mmmm-^'. '.5.^.* rr :%^ .-. -n.-o^ #• • « » .V .0" V ' ' V ' ">>.0' " .*'-\ .*<^. <* % s^" *v ^ o ■ o .0" -.T'-^W^ * ^^ "0,0' ^V V . -^ „ - o ^ -^ '^^IWS , * » « ' ^^^ V V O ' . , « * /> A> . . . w of Ralph de Lemesi had Lady Alice de Newbergh (of the house of Planta- genet) m. William Baron Mauduit, of Henslape had Lady Isabel de Manduit. sister of William Mau- duit. seventh Earl Warwick, m. Wil- liam (fifth) Baron Beauchamp, of Elm- ley Castle, will Jan. 7, 1268 William de Beauchamp, created Earl of Warwick, m. Maud, dau. of Sir John Fitz-John,' chiej justice of Ireland 1258, and widow of Gerard de Furnival, Guy de Beauchamp, descent same as from Charle- masne. had had In 1312, time of King Edward II, of England, the black dog of the woods, the terrible Earl of Warwick, had as prisoner, the King's favorite. Piers Gaveston. He had given his solemn oath to King Edward I, to protect the young King from the vile influence of this man, upon his death bed, and had him sent in exile. Gaveston stood before his enemies and they sentenced him to die. There was a short march to Blacklow hill, near the famous Guy's Cliff, where the judicial murder was executed. The King granted an amnesty to all participants, and all the valuable gifts confiscated were restored to the Crown. Guy de Beauchamp, Second Earl Warwick, [ 12 ] ONE LINE OF DESCENT FROM ALFRED (THE GREAT), KING OF ENGLAND. Alfred (the great) m. Ealswith^ dan. of Earl Ethel- ran had Edward (the elder). King of England, m. Edgira, dau. of Earl Segeline had Princess Edgira m. Henry, Count of X^ermandois and Tro3'es had Hubert (fourth). Count of X^ermandiois, m. Adel- held, or Alice, dau. of Comnt de Valois, and descended from Pepin, King of Italy, son of Charlemagne (the great) had Lady Alice de Vermandois m. Hugh Magnus, son of Henry I, King of France had Lady Isabel de Vermandois m. first Robert de Beaumont, Earl of Melent, and first Earl of Leicester ; secondly, William de Warren, Earl of Surrey, a grandson of William the Conqueror, son of Princess Gundreda had Lady Gundreda de Warren m. firstl}- Roger Bello- mont de Newbergh ; secondly, Roger de Beaumont, Earl of Warwick. Lme continues same as from foregoing. ANCEvSTORS OF BALDWIN, COUNTS OF FLANDERS. Lidricus Harlebecencis, Forester, great grand- father of Baldwin I, had Baldwin I, Count of Flanders, m. Judith, dau. of Charles (second). King of France had Baldwin 11, Count of Flanders, m. Ealfthryth, dau. of Alfred (the great) had Baldwin HI. Count of Flanders, etc. From Tertullus (the rustic), whom the King made Seneschal of Aujou. descended the Plantagenets. From Robert (the strong) descended Hugh Capet. The two Christian families who have worn the greatest numbers of crowns stood side by side, at their begiinnings, conscious only of vigor and courage, if ignorant of their high destiny. [13] Plantagenet (Planta Genista), Scotch Broom. He (Geoffrey de Plantagcnet) so called from wearing- the flower in his hat. He was the sun of Fulke, Count of Anjo'U. Baldwins are also descended from Scotch Kings through Maud (the Good) Queen of Henry I. WEST SAXON KINGS. Ethllwulf. From this King the English chromicles trace the line of the generations of their Kings upwards, even to Adam. — (William of Malmesbury, historian), Alfeei) (the Great) Sox of Ethelwui.f. Ethelwulf was the son of Egbert, Egbert of Elmund, El- mund of Eafa, Eafa of B'oppa ; Eoppa was the so« of Ingild, the brother of King Ina, who were both sons of Kenred; Kenred, son of Ceolwald, Ceolwald of Cutha, Cutha of Cuth- win, Cuthwin of Ceawlin, Ceawlin of Cynric, Cynric of Creod- 'ng, Creodin^ of Cerdic ; Cerdic was the first King of the West Saxons ; Cerdic of Elsa, Elesa of Esla, Elsa of Gewis, Gewis of Wig, Wig of Freawin, Freawin of Frithogar, Fritho- gar of Brond, Brond of Reldeg, Beldeg of Woden; and from him proceeded the Kings of many nations. Woden was the son of Frithowald. Frithowald of Frealaf, Frealaf of Finn, Finn of Godwulf, Gociwulf of Geat, Geat of Taetwa, Taetwa of Beaw, Beawa of Sceldi, Sceldji of Sceaf, who. as some afifirm, was driven on a certain island in Germany, called Scamphta (of which Jornandes, the historiani of the Goths, speaks), a little boy asleep, with a handful of corn at his head, whence he w^s called Sceaf; and on account of his singular appearance, being well received by the men of that country, and carefully educated, in his riper age he reigned in a town which was called Slaswic, but at present Haithby ; which country, called old Anglia whence the Angles came into Britain, is situated between the Saxons and the Gioths. Sceaf was the son of Heremod, Heremod of Itermon, Iter- mo-n of Hathra, Hathra of Guala, Guala of Bedwig, Bedwig of Streaf, and he, as thev say. was the son of Noah, born in the Ark. His ancestry can be traced in the Bible. [ 14] CHAPTER I. ROYAL ANCESTRY OF BALDWIN DESCENDED FROM BRUEN IN AMERICA. As will be seen by the foregoing charts of lineage, the ancestors date from a very early period, Charlemagne (the great) P^mperor is one of the ancestors ; also, two of his sons and grandsons, for three or four generations. Alfred (the great), King of E^ngland, and his son Edward (the elder), and his daughter Ealfthryth, are progenitors in a lineal hne. Ancestors also are from the powerful Dukes of Norniandy, commencnig with the founder, Rollo I, down to William the Conquero'r, who were connected by marriage with the Bald- wins, the Counts of Flanders. They were very powerful, and possessed immense wealth. They became famous in history as being the leaders in the crusades of the tloly Land, and they became the first Kings of Jerusalem, and all their descendants, after the male line became extinct, their daughters' husbands succeeded to the throne. The last descendant, lolanthe, was married to Fred- erick II, Emperor of Germany. He died possessed of .seven crowns. Ancestors of the house of Anjou are among the grand- parents. The oowerful house of Capet, its progenitor Robert (the v*^trong), down to King Henry I of France. The Hne of French, Flemish and English progenitors were united in marriage, and the line continues lineally through .several noblt^ and eminent families to Marie le Bruen, the wife of John Baldwin, S^., of ]\Iilford, Conn., America. L 15 1 CHAPTER II. Empktcou Charlemagne. Charlemagne, h. April 2, 742, at Ingelheim, Mayence. His iather was Pcpin, who was the son of Charles Martel. Char- lemagne was married twice before he married Hildegarde, the mother of the sons that inherited the thrones of France, Ger- many and Italy. She was the daugjiter or the granddaughter of Gotfned, Duke of y\llemania. Her peeriess beauty is poetically described as that of the hhes blended with the roses, and it is said that she added to the charms of her person the shining attributes of a brio-ht intellect and a kind heart. ' ^^ Many historians have written of Charlemagne, and all give him the title of Great. He was considered a wonderful man of great intellectual reach, and a distinguished warrior. His eucotiragcmenits of the fine arts and the founding of schools are among his noble deeds. He was invariably kind and with unflagging energies. His mode of life was simple, dressuig as his people, save on certain occasions. He was a great lo'ver of the hunt, and was eariy and late in his saddle hunting m the Ardenne Mountains. His love of the beautiful was one of his attributes, whether to his credit or otherwise, but it was a very eariy period of civilization, and so one must overiook his faults and ponder over his good and celebrated deeds. Historv considers him one of the greatest Emperors, and Pope Hadrian said of him, the fame of his glorious line was destined to sound throughout the worid. He was made a patrician. In that celebrated battle of Roncevalls, madie famo-us in song and story, Baldwin is mentioned. It is the first time the name is noted in history. He is a nephew of Charlemagne, and it was he that took the horse of the dving Oriando, the favorite nepliew of Chariemagne, to tell him^ of his death. See the poem. "Songs of Roland." Chariemagne had eight children. King Pepin, his son. of Italv. was the ancestor of the Counts of de A^rmandois. [ 16] Charlemagne, Emperor, m. Hildergarde had Pepin, King of Lombard}^ m. Bertha, dau. of WilHam, Count of Toulouse had Bernard, King of Ivombard}^ m. Conegunde had Pepin, Count de Vermandois, m. had Hubert I, Count de Vermandois, m. had Hubert II, Count de Vermandois, m. had Albert I, Count de Vermandois, m, Gerberger, dau. of Louis IV of France had Hubert III, Count de Vermandois, m. Hermingarde had Otto m. Pavie had Hubert IV m. Hildegarde had Adelheld m. Count Hugh Magnus, son of Henry I, King of France, by the latter marriage uniting the names of Charlemagne and Hugh Capet, who was descended from the powerful house of Anjou by Robert (the Strong's) supposed descent from the great Saxon Wittikind. The death of Pepin is noted at the age of 33 years. It was .1 great bereavement to the Emperor, who would retire tO' the camp at \ erchm and weep upon the altar for his beloved son in solitude. He was buried in Milan on the fifth of the Ides of July, in the third year of the indication. A son of the s^rcat Lord Charles. II \c Pcpiiiiis Ih'x. qiiic-iral in pace, (/iii in hoc, regnavit pro- 1 inria anu. In 796 ClKirlemagne engaged in a war with the Huns, whom he comciuered. and received many rare treasures of art and holy relics. He was tall and of commanding appearance. He died at Ingelhelm in 840. He divided his kingdom between hi'- three sons. Charlemagne lived threescore years and ten, but was not cQiTisid'ercd old. In the last years of his life he did rnord work of the highest intellectual reach than many of the ablest nen of half his aee. [ 17] CHAPTER III. Louis I (le Debonaire), son oi Charlemagne, m. Judith, a daughter of Gu^lph or WeU". Ancestry of the House of Guelph. Guelph I, Count of Wcingarten, was the founder, later Count of Altdbrf. The Dukes of Upper and Lower Bavaria engaged in the first Crusades. He had married a daughter of Bald^vin V, Judith, whose sister. Matilda, married William, the Duke of Normandy. I