head to take over command of 2nd Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regiment, whose C.O. had been killed in the Normandy landings 3 days earlier. Remained in command throughout operations in France, Belgium and Holland up to the Rhine in Germany. Awarded Bar to D.S.O. for action whilst under command of II Armd. Divn. near Falaise.

    March 1945 appointed GSO I Liaison 24 Army Gp. and subsequently returned to U.K. to command 166 Inf. Officer Cadet Unit in Isle of Man. Oct. 1945 in command Basic O.C.T.U. Aldershot to reform it into the Mons Officer Cadet School; appointed Acting Colonel. 1946 in command 1st Bn. of his own Regiment, The Queen's Royal Regt. in Malaya. 1948 Commandant Eaton Hall Officer Cadet School, Chester. 1950 retired, remaining on Regular Army Reserve of Officers, with mobilization appointment in rank of full Colonel.

    1950-63 market gardening at Roborough House, Nr. Plymouth; Member of Board of Governors, St. Dunstan's Abbey School, Plymouth 1951-66; Member of House of Laity, Church Assembly 1965-70; Church Warden, St. Mary the Virgin, Bickleigh, 1951-63, member of the P.C.C. and Manager of the Church School at Bickleigh; member of the P.C.C. of Parish Church of St. Eustachius, Tavistock, since 1965.

    Interests: Gardening; Bird Watching (Member R.S.P.B.).

    Clubs: Sometime member Junior United Service and Senior Army & Navy (the Rag); more recently, St. John House Club (Order of St. John of Jerusalem).

    Portrait: Crayon by Robert Needham 1947.



    From Cobbold Trust Tree:

    When commanding 1/6 Queen's Royal Regiment with the 8th Army and taking part in the battles of Bir el Munassib, Adam Halfa and El Alamein, he was awarded his first DSO. He was captured in the desert but escaped from prison camp. The story of his escape is told in his privately published book, Apennine Journey. Following his escape he was ordered to Normandy to command 2nd Battalion of the Warwickshire Regiment whose CO had been killed in the Normandy landings three days earlier. He retained this command for the rest of the war and won his second DSO.
    The citation states:
    "On August 6th 1944 Lieut-Colonel Gibbs' battalion withstood a heavy and determined attack at le Bas Perrier from enemy infantry and Tiger tanks, preceded by intense artillery and mortar covering fire. One company area was overrun by tanks, which penetrated the battalion position. The action lasted from early afternoon till dusk, and the fire of enemy tanks dominated the battalion area the whole time, from the high ground above. Throughout this confused action, in which the battalion suffered heavy casualties, Lieut-Col. Gibbs had the situation well in hand. His calm, imperturbable behaviour was an inspiration to his junior leaders and soldiers. His clear orders, determination and complete disregard for his own safety under these very difficult circumstances had a most marked effect upon the course of the battle, and its successful outcome is a shining example of what the personality of a courageous leader can achieve."

    At his funeral service on 4th May 1984 the address was given by Major General Sir Philip Ward. Here is what he said:

    Once in a lifetime - maybe twice - if you have eyes to see - you will behold a man who you will recognise as one who is especially good, especially dear, in fact uniquely special. And if you have ears to hear you will reconise in him a voice that speaks the truth. In my lifetime, and I guess in the lifetime of most of you here this afternoon, Denis Gibbs was such a man. His influence on us all was far reaching, profound and wholly benign.

    I originally met Denis on 1st January 1950 when I was appointed to my first job outside my regiment to be his Adjutant, when he was Commandant of Eaton Hall Officer Cadet School. My predecessor, like me, a Welsh Guardsman of tender years, in handing Denis over to me said - rather anxiously - "don't worry if at times he seems a little fierce; he tends occasionally to gnash his teeth and storm about, but if you stand your ground he turns out to be the kindest man on earth and you will get to love him". He also told me that Denis was given to writing little notes on very small pieces of paper, none of which were decipherable, but that it didn't matter because he always followed them up with verbal confirmation that left no room for misunderstanding. Well - he did storm about a bit and gnash his teeth, (seldom I'm happy to say at me), but his gnashes expired as quickly as they had begun, and ended with the object of his wrath being bought a reviving drink to settle things.

    As to the writing, that too proved to be a correct warning, but it has become a source of intellectual delight far exceeding the solution of crossword puzzles, in all the time of friendship and correspondence that has ensued throughout the last four and thirty years. The trick, we found, was to open one of his letters at breakfast time and lie it flat on a convenient table or desk and let it get used to its new surroundings. We would then visit it during the day taking it, as it were, by surprise, and from a distance dart in and out, making out its meaning, bit by bit.

