Page:A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Colonial Gentry Vol 2.djvu/438

 812 BURKE'S COLONIAL GENTRY. Arms — Az. six annulets or three two and one. Crest — Two arms in armour proper^ grasping an annulet or. Motto — Sans changer. Mesidence — Port Moresby, British New Guinea. jHaitin* EDWARD MARTIN, of Ballinahinch, Hamilton, Canada, one of Her Majesty's Counsel, D.C.L., bencher of the Law Society of Upper Canada, h. 3rd October, 1834; m. 2nd December, 1862, Mariana Mary, third daughter of Charles Ozon Counsell, of Hamilton, Canada, by Mariana, his wife, youngest daughter of George Stringer, and by her has issue, I. Edward Kirwan Counsell, barrister-at-law, &. 5th February, 1864 ; m. 7th April, 1891, Mabel Frances, second daughter of the Right Rev. Charles Hamilton, D.D., D.C.L., Bishop of Niagara, and Frances Louisa Hume, his wife, youngest daughter of Deputy Commissary- General Tauuatt Huston Thomson, and has issue, Edward Austin Hamilton, 6. 23rd January, 1892. Vera Kathleen Craigie. II. Archer Evans Stringer, barrister-at-law, of Victoria, British Columbia, h. 6th May, 1865 ; m. 3rd July, 1889, Emily Mary, second daughter of John Breakenridge Read, barrister-at-law, of Osgoode Hall, Toronto, Ontario (and Roxana Caroline, his wife, third daughter of Norman Ballard, of Picton, co. Prince Edward, Ontario), and niece of David Breakenridge Read, Q.C, of an LTnited Empire Loyalist family, and has issue, 1. Archer D'Arcy Counsell, h. 4th December, 1890. 2. Edward Oliver Carew, I. 7th August, 1892. in. D'Arcy Richard Charles, barrister-at-law, h. 3rd December, 1869. IV. Alexis Francis Ramsay, Lieutenant 10th Royal Grenadiers, h. 19th November, 1871. V. Frederick John Strange, h. 23rd August, 1875. I. Ethel Mary Sylvia, m. 5th June, 1890, Lawrence Heyden Baldwin, barrister-at-law, seventh son of William Augustus Baldwin, of Mash- quoteh, co. York, Upper Canada, and nephew of the Hon. Robert Baldwin, C.B., of Spadina, co. York, Premier and Attorney-General of Upper Canada, and has issue. II. Amy Louisa Theodora. III. Mary Clendinning O'Donnell. Hiiuaae. The old Anglo-Norman house of Mabtis of Galway, is descended from one of the officers who accouipanicd De Burgh, the ancestor of the noble family of Clanriearde, to Ireland, ttmp. Henb^ II, and upon the conquest of Gahvav, settled there. The family, which in Geoffry Lynch's MS. (T.C.I).), written nearly two centuries and a county by two houses, of nntnown seniority, tliat of Ross, and thnt of Tillyra Castle. 'Ihis latter was, though Roman Catholic, by special dispensation of the Act of Anne, because of the relief and protectinn afforded to Protestants, the only Papist family, recognised by statute, as then entitled to hold lands. The family of Ballinahincli Castle of half ago, is discribed even then as being | which we treat, is a bra:ich of the house of ancient in Gal way, is now represented in that I Ross, but it so quickly orersliadowed the