will give a more detailed account of the Baldwins, Counts of Flanders, later. The son of Louis was Charle<; H (the Bald), who was mar- ried to Hemiintrude of Orleans. He succeeded his father as King of France, and was succeeded by his son, Louis H (le Beuge), and he was succeeded by his' son Charles HI (the Simple), as King of France. He married Edgifu, a daughter of Edward (the Elder). Their son, Louis IV. King of France (styled d'Outremer, as he was born in exile while in England with his parent^;). He married Princess Gerberga, a daughter of Henry I of Germany (called the Fowler.) He was one of Germany's greatest Kings. In the year 921 the whole German nation was under his rule. After several battles, he conquered the whole of Lor- raine, which had still wavered between France and Germany. Soon he strengthened this union by giving his daughter, the Princess Gerberga, in marriage to' its Duke, Gislebert/'and during seven centuries that beautiful land was united with Germany. Gerberga, upon becoming a widow, married Louis IV of France. They had two sons, Lothaire and Charles. Duke of Lorraine. Louis V was son of Lothaire, and was on the throne of France. At his dieath Charles, Duke of Lorraine, was heir to tTie throne of his nephew. He had married Agnes de Vermandois. a great-grand- daughter of Alfred (the Great), also descended from Charle- magne. Thev had a son, Charles, Duke of Lorraine and Bavaria. To return to Charles HI and his Queen, Edgifu. When in exile they were received at the Court of Athelstan. King of England, as that monarch was her brother. Athelstan tried to conciliate Hugh (the Great), and the ruling power in France, to place Charles upon the throne. So he gave his sister, Eadhild. in marriage to Hugh. The negotiator was L 18 ] Adolof. Count of Boulog-ne, son of Baldwin II. Hugh was descended from rjobert (the Strong), Count of Anjou. Hugh Capet, his son, finally received the crown of France. Baldwin II was the founder of the house of Blois. Aelfthryth, a flaughter of Alfred (the Great), had married Baldwin II, Count of Flanders. She was a cousin of Athel- stan, and she brought rare gifts from Flanders to the mar- riage, relics from the Holy Land, a rare vase compared to the Barberini vase, the genuine sword that pierced the Saviour's side. I'he marriage to which this magnificence was a prelude w^as not a happy one. After some years they separated. Hugh later married Pledwig, a daughter of Henry I of Ger- many. Her brother, Otto, afterwards King, married Edith, sister of Athelstan, thus umiting- Germany and England. Louis IV was placed upon the throne of France, although Hugh Capet was virtually the ruler. His mother was Edgifu. a sister of Athelstan. Her life re- dounds little to her credit. Having formed an attachment foi) the Count of Meaux. son of Count de \^ermandois. whO' de- prived her husband of his throne, she caused him, as it were, to forcibly carry her off. They were subsequently married, but her son, Louis, justly provoked at such flagrant conduct, had her committed to the care of his Queen, Gerbcrga. [19] « CHAPTER IV. Baldwin I, Count of Flanders (House of Boulogne and Flanders) Eustace, Count of Boulogne \ lit I I Alfred Eustace Godfrey Baldwin I, King of Jerusalem Matilda I Pharamus I Daughter, of Wendover, Buckingham House of Blois William (the Conqueror) Adella= Stephen, Earl of Blois Gundreda= Wm. de Warren I Wm. d e Warren =Isabel de Vern iandois Stephen, Earl of BIois= Matilda of Eustace, I j Count Boulogne I I I Wm. de Warren, Eustace, Count Boulogne * Wm., Ct. Boulogne = 3rd Earl Surrey t Hameli nPlantagenet= Isabel de Warren I I , Ancestors of Bigods to Maud Fitz John Guarrem or Warren, of Castle Martel in Normandy Princess Gundreda= William de Warren Roger de Mortimer William de Warren Ralph de Mortimer, Lord of Wigmore I I Lady Gundreda Hugh de Mortimer, Lord of Wigmore I Roger de Mortimer, Lord of Wigmore I Lady Joan de Mortimer (A de Mortimer became the Earl of March) [20] Richard I (Sans Peur), 3d Duke of Normandy Godfrey, Earl Eu Godfrey, Count Eu, Earl Brion ^dau. Geslebert Suruamed Crispin I I i Fitz-Gilbert de Clare I The above is called j Ricardus de Benefacta then as VVigerius, Duke of Lorraine Ricardus de Tonibridge = Rohai8e Baldwin Teutonicus= Daughter Nicholas de BaschviUe, Lord of Castls Martel, in (xermany William de Martel, Earl of Warren William de Warren Roger de Mortimer Richard I=^Gunorra. Duchess of Normandy and Aveline = Osbern de Bolebec Walter Giflford, first Earl of Buckingham Rohaise Daughter m. Baldwin Teutonicus House of De Clare CHAPTER V. Counts of Anjou. Wittikind I Robert (The Strong), Hugh (Le Blanc) Hugh Capet, King of France, usurped throne in time of Charles III. Robert (the Pious), King of France. King Henry I, of France. Adella:^ Baldwin V. Phillip I, King of France. Hugh Magnu8= Alice d' Vermandois. L 21 ] You can note on chart of Alfred (the Great) the descent of AHce de Vermandois, tlirough his granddaughter, Princess Kdgira, and her marriage to the powerful Duke Hugh, brother of the reigning King Phillip I of France, whose descent ii from the illustrious house of Anjou, which was destined to give so many famous kings to the throne of France. I will now proceed with the house of Flanders and the Nor- man Dukes, as there were many of that illustrious line noted in history who are the progenitors of the Baldwins. Baldwin I, King of Flanders, married Judith, daughter of Charles II, King of France. She was the widow of Ethelwulf, King of England. She was grandmother of Godfrey of Bou- logne, Eustace and Baldwin, who went forth on the Crusades and became Kings of Jerusalem. From Lord's Beacon Lights of History, vol. H : Ethelwulf, King of England, at the age of sixty years, married a French Princess, a daughter of Charles II, who' was only fourteen years of age. Even in that rude age it caused a great scandal, which nearly caused liis dethronement. He was returning from his visit to Rome, with his young and favorite son, Alfred, later the King. He lived but two years after that mar- riage, and his youthful widow married his son Ethelbald, who inherited the throne. It was through this woman, Judith, and her subsequent husband Baldwin I (Bras de Fer), Count of Flanders, that the English Kings, since the Conqueror, trace their descent from Alfred the Great and Charlemagne. Her son, Baldwin II, Count of Flanders, married Aelfthryth, the daughter of Alfred. No doubt she brought about this union between the daughter of her talented stepson (Alfred) and her son, Bald- win II. From this union a couple of generations descended the Conqueror's Queen, being Matilda, daughter of Baldwin V, Count of Flanders, and his consort. Adella, daughter of Robert (the Pious), King of France. The present royal family of England can trace a direct descent through William ('the Conqueror), Alfred (the Great), and is allied by blood remotely with most of the reigning princes of Europe. The present line is also descen,ded through Judith to the Guelphs. The Baldwins of American birth, descended from Marie le Bruen, have the same line of descent. [22] Baldwin II, Count of Flanders, was the founder of the house of Blois. Charles 11 gave all the regiom between the Scheld and the sea to Baldwin T. and created him Count of Flanders. The King feared him as a rival in power, so he conciliated him and he became the bulwark against the French nation. He built the city ot FJruges in 856 as a fortress, and died in 880, having enjoyed his honors with peculiar celebrity. Flanders never had a man his superior in talent and warlike ability. It would appear that the Baldwins. Counts of Flanders, were the great leaders of every enterprise. They understood and identified themselves with their people's love of industry and freedom, and Arnulf (the CMd), Alfred's grandson, became the Alfred of Flemish historv. Ghent was celebrated for its fine arts and their great conmierce and weaving industries. The famous Bayeux tapestries were the needlework of Matilda's court ladies. Baldwin \' (de Lisle) was even more powerful than his pre- decessors. He v.as one of the most powerful vassals of the empire, \vhich had then risen to a height unknow^i since the days of Charlemagne. Earl Godwine was a close relative, his son, Tostig. having married his daughter, Judith ("Freeman" states her to be sister of Baldwin V), and thus a close and strong friendship was formed between England and Baldwin's land, as it was then called. Baldwin desired a marriage between his daughter, Matilda, and William the Duke of Normandy, and defied the Pope, who prohibited the marriage on account of kinship, and was excommunicated therefor. William w^as -anxious for the mar- liage, as it woukl strengthen his hold on France, as Matilda's mother. Adella, was sister of Henry I, King of France, and she wa.s a direct descendant of Alfred (the Great), and .some historians claim William desired the marriage to give him some rightful claim to England's rrown. Duke Godfrev of Boulogne stood by his kinsman in this churchly wrangle, as it was instigated by Earl Godwine of England to retain power there. Godfrey finally was forgiven and did penapce bv going on the Crusade to the Holv Land. A .