Tuesday, March 17, 2020

42.3.a.2 The 3rd, 2nd, 1sst Great Grandparents of Barbara Brabazon

3rd GG  Sir Edward Brabazon and Mary Chambre


Sir Edward Brabazon was born 1609, the son of Sir William Brabazon and Jane Bingley
Mary Chambre 1611 – 1685 was the daughter of Calcott Chambre MP and his wife Mary de Villiers
His father was George Chambre and his mother Judith Caldecott, daughter of Walter Caldecott and Alice Wade.  He attended Oxford University.
In 1612 Calcott Chambre, an Oxfordshire landowner and later MP, acquired a share of the Shillelagh venture and over the next few years he bought out the other partners in the venture 17.  Richard Mitton, one of the partners that Chambre bought out, became keeper of the customs at the port of Wexford 18.  Chambre now faced the biggest obstacle to his venture since exploiting this wood required more than ownership of the lands since the Crown exercised control over the forest and the rights to export wood.[1]


Short excerpt from    A Journal kept by Richard Newall while loading the ship Mayflower at Wexford, Ireland in 1624  John P. Newell ©

Mary de Villiers was the daughter of Edward de Villiers of Howthorp.

Edward and Mary children included:

·                  William Brabazon                                 (1634-1684)
·                  Lord Edward MeathBrabazon                (1635-1707)
·                  Lady Jane Brabazon                              (1641-1690)
·                  Anthony Brabazon                                (1643-1655)
·                  Mary Brabazon                                     (1644-)
·                  Chambré Brabazon Earl van Meath       (1645-1715)



2nd GG Chambre Brabazon Earl of Meath and Juliana Chaworth

He was the third son of Edward Brabazon, 2nd Earl of Meath and Mary Chambre. He was admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, on 10 October 1667. He was the captain of a troop of horse in Ireland, and was Paymaster of Ireland in 1675. Between 1692 and 1695, he sat in the Irish House of Commons for Dublin County. He succeeded his brother Edward as Earl of Meath in 1707 and took his seat on 8 August 1709 in the Irish House of Lords. Meath was appointed Custos Rotulorum of Dublin in the same year, and named to the Privy Council of Ireland in 1710.
In 1682, he married Juliana Chaworth (d. 12 November 1692), only daughter of Patrick Chaworth, 3rd Viscount Chaworth and Grace Manners, daughter of John Manners, 8th Earl of Rutland. They had seven children:
  1. Lady Mary Brabazon (1683–1738), buried in St. Mary's Church, Nottingham.
  2. Lady Juliana Brabazon (1684–1692).
  3. Lady Catharine Brabazon (1686–1742), married Thomas Hallowes of Bolsover and had issue.
  4. Chaworth Brabazon, 6th Earl of Meath (1687–1763).
  5. Lady Frances Brabazon (1688–1751), married Maj-Gen. Hon. Henry Ponsonby (d. 1745, at the Battle of Fontenoy) and had issue.
  6. Hon. Chambré Brabazon (died young, 1691)
  7. Edward Brabazon, 7th Earl of Meath (1691–1772)
He died in Nottingham and was buried in St. Mary's Church, Nottingham on 2 April 1715.
 Memorial to Mary Brabazon in St. Mary's Church, Nottingham







Patrick Chaworth (20 June 1635 – June 1693) was 3rd Viscount Chaworth of Armagh. He is also known as Patricius Chaworth.
He was baptised on 20 June 1635 at Southwell, Nottinghamshire, England. He was the son of John Chaworth, 2nd Viscount Chaworth of Armagh and Hon. Elizabeth Noel. He married Lady Grace Manners, daughter of John Manners, 8th Earl of Rutland and Hon. Frances Montagu, before 1666. They had a daughter:
·        Hon. Juliana Chaworth (1655–1692) married Chambre Brabazon, 5th Earl of Meath.
During the English Civil War, the family home Wiverton Hall was made uninhabitable by Parliamentary forces. Annesley Park became the new family seat. The marriage was not a happy one and eventually Grace left her husband to live in London. Patrick rebuilt parts of Annesley Hall, constructed the terrace and the flight of steps to the church. His Achievement of Arms was placed on one of the tower walls in the church. This was moved in 1874 to the new church, All Saints' Church, Annesley although it had been badly damaged by vandals.
He succeeded to the titles of 3rd Viscount Chaworth of Armagh and 3rd Baron Chaworth of Tryme on the death of his father in June 1644. He died in June 1693. He was buried at Annesley, Nottinghamshire. His will dated 30 April 1693 received probate on 24 April 1694 at York. Without male issue, on his death his titles became extinct.

