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LOVE BUT DREAD

THE Lit~~OESAYS OF LOUGHRY

A Genealogical History compiled by ERNEST H. GODFREY, F.S.S.

1949

Printed and Published by H. H. GREAVES LIMITED 106-110 LORDSHIP LANE LONDON S.E.22

Price 21/- net, post free. All rights reserved

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LouGHRY MANOR Housn

Savez-vous ce que c'est que la noblesse? Ce sont les avances que la patrie vous fait sur la parole de vos ancetres, en attendant que VOUS soyez en etat de faire honneur a VOS garants. From Belisaire, By Marmontel.

Dedicated to the memory of my dear Wife, and issued mainly for private family circulation.

CONTENTS

PAGE Preface 13 Introduction . 15 Origin of the Lindesay Family - 16 Plantation of - 17 Grants of the Loughry and Estates - 18 N a.:nes of Other Plantation Landlords 20 Original Tenants of the Loughry Estates - 21 Siege of , 1689 - 24 The Story of John Lindesay 26 Judge Lindesay and Dean Swift 27 John Lindesay, Fifth Owner of Loughry - 30 Archbishop Nicolson - 31 Robert Lindesay, Sixth Owner of Loughry 33 Mauleverers of Arncliffe Hall, Yorkshire - 35 John Lindesay, Seventh Owner of Loughry - 38 Frederick Lindesay, Eighth O\vner of Loughry 38. Lindesay Arn1orial Bearings 46 Charlotte Lindesay (1832-1919) - 51 Disposal of the Loughry Manor House and Demesne - 59 Description of the Loughry Park 60 Loughry. By Elizabeth Katharine Lindesay - 62 Lines on Loughry. By Emmeline Stuart Lindesay - 66 Descendants of Frederick Lindesav - 68 ✓ The Story of Hugh Lindesay - 76 Love. An Early Poem by Emmeline Stuart Lindesay - 85 The Rev. Thomas Lindesav and His Descendants - 89 ✓ Conclusion 95 Alphabetical List of Subscribers - 97

APPENDICES I. Pedigree of the Lindesays of Loughry from 1611. Facing 100 II. Descendants of Frederick Lindesay by I-:Iis First Wife - 101 III. Descendants of Frederick Lindesay by His Second Wife 105 IV. Descendants of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay - - 108 Index - 115

ILLUSTRATIONS

PAGE Loughry Manor House - Frontispiece Stone-Carving on Wall - 19 Swift's Summer House - - 28 Archbishop Nicolson (1665-1727) - 32 Robert Lindesay, M.P. (1747-1832) - - 34 Jane Lindesay (nee Mauleverer), (1753-1824) - - 36 Frederick Lindesay (1792-1871) - - 40 Seal of John, First Lord Lindesay of the Byres - - 43 Family Burial-Ground at Donaghrisk - - 44 lvfemorial Tablet to Frederick and Charlotte Lindesay - - 44 Henry Forrest, Factor (or Steward) to Frederick Lindesay - - 45 Seal of the First Robert Lindesay of Loughry - - 47 Book-plate of Frederick Lindesay - - 48 Book-plate of F. J. S. Lindesay - - 49 Group Photograph of the Lindesay Family - - 54 Maria Mansfield (1813-1900) - - 56 Giants' Grave - - 60 Waterfall in Loughry Park - 61 Back Vievv of the Manor House - - 61 T. E. Lindesay (1832-1857) - 72 F. J. S. Lindesay (1828-1877) - - 73 J. E. C. C. Lindesay (1838-1893) - - 73 Memorial Tablet to W. F. Lindesay - - 74 " Captain Lane" - 75 • W. F. Lindesay (1857-1907) - 77 Crawford Lindesay (1863-1933) - - 77 The Postman's Morning Call - - 80 Emmeline Stuart Godfrey ( 1861-194 5) - 86 Hugh Howard Lindesay (1892-1915) - - 88 Vivian Wilfred Bennett (1896-1917) - - 88 Exterior of All ' Church, Howick, New Zealand - - 92 Interior of All Saints' Church, Howick, New Zealand - - 94

Preface

HIS Genealogical History of the Lindesays of Loughry~ C aunty Tyrone, is the outcome of a visit paid by _members T of the Lindesay Family to their old home in the summer of 1936. On the 10th December, 1938, my wife and I issued, for private family circulation, some historical Family Notes in the form of a typescript. An important source of the information included in this History is a Manuscript Book of over 150 pages, entitled: The Lindesays of Loughry and Tullaghoge, which was written about the year 1834 by Frederick Lindesay (1792-1871) and which came into the possession of his grand-daughter, Mrs. GABBETT, of Ballaghtobin, Callan, Co. Kilkenny. This Book, covering a period of nearly three hundred years, contains copies of title-deeds, charters, wills, marriage-settlements, etc., with descriptions, character-sketches and anecdotes relating to successive owners of the Loughry Estates. Deposited by Mrs. Gabbett in the Public Record Office at (n.o.D. 425), it is available for consultation by persons interested. Another source of information is a variety of notes made by Miss K. HARRIS, of 31 Balmoral Avenue, Belfast, who for many years was a member of the staff of tp.e Ulster Dairy School at Loughry. These notes were collected by her from elderly people living in the neighbourhood of Loughry and from conversations with members of the Lindesay Family whom she kindly welcomed on occasions when they were visiting the old home. Some years ago it was pointed out to me that the ink of the original typescript notes was fading, and that therefore their re-issue in more durable form was desirable. The original article has accordingly been revised, expanded and brought up to date, and to it have been added a numf>er of illustrations, including portraits of past members of the family and views of the Loughry demesne, etc. It is hoped that the work, in its general historical application, may appeal to a wider circle of the public, especially in Northern , , Canada and the United States. To many members of the Lindesay Family, both at home and abroad, including especially Mrs. GABBETT; her daughter, Mrs. MALCOLM, of Cahirleske, Callan, Co. Kilkenny; Mrs. ELIOT HowARD, of Clareland, Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire; Mrs. RoLAND MAcRORY, of Limavady, Co. Derry, and Col. S. F. LINDESAY, of Salisbury, S. Rhodesia, South Africa, I desire to express grateful acknowledgments for much kind help rendered and for vital statistics recorded in Appendices I-IV. Every effort has been made to secure accuracy and completeness in presentation of the facts; but in a work of this kind there may be errors and omissions, notification of which the compiler will be glad to receive. ERNEST H. GODFREY St. Peter's Vicarage, Bishopsford Road, Morden, Surrey. August, 1949. The LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY County Tyrone : A Genealogical History

compiled by ERNEST H. GODFREY, F.S.S.

INTRODUCTION In the following pages it is proposed to describe the settlement of a branch of the ancient and noble Scottish house of Lindesay on estates at Loughry and Tullyhogue,1 Co. Tyrone, , and neighbouring sites, in the early part of the seventeenth century, under the Crown Colonisation Scheme, known historically as the " ." Tullyhogue is said to mean: "Hill of the Youths"; and, according to tradition, Tully hogue Fort, close to Loughry, is where the Kings of Ulster used formerly to be crowned.-· After reference to the origin of the family in Scotland, the writer will proceed to describe the original grantees of the Loughry Estates and their tenants, the names of other plantation landlords, the building of the Manor House, the Siege of Derry in 1689 (including the romantic story of John Lindesay), the friendship of Judge Lindesay with Dean Swift, and will give brief biographical details concerning successive owners of Loughry and of their descendants. Joshua, the last resident Lindesay at Loughry, died in 1893; and subsequently the estates passed finally from possession of the family. The tenants on the estate became owners of their farms under the provisions of the Land Act; and in 1906 the Manor House and demesne were acquired by the Irish Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction, to be opened in January, 1908, after the completion of additional buildings, as the Ulster Dairy School.2 On January 1st, 1922, in consequence of the Government of Ireland Act, 1920, the School was transferred to the Ministry of Agriculture, Northern Ireland, by whom it is now administered. 1 Or Tullahogue, more properly '' Tulloch-og '' or '' Tillochog.'' The modern spelling of Tullyhogue is adopted throughout. 2 Now the Loughry Agricultural College. 16 THE LINDESAYS OF LOVGHRY ORIGIN OF THE LINDESAY FAMILY The most comprehensive account of the Scottish house of Lindesay is that contained in the Lives of ihe Lindsays, a work in three volumes, by Lord Lindsay, aftenvards 25th and 8th of Balcarres. It was published in 1849 by John Murray, Albemarle Street, London, W., but is no\v out of print.1 Another work of similar character, entitled: The History and Traditions of the Land of the Lindsays in Angus and Mearns, was published by Sutherland & Knox, of George Street, Edinburgh, in 1853. Dedi­ cated to Lord Lindsay, it was written by Andrew Jervise, of Brechin, N.B., and is also out of print. But as the present work is devoted to the Lindesays of Loughry, it is only necessary to refer readers to these publications for many interesting particulars concerning the Scottish house. A genealogical history of the Linzee Family, by JoHN H. LrNZEE, A.B., S.B., of 848 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass., U.S.A., was privately printed at Boston in 1917. It consists of two large octavo volumes of 910 pages. Vol. I, pp. 1-412, is entitled: The Lindeseie and Limesi F amities of Great Britain, including the Probates of Somerset House, London, , of all spellings of the Name Lindeseie from 1300-1800. Vol. II, pp. 413-910, is entitled: The Linzee Family of Great Britain and the United States of America and the Allied Families of Penfold, Tilden, Wooldridge, Hood, Hunt, Amory, Browne and Evans. On January 1st, 1881, the Rev. W. F. Lindesay, who, after the death of his two half-brothers, succeeded to representation of the Lindesays of Loughry, prepared a Genealogical Chart to Illustrate the Lives of the Lindesays. It appears to have been largely based upon the work of Lord Lindsay; and in 1905 it was circulated privately to members of the Lindesay family in the form of a " blue-print" by Crawford Lindesay, who, as a Civil Engineer, had facilities for blue-print production. The Chart shows that the Scottish House of Lindsay is descended from Ivar, Jarl of the Uplan­ ders of Norway and Rognvald, Jarl of More, who flourished A.D. 863, and whose son was Rollo ( c. 932), ancestor of the Dukes of Normandy.2 Crawford Lindesay also circulated as a blue-print, with the above named Chart, in 1905, A Genealogical Chart of the Lindesays of Drum, Craigballe, Loughry and Calzoo, County Tyrone. From

1 See the following references to the Lives of the Lindsays, Vol. I, pp. 56,247,319, 320, 385, 431, 440, 441, 467; Vol. II, pp. 296, 297, 438-440. 2 In the Channel Islands. by long-standing custom, a land dispute must be referred to a Court of Law whenever one of the disputants exclaims: " I appeal to Rollo." ORIGIN OF THE LINDESAY FAMILY 17 this Chart the Pedigree of the Lindesays of Loughry, which is given as Appendix I, has been mainly derived. The Pedigree of the Scottish Lindsays is intricate and compli­ cated; but it is certain that the ancestors of the Loughry Lindesays belonged to the Byres Branch of the House, one of whose most distinguished members was Sir Lindsay of The Mount. Born c. 1490, he vvas Lyon King of Arms in the reign of King James V, and was justly celebrated as a poet. His works were "esteemed such treasuries of accurate information and sound wisdom on all subjects, that to say ' Ye'll no' find that in Davie Lindsay ' was tantamount to the strongest expression of incredulity. "1 vVhen enumerating the families that have sprung from the Byres Branch of the House of Lindsay, the author of the "Lives" thus refers to the Loughry Lindesays : " Of the remaining branches of the House of Byres, none now survive in wealth and estate, except the families of Loughry in the County of Tyrone and of Drum and Craigballe, otherwise styled Cahoo, in that of Louth in Ireland" (Lives, Vol. II, p. 297). He also vvrote : " On the tombstone of the first Robert Lindesay of Loughry are the Arms of the Byres Branch, and he is thereon described as 'e nobili Scotorum Lyndesaiorum familia oriundus'" (Lives, Vol. I, p. 441). According to Frederick Lindesay's Manuscript Book (see Preface), this tombstone of the first Robert Lindesay became buried under the ground. It was discovered when a new grave was being dug and ·was re-erected. It was then found difficult to decipher the wording; and the number of Robert Lindesay' s children and the date engraved on the tombstone are matters of doubtful conjecture.

PLANTATION OF ULSTER Under the Crown Scheme for the Colonisation of Ulster, the policy of King James I of England and VI of Scotland is known historically as the "Plantation of Ulster." The plan was finally adopted in 1609,2 and it led ultimately to a large settlement in Northern Ireland of virile Scottish protestants, whose descendants have exercised a decided influence on the promotion of Irish prospenty. That King James awarded part of the confiscated lands of the O'Neills of Tyrone to a younger son was consistent with the general 1 Lives of the Lindsays, Vol. I, p. 262. 2 Encyclopedia Britannica, 14th Edition= 1929, p. 608. B 18 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY policy of that monarch. The law of the Scottish entail of landed property in those days decreed that the total lands and estate must go to the eldest son to the exclusion of all other children, and the tenant of such "entailed" property had no power whatsoever to charge his lands beyond the term of his own life with any sums for the provision of his younger children. Therefore, while the heads of the noble families of England and Scotland received their rewards for "faithful and essential services" from the Abbey lands acquired by the Crown on the dissolution of the Monasteries, King James further recompensed his adherents by providing for the younger sons under the Crown Scheme for the Colonisation of Ulster. These settlers, or "undertakers"~ as they were called, whose presence the native Irish naturally resented, were required by the terms of their " Letters Patent," and within a given time, to build " bawns," or enclosures for cattle, to erect manors or castles of stone, to " plant" their portions of land ,vith English and Scottish tenants, who in their turn were required to build homes for themselves and families, and to maintain men and arms for defence purposes. " Undertakers " of one thousand acres, or " thereabouts," paid to the Cro,vn a yearly sum of £5 14s. 8d. The word " thereabouts " ,vas an elastic term, in some cases meaning up to three thousand acres.

GRANTS OF THE LOUGHRY AND TULLYHOGUE ESTATES Robert Lindesay, the first owner of Loughry, ,vas the second son of Thomas Lindesay, of Kingswark in Leith, who vvas Searcher­ General of Leith (1562-94) and Snowdon Herald (1590-94). These offices he held under Mary Queen of Scots and her son, King James I of England and VI of Scotland. He had three sons and two daughters. King James provided not only for him, but also for his family, by pensions, etc., to his daughters, Agnes and Elizabeth, out of the rents and tithes of the Abbey of North Benvick, and to his sons, Robert, Bernard and Thomas, fro!n other lands belonging to the Friars of Linlithgo,v. By letters patent bearing date 24th June, 1610, the grant ,vas made to Bernard Lindesay, the eldest son of Thomas Lindesay, Searcher-General of Leith, of the lands of Craigbally, or Drum, in the County of Tyrone, ,vithin three miles of the lands of Tullyhogue, or Loughry, which ,vere granted on the same day and year to his brother Robert. The 21st June, 1611, is also on record as the date of a patent from King James I granting the lands of Loughry and Tullyhogue to Robert Lindesay. It is not clear why there should GRANTS OF THE LOUGHRY AND TULLYHOGUE ESTATES 19 have been tvvo patents, one dated 24th June, 1610, and the other 21st June, 1611; but possibly they may have related to different parts of the total estates. The lands comprised in these two grants \ve~e part of the forfeited lands of O'Neill, and consisted of portions of the settlen1ent and colonisation of Ulster, begun by Queen Elizabeth and completed by King James I. King James divided these lands in the north of Ireland among the younger sons of noble families for whom he had a great affection. Robert Lindesay became Chief Harbinger to King James in 1614, and was also Comptroller of Artillery. His first residence was a wooden structure near the village of Tullyhogue. This vvas surrounded by a ditch with a high bank of clay and a quick-thorn hedge. He married Janet Acheson, \V hose father was ancestor of the Earls of Gosford. As stated above, he had three sons: Robert, b. 1604; Bernard, b. 1607; Thomas, b. 1609; and two daughters: Barbara, b. 1608; Helen, b. 1609. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Robert, the second owner of Loughry, ,vho, in 1639, the fourteenth year of the reign of Charles I, obtained a second patent of the Manor and lands of Loughry and Tullyhogue, which were described therein as Manor Lindesay. In 1632 he built the Manor House of Loughry, \vhich was burnt by the rebels in 1641, but was rebuilt in 1671. The illustration is from a photograph of the stone-carved coat of arms on the south wall of the house built by the second Robert Lindesay of Loughry. It shovvs the Lindesay .Arms impaled with those of his -,vi£ e, Margaret, daughter of James Richardson, of Castle Hill, Co. Tyrone, and ,vith the initials R.L. and M.R . .A. similar carving, dated 1680, is on the wall of the long vving, kno-wn as the " Bachelors' 1 UTYY a1 k . ",...fh' e name "Loug h ry " . a)·' means "K.1ng ' s c·f1 t, " a re~er-r ,..r· ence to the grant of the estate t ,i,, ':,.; by King James I and VI. . (_. ,:If .:",~ .,. This Robert Lindesay ,vas

' ,, '" ~. an officer of the Royal Army at the Battle of \Vorcester be­ t\veen Charles II and the Par­ liamentarians under Oliver Cro:n,vell in 1651. By his wife, Margaret, mentioned above~ STOXE CARYI'-G ox \VALL he had three sons and 20 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY three daughters. Of these three sons, Robert succeeded to Loughry as the third owner; Alexander founded the branch of Cahoo, Co. Tyrone. A recent representative of this Cahoo branch was the REv. WALTER BRocAs L1NDESAY, LL.D., Vicar of Holy Trinity, Upper Tooting, from 1906 to 1917. He died 9th June, 1917, aged 68. The third son was William Lindesay, ,vho, in a deed of 1667, was described as having " gone to parts beyond sea." In connection with the second patent for the grant of Loughry, as above mentioned, it appears that this vvas obtained in pursuance of an ingenious plan on the part of King Charles I to raise money refused him by his Parliament by the grant of ne\-v patents or naturalisation papers to the plantation landlords of Ulster. He seized this opportunity to raise the annual amount payable to the Crown from £5 14s. 8d. to £ 14 lls. 8d. per one thousand acres~ The administration of this scheme was placed in the hands of the King's representative in Dublin, Thomas Wentworth, .

NAMES OF OTHER PLANTATION LANDLORDS Frederick Lindesay, in his Manuscript Book of 1834, entitled: The Lindesays of Loughry and Tullaghoge, referred to in the Preface, gives the names of some of the adventurers who obtained grants of forfeited lands at the same time that Bernard and Robert Lindesay received theirs. 'fhey are as follo,vs: Earl of ; Sir Thomas Ash; Archibald Acheson; Henry Acheson (ancestor of the ); The Aubigney; Sir Francis Annesley; John Archdale; Sir Edward Blennerhasset; Sir Francis Blennerhasset; Sir Basille Brooke; Lady Broughton; Lord Burley;* Sir Stephen Butler; Earl of Castlehaven; Sir Toby Caulfield; Lord Chichester; Sir Thomas Chichester (ancestor of the Marquis of Donegall); Sir William Cole (ancestor of the ); Sir Anthony Cope; Sir Thomas Cornwall; Sir James Cunningham; Sir John Davis; Sir James Douglas; Sir John Drummond; Alexander Dunbar; William Stewart; the Laird of Dunduff;* Sir John Elliott; Sir Alexander Hamilton; Sir Claud Hamilton; Sir Robert Haybourne; Sir John Hume; Lord Lambert; Sir Gerard Lowther; Jeremy Lindesay; The Laird of Lusse; Sir George Niacneering (or Maineering);* Captain Mansfield; Lord Moore; The Laird of Mount Whaney; Lord Ridgeware; Lord Soy; George Linethorne;* John Murrey; Oliver St. John; Sir John Stewart; Robert Stewart; James Trailee; Sir John Vaughan; Lord Uchiltre; Sir Francis Willoughby; Lord Wingfield; and a great many others of equal distinction, all of whose names appear in Pynnar's Survey of Ulster.

* Transcription doubtful. NAMES OF OTHER PLANTATION LANDLORDS 21 Amongst the friends and neighbours of Frederick Lindesay himself were the Earls of Castle Stewart and Ranfurley, the Lowrys of Pomeroy and Rockdale, the Lenox-Conynghams of Spring Hill, the Rev. Dr. Crawford, the Rev. Dr. Porter, and D. H. Charles, J.P., M.D., of , Co. Tyrone. A son of the last-named, Sir Richard Havelock Charles, G.C.V.O., K.C.S.I., M.D., Sergeant­ Surgeon to King , was created a Baronet in 1928. His second son, Sir Noel Havelock Charles, 3rd Bt., K.C.M.G., M.C., ,vas H.M. Ambassador to Italy from 1944-47. Another son of Dr. Charles of Cookstown was the late Canon Charles of Westminster, an authority on apocryphal literature. Mrs. Lenox-Conyngham, of Spring Hill, Moneymore, Co. Londonderry, daughter of Colonel Lowry of Rockdale, writes that the Lindesays of Loughry, only three miles from Rockdale, ,vere friends of her husband's family and of her own family for generations, and that when a child Loughry was almost a second home to her. Mrs. Conyngham has recently written a book, entitled: An Old Ulster House. It deals with Ulster history, contains ghost stories and adventures and has many references to Loughry, even to its " Banshee. "1 According to the Encyclopedia Britannica (14th Edition, 1929, Vol. 3, p. 79), the Banshee is "A supernatural being in Irish and general Celtic folk-lore, whose mournful screaming at night is held to foretell the death of some member of the household visited .... The Irish Banshee is held to be the distinction of families of pure descent." Sir Walter Scott, in Demonology and Witchcraft, p. 351, mentions belief in the Banshee in the Highlands of Scotland. See the reference to the Banshee in the Lines on Loughry by my late wife on p. 66.

ORIGINAL TENANTS OF THE LOUGHRY ESTATES It is recorded that within the given time the Lindesay estate was " planted " with two freeholders of 120 acres each; seven lessees of 120 acres each; one lessee of 60 acres, and twelve cottagers having bet,veen them 120 acres: a total of twenty-two tenants able to maintain thirty men and arms. Probably these twelve cottagers helped to build and that later they inhabited the neighbouring~~ Plantation" village of" Lindesay­ ville," the name of which still survives. That the village was built near the church at confirms the statement in the family records that the Lindesays and their tenants were members of the reformed Church of England and not of the Kirk of Scotland. 1 An Old Ulster House, by Mrs. Lenox-Conygham; 4to, 254 pp., 1948. Published by W. Tempest, Dundalgan Press, Dundalk, Eire. Price 25s. 22 THE LINDESAYS OF LOVG HR Y Cottages at Lindesayville ,vere built by Frederick Lindesay, the eighth owner of Loughry. A new Orange Hall at Lindesayville was opened on Easter Monday, in 1893, by Mrs. Hassard of Desertcreat, the foundation­ stone having been laid on November 5th, 1892, by the late Mrs. Harrison, widow of Mr. R. F. Harrison, K.C., a grand-daughter of Frederick Lindesay of Loughry, and a niece of Colonel Joshua Lindesay, the tenth owner of Loughry. lv1rs. Harrison died on August 21st, 1948, aged 88 (see Appendix II). The site on which the Hall stands was presented by Colonel Joshua Lindesay, who also supplied a large quantity of the building materials. It is a commodious two-storey building of stone and lime, and is favourably situated near Desertcreat. In 1924, on the occasion of the marriage of her elder son (now Commodore V. S. Godfrey, O.B.E., R.C.N.), my late wife acquired as a gift from Mrs. Cardwell of Ballynakelly, Coalesland, Co. Tyrone, whose grandfather, Henry Forrest of Tullyhogue, had been Factor (or Steward) to Frederick Lindesay, an old printed document which \Vas amongst his papers. This is a " List of the Names and Arms of the First Scottish Tenants who \vith their Families came from Scotland to Tullyhogue in 1610 with the first Robert Lindesay, Esq., the Chief Harbinger to King James I, England, and VI, Scotland." This· list is stated to be " Extracted from the Muster Roll of Tyrone in the MS. in the British Museum, London." Then follows the "Muster Roll of Tullyhogue," headed by the names of sixty-five tenants. Of these, twenty had arms, the names of which are given, and the remainder had no arms. Of those who had arms, one possessed a sword and cullence, nine sword and snaphance, five sword and pike, seven a sword only and one was a drummer. The " Mu~ter Roll of Tullyhogue " is as below : 1. Robert Lindsay, Esq., 10. George Wetherington, Undertaker of 1,000 Men Sword and Snaphance. and Arms. 11. George M' Caffie, ,, ,, 2. Robert M'Murtan, 12. William Ellott, ,, ,, Sword and Cullence. 13. John Ellott ,, ,, 3. Robert Nixon, 14. Robert Bagsty, Sword Sword and Snaphance. 15. Archibald Ellott, ,, 4. John Style, ,, ,, 16. John Gledinning, 5. David English, ,, ,, Sword and Pike. 6. David Thompson, Sword. 17. James Somerville, Sword. 7. John Walls, 18. Bell, Sword and Pike. Sword and Snaphance. 19. John Creighton, Drummer. 8. William , ,, ,, 20. John Somerville, 9. Jenkin Bell, Sword and Pike. Sword and Pike. ORIGI~AL TENANTS OF THE LOUGHRY ESTATES 23 21. George Carr, Sword and Pike. 44. John M'Connell, No Arms. 22. James Harper, Sword. 45. Robert M'Guffin, ,, 23. Barnard Lyndsay, ,, 46. George Olyver, ,, 24. William Rowte, ,, 47. James Walker, ,, 25. James Bayty, No Arms. 48. Luke Acheson, ,, 26. vVilliam Scott, ,, 49. John Gays, ,, 27. William Bruce, ,, 50. James Forster, ,, 28. Francis Carr, ,, 51. John Guerdon, ,, 29. James Sincleare, ,, 52. James Sanderson, ,, 30. Robert Crauford, ,, 53. Robert Ellott, ,, 31. John Irvine, ,, 54. Andrew M'Dilshender, ,, 32. James Glendinning, ,, 55. William Sanderson, ,, 33. Patrick Glendinning, ,, 56. William Ellott, ,, 34. Andrew Ferguson, ,, 57. James Bayty, ,, 35. Andrew Peason, ,, 58. John Creighton, ,, 36. Willia1n Maxwell, ,, 59. James Harper, ,, 37. Andrew Berry, ,, 60. William Ellott, ,, 38. Andrew M'Kedyon, ,, 61. Jenkin Bell, ,, 39. George Leebit, ,, 62. John Walls, ,, 40. Robert Steele, ,, 63. Robert Nixon, ,, 41. William Steele, ,, 64. David Thomson, ,, 42. Colin Reid, ,, 65. William Rowt, ,, 43. Robert Ellott, ,, 66. George Carr, ,, As there may be descendants or these families now living in Northern Ireland and some possibly upon former estates of the Lindesay family, the reproduction of the above names may be of interest. Mrs. Cardwell has also sent to me the names of retainers, tenants and residents on the Loughry estates during the later years of the Lindesay ownership, written down from memory by her mother and herself. I give these names, with their localities, as follows: LINDESAY DEMESNE: Margaret Barker, Alex. Bell, Graham, James Ferguson, William Harkness, Rose McCardle, Samuel McKane, Ja1nes and John MacQueen, James and John Mullan, John Stewart, John Stenson. LIMEPARK HOUSE: Thomas Crawford. CAHOO: Robert and Elizabeth McGahie, William Park, , William Reid, Robert Turkington. DONAGHRISK: John Harkness, George McCrea, Daniel MacFarland, Walter Crawford (of The Priory). GONSHILL: James Lynd, William McConnell, Robert and William P~rk. GORTAGAMMON: John Griffin, William Nelson, Robert Patton, William Wallace. GRANGE : William Anderson, Nfatthew Bell, Joseph Campbell, Alexander Ferguson, James and William McCord, William Mason, James Patterson, Alex. Smith, Martha Bell Steel. HIGH CROSS: Joseph Forrest, James McCann, Stewart Moorhead, William Taylor. INNEVAL: Arthur , William Sloane, John Stewart, Joseph Vance. KILL YCOP: George 24 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Bryan, Robert Blaney, Thomas Chambers, Thomas McGuffin, Hugh Mcldoon, Ann Miller, John Scott. LINDESA YVILLE : James Blair, John Brown, Samuel Ferguson, Samuel Hannah, Thomas McVeigh, William Mallon, John Money, George Montgomery, Samuel Stranaghan, Thomas Taylor. LOW CROSS: Samuel Berkeley, John Beattie, Thomas Brown, William Hutchinson, Samuel Jackson, James McKenzie, Matthew Neale. SESSEAGH LINDESAY: George ~n, David Howard, John and William Kirland, Margaret Sloane. TULLY­ HOGUE: Robert Cooke, Mary A. Dilworth, David and Henry Forrest, George Harpur, John I--Ioward, Dr. Sam. Jones, Hugh Johnston, John McNeill, Charles Mallon, John and James Moorhead, John Park, John Shaw, William Wallace, John White. : George Anderson, William Beattie, Thomas Howard, William McQuade, Margaret Marron, James Maynes.