    From these early days my alarm had changed to respect, from respect to affection and from affection to admiration and love. Denis Lucius Alban Gibbs was the third son and child of the five children of Canon Reginald Gibbs and his wife Lucia of Clifton Hampden in the county of Oxfordshire and was born in 1905. His brother Tom and his sister Joan survive him and they are here with us today. It was within this truly remarkable family that Denis received his grounding in the Christian Faith. He was carved into it, granite strong, and it was a faith that never left him. By it he was inspired, with it he inspired other people. It was the first of five foundation stones upon which his life was built.

    The second foundation stone, chronologically, was his Regiment and the Army. He went to Sandhurst in the year that I was born, and was commissioned after an oustanding two years as a Gentleman Cadet into The Queen's Royal Regiment in 1926. he was lucky enough to serve in India and in the Sudan before such service was eclipsed by the aftermath of the Second World War. In those years before 1939 he became immersed in the art and ethos of regimental soldiery, honed and tempered for the most difficult of all levels of command - in his case that of Battalion Commander. But first, at the outbreak of war he was appointed Brigade major of 144 Infantry Brigade serving in France. He was Mentioned in despatches for his part in the evacuation from Dunkirk.

    Then, in 1942, he was given command of 1/6 Battalion of his own Regiment, leading them at the battles of Alam Halfa and El Alamein. Here again he was Mentioned in Despatches and was awarded his first D.S.O.
    Fate ordained that he should be captured in the desert, but fate also ordained that he should escape from his prison camp, and more of that in a moment. Meanwhile, after his return to this country, and a short spell of sick leave, he was ordered to Normandy to take over the 2nd Battalion of The Warwickshire Regiment whose Commanding Officer had been killed in the Normandy landings three days earlier. He remained in command throughout the rest of the war and received his second D.S.O. What a record: what a man.

    The story of his escape from prison camp near Cremona in Italy is recorded in a slim, privately printed book, written by Denis, and called Apennine Journey, and is in itself a small classic of fortitude and resolution. Many of you will have read it, and in it you will have detected that self-effacing modesty and that concern for the people who helped him make good his escape, so typical of Denis. For all who understood soldiery, and for all who saw him at work right up until the time of his retirement in 1950, Denis was the Quintessential regimental officer: proud of his Sovereign and the Country which his regiment served: proud of the men he led.

    In 1933, after seven years with his Regiment, another foundation stone, but of a very special kind, was laid, namely his marriage to Hilaria Edgcumbe. Here, if ever, was a marriage made in Heaven. The combined ingredients of love and their contrasting characteristics: the details of administration for him; the carefree serenity from her. Their combined interest in, compassion for and care of each other and of other people combined to make a marriage that was at once efficient and effective, and at the same time one that was as romantic at its end as it was at its beginning. So happy are we that they and all of us were able to share in the Golden Wedding celebrations last year.

    Two more foundation stones. First the family. Four daughters, eleven grandchildren. Such a source of pride and happiness. Such special people as you would expect from such a parentage. Colourful, diverse in character,adventurous, individualistic, original, loving - sometimes presenting Denis with conundrums to be shared and solved, with advice to be sought and given, all activities which, though like all fathers doubtless sometimes driven wild by them, Denis relished to the full, and without which he would have felt a little cheated.

    I come now to the last foundation stone: his Church: one allied so closely to the first of those which I suggested, his Faith. He was churchwarden and a member of the Parochial Church Council at Bickleigh, amongst his flowers and fruit whilst at Roborough, from 1951 to 1963. And of this church, here at Tavistock, a member of the Parochial Church Council from 1965 to his death. He was a most regular attender at all services of the Church's year deriving strength and comfort in such a quiet and modest way. If he was here (ie at Tavistock), or staying away, he never missed an Office if he could help it, and he epitomised what it is that the Church needs so desperately, if it is to survive and grow, namely the active participation of the Laity.

    Faith and Family: Regiment, Queen and Country, The Church. These were Denis' talismen. By them he steered: by them he was formed into the man we knew. I have tried to hold before your eyes a looking glass. In it I hope you have seen a Denis whom you recognise. But be assured of this. We shall not see his like again, this side of Paradise.

    Denis married Lady Hilaria Agnes Edgcumbe on 17 Oct 1933 in Aldenham Church, Aldenham, Hertfordshire. Hilaria (daughter of Kenelm William Edward Edgcumbe, 6th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe and Lilian Agnes Arkwright) was born on 16 Jan 1908 in Chelsea, London; died on 19 Nov 2009 in Plymouth, Devon. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Lady Hilaria Agnes EdgcumbeLady Hilaria Agnes Edgcumbe was born on 16 Jan 1908 in Chelsea, London (daughter of Kenelm William Edward Edgcumbe, 6th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe and Lilian Agnes Arkwright); died on 19 Nov 2009 in Plymouth, Devon.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 2 Apr 1911, Aldenham, Hertfordshire; Age: 3; Relation to Head of House: Daughter
    • Residence: 1935, Chelsea, London
    • Departure: 18 Jul 1947, Southampton, Hampshire

    Notes:

    Eldest daughter of 6th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe. Educated at Aldenham and in France.