He was the son of John Chaworth 1605 – 1644 2nd Viscount Chaworth and Hon Elizabeth Noel 1610 - 1683.  She was the daughter of Edward Noel 1582 – 1643 2nd Viscount Campden and Juliana Hicks 1586 - 1680



John Manners, 8th Earl of Rutland (10 June 1604 – 29 September 1679), was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1640 until 1641 when he inherited the peerage
Manners was the son of Sir George Manners of Haddon Hall, Derbyshire, son of Sir John Manners. His mother was Grace Pierrepont daughter of Sir Henry Pierrepont (MP). The 8th earl was the great-grandson of Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland. He was admitted at Queens' College, Cambridge, in spring 1619 and was awarded MA in 1621. He was admitted at the Inner Temple in November 1621. In 1632 he was High Sheriff of Derbyshire.
In April 1640, Manners was elected Member of Parliament for Derbyshire in the Short Parliament. In 1641 he inherited the earldom on the death of his second cousin George Manners, 7th Earl of Rutland on 29 March. He was a moderate Parliamentarian and took the covenant in 1643. In 1646 he was Chief Justice in Eyre, North of Trent.
After the Restoration, Lord Rutland became Lord Lieutenant of Leicestershire on 14 February 1667 and held the post to 7 July 1677.
Lord Rutland died aged 75 and was buried at Bottesford, Leicestershire. He was succeeded in the earldom by his son John, who would become the first Duke of Rutland.
Manners married Frances Montagu, daughter of Sir Edward Montagu, 1st Baron Montagu of Boughton, in 1628. They had seven children:
·        Lady Grace Manners (died 15 February 1700), who married, first, Patrick Chaworth, 3rd Viscount Chaworth, and after his death, married Sir William Langhorne, 1st Baronet; she died less than a year after this second marriage.
·        Lady Margaret Manners (died 1682), who married James Cecil, 3rd Earl of Salisbury, and had children.
·        Lady Frances Manners (c. 1636–1660), who married John Cecil, 4th Earl of Exeter, and had children.
·        John Manners, 1st Duke of Rutland (1638–1711)
·        Lady Elizabeth Manners (c. 1654–1700), who married James Annesley, 2nd Earl of Anglesey, and had children.
·        Lady Dorothy Manners (c. 1656–1698), married Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 2nd Earl of Shaftesbury and had children.
·        Lady Anne Manners (born 1655), who married Scrope Howe, 1st Viscount Howe.

Grace, Lady Manners (c.1575 – c.1650) was an English noblewoman who lived at Haddon Hall near BakewellDerbyshire. She founded Bakewell's Lady Manners School in 1636.
Grace Pierrepont was the daughter of Sir Henry Pierrepont, a Knight of the Garter, and Frances Cavendish. Her maternal grandparents were Rt. Hon. Sir William Cavendish and Bess of Hardwick. Grace's brother was Robert Pierrepont, born in 1584, who became the 1st Earl of Kingston-upon-Hull. Grace's sister, Elizabeth, married Thomas Erskine, 1st Earl of Kellie.
Grace was married to Sir George Manners on 1 August 1593. She had five children:
·        John Manners, 8th Earl of Rutland (1604-1679)[3]
·        Elizabeth Manners, who married Robert Sutton, 1st Baron Lexinton of Aram
·        Eleanor Manners, who married Lewis Watson, 1st Baron Rockingham, and had children
·        Frances Manners (died 1652), who married Nicholas Saunderson, 2nd Viscount Castleton, and had children
·        Dorothy Manners, who married Sir Thomas Lake
On 20 May 1636, she founded Lady Manners School in Bakewell, Derbyshire.
Her body is interred in Bakewell Parish Church.

