Wednesday, September 3, 2014

The tenth Duke of Manchester's property's, Just a few as you can see MANDY, and Nell have many property's.

His Grace, The 10th Duke of Manchester property's, more to be added from California,New York, Kenya, Mandeville Jamaica. Los Angeles, many places in Europe and London, Pebble Beach Ca, Ontario Canada, a very extensive estate and property list.


 Knowle Park: Granted to Drogo de Montacuto as tenant in chief for King William I in Doomsday Book for Somersetshire 1086.
2. Bishopstone: 1 hide of land (approx 100 acres) as under- tenant for Robert of Mortain. (Somerset)
3. Sherborne Castle: Custodian
4. Beaumaris Castle: Custodian (Dorset)
5. Berkingham Castle: Custodian (Devon)
6. Yardlington: (Somerset)
7. Donyat: held as under-tenant of Robert of Mortain, later granted in fee simple. This became the family seat of the Earls of Salisbury. (Somerset)
8. Various other very small holdings which were held as tenancys of either the King or Robert of Mortain. (Dorset, Devon, Kent, Norfolk, Oxfordshire)

The Montacuto/Montagus lost all their holdings in 1400 with the attainer of John Montagu, who was beheaded for treason against the crown. The only property returned to his son Thomas in 1461 was Donyat, the family seat.

There are two properties which have come to be associated with the Earls of Salisbury, but in fact had nothing to do with them.

CASTLE MONTACUTE: This was the personal holding and seat of the Robert, Earl of Mortain, half-brother of William I.

YOEVIL: Belonged to Robert of Mortain (Buckinghamshire)
This property is often mentioned as a possible connection between the Earls of Salisbury and the Boveney Montague family, but there is no historic connection between the Salisbury Montagus and this estate.

Ladde/Montagu: Earls of Manchester, Baron Montagu of Kimbolton, Earls of Sandwich, Baron Hinchingbrooke, Baron Montagu of Boughton, Dukes of Manchester, Dukes of Montagu.

1. Boughton House: Purchased by Edward Montagu in 1428 from St. Edmundsbury Abbey. (Northamptonshire) (Family Seat)
2. Kimbolton Castle: Purchased by Henry Montagu Earl of Manchester, in 1615 from the Wingfeild Family. (Huntingdonshire)
3. Hinchingbrooke: Purchased from Oliver Cromwell,the uncle of Lord Protector Cromwell, by Henry Montagu, Earl of Manchester in 1627 for his brother the Earl of Sandwich. (Huntingdonshire)
4. Hemington Manor: Purchased in 1486 by Thomas Montagu. (Northamptonshire)
5. Montagu House: Built by Ralph Montagu, 1st Duke of Manchester in 1675, became the London Museum (Bloomsbury, London)
6. Ditton Park: Inherited by Ralph Montagu in 1688. (Buckinghamshire)
7. Barnwell Manor: Purchased by Sir Edward Montagu in 1540. (Northamptonshire)
8. Beaulieu Palace: Inherited by Ralph Montagu in 1690, now the home of the Montagu-Scott-Douglas', Dukes of Buccleuch. ** This is the estate that everyone visits, where the Montagu Coat of Arms are displayed in a fine tapestry, as well as a beautiful illustrated family tree.
9. Various small holdings granted by the king.

Boveney Montague Family: (Buckinghamshire)

There is only one property attributed to this family.

Lambard Manor: Home of the Boveney Montague family from 1560 to approximately 1650. Estate belonged to Thomas Grove who willed it to his daughter Anne in 1558. Anne's mother Margaret Grove (Malthous) married William Montague in 1560, at which time William moved into the estate. Anne died in 1665, and per Thomas Grove's will the Manor and estate passed to his nephew William Grove, who rented the property to the Montague's for twenty-six shillings, eight pence a year. At some point the Montague's must have purchased the estate; because the name is changed to 'Mountagues Lambards' and is so named in a will dated 1606 of one Thomas Eyre (PCC,40 Huddleston) in which he is leaving 40 acres of land purchased from William Montague, a parcel once belonging to 'Montague's Lambards' to his son.
I can find no further mention of the family at this estate after 1650, as attested by the muster rolls, and tax rolls, and a search of the extant parish registers proved fruitless.
Myrtle Hyde did a very complete study of this family, and per her article in the NEHG, Vol 142, 1988, Peter Montague and his wife Ellen Allen, appartently removed to Warfield, Berkshire by 1630, where they were assigned church seats in the parish church of Warfield.

George MONTAGU (6th Duke of Manchester.) - 1854 - ‎Read -





  • William Drogo Montagu was born at Kimbolton Castle on 15 October 1823, the eldest son of George Montagu, 6th Duke of Manchester. He was known as Lord Kimbolton from 1823 to 1843 and as Viscount Mandeville from 1843 to 1855.
    He was the M.P. (Conservative) for Bewdley from 1847 to 1852 and for Huntingdonshire from 1852 to 1855. He succeeded his father on 18 August 1855, taking his seat in the House of Lords as 7th Duke of Manchester.
    He married Countess Luise Friederike Auguste von Alten, daughter of Karl Franz Viktor, Graf von Alten of Hanover, in Hanover on 22 July 1852. They had five children.
    He died of peritonitis and dysentry in Naples on 22 March 1890. 