SIEGE OF DERRY, 1689 The third Robert Lindesay of Loughry, who succeeded his father in 1674, completed the rebuilding of the mansion in 1680, and this date is inscribed on the foundation-stone. He united with his friend and neighbour, the Rev. George Walker, Rector of Donagh­ more, Co. Tyrone-generally recognized as the hero of the Siege­ in the defence of and later of Derry .1 Robert Lindesay, his son Robert, aged 10, his brother Alexander and Alexander's daughter, were all confined within the walls of Derry during the entire period of the Siege. Alexander Lindesay and his daughter of Cahoo were killed by the last cannon-ball fired at random into the city after it was supposed that all danger was over. Lasting for 105 days, the Siege was raised after the breaking of the boom by English ships on July 31st, 1689. This event was followed, on July 1st, 1690, by King vVilliam's victory of the battle of the Boyne. Under the" New Style," July 1st, 1690, was July 11th, 1690. On July 12th, 1691, the Jacobite cause was finally ruined by the battle of Aughrim; and the two events, viz., the battle of the Boyne (1690) and the battle of Aughrim (1691), are celebrated annually on July 12th by Orangemen in Northern Ireland and by their co-religionists in Canada, the United States and elsewhere. For the same reason as that which is applicable to the "Muster Roll of Tullyhogue" on page 22, it may be of interest to record here the names of the signatories to a "humble address of the Governors, Officers, Clergy and other gentlemen in the City and 1 See Reprint of Walker's Diary of the Siege of Derry in 1688-1689. Londonderry: Printed by James Hempton, Shipquay Street: 1895. It.is also described as A True Account of the Siege of Londonderry, by the Reverend Mr. George Walker, Rector of Donoghmoore in the County of Tirone, and late Govern our of Derry in Ireland. SIEGE OF DERRY, 1689 25 Garrison of Londonderry," which was subscribed on July 29th, 1689, for presentation to King William and Queen Mary. They are taken from Walker's Diary of the Siege of Derry (pp. 68-74) as follows:

GEORGE w ALKER. Andrew Grigson. Richard Flemin. John Michelbourn. Christopher Jenny. Henry Cust. Richard Crofton. Thomas Smyth. John Crofton. Thomas Lane. Bartholomew Black. Benjamin Wilkins. Hugh Hamill. John Campbell. Thomas Lane. Charles Kinas ton. Robert Morgan. James Blair. \Villiam Campbell. Michael Clenaghan. Dudley Phillips. Gervase Squire. Richard Fane. John Buchanan. Henry Monry. Stephen Godfrey. Edward Curling. Henry Campsie. William Hamilton. William Church. Adam Morrow. Robert Rogers. Dalway Clements. John Dobbin. Jame Galtworth. Albert Hall. Alexander Steward. Richard Islen. Matthew Cocken. Thomas Gughtredge. Arthur Hamilton. Thomas Brunett. Thomas Johnston. Michael Rullack. William Stewart. Thomas Newcomen. James Stiles. Franc. Wilson. Patt Moore. James Cunningham. Matt. McClellany. John Humes. Archibald McMulloch. George Crofton. Edward Davyes. Francis Obre. William Babington. John Hamil ton. Alexander Sanderson. Robert King. Thomas Ash. Archibald Sanderson. ..A.dam Downing. . Arthur Noble. Hilhouse. Ralph Fullerton. Philip Dunbarr. John Mucholland. Michael Cunningham. George White. John Clements. Joseph Johnston. Thomas White. William Manson. Robert Bayley. John Logan. Theophilus Manson. William Grove. Alexander Rankin. Robert Bennet. John I\1cClelland. Edmund Rice. William Dobbin. James Graham. Robert Walker. George Garnet. William Thompson. Richard Robinson. Jan1es Barrington. James Young. Robert Maghlin. Warren Godfrey. Richard Cormach. Matthew Clarke. John Cunningham. Oliver Apton. James :tv1cCarmick. Henry Lane. Alex. Knox. John Cochran. George Walker Bernard M ulhollan. James I\1cCartny. Hannson. David Mulhollan. James Tracy. Andrew Bailly. Thomas Conlay. John I-Ialshton. Daniel Mons Cuistion. Robert Skinner. Joseph Gordon. John Bailly. Ja. Gledstanes. James Hairs. Robert Lyndsie. John Maghlin. Andrew Hamilton. Francis Boyd. Robert Dennison. Adam Ardock. James Carr. Marmaduke Stewart. Robert Wallace. William Montgomery. James Fleming. George Church. James Moore. 26 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Nicholas White. John Hering. John Hamilton. John Fuller. Ja1nes Hufton. Henry --verett. Thomas Key. Henry Pearse. Daniel Fisher. Frederick Kye. Alexander Ratliffe. John Cross. Thomas Baker. Thon1as Odayre. William Cross. Ta mes Manson. It will be noticed that "Robert Lyndsie" appears amongst the names of those who signed this Address. The wife of this Lindesay -that is the lady who was vvith her husband all through the Siege -died at the age of 105 years, which is just the nu1nber of days that the Siege lasted. Here it may be observed, with re~erence to the spelling of the na!ne as "Lyndsie," that in ancient times there ,vas little orthographic uniformity. In the Lives of the Lindsays, the author gives, on p. 413 of Vol. I, no less than eighty-eight variations in the spelling of the surname as derived from Charters and other documents. The spelling of the name as "Lindesay" throughout this work is distinctive of the Loughry branch. Frederick Lindesay, in his Manuscript Book of 1834, previously mentioned, discussed at sc_n~ !engt~1 th~ variations in the spelling of his name, Lindesay. He remarks that in Scotland the name is spelt in four different ways, viz., "Lindesay," "Lindsay," "Lyndesay," and "Lyndsay." This fact he proves by reference to a Privy Seal Record respecting John, sixth Lord Lindesay of the Byres, in which his name (as if purposely _to prove that the four modes of spelling are each correct) is spelt in four several ways as above. He adds that on the tombstone of the Chief Harbinger the name is spelt in two different ways, viz., round the n1argin {,{, Robert Lindesay," and in the body of the stone, " nobili Scotorum Lyndesaiorum, etc." He states that Robin Lindesay, the Judge, was the first of the descendants of Tho:nas, the Snowdon Herald, to omit the letter" e." The Judge's nephe,v, Robert Lindesay, spe~t his name without the "e" merely be(ause his uncle, Judge Lindesay, had done so; but this he regretted, and often mentioned to John Lindesay, his sen and heir, but who died in his father's life-time, that he thought it would be right for him to resume the spelling of" Lindesay." Consequently, "the present John Lindesay [Frederick Lindesay's nephew] and the rest of our family now ,vrite our name as our forefathers have done: Lindesay."

THE STORY OF JOHN LINDESAY In connection ,vith this Siege, the story of John Lindesay is as romantic as any in history, and provides a wonderful example of the devotion of Irish foster-mothers to their charges. Born in 1686, and THE STORY OF JOHN LINDESAY 27 aged three at the time of the Siege, the baby John was nursed by a native Irish woman named Corr, whose husband was a soldier in the army of King James. This woman was devotedly attached to the child and was constantly about the house at Loughry. When Robert Lindesay was preparing to go with his family and retainers to join the supporters of King William, the youngest child, John, could not be found. As the nurse had also disappeared, the agonized parents feared treachery, concluded that the infant had been kid­ napped and murdered, and hastily departed with the elder son, Robert ( afterwards the Judge), for Derry. After the Siege, the country settled down, the Lindesays returned to Loughry and still there was no word of the missing child. One day a woman arrived at the door ,vith a donkey, across whose back ,vere two panniers apparently filled with oysters covered with sea­ weed (not an unusual sight in those days). One basket did indeed contain oysters, but in the other was the boy John, who was immedi­ ately recognized by his parents. The old, disguised woman was his. fester-mother. This nurse, in her devotion to the child and anxiety for his welfare, had hidden him in a cave near Clance, known to this day as " Lindesay Cave." There she fed and watched over him, taught him a few words of Irish, and afterwards passed him off as her own son to the soldiers of King James's army; and, finally, when all was quiet, she restored him to his parents. The writer remembers reading in his youth the pathetic story of a lost child who ,vas restored to his parents. When re-entering his home, the child recognized the pebbles on the drive, saying, "We: used to ca' them beans." It seems possible that this story was based upon the incident above described.

JUDGE LINDESAY A.ND DEAN SWIFT Robert Lindesay, born 1679, the fourth to bear this name at Loughry and the fourth o,vner of Loughry, succeeded his father in 1691 at the age of twelve. He was a particularly able and brilliant man. He was 11ember of Parliament for the county of Tyrone, and he became a Judge of the Common Pleas. He possessed considerable literary ability and was a close friend of Jonathan S"'Nift, the Dean of St. Patrick's. Judge Lindesay, as he was called, was the first of the family to acquire a residence in Dublin, at 67 Mount­ joy Square. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Edward Singleton, of Drogheda and sister of Henry Singleton, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench and after\vards Master of the Rolls, Ireland. By her he had two children, both of whom predeceased him. 28 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY During Judge or "Councillor" Lindesay's lifetime, Loughry was the scene of many brilliant social gatherings. Jonathan Swift, Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin, was a frequent visitor; and in the old summer house, knovln as " S\vift' s Summer House," over­ looking the river close to the mansion, the Dean, in company ,vith his friend Lindesay, wrote many of his poems and other works, including part of his political satire, The Tale of a Tub. A picture of the Summer House, as it exists to-day, is given below.

SwIFT's SD1:'.\1ER HousE

It is reproduced from a postcard photograph in Glasgo\v's (Cookstown) Ltd., Mid-Ulster Series, No. 51, by kind permission of MR. H. L. , of Cookstown, Co. Tyrone. JUDGE LINDESAY AND DEAN SWIFT 29 A gate-legged oak table in the summer-house, at which the Dean was accustomed to write, was, in 1922, presented to the Deanery of St. Patrick's, Dublin, by the Rev. William O'Neill Lindesay, eighth son of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay and great-grandson of John Lindesay, brother of the Judge. The gift is recorded in a Latin inscription on a brass plate affixed to the table. The oak chair used by Dean Swift is now in the possession of Mrs. Gabbett, of Ballaghtobin, Callan, Co. Kilkenny. The fallowing quotation from a dialogue in verse between Robert Lindesay and the Dean is copied from a Lindesay Family MS., and is only one of many to be found therein. SWIFT: ''Since there are persons who complain There's too much satire in my vein; That I an1. often found exceeding The rules of raillery and breeding; With too much freedom treat my betters Not sparing even men of letters;· You who are skill' d in lawyers' lore What's your advice? Should I give o'er? Nor ever fools or knaves expose Either in verse or humorous prose? And to avoid all future ill In my scrutoire1 lock up my quill?" LAWYER: "Since you are pleas'd to condescend To ask the judgment of a friend, Your case consider' d I n1ust think You should withdraw from pen and ink, Forbear your poetry and jokes And live like other Christian folks, Or, if the Muses must inspire Your fancy with their pleasing fire, Take subjects safer for your wit Than those on which you lately writ." These lines form part of what is described as "A Dialogue between an Eminent Lawyer and Dr. Jonathan Swift, D.S.P.D., an allusion to Horace, Book II, Satire I ' Sunt quibus in satira,' &c., written by Mr. Lindsay in 1729." They appear in the Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D., with Notes and a Life of the Author, by Walter Scott, Esq., Vol. XIV, p. 230, Edinburgh, 1814. The Dialogue is immediately preceded by another poem, entitled: "Paulus: An Epigram," by Mr. Lindsay and dated September 7th, 1728. A footnote to the name Lindsay reads as follows: "A polite

A word not now much in use. It is equivalent to escritoire, an enclosed writing table. 30 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY and elegant scholar; at that time an eminent pleader at the bar in Dublin, and afterwards advanced to be one of the Justices of the Common Pleas." The verses of Lindsay are follo\ved by " The Answer," by Dr. Swift. Judge Lindesay, \vho \Vas named as his executor by Dean S'Arift, died in Dublin on January 17th, 1742, aged 63, three years before the death of his friend. Fie was buried in St. Andrew's Church, Dublin, and therefore not in the fa:nily burying place at Donaghrisk, Co. Tyrone (see page 44). The present incumbent of St. Andrevv's (Rev. D. H. Clarke) informs me that this church was destroyed by fire in 1854, together with any memorials it contained. Most of the old church­ yard is now built over, and practically no legible tombstones remain.

JOHN LINDESAY, FIFTH OWNER OF LOUGHRY'" John Lindesay succeeded to the estates as fifth owner of Loughry on the death of his brother, Robert (the Judge), whose only son and daughter had died young. It is related that in after life the brothers Robert and John did not see eye to eye in political affairs. Robert was a firm supporter of King William of Orange. John, whilst adhering strictly to protestant principles, upheld the claims of King James to the throne. He (John) was fifty-six years of age and unmarried when he succeeded his brother Robert in 1742. Some time later he invited his relatives, Walter Lindesay and Walter's son, heirs presumptive, to spend a fe\v months at Loug~ry in order that they might beco:ne acquainted with the tenants and the property. The invitation was accepted, but the visit was not a success. Walter Lindesay, who was very little older than John, so irritated the latter by suggesting certain improvements in the estate, \vhich he thought should be carried cut be:ore his son Alexander inherited, that John -who apparently had no intention of doing so previously­ determined to marry. On the departure of the guests he consulted his maternal uncle, the Rev. John· 1'-Aa urice, Rector of Desertcreat, \vho resided at Ballymully Glebe. His uncle suggested a marriage with the daughter of a ,veal thy Englishman of good fa!nily. John Lindesay married therefore in 17 44 the third daughter of the Rev. Bellingham Mauleverer, Rector of Maghera, Co. Derry, and the grand-daughter of Archbishop Nicolson. Her name \Vas Elizabeth,

and she is described as a verv) beautiful., amiable and sensible \voman. There \Vas one child of the marriage, called Robert, \vho eventually succeeded to Loughry as the sixth o\vner. Here I venture to make a slight digression to relate a somewhat similar episode \vhich o:curred in English family history. The celebrated " Coke of I--Iolkha1n " (1754-1842), famous for his JOHN LINDESAY, FIFTH OWNER OF LOUGHRY .),., 1 agricultural improvements that turned a poor property in Norfolk from a rental value of £2,200 p.a. to one of over £20,000 p.a., \Vas a childless widower, son1ewhat advanced in years. He desired his nephe\v and then heir to marry his young \Vard, a niece of the . This the nephew declined to do, whereupon Coke said: " Then I'll marry her myself." He did so, and in 1837, by the \vish of his wife, he accepted a peerage, \V hich he had previously refused. He became , and a son of this second marriage became the second Earl of Leicester, K.G. (1822-1909). Reverting now- to the career of John Lindesay as fifth owner of Loughry, his son Robert was t\VO years old when the Manor House of Loughry was burned for the second time. The fire broke out in the nursery at the top of the house; the infant was rescued from the flames by his mother, who conveyed him to the Glebe at Bally­ mully. John, then aged 63, in his efforts to save some of the family treasures, had a narrow escape from death._ He lived to rebuild the mansion on part of the old \Valls and old site, and he died in 1761, aged 75 years. He was buried in the family vault at Donaghrisk. His marriage settlement described the estate of Loughry as situated in the parishes of Desertcreat, Artree, Derry loran (Cookstown) and Stewartstown. ARCHBISHOP NICOLSON Archbishop , from whom through Elizabeth Lindesay (nee Mauleverer) \Vere descended the subsequent Lindesays of Loughry, was a notable historian, antiquarian and controversialist. He became Rector of Great Salkeld, Cumberland, in 1682, and was afterwards Archdeacon and then Bishop of Carlisle. He was translated to the Bishopric of Londonderry in 1718, and was appointed .Archbishop of Cashel on February 9th, 1727. He died on February 14th, 1727, and \Vas buried in the Cathedral of Derry. He did a great \Vork by reformation of the Diocese of Carlisle; and Dr. Creighton, Bishop of London, described him as "the most note­ \Vorthy man connected with the See of Carlisle." He \Vas born in 1665, and he entered Queen's College, Oxford, at the age of 15. By permission of Col. Joshua Lindesay (1838-1893), the replica of an oil-painted portrait of the Archbishop in the possession of the Lindesay family \Vas made in 1891 to the order of the Provost of Queen's (J. R. Magrath) by an artist named W. Miln; and it no\v hangs in the Common Room gallery of the College. The \Vriter's second son (Rev. Frederick Lindesay Godfrey) inspected this portrait of his ancestor ,vhen he ,vas an undergraduate at Merton College, Oxford. A biography of the Archbishop appears in the Dictionary of National Biography, and details o~ his career are also given in ARCHBISHOP NICOLSON (1665-1727) ARCHBISHOP NICOLSON 33 Chapter XIV, with portrait, pp. 73-83, of a work, entitled: Great Salkeld: Its Rectors and History, by A. G. Loftie, M.A., printed by Bemrose & Sons, Ltd., Derby, 1900. The accompanying portrait of the Archbishop is reproduced from a coloured likeness in the writer's possession. It is apparently the copy of a photograph of the original oil painting mentioned above.

ROBERT LINDESAY, SIXTH OWNER OF LOUGHRY Robert Lindesay, the sixth owner of Loughry, born 11th April, 1747, inherited the estates in 1761 at the age of fourteen. By the terms of his father's will, his mother, Elizabeth (nee Mauleverer) ,vas appointed his sole guardian. He ,vas educated at the Royal School, , Trinity College, Dublin, and Christ Church, Oxford. He studied law, was D.L. and J.P., and was High Sheriff of the County of Tyrone in 1788. He ,vas M.P. for the Borough of Dundalk for several years in the Irish Parliament from 1781. He was Deputy-Governor of Tyrone and Assistant-Barrister for the County of Tyrone from 1800 to 1829; and on his retirement the Magistrates of Tyrone County presented him with a massive silver salver, with a high eulogium engraved thereon for his "honorable, high-minded and efficacious discharge of his arduous duties during such a number of years." He married, 20th June, 1775, his second cousin, Jane, eldest daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Mauleverer, of Arncliffe Hall, Yorkshire. They had four sons and six daughters. Jane Lindesay was born 24th July, 1753, and died 18th April, 1824. Her husband, Robert Lindesay, died 6th January, 1832. The sons were: John of ,vhom next; Robert, who died young; Frederick and Thomas. Of the six daughters, Jane, of 28 Imperial Square, Cheltenham, died unmarried; Sarah married J. Cranborne Strode, cousin, both by father and mother, to the second Marquis of Salisbury, and died 31st October, 1851; Elizabeth married Col. Joshua Cooper, of Markree, Co. Sligo; Mary, born 1791, married Bellingham Mauleverer, and died 22nd November, 1868; Fanny married Colonel O'Neill, and Anne died unmarried. Portraits of Robert Lindesay and his wife Jane (nee Mauleverer) were presented to the Ulster Dairy School at Loughry, and also to members of the Lindesay family in 1933 by Mrs. Macrory, of Limavady, a grand-daughter of the Thomas Lindesay mentioned above. The accompanying portraits of Robert and Jane Lindesay are reproduced from copies received from Mrs. Macrory through Colonel Victor Lindesay, my late wife's brother. They are now in the writer's possession. C .':,'',,,, jft'.'.\ :A·· ,,,1' ·~ ,1 " ''~ ,,,.i ',,,, ••

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ROBERT LINDESAY, M.P. (1747-1832) ROBERT LINDESAY, SIXTH OWNER OF LOUGHRY 35 Amongst old letters preserved by Frederick Lindesay is one from his sister, Sarah Strode, to her father, Robert Lindesay. It is dated from Tunbridge Wells on August 31st, 1828. One item in it is of some little historic interest, for it tells of a visit to friends whose house was rented from Major By, he "having got some appointment in Canada." This was Colonel By, R.E., the officer sent out from England to build the canal from a point bel_ow the Chaudiere Falls to Kingston on Lake Ontario. This work, together with develop­ ment of the lumber trade, created a settlement, which was called Bytown after Colonel By. In 1854 it ,vas incorporated as a city, and its na1ne was changed to Ottawa, to become at Confederation in 1867 the capital of the Dominion of Canada. The letter was "franked" by Lord Abergavenny, with whom the Strodes happened to be dining. Miss Norah Pauline Wade, of 68 Ennismore Gardens, London, S.W.7, a great-grand-daughter of Frederick Lindesay, of Loughry, relates a romance connected with Frederick's sister, Elizabeth Lindesay, who married Col. Joshua Cooper, of Markree Castle, Co. Sligo. It appears that Miss Wade's great-grandfather, Col. Thomas Wade, Deputy Adjutant-General of Ireland, A.D.C. to the Duke of Wellington, and Elizabeth Lindesay had wished to marry, but circumstances prevented their union. Eventually, Col. Wade married Anne Smythe, of Barba villa, Co. Westmeath; and their second son, Richard Wade, was adopted by Elizabeth Cooper, who had no children of her own. She was greatly devoted to her adopted son, and she left him a considerable fortune. His son, Philip Harold Wade, married Pauline Bagwell, and Norah Pauline Wade was their only child. (See Appendix II.)

MAULEVERERS OF ARNCLIFFE HALL, YORKSHIRE As previously noted, there have been three inter-marriages between the Lindesay and Mauleverer families, and through marriage of Jane Mauleverer, the co-heiress, to Robert Lindesay, the representation of the Mauleverer family devolved upon the Lindesays of Loughry. The family claim to be descended from Sir Richard Mauleverer, who came over with William the Conqueror, and who was stated(somewhat mythically)to have been appointed by the Conqueror as "Maister of ye forests, parks and chases, Trent northward." The Mauleverers were long settled at Arncliffe Hall, near Northallerton, in the North Riding of Yorkshire. Many genealogical, biographical and heraldic details concerning this family are given in articles entitled "Ingleby Arncliffe," which appeared in the Journal of the Yorkshire Archceological Society, Vol. XVI, Part fANE LINDESAY (nee MAULEVERER), (1753-1824) MAULEVERERS OF ARNCLIFFE HALL, YORKSHIRE 37 62, Leeds, 1901. During the Civil War, the family sided with the Parliamentary Forces, and a "Tho. Mauleverer" is tenth on the list of fifty-nine signatories of the Warrant for the Execution of King Charles I on 30th January, 1649. As will be seen in the Appendices to this work, the name Mauleverer is perpetuated by its bestowal upon successive members of the Lindesay family since the time of Robert and Jane Lindesay. The true derivation of the surname Mauleverer is open to question, some authorities deeming its original meaning to have been "bad workman" from the Norman French "mal ouvrier" (Latin: Malus operarius), others that it originated in a nickname bestowed upon an early Yorkshire hunter in mishandling his leash of greyhounds. In an amicable argument at Loughry, Frederick Lindesay was in favour of the latter theory, whilst his friend, the Rev. Dr. Porter, took the other view. Both theories are given in Lewer's Historical Essays on English Surnames. Thus, Essay XV reads: " The name Mauleverer was antiently written M alus leporarius, or Maleparer, the bad hare hunter, and tradition states that a York­ shire gentleman being to let slip a brace of greyhounds to run for a stake of considerable value held them with so unskilful a hand as rather to endanger their necks than to expedite the capture of the hare. This deficiency of skill brought down upon him the nickname above mentioned, which thenceforward descended to his posterity, an everlasting memorial of his ignorance of hunting. But that learned student of matters genealogical, Peter le Neve, Norroy King of Arms, more rationally supposes it to be Malus operarius (in French Malouvrier)." Frederick Lindesay's son, Wilfred, thought that Dr. Porter was right, because the name occurs in the Roll of Battle Abbey amongst those Knights who came over ,vith William the Conqueror in the form of Mauleverer; there£ ore the name must have been borne by the ancestors of the Yorkshire gentleman mentioned in the tradition and could not have been assumed on account of it. But the following footnote appears on p. 164 in an article on "Ingleby Arncliffe" in the Journal of the Yorkshire Archceological Society, Vol. XVI, Part 62, 1901 : " The name Mauleverer is said to mean M alus leporarius, or the bad hare hunter, which name was given to the founder of the family from his having tried to course with three greyhounds coupled together, which not unnaturally ended in their being strangled. The greyhounds in their Coat are a canting allusion to the supposed meaning of the name. The earliest mention of these Arms occurs 38 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY in an Heraldic Roll of the Reign of Edward II, edited by Sir Harris Nicolas (p. 96), where Sir William Mauleverer has attributed to him 'de argent a III leverers de goules.' "

JOHN LINDESAY, SEVENTH OvVNER OF LOUGHRY John Lindesay, the eldest son of Robert Lindesay, the sixth owner of Loughry, born 29th February, 1780, was Lieutenant in the 30th Regiment (Second Battalion, Worcestershire Regiment), and was afterwards Lieut.-Colonel in the Royal Tyrone Militia. He married Mary Anne, daughter of Richard Pennyfather of New Park, Co. Tipperary, M.P. for Cashel, and was Mayor of Cashel in 1825. In Church, Cookstown, there is a silver paten inscribed : ''The gift of Mrs. Mary Anne Lindesay, of Loughry, Anno 1728 (nee Pennyfather), wife of John Lindesay, Sen." This John Lindesay died 6th November, 1826, six years be£ ore the death of his father, Robert; so that he did not succeed to the Loughry estates. His widow, Mary Anne Lindesay, was born 4th March, 1786, and died 25th December, 1873. His son, John, the seventh owner of Loughry, was D.L. for Co. Tyrone. He was born on 10th March, 1808, and he died on 7th August, 1848. He married Harriet Hester, daughter of the Right Hon. Charles Watkin Williams Vlynn, M.P. for Langedwin, and the brother of Sir W. Williams Wynn, Bt., M.P. for Wynnestay, Denbighshire. (She died 18th March, 1878.) Dying childless, the property reverted to his uncle, Frederick Lindesay, the third son of Robert and Jane Lindesay.

FREDERICK LINDESAY, EIGHTH OWNER OF LOUGHRY Frederick Lindesay did not, however, succeed to the Loughry estate before having to defend a vexatious lawsuit brought against him by Harriet Hester Lindesay, the widow of his nephew John. This suit, ,vhich, it was stated, excited much interest at the time both in England and Ireland, was brought by Mrs. Lindesay to substantiate a claim that under an alleged will of her husband made in April, 1838, all the Lindesay estates and property, real and personal, were bequeathed to her. The will was decided by the Judge of the Prerogative Court to have been subsequently revoked by the deceased John Lindesay, and that he had died intestate. From this decision, Mrs. Lindesay appealed to the Court of Delegates; but on the morning of the trial consented that the Appeal should be dismissed. Accordingly, Frederick Lindesay duly succeeded his nephew as the eighth owner of the Loughry estates. He ,vas born on 2nd January, 1792, when the real estate included FREDERICK LINDESAY, EIGHTH OWNER OF LOUGHRY 39 Loughry, Rock Lodge, Desertcreat and 67 Mountjoy Square, · Dublin. He was educated at Armagh and at Trinity College, Dublin, where he graduated as B.A. in 1813 and M.A. in 1833. On 23rd September, 1823, he married Agnes Cornish Bayntun, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Edwin Bayntun-Sandys, Bt., of Miserden Park, Gloucestershire, and Chadlington Park, Oxford­ shire. By her, who died 10th May, 1842, he had four sons and three daughters. He was called to the Irish Bar in 1817, and for a time in early life he practised as a barrister in London, residing at Barnes. During 1ny residence in Gloucestershire from 1928-30, the three sisters, Flora Kenny, Alexandra Bennett and my wife, Emmeline Godfrey, together with myself, spent a memorable day in motoring to Miserden, where we went over the house that was the scene of their father's early courtship. The house was then the residence of Mrs. Wills. We also inspected the ancient family memorials in the Church. Lady Sandys, a member of the family, was Godmother to my wife, and an antique silver sugar sifter, in the form of a lighthouse, presented by her, is now in possession of our sailor son, Valentine Godfrey. The Sandys family claim direct descent from William of Wykeham and therefore to be entitled to privileges as "founder's kin" in connection with Winchester College. Frederick Lindesay, having thus succeeded to Loughry after the death of his nephew, John, in 1848, became D.L. and J.P. for the County of Tyrone. He was High Sheriff of the county in 1859, and was Captain Commandant of the Loughry Corps of Ye~manry Infantry, a corps originally raised by his father. His town house was 67 Mountjoy Square, Dublin, where also he was a member of the Sackville· Street Club. On 27th November, 1856, he married, as his second wife, Charlotte, third daughter of Henry Charles Boy le MacMurrough Murphy, of Dublin, by whom he had, as surviving children, four sons and three daughters, whose records appear below. The portrait on page 40 shows Frederick Lindesay in his uni­ form as Deputy-Lieutenant of County Tyrone. It is the photo­ graphic enlargement of a small painting in colours on ivory, which is in the writer's possession. A genealogist and antiquarian of repute, Frederick Lindesay devoted much time and research in an endeavour to prove legally his claim to the of Lindesay of the Byres and to the Earldom of Lindsay. He did not originate this claim, for it was made by his predecessor, John Lindesay. In the first edition of Walford's County Families of the ; or Royal Manual of the Titled and Untitled Aristocracy of Great Britain and Ireland, which FREDERICK LIXDESAY (1792-1871) FREDERICK LINDESAY, EIGHTH OWNER OF LOUGHRY 41 ·was published in 1860, the record of Lindesay of Loughry appears -on p. 386. It reads: "This fan1ily are descended from the Lords .Lindesay of the Byres, Co. Haddington (ancestors of the Earls of Crawford and Lindesay), and, as such, Mr. Lindesay claims the Barony of Lindesay of Byres and the Earldom of Lindesay, er. 1633." Frederick Lindesay did not succeed in proving legally his claim; but John Trotter Lindsay-Bethune, son of Sir Henry Lindsay-Bethune, Bt., de jure 9th Earl of Lindsay, established his right to the Earldom .and other titles before the on 5th April, 1878, thus becoming the 10th Earl of Lindsay. Since then there have been three successive Earls of Lindsay, and the title is now (1948) held by William Tucker Lindesay-Bethune, as 14th Earl. Reginald Bethune Lindesay-Bethune, the 12th Earl, assumed the additional surname of Lindesay in 1918. For the details concerning this complicated peerage, reference may be made to the article on the Lindsay Earldom by· Sir Francis J. Grant, K.C.V.O., Rothesay Herald, in Vol. V, 1908, pp. 391-420, of the Scots Peerage, edited by Sir James Balfour Paul. Frederick's son, Wilfred Lindesay (the writer's brother-in-law), expressed the opinion that whilst the claim of his father to the Earldom may have been doubtful, he (Wilfred) was convinced that he was entitled to the Barony of the Byres. He hoped that this claim might be prosecuted by his brother, Crawford, who, however, never saw his way to take further action in the matter. In a newspaper report of the funeral in February, 1893, of Colonel Joshua Lindesay, it was stated that in the ancient Lindesay burial­ ground at Donaghrisk were interred "several of the old Earls of Lindesay and Crauford." Various references have been made, in the course of this work, to the Lives of the Lindsays, by Alexander, Lord Lindsay. In this book statements respecting the Lindesays of Loughry appear in Vol. I, pp. 320 and 441, and also in Vol. II, p. 297, where Frederick Lindesay, then residing in Mountjoy-Square West, Dublin, is thanked "for much kind antiquarian and genealogical assistance." The author added that "the arms of the house being those of the Lords Lindsay by long inheritance, may be considered as establish­ ing their Byres origin, but the precise affiliation has not as yet been ascertained.'' Efforts to ascertain this "precise affiliation" of Thomas Lindesay, the father of the first Robert Lindesay of Loughry, do not appear so far to have been successful. On communicating with H.M. Register Office in Edinburgh, I received a letter from the Rothesay Herald and Lyon Clerk (Lieut.-Colonel H. A. B. Lawson, 42 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY F.S.A.Scot.) stating that their official work on the Lyon Court for Thomas Lindsay is as follows : "Thomas Lindsay, of Kingswark, Leith, Snowdoun (1571),. Searcher-General of Leith, Lyon Depute (1591), died before 6th July, 1607, had issue, Robert, settled in Tyrone; Bernard, Groom of the Chambers (Plantation of Ulster 288)." Colonel Lawson added that he· thought it was generally accepted that Thomas Lindsay came from the Byres family; but it would mean putting a searcher on to collecting details, and he doubted if they would be available, owing to the paucity of Scottish records. In the Manuscript Book of Frederick Lindesay referred to in the Preface to this History, it is stated that the Book was written to trace the genealogy of his family, because of the destruction of pedigree matter in 1641 during the rebellion and in 1756 when the Manor House of Loughry was destroyed by fire, together with the patents of James I granting the Manor and lands of Tullyhogue as. already described. Frederick Lindesay also stated that his father, Robert Lindesay, preserved the tradition of the family's legitimate descent from the first Lord Lindesay of the Byres. He added that there was "never the slightest hint given or any doubt entertained in the family of the fact." Though they never met personally, Frederick Lindesay main­ tained over many years an active and cordial correspondence with Lord Lindsay, who succeeded his father as 25th Earl of Crawford on 15 Dec., 1869. In 1860, when Frederick's son, apparently Fritz,. a Captain in the 3rd Dragoon Guards, was stationed with his· regiment at Manchester, he was cordially welcomed to Haigh, Lord Crawford's Lancashire seat. Lord Lindsay, in writing to Frederick Lindesay on 25th February, 1860, mentioned that it was partly at the instance of his brother-in-law, Robert Loyd Lindsay (Colonel in the Scots Fusilier Guards), that Fritz had called to see him. This Robert Loyd Lindsay married Harriet Sarah, the only child of Samuel Jones Loyd, Lord Overstone, a banker and financial adviser to W. E. Gladstone, and he assumed the additional surname of Loyd from his father-in-law. In the Crimean War, he won the V.C. and other honours. He was a keen supporter of the Rifle Shooting Competitions at Wimbledon, and afterwards at Eisley, and was raised to the Peerage as Lord Wantage. I remember him as present at the Royal Agricultural Show, and was struck with his marked resemblance to the portraits of my wife's father, Frederick Lindesay, though the relationship between them was not close. On 28th February, 1860, Lord Lindsay sent to Frederick a cast of the seal of John, first Lord Lindesay of the Byres, Co. Haddington) FREDERICK LINDESAY, EIGHTH OWNER OF LOUGHRY 43, who died 1479, stating that it was from one of the family charters. of Cosmo Innes and was the first good impression of the seal that he had met with. This cast is in the writer's possession, and the accompanying illustration is a photographic reproduction of it .. The inscription round the edge of the seal appears to be: S. (for Sigillum) Johannis de Lindesay. The Arms on the seal are: Gules, a Fesse chequee argent and azure; three Stars in chief of the second. Crest: A Swan wi_th its \\rings expanded proper. Supporters : Two Griffins gules, armed and membered or. _Another subject of correspondence was the famous Arabic poem, of which there are several SEAL oF JoHN, FIRST LORD LINDESA y English translations. Lord Lindsay, writing on OF THE BYRES. 7th July, 1841, refers to a version by Sir William Jones, but states that he has_been more familiar with another version by Professor Carlyle, which is as follows: When born, in tears we saw thee drowned, While thine assembled friends around With smiles their joy expressed. So live, that at thy parting hour, They may the flood of sorrow pour, And thou in smiles be dressed. James Dacre Carlyle (1759-1804) was Professor of Arabic in the University of Cambridge. In 1871, Lord Lindsay, about two years after his accession as 25th Earl of Crawford, had accepted an invitation to visit Loughry, but Frederick Lindesay's death on 10th July, 1871, prevented the intended visit. Lord Crawford was Godfather to two of Frederick's children, viz., Alexander, who died in infancy, and Alexandra, who became Mrs. Bennett. Lord Crawford died 13th December, 1880, and a theft of the bones of this noblernan from the family vault in Scotland caused a considerable sensation at the time. The late Colonel Lowry, D.L., of Pomeroy House, Co. Tyrone, who died 2nd October, 1947, in his 91st year, remembered Frederick Lindesay well, and related that he maintained great state at Loughry, keeping open house and entertaining freely. It is said that he was the last gentleman in Tyrone to drive a coach-and-four, and this "turn-out" was, in 1938, still fresh in the memory of the older employees on the estate. He was a popular landlord and a kind and generous master. He died after three days' illness, and was interred in the Family Burial Ground at Donaghrisk (see illustration on page 44). 44 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY

A marble tablet to his memorvJ and to· that of his second wife was placed in the church at Desertcreat by Mrs. Crawford Lindesay and by four of their surviving children, viz., Mrs. Godfrey, Mrs. Bennett, Colonel Victor Lindesay, and the Rev. Robert Lindesay. The tablet

FAMILY BvRIAL GROt,:!\'D AT DoNAGHRISK was dedicated on 16th April, 1937, by the Very Rev. F. Tichborne, M.A., Dean of Armagh (see illustration belo\v). In his home relationships, Frederick Lindesay was of an affectionate disposition, and he was greatly beloved by his older

!r..._ __ :~'In Loving and RP~rr-ed 01tmory of I1 '· ---FREDERICK UNDESAY DL.J.P. 0792-i87u--­ AND_ CHARLOTTE,H1s WIFE,.oF LOLGHRY. THE MEMORY Of THE JUS: IS BLESSED.

•::: I ~ I This ta.bttt 'ti.&a.s er.tr-ttd in 1936. t · ·bt; n,ei.l:'! _drvo tl"d t'lhiidi,rn. L.•.•.• IHIMiiUFt UP U■ IHIII "'1 II R VF

MDiORIAL T.\BLET TO FREDERICK A~D CHARLOTTE LI~DESAY children, including my own dear wife, who were able to reme:nber him. He had a quick, hot temper, soon appeased. It is related of him that on various occasions he would violently scold his faithful man-servant, ending up with a curt "Take notice to quit." When the term of notice expired, the servant \Vould appear humbly to FREDERICK LINDESAY, EIGHTH OWNER OF LOUGHRY 45 take leave of his master, only to be met with the rejoinder: "What do you mean, you rascal? Get on with your work, and let's hear no 1nore about it." The man would then retire, and things would go on happily as before. It was customary for the children every morning to appear at their father's bedside and receive sweets set out on a "Goody-table." My wife had vivid recollections of her aged father, by whose side she was generally to be found in con­ temporary photographs. The Lindesay family were accustomed to worship in the church at Derryloran, Cookstown, and one of the two large pews occupied still bears a brass plate with Frederick Lindesay 's name engraved thereon.

HENRY FORREST, FACTOR (OR STEWARD) TO FREDERICK LI~DESAY Festive celebrations at Loughry usually included a "tenants' ball," when the master of the house and relatives mingled freely with their guests to see that they all had a good time. On one such occasion a girl dancer was quizzed by gentlemen of the party to describe the items of her attire. This she did until the list was exhausted, when they said: " Yes, and then?", deriving, of course, amusement from her reply, which was: ''And then comes Oi.'' The accompanying portrait of Henry Forrest, factor (or steward) to Frederick Lindesay, is reproduced from a photograph which is 46 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY kindly lent by his great-granddaughter, Miss Margaret Steenson, of Strife Hill, Cookstown, Co. Tyrone. He was born in 1801, and lived to be over ninetv.

LINDESAY ARMORIAL BEARINGS Heraldically described, the Armorial Bearings of the Lindesays of Loughry are: "Gules, a Fesse-chequee argent and azure, with three mullets of the second in chief and a crescent argent in base for difference." The family Crest is a "Swan proper standing with wings closed," and the Motto is : "Love but Dread," sometimes :suspected of having been corrupted from "Live but Dread." This is borne out by the fact that "Live but Dreid" is given as the motto of the Lords Lindsay of the Byres in Vol. I, p. 440, of the Lives of the Lindsays. Anglicised, the motto would read: "Love (or Live) without Fear." Colonel F. S. Lindesay, writing to me from South Africa on 7th July, 1948, stated that his father (Frederick Lindesay, fourth son of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay) told him that the "but" in the motto was originally "bot," an old Scottish word signifying ·"without," and still occasionally to be found with this meaning in .ancient Scottish ballads. According to Lord Lindsay, Sir William, youngest son of Sir David Lindsay of Crawford (1314-55), "whose appanage was the Byres in Haddingtonshire, acquired the Barony of Abercorn and other extensive estates with his wife Christiana, daughter of Sir William Mure of Abercorn." In memory of this marriage, Sir William's descendants adopted three stars or mullets in chief on their shield, "these stars being the Arms of the Mures of Abercorn.1 Thus these three mullets have appeared in the Arms of the Byres Branch from about the fourteenth century until the present day; and they are there£ ore borne by the Lindesays of Loughry in virtue of their Byres descent. The "Crescent argent in base for difference" was, according to Lord Lindsay, adopted as a mark of "brotherly clifference" by Master Patrick Lindsay, the second son of the Earl of Crawford and Lindsay of the seventeenth century .2 Since this

2 ;i Lives of the Lz"ndsays, Vol. I, p. 52. Ibid~ p. 56. LINDESAY ARMORIAL BEARINGS 47 The first Robert Lindesay of Loughry and Tullyhogue possessed an armorial seal, whicp. he lost early in the seventeenth century. It was recovered from the ground after the lapse of over two hundred years, and became the property of Mrs. F ranees Mary Lindesay, now of Pool Park, Cornwood, South Devon, the widow of Lieut.­ Colonel Henry Richard Ponsonby Lindesay, second son of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay. Mrs. Lindesay gave the seal to her nephew, Col. J. H. C. Lindesay, 1\1.C., of Loch Arthur, Beeswing, Dumfries­ shire, by whom it is now carefully treasured. The seal consists of the Lindesay Arms between the letters R L, and the following inscription runs round the edge: "Sigillum Roberti Lindesay de Tillochog." A good wax impression of the seal was amongst Frederick Lindesay's papers, vvhich came to Mrs. Gabbett, of Bal­ laghtobin, Callan, Co. Kilkenny, from her

mother, Philippa Allen Knox, Frederick SEAL oF THE FiRsT Lindesay's sixth daughter by his first wife (see RoBERT L1"DEsAY oF Appendices II and IV). It is reproduced from LovcHRY. a photograph as the accompanying illustration. On a card attached to the wax impression of the seal is the following legend : "This is the impression of the Seal or Signet of Robert Lindesay of Leith in Scotland, Esq., Chief Harbinger and Controller of the Artillery to King James the first, who granted to him by patent the Manor of Tullochog (changed to that of Manor Lindesay by 2nd Patent in the reign of Charles I) in the County of Tyrone, Ireland, A.D. 1611. This Robert Lindesay (the founder of the family of Lindesays of Loughry in Manor Lindesay) died between the years 1614 and 1618, and this his signet was discovered by a work­ man of the Rev. T. H. Porter, D.D. and Rector of Ballymully, who dug it out of the earth on Monday evening the 26th day of March, 1849, while levelling the hedge of the old road which passed the northern side of the celebrated Tillochog Fort in which 'The O'Neil' of former days used to be Inaugurated. This seal had probably lain under ground for upwards of 200 years, as no impression of it is. to be found on any of the old Family Deeds of the Lindesays, and from 1632 the Lindesay Family have resided at Loughry and not in Tillochog." By the marriage of Robert Lindesay (1747-1832) to his second cousin Jane·, daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Mauleverer of Arncliffe Hall, Yorkshire, as above mentioned, their son Frederick became entitled to quarter the Mauleverer Arms with those of his o,vn family. Consequently, the present Arms of the representatives 48 THE LI:\fDESAYS OF LOUGHRY of the Lindesays of Loughry are: For LINDESAY, first and fourth quarters: Gules, a Fesse-chequee argent and azure, three mullets in chief of the second and a crescent argent in base for difference. For MAULEVERER, second and third quarters: Sable, three grey­ hounds in pale courant argent collared or. Lindesay Crest: A Swan proper standing with wings closed. Mauleverer Crest: A Maple Leaf springing from a trunk, all proper. Lindesay Motto : Love but Dread. Mauleverer Motto: En Dieu ma foi.

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The Heraldic Achievement of Frederick Lindesay was completed by the impalement of his own quartered Arms with the quartered Arms of the family of his first wife, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Edwin Bayntun-Sandys, Bt. These were for SANDYS, first and fourth quarters: Or, a Fesse dancetee bet\veen three Cross-crosslets fitchee gules; and for BAYNTUN, second and third quarters: Pean, a Bend lozengy argent. In accordance with the custom of his day, Frederick Lindesay, after his first marriage in 1823, used a beautifully engraved book­ plate, consisting of his own Arms impaled with those of his heiress wife and "ensigned" with the Scottish thistle. This book-plate is reproduced above. In the writer's possession is a Church of England Book of Common Prayer, published by the Oxford University Press in 1872, and containing, besides all the usual Church Services, the complete series of Morning and Evening LINDESAY AR:\IORIAL BEARINGS 49 Lessons then in use. The volume (5½ in. x 3¼ in. x 2 in.) has gilt edges, and is bound in covers of finely c~rved Irish bog oak, with, on the front and back, a standing effigy of our Lord holding the scourge with which He cleansed the Temple. On the inside of the cover is the book-plate just referred to, and the book is enclosed for preservation in a leather case. As the Book was published in 1872, it could not have been used by Frederick Lindesay himself; it \Vas probably used by his widovv, Charlotte Lindesay, and the

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1'rrhtritk Jfolrn ~anhJJs 1(tinhtsa!I bog-oak covers may have bound a previous prayer book used by her husband. Frederick (or Fritz) John Sandys Lindesay, who succeeded to Loughry on the death of his father in 1871, also used a finely engraved armorial book-plate, containing no less than eleven different coats of arms. It was evidently designed by his father, as notes applicable thereto are amongst his papers. The eleven coats have been identified as follows: (1) LINDESAY (Gules, a fesse chequee argent and azure, three mullets in chief of the second and a crescent argent in base for difference); (2) MAULEVERER (Sable, three greyhounds in pale courant argent collared or); (3) BERLEY (Gules, on a chevron argent bet\veen three eagles displayed as many crosses-crosslet sable) ; ( 4) S.AND YS (Or, a f esse dancettee bet\veen D 50. THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY three cross-crosslets fitchee gules); (5) COLVILLE (Or, a fesse gules in chief three torteaux); (6) CONYERS (Azure, a manche or); (7) INGRAM (Ermine, on a fesse gules three escallops or); (8) BAYNTUN (Pean, a bend lozengy argent); (9) FULTHORPE (Argent, a cross moline sable); (10) HODGKINSON (Or, a cross quarter pierced five cinquefoils vert); (11) WILBERFOSSE (Argent, an eagle displayed sable). The shield is surmounted by two crests, viz., LINDESAY: A swan proper standing with wings closed; and SANDYS: A griffin segreant per fesse or and gules. These two crests were erected by Fritz Lindesay on the posts of the Loughry entrance gates. Irreverent local inhabitants called them the "duck and the div'l." The Lindesay and Mauleverer arms Fritz inherited fro!Il his father, the Mauleverer coming to him through the marriage of his grandfather, Robert Lindesay, with Elizabeth, co-heiress of Thomas Mauleverer. The Berley, Colville, Conyers, Fulthorpe, Hodgkin­ son and Wilberfosse arms are also Mauleverer quarterings, as described on page 184 of the article entitled: "Ingleby Arncliffe," in the Yorkshire Archceological f ournal, previously quoted, whilst the two remaining coats of Bayntun and Sandys were derived fro!Il his mother, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Edwin Bayntun­ Sandys, Bt. It should be stated, however, that in footnote 2 on p. 184 of the article above-mentioned, the right of the Mauleverers to quarter the coat "Argent, a cross moline sable" for Fulthorpe is questioned for the reason given. All the sons of Frederick Lindesay by his first wife having died childless, the Bayntun and Sandys arms became extinct so far as the Lindesays are concerned. The Lindesay and Mauleverer arms go to the male de~cendants of Robert Lindesay bearing the name of Lindesay, as also presumably do the remaining coats of arms derived from the Mauleverers of Arncliffe and included in the heraldic book­ plate of F. J. S. Lindesay. A photographic reproduction of this book-plate is given on page 49. Under this heading, though not strictly heraldi:: reference may be made to the Lindsay tartan or plaid. The Lindsays are not of the Highland Clans, but they possess a tartan or plaid, which is shown on page 34 of The Scottish Clans and their Tartans, fifth edition, published by W. & A. K. Johnston, of Edinburgh and London. In a Bulletin of the Clan Lindsay Society, issued with the Report of the Annual 1'1eeting of 25th October, 1947, a reference is made to the Lindsay Tartan and to the couplet: "A Lindsay with green Should never be seen." LINDESAY ARMORIAL BEARINGS 51 It is stated that the aversion from green of the Lindsays originated with the battle of Brechin in 1452, when the Lindsays were vanquished by the Royalist forces. On this occasion the dress of the Clan Lindsay was of green, which was henceforth considered an unlucky colour in the Clan. It is further stated that the Lindsay tartan at the present date has a preponderance of red or magenta. In the book above mentioned, the tartan is shown to consist of scarlet squares on a background of dark and light green, the scarlet squares being crossed both ways by light double lines of dark green. The battle of Brechin, and the superstition that green is an unlucky colour for the Lindsays, together with the couplet given above, are fully described in Vol. I, pp. 134-139, of Lord Lindsay's Lives. CHARLOTTE LINDESAY (1832-1919) Charlotte Lindesay was born in Dublin on 7th August, 1832. According to information derived personally from my wife, her father, Frederick Lindesay, met her mother as a young girl of 24 in the house of the Archbishop of Dublin, where he was staying as guest. It is apparent, from old letters in the writer's possession, that shortly before the marriage took place, inquiries on the part of the Lindesays were directed towards ascertaining the family ante­ cedents of the prospective bride. To answer these in detail, recourse was had to older members of her family, especially to her Aunt Lucy, wife of the Rev. Valentine Pole Griffith. There may possibly have been a natural objection to a second marriage on the part of the children of Frederick Lindesay by his first wife, but as regards Frederick Lindesay himself I think it probable that the inquiries were prompted as much by his taste for antiquarian and genealogical research as by other considerations. Be that as it may, replies received from Mrs. Griffith and others proved conclusively that Charlotte's descent on both sides of the house was, in point of birth and antiquity, not inferior to that of her future husband. Her father was Henry Charles Boyle MacMurrough Murphy, \vhose ancestors for several generations were Protestant clergy of the , in communion then as now with the Church of England. ·He died 24th February, 1878. _Her grandfather, the Rev. Samuel Murphy, was Rector of Offiane, Diocese of Ossory, and he was Chaplain to the second Duke of . His mother was Helena, daughter of Edward and Helena Ryan, the latter nee de la Poire, a lady of Huguenot descent with French and Dutch aristo­ cratic connections, and a cousin of the Prime Minister of France. Edward Ryan, her husband, was a country gentleman of wealth and position, whose estate was near London. He was closely related 52. THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY to noble families, including those of the Duke of Leinster, the and others. A portrait of Mrs. Ryan now in the possession of the writer's daughter, Eveleen Haskell, of 3482 Holton Avenue, Montreal, shows her to have been a very beautiful woman, and the tradition is that she was "as good as she was beautiful." A brother of the Rev. Samuel Murphy, viz., the Rev. John Murphy, great-uncle of Charlotte Lindesay, ,vas entrusted by Lord Moira, whose Chaplain he was, witl1 the care of the celebrated "Pamela" FitzGerald, wife of Lord Edward FitzGerald, who died on 4th June, 1798, from wounds received when resisting arrest on a charge of treason. John Murphy brought Pamela FitzGerald and her two young daughters safely from Ireland to Lord Moira's house in London. In gratitude for this service, she presented him with a miniature portrait of herself, painted on ivory and framed in gold. Amongst other letters referred to above, is a note, dated 16th September, 1886, and signed by J. H. Glascott, of the Ulster Office. He wrote: " I know all about the pedigree of the very ancient and honour­ able family or rather sept of Murphy of Tubberlimina and Oulart­ leigh, Co. Wexford. They are not Madvlurrough Murphy but O)Morchoe of the Clan MacMurrogh. O'Morchoe would be pronounced Murphy in English, and they are quite a distinct race from all the other various lines of Murphy in Ireland. They descended from Murrough na Gooidhal, brother of Dermot MacMurrogh, King of Leinster, 1170, and son of Dorrough MacMurrogh, King of Leinster, who was slain by the. Danes of Dublin, who was the son of Murrogh, King of Leinster, from whom the tribe took their tribe-name of MacMurrogh." He offered to provide a full pedigree of the family showing the descent from the Kings of Leinster, and he stated that "there is not a better proved pedigree on record." Charlotte Lindesay's mother was Susan (born 12th May, 1794> died 1st July, 1851), the fifth daughter of John , M.D. (born 1754), of Maryborough, Queen's County, descended from an ancient Kentish family of the thirteenth century, presumed to be originally Jewish from Lombardy, but since then Christian and having no modern alliances with Je\vish families. Her uncle was Arthur Jacob> M.D. (born 13th June, 1790, died 21st September, 1874), a distinguished physician and one of the founders of the Royal College of Surgeons, Dublin. As an anatomist he discovered the membrane in the human eye, which is called after him the Membrana Jacobi. His son, Dr. Arthur Hamilton Jacob of Dublin, issued, by subscrip­ tion, in 1875, a History of the Families of Jacob from A.D. 1275 to 1875. Of this History, John H. Glascott, J.P., of Killowen (the CHARLOTTE LINDESAY (1832-1919) 53 genealogist described above as of the Ulster Office) was . joint compiler. He was a distant relative of the Jacob family. This work gives the maternal ancestry of Charlotte Lindesay, and records that her grandfather, Dr. Jacob of Mary borough, married Grace Alley, w·ho was the granddaughter of the Rev. Peter Alley, Rector of Donoughmore and the great-great-granddaughter of the Right Rev. William Alley, Bishop of Exeter in 1560; so that through her mother Charlotte Lindesay was the great-great-great­ granddaughter of the Bishop (see pp. 60 and 61 of the Jacob History . cited above). Of the English branch of the family of Jacob, Brigadier-General John Jacob, of the Sind Horse (1812-58), after ·whom was named the Indian town of Jacobabad, the Right Rev. Edgar Jacob (1844-1920), Bishop of St. Albans from 1903 to 1919, and Field-Marshal Claud Jacob, G.C.B., etc., were distinguished members. Also it may be mentioned that the Murphy papers show a connection with the family of Lord Chief Justice Singleton, whose sister married Judge Lindesay of Loughry. Amongst the of the Siege of Derry, who, ,vith "Robert Lyndsie," signed the Address to King William and Queen Mary, was another ancestor of Charlotte Lindesay, viz., the Rev. Michael Clenaghan. The "'edding of Frederick Lindesay and Charlotte Murphy took place on 27th November, 1856, and the announcement published in the Dublin Evening Packet of 2nd December, 1856, was as follows: "MARRIAGE IN HIGH LIFE "By special licence on Thursday, the 27th November, in Lower Bagot Street, by the Rev. Valentine Pole Griffith, Rector of Glen­ columbkille, Diocese of , uncle of the bride, Frederick Lindesay of Mountjoy Square, Dublin, and of Loughry, County of Tyrone, Esq., D.L., J.P., to Charlotte MacMurrough Murphy, fourth surviving daughter of Henry Charles Boyle MacMurrough Murphy, Esq., late of Hume Street, Dublin, and granddaughter of the late Rev. Samuel MacMurrough Murphy, private Chaplain to His Grace the late William Robert, second Duke of Leinster, and Rector of Offerlane, Diocese of Ossory, and his wife, Helena Ryan, second cousin and sole heiress of the last Lord Ligonier in whom that title became extinct." The first Lord Ligonier (1678-1770 came of a Huguenot family settled in England. He served throughout Marlborough's campaigns in Flanders (1702-10), and in 1766 he was promoted to be a Field-Marshal in the British Army, and received an Earldom. His monument is in Westminster Abbey, facing the Northern Entrance. A marble bust of him by the celebrated French sculptor, ~ -~~";._ jj;;-$&~;.;+t■ Iii ;.:...,.. ~_• 3f#iii I 'i-c"'--™4 I IL 1;.1,;L.,,n;,J ~ .,- ,..,.. :s - ;' ,· ;' . a ...► z ; c up £€5 p I pq __ a•::__ xq_c '-f

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GROUP PHOTOGRAPH OF THE LINDESA Y FAMILY. Left to Right (at back): T. JERVIS, FRITZ LrnnEsA Y, F1tEUE1ucK L1xn:~sAY, Jo~HUA LINDESAY, EnwARD BEATTY; (in front): T. L. fERVIs, WILFRED LINDESAY, HELENA JERv1s, Er-.nn:LINE LrNIJESAY, CHARLOTTE LrNDESAY, CRAWFORD L1NDESAY, KATE BEATTY AND CHILD, FLORA LINDESAY. CHARLOTTE LINDESAY (1832-1919) 55 L. F. Roubiliac, is at Windsor Castle, and a terra cotta model of this bust was purchased by the National Portrait Gallery in February, 1924. He died on 28th April, 1770, aged 92. A life­ size equestrian portrait of him by Sir Joshua Reynolds was presented to the National Gallery by King William IV in 1836. It is now in the Tate Gallery. Charlotte Lindesay was devoted to her husband, and, possessing brilliant social accomplishments, she made an ideal hostess at Loughry. She was intensely musical, had a fine soprano voice, and was an excellent vocalist, pianist and harpist. Also she became the greatly beloved mother of a large family of four surviving sons and three daughters, all of whom did well in after life and were a credit to the careful religious home-training they received. Some idea of the. domestic life of Frederick Lindesay and his second wife may be gathered from the accompanying reproduction of a quaint old photograph taken in the early days o~ photography about the year 1866. This shows the aged owner of Loughry standing by the front door of the house surrounded by the members of his family then resident or guests. Underneath the picture are the names of those represented, and through the window may be seen the nurse with the youngest child in arms. After the death of Frederick Lindesay in 1871, his estate was "thrown into Chancery," and a lawsuit followed. Into the details of this litigation it is not necessary to enter. Suffice it to state that the case was settled by agreement between .the parties, and under the legal decision arrived at Charlotte Lindesay, the widow, received an annuity and each of the seven children was allotted a sum of money to provide for maintenance and education. With only slender means but with splendid courage, Charlotte Lindesay lived first ,vith her young family at Dundrum, Co. Dublin, and then at Duhvich, where her second son, Crawford, was educated at the well-known College. After the ordination in 1886 of her eldest son, Wilfred, the family moved to make a home for him during his first curacy at St. Athanasius, Kirkdale, Liverpool (1886-1892). The two youngest sons, Victor and Robert, entered the Manchester Grammar School. When Wilfred was appointed to his second curacy at St. Stephen's, \Vandsworth (1892-1894), the family again moved to make a home for him. After serving a third curacy at St. Nicholas', Rochester (1894-97), Wilfred became Rector of St. Cuthbert's, Bedford, and his mother kept house for him there until his death in 1907. · It goes without saying that all her children were devoted to their mother, or "Mudsy," as she was affectionately called. In the 56 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY rearing of her young family, Charlotte Lindesay was greatly helped by her sister-in-law, Mary Anne, knov.rn as "Tante," the ,vido,v of her brother, Henry de la Poire MacMurrough Murphy. She was a daughter of Richard Partridge of Bombay, ,vas born 28th January, 1845, and married 17th January, 1865, at the age of 20. She died on the 15th December, 1925, at the age of 80. Nor must be forgotten the faithful services of an old nurse, Maria Mansfield, born 20th February, 1813, who had been nurse not only to the Lindesay family but also to the family of Mrs.

