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BARONETAGE |
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Last updated 10/01/2024 |
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Names of
baronets shown in blue |
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have not yet proved succession and, as a |
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result, their name has not yet been placed on |
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the Official Roll of the Baronetage. |
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Date |
Type |
Order |
Name |
Born |
Died |
Age |
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Dates in italics in the "Born" column
indicate that the baronet was |
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baptised on that date;
dates in italics in the "Died" column indicate |
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that the baronet was buried on that date |
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GOLDING of Colston Bassett,Notts |
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27 Sep 1642 |
E |
1 |
Edward Golding |
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c 1656 |
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c 1656 |
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2 |
Charles Golding |
c 1624 |
28 Sep 1661 |
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28 Sep 1661 |
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3 |
Edward Golding |
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8 Dec 1715 |
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to |
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Extinct on his death |
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Dec 1715 |
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GOLDNEY of Beechfield and Bradenstoke |
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Abbey, Wilts |
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11 May 1880 |
UK |
1 |
Gabriel Goldney |
25 Jul 1813 |
8 May 1900 |
86 |
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MP for Chippenham 1865-1885 |
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8 May 1900 |
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2 |
Gabriel Prior Goldney |
4 Aug 1843 |
4 May 1925 |
81 |
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4 May 1925 |
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3 |
Frederick Hastings Goldney |
26 May 1845 |
21 Feb 1940 |
94 |
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21 Feb 1940 |
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4 |
Henry Hastings Goldney |
3 Jul 1886 |
26 Feb 1974 |
87 |
to |
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Extinct on his death |
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26 Feb 1974 |
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GOLDSMID of St Johns Lodge,Surrey |
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15 Oct 1841 |
UK |
1 |
Isaac Lyon Goldsmid |
13 Jan 1778 |
27 Apr 1859 |
81 |
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27 Apr 1859 |
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2 |
Francis Henry Goldsmid |
1 May 1808 |
2 May 1878 |
70 |
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MP for Reading 1860-1878 |
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For further information on the death of this |
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baronet,see the note at the foot of this page |
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2 May 1878 |
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3 |
Julian Goldsmid |
8 Oct 1838 |
7 Jan 1896 |
57 |
to |
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MP for Honiton 1866-1868,Rochester 1870-1880 |
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7 Jan 1896 |
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and St.Pancras South 1885-1896 PC 1895 |
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Extinct on his death |
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GOLDSMID of Somerhill,Kent |
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22 Jan 1934 |
UK |
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See "D'Avigdor-Goldsmid" |
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GOLDSMID-STERN-SALOMONS |
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of Broomhill,Kent and Great Cumberland |
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Place, Middlesex |
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26 Oct 1869 |
UK |
1 |
David
Salomons |
22 Nov 1797 |
18 Jul 1873 |
75 |
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For
details of the special remainder included |
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in the creation of this baronetcy,see the note |
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at the foot of this page |
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MP for Greenwich 1851-1852 and 1859-1873 |
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18 Jul 1873 |
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2 |
David Lionel Salomons (later Goldsmid- |
28 Jun 1851 |
19 Apr 1925 |
73 |
to |
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Stern-Salomons) |
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19 Apr 1925 |
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Extinct on his death |
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GOOCH of Benacre Hall,Suffolk |
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4 Nov 1746 |
GB |
1 |
William Gooch |
21 Oct 1681 |
17 Dec 1751 |
70 |
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For
details of the special remainder included |
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in the creation of this baronetcy,see the note |
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at the foot of this page |
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17 Dec 1751 |
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2 |
Thomas Gooch |
19 Jan 1675 |
14 Feb 1754 |
79 |
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14 Feb 1754 |
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3 |
Thomas Gooch |
c 1721 |
10 Sep 1781 |
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10 Sep 1781 |
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4 |
Thomas Gooch |
1745 |
7 Apr 1826 |
80 |
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7 Apr 1826 |
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5 |
Thomas Sherlock Gooch |
2 Nov 1767 |
18 Dec 1851 |
84 |
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MP for Suffolk 1806-1830 |
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18 Dec 1851 |
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6 |
Edward Sherlock Gooch |
6 Jun 1802 |
9 Nov 1856 |
54 |
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MP for Suffolk East 1846-1856 |
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9 Nov 1856 |
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7 |
Edward Sherlock Gooch |
16 May 1843 |
27 May 1872 |
29 |
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27 May 1872 |
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8 |
Francis Robert Sherlock Lambert Gooch |
8 Sep 1850 |
13 Aug 1881 |
30 |
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For information on this baronet's wife, see the |
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note at the foot of this page. |
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13 Aug 1881 |
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9 |
Alfred Sherlock Gooch |
20 Dec 1851 |
24 Feb 1899 |
47 |
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24 Feb 1899 |
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10 |
Thomas Vere Sherlock Gooch |
10 Jun 1881 |
7 Jul 1946 |
65 |
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7 Jul 1946 |
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11 |
Robert Eric Sherlock Gooch |
6 May 1903 |
13 Nov 1978 |
75 |
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13 Nov 1978 |
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12 |
Richard John Sherlock Gooch |
22 Mar 1930 |
19 Apr 1999 |
69 |
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19 Apr 1999 |
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13 |
Timothy Robert Sherlock Gooch |
7 Dec 1934 |
9 Apr 2008 |
73 |
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9 Apr 2008 |
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14 |
Arthur Brian Sherlock Gooch |
1 Jun 1937 |
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GOOCH of Clewer Park,Berks |
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15 Nov 1866 |
UK |
1 |
Daniel Gooch |
24 Aug 1816 |
15 Oct 1889 |
73 |
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MP for Cricklade 1865-1885 |
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15 Oct 1889 |
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2 |
Henry Daniel Gooch |
30 Dec 1841 |
24 Jun 1897 |
55 |
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24 Jun 1897 |
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3 |
Daniel Fulthorpe Gooch |
25 May 1869 |
22 Dec 1926 |
57 |
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22 Dec 1926 |
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4 |
Robert Douglas Gooch |
19 Sep 1905 |
6 May 1989 |
83 |
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6 May 1989 |
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5 |
Trevor Sherlock Gooch |
15 Jun 1915 |
26 May 2003 |
87 |
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26 May 2003 |
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6 |
Miles Peter Gooch |
3 Feb 1963 |
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GOODENOUGH of Broadwell and Filkins,Oxon |
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19 Jan 1943 |
UK |
1 |
William Macnamara Goodenough |
10 Mar 1899 |
23 May 1951 |
52 |
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23 May 1951 |
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2 |
Richard Edmund Goodenough |
9 Jun 1925 |
13 Dec 1996 |
71 |
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13 Dec 1996 |
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3 |
William McLernon Goodenough |
5 Aug 1954 |
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GOODERE of Burhope,Hereford |
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5 Dec 1707 |
GB |
1 |
Edward Goodere |
1657 |
29 Mar 1739 |
81 |
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MP for Evesham 1708-1715 and |
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Herefordshire 1722-1727 |
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29 Mar 1739 |
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2 |
John Dinely Goodere |
c 1680 |
24 Jan 1741 |
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For further information on this baronet, see the |
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note at the foot of this page. |
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24 Jan 1741 |
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3 |
Samuel Goodere [hanged for
murdering |
1687 |
20 Apr 1741 |
53 |
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his brother,the second baronet] |
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For further information on this baronet, see the |
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note at the foot of this page. |
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20 Apr 1741 |
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4 |
Edward Dineley-Goodere |
1729 |
Mar 1761 |
31 |
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Mar 1761 |
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5 |
John Dineley-Goodere |
1729 |
Nov 1809 |
80 |
to |
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Extinct on his death |
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Nov 1809 |
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For further information on this baronet, see the |
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note at the foot of this page. |
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GOODHART of Portland Place |
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and Holtye,Sussex |
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1 Jul 1911 |
UK |
1 |
James Frederic Goodhart |
24 Oct 1845 |
28 Mar 1916 |
70 |
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28 Mar 1916 |
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2 |
Ernest Frederic Goodhart |
12 Aug 1880 |
13 Jan 1961 |
80 |
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13 Jan 1961 |
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3 |
John Gordon Goodhart |
14 Dec 1916 |
13 Jan 1979 |
62 |
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13 Jan 1979 |
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4 |
Robert Anthony Gordon Goodhart |
15 Dec 1948 |
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GOODRICKE of Ribston,Yorks |
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14 Aug 1641 |
E |
1 |
John Goodricke |
20 Apr 1617 |
Nov 1670 |
53 |
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MP for Yorkshire 1661-1670 |
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Nov 1670 |
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2 |
Henry Goodricke |
24 Oct 1642 |
5 Mar 1705 |
62 |
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MP for Boroughbridge 1673-1679 and 1685-1705 |
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PC 1690 |
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5 Mar 1705 |
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3 |
John Goodricke |
16 Oct 1654 |
10 Dec 1705 |
51 |
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10 Dec 1705 |
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4 |
Henry Goodricke |
8 Sep 1677 |
21 Jul 1738 |
60 |
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21 Jul 1738 |
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5 |
John Goodricke |
20 May 1708 |
3 Aug 1789 |
81 |
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MP for Pontefract 1774-1780 and |
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Ripon 1787-1789 |
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3 Aug 1789 |
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6 |
Henry Goodricke |
12 Oct 1765 |
23 Mar 1802 |
36 |
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23 Mar 1802 |
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7 |
Henry James Goodricke |
26 Sep 1797 |
22 Aug 1833 |
35 |
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22 Aug 1833 |
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8 |
Thomas Francis Henry Goodricke |
24 Sep 1762 |
9 Mar 1839 |
76 |
to |
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Extinct on his death |
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9 Mar 1839 |
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GOODRICKE of Studley Castle,Warwicks |
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31 Mar 1835 |
UK |
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See "Holyoake-Goodricke" |
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GOODSON of Waddeton Court,Devon |
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18 Jan 1922 |
UK |
1 |
Sir Alfred Lassam Goodson |
17 May 1867 |
29 Nov 1940 |
73 |
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29 Nov 1940 |
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2 |
Alfred Lassam Goodson |
26 Aug 1893 |
17 Feb 1986 |
92 |
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17 Feb 1986 |
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3 |
Mark Weston Lassam Goodson |
12 Dec 1925 |
1 Feb 2015 |
89 |
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1 Feb 2015 |
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4 |
Alan Reginald Goodson |
15 May 1960 |
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GOOLD of Old Court,co.Cork |
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8 Aug 1801 |
UK |
1 |
Francis Goold |
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20 Aug 1818 |
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For
details of the special remainder included |
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in the creation of this baronetcy,see the note |
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at the foot of this page |
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20 Aug 1818 |
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2 |
George Goold |
29 Mar 1778 |
16 Mar 1870 |
91 |
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16 Mar 1870 |
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3 |
Henry Valentine Goold |
7 Jul 1803 |
18 Jun 1893 |
89 |
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18 Jun 1893 |
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4 |
James Stephen Goold |
13 Oct 1848 |
12 Aug 1926 |
77 |
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For further information on this baronet and his |
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younger brother,Vere Goold, see the note at |
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the foot of this page |
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12 Aug 1926 |
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5 |
George Patrick Goold |
9 Jul 1878 |
Jan 1954 |
75 |
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Jan 1954 |
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6 |
George Ignatius Goold |
29 Apr 1903 |
26 Apr 1967 |
63 |
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26 Apr 1967 |
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7 |
George Leonard Goold |
26 Aug 1923 |
31 Aug 1997 |
74 |
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31 Aug 1997 |
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8 |
George William Goold |
25 Mar 1950 |
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GORDON of Letterfourie,Sutherland |
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28 May 1625 |
NS |
1 |
Robert Gordon |
14 May 1580 |
Mar 1656 |
75 |
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Mar 1656 |
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2 |
Ludovick Gordon |
15 Oct 1624 |
c 1685 |
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c 1685 |
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3 |
Robert Gordon |
7 Mar 1647 |
5 Sep 1704 |
57 |
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5 Sep 1704 |
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4 |
Robert Gordon |
1696 |
8 Jan 1772 |
75 |
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MP for Buteshire and Caithness 1715-1722 |
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8 Jan 1772 |
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5 |
Robert Gordon |
c 1738 |
2 Jun 1776 |
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2 Jun 1776 |
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6 |
William Gordon |
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5 Mar 1795 |
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5 Mar 1795 |
|
7 |
Alexander Gordon |
1715 |
16 Jan 1797 |
81 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
16 Jan 1797 |
|
8 |
James Gordon |
1779 |
24 Dec 1843 |
64 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
24 Dec 1843 |
|
9 |
William Gordon |
26 Dec 1803 |
5 Dec 1861 |
57 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5 Dec 1861 |
|
10 |
Robert Glendonwyn Gordon |
1824 |
24 Mar 1908 |
83 |
to |
|
|
On his death the baronetcy became dormant |
|
|
|
24 Mar 1908 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
GORDON of Cluny,Aberdeen |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
31 Aug 1625 |
NS |
1 |
Alexander Gordon |
|
c 1648 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c 1648 |
|
2 |
John Gordon |
|
c 1668 |
|
to |
|
|
On his death the baronetcy became dormant |
|
|
|
c 1668 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
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|
|
GORDON of Lesmore,Aberdeen |
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 Sep 1625 |
NS |
1 |
James Gordon |
|
c 1640 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c 1640 |
|
2 |
James Gordon |
|
c 1647 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c 1647 |