«on, Bakhvin VI, the Count of Flanders, married Ixichildis. Countess of Namur and Hainault. Thev had sons. [23] Gilbert O'Guant aud Robert. The desceiidants of The Bald- win, Count of Flanders, followed the Crusade, Godfrey being grandson of Baldwin I and Judith and soau of Count Eustace and Ida of Boulogne, and in turn inherited the throne of Jeru- salem. The ma-le line of Baldwin Counts of Flanders lost their lives in that country and became extinct. The heirship went to the female side of the house. The Coiuitship was finally sold by Margaret, after many generations, to Charles d'Anjou, brother of the King of France. One of the heirs (male) from a daughter became a King of Spain. King John, the famous blind King of Bohemia, wais de- scended from the Baldwin line. History relates of him lead- ing in Ihe battle fray, bound to two companions. When found dead on tiiat battlefield, this device was found upon his shield, (Ich Dien) "I serve," w^hich motto ever since has been the one borne by the heir to the British throne, the Prince of Wales. Baldwin's daughter Judith afterwards married Guelph TV, son of Azo and Kunigondc, the founder of the younger house of Guelph, and Henry the Black possessed' successively the Duchy of Bavaria, from which illustrious stock the present royal race of England derives its descent. Count Guy of Flan- ders in 130C, Count Louis in 1338, Louis de Malle in 1384. Having no sons, the title went to Philip (the Bold) of Bur- gundy, who bad married the heiress, and became their ruler, holding the great possessions of Burgundv and Flanders. A daughter, Mary, married the Archduke of Austria. This rich possession now became a part of the House of Hapsburg, 1477. Later, Charles, son of Philip of Spain, succeeded to his inheritance of the Netherlands, comprising seventeen prov- inces. All of the Netherlands, which was strongly Protestant, and under the Spinish rule suffered from the terrible Inquisi- tion. ^ The entire population was condemned to death, and sanctioned bv ro3'-al charter. The country was the richest of all the countries, and most advanced in civilization. Philip Augustus II of France married Isabella, daughter of Baldtwin.^ Count of Hainault, and niece of Philip of Flanders. By this marriage the ancient houses of Charlemagne and Capet were united, she being a direct descendant of Charles, Duke of Lorraine. A daughter of Charles, namied Hermin- garde, was married to Albert. Count of Namur, and from her descended Isabella of Hainault. In the historv of Mons. de Bonnechose of France he states that by the above link Queen Victoria may claim Charlemagne as one of her ancestors, Edward HI having married Isabella cf France. [2t ] The banished Charles, Duke of Lorraine, settled in Bavaria, and left sons, and a daughter. Herniing-arde. The Baldwin Counts of Flanders, Hainault and Burgundy, are descended from Charlemagne by descent from Judith and Louis L Ma- tilda, wife of the Conqueror, is tenth in descent. (See Burke.) Mary, Queen of Scots, was of the same line, being of the House of AnJGU. Guise and Lorraine. CHAPTER VL Dukes of Normaxdy. Rollo (Or Robert I) -Princess Gizella, dau. of Chas. III. I William (Long Swords). I Emn'ia=Richard I (Sans Peiir). I Richard II (the Good). Richard III. Robert (the Magnificent). AUinor. I William (the Conqueror) = Matilda Maud, dau. Baldwin \ . Counts of Boulogne and Flanders are kinspeople. The nobles who took up the cross on a Crusade to the Holy Land were Hugh the Great, son of Henry I of France; Robert, Count of Flanders: Stephen, Count of Blois. As you remem- ber, Baldwin H was the founder of the House of Blois. Ray- mond of Toulouse, Eustace of Boulogne. Baldwin, Robert the Magnificent of Normandy, and Trancred. The Crusafles took place in the tenth and eleventh centu- ries. In Edward the Confessor's time (1050) one Peter Baldwin is noted in the fragmentary papers as Baldwin Capilanus. He was afterwards made Abbot of St. Edmundsbury. He had been a monk at vSt. Denis, Paris. Edward was educated at thd court of Baldwin. 1 wish to sliow the early Baldwins in Eng- land. [ 25 J TuE Counts of Boulogne. Eustace, son of Baldwin, one of the ancestors, married Goda, or Ida, who brought liim rich possessions and the Countship of that ancient House of Boulogne. The emblem of a Swan is the ancient cognizance of the house. For a more compre- hensive history of them read the work by J. Horace Round called The Counts of Boulogne as English Lords. ' In this work many by name Baldwin are mentioned. The rich auid pow^erful family of de Warren was the next in de- scent. (Look on chart.) Edith, a daughter of Princess Gun- dreda and sister of William de Warren, was the ancestor of the powerful family of Howards. Catherine Howard was a consort of Henry VHL The present title is Duke of Norfolk, Earl of Arundel and Surrey, premier Duke of England, immediately after the Prince of bloold royal, I wish to show how this ancient title is held, and the Baldwins are descended from her mother and father! Among the tenures of this great fief was one Baldwin de Austry, and a son is given lands in Wendover County, Bucks. You will here notice that the earlv Baldwins held lands in Wendover— that is, the English Baldwin ancestors. So that there can be small doubt that they are of that de- scent. Every one of that name in England contemporary with the Conqueror was of descent from the Counts of Flanders. So it is reasonable to supposd the later Baldwins in that locality must be their offspring. I am making a mord searching invcstigatio'U in that direction. You must remerrt. ber that they are most surely descended from the Counts of Flanders, bv descent from Sir John Bruen, through a female. But it would be more than gratifying to show an unbroken male descent from that great and ancient house. It is rarely shown for any great period. Of the powerful House of Anjou, Rollo, or Robert, was a great captain engaged by Charles II, King of France, to pro- tect the frontier from invasion by the powerful Normans. You will note the line of descent. I will now show a chart with all the names o(f the ances- tors, and their connections by marriage. Every name on the chart is an ancestor. -^/? CltA^'t [ 27 J CHAPTER VII. It will be seen from the chart how Isabel de Vermandois is descended from Hugh Capet, paternally, and from Charle- magne and son, King Pepin, maternally. Later on, after her marriage with William de Warren, second Earl Warren and Surrey, the son of Princess Gundreda, who' is descended from Alfred the Great through Matilda, daughter of Baldwin V, Count of Flanders. Her descendants follow down to Guy de Beaitchamp, Earl of Warwick. He is descended by his father, Willian:. w-ho is descended from Charlemagne, through the line of French Kings, the Earls Mortimer, to William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, who married Lady Maud Fitz- John, father and mother of Count Guy. CHAPTER VIII. I shall now give a short series of descriptions of the various' manors, also the original holders of lands at the time and before the concjuest of England, in the County of Essex) which locality is the ome where mostly all the ancestors lived. The articles were discovered in a rare volume, called "The Counties of Essex and Their Holders." Note how the lands changed hands, by descent, from inheri- tance, at limes by confiscation, again their restoration. Some of these ancient historic places are still to be seen, though mostly in a state of ruin. [28] Before proceeding with this part of my subject, I will place before ycu a short synopsis of the Baldwin Genealogy. They are the deductions that would connect the early line O'f the Baldwins with the ancient historic connections. Judge Charles Candee Baldwin, the very eminent genealo- gist, leaves tlie inference quite plain, and one can form almost a c(jntinuo-us line from Baldwin through Baldwin, as is done from Baldwin to Bruen maternally, and then to the royal bne. The relationship of Sir John Bruen of England is to Orville Dwight Baldwin that of sixth great-grandfather, to Queen Matilda twenty-fifth great-grandmother. That of Alfred the Great, twenty-eighth great-grandfather. Each name following in lineal line from Alfred is a child of the fcrmer name. This is the longest unbroken descent in all the vvx>rld. Queen \'"ictoria held her throne on no greater or stronger line, though the Stuarts were dethroned, and, by marriage to a Hapsburg of Germany, changed the line. She counts among her ancestry the same progenitors as do the American Baldwins, such as her descent from the house of England's earliest Saxon Kings, also of Charlemagne, and from the house of Anjou, whose Princesses married the Scotch and English Kings. Tlie mother of Marie Stuart, Heing a descendant of Anjou, and her 'son, James I, whose daughter married the Elector of Palatine, Victoria derives descent from them after several generations. As these noble ancestors of Marie Bruen were all de- scended and connected ^vith all the royal lines of Europe to the time after \^''illiam the Conqueror and to the rich and powerful Plantagenets. the Beauchamps, the de Newbergs, Mauduits and de Say, the Booths and her most eminent father John Bruen, himself descended in a male line from a great family to T200, this Hne of BaldNvin may justly be proud. Several of the ancestors are of the great Charter Barons, or the Barons of Run)'-mede. ANCESTRY OF BALDWIN, Male Line. Richard Baldwin, of Dundridge, England, 1552, m. Ellen Apoke had Richard Baldwin, Dundridge, Eng. had Richard Baldwin, of Cholesburgh, Eng., 1630, m. Isabel had L i^') J Nathaniel Baldwin, of Cholesburg-, Engf., enii- gratecl to America, 1639, m. Joana Westcoat, widow had Samuel Baldwin, born in Fairfield, Conn., 1665^ m. Abagail Baldwin, dau. of John Baldwin, Sr., and wife Marie Bruen, of Bruen Stapleford, Eng. Captain Nathaniel Baldwin, b. Nov 28, 1693, in Guildford, Conn., died 1760, m. Elizabeth Parmelee had Samuel Baldwin, b. March 18, 1725, in Guildford, Conn., m. Mercy Stanley, died Febru- ary 22 ,1804 had Samuel Baldwin, b. Goshen, Conn., May 25, 1755, m. Lucina Hill, served six months in the Revolution had Harvey Baldwin, M. D., b. January 26, 1784, in Lexington, New York, d. April 9, 1852; m. Nelly Calkins, b. June 6, 1784; m. (second) Cynthia Searles, b. January 28, 1797; m. (third) Betsy Wightman, b. March 7, 1791; m. (fourth) Sarah Groom had Orrin Calkins Baldwin, b. February 9, 1809, in Lexington, New York, d. November 5, 1 86 1, m. Jane Wightman lyuce of Middle- burgh, N. Y,, dau, of Betsy Whitman Euce had Orville Dwight Baldwin, b. August 8, 1843, in "Renslaerville, N. Y., came to San Fran- cisco, California, m. Millie Eva Wehn, dau. of Charles Frederick Wehn, and son of Dorothea, dau. of William Von Glode; and Millie also descended mater- nally from Michael and Catherine Rohe, by their dau,, Eva Catherine Rohe — had Blanche Evelyn Baldwin and Orville Raymond Baldwin [ 30 ] Blanche E., b. March i8, 1874, in San Francisco, Cal., m. John McGaw, b. July 