Gibbs Family Tree

Notes


Matches 951 to 1,000 of 2,228

      «Prev «1 ... 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 ... 45» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
951 Charles Frederick Henry Leslie (8 December 1861 in Mayfair, London, England – 12 February 1921 in Mayfair, London, England) was an English businessman and cricketer. He played first-class cricket for eight years between 1881 and 1888, for Oxford University, Middlesex and England.

See https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Leslie_(cricketer)
 
Leslie, Charles Frederick Henry (I1834)
 
952 Charles Gordon-Cumming-Dunbar, DD (b Elgin 14 February 1844 - d Ramsgate 8 January 1916) was an Anglican priest in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

He was educated at Winchester College and the University of Jena; and ordained in 1867. His first post was as Chaplain to the Bishop of Colombo. After that he refused the chance to be the first Bishop of Pretoria but accepted the Archdeaconry of Grenada, serving from 1875 to 1877. On his return he held incumbencies at Little Heath and Walthamstow.

On 17 October 1872 he married Edith Wentworth (1845–1891), youngest daughter of William Charles Wentworth. He had one daughter Beatrix Leyla Marjorie Wentworth who died on 8 January 1919, leaving issue.

 
Dunbar, Sir Charles Gordon Cumming 9th Bart. of Northfield (I498)
 
953 Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey, KG, PC (13 March 1764 – 17 July 1845), known as Viscount Howick between 1806 and 1807, was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from November 1830 to July 1834. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Grey,_2nd_Earl_Grey Grey, Charles 2nd Earl Grey (I4912)
 
954 Charles Hanbury-Tracy, 1st Baron Sudeley (28 December 1778 – 10 February 1858), known as Charles Hanbury until 1798 and as Charles Hanbury Tracy from 1798 to 1838, was a British Whig politician. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Hanbury-Tracy,_1st_Baron_Sudeley
 
Hanbury-Tracy, 1st Baron Sudeley Charles (I5231)
 
955 Charles has dropped the 'FORTESCUE' from his name.
Birth record Vol. 5c Page 1425.

 
Fortescue-Brickdale, Charles (I1083)
 
956 Charles Henry Wyndham a'Court Repington. M.P. for Wilton, Wilts, 1852-5, died 29 October 1903. See Heytesbury in Burke's Peerage. a'Court Repington, Charles Henry Wyndham (I3087)
 
957 Charles Ian Finch-Knightley, 11th Earl of Aylesford, JP, DL (2 November 1918 – 19 February 2008), styled Lord Guernsey between 1940 and 1958, was a British peer. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Finch-Knightley,_11th_Earl_of_Aylesford
 
Finch-Knightly, 11th Earl of Aylesford Charles Ian (I4473)
 
958 Charles Mayne Young (1777–1856), English actor, was the son of an eminent London surgeon. Young's first stage appearance was in Liverpool on 20 September 1798, as the character Young Norval (or the character Douglas according to some of his biographers) in Home's blank verse tragedy Douglas. Young's first London appearance was in 1807 as Hamlet with his friend Charles Mathews playing Polonius. "With the decline of John Philip Kemble, and until the coming of Kean and Macready, he was the leading English tragedian". He retired in 1832 in a farewell performance playing Hamlet with, as a special honour to him, Mathews as Polonius and Macready as the Ghost. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Mayne_Young
 
Young, Charles Mayne (I5062)
 
959 Charles Robert Grey, 5th Earl Grey DL (15 December 1879 – 2 April 1963), styled Viscount Howick between 1894 and 1917, was an English nobleman, the son of Albert Grey, 4th Earl Grey.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Grey,_5th_Earl_Grey 
Grey, Charles Robert 5th Earl Grey (I1379)
 
960 Charles William Justin Hanbury-Tracy (14th April 1938-6th March 2024) is a British scholar and heritage consultant on the history and development of medieval British and European continental church furniture. He publishes under the name of Charles Tracy.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Tracy_(art_historian)
 
Hanbury-Tracy, Charles William Justin (I256)
 
961 Charlotte (7th daughter), born at Stowe 25 February 1799; married 7 October 1822 her 1st cousin, Rev. William Crawley (1790-1856) (5th son of Sir T. Crawley-Boevey, 2nd baronet), perpetual curate of Flaxley; died 14 December 1878. She had one son and three daughters and numerous descendants of hers are living.
 