Common Links with the Isaacson and Brabazon Family

Frances Montague daughter of Edward Montagu, 1st Baron of Broughton, married Frances Cotton
Frances Montague married John Manners, 8th Earl of Rutledge
Their daughter Grace Manners married Patrick Chaworth, and their daughter was Juliana Chaworth

 

  Robert Bruce Cotton, 1st Baronet (22 January 1570/1 – 6 May 1631) of Conington Hall in the parish of Conington in Huntingdonshire, England, was a Member of Parliament and an antiquarian who founded the Cotton library. He was born on 22 January 1571 in Denton, Huntingdonshire, the son and heir of Thomas Cotton (1544–1592) of Conington (son of Thomas Cotton of Conington Sheriff of Huntingdonshire in 1547) by his first wife Elizabeth Shirley, a daughter of Francis Shirley of Staunton Harold in Leicestershire.
The Cotton family originated at the manor of Cotton, Cheshire, from which they took their surname. Cotton was educated at Westminster School where he was a pupil of the antiquarian William Camden, under whose influence he began to study antiquarian topics. He began collecting rare manuscripts as well as collecting notes on the history of Huntingdonshire when he was seventeen. He proceeded to Jesus College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA in 1585 and in 1589 entered the Middle Temple to study law. He began to amass a library in which the documents rivalled, then surpassed, the royal manuscript collections.
As a young man, Cotton may have contracted a (possibly irregular) marriage with Frideswide Faunt, daughter of William Faunt of Foston, Leicestershire, and sister of the Jesuit theologian Arthur Faunt. The marriage was recorded by William Burton, Frideswide's nephew, but is not mentioned in Cotton's own papers.
In about 1593 (the precise date is not known), he married Elizabeth Brocas, the daughter of William Brocas of Theddingworth in Leicestershire. This marriage took place about a year after the death of Cotton's father, and helped to shore up his financial position, as Elizabeth was an heiress. Their subsequent marital history suggests that perhaps these factors outweighed personal compatibility.
By Elizabeth, Cotton had a son: Sir Thomas Cotton, 2nd Baronet (1594–1662). Sir Thomas in turn married Margaret Howard, by whom he had a son, Sir John Cotton (born 1621).
Sir Robert had an extensive circle of friends and a considerable capacity to charm, which he displayed both before and after marrying. He spent several years, and possibly more than a decade, living with the widowed Lady Hunsdon, perhaps as her lover during an overt separation from his wife. Eventually the Cottons patched things up. Nonetheless, a reputation as something of a playboy attached to Sir Robert until the end of his life.
Sir Thomas Cotton, 2nd Baronet, of Connington (1594 – 16 May 1662) was an English politician and heir to the Cottonian Library.
 
He was the only surviving child of Sir Robert Cotton, 1st Baronet, of Connington and Elizabeth Brocas. He graduated B.A. at Broadgates Hall, Oxford in 1616. In 1624 he became Member of Parliament for Great Marlow.
Sir Thomas was the intimate friend and correspondent of Sir John Eliot, and was entrusted by his influence with the representation of St Germans (Eliot's native place) in the third of Charles I's parliaments. He was M.P. for Huntingdonshire in the Short Parliament of 1640, but took no active part in politics or the civil wars. His house at Westminster was left at the disposal of the parliament, and Charles I slept there during his trial. Cotton died at Connington on 13 May 1662, and was buried with his father.
He married, first, Margaret, daughter of Lord William Howard, of Naworth CastleCumberland, by whom he had one son, John; second, Alice, daughter and heiress of Sir John Constable of Dromanby, Yorkshire, widow of Edmund Anderson of Stratton and Eyworth, Bedfordshire, by whom he had four sons. The second son, Robert, was Member of Parliament for Cambridgeshire, was knighted, was commissioner of the post office, and was friendly with John Evelyn.

Edward Montagu, 1st Baron Montagu of Boughton KB (AKA Sir Edward Montague of Boughton Castle) (c. 1562 – 15 June 1644) was an English politician.