3, 1865, in Brentwood, Middlesex, England had Baldwin McGaw, b. January 27, 1900, in San Fran- cisco, Cal., and Evelyn Victoria McGaw, b. February 13, 1901, in San Francisco, Cal. Orville Raymond Baldwin, b. February 6, 1876, in San Francisco, Cal., m. Anna Deuprey, dau. of Eugene Deuprey and Florence Hillyer, b. June 20, 1878 had Doris Baldwin, b. December 24, 1897, in San Fran- cisco, Cal. Orville Dwight Baldwin, b. January 19, 1899, in San Francisco, Cal. Drusilla, b. June 19, 1900, in Santa Barbara, Cal. Desire'e, b 1904 in Middletown, Eake Co., Cal. [31 ] John Bruen, of Bruen Stapleford, Cheshire, Eugland, father of Marie Bruen. [32] Born April 11, 1793. Descended from John Bruen. He was a noted minis- ter of the gospel. His ancestor, Obadiah, the brother of Marie Bruen, bought, with two or three others, of the Indians, what is now Newark, formerly New Work, and the Bruens have continued living there to the present time. [ 33] Ira Baldwin, son of Samuel Baldwin and brother of Harvey Baldwin. [ 34] Ambrose Baldwin, brother of Harvey Baldwin and grandfather of Dr. Frank Baldwin. [35 ] Frank Baldwin, M. D. Dr. Baldwin is descended from Horace Goodyear Baldwin, son of Ambrose. The latter is brother to Harvey, who is the grandfather of Orville Dwight Baldwin, It gives me pleasure to place his name in this work, and also his likeness, as he has given valuable assistance in tracing the family history. He is a prac- ticing physician in Brooklyn, N. Y. He married Anna Richie Cook. Her grandmother was a Baldwin, distantly related to Ambrose Baldwin. Their children are : John (Jack) Cook, Emily Rebecca, Ardis, and Richard Baldwin. « m < H a ^ n o W s M . . I-H O > 4J # 2 O lO O Cm h 03 P5 C _ o — ■ "o .2 9 a? is — (8 c4 A- Jli eS >> « "rt tj 'a ^ O II a ■+3 w eg 'S "a 11 _g 2 S m II II 2 w t- 00 'S m P5 03 1 '3 3 s "aj 3 s >> eS c3 cd c8 ;z; * * w o s •-:] a cS S V (O > a Px) a i-s .2 1 1{ a § ■? II 2 13 pq m 4^ OS J= ^ ^ ^ ^ •—> r-l "^ <3 W [37] [38] ■ 1 ■ ^^^H ^p^^^^pp^ I ^^H ^H 1 ^H ^^H I& ' 1 1 ^^1 ^H w % 1 ^M ^U w ^^H ^^^^H '^^H ^^^^^V ^^1 ^^^^^V f ^^1 ^R »^ , ' -iji 1 1 Bi ^^^L>^ 1 Ky ^^H ^v ' ' ^»^ ^1 1 1 I r ^•^ H I^H I^I^^^H- ^ ■ll Millie Eva Baldwin (Wehii ) [ 39] Orville Dwight Baldwin. (See Appendix B.) [40] Blanche Evelyn McGaw (Baldwin). (See Appendix H.) [41 ] John McGaw. [42 J Baldwin INIcGaw. (Child of Blanche.) [43 1 ^^^^^^*^ 1 ■ Pf'^ 1 ^H RT^ i«c« '^ ^^^^1 m 1 <;^ % \ ■^ iP ^pw ^ % ^^ ^m |S| ^ Evelyu Victoria jNIcGaw. (Child of Blanche.) [44] Orville Raxiiioiid Baldwin. (See Appendix B.) r 45 ]; Anna Deuprey, wife of Orville Raymond Baldwin. 46 1 i- - '"^^^^^ ^ ■ ■ .^ ■ : 1 ( s ■ '^ w^^ ^^^ t&^S^C • "••>,- . ^ ■ fclj^T.'-B^Ww^ iuHi J i i 9bb| ■ H ^ Hi gH IJHIII Hi H Orville R. Baldwin, at the age of two years. [47 1 Doris, Drusilla, and Orville Dwight Baldwin. Children of Orville R. Baldwin. [48 ] Windermere. 3700 Washington street, San Francisco. This home, built for Mr. Orville Dwight Baldwin, and occupied by him and family for ten years. From here tlieir two children married, and here were born his two grandchildren, Baldwin McGaw and Evelyn Victoria McGaw. [49 J Angelia Jane Bowman (Baldwin). Caroline Mary Bertz (Baldwin). Immediate descendants of Orrin Calkins Baldwin. [ 50 Warren Luce Baldwin, son of Orria Calkins Baldwin and Tane Wightnian Luce. (See Appendix A.) [ 51] Josephine Easton Preston (Baldwin). [52] Jane Zilpha Swartley (Bowman). [ 53] ' CHAPTER IX. Manor of Lambourne. The names of ancestors will be in italics. Eustace, Earl of Boulogne, whoi was father of Godfrey, also had a son, Alfred. Eustace left this estate to Alfred^ from whom it passed to his younger son, Pharamus de Boulogne. Matilda, daughter of Eustace, married Stephen Earl of Blois, wlio was son of Adella, daughter of William the Conqueror, an ALICE DE TONI. GUY DE BEAUCHAMP. Walthemstow Toni. This manor j^iven by William the Conqueror to Ralph de Tond, who was his standard-bearer at the time of the conquest. He had a son, Robert, who, deceased, left the estate to his sister^ Alice, as heiress. Walthemstow Toni, or High Hall^ now belongs to the May- nard family. Alice at the time was the wido^v of Thomas de Leybume. She afterv^'ard married Gvy de Beaucliamp, Earl of Warwick. It passed to the crown at one time, but was restored to the Beauchamps, till it finally came to Richard (the King Maker), who was a Nevil, not a Beauchamp, he having married the heiress. Alberic de Veer married Beatrix, half sister of William the Conqueror. He was the founder of the noble family of Veer, Earls of Oxford. [ 57 ] Waldron de Saffron Was firGt holden by Geoffrey de Manville, who accompanied William the Conqueror. He received no less than ii8 lord- ships. He built the castle, a part of it remaining to this day. The name was derived from a town in Normandy and the estate of Waldroii became the head of the barony and the honor of Mandeville. He was succeeded by his son, William, who- was made con- stable of the Tower, and succeeded by his son, Geoffrey, and advanced by King- Stephen to the title and dignity oif the Eiarl of Essex. It was during the strife for the crown between Stephen and Matilda, to whom it had been left by her father, that Geoffrey took part with Matilda, who confirmed to him whatever his grandfather or father ever held in forts or castles, and particu^ larly the Tower of London. She also confirmed on him the office of hereditary sheriff of London, Middlesex, Hertford- shire and Essex. It was not long that Matilda could support her hereditary dignity. Geoffrey Mandeville was killed September 14, 1144. His second son had restored by King Henry II his father's and grandfather's and great-grandfather's estates, alsO' the Earldom of Essex. He married Eustacia. At his death the estates reverted to his brother, William de Mandeville, who went to the Holy Land with Phillip of Flanders. Geoffrey was buried in the Abbey of Mortimer in Normandy, and his heart brought to England and deposited in the chapter house of Waldron Priorv. [ 58 J Beatrix, his aunt, who was sister tOi WilHam the Conqueror, would have succeeded to his estates, she being the lawful heir, but being aged she waived her claim for her yoimgest son, Geoffrey de Say. It was afterwards transferred to Geoffrey Fitz-Piers, who married her grand'laughter. by her son, William. Their eldest son too-k the name of Mandeville, and then it came to his sister, Maude, wife of Henry de Bohun^ and finally to a daugiiter, Eleanor, who married Thomas of Woodstock, who was sor. of King Edward IV. LrsTox Hall. Held bv Hugh de Gernon, who became a monk, married B2'.silia, daughter of Gerard Flatel. Gerard married Edith, sister of Wilh'a>n, Earl de Warren, leaving Hugh, who was taken under the patronage of Henry I of England. He mar- ried Maude, sister of Ralph de Peronne, Count de Vernian- dois. Had son, Hugh Cavendish. The family took name from the ancient one of Gernons of Boulo!gne. WILLIAM DE BEAUCHAMP AND MAUDE. E.ASTOX Hall, Boelky. The lands lie in Borley, Bellechamp Otten (Beautiful Vale). Before the conquest these lands belonged to Grima and Godiva. William le Gro-s left two- daughters, of whom Arnica was the mother of Constance, wdiose son was Ralph de Easton . Nicholas de Beauchamp held possession here, and was suc- ceeded by the de Veers, in which noble family the estate con- tinued several generations. John de Veer granted it to Maude, wife of William de Beaucliam/p. It belonged tO' Alberic, the tenth Earl, about 1400, and it was holden by his widow. Alice, of the Earl of March, It then fell to Richard, eleventh Earl, and by his widow, Alice, and to their son, John Howard, Duke of Norfolk, but was restored by King Henry VII to^ John, the thirteenth Earl of Oxford. [59] RICHARD FITZ GILBERT (EARL OF CLARE). Cr.iiRET Hall. The family of Vaux, or Vails, were possessed of this manor, and it was sold by Robert de Vails to Richard de Clare, E^rl of Gloucester, who'se grandson, Gilbert, Earl of Clare, Her-, ford and Gloucester, in I2Q5 died possessed of this manor and hamlet of Claret. His son, Gilbert, died and left three sisters. Ealenor mar- ried Hug-h, Lord Spencer; Elizabeth married John de Burgh, Earl of Ulster, ancestor of Burke of the Peerage; secondly," to Theobold, Lord Verdon ; lastly, to vSir Roger de Morry; third sister married Fiers Gaveston, Earl of Cornwall, then to Hugh. Lord Audly. In 1316 Elizabeth died, leaving a daugh- ter, Elizabeth, who married Lionel, third son of King Richard HI, created Duke of Clarence, and his daughter, Phillipa, mar- ried Edward de Mortimer, third Earl of March. He was suc- ceeded by his son, Roger, and his grandson, Edmund Mor- timer, Earl of March, Lord of Wigmore, Trim, Clare and Con- naught. 60 BEAUCHAMP. EARL WARREN. HlNCKFOPiD. John, the fifth Earl of Oxford, a de Veer, g-ranted Hinck- ford to Maude, wife of William de Beauchamp. Beatrice is second daughter and coheiress toi WilHam de Warren, Earl Warren in Nonnandy. He married a daughter of the Con- queror, and accompanied him on a great expedition. Tlie daugliter was Princess Gundreda. He distinguished himself during the military engagements, and was most liberally re- warded by having numerovis estates given him, with the office of Chief Justice of England. He was afterwards made Earl of Surrey by William Rufus, and died (1089) in possession of more than two hundred lordships in Essex and other counties. The ancient holders were King William, Eudes, the half brother of William (the Bishop) : Eustace, Earl of Boulogiie, grandfather of Godfrey de Boulogne. Maude is daughter of John Fitz-Jolnu married WiUiam d6 Beauchamp, created Earl of Warwick. Princess Gundreda, daughter of William the Conqueror, married William de Warroi, first Earl of Surrey. [ 61 ] Peyton Hall Belonged to Geoffrey Baldwin in the reign of Edward II. Thaxted Church Contains an old window showing the intermarriage of these no'ble families. King Edward IV; Lionel, Duke of Clarence; Iforlimer, Earl of March ; de Burgh, Earl of Ulster, Earl of Clare; the Catholic wheel and pomegranate, the cognizance of Catherine of Arago^n. The ceiling is of fine carved wood. High Roding. Given by the Conqueror to William de Warren, first Earl of Surrey, succeeded by son, William, and grandson, William, v.'hose onh daughter, Isabel, by marriage conveyed it to Wil- liam of Blois and was succeeded by Hamelen Plantaganet, whom she married, William of Blois, King Stephen's son having died, then to William, to John, and his grandson, John, dying without issue, succeeded to his sister, Alice, who married Edmund Fitz-AIlen, Earl of Anmdel, who, falling- a victim to the in- trigues of Queen Isabel and Roger Mortimer, was beheaded. It was restored to his son, Richard. Tlien to Earl of Arundel, his son ; finally to Ormond and Earl of Wiltshire and Anne de Bouievn. 