Crawley, Charlotte (I5492)
 
962 Charlotte Mary Yonge (1823–1901) was an English novelist who wrote to the service of the church. Her books helped to spread the influence of the Oxford Movement. Her books showed her keen interest in matters of public health and sanitation.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlotte_Mary_Yonge
See http://www.yongefamily.info/184806882

 
Yonge, Charlotte Mary (I6026)
 
963 Charlton Gibbs, Janet Blanche (I1749)
 
964 Charlton House Gibbs, Louis Merivale (I1740)
 
965 Charlton in the Tyntesfield Estate Gibbs, Louis Merivale (I1740)
 
966 Charlton on the Tyntesfield Estate Gibbs, The Right Hon. George Abraham 1st Baron Wraxall (I1735)
 
967 Charlwood Street Gibbs, Mary Beatrice (I1464)
 
968 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Thornewill, Dr. John-Mark Judah PhD (I1671)
 
969 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Peter Brian Tugwell / Ann Elizabeth Gibbs (F1198)
 
970 Christ Church, Lancaster Gate
 
Family: The Rev. Alfred Percivall Pott / Edith Laura Cook (F1239)
 
971 Christiaan BOK was from Wolfenbütel, North Germany. He was 27 and a soldier when he arrived at the Cape in 1696. He came out with Geringer and they became business partners. He had the following children with ex-slave Anna van BENGAL also known as Anna GROOTHENNING. She and her child Anna was baptised 1 January 1713. They got married 5 February 1713.

Anna Groothenning came as a slave from Bengale and became the slave of the baker Hans Casper Geringer. Geringer had a child out of wedlock with Anna, this child was born in 1703 and was called Maria Groothenning / Maria Bock / Maria van die Kaap. In 1709 Anna Groothenning and her four children Michiel, Maria, Catharina and Johanna were manumitted 27 August 1709 by Geringer.

Anna Groothenning and her children were baptised on 1 January 1713 in Cape Town. Geringer and Christaan Bok were business partners.

Children:
b1 Michiel Bok baptised 17 March 1702, X 2 July 1719 Elisabeth van der Poel
Maria born 1703, her father was Geringer. Maria herself had an illegitimate son by Nicolaas Bruyns. She later married Thomas Eysman
b2 Catharina born 1705, married at age 13 on 27 February 1718 Estiene Gous.
b3 Johanna born 1708 (later known as Anna), when she was fourteen years old she married Andries Bester on 13 February 1724, thus becoming the stammoeder of the Bester family
b4 Christiaan baptised 8 July 1714 never married
b5 Clara born in 1716, at age 15 she married 4 February 1731 Johan Jurgen Fuchs (also known as Vos), XX 1 August 1756 Gideon Slabbert

Bok died in 1716. Anna Groothenning also had children with Hans Caspar Geringer, a girl named Maria. Geringer passed away in 1719.

Anna then had an affair with Jacob Marik, she had a son who was born 6 March 1718 named Jacob baptised 6 March 1718. Marik and Geringer had some legal cases against one another.

Verwysings:
M Cairns, "Geringer and Bok - A Genealogical Jig-Saw" Familia XIII, 1976, no 2
André Bester: "Stamboom van Cornelius Johannes Bester 1874-1918) Familia 1997 no 1
Lombard and Heese
 
Bok, Christiaan Jacobus (I5644)
 
972 Christiaan BOK was from Wolfenbütel, North Germany. He was 27 and a soldier when he arrived at the Cape in 1696. He came out with Geringer and they became business partners. He had the following children with ex-slave Anna van BENGAL also known as Anna GROOTHENNING. She and her child Anna was baptised 1 January 1713. They got married 5 February 1713.