Montagu was the son of Sir Edward Montagu and his wife Elizabeth Harrington, daughter of James Harington of Exton, Rutland. He matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in about 1574 and graduated BA on 14 March 1579. He was a student of the Middle Temple in 1580. He succeeded his father in 1602.
In 1584, he was elected Member of Parliament for Bere Alston, in 1597 for Tavistock and in 1601 for Brackley. He was created Knight of the Bath by James I at his coronation on 25 July 1603. He was appointed High Sheriff of Northamptonshire for 1595–96.
In 1604 Montagu was elected MP for Northamptonshire. On 9 February 1605, with other gentlemen of Northamptonshire, he presented a petition to the king in favour of those ministers in the county who refused subscription. The petitioners were warned that their combination "in a cause against which the king had shewed his mislike … was little less than treason." Montagu was for the time deprived of his lieutenancy and justiceship of the peace in the county. He was one of the key founders of what is known today as Guy Fawkes Night through his sponsorship, in Parliament, of the Observance of 5th November Act 1605. He was re-elected MP for Northamptonshire in 1614 for the Addled Parliament and in 1621. He was created Baron Montagu of Boughton on 29 June 1621.[1]
Montagu supported King Charles I in the Civil War, which led to his arrest in August 1642. He was imprisoned for a time in the Tower of London, but was moved to the Savoy Hospital due to ill health, and died a prisoner in 1644. He was buried at Weekley.
He married three times:
1.    His first wife was Elizabeth, the daughter and heiress of Sir John Jeffrey of Chiddingly, Sussex, with whom he had a daughter Elizabeth, who married Robert Bertie, 1st Earl of Lindsey.
2.    His second wife was Frances, the daughter of Thomas Cotton of Conington, Huntingdonshire, with whom he had three sons, including Edward Montagu, 2nd Baron Montagu of Boughton, and another daughter, Frances, who married John Manners, 8th Earl of Rutland.
3.    His third wife was Anne, the daughter of John Crouch of Corneybury, Hertfordshire, and widow of Robert Wynchell, Richard Chamberlain and Sir Ralph Hare of Stow Bardolph, Norfolk.
Sir Edward Montagu (c. 1530 – 26 January 1602) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1559.
Montagu was the eldest surviving son of Sir Edward Montagu of Boughton House, near Kettering and his third wife Helen Roper, daughter of John Roper of Well Hall, Eltham. In 1556, he succeeded to eleven manors, a castle,[1] a baronial residence’ and the patronage of eight livings in Northamptonshire on the death of his father. He extended his possessions by a grant of concealed lands in Northamptonshire, and bought the manor of Trafford and woods near Brigstock and property at Newton, Overdean and Woodhall Bedfordshire.
In 1559, he was elected Member of Parliament for Northamptonshire. He was a J.P. for Northamptonshire from about 1559 and was Sheriff of Northamptonshire from 1559 to 1560. He was knighted between 1568 and 1570. In 1570 he became Deputy Lieutenant and was Sheriff of Northamptonshire again from 1570 to 1571. He was a commissioner to regulate the ‘export’ of corn in 1572, commissioner for Peterborough cathedral lands in 1574 and commissioner for religious ‘disorders’ for Northampton in 1579.
He attended the funeral of Mary, Queen of Scots on 1 August 1587. From 1588 to 1589 he was Sheriff of Northamptonshire again and in 1590 was a commissioner for recusancy in 1590s. He served his fourth term as sheriff of Northamptonshire from 1600 to 1601.
Montagu died at the age of about 70. He was described as an ‘earnest furtherer’ of religion and was known as "the friend of Kettering". Many of his contemporaries remarked on his piety and justice, his wisdom and service to the count.
Montagu married Elizabeth Harrington, daughter of James Harington of Exton, Rutland in 1557. They had eight sons and four daughters. He was father of:
·        Edward Montagu, 1st Baron Montagu of Boughton, ancestor of the Dukes of Montagu and the Dukes of Rutland.
·        Henry Montague
·        Sir Walter Montague
·        Henry Montagu, 1st Earl of Manchester, ancestor of the Dukes of Manchester and Earls of Halifax.
·        Sir Charles Montagu
·        James MontaguBishop of Winchester.
·        Sir Sidney Montagu, ancestor of the Earls of Sandwich.
·        Thomas Montague
·        Lucy Montagu who married Sir William Wray, 1st Baronet, of Glentworth
·        Susanna Montague
·        Elizabeth Montagu who married Robert Bertie
·        Theodosia Montagu who married Sir John Capell; their son was Arthur Capell, 1st Baron Capell of Hadham.