|
3 |
William Gordon |
|
c 1671 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c 1671 |
|
4 |
William Gordon |
|
c 1684 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c 1684 |
|
5 |
James Gordon |
|
c 1710 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c 1710 |
|
6 |
William Gordon |
|
15 Sep 1750 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15 Sep 1750 |
|
7 |
Alexander Gordon |
|
25 Mar 1782 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25 Mar 1782 |
|
8 |
Francis Gordon |
c 1764 |
9 Nov 1839 |
|
to |
|
|
On his death the baronetcy became dormant |
|
|
|
9 Nov 1839 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
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|
GORDON of Lochinvar,Kirdcudbright |
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 May 1626 |
NS |
1 |
Robert Gordon |
c 1565 |
Nov 1628 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Nov 1628 |
|
2 |
John Gordon |
c 1600 |
12 Sep 1634 |
|
|
|
|
He was subsequently created Viscount |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kenmure (qv) in 1633 with which title the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
baronetcy then merged until it became |
|
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|
|
|
|
dormant in 1847 |
|
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|
|
GORDON of Embo,Sutherland |
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
18 Jun 1631 |
NS |
1 |
John Gordon |
|
1649 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1649 |
|
2 |
Robert Gordon |
|
16 Oct 1697 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
16 Oct 1697 |
|
3 |
John Gordon |
|
10 May 1701 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10 May 1701 |
|
4 |
William Gordon |
|
14 Apr 1760 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
14 Apr 1760 |
|
5 |
John Gordon |
|
24 Jan 1779 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
24 Jan 1779 |
|
6 |
James Gordon |
|
1786 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1786 |
|
7 |
William Gordon |
1736 |
7 Jan 1804 |
67 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7 Jan 1804 |
|
8 |
John Gordon |
|
12 Nov 1804 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12 Nov 1804 |
|
9 |
Orford Gordon |
|
19 Jun 1857 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19 Jun 1857 |
|
10 |
William Home Gordon |
1818 |
18 Sep 1876 |
58 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
18 Sep 1876 |
|
11 |
Home Seton Gordon |
21 Mar 1845 |
11 Dec 1906 |
61 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
11 Dec 1906 |
|
12 |
Home Seton Charles Montagu Gordon |
30 Sep 1871 |
9 Sep 1956 |
84 |
to |
|
|
Extinct or dormant on his death |
|
|
|
9 Sep 1956 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
GORDON of Haddo,Aberdeen |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
13 Aug 1642 |
NS |
1 |
John Gordon |
1610 |
19 Jul 1644 |
34 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19 Jul 1644 |
|
2 |
John Gordon |
c 1632 |
1665 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1665 |
|
3 |
George Gordon |
3 Oct 1637 |
20 Apr 1720 |
82 |
|
|
|
He was
subsequently created Earl of |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Aberdeen
(qv) in 1682 with which title |
|
|
|
|
|
|
the baronetcy remains merged |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
GORDON of Park,Banff |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
21 Aug 1686 |
NS |
1 |
John Gordon |
|
Feb 1713 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Feb 1713 |
|
2 |
James Gordon |
|
15 Dec 1727 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15 Dec 1727 |
|
3 |
William Gordon |
|
5 Jun 1751 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5 Jun 1751 |
|
4 |
John James Gordon |
26 Mar 1749 |
11 Dec 1780 |
31 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
11 Dec 1780 |
|
5 |
John Bury Gordon |
5 Apr 1779 |
23 Jul 1835 |
56 |
to |
|
|
On his death the baronetcy became dormant |
|
|
|
23 Jul 1835 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
|
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|
|
GORDON of Dalpholly,Sutherland |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3 Feb 1704 |
NS |
1 |
William Gordon |
|
9 Jun 1742 |
|
|
|
|
MP for Sutherlandshire 1708-1713 and |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1714-1727 and Cromartyshire 1741-1742 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9 Jun 1742 |
|
2 |
John Gordon |
c 1707 |
25 May 1783 |
|
|
|
|
MP for
Cromartyshire 1742-1747 and |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1754-1761 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25 May 1783 |
|
3 |
Adam Gordon |
|
2 Nov 1817 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 Nov 1817 |
|
4 |
George Gordon |
|
1840 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1840 |
|
5 |
Adam Gordon |
|
1850 |
|
to |
|
|
On his death the baronetcy became dormant |
|
|
|
1850 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
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|
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|
|
GORDON of Afton and Earlston,Kirkcudbright |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9 Jul 1706 |
NS |
1 |
William Gordon |
1654 |
Dec 1718 |
64 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dec 1718 |
|
2 |
Alexander Gordon |
1650 |
10 Nov 1726 |
76 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10 Nov 1726 |
|
3 |
Thomas Gordon |
26 Oct 1685 |
23 Mar 1769 |
83 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
23 Mar 1769 |
|
4 |
John Gordon |
20 Dec 1720 |
17 Oct 1795 |
74 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
17 Oct 1795 |
|
5 |
John Gordon |
4 Oct 1780 |
8 Jan 1843 |
62 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8 Jan 1843 |
|
6 |
William Gordon |
20 Oct 1830 |
12 May 1906 |
75 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12 May 1906 |
|
7 |
Charles Edward Gordon |
14 Apr 1835 |
3 Dec 1910 |
75 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3 Dec 1910 |
|
8 |
Robert Charles Gordon |
17 Apr 1862 |
30 Aug 1939 |
77 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30 Aug 1939 |
|
9 |
John Charles Gordon |
4 Jan 1901 |
1982 |
81 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1982 |
|
10 |
Robert James Gordon |
17 Aug 1932 |
|
|
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|
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|
|
GORDON of Newark-upon-Trent,Notts |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
21 Aug 1764 |
GB |
1 |
Samuel Gordon |
|
29 Apr 1780 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
29 Apr 1780 |
|
2 |
Jenison William Gordon |
30 Sep 1747 |
9 May 1831 |
83 |
to |
|
|
Extinct on his death |
|
|
|
9 May 1831 |
|
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|
GORDON of Halkin,Ayr |
|
|
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|
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|
|
12 Nov 1813 |
UK |
|
See "Duff-Gordon" |
|
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|
GORDON of Northcourt,Isle of Wight |
|
|
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|
|
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|
|
5 Dec 1818 |
UK |
1 |
James Willoughby Gordon |
21 Oct 1772 |
4 Jan 1851 |
78 |
|
|
|
MP for Launceston 1830-1831 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4 Jan 1851 |
|
2 |
Henry Percy Gordon |
21 Oct 1806 |
29 Jul 1876 |
69 |
to |
|
|
Extinct on his death |
|
|
|
29 Jul 1876 |
|
|
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|
|
GORDON of Jamaica,West Indies |
|
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|
|
19 Jul 1838 |
UK |
|
See "Smith-Gordon" |
|
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|
GORDON-CUMMING of Altyre,Elgin |
|
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|
21 May 1804 |
UK |
1 |
Alexander Penrose Cumming (later Gordon- |
|
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|
|
|
Cumming) |
19 May 1749 |
10 Feb 1806 |
56 |
|
|
|
MP for Inverness 1802-1803 |
|
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|
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|
|
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|
|
|
10 Feb 1806 |
|
2 |
William Gordon Gordon-Cumming |
20 Jul 1787 |
25 Nov 1854 |
67 |
|
|
|
MP for Elgin Burghs 1831-1832 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25 Nov 1854 |
|
3 |
Alexander Penrose Gordon-Cumming |
17 Aug 1816 |
2 Sep 1866 |
50 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 Sep 1866 |
|
4 |
William Gordon Gordon-Cumming |
20 Jul 1848 |
20 May 1930 |
81 |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
20 May 1930 |
|
5 |
Alexander Penrose Gordon-Cumming |
12 Sep 1893 |
23 Feb 1939 |
45 |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
23 Feb 1939 |
|
6 |
William Gordon Gordon-Cumming |
19 Jun 1928 |
10 Jan 2002 |
73 |
|
|
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|
|
10 Jan 2002 |
|
7 |
Alexander Penrose Gordon-Cumming |
15 Apr 1954 |
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|
GORDON-CUMMING-DUNBAR |
|
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|
|
of Northfield,Scotland |
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|
10 Apr 1700 |
NS |
|
See "Dunbar" |
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|
GORE of Magherabeg,co.Donegal |
|
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|
2 Feb 1622 |
I |
1 |
Paul Gore |
|
Sep 1629 |
|
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|
Sep 1629 |
|
2 |
Ralph Gore |
|
c 1661 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
c 1661 |
|
3 |
William Gore |
|
1700 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1700 |
|
4 |
Ralph Gore |
1675 |
23 Feb 1733 |
57 |
|
|
|
Chancellor of the Exchequer [I] 1717. |
|
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|
|
Speaker of the House of Commons [I] 1729 |
|
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|
23 Feb 1733 |
|
5 |
St.George Gore-St.George |
25 Jun 1722 |
25 Sep 1746 |
24 |
|
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|
|
25 Sep 1746 |
|
6 |
Ralph Gore,later [1772] 1st Earl of Ross |
23 Nov 1725 |
Sep 1802 |
76 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sep 1802 |
|
7 |
Ralph Gore |
3 Dec 1758 |
25 Mar 1842 |
83 |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
25 Mar 1842 |
|
8 |
St.George Gore |
28 Apr 1811 |
31 Dec 1878 |
67 |
|
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|
31 Dec 1878 |
|
9 |
St.George Ralph Gore |
21 Sep 1841 |
17 Oct 1887 |
46 |
|
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|
17 Oct 1887 |
|
10 |
Ralph St.George Claude Gore |
12 May 1877 |
27 Mar 1961 |
83 |
|
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|
|
27 Mar 1961 |
|
11 |
Ralph St.George Brian Gore |
31 May 1908 |
28 Jun 1973 |
65 |
|
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|
28 Jun 1973 |
|
12 |
St.George Ralph Gore |
14 Dec 1914 |
13 Nov 1973 |
58 |
|
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|
|
13 Nov 1973 |
|
13 |
Richard Ralph St.George Gore |
19 Nov 1954 |
30 Oct 1993 |
38 |
|
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|
|
30 Oct 1993 |
|
14 |
Nigel Hugh St.George Gore |
23 Dec 1922 |
23 Sep 2008 |
85 |
|
|
|
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|
|
|
23 Sep 2008 |
|
15 |
Hugh Frederick Corbet Gore |
31 Dec 1934 |
12 Oct 2022 |
87 |
|
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|
|
12 Oct 2022 |
|
16 |
Timothy Milton Corbet Gore |
26 Nov 1969 |
|
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|
GORE of Castle Gore,co.Mayo |
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|
10 Apr 1662 |
I |
1 |
Arthur Gore |
|
20 Dec 1697 |
|
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|
20 Dec 1697 |
|
2 |
Arthur Gore |
by Sep 1682 |
10 Feb 1741 |
|
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|
10 Feb 1741 |
|
3 |
Arthur Gore |
1703 |
17 Apr 1773 |
69 |
|
|
|
He was subsequently created Earl of Arran |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(qv) in 1762
with which title the |
|
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|
|
|
|
baronetcy remains merged |
|
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|
GORE of Belleek,Mayo |
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|
5 Dec 1868 |
UK |
|
See "Knox-Gore" |
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|
GORE-BOOTH of Artarman,co.Sligo |
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|
For information on the recent history of the |
|
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|
|
Gore-Booth family,see the note at the foot of |
|
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|
|
this page |
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|
30 Aug 1760 |
I |
1 |
Booth Gore |
1712 |
22 Jul 1773 |
61 |
|
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|
22 Jul 1773 |
|
2 |
Booth Gore |
|
17 Jun 1804 |
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17 Jun 1804 |
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3 |
Robert Newcomen Booth (Gore-Booth |
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from 30 Aug 1804) |
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23 Oct 1814 |
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23 Oct 1814 |
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4 |
Robert Gore-Booth |
25 Aug 1805 |
21 Dec 1876 |
71 |
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MP for co.Sligo 1850-1876. Lord Lieutenant |
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Sligo 1868-1876 |
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21 Dec 1876 |
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5 |
Henry William Gore-Booth |
1 Jul 1843 |
13 Jan 1900 |
56 |
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13 Jan 1900 |
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6 |
Josslyn Augustus Richard Gore-Booth |
25 Feb 1869 |
14 Mar 1944 |
75 |
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14 Mar 1944 |
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7 |
Michael Savile Gore-Booth |
24 Jul 1908 |
16 Mar 1987 |
78 |
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16 Mar 1987 |
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8 |
Angus Josslyn Gore-Booth |
25 Jun 1920 |
26 Jan 1996 |
75 |
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26 Jan 1996 |
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9 |
Josslyn Henry Robert Gore-Booth |
5 Oct 1950 |
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GORGES of Langford,Wilts |
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25 Nov 1611 |
E |
1 |
Edward Gorges |
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c 1650 |
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He was subsequently created Baron Gorges of |
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Dundalk
(qv) in 1620 with which title the |
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baronetcy then merged until its extinction |
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in 1712 |
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GORGES-MEREDYTH |
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of Catharines Grove,Dublin |
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5 Sep 1787 |
I |
1 |
Richard Gorges-Meredyth |
7 May 1735 |
Sep 1821 |
86 |
to |
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Extinct on his death |
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Sep 1821 |
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GORING of Burton,Sussex |
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14 May 1622 |
E |
1 |
William Goring |
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25 Feb 1658 |
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MP for Sussex 1628-1629 |
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Feb 1658 |
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2 |
Henry Goring |
c 1618 |
8 Jun 1671 |
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8 Jun 1671 |
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3 |
William Goring |
c 1659 |
29 Feb 1724 |
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to |
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Extinct on his death |
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29 Feb 1724 |
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GORING of Highden,Sussex |
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18 May 1678 |
E |
1 |
James Bowyer |
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28 Feb 1680 |
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28 Feb 1680 |
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2 |
Henry Goring |
1 May 1622 |
3 Apr 1702 |
79 |
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MP for Sussex 1660 and 1685-1687 and |
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Steyning 1661-1679 |
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3 Apr 1702 |
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3 |
Charles Goring |
c 1668 |
13 Jan 1713 |
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MP for Bramber 1689 |
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Jan 1713 |
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4 |
Henry Goring |
16 Sep 1679 |
12 Nov 1731 |
52 |
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MP for Horsham 1707-1708 and 1715, and |
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Steyning 1709-1715 |
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12 Nov 1731 |
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5 |
Charles Mathew Goring |
15 May 1706 |
Aug 1769 |
63 |
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Aug 1769 |
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6 |
Harry Goring |
26 Apr 1739 |
1 Dec 1824 |
85 |
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MP for New Shoreham 1790-1796 |
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1 Dec 1824 |
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7 |
Charles Foster Goring |
11 Jul 1768 |
26 Mar 1844 |
75 |
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26 Mar 1844 |
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8 |
Harry Dent Goring |
30 Dec 1801 |
19 Apr 1859 |
57 |
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MP for New Shoreham 1832-1841 |
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19 Apr 1859 |
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9 |
Charles Goring |
2 Jun 1828 |
3 Nov 1884 |
56 |
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3 Nov 1884 |
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10 |
Craven Charles Goring |
24 Oct 1841 |
14 Mar 1897 |
55 |
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For information regarding a dream experienced by |
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this baronet's wife and subsequent events,see |
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the note at the foot of this page |
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14 Mar 1897 |
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11 |
Harry Yelverton Goring |
19 Jul 1840 |
20 Aug 1911 |
71 |
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For further information on this baronet,see |
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the note at the foot of this page |
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20 Aug 1911 |
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12 |
Forster Gurney Goring |
19 Jun 1876 |
1 May 1956 |
79 |
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1 May 1956 |
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13 |
William Burton Nigel Goring |
21 Jun 1933 |
1 Jan 2024 |
90 |
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1 Jan 2024 |
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14 |
Richard Harry Goring |
10 Sep 1949 |
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GOSCHEN of Beacon Lodge,Hants |
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17 Jan 1916 |
UK |
1 |
Sir William Edward Goschen |
18 Jul 1847 |
20 May 1924 |
76 |
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PC 1905 |
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20 May 1924 |
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2 |
Edward Henry Goschen |
9 Mar 1876 |
7 Aug 1933 |
57 |
