John H. Call1

M, #22167, b. circa 12 January 1852, d. 25 September 1934
     John H. Call was born circa 12 January 1852 in Newton, New Hampshire, (calculated from age at death.)1,2 He was the son of Henry Call and Harriet N. Williams.1 John H. Call married Sarah Hannah Sewall, daughter of William Harmon Sewall and Lydia Jane Moore, on 16 February 1887 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.1 John H. Call died on 25 September 1934 in Maine3 and is buried in First Baptist Church Cemetery, Kittery Point, York County, Maine.4

Citations

  1. [S232] Ancestry.com, New Hampshire, Marriage Records Index, 1637-1947.
  2. [S89] Family Search, New Hampshire Marriages, 1720-1920.
  3. [S89] Family Search, Nathan Hale Cemetery Collection, ca. 1780-1980.
  4. [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 200860994, John H. Call, showing gravestone photograph."

William Callan1

M, #15043, b. 16 September 1878, d. 28 June 1963
     William Callan was born on 16 September 1878 in Pennsylvania.2,3 He married Edith Brooks Sewall, daughter of Charles Joseph Sewall and Annie Brooks Wellman, on 24 June 1922.1 William Callan and Edith Brooks Sewall appear on the census of 1930 at Bronxville, Westchester County, New York, and their two adopted daughters Barbara and Eleanor. He is listed as a manufacturer of dairy products whilst his wife is the manager of a boarding house.2 William Callan died on 28 June 1963 in Richmond, Massachusetts, at the age of 84.4

Citations

  1. [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~houghtonfamily/…
  2. [S231] 1930 US Census, Bronxville, Westchester, New York.
  3. [S210] Social Security Death Index.
  4. [S205] Newspaper, Springfield Union, 1 July 1963.

Alwin de Callendar1

M, #13445, b. circa 1275
     Alwin de Callendar was born circa 1275.1 He was the son of Sir John de Callendar.1

Child of Alwin de Callendar

Citations

  1. [S163] Edwin Brockholst Livingston, Livingstons of Callendar, p. 494.

Alwin Thane of Callendar1

M, #13447, b. circa 1240
     Alwin Thane of Callendar (fl. Circa 1240.)1 He was the son of Malcolm Thane of Callendar and Eva Lennox.1

Child of Alwin Thane of Callendar

Citations

  1. [S163] Edwin Brockholst Livingston, Livingstons of Callendar, p. 494.

Christian de Callendar1

F, #7074
     Christian de Callendar was the daughter of Sir Patrick de Callendar.1 Christian de Callendar married Sir William de Livingston,, son of Sir William de Livingston, Lord of Gorgyn, Craigmillar and Drumry and Margaret Comyn ?, in 1345.2

Citations

  1. [S26] Hector Livingston Duff, Sewells in the New World, p. 111.
  2. [S163] Edwin Brockholst Livingston, Livingstons of Callendar, p. 485.

Duncan Thane of Callendar1

M, #13449

Child of Duncan Thane of Callendar

Citations

  1. [S163] Edwin Brockholst Livingston, Livingstons of Callendar, p. 494.

Sir John de Callendar1

M, #13446, d. before 22 February 1303
     Sir John de Callendar was the son of Alwin Thane of Callendar.1 Sir John de Callendar died before 22 February 1303.1

Child of Sir John de Callendar

Citations

  1. [S163] Edwin Brockholst Livingston, Livingstons of Callendar, p. 494.

Malcolm Thane of Callendar1

M, #13448
     Malcolm Thane of Callendar was the son of Duncan Thane of Callendar.1 Malcolm Thane of Callendar married Eva Lennox, daughter of Alwyn 2nd Earl of Lennox, Lennox and Eva Menteith, circa 1217.

Child of Malcolm Thane of Callendar and Eva Lennox

Citations

  1. [S163] Edwin Brockholst Livingston, Livingstons of Callendar, p. 494.