Anna Groothenning came as a slave from Bengale and became the slave of the baker Hans Casper Geringer. Geringer had a child out of wedlock with Anna, this child was born in 1703 and was called Maria Groothenning / Maria Bock / Maria van die Kaap. In 1709 Anna Groothenning and her four children Michiel, Maria, Catharina and Johanna were manumitted 27 August 1709 by Geringer.

Anna Groothenning and her children were baptised on 1 January 1713 in Cape Town. Geringer and Christaan Bok were business partners.

Children:
b1 Michiel Bok baptised 17 March 1702, X 2 July 1719 Elisabeth van der Poel
Maria born 1703, her father was Geringer. Maria herself had an illegitimate son by Nicolaas Bruyns. She later married Thomas Eysman
b2 Catharina born 1705, married at age 13 on 27 February 1718 Estiene Gous.
b3 Johanna born 1708 (later known as Anna), when she was fourteen years old she married Andries Bester on 13 February 1724, thus becoming the stammoeder of the Bester family
b4 Christiaan baptised 8 July 1714 never married
b5 Clara born in 1716, at age 15 she married 4 February 1731 Johan Jurgen Fuchs (also known as Vos), XX 1 August 1756 Gideon Slabbert

Bok died in 1716. Anna Groothenning also had children with Hans Caspar Geringer, a girl named Maria. Geringer passed away in 1719.

Anna then had an affair with Jacob Marik, she had a son who was born 6 March 1718 named Jacob baptised 6 March 1718. Marik and Geringer had some legal cases against one another.

Verwysings:
M Cairns, "Geringer and Bok - A Genealogical Jig-Saw" Familia XIII, 1976, no 2
André Bester: "Stamboom van Cornelius Johannes Bester 1874-1918) Familia 1997 no 1
Lombard and Heese
 
Groothenning, Anna (I5645)
 
973 Church of England Parish Registers 1813–1925. Bexley Local Studies & Archive Centre, Bexleyheath, Kent, England. Source (S476)
 
974 Church of England Parish Registers, 1754-1921. London Metropolitan Archives, London.<p>Images produced by permission of the City of London Corporation Libraries, Archives and Guildhall Art Gallery Department. The City of London gives no warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or fitness for the purpose of the information provided. Images may be used only for purposes of research, private study or education. Applications for any other use should be made to the City of London, Guildhall, PO Box 270, London, EC2P 2EJ. Infringement of the above condition may result in legal action.</p> Source (S347)
 
975 Church of England Parish Registers. Norfolk Record Office, Norwich, Norfolk, England. Source (S525)
 
976 Church of England Parish Registers. Norfolk Record Office, Norwich, Norfolk, England. Source (S491)
 
977 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Sir Geoffrey Robert Newman, 6th Bt of Mamhead, Devon / Mary Elizabeth Gibbs (F1075)
 
978 Church of St. Mary Arches Gibbs, Abraham of Exeter (I2916)
 
979 Cirencester Hospital McCorquodale, Mary Rosamond (I2790)
 
980 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Gibbs, Emily Anna (I2341)
 
981 Clarence Green Mitchell was born to John W. Mitchell and Caroline Mitchell in Charleston, South Carolina, in July 1826. He spent a short period of time in San Francisco, California, in the mid-1850s and received an appointment as Commissioner of Deeds for the State of California in New York in 1852. He married Sarah A. Lindley in New York in 1872. Clarence G. Mitchell worked as an attorney in his father's practice, Mitchells & Hinsdale (in partnership with Elizur B. Hinsdale). Clarence Mitchell played a significant role in the management of distributions from the Mary Green estate to his cousins Timothy Green Mitchell, Martha Louise Mitchell, and Elizabeth ("Lizzie") Green Mitchell. Clarence G. Mitchell died in South Carolina in 1893. Mitchell, Clarence Green (I549)
 