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7 Aug 1933 |
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3 |
Edward Christian Goschen |
2 Sep 1913 |
8 Mar 2001 |
87 |
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8 Mar 2001 |
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4 |
Edward Alexander Goschen |
13 Mar 1949 |
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GOSCHEN of Durrington House,Essex |
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27 Jun 1927 |
UK |
1 |
Sir Harry William Henry Neville Goschen |
1865 |
7 Jul 1945 |
80 |
to |
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|
Extinct on his death |
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7 Jul 1945 |
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GOSTWICK of Willington,Beds |
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25 Nov 1611 |
E |
1 |
William Gostwick |
2 Dec 1565 |
19 Sep 1615 |
49 |
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19 Sep 1615 |
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2 |
Edward Gostwick |
1588 |
20 Sep 1630 |
42 |
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20 Sep 1630 |
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3 |
Edward Gostwick |
1619 |
24 Feb 1671 |
51 |
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24 Feb 1671 |
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4 |
William Gostwick |
21 Aug 1650 |
24 Jan 1720 |
69 |
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MP for Bedfordshire 1698-1713 |
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Jan 1720 |
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5 |
William Gostwick |
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6 May 1766 |
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to |
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On his death the baronetcy became either |
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May 1766 |
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extinct or dormant |
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GOUGH of Edgbaston,Warwicks |
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6 Apr 1728 |
GB |
1 |
Henry Gough |
9 Mar 1708 |
8 Jun 1774 |
66 |
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MP for
Totnes 1732-1734 and Bramber |
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1734-1741 |
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8 Jun 1774 |
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2 |
Henry Gough (Gough-Calthorpe from 7 May 1788) |
1 Jan 1748 |
16 Mar 1798 |
50 |
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He was
subsequently created Baron |
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Calthorpe (qv) in 1796 with which title |
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the
baronetcy then merged until its |
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extinction in 1997 |
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GOUGH of Synone and Drangan,co.Tipperary |
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23 Dec 1842 |
UK |
1 |
Sir Hugh Gough |
3 Nov 1779 |
2 Mar 1869 |
89 |
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|
He was subsequently created Viscount |
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Gough (qv) in 1849 with which title the |
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baronetcy remains merged |
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GOUGH-CALTHORPE of Elveham,Hants |
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1 Jul 1929 |
UK |
|
See "Anstruther-Gough-Calthorpe" |
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GOULD of London |
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13 Jun 1660 |
E |
1 |
Nicholas Gould |
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23 Jan 1664 |
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to |
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MP for Fowey 1648-1653 and 1659-1660 |
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Jan 1664 |
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Extinct on his death |
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GOULDING of Millicent,co.Kildare |
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22 Aug 1904 |
UK |
1 |
William Joshua Goulding |
7 Mar 1856 |
12 Jul 1925 |
69 |
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12 Jul 1925 |
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2 |
William Lingard Amphlett Goulding |
5 Oct 1883 |
20 Jun 1935 |
51 |
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20 Jun 1935 |
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3 |
William Basil Goulding |
4 Nov 1909 |
16 Jan 1982 |
72 |
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16 Jan 1982 |
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4 |
William Lingard Walter Goulding |
11 Jul 1940 |
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GOULDING of Wargrave Hall,Oxon |
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25 Jun 1915 |
UK |
1 |
Edward Alfred Goulding |
5 Nov 1862 |
17 Jul 1936 |
73 |
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|
He was subsequently created Baron |
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|
Wargrave
(qv) in 1922 with which title |
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|
the baronetcy then merged until its |
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extinction in 1936 |
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GOWER of Stittenham,Yorks |
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2 Jun 1620 |
E |
1 |
Thomas Gower |
c Jul 1584 |
c 1655 |
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c 1655 |
|
2 |
Thomas Gower |
c 1605 |
3 Sep 1672 |
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MP for Malton 1661-1672 |
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3 Sep 1672 |
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3 |
Thomas Gower |
c 1666 |
8 Oct 1689 |
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8 Oct 1689 |
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4 |
William Leveson-Gower |
c 1647 |
22 Dec 1691 |
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MP for Newcastle under Lyme 1675-1681 |
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and 1689-1691 and Shropshire 1681-1685 |
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22 Dec 1691 |
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5 |
John Leveson-Gower |
7 Jan 1675 |
31 Aug 1709 |
34 |
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|
He was subsequently created Baron Gower |
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(qv) in 1703 with which title the |
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baronetcy then merged. The baronetcy is |
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now merged in the Dukedom of Sutherland |
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|
GRAAFF of Cape Town,South Africa |
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6 Feb 1911 |
UK |
1 |
David Pieter de Villiers Graaff |
30 Mar 1859 |
13 Apr 1931 |
72 |
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13 Apr 1931 |
|
2 |
de Villiers Graaff |
8 Dec 1913 |
4 Oct 1999 |
85 |
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4 Oct 1999 |
|
3 |
David de Villiers Graaff |
3 May 1940 |
24 Jan 2015 |
74 |
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24 Jan 2015 |
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4 |
de Villiers Graaff |
16 Jul 1970 |
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|
GRACE of Minchenden House,Middlesex |
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|
11 May 1795 |
GB |
1 |
Richard Grace Gamon |
14 Aug 1748 |
8 Apr 1818 |
69 |
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|
MP for Winchester 1784-1812 |
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|
For
details of the special remainder included |
|
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|
in the creation of this baronetcy,see the note |
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|
at the foot of this page |
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8 Apr 1818 |
|
2 |
William Grace |
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27 Jan 1841 |
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27 Jan 1841 |
|
3 |
William Grace |
6 Nov 1817 |
23 Mar 1887 |
69 |
|
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23 Mar 1887 |
|
4 |
Percy Raymond Grace |
11 Aug 1831 |
16 Aug 1903 |
72 |
|
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16 Aug 1903 |
|
5 |
Valentine Raymond Grace |
11 Jan 1877 |
3 May 1945 |
68 |
|
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|
3 May 1945 |
|
6 |
Raymond Eustace Grace |
6 Jan 1903 |
16 Apr 1977 |
74 |
to |
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|
Extinct on his death |
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|
16 Apr 1977 |
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|
GRAEME of Holly Grove,Berks |
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18 Dec 1783 |
GB |
|
See "Hamond-Graeme" |
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|
GRAHAM of Braco,Perth |
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28 Sep 1625 |
NS |
1 |
William Graham |
|
c 1635 |
|
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|
c 1635 |
|
2 |
John Graham |
|
c 1646 |
|
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|
c 1646 |
|
3 |
William Graham |
|
c 1684 |
|
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|
|
c 1684 |
|
4 |
James Graham |
c 1661 |
c 1700 |
|
to |
|
|
On his death the baronetcy became dormant |
|
|
|
c 1700 |
|
|
but has since been assumed by the Dukes of |
|
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|
Montrose |
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|
GRAHAM of Esk,Cumberland |
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|
29 Mar 1629 |
E |
1 |
Richard Graham |
|
28 Jan 1654 |
|
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|
|
MP for Carlisle 1626 and 1628-1629 |
|
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28 Jan 1654 |
|
2 |
George Graham |
c 1624 |
19 Mar 1658 |
|
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|
19 Mar 1658 |
|
3 |
Richard Graham,later [1681] 1st |
|
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|
Viscount Preston |
24 Sep 1648 |
22 Nov 1695 |
47 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22 Nov 1695 |
|
4 |
Edward Graham,2nd Viscount Preston |
1679 |
1710 |
31 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1710 |
|
5 |
Charles Graham,3rd Viscount Preston |
25 Mar 1706 |
23 Feb 1739 |
32 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
23 Feb 1739 |
|
6 |
William Graham |
1730 |
21 Sep 1774 |
44 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
21 Sep 1774 |
|
7 |
Charles Graham |
11 Nov 1764 |
26 Nov 1795 |
31 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
26 Nov 1795 |
|
8 |
Robert Graham |
1 Nov 1769 |
27 Jan 1852 |
82 |
|
|
|
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|
|
|
27 Jan 1852 |
|
9 |
Edward Graham |
1 Jan 1820 |
27 May 1864 |
44 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
27 May 1864 |
|
10 |
Robert James Stuart Graham |
2 Dec 1845 |
12 May 1917 |
71 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12 May 1917 |
|
11 |
Montrose Stuart Graham |
20 May 1875 |
16 Jan 1939 |
63 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
16 Jan 1939 |
|
12 |
Montrose Stuart Graham |
4 Aug 1904 |
1975 |
70 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1975 |
|
13 |
Ralph Wolfe Graham |
14 Jul 1908 |
1988 |
79 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1988 |
|
14 |
Ralph Stuart Graham |
5 Nov 1950 |
|
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|
GRAHAM of Norton Conyers,Yorks |
|
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|
17 Nov 1662 |
E |
1 |
Richard Graham |
11 Mar 1636 |
21 Dec 1711 |
75 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dec 1711 |
|
2 |
Reginald Graham |
30 Jul 1670 |
20 May 1728 |
57 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
20 May 1728 |
|
3 |
Bellingham Graham |
20 Aug 1702 |
1 Apr 1730 |
27 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 Apr 1730 |
|
4 |
Reginald Graham |
16 May 1704 |
29 Oct 1755 |
51 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
29 Oct 1755 |
|
5 |
Bellingham Graham |
14 Jun 1729 |
3 Oct 1790 |
61 |
|
|
|
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|
|
|
3 Oct 1790 |
|
6 |
Bellingham Graham |
c 1764 |
13 Apr 1796 |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
13 Apr 1796 |
|
7 |
Bellingham Reginald Graham |
4 Nov 1789 |
15 Jun 1866 |
76 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15 Jun 1866 |
|
8 |
Reginald Henry Graham |
22 Apr 1835 |
27 Dec 1920 |
85 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
27 Dec 1920 |
|
9 |
Reginald Guy Graham |
28 May 1878 |
2 Jun 1940 |
62 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 Jun 1940 |
|
10 |
Richard Bellingham Graham |
17 May 1912 |
29 Jan 1982 |
69 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
29 Jan 1982 |
|
11 |
James Bellingham Graham |
8 Oct 1940 |
|
|
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|
GRAHAM of Gartmore,Stirling |
|
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|
28 Jun 1665 |
NS |
1 |
William Graham |
|
Dec 1684 |
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|
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|
Dec 1684 |
|
2 |
John Graham |
|
12 Jul 1708 |
|
to |
|
|
Extinct on his death |
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|
|
12 Jul 1708 |
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|
GRAHAM of Netherby,Cumberland |
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|
|
15 Jan 1783 |
GB |
1 |
James Graham |
22 Apr 1761 |
13 Apr 1824 |
62 |
|
|
|
MP for Ripon 1798-1807 |
|
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|
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|
|
|
13 Apr 1824 |
|
2 |
James Robert George Graham |
1 Jun 1792 |
25 Oct 1861 |
69 |
|
|
|
MP for Hull 1818-1820, St.Ives 1820-1821, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Carlisle 1826-1829, Cumberland 1829-1832, |
|
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|
Cumberland East 1832-1837, Pembroke |
|
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|
1838-1841, Dorchester 1841-1847, Ripon |
|
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|
1847-1852
and Carlisle 1852-1861. First |
|
|
|
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|
|
Lord of the Admiralty 1830-1834 and 1852- |
|
|
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|
|
1855. Home Secretary 1841-1846. PC 1830 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25 Oct 1861 |
|
3 |
Frederick Ulric Graham |
2 Apr 1820 |
8 Mar 1888 |
67 |
|
|
|
For further information on this baronet, see |
|
|
|
|
|
|
the note at the foot of this page |
|
|
|
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|
8 Mar 1888 |
|
4 |
Richard James Graham |
24 Feb 1859 |
26 Aug 1932 |
73 |
|
|
|
For information on the death of his widow, see |
|
|
|
|
|
|
the note at the foot of this page |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
26 Aug 1932 |
|
5 |
Frederick Fergus Graham |
10 Mar 1893 |
1 Aug 1978 |
85 |
|
|
|
Lord Lieutenant Cumberland 1958-1968 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
MP for
Cumberland North 1926-1935 and |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Darlington 1951-1959 |
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
1 Aug 1978 |
|
6 |
Charles Spencer Richard Graham |
16 Jul 1919 |
11 Jul 1997 |
77 |
|
|
|
Lord Lieutenant Cumberland 1983-1994 |
|
|
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|
11 Jul 1997 |
|
7 |
James Fergus Surtees Graham |
29 Jul 1946 |
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GRAHAM of Kirkstall,Yorks |
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|
|
3 Oct 1808 |
UK |
1 |
James Graham |
18 Nov 1753 |
21 Mar 1825 |
71 |
|
|
|
MP for Cockermouth 1802-1805 and 1806-1812, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Wigtown 1805-1806 and Carlisle 1812-1825 |
|
|
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|
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|
|
21 Mar 1825 |
|
2 |
Sandford Graham |
10 Mar 1788 |
14 Sep 1852 |
64 |
|
|
|
MP for Aldeburgh 1812 and Ludgershall 1812-1815, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1818-1826 and 1830-1832 |
|
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|
14 Sep 1852 |
|
3 |
Sandford Graham |
21 Feb 1821 |
2 May 1875 |
54 |
|
|
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|
2 May 1875 |
|
4 |
Lumley Graham |
1828 |
25 Oct 1890 |
62 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25 Oct 1890 |
|
5 |
Cyril Clerke Graham |
6 Mar 1834 |
9 May 1895 |
61 |
to |
|
|
Lieutenant Governor of Grenada 1875-1877 |
|
|
|
9 May 1895 |
|
|
Extinct on his death |
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GRAHAM of Larbert House and Househill,Stirling |
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|
4 Dec 1906 |
UK |
1 |
John Hatt Noble Graham |
14 Aug 1837 |
25 May 1926 |
88 |
|
|
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|
|
|
|
25 May 1926 |
|
2 |
John Frederick Noble Graham |
25 Jul 1864 |
25 Nov 1936 |
72 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25 Nov 1936 |
|
3 |
John Reginald Noble Graham VC |
17 Sep 1892 |
6 Dec 1980 |
88 |
|
|
|
For further information regarding the award of |
|
|
|
|
|
|
this baronet's Victoria Cross, see the note at |
|
|
|
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|
|
the foot of this page |
|
|
|
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|
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|
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|
|
6 Dec 1980 |
|
4 |
John Alexander Noble Graham |
15 Jul 1926 |
11 Dec 2019 |
93 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
11 Dec 2019 |
|
5 |
Lt-Gen Andrew John Noble Graham |
1956 |
|
|
|
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|
GRAHAM of Dromore,co.Down |
|
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|
23 Jan 1964 |
UK |
1 |
Sir Clarence Johnston Graham |
8 May 1900 |
22 Dec 1966 |
66 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22 Dec 1966 |
|
2 |
John Moodie Graham |
3 Apr 1938 |
2 Nov 2020 |
82 |
to |
|
|
Extinct on his death |
|
|
|
2 Nov 2020 |
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GRAHAM-MONTGOMERY of Stanhope,Peebles |
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16 Jul 1801 |
UK |
|
See "Montgomery" |
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GRAHAM-MOON of Portman Square,London |
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4 May 1855 |
UK |
|
See "Moon" |
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Sir Francis Henry Goldsmid, 2nd baronet |
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|
Sir Francis died as a result of injuries that
he received when alighting from a train, as |
|
|
|
|
reported in "The Hampshire Telegraph and
Sussex Chronicle" on 4 May 1878:- |
|
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|
|
'We regret to record the death, under very
painful circumstances, of Sir Francis Goldsmid, |
|
|
|
M.P.
for Reading, which occurred on Thursday night. Sir Francis was a passenger by
the |
|
|
|
|
Southampton train on the South-Western Railway,
due in London at 7.53. On arriving at |
|
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|
|
Waterloo Junction, the hon. baronet proceeded
to alight, and in doing so slipped down |
|
|
|
|
between the train and the platform. The train
had not quite stopped, and the unfortunate |
|
|
|
gentleman
was dragged along with it for some yards. On being extricated it was
found |
|
|
|
|
that his foot was badly crushed, and that he
had sustained other injuries. As speedily as |
|
|
|
|
possible he was placed on a stretcher and
removed to St. Thomas's Hospital, where his |
|
|
|
|
case received every attention at the hands of
the house-surgeon, Mr. Makin. In addition |
|
|
|
|
to the injury to his foot, it turned out that
his chest had also been much crushed and the |
|
|
|
ribs fractured. From these injuries and from
the shock to the system, death resulted within |
|
|
|
40 minutes of his admission to the hospital.