  • A native of Venice, Pellegrini was invited to England in 1708 by the British ambassador to Venice, Charles Montagu, later 1st Duke of Manchester

    In 1713 he finished the decoration of the chapel and the stair-well of the Duke of Manchester’s country house, Kimbolton Castle, for which he provided the Triumph of a Roman Emperor on the walls and Minerva, which includes a portrait of the patron upheld by putti on the ceiling (both in situ). Again, the light and radiant colours are indebted to Veronese; the scene of musicians playing a fanfare, painted in a triangular area, is brilliantly accomplished, both as an independent work and as part of the whole. Pellegrini’s third large-scale cycle from this period, probably done c. 1709–10, consists of a series of mythological canvases originally intended for Burlington House, London, and now in Narford Hall, Norfolk. Pellegrini enjoyed considerable success in England. He was popular with the aristocracy and was appointed one of the directors of Kneller’s Academy in 1711.

    In 1708, Charles Montagu (later 1st Duke of Manchester), the British ambassador extraordinary at Venice, invited Pellegrini and Marco Ricci to England. Pellegrini stayed until 1713. The visit was of decisive importance for him because he established himself as one of the most sought-after decorative painters in Europe during these years. His first work in England was probably the decoration (destr.) of the stair-well in the Duke of Manchester’s house in Arlington Street, London. In 1709, with Ricci, Pellegrini

    THE ROYAL DESCENTS OF THE DUKE AND DUCHESS OF MANCHESTER







    THE ROYAL DESCENTS
    OF
    THE DUKE AND DUCHESS OF MANCHESTER.
    WILLIAM I., King of England, had:
    Gundred, m. William de Warren, and had:
    William, Earl of Warren and Surrey, who had:
    Adeline,m. Henry, Prince of Scotland, and had:
    David, Earl of Huntingdon, who had:
    Isabel, m. Robert, Earl of Annandale, and had:
    Robert Bruce, Earl of Annandale, who had:
    Robert Bruce, Earl of Garrick, who had:
    Robert Bruce, King of Scotland, who had:
    Mary, m. Walter, Lord High Steward, and had:
    Robert II., King of Scotland, who had:
    Robert M., King of Scotland, who had:
    James I., King of Scotland, who had:
    Jean, m. George, Earl of Huntley, and had:
    Alexander, Earl of Huntley, who had:
    John, Lord Gordon, who had:
    George, Earl of Huntley, who had:
    George, Earl of Huntley, who had:
    George, Marquis of Huntley, who had:
    George, Marquis of Huntley, who had:
    Louis, Marquis of Huntley, who had:
    George, Duke of Gordon, who had:
    Alexander, Duke of Gordon, who had:
    Cosino, Duke of Gordon, who had:
    Alexander, Duke of Gordon, who had:
    Susan, m. Wm., Duke of Manchester, and had:
    George, Duke of Manchester, who had:
    William, Duke of Manchester, who had:
    George William Drogo Montague,
    eighth Duke of Manchester.
    HENRY I., King of France, had:
    Prince Hugh the Great, who had: Isabel, m. William de Warren, and had: Adeline, m. Henry, Prince ofScotland, and had: David, Earl of Huntingdon, who had: Isabel, m. Robert, Earl of Annandale, and had: -Robert Bruce, Earl of Annandale, who had: Robert Bruce, Earl of Garrick, who had: Robert Bruce, Kingof Scotland, who had: Margaret, m. Wm., Earl ofSutherland, and had: John, Earl of Sutherland, who had: Nicholas. Earl of Sutherland, who had: Robert, Earl of Sutherland, who had: Alexander Sutherland,of Dunheath, who had: Margaret, m. William, Earlof Orkney, and had: Marjory, m. Andrew, Lord Leslie, and had: William, Earl of Rothes, who had: George, Earl of Rothes, who had: Helen, m. Mark Ker, of Newbottle, and had: Mark, Earl of Lothian, who had: Jean, m. Hon. Robert Boyd, and had: James, eighth Lord Boyd, who had: William, Earl ofKilmarnock, who had: Robert Boyd, of Kilmarnock, who had: James Boyd, of Newburyport, Mass., who had: Frances, m. William Little, of Boston, and had: Maria Augusta, m. J. Clement, of La., and had: Ellen, m. Antonio Yznaga del Valle, and had' m. Consuelo Yznaga, of New York City.

    William Drogo Montagu, 7th Duke of Manchester, KP (15 October 1823 – 22 March 1890), known as Lord Kimbolton from 1823 to 1843[1] and as Viscount Mandeville from 1843 to 1855, was a British peer and Conservative Member of Parliament.