62 ] MORTIMER. WIGMORE CASTLE. MILLICENT DE FERRERS. WooDHAM Ferrers. Henry de Ferrers, son of Gualclieline de Ferrers, a noble Norman, who also had four other lordships in this country. Enguelf and William, his twO' oldest sons, dying before him, he was succeeded bv his youngest son, Robert, who for his valor at the battle of Standard and in Yorkshire against King David of Scotland, was created Earl of Derby by King vSiephen in 1138 and died the year following, leaving his son, Robert, to succeed him, styled the younger, as Earl of Ferrers and Earl of Nottingham. His son, William, succeeded him, remarkable as being possessed of seventy- nine knights' fees. He married Margaret, heiress of William Peverell of Notting- ham, by whom he had Robert, Earl of Ferrers, who married Sybilla, daughter of William de Braose of Brecknock, by whom he had j\[UUr<>ni, wife of Eoger, Lord Mortimer, of Wig- more. He also had a daughter, Agatha, concubine to King John, and by that monarch mother to Joane, who married Lleweln, Prince of Wales. He also had by Sybilla his son and heir, William, Earl Ferrers, whom King Richard first deprived of his possessions, giving them to John, Earl of Mortain, William the Conqueror's half-brother, but afterwards regained them. Pie was succeeded bv his son. William, created Earl of Derby by King John. He was created by charter July 7, 1205, ^"d girt with a sword by the King's own hands, being the first) mentioned to have been so knisfhted. [63] He married Sybilla, daughter oif William Mareschall, Earl of Pembroke. By Sybilla he had seven daughters, and by his second wife, Margaret, daughter o^f Ouincy, Earl of Win- chester, he had Kobert, who succeeded to the earldom and was the last Earl of Derby. The earldom went to the family of Grey of Ruthen, and Sir John Grey, Lord Lisle, married Elizabeth, daughter of Richard Wildville, Earl Rivers, by whom !ie had two sons. Sir Thomas and Richard Woodville. His widow was afterwards the wife of King Edward IV. His son, Thomas was created Earl of Huntington, and by inters marriage to Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, from whoin sprang the unfortunate Lady Jane Grey, the mother being Mary, of whom, in "When Knighthood was in Flower," she is made the heroine. Roger, third Baron Mortimer of Wig- more Castle, married Millicent, daughter Oif Robert de Eer-" vers, fourth Earl of Derby. It will be seen here that the family of Grey Woodvilles were connections of Roger Mortimer and Millicent de Ferrers. Thetbon Mount. Godric held this portion before the conquest. This manor lying contiguous to Stapleton. Tany, or Packard, de Toni. Thomas Hampton was in possession oi this manor. John was his son and heir, and John his grandson. Sir John died possessed of this estate, 1553. His next heirs were Edward Ferrers and Anne. Sir John Hampden married Philippa, daughter of John Wilford. [64] Chigwell Hall. There are three manors in this parish. The manor house belonged to Harold, time of conquest, and the survey formed part of the possessions of Ralph de Lemesi, Baron of Ulverlai, in Warwickshire, where he had his country seat. Ralph, his grandson, was his successor, whose son Allen was the father of Gerard de Lemesi, who married Alice de Harcourt. 65 Great Stamford. The manision of this manor passed from Svveyn to the crown. It after belonged to Eichard Fitz-William, under whom it was holden by the ancient family of Musters. Wil- liam, son of Richard Fitz-William, on his death in 1260, left his only daughter Margery his heiress, who' was married to "Richard de Toni of the family of that name of Stapleford Toni. The first Lord Vernon was George \^enable. [66] TAKEN FROM THE BALDWIN GENEALOGY. Descent of Dunbetdge Manor. Simon de Montacute, d. 1315 I Wm. de Montacute, d. 1320 I Wm. de Montacute, created Earl of Salisbury, m. dau. of Wm. Lord Grandison John, d. 1390, m. Margeret, heiress of Lord Mouther John, Earl of Salisbury, d. 1440 I Thomas, Earl of Salisbury, d. 1428, m. Ealenor, sister and heir of Earl of Kent I Alice, m. Eichard Neville, created Earl of Salisbury. This Neville obtained Beauchamp Court, and took name of Warwick, Neville d. 1460. Richard, Earl of Warwick, d. 1471, called the "King Maker" I Isabel Neville, m. George Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence, brother to Edw. IV, 1 d. 1478. t Margeret, Countess of Salisbury, beheaded 1541 It then came to the cro-wni, and Henry VIII bestowed it to Sir lohn Baldwin and heirs and assigns. This lies in Wen- dover. Account also in Eng-lish history. [67 J DE FURNIVAL. DE SAY. EARLS OF CLARE. Maator of Newport. Empress Maude gave this manor to Geoffrey de Mandeville, and afterwards King John granted it to^ Gerard de Furnival. The do Sai/s descended from Eustace, Earl of Boulogne. Richard Fiiz-GiJbert was Earl Brion, in Normandy, and Lord of the honour of Clare in Suft'olk. He was grandson of Geof- frey, who was the natural son of Richard, Duke of Normandy. Fairsted Belonged to William Earl Ferrers, son of Robert. Ultig Hall was given to Robert, a younger son of Richard Fitz-Gilbert, progenitor of the ancient Earls of Clare, and from them sprung the noble family of Fitz-Walter. [ 68 Nether Hall. Tlie manor house of Nether Hall o^ the conquest belonged to Richard Fiiz-Gilbert, and his under tenant was Williajn Pec- catum, or Feclie. In 1284 Sir Gilbert Peche gave this manor to Edward I and wife, Ealenor. In 1496 King Henry granted Nether Hall to John de Veer, Earl of Oxford. HOLBREGGE, OR HOLBRTDGE. Humphrey and Henry, sons of Earl Gilbert, also Robert of Gernon, from whom it descended to the family of de Veer, Earls of Oxford. Then to Hugli de Mortimer, of the house of Mortimer, Earl of March, and of Maude, his wife. 69 ] Beundon Had been given to Ralph Lemesi, one of the Conqueror's great men. He had two Lordships, and eleven in other parts of the country. The capitol seat in Ulveric, in Warwickshire, from which place the baronial title was derived. Ralph, the grandsoTi, was founder of Herfordshire Priory. And by his wife, Hadevisa. a son, Allen, who was father of Gerard at the time of Henry H. His six children were Allinore, John, Allen, Gerard, Ama'belia and Basilia. John married Alice, daughter of Robert de Harcourt. One o^f the descendants married Thomas Manners, Earl of Rutland (Ealenor). Tliey are an- cestors of Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall. Alice, daughter of John Harcourt, and widow of John de Lemisi, married Wal- lo.ran de NevMrgh, fourth Earl of Warwick. [70] CHAPTER X. Following is the lineage of the ancestors, as taken from Bnrke's Peerage ; also, from The County families of Essex, Baldwin VI, brother of Queen Matilda, of England, had son, Baldwin de Gaunt. His daughter married the great Allen dc Percy. Their son William married the daughter of Richard Fitz-Gilbert de Clare ; had Lady Agnes Percy, who married the Duke of Nether Lorraine, and had Richard Fitz-Gilbert de Clare, who inherited his aunt's the Countess of Warwick's* estates. A de Bohun, Alice, a descendant of Henry, married Ralph de Toni of Fjamstead, 1264. Venable, Kinderton, Shirley: Peter Venables, Piaron of Kinderton, married Catherine Shirley. George Vernon married Dorothy Shirley, descended from the ancient Baronies of Ferers of Chartley, Boucheir and Louvain. Henry, Earl Ferers of the present time, is named Sewallus. Selina, Countess of Huntington', of the i8th century, was considered the greatest character of her time. She lived during the reign of four monarchs. She gave of her great wealth boun- tifully to religion, and her powerful influence was felt through all her life. She is descended frotn the ancient Earl Ferers. Her biography h,as been published. A Margaret Rolle, a great Devonshire heiress, w-ife of Lord Walpole, afterwards the Earl of Oxford, separated from him, and on his death married Se- wallis Shirley. Her son George, third Earl, was nephew to Sir Horace Walpole. She succeeded in her right tO' the Bar- onies of Clinton and de Say. On the death of Hugh, Lord Clinton, about 1300, Lady Matilda Maud de Beauchamp mar- ried Geoffrey de Say, Admiral of the King's Fleet, and their daughter, Idona de Say, married Sir John Clinton, third Baron Chnton of Maxtock. 