982 Clarence Van Schaick Mitchell was born in New York and was attending Princeton University when he decided to volunteer to serve the French Army in 1914 to fight in a war “that was a crusade against a nation gone mad” (Mitchell 1920, 7). After one year of service, he returned to the United States and received his law degree from Harvard Law School in 1917. Once the United States entered World War I, C.V.S. Mitchell enlisted in the Army and went through officer training at Officers Training Camp in Plattsburgh, New York. In 1918, he returned to France and was a liaison officer for the French General Noel Edouard de Castelnau. He chronicled this experience in his letters home, which were published as a book titled Letters from a Liaison Officer by Princeton University Press in 1920. C.V.S Mitchell returned to the United States and was a lawyer at his father’s law firm until he reenlisted in 1943.
This time, C.V.S. Mitchell was sent to the Mediterranean theater of operations and spent the majority of the war in Casablanca, Oran, and Corsica. 
Mitchell, Clarence Van Schaick (I733)
 
983 Clerk to Res Magistrate Beaufort West. Served in Magistrates Office,Hopetown (1866). Calvinia. R.M. ladysmith 1876. Interpretor for H.E. Sir Garnet Wolsley in Transvaal in 1874. R.M.Aberdeen, Victoria West, Calvinia, Graaff-Reinet and Cape Town 1894. Kept a mistress. Faure, Jan Gysbertus Reynier Cambier (I920)
 
984 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Gault, Richard (I5651)
 
985 Col, 1st Norfolk Royal Field Artillery (Volunteers) 1888-1908; Vice-Admiral of Suffolk 1890-1947; ADC to King Edward VII 1902-10 and King George V 1910-30; CB 1904; CVO 1906; Col, 3rd East Anglian Brigade Royal Field Artillery 1909-16; Chairman, East Suffolk County Council 1911-24; served in World War I 1914-18 as Col, Royal Field Artillery, in France, Egypt and Palestine; CBE 1919; Col commanding Kantara Area 1919-20; Governor of Victoria 1920-26; KCMG 1920; Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries 1928-29; Lord Lieutenant of Suffolk 1835-47; Grand Master of the Mark Masons of England 1943-47; KGStJ

 
Rous, George Edward John Mowbray 3rd Earl of Stradbroke (I5388)
 
986 Collina Gibbs, John Arthur (I1410)
 
987 Colonel Evan Henry Llewellyn (25 February 1847 – 27 February 1914) was a British Army officer and a Conservative politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1885 and 1906.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evan_Henry_Llewellyn 
Llewellyn, Evan Henry (I2)
 
988 Colonel in the Royal Field Artillery, awarded DSO, MiD, wounded at Arras. Meynell, Lt. Col. Francis Hugo Lindley DSO (I1919)
 
989 Colonel Quill was the owner of Ballycarty House when it was burned by Republican Forces during the Irish Civil War in 1922/23. It was feared that the Free State Army would use it as a garrison. It is not known if he was living in the house at the time but he was not injured. A youth in the house named Ryle was murdered by the Free State Army during the civil war. The house was burned and never reoccupied.

Quill is an old Irish name and were originally a military family who had to leave Ireland in the 1690's and fought for the French. With the defeat of the forces of James 11 of England by the forces of William 111 in Ireland in 1691, part of the surrender agreement was that the Irish forces could leave Ireland and go with their arms to France to whom they were allied. Tens of Thousands of Irishmen did this and formed their own regiments in the army of the Frnech Kings - these were termed the "wild geese". With the Revolution in France, some would have defected to the British who supported the Royalist cause in France. These regiments or really their leaders would then become established families serving the British Crown. Alternatively, some member of the Quill Family at some stage would have changed sides and become allied to the English side in Ireland and would have been rewarded for becoming loyal to the crown and hence that branch of the family became separated from the old gaelic family who would have remained Catholics. 
Quill, Berkely Crosbie (I1131)
 
990 COLONEL ROBERT McCAUSLAND (c1685-c1734), of Fruit Hill, near Limavady, styled his "cousin" in the will of Captain Oliver McCausland, of Strabane, of which he was left executor and also a legatee.