Sir Patrick de Callendar1

M, #7075
     Sir Patrick de Callendar was the son of Alwin de Callendar.2

Child of Sir Patrick de Callendar

Citations

  1. [S26] Hector Livingston Duff, Sewells in the New World, p. 111.
  2. [S163] Edwin Brockholst Livingston, Livingstons of Callendar, p. 494.

(unknown) Calvert

M, #11437, b. circa 1682
     (unknown) Calvert was born circa 1682. He was the son of Philip Calvert and Jane Sewall.1 (unknown) Calvert died young.

Citations

  1. [S131] George Norbury MacKenzie, Colonial families of the United States, Vol. VI p. 289.

Anne Calvert1

F, #23344, b. 1673, d. 1731
     Anne Calvert was born in 1673.1 She was the daughter of Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore and Jane Lowe.1 Anne Calvert married John Paston. Anne Calvert died in 1731.1

Citations

  1. [S596] Et. al. Edward C. Papenfuse, Maryland Legislature 1635-1789, p. 187.

Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Lord Baltimore

M, #11608, b. 21 March 1679, d. 16 April 1715
     Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Lord Baltimore was born on 21 March 1679.1 He was the son of Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore and Jane Lowe. Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Lord Baltimore married Charlotte Lee, daughter of Edward Henry Lee 1st Earl of Lichfield and Charlotte FitzRoy, on 2 January 1698/99.2 Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Lord Baltimore died on 16 April 1715 in Epsom, Surrey, at the age of 36 and is buried on 2 May 1715.

Citations

  1. [S135] George Edward Cokayne, Complete peerage, Vol. I. p. 394.
  2. [S131] George Norbury MacKenzie, Colonial families of the United States, Vol. 2. p. 168.

Cecil Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore1

M, #4611, b. 8 August 1605, d. 30 November 1675
     Cecil Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore was born on 8 August 1605 in Kent.2 He was the son of George Calvert First Baron Baltimore.1 Cecil Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore was baptised on 2 March 1605/6 at Bexley, Kent.3 He married Anne Arundell, daughter of Sir Thomas Arundell, Lord Arundell of Wardour and Anne Phillipson, (settlement) 20 March 1627/28.3 Cecil Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore died on 30 November 1675 in London at the age of 70 and is buried on 7 December 1675 in St Giles in the Fields Churchyard, Holborn, London.3

Child of Cecil Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore and Anne Arundell

Citations

  1. [S31] Maryland Historical Magazine, 1909, p. 292.
  2. [S34] Unverified internet information, http://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/…
  3. [S135] George Edward Cokayne, Complete peerage, 1,393.
  4. [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/megafile/msa/speccol/…

Cecil Calvert

M, #12033, b. 1667, d. 1681
     Cecil Calvert was born in 1667 in St. Mary's County, Maryland.1 He was the son of Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore and Jane Lowe. Cecil Calvert died in 1681.

Citations

  1. [S596] Et. al. Edward C. Papenfuse, Maryland Legislature 1635-1789, p. 187.

Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore

M, #4430, b. 27 August 1637, d. 21 February 1714/15
     Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore was born on 27 August 1637 in England. He was the son of Cecil Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore and Anne Arundell.1 Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore married firstly Mary Darnall in 1656.1 Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore married secondly Jane Lowe, daughter of Vincent Lowe and Ann Cavendish, in 1666.2 Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore died on 21 February 1714/15 in London at the age of 77 and is buried in St. Pancras.
He was governor and heir-apparent to the proprietorship of the colony; married the widow of his close friend Henry Sewall, who immigrated with him in 1661 when both established a residence at Mattapany. Governor of Maryland, 1661-1675; Secretary, 1665-1666, 1667-1669, 1673-1673/74; Collector of Patuxent, 1673-1675/76; proprietor of Maryland, 1675-1714/15 (without governing rights, 1689-1714/15).