MARIA MAXSFIELD (1813-1900) Lindesay's mother over a period of sixty years. She was called "Obie," and was dearly loved by all the children. She spent her last days with Wilfred Lindesay and his mother at St. Cuthbert' s Rectory, Bedford, where she died on 7th March, 1900, at the age of 87. Various characteristic expressions of hers have come down in the family, as, for instance: ''Master Wilfred, or Master Craw­ ford, I see ye're blue-mouldy for a whippin' !"-a threat rarely if ever carried out. When staying in my own home she became ill. My wife had given her the best spare room in the house, but when the local R.C. priest arrived her first words to him were: "Ye CHARLOTTE LINDESAY (1832-1919) 57 know, Sir, I'm only a servant in this house," to which he at once replied and truly: "And a very good servant too." A portrait of this dear old friend and servant of the Lindesay family is given on page 56. Other faithful servants of the Lindesay family at Loughry in­ cluded Thomas Weir, butler; James Ferguson, coachman, \vho afterwards entered the service of Lord Castle Stewart; and Margaret Barker, who occupied the Gate House at the entrance to the Park from Cookstown. She valued greatly a gold ring set with pearls and ruby, which was given to her by a sister of Frederick Lindesay, Fanny, wife of Colonel O'Neill. This ring she sent to my sister­ in-law, Flora Kenny, who set great store by it, and wished it to be given t0 one of the family after she was gone. So it came to my wife, and it is now in the possession of our daughter, with a note of its history. A some\vhat curious characteristic of the Lindesay family was their habit of inventing special words, the meaning of which was known only to intimate relatives. Thus, "ging" denoted gladness, ''parasfooschere'' anything unreal, ''dirtality'' a special kind of affec­ tation or "show-off," and "petaty" meant nearly or almost. The fact is mentioned, because it seems probable that the habit may be more or less peculiar to Scottish families. At any rate, it is on record that the family of the great Liberal statesman, W. E. Gladstone, had similarly a special vocabulary known only amongst the1nselves. " T ollaloos " was the private Lindesay name for men's trousers, and when on their holiday in France, Charlotte Lindesay, observing a passing Frenchman wearing an extraordinary specimen of this garment, said to her daughters, knowing that, if overheard, she would not be understood : " Will you look at those ' tollaloos ' ?" It happened that with them was a German girl friend, who, always wanting to perfect her English, asked innocently enough: " U nd wass ist tollaloos? ", which sent the girls into fits of laughter before explaining. On another occasion the same German girl entering a shop to inquire the price of an article found it too high, and, on leaving, said to the smiling and obsequious salesman: "No, no, I buy not. You are a very dear man!" Large families were customary in the early years under review, and the family of Charlotte Lindesay was no exception to the rule. She had two brothers and five sisters. Of her brothers, the elder, William MacMurrough Murphy, died unmarried in India. He was killed in action at the battle of Chilian\\ralla, which was fought on 13th January, 1849, during the Second Sikh War. The other 58 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY brother, Henry de la Poire MacMurrough Murphy (or Uncle Harry), born 28th April, 1828, died childless in Dublin, 6th April, 1871, aged nearly 43 years. Of the five sisters, Helena Elizabeth, the eldest, born 3rd September, 1824, married, 1st September, 1851, Thomas, fourth son of Sir John M. Jervis-White-Jervis, 1st Bt., of Bally Ellis, Co. Wexford. Their only child, Thomas Lindesay Jervis-White-Jervis, born 20th June, 1852, was H.M. Consul at Ajaccio, Corsica, where his mother kept house for him until his death, 1st January, 1885, aged 32. He was unmarried. His father, Thomas Jervis, was born 1st January, 1797, and died 15th September, 1879. Helena Jervis, his widow, died at St. Cuthbert's Rectory, Bedford, on the 29th April, 1905, at the age of 80. Two sisters, Georgina (born 3rd November, 1828; died 27th February, 1889) and Henrietta (or Lilly), born 20th January, 1838-a talented musician-died unmarried. Georgina spent much time at the British Museum in genealogical research, resulting in her compilation of a long pedigree of the MacMurrough Murphy family, which, as already indicated, traced back to the Kings of Leinster. The "Fesse sable, charged with three garbs or," which are "over all" on the MacMurrough Murphy shield, are said to be the original Arms of the Kings of Leinster. Unfortunately this interesting pedigree was sent on loan to an American of the name of Murphy in the United ~tates, and he did not return it. Susan, another sister (born 10th January, 1830; died 8th April, 1911), married in 1858 at Satara, Bombay Presidency, India, her cousin, Arthur Jacob, C.E., who became Borough Engineer for Salford, Lancashire. Two of her daughters survive, viz., Mrs. Tomlinson, Lindow Lodge, vVilmslow, Cheshire, and Mrs. Darling­ ton, 10 11ulgrave Terrace, Kingstown, Dublin. Other daughters ,vere : Susan Alexandra Jacob (b. 11 March, 1869; d. 19 Nov., 1919) and Louisa Kate Jacob (b. 19 July, 1871; d. 24 February, 1949). Charlotte's youngest sister, Kate Selina, born 4th July, 1835, married> 16th Nove1nber, 1865, Edward Beatty, of Heathfield, Co. Wexford (born 27th February, 1842; died 14th January, 1918). To a branch of this family belonged Admiral . Ed,vard and Kate Beatty, had three children: Letitia Eva Geraldine (born 12th March, 1867; died 15th May, 1872), Frederica Charlotte Elizabeth (born 5th January, 1869; died unmarried, 25th August, 1913), and Horace Ed,vard Beatty (bcrn 17th January, 1876, ,vho married, 20th January, 1914, Mary Ro,ve). He ,vas in the Mercantile Marine Service, and died without issue 16th ·March, 1935. His widow, of 10 Aigburth Hall A venue, Liverpool, 19, survives. CHARLOTTE LINDESAY (1832-1919) 59 During her later years Charlotte Lindesay and other members of her family suffered trouble and annoyance over a lawsuit that arose out of the provisions of her mother's will, relating to landed property at Donoughmore, Co. Tipperary. The proceedings dragged on for about ten years. Eventually, after the death of the plaintiff's solicitor, a compromise was effected. The case was known as Lindesay v. Darlington, and the final judgment was given by the Master of the Rolls on 13th December, 1916, in the High Court of Justice, Dublin (Record 1916-77). The interest of Charlotte Lindesay in the estate was bequeathed to my wife; and in 1942 the interests of all the parties were bought out under compulsory Irish legislation, and my wife's share was reinvested in England. In 1907, after the death of her eldest son at St. Cuthbert's Rectory, Bedford, and the departure for Canada in the spring of that year of her daughter, Emmeline Godfrey and young children, Mrs. Lindesay, visiting in turn her other children in England, had rooms in Bedford. In 1916, when Frederick Godfrey was placed by his father at Rossall School, his mother went over from Canada to England, and stayed for two years with her mother, making at the same time a home for her son during his holidays when he was from fourteen to sixteen years of age. Also her elder son, Valentine, then a young Canadian Naval Officer serving at sea during the war of 1914-18, spent short leaves with his mother and grandmother. Before returning to Canada in 1918, my wife ,vas able to make: suitable arrangements for the care of her aged mother by Miss E. L. Smith, of 13 Waterloo Road, Bedford. Miss Smith proved to be a most devoted friend, and the last few months of Charlotte Lindesay' s life were comfortable and happy. She passed away in Bedford on 29th July, 1919, aged nearly 87.

DISPOSAL OF THE LOUGHRY MANOR HOUSE AND DEMESNE After the death of Joshua Lindesay in 1893, the Manor House and Park ,vere acquired by the late Mr. J. W. Fle:ning, 0£ Cooks­ to,vn. Shortly after,vards a fire broke out in the old mansion, and the whole of the top storey, including the b~drcc~n of Judge Lindesay, the two nurseries and the servants' quarters, were completely destroyed. i\s already stated in the introduction en page 15, the house and park were acquired by the Government cf Northern Ireland for the purposes of the Ulster Dairy School. The following statement shows how the old rooms were adapted to suit the requirements of the School : 60 THE LI:\"DESAYS OF LOUGHRY

RooMs AT LouGHRY MANOR Rom,{s IN THE DAIRY ScHooL Library - Office. Dining Room Sewing Room. Small Drawing Room - Superintendent's Room. Large Drawing Room - School Room. Bedroom, "Blue Room" Staff Sitting Room. Bedroom with Dressing Room - Small Dormitory. Yellow Room Superintendent's Room. '' Bachelors' Walk '' (six rooms) Teachers' Wing. Banqueting Hall, with Musicians' Gallery and Turret at one end Dormitory.

DESCRIPTION OF THE LOUGHRY PARK All visitors to Loughry are impressed by its natural beauties. The mansion is surrounded by a park of 365 acres, intersected by a narro\v river flowing, ,vi th a \Vaterf all, close to the house. Near

GIAXTS' GRAYE this spot the river is cros~ed by an old wooden footbridge, overgrown \vith creepers and climbing plants. The river winds through a deep ravine, tree- and fern-clad on both sides. On one of its banks is the traditional "Banshee Rock," and on the ether is the famous "Wishing Well." The park contains also supposed Druidical Ruins, dating back approximately to 2000 years B.c., and kno\vn locally as the" Giants' Grave" (see above). The house is approached by three alternative routes, with entrance gates and lodges. The main entrance leads through what was once a fine avenue of beech trees; another follows the river to the road from Cooksto\vn to Tully­ hogue. An old Lindesay prophecy was to the effect that ,vhen the beech trees feil, the Lindesays ,vould cease from Loughry. The [Photo by T. McClelland, Cookstown WATERFALL IN LOUGHRY PARK

[Photo by A. Charles, Cookstown B.-\CK VIE w OF THE :\:L\~OR Hm;sE THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY prophecy seems to have been fulfilled. Apropos of this prophecy, my wife told me of an ancient Scottish curse, applicable to both the Lindsay and Ogilvie families. It was that "every Lindsay shall be poorer than his father, and every Ogilvie dafter than his mither." (See views on page 61 ). And here, by kind permission, I give an article of imaginary •character, written after a visit to her father's old home, by Miss Lindesay, daughter of the late Rev. R. T. M. Lindesay, M.i\., the youngest son of Frederick and Charlotte Lindesay.

LOUGHRY By ELIZABETH KATHARINE LINDESAY Loughry, the ancestral home of the Lindesays, stands on fair ground . .Sheltered by beech woods, the ancient stone house looks out towards rolling hills, while a near-by stream babbles continuous music. Far clown the valley its waters(brushed by low-dipping tree branches)murmur -0f days gone by when sound of wheels was heard along the curving · drive, crack of whip, clop of horses' hoofs; when the air was vibrant with children's laughter, or merry greeting. Now no more we hear them; yet their memory lingers lovingly,re-enacting scenes from the past. Who is this crinolined figure stepping out daintily from the doorway? Again, who is this bewigged, courtly gentleman turning and bowing in stately fashion? There is a pawing of the gravel, a tossing of heads, a pair of restive horses: the groom has difficulty in holding one while ~ young girl mounts from the high stone step. Away they go, galloping down the drive, and echo of a cheery "Good-bye" fades into the mist of years. Hand in hand, there are two who wander down to the Wishing Well. Solemnly each kneels before the fairy shrine; each gently stirs the water, then, holding the ancient spoon, drinks while framing an unspoken wish of the heart. Silently they glide away together into the ·shadow of the trees : their footfalls are mysteriously silent-ah, a twig snaps under the feet of one; she turns laughingly to her companion­ ·and the mossy banks and twinkling stream below are fit setting for ·Romance. A cold, crisp winter's morning, and little hands are gathering snow­ ,drops along those wooded ways overhanging the stream. Nurse holds ·on firmly to one ~and-those banks are treacherous to eager feet. Again, a balmy day of spring: tender green of the trees shows a ·fi]my haze melting into the distance; and there, all around, bluebells etherealise the earth. A basket stands close by, filled with blooms. Sunlight and shadow chase across the water: farther down a fisher­ ·man stands patiently waiting in the stillness. Opposite him the banshee rock shows smooth and green. When this turns brown ( so legend tells) ::i.11 hearts are sad and fearsome, for it is a portent of death, the death of LOUGHRY, BY ELIZABETH LINDESAY 63· the head of the house. Then the weird wail of the banshee is heard in lamentation; the old house with its drawn blinds looks a melancholy spectacle; the rain drips from the trees and patters mournfully on fallen leaves. And so it has come to pass that the dear presence has gone from our midst; the banshee rock has turned a dull brown; the lamentable cry of the banshee herself is heard. And all a-down the drive the solemn, slow procession winds with its precious burden : there, in that dim vault surrounded by a circle of cypresses, he lies among his forebears. Heads are bared, tears shed, for is he not greatly beloved? So the cycles come and go, and the loved house shelters the memories of its sorrows and its joys. . . . There, along that corridor (the Bachelors' Walk) fair sons sleep. Beyond this wing of the house the long Banqueting Hall with its minstrels' gallery and old oak beams lends an air of joyousness, for is it not here where so many happy hours have sped by, where dancing and laughter have re-echoed among the rafters? Here, twice a year, tenants have come to enjoy a feast, to play and make merry. The old hall holds the memory of joyous faces, holly and mistletoe, and many a romp. There flits before the mind's eye the scene of a twenty-first birthday celebration. That young officer is making a speech in answer to the universal congratulations. There is a merry twinkle in those blue eyes; yes, he is enjoying life while he may. Proudly his parents watch him, then they scan the faces of their many guests. There will be a Ball to-night. The lawns will be lit up with many coloured lanterns swinging over the moonlit ground. And -there will be a few heartburnings to-night, for even in masquerade that tall and lithe figure will stand out supreme, those blue eyes bewitch more than one fair maiden. . . . Lights in all the windows, and the stables full to-night. A wedding: watch; the bride prepares to cut the cake. How sweet she looks. On one arm is hooked the end of the long veil-an heirloom. Smiling, she looks up at her groom. Her eyes are black as sloes, her hair ebon, hint of a dimple in her chin, and long tapered fingers grasping the silver knife. Ah, he must help with the cutting of that cake; his hand closes over_ hers. Friends throng round the bridal couple: the far end of the huge hall is empty but for the long tables of refreshments. Now overhead is heard again the pit-pat of little feet, for over the Banqueting Hall are the nurseries. A rocking-horse stands waiting for a sturdy-limbed child: he springs on to it, and lo, the horse goes merrily, higher and higher. A "whoop," a tugging of the reins, and his small sister cries out, isn't it her turn? In the far corner another little one crouches, in imitation of a lion. Downstairs, in her pretty boudoir looking down to the rushing water of the weir, is seated the lady of the house. There is embroidery by her side and she is choosing her shade of silk : the rich brocade of her gown makes happy contrast to the dove-grey plush chair on which she sits. In the large drawing-room overlooking the park a serving maid is opening a window; outside the sun shines, .gleaming on the brightly , 64 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY coloured herbaceous border beneath. Later, the room will be filled with flowers, will be gay with laughing guests. Down one more flight of the old oak stairs to the ground floor, and in the library, seated at his desk, the master of the house looks up with thoughtful countenance. Yes, he inherits the oval-shaped face of the Lindesays. His powdered hair and strong, dark brows lend a striking air. The white cravat and plum-coloured coat convey sense of warmth to the dark-toned background. Now bending over the page he continues writing-a neat hand, and he dips his quill pen carefully into the old silver ink-stand. The walls of the room are lined with books in warm-coloured bindings, well worn and treasured company. In the dining-room, where forebears look down benevolently from their frames, a lackey pauses to survey his handiwork; the table glistens with glass and spotless napery. Presently the deep-sounding gong summons the family to lunch. Outside, the old ash tree spreads a noonday shade on the grass; everywhere is an air of serenity, of peace. Dean Swift's summer-house is cool and refreshing inside; secluded, yet companionable; and butterflies bask in the sun, then chase each other to the shrubbery, whence come exotic scents. An ancient yew hard by makes dark and impenetrable patch of shade. Bees hasten from flower to flower, and faint whirr of insects is perceptible. . . . The old hound, stretched out, head resting on paws, sleeps, though with an ear ever ready for the sound of his adored master's voice. Now a more recent scene. A picnic under the trees down by the stream; splash of a pebble thrown into the water, a child's delighted chuckle, a romp in and out of those caves fashioned so invitingly by nature. A mimic warfare; stalking Red Indians from behind the great tree boles. A tartan rug ( of the Lindsay plaid) thrown invitingly upon the ground-it is too hot to romp any more. Following up the stream toward the boat-house the orchard comes into view, its trees laden with spoil: on the grass beneath fallen fruit is a feast for wasps. The Vinery, that famous store of grapes, waxes hotter still, and the heavy clusters turn a deeper hue. . . . Quacking of ducks, a gentle splash and they are sailing on the water, for a boat drifts by lazily, its occupants cooling their fingers in the stream. Cows in the near-by field are swishing their tails, for the flies are bothersome. . . . What is this disturbance among the poultry? Why, the pure white peacock has ~trutted round to those insignificant creatures who should be filled with admiration of him ! Spreading his tail, he plumes himself; who can be more wonderful than he? For he is unique; they say there are none like him in the British Isles. Yet those stupid fowls just scratch away and cackle, telling him that they have laid eggs! What does that matter? He trails away in disgust to the front of the house, through which he knows by experience he will be watched and duly admired. Even now he can just see the white head of that kind friend who talks to him in a low, quiet voice; and those younger, gayer folk who often induce him to show off to visitors-for what better LOUGHRY, BY ELIZABETH LlNDESAY 65 setting could he have than this lawn, these dark trees as background? But there is one up there in the house of whom he is jealous, peacock though he is; one whose br~ght uniform attracts too much attention. Not only that; this one mimics him, this young giant who twirls his moustache and thinks himself such a dandy ! Ah, but days will come when all long for the sight of that gay coat, the sound of that musical voice; when that virile young body will lie still upon the battlefield, but the brave heart have earned its repose .... One last picture. A benign, elderly gentleman, with broad, intellectual forehead and bright blue eyes, stands gazing fondly at the young children playing at his feet. His dainty little wife, her arm hooked affectionately in his, is asking him a question. The white makes him look venerable, and perhaps more like a grandfather than a father to these young folk. Yet his heart is not old : he loves to watch them at their play, and nothing is too small to show or tell him, nothing unimportant in his eyes. Eyes: yes; only two of them have his, those of the others being hazel or brown. But more than two of them have reddish, auburn hair, proclaiming their Scottish ancestry. Ah, happy little group! Not for long will the children enjoy this playground; out into the world they must go, and leave their heritage to others; bitter thought, happily they know nought of it now. And some day they will return : once more tread the well-worn paths, see the shimmer of the stream at their feet, be brushed gently by the branches of those trees that have lived so long and seen so much. For seasons come and go, and winds sweep over the cornfields yonder, sweep over the tomb of that giant who sleeps so quietly in his ancient grave. . . . The walnut trees in the park, the chestnuts, yield their fruit: up the far drive the golden flowers of the tulip tree bloom year by year; delicate fern fronds bestrew the banks, beech husks carpet the ground; by and by, hush of winter broods o'er the scene. Inside are bright log fires, dark black peat with scent of the forests of long ago. Sparks leap up playfully in the grate-but hist, those sparks have a· menacing aspect, for twice they have flashed through the dear old house, twice flames have roared and crackled through the woodwork, and memories of the darksome ashes are not to be borne. Instead, a fragrance of dignity and beauty fills the air of remembrance; yet withal a simplicity of life freed from the shackles of insincerity, and a familiarity with vast spaces, a comn1uning with nature. When all is gone this fragrance will remain and be enfolded within the essence of woods and stream, brooding in unruffled calm. . . And Time shall be discounted, for what was shall be for ever, shall live jn spirit beyond the cori.fines of a limited sphere of reckoning. So Loughry, the well-beloved home, shall linger still and shall never die in the heart5 of those whose heredity proclaims their love and veneration for it. Also under this heading is given a poem ,vritten by my late wife, Emmeline Stuart Godfrey, daughter of Frederick and Charlottr: E 66 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Lindesay. Found arr1ongst her papers, the verses were written in early girlhood; and they are now printed as showing what a deep and lasting impression the beauty of the natural surroundings of Loughry made upon a child who left the old home at the age of ten not to revisit it until late in life.

LINES ON LOUGHRY By EMMELINE STUART LINDESAY I can see the dear old homestead Peeking out among the trees, While, above, the Lindesay banner Bravely flutters in the breeze. Once again with dear companions, Running in the meadows gay, I can hear our shouts of laught~r Ringing thro' the summer's day. Son1etimes wreathing woodland flowers Into garlands for the swing, With our hearts as glad and lightsome As the bird upon the wing.

Sometimes culling fragrant blossoms From the wood, the stream beside, Dropping them from weary fingers, Sauntering home at eventide.

Boating on the shadowy river In the summer evenings long, To the sweet flutina's music Chanting Moore's Canadian song.

Thus we rowed past ash and hazel Where the timid lapwing drank, Gliding to the rhythmic measure Into lovely "Fairy Bank."

And the grave where sleep the giants In the dewy pasture land, Haunted by the weird traditions Childhood did not understand.

And the great rock in the woodland, Where the Banshee1 wailed and cried, When the stricken Laird of Loughry In his neighbouring mansion died. 1 See the reference to the Banshee on p. 21 of this book. LI?\'ES ON LOUGHRY 67 Formed with taste a rural bower Overlooked the Banshee's home, Far beneath there rolled the river, Calm and still, or white with foam.

Many a day, the guests they gather In the Banshee's rustic bower, Laughter, feasting, song and story While away the festive hour. Once when they had all departed, Lingered one, to be alone; Golden eventide was falling, And the birds to rest were flown. Then a sigh of peace escaped her : " Oh, how fair my husband's home r Here for life-time ,vould I rest me, N ever, never more to roam. '' Thus entranc'd with nature's beauty Did she hear the Banshee wail? Was there no foreboding shadow That would make the spirit fail? One short month, we children gather In the rural bower once more. \V atching for the slow procession And the burden that it bore. Through the trees it came, we saw it. Saw the funeral dark and grim, And the mourners in their sorrow And the hearse that carried him.

Not again-ah! Not for ever Shall we see that early home, But in dreams I hear the river Rippling low or flecked with foam.

And in thought I cull the flowers Where the velvet wood-moss lies, :See in visions Rock and Bower, Where the lonely Banshee cries.

Wander through deserted chambers, Round the nurseries, up the stair, Recollecting forms and faces That can never meet me there. 68 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Yet we know a home is waiting In the eternal Fatherland, Where we shall be reunited Hand again be clasped in hand. There to rest as on an ocean Of exhaustless, boundless love­ "One whole family in Heaven " In the changeless home above. DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY In Appendices II and III, on pages 101-107, is given a list of the descendants of Frederick Lindesay, the eighth and last married owner of Loughry, together with the dates of births, marriages and deaths so far as it has been possible to ascertain them. In addition to the seven children whose records are given in Appendix II, Frederick Lindesay, by his first wife, had two other children, both of whom died in infancy: Edwin Lindesay, died 1827, and Elizabet..li Adelaide Lindesay, died 1834. Appendix IV gives the descendants of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay, youngest son of Robert and Jane Lindesay. That "boys will be boys" was as evident one hundred years ago as it is now. Two, if not three, of Frederick Lindesay's sons by his first wife were educated at the Tarvin Hall School, near Chester, under Dr. Brindley as Principal. Some of the "11onthly Letters:> written by the boys to their father, and preserved by him, make interesting reading. These letters, notably by Thomas Edward and Joshua, are in a copper-plate hand, faultlessly expressed and evidently written under ·the direction of the Principal to impress parents with the excellence of the school training. Other letters in the boys' natural handwriting (and spelling), and with candid not always favourable criticisms of the masters, are of more human interest. It is noteworthy that one of these letters, ,vritten in 1847, mentions that during the holidays gas works had been installed at the school, and that the new light was greatly superior to that of the old lamps. was then, as now, the favourite game, and one of the boys tells his father of a certain "backstop" who persistently called out "Well blocked," when the boy batting thus saved his wicket. But one ball passed through and hit the backstop in the stomach, whereat all the boys called out "Well blocked," in rebuke of his patronising self-conceit. A letter from T. E. Lindesay, dated 14th October, 1848, tells of the outbreak of cholera, saying that the disease had not come nearer than Edinburgh, where it had been rather bad. The headmaster had forbidden all fruit from being sent to the boys by their friends. DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY 69 Another letter, dated 2nd June, 1851, mentions that about thirty of the boys will join the excursion to London to visit the Great Exhibition, Mr. Wylde's Monster Globe of the Earth, the Tower of London, Westminster Abbey and a few other places of interest, adding the rather unctuous sentence, certainly not the natural expression of a schoolboy : "No doubt much instruction, as well as entertainment, will result from the visit." A letter from Joshua, dated 30th March, 1850, describes a visit of the school to see the Britannia Tubular Suspension Bridge over the Menai Straits. The boys lunched in the Tube and "cheered Mr. Stephenson for his success in completing such a wonderful undertaking." The Stephenson thus referred to was Robert (1803- 1859), son of George Stephenson (1781-1848) of railway engine fame. He constructed many other notable railway bridges, including the Victoria Tubular Bridge over the St. Lawrence River at Montreal. He was M.P. for Whitby from 1847 until his death in 1859. · Of the four sons of Frederick Lindesay by his first wife, all served either in Army or Militia regiments. Robert, the eldest son, served in the 30th Regiment, and was subsequently Captain in the Royal Tyrone Fusiliers. FREDERICK LINDESAY, or "Fritz" as he was generally called, the ninth owner of Loughry, was D .L. and J.P. for the County of Tyrone. He had served as Major in the 3rd Dragoon Guards. Amongst papers that have come into my possession the following letter from Fritz to his father shows how an Army officer at that time was engaged during. his leave:

26th October, 1865. My dear Father, I am dining here to-night with Lord Roden at Tollymore Park, and to-morrow go to pay a visit to a friend at . I go on the next day to Belfast and a letter will find me at the Imperial Hotel. I intend going up the Lagan Canal with a small boat of mine into Lough N eagh to Shan es Castle, but will stop at Hillsborough most likely on my way. However don't be surprized if I pop in some day and give you a peep of my ugly "fizz" at Loughry. I must be in Dublin the first week of next month, so it will be before then, but at present I could not say what day. I have had another letter from the Major who wants me to exchange to India, but I do not like to give him a decided answer until I see you about it. I am not going to keep my boat long on , but will send her on to Lough Erne, as I am going next month to Crowe. Lord de Ros, our full Colonel, wants me to see his place, 70 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Old Court, Strangford, but do not think I shall have time. This Park is lovely and reminds me so of Loughry, particularly all the river views. I have just come in from walking with Sir .,Arthur Cotton who made me go look at a very pretty cascade, which has been in its glory from the recent heavy rains. He also showed me a wonderful bridge which he has made across the river, made on wooden chains. I never saw the like before. Believe me, Your very affectionate son, FRITZ. The late Colonel Lowry, who had been a friend of both Fritz and Joshua Lindesay, related the following of the elder brother: "Captain Fritz Lindesay, a young and extremely good-looking officer, spent much of his time in London. He had an allowa:ice from his father, and inherited very expensive tastes. He was no~ very much interested in horses, knew very little about them, and gambling at that time was not one of his vices. Nevertheless the Captain was very much impressed when he dreamt three nights in succession that a horse named ' Hermit ' had won the Derby. The dream coincided with an unexpected windfall in the shape of a legacy of £500. Believing in his dream, he put the entire sum o:i the horse. 'Hermit,' a rank outsider, won the race at 40 to 1,. and the 'unlucky speculator' (Colonel Lowry's words) raked in a fortune.1 The win was his undoing. He changed into a crack Cavalry Regiment, indulged his expensive tastes, which included yachting, to the full, and after a short and extravagant tenancy of Loughry, died, leaving a load of personal debts, as well as a mortgaged estate." Colonel Lawry's recollections agree with the opinion of some of the older servants, who describe the Captain as "wild but no harm in him." Fritz died on 16th October, 1877, at Castle Saunderson, Co. Cavan, the home of his friend, Major Saunderson, afterwards Colonel the Right Hon. Edward James Saunderson, M.P., who was a popular and doughty champion of the cause of Northern Ireland in the controversies aroused bv the introduction of Gladstone's Irish Home Rule Bill. He \Vas a'n earnest Christian, and it is related that Fritz Lindesay, under his influence, died sincerely repentant. I remember reading a speech by Colonel Saunderson, which con­ vulsed the House of Commons with laughter, when he remarked: " I forget whether I recollect." A letter \vritten by Captain , familiarly known as "Obby," of Cahirleske, Callan, Co. Kilkenny, to Charlotte Lindesay, 1 NOTE. Mr. Chaplain's "Hermit" won the D~rby in 1867. The race was run after a fall of snow. DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY 71 from Loughry, on 20th October, 1877, announced the death of Fritz Lindesay on the previous Tuesday (16th October). The following extracts from this letter are interesting not only because they describe the last hours of Fritz, but also because they reveal something of the fine character of the writer and of Edward Saunderson, thF friend in \Vhose house Fritz passed a\vay: "Fritz was 1nost fortunate in breathing his last at the home of such a true Christian. Major Saunderson, from all I have heard, was better than all the clergy in Ireland. He had once been a \vild young man, but has for many years past devoted himself to preparing others for a better world, and being blessed with talent and eloquence he has made wonderful impressions upon all who have come within his reach. He had been at poor Fritz for a long time, and for some months past, since he met with an accident that aln1ost killed him when lifting· a mast out of his yacht, he has really attended to him. I hear it was most beautiful to hear the two towards the end speaking of the change that was about to take place. Fritz expressed himself as perfectly ready to go and to feel confident of salvation through his Saviour's blood, but added that he felt sure that the Almighty would yet spare him for a little to perfect the good work that Saunderson had begun. He felt sure that Saunderson's beautiful prayers were heard and almost at the last said: 'I have seen in letters of gold, written : Thy prayer is heard,' adding: ' Saunderson, that was your prayer for me.' He expressed himself as regretting the life he had led. He desired his funeral to be private and to avoid all unnecessary expense and his remains to be placed next Bob's and exactly over his darling mother, whom he felt sure he was so soon to meet. " Majer Saunderson said he felt it \Vas an honour from God that He had trusted the pcor fello\v to him and sent him to die in his hcuse. His sister, Philippa, \Vife of Captain Knox, \Vas also present. She left a note stating that her "darling beloved brcther" died in her arms at 7 a.m. and that his last \vords \Vere: "Good-night till tc-morro\V. " The third son was Lieutenant TH011As EDWARD LrNDESAY, of the 22nd Bengal Native Infantry. He was, at the age of 25, murdered, \vith brother officers, during the Indian Mutiny, on or about 9th June. 1857. The ring-leader cf the murderers, named Jafir Ali, an influentiJl Zemindar,1 was eventually arrested, convicted and sentenced to death by the High Court of Allahabad, North-West Provinres, India, consisting of Justices Turner and Turnbull. An account of the arrest and conviction ot the murderer taken from the India News and Official Gazette, dated 27th March, 1871, was

1 A Be~gal holder of lan-:l for \vhich he pa·:s revenue to the Government. ~ .. 72 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY contained in a communication to The Titnes of 4th April, 1871, by Frederick Lindesay, father of the murdered officer. The accompanying portrait of this handsome and promising young officer is reproduced from a photograph; and a fa:::simile in oils was kindly given to the writer on 26th April, 1947, by Mrs. Hugh Malcolm, a great-granddaughter of Frederick Lindesay by his first wife.

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T. E. LIXDESAY (1832-1857) JosHUA LINDESAY, the tenth and last occupant of the Loughry Manor House, was at first Major in the 30th Regiment (1st Battalion of the East Lancashire Regiment) and afterwards Colonel of the 3rd Battalion of the East Lancashire Militia. In 1866, as Lieutenant in the 30th Regiment of Foot, he was serving in Canada, and was A.D.C. to Lieut.-General the Hon. James Lindsay, com1nanding H.M. Forces in Canada East. He succeeded his brother in very difficult circumstances, the liabilities of the estate amounting, it is said, to £42,000. His servants, people in the neighbourhood, and Colonel Lowry, the friend of the family, all spoke very highly of him. He tried his utmost to free the property and pay his brother's debts, cutting down all expenses, and living alone ,vith only one man-servant. But the burden was too great DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LIXDESAY for him> and he sank into a state of depression and died unmarried on 1st February, 1893. He was buried at Donaghrisk. It was said locally that when the Lindesay property was sold under the Land Act, the tenants voluntarily added to the arranged price half a year's purchase, for the personal benefit of the Lindesays, a high tribute to the popularity of the family as landlords .. Portraits of Fritz and Joshua Lindesay are given below.