He had estates in the parish of Cappagh, County Tyrone, and succeeded under the will of the Rt Hon William Conolly to considerable property in County Londonderry.

Colonel McCausland married, in 1709, Hannah, daughter of William Moore, of Garvey, and widow of James Hamilton, junior, of Strabane, and by her left surviving issue, 
McCausland, Robert (I773)
 
991 Commenced his naval career as midshipman on board the Impregnable, of ninety-eight guns, bearing the flag of his relative, Sir Richard Bickerton, was made lieutenant in 1792, obtained a captain's commission in 1797, and attained the rank of rear-admiral 19th July 1821. He was created a knight commander of the Bath in 1833.
Sir Richard, whose patronymic was Moubray, assumed by sign manual, in 1832, upon inheriting the manor and estate of Wood Walton, the surname and arms of Hussey. He was a magistrate for the counties of Huntingdon and Fife and a deputy lieutenant of the former shire. 
Hussey Moubray, Vice Admiral Sir Richard K.C.B. (I1357)
 
992 Commonwealth War Graves, The Athens Memorial, The Kings Royal Rifle Corps  Tyser, Lieut. John Walter George (I4564)
 
993 Compiled from publicly available sources. Source (S369)
 
994 Compiled from publicly available sources. Source (S351)
 
995 Conolly Robert McCausland fought in the Second World War and was reportedly so deeply moved by what he had witnessed that he converted to Catholicism around 1941. He has inherited the estate in 1938 after his father's death but it was a clause in the Will that no Catholic could inherit or own the estate. The Trustees which local solicitor WA Ingram of Martin, King, French and Ingram was one and Sir Norman Stronge was another took the view that Conolly forfeited his claim on the estate and he had signed the will with the clause a number of years previously. At first Conolly did not object to this and indeed forfeited the estate selling its contents to his sister who took it over. Shortly after WA Ingram passed away, Ingram was the last living person to know the events around the will, Conolly decided to take the issue up in court. The whole episode caused great emotional and financial distress to the family. Conolly lost the case for himself but he also had his son Marcus as one of the co-Plaintiff. The Court ruled in favour of Marcus stating that as he was too young the clause did not apply and that the estate would pass to him on him coming of age. Conolly would see effigy of himself burnt outside the gates of Drenagh and in the town of Limavady itself. A tragic episode in the history of the family and estate. McCausland, Conolly Robert M.C. D.L. J.P. (I1232)
 
996 Convicted of theft/extortion at 14 years and sentenced to life and transportation. Transportation on the Ship “Nile II” to the Western Australian Penal Colony. Arrived in WA on 1st January 1858. Travelled with 269 other convicts.
 
Youard, John Hugell (I4738)
 
997 Count Semyon Romanovich Vorontsov (26 June 1744 – 9 July 1832) was a Russian diplomat from the aristocratic Russian Vorontsov family.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semyon_Vorontsov 
Vorontsov, Count Semyon Romanovich (I3431)
 
998 Countess Ekaterina Semyonovna Vorontsov (October 24, 1784 in Saint Petersburg – March 27, 1856 in London), sometimes spelled Woronzow, was the daughter of Semyon Vorontsov, the Russian ambassador in Britain from 1785

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_Vorontsov 
Vorontsova, Countess Catherine Semyonovna (I3094)
 
999 Countess of Morton. Baptised at Badminton, Glos. on 3 April 1927. Educated at St. Michael's Watermoor, Cirencester and Cheltenham Ladies College.

Living at Dalmahoy Home Farm, Kirknewton. Partner of Dalmahoy Farms and Director of Dalmahoy Country Club (1978). Plays polo in the Dalmahoy Team.

Portrait: By A. Beauchamp Cameron (1964) last in her possession. 
Gibbs, Mary Sheila Countess of Morton (I2813)
 
1000 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Avinash Rajan / Maya Antonia Mascarenhas Prabhu (F399)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 ... 45» Next»