71 J LINEAGE OF DE BELLOMONT (BURKE). Aberccrn, Duke of Hamilton : Without attempting to trace the exact Une of descent of the illustrious house of Hamilton, from the great and powerful stock of the ancient de Bellomonts, Earls of Leicester, there seems to be no doubt they derive their descent therefrom, and of the Counts of Mellent. Lady Isabell de Vermandois mar- ried Robert de Beaumont, Earl of Mellent and first Earl of Leicester. And Lady Gundreda de Warren married Roger Bellomont de Newbergh, Earl Warwick. Lineage of Baron de Lisle and Dudley, by maternal descent from the de Beau- monts and Beauchamps, ancient Earls of Warwick, the E^rls of Leicester. They can claim legitimate descent from William the Conqueror. Princess Gundreda, the youngest daughter of that monarch, married William de Warren,, first Earl Warren and Surrey. And the granddaughter of that marriage, Gun- dred, married Roger de Beaumont, second Earl Warwick, the Baronet's direct ancestor. Lineage of the present Duke of Newcastle : Descended from the de Says, Clinton. Walter Fitz- Walter descended from William Longspere and Henry I of England and fair Rosamond. The Jephson, Norreys, through their de- scent, may claim descent and to partake of the most illustrious blood in England — Plantagenets, de Clare, Salisbury, Bello- mont, de Veer, Odingsells, Beaumont (Burke), (to show what that great authority has to say of that lineage), which is in the line of Baldwin. The Barony of Say and Sele I do not give now, as I give It later under the order of the Barons of Runvmede. [ '2 ] CLINTON LINEAGE. John de Cli'iton, first Lord Clinton, son and heir of Thomas de Clinton, of Amington and Maxtock, Co. Warwick, by Maude, daughter of Sir Ralph Bracebridge, of Kingsbury, Co. Warwick, and the descendants of Osbert, the nephew of Geoffrey de Clinton, Lord Chamberlain to Henry I. married Ida, eldest daughter of William de Odingsells, Lord of MaX' tock Castle, Co. Warwick, He had two sons, John and William, created Earl of Hunt- ingdon. Sir John de Clinton, second Baron de Clinton, married Mar- gery, daughter of Sir William Corbet of Chadlesly, Corbet, Co. Worcester, and had son Sir John de Clinton, third Baron. This noble inherited the estate of his uncle, Sir W^illiam, Earl of Huntingdoii, and was Constable of Warwick Castle in 1390. He married first Idonea de Say, eldest sister of William Lord Say, and daughter of Geofifrey, secomd Baron de Say, Admiral of the King's Fleet, and Lady Matilda Beauchamp. Lady Idonea was aunt and sole heir of Elizabeth, Baroness de Say. She v/a? also cousin and heir to William de Say and Baron Seele. Tlie present family of Warwick are Neville. First Greviile of Campden purchased the title of Milcote from Sir Walter Beauchamp, Knt. [ 73] The bear and staff belong to the Saxon Earls Warwick, de- rived from the chivalrous Guy. The arms were adopted by the de Newburgks, who are of the house of PI anta genet. Ro^er de Beaumont was ruler of Normandy, with Matilda, during the absence of William in England. Matilda had daughter Constance, married to Allen Fer- g-eant, Duke of Brittany. Agatha was affianced to the Saxon Harold, son of Earl Godwin. Adella married Stephen of Blois. Gundreda married William de Warren, Earl of Surrey, created by WiHiam Rufus, her brother. Gund}-eda had two sons — William de Warren, second Earl cf Surrey, and Rainold, who died childless. From the former sprang many noble families. His son Wiiliam, third Baron, had daughter Isabel, who married William of Blois, who was son of Stephen and Matilda, great-grandson of William the Conqueror. William Rufus died, and Henry I seized the throne while Robert Courthose was on a crusade in the Holy Land with Godfrey de Boulogne. Henry married Matilda or I\laude, daughter of Malcolm, King of Scotland, and his wifd Margaret, thus uniting the Norman and Anglo-Saxon families, al?o Scotland. Queen Matilda's name was Edith, but was called Matilda in compliment to King Henry's mother. She was styled good Queen Maude. Robert, Duke of Noirmandy, w-as her godfather. Earl Mellent was cousin to Robert, Duke of Normandy, and interceded with Henry to deal fairly with his brother. Earl Mellent was Robert de Beaumont, Earl of Leicester. [74] DE BOHUN LINEAGE. I. Humphrey de Bohun, the first of this noble family settled in England, being a kinsman to the Conqueror. II. Humphrey (the Great), m. Maud, dau. of Edward de Saresbury. III. Humphrey, the steward to King Henry I, m. Margery, dau. of Milo, Earl of Hereford. IV. Humphrey, m. Margery, dau. of Henry of Huntington. DE TONI LINEAGE. Roger de Toni (the Elder), standard bearer of William (Conq.) Ralph de Toni. Ralph de Toni. Roger de Toni, m. dau. of Robert, Earl of Leicester. Roger de Toni, m. Constance, dau. of Richard, viz. Count de Bellomont. Ralph de Toni. Roger de Toni. Ralph de Toni, m. Alice de Bohun. ANCESTRY OF BEAUCHAMP. Walter Beauchamp, steward to King Henry I, m. Emeline, dau. of Urso d' Abitot. William de Beauchamp. William de Beauchamp. Walter de Beauchamp, Governor of Hanley Castle, Worcestershire. William de Beauchamp, m. Isabel de Mauduit. William de Beauchamp, Earl Warwick, m. Maud Fitz Jbhn. Guy de Beauchamp, m. Alice de Toni. PECHE ANCESTRY. Robert Peche, Bishop of Coventry. Geoffrey Peche, m. Petronel, dau. of Robert Walsh. Richard Peche, Justice of Assize in Warwickshire, 1229. Sir John Peche, Knight, d. 1339. Sir John Peche. Sir John Peche, Knight, Lord of Hampton in Ardly, d. 1377. Sir John Peche, Knight, b. 1352, d. 1386. Margaret Peche, m. William de Montfort. BOOTH LINEAGE. John Booth, of Barton, in Lancashire. Sir Robert Booth of Dunham, Knight, m. Dowse, dau. of Sir Wm. Venables of Bolin, Sheriff of Chester. Sir William Booth of Dunham, Knight, m. Maud, dau. of John Dutton, Esq., of Dutton. George Booth, Esq., of Dunham, m. Catherine de Montfort, d. 1483. [ 75 HOLFORD LINEAGE. Roger de Toft, Lord of Toft. William Toft, m. Joan, dau, of Richard de Lostock. Henry Holford, brother and heir to Roger, who died 1330, and assumed name Holford ftom place of his residence, as was custo- mary, which surname his posterity has ever since retained. John Holford, of Holford, m. Joana, dau. of Roger le Bruyn, of Stapleford. William Holford, of Holford, m. Margaret, dau. of Sir Richard Venables of Kinderton, d. 1459. Thomas Holford, Esq , of Holford, m. Joan, dau. of Richard Leigh. Thomas Holford, Esq., of Holford, m. Maud, dau. of William Bulkeley, Deputy Judge of Chester. Sir George Holford, of Holford, Knight, m. Isabel, widow of Warren of Pointon in Cheshire, and dau. of Robert Leigh of Addlington, Sheriff. Sir John Holford, of Holford, Knight, m. Margery, dau. of Rufe Brereton of Iscoit, Flintshire. Thomas Holford, of Holford, m. Jane Booth. [ '(^ J Kenilwoeth. Kenilworth is scarce five miles away from Coventry. Most stirring scenes were enacted there, from midsummer to December, 1266. The castle o.f the De Monitforts, Coles - hill, was the scene of battle, engaged in between Henry III of England and Balduin de Monifort. An arrow shot over the wall of the castle, aimed at the King, would have been his death, had not a loyal follower thrown himself in front of th^ King, and himself perished. The honors of Roger of Beauniout, the head of that house; passed by female descent to Simon de Montfort, that great deliverer who made the title of Earl of Leicester the most glorious in the whole peerage of England (Freeman). He was ancestor of Baldwin de Montfort. The Earl of Maxiohes' castle was near by. A picture of it is in a book, "Life in an Old English Town." We hear of fight- ing between the yormg Earl of Stafford, the Lord of Maxtock and the citizens. The Earl of Leicester, better knowm as the Duke qf Buck- ingham, caused the imprisonment of Sir Baldwin de Montfort, because he made some difficulty about the surrerider of his manor of Coleshill into the Duke's keeping. That the great prosperity of Coventry and the glory passed away with the Tudor Kings is undoubted, just as the special history closes with the War of the Roses. One of their laws was that, No man of craft "shall bear bills, or gysarnes, or straight staves," upon pain of forfeiture of said weapons. Those driving cattle to market could, however, carry a small staff in their hands. The gentry flocked to the far-famed Corpus Christi shoavs, or to be near the court, for Henry VI and his Queen tarried frequently at Coventry. In 14.40 Sir Humphrey Stafford and his son Richard were attacked at nightfall, in the broad gate, as they were coming from Lady Shrewsbury's, by Sir Robert Harcourt and his men. Richard was slain, while two of the Harcotirt faction were also killed in the fray. This was written to Viscmint Beaumont, as the men say, in a Paternoster. Many notable folk have at one time or another been con- nected with the citv. Sir William Dugdale, Garter King-at-Arms, under Charles f L author of the Monasticon and the antiquities of Warwick- shire, received his education here at the free grammar school. [77 J Old St. Mary's Hall is lull of deep interest. Sitting- in the minstrel gallery, behind the array oi Cromwellian amior, can be viewed a magnificent 15th century window, above the arms oif the city, "The Elephant aiid Castle," wheat sheaves of Chester, and the sable eagle O'f Earl Leoffric and Lady Godiva. As the black eagle is almost unknown as an insignia in Eng- land,, it belonging more properly to Germany, it would seem that it was derived from so'me heir of that country. Chester, being near b^^ and the le Bruins, bearing that emblem, were possibly connected. The great Barons formed a league, and compelled Kinj John to yield to their demands, and on the 15th of June, 12 14, signed at Runymede the ever memorable Magna Charta. The Barons of Runymede is an Oider, existing in America. Among its number is Bruen, also Orville Dwight Baldwin, as descendants. Louis VII affected to lay claim to England, throiugh his Queen Blanche, who was granddaughter of Henry II. John fled, and Loivis w^as proclaimed King, when, fortunately, John died, and his child, ten years of age, was declared King. The Barons would not desert, under such circumstances, the Plan-* tagent, the legitim.ate heir. King Philip Augustus was the only son of Louis VII, and married Isabella, daughter of Baldwin, Coimt of Hainault, and niece of Philip, Earl of Flanders. This princess was directly de- scended in the female line from the unfortunate Charles ol Lor- raine, last heir of the Carlovingianis. A bitter enmity existed between Philip and Henry II of England. And their armies met at a spot near Gisors. They had scarcely discussed the point in dispute, when the venerable Bishop Tyre appeared, and made an eloquent appeal for them to give up all thoughts (•>f w^ar and engage in defending Christians in the Holy Land. Such an appeal was never made in vain. Henry instantly proffered his services, and assumed the crolss. And Philip Augustus followed his example, with a crowd of gallant war- riors, Richard Coeur dc Lion, Philip df Flanders. Duke of Burgundy, and the Counts of Champagne, Chartres and Na- varre. [ 78] The Barons of Runnymede, or Rune Mead. The memorable meeting of the Barons was preceeded by a more solemn one at the altar of St. Edmundsbury. They marched to London and met by appointment King John, at long low plains near