1st Great grandparents Edward Brabazon 7th Earl of Meath and Martha Collins


Edward Brabazon, 7th Earl of Meath (c. 1691 – 24 November 1772) was an Anglo-Irish peer.
The second surviving son of Chambré Brabazon, 5th Earl of Meath and Juliana Chaworth, he sat for Dublin County from 1715, when his elder brother was called up to the Irish House of Lords, to 1758. In 1763, he succeeded his brother as Earl of Meath.
Around 1720, he married Martha (d. 24 April 1762), daughter of Rev. William Collins.
Upon his death in 1772, he was succeeded by his son Anthony.
1.      Juliana Brabazon                                             1725-1725
2.      Anthony Brabazon  8th Earl of Meath            1726-1790
3.      Hon William Brabazon                                    1727-1772

Martha Collins to Edward Brabazon  Marriage record 1725


Anthony Brabazon, 8th Earl of Meath (c. 1726 – 4 January 1790), styled Lord Brabazon from 1763 to 1772, was an Anglo-Irish peer.
The son of Edward Brabazon, 7th Earl of Meath and Martha Collins, he sat for Wicklow County from 1745 to 1760. He then sat for Dublin County from 1761 until he succeeded his father in the peerage in 1772.[1]
On 20 May 1758, he married Grace Leigh (d. 28 October 1812). Their children included:[
·        Chaworth Brabazon, Lord Brabazon (18 August 1760 – December 1779)
·        William Brabazon, 9th Earl of Meath (1769–1797)
·        Lady Catherine Brabazon (c.1770 - 24 December 1847), married Rev. Francis Brownlow (1779-1847)
·        John Brabazon, 10th Earl of Meath (1772–1851)
He died on 4 January 1790 and was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, William

Parents Hon William Brabazon 9th Earl of Meath and Catherine Gifford


William Brabazon married Catherine Gifford 1737   on 10th May 1764
Catherine was the daughter of and sole heir of Arthur Gifford, Esq. 
She married secondly Signor John St Georgio. Who was a concert pianist with Signora Salvagni.
At some point they moved to London, from Dublin, and he was paying Land Tax
She died in February 1833
The children were

Martha Brabazon                                  1765-
Edward Brabazon                                  1767- 1800        m Miss Tuke
Arthur-Gifford  Brabazon                      1768- 1815       m Margaret Haigh
Barbara Brabazon                                  1769- 1845        m  John Moore Esq

Catherine’s  parents were Arthur Gifford Esq 1695 – 1772 and Barbara Cliffe 1697
Arthur was the son of John Gifford and Catherine Bernard 1671 - 1741



John was the son of Col John Gifford 1630 who fought in the Williamite War, and his wife Margaret Adamson.


In 1690 Lombard’s Castle was granted to Col John Gifford as a result of the Williamite War. In 1750 it was used as a free Protestant School





The Cliffe Lineage

Barbara Cliffe was the daughter of John Cliff 1661 – 1728  and Barbara Carr 1680 – 1735
John was the son of John Cliffe c 1620 – 1691 and Eleanor Loftus 1641 - 1700
John Cliffe from Westminster, went to Ireland as Secretary of War under the command of Oliver Cromwell.  He received land grants in Wexford and Meath.




Biography

The Irish-born Loftus Cliffe entered the British Army in 1762, and in 1771, was serving as a lieutenant in William Howe's 46th Regiment of Foot, of which John Vaughan (1738-1795) was lieutenant colonel. In response to the Revolutionary crisis in 1776, the 46th Regiment was ordered to leave Ireland for America, arriving at New York just in time to take part in the Battle of Long Island at which Howe's masterfully executed tactics nearly annihilated the American army. The regiment continued on the offensive throughout the fall and winter, of 1776-77, driving into New Jersey, meeting with mixed success. Late in December, the 46th Regiment was given the task of guarding Charles Lee after his capture at Basking Ridge, and thereafter settled into winter quarters.

In the early summer of 1777, the regiment embarked on a long campaign designed to lure Washington into battle and to capture Philadelphia. Cliffe's regiment was engaged at Brandywine, at the "massacre" at Paoli, at Germantown, and were involved in the capture of Philadelphia and the reduction of the forts guarding the Delaware River. By this point, Cliffe considered himself to be a hard bitten, hard drinking veteran. A career soldier, Cliffe reveled in all of the most dramatic aspects of the military life, and looked forward to the possibility of personal advancement. 

During the occupation of Philadelphia in February, 1778, however, Cliffe had a serious falling out with Lt. Col. Vaughan and Maj. Joseph Ferguson of his regiment. Cliffe and other subalterns, unaware that Ferguson had ordered that tent poles not be transported on wagons, followed the usual procedure in ordering their men to break camp. When confronted by Ferguson, sure of himself and indignant at the challenge, Cliffe refused to back down, and as a result, he and six of his fellow officers were arrested for disobedience. Although he was fully acquitted, and the offense was considered minor, later in the year, Cliffe purchased a captaincy in the 52nd Regiment of Foot, then stationed in New York. He left America with the regiment at the end of 1779 and spent the remainder of the Revolutionary War at stations in Britain and Minorca, sailing for India in 1783. Cliffe's name last appears in the Army List in 1785, suggesting that he may have died in India.