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F. J. s. LI;\DESAY (1828-1877) J. E. C. C. LI'.\'DESAY, (1838-1893)

Of the four sons of Frederick Lindesay's second wife, WILLIA:\! FREDERICK, usually called Wilfred, or more intimately still "Weepy," or "Pips," was educated at Rossall and Merton College, Oxford, for which College he had a life-long loyal attachment. An incident at Rossall was an early indication of the courage which distinguished all the Lindesay family. His school-fellows "dared" him to jump fro1n a high cliff on to the ground many feet below. He accepted the chalienge \vithout hesitation; but the result was an injury to the back which caused long suffering. At Oxford he graduated with the degree of B.A., but never proceeded to take the M.A. He was ordained Deacon in 1886, and Priest in 1888. His curacies 74 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY were at St. Athanasius', Kirkdale, Liverpool; St. Stephen's,. Wandsworth, and St. Nicholas, Rochester. On 21st July, 1897, by no~nination of the Lord Chancellor (the Earl of Halsbury ), he was appointed Rector of St. Cuthbert' s,. Bedford. He excelled in swimming and diving, and he taught many boys to swim, beth at Rochester and Bedford, where he was president cf the Newnham Swimming Club. On one occasion he saved life by diving and bringing out a boy taken with a fit in the Baths. After the death of Joshua Lindesay, he succeeded to the representa­ tion of his family. I-Ie was widely respected and deeply loved by his parishioners. This respect and affection were manifested by the large and representative attendance at his funeral after his death on 14th February, 1907. A long account of his family, character and career appeared in the Bedfordshire Times of 22nd February, 1907, including special reference to his work as Curate amongst parishioners in the poorest quarters of Liverpool and as Chaplain to H.M. Prison at Bedford. In the last-named capacity his ministra­ tions earned warm commendation from the Prison Commissioners. He was an earnest supporter of the work of the Bedford Discharged Prisoners' Aid Society.

ME'.\!ORI.-\L TABLET TO \V. F. LIXDES.-\Y A brass tablet to his memory was subscribed for voluntarily by parishioners, and it is affixed to. the wall of the Vestry in St .. Cuthbert's Church, Bedford ( see illustration). It reads: DESCENDA~TS OF FREDERICK LI~DESAY 75 To the Glory of God and in loving Memory of WILLIA?vl FREDERICK LINDESAY, B.A., of Merton College, Oxford, Rector of this Parish from 21st July, 1897, who, after four years of suffering, patiently endured, entered into rest, 14th February, 1907. Aged 49 years. "What I do thou knowest not now, but thou shalt know hereafter.'" A love for soldiers and a love for boys were special characteristics. His love for soldiers may have partly influenced him in showing kind hospitality to a jobbing gardener calling occasionally at the Rec-

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N ,f:~?I~\• ;ltf~t[:!~t}~ ~~\ic ·:\- ,-: :{ " CAPT:\l); LA:s;E ', tory. He may have represented himself as an " old scldier." .A.t any rate \\7'ilfred dubbed him " Captain Lane," and this photograph sho\VS him standing in the garden at St. Cuthbert' s Rectory, Bedford. Wilfred Lindesay had a warm life-long friendship, from College days at Merton, with Hardinge Frank Giffard, M.A., F.S.A.,1 who

1 Author of a genealogical article, entitled: "Giffard's Jump," read at Bideford, Devon, in 1902, and printed in the Transactions of the Devonshire Association of Sci~nce, Litrature and Ari, 1902, Vol. XXXIV, pp. 648-703. 76 THE LI~DESAYS oi,· LOUGHRY became Private Secretary to his uncle, Lord Chancellor Hals bury, and was subsequently one of H.M. Commissioners in Lunacy. The two friends had much in common, not the least being their interest in genealogical research, both as members, Giffard of one of the oldest English and Lindesay of one of the oldest Scottish families. Wilfred Lindesay and Giffard once accompanied Lord Halsbury on a holiday visit to Ireland, and calling at an ancestral home of the Giffards derived amusement from the fact that in the absence of the occupier they were refused admittance by ari irate house­ keeper in charge, who evidently had suspicions even of the Lord Chancellor of England ! In September, 1897, Wilfred Lindesay, with his friend, Hardin_ge Giffard, paid a visit to the old home at Loughry, interviewing old friends, including Colonel Lowry of Pomeroy and Dr. Charles of Cookstown, as well as James Ferguson and James Macqueen, old and· valued servants and friends of the Lindesay family. Writing to his mother, Wilfred also mentioned the kindness and hospitality of Mr. J. W. Fleming, the then owner of Loughry, who told him that any member of the Lindesay family would always be welcomed by him to Loughry. CRA-NFORD LrNDESAY, or "Toss," on the death of his elder brother, Wilfred, became head of the Loughry Lindesays. Educated at Dulwich, he was trained as a Civil Engineer by his uncle, Arthur Jacob, Borough Engineer for Salford, Lancashire. After service ,vith one of the principal railway companies, he was appointed Assistant Engineer for Cape Town, South Africa, and as such was largely responsible for construction of the Docks. Later he became Borough Engineer for Salisbury, Rhodesia, retiring in 1904 and taking up residence at Harpenden, Herts. He died on 29th May, 1933, at his residence, Grampian Lodge, Horniman Drive, Forest Hill, London, S.E. On page 77 are given the portraits of the t,vo brothers, Wilfred and Crawford Lindesay, who succeeded respectively to representa­ tion of the Lindesays of Loughry, after the death in 1893 of Joshua Lindesay.

TI--IE STORY OF HUGH LINDESAY Cra,vford's son by his first wife was HucH HowARD L1~DESAY. who ca:ne out to Canada and entered the Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph. Entrusted by his father ,vith the guardianship of this son, I ,vas able, through the kindness of my friend and colleague, Dr. Gussow, the Dominion Botanist, to secure a tempor­ ary appointment for him during the long vacation on the staff of the \V. F. LI!\DESAY (1857-1907)

CRAWFORD LI~DESAY (1863-1933) 78 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Dominion Experimental Farm at Ottawa. Under Dr. Giisso\v's rraining he developed into a useful assistant and was for some time an inspector for prevention of the importation of diseased plants. He was an excellent swimmer, having been taught by his uncle, Wilfred Lindesay, at Bed:ord. I recall a warm Sunday in the summer, when staying at our country cottage at Britannia Bay, he went for a long swim on the adjacent Lake Deschenes. As it seemed long before he returned, I became uneasy and set out in a boat to look for him. After some little time searching without success, he suddenly popped up alongside the boat, with a cheery " Hallo, U nde Ernest!" He then continued his swim and landed safely on the other side. · Having only about one more year to complete his course at the Ontario Agricultural College and with excellent prospects for the future, the outbreak of the Great War in 1914 changed all this. He, with two companions, i\lan Beddoes and Philip W oollcombe, enlisted as volunteers in the First Contingent that left Canada for the front. Rising speedily to the rank of Sergeant, he sent ba-:k •cheerful letters which were published in the Otta,va Press. But he lost his life when carrying out a particularly hazardous duty. He was ordered by his Co:nmanding Officer to take an impo:tant message to troops on the other side of a zone swept by the fire c i: the enemy and lighted at night by intermittent flares. Allowed to take one companion, he chose his friend, Richard Reynolds, and the t\VO set out at night to cross the zone, dropping to the ground when the flares were blazing and running through the darkness .as they ceased. When nearly across, Lindesay exclaimed: "Now we'll run for it!" But both soldiers were wounded, Lindesav seriously, Reynolds slightly. "Never mind me, Dick; it's just th~ fortune of war," ·were his last recorded words. His exact fate was never ascertained, though inquiries were set on foot by the Red ·Cross Society; but it is believed that when he was being carried off the field by a comrade both were killed before they could rea:h safety. The two co!Ilpanions mentioned both returned, and Philip Woollcombe eventually received a commission and rose to the rank -of Captain. Hugh Lin2e'.:ay's name appears on the "Roll 0£ Honour" in St. George's Church, Ottawa (see portrait on page 88). During his retirement in England from 1904, Crawford Lindesay was the guide, philosopher and friend of all his near relatives, and by several of them he was chosen as Executor. In this capacity he acted after the death of his elder brother, Wilfred, in 1907, of his mother, Charlotte Lindesay, in 1919, of his aunt, Mary de la Poire Ma:Murrough-Murphy, in 1925, and of his sister, Flora Kenny, in 1930. DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY 79 His second wife \Vas a daughter of Colonel James Cross Ormrod, J.P., of W yresdale Park, Scorton, Lancaster, the largest country residence in Lancashire. He was the last hunting man in England to keep a pack of deer hounds. It is somewhat of a coincidence that Wyresdale Park was, in the thirteenth century, a possession of Sir William de Lindsay, of La:nberton. In the Lives of the Lindsays it is recorded that this Sir William de Lindsay was killed in battle against Llewellyn, Prince of Wales, on 6th Nove1nber, 1283. He had vast estates, both in England and Scotland, and these devolved upon his daughter and heiress. Of his seventeen English manors, seven were in Lancashire, and a footnote shows that Wyresdale was one of the seven. (See Lives of the Lindsays, Vol. I> pp. 30 and 31, and the footnote t; also see under "La!Ilberton," the Genealogical Chart facing the title-page.) By his second marriage, Crawford left two surviving sons, the elder of whom, Robert Ormrod Lindesay, now (1949) the repre­ sentative of his family, resides at Glastry, Kircubbin, Co. Down. The other son, Peter Crawford Mauleverer Lindesay, resides at 373 Holmesdale Road, South Norwood, London, S.E.25, pending the rebuilding of his father's house, Grampian Lodge, which was destroyed by enemy action during the \Var of 1939-1945. Crawford's sons, Robert and Peter, and the latter's son, Patrick, are now the last surviving male offspring of Frederick Lindesay bearing that surname. Their complete record appears in Appendices I and III. VICTOR LINDESAY was educated at the Manchester Grammar School and at the Victoria University, Manchester, where he obtained classical scholarships. He passed third out of thirty­ eight candidates in the examination for the Indian Medical Service in which he had a useful and varied career. He served with the 4th P.W.O. Gurkha Rifles and proceeded with the Regiment tC) China in connection with the Boxer Uprising of 1900. During the expedition, a Gurkha rifleman, having fallen overboard in the Pei-ho river in July, 1902, Victor Lindesay plunged in after him and saved his life, but not before having to knock the struggling soldier senseless in the water. For this action he received the Medal of the Royal Humane Society. He served throughout the 1914-18 war in France, Gallipoli and Iraq. While serving in the Himalayas, he caught, at the height of six thousand feet, an anopheles mosquito. This was a very rare specimen, and it is now in the Natural History Department of the British Museum, named after him. He married, 6th June, 1898, Frances Helen Levine, daughter of Major W. Merrick Fowler, 61st Foot, of Strode Manor, Dorset .A 80 THE Ll~DESAYS OF LOUGHRY poignant tragedy of their married life, due to the war of 1914-18, was the loss of their two fine infant sons, Robert and Bernard, who, contracting a virulent form of dysentery on board the troop­ ship "Dongola" when returning from India in 1915, died during the voyage and were buried at Gibraltar. A complete record of the children of Victor and Helen Lindesay will be found in Appendix III, but there are two present survivors of the family in their daughters, Enid and Mauleverer. Enid married, 20th July, 1920, Colonel Gordon Blackburne-Kane, who, retiring in 1948 from being Military Secretary to the Governor of Assam at Shillong, India, now resides at 6 Dorney Grove, Weybridge, Surrey.

:-c:--.,---__ tfi, ::i ,~.,_/,_ft ( I - TI"l I I 1, n · I~ I -= 1\ ,, ; ~~l"c. l( .Y,r '/' .A ( I ~ __L_/ ~ ~ ___,/...._· ---\.;... ?" THE PosTMA~'s M0Rx1::--G CALL · Mauleverer married, 5th Aprii, 1924, · Brigadier La\vrence Mon:er-Williams, C.B.E., 1nd A.D.C. to H.M. the King. They returned from India in 1948, and no,v reside at Lords and Ladies, Pilcot> Dcgmersfield, Hants. Both daughters have children, whose records are given in Appendix III. Victor Lindesay died 2nd May, 1940, and is survived by his ,vido,v, Helen Lindesay. Artistically gifted, Victor Lindesay's letters home were often embellished by humorous sketches illustrating the events described. For instance, in the comic sketch (above) he has drawn upon his imagination to illustrate an incident in France. \Vhen Charlotte Lindesay and her three daughters were on holiday, they occupied at Nancy a single bedroom on the ground floor, into which the French postman suddenly penetrated one morning to deiiver letters whilst the ladies were still in bed. This, of course, occasioned con­ sternation at the time, but not a little merriment after,vards. DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY 81 After thirty years' service in the East, he retired to live happily at Burley in the New Forest, and it was here that his younger daughter was married, three of his grandchildren were born, and where he lies buried. A gifted amateur actor and comedian, he was much in demand at local charity entertainments. Throughout his life he was a keen classical scholar, and always took his Greek Testament to Matins. He was editing a Greek Dictionary for schoolboys, and died in his chair while working on it. RoBERT LINDESAY was also educated at the Manchester Grammar School, and he proceeded to Trinity College, Oxford. He was remarkable for exceptional musical abilities, being an excel­ lent violinist and possessing an unusually sweet tenor voice. At Oxford he was an active member of the Musical Union, and probably his devotion to music was the cause of his leaving Oxford without a degree. _ Whilst master in a school in South Africa, he married, 26th October, 1894, Louisa (born 13th May, 1856; died 22nd April, 1918), daughter of John Barnard, of Cotham, Bristol. She was also an excellent musician, graduate of the Royal College of Music and a very accomplished pianist. On their return home, Robert Lindesay resumed his studies and graduated as M.A. of Oxford. He was ordained, and after a curacy at Wheathampstead, Herts, he was appointed to the Vicarage of Walton, Carlisle. This living he held for thirty-four years until his death on 7th April, 1941. He married, -secondly, 20th April, 1920, Laura Richardson (born 24th November, 1864; died 22nd July, 1944), of Ambleside, Westmorland. There is one child of the first marriage: ELIZABETH KATHARINE LINDESAY. She has inherited the musical talents of both her parents, and she possesses the distinction of two degrees from the Royal Academy of Music, viz., the A.R.A.M. (Honorary) and the L.R.A.M. (professional), for both violin and piano. She resides at Woodend, Felcourt, near East Grinstead, Sussex. As stated above, Victor and Robert Lindesay were educated at the Manchester Grammar School. Both boys were keen boxers, and at a public display it was found that they ,vere pitted to box against each other; but owing to their fraternal relationship they declined the contest, a decision that was loudly applauded by their school-fellows and by others present. Records of the daughters of Frederick Lindesay by his first wife are given in Appendix II on p. 101. PHILIPPA ALLEN LINDESAY, the second daughter, became, in 1854, at the age of 20, the bride F 82 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY of Captain R. J. Knox, of Ballaghtobin and Cahirleske, Callan, Co. Kilkenny. They had a family of four sons and eight daughters. Captain Knox, who was loved and trusted by his father-in-la\v, proved to be a true, life-long friend to his widow, Charlotte Lindesay. AGNES SARAH, the third daughter, married John Bag\vell, of Lisronagh, Co. Tipperary; and they had three sons and four daughters. Miss Sybil Hilda Lindesay Bagwell, of Dunmurry, near Belfast, the only child of Frederick Taylor Bagwell, eldest son of John and Agnes Sarah Bagwell, has given me some interesting particulars of her father's family. She tells me that her father derived his name of Taylor from the celebrated Bishop Jeremy Taylor, author of many theological and devotional works, including the well known "Holy Living" and "Boly Dying." Another branch of the Bag\vell family is of Marlfield, Co. Tipperary, several of the family serving successively as Members of Parliament. Jane, a daughter of Colonel John Bagwell, M.P ., by his wife, sister to the Earl of Lis towel, married Sir Eyre Coote. Colonel Bagwell was succeeded by his eldest son, Colonel the Right Hon. William Bagwell, who, dying unmarried, was succeeded by his nephew, John Bag\vell, M.P., who, born 1811, married 1838, the Hon. Frances Prittie, daughter of Lord Dunalley; and their second son, William Bagwell, born 1849, married a daughter of C. Spring Rice. The daughters of Frederick Lindesay and all the children, save one, of the Knox family having passed away, I cannot write of them particularly. But I feel sure that they all had their share of real Irish humour; and the following anecdote, illustrating this, was related to me by my wife. Sophia Janet ( or "Tooey"), sixth daughter of Robert and Philippa Knox and the widow of Edward Gabbett, was one day ascending in the lift at the Army and Navy Stores in London, when, as customary, the lift-attendant announced at each floor the principal articles there on sale. At one stage, Tooey said to the attendant: " I'll do that for you at the next floor," which accordingly she did, imitating perfectly his tone and manner and causing general laughter amongst the occupants of the lift at the time. Mrs. Gabbett, happily still living, is now the only surviving child of Robert and Philippa Knox and the only surviving grand­ child of Frederick Lindesay by his first wife. She celebrated her eightieth birthday on the 5th September, 1948. I feel I need make no apology for quoting the following tribute to her from a letter written to me by her daughter, Mrs. Malcolm, of Cahirleske, Callan, Co. Kilkenny : DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY 83 Here in S. Ireland she [ Mrs. Gabbett] is renowned as one of the greatest characters of our time, and around here rich and poor flock to her for help and advice. After a full life which included years in Burma with my father in the early days of our occupation of that land, she has a mind as alert and full of knowledge as one could wish at the age of 80, and can ride life's storms with that same courage and humour as did her forebears in days gone by. You must forgive me for writing of her like this, but I do feel that like her mother, Philippa, she will always be remembered for those very attributes which she inherits from the Lindesays. Of the daughters by the second wife, the writer has, of course, mo:-e intimate knowledge. FLORA, the eldest, was, as indicated in Appendix III, married twice. Her first husband, the Rev. 0. F. P1cor, whom she married on 24th May, 1893, was member of an old Shropshire family of Peplow Hall, Market Drayton, including many who ,vere clergymen of the Church of ·England. He was born on the 26th August, 1829, and ·was one of five clergymen brothers, the eldest of whom was Prebendary John Tay!eur Pigot, for fifty-five years Vicar of Fremington, North Devon (died 30th June, 1912, aged 91). Flora's first husband was affectionately known as "Padre," and he was considerably older than his wife, who had been previously engaged to his son, the Rev. Harry Pigot. The disparity of years did not prevent Flora from making the declining years of her husband's life very happy, for he was devotedly attached to her. He was senior Chaplain in the Prison Service and he ended his official career as Chaplain to H.M. Prison, Wandsworth Common. Here he occupied the large official residence, with its old-world garden, to the right of the prison entrance, and with his young \vife entertained relatives and friends with unfailing hospitality. They were always "At home" on Tuesdays, and in the summer­ time croquet was the usual pastime. The writer himself has vivid recollections of their kindness and hospitality, both before and after his marriage to Flora's sister. The Padre was of gentle and loving disposition, combined with firm adherence to duty. As Chaplain he exercised a valuable Christian influence upon successive inmates of prisons, and they frequently expressed gratitude for his ministra­ tions. Warm tribute \Vas paid to the value of his long service by the Public Press at the time of his death on 17th March, 1908. Two incidents I recall which, though gossipy, it may be of interest to mention. Wilfred Lindesay, Flora's eldest brother, was, of course, a frequent guest, as was also his great College friend, Hardinge Giffard. Invariably the Padre \Vould say grace both 84 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY before and after meals, and as invariably Wilfred would say after the second grace: "Padre, in Scotland we never say grace after meals." The Padre would .!Ilake no reply, but he never changed his practice. Flora, though musical like the rest of the family, excelled as an artist, drawing well both with pencil and with pen and ink. Once, when at the prison service, the Governor, facing the prisoners, lost his balance ~.nd nearly toppled over, Flora, after the service, drew a picture of the incident, causing, of course, some private merriment. On another occasion she entered a competition instituted by a magazine called Woman, for the best drawing of the competitor's ideal of "A good, healthy, sensible British Curate.', Flora won the prize with an exact drawing of the likeness of her own brother, Wilfred. The winning portrait was published by the magazine in its issue of 3rd April, 1895, in the centre of a page around which were grouped the artistic efforts of other competitors, showing their ideals of curates and representing different schools of thought in the Church and habited accordingly. After the death of 0. F. Pigat at Brookfield, Sharnbrook, Bedford, Flora, on 17th June, 1909, married another clergyman­ widower, the Rev. WALTER WoLFENDEN KENNY. He vvas born 6th May, 1862, and died 8th February, 1926. From 1909 to 1913, he was Rector of Carlton, Bedford. This marriage vvas quite a happy one, notwithstanding, or perhaps because her second husband had a vigorous and masterful personality. James Wolfenden Kenny ("Wolfie"), a child by Walter's first wife, owed much to his step­ mother's affectionate and wise training. He is now Brigadier in the Royal Artillery, and he served throughout the second world war, 1939-1945. To the second sister, EMMELINE STUART, my own dear wife, it is impossible for me to do adequate justice. To her loving companionship, invariable loyalty and wise counsel, during a supremely happy married life of over fifty-one years, I owe more than it is possible for me to express. She was a writer of distinction; and a Booklet of her "Lyrical Poems," issued by me in 1946, was, I felt, the best tribute that could be paid to her memory. The Booklet, necessarily a limited edition, was favourably received and commented upon by persons in walks of life well able to appreciate good verse. A copy of this Booklet was graciously accepted by Her Majesty Queen Mary, of whom my wife was ever a loyal admirer. Emmeline was an effective speaker at Mothers' Meetings of the Church of England, both in Canada and at home in England, her services in this capacity having been recognized by presentations on DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY 85 three occasions. From time to time she also addressed meetings of the Bedford Branch of the British-Israel World Federation. As Sunday School teacher and Superintendent she did excellent work for many years. She had indeed a wonderful love for and sympathy with little children, who remembered for years afterwards the subject of her addresses. One of the earliest members of the Children's Scripture Union, which was founded in 1879, Emmeline was, for many years, until her death in 1945, one of its active local secretaries; and it was during the time that the writer enjoyed the privilege of helping her in this work that our acquaintance ripened into the mutual affection which resulted in our happy marriage in 1894. In Canada, at Ottawa, for years she was a welcome regular visitor to the prisoners in the Women's Ward of the gaol, and each visit meant a weary climb up steep stairs. A portrait of ·my wife is given on page 86. This is reproduced from a complimentary photograph, taken in 1939, by Messrs. Elliott and Fry, Ltd., of 63 Baker Street, London, W.l, whose kind permission to include it in this history is gratefully acknowledged. The following little poem of hers on "Love" is an early and hitherto unpublished effort found amongst her papers:

LOVE What the sun is to the flowers After gloom of night, In the dewy morning hours, Bathing them in light; What the Spring is to the earth After Winter sleep, \V aking to a wondrous birth Nature's secrets deep; What the breeze is to the wood After sultry noon, \Vhisp' ring through the solitude Where the violets swoon; What the rain is to the ground, Thirsting for the shower. Bathing with refreshing sound Grass and tree and flower; What the ark was to th-~ dove, Mid the waters' strife, This, and more than this, is love, Love that sweetens life. E.L. [From photo by Elliott & Fry, Ltd.

~met·11e sht~ sttifr~ (1861-1945) DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY 87 When about 17, Emmeline stayed for some six months in Rome with her Godmother, an old friend of her father's, the Dowager Countess of Castle Stewart, from whom she derived her Christian names, Emmeline Stuart. The Countess was the widow of the third Earl of Castle Stewart, to whom she was married in February, 1830. (He was born on the 11th of September, 1807, and he died on the 27th January, 1857.) She was the grand­ daughter of Benjamin Bathurst, Bishop of Norwich, whose hand­ some life-size monument in Norwich Cathedral shows the Bishop seated in his episcopal robes. Two terrible tragedies marked the life of Lady Castle Stewart. Her father, when Ambassador and on his way home from Vienna in 1809, disappeared, and was not seen again alive or dead. His fate was never cleared up; some inquirers believed that he was murdered for the sake of his money, others that he was killed for political reasons. His widow always. believed that he had been put to death by order of the first Napoleon. Lady Castle Stewart married, secondly, on 27th June, 1867, ·a handsome Italian of Rome, Alessandro Pistocchi, who was greatly her junior. The marriage proved unfortunate, and the ill-matched couple were obliged to separate. The other tragedy was the death of a much-loved sister, whose horse, with the rider, slipped just under the hill of Monte Mario and fell into the river; so that both horse and rider were drowned. It was this incident that caused Lady Cistle Stewart to purchase a residence on Monte Mario overlooking the spot where her sister was drowned, and where she lived until her own death in January, 1893, at the age of 93. She desired to adopt Emmeline Lindesay, but home ties were too strong for entertainment of any such idea by her Godchild. When leaving for home she received as a parting gift a beautiful pearl and gold necklace, which is now in the possession of our daughter, Eveleen Haskell. Her residence in Italy enabled my wife to add knowledge of the Italian language to that of French and German. In 1927, when Emmeline and I were in Rome together, we went to see the Villa Stuart on Monte Mario where she had lived with her Godmother. We found that it was in the possession of an Italian artist. He had made certain alterations to please the fancy of a Dutch wife, but otherwise the mansion remained much as it used to be. Over the entrance gates were still the Castle Stewart Arms-a rusty memorial of past grandeur. The owner showed us over the house and gave us kind hospitality . .A .. LEXANDRA, the third sister, whose husband, Colonel V. B. Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori-I-Iorace (Odes III, 2, 3)

HUGH HOWARD LINDESAY (1892-1915)

VIVIAN WILFRED BE~NETT (1896-1917)

Their name liveth for evermore .-Ecclesiasticus 44, 14. REV. THOMAS LINDESAY AND HIS DESCENDANTS 89 BENNETT (born 20th April, 1867; died 21st May, 1938) entered the Indian Medical Service, was, as a young girl, full of high spirits and irrepressible Irish fun. She was apparently the life of those on board the P. & 0. steamer when she sailed out to India for her wedding in the Cathedral at Bombay on 3rd February, 1895. She had a fine soprano voice, and the writer has pleasing memories of the songs she used to sing. After superannuation in 1924, Colonel Bennett and his family made their home in the Isle of Man, taking a house overlooking the sea at Castletown. Here for many years she was the Diocesan Secretary of the Mothers' Union, and she attended regularly the annual meetings of the Central Executive. On her retirement from this office after the death of her husband in 1938, a fine presentation to her from her co-members of the Union testified to their loving appreciation of her services. The great sorrow of her married life was the loss of her elder son, VIVIAN WILFRED BENNETT, a young officer of great promise in the Royal Engineers, who was killed on 21st October, 1917, the day after his twenty-first birthday, by a German sniper's bullet when superintending· the construction of a military bridge during the first world war (see portrait p. 88). Another son is resident in Canada, and a daughter, Helen Norah Bennett, who graduated as M.A. from the University of Edinburgh, now has her home in the Vicarage o: her cousin, the Rev. F. Lindesay Godfrey, of St. Peter's, Morden, Surrey. Towards the end of the year 1938, Mrs. Bennett, with her daughter Helen, moved from the Isle of Man to Bedford, to be near to her sister, and she passed away at her residence, 60 Spenser Road, Bedford, on 1st May, 1946, the last survivor of her father's large family.