Runnymede, bounded on one side by the Thames, on the other by a gentle line of hills. The island in the river. The famous spot speaks only of peace and long tranquility. In the council meadow, for Run Med means the mead of council. The Ankerwyke Yew to be seen on the opposite shore, which was a vigorous tree when the Army of God and Holy Church stood upon Runnymede, and which still bears its green leaf after six hundred and fifty winters. The Barons of England swearing before Cardinal Stephen Lang- ton, November 2, 1214, that they will support and procure from King John the confirmation of the Charter of Liberties, known as the Magna Charta. [79] Henry died, and Richard Coeur de Lion was King, and John took the throne while Richard was in the Holy Land. King Philip became estranged from Richard, owing to the greater power of this mighty monarch, and so^, on his return to France, leagued with John to win back their great baronies of Aquitaine and Burgundy. John had killed his nephew Arthur (so it w^as supposed), and the nation was enraged, and he was cited to appear before the crown of France. Queen Eleanor had strenuously aided her favorite son, John, but could not survive the fallen fortunes of the house of Plantagenet. She was the divorced wife of King Louis VII, and married Henry II of England. Arthur, and the nation was enraged, and he was cited tO' ap- pear before the crown oif France. Queen Eleanor had stren- uously aided her favorite son, John, but could not survive tha fallen fortunes of the house of Plantagenet. She was the divorced wife of King Louis VH, and married Henry H oi England. King David I of Scotland married Matilda, daughter oi WaJtheof. Earl of Northumberland, and Judith, niece of Wil- liam the Conqueror. Their son.. Prince Henry, married Lady Ada de Warren, daughter of William, second Earl of Warren and Surrey, and his wife. Lady Isabel die Vermandois. She was the great-granddaughter of William and Matilda. o w >»>. a> i> b (h b ^ 3 3 ^ ^* '13'^ >, * n a oj >.C3 « ^ 41 £ a a 3 4; C aj Sm " -> t^ h 3 l< t. =4-i a y] c3 rt O n ® _^ — ' -w ^ t- 3 i; a *j =« ij W 3 § •r" ^« m a (H „j > O -. ,^ CC Q-^ "S ^ - » . 0) S a a a a t: ^ - > t^ J3 ia ^ rs ^ 1^ «=5 5 f-i O 3 o a i*-^ ST "-ss-"Krocs3o afq;2;^Mfi5WM sc d II • - '- :jfe 3)5 3^ ;r s- a a :^ — tU S ;= ^ O O ^;= -^ a a t* 73 -*< l-H -5 1-5 S Sg S o ^^ c3 a 02 Q eq e -C* 3 J -5 '^ " ns ^^ -'■^>K,S>-ac«GOr5-tf»3* o i«5 o '^ a ~ .o ^ to CO ,_- 3 a — rt cu a, ;? _] Ei H-? ^3 ► a s g P5 £ Xh "" * > >^ TT •? ■- '^ -« O -» ^^ a ?"':2-r;.o'^ =5?:^,-*! 2 .=? -= ^ li 'S '::: 'S t^S O ►^^xXPH0X^fi^S<3c3c^c^W0000 [81] ANCESTRY OF THE MAGNA CHARTA BARONS. Richard Fitz-Gilbert of Richard de Clare. Richard Fitz-Gilbert was the founder of the house of Clare in England. He accompanied William the Conqueror there, and participated in the spoils of conquest, and obtained exten- sive possessions in the new and old da(minions of his royal leader and kinsman. He was the eldest son of Gislebert, surnamed Crispin, Count of Eu, Earl of Brion in Normandy, in right of his wife, whp vras the sister and heir of the Earl oi Brion, and by her inheri- tance from his father, Geoffrey (or Godfrey), Earl Eu and Brion, a natural son of Richard I (sans peur), third Duke oi Normandy, died 986. Ancestor O'f William the Conqueror. In the sixth year of William I, Richard Fitz-Gilbert was joined, under the designation oi Ricardus de Benefacta, with William de Warren, Earl of Surrey, in^ the great office oi Ju- diciary of England. At the time of the general survey in Eng- land he w^as designated as Ricardus de Toiiebridge (now Tun- bridge), in Kent. It is recorded he w^as possessed of thirty- eight lordships in Surrey, thirty-five in Essex, three in Cam- bridgeshire, ninety-five in Suffolk, and some in Wilts and Devon. One of these lordships was O'f Clare, on the border of and in Suffolk, which, subsequently becoming his chief seat, he came to be styled Richard de Clare, and his descendants to be known as the Earls of Clare, although never so created. He fell in a skirmish with the Welsh. Of the issue by wife Rohaise was a daughter married to Baldwin Teutonicus. TEook on chart on first page.) Rohaise was a daughter 'oi Walter Gifford, first Earl of Buckingham, son of Osborn de Bolebec and his wife. Aveline, sister oi Gunorra, wife of Richard I, third Duke of Nonnandy. Baldwin Teutonicus had Nicholas de Baschville, Lord of Castle Martel in Ger- many. He married a daughter of Herfastus the Dane, and a niece of the Duchess Gunorra in Normandy, and had William de Martel, Eari of Guarrem, or Warren, who married a daughter of Rafe de torta, a noble Dane, protector of Nor- mandy during the nonage of Duke Richard I, and bad issue Roger de Mortimer, brother of William de Warren, first Earl of Surrev, both companions of William the Conqueror, and had issue Ralph de Mortimer, Lord of Wigmore Castle, mar- ried Lady Millicent and had issue Hugh de Mortimer, second Baron, Lord of Wigmore Castle, d. 1185. married Lady [82 J Maude, and had issue Roger de Alortimer, third Baron of Wigmore Castle, d. 1215, and had issue by Lady MilHcent, dauofhter of Robert Ferrers, fourth Earl of Derby, and his wife, Sybilla, daughter of William de Braos-e of Brecknock^ and had issue Lady Joan de Mortimer, and had issue by hus- band, Walter de Beauchamp, son of Walter, fourth Baron Beauchamp, William de Beauchamp. fifth Baron of Elmly, by wife. Lady Isabel, daughter ol William, sixth Baron Mauduit, and fourth Baroti Henalape, heritable chamberlain to the ex- chequet, had William de Beauchamp, sixth Barou Beau- champ, created Earl of Warwick, and by wife, Maude, daug-h- ter of Sir John Fitz-Tohn, Guy de Beauchamp, second Earl ol Warwick, 1275-1315, by wife. Lady Alice, daughter of Sir Ralph de Toni and widow of Sir Thomas L&yburn, had Lady Matilda de Beauchamj), married Geoffrey de Say, Admiral of the King's fleet, and descended from Geofifrey de Say, a Magna Charta Baron. [83 J Roger Biciod (a Magna Charta Baron). Earl of Norfolk, Lord High Steward of England, d. 1220, m., first, before 1195, Lady Isabel de Warren, daughter of Hamelin Plantagenet, fifth Earl O'f Warren and Surrey (jure uxoris), who bore O'ne of the three swords at the second co(ro-» nation of Richard 1 of England and was with that King in the army at Normandy, and d. 1202, and his wife, Isabella, Countess of Surrey, widow of William de Blois, and only daughter and richest heiress in England of William, third Earl Warren and Surrey, who zealously espoused the cause of King Stephen and had a chief command in his army. He was a son of William, second Earl Warren and vSurrey, and his wife, Lady Isabel de Vermandois, daughter of Hugh Magnus. Her descent is from Charlemagne, See chart. Roger Bigod had by his first wife, Lady Isabel, Hugh Bigod, one of the Charta Barons, second Earl of Norfolk, d. 1225. He (Hugh) marrievl Lady Maud Marshall. Hugh Bigod and Lady Maud had Sir Ralph Bigod, who had Lady Isabel, she was widow of Gilbert de I^acie, Lord of Meath, Ireland, and married, secondly, John Fitz-Piers Kitz-Geof^rey, Lord of Berkhamstead and Kirkling, Chief Justice of Ireland (time of Henry III), and their son, Geofifrey Fitz-Piers, Baron de Mandeville, created in 1199, Earl of Essex, Justiciary of England, and his second wife, Lady Aveline. Lady Isabel had John Fitz-John, Chief Jus- tice of Ireland, 1258, leaving issue by wife whosie name has nol been preserved. Lady Maud Fitz-John, widow of Gerard de Furnival d. 1280. who married, secondlv, William, sixth Baroii [84] de Beauchamp of Elmley Castle, Earl of Warwick, in right oi his mother. Lady Isabel, daughter of William, fourth Baron Mauduit, of Henslape^ County Bucks, heritable chamberlain to the exchequer, d. 1256, and sister and heiress of William Mauduit, seventh Earl of Warwick. William de Be?uchamp was a distinguished captain in the Welsh and Scottish wars of Edward I, and d. 1298. The mother of Lady Isabel de Mauduit was Lady Alice, daughter of Walleran de Newbergh. fourth Earl of Warwick, d. 1205, by his second wife, Alice de Harcourt. The son of Roger Bellomoint de Newbergh, second Earl Warwick, who d. 1 153, and wife, Lady Gundreda de Warren, was Wallerauv Lady Gundreda was daughter of William de Warren, second Earl Warren and vSurrey, and wife, Lady Isabel de Verman- dois, widow of Robert de Beaumont, Earl Mellent, and a de-* scendant of Hugh Capet, King of France. To return to William de Beauchamp and Lady Maud, who had Guy the ancestor, also had daughter, Lady Sarah de Beauchamp. Guy Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, married Lady Alice, daughter of Ralph de Toni, of Flamstead, Herts. She was widow- of ThoTnas de Leyburn, and had Lady Matilda de Beauchamp, who married Geoffrey de Say, Admiral of the King's fleet. This lineage shows how many of the ancestors are connected by marriage, and their descent from a Magna Charta Baron. Geoffrey de Say (Magna Charta Baron). Geoffrey de Say, d. 1230, had by wife, Lady Alice (daughter and coheiress of John do Cheney), William de Say, Governor of the Castle at Rochester, time of King Henry. William d. 1272 and was succeeded by his son, William de Say, who had w'ith others in the twenty-second year of the reign of Edwarri II summons to advise with the King upon affairs of the realm, and subsequently did military duty in Gascony. He d. 1295 and was succeeded by his son, Geoffrey de Say, then only fourteen years old, whose wardship was given to William, first Baron de I^eyburn, in order that he might marry Idonea. daughter of said William. In the seventh year of Edward III he had summons to Parliament as a Baron. He died 1322. having issue bv Lady Idonea, who became a rich heiress, inheriting her uncle's and her father's, brothers' and nieces' vast estates. Geoffrey de Say, second Baron, being of age, nineteenth year of Edward II, he had livery of his lands and was summoned to Parliament (Edward.) He was constituted Admiral of the [85] King's fleet, :ind was constantly in service with the wars of France and Flanders, d. 15 13. He married Maud, daughter -of Guy de Beauchamp, second Earl of Warwick, and