    For part of Second World War worked as a Telephone Operator in firm of Everett Edgcumbe, London. President., Plymouth Branch, League of Pity (N.S.P.C.C.) from 1955; President of Red Cross (Tavistock) 1963-70; Manager of Church School, Bickleigh, 1953-63.

    Family portrait by Godfrey Money-Coutts of grandchildren of Earl and Countess of Mount Edgcumbe; as also portrait 6th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe, T.D., D.L. and portrait of his wife, Countess of Mt. Edgcumbe, her father and mother.
    Portrait: Water colour 1914 by Winifred Marks; crayon by Robert Needham 1947 of her brother Piers Edgcumbe, Xllth Royal Lancers, killed at Dunkirk 1940.

    Children:
    1. 3. Jillianne Bridget Gibbs was born on 11 Jul 1935 in Aldenham, Hertfordshire; died on 20 Jan 1994 in Shrewsbury, Shropshire; was buried in Tavistock Cemetery, Devon.
    2. Margaret Hilaria Gibbs
    3. Rosamund Lucia Gibbs, Lady Woodard
    4. Penelope Mary Gibbs


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Canon Reginald GibbsCanon Reginald Gibbs was born on 29 Jun 1867 in The Parsonage, Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire (son of Rev. John Lomax Gibbs and Isabel Marianne Bright); died on 27 Oct 1940 in Aldenham, Hertfordshire; was buried in Aldenham Church, Aldenham, Hertfordshire.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: Canon of St. Albans
    • Baptism: 4 Aug 1867, Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire
    • Residence: 1881, Christchurch, Hampshire
    • Residence: 19 Oct 1886, Oxford, Oxfordshire
    • Residence: 1901, Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire
    • Residence: 2 Apr 1911, Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Head
    • Residence: 1939, Aldenham Vicarage, Hertfordshire; 1939 Census of England & Wales, Clerk of Holy Orders

    Notes:

    3rd son of Rev. John Lomax Gibbs. Baptised at the Parsonage, Clifton Hampden, 4 August 1867. Educated at Lancing 1881-6; matric. oxford (Keble College) 19 October 1886; 3rd class Theology 1890 MA 1894. Student at Cuddesdon (Oxon), Theological College 1891-2.

    Ordained Deacon at Exeter, 1892, Priest 1893. Curate of Ottery St. Mary, Devon, 1892-4; Curate of Clyst St. George under his father 1894-7. Vicar of Clifton Hampden, Oxon., 1898-1923 (presented by Henry Lord Aldenham). His (overlarge) parsonage of 1832-46 (meanwhile called The Cottage) being re-exchanged with it. Vicar of Aldenham 1923-40 (presented by Alban, Lord Aldenham). Canon of St. Albans.

    Reginald married Lucia McCausland on 4 Jan 1899 in Limavady, Londonderry, Northern Ireland. Lucia (daughter of Capt. Conolly Thomas McCausland and Laura St John) was born on 18 Oct 1869 in Drenagh, Newtown Limavady, Derry, Ireland; died on 10 Jan 1940 in Peace Memorial Hospital, Watford, Hertfordshire; was buried in Aldenham, Hertfordshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Lucia McCauslandLucia McCausland was born on 18 Oct 1869 in Drenagh, Newtown Limavady, Derry, Ireland (daughter of Capt. Conolly Thomas McCausland and Laura St John); died on 10 Jan 1940 in Peace Memorial Hospital, Watford, Hertfordshire; was buried in Aldenham, Hertfordshire.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: Drumachose,Derry Co.,Ireland
    • Residence: 1901, Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire
    • Residence: 2 Apr 1911, Culham, Oxfordshire

    Notes:

    Lucia (Reginald's 2nd cousin), 2nd daughter of Connolly Thomas McCausland (d.1902) of Drenagh, Co. Derry (for whom see Burke's 'Landed Gentry of Ireland'), by Hon. Laura, 2nd daughter of St. Andrew Beauchamp St. John, 14th Baron St. John of Bleisho (died 1874). (Her grandmother Marianne McCausland (born Tyndall) and her husband's grandmother, Caroline Bright, were sisters. Baptised at Drumachose, Limavady, Co. Derry. Buried at Aldenham Parish Church.