Before his death he stated to the house-surgeon |
|
|
|
that when he alighted from the train he thought
it had stopped, inasmuch as one of the |
|
|
|
|
officials had opened the carriage door for
him.......Sir Francis stated by "Debrett" to have |
|
|
|
|
been the first member of the Jewish faith
called to the English Bar, and also the first person |
|
|
|
of that religion who was made a Q.C.' |
|
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|
|
The Goldsmid family appears to have suffered
more than its fair share of violent deaths over |
|
|
|
the years - indeed, the article below suggests
the existence of a family curse. This article is |
|
|
|
taken from the "Southland Times"
[published in Invercargill, New Zealand] on 24 September |
|
|
|
1878, possibly reprinted from "The London
Mayfair." |
|
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|
'..........We
have had brought under our notice some curious facts in connection with
the |
|
|
|
private history of the distinguished family of
which the late baronet was the head. It is a |
|
|
|
|
tradition in the family, and generally with the
Jews settled in England, that for nearly a |
|
|
|
|
hundred years a fatal spell has overhung the
Goldsmids; and we are bound to say that, in a |
|
|
|
manner which is doubtless a coincidence but it
is nevertheless remarkable, the spell has not |
|
|
|
failed
to work through several generations. |
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|
'It appears.....that during the latter part of
the eighteenth century there lived in London a |
|
|
|
Jewish Rabbi alleged to be gifted with those
magical powers many instances of which are to |
|
|
|
be found recorded in the Old Testament. This
seer was known as Rabbi de Falk. He performed |
|
|
|
many deeds of wonder which might reasonably
excite the professional jealousy of Messrs |
|
|
|
|
Maskelyne and Cook; but what we are chiefly
concerned with is his connection to the |
|
|
|
|
Goldsmid family. When he died he left to Mr.
Aaron Goldsmid, great-grandfather of the late |
|
|
|
baronet,
Sir Francis, a sealed packet, with strict injunctions that it should be
carefully |
|
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|
|
preserved,
but never opened. By way of enforcing this request he informed the old
Dutch |
|
|
|
merchant who founded the Goldsmid family in
England that if his injunctions were obeyed he |
|
|
|
and
his descendants would bask in the sun of prosperity till the coming of the
Messiah. If his |
|
|
|
injunctions were disregarded, ill-fortune would
finally overtake each successive representative |
|
|
|
of the race. Old Aaron Goldsmid kept the
packet, holding it sacred for some years, but finally, |
|
|
|
in an evil moment, curiosity overcame his
reverence for the dead kabbalist and he opened the |
|
|
|
packet.
A few hours after he was found dead [in 1782]. On the floor near him were
the |
|
|
|
|
contents
of the package which proved to be a small piece of parchment covered
with |
|
|
|
|
hieroglyphics and cabbalistic figures. |
|
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|
'At the time of his death, Aaron Goldsmid had
founded a great fortune and a prosperous family. |
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|
Amongst
the latter he divided his wealth. Two of the sons - Benjamin and Abraham -
entered |
|
|
|
upon business as money brokers, and speedily
established a colossal connection. They were |
|
|
|
omnipotent on the Stock Exchange [and] were
popular in the country.....Like all his family, |
|
|
|
Benjamin was a man of boundless generosity and
judicious philanthropy. He founded a Naval |
|
|
|
College, and was never tired of exercising
private liberality. But as he advanced in life he |
|
|
|
|
began
to feel the curse of the kabbalist. He grew despondent, scented ruin from
afar, and, on |
|
|
|
the
15th of April, 1808, being fifty-five years of age, honored, powerful, and
esteemed - he |
|
|
|
died by his own hand. |
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|
'Brother Abraham was now left to represent and
guide the fortunes of the Goldsmid family. For |
|
|
|
five years he managed with accustomed success
the great business of Goldsmid Brothers and |
|
|
|
in 1810 he joined the house of Baring in
contracting for a Ministerial loan of fourteen millions. |
|
|
|
The bears came down on the fold of the loan and
succeeded in depreciating the scrip. These |
|
|
|
were circumstances which came in the usual way
of business and would, a few years earlier, |
|
|
|
have been met with the skill, firmness, and
infinite resource which had already lifted Abraham |
|
|
|
to
the front rank of financiers. But the curse of the kabbalist was upon him. He
shrank from |
|
|
|
an encounter with adverse circumstances. He
hesitated, blundered, and - always losing - |
|
|
|
presently sank into a fit of despondency from
which it was impossible to arouse him. A sum of |
|
|
|
half a million had to be forthcoming on the
28th September, 1810. In the state of the market, |
|
|
|
Abraham Goldsmid did not know where to put his
hand on the money. He shrank from the |
|
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|
|
impending disgrace, and when the hour struck at
which the cash was due, it was discovered |
|
|
|
that Abraham Goldsmid had paid another and
still more terrible debt, for he was dead [having |
|
|
|
shot himself through the head while in his garden]. |
|
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|
'After
this the Goldsmids fell from high estate in the city; but not for long. A
greater than Aaron |
|
|
|
or Benjamin arose in the person of Isaac, a
nephew of Benjamin and grandson of the founder |
|
|
|
of the English house. Isaac entering into
business in the city, speedily amassed a fortune, and |
|
|
|
became known as one of the greatest financiers
in the world. Having made his own fortune he |
|
|
|
maintained the family reputation for aiding in
good works, and became largely engaged in |
|
|
|
|
philanthropic and educational
undertakings.....At sixty years of age he retired from business, |
|
|
|
having heaped up enormous wealth and secured
the honour of an English baronetcy and a |
|
|
|
Portuguese
peerage. He seems, among other good things to have staved off the curse of
the |
|
|
|
defunct de Falk, and though he sunk into
childishness during the last years of his life, that is a |
|
|
|
calamity which poor humanity is subject to when
it sees fourscore. |
|
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|
'But with the next heir the curse showed itself
with added malignity. The late baronet, Sir |
|
|
|
Francis, was the son of Sir Isaac, and
everybody knows how he was struck down by the |
|
|
|
|
accident at the Waterloo Station on the 3rd of
May. Whether the accident was due to |
|
|
|
|
defective arrangements on the part of the
railway company, or whether the unappeased manes |
|
|
|
[i.e.
the spirits of the dead] of the mysterious Rabbi still remained unsatisfied,
we leave to the |
|
|
|
judgment of the intelligent reader.' |
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|
The
special remainder to the baronetcy of Salomons (later Goldsmid-Stern- |
|
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|
Salomons) created in 1869 |
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|
From the "London Gazette" of 8
October 1869 (issue 23544, page 5446):- |
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|
'The
Queen has been pleased to direct letters patent to be passed under the Great
Seal |
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|
|
granting the dignity of a Baronet of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland unto |
|
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|
|
David Salomons, of Broom Hill, in the parish of
Tunbridge, in the county of Kent, and of Great |
|
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Cumberland-place, in the county of Middlesex,
Esq. one of the Aldermen of the City of London, |
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and the heirs male of his body lawfully
begotten, with remainder, in default of such issue male, |
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to his nephew David Lionel Salomons, Esq. and
the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten.' |
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The special remainder to the baronetcy of Gooch
created in 1746 |
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From the "London Gazette" of 1
November 1746 (issue 8585, page 1):- |
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'The King has been pleased to grant unto
William Gooch, Esq; and the Heirs Male of his Body |
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lawfully begotten; and in Default of such
Issue, to his Brother the Right Reverend Father in |
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God Thomas Lord Bishop of Norwich, and the
Heirs Male of his Body lawfully begotten, the |
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Dignity of a Baronet of the Kingdom of Great
Britain.' |
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Sarah
Annie, Lady Gooch, wife of Sir Francis Robert Sherlock Lambert Gooch, |
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8th baronet |
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On 16 July 1872, Sarah Annie Sutherland married
Sir Francis Robert Sherlock Gooch, 8th |
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baronet. A fortnight after the marriage, she
gave birth to a son who died at the age of four |
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months. Lady Gooch was the central player in a
very sad story of attempted fraud. |
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In November 1878, she and a nurse named Ann
Walker were charged with conspiracy to |
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defraud
her husband by passing off a child as being his, when it was not the case.
The |
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following account of the subsequent trial is
taken from the 'North Wales Chronicle' of 14 |
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December 1878:- |
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'……it appears that Lady Gooch was apprehensive
that her "lord and master" was not destined |
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to
walk this terrestrial sphere for a very long period, and that by his death
his income would |
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fall into a collateral branch of the family,
leaving to Lady Gooch an empty title. Her ladyship |
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was childless, and the only pledge which she
had given to the world had been called away in |
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its infantile years. Sir Francis mourned the
loss of his child, and grieved much that he had no |
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son and heir. Lady Gooch, according to the
evidence of her friends, seems to have imagined |
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that Sir Francis treated her somewhat coldly
because she bore him no "bonny bairn" to cheer |
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his paternal eye, and accordingly a strange
fancy took possession of her mind. A child she |
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would have, if she even adopted one, and she
fancied that she could persuade Sir Francis |
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that the happy day had arrived when he could
once more call himself "father." For this |
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purpose she simulated pregnancy; but Sir
Francis was evidently incredulous, and was little |
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inclined to put faith in the "interesting
condition" of his wife. Her ladyship was not daunted by |
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her husband's incredulity, and she appears to
have entered into a conspiracy with herself to |
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further her ends. She journeyed to an infants'
home in Great Coram-street, and made |
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application for a child. She was indifferent whether it was a boy or
a girl, and stated that she |
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wanted a child in order to win back the
affection of her husband. She wished to adopt a child, |
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and as her social position appeared to be a
guarantee of its being properly cared for, the |
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proprietress of the infants' home arranged to
procure her one. Henceforth the idea of having a |
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child appears to have haunted and distorted the
mind of the poor lady. She mentioned it to her |
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companion, her servants , her medical advisers,
and almost to every one she met, informing |
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one and all that she was about to be confined.
Her companion told her of the foolishness of |
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the ideas she was labouring under, pointed out
to her that she was nursing a delusion, and |
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that, in fact, she was rendering herself liable
for fraud. The medical gentlemen informed her |
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that they could take no part in a conspiracy,
and strongly advised her to disabuse herself of |
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the belief that she could impose a stranger's
child upon her husband as her own. To all these |
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warnings and counsels Lady Gooch turned a deaf
ear, and followed out her foolish intentions. |
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She hired a nurse, purchased baby linen, and
took special apartments in the Grosvenor Hotel. |
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The
long expected prodigy was procured, smuggled into the hotel, and Lady Gooch
went |
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through the farce of professing to have become
a mother according to the laws of nature. |
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A medical gentleman was sent for, and asked to
certify that the child was born to Sir Francis |
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Gooch. He laughed, and informed her ladyship
that the child was over a fortnight old. Her |
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ladyship's maid was requested to telegraph the
birth of a son to Sir Francis. She very wisely |
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declined, and Lady Gooch, her nurse and adopted
infant were left to carry on an evident farce. |
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Meanwhile Sir Francis had put the law in
operation , and poor Lady Gooch was awakened from |
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her maternal imaginings by being summoned to
the police court on a charge of conspiring to |
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palm off a strange child on her husband as his
own. The prosecution charged Lady Gooch |
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with
having expressed a determination to have a son in order that, at the death of
her |
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husband, she might not be left destitute, as
the son would become a ward in Chancery, and |
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a large allowance would be made for the child
and mother during its infancy. It was also |
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alleged that her ladyship was anxious to
procure a son so as to prevent the estates passing |
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to another branch. The defence admitted that
the statements of Lady Gooch were false, and |
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very naturally suggested that her conduct and
explanation to the doctors, to her companions, |
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and others, left it quite clear that her tale
was sure to be discovered as an imposition. The |
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prosecution
at the closure of the police court proceedings, begged the magistrate not
to |
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proceed
any further with the case, as Sir Francis was satisfied that the evidence
before the |
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Court would effectually prevent Lady Gooch from
palming off the strange child on her husband, |
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that the child was sent back to the
institution, and that they sought no criminal issues. The |
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magistrate, however, deemed it his duty to send
the case for trial [with the result that the |
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grand jury threw out the bill]. There can be
little doubt that Lady Gooch was fostering a |
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weird hallucination, that her punishment is
already severe , by the fact that she has been |
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evidently awakened to a true sense of her
folly, that the ends of justice have been obtained, |
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and that the position of Lady Gooch in the
future, under the most favourable circumstances, |
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will be of itself a punishment more than
commensurate with her folly.' |
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In March 1879, Lady Gooch sued her husband for
divorce on the ground of his adultery. Sir |
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Francis denied the adultery and when the case
was called, the Court was told that an |
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arrangement had been reached between the
parties, and as a result, the case did not proceed. |
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Lady Gooch died some seven months later, on 28
October 1879. No age is given for her in any |
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of the death notices, but I doubt whether she
would have reached her 30th birthday. She was |
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correct in believing that her husband was not
destined to live a long life - he died 13 August |
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1881, aged 30. |
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Sir John Dinely Goodere, 2nd baronet and Sir
Samuel Goodere, 3rd baronet |
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From the "Newgate Calendar" :- |
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Sir John Dinely Goodere succeeded his father,
Sir Edward, in the possession of an estate of |
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three
thousand pounds a year, situated near Evesham in Worcestershire. His brother
Samuel, |
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was bred to the sea, and at length was advanced
to the rank of captain of a man-of-war. |
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Sir John married the daughter of a merchant and
received twenty thousand pounds as a |
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marriage portion. But mutual unhappiness was
the consequence of this connection, for the |
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husband was brutal in his manners, and the wife
perhaps not strictly observant of the sacred |
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vow she had taken; for she was too frequently
visited by Sir Robert Jasen; and after |
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recriminations between the married pair, Sir
John brought an action in the Court of Common |
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Pleas
for criminal conversation [i.e. adultery], and five hundred pounds' damages
were |
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awarded by the jury. |
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Sir
John's next step was to indict his lady for a conspiracy, and, a conviction
following, she |
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was fined and imprisoned for a year in the
King's Bench. He likewise petitioned for a divorce; |
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but the matter being heard in the House of
Lords, his petition was thrown out. |
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Sir John having no children, Captain Samuel
Goodere formed very sanguine expectations of |
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possessing
the estate; but finding that the brother had docked the entail in favour of
his |
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sister's children, the Captain sought the most
diabolical means of revenge for the supposed |
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injury. |
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While the Captain's vessel lay in the port of
Bristol, Sir John went to that city on business; and |
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being engaged to dine with an attorney, named
Smith, the Captain prevailed on the latter to |
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permit him to make one of their company, under
pretence of being reconciled to his brother. |
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Mr Smith consented, and used his good offices
to accommodate the difference, and a sincere |
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reconciliation appeared to have taken place. |
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This visit was made on the 10th of January,
1741 [Old Style; 23 January New Style], and the |
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Captain, having previously concerted his
measures, brought some sailors on shore with him, |
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and
left them at a public-house, in waiting to seize the baronet in the evening.