his wife, Lady Alice de Toni. Geoffrey de Say and the Lady Maud had Lacy Idonea de vSay, who married Sir John, third Lord Clinton of Maxtock, Governor of Warwick Castle. This Lord Clinton is descended from a Magna Charta Baron, being Robert Fitz- Walter. RoHEUT Fttz- Waiter (Magna Charta Baron). RoberL was called the Marshal of the Army of God, who headed the confederate Barons. William Long Sword (so named as he wore a sword the same length as the King, natural son of Henry I and Fair Rosomond), married Ela, Countes^ of Salisbury, had issue by the Countess Ela, Ida, fourth daugh- ter, which Ida married R obert Fitz- Walter and had issue,, Robert Fitz- Walter Fitz-Robert. The last named had daugh- ter, Ela, who married Sir William de Odingsells and had daughter, Ida, who married John de; Clintdn of Amington, summoned to Parliament (1299) as Baron Clinton. The pres- ent title is Duke of Newcastle. Sir John de Clinton had two sons, one was created Earl of Huntington, the other Lord Clinton, second Lord Clinton. His son, John, third Lord Clinton, married Idonea de Say, eldest daughter of Geoffrey de Say, Lord Say and Sele, and granddaughter maternally of Guy de Beauchanip, Earl of Warwick, and coheir of her brother, William de Say. Lord Clinton had three sons by Idonea, also daughter, Lady Margaret, married to Baldwin de Montfort, Knight, and had Sir William de Montfort, who married Margaret Peche, granddaughter of Sir John Peche and daughter of Sir John Peche, d. 1386, had issue Sir Bald- win de Montfort, Knight, b. 1445, d. 1475. He married Joana Vernon and had Robert de Montfort of Bescote, Staffordshire, and Monkspath, Warwickshire, who had Catherine Montfort. bis heiress, who married Sir George Booth, eldest son of Sir William Booth of Dunham Massie, County Chester, Higll Sheriflf of Chester for life, and wife, Maud, daughter of John Dutton of Dutton, Chesshire, and had Sir William Booth, eldest son, d. November o, 1520, who- had by his second wife, Ellen, daughter of Sir John Montgomery of Trenly, Stafiford- shire, Jane Booth. She became widow of Hugh, who was son of Sir Pier de Dutton, married, secondly. Thomas Hol- ford, County Chester and had Dorothy Holford, who was second wife of Sir John Bruen of Bruen Stapleford, County [86] Chester, b. 1510, d. May 14, 1580, and had John Bruen, eldest son, baptized 1560, died January 18, 1626, buried at Tarvin, being of the Bruens of Tarvin. He had by third wife a daug-h- tcr, Alarie, who with her half brother, Obadiah, came to America and married John Baldwin, Sr., of Milford, Ccwm. Marie had daughter by John Baldwin, Abagail, who' married Samuel Baldwin, son of Nathaniel Baldwin of Milford, Conn. They had son, Captain Nathaniel Baldwin, under whose name his djescendanl, Blanche Evelyn Baldwin, who married John McGaw of England, has become a Colonial Dame of America, the order founded in Washington. Captain Nathaniel's sfran-d- s'm, Samuel, is the ancestor of whom Blanche Evelyn Baldwin (McGaw) was admitted to the Daughters of the Revolution. [ 87 From Guizot History of England. During the Cromwellian period the royalists wished to place the Stuarts again upon the throne, and great supervision was exercised; many great nobles hesitated, the King at Calais not daring to venture in England. In some place alone in Cheshire a plain country gentleman, more bold than other compatriots, William Booth, raised the royal standard and organized the struggle against the republic. Among them was the Earl ol Derby, who, with Sir William Booth, was placed in the Tower, Vv'hich was filled with royalists. England. The ancient Norman keep, built by the de Veers and de Clares, is still standing, situated at Headingham, near the head-waters of the Colne. The great keep of Headingham is the finest relic of Norman and civil architecture in England. It is in the valley of the Stour, near Essex and Suffolk. [88] John Beuetst. The life of John Bruen has been pubHshed three times. He was a great philanthropist, and his home, Stapleford Hall, was the refuge of many noble families suffering from religious per- secutions. His generosity was colossal ; he supplied the poor of three oarishes with wool from his mills. His home was a seat of education in religious matter. He was Calvinistic in principle. In his religious zeal he demolished the arms and stained-glass windows of his ancestors. He was the eldest oi thirteen children, and he divided the estate among them. Th• Corrupted into Ouvin, Ovin. Ouvrier, a chief. ) Thus the definition of Baldwin being the chief, or keeper, or the chief-keeper of the royal stag-hounds. [101 I One of the best known royal Baudouvins was called " bras de fer." In A. D., 862, he then being the hereditary chief-forester of Harle- beck, in Flanders, was created the sovereign Count of Flanders, and, subsequently, Count of Artois, by his father-in-law, Charles le Hardi, King of the Franks, to whose daughter, Judith, he was the third husband, when he became known as Baudovier, or Baudouvin /, first Count of Flanders of his line, and d. in 879. From him was descended Baldwin, Count of Hainault, in the 13th century. Baudouvin, {Baudwin, or Baldwin /.), Count of Flanders, was the son of Odoacre, the son of Engueraud, or Ingelran, the son of Lyderick, all hereditary chief-foresters of Harlebeck. The proprietary Counts of Ardres, and of Ghisnes, or Guines, had also in their lands been " baudouviers," or keepers of the stag- hounds ; hence Baudwin, or Baldwin, is a common name in their families. But, philologists will differ ! Of the authorities on surnames. Gentry derives Baldwin from the compound of bald (Anglo-Saxon), pronounced " bawld," mean- ing bold, and win, (A.-S.), meaning a (successful) contest, or battle. And from this Baldwin is defined " bold in battle." Anderson, another authority, brings Baldwin from the old German " balde," and also says it means "bold in battle." Ferguson says Baldwin is derived from the combination of *' bald" and "win." That as a designative term it was " baldwin " in the 8th century, A. D., and in Anglo-Saxon was Baldwine; in early English, Baldwin ; in Dutch, Boudewyn ; in early French, Baudouin ; and Italian, Baldovino. He says it is a compound of bald, baldo, baudo. Old German, of 4th century, ^:. D., or the Anglo-Saxon bold, which equalled the Latin " fortis," a brave, or warrior, and wine or win. Old German for " friend," therefore Baldwin may have been " brave friend." The word " bald " is the most common in the compound words. It is claimed that Baldwin is derived from the Irish word '-balbhan," i. e., the stammerer, or silent one, the roots being "^a/M," (Irish), to stammer; (hence the French " balbutier," to stammer), and "«;/," (Irish), one who. That is, ^^ balbhan," or *'balwin;' or Baldwin, is " one who stammers, hesitates." [ 102] In the 14th century this designation came to be used in the Fitzmaurice family in Ireland. Thomas-balbhan Fitzmaurice, eighth Lord of Kerry, it is presumed, was responsible for a " Baldwin ' ' family on his estate ! In connection with these two widely different derivations of Baldwin, it is interesting to note that " Henry-balbhan was a ranger of woods in Shorpshire ; that is, he did police duty in the public forest, being a knight, or, at least, a squire. He had by his wife. Lady Eleanor Herbert, (daughter of Sir Edward Herbert, Kt. of Red Castle, second son of the first Lord Pembroke, by his wife, Lady Anne Paer, or Parr, a sister of Queen Catherine, the last wife of Henry the VIIL), three sons, who went to Ireland and acquired lands by grant and purchase, in Co. Cork, time of Elizabeth, and founded the Baldwin family there — the representative of which is James Baldwin, "The O'Baldwin," as he is called, residing at 21 Green Park, Bath, England. His arms are : "Ar, a chev., erm. bet. 3 hazel sprigs, vert." Crest : " A squirrel sejant or. holding a hazel sprig, vert." Another large Baldwin family in Ireland derives its surname by gift from the Crown ! An ancestor was obliged to accept it at the time of the Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland. Chief O'Mulligan, hereditary bard and historian to the royal house of O'Reilly, and chieftain of Tir MacCaerthian, in Tir Connell, Donegal, was commanded to assume the surname " Bald- win," and Chief O'Mulligan, in Oo. Tyrone, had to take the name " Molineux." In England there are Huguenot families named Baudevin, Baudoin, Baudovin, Bauldevin, Bauldouin. Charles H, Browning. It will be noticed the Irish coat-of-arms are similar to those of the English Baldwin of Co. Bucks. [ 103] AMERICAN ANCESTRY— Continued. Captain John Stanley, b. Eng.; m. Sarah Scott, Decem- ber 5, 1645, d^"' o^ Thomas and Anne Scott of Guildford. had Deacon John Stanley, b. November 4, 1647, at Farming- ton, Conn.; d. May 16, 1729; m. Novem- ber 18, i66q, Hester Newell, dau. of Thom.as Newell. had Timothy Stanley, b. June 6, 1689; d. November 28, 1761, at Farmington, Conn.; m. 1718, Martha Smith. had Mercy Stanley, b. 1726; d. 1768; m. November 28, 1774, Samuel Baldwin. John Parmelee, b. in England, came to Guildford, 1639, to Hartford, Conn., 1650, made his will and left large estate to son, November 8, 1659. John Parmelee, also b. in England; m. Hannah . Isaac Parmelee, b, 1665. in Guildford, Conn.; d. January 3, 1749; m. Elizabeth Hiland. Elizabeth Parmelee, b. January 30, 1697; d. March 14, 1786, at Goshen, Conn ; m. Captain Nathaniel Baldwin of Goshen, Conn. had had had had had Ebenezer Hill, b. at Wallingford, Conn.; m. January 3, 17 1 6, Martha Dibble. Ebenezer Hill, b. October 24, 17 17, at Wallingford, Conn.; m. May 27, 1741, Elizabeth Bald- win. Ambrose Hill, b. March 21, 1744; m. October 10, 1764, Lucia Beach. Lucina Hill, b. August 5, 1767; m, Samuel Baldwin of the revolution in 1782. Thomas Scott was one of the original 25 planters of Hartford, Connecticut. Captain John Stanley served and had active service in King Philip's War, and was also Representative. The last Samuel here is son of Samuel who is son of Captain Nathaniel Baldwin, and the latter's grandmother was Marie Bruen. i^on 'a^nilvf ^eooTd ^B S