    William Montagu was born at Kimbolton Castle in 1823. He was the eldest son of George Montagu, 6th Duke of Manchester. His mother was Lady Millicent Sparrow, daughter of Brig. Gen. Robert Bernard Sparrow of Brampton Park, Huntingdonshire.[1]

    He was MP for Bewdley 1848–1852 and Huntingdonshire 1852–1855.[1]

    He joined the Canterbury Association on 27 May 1848. It was Edward Gibbon Wakefield's hope that Lord Mandeville would emigrate and be the aristocratic leader in the colony, but he did not go to New Zealand. Lord Mandeville and his grandmother, Lady Olivia Sparrow, both bought land in Riccarton, though. Between them, they held 500 acres (200 ha). Mandeville North near Kaiapoi is named after Lord Mandeville.

    EARLY RECORDS OF THE MANCHESTER'S ENGLISH MANORIAL ESTATES, BY, BOXALL CHARLES GERVAISE


    THE 7th EARL OF SANDWICH,



    John Montagu, 7th Earl of Sandwich

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Jump to: navigation, search
    The Right Honourable

    The Earl of Sandwich

    PC
    John William Montagu, 7th Earl of Sandwich.jpg
    The Earl of Sandwich.
    Captain of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms
    In office
    27 February 1852 – 17 December 1852
    MonarchVictoria
    Prime MinisterThe Earl of Derby
    Preceded byThe Lord Foley
    Succeeded byThe Lord Foley
    Master of the Buckhounds
    In office
    26 February 1858 – 11 June 1859
    MonarchVictoria
    Prime MinisterThe Earl of Derby
    Preceded byThe Earl of Bessborough
    Succeeded byThe Earl of Bessborough
    Personal details
    Born8 November 1811
    Died3 March 1884
    NationalityBritish
    Political partyConservative
    Spouse(s)(1) Lady Mary Paget
    (d. 1859)
    (2) Lady Blanche Egerton
    (d. 1894)
    Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
    John William Montagu, 7th Earl of Sandwich PC (8 November 1811 – 3 March 1884), styled Viscount Hinchingbrooke from 1814 to 1818, was a British peer and Conservative politician. He served under Lord Derby as Captain of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms in 1852 and as Master of the Buckhounds between 1858 and 1859.

    Background and education[edit source | editbeta]


    The Earl of Sandwich as a young man by Sir George Hayter.
    Montagu was the son of George Montagu, 6th Earl of Sandwich, and his wife Lady Louisa Mary Ann Julia Harriett, daughter of Armar Lowry-Corry, 1st Earl Belmore. He succeeded his father in the earldom in 1818 at the age of six. He was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.[1] While at Cambridge he played two first-class matches for the Cambridge University Cricket Club.[2]

    Political career[edit source | editbeta]

    Lord Sandwich served in the Earl of Derby's first administration as Captain of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms from February[3] to December 1852[4] and was admitted to the Privy Council the same year.[5] When the Conservatives returned to power under Derby in 1858 Sandwich was appointed Master of the Buckhounds,[6] an office he retained until the government fell the following year.[7] Apart from his political career he was also Lord-Lieutenant of Huntingdonshire between 1841 and 1884.

    Family[edit source | editbeta]

    Lord Sandwich married firstly Lady Mary Paget, daughter of Field Marshal Henry Paget, 1st Marquess of Anglesey, in 1838. After her death in 1859 he married secondly Lady Blanche Egerton, daughter of Francis Egerton, 1st Earl of Ellesmere, in 1865. He died in March 1884, aged 72, and was succeeded in his titles by his eldest son from his first marriage, Edward. The Countess of Sandwich died in 1894.

    References[edit source | editbeta]

    1. ^ Venn, J.; Venn, J. A., eds. (1922–1958). "Sandwich, John William (Montagu), Earl of". Alumni Cantabrigienses (10 vols) (online ed.). Cambridge University Press. 
    2. ^ Cricinfo: Earl of Sandwich
    3. ^ The London Gazette: no. 21297. p. 670. 2 March 1852.
    4. ^ The London Gazette: no. 21397. p. 3939. 31 December 1852.
    5. ^ The London Gazette: no. 21296. p. 633. 27 February 1852.
    6. ^ The London Gazette: no. 22106. p. 1207. 2 March 1858.
    7. ^ The London Gazette: no. 22279. p. 2472. 24 June 1859.
    Political offices
    Preceded by
    The Lord Foley
    Captain of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms
    1852
    Succeeded by
    The Lord Foley
    Preceded by
    The Earl of Bessborough
    Master of the Buckhounds
    1858–1859
    Succeeded by
    The Earl of Bessborough
    Honorary titles
    Preceded by
    The Duke of Manchester
    Lord Lieutenant of Huntingdonshire
    1841–1884
    Succeeded by
    The Duke of Bedford
    Peerage of England
    Preceded by
    George Montagu
    Earl of Sandwich
    1818–1884
    Succeeded by
    Edward George Henry Montagu

    My mother Lady Mary, was there she stated in fact, the marriage to Marion Johanna Stoner, When I was 20 and Marion Stoner was 33 with three kids and no money, and A X husband was A fraud marriage, Done by Marion Stoner to get Quick cash. The fact I was never in court or was I there would be a real thought! Marion Stoners article she stated she was with me two months. MARION STONER stated in her own article she was married before. THEN IN MARION'S COURT PAPERS MARION SAID SHE WAS NEVER MARRIED.