Accordingly, |
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when
the company broke up, the Captain attended his brother through the streets,
and when |
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they
came opposite the public-house the seamen ran out, seized Sir John and
conveyed him |
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to
a boat that had been appointed to wait for his reception. As soon as the
victim was in the |
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boat
he said to his brother "I know you have intention to murder me, and if
you are ready to |
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do
it, let me beg that it be done here without giving yourself the trouble to
take me on board." |
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To
which the Captain said "No, brother; I am going to prevent you rotting
on land; but |
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however, I would have you make your peace with
God this night." |
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Being put on board, Sir John appealed to the
seamen for help; but the Captain put a stop to |
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any efforts they might have made to assist him,
by saying that he was a lunatic, and brought |
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on board to prevent his committing an act of
suicide. |
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[Matthew] Mahony and [Charles] White now
conveyed him to the purser's cabin, which the |
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Captain guarded with a drawn sword, while the
other villains attempted to strangle him with a |
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handkerchief which they found in his pocket,
the wretched victim crying out "Murder!" and |
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beseeching them not to kill him, and offering
all he possessed as a compensation for his life. |
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As they could not strangle him with the
handkerchief the Captain gave them a cord, with |
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which Mahony dispatched him, while White held
his hands and trod on his stomach. The |
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Captain now retired to his cabin, and on the
murder being committed the perpetrators of it |
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went to him and told him "the job was
done"; on which he gave them money, and bade them |
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seek their safety in flight. |
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The attorney with whom the brothers had dined
having heard of the commission of a murder, |
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and knowing of the former animosity of the
Captain to his brother, immediately conjectured |
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who it was that had fallen a sacrifice; on
which he went to the Mayor of Bristol, who issued |
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his warrant to the water-bailiff, who, going on
board, found that the lieutenant and cooper |
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had prudently confined the Captain to his cabin. |
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The
offender, being brought on shore, was committed to Newgate, and Mahony and
White, |
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being taken a few hours afterwards, were lodged
in the same prison. At the sessions held at |
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Bristol on the 26th of March, 1741, these
offenders were brought to trial, and, being |
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convicted on the fullest evidence, received
sentence of death. They were hanged near the |
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Hot Wells, Bristol, on the 20th of April, 1741,
within view of the place where the ship lay when |
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the murder was committed. |
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Sir John Dineley-Goodere, 5th baronet |
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The following is extracted from "The
Emperor of the United States of America and Other |
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Magnificent British Eccentrics" by
Catherine Caufield (Routledge & Kegan Paul, London 1981) |
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Sir John's primary object in life was the
retrieval of £300,000 which he believed, on no very |
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good authority, could be his for the relatively
small expense of a lawsuit. By 1770 his position |
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had become desperate. He was forced to sell
what was left of the family estate at Burhope |
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in Herefordshire and decided to get the money
he needed to pursue his claim through the |
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courts by marrying a rich woman. |
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Friends had managed to procure him a pension as
a Poor Knight of Windsor and it was from the |
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illustrious address of Windsor Castle that he
began his campaign. The ancient and honourable |
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name of Dinely was worth, he reckoned, a dowry
of at least £10,000. But should the lucky |
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woman he chose to marry be young and pretty he
might lower his price by £500. He studied |
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the market closely and made a list of eligible
women, with notes on their fortunes, faces and |
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figures. |
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He lived very simply while at Windsor, saving
what money he had for his thrice-yearly visits to |
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London. These he announced by means of
advertisements placed in the fashionable papers, |
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replies 'to be left at the Admiralty
coffee-house till called for, post-paid or your letter will not |
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be received.' His reputation spread and it was
not long before Sir John was surrounded by |
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women whenever he appeared at the theatre or at
Vauxhall Gardens, his two favourite haunts. |
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Dressed in faded velvet breeches, a coat and
waistcoat of a cut popular years before, and a |
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powdered wig which was secured to his head by
means of a chin strap, he cut a conspicuous, |
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if not a dashing, figure. |
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As soon as he spied a likely candidate for
matrimony, Sir John would approach her, bow deeply, |
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and without a word present her with a piece of
paper from a stock which he carried with him, |
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setting forth the terms of his romantic
proposition. His search for a wife continued without |
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success until his death. More than once he
discovered that the object of his affections was a |
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man
in disguise, but neither practical jokes nor his years of failure discouraged
him from |
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continuing his search. |
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A typical advertisement, published in the
Ipswich Journal on 21 August 1802, reads as follows:- |
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To the angelic fair of true English breed: -
worthy notice. Sir John Dinely, of Windsor Castle, |
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recommends
himself and his ample fortune to any angelic beauty of good breed, fit
to |
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become, and willing to be, a mother of a noble
heir, and keep up the name of ancient family, |
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ennobled
by deeds of arms and ancestral renown. Ladies at a certain period of life
need not |
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apply,
as heirship is the object of the mutual contract offered by the ladies'
sincere admirer, |
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Sir
John Dinely. Fortune favours the bold. Such ladies as this advertisement may
induce to |
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apply, or send their agents (but not servants
or matrons) may direct to me at the Castle, |
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Windsor.
Happiness and pleasure are agreeable objects and should be regarded as well
as |
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honour. The lady who shall thus become my wife
will be a Baronetess, and rank accordingly as |
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Lady
Dinely of Windsor. Goodwill and favour to all ladies of Great Britain; pull
no caps on his |
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account, but favour him with your smiles, and
paeans of pleasure await your steps. |
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********************* |
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A more comprehensive account of Sir John
appeared in the Australian monthly magazine |
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"Parade" in its issue for December 1970:- |
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'In the closing years of the 18th century one
of the sights of the ancient royal town of Windsor |
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was the daily perambulation through the streets
of Sir John Dinely Goodere, baronet, in search |
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of
a wife. With a penny loaf in one pocket of his shabby coat, a battered cocked
hat on his |
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bewigged head and a bundle of leaflets in his
hand, Sir John set out each morning from his |
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pensioner's quarters in Windsor Castle. Every
time he met an unattached woman, "be it a |
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tittering
girl of 16 or a personable widow," the elderly baronet made a courtly
bow and pressed |
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upon her one of his leaflets. The papers were
addressed to "the angelic fair of the true British |
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breed"
and cordially invited the recipient to consider the enormous advantages of
becoming |
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Lady Dineley Goodere. Not only would she have
the honour of providing an heir for the house |
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of Goodere, but her money would enable Sir John
to claim an inheritance of £375,000 out of |
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which he had been cheated long ago. However,
the ladies of Windsor resisted all the baronet's |
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blandishments
and Sir John was doomed to end his eccentric existence still heirless
and |
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unmarried. And with him ended a family whose
record of murder, madness and tragedy wrote |
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one of the most lurid chapters into the annals
of the English aristocracy. |
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'The first to achieve notoriety was Sir Edward
Goodere, squire of Burhope, in Herefordshire, who |
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was
born about 1660 and wed the heiress of the Dineley estates in the
neighbouring county of |
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Worcestershire. Sir Edward, a man of black
temper and ferocious family pride, claimed to be |
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descended from the Plantagenets and spent most
of his life in quarrels and law suits. He was |
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celebrated
for riding his horses to death on the hunting field, beating his servants
like dogs, and |
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for his enormous feats of eating, drinking and
physical strength. |
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'He also developed an insane hatred for his
three sons, all of whom died violently - the eldest |
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in a duel, the second by murder, and the third
on the gallows. After the duel swept away his |
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eldest heir in 1708, Sir Edward was left with
John, a drunken wastrel, and his younger brother, |
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Samuel, an officer in the Royal Navy. Captain
Samuel Goodere, in keeping with the family |
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tradition was a halfcrazy tyrant, who drove
his seamen to the verge of mutiny before he was |
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court-martialled and dismissed his ship in
1719. For some years, Sir Edward and his precious |
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pair of sons managed to patch up their feuds
until Samuel ran off with, and married, a farmer's |
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penniless
daughter about 1725. |
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'Disowned by his outraged parent, Samuel
applied to return to active naval service. After some |
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delay because of his previous record, he was
given command of another ship. He had just |
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|
narrowly
escaped a second court-martial for negligence and brutality when, in 1739,
news of |
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|
his father's death sent him hurrying ashore to
claim his share of the Goodere inheritance. To his |
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|
fury,
he found that the new baronet, his brother John, had already mortgaged most
of the |
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|
estate to the hilt and was rapidly losing the
rest in an orgy of gambling and dissipation. Since |
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|
John
had no children, Captain Samuel was his heir, but it was obvious that after a
few more |
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|
years of the baronet's spendthrift wildness
there would be nothing to inherit. The only solution |
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|
was to get rid of Sir John as quickly as
possible. Coldly and deliberately, the captain began |
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|
planning
his brother's murder. [Then follows a description of John's murder and
Samuel's |
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|
subsequent hanging - for further details, see
the note immediately preceding this one]. |
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'Samuel left 12-year-old twin sons, Edward and
John, of whom Edward became the new |
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|
baronet because he first saw the light of day a
few minutes before his brother. Left with only |
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|
the remnants of a once princely estate, the
boys were reared in obscurity by a guardian at the |
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|
decaying old mansion of Burhope, in
Herefordshire. Before long the fatal streak of madness |
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|
appeared in both of them - mere eccentricity in
John, but soon degenerating into violent mania |
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in his elder brother. |
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'Eventually, Sir Edward was locked up in a
private asylum, where he spent his days inventing |
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flying machines, trying to teach ducks to
speak, and writing letters to his "imperial cousin," the |
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Emperor of China. He died in 1761, and Sir John
Dinely Goodere, aged 32, became the last and |
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|
perhaps
the most celebrated of all the baronets of his noble house. Nine years later,
with not |
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|
even
the ancestral home of Burhope left from the wreck of his fortune, Sir John
settled in |
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in Windsor, where he lived for the rest of his days. |
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'At
first he was only a minor curiosity, a solitary figure, who emerged from his
cheap lodgings |
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only to make his daily purchases of bread, milk
and farthing candles. He shunned company, and |
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|
if anyone entered a tavern where he was taking
a lonely dram of brandy, he would immediately |
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|
pour the liquor on the floor and hastily
shuffle out. Yet, with the passing years, the recluse of |
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Windsor blossomed into a character whose
eccentricities attracted visitors from all over the |
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|
neighbourhood and as far away as London. |
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'Summer and winter, he appeared in a large,
tattered old cloak "from which appeared a pair of |
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incredibly skinny legs encased in dirty silk
stockings and ending in large wooden shoes." In one |
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hand he brandished a voluminous umbrella to
beat off the jeering boys who followed him about; |
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in
the other hand was usually a halfgnawed loaf of bread. On royal occasions,
when King |
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George III came to reside in Windsor Castle,
the baronet was always in front of the loyal |
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subjects
who gathered at the castle gate to welcome the sovereign. Then Sir John would
be |
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clad in an embroidered coat "of incredible
antiquity," velvet breeches, a silk waistcoat and a |
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great powdered wig that concealed half his face. |
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'He also became more sociable and, instead of
avoiding company, would stop people in the |
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street and harangue them at tedious length
about his illustrious ancestry. At various times he |
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claimed to be descended from Julius Caesar,
King Arthur of the Round Table, the ancient Princes |
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of
Wales, and William the Conqueror. Eventually he was obsessed with the notion
that he had |
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|
been cheated out of the vast Dinely estates of
his grandmother, which he calculated were now |
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worth, with compound interest, at least £375,000. |
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'Too poor to start law suits, he badgered the
government with petitions until at last one of |
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|
them came to the notice of the Prime Minister,
Lord North. North charitably arranged for the |
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|
baronet to be enrolled among the "poor
knights of Windsor," the little band of royal pensioners |
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|
who were given food and lodging within the
castle walls. It was then that the 50-year-old Sir |
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|
John Goodere launched on the famous
wife-hunting campaign that was to convert him from a |
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|
local oddity into a national celebrity. One of
his objects was to raise money to prosecute his |
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|
law
suits. But much more important was the necessity to provide himself with an
heir so that |
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|
the name of Goodere should not become extinct. |
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'The baronet began his quest modestly enough by
stopping any presentable single woman in the |
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|
streets of Windsor and politely asking her to
visit his quarters and discuss matrimony. When all |
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|
these
proposals were rejected with bursts of laughter, expressions of outraged
modesty or |
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|
threats
to call the constables, Sir John took more elaborate measures. He had
pamphlets |
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|
printed, in which he pointed out to "all
virtuous and single ladies of fashionable degree or |
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|
otherwise," the inestimable advantages of
becoming Lady Goodere. |
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'The recipients were invited to meet Sir John
at a pastrycook's shop in Windsor, where he would |
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be in attendance for three hours a day to
receive their applications. Those too shy to keep an |
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|
assignation in a public shop might send a
discreet agent to the poor knights' quarters in the |
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|
castle, where Sir John would consider their
proposals. |
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'Next, the frustrated baronet was reduced to
advertising in the London newspapers, announcing |
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|
that on one evening each month he would appear
in the Vauxhall Gardens to "attend to any |
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|
supplications by the fair sex." The only
result was that he was driven nearly mad by crowds of |
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|
jeering trollops, threatened with a duel by a
jealous lover, and chased out of the gardens |
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|
beneath a hail of
rubbish. |
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'Meanwhile, sightseers came from all over
Britain to enjoy the spectacle of the celebrated Sir |
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|
John Goodere on his endless rounds in search of
a wife. Crowds trailed him through the streets, |
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|
obscene
ballads were sung about him, and even King George complained that "the
damned old |
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|
crow" aroused more excitement in the town
than the monarch himself. |
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'But matrimony continued to elude the baronet
for the rest of his days. In November 1809 he |
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|
died, still wifeless, in Windsor Castle. And
with him the crazy and tragedy-haunted family of |
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Goodere came to an end.' |
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The special remainder to the baronetcy of Goold
created in 1801 |
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From the "London Gazette" of 4 July
1801 (issue 15382, page 754):- |
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'The
King has been pleased to grant the Dignity of a Baronet of the United Kingdom
of Great |
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|
Britain and Ireland to.....Francis Goold, of
Old Court, in the County of Cork, Esq; with Remainder |
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|
to the Heirs Male of the Body of his Father
George Goold, late of Old Court, in the said County |
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of Cork, Esq; deceased.' |
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Sir James Stephen Goold, 4th baronet and his
brother, Vere Thomas St.Leger Goold |
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According to an article which appeared in the
'Adelaide [South Australia] Advertiser' on 9 |
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September 1907, Sir James's younger brother,
Vere Thomas St.Leger Goold, claimed the |
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|
baronetcy, notwithstanding the fact that his
older brother was still alive at the time. In any |
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|
event, Sir James Goold also had three sons and
two grandsons, each of whom took precedence |
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|
in the line of succession. It should also be
pointed out that Sir James Goold and his family |
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|
lived in South Australia at the time the
article was published, and the paper would therefore be |
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|
expected to have a better knowledge of the
family than most. |
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The article states that 'How [Vere] Goold
claimed his title to his brother's baronetcy, though |
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Sir James Stephen Goold is still alive, forms a
curious narrative. Even if Sir James were dead, |
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Vere Goold would not be justified in using the
title of 'Sir Vere,' as there are three sons and |
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|
one [actually two] grandsons of his brother who
would take precedence of him. The family of |
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|
the baronet are all residing in Australia, but
are not in a position to "keep up" the title. |
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'In 1900 a paragraph appeared in Canadian and
Australian papers, stating that in consequence |
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|
of the death of the holder of the title, Mr.
