Ancestry of Camilla Rosemary Parker Bowles, nee Shand (some

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Richard

Ancestry of Camilla Rosemary Parker Bowles, nee Shand (some

Legg inn av Richard » 18 feb 2005 01:01:02

Hello Mr Reitwiesner (et al.),

As I see that our research into the ancestry of Mrs Parker Bowles is
converging, I would like to contribute my findings on the ancestry of this
lady. I am hoping to write an article for publication on her ancestry, so I
hope not to tread on anyone's toes in this regard. I shall certainly
acknowledge my sources, including the help of people such as yourself (and
the people you give credit to), as well as my correspondents over the years,
such as Leo van de Pas, etc.

I shall put in caps the names of people I have in my database in addition to
what you have published on your website (just updated yet again I see, as we
carry on our work separately, leading, naturally, to many of the same
findings [or so one hopes!]). Then you can refer to the lengthier Ancestor
Table (Ahnenreihe) below. There are also plenty of items of interest to add
to the data of ancestors whose names I have not capitalised. On occasion, I
have drawn your attention to additional details of interest, or particularly
important corrections (to a Canadian at least!).

As for the Loyalist ancestors of Mrs Parker Bowles, many of their
descendants would place U.E. after their names, a designation standing for
Unity of the Empire, which was allowed by Order-in-Council (if memory serves
in the absence of my reference work on the subject, currently in storage,
preparative for moving house)..


First Generation (Subject or Praeposita)
1. Camilla Rosemary Shand

Second Generation (Subject's Parents)
2. Bruce Middleton Hope Shand
3. Rosalind Mary Cubitt

Third Generation (Subject's Grandparents)
4. Philip Morton Shand
5. Edith Marguerite Harrington
6. Roland Calvert Cubitt
7. Sonia Mary Keppel

Fourth Generation (Subject's Great-Grandparents)
8. Alexander Faulkner Shand
9. Augusta Mary Coates
10. George Woods Harrington
11. Alice Edith Stillman
12. Henry Cubitt
13. Maud Marianne Cubitt
14. The Hon. George Keppel
15. Alice Frederica Edmonstone

Fifth Generation (Subject's Great-Great-Grandparents)
16. Hugh Morton Shand
17. Edrica Faulkner
18. Charles Coates
19. Sarah Clegg Hope
20. Henry Harrington
21. Eliza Woods
22. Frederick or Thomas Stillman
23. Ann NN
24. George Cubitt
25. Laura Joyce
26. Archibald Motteux Calvert
27. Constance MARIA GEORGIANA Peters
28. William Coutts Keppel
29. Sophia Mary MacNab
30. Sir William Edmonstone, 4th Baronet
31. Mary ELIZABETH Parsons

Sixth Generation (Subject's Great-Great-Great-Grandparents)
32. Alexander Garden Shand
33. Isabella Morton
34. Joshua Wilson Faulkner (SOMETIME PORTRAIT PAINTER, SEE DNB AND OXFORD
DNB)
35. ELIZABETH SUSANNA JONES
36. WILLIAM HENRY COATES
37. SARAH SHIPTON
38. Samuel Hope
39. Rebekah Bateman
40. Isaac Harrington
41. Sarah NN
42. John Woods
43. Sarah NN
44. Male Stillman
45. Female NN
46. Male NN
47. Female NN
48. Thomas Cubitt
49. Mary Anne Warner
50. The Rev. James Joyce
51. Sarah Brakspear
52. Charles Calvert
53. Jane Rowley
54. William Peters
55. Marianne Jane Bonham
56. George Thomas Keppel
57. Susan Trotter
58. Sir ALLAN Napier MacNab, 1st (and last) Baronet. The Hero of Upper
Canada in the War of 1812 against the American Invaders. See both the
Canadian Dictionary of National Biography and the British DNB (including
updates). Nota Bene: the spelling of his Christian name; also he was Prime
Minister not of Upper Canada, which was abolished after Lord Durham's famous
report after the rebellions in Upper and Lower Canada, but of the United
Province of the Canadas (commonly called "The Canadas" at the time, of which
there was a lower division into Canada East composed of the former Lower
Canada which became a separate jurisdiction once more, i.e. the province of
Quebec, at Confederation in 1867, while Canada West, the former Upper Canada
became the province of Ontario at Confederation).
59. Mary Stuart
60. Sir Charles Edmonstone, 2nd Baronet
61. Louisa Hotham
62. Lt-Col. John Whitehill Parsons, C.M.G.
63. Mary Elizabeth Dewar