He expressed frequent discontent in the 1660s and the 1670s with the caliber and social standing of the Council and was often at odds with his uncle Philip Calvert (1626-1682) and the latter's protegee, Henry Coursey (ca. 1629-1695). He continued his father's policy of religious toleration, and in particular reached accommodation in the 1680s with the Quakers; fashioned a close circle of political leaders, almost exclusively Catholics, who were usually bound to him by blood kinship or marriage, especially in the case of his Sewall stepchildren; his struggles with William Penn over the northern boundary of Maryland and attacks against the colony's charter finally necessitated his return to England in 1684; his deputies lacked Calvert's ability to defuse attacks and govern smoothly; Calvert lost his colony in the royal settlement following the Glorious Revolution, during which he was charged with outlawry and treason, charges that were later dropped. He made many unsuccessful efforts to regain the colony over the subsequent twenty-five years and he broke off relations with his son Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Lord Baltimore (1679-1715) upon the latter's conversion to Protestantism.

Children of Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore and Jane Lowe

Citations

  1. [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/megafile/msa/speccol/…
  2. [S4] Sandra MacLean Clunies, Clunies files.
  3. [S596] Et. al. Edward C. Papenfuse, Maryland Legislature 1635-1789, p. 187.

Charles Calvert

M, #12036, b. 29 September 1699, d. 1733
     Charles Calvert was born on 29 September 1699.1 He was the son of Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore and Jane Lowe. Charles Calvert died in 1733.

Citations

  1. [S135] George Edward Cokayne, Complete peerage, 1, 394.

Clare Calvert

F, #23343, b. 1670, d. by 1694
     Clare Calvert was born in 1670. She was the daughter of Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore and Jane Lowe. Clare Calvert died by 1694.1

Citations

  1. [S596] Et. al. Edward C. Papenfuse, Maryland Legislature 1635-1789, p. 187.

George Calvert First Baron Baltimore1

M, #4610, b. 1578 or 1579, d. 15 April 1632
     George Calvert First Baron Baltimore was born in 1578 or 1579 in Kipling, Bolton, Yorkshire.1,2 He was the son of Leonard Calvert and Alicia Crossland.1 George Calvert First Baron Baltimore married firstly Anne Mynne, daughter of George Mynne and Elizabeth Wroth, on 22 November 1604 in St. Peter's Cornhill, London.2 George Calvert First Baron Baltimore married secondly Joan (Unknown) in or before 1627.2 George Calvert First Baron Baltimore died on 15 April 1632. He is buried in St. Dunstan-in-the-West, Fleet Street, London.3
When he was about fourteen years old he graduated from Oxford University, and after spending a few years in travel he was made Clerk of the Privy Council and later secretary of state. While holding the latter office he won the favour of James I., by whom he was made a knight in 1617, and in 1625 created Baron Baltimore of Baltimore, Ireland. It was also from the hands of this monarch that he received his grant of the province of Avalon in southern Newfoundland, where he founded a colony, which he visited, but did not remain on account of the extreme cold. After visiting the southern part of the American coast, he urged Charles I. to grant him another patent, consisting of the tract of land now covered by Maryland and Delaware. Lord Baltimore intended to found a state which should be governed by an assembly, and should have an hereditary landed aristocracy.

Children of George Calvert First Baron Baltimore

Child of George Calvert First Baron Baltimore and Joan (Unknown)

Citations

  1. [S32] Charles Knowles Bolton, The Founders, p. 99.
  2. [S135] George Edward Cokayne, Complete peerage, 1,393.
  3. [S21] Various editors, Dictionary of National Biography, p.721.
  4. [S31] Maryland Historical Magazine, 1909, p. 292.

Leonard Calvert1

M, #4651
     Leonard Calvert married Alicia Crossland, daughter of John Crosland of Crosland.1

Child of Leonard Calvert and Alicia Crossland

Citations

  1. [S32] Charles Knowles Bolton, The Founders, p. 99.