Vere St.Leger Goold, of Montreal, had |
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|
succeeded
to it. The only foundation for the story was the fact that a brother
named |
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Frederick Edward Michael Goold, who came
between James Stephen and Vere St.Leger, died |
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|
in
a hospital in Australia, leaving no heirs. [While this person does not appear
in Burke's |
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|
Peerage, he is shown as the heir to the
baronetcy in the 1899 edition of Dod's Peerage, even |
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|
though each of Sir James's three sons had been
born by that time - but this was not known |
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|
to the editors of these peerage reference works]. |
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'Vere St.Leger appears to have fastened on this
fact, and circulated a statement that it was |
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the elder brother, holder of the title, who had
died without family. In May, 1901, he wrote to |
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|
the editors of the leading books of reference,
telling them of his brother's death. While |
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professing anxiety not to use the title
"until proofs come to hand," he said he would like to |
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|
establish his position as baronet, "for my
wife's sake." He also informed the editors that he had |
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|
no
children, and that he travelled about a good deal. His friends, he explained,
wished to call |
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|
him 'Sir Vere,' but he told everyone that it
would be "somewhat premature" to do so. He wound |
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|
up
by ingenuously stating that he had not seen or heard anything of his brother,
James |
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|
Stephen Goold, since the year 1863 [the year
James Stephen Goold migrated to Australia]. |
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'This last statement was denounced the
following year by the real baronet, Vere St.Leger's |
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elder brother, as a falsehood. He had also seen
the newspaper paragraphs and he wrote to the |
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editors to inform them that, while he was not
in a position to keep up the title, he still wished |
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|
to preserve the rights of his three sons and
any children they might have. As for his brother's |
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statement
that he had not seen or heard of him since 1863, he settled the question
by |
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|
showing
that he had been in frequent communication with him since 1897 on the
question of |
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the use of the title. |
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'In
subsequent letters Sir James Stephen Goold alleged that Vere St.Leger
actually wrote to |
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|
him offering him £100 if he would sign a
document "waiving his claim," and the claims of his |
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children, to the title. The money was never
sent, and the document, if it had been signed for |
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this consideration would have been worth
nothing. It is not in the power of anyone to abandon |
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|
a title in that fashion.' |
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When Sir James Goold died in August 1926, the
[Melbourne] 'Argus' reported, in its edition of |
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|
10 August 1926, that "Sir James Stephen
Goold, an Irish baronet [sic - it is a baronetcy of |
|
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|
the
United Kingdom], died yesterday at a mental hospital. [I understand, however,
that Sir |
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|
James had suffered a stroke, so the reference
to a mental hospital may be somewhat |
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|
misleading
- it is more likely that he died in some form of sanatorium or nursing home.]
Sir |
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James
Goold, who was born on October 13, 1848, succeeded his uncle, the third
baronet, in |
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|
1893.
He was for many years and until 13 years ago a railway ganger at Gladstone,
South |
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|
Australia.
He never used his title……….Sir James Goold had maintained for 44 years the
secret |
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|
of his association with a titled family, but in
August 1907, a cable message announced that a |
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|
Vere
Goold and Mrs. Goold had murdered Madame Emma Levin at Monte Carlo. [Vere]
Goold |
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|
said that he had a brother, a baronet, in South
Australia……" |
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The
murder referred to above was one of most sensational newspaper stories of
1907. On |
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|
6 August of that year, a middle-aged couple
arrived at Marseilles by train from Monte Carlo. |
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|
The man gave a railway porter a luggage ticket
and asked him to forward a trunk via goods |
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|
train to Charing Cross Station in London, to be
left there until called for. The trunk was placed |
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|
on a truck and driven towards the goods
station, but on the way, it was noticed that blood |
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|
was leaking from a corner of the trunk. The
porter reported the matter to the police, and |
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|
when
the trunk was opened, they found the body of a woman, whose head and legs had
been |
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|
severed.
It was an easy matter to trace the middle-aged couple, since the porter
had |
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|
overheard
them hiring a cab to take them to a hotel, whose name he had remembered.
The |
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|
police
immediately proceeded to the hotel and arrested the couple, and seized their
other |
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|
luggage.
In one of their trunks, the police found the missing head and legs. |
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At their subsequent trial the prisoners, Vere
St.Leger Goold and his wife Violet Goold, formerly |
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|
Girondin, denied murdering Emma Levin, but
admitted to dismembering her body. Evidence was |
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|
brought before the court which showed that Emma
Levin was a wealthy woman who possessed |
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|
a
valuable collection of jewellery. In addition, it was shown that she had lent
money to the |
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|
Goolds, and had been pressing them for
repayment. Finally, on 4 December 1907, the Court |
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|
found both of the Goolds to be guilty of
premeditated murder and sentenced Vere Goold to life |
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|
imprisonment, while Mrs. Goold was sentenced to
death. Vere Goold died in prison on Devil's |
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|
Island, the French penal settlement off the
coast of South America in September 1909 (one |
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|
report suggests that he committed suicide). His
wife's death sentence was later commuted |
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|
to life in prison, where she died in January 1914. |
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|
The reason for the commutation of Mrs. Goold's
death sentence may perhaps be found in the |
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|
following report which appeared in 'The
Washington Post' on 24 December 1907:- |
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'Mme. Vere Goold has produced consternation in
the principality of Monaco by exercising an |
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|
ancient right of a condemned person and
demanding that she be beheaded in the plaza, which |
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|
is the flower and tree decorated space in front
of the Casino at Monte Carlo. |
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'Ever since the trial of the Goolds for the
murder of Emma Levin, the Prince of Monaco has |
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|
dreaded some such possibility as this. The
persistent policy of this ruler has been to keep |
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|
away, to cover up, anything that might frighten
the nervous sensibilities of the patrons of the |
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|
gambling establishments. |
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'The idea of an execution in Monte Carlo was
horrifying enough, but now this terrible woman |
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|
demands to be killed in public and that the
guillotine be set up in front of the Palace of Chance. |
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|
'She
and her husband have appealed against their sentences - his that of hard
labour for life |
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|
and
hers that of the headsman - and in view of the woman's plea for a final
public appearance |
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|
it is possible the appeal will be granted. |
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'Meanwhile
the Goolds are locked up in the Monaco prison. Goold has sent a farewell
message |
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|
to
his friends in Ireland and England, and will be shipped to Cayenne, French
Guinea [sic for |
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|
|
Guiana], if the sentence be carried out. He has
also sent loving messages to the cell of his |
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|
|
wife, but she refuses to read them and declares
she wants nothing more to do with "that |
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|
lazy drunkard." |
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|
While researching this note, I made a courtesy
phone call to the current baronet, Sir George |
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|
William [Bill] Goold, who lives in Sydney. Not
only was Bill familiar with most aspects of the |
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|
|
stories of Sir James Stephen Goold and Vere
St.Leger Goold, but he was also aware of some |
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|
information that was unknown to me. He very
kindly sent me a copy of a pamphlet entitled |
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|
"St.Leger Goold; A Tale of Two
Courts" written by Alan Little and published by the Wimbledon |
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|
Lawn Tennis Museum in 1984. The two courts
referred to in the title of the pamphlet are the |
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|
court which convicted Vere Goold of murder, and
also the tennis courts at Wimbledon, where |
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|
Goold was a champion player, being the
runner-up in the men's singles at Wimbledon in 1879, |
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|
the same year that he won the Irish championship. |
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The Gore-Booth baronetcy |
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The
following article, which is headed "The sorry fate of the House of
Gore-Booth" appeared in |
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|
"The
Sunday Times" of 25 October 1970. The article was written by Anne ['You
are the |
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|
Weakest
Link'] Robinson. On the face of it, the Gore-Booth family appear to have been
the |
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|
victims of, at the least, official
incompetence, or, at worst, corruption. |
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'Lissadell House, County Sligo, is the
ancestral home of the Gore-Booth family. The Gore-Booths, |
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|
who share common ancestry with the Earls of
Arran and the Barons Harlech, have been lords |
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|
lieutenant,
high sheriffs, justices of the peace, soldiers, sailors and civil servants.
The sons |
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|
went to Eton and Rugby, Oxford and Cambridge,
and served in the Royal Irish Fusiliers, the |
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|
Dragoons, the Irish Guards, the Scots Fusilier
Guards and the Royal Navy. |
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|
'Lord Gore-Booth rose to head the British
diplomatic service. Constance Georgina Gore-Booth, |
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|
the
Countess Markievicz, fought alongside the rebels in the Irish Rebellion of
1916, was the |
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|
|
first woman elected to the British Parliament
and was the first Irish Minister for Labour. Yeats |
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|
was a close friend, a regular visitor to
Lissadell, an admirer of the sisters: |
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"The
light of evening, Lissadell, |
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Great windows
open to the south, |
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Two girls in
silk kimonos, both |
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Beautiful,
one a gazelle." |
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[These
are the opening lines of Yeats's poem "In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and
Con |
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|
Markiewicz."] |
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'Lissadell, one of Ireland's great houses, and
the Gore-Booths, one of its great families, are |
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|
now in sad decline. The avenue to the
once-magnificent Georgian house is lined with potholes. |
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|
The garden is overgrown, the greenhouses are
shattered and empty, the stables beyond repair. |
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|
The roof of the main block leaks badly and the
paintings show patches of mildew. In two tiny |
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|
bedrooms and a cramped kitchen live Angus
Josslyn, the heir presumptive to the family |
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baronetcy,
and his sisters, Miss Gabrielle and Miss Aideen. They scratch a living
showing |
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visitors over the estate at 3s a head. In
winter they sit round the kitchen stove because they |
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cannot afford a coal fire. |
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'The Gore-Booths claim the trouble they are now
in is not of their own making. They tell an |
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alarming story of a 14-year battle against the
Irish legal establishment, of political pressures, |
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mismanaged accounts, vanishing forests, unusual
business practices, missing funds, and threats |
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of prison as, in front of their eyes, their
father's legacy was allowed to be whittled away by the |
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very people appointed in law to protect it. |
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'Their
account sounds like a 19th-century melodrama, yet in Sligo few doubt that it
is true. |
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"The Gore-Booth business," said a
neighbour last week, "is one of the great Irish scandals of the |
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century." |
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'The decline in the fortunes of the Gore-Booth
family began with the death in 1944 of the 6th |
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baronet, Sir Josslyn. Sir Josslyn, one of the
founders of co-operative dairy societies throughout |
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Ireland and a man of strong social conscience,
had steadily built up the 2,670-acre estate, |
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concentrating
on commercial timber. His idea was that forests coming progressively
into |
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production would take care of his death duties
without ruining his family and without the need |
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for dismissing any of the estate workers. |
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'Sir Josslyn had eight children, four boys and
four girls. Two sons, Hugh, the second, and Brian, |
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the third, were killed in action during the
war. The youngest, Angus, has had periods of absent- |
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mindedness. The eldest, Sir Michael Savile, 7th
baronet, is in a Yorkshire nursing home suffering |
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from mental illness. Sir Michael was already
ill when his father died, and incapable therefore of |
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managing the estate. |
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'Accordingly, the Irish Government, through the
Solicitor-General for wards of court (the Irish |
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equivalent to the official solicitor) stepped
in and made Sir Michael a ward. The Solicitor-General |
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thus
became responsible for administering the financial affairs and the property
of Sir Michael. |
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As
well, three trustees were appointed and were to be consulted on any major
issues |
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concerning the estate. |
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'The day-to-day management was left in the
hands of Miss Gabrielle, and under her care, during |
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the early years of this arrangement, the estate
ran profitably. Then, in 1952, trouble began. |
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'In that year, Mr. Gerald Maguire became the
new Solicitor-General for wards of court. Mr. |
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Maguire,
who came from a family of lawyers, had his own ideas of how the estate should
be |
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run. They did not coincide that those of Miss
Gabrielle and by 1955 the family had a bank |
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overdraft of some £20,000. There are two
versions of how this occurred. Mr. Maguire said that |
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Miss Gabrielle had no idea of how to manage
Lissadell and her incompetence had caused the |
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loss. |
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'Miss
Gabrielle says that although the timber trade went through a depressed period
at this |
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time, the real reason for the loss was that Mr.
Maguire would not allow her enough money from |
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the family funds to pay reasonable wages, and
that Mr. Maguire's unusual accounting methods |
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made
it hard to keep track of the progress of the business. She says, for example,
that in |
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September, 1954, the timber firm of McAinsh and
Company paid £5,750 for timber it had felled |
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on the estate. When Miss Gabrielle received the
1954 accounts there was no sign of this |
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amount. After representation to Mr. Maguire,
the figure was inserted and the accounts altered |
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accordingly. |
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'This incident led to a further deterioration
in relations and Miss Gabrielle when Mr. Maguire |
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sacked her and appointed a new manager.
However, when the new man turned up at Lissadell |
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to take charge, 41 out of the 53 workers on the
estate refused to serve under him unless the |
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Gore-Booths ordered them to do so. Mr. Maguire
replied by dismissing them. |
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'Miss Gabrielle announced that she was not
going to let loyal workers be sacked in this manner |
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and said that if Mr. Maguire would not pay
their wages then she would. She began selling crops |
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and timber from the estate to raise the money.