Seventh Generation (Subject's Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandparents)
64. WILLIAM SHAND
65. HELEN OGILVIE
66. HUGH MORTON
67. ELIZABETH GILMOUR
68. WILLIAM FAULKNER
69. ELIZABETH TORR
70. Male Jones
71. Female NN
72. Male Coates
73. Female NN
74. Male Shipton
75. Female NN
76. William Hope
77. Mary Jones
78. Thomas Bateman
79. Female NN
80. Isaac Harrington
81. Sarah Elsden
82-95 untraced ancestry of Ann wife of Frederick/Thomas Stillman
96. Jonathan Cubitt
97. Agnes Scarlett
98. Samuel Warner
99. Female NN
100. Jeremiah Joyce
101. Female NN
102. Robert Brakespear
103. Sarah Hayward
104. Felix Calvert
105. Elizabeth Ladbroke
106. Sir William Rowley, 2nd Baronet
107. Susanna Edith Harland
108. Henry Peters
109. Charlotte Mary Morrison
110. Henry Bonham
111. Charlotte Elizabeth Morrice
112. William Charles Keppel
113. Elizabeth Southwell
114. Sir Coutts Trotter, 1st Baronet
115. Margaret Gordon
116. ALLAN MacNab
117. Anne Napier
118. John Stuart
119. Sophia Jones
120. Sir Archibald Edmonstone, 1st Baronet
121. Susanna Mary Harenc
122. Beaumont Hotham, 2nd Baron Hotham
123. Susannah Hankey
124. Male Parsons
125. Female NN
126. MAJOR-GENERAL DAVID DEWAR, OF GILSTON HOUSE, FIFE
127. MARY CUTLER (SHE MARRIED FIRST JAMES DEWAR OF VOGRIE, AND AFTER HIS
DEATH, HIS DEWAR KINSMAN)

I have employed NN to stand for unknown surnames, from the genealogist's
Latin term, Nomen Nescio. I expect you are quite familiar with that term
already. Of course, I may be proved wrong in referring to the unidentified
male parents of known offspring by the supposed birth surname of their
progeny, as they could be illegitimate, adopted, or subjects of surname
changes, etc., but it's a handy tag. Normally, I eschew including unknowns
to the greatest extent reasonable, as I see fit.

I hope this comes as a welcome contribution to this study.

Sincerely,

Richard Carruthers, M.A., Oxon.
Vancouver, British Columbia, CANADA

P.S.
Caveat Lector!!!
As you can see below, I have not yet correlated with my data all the
additional material that you have found and published. In some instances, I
have yet to add the exact source of what I have gleaned from your data as I
am in media res.
I have also omitted titles in most instances below, because the programme I
am using to generate the following report, FTM version 11, distinguish
between prenominal and post-nominal titles, and designations, and so does
not automatically place them properly, creating lots of solecisms when I
include them. Where I have included such items, this is due to my making
space for them (somehow!) in the name field, after placing a comma to
separate them from the actual name. I use this as a handy spot in which to
space descriptors, which are often mental notes to myself, or copied from
Burke, etc. I know that TMG does this more elegantly, but I have yet to
master it.
No doubt, this report ought to have been edited carefully before my posting
it, but I am rushing to make this contribution before the topicality and
freshness of my information decreases. I do hope that I have not breached
any copyright laws in publishing what is purely for the love of genealogical
scholarship. I cut my eye teeth on the ancestry of the current Prince of
Wales, and corresponded as a youth with Arthur Addington, the literary
executor of Gerald Paget, adding the ancestry of the late Princess of Wales
when that engagement was announced in my final year at boarding school.
There may also be corrections required for some items, due, for instance, to
the findings of M. Denis Beauregard, as you have acknowledged. Please excuse
any missing diacritics. I am currently unable to add or correct them due to
a computing problem.
I would like to acknowledge the kindness of my friend Dr R.D. Dunn, retired
professor of English, and Mertonian, who lent me his book on the Monuments
of Merton College Chapel, Oxford.
I hope I haven't forgotten anything crucial. Fingers crossed.

P.P.S.
The file was refused as too large, so I am resending the longer format
report in parts.

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