Governor Leonard Calvert

M, #4633, b. circa 1606, d. circa 9 June 1647
     Governor Leonard Calvert was born circa 1606 in England. He was the son of George Calvert First Baron Baltimore. He was sent as first governor of Maryland by his brother, Cecil, Lord Baltimore, who had obtained a charter for the colony from Charles I on June 20, 1632. The expedition set sail from Cowes on Nov. 22, 1633, in two ships, called the Ark and the Dove, and consisted of two hundred persons, part Catholics and part Protestants. They arrived at Point Comfort, Virginia, Feb. 27, and a few days later sailed up the bay and Potomac river, where they purchased from the Indians a tract of land about April 1654, and laid out St. Mary's.

Before the arrival of Calvert, William Claiborne, a Virginian, had established a trading post on Kent island, within the bounds of Maryland, but had obtained no grant of the land. Lord Baltimore instructed Calvert to make friendly overtures to Claiborne. These were rejected and Claiborne sent an armed vessel against St. Mary's which the Marylanders captured after some bloodshed. Claiborne then sailed for England and in February, 1688, Calvert took possession of Kent island without resistance. In February, 1645, while Calvert was in Virginia, an armed English ship seized St. Mary's and about the same time Claiborne re-established himself on Kent island. Calvert re-entered the province in 1646, and proclaimed a general pardon on April 16, 1647. Governor Leonard Calvert died circa 9 June 1647 in Maryland.

Philip Calvert1

M, #4609, b. before 20 March 1627/28, d. 1682 or 1683
     Philip Calvert was born before 20 March 1627/28 possibly in County Wexford, Ireland.2 He was the son of George Calvert First Baron Baltimore and Joan (Unknown). Philip Calvert married firstly Anne Wolsey, daughter of Sir Thomas Wolseley of Staffordshire, before 1656 in England.2 Philip Calvert married secondly Jane Sewall, daughter of Colonel Henry Sewall and Jane Lowe, in 1681.1 Philip Calvert died in 1682 or 1683 in Maryland.

Child of Philip Calvert and Jane Sewall

Citations

  1. [S31] Maryland Historical Magazine, 1909, p. 292.
  2. [S31] Maryland Historical Magazine, Vol. 21, p. 322.
  3. [S131] George Norbury MacKenzie, Colonial families of the United States, Vol. VI p. 289.

Richard Earl of Cambridge

M, #11776
     Richard Earl of Cambridge married Anne Mortimer, daughter of Roger Mortimer Earl of March and Eleanor Holland.

Child of Richard Earl of Cambridge and Anne Mortimer

(unknown) Cameron of Letterfinlay

F, #4558
     (unknown) Cameron of Letterfinlay married Donald Charles Cameron, son of Ewan Cameron of Dawnie or Glen Nevis.

Children of (unknown) Cameron of Letterfinlay and Donald Charles Cameron

Citations

  1. [S47] James Cameron & Archer, Sarah Beatrice Cameron Crombie, The Crombies and Camerons, p. 26.
  2. [S47] James Cameron & Archer, Sarah Beatrice Cameron Crombie, The Crombies and Camerons, p. 27.

Adelaide Arabella Annette Cameron1,2

F, #6239, d. 20 February 1887
     Adelaide Arabella Annette Cameron was the daughter of Allan Russell Cameron.2 Adelaide Arabella Annette Cameron married Donald Charles Kennedy Cameron, son of Donald Charles Cameron and Margaret Anne Moore, on 13 June 1883.1,3 Adelaide Arabella Annette Cameron died on 20 February 1887 in Queensland.2

Child of Adelaide Arabella Annette Cameron and Donald Charles Kennedy Cameron

Citations

  1. [S47] James Cameron & Archer, Sarah Beatrice Cameron Crombie, The Crombies and Camerons, p. 9.
  2. [S232] Ancestry.com, Australia Death Index, 1787-1985.
  3. [S232] Ancestry.com, Australia Marriage Index, 1788-1950.