Mr. Maguire took to the law. He appealed to |
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the High Court in Dublin and succeeded in
obtaining an injunction restraining the Gore-Booths |
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"from selling, removing or disposing"
of any of the property at Lissadell. |
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'This
produced a stalemate. Interest was mounting on the £20,000 overdraft (it has
now |
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reached £40,000) and the estate began to
deteriorate. Miss Gabrielle's idea of how to solve |
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the problem was that Mr. Maguire should release
enough of her brother's capital to pay off the |
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overdraft and start afresh. Mr. Maguire saw
another, more direct, solution and on October 5, |
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1956, moved to apply the coup de grace. He
applied to the High Court for an order to allow |
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him to sell Lissadell to the Land Commissioner. |
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'The President of the High Court, Mr. Justice
Cahir Davitt, granted the application and made an |
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order for the sale, in which it was said that
the trustees of the Gore-Booth estate had agreed |
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to such a sale. Since the trustees were Sir
Michael's uncles, Major Michael Nicholls and Mr. |
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Mordaunt
Gore-Booth, this came as a surprise to Miss Gabrielle and her family and
they |
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immediately sent telegrams to the uncles asking
if this was so. Both uncles replied
rather |
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testily that not only had they not given
consent to the sale of Lissadell but they had not been |
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consulted. The family made representations to
Mr. Justice Davitt with this evidence and the |
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order for the sale was rescinded. |
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'These events had caused something of a stir in
Ireland. Mr. Justice Davitt is the son of one of |
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Ireland's
great national leaders, Michael Davitt, founder of the Land League, which, in
the |
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nineteenth century, broke the power of
landlords in Ireland and enabled tenant farmers to |
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become owners of their own holdings. But Irish
newspapers hesitated to tackle the story. "It |
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was a political hot potato," a Dublin
reporter said last week. "Firstly, it's Government policy |
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to break up the old large estates, and secondly
no one wanted to take on a story where |
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everyone involved had such good connections." |
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'Mr. Maguire's next move set County Sligo
talking. He decided to sell some Lissadell cattle and |
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sent an agent and three men to collect them.
Just as a precaution he also sent a police escort. |
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This column was met by a determined Miss
Gabrielle and Miss Aideen who appeared to be |
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trying to drive the cattle away by waving their
arms. Mr. Maguire went straight to the High |
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Court and asked that the sisters be sent to
jail for contempt. In evidence Miss Gabrielle denied |
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that she had been trying to drive the cattle
off. Knowing Mr. Maguire's accounting methods, |
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she
had, she said, merely been trying to count the cattle before they were sold.
The judge |
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said the whole thing was a trivial matter and
dismissed the application. |
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'The battle between Mr. Maguire and the
Gore-Booths continued. Mr. Maguire took over the |
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management of the estate himself and obtained
an injunction restraining the Gore-Booths from |
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interfering with him. He followed the
injunction a week later with an eviction order, but this was |
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suspended indefinitely so long as the family
refrained from interfering. The threat of losing their |
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home
was an effective check and the Gore-Booths were able to do nothing when a new |
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manager was installed on the estate and felling
of large areas of woodlands began. |
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'The
felling of the trees continued with a curious change in the method of selling
the timber. |
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Normal practice had been to offer the forests
for sale by tender. Merchants would be given |
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details of the woods, allowed to inspect them,
and then invited to make a bid. This suddenly |
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ended. McAinsh and Company, one of the regular
bidders under this system, was not invited |
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to tender any more and as a result closed its
saw-mill in the area. |
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'To replace the tender system a new arrangement
was worked out with the now defunct |
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timber firm of D.G. Somerville. Under an
agreement with the Solicitor-General for wards of |
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court, Somervilles would fell a section of
woodland, measure the timber and then make an offer. |
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This peculiar system is not generally known in
the timber trade. |
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'The Gore-Booths, upset at the whittling down
of the estate, made repeated requests through |
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their own solicitor for a statement of the
family affairs. In 1960 Mr. Maguire died and the new |
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Solicitor-General
for wards of court gave permission for the family to be given revenue |
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statements for the sale of timber for the
previous five years. The family received a sheet of |
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paper with the figure £16,390. No details
whatsoever were supplied. (Again the Solicitor- |
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General's office appeared to have had a problem
with their figures. D.G. Somerville, to whom the |
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timber had been sold, independently gave Miss
Gabrielle a total of £16,219.) |
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'The Gore-Booth family challenged this. Miss
Gabrielle has spent months tramping the estate to |
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measure woodland and count tree-stumps and has
documented in great detail a claim against |
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the Solicitor-General totalling £234,000. |
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'For
example, Miss Gabrielle claims that between 1956 and 1960 the manager sold
timber from |
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153 acres of top quality woodland. Mr. John
Plant, the former manager of Somervilles, puts the |
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value of the timber at £925 an acre. A timber
expert last week gave a more conservative |
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estimate of £500. Even calculated on the lower
price the return should have been in the region |
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of £76,000. The amount could have been more.
The Forestry Department can only produce |
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felling licences for 95 acres. The remaining 58
acres were felled without reference to the |
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Department which has therefore, no record of
the number of the trees chopped down on these |
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sections. Later in 1960, after Somervilles went
into liquidation, Mr. Plant bought on his own |
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behalf £9,000 worth of standing timber from
Lissadell. The amount entered for this transaction |
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in the official accounts which the family
received was £1,931. |
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'In 1961 the Gore-Booths took their case to the
High Court. It was four years before Mr. Justice |
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Davitt delivered his judgment. He stated that
his investigations into the accounts and balance |
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sheets provided by the Solicitor-General of
wards of court showed nothing wrong. The family |
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appealed but discontinued their action when
they ran out of funds. |
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'In 1967, the new President of the High Court,
Mr. Justice O'Keefe, made a further order for the |
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Lissadell estate, excluding the house, to be
sold to the Land Commission. The two uncles who |
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had been trustees had died. The new trustee,
the Bank of Ireland, owed about £40,000 from |
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the
estate, gave its consent to the sale. A bid by the family to oppose the order
was |
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unsuccessful and Lissadell was sold for
£77,000. Miss Gabrielle has appealed to the Attorney- |
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General of Ireland for an inquiry. Her chances
are not bright. The present Solicitor-General |
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for wards of court, Mr. Daniel Coughlan, said
last week:- "I feel that little can happen unless |
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a claim is put through the courts, and that has
already been done." |
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'Lord
Mountbatten, who owns a nearby estate and sympathises with the
Gore-Booths' |
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difficulties, now employs Miss Gabrielle as his
manager and regards her as highly competent. |
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With the income from this, and takings from
visitors, Miss Gabrielle, Miss Aideen and Mr. Angus |
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hope to hold out at Lissadell until the
Attorney-General makes his decision. Miss Gabrielle said |
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yesterday:- "It's our last chance. We have
no money for further legal fees." If their last chance |
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fails
then within a year the estate will be split into small parcels and sold. If
this happens, |
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Lissadell, and with it a bit of Irish history,
will cease to exist.' |
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Eventually, in 2003, Lissadell House was sold
to a private couple for €3 million. The new owners |
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spent large amounts in restoring the house and
gardens, and continued to allow public access |
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to
the house, but they limited public rights of way over the estate, including a
right of way to |
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a popular beach bordering the grounds. In
December 2010, after Sligo County Council had voted |
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to preserve the public rights of way, the Irish
High Court ruled in favour of the Council and the |
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public rights of way were restored. |
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Agnes Goring, wife of Sir Craven Charles
Goring, 10th baronet |
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Lady Goring is the central character in one of
the stories included in "Lord Halifax's Ghost Book" |
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[Geoffrey Bles London 1936], a collection of
ghost stories compiled by Charles Lindley Wood, |
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2nd Viscount Halifax. When I first set out to
write this note, I believed that the note would |
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consist only of Lady Goring's story, but, upon
digging a bit deeper, the note "growed like |
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Topsy." Firstly, the story of Lady Goring's dream:- |
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'One
night Lady Goring distinctly saw in a dream an old house, which was quite
unfamiliar to |
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her. She knew that someone was with her and
that she was visiting this house for a purpose; |
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and
when she got inside, one special room was fixed in her mind. First, it had a
very curious |
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frieze near the ceiling; then the latticed
windows were of a peculiar, long, narrow shape and |
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were connected by a striking moulding. In her
dream she saw an elderly woman sitting hunched |
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up in an armchair by the fire; but a moment
later her attention wandered from her to the door, |
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which was softly opening. She saw a man enter,
steal up quickly to the elderly woman, who |
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was apparently asleep, suddenly produce a
pistol, place it close to her temple, and fire. When |
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his victim fell over, the murderer tried to
arrange the pistol so that it might appear as if it had |
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fallen from her hand. He then noiselessly left
the room, shutting the door after him, but a few |
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moments afterwards reappeared and made some
further alterations in the position of the dead |
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woman and the pistol. Having done so, he went
away and did not return. Lady Goring saw his |
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face so plainly in her dream that it became
fixed in her memory. |
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'In course of time she and her husband, Sir
Craven, wished to rent a house, and inspected |
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various properties, among others an old manor
in Cheshire. The moment Lady Goring entered the |
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manor she felt that the place was strangely
familiar to her. Then the truth flashed upon her. "I |
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have never been here in my life," she told
herself, "but it is the house of my dream." |
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'At that moment the caretaker said, "This
door on the right leads to the drawing-room"; where- |
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upon Lady Goring corrected her, saying, "I
am sure that you must mean the dining-room." |
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'The caretaker apologised and replied,
"Did I say the drawing-room? I meant to say the dining- |
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room." |
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'As soon as she opened the door, Lady Goring
recognised the remarkable frieze, the latticed |
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windows and the peculiar moulding. There was
also a chair near the fireplace. |
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'The caretaker, on being asked for some
information about the house, told the Gorings that the |
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last tenant had not stayed very long and that
the family previously in possession had been |
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foreigners. She thought they were Austrians or
Swiss. There were three of them, a gentleman, |
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his wife and his mother-in-law. There had been
a sad tragedy in their time because the old lady |
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had
shot herself. After this, the husband and wife had gone away to foreign parts
and the |
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house had been shut up for some time. |
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'Lady Goring did not take the house, but some
months later, as she was walking down Regent |
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Street
and idly looking in at the shop windows, she came to a standstill opposite
the |
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Stereoscopic. What had stopped her was a
photograph in the window. "Why!" she exclaimed |
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to herself, "there is the murderer of my
dream." On going into the shop and enquiring who the |
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man in the photograph might be, she found that
it was Tourville, who was then being tried for |
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the murder of his second wife in the Tyrol.' |
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While it is impossible to say whether Lady
Goring's dream ever actually occurred, there is no |
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doubt at all that the death described by Lady
Goring took place, and that in the manner of the |
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dream. The following article appeared in 'The
Manchester Guardian' of 25 September 1876:- |
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'In April 1868 there appeared the following in
the Warrington Guardian,
under the head "Fatal |
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Pistol Accident at Lymm: A Lady Shot by her
Son-in-Law." - On Saturday
morning last Mrs. |
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Elizabeth Brigham, who resided at Foxley Hall,
Lymm, was killed by the discharge of a revolver |
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pistol, which her son-in-law, Mons. Perreau,
had been engaged in cleaning. The deceased lady |
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was the widow of the late Dr. Brigham, and had
been many years resident at Foxley Hall. A |
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great deal of excitement was occasioned in the
neighbourhood immediately the melancholy |
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occurrence became known; and rumours were
circulated as to the act having been done |
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designedly. At the inquest held before Mr.
James Nicholson, coroner, the whole of the facts |
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were minutely inquired into, and all cause for
suspicion was set at rest, when, after an |
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investigation of five hours, the Jury returned
a verdict of accidental death. [It should be noted |
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that Lymm is in Cheshire, and therefore Lady
Goring's mention of an "old manor in Cheshire" |
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fits very nicely with "Foxley Hall,
Lymm." The evidence becomes even stronger as the report |
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continues....] |
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'The sequel to this Lymm "accident"
appears in the French correspondent's column of the |
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Standard of Friday, as
follows:- "A tragic event has just occurred at the Stitzer-Joch, in
the |
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Tyrol. A lady of English birth, Madame de
Tourville, was found dead at the foot of a rock. Her |
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husband stated that she had been seized with a
sudden giddiness and had fallen down the |
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precipice. Rumours, however, got afloat that
her death was not the result of an accident, but |
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|
of crime. An inquiry held by the authorities
resulted in a verdict of not proven. The matter then |
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entered
on a new phase. The English police, whose suspicions were aroused, gathered
fresh |
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|
information
about the husband. Henri de Tourville had previously passed under the name
of |
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Henri
Perreau. His first wife was a woman of ailing constitution. One day Perreau
happened to |
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be alone with his mother-in-law, and was
showing her the mechanism of a revolver. As ill-luck |
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would have it the weapon was loaded and a
barrel went off, which killed the lady. His wife died |
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soon after, and Perreau inherited £40,000
sterling. Perreau was not prosecuted, but the police |
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|
thought it their duty to keep an eye on him. He
afterwards changed his name to De Tourville, |
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and in November 1875, married a second wife
with a fortune of £70,000, and persuaded her |
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to make a will in his favour. They then went
travelling, and did not return to England. The |
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Tagblatt of Innsbruck,
which gives these details, does not say whether the Austrian police |
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have taken any steps in consequence of the
information furnished by the English detectives." |
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'Mrs.