The Loftus Cliffe papers consist of letters and receipts dating from Cliffe's service during the American Revolution, 1776-1778. The letters detail his participation in campaigns in the mid-Atlantic theater, and include excellent descriptions of the Battles of Long Island, Trenton, Brandywine, and Germantown. As a junior officer assigned to a regiment under the direct command of William Howe Cliffe's letters form an important resource for study of the British military during the Revolution, but the importance of the collection goes beyond just this. Cliffe's strident masculinity, his love of the military, and his fondness for local color and for discussing the lifestyle of both Americans and British make these letters unusually entertaining, and his antagonism toward Major Joseph Ferguson of the 46th Regiment adds another interesting dimension. The post-Revolutionary portion of the Cliffe Papers consists of letters written from Britain, with the exception of a single letter written from India in January, 1784.



Nicholas Loftus Earl of Ely

Earl of Ely is a title that has been created three times in the Peerage of Ireland for members of the Loftus family. This family descended from Nicholas Loftus, who was raised to the Peerage of Ireland as Baron Loftus, of Loftus Hall in the County of Wexford, in 1751. In 1756 he was further honoured when he was made Viscount Loftus, of Ely in the County of Wicklow. He was succeeded by his son, Nicholas, the second Viscount. He had previously represented Fethard in the Irish House of Commons. In 1766 he was created Earl of Ely in the Peerage of Ireland. Lord Ely assumed the additional surname of Hume. He was succeeded by his son, Nicholas, the second Earl. He represented both Fethard and Bannow in the Irish Parliament.

The earldom became extinct on his early death in 1769 while he was succeeded in the barony and viscountcy by his uncle, Henry, the fourth Viscount. He represented Bannow and County Wexford in the Irish House of Commons. In 1771 the earldom was revived when he was created Earl of Ely in the Peerage of Ireland. However, all three titles became extinct on his death in 1783. He devised his estates to his nephew Charles Tottenham, who assumed the surname of Loftus in lieu of his patronymic and was created Baron Loftus in 1789, Viscount Loftus in 1789, Earl of Ely in 1794 and Marquess of Ely in 1800. See the latter title for more information on these peerages.

The title refers to Ely in County Wicklow, not to the City of Ely in Cambridgeshire, and the second syllable is pronounced to rhyme with "lie" rather than "lee" (and so the title is pronounced in the same way as the first name Eli).

Nicholas Loftus, 1st Viscount Loftus PC (I) (c.1687 - 31 December 1763) was an Anglo-Irish politician and peer.

Loftus was the son of Henry Loftus and Anne Crewkern. He served in the Irish House of Commons as the Member of Parliament for Fethard between 1710 and 1713, Clonmines from 1713 to 1715 and Wexford County between 1715 and 1751. Upon leaving the Commons, Loftus was elevated to the peerage as Baron Loftus, of Loftus Hall in County Wexford in the Peerage of Ireland on 5 October 1751, and assumed his seat in the Irish House of Lords. He was invested as a member of the Privy Council of Ireland in 1753. He was furthered honored when he was created Viscount Loftus of Ely in County Wicklow, also a title in the Irish peerage, on 19 July 1756.

He married Hon. Anne Ponsonby, daughter of William Ponsonby, 1st Viscount Duncannon and Mary Moore, in April 1706. They had five children:

1.      1.      Hon. Mary Loftus (d. 1779)
2.      Hon. Anne Loftus (d. 10 November 1768)
3.      Hon. Elizabeth Loftus (d. June 1747) who married Sir John Tottenham, 1st Baronet and was the mother of Charles Loftus, 1st Marquess of Ely
4.      Nicholas Hume-Loftus, 1st Earl of Ely (1708 - 31 October 1766)
5.      Henry Loftus, 1st Earl of Ely (18 November 1709 – 8 May 1783)
6.      Loftus also had two illegitimate children by his Irish housekeeper, May Hernon:
7.      Sir Edward Loftus, 1st Baronet (c.1742 - 17 May 1818)

No comments:

Post a Comment