Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 6.djvu/377

 12 s. vi. jra 19, 1920.] NOTES AND QUERIES.

309'

(ii.) Thomas Edward Fitzgerald, born 1829.

(iii.) Francis Augustus Fitzgerald, born 1834. died Jan. 20, 1903, at Seafield House. Monkstown, co. Dublin. W ill dated July 25, 1900 ; proved July, 1903. A captain in the 12th Regt. He married Mary Charlotte,

dau. of of - and by her left issue a

son, Thomas Edward Joseph Fitzgerald.

ii. Francis Fitzgerald, born 1784, died Apr. 22, 1810, at Dawlish Lodge, co. Devon, and buried in Kilmead churchyard, co. Kildare. Monumental inscription says : " Died in the 26th year of his age."

iii. Mary Fitzgerald, born July 1, 1780, died Aug. 3, 1806, and buried in Kilmead churchyard.

iv. Elizabeth Fitzgerald, died Jan. 14, 1856, buried in Kilmead churchyard.

v. Ann Fitzgerald, born 1793, died June 2, 1841, in the 48th year of her age, and buried in Kilmead churchyard.

vi. Rose Fitzgerald married Lawrence Strange.

4. Ann (Xancy) Fitzgerald, a professed nun of the King Street Nunnery, Dublin. Called Ann in her father's and brother's wills, ; died November, 1808.

5. Hester (Hessy) Fitzgerald, married May, 1785 (marriage licence dated. . . .1785), as his second wife, Peter Delamar of Lacken, co. Westmeath, High Sheriff, 1773, for co. Westmeath. He possessed the estates of Killeen, Knightswood and Rathlavanagh. He died 1805. (See 12 S. iii. 500 for Delamar of co. Westmeath.) |^ I

II. Walter Fitzgerald of Gurteen and Ballirogan, co. Kildare. Will undated ; probate granted June 15, 1803, to his son James Walter Fitzgerald, to whom he left his farm of Ballirogan, also farm of Gorteen and Clareen, farm of Castlerow, and his debentures on Athy Road. He married Bridget Purcell, and by her left issue :

1. James Walter Fitzgerald of Ballirogan, co. Kildare, who married, marriage licence dated June 22, 1799, Ellen Colgan of the

B^rish of Castlodermott in the diocese of ublin.

2. Catherine Fitzgerald,

3. Mary Fitzgerald.

4. Ellinor Fitzgerald.

5. Margaret Fitzgerald, married

O.Reilly.

6. Thomas Fitzgerald.

7. Bridget Fitzgerald.

III. Anne Fitzgerald, married Dunn

of co. Kildare and had issue :

1. Thomas Dunn, rented Leinster Lodge,

co. Kildare, and died about 1806 ; he mar- ried and had issue, two daughters.

2. Patrick Dunn, who married and had numerous issue.

IV. Maiy Fitzgerald, living in 1798 - r married Nicholas Warren of Killeen, Queen's co., son of Capt. Nicholas Warren of Corduff, co. Meath, and had issue :

1. James Warren of Killeen, Queen's Co. Will dated Nov. 15, 1797, was proved Jan. 26, 1798, in the Prerogative Court, Dublin. He married Clare, dau. of Thomas- Moore of Dublin, and had issue, with two- others :

1. Marcel! a Warren, married in 1811, Thomas, M.D.

2. Thomas Warren, who died in France, 1816-7. He married about 1794, Nancy Archdekin, and by her, who died ante 1816,- had eight children.

HENRY FITZGERALD REYNOLDS.

FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE : HAVERSTOCK HILL. (See 11 S. ii. 365; vi. 77), May I, as appropriate to the centenary of the - birth of this noble woman, again refer to the generally accepted belief that she once resided on Haverstock Hill ? No local history, or guide book, which I have con- sulted offers any information on the subject. It would be gratifying were we able to locate the house, or its site, the more so if a tablet could be erected thereon to chronicle so notable a circumstance. As we know, one exists on the walls of 10 South Street, Park Lane, where " The Lady of the Lamp " lived so long, and where she died in 1910.

CECIL CLARKE.

Junior Athenaeum Club.

LENGTHY SENTENCES IN ENGLISH AND FRENCH. The following paragraphs ap- peared in recent issues of The Manchester Guardian, and merit a less ephemeral existence than that journal could bestow upon them :

" In his recently published life of John Payne, Mr. Thomas Wright says that a sentence of Payne's, containing 603 words, is probably the longest sentence in the language. This falls short of the sentence by Hazlitt described in Meikle- john's ' Art of Writing English ' as ' probably the longest sentence in any author, ancint or modern.' Writing of Coleridge in ' The Spirit of ' the Age,' Hazlitt spun out a sentence of one hundred and ten lines, with only one semicolon to- break it. Lamb's favourite, ' that princely woman, the thrice-noble Margaret Newcastle,' beats even this record. In the Duchess of New- castle's ' True Belation of My Birth, Breeding, and Life,' will be found a sentence that extends-