de Tourville was killed on 16 July 1876. After her death and the subsequent
inquiry held by |
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the authorities in Austria, de Tourville had
returned to England, where, in late October 1876, he |
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was
arrested on an extradition warrant and charged with murder. He was
subsequently |
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extradited to Austria, where he stood trial in
June/July 1877, at which trial he was found guilty |
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and sentenced to be hanged, but this sentence
was later commuted to 18 years' hard labour. |
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During much of the 1880s, de Tourville's name
was often before the English courts as he sought |
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|
to receive the moneys that had been left to him
under the wills of his two former wives. These |
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cases were further complicated by the existence
of an alleged son by his first marriage who had |
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disappeared, and the possibility that this son
was identical with a body found washed up on a |
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beach
in Naples in 1885. According to a number of reports in American newspapers de
Tourville |
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died in prison in February 1890, the reporting
of which led the papers to provide their readers |
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|
with a summary of de Tourville's history. The
following summary appeared in 'The Washington |
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Post' of 24 February 1890. In some respects it
differs from the outline shown above, but it also |
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contains some new information/allegations:- |
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'One of the most remarkable criminals of modern
times has just brought his life to a close in the |
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Karlau
Prison, at Graz, Austria. A Frenchman of low birth, yet of exceedingly
handsome |
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appearance and still more charming manners, he
caused himself to be naturalized in England |
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under
the name of "Count Henry de Tourville." It is not customary for the
clerks who register |
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|
the naturalization papers to inquire into the
rights or legality of a foreign title borne by a candid- |
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ate for British citizenship, and no difficulty
is made about registering aliens under any nobiliary |
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designation which they may assume for the
occasion. The title figuring upon the naturalization |
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papers, with the stamp and seal of the British
government appended thereto, is regarded by the |
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uninitiated both at home and abroad as having
received the official confirmation, sanction, and |
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recognition of Queen Victoria, and from that
time forth is considered what one might describe |
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as a legal tender. |
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'With
the assistance of the title thus obtained, "Count de Tourville,"
who was the type of the |
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polished and highly-cultured adventurer, spread
his net in the provincial cities of the midland |
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counties, and succeeded in capturing the
affections of a wealthy heiress of the middle classes. |
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His married life was, however, of short
duration, for his wife died abroad from the effects of |
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powdered
glass put in her food and drink. His mother-in-law, who suspected his share
in her |
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daughter's
death, and who, with true mother-in-law-like method, lost no opportunity
in |
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insinuating her belief on the subject, was
"accidentally" shot through the brain by him while he |
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was cleaning a pistol. It should be added that
the only reason why the old lady exposed herself |
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to the danger of travelling about with the
pseudo Count was for the purpose of protecting the |
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life and interests of her little grandson, the
sole issue of the marriage, and on whom the fortune |
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of the murdered woman was settled. |
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'Within a short time after the death of de
Tourville's mother-in-law the house in which his little |
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three-year-old boy was residing mysteriously
caught fire and the child barely escaped with his |
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life. The circumstances of the case were so
peculiar that the marriage trustees determined to |
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take possession of the infant. De Tourville did
not venture to protest or face the music of a law |
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court on the subject, for he realized that,
although the evidence against him was not sufficient |
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to
secure a conviction, it was quite sufficient to ruin any further matrimonial
chances in |
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|
England. The boy is now a young man of about
twenty. With the sanction of his guardians he |
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has assumed his mother's in lieu of his
father's name, and next year he will attain his majority |
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and will be placed in possession of his fortune. |
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'Scarcely
a year had elapsed after the attempt to burn his little boy when de
Tourville |
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succeeded in obtaining the hand of a wealthy
widow residing at Birmingham. Her name was |
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Madeline Miller, and her fortune amounted to
about $200,000, her age, however, being fifty- |
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seven; that is, fifteen years older than de
Tourville's. The latter was exceedingly relieved to |
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discover that she had no near relatives. The
wedding took place at Birmingham in June, 1876, |
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and the honeymoon was spent in the Austrian
Tyrol. On the 16th of July the couple proceeded |
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to make an excursion up the mountain known as
the Stillfer Joche. Shortly after nightfall he |
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returned alone to the hotel at Vozen, and
declared amid great protestations of grief that his |
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wife had fallen over a precipice and had been
killed. The mangled remains of the poor lady were |
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found on the following day, and so sincere did
de Tourville's sorrow appear that no suspicion |
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arose
at the time [this is totally at odds with other reports, which state that de
Tourville's |
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|
reaction to his wife's death was that of total
nonchalance, which gave rise to the initial police |
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|
suspicion
of his guilt]. The inquest was of the most perfunctory nature, and the burial
took |
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place in the Protestant Cemetery here.
Immediately afterward de Tourville left for England and |
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assumed possession of his wife's fortune
without difficulty. |
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Within a few days after his departure, however,
rumours began to circulate about Meran |
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concerning
certain peculiar features in connection with the accident. In the first
place, a |
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Vienna
lawyer named Dr. Markreiter who was stopping at Vozen at the time, and who
was an |
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|
enthusiast on the subject of mountaineering,
drew attention to the fact that the upper portion |
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of the precipice at the foot of which she was
found was of a slope so very gradual and gentle |
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from the road that it was impossible that any
one could have slipped from the path and been |
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straightway precipitated into the abyss. It was
manifest that the unfortunate woman's body |
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must
have been dragged almost to the edge of the lower section of the precipice in
order to |
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have fallen into the abyss. The suspicions thus
engendered were further corroborated by the |
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|
servants of the hotel and by the knowledge that
the "Countess" had been considerably older |
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and richer than her husband. |
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'So serious did the presumption of foul play
become that by order of the local justice the body |
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|
of the lady was exhumed and subjected to a
careful autopsy. From this it resulted that several |
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wounds were found on the body which could not
have been produced by the fall. In view of |
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|
these circumstances a warrant of arrest was
issued against de Tourville, and the authorities |
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here were requested to take the necessary steps
for procuring his extradition from England. |
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He was arrested in London by a Scotland Yard
detective by the name of Clark and taken before |
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Magistrate Vaughn at the Bow-street police
court, with a view to his extradition. Considerable |
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|
difficulty was experienced, for the question
arose whether he was an English subject, and |
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|
whether, as a Frenchman, the English
authorities possessed the right to extradite him. The |
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|
validity of his naturalization was open to
question, since he admitted and was able to show that |
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he
had been citizenized [ugh!] by England under a false name, namely, that of de
Tourville. |
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Finally, he was turned over to the Austrian
authorities. |
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'One
of the most extraordinarily dramatic trials of modern times now took place.
One of the |
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most
sensational incidents occurred when de Tourville denied having shot the
mother of his first |
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wife.
The London detective, Clark, then stepped into the witness box, opened his
bag, and |
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extracted
therefrom the skull of the old lady, perforated by the bullet. Another
equally striking |
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feature was when the entire court adjourned to
witness the scene of the accident in the |
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mountains.
Judges, jury, counsel, prisoner, police, newspaper reporters, drove up in a
long file |
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of
carriages to the spot where de Tourville claimed that his wife had fallen. A
dummy figure of |
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life
size was taken along for the purpose of demonstrating the impossibility of
the body having |
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fallen from the roadway down the precipice
without having been dragged a considerable |
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|
distance.
When the court returned to Vozen at the conclusion of this unique
mountain |
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|
excursion,
de Tourville was condemned to death. On appeal, in view of the
circumstantial |
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nature
of the evidence, the sentence was commuted to one of penal servitude for
twenty |
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years. |
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'The first portion of his imprisonment was
spent in the penitentiary at Cape d'Istria, whence he |
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was moved to that of Gradisca. While at
Gradisca he almost succeeded in effecting his escape |
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by bribing two wardens with gold that had been
smuggled into his possession in the hollow of a |
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flatiron. On the discovery thereof he was
immediately removed to the Karlau, near Graz, which |
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is the most gloomy and terrible of all Austrian
prisons. It was there that he died a fortnight ago |
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after sixteen [sic] years of incarceration.' |
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Sir Harry Yelverton Goring, 11th baronet |
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The
following article appeared in the New Zealand 'Inangahua Times' on 4 May
1897. |
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Inangahua is a region on the west coast of New
Zealand's South Island. The newspaper was |
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published in the town of Reefton, reputedly the
first town in the Southern Hemisphere to be |
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lit
by electricity, although Tamworth in New South Wales also claims this
honour. |
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'Mr. Henry Yelverston [sic] Goring, formerly of
[New] Zealand, at present at Tamworth [a nice |
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coincidence], in Staffordshire, has just
succeeded to the family baronetcy. It appears (writes |
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our London correspondent under date March 29th)
that on Thursday he received a telegram |
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from
a friend in Lichfield congratulating him on his title, and referring him to
the obituary |
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notices in that day's Times. "I said to my
wife," remarked Sir H. Y. Goring, "I doubt my friend |
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is hoaxing me, but anyhow I'll go to the public
reading room and see the paper. So after I had |
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my dinner I went, and read the notice of the
sudden death of my cousin, Colonel Sir Charles |
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Goring. I had never anticipated a fatal
termination to his illness, particularly as he was of the |
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same
age as myself, and had not gone through the many hardships that I
have." |
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'The new baronet says he went out with his
father to New Zealand, where his father became |
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private secretary to Sir George Grey, the then
Governor, and continued to act in that capacity |
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to the succeeding Governors for 30 years, when
he retired on a pension. The present baronet |
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could find nothing to do, and went to Sydney to
look for work. Not getting any, he joined the |
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First
Battalion 12th Suffolk Regiment in 1860. He had no friends in the regiment,
and the |
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promotion he got was simply on his merits. He
was made sergeant at Sealcot (India) in 1869. |
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In 1872 he returned Home and retired in 1886 on
a pension of 25/6 per week. As he had a |
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large family he entered the tobacco business,
and has been in it for seven years. |
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'Asked if he would stay in Tamworth, the
baronet said: "I feel quite satisfied with my present |
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position, so far as it goes. I am quite
comfortable, and did not want this thing at all - this |
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honour which has been put upon me without my
wish. I did not expect that I should ever come |
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into it. But I always thought my son would get
it some day. He is in New Zealand, managing a |
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sheep ranch." Just then an old lady came
in for her "pennyworth 'f snuff," which the baronet |
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duly served to her.' |
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The special remainder to the baronetcy of Grace
(originally Gamon) created in 1795 |
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From the "London Gazette" of 7 April
1795 (issue 13768, page 319):- |
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'The King has been pleased to grant the Dignity
of a Baronet of the Kingdom of Great Britain to |
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Richard
Gamon, of Minchenden House in the County of Middlesex, Esq; with Remainder
to |
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Richard Grace, of Rahin in the Queen's County
and Kingdom of Ireland, Esq; and his Issue Male.' |
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Sir Frederick Ulric Graham, 3rd baronet [GB 1783] |
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A dramatic incident in the life of Sir
Frederick was reported in "The Manchester Courier and |
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Lancashire General Advertiser" on 7 November 1868:- |
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'An
extraordinary case of threatening to shoot Sir Frederick Graham, Bart., of
Netherby, comes to |
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us from Longtown. It appears that Sir Frederick
Graham and five other gentlemen were out |
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shooting, when a young man named Isaac
Sanderson, the son of a respectable yeoman, came up |
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to them with a dog and gun. Sir Frederick sent
a man to see what Sanderson wanted, upon which |
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the latter went up to Sir Henry Vane, and asked
him for some gun-caps, as he said he was going |
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to shoot with the party. The head-keeper took
the gun from Sanderson, who then became very |
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violent, assaulting one of the keepers, and
threatening Sir Frederick, whom he said he would kill. |
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He was then taken away to the Longtown
Police-office. In the police cell the prisoner smashed |
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everything within his reach. He said he would
fight Sir Frederick with any weapon he chose; and |
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he said he ought to have given him the
satisfaction of a gentleman. Next day he was brought |
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before the Longtown magistrates and bound over,
himself in £100, and two others in £50, and |
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was committed to gaol until the sureties were
provided. These were provided, and on the day |
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after his release from prison the young man
appeared again at Longtown, and, from his conduct, |
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the police-sergeant felt it to be his duty to
re-arrest him. He was taken to Carlisle, and there |
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brought before a special session of justices,
by whom he was committed for seven days, in |
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order that his mental condition might be
ascertained. The authorities at Carlisle have since |
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decided to communicate with the Home Secretary
with a view to his removal to an asylum.' |
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Florence, Lady Graham, widow of Sir Richard
James Graham, 4th baronet [GB 1783] |
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Lady
Graham died from her injuries after she had been knocked down by a London
tram, as |
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reported in the London "Daily
Telegraph" of 6 January 1934:- |
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'Florence
Lady Graham, of Catherine-street, Buckinghamsgate, was knocked down by a
tramcar |
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on the Victoria-embankment yesterday and was
taken to Westminster Hospital with serious head |
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injuries. It was stated last night that she was
unconscious and critically ill. It was impossible |
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to move her for an X-ray examination. |
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'Lady
Graham, who is about 70, was taking her customary morning walk with her
granddaughter, |
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aged nine, and a dog. They stopped to cross the
road, and Lady Graham asked the child to pick |
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up the dog. The child did so, and Lady Graham
started to cross the road, apparently unaware |
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that a tramcar was approaching. |
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'The
child did not see the accident. She was cared for by a policewoman. |
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'Lady
Graham is a daughter of the late Mr. J. Carter-Wood. In 1892 she married Mr.
James Reginald |
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Graham, who died in 1910. In 1927 she married,
as his third wife, his brother, Sir Richard James |
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Graham. Sir Richard died in 1932.' |
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Lady Graham's injuries were too severe for her
to survive. An inquest was held which was reported |
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in the "Daily Telegraph" of 10 January 1934:- |
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'The
death of Florence Lady Graham, of Catherine-street, Buckinghamsgate, who died
at West- |
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minster Hospital after being knocked down by a
tramcar on Victoria Embankment, on Friday, was |
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inquired into by the Westminster coroner yesterday. |
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'Stoker
Cyril Cadman, H.M.S. Crescent, of Gillingham, said he was on Victoria
Embankment and saw |
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Lady Graham step off the pavement on the river
side. "She did not seem to look either way," he |
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said, "but stepped across the road on to
the tram track. When the tram was
about 15ft away |
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she stopped. Someone shouted to her to get out
of the way, and as the tram was pulling up it |
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struck her." Stoker Cadman added that the
driver of the tram sounded his bell and shouted. |
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Alfred Bennet Houghting, motorman, of
Stockwell, said that Lady Graham was about eight yards |
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away when she stepped on to the track. "I
shouted and applied my brake," he added, "but she |
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went into my buffer." |
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'Mr
R.P.G. Vivian, of Stone Hall, Balcombe, a stepson, told the coroner that Lady
Graham had |
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her granddaughter with her and also a little
dog. "It was, I think," he said, "her anxiety about |
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her little dog, which she stopped to pick up,
that made her hesitate." |
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'The
jury returned a verdict of accidental death, and exonerated the driver.' |
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Sir John Reginald Noble Graham VC, 3rd
baronet [UK 1906] |
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Graham
was awarded the Victoria Cross in 1917. The citation in the London
Gazette |
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(Supplement 30284, page 9532 dated 14 September
1917) reads:- |
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'Lt. John Reginald Noble Graham, Arg. &
Suth'd Highrs [Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders], attd. |
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M.G.C. [attached to the Machine Gun Corps] |
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"For most conspicuous bravery, coolness
and resource when in command of a Machine Gun |
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Section. |
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"Lt. Graham accompanied his guns across
open ground, under very heavy rifle and machine gun |
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fire, and when his men became casualties, he
assisted in carrying the ammunition. |
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"Although twice wounded he continued
during the advance to control his guns and was able, |
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with one gun, to open an accurate fire on the
enemy, who were massing for a counter- attack. |
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This gun was put out of action by the enemy's
rifle fire, and he was again wounded. The |
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advancing enemy forced him to retire, but
before doing so he further disabled his gun, rendering |
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it useless. |
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"He
then brought a Lewis gun into action with excellent effect till all the
ammunition was |
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expended. He was again severely wounded, and
forced through loss of blood to retire. |
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"His valour and skilful handling of his
guns held up a strong counter-attack which threatened to |
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roll up the left flank of the Brigade, and thus
averted what might have been a very critical |
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situation." |
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Copyright © 2020 Maltagenealogy.com |
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