A collection of historical and genalogical records
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Melanie/Michael:
I believe I am through?????????
Otherwise, I checked and found the zip file I sent to William. If you download it and save it to a sub-directory you would be able to get and index of names and individual entries by navigating in the sub-directory. I draw your attention to the notes/citations which give back-up as to where the material came from. Reliable are the birth, marriage and death entries in the Bishop's Transcripts (or the Parish Registers). Unfortunately, this is not always true with PAF: there is an enormous quantity of garbage put on the internet.
Note: I do not have Michael's private E-mail address (recommend you ask William to send it to me privately if you want the zip file).
Regards,
David
Greetings William: re.: Douglas/ Douglas- Willan Connection
Hopefully, this finds you well and prospering! I revisited your site after an absence of several years and offer the following as my genealogical swan song.
If you remember the ascendancy of Lt. Gen. Robert Douglas, R.A., Col. Commandant of the Royal Artillery, who died in 1827 was presented in an alleged petition, by his sisters Christian and Jean Douglas, dated 1779. My efforts to trace the petition have been unsuccessful and it had occurred to me that an unscrupulous individual might have concocted the pedigree to favour his chances of being reimbursed by the family! However, I have been able to conclusively validate the petition pedigree to the extent that the father of Lt. Gen. Robert Douglas, R.A. who died in 1827 was indeed Robert Douglas of the Chatham Marines who died on March 28, 1783 as Major, was promoted next day, and buried April 4, as Lt. Col- he was born about 1710. His wife was an unknown Mary. Note: Your archives (reproducing my raw notes) have the above Lt. General Robert Douglas as Sir [SIC] Robert Douglas- which is incorrect- he was not knighted.
Per the pedigree, his father is said to have been a certain Lt. James Douglas of Albemarle’s who died young at Gibraltar. I have been able to validate that Katharine Douglass [SIC] of Edinburgh died March 26, 1773, was the widow of Lieutenant James Douglass of the 29th of Foot [Albemarles] that their daughter was Christian Douglass and that she was owed five pounds Sterling as a quarters pension due to her as an officer’s widow which sum is in the hands of { } in Abbington Street London agent for the defunct. Note: Between 1731 and June 5, 1733 the colonelcy of the 29th of Foot was given to William Anne, Earl of Albemarle and that the regiment was at Gibraltar from 1727 to 1745.
So the pedigree is accurate to the extent that Lt. James Douglas(s) of the 29th foot existed as did his daughter Christian but I have not been able to establish that he and his wife Katherine were the parents of Lt. Col. Robert Douglas of the Chatham Marines.
The key would be to find the petition; parenthetically, to what source might a pre- computer age early-20th. century genealogist have gone to establish the pedigree in the first place????
Kind regards and thank you for making your site available,
David
Genealogical swan song? I hope not!
It is said that 'Old genealogists never die, they just fade away', but I hope that young genealogists may take over the mantle. And I am not young!
Thank you for these further insights. I still have an unfinished bit of work on the Willan family on my desktop. There always seems to be something more pressing. But I did enjoy exploring the family and the Douglas connections, and looking back through previous posts in the section remnded me how much work has been done..
As for General Robert, I will removed his knighthood!
At this point, I have not checked whether I have all the other information recorded in other places, but will get onto that soon.
With best wishes, and thanks,
William
William, would you please give David my email address.
Michael
Done
The more information you can give about the people you mention, the more chance there is of someone else connecting with your family.
Dates and places of births, deaths and marriages all help to place families.
Professions also help.
'My great-grandmother mother was a Douglas from Montrose' does not give many clues to follow up! But a bit of flesh on the bones makes further research possible. But if we are told who she married, what his profession was and where the children were baptised, then we can get to work.
Maybe it is time to update the information in your profile?
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