    Buried:
    Parish Church

    Children:
    1. Rev Michael McCausland Gibbs was born on 1 Sep 1900 in Banbury Road, Oxford, Oxfordshire; died on 27 Jul 1962 in Chester, Cheshire.
    2. Rev Thomas Reginald Gibbs was born on 3 Nov 1902 in Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire; died on 20 May 1987 in Great Malvern, Worcestershire; was buried in Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire.
    3. 6. Lieut. Colonel Denis Lucius Alban Gibbs, DSO* was born on 15 Oct 1905 in Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire; died on 27 Apr 1984 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire.
    4. Bridget Julia Gibbs was born on 29 Aug 1907 in Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire; died on 22 Jun 1935 in Valles, Rio de Pusterico, Italy; was buried in Valles, Rio de Pusterico, Italy.
    5. Joanna Isabel Gibbs was born on 29 Aug 1907 in Clifton Hampden, Oxfordshire; died on 14 Nov 1995 in Winchester, Hampshire.

  3. 14.  Kenelm William Edward Edgcumbe, 6th Earl of Mount EdgcumbeKenelm William Edward Edgcumbe, 6th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe was born on 9 Oct 1873 in Vienna, Austria (son of Richard John Frederick Edgcumbe and Mary Louisa Monck); died on 10 Feb 1965 in St. Germans, Cornwall.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1881, Chelsea, London; Relationship to Head: Son
    • Residence: 2 Apr 1911, Aldenham, Hertfordshire; 37, married; head of household
    • Residence: 1913, Ireland
    • Military Service: Between 1914 and 1920
    • Residence: 1926, England
    • Departure: 1 Apr 1926, Southampton, Hampshire
    • Arrival: 13 Apr 1926, New York, USA; Age: 52

    Notes:

    The barony Edgcumbe of Mount Edgcumbe in the County of Cornwall, was created in 1742. In 1781 the title became Viscount Mount Edgcumbe and Valletort and in 1789 an Earldom was created.

    Kenelm William Edward Edgcumbe was a Fellow of University College, London; late Lt-Col RE (TA); JP for Herts; son of the late Richard Edgcumbe; succeeded his cousin to the title in 1944. He married in 1906 Lillian Agnes daughter of Col A C Arkwright of Hatfield Place Essex. They had three daughters and one son who was killed in action in 1940.
    He was educated at Harrow (with Winston Churchill who was said to be stupid and unpopular) and studied Electrical Engineering in Germany and at University College, London. He served throughout the 1914-18 war. He was an Hon. Member and past president of the Institution of Electrical Engineers; late Hon. Secretary of the International Electrotechnical Commission; Fellow (Past President) of the Illuminating Engineering Society of Great britain; Member of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers; He was M.I.C.E. and F Inst P.

    He was a keen Territorial for 20 years, a DL for the County of Cornwall from 1961 until his death and awarded the Order of St john in 1964. He was succeeded by his cousin Edward Piers Edgcumbe (b 1908) elder son of late George Valletort Edgcumbe who had married in 1944 Victoria Effie Warbrick.

    Died:
    Age at Death: 91

    Kenelm married Lilian Agnes Arkwright on 19 Jul 1906 in Braintree, Essex. Lilian (daughter of Arthur Chandos Arkwright, Lt Colonel and Agnes Mary Tufnell) was born on 19 Jan 1877 in Oswestry, Shropshire; died on 28 Sep 1964 in St. Germans, Cornwall. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Lilian Agnes ArkwrightLilian Agnes Arkwright was born on 19 Jan 1877 in Oswestry, Shropshire (daughter of Arthur Chandos Arkwright, Lt Colonel and Agnes Mary Tufnell); died on 28 Sep 1964 in St. Germans, Cornwall.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 25 Feb 1877, Oswestry, Shropshire
    • Residence: 1901, Shenfield, Essex; Relation to Head of House: Visitor
    • Residence: 2 Apr 1911, Aldenham, Hertfordshire; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Wife

    Notes:

    Died:
    see also Probate

    Children:
    1. 7. Lady Hilaria Agnes Edgcumbe was born on 16 Jan 1908 in Chelsea, London; died on 19 Nov 2009 in Plymouth, Devon.
    2. Katherine Lilian Edgcumbe, Lady was born on 1 May 1910 in Mill Hill, Middlesex; died in Dec 1989 in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire.
    3. Margaret Louisa Edgcumbe was born on 21 Mar 1912 in Watford, Hertfordshire; died on 5 Apr 1988 in Ireland.
    4. Second Lieutenant Piers Richard Edgcumbe was born on 22 Oct 1914 in Braintree, Essex; died on 27 May 1940 in Wormhout, Dunkirk, Nord, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France; was buried in May 1940 in Nord, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France.