Page:A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Colonial Gentry Vol 2.djvu/104

 48(5 BURKE'S COLONIAL GENTRY. I. Ellzn, /-. mil January, 1792, d. 2nd July, 1795. Caplain Dalgelv m. secondly, at BidefortI, CO. Devon, Hit! a-y. 17!)7, F.Iiza, daughter of lldraund SM.r,E, of Bideford, and by Ler (wbo (/. lltli iVovembcr, 18.39) had issue, T. Jolm Suiale, Provost-Marsh.al-Genernl of Honduras, and private secretary to Major-General vSir Francis Cockburn, h. i2th Julv, 1798, d. tinm. 1st July, 1832, aged 3+. Ti. Frederick Henry, major in the amiy and payuiasterof dejiots and battalions, Chatham, b. 13th March, 1S03 ; (/. nnm. 13th August. 1S56. TIT. James William, lieutenant-colonel, I. nth January. 1805; m. 2Sth April, 1810, Cbarlotte, daughter of Edmund Nathaniel William FoETEscrE, of Fal- lowpit, before mentioned, and d. 28th November, 1869, having by her, who d. 13tli June. 18S*n, had issue, a son, Colonel Keginald Williinn D.^LfiETT, C.B., 711. 1877, K'ite, widow of W. S. Elderton. Tin. Samuel Gonucnnan, Lieutenant in the 45th Eegiment of Foot, I. 2nd March, 1807 ; m. in New South Wales, Elizabeth Wiseman, of Wisc- mnn's Ferry, Hawkesbui-y River, New South Wales (who d. at Sydney, 8th February, 1878), and d. at Sydney, 15th July, 1852, having had issue, four daughters. IX. Edmund Augustus, liieutenant 17th Eegiment of F'oot, h. 29th December, 1810, d. vnm. 9th October, 1886. II. Eliza Morrison, I. 4th June, 1800 ; m. Lieutenant-Colonel Henry SiM- jtosDS, of the St. Helena Eegiment (who d. 27th July, 1869), and d. 7th November. 1871. III. Dorothy Mary Jnne, h. 17th October, 1808 ; m'. 4th October, 1833, Samuel Arms — Gu. a swan arg. gorged with a collar gemel az. within a bordure of the second, charged with four thistles two in chief and two in base slipped ppr. Crext — A lion ramp, guard, gu., gorged with a wreath of oak or supporting a shield arg. thereon a thistle slipped ])pr. 3Iofto — Vineit qui patitur. Ses'denre — Lockerley Hall. East Tytherley, Hants. Chili — Oriental, Union, and City, in London, and Melbourne, in Melbourne. Moore, of Bond's Glen, co. London- derry, fourth son of Joseph Moore, of the same place, by Anne, his first wife, the dauiihter of FtETCHEB, merchant of the city of London, and d. 1st November, 1877, having long suiwived her husband, who d. at Oakover, Swan Eiver, Western Aus- tralia, 4th July, 1819. They had issue {.lee Moore of Fremantle). iv. .Mary Smale, A. 2nd October, 1812; d. 27th January, 1815, and was buried in the Tower of London. Captain Dalgety d. 17th May, 1827, and was buried at Bideford, co. Devon. His eldest surviving son, LiErTE>.'ANT Alexaxdeh Dalgett, of the 89th Regiment of Foot, was h. 23rd September, 1788; m. first, 30th December, 1815, Eliza DoKIDGE, of Bideford, co. Devon, and br her (who d. 19th July, 1843, aged 53) had issue, I. Feedebick Gon>erman, late of Lockerley Hall. II. Alexaudcr, b. 11th July, 1820, d. at sea, inth September. 1834. m. William John, b. lltli Aitgust, 1827, d. 23rd November, 1834. IV. Richard Butler, b. 1st August, T. Edmund Simraonds, b. 28th 1835, d. unm. in New Zealand, March, 18f;7. I. Dorothy Jane, b. 4th October, d. vni)}. 7th December, 1812. He m. secondly, 16th September, 1844, Mary Chanter, daughter of John C'AWSEr, of Bide- ford, and by her had issue, TI. Alexander William, of Kensinaton House, Pie 'son Eoad. St. Heliers, Jersey, b. 27th May, 1846. Lieutenant Alexander Dalgety d. at Bideford, 18th May, 1853, ajed 64. " His widow m. secondly, Thomas HcXTABLE, of Bideford, and d. 4th July, 1888. 1833. Miiv, 18th 1822, 33o^>ti. THE LATE HON. JOHN BOYD, of the city of St. John, New Bruns- Ti'ick, Canada, Lieutenant-GoTernor of New Brunswick, h. 28th September, 1828, m. 4th September, 1852, Annie E., daughter of Cereno P. Jones, of Weymouth, Nova Scotia, and d. s. j'. 4th December, 1893. Mr. Boyd's father lived at Magherafelt, co. Deny, Ireland, and his grand- father was an elder in the Covenanting Church of Scotland. His family came from Argyleshire, in the 17th century, with a colony of brave Presby- terians who had resisted unto blood during the stormy period of the death of the Marquess of Aigyll, and were the men who founded the prosperity of the