Adelaide Elizabeth Cameron1

F, #6145, b. 3 October 1848, d. 22 August 1853
     Adelaide Elizabeth Cameron was born on 3 October 1848 in Berbice, British Guiana.2 She was the daughter of Donald Charles Cameron and Margaret Anne Moore.1 Adelaide Elizabeth Cameron died on 22 August 1853 at the age of 4 on the S.S. Great Britain, of diptheria on the voyage to Australia. Buried on St. Vincent.1,3

Citations

  1. [S47] James Cameron & Archer, Sarah Beatrice Cameron Crombie, The Crombies and Camerons, p. 7.
  2. [S47] James Cameron & Archer, Sarah Beatrice Cameron Crombie, The Crombies and Camerons, p. 18.
  3. [S93] Gary B. Milera, "Website or written communication", Ancestral File.

Adele Serenette Cameron

F, #4568, b. 5 January 1859, d. 2 April 1939
     Adele Serenette Cameron was known in the family as Aunt Addie.1 She was born on 5 January 1859 at Beremboke Station, Victoria, Australia. She was the daughter of Donald Charles Cameron and Margaret Anne Moore. Adele Serenette Cameron married Thomas Stevenson Sword on 17 December 1887 in Fairholme, Toowoomba.2 Adele Serenette Cameron died on 2 April 1939 in Toowoomba at the age of 80.

Children of Adele Serenette Cameron and Thomas Stevenson Sword

Citations

  1. [S47] James Cameron & Archer, Sarah Beatrice Cameron Crombie, The Crombies and Camerons, p. 9.
  2. [S205] Newspaper, The Brisbane Courier, 21 December 1887.

Alan Cecil Cameron

M, #6202, b. circa 1912
     Alan Cecil Cameron was born circa 1912. He was the son of Allan Ewan Cameron and Beatrice Katharine Huband-Smith.1

Citations

  1. [S47] James Cameron & Archer, Sarah Beatrice Cameron Crombie, The Crombies and Camerons, p. 8.

Alexander Gordon Matheson Cameron M.D.1

M, #6142, b. 11 February 1823, d. 1884
     Alexander Gordon Matheson Cameron M.D. was born on 11 February 1823.2 He was the son of John Cameron and Isabella Kennedy.3 Alexander Gordon Matheson Cameron M.D. was christened on 24 February 1823 at Kilmallie, Argyll.2 He married Edith Daly, daughter of Richard Martin Daly and Sarah O'Brien, in 1855 in Berbice, Demerara.1 Alexander Gordon Matheson Cameron M.D. died in 1884 in Demerara.3,1

Children of Alexander Gordon Matheson Cameron M.D. and Edith Daly

Citations

  1. [S205] Newspaper, The Celtic Monthly, vol.VII 1899. Page 160.
  2. [S89] Family Search, Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950.
  3. [S47] James Cameron & Archer, Sarah Beatrice Cameron Crombie, The Crombies and Camerons, p. 27.
  4. [S89] Family Search, Caribbean Births and Baptisms, 1590-1928.

Alexander Cameron of the Glens [or Glenevis]

M, #4562, d. circa 1613
     Alexander Cameron of the Glens [or Glenevis] married (?) Macdonald of Keppoch. Alexander Cameron of the Glens [or Glenevis] died circa 1613.

Child of Alexander Cameron of the Glens [or Glenevis] and (?) Macdonald of Keppoch

Alistair Cameron

M, #22041
     Alistair Cameron was the son of Alexander Gordon Matheson Cameron M.D. and Edith Daly. Alistair Cameron, occupies a leading position in Barbados, as managing attorney for the several sugar estates of an old West-Indian firm, and is married, with a family of one son and four daughters.1

Citations

  1. [S205] Newspaper, The Celtic Monthly, vol.VII 1899. Page 160.