THE REV. THOMAS LINDESAY .AND HIS DESCENDANTS The Rev. THOMAS LINDESAY, M.A., Prebendary and Rector of Upper Cumber, Co. Derry, was the fourth son of Robert Lindesay, M.P., sixth owner of Loughry, by his wife, Jane Lindesay, daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Mauleverer, of Arncliffe Hall, Yorkshire. He was therefore the younger brother of Frederick Lindesay, the eighth owner of Loughry. He was born on the 25th December, 1794, and received his early education, like other members of the family, at the Royal School, Armagh, under Dr. Carpendale. He married (1 ), 1st December, 1835, Harriet Catherine, daughter of the Right Rev. and Hon. Richard Ponsonby, , and sister of the fourth and last Lord Ponsonby of that 90 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY creation (a junior branch of the noble house of Bessborough). By her, who died 26th December, 1836, aged 32, he had one son,. apparently still-born. He married (2), 28th March, 1840, Elizabeth,. daughter and co-heiress of Henry Coddington, of Donore, Co. Meath. She was born 11th September, 1812, and died 5th November, 1885. He died at Alla Rectory, on 2nd March, 1860, and was buried at Desertcreat, near Loughry, on 7th March, 1860. His will was. proved in 1860 by his widow, Elizabeth Lindesay, the effects being valued at £25,000. For the records of his descendants, see Appendix IV. His career as a clergyman is given in Leslie's Derry Clergy and Parishes, and a copy of the record therein, together with other interesting particulars, has been kindly furnished to me by the present Rector of Upper Cumber, the Rev. W. B. Evans, M.A., of Alla Rectory, Killaloe, Co. Derry. This record shows that Thomas Lindesay entered Trinity College, Dublin, as a Fellow Commoner, on the 6th April, 1812, aged 17, and that he graduated as B.A. in 1816 and M.A. in 1832. In 1819 he became Curate of Desertlyn, Diocese of_ Armagh, and he was Rector of Tamlaght, in the same diocese, from 1834 to 1838. From 1838 to 1847 he· was Rector of Kilrea, Co. Derry; and it was here that were born the first three of his sons and two of his three daughters (see Appendix IV). His other children \Vere nearly all of them born at Alla Rectory' then the residence of the Rectors of Upper Cumber. From 1847 until his death in 1860, h<. was Prebendary of Upper Cumber, an ecclesiastical office not now in existence; and during this period he \Vas also the Rector of Upper Cumber. The church at Cumber was rebuilt in 1757 on the old site, and the Glebe house was built in 1772. In 1798, the parish of Cumber was divided into Cumber Upper, which was attached to the Prebend, and Cumber Lower. In 1837, the tithes amounted to £740, and there was a Glebe of 1,508 acres. In 1860, the present church was built on a new site by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners at a cost of £2,253 16s. 8d. 111 1861, there ,vere 798 Church adherents in Upper Cumber and 1,346 Protestant Dissenters. Leslie's Derry Clergy and Parishes records the careers of four curates who served during the incumbency of Thomas Lindesay. They were: (1) Thomas Twigg Wright, nominated 21st June, 1847; (2) William Ross, 1849, afterwards Vicar of Dungiven, Co. Derry, from 1850-86 and Canon of Derry, 1873-91; (3) Samuel McPherson, licensed 8th September, 1851; and (4) Willia!Il Miller Major, appointed 18th June, 1850, who was Prebendary of Moville, Cc Derry, 1858-73. REV. THO::\IAS LINDESAY AND HIS DESCENDANTS 91 From an antiquarian point of vie\v, the following notes may be of some interest. According to a statement by James B. Leslie, the name "Cumber" is, in Colton's Visitation, said to be derived from "Commyr" (Irish "Com," meaning "together" and "Vior," mean­ ing "water"). It denotes therefore a place where two or more rivers meet. Thus Cumber was at the place where the River Glenrandle runs into the Faughan. The tradition is that St. Patrick founded a Church here. Alla Rectory was the name of the ancient residence of the Rectors of Cumber. It is derived from the to\vnland of Alla in which it was situated. In 1944, the old Rectory was sold, and the nevv Rectory is in the of Lettermuck. It is called Alla Rectory, because the present incumbent decided to retain the ancient designation for the modern residence. On the south wall of the pre!:ent church is a marble tab!et with the following inscription: · SACRED to the memory of The Rev. THOMAS LINDESAY, A.M. (son of the late Robert Lindesay, of Loughry, Co. Tyrone, Esq.), for 12 years Rector of this Parish, who departed this life 2nd March, 1860, relying solely on the merits of his Blessed Saviour and in full assurance of Eternal Life. "I am the Resurrection and the Life; he that believeth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live."-John xi, 25. "The dead in Christ shall rise tirst."-1 Thess. iv, 16. Erected by his afflicted and only surviving sister, J.L.1 By his second wife, Thomas Lindesay had eight sons and three daughters. The second son, Henry Richard Ponsonby, of Donore, Ivy Bridge, South Devon, was born 27th July, 1843. He married, 20th July, 1898, Frances 1,fary, daughter of the Rev. J. Irwin, Rector of Hurworth-on-Tees. In 1893~ on the death of Joshua Lindesay, the last resident owner of Loughry, he succeeded to the Loughry estates under the will of his cousin, Frederick Tchn Sandys Lindesay; but he did not take up residence there. The property, being heavily encumbered, was sold and disposed of in the manner already described. He died 1st September, 1903. His widow survives and resides at Pool Park, Cornwood, South Devon. TH011As LrNDESAY, the third son of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay, proceeded to New Zealand, and was the founder of a numerous branch of the Lindesay family in that Dominion. He was born 4th February, 1845, and was educated at Rossall School and also at 1 Jane Lind:::say, eldest daughter of Robert Lindesay (1747-1832). [ From photo by Robin C. \Vood, Auckland

EXTERIOR oF ALL SA1:-.:Ts' Cr-rnncIT, A11CKLAND, NEW ZEALAND REV. TH0:\1AS LINDESAY AND HIS DESCENDANTS 93 Cheltenham College, where he was from Michaelmas, 1858, to December, 1859. He left Ireland in the sailing ship "Mary Shepherd" in 1865, and, on the advice of the Rev. R. A. Hall, settled at Whangai, Bay of Islands, where he took up farming. He was appointed Lay Reader to the Church at Pakaraka, where he held regular services. On 1st August, 1874, he was married, at All Saints' Church, Howick, New Zealand, by the Rev. J. A. Hall, to Inez Eva Isabel, daughter of Lieut.-Colonel the Hon. Stephen Ponsonby Peacocke, of Hawthornden, Ho\vick, N.Z., and great­ granddaughter of the first Marquis of Waterford. Soon after their marriage, he and his wife left on a two-year tour of England, Ireland and the Continent, and their eldest daughter, Isabel Eva Elizabeth Lindesay, was born at 49 FitzWilliam Square, Dublin. On their return to New Zealand, they resided for some time at Howick, where he assisted with the Church services. He then moved to One Tree Hill, and while there served as Lay Reader at Onehunga and Mangere. In 1888, he entered the service of H.M. Customs, from \vhich he retired in 1910. About 1896 he moved to Parnell, and this property is still in the possession of the family. Always a keen Churchman, he attended St. Mary's Cathedral, Auckland, regularly, and served for many years as a Vestryman. He died 10th September, 1924, and was interred at Purewa, the funeral service being con­ ducted by the Rev. Canon P. E. James,Vicar of St. Mary's Cathedral. His widow, vvho was born 23rd October, 1852, and died 10th October, 1937, was also interred at Purewa, the officiating clergymen being the Ven. George MacMurray, Archdeacon of Auckland, the Rev. Canon W. Fancourt, Vicar of St. Mary's Cathedral, and the Rev. H. R. Jecks. The accompanying illustrations of All Saints' Church, Howick, N.Z., in which Thomas and Inez Lindesay were married, are reproduced from photographs sent to me by their fourth son, Mr. Cyril E. A. Lindesay, of Mission Bay, Auckland. This church is one of the oldest in New Zealand, and the centenary of its erection was celebrated in 1947. It \Vas built by the famous George Augustus Selwyn (1809-1878), who was the first and only Bishop for the whole of New Zealand, holding that office from 1841-68 (pages 92, 94). To Mr. Cyril Lindesay I am indebted for the details of his father's career, as given above, and also for information kindly given concerning other members of the New Zealand branch of the Lindesay family. The record of Mr. Cyril Lindesay himself will be found in Appendix IV. The letters "S.B.St.J." after his name there are the abbreviation for "Serving Brother of Order of the Hospital of John of Jerusalem." Dating from the titne ' j I ' f i , I I I

i

/ i

[ From photo by Robin C. Wood, Auckland lNTF.RToR oF ALL SATNTs' Cmmcn, AucKLAND, Nnw ZEALAND REV. TH0~1AS LINDESAY AND HIS DESCEI\"DANTS 95 of the First Crusade ( 1096-97), this claims to b·e the oldest Order of Chivalry in the \vorld. Mr. Cyril Lindesay informs me that he \Vas appointed to this Order on the 5th May, 1939, and that he was invested with the insignia of the Order in St. Mary's Cathedral on the 12th December, 1943, by the New Zealand Prior, Sir Cyril Newall, G.C.B., etc. (now Lord Newall), who was Governor­ General of the Dominion from 1941 to 1946. JoHN LINDESAY, the fifth son of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay, also went out to New Zealand, where he was married at Auckland, 20th September, 1877. He left for England soon after his marriage and did not return to New Zealand. Particulars concerning his family are recorded in Appendix IV. The Rev. WILLIAM O'NEILL LINDESAY, M.A., eighth son of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay, \Vas, like his father, in Holy Orders of the Church of England in Ireland, and he became eventually Rector of Upper Cumber, Diocese of Derry. He was born 5th January, 1857. Leslie's Derry Clergy and Parishes shows that he graduated fro!n Trinity College, Dublin, as B.A. in 1878. He received the Divinity Testamonium (2) in 1879 and was Hebrew Prizeman in 1878 and 1879. He graduated as M.A. in 1881. From 1880-82 he was Curate at St. Matthias', Dublin, and he \Vas Curate at Abbeyleix, Diocese 0£ Leighlin, from 1883-84, and at Donaghcloney, Diocese of Dromore, from 1884-89. He was Rector of , Diocese of Derry, from 1889-97; and on 29th October, 1897, he was instituted to the Rectory of Upper Cumber, Diocese of Derry, where he re!Ilained until 1903. He was Curate at Clane, Diocese of Kildare, from 1911-13. He died in retirement at Bellevue, Bagshot, Surrey, 22nd January, 1933 (see Appendix IV).

CONCLUSION So ends this Genealogical History of the Lindesays of Loughry, County Tyrone. It has been undertaken with the object of placing on record, for the information of the present and future descendants of Frederick Lindesay, and of others likely to be interested, the principal facts relating to a family many of whose me!llbers have taken a not unimportant part in the history of Northern Ireland. I am not without hope that some of the facts herein recorded may even appeal to a wider public, because it is probable that the history of the Loughry Lindesays may be regarded as typical of or similar to the records of other Northern Irish families of Scottish ancestry. Finally, let it not be thought that this record of a noted Irish house is written only to gratify ancestral pride. In this connection the writer shares fully the sentiments expressed by the noble author 96 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY of the Lives of the Lindsays, so frequently referred to in these pages. In the Introductory Letter, which he wrote for the first edition of his work, and which was intended only for private circulation, Lord Lindsay wrote : Be grateful then for your descent from religious as well as from noble ancestors; it is your duty to be so, and this is the most worthy tribute you can pay to their ashes. Yet, at the same time, be most jealously on your guard lest this lawful satisfaction degenerate into arrogance or a fancied superiority over those nobles of God's creation, who, endo\ved in other respects with every exalted quality, cannot point to a long line of ancestry. Pride is of all sins the most hateful in the sight of God, and of the proud who is so mean, who is so despicable as he that values himself on the merits of others ?1 It was Burke who wrote that "People will not look forward to posterity who never look back to their ancestors"; and Macaulay, in his History of England, wrote: "A people which takes no pride in the noble achievements of remote ancestors will never achieve anything worthy to be remembered with pride by remote descendants. ''2 Whether we be high-born and long-descended, or whether we be "lowly-born and range with humble livers in content," we are all to a large extent what our forebears have made us. Only the present is and the future may be ours so to live that we may influence posterity for good. . . .

1 Lives of the Lindsays, Vol. I, p. XIII. 2 History of England, London, 1877, Vol. I. p. 773. ALPHABETICAL LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS 97 GENEALOGICAL HIS'fORY OF THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY, COUNTY TYRONE Alphabetical List of Subscribers Alexander, Major C. A. M., Pomeroy I-louse, Co. Tyrone. Armstrong, Mrs., 4121 First A.venue, San Diego,, California, U.S.A. Bagwell, Miss, 2 Ashley Villas, Dunn1urry, Co. Antrin1. Beale, Mrs., Daneswood, Barton-on-Sea, Hants. Belfast Linen Hall Library, Belfast. Belfast Public Library, Belfast. Belfast Public Record Office, May Street, Belfast. Bennett, Miss Helen, M.A., St. Peter's Vicarage, Morden, Surrey. Birmingham Public Libraries, Reference Dept., Birmingham. Blackburne-Kane, Mrs., 6 Dorney Grove, Weybridge, Surrey. Blackwood, R. W. H., Castlenavin, Seaforde, Co. Down. Blayney, Mrs., 31 Tudor Drive, Watford, Herts. Bounden, Mrs. Frederick, 25 Berrow Park Road, Peverell, Plymouth. Cardwell, Mrs., Crossroads, Ballynakelly, Coalesland, Co. Tyrone. Casement, Mrs. Frank, Craigtara, Ballycastle, Co. Antrim. Cumming, Mrs. R. W., 10 Robert Street, Ellerslie, Auckland, New Zealand. Darlington, 1'1rs., 10 Mulgrave Terrace, Kingstown, Co. Dublin. Dawson and Sons, Ltd., Wm., Cannon House, Macklin Street, London, W.C.2. Gabbett, Mrs., Ballagh to bin, Callan, Co. Kilkenny. Gabbett, Miss M. E., Kilmoganny, Co. Kilkenny. Gabbett, Major R. E., M.B.E., M.C., R.E., Lodsworth, Petworth, Sussex. Gaskell, The Lady Constance Milnes, 1 Hyde Park Street, London, W. Glasgow, Henry L., Cookstown, Co. Tyrone. Goddard, Mrs., 119 Handside Lane, Welwyn Garden City, Herts. Godfrey, Ernest H., St. Peter's Vicarage, Morden, Surrey. Godfrey, The Rev. F. Lindesay, M.A., St. Peter's Vicarage, Morden, Surrey. Godfrey, Commodore Valentine S., O.B.E., R.C.N., St. John's, New- £ouridland, Dominion of Canada. Gunton, Mrs., Burton, Carnforth, Westmorland. Gussow, Dr. H. T ., 2975 McAnally Road, Victoria, B.C., Canada. Harper, Mrs. James, jr., 590 East Third Street, Mount Vernon, New York, U.S.A. Harris, Miss K., 31 Balmoral Avenue, Belfast. Harrison, Lieut.-Col., M.C.C., D.S.O., M.C., The Malt H9use, Crondall, Hants. Haskell, Mrs., 3482 Holton A venue, Montreal, Canada. Hodges, Figgis and Co., Ltd., 6 Dawson Street, Dublin. Holmes, W. and R., Ltd., 3-11 Dunlop Street, Glasgow. Howard, Mrs. Eliot, Clareland, Stourport-on-Severn, W orceste~shire. Jefferson, Herbert, Ph.D., J.P., 98 Circular Road, Belfast. G 98 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Jourdain, Col. H. F. N., C.M.G., Fyfield Lodge, Fyfield Road, Oxford. Kaye, Mrs., Hansla, East Grinstead, Sussex. Keating, Mrs., 121 Mackay Street, Ottawa, Canada. K.enny, Brigadier J. W., R.A., c/o Grindley's Bank, 54 Parliament Street, London S.W.l. Kerr, Captain W., Maer Craig, Exmouth, Devon. King-Harman, Lady, Ouse Manor, Sharnbrook, Bedford. Kingston, Egerton, 47 Brighton Road, Shoreham-by-Sea, Sussex. Lawrence, John, Oakhill, Lamorna, Nr. Penzance, Cornwall. Lenox-Conyngham, Mrs., Spring Hill, Moneymore, N. Ireland. Lindesay, Cyril E. A... , 6 Palmer Crescent, Mission Bay, Auckland, N.Z. Lindesay, Lieut.-Col. E. M., M.B.E., R.A., White Lodge, W eyhill Road, Andover, Rants. Lindesay, Miss, 17 Avon Street, Parnell, Auckland, C4, New Zealand. Lindesay, Miss Elizabeth K., Wood End, Felcourt, East Grinstead, Sussex. Lindesay, 11rs. Helen, 6 Dorney Grove, Weybridge, Surrey. Lindesay, Lieut.-Col. F. S., c/o Standard Bank of South Africa, Salis­ bury, Southern Rhodesia. Lindesay, Lieut.-Col. J. H. C., M.C., Loch Arthur, Beeswing, Dumfries- shire, Scotland. Lindesay, John M., 12 Sandy L3.ne, Wallasey, Cheshire. Lindesay, P., Box 35, Papakura, Auckland, New Zealand. Lindesay, P. M. C., 373 Holmesdale Road, South Norwood, London, S.E.25. Lindesay, R. F. B., 263 Kano Road, Whangarei, New Zealand. Lindesay, Robert Ormrod, Glastry, Kircubbin, Co. Down. Lindesay, T. C., Moerewa, R.D., Bay of Islands, New Zealand. Lindesav, Lieut.-Col. T. H., R.E., Hillside, Dorman's Park, East Grin;tead, Sussex. Lindsay, John M., The Manor, Fishbourne, Chichester, Sussex. Lindsay, The Hon. L., M.C., West Stoke House, Chichester, Sussex. Lindsay, Philip, Beckley, Nr. Rye, Sussex. Lindsay, W. B., Hon. Sec., Clan Lindsay Society, 119 Loch Leven Road, Langside, Glasgow, Scotland. Macrory, Mrs. Roland, 90 Main Street, Limavady, N. Ireland. Maffey, Mrs. G. L., The Vicarage, 42 Hutchinson Avenue, New Lynn, Auckland,- New Zealand. Malcolm, Mrs. Hugh, Cahirleske, Cal1an, Co. Kilkenny. Marshall,. Herbert, O.B.E., Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Ottawa, Canada. Monier-Williams, Mrs., Lords and Ladies, Pilcot, Dogmersfield, Hants. Mostyn, The Hon. Lady Lloyd, Castle Close, Sharnbrook, Bedford. Mullan and Son, Ltd., William, Booksellers, Belfast. New, Mrs., Waterford Vernev, Nr. l-Iertford. New York Public Library, Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street, New York, 18, U.S.A. ALPHABETICAL LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS 99 Passy, Lieut.-Col. de L., R.E., 16 Martha Street, Port Hope, Ontario, Canada. Paterson, T. G. F., County Museum~ Armagh, N. Ireland. Patrick, Mrs. G. H., Strathmore, Alberta, Canada. Richardson, Lieut.-Col. D. L., Wer·gs I-!all, Nr. Wolverhampton. Richardson, The Rev. R. W., R.N., Royal Naval Air Station, Yeovilton, Somerset. Rising, Mrs., 2 Stoke Cottage, Miil Road, Sharnbrook, Bedford. Royal Dublin Society, B::ills Bridge, Dublin. Smith, Miss Clarice, 341 Riverdale Avenue, Ottawa, Canada. Smith, Miss E. L., 13 Waterloo Road, Bedford. Steenson, Miss, Strifehill, Cookstovvn, Co. Tyrone. Stevens and Brown, B. F., Ltd., 28-30 Little Russell Street, London, W.C.l. Stuart, Mrs. Dorothy Trice, Stelvio Court Garage Flat, Darley Road, Eastbourne, Sussex. Tabuteau, Mrs. A. M., 19 Salisbury Road, Hove, 3, Sussex. Tomlinson, Mrs., Lindow Lodge, 42 Chapel Lane, Wilmslow, Cheshire. Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.A. · Underhay, W. H., Simpson, Diptford, S. Brent, Devon. Wade, Miss Norah, 68 Ennismore Gardens, London, S.W.7. Walker, Mrs. R. A. R., Corby House, Long Street, Sherborne, Dorset. Warnock and Co., J., Margaret Square, Nevvry, Co. Down. Wilson, Miss Edith, 3 The Avenue, Bedford. Wilton, Miss, 25 Clyde Road, Dublin. Wollaston, Sir Gerald W., K.C.B., K.C.V.O., College of Arms, Street, London, E.C. Woollcombe, The Rev. Canon G. P., M.A., LLD., 194 Cobourg Street, Ottawa, Canada. \\Tright, Mrs. Linwood, The Cottage, Swithland, Leicestershire.

Genealogical Chart of the Lindesays of Loughry, Co. Tyrone.

Note : The numbers within parentheses indicate the order in which successive Lindesays were owners of Loughry.

( 1) Robert Lindesay, second son of Thomas Lindesay, Janet Acheson, whose father was ancestor of the Earls of of Kingswark, Leith. Gosford. I (2) Robert Lindesay, b. 1604; d. 18th May, 1674 Margaret, d. of James Richardson, of Castle Hill (now Castle), Co. Tyrone. I ( 3) Robert Lindesay, d. 1691 Anne, d. of John Maurice, of Belleville, Co. Tyrone.

I I (4) Robert Lindesay, M.P. for Co. Tyrone, Judge of the Elizabeth, d. of Edward Singleton, of Drogheda, and sister (5) John Lindesay, b. 1686; d. 1761 Elizabeth, d. of the Rev. Bellingham l Common Pleas, 1733; b. 1679; d. 1742. of Henry Singleton, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Maghera, Co. Derry, and g.

I I I John Lindesay, Lieut. 36th Regiment; Lieut.-Col. Royal Mary Anne, d. of Richard Pennyfather, of New Park, Co. Robert Lindesay, d. an infant. Rev. Thomas Lindesay, Rector of Upper Cumber, Tyrone Militia; Mayor of Cashel, 1825 ; b. 1780 ; Tipperary, M.P. for Cashel. 1835, Harriet Catherine, d. of the ,Rt. Rev. and d. 1826. sister of the 4th and last Lord Ponsonby of that the noble house of Bessborough). She died 4th apparently still-born. He m. (2) 28th Mar.. .184( of Henry Coddington, of Donore, Co. •Meath. S and died 5th Nov., 1885. He was born 25th D( I For issue of second marriage (8 sons and 3 daug (7) John Lindesay, D.L. for Co. Tyrone; b. 10th Mar., = Harriet Hester, d. of the Rt. Hon. Charles Watkin Williams 1809 ; d. 7th Aug., 1848. I Wynn, M.P. S.P.

I (i) 23rd Sept., 1823, Agnes Cornish Baytun, d. and (8) Frederick Lindesay, (ii.) 27th Nov., 1856, co-heiress of Sir Edwin Baytun,Sandys, Bt., of M.A., D.L., J.P., High Charlotte, d. of Henry Miserden Park, Glos., and Chadlington Park, Oxon. Sheriff for Co. Tyrone, Charles Boyle MacMur, 1859; b. 2nd Jan., 1792; rough Murphy, of Dub, d. 10th July, 1871. lin. I I I I Robert Sandys Lindesay, Jane Mauleverer Agnes, d. Philippa Allen, b. 30th 1850, Capt. R. J. Knox, of Agnes Sarah, b. 3rd Dec., John Bagwell, of Lis, b. 7th Sept. 1825 ; cl. unmarried 24th July, 1830. Mar., 1834. Cahirleske, Callan, Co. 1835; d. 20th Feb., 1941. ronagh, Co. Tipperary. unmarried Feb., 1870. Kilkenny. / I Issue: 3 sons, 7 daughters. Issue : 1 son, 4 daughters. (9) Frederick John Sandys Linde, say, D.L., J.P., b. 16th I I I I June, 1828; d. unm. 16th Rev. William Frederick (i.) 26th Dec., 1889,=Charles de la Poire Craw, =(ii.) 21st Apr., 1900, Victor Edward Hugh, =6th June, 1893, Frances (i.) 26th Oct., 1894,=Rev. Robert Thomas=(ii.) 20th Apl., 1920, (i.) 24th May, 189 Oct., 1877. Lindesay, B.A., b. 3rd Amy Carleton Bigg, ford Lindesay, C.E., b. 1st Ethel Mary Ormrod. I.M.S., b. 24th May, Helen Levine Fowler. Louisa Barnard. lvfaulevcrcr Lindesay, Laura Richardson. Rev. 0. F. Pigot June, 1857 ; d. unm. Wither. July, 1863; cl. 29th May, 1869; d. 2nd May, 1940. M.A., b. 9th May, 1870; 26th Aug., 1829 ; 14th Feb., 1907. 193 3. d. 7th April, 1941. 17th Mar., 1908. Thomas Edward Lindesay, b. 11th 1v1ay, 1832; d. Elizabeth Katharine S.P. unm. in Indian Mutiny about 9th June, 1857. I I I I I I I I Hugh Howard Lindesay, Robert Noel Carleton Frances Mabel Amy, b. Robert Ormrod Linde, Peter Mauleverer Craw,=25th July, 1928, Hazel Edith Ethel, b. 1902; Janet Ethel, b. 1909; cl. Emmeline Stuart, b. =3rd July, 19th Aug., 1861; ( 10) Joshua Edward Charles b. 24th Nov., 1892; d. Lindesay, b. 25th Dec., 10th Oct., 1895; d. 5th say, b. 15th May, ford Lindesay, A.M.I.C.E., Gwendoline Gilbertson. d. 1904. 13th Mar., 1910. cl. Henry Go Cooper Lindesay, D.L., unm.; killed in the Great 1897 ; d. an infant. Oct., 1896. 1901. b. 16th Jan., 1903. 12th Nov., 1945. July, 186'. J.P., b. 14th Feb., 1838; War, 1914-18. Issue : 2 sons, 2 daughter d. unm. 1st Feb., 1893. Patrick Clyne Crawford Lindesay, b. 11th Mar., 1930.

I I I I Frederick Hugh Byres Robert J o!J.n Byres Lin, Bernard Alexander Enid Katharine Jessie. = 20th July, Lindesay and Helen desay, b. 8th Nov. Hugh Lindesay, b. / Blackburne. Loughry (twins), b. 18th 1908; d. 1915. 13th Mar., 1912; d. July, 1906; d. in infancy. 1915. Issue : 2 sons.

APPENDIX I

Genealogical Chart of the Lindesays of Loughry, Co. Tyrone.

Note: The numbers within parentheses indicate the order in which successive Lindesays were owners of Loughry.

( 1) Robert Llndesay, second son of Thomas Lindesay, Janet Acheson, whose father was ancestor of the Earls of of Kingswark, Leith. Gosford. I (2) Robert Lindesay, b. 1604; d. 18th May, 1674 Margaret, d. of James Richardson, of Castle Hill (now Augher Castle), Co. Tyrone. I (3) Robert Lindesay, d. 1691 Anne, d. of John Maurice, of Belleville, Co. Tyrone. I ( 4) Robert Lindesay, M.P. for Co. Tyrone, Judge of the l Elizabeth, d. of Edward Singleton, of Drogheda, and sister (5) John Lindesay, b. 1686; d. 1761 Elizabeth. cl. of the Rev. Bellingham ] Common Pleas, 1733; 1- 1 679; d. 1742. of Henry Singleton, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Maghera, Co. Derry, and g.d. of W: Bench and afterwards Master of the Rolls. bishop of Cashel. I I Robert Lindesay, cl. an infant. Anne, d. unm. I ( 6) Robert Lindesay, M.P. for Dundalk, 1781, High Sheriff 6th July, 1775, his second cousin, Jane, d. and co-heiress of for Co. Tyrone, 1 788, Deputy Governor of Tyrone Thomas Mauleverer, of Arncliffe Hall, Yorkshire. and Assistant Barrister for Tyrone, 1800,29; b. 1747; cl. 6th Jan., 1832.

I I I John Lindesay, Lieut. 36th Regiment ; Lieut.,Col. Royal Mary Anne, d. of Richard Pennyfather, of New Park, Co. Robert Lindesay, d. an mfant. Rev. Thomas Lindesay, Rector of Upper Cumber, Tyrone Militia; Mayor of Cashel, 1825 ; b. 1780 ; Tipperary, M.P. for Cashel. 1835, Harriet Catherine, d. of the Rt. Rev. and d. 1826. sister of the 4th and last Lord Ponsonby of that the noble house of Bessborough). She died 4th apparently still-born. He m. (2) 28th Mar.. .1841 of Henry Coddington, of Donore, Co. •Meath. S and died 5th Nov., 1885. He was born 25th Di I For issue of second marriage (8 sons and 3 daug (7) John Lindesay, D.L. for Co. Tyrone; b. 10th Mar., Harriet Hester, d. of the Rt. Hon. Charles Watkin Williams 1809 ; d. 7th Aug., 1848. I Wynn, M.P. S.P. I (i) 23rd Sept., 1823, Agnes Cornish Baytun, cl. and ( 8) Frederick Lindesay, (ii.) 27th Nov., 1856, co-heiress of Sir Edwin Baytun,Sandys, Bt., of M.A., D.L., J.P., High Charlotte, d. of Henry Miserden Park, Glos., and Chadlington Park, Oxon. Sheriff for Co. Tyrone, Charles Boyle MacMur­ 1859; b. 2nd Jan., 1792; rough Murphy, of Dub, d. 10th July, 1871. lin. I I I I Robert Sandys Lindesay, Jane Mauleverer Agnes, d. Philippa Allen, b. 30th 1850, Capt. R. T- Knox, of Agnes Sarah, b. 3rd Dec., John Bagwell, of Lis, b. 7th Sept. 1825 ; d. unmarried 24th July, 1830. Mar., 1834. Cahirleske, Callan, Co. 1835; cl. 20th Feb., 1941. ronagh, Co. Tipperary. unmarried Feb., 1870. Kilkenny. I Issue: 3 sons, 7 daughters. Issue : 1 son, 4 daughters. (9) Frederick John Sandys Linde, say, D.L., J.P., b. 16th I I I I June, 1828; d. unm. 16th Rev. William Frederick (i.) 26th Dec., 1889,=Charles de la Poire Craw,=(ii.) 21st Apr., 1900, Victor Edward Hugh, =6th June, 1893, Frances (i.) 26th Oct., 1894,=Rev. Robert Thomas=(ii.) 20th Apl., 1920, (i.) 24th May, 18' Oct., 1877. Lindesay, B.A., b. 3rd Amy Carleton Bigg- ford Lindesay, C.E., b. 1st Ethel ·Mary Ormrod. I.1'LS., b. 24th May, Helen Levine Fowler. Louisa Barnard. 1vfau1evcrcr lindesay, Laura Richardson. Rev. 0. F. Pigat June, 1857 ; d. unm. Wither. July, 1863; d. 29th May, 1869; d. 2nd May, 1940. M.A., b. 9th May, 1870; 26th Aug., 1829 ; 14th Feb., 1907. 193 3. cl. 7th April, 1941. 17th 11ar., 1908. Thomas Edward Lindesay, b. 11th },,fay, 1832; d. Elizabeth Katharine S.P. unm. in J ndian Mutiny about 9th June, 1857. I I I I I I I l Hugh Howard Lindesay, Robert Noel Carleton Frances Mabel Amy, b. Robert Ormrod Linde, Peter 1'Iauleverer Craw-=25th July, 1928, Hazel Edith Ethel, b. 1902; Janet Ethel, b. 1909; d. Emmeline Stuart, b. =3rd July, 19th Aug., 1861; ( 10) Joshua Edward Charles b. 24th Nov., 1892; d. Lindesay, b. 25th Dec., 10th Oct., 1895; d. 5th say, b. 15th May, ford Lindcsay, A.M.I .C.E., Gwendoline Gilbertson. d. 1904. 13th Mar., 1910. d. Henry G< Cooper Lindesay, D.L., unm.; killed in the Great 1897 ; d. an infant. Oct., 1896. 1901. b. 16th Jan., 1903. 12th Nov., 1945. July, 18c J.P., b. 14th Feb., 1838; War, 1914-18. Issue : 2 sons, 2 daughte d. unm. 1st Feb., 1893. Patrick Clyne Crawford Lindesay, b. 11th Mar., 1930.

I I I I Frederick Hugh Byres Robert Jolin Byres Lin, Bernard Alexander Enid Katharine Jessie. = 20th July, Lindesay and Helen desay, b. 8th Nov. Hugh Lindesay, b. / BlackburnE Loughry (twins), b. 18th 1908 ; d. 1915. 13th Mar., 1912; cl. July, 1906; d. in infancy. 1915. Issue : 2 sons.

NoTE.-After the death of Joshua Lindesay, the tenth and last resident-owner of Loughry, and after the death of Henry Lindesay, eldest surviving son of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay, to whom the Loughry Estates were beaueathed by Frederick John Sandys Lindesay, ninth Loughry devolved successively upon sons of the second marriage of Frederick Lindesay, the eighth owner, viz., the Rev. W. F. Lindesay ( 1857-1907) and Charles de la Poire Crawford Lindesay (1860-193 3), whose elder son, Robert Orm rod Lindesay is now ( 1949)

APPENDIX I

Genealogical Chart of the Lindesays of Loughry, Co. Tyrone.

Note: The numbers within parentheses indicate the order in which successive Lindesays were owners of Loughry.

( 1) Robert Lindesay, second son of Thomas Lindesay, Janet Acheson, whose father was ancestor of the Earls of of Kingswark, Leith. Gosford. I (2) Robert Lindesay, b. 1604; d. 18th May, 1674 Margaret, d. of James Richardson, of Castle Hill (now Augher Castle), Co. Tyrone. I (3) Robert Lindesay, d. 1691 Anne, d. of John Maurice, of Belleville, Co. Tyrone. I I (4) Robert Lindesay, M.P. for Co. Tyrone, Judge of the Elizabeth, d. of Edward Singleton, of Drogheda, and sister (5) John Lindesay, b. 1686; d. 1761 Elizabeth, cl. of the Rev. Bellingham Mauleverer, Rector of Common Pleas, 1733; b. 1679; cl. 1742. of Henry Singleton, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Maghera, Co. Derry, and g.d. of William Nicolson, Arch, Bench and afterwards Master of the Rolls. bishop of Cashel. I I Robert Lindesay, cl. an infant. Anne, d. unm. I ( 6) Robert Lindesay, M.P. for Dundalk, 1781, High Sheriff 6th July, 1775, his second cousin, Jane, d. and co,heiress of for Co. Tyrone, 1788, Deputy Governor of Tyrone Thomas Mauleverer, of Arncliff e Hall, Yorkshire. and Assistant Barrister for Tyrone, 1800-29; b. 174 7 ; cl. 6th Jan., 183 2. I I I John Lindesay, Lieut. 36th Regiment ; Lieut.,Col. Royal Mary Anne, d. of Richard Pennyfather, of New Park, Co. Robert Lindesay, d. an infant. Rev. Thomas Lindesay, Rector of Upper Cumber, Co. Derry; m. ( 1) 1st Dec., Tyrone Militia; Mayor of Cashel, 1825 ; b. 1780 ; Tipperary, M.P. for Cashel. 1835, Harriet Catherine, cl. of the Rt. Rev. and Hon. Richard Ponsonby, and cl. 1826. sister of the 4th and last Lord Ponsonby of that creation ( a junior branch of the noble house of Bessborough). She died 4th Dec., 1836 ; issue, one child, apparently still,born. He m. (2) 28th Mar. ..1840, Elizabeth, d. and co,heiress of Henry Coddington, of Donore, Co. Meath. She was born 11th Sept. 1812, and died 5th Nov., 1885. He was born 25th Dec., 1794; cl. 2nd Mar., 1860. I For issue of second marriage (8 sons and 3 daughters), see Appendix IV. (7) John Lindesay, D.L. for Co. Tyrone; b. 10th Mar., Harriet Hester, d. of the Rt. Hon. Charles Watkin Williams 1809 ; cl. 7th Aug., 1848. I Wynn, M.P. S.P. I (i) 23rd Sept., 1823, Agnes Cornish Baytun, cl. and (8) Frederick Lindesay, (ii.) 27th Nov., 1856, co-heiress of Sir Edwin Baytun,Sandys, Bt., of M.A., D.L., J.P., High Charlotte, cl. of Henry Miserden Park, Glos., and Chadlington Park, Oxon. Sheriff for Co. Tyrone, Charles Boyle MacMur, 1859; b. 2nd Jan., 1792; rough Murphy, of Dub, cl. 10th July, 1871. lin. I I [. Philippa Allen, b. 30th 1850, Capt. R. J. Knox, of Agnes Sarah, b. 3rd Dec., John Bagwell, of Lis, t. Mar., 1834. Cahirleske, Callan, Co. 1835;

Elizabeth Katharine S.P. S.P. S.P.

I I I I l I I I Robert Noel Carleton Frances Mabel Amy, b. Robert Ormrod Linde­ Peter Mauleverer Craw,=2Sth July, 1928, Hazel Edith Ethel, b. 1902; Janet Ethel, b. 1909; d. Emmeline Stuart, b. =3rd July, 1894, Ernest Alexandra Phillipa= 3rd Feb., 1896, Vivian 19th Aug., 1861; d. Henry Godfrey, b. 17th Anna, b. 11th Dec., Boase Bennett, I.M.S., Lindesay, b. 25th Dec., 10th Oct., 1895; d. 5th say, b. 15th May, ford Lindesay, A.M.I .C.E., Gwendoline Gilbertson. cl. 1904. 13th Mar., 1910. 1897 ; d. an infant. Oct., 1896. 1901. b. 16th Jan., 1903. 12th Nov., 1945. July, 1862. 1867 ; d. 1st May, b. 20th April, 1867 ; d. 1946. 22nd May, 1938. Issue : 2 sons, 2 daughters. Patrick Clyne Crawford Issue: 2 sons, 1 daughter. Lindesay, b. 11th Mar., 1930.

I I I I I Frederick Hugh Byres Robert John Byres Lin, Bernard Alexander Enid Katharine Jessie. = 20th July, 1930, Gordon Dorothy Mauleverer.=5th Apr., 1924, Lawrence Lindesay and Helen desay, b. 8th Nov. Hugh Lindesay, b. / Blackburne,Kane. I },.f onier-Williams. Loughry (twins), b. 18th 1908; cl. 1915. 13th Mar., 1912; d. I July, 1906; d. in infancy. 1915. Issue : 2 sons. Issue : 1 son, 1 daughter.

the tenth and last resident-owner of Loughry, and after the death of Henry Lindesay, eldest surviving son of the Rev. Thomas Lindesay, to whom the Loughry Estates were beaueathed by Frederick John Sandys Lindesay, ninth owner of Loughry, representation of the Lindesays of >ns of the second marriage of Frederick Lindesay, the eighth owner, viz., the Rev. W. F. Lindesay (1857,1907) and Charles de la Poire Crawford Lindesay (1860-1933), whose elder son, Robert Ormrod Lindesay is now (1949) the representative of the family.

APPENDIX II 101 APPENDIX II DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY BY HIS FIRST WIFE

I. CHILDREN. 1. Robert Sandys Lindesay, b. 7 Sept., 1825; d. unm. on or about 23 Feb., 1870 (Funeral 26 Feb., 1870.) 2. Frederick John Sandys Lindesay, b. 16 June, 1828; d. unm., 16 Oct., 1877. 3. Thomas Edward Lindesay, b. 11 May, 1832; killed in the Indian Mutiny, unm. on or about 10 June, 1857. 4. Joshua Edward Charles Cooper Lindesay, b. 14 Feb., 1838; d. unm. 1 Feb., 1893. 5. Jane Mauleverer i\gnes Lindesay, d. 20 July, 1830. 6. Philippa. Allen Lindesay, b. 30 Mar., 1834; m. 6 April, 1854, Captain Robert John Knox, J.P., of Cahirleske, Callan, Co. Kilkenny; d. 27 July, 1907. Issue: 4 sons; 8 daughters. 7. Agnes Sarah Lindesay, b. 31 Dec., 1835; m. John Bagwell, of Lisronagh, Co. Tipperary; d. 13 Feb., 1901. He died 29 Jan., 1894. Issue: 3 sons; 4 daughters.

IL GRANDCHILDREN. Children of Robert Knox. 1. Robert Chaloner Knox, Col. 5th Royal Irish Regiment; b. 5 Feb., 1855; d. unm. 20 June, 1924. 2. The Rev. Frederick , M.A., J.P., Chaplain to the Duke of Rutland, b. 5 May, 1856; m. 1892, Eva Bassile, daughter of the Rev. Henry G. C. Browne (see Peerage of Kilmaine); d. 2 July, 1929. Issue: 1 daughter. 3. Edwin Sandys Lindesay Knox, b. 30 Dec., 1858; d. 28 Nov., 1859. 4. Lindesay Knox, J.P., Major 5th Royal Irish Regiment, b. 23 Aug., 1864; m. 1 Sept., 1895, Ethel, daughter of Major-General Dennis; d. 16 Dec., 1933. Issue: 1 son, d. in infancy; 4 daughters. 5. Catherine Frances Knox, b. 6 July, 1857; d. unm. 4 Jan., 1931. 6. Agnes Charlotte Knox, b. 16 May, 1860; m. (1) 13 Dec., 1894, George Edmund Allen, of Wickeridge House, Ashburton, Devon; (2) 9 Aug., 1922, Ernest Godfrey Mills, of Gurrington House, Ashburton, l)evon; d. 13 Feb., 1925. Issue: 2 daughters by first marriage. 7. Philippa Knox, b. 13 Aug., 1861; d. unm., 27 Oct., 1929. 8. Cecilia Maria Knox, b. 6 April, 1863; d. unm., 1 April, 1880. 9. Alice Knox, b. 2 June, 1866; d. unm., 25 Aug., 1946. 10. Sophia Janet ("Tooey") Knox, b. 5 Sept., 1868; m. 3 July, 1900, Edward Gabbett, son of the Ven. E. Gabbett, Archdeacon of Limerick and Rector of Croom, Limerick. Issue: 1 son; 3 daughters. Gl 102 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY 11. Flora Blanche Marianne Knox, b. 10 Jan., 1870; m. 17 Dec., 1901, Mark Lingard; d. 12 Nov., 1934. 12. Mary Herbert ("Minnie") Knox, b. 18 June, 1871; m. 29 April, 1908, the Rev. William Archibald Richardson; d. 4 Jan., 1941. Issue: 2 sons; 1 daughter. Children of John Bagwell. 1. Frederick Taylor Bagwell, B.A., Barrister-at-Law; m. 11 Jan., 1894, Hilda Mary Jane Stuart, daughter of John F. Turnly, D.L., J.P., of Drumnasole, Carnlough, Co. Antrim. Issue: 1 daughter. 2. Edward Bagwell, R.I.C. 3. John Percy Bagwell, Army Officer; d. unm., 9 April, 1891. 4. Agnes Blanche Bagwell, b. 30 April, 1860; m. 7 Aug., 1884, Robert Francis Harrison, K.C., of Race View, Ballymena, Co. Antrim; d. 21 Aug., 1948. Issue: 2 sons; 2 daughters. 5. Pauline Eliza Jemima Marian Bagwell, b. 17 June, 1861; m. 30 Jan., 1892, Philip Harold Wade, son of Richard Wade, by his wife Adelaide, daughter of Sir Lancelot Shadwell, Vice-Chan­ cellor, appointed Speaker of the I-louse of Lords in 1835. Issue: 1 daughter. 6. Edith Bagwell, m. April, 1889, Frederick Hinde, Captain, 12th Royal Lancers; d. 1917 from shock after receipt of news of the death of her son, Basil, in the war of 1914-1918. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. 7. Alice Bagwell, b. 1868; d. unm., 23 Dec., 1898.

III. GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN. Daughter of the Rev. F. J{l. Knox. Eileen Frances Knox; m. Major Walter Morris, M.C. Daughters of Lindesay Knox. 1. & 2. (Twins): Esme Knox; m. Oct. 1922, William Davis. Daphne Knox. 3. Barbara Knox. 4. Iris Knox. Daughters of George Allen. 1. Katharine Agnes Allen. 2. Philippa Blanche Fortescue Allen. Children of Edward Gabbett. 1. Lieut-Col. Robert Edward Gabbett, M.B.E., M.C., R.E., b. 8 June, 1911; m. 15 Oct., 1943, Ann Henrietta Westwood Verney Asser. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. 2. Moira Eileen Gabbett. 3, Cecilia Alleyne Gabbett; m. 24 Jan., 1931, Co1nmander James Hugh Malcolm, 11.S.C., R.N. 4. Joan Edith Gabbett; m. 10 Oct., 1936, Maurice William Gibbon. Issue: 2 sons; 2 daughters. APPENDIX II 103 Son of Mark Lingard. Ralph 11ark Lingard, b. 16 Dec., 1905; d. 19 June, 1948 (Ac_cidentally drowned in Borneo). Children of the Rev. Archibald Richardson. 1. The Rev. Raymond William Richardson, R.N., b. 16 Oct., 1909; m. 8 July, 1939, Jocelyn Carroll. 2. & 3. (Twins): Lieut-Col. Dermot Lindesay Richardson and Sheila Mary Richardson. Daughter of Frederick Taylor Bagwell. Sybil Hilda Lindesay Bagwell. Children of R. F. Harrison. 1. Lieut.-Col. Michael Charles Cooper Harrison, D.S.O., M.C., 18th Royal Irish Regiment, b. Dublin, 22 Jan., 1888; m. 30 Sept., 1926, Lucy Kathleen Hansell. 2. Robert Arthur Harrison, b. 14 Feb., 1902; m. 27 April, 1935, Mary Martin. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. 3. Frances Mabel Harrison, m. 19 Dec., 1916, Major-General Frank Casement, D.S.O., R.A.M.C., son of Casement, D.L., of Ballycastle, Co. Antrim. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. 4. Blanche Lindesay Harrison; m. 8 Dec., 1925, Brigadier· Charles I-I. Cooper, O.B.E., I.A.S.C. Daughter of Philip }Vade. Norah Pauline Wade. Children of Captain Hinde. 1. Basil Hinde; killed in 1"1esopota1nia, a1'out Jan., 1917, in war of 1914-18. 2. Eileen Hinde; m. 3 Aug., 1916, Geoffrey Cobb; d. 11 June, 1927. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter.

IV. GREAT-GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN. Children of Robert Edward Gabbett. 1. Michael Robert Edward Verney Ga~bett, b. 5 March, 1948. 2. Penelope Ann Verney Gabbett. Children of the Rev. Raymond William Richardson. 1. & 2. (Twins) : Brian William and Michael John Richardson, b. 19 Sept., 1943. 3. David Raymond Richardson, b., 4 Oct., 1947. Children of Robert Arthur Harrison. 1. Michael Piers Martin Harrison, b. 15 Aug., 1936. 2. Julyan Frances Harrison. Children of General Frank Casement. 1. Francis Charles Casement, R.A... , b. 11 May, 1920; m. 7 Nov., 1942, Lesley, daughter of Captain Cecil Brown, of Whiteparish, Salisbury. Issue: 1 son. 2. Alison Sheila Casement. 104 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Children of Maurice Gibbon. 1. John Edward Gibbon, b. 27 July, 1938. 2. William Acton Gibbon, b. 8 11ay, 1940. 3. & 4. (Twins): Philippa 11ary Gibbon and Janet Gibbon (Janet died at birth). Children of Geoffrey Cobb. 1. Basil Cobb, b. 12 Nov., 1918. 2. Margaret Eileen Anne Cobb; m. 4 Jan., 1944, Garth Priestman Wilson, son of Lieut-Col. P. W. Wilson. V. GREAT-GREAT-GREAT-GRANDCHILD. Son of Francis Charles Casement. Hugh Francis Casement, b. 20 Nov., 1947. APPENDIX III 105 APPENDIX III DESCENDANTS OF FREDERICK LINDESAY BY HIS SECOND WIFE

I. CHILDREN. 1. The Rev. William Frederick Lindesay, B.A., b. 3 June, 1857; d. unm., 14 Feb., 1907. 2. Charles de la Poire Crawford Lindesay, C.E., b. 1 July, 1863; m. (1) 26 Dec., 1889, Amy Carleton, eldest daughter of George Howard Bigg-Wither, of Manydown and Tangier Parks, Hants.; (2) 21 April 1900, Ethei Mary, daughter of Col. James Cross Ormrod, J.P., of Wyresdale Park, Scorton, Lancaster; d. 29 May, 1933. Issue: 2 sons; 1 daughter by first wife; 2 sons; 2 daughters by second wife. 3. Alexander Robert Knox Lindesay, b. 23 Au.g., 1864; d. 24 Jan., 1865. 4. Lieut-Col. Victor Edward Hugh Lindesay, M.B., Ch.B., I.M.S., b. 24 ~fay, 1869; m. 6 June, 1898, Frances Helen Levine, daughter of 1\t1ajor W. Merrick Fowler, 61st Foot, of Strode Manor, Dorset; d. 2 May, 1940. Issue: 3 sons; 3 daughters. 5. The Rev. Robert Thomas Mauleverer Lindesay, M.A., b. 9 May, 1870; m. (1) 26 Oct., 1894, Louisa, youngest daughter of John Barnard, of Cotham, Bristol; (2) 20 April, 1920, Laura Richardson; d. 7 April, 1941. Issue : 1 daughter by first wife. 6. Flora Charlotte Helena Lindesay, b. 25 Jan., 1860; m. (1) 24 May, 1893, the Rev. Octavius Frederick Pigot, L.Th.; (2) 17 June, 1909, the Rev. Walter Wolfenden Kenny, M.A.; d. 1 Nov., 1930. 7. En1meline Stuart Lindesay, b. 19 Aug., 1861; m. 3 July, 1894, Ernest Henry Godfrey, F.S.S., d. 12 Nov., 1945. Issue: 2 sons; 2 daughters. 8. Charlotte Philippa Bendrida Lindesay, -b. 19 Nov., 1865; d. 2 June, 1866. 9. Alexandra Philippa Anna Lindesay, b. 11 f)ec., 1867; m. 3 Feb., 1895, Col. Vivian Boase Bennett, M.B.,. F.R.C.S., I.M.S.; d. 1 May, 1946. Issue: 2 sons; 1 daughter.

II. GRANDCHILDREN. Children of Crawford Lindesay by his first wife. 1. Hugh Howard Lindesay, b. 24 Nov., 1892; d. unm. (killed in war of 1914-18). 2. Robert Noel Carleton Lindesay, b. 25 Dec., 1897; d. in infan€y. 3. Frances Mabel Amy Lindesay, b. 10 Oct., 1895; d. 5 Oct., 1896. Children of Crawford Lindesay by his second wife. 1. Robert Ormrod Lindesay, b. 15 May, 1901. 106 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY 2. Peter Mauleverer Crawford Lindesay, AJvLI.C.E., A.MJ ... STRUCT.E., b. 16 Jan., 1905; m. 25 July, 1928, Hazel Gwendo­ line Gilbertson. Issue : 1 son. 3. Edith Ethel Lindesay, b. 1902; d. 1904. 4. Janet Edith Lindesay, b. 22 Dec., 1909; d. 13 March, 1910. Children of Victor Lindesay. 1. & 2. (Twins): Frederick Hugh Byres Lindesay and Helen Loughry Lindesay, b. 9 11ay, 1908; Helen Loughry Lindesay d. 31 May, 1908; Frederick Hugh Byres Lindesay d. June, 1909. 3. Robert John Byres Lindesay, b. 9 Nov., 1910; d. 6 Jan., 1915. 4. Bernard .J\.lexander Hugh Lindesay, b. 13 March, 1912; d. 3 Jan., 1915. 5. Enid Katharine Jessie Lindesay, m. 20 July, 1920; Lieut.-Col. Gordon Blackburne-Kane. Issue: 2 sons. 6. Dorothy Mauleverer Lindesay, m. 5 April, 1924, Brigadier Law­ rence Monier-Williams, C.B.E., A.D.C. to H.M. The King. Issue : 1 son, 1 daughter. Daughter of the Rev. Robert Lindesay. Elizabeth Katharine Lindesay. Children of Ernest H. Godfrey. 1. Commodore Valentine Stuart Godfrey, O.B.E., Officer of the U.S. Legion of Merit, R.C.N., b. 14 A~g~ -_1898; m. 8 March,_ 1924, 11argaret Horton, daughter of L~she Herbert Hardie, of Victoria, B.C., Canada. Issue: 1 sori; 1 daughter. 2. The Rev. Frederick Lindesay Godfrey, M.A., b. 25 May, 1902; m. 11 May, 1932, Lois Mary Gladys, daughter of Archibald Turner, of Swithland, Leicestershire. Issue: 3 sons. 3. Emmeline Bendrida Godfrey, b. 8 Aug., 1895, d. 5 Sept., 1895. 4. Eveleen Maud Godfrey, m. 5 Jan., 1918, Alfred John Llewellyn Haskell, Deputy General Manager, Bank of Montreal, Canada. Issue : 1 son; 1 daughter. Children of Col. Vivian Bennett. 1. Lieutenant Vivian Wilfred Bennett, R.E., b. 20 Oct., 1896; d. unm. 21 Oct., 1917 (killed in war of 1914-18). 2. Hugh Lindesay Bennett, b. 11 Aug., 1902; m. 20 11arch, 1930, Edith Agnes Walsh. Issue : 1 sor.; 1 daughter. 3. Helen Norah Bennett, M.A.

III. GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN. Son of Peter Lindesay. Patrick Clyne Crawford Lindesay, b. 11 March, 1930. Sons of Col. Gordon Blackburne-Kane. 1. Captain John Lindesay Blackburne-Kane, Royal Leicestershire Regiment, b. 19 Nov., 1921; m. 9 Nov., 1946, Vivian Grace, daughter of Captain R. C. Sun1ner. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. APPENDIX Ill 107 2. Geoffrey Michael Lindesay Blackburne-Kane, b. 12 Nov., 1925; m. 20 March, 1948, Rachel Maud, daughter of Lieut.-Col. F. E. Gilpin. Children of Brigadier Lawrence Monier-Williams. 1. Peter Lawrence Crawford Monier-Williams, b. 7 Jan., 1925. 2. Felicite Helen Mauleverer Monier-Williams. Children of Commodore Valentine Godfrey. 1. John Valentine Hardie Godfrey, b. 2 Aug., 1930. 2. Margaret Lucretia Lindesay Godfrey. Children of the Rev. Frederick Godfrey. 1. Patrick Lindesay Archibald Godfrey, b. 15 Feb., 1933. 2. Christopher Martin Valentine Godfrey, b. 19 Jan., 1938. 3. William Richard Godfrey, b. 24 Oct., 1944. Children of Alfred Haskell. 1. John Frederick Dennis Haskell, b. 14 Jan., 1928. 2. Barbara J\.1aithol Lindesay Haskell, m. 26 Aug., 1944, James. Harper, jr. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. Children of Hugh Bennett. 1. William Hugh Bennett, b. 10 Oct., 1933. 2. Betty Ann Bennett. IV·. GREAT-GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN. Children of Captain John Blackburne-Kane. l. Hugh Patrick Lindesay Blackburne-Kan-e, b. 8 June, 1949~ 2. Penelope Enid Blackburne-K.ane. Children of James Harper, jr. 1. John Copcutt Harper, b. 17 Sept., 1948. 2. Denise Lindesay Harper. 108 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY APPENDIX IV DESCENDANTS OF THE REV. THOMAS LINDESAY, RECTOR OF UPPER CU:tvIBER, COUNTY DERRY

I. CHILDREN OF THE REV. THOMAS LINDESAY, BY HIS SECOND w IFE. 1. Robert Thomas Lindesay, b. 15 Jan., 1841; d. unm., at Pau, S.W. France, 20 Jan., 1862. 2. Lieut.Col. Henry Richard Ponsonby Lindesay, of Donore, Ivy Bridge, South Devon, b. 27 July, 1843; m. 20 July, 1898, Frances 1-1ary, daughter of the Rev. J. Irwin, Rector of Hurworth-on Tees; d. s.p. 1 Sept., 1903. 3. Thomas Lindesay, of Auckland, New Zealand, b. 4 Feb., 1845; m. 1 Aug., 1874, Inez Eva Isabel, daughter of Lieut.-Col. the Hon. Stephen Ponsonby Peacocke, of Hawthornden, Howick, New Zealand, and great-granddaughter of the first Marquis of Waterford (she was born 23 Oct., 1852, and died 10 Oct., 1937). He died 10 Sept., 1924. Issue: 5 sons; 4 daughters. 4. Frederick Lindesay, b. 18 Jan., 1848; m. 8 Dec., 1874, Mary Sophia, daughter of P.H. de la Motte (b. 15 April, 1850; d. 26 Mar., 1926). He died 11 Feb., 1923. Issue: 3 sons; 3 daughters. 5. John Lindesay, b. Dublin, 20 Jan., 1851; m. at Auckland, New Zealand, 20 Sept., 1877. Edith Ellen Greenhalsh (b. Plymouth, 8 Jan., 1857; d. 28 Sept., 1926). He died 19 March, 1928. Issue: 4 sons; 3 daughters. 6. Abraham Hamilton Lindesay, R.N., b. 6 April, 1852; cl. unrn. 17 April, 1888. 7. Major Edward Lindesay, b. 6 Sept., 1853; m. 20 Sept., 1892, Eva, daughter of Surgeon-General Davis, I.M.S.; d. 5 March, 1923. Issue : 3 sons. 8. The Rev. William O'Neill Lindesay, M.A., Rector of Upper Cum­ ber, Co. Derry; b. 5 Jan., 1857; m. 20 April, 1898, Priscilla Sarah, daughter of G. J. Buck; d. 22 Jan., 1933. s.p. 9. Ellen Jane Lindesay, b. 27 July, 1842; cl. unm. in Dublin, 1926. 10. Elizabeth Frances Lindesay, b. March, 1847; m. 12 Aug., 1869, Charles Frederick Stewart, of Horn Head, Co. Donegal; d. 5 March, 1881. Issue: 4 sons; 4 daughters. Charles Frederick Stewart m. (2) 6 May, 1884, Georgina Sophie, daughter of Blackwood Hamilton, of Highnam, Bray, Co. Wicklow. Issue: 2 sons; 1 daughter. 11. Isabella Lindesay, b. 3 July, 1849; m. 20 April, 1875, Henry Wilton, D.I., R.I.C., son of George J. Wilton, of Co. Cavan. (b. 1845; d. 30 Nov., 1886). She died 19 Oct., 1931, aged 82. Issue: 1 son; 2 daughters. APPENDIX IV 109

II. GRANDCHILDREN OF THE REV. THOMAS LINDESAY. Children of Thomas Lindesay, of Auckland, New Zealand. 1. Thomas Percy Coddington Lindesay, J.P., b. 27 Feb., 1878; m. (1) 2 Jan., 1908, Aline, 2nd daughter of Charles Cowan, of Auckland, N.Z. (She died 10 Dec., 1939). Issue: 3 sons. He m. (2) 2 April, 1944, Lucy, 4th daughter of Robert Glasson, of Karaka, N .z. 2. Reginald Frederick Brydges Lindesay, of Whangarei, N.Z., b. 12 Oct., 1880; m. 30 Nov., 1910, Henrietta, 2nd daughter of J. A. L. Hall, of Bay of Islands, N .Z., and granddaughter of the Rev. J. A. Hall, who officiated at the wedding of his father and mother, Thomas and Inez Lindesay. Issue: 2 sons. 3. Hamilton Beresford Lindesay, b. 12 Dec., 1886; m. 22 July, 1920, Catherine, 5th daughter of Robert Glasson, of Karaka, N.Z. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. 4. Cyril Edward Arthur Lindesay, S.B.St.J., of Mission Bay, Auck­ land, N.Z., b. 15 March, 1892; m. 3 Feb., 1937, Nyree Dacre, eldest daughter of Stanley Orbell, of Auckland, N.Z. 5. Isabel Eva Elizabeth Lindesay; m. 3 May, 1905, Lieut.-Col. Roy William Cumming, 16th W aikatos, elder son of William Cum­ ming, by his second wife, Rhoda Lucy Bell, of Hamilton, N .z. Issue: 1 son; 4 daughters. 6. Inez ·violet Georgie Lindesay. 7. Cecil Lindesay, b. 1 Oct., 1885; d. 17 Feb., 1893. 8. Daphne Gladys Alice Mabel Lindesay. 9. Eileen Lindesay, b. 27 June, 1893; d. 15 Sept., 1893. Children of Frederick Lindesay. 1. Frederick Sinclair Lindesay, Lieut.-Col. Indian Army, of Salis­ bury, Southern Rhodesia, South Africa, b. 16 January, 1880; m. 10 March, 1908, Violet Ethel, eldest daughter of E. A. Down, Indian Forest Service. Issue : 3 sons; 2 daughters. 2. Hamilton Lindesay, b. 26 July, 1882. 3. Philip Mauleverer Lindesay, b. 27 June, 1889; d. unm. 13 July, 1935. 4. Hildegarde Ellen Elizabeth Lindesay, m. as his second wife, 1910, Captain Charles Frederick Stewart, D.L., J.P., of Horn Head, Co. Donegal. Issue : 2 sons. 5. Constance Isabel Mary Lindesay, b. 25 Jan., 1877; d. 5 Feb., 1881. 6. Inez Dorothea Mary Lindesay; m. 28 Oct., 1909, Major Roland 1,1artin Macrory. R.E., of Limavady, Co. Derry. (He died 16 Mar., 1944). Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. Children of John Lindesay. 1. John Middleton Lindesay, b. 19 Dec., 1877, at Christ Church, New Zealand;- m. 23 Mar., 1914, at Brooklyn, Ne,v York, U.S.A., Etheldreda Maria Theresa Cross, b. at San Paulo, Brazil. Issue: 3 sons. 110 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY 2. Henry Horrell Lindesay, b. 19 Feb., 1882; m. Ellen Ryder; d. 3 Jan., 1938. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. 3. Edward Hamilton Lindesay, b. 12 Nov., 1886; m. Rachel Ley; d. 16 Jan., 1919. s.p. 4. Isabella Elizabeth Ellen Lindesay; m. 29 Dec., 1904, George Underhay. Issue 1 son. 5. Claudia Jane Lindesay, b. 29 Feb., 1884; m. 19 Dec., 1917, Joseph Henry Rennell; she d. 13 Feb., 1946. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. 6. Edith May Lindesay; m. 12 Jan., 1908, Frederick Bounden. Issue: 1 son; 3 daughters. 7. Frances Grace Lindesay; m. 11 Nov., 1928, Albert John Gurr, Sons of lvlajor Edward Lindesay. 1. Lieut.-Col. James Henry Coddington Lindesay, M.C., of Loch Arthur, Beeswing, Dumfriesshire, Scotland, b. 2 Aug., 1893; m. 26 Sept., 1923, Elizabeth Rebecca Frances, daughter of Col. W. D. Dickson, J.P., of Kildemo, Co. Limerick. Issue: 3 sons; 1 daughter. 2. Lieut.-Col. Thomas Ha1nilton Lindesay, R.E., of Hills~de, Dor­ man's Park, East Grinstead, Sussex, b. at Mhow, Central India, 17 Dec., 189]; m. 8 Oct., 1930, Margaret Logan, daughter of Peter and Margaret Varwell, of Cluden, Northam, North Devon. Issue : 2 sons. 3. Lieut.-Col. Edward Mauleverer Lindesay, M.B.E., R.A., of White Lodge, Weyhill Road, Andover, Hants., b. 31 July, 1901; m. 27 Nov., 1930, Rhoda Doreen Bathgate. Issue: 2 sons. Children of Charles Frederick Stewart by his first wife. 1. Captain Charles Frederick Stewart, D.L., J.P., of Horn Head, Co. Donegal, b. 12 July, 1870; m. (1) 20 Sept., 189), Alice Mary Lydia (b. 1868; d. Jan., 1907), daughter of Captain John Keys Humfrey, of Cavan-a-Cor. Issue: 2 daughters. (2) 5 Oct., 1910, Hildegarde Ellen Elizabeth Lindesay (He died 1933). Issue: 2 sons. 2. William Stewart, b. 2 Aug., 1871; d. unm. 22 Jan., 1895. 3. The Rev. Thomas Francis Stewart, M.A., C.F., Vicar of St. Paul's, Worcester, b. 9 Oct., 1872; d. 15 March, 1916, as result of motor accident. 4. Walter Edvvard Stewart, b. 14 June, 1876; d. 1 Oct., 1883. 5. Anne Elizabeth Frances Stewart; m. 21 June, 1900, Henry Eliot Howard, second son of Col. Henry Howard, J.P., of Stone House, Kidderminster, Worcestershire. He was born 13 Nov., 1872, and died 26 Dec., 1940. Issue: 2 sons; 4 daughters. 6. Nicola Mary Stewart, b. 20 July, 1877; d. 5 April, 1891. 7. Eleanor Louisa Stewart, b. 25 June, 1879; d. 14 July, 1914. Drowned near Horn Head, whilst rescuing niece. 8. Elizabeth Frances Stewart, b. 27 Feb., 1881; d. 2 April, 1891. APPENDIX IV 111 Children of Charles Frederick Stewart by his second wife. 1. Bertram Robert Stewart, b. 14 Jan., 1886. 2. Richard Arthur Stewart, b. 17 Sept., 1888. 3. Georgina Sophia Stewart. Children of Henry Wilton. 1. George Henry Wilton, b. 15 March, 1876; d. unm. 13 Nov., 1932. 2. Anna Elizabeth Mary Wilton. 3. Isabella Frances Wilton; m. 17 Nov., 1908, Dr. Joseph Ward, C.M.G., D.S.O. She died 14 Jan., 1920, s.p.

III. GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN OF THE REV. THOMAS LINDESAY. Childr.~n of Thomas Percy Coddington Lindesay by his first wife. 1. Harry Percy Phillip Lindesay, b. 13 April, 1910. 2. Frederick .A.llan Hamilton Lindesay, b. 3 May, 1911. 3. Denis Thomas Robert Lindesay, b. 25 Aug., 1913. Children of Reginald F. B. Lindesay. 1. Reginald John Brydges Lindesay, Sergeant-Pilot, R.A.F., b. 26 Nov., 1911; Lost 24 March, 1942, in world war. 2. Thomas Campbell Lindesay, of Moerewa, Bay of Islands, New Zealand, Captain, 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force, b. 8 Aug., 1915; m. 27 July, 1946, Anne Benita Poore, of "The Livery," \Vinterslow, Salisbury. Issue: 1 son. Children of Hamilton Beresford Lindesay. 1. Thon1as Hamilton Beresford Lindesay, b. 17 Feb., 1922. 2. Eleanor Berners Louisa Lindesay. Children of Lieut.-Col. R. W. Cumming. 1. Lindesay Roy Gordon Cumming, b. 13 Jan., 1913. 2. Inez Isabel Loraine Cumming. 3. Dorothy Eleanor Cumming; m. 12 July, 1933, Major Hugh Stewart Douglas, M.B.E., M.B., Ch.B., only son of Dr. Hugh Douglas, of Hamilton, New Zealand. Issue: 5 sons. 4. Enid Violet Hope Cum1ning. 5. Mary Beresford Cumming; m. 12 Nov., 1941, The Rev. Geoffrey Louis Maffey, M.A., L.Th., elder son of L.D.S. Maffey, of Auckland, New Zealand. Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. Children of Frederick Sinclair Lindesay. 1. Robert Halkett Lindesay, b. 19 July, 1913; m. 9 Dec., 1939, Nancy Cullen Bowles. Issue: 1 daughter. 2. Peter Frederick Lindesay, b. 24 Dec., 1915; m. 22 Nov., 1940, Dorothea Helen Kidd. Issue : 3 sons. 3. Richard Thomas Anthony Lindesay, b. 11 June, ·1917. 4. Patricia \liolet Hildegarde Lindesay; m. 3 Oct., 1931, Col. Oscar Kinsman Steveney, of the Indian Army. Issue: 1 son. 5. Rosamond Inez Lindesay; n1. 6 Oct., 1937, I. J. J. Vigour~ A.R.I.B.A., Issue: 1 son; 1 daughter. 112 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Children of Captain Charles Frederick Stewart by his first wife. 1. Elizabet.l-i Frances Stewart; m. 1 Dec., 1924, Reginald Arthur Rolleston vValker. Issue: 4 sons; 3 daughters. 2. Alice Humfrey Stewart, b. 8 11ay, 1903; d. 24 Aug., 1948. Children of Captain Charles .Frederick Stewart by his second wife. 1. Charles Frederick Stewart, b. 6 Aug., 1911; d. 5 July, 1920. 2. Lindesay Stewart, b. 16 April, 1913. Children of Major R. M. Macrory. 1. Captain Henry Greer lvfacrory, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, b. 26 April, 1918; killed in \var, Jan., 1944. 2. Mary Lindesay Macrory, b. 29 June, 1914; d. 23 Dec., 1929. Children of /ohn Middleton Lindesay. 1. John Hamilton Lindesay, b. 1 July, 1915, at Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.; m. 18 May, 1946) Dorothy Lucas. Issue: 1 son. 2. Richard Cross Lindesay, b. at Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A., 16 April, 1918; d. at Brooklyn, 31 Dec., 1918. 3. Frederick Henry Lindesay, b. at Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A., 21 July, 1921. Children of Henry Horrell Lindesay. 1. · Leslie Lindesay. 2. May Lindesay. Son of George. Underhay. Wilfrid Henry U nderhay, b. 25 June, 1905; m. 27 April, 1935, Ethel Elizabeth Burner. Children of Joseph H. Rennell. 1. Edward Joseph James Rennell, b. 18 Nov., 1919. 2. Claudia Doreen Rennell. Children of Frederick Bounden. 1. Frederick Robert Henry Bounden, b. 16 Oct., 1913; m. 5 Feb., 1937, Ena Barlow. Issue: 1 son. 2. Hilda Catherine May Bounden; m. 31 Dec., 1939, Leonard Charles Cunningham. Issue : 3 daughters. 3. Muriel Gladys Bounden; m. 17 Jan., 1935, John Worthington Southgate. Issue: 3 sons; 2 daughters. 4. Phyllis Ethel Bounden. Children of Col. /. H. C. Lindesay. 1. Edward Dickson Lindesay, b. 25 July, 1924 (late Captain Bombay Sappers and Miners), Student of Civil Engineering, Glasgow University. 2. John Stewart Lindesay (late Lieutenant (Acting Captain) 1/5 Mahrattas) Imperial Bank of Iran, b. 4 March, 1926. 3. Robert James Lindesay b. 15 Nov., 1935. 4. Mary Frances Lindesay, A.T .S. APPENDIX IV 113 Children of Col. Thomas Hamilton Lindesay. 1. Peter Edward Lindesay, b. 21 Nov., 1931. 2. Wendy O'Neill Lindesay. Children of Col. E. M. Lindesay. 1. James Lawson Lindesay, b. 27 Aug., 1931. 2. Richard Hugh Mauleverer Lindesay, b. 20 April, 1936. Children of Eliot Howard. 1. Eliot Charles Stewart Howard, b. 12 Oct., 1903; m. 16 June, 1939,. Daphne Agnes, daughter of Captain Colville, R.N., of Coton Hall, near Bridgnorth, Shropshire. Issue : 1 son. 2. Alan Lindesay McKnight Howard, b. 9 Aug., 1906; d. 25 Jan.,. 1912. 3. Alison Howard; m. 21 April, 1931, Edward Gibbons, of Elm Hill,. near Worcester. Issue: 3 sons; 1 daughter. 4. Rosemary Eliot Howard. 5. Esme Eleanor Howard; m. 25 April, 1940, the Rev. John Fletcher Boughey, C.F., Rector of Barby, near Rugby. 6. Elizabeth Lindesay Howard; m. 21 June, 1947, Patrick Beaumont,. late R.N. V .R.

IV. GREAT-GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN OF THE REV. THOMAS LINDESAY. Son of Thomas Campbell Lindesay. Philip Edward Lindesay, b. 22 Aug., 1947. Children of Major Hugh Stewart Douglas. 1. Brian Stewart Douglas, b. 29 July, 1935. 2. Hugh Douglas, b. 29 Jan., 1938. 3. David Lindesay Douglas, b. 19 Feb., 1940. 4. Peter Lennox Douglas, b. 13 April, 1946. 5. John Harris Douglas, b. 19 June, 1948. Children of the Rev. G. L. Maffey. 1. Michael Geoffrey Maffey, b. 23 Sept., 1943. 2. Jennifer Mary Maffey. Daughter of Robert Halkett Lindesay. Patricia Margaret Lindesay. Children of Peter Frederick Lindesay. 1. Derek Sinclair Lindesay, b. 30 Jan., 1943; d. 19 Feb., 1943. 2. Raymond Arthur Lindesay, b. 15 Jan., 1947. 3. Keith Halkett Lindesay, b. 8 July, 1948. Son of Col. 0. K. Steveney. Peter Halkett Steveney, b. 19 Oct., 1935. Children of I. J. J. Vigour. 1. John Humphrey Vigour, b. 16 Sept., 1938. 2. Jacqueline Gay Vigour. 114 THE LINDESAYS OF LOUGHRY Children of R. A. R. Walker. 1. Charles Wyborn Goodere \Valker, b. 12 July, 1927. 2. John Humfrey Stewart Walker, b. 14 Oct., 1929. 3. Robert Darnley Stewart Walker, b. 28 May, 1937. 4. James Stewart Walker, b. 27 July, 1942. 5. Rosamund Elizabeth Frances Walker. 6. Eleanor Goodere Dinely Walker. 7. Mary Esme Rolleston Walker. Son of John Hamilton Lindesay. David John Lindesay, b. 9 Feb., 1947. Son of Eliot C. S. 1-Ioward. 1'1ichael Eliot Howard, b. 23 Dec., 1946. Children of Edward Gibbons. 1. Philip Henry Gibbons, b. 14 April, 1932. 2. Peter John Gibbons, b. 22 Aug., 1935. 3. David Benjamin Gibbons, b. 18 Nov., 1947. 4. Elizabeth Ann Gibbons. Son of F. R. H. Bounden. John Glynn Bounden, b. 23 June, 1944. Children of L. C. Cunningham. 1. Barry Francis Cunningham, b. 16 Oct., 1942~ 2. Dorothy Lorraine Cunningha1n. Children of J. W. Southgate. 1. Michael John Southgate, b. 2 April, 1935. 2. Brian Edward Southgate, h. 15 March, 1936. 3. Alan Frederick Southgate, b. 9 .A.. pril, 1938. 4. Gillian Mary Southgate. 5. Barbara Joan Southgate. INDEX

Ab:::rcorn, Sir \Villi~~m Mure of, 46 British-Israel World Federation, 85 Abergavenny, Lord, letter franked by, 35 Burke on pride of ancestry, 96 Acheson, Janet, 17 '' But,'' ancient Scottish meaning of, 46 Address to King \Viiliam and Queen Bv, Col.. R.E., 35 Mary, 24 B\'town,, · afterwards Ottawa, 35 Agriculture, Ministry of, N. Ireland, 15 Albemarle, Niece of the Earl of, 31 "Captain Lane,'' 75 Alley, Grace, 53; Rev. Peter, 53; William, Cardwell, Mrs., 22, 23 Bf shop of Exeter, 53 Carlisle, Bishop Nicolson of, 31 All Saints' Church, Hmvick, N.Z., 92-94 Carlyle, Prof. Thomas Dacre, 43 Ancestry, legitimate pride of noble, 95 ,96 Cashel, Archbishop Nicolson of, 31, 32 An Old Ulster House, by Mrs. Lenox- Castle Stewart, Earls of, 21, 87; Dowager Conyngham, 21 Countess of, 8 7 Arabic poem, translation of, 43 Chaplain, Henry, and the Derby of 1867, Armagh, Royal School, 39, 89 70 Armorial Bearings, Lindesa y, 19, 4 3, Chaplain's House, Wandsworth Prison, 83 46-56 Charles I and Plantation of Ulster, 20 Arms of Margaret Lindesay, 19 Charles, Dr., of Cooksto\vn, 21; Canon, Army and Navy Stores, 82 of \Vestminster, 21; Sir Havelock, 1st Arncliffe Hall, Mauleverers of, 33, 35 Bt., 21; Sir Noel, 3rd Bt., 21 Aughrim, battle of, 24 Cheltenham College, 91 Children's Scripture Union, 85 Bagwell, Agnes Sarah, 82 ; Frederick Chilianwalla, Battle of, 1849, 57 Taylor, 82; John, 82; Norah Pauline, Christ Church, Oxford, 33 35; Sybil, 82 Clan Lindsay Society, 50 Bagwells of Marlfield, 82 Clenaghan, Rev. Michael, 25, 53 Ballymuily Glebe, 30, 31 Coddington, Elizabeth, 90 Banshee, The, 21, 60, 62, 66, 67 Coke of Holkham, 30 Barker, Margaret, 23, 57 Colonisation of Ulster, 17 Barnard, John, 81 Cooper, Elizabeth, 33, 35 Bathurst, Benjamin, Bishop of Norwich, Coote, Sir Eyre, 82 87; Disappearance of Arnb2ssador, 87 Crawford, 25th Earl of, 43 Battle of Brechin, 1452, 51 Crawford and Lindsay, Earls of, 41 Battle of the Boyne, 24 Crawford, Rev. Dr., 21 Bayntun-Sandys, Agnes Cornish, 39; Sir Creighton, Dr., Bishop of London, 31 Edwin, Bt., 39 Cricket at Tarvin Hall School: 68 Beatty, Admiral Earl, 58; Fred<::rica, 58; Cromwell, Oliver, 18 Edward and Kat-::, children of, 58; Horace, 58 Darlington, Mrs., 58 Beech tree avenue at Loughry, 60 De la Poire, Helena, 51 Belfast Public Record Office, 13 Derby Race of 1867, 70 Bennett, Alexandra, 87; Col. V. B., 87; De Ros, Lord, 69 Helen Norah, 89; Vivian Wilfred, 88, Derry, Siege of, 1689, 15, 24 89 Dictionary of National Biography, 31 Bessborough, Noble House oC 89 Dissolution of the Monasteries, 18 Bethune, See under '' Lindsay '' and Donaghrisk Burying Ground, 30, 31, 41-

" LindesavJ " 43. 44, 73 Blackburne-Kane, Enid, 80 Druidical Ruins at Loughry, 6J Book-plates: Frederick Lindesay, 48; F. J. Dul wich College, 55, 76 S. Lindesay, 49 Dunaliey, Lord, 82 '' Bot,'' ancient Scottish ,vord for '' ,vith- out, '' 46 Elliott and Frv. Ltd., 85, 86 Boxer Uprising in China, 1902, 79 Exeter, \Villiam Alley, Bishop of, 53 Boyne, Battle of the, 24 Exhibition of 1851, Great, 69 Brechin, Battle of, 1452, 51 Britannia Tubular Suspension Bridge, Fancourt, Canon \V., 92 1850, 69 Ferguson, lames, 23, 26 116 INDEX

Festive Celebrations at Loughry, 45 Sir Claud, 53; General John, 53; John, FitzGerald, Lord Edward, 52; Pamela, 52 M.D., of Maryborough, 52; Louisa Kate, Fleming, J. W., 59, 76 58; Susan, 58 Forrest, Henry, 22, 45 Jacobabad, founded by General Jacob, 53 Fowler, Major \V. Merrick, 79 Jafir Ali, 71 James I, Loughry patents of, 18 Gabbett, Mrs., 13, 29, 47, 80 James, Canon P .E., 92 Geneall)gical Chart of Lindesay Family, Jersey, Earl of, 52 16 Jervis-\Vhite-Jervis, Helena, 58; Thomas Giants' Gr:.1ve at Loughry, 60, 65, 66 Lindesa v, 5 8 Giffard, Hardinge, 75, 76 Jervise, Andrew, 16 '" Giff2.rd's Jump," 75 Gladstone's Home Rule Bill, 70 Kenny, Flora, 83; Brigadier J. W., 84; Glascott, J. H., 52, 53 Rev. W. Vil., 84 Globe of the Earth, Monster, 69 Knox, Captain R. J., 81, 82 ; Janet Godfrey, E. S., 13, 39, 44, 59, 66-68, (" Tooey "), 82, 83; Philippa Allen, 84, 87; F. L., 31, 59, 89; V. S., 22, 71, 81 39, 59 GoYernment of Ireland Act, 1920, 15 Land Act and Loughry Tenants, 15 Grace after meals, 83, 84 Land of the Lindsays in Angus and Grant, Sir Francis, 41 i".1earns, 16 Grt?at Salkeld: Its Rectors and History, 33 Lane " Captain," 75 Greek Dictionary for Schoolboys, 81 Lawson, Col., Rothesay Herald, 41, 42 Green colour unlucky for Lindsays, 50 Lawsuit, Lindesay v. Darlington, S.9; after Griffith, Rev. Valentine Pole, 51, 53 death of Frederick Lindesay, 55 Gurkha Rifles, 4th, 79 Leicester, 1st Earl of, 31; 2nd Earl of, 31 Leinster, Duke of, 51, 52 Hall, Rev. J. A., 98; Rev. R. A., 93 Leinster, Arms of Kings of, 58; King of, Halshury, Lord Chancellor, 75, 7 6 1170, 52 Harris, Miss K., 13 Leith, Searcher-General of, 18 Harrison, R. F., 22; Mrs., 22 Lenox-Conyngham, Mrs., 21 Haskell, Eveleen, 52, 57 Leslie's Derry Clergy and Parishes, 90, 95 Hassard, Mrs., 22 Lewer' s Historical Essays, 37 Heraldic Achievement of Frederick Ligonier, Lord, 53, 55 Lindesay, 48 Lindesay, Armorial Bearings, 46-50; Cave, '' Hermit,'' Derby winner, 1867, 70 27; Family origin of, 16; Family ser­ History and Traditions of tlze Land of vants, 5~, 57; Group Pho~ograph, 54; tlze Lindsays, 16 Lords, of the Byres, 17, 4 i-43; Agnes History of England, :Macaulay's, 96 Sarah, 81; Alexander, of Cahoo, 20, 24; History of the Jacob Family, 1275-1875, Alexandra, 87-89; Anne, daughter of 52 Robe1t, M.P., 33; Bernard, 18; Bernard, Holy Living and Holy Dying, by Jeremy Groom of t:ie Chambers, 42; Charlotte, Taylor, 82 44, 51-59; Crawford, 16, 76-79; Cyril Horace, quotations from, 29, 88 E. A., 93, 95; Elizabeth, 35; Elizabeth Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, Order Katharine, 62, 81; E. S., 84-87; Flora, of the, 92 83, 84; Frederick, 13, 17, 20-22, 26, Howard, Mrs. Eliot, 13 37, 38, 40, 42, 44, 47, 62, 68-69; Frederick J. S., 49, 50, 69-71, 73 ; Ingleby Arncliffe, 35, 37 H. R. P., 91; Mrs. H. R. P., 91; Harriet Irish Department of Agriculture, 15 Hester, 38; Helen, 79, 80; Hugh, 76-78, Parliament, 33 88; Isabel Eva Elizabeth, 93; Jane, 33, 36; Irwin, Rev. J.. 91 J. H. C., 47; John, 15, 26, 30; John, Isle of Man, 89 son of Robert, M.P., 38; John, son of Ivar, Jarl of the Uplanders of Norway, 16 Rev. Thomas, 95; Joshua, 15, 22, 59, 68, 72, 73; Judge, 15, 27; Mary Anne, Jacob, Arthur, 58; Arthur, M.D., 52; 3 8, Pa trick, 79; Peter, 79; Philippa Edgar, Bishop of St. Alban's, 53; Allen, 81 ; Robert, 1st of Loughry, 17, Kentish Family of, 52; Field-Marshal 18, 47; Rob:::rt, 2nd of Loughry, 19; INDEX 117

Robert, 3rd of Loughry, 24, 26; Robert, Love but Dread, 46, 48 M.P., 33, 34; Robert 0., 79; Thomas, Love, poem on, by E. S. Lindesay, 85 father of 1st Robert, of Loughry, 41, 42; Lowry, Col., of Pomeroy, 21, 70 Rev. R. T. M., 44, 81; Col. S. F., 14; Lowrys of Rockdale, 21 Thomas, of Kingswark in Leith, 18, 42; Lyndsie, Robert, Signatory of Address to Rev. Thomas, 29, 68, 89-91; Thomas, King William and Queen Mary, 25, 26 son of Rev. Thomas, 91, 92; Thomas Lyon King of Arms, 17 Edward, 68, 71, 72; Victor, 33, 44, 79- Lyrical Poems of E. S. Godfrey, 84 81; Rev. Walter Brocas, 20; Rev. W. F., 16, 37, 41, 73-77; William, 20; Macaulay on pride of ancestry, 96 Rev. William O'Neill, 29, 95 MacMurrogh, Dermot, King of Leinster, Lindesay prophecy, an old, 60 52; Donough, King of Leinster, 52 Lindesay, variations in .spelling of name, MacMurrough-Murphy, Pedigree of, 52; 26 _ . Henry Charles Boyle, 51; Georgina, 58; Lindc:say ·v. Darlington, 59 Henry de la Poire, 56; Henrietta, 58; Lindesay and Mauleverer Family, 30, 33, Marv, 55~ Rev. Samuel, 52; William, 57 35-38 MacM~rray, Archdeacon of Auckland, Lindesays of New Zealand, 91-95 N.Z., 92 Lindesayville, 21, 22 Macrory, Mrs. Roland, 14, 33 Lindesay-Bethune, Reginald, 12th Earl of Maghera, Rector of, 30 Lindsay, 41; \V. T., 14th Earl of Lind­ Magrath, J. R., Provost of Queen's Col- say, 41 lege, Oxford, 31 Lindsay, Lord, author of Lives of the Malcolm, Mrs. Hugh, 13, 82 Lindsays, 16, 43; See also under " Lives Man, Isle of, 89 of the Lindsays "; David, of Crawford, Manchester Grammar School, 79, 81 46; Sir David, of The Mount, 17; Manor Lindesay, 19 Master Patrick, 46; Peerage of, 41; Col. Mansfield, Maria, 56 Robert Loyd, V.C., 4·2; Sir William Marlborough's Campaigns in Flanders, 53 de, 79 Marriage in High Life, 53 Lindsays' aversion from green, 50, 51 Marriage settlement of John Lindesay, 31 Lindsay-Bethune, J. T., 10th Earl of Lind­ Mary, H.M. Queen, 84 say, 41 Mauleverer, Derivation of name, 3 7; Rev. Lindsays, Land of the, in Angus and Bellingham, 30; Elizabeth, 30; Jane, Mearns, 16 · wife of Robert Lindesay, 33-36; Mary, Lindsays, Pedigree of the Scottish, 17 daughter of Robert Lindesa y, 33; Sir Lines on Loughry, by E. S. Lindesay, 66 Richard, 35; Tho., signs death warrant Linzee Family, 16 of Charles I, .37 Linzee, John H., 16 Mauleverers of Arncliffe Hall, 35 Listowel, Earl of, 82 Maurice, Rev. John, 30 Live without fear, 46 Membrana Jacobi, discovery of, 52 Lives of the Lindsays, by Lord Lindsay, Merton College, Oxford, 31 16, 17. 26, 41-46, 95, 96 Miln, W., Artist, 31 Llewellvn, Prince of Wales, 1283, 79 Ministry of Agriculture, N. Ireland, 15 Loftie, ·A. G., Author of Great Salkeld: Moira, Lord, 52 Its Rectors and History, 33 Monasteries, dissolution of the, 18 Lombardy, Jews of, 52 Monier-Williams, Dorothy Mauleverer, 80 London, Dr. Creighton, Bishop of, 31 Monte Mario, Rome, 87 Londonderry, William Nicolson, Bishop Montreal, Victoria Tubular Bridge at, 69 of, 31 Mosquito, Anopheles, 79 Lough N eagh, 69 Mothers' Meetings of C. of E., 84 Loughry, by Elizabeth Lindesay, 62-65; Motto of Lindesay Family, 46 Estates, 15, 21, 31; Lines on, by E. S. Mure of Abercorn, Sir William, 46 Lindesay, 66-68; Manor House, Frontis­ Murphy, See MacMurrough-Murphy piece, 15, 19, 31, 54, 59, 61; Park, 60; Murphy, Family of Tubberlimina, 52; Second patent for grant of, 20; Ulster H. C. B. MacMurrough, 51; Rev. John, Dairy School at, 13, 59, 60; Visit to, of 52 Rev. Vl. F. Lindesay and H.F. Giffard, Murray, John, 16 76 Muster Roll of Tullyhogue, 22 118 INDEX

Newall, Sir Cyril, 95 St. John of Jerusalem, Order of the Hos- New Zea land Branch of Lindesa y family, pital of, 93 91 St. Mary's Cathedral, Auckland, N.Z., 93 Nicolson, Archbishop, 31, 32 Salisbury, 2nd Marquis of, 33 Normandy, Dukes of, 16 Sandys Family and Winchester College, 39 Sandys, Lady, 39 " Obie," Nurse, 56 Saunderson, Col., 70 " Obbv " Knox, 70, 82 School days of Frederick Lindesay's sons, Ogilvi~ and Lindsay Curse, 62 68 O'Neill, Fanny, 57 Scott, Walter, 21, 29 O'Neills of Tyrone, 17, 18, 19 Scottish r.urse, Ancient, 62 Orange Hall at Lindesayville, 22 Scripture Union, Children's, 85 Origin of the Lindesa:y family, 16 Seal of 1st Lord Lindesay of the Byres, 47 Original tenants on Loughry estate, 22 Searcher-General of Leith, 18 Onnrod, Col. James Cross, 79 Selwyn. Bishop, of New Zealand, 92 Ottawa, Incorporation of, 35; St. George's Shanes Castle, 69 Church Roll of Honour, 78 Siege of Derry, 24 Oulartleigh, Murphys of, 52 Sind Horse, General Jacob and, 53 Overstone, Lord, 42 Singleton. Elizabeth, 27 Smith, Miss E. L., 59 Pamela Fitzgerald, 52 Snowdon Herald, Thomas Lindesay as, Partridge, Richard, 56 18, 42 Peacocke, Col. the Hon. S. Ponsonby, 92 Spelling of the name Lindsay, 26 Peacocks a,t Loughry, 64 Steenson, Miss, 46 Pedigree of the Scottish Lindsays, 17 Stephenson, George, 69; Robert, 69 Pennyfather, Mary Anne, 38 Story of Hugh Lindesay, 76 Pigot, Fiora, 83; Rev. 0. F., 83; Pre- Strafford, Earl of, 20 bendary, 83 · Strode, Sarah, 33, 35 Pistocchi, Alessandro, 87 Suspension Bridge over Menai Straits, 69 Plaid, Lindsay, 50 Swift, Dean, and Judge Lindesay, 15, 27; Planta6on of Ulster, 17 Summer House of, 28; Table and Chair Ponsonby, 4th Lord, 89; Harriet Cath- of, 29 erine, SJ Porter, Rev. Dr., 21, 37 Tartan or Plaid, Lindsay, 50 Posterity, Influence of ancestry on, 96 Tarvin Hall School, 68 Prayer Bock, C. of E., Lindesay, 48 Taylor, Bishop Jeremy, 82 Prittie, Hc!Il. Frances, 82 Tenants' Ball at Loughry, 45 Tenants, Original, of Loughry, 21 Queen's College, Oxford, and Archbishop " Tollaloos " at Nancy, 57 Nicolson, 31 Tomlinson, Mrs., 58 Tower of London, 69 Ranfurley, Earls of, 21 Trinity College, Dublin, 33 Rebellion of 1641, 19 Tubberlimina, Murphys of, 52 Register Office, Edinburgh, 41 Tubular Suspension Bridge, 69 Rice, C. 5p:ing, 82 Tullochog, Fort of, 15 Richardson, Margaret, 19; Laura, 81 Tullyhogue, 15 Roden, Lord, 69 Rognvald, Jarl of More, 16 Ulster Dairy School, Loughry, 15, 33 Rol!o, Ancestor of the Dukes of Nor- Ulster, Kings of, 15; Plantation of, 17 mandy, 16; Appeal to, 16 '' Undertakers,'' Settlement of Ulster by, Rossall School, 59, 73, 91 18 Roubiliac, L. F., 55 Royal School, Armagh, 33 Victoria Tubular Bridge at Montreal, 69 Ryan, Edward, 51; Helena, 51 Vocabulary of Lindesay Family, Intimate, 57 St. Alban's, Edgar Jacob, Bishop of, 53 St. Andrew's Church, Dublin, 30 Wade, Norah, 35; Philip Harold, 35; St. Cuthbert's, Bedford, 56, 58, 74 Richard, 35; Col. Thomas, 35 INDEX 119

Wales, Llewellyn, Prince of, 1283, 79 Woman Magazine and Curate Competi- Walford's County Families, 1860, 39 tion, 84 Walker, Rev. George, 24 Worcester, Battle of, 1651, 18 Walker's Diary of Siege of Derry, 24, 25 Wvlde's Monster Globe of the Earth, 69 Wandsworth Prison, 83, 84 Wynn, See Williams-Wynn Wantage, Lord, V.C., 42 Wryesdale Park, Lancashire, 79 Weir, Thomas, 57 Williams-Wynn, Charles Watkin, 38 Yorkshire Arch~ological Society, 35, 3 7 Harriet Hester, 38 " Wishing-Well " at Loughry, 62 Zemindar, meaning